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#31 |
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DIS Veteran
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Baltimore MD
Posts: 3,992
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My problem with the Segway is the speed. If they would make a version that has a built in speed limiter and a few other modifications to make it easier to use as a mobility device I'd be fine with it. As it is it's like comparing a bicycle and a manual wheelchair. Yes both use the same wheels to get around but one is for transportation/fun and the other is a medical device. A bike would make it a lot easier for people to get around WDW but I don't expect Disney to allow one in the parks.
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CR-77, Travelodge(DTD)-81, Poly-92, SOG-96, Offsite-97, ASMu-98, POR-03, Vistana Resort-04, WL-Sept 2006! CSR-December 2006, Pop-May 2007(first solo trip!), CSR-Sept 2007(Solo trip), and offsite-May-2008 visited Universal, SeaWorld, KSC and a couple of days at WDW. WL-March 2009 I turned 50 in WDW! May-10 Pop, Oct 2010- Pop for first F&W, Dec 2010-Pop for Christmas stuff, May 2011-POFQ. Currently no trip and it's killing me. Trip report from 1997:http://www.mouseplanet.com/dtp/trip....97/sears97.htm
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#32 |
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Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Thompsons Station, TN
Posts: 1,170
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I can see the law of unintended consequences coming into play here. Disney, in order to keep the Segways out and protect themselves from PI lawsuits, will ban all outside mobility devices in their parks and require anyone needing assistance to use one of their scooters, wheelchairs, standup scooters, etc.
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#33 | |
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Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: 6 miles from Disneyland
Posts: 3,688
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Quote:
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~Katy~
"Its kind of fun to do the impossible" ~Walt Disney Married in Disney World 10/26/2009! ![]() |
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#34 | ||
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It's like combining the teacups with a roller coaster
Join Date: Aug 1999
Location: Twin Cities area,Minnesota,USA
Posts: 28,583
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Quote:
Once you let one in, you have to let all in. And, you can ask if the person has a disability that they are using the Segway for, but that is the extent. When the lawsuit first came up, I did a lot of reading on the internet to try to educate myself about the use of Segways for people with disabilities. One of the things I found was a Segway users message board where I found some young guys who wrote they were not disabled planning on how they would get their Segways to the parks. They had done quite a bit of research and planned that they could transport them free of charge because they were would claim they were mobility devices. I do not know if the current models of Segways still use different colored keys for the different speeds, but these guys had planned how to disguise their fast speed key by getting a duplicate Fast key made in the slow key color. They were planning to go to MK at park opening and how they could race everyone to Space Mountain and beat the crowds to all the attractions. I think these experienced drivers, plus the inexperienced ones that KPeveler mentioned are the reason WDW doesn’t want to let Segway users in. There are things like the heights of the drivers and not being able to use them in the queues that could be dealt with - it would complicate matters, but if everyone agreed to transfer to a wheelchair for those things if they could not walk, it might work (although they still would have to find a place for parking). And , even experienced guests may not do what they are supposed to do - here is a past thread about a news story of a man with an iBot wheelchair who was driving around WDW on 2 wheels. Quote:
There are people who can use a ‘generic’ wheelchair, ECV or power wheelchair, but many who own their own have very specific needs that can only be met by their own wheelchair. We tried a few years ago to rent a power wheelchair from one of the rental companies for our DD and were not able to get one that would fit her, much less meet her needs. She needs an unusual size of wheelchair - her seat cushion is 14 inches wide and 18 inches long (she is a tiny thing with long legs). We would provide her Jay gel cushion seat, but could not rent a wheelchair that would fit it. The narrowest was 16 inches wide. We know from experience when she was trialing power wheelchairs that is too wide - it gets her arms too far away from her body, which meant she was not able to drive straight. She has a lot of other specialized things - special seatbelt (not just a run of the mill one), foot straps, special wheelchair back, goalpost joystick....... Anyway, you get the idea that many people could not use the rental equipment at all.
