P.I. Squirrel
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From The Orlando Sentinel:
Disney World ban on Segways faces another challenge
In an Orlando courtroom this morning, disability-rights advocates are seeking to have a Disney-negotiated settlement blocked
Jason Garcia | Sentinel Staff Writer
5:10 PM EDT, June 3, 2009
Walt Disney World's ban on Segways is facing a new challenge.
Disability-rights advocates on Wednesday sought to persuade a federal judge to reject a proposed settlement between Disney and three disabled people that would allow Disney to continue prohibiting the two-wheeled scooters inside its theme parks in Orlando and Anaheim, Calif.
Critics say the ban and the settlement preserving it unfairly discriminate against disabled people who prefer to move around on the upright Segways rather than seated on scooters or wheelchairs.
"The objection really is to make sure that people with disabilities have the right to use the technology that helps them participate most fully in the activities of daily life," said Chris Black, spokeswoman for an organization known as Disability Rights Advocates for Technology, or DRAFT, which raises money to donate Segways to disabled U.S. military veterans.
The original class-action lawsuit, filed by a man and a woman from Illinois and a woman from Iowa, was initially dismissed in early 2008 but resurrected after the lawyers for the three disabled people reworked their complaint.
Under the terms of the proposed settlement, Disney would continue to bar Segways at its theme parks and would be released from future legal claims arising from the ban. The company would instead have to develop and deploy 15 of its own four-wheeled, upright scooters for guests disabled guests to use in its parks.
The company demonstrated one of the devices an "electronic standing device," or ESV during Wednesday's court hearing. Disney says it has built 26 of the vehicles, which look much like the sit-down scooters typically used at Disney World except these models have a standing backrest instead of a seat.
Also as part of the settlement, Disney would pay the original plaintiffs' attorney fees likely to be between $70,000 and $185,000 and pay the three individuals $4,000 each, which, according to the terms, "may be applied by them toward a one-week stay for a family of four" at Disney World.
Disney itself sells guided Segway tours in Epcot and its Fort Wilderness campground, and some of its employees use the devices. But the resort says allowing "unrestricted" use of Segways which require users to constantly balance them to keep them still, and which can travel faster than 10 mph would create safety hazards for other guests.
The Disney ESVs travel at much slower speeds and are easier to stop than Segways. They also have longer-lasting batteries that can fuel a full day of movement throughout a theme park, though they require a wider turning radius.
"Our focus is on maintaining a safe environment for all guests and cast members while providing access for guests with disabilities," Disney spokeswoman Andrea Finger said.
But opponents argue that the settlement terms violate the federal Americans With Disabilities Act and would unfairly bind other disabled people who do not believe Disney's ESVs are suitable substitutes for Segways.
They also object to Disney's plans to charge guests to rent the ESVs. Disney currently charges $45 a day, plus a $100 security deposit for the vehicle and a $20 security deposit for the key.
Black, the DRAFT spokeswoman, said ESVs can't replace Segways because users are likely to be less confident or comfortable being forced to use an unfamiliar device rather than their own vehicle.
Other individuals and organizations have also objected to the settlement, including the U.S. Department of Justice and a coalition of 23 attorneys general including Florida Attorney General and likely 2010 Republican nominee for governor Bill McCollum.