Banks Sued over ATM Use
Banks Sued over ATM Use
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Banks Sued over ATM Use: Advocates for the Blind
Say Mellon and PNC Should Provide Voice-Operated Machines
by Joseph A. Slobodzian
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From the Editor: The following article appeared in the June
4, 1999, edition of the Philadelphia Inquirer. In the May issue
of the Braille Monitor we carried a story outlining the problems
with today's automatic teller machines. The following article
continues the story. Here it is:
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Advocates for the blind in Pennsylvania yesterday sued
Mellon Bank and PNC Bank, contending that the banks must provide
voice-equipped automatic teller machines to comply with federal
disabilities law.
The lawsuits were filed in U.S. District Courts in
Philadelphia against Mellon, and in Pittsburgh against PNC, by
the National Federation of the Blind of Pennsylvania and
individual Federation members who are customers of the banks.
"The talking ATM technology is available, and we think the
banks should provide them for their blind customers," said
Theodore Young, owner of a Glenside computer company, president
of the Pennsylvania Federation, and a blind customer of Mellon
Bank.
Young said the two banks were targeted in the suit because
both are large statewide banks likely to have significant numbers
of blind customers. Although most banks now have ATM machines
with Braille raised-dot coding along the keys for blind users,
Young said only 15 percent of the blind are literate in Braille.
Young said even those who are Braille-literate, as he is, are not
helped when the bank changes the on-screen message or options on
the ATM.
"You wind up having to memorize the keys until the next
changes," Young added. The lawsuit, filed under the Americans
With Disabilities Act, asks the court to find the banks in
violation of the federal law and order them to install talking
ATM technology.
Spokesmen for Mellon and PNC said yesterday that they were
not permitted to comment on pending litigation. John Hall, a
spokesman for the American Bankers Association, a Washington-
based industry group, said talking ATM technology is new and not
in common use in U.S. banks. Hall said an association task force
worked with disabilities groups at the time the federal law took
effect in 1992 and approved accommodations for the blind such as
Braille directions and bank-sponsored training for the blind on
using ATM machines.
Voice-equipped ATM's were discounted as an option at the
time, Hall said, because of security concerns when the ATM voice
announces personal financial information about the blind
customer.
Young, however, said current technology would let the ATM
machines broadcast aural directions that could only be heard by
someone wearing a special headset programmed to receive it. Young
said such an accommodation was critical for the blind as more
federal and state government agencies are using direct-deposit to
place social program benefits in recipients' bank accounts.
Thomas H. Earle, a lawyer with the Disabilities Law Project
in Center City, who filed the suit for the blind federation,
acknowledged that the talking bank technology was new but noted
that Royal Bank of Canada had begun installing such machines in
its banks.
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