mark handler
SAWHORSE
Parking signs cause confusion
By AMANDA FRIES
Observer-Dispatch
Posted Sep 29, 2013 @ 01:28 PM
Handicap parking spots at the Union Station caught the attention of Public Eye.
One resident said that it seems as though Utica's train station does not have the correct number of handicap accessible parking spots as required by the Americans with Disabilities Act, or at the very least, signage creates confusion for some of the designated spots.
“I was forced to walk the 400 feet,” the resident said. “And I have a handicap (parking) permit.”
Mark Laramie, the Oneida County deputy commissioner of engineering, said there are 184 county-owned parking spaces around the train station.
Of those, he said 77 are employee-only parking.
Laramie said the county has designated 11 parking spaces as handicap accessible. That is five more than the minimum required by the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Upon visiting the train station, one area on the east side of Union Station near the train tracks, signs indicated that it's Oneida County employee parking only, creating confusion on whether the handicap accessible parking spots can be used by the public.
“There is a bit of confusion on how that signage is implied,” Laramie said.
Laramie said that he would forward communication to the commissioner for potentially changing the signs.
“For one of those three (parking spots), there is some confusion,” he said.
Laramie said contact would be made with the commissioner within the next couple of week
Public Eye: Handicap parking signs cause confusion - Utica, NY - The Observer-Dispatch, Utica, New York
By AMANDA FRIES
Observer-Dispatch
Posted Sep 29, 2013 @ 01:28 PM
Handicap parking spots at the Union Station caught the attention of Public Eye.
One resident said that it seems as though Utica's train station does not have the correct number of handicap accessible parking spots as required by the Americans with Disabilities Act, or at the very least, signage creates confusion for some of the designated spots.
“I was forced to walk the 400 feet,” the resident said. “And I have a handicap (parking) permit.”
Mark Laramie, the Oneida County deputy commissioner of engineering, said there are 184 county-owned parking spaces around the train station.
Of those, he said 77 are employee-only parking.
Laramie said the county has designated 11 parking spaces as handicap accessible. That is five more than the minimum required by the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Upon visiting the train station, one area on the east side of Union Station near the train tracks, signs indicated that it's Oneida County employee parking only, creating confusion on whether the handicap accessible parking spots can be used by the public.
“There is a bit of confusion on how that signage is implied,” Laramie said.
Laramie said that he would forward communication to the commissioner for potentially changing the signs.
“For one of those three (parking spots), there is some confusion,” he said.
Laramie said contact would be made with the commissioner within the next couple of week
Public Eye: Handicap parking signs cause confusion - Utica, NY - The Observer-Dispatch, Utica, New York