MY LETTER TO THE AMERICAN WITH DISABILITIES ACT
Blog readers, I wrote a strong-worded [but still short] letter to the Americans with Disabilities Act people. I am not mean. Just sick and tired of smashing my wheelchair into inaccessible doors struggling trying to hold them open, damaging my wheelchair parts, ripping my shoe straps, breaking my cupholders. These things cost money man. Check out the letter below in "read more". I hope they don't just ignore me...
-------
To Whom it May Concern,
-------
To Whom it May Concern,
Please take this message
kindly and seriously. It is not intended to judge or negatively criticize, but
to raise some awareness of how the Civil Rights Law THAT SHOULD BE protected
under the ADA is being violated. My name is Lije Purellku. I am a 30 year old
college graduate and a handicapped individual. Among my many struggles:
completing school with a mobility impairment, and struggling to find
employment; I am dismayed at the violation of peoples’ most basic daily
needs–that is the simple access to buildings/services. I am writing solely as
an advocate for some of the most basic rights for individuals with
disabilities. Among many unfair inequalities which remain yet to be resolved,
it is imperative [and should not even be an issue] that all individuals have
access to the same buildings. It is absolutely ridiculous that ALL
places...including venues, restaurants, stores, movie theaters, schools,
hallways, door entrances, bathrooms, and all other services are not handicap
accessible. If a place, ANY PLACE, is accessible to fully mobile people, it
should be accessible to immobile individuals as well. It is actually deplorable
that the ADA [a department specifically designed to protect against
discrimination to Americans with disabilities as enforced by the Civil Rights
Act] does not make every attempt [with strict mandates] to make this an equal
environment for all. I actually think it is ridiculous that I, a 30-year old
handicapped woman needs to inform the ADA, a professional establishment that
discrimination is illegal. Let me define some aspects of
"discrimination" for you:when reasonable accommodations are not
available to individuals with disabilities or when accessibility to any place
is unavailable SOLELY due to your mobility impairment. I am not complaining
specifically about one place because it happens to me a few times a week where
I damage a certain part of my wheelchair trying to get through a non-accessible
doorway, or I cannot navigate in a small space where fully-abled people can fit
and walk. For example, at the AMC Loews Multiplex in Levittown, the doors
render me trapped, either outside, hoping for someone to come and hold the door
open to let me in, or in the bathroom hoping for someone to come and hold the
door open to let me out. Furthermore, I
am endangering myself by trying to move my wheelchair in/out while trying to
simultaneously hold the door open with my other weak arm or leg. I have already
suffered damages to several of my wheelchair parts [consequently struggling
with unfair insurance coverage for replacement parts], but if I break or harm a
body part due to failure of ADA regulations, I will be sure to once again
contact you regarding any law suit/financial hospital/therapy consequential
necessities. It is not enough that businesses slap a sticker on their window
stating "ADA approved" and then put a couple of NON-WORKING automatic
handicap button door openers or a flimsy cardboard/wooden makeshift ramp in
front of their building. The ADA needs to STRICTLY MANDATE, not just require,
that ALL buildings/services, outdoor/indoor services/rooms/bathrooms/doorways
be accessible to all people. I am a handicapped individual who [fortunately]
can think and write about these inequalities--who can move certain body parts
to try and hold doors open for myself [a task which would be difficult for
anyone in a wheelchair to do, let alone someone with arm/leg weaknesses];
however, there are individuals in wheelchairs who can't do those things, what
are they supposed to do? I am writing to advocate for myself and these people.
If any of the administration would like to meet with me and discuss this,
please do not hesitate to contact me. EMAIL= lijepurellku@hotmail.com--PHONE=
(516) 978-7001. I am writing with sincere and strong hopes that you will address
these issues. These requests are not unusual and are only inclined to put
myself and others with mobility impairments on the same playing field. Thank
you.
Hi Lije, This is you. You're awesome.
ReplyDelete