Signs of Regress
Signs of Regress
The Braille Monitor_______
October 1997
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PHOTO/CAPTION: Scott LaBarre
Signs of Regress
by Scott LaBarre
From the Editor: Scott LaBarre
is President of the Denver Chapter of the National Federation of the Blind of
Colorado. He is also an attorney with a good deal of experience in protecting
the rights of blind people. One can never tell from which quarter the next incursion
on our rights is likely to come. That's why it is necessary to be watchful all
the time. Here is Scott's story of the problems caused by a well-meaning, determined
citizen and the city officials who wanted to be responsive. It never occurred
to any of them to inquire of the blind people involved whether their efforts
were a good idea. This is what Scott says:
Although the blind have made many strides
towards full participation and complete integration into our society, very real
and significant barriers still exist which prevent us from achieving true equality.
As it has always been, these barriers stem mostly from misinformation and ignorance
of the real capabilities of blind people. One of the most devastating misconceptions
with which we struggle is the notion that blind people, as a natural result
of vision loss, face greater danger and risk while participating in routine
daily activities. From this misguided stereotype comes the belief that the blind
pose a greater safety risk.
As many Federationists will remember,
there was a time when blind people could not buy insurance because the insurance
industry thought insuring blind people was far too risky a proposition. It was
common knowledge--though there was no supporting evidence--that blind people
were at great risk and hazard far more often than the sighted. Throughout this
century the issue of safety has surfaced again and again in many guises. Safety
has been the excuse for barring us from everything from amusement parks to competitive
employment. Several years ago a group of blind people, including me, were prevented
from enjoying rides together at a Valleyfair amusement park because park policy
required that every blind person ride the attractions with a sighted person.
(See the March 1991 and May 1994 issues of the Braille Monitor for the full
story.) In whatever form the safety issue appears, we must do our best to demonstrate
that as a class the blind are no more or less competent or safe than the sighted
public. We must step forward to educate those who have had no real experience
with blindness or the actual abilities of blind people.
Last year, right here in the city of
Denver, we did battle over the safety issue. The cities of Denver and Glendale
began installing signs communicating the message "blind crossing"
wherever officials believed a number of blind pedestrians crossed streets frequently.
As many know, the NFB of Colorado operates the Colorado Center for the Blind,
a comprehensive adjustment-to-blindness training center based on Federation
philosophy. The outbreak of these signs expanded outward from intersections
near our center's two buildings. Later the city of Glendale, the jurisdiction
in which our center leases apartments in which center students reside during
their training, joined the signage craze. Both cities announced that increased
safety for the blind was the main reason why these signs had sprung up among
us. Initially we made several contacts with the City of Denver since the Denver
signs were the first to be hatched. Doug Trimble, a cane travel instructor at
the center and a member of the NFB of Denver Board, contacted city officials,
and a supervisor of someone or something assured Doug that the signs would be
removed. It seemed like a victory easily won, right? When the signs did not
disappear, Doug Trimble called the city again and again was assured that the
signs would vanish. Time passed, as it inevitably does, and the signs still
stood tall and announced to Denver drivers that blind people were in the area
and, therefore, greater caution should be used.
I then began calling the city and eventually
left several detailed voice-mail messages for Brian Mitchell, a traffic engineer
who apparently headed the appropriate section of the Transportation Department.
When I failed to hear from Mr. Mitchell, I wrote the following letter:
May 3, 1996
Mr. Bryan Mitchell
Department of Public Works
Transportation Division
Denver, Colorado
Dear Mr. Mitchell:
I am writing you regarding certain signs
that have been placed near our various properties here in Denver. These signs
identify the intersections of Broadway and Colorado Avenue and Broadway and
Iliff as "blind crossings." It is also my understanding that another
sign is now located at Broadway and Mississippi.
When you and the City decided to place
these signs, I am certain that your intent was to help blind and visually impaired
residents of Denver. You probably believed that they would make these intersections
safer and easier to cross for the blind. We appreciate your intentions, but
we want to explain to you why in the long run these signs and other such devices
are, in fact, harmful to the blind.
As you know, the National Federation
of the Blind of Colorado established the Colorado Center for the Blind (CCB),
an adjustment-to-blindness training program primarily for blind adults. We teach
necessary skills and techniques, like independent cane travel, that will allow
blind people to integrate fully and competently into society.
