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U.S. attorney's office checking Chicago restaurants' ADA compliance

mark handler

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U.S. attorney's office checking restaurants' ADA compliance

http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-restaurants-american-disabilities-act-1119-biz-20151118-story.html

By Corilyn Shropshire•Contact Reporter

Chicago Tribune

November 18, 2015, 4:39 PM

The U.S. attorney's office in Chicago said Wednesday that it will begin checking if restaurants in the city and suburbs are complying with the American with Disabilities Act.

An initial group of restaurants in Chicago and the suburbs will be surveyed on their accessibility. It is not clear how those restaurants were selected, as calls to the U.S. attorney's office were not immediately returned.

Federal investigators may follow up with on-site inspections.

"The Americans with Disabilities Act is an important civil rights law," U.S. Attorney Zach Fardon said in a statement. "Restaurant owners must conform to its accessibility provisions, and we will pursue all reasonable measures to ensure compliance."

Noncompliant restaurant owners and operators will have the option to upgrade their facilities to meet ADA requirements, the U.S. attorney's office said. Those who do not comply may face a civil lawsuit and be subject to potential penalties and fines.
 
This is how far our system has come, the U.S. Attorneys' office is out chasing restaurants for ADA compliance while there are hundreds of killings per month in Chicago, or course criminals can seldom pay penalties and interest while at least some restaurants can. The government has become the criminal now, Civil Asset Forfeitures now bring in more profit to the cops than criminals steal!

I saw this personally about 1992, I had a buddy, smart guy former great opera tenor, who have gotten so fat he couldn't function anymore, I went to visit him and he asked me to take him to the DMV to renew his drivers' license. I knew he'd never drive again but realizing how important the idea of having a license was I agreed, I had Jaguar with a small trunk so I took his big old Ford, put his wheelchair in the trunk and took off the the DMV about 3:00 in the afternoon, I was in Oakland on San Leandro Boulevard right near the Oakland Coliseum when I heard tires squealing behind me while I was sitting at a red light, to the left and to the right there were dozens of Oakland cop cars, there were also about a dozen uniformed Oakland cops standing near a whitewashed glass door in a warehouse. When I was hit I expected cops to come running, but they all immediately ran into the whitewashed glass door. I couldn't get the wheelchair out of the smashed trunk and was concerned that the gas tank might explode so I left him in the car and ran to the glass door for help, a fat uniformed Oakland police woman opened the door a few inches wanting to know what I wanted? I told her I wanted a cop to help me get a guy out of a wrecked car in case the gas tank blew, I could see through the door dozens of police officers sitting a computers playing solitaire, she said: "Yeah I saw the wreck but we don't do traffic here". I asked why the cops couldn't help and she said they did drugs, there was no money in traffic, she finally agreed to call a traffic officer who got there in about an hour and wrote a report. I never did get him out of the car and was able to drive him home in the wrecked car. I found out later that those cops were a drug beat that were able to confiscate all the money, cars, and anything they could take from drug dealers, and keep it, some of them were even driving around in a Rolls Royce they confiscated.
 
This is astoundingly dirty.

Someone has decided to target, specifically, a certain type of business, in a certain area. Why not canvass and survey all the government buildings and facilities first to insure that they are compliant?

Brent.
 
Conarb has it right. A kid that worked for me was at a house when it was raided. The cops were divvying up stuff right in front of him. Two cops got in an argument over a big screen tv.
 
MASSDRIVER said:
This is astoundingly dirty.Someone has decided to target, specifically, a certain type of business, in a certain area. Why not canvass and survey all the government buildings and facilities first to insure that they are compliant?

Brent.
CHICAGO (WLS) --

The ABC7 I-Team looked into why one-third of CTA 'L' stations still do not have elevators, making it difficult or impossible for some passengers to get to and from the trains.

The I-Team received complaints about dangers due to limited access at the Clinton Blue Line station downtown, an antiquated stop with no elevator and lots of stairs.