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SueM in MN
Moderator of disABILITIES Link to disABILITIES FAQs thread Spaceship Earth: We are all passengers together. Life is what happens to you when you're busy making other plans......John Lennon Be a rainbow in someone else's cloud. Dr. Maya Angelou trip report link in Memory of eternaldisneyfan, who lived these words: Some people are always grumbling because roses have thorns. I am thankful that thorns have roses. Alphonse Karr |
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#35 |
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Earning My Ears
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Boston MA
Posts: 19
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Hello,
I have been following this subject with great interest over the last few years. As with most cases each side has their own opinions. For a long time that was the basis of these discussions, they were the exchange of opinions. These discussions concerning the use of alternative mobility devices, in this case the big topic seems to be the Segway, have sprouted up from legal websites to as I can see disability websites. What I find interesting about this particular discussion is that it doesn't seem like anyone has actually read the entire opinion. There is language that fundamentally changes the burden of things such as direct threat. At one time all a place of public accommodation needed to do was use the claim of direct threat as a reason to exclude devices that did not fit the current paradigm of a mobility device. The new rules dramatically change that. Now it is up to the place of public accommodation to definitively prove that the device would pose a direct threat. I know that doesn't seem like much but the bottom-line is there is no definitive proof that a Segway is more or less a danger to any other mobility device. If you read the entire opinion you will see that even the detractors admitted that the safety record was no better or worse. Without that proof it will be very difficult for a place of public accommodation to prove a direct threat. Also the fact that the Department of Justice saw fit to file an amicus in the Segway class action case is very telling. This does not happen everyday and it usually happens when the federal government feels that a person or corporation is trying to circumvent the federal law. In hindsight that should have been a harbinger of how the rule changes would turn. It seems that the supporters in this conversation and there only seems to be one, feel that their position has greatly improved. For the first time since I started watching this I tend to agree with them. The scale now weighs heavily upon the place of public accommodation. The other thing I find striking is that the conversation for those that do not agree with the use of Segways is still centering around what Disney would like to do. It is no longer Disney's choice. Whether you agree or disagree with the opinion 180 days after it is published it will become law. There's no changing that. Thank you for taking the time to listen to my comments. Respectfully yours, Harold |
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#36 | |
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"All our dreams can come true, if we have the courage to pursue them."
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Southern Illinois
Posts: 7,318
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There is no way that Disney or anywhere else can regulate how fast a Segway goes in any given area. A person walked right out in front of Bill's wheelchair last year in DHS he couldn't help but bump her. What if he had been on a Segway? I would think the force would have been worse on the person he bumped and he might have fallen off the segway. A person driving it has no safety things built in to keep them on, a helmet if a person chooses to wear it but what else? They could be hurt by people constantly walking out in front of them which happens all the time at a theme park. These rules worries me greatly.
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Ace, Me, and the Guy with CP - 1st TR Happy Birthday Bill 6/08 Introducing Amy to "Walt's World" 10/08 Where everybody knows Bill's name 11/08 Does this mean we aren't going to the mountains? 11/09 Birthdays, surprises, Magic & Merriment 12/10 An Imagineer fell for Bill 5/11 Bill and Tracy’s Kinda Excellent Adventure!! Dec. 2011 It's the Little Moments that Count!! -5/12 Justice for Travis |
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#37 |
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Earning My Ears
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Boston MA
Posts: 19
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Hello,
You asked "is this safety record accurate"? This is the fundamental change in the law. a place of public accommodation can no longer ban a device based on preconceived notions they must be holding actual data. Does a company like Disney have that data . I can tell from what I have read on the subject is that Disney uses many Segways. I believe I read somewhere that they also give a Segway tour. This creates another sticky wet for them. It is in the rare case where an employer states that equipment given to their employees is or has been dangerous while the employer knew or thought that the equipment was dangerous. Your second paragraph makes a few points that both helps the Department of Justice and also shows that you can enforce behavior. You see the "what if" scenarios are no longer allowed to be taken into consideration when making the determination on whether a device shall be allowed. The burden of proof is not for the user to prove that the device is safe but for the place of public accommodation to prove that it is not safe.That's a huge difference from previous rules. Of course any person, able bodied or disable, can be removed from a place of public accommodation anytime their behavior becomes an issue. As you have so accurately stated many of these places are very crowded. Pedestrians, children's strollers, etc. moving in and out of public areas. You've also stated it's difficult for people in wheelchairs to avoid some of these obstacles. I can see where that could be a problem. But then again, this moves us back to the spirit in the intention of the new policies. Can anybody definitively prove that a collision by a Segway is more dangerous than a collision by say a big heavy scooter ECV or power chair? I don't think any of that exists. Disney has the resources to use a very good attorneys. Kerry Scanlon, the attorney used during the class action suit, was once an employee of the DOJ and a fine attorney. If he was holding legitimate proof that a Segway is indeed more dangerous than a power chair he would've certainly entered it as evidence during the class action suit. That truly would have been his smoking gun and would've ended the conversation pretty much in place. Thank you again for your time, Harold |
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#38 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: 6 miles from Disneyland
Posts: 3,688
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One point that has always been brought up which allows Disney some aid is that Segways states several times in their manuals that protective gear, including helmets, must be worn at all times, and that using the Segway can cause death. It states that explictely. Wheelchairs do not say in their user manual "use of this wheelchair may cause death."
