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Berkeley Commission on Disability Members File Lawsuit Against City of Berkeley for Disability Discrimination
February 21st, 2024
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News & Politics
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4 minute read
Berkeley Commission on Disability Members File Lawsuit Against City of Berkeley for Disability Discrimination
Berkeley, CA—Three disabled members of the Berkeley Commission on Disability—Rena Fischer, Kathi Pugh, and Helen Walsh—have filed a lawsuit against the City of Berkeley for violating the Americans with Disabilities Act by failing to allow them to attend Commission meetings remotely as an accommodation unless they subject themselves to burdensome, dangerous, and invasive requirements. Read the complaint here.Rather than grant federally required disability accommodations for members who require remote attendance, the City forces disabled Commission members to have their home addresses posted publicly as teleconference locations and open up their homes to any member of the public who wishes to enter and attend the meeting from there, ostensibly to comply with state law, despite the dangers to them and aggravations to their health that can result from doing so.Plaintiff Rena Fischer said, “When I needed to participate remotely—from bed—in a Commission on Disability meeting, I was shocked that the City of Berkeley required me to open my one-bedroom apartment to the public, even while I can’t independently get out of bed. The policy is unsafe and it puts me, and other disabled Commissioners, at risk. While the ADA secures our right to fully participate in City programs, Berkeley, a birthplace of the Disability Rights Movement, is putting obstacles in the way of disabled people. Hey Berkeley, where’s the ramp?”
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