38 years in business and draws a line in the sand and won't build a simple ramp for handicap access. Wife and kids must be so proud.
Yeah.techno-ag said:
Yeah it got out of control a while back for all kinds of service animals. Remember the service horse on airplanes?
You mean the landlord, not the business owner.agz win said:
38 years in business and draws a line in the sand and won't build a simple ramp for handicap access. Wife and kids must be so proud.
The article says the landlord said it would cost too much. Notice how we didn't get the landlord's side of the story in the article. We get a sob story about the person that couldn't eat at the restaurant and the owner of the business saying the landlord wouldn't accommodate.agz win said:
38 years in business and draws a line in the sand and won't build a simple ramp for handicap access. Wife and kids must be so proud.
Two members of my family are permanently wheelchair bound. Shame on all posters herein who have ridiculed the handicapped!! I'm sure your parents are proud.annie88 said:
Wow, I'm kind of disgusted by some of the comments on here, and it tells me that most of you have never had to deal with any kind of serious restriction in your lives.
Do better.
shack009 said:The article says the landlord said it would cost too much. Notice how we didn't get the landlord's side of the story in the article. We get a sob story about the person that couldn't eat at the restaurant and the owner of the business saying the landlord wouldn't accommodate.agz win said:
38 years in business and draws a line in the sand and won't build a simple ramp for handicap access. Wife and kids must be so proud.
We never get the side explaining how onerous it can be to comply with these ridiculous standards. People like you lap it up without thinking.
BrazosDog02 said:shack009 said:The article says the landlord said it would cost too much. Notice how we didn't get the landlord's side of the story in the article. We get a sob story about the person that couldn't eat at the restaurant and the owner of the business saying the landlord wouldn't accommodate.agz win said:
38 years in business and draws a line in the sand and won't build a simple ramp for handicap access. Wife and kids must be so proud.
We never get the side explaining how onerous it can be to comply with these ridiculous standards. People like you lap it up without thinking.
Because the other side helped make this a reality.
We killed a business over a few hundred dollars of lumber. Hahaha….i can't imagine what the books look like for someone to just roll over on a lawsuit instead of dining a high school kid on Nextdoor to build a fuggin ramp so some handicapped dude can roll up it every 3 years.
Not a better way to get rid of an underpaying tenant than fixing them into bankruptcy with a ADA suit. Lol.
FL_Ag1998 said:annie88 said:
Wow, I'm kind of disgusted by some of the comments on here, and it tells me that most of you have never had to deal with any kind of serious restriction in your lives.
Do better.
This x100000000. When my dad was going through the cancer that ultimately killed him the chemo left him so weak it took all his strength just to walk from the handicap parking spot right next to the doctor's office door into the lobby. It gave me a new perspective on how crucial handicap access is.
Most of the comments above are just pathetic.
Ryan the Temp said:
If you want to see an example of how ridiculous this stuff can get, Vancouver, BC has banned round doorknobs. This includes residential structures. Only lever style door knobs are permitted.
You learn to enjoy Business B food, or order Business A food from Ubereats or whatever. Maybe cook at home.dmart90 said:Your lack of empathy is telling. Yes, we all have choices. If business A sucks I can go to business B. I have that CHOICE. But in this case I am limited to business B because I'm handicapped and I can't even try business A? And your response if basically "sucks to be you"?Muy said:dmart90 said:Muy said:
Not like people with needs can't simply go to restaurants who cater to those needs.
What a dick thing to say.
What?!! In every aspect of life, we have options to choose where to eat, no matter what our needs are. Sorry this hurts your feelings.
That's a dick think to say.
Only a Dem voter would be okay with the government telling you what kind of doorknobs you can have in your home.GeorgiAg said:Ryan the Temp said:
If you want to see an example of how ridiculous this stuff can get, Vancouver, BC has banned round doorknobs. This includes residential structures. Only lever style door knobs are permitted.
There is zero advantage to a round doorknob and it costs the same as a lever doorknob. In a fire, it can be the difference between life or death for a disabled person. I don't get the indignation.
Who ridiculed the handicapped???whatthehey78 said:Two members of my family are permanently wheelchair bound. Shame on all posters herein who have ridiculed the handicapped!! I'm sure your parents are proud.annie88 said:
Wow, I'm kind of disgusted by some of the comments on here, and it tells me that most of you have never had to deal with any kind of serious restriction in your lives.
Do better.
GeorgiAg said:
I've defended a dozen of these cases and have two currently. These lawyers have a disabled person or two on the payroll and send them around to businesses to be "inconvenienced." The same lawyer and plaintiff have hit every liquor store in town.
