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Class of Blind Pedestrians Certified in Lawsuit Challenging Exclusion from Chicago’s Pedestrian Safety Program
February 21st, 2024
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News & Politics
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4 minute read
Class of Blind Pedestrians Certified in Lawsuit Challenging Exclusion from Chicago’s Pedestrian Safety Program
Chicago, IL— A federal judge for the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois has approved a motion for class certification in the class action lawsuit that Disability Rights Advocates (“DRA”) and Proskauer Rose LLP (“Proskauer”) filed in September 2019 against the City of Chicago and the Chicago Department of Transportation (“CDOT”) challenging the systemic lack of accessible pedestrian signals (“APS”) at intersections all over the city. This lawsuit, filed on behalf of the American Council of the Blind of Metropolitan Chicago (“ACBMC”) and three individual plaintiffs with vision-related disabilities, alleges that Chicago disregards blind pedestrians’ safety needs in its pedestrian planning, thereby violating federal and state civil rights laws. The approved class is comprised of all blind or low-vision pedestrians who use the City of Chicago’s signalized pedestrian intersections. Read the judge’s order here.Less than one half of one percent of all of Chicago’s 2,672 signalized intersections provides APS for blind pedestrians. This level of access may be the worst of any major metropolitan area in the United States.“In the almost three years since we filed this lawsuit, we continue to see our clients and other blind pedestrians struggle to cross the intersections that have long been made safe for sighted pedestrians. We hope this decision proves a catalyst for some much-needed reforms,” said Jelena Kolic, a Senior Staff Attorney at Disability Rights Advocates.Debbie Watson, President of Plaintiff ACBMC, explained that “it’s not just a matter of safety. Blind people have the right to navigate the city independently.”DRA Supervising Attorney Christina Brandt-Young said, "Access to sidewalks equals access to every service and activity in Chicago. Blind Chicagoans deserve to be able to go anywhere they want."
Pedestrian Crosswalk; image courtesy of Free-Photos via Pixabay, www.pixabay.com
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