Also, Disney only gives the Segway tours when the parks are closed generally, and they give a great deal of training before hand. If you demonstrate an inability to use it, then they do not let you take the tour. I think Disney will just end the tour and have CMs stop using Segways in the parks if that proves to be a problem.
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~Katy~
"Its kind of fun to do the impossible" ~Walt Disney Married in Disney World 10/26/2009! ![]() |
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#39 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: 6 miles from Disneyland
Posts: 3,688
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Also I thought Disney only had to prove that Segways are dangerous to use in the parks, not that it was more dangerous than a wheelchair... because there are so many types of wheelchairs and scooters and powerchairs, there is no way to compare each and every one.
i would think Disney would just have to prove the danger of Segways. Also, the law, as I read it, states that Segways have to be allowed in open pedestrian areas (basically where anyone is allowed to walk). All Disney will do is state that queues and attractions are not open pedestrian areas, which they are not (there are already restrictions), and I think the people who think they are "fun" will find having to leave them behind every time they want to do something a pain in the rear. I am most interested in what will happen with buses. How does one tie down a Segway. I was under the impression that mobility devices had to be secured safely (holding on is not safe) per federal regulations... Also, does this law extend to public transportation? Or just to pedestrian areas?
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~Katy~
"Its kind of fun to do the impossible" ~Walt Disney Married in Disney World 10/26/2009! ![]() |
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#40 | |
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"All our dreams can come true, if we have the courage to pursue them."
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Southern Illinois
Posts: 7,318
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Quote:
I too am very interested in how a Segway can be tied down safely.
__________________
Ace, Me, and the Guy with CP - 1st TR Happy Birthday Bill 6/08 Introducing Amy to "Walt's World" 10/08 Where everybody knows Bill's name 11/08 Does this mean we aren't going to the mountains? 11/09 Birthdays, surprises, Magic & Merriment 12/10 An Imagineer fell for Bill 5/11 Bill and Tracy’s Kinda Excellent Adventure!! Dec. 2011 It's the Little Moments that Count!! -5/12 Justice for Travis |
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#41 | |
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Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: 6 miles from Disneyland
Posts: 3,688
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Quote:
![]() I am not against experienced users using Segways - in fact, if neurosurgery can deal with some of my issues, I may even be a good candidate for using them! Again, my concern is people who rent them from outside companies who have no idea how to use them. I am also concerned that wheelchair spots in theatres will be full of segways with no one on them. And lastly, how do people secure it safely on a bus. One more question: Do Segways have headlights? I would think it would be dangerous to operate it after dark or in dark spaces (thinking Philharmagic pre-show area), since it relies on balance, without lights...
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~Katy~
"Its kind of fun to do the impossible" ~Walt Disney Married in Disney World 10/26/2009! ![]() |
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#42 | |
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I will do my Elvis impression at DAP, if Kevin will do a duet with me
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,138
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Quote:
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Skip AKA "Justin"
"Pursue the passion, not the money. If you follow your passion and you're good what you do, the money comes." -Pete Werner ![]() ![]() |
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#43 | |
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I will do my Elvis impression at DAP, if Kevin will do a duet with me
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,138
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Quote:
__________________
Skip AKA "Justin"
"Pursue the passion, not the money. If you follow your passion and you're good what you do, the money comes." -Pete Werner ![]() ![]() |
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#44 |
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Earning My Ears
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 28
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Many of the arguments put forward to ban Segways are the same that were used to attempt to ban power wheelchairs. Lets look at the top speed issue. While many power chairs have top speeds of 4 mph or slower, quite a few go 5 mph, 6 mph or with a quick internet search, I found a Bounder Plus wheelchair that goes 11.6 mph. The issue is not what the top speed is but if the machine is used in an appropriate manner. The fastest spinter was clocked at a top speed of 27 mph, needless to say, Disney is within their rights to not have people running through their parks at dangerous speeds.
The discussion here that someone should be satisfied to use an ECV is the same argument that says that you should be content to use a manual chair. The fact is that the same DOJ Civil Rights Division that gave power wheelchair users rights has now given similar rights to the disabled Segway user community. Also look at service animals, they should be allowed wherever possible. If a service animal is not housebroken that animal can be banned for poor behavior but that has no effect on the vast majority of people that have well behaved service animals. I am not certain that I will change any opinions on this web site. I do look forward to working together with members of this site in the future. As Harold has pointed out the rules have changed. |
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#45 | |
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I will do my Elvis impression at DAP, if Kevin will do a duet with me
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,138
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Quote:
http://draft.org/DisneyClassActionIn...0/Default.aspx
__________________
Skip AKA "Justin"
"Pursue the passion, not the money. If you follow your passion and you're good what you do, the money comes." -Pete Werner ![]() ![]() |
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