Comments to the Access Board on Detectable Warnings
Comments to the Access Board on Detectable Warnings
The Braille Monitor
January 2003
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Comments to the Access
Board on Detectable Warnings
by
Michael Freeman
From the Editor: Mike
Freeman is one of the leaders of the NFB of Washington. He is an experienced
cane user with definite views about detectable warnings of all kinds. Here is
the comment he submitted to the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance
Board (ATBCB), known more familiarly as the Access Board. It is representative
of the thinking of many of the Federationists who filed comments. This is what
Mike said:
Mike
Freeman
Michael Freeman
Vancouver, WashingtonSeptember
24, 2002
Scott Windley
Office
of Technical and Information Services
Architectural
and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board
Washington,
D.C.
Dear Sir:
I am writing to comment
on the draft guidelines for accessible public rights of way recently published
by the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board (ATBCB) as
Docket Number 02-1, RIN 3014-AA26 to be codified at 36 CFR Parts 1190 and 1191
as published in the Federal Register of June 17, 2002. I am blind.
In
general I am opposed to the guidelines for Accessible Pedestrian Signals (APSs).
They are largely unnecessary, they will have unacceptable adverse consequences,
and they will require far more modification of the environment than is needed.
I am also opposed to the guidelines on detectable warnings. In most situations
these are not needed, and, where they are appropriate, the guidelines specify
what is, in my opinion, the wrong type of detectable warning.
I
shall expand upon these comments below. Before I do so, however, some preliminary
remarks are in order: (1) I believe that, in formulating the guidelines respecting
accessible pedestrian signals and detectable warnings, ATBCB should adopt the
philosophy that only those modifications to the environment deemed absolutely
necessary for the average blind person with some travel skills to function should
be imposed and that guidelines should be formulated under the assumption that
blind people possess decent travel skills rather than under the assumption that
they have minimal travel skills and require a great deal of assistance in crossing
streets and other thoroughfares. I, like most blind people, travel in most situations
with perfect ease and safety without special environmental adaptations.
(2)
I believe that most of the problems proponents of accessible pedestrian signals
allege are not so much the result of lack of access to pedestrian signals as
a result of a shift in the paradigm of design criteria for public rights of
way. Several traffic engineers have told me that public rights of way are increasingly
designed to facilitate the flow of vehicular traffic rather than to facilitate
pedestrian access. In my view the supposed need for accessible pedestrian signaling
devices would largely be obviated and the environment would be made safer for
all pedestrians (blind and sighted alike) were the guidelines to force a shift
in the design paradigm back to a pedestrian-oriented model.
Advocacy
of audible pedestrian signals is predicated upon the analogy that aural cues
are to the blind what visual cues are to the sighted. There is a measure of
truth in this analogy. However, when closely examined in the context of APSs,
the analogy breaks down. Slavishly adhering to it could have severe, if not
fatal, consequences.
The
sighted can physically pay attention to or ignore visual pedestrian signals
when assessing vehicular traffic to determine when it is safe to cross streets,
roads, roundabouts, and the like. This is in sharp contrast to the predicament
of the blind when encountering APSs, which use audible cues.
Sound,
being a pressure wave, is all-pervasive; sounds are superimposed upon each other.
The brain separates and classifies sounds by analysis rather than by physical
action (eye movement in the case of vision). Thus persistent sounds such as
the periodic tones for APSs specified in Section 1106.2.3.1 often mask other
sounds such as traffic flow which are of vital importance when assessing crossing
safety. Add to this the multiplicity of locator tones as specified in Section
1106.3.2.1, and the resulting cacophony will be extremely distracting to blind
pedestrians and could spell disaster for them if they miss the sound of an approaching
vehicle while attempting to sort out the plethora of tones generated by the
APS.
In
my view mandating any APSs with audible indicators is, therefore, unacceptable
and inadvisable. In my view Accessible Pedestrian Signals should be mandated
only for complex street geometry, complex traffic flow, or complex signalization.
In these situations, however, under no circumstances should audible indicators
be mandated or used. They are too distracting (hence, dangerous). Instead, vibrotactile
APS systems should be employed.
Especially
in urban environments sound reflects from a multitude of objects in the vicinity
of street crossings, creating manifold echoes, making accurate assessment of
audible APS location confusing at best and impossible at worst. Since the location
of actuators for APSs is specified at Section 1106.2.1, I can see no reason
whatsoever for provision of locator tones. If the guidelines are followed, the
APS actuators will be in relatively standard positions with respect to crosswalks.
Moreover
(the guidelines are unclear on this point), conventional intersections could
have between four and eight emitters of locator tones. As I said above, such
a plethora of tones would be extremely distracting for a blind person who, as
I often do, listens to several traffic cycles to assess traffic flow, the signal
pattern, and how well vehicular traffic is obeying the signals. This noise is
unhelpful at best and could be tragic at worst. Mandating locator tones should
be eliminated from the guidelines.
Under
most circumstances I see no need for detectable warnings (Section 1108). A blind
person using either a long cane or a guide dog can usually determine where the
boundary between a sidewalk and street lies. Normally curbs and curb cuts with
ramps are easily detected. It is becoming increasingly common, however, for
sidewalk/street boundaries to be designed to blend smoothly into each other
and to be so flat as to be virtually undetectable by nonvisual means. It therefore
makes sense under these restricted circumstances to have some sort of tactile
detectable warning. The background material for these guidelines stated that
one organization of the blind suggested that detectable warnings should be used
whenever the slope leading from a sidewalk to a street had a gradient less than
one to fifteen. This proposal makes eminent sense to me.
I
therefore advocate that the guidelines specify that detectable warnings be used
under these conditions and under no others. I do not, however, favor that detectable
warnings be in the form of truncated domes as specified in Section 1108.1. It
seems to me that a better solution would be to specify a general roughened surface
in the zone, which would constitute the detectable warning, or a warning zone
consisting of alternating strips of contrasting surface textures. Such a warning
system would not interfere with operation of wheeled vehicles and would not
constitute a tripping hazard. It might even help with traction.
In
summary, APSs should be used only under conditions of complex traffic flow or
signalization and should employ vibrotactile rather than audible indicators.
Likewise detectable warnings should be used only when the transition of sidewalks
to streets is undetectable using a cane or guide dog. As I stated in my introductory
remarks, the operating principle should be to change the environment as little
as possible consistent with pedestrian safety.
I
appreciate the opportunity to contribute my views and thoughts on the access
guidelines for public rights-of-way and thank you for your attention.
Sincerely,
Michael Freeman
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