Date: Fri 01-May-1998
Date: Fri 01-May-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
referendum-Beres-ADA-complaint
Full Text:
Referendum Draws A Complaint Over Access
Wendy Beres says she couldn't vote in Tuesday's budget referendum because
there wasn't a legal handicap parking space accessible to the Middle School
gym where the voting took place.
Mrs Beres, who is the chairman of the local Persons With Disabilities
Committee, filed a formal complaint on Wednesday with Tom Paternoster, the
town's Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) coordinator.
In her letter, Mrs Beres said she went to the middle school twice, at
approximately 6:45 pm and 7:45 pm, and both times was unable to park in an
accessible parking space. In previous years temporary handicap parking spaces
have been placed opposite the curb cuts to accommodate voters with
disabilities, she said, but this year that was not done.
"I did locate one parking space that was designated as handicap, unfortunately
this was not legally wide enough to be usable for individuals that have a
disability," she said.
The location of this parking space also would have required an individual with
a disability not only to cross traffic to get to the gym but also to head into
on-coming cars to access the curb cut, she added.
"I believe the Town of Newtown has violated my right to vote as well as the
voting rights of the residents with a mobility disability by not providing
legal handicap parking and safe access at the voting place," she said.
Mrs Beres made her complaint as a private citizen, not as chairman of the
local ADA board.
Registrars of Voters Linda Connor and Shirley Lawrenson said they had not
received a copy of Mrs Beres' complaint.
"There is a marked handicap space at the back of the building near the Board
of Education office," Mrs Connor said. "The voter would have to come around
the building on the sidewalk to the gym. So we use yellow signs to mark two
spaces closer to the gym on the side of the building."
Mrs Lawrenson said temporary handicap spaces can no longer be located in the
horseshoe driveway in front of the middle school because it is a designated
fire lane. If cars were parked there, as Mrs Beres also alleged in her
complaint, the cars were parked illegally, Mrs Lawrenson said.
Mrs Beres said there is not a parking space on the Board of Education side of
the building that meets the width requirement to accommodate a handicap van.
And none of the spaces are near a curb cut, she said. Handicap parking spaces
must be at least 96 inches wide and have a minimum adjacent access space of 60
inches; parking spaces for handicap vans must be 96 inches wide with an
additional 96-inch-wide access space, she said.
"People with walkers or crutches -- not to mention wheelchairs -- need space
alongside their vehicles to be able to get out and maneuver," she said. "And
it is hazardous if they have to go through traffic to reach a curb cut."
"Does the town not want the elderly and the handicapped to vote?" she asked.
Mrs Lawrenson said there was a complaint at the polls by a voter on the issue
of handicap accessibility. An elderly voter who used a cane complained that
the parking lot was not level and presented a hazard, Mrs Lawrenson said.