CTA officials say they are aware of these issues and are working to make all CTA train stations fully accessible, but passengers say they are losing this uphill battle.

Kenetha Robinson is a regular CTA rider, but says she usually avoids the Clinton stop.

"I only do it when I have to transfer to Metra because this is the one closest to Union Station but this one has the most stairs," Robinson says. "There's no handicap accessible. There's nothing!"

The I-Team received complaints from passengers about problems they have navigating these steep stairs at the Clinton stop. Over the past few months we visited the station numerous times to watch people come and go.

"The Blue Line is super convenient from my house but this stop is always such a pain. I'm already kind of huffing and puffing and I'm in decent shape," says rider Rebecca Hinsdale.

We witnessed dozens of people struggling to carry their suitcases. Some had a hard time just walking up so many stairs. One man slipped and almost fell while carrying his child in a stroller.

"This is the closest station to the Amtrak line," says Kath Rooney, a tourist. "It's an easy walk here but an elevator would be very helpful for those of us with suitcases and of course those who can't use the stairs."

Elevators at two nearby stops were out of service on the days we inspected. Tourists visiting from London say they couldn't believe there was no elevator at the station.

"We were walking around," says Imogen Ptacek, "and there were just stairs going up."

There are 146 CTA train stations - 100 of which are accessible in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, which became law 25 years ago. That leaves 46 stops with no elevators.

"We agree 100 percent with our customers that all rail stations should be fully accessible to our customers," says CTA spokesperson Tammy Chase. "That's a goal. We've been working on that for a very long time."

CTA says funding and space constraints are obstacles, especially at the 57-year-old Clinton station.

"It would need significant work and reconfiguration to accommodate an elevator and meet all of the safety and zoning codes," says Chase.

But even some newly renovated stations, such as the Blue Line Damen stop, have limited access to the platform and no elevator.

"Because it's surrounded by historic properties, because the layout of the station, it's nearly impossible to do without acquiring properties around," Chase says.

An elevator is being added at the Addison station, part of an $8-million modernization project.

"We have to prioritize which stations we can make accessible next," Chase says. "It depends on federal funding, state funding."

Many passengers told the I-Team the Clinton stop should be a priority based on its proximity to the Greyhound, Amtrak and Metra stations.

"It seems pretty logical that this station would be a priority to make easily accessible," Hinsdale says.

"We recognize customers do have difficulty. We do understand. That's why having an elevator at every station is so important," says Chase.

The Americans with Disabilities Act required that key stations be accessible by certain years and the CTA met those requirements.

Local advocacy groups continue to push CTA to become 100 percent accessible.

Plans are in the works to modernize all 12 stations of the Forest Park Blue Line branch, including the Clinton stop, but those upgrades could be many years away.

http://abc7chicago.com/news/uphill-battle-one-third-of-cta-stations-not-disability-compliant/1090632/

Rahm Emanuel has a plan to close, simultaneously, 54 Chicago public schools. Never has this number been closed all at once anywhere before. The plan is poorly thought out and actually doesn't even merit the word "plan" as many parts of it are still unclear. Students in my neighborhood--just for one minor example--still do not know where they will be going to school, because no one from CPS can or will answer this question.

In almost every case for special education students, the receiving schools will be worse, because these students are leaving schools with specialized programs, curriculum structure, and building codes and going to schools without those things. Wheelchair-bound Morgan students will go to Ryder school, which is not only not ADA compliant, it does not have an elevator. I am not making that up, it is a fact.

http://www.chicagonow.com/chicago-public-fools/2013/04/confessions-of-a-radical-extremist/
 
conarb said:
. . . I asked why the cops couldn't help and she said they did drugs, there was no money in traffic, she finally agreed to call a traffic officer who got there in about an hour and wrote a report.
My how times have change!

Chicago issued $2.4 million in bogus traffic tickets from speed cameras



City tickets "without the legally required evidence of a schoolchild in sight."

http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/11/chicago-issued-2-4-million-bogus-traffic-tickets-from-speed-cameras/
 
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