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Handicapping Ourselves

Bradford Waterhouse

Issue date: 3/21/07 Section: Opinion
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Winter and early spring in Vermont are hardly welcoming times of the year for people to be moving around on campus. Feet of muck-ice, slush, dirty water puddles, layers of sand and salt from trucks, snow banks rising so high you can barely see across the parking lot to pull out and, in March, mud so deep you can't pull out of the parking lot at all.

As nasty looking and uninviting as the campus may look this time of year, for someone who is handicapped, especially visiting the school for the first time in hopes of maybe going here, it looks particularly so.

As much as people have tried, and in many ways succeeded, in making this campus a friendly, welcoming place for people with handicaps, there are still things around campus that need to change.

Terrain has to be one of the most problematic things on campus. During the day, the snow melts, covering the sidewalks and sides of the road with water that turns into ice later in the evening. It's hard enough to walk on with two feet, but with crutches the ice is more than just a nuisance, it becomes a hazard. Some sidewalks (like the one behind Wheeler hall) are coming apart, becoming more like small obstacle courses than the smooth footpaths they were put there to be. In a wheelchair, the feeling becomes, as my cousin describes it, "so bumpy and tiring that when I get to the end I want to go across campus and loop around instead of going back."

Handicap parking is also an issue. In the winter, painted cues on the pavement showing where the handicap spots are become hidden, with some spots on campus (like the new lot next to Castleton Hall) devoid of any other sign. Some spots, like the one behind Wheeler, are the same size as regular spots with a spot to park on either side, making it impossible for someone using a ramp to get it to the ground so they can get out of their vehicle.

Accessibility to buildings is another area that needs the most work. Few buildings have handicap-accessible doorways (with buttons) and even those that do are faulty. The handicap doors to Glenbrook gymnasium have, on occasion, been locked, which is against the law. The button on Castleton Hall has been broken for weeks and the new buildings don't even have buttons for accessibility.
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