Generally speaking, society associates
blindness with helplessness. Many people who do not know about blindness assume
that, if you are blind, you must rely on the help of others. At the CCB we invest
a great deal of time and effort dispelling these myths. As you can imagine,
such stereotypes and beliefs about blindness lead directly to lack of opportunity
for blind people in our country. For example, working-age blind people in the
U.S. face an unemployment rate of about 75 percent. This is not due to inability
or unwillingness to work on our part but rather to a fundamental lack of understanding
about blindness and visual impairment on the part of would-be employers.
In many ways the signs you have placed
at these intersections underscore the notion that the blind are helpless. They
leave the public with the idea that the blind cannot cross an intersection safely
without such signs. They send the message that drivers must look out for the
blind because we cannot take responsibility for our own safety. This kind of
message runs directly contrary to the perception of blindness we are vigorously
attempting to establish in blind travelers and society at large.
At CCB we teach our students effective
and safe techniques to use when crossing intersections and traveling throughout
the city. The techniques we use as blind people to cross streets are no less
safe than those used by the sighted. We do not need special signs calling attention
to the fact that we are less safe. If we did require the warnings in order to
cross safely, such signs would be necessary at every intersection in the city
because blind people travel throughout the city just as other citizens do.
For these reasons we are asking that
you remove these signs and return the intersections to their original configuration.
We would be more than happy to meet with you and explain our reasoning further.
I have enclosed an article which appeared
in the January, 1996, Braille Monitor, the magazine published by the
National Federation of the Blind. The article discusses a similar situation
which occurred in Minnesota. The arguments which our members made regarding
the Minnesota situation apply just as strongly in Denver.
Thank you very much for your attention
to this matter. I look forward to a rapid response.
Cordially, Scott C. LaBarre, Esq.
Director of Advocacy Affairs
National Federation of the Blind of Colorado
We sent essentially the same letter to
the mayor of Glendale, Colorado. In fact the matter was much more easily resolved
in Glendale. In response to the letter the mayor invited us to a May 7, 1996,
City Council meeting. Members of the Denver Chapter including Dr. Verna Brasher,
Debra Johnson, Jennifer and Dan Wenzel, and I attended the meeting and gave
a presentation to the Council. After hearing our arguments, the Council voted
unanimously to remove the signs. The very next day City workers removed the
signs from Glendale. Glendale is a tiny suburb of Denver, having only 3,000
inhabitants. Because there are fewer layers of red tape and entangled bureaucracy
in Glendale, it is often much easier and quicker to accomplish a civic goal
there than in Denver.
Before completing the chronology of events
in Denver I should explain the reasons why the city all of a sudden busied itself
installing safety signs. In late 1995 a citizen, not even a resident of Denver,
began writing letters and apparently calling city officials. Here are her letters:
Littleton, Colorado
September 8, 1995
Denver Department of Transportation
Traffic Sign Division
Attention Brian Mitchell
Denver, Colorado
Re: Traffic Signs Designating Blind Pedestrian
Populations
Dear Brian:
Thanks for a moment of your time to address
a recent concern I have regarding our blind citizens. I recently spoke with
Terry Surls, in which we discussed this topic, and came to agreement that it
might best be addressed by your area of CDOT.
I reside in Littleton and work in the
downtown area, and often use the Broadway route to commute north and south to
work. In the heaviest rush hours, both morning and evening, I often see a large
number of our blind community trying to cross major intersections and catch
RTD buses at Broadway, Evans, and Mississippi with only their canes and senses
as their guide. The National Federation for the Blind is also on 2232 South
Broadway, so this could have some influence on the blind population in this
area as well.
It has caused me great concern and anguish
recently, as I watch blind citizens straining to listen for the traffic to stop
at these intersections and then working their way across them. In addition,
I have also watched vehicles coming out of the many businesses in this area,
and upon their exit, they are blocking the sidewalk, awaiting to merge onto
Broadway themselves. So many times I have really felt the anxiety for these
pedestrians, as they have literally felt their way around a running vehicle,
to find their way back onto a sidewalk that was intended for their very safety.
Terry and I discussed in detail the options
of adding some audible crossing signals at various intersections in this area.
However, after lengthy review and sharing our own experiences with the blind
population, we concluded that this option is not always in everyone's best interest.
However, an alternative that would help,
we think, would be the posting of several signs in this area that at least would
alert drivers to blind pedestrians in the area so that they might take additional
precautions to watch for them.
