Mickey&JoshNut
<font color=purple>It's not nice to distract the c
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2004
- Messages
- 5,454
I agree that Disney does not understand Visual Impairments. My Mom suffers from Macular Degeneration and now have very little vision (is considered legally blind here in Canada) and has very bad night blindness. She does use a walker/rollator in the parks and I hold onto the side of it and direct it for her because I found that people did not understand her white cane (we are from Canada where white canes are very noticeable and accepted) and would trip over it, walk in front of it, etc. So with the walker/rollator, she has a bit of a buffer zone. We do use the wheelchair entrances to the buses and it does make it more noticeable to drivers. I agree that it might be a training issue and I would have questioned the driver when he opened the front door by asking why he didn't acknowledge your family member who has a visual impairment? not nasty, just a question. Again, the driver might not have known what the white cane was for and simply thought you were trying to bypass the line.