This
is a sort of continuation of my last post where I made some minor
cribs about the `accessible hotel room' I was at on the California
coast. Today, I want to elaborate on this general crib, but this time,
it is about a motel in New Jersey where I spent two nights. One of my
more favourite cousins whom I wanted to spend time with very sweetly
decided to reserve a room in a motel not far from her home so that
(a) I could be spared the pain of climbing some 14 steps to the
bedrooms on the second floor (by American parlance), (b) be more
comfortable in the `accessible' motel room where I would be spared
the stairs, and have a more comfortable bathroom at my disposal.
The
idea of harping on this same theme is this: earlier, when I visited
different institutes in India whose levels of accessibility were very
poor, I would make a point of broadcsting these inadequacies in the
hope that this might lead to the institutes taking appropriate
remedial measures; and this aggressive tactic sometimes had some desired results. The scenario is similar here too. Only substitute motel owners/state authorities for institute administration/appropriate arm of Government.
Coming
back to my New Jersey motel, first of all, the front door was one of
those affairs which swings shut automatically as soon as you open the door and
stop
holding it. If I didn't have my wife with me, I could have neither got into nor out of the room; talk of fire hazards, and universal design!
holding it. If I didn't have my wife with me, I could have neither got into nor out of the room; talk of fire hazards, and universal design!
As
soon as you enter the room, you see two large queen-size beds, with
just enough space to squeeze a table and two chairs on one side, like
this:
And
coming to the shower, there was the ubiquitous bath-tub which you
have to climb into after getting your legs over an almost two-foot
high side of the tub, thus:
If the last manoeuvre was dicey for the mobility challenged, the next is enough to drive to tears those for whom motions needing delicate/subtle hand control. To make this clearer, let me enlarge a part of the above picture and focus on the the shower/tap toggle mechanism that appears as a thin short object above the tap and below the knob regulating water flow/temperature. In order to to change from shower to tap, you need to grab the centre of this object - which is barely 2 mm wide and protrudes barely 1 mm from the centre of this object - and pull it out. Needless to say, I couldn't do it and had to ask my wife to come and do it for me.
After having negotiated the shower with a little help from my friends, it was time to get dressed and go to the lobby for some breakfast and coffee. Imagine the fun an unattended wheelchair user will have navigating to that breakfast in this lobby:
As far as I can make out, the grip bars in the toilet are the only accessible feature of the room.; and there is no way that such a person could spend a night alone in this room.
How is it that such places comply with the Disabilities Act they have over there??
ReplyDeleteI can't believe they do!
ReplyDeleteSunder spot on! Especially after what we saw yesterday at the Toronto hotel.
ReplyDelete