On a day where the parks are empty, it might be ok to use Segways. Given the incidence rate of people-
ECV ( or wheelchair) collisions, many of which are instigated by ambulatory people stepping in front of or into
ECVs or wheelchairs, I can only imagine what would happen with Segways or similar devices.
The article referenced states explicitly:
“The ADA
requires that employers provide reasonable accommodations for employees with disabilities unless the employer would suffer an undue hardship as a result. However, as several courts have concluded,
employers are not obligated to grant the reasonable accommodation the employee prefers. Employers need only provide an accommodation that allows an employee with a disability to do his or her job (emphasis added)
.” It goes on to cite specific examples. See
https://www.hrdive.com/news/ada-doe...preferred-accommodations-3rd-cir-says/577588/.
Providing crates for service animals is an accommodation to be certain. The ADA and the regulations do not specify what accommodations need be offered, but that an accommodation must be provided. Disney needed to to accommodate individuals with service animals who wanted to ride attractions. Options probably included letting the animal ride the attraction (probably unsafe and could not be made safe), providing crates, or providing individuals to temporarily care for animals. Disney’s selected option was to offer crates (which are usually attended). For relevant attractions, Disney provides an accommodation: the crates. It does not provide different choices for individuals with service animals.
I never suggested that there were bounds on the nature of accommodations or disabilities Or that Disney only offers the
DAS. The focus of the alternative waiting is not because of someone’s inability to stand In line. It’s their inability to be in line for an extended duration. It’s a nuanced position: If it were solely the ability to stand in line, then wheeled visitors would qualify for alternative waiting as well. And most people don’t really like standing in line, anyway. So we may see further movement towards virtual queues, going beyond FastPass+.
And believe me- due to the nature of my underlying condition, I have a rather peculiar set of limitations that are difficult to accommodate. Most of my joints pare either permanently immobilized or have extremely limited ranges of motion. My extremities cannot be repositioned or moved independently: I basically have about 125 bones, instead of 206. And the number gets smaller regularly as new bone grows, connecting existing bone in a web of new bone material.