If you fight these cases you lose. This lawyer is pretty decent. He will give you years to comply and won't make you do ridiculous things.
I have a great ADA expert and the lawyer would take anything he said as gospel. It's a scam but it gets things done and doesn't cost taxpayers anything.
A classic case of "it is free" when it is literally not free because it requires someone to pay a COST to comply. That cost either costs the taxpayer (business owner) and likely also the consumers (more taxpayers) in the way of higher cost of goods for the business owner to recoup costs. Or in this case the COST of not having a restaurant people enjoyed.shack009 said:GeorgiAg said:
I've defended a dozen of these cases and have two currently. These lawyers have a disabled person or two on the payroll and send them around to businesses to be "inconvenienced." The same lawyer and plaintiff have hit every liquor store in town.
If you fight these cases you lose. This lawyer is pretty decent. He will give you years to comply and won't make you do ridiculous things.
I have a great ADA expert and the lawyer would take anything he said as gospel. It's a scam but it gets things done and doesn't cost taxpayers anything.
What an odd post. "It's a scam, but it gets things done" is quite the sentence.
That lawyer is not decent if he has somebody he is sending around to every place in town so that he can sue them.
It doesn't cost taxpayers anything? You doing your defending for free, counselor?
texagbeliever said:A classic case of "it is free" when it is literally not free because it requires someone to pay a COST to comply. That cost either costs the taxpayer (business owner) and likely also the consumers (more taxpayers) in the way of higher cost of goods for the business owner to recoup costs. Or in this case the COST of not having a restaurant people enjoyed.shack009 said:GeorgiAg said:
I've defended a dozen of these cases and have two currently. These lawyers have a disabled person or two on the payroll and send them around to businesses to be "inconvenienced." The same lawyer and plaintiff have hit every liquor store in town.
If you fight these cases you lose. This lawyer is pretty decent. He will give you years to comply and won't make you do ridiculous things.
I have a great ADA expert and the lawyer would take anything he said as gospel. It's a scam but it gets things done and doesn't cost taxpayers anything.
What an odd post. "It's a scam, but it gets things done" is quite the sentence.
That lawyer is not decent if he has somebody he is sending around to every place in town so that he can sue them.
It doesn't cost taxpayers anything? You doing your defending for free, counselor?
I am just baffled at how economically illiterate people are to think that because they don't directly experience a transaction the cost = $0 to them.
Yes we should be THANKFUL that lawyers are out there looking for insignificant violations so that they can sue businesses. Gosh I am just so dumb. Thank you lawyers. Especially ambulance chasers and the ones at the ACLU.GeorgiAg said:texagbeliever said:A classic case of "it is free" when it is literally not free because it requires someone to pay a COST to comply. That cost either costs the taxpayer (business owner) and likely also the consumers (more taxpayers) in the way of higher cost of goods for the business owner to recoup costs. Or in this case the COST of not having a restaurant people enjoyed.shack009 said:GeorgiAg said:
I've defended a dozen of these cases and have two currently. These lawyers have a disabled person or two on the payroll and send them around to businesses to be "inconvenienced." The same lawyer and plaintiff have hit every liquor store in town.
If you fight these cases you lose. This lawyer is pretty decent. He will give you years to comply and won't make you do ridiculous things.
I have a great ADA expert and the lawyer would take anything he said as gospel. It's a scam but it gets things done and doesn't cost taxpayers anything.
What an odd post. "It's a scam, but it gets things done" is quite the sentence.
That lawyer is not decent if he has somebody he is sending around to every place in town so that he can sue them.
It doesn't cost taxpayers anything? You doing your defending for free, counselor?
I am just baffled at how economically illiterate people are to think that because they don't directly experience a transaction the cost = $0 to them.
If you don't have ADA lawsuits then you'd have government inspectors/prosecutors on taxpayer dime. This is more efficient. I know it sucks for the business but the alternative is what? A big f you to the disabled?
I agree there are some regulations that are ridiculous. But a handicap ramp isn't one of them. I also represented a disabled lady who broke her ankle trying to exit a bathroom at a Toyota dealership because the door was set with way too forceful of a closing mechanism. What is she supposed to do? Piss herself?
She was disabled because her ex husband shot her in the back.
whatthehey78 said:Two members of my family are permanently wheelchair bound. Shame on all posters herein who have ridiculed the handicapped!! I'm sure your parents are proud.annie88 said:
Wow, I'm kind of disgusted by some of the comments on here, and it tells me that most of you have never had to deal with any kind of serious restriction in your lives.
Do better.
Except you can't get downvoted to oblivion.BrazosDog02 said:
Is this your first time on this board? It's pretty much maroon Reddit.