I use a similar analogy, Brian, with
the "Deaf Child" signs posted for our deaf population. Simply put,
they are placed there to keep our handicapped neighbors safe and our driving
population more alert.
But they serve a social purpose far beyond
the safety of the pedestrian--action from liability suits, and just the sheer
anguish of living day to day with the knowledge of knowing you have injured
another person. Or even, perhaps, a criminal charge for vehicular misuse.
I sincerely appreciate your time and
attention to this issue, Brian, and I look forward to your response. I am hopeful
that I will be able to count on your staff's commitment to this public, community,
and humanitarian concern.
Sincerely,
Sonja J. Guenther
Littleton, Colorado
December 29, 1995
Denver Department of Transportation
Traffic Sign Division
Denver, Colorado
Attention: Brian Mitchell
Re: Traffic Signs for Blind Pedestrians
Brian:
Thanks once more for your efforts this
fall in getting the signs posted on Broadway that designate blind pedestrians
are in the area. As I mentioned in our last conversation, I had attempted to
take some photos from my car during a recent episode and would send you a copy
once those were developed.
The intersection we last spoke of was
at Broadway and Mississippi. The photograph enclosed was (through my windshield
on a snowy day) taken while I was travelling east on Mississippi, at Broadway.
As you can see from the photo, the blind pedestrians are standing on the northeast
corner of this intersection and are headed south across Mississippi. There were
a total of four blind pedestrians crossing this intersection at rush hour. You
can see, too, of course, just how congested the intersection was at the time.
Just after I took the photo, these four
pedestrians ran across Mississippi, and then ran west across Broadway--against
the light. As you had mentioned to me earlier, you would pursue a third blind
pedestrian sign at this intersection in consideration of the recent concerns
for our blind pedestrians there. Although it is certainly not the clearest photo,
I wanted to send it on to you, anyway, in case you needed additional support
for your file.
Thanks again, Brian, for your continued
support in this matter. I look forward to seeing our sign soon, and please call
me if I might answer any questions for you.
Sincerely,
Sonja J. Guenther
There you have the two letters, and it
is interesting to note that just one concerned citizen prevailed upon the city
to install the "blind crossing" signs. Neither Denver nor Glendale
ever contacted us to discuss the matter and determine whether these signs were
truly necessary. Ms. Guenther herself never contacted the Federation to discuss
the matter.
Clearly Ms. Guenther was motivated by
good intentions to protect what she perceived as our safety interests. She actually
followed us and snapped photographs. Again, she did so without our knowledge.
I begin to understand a little of how celebrities feel when they are chased
by the paparazzi.
Through a combination of phone calls
and correspondence we convinced the city to remove the signs from affected intersections.
In particular, Councilman Edward Thomas played a major role in advancing our
cause. Here is his letter notifying us of our victory.
City, Colorado
May 17, 1996
Diane McGeorge and Scott C. LaBarre,
Esq.
National Federation of the Blind of Colorado
Denver, Colorado
Re: Blind Crossing Signs
Ms. McGeorge and Mr. LaBarre:
By now you have received a written communique
from Mr. Brian Mitchell, Traffic Operations Engineer, City and County of Denver,
indicating a municipal liability concern about removing the "Blind Pedestrian
Crossing" signs at (1)Colorado Avenue and Broadway, (2)Iliff and Broadway,
and (3) Mississippi and Broadway. The City has not placed such signs at Evans
and Broadway.
The signs went up after it was brought
to the city's attention that visually impaired pedestrians frequently crossed
at these intersections. The signs, of course, are meant to serve a safety function.
Your May 3, 1996, letter to Mr. Mitchell
and Federation member Mr. Gary Van Doren's call to my office expressed a viewpoint
that, although well-intended, the signs actually are harmful to the blind because
they perpetuate an erroneous notion that blindness is associated with helplessness.
I have made Councilman William Himmelmann,
District Seven, aware of this concern. South Broadway runs through his district.
However, since you last had contact with
my office, Mr. Mitchell agreed that the signs at (1) Colorado Avenue and Broadway,
and (2) Iliff and Broadway could be removed. These intersections do not have
as high a volume of turning traffic as (3)Mississippi and Broadway. At Mississippi
and Broadway he would consider removing the blind crossing legend signs and
replacing them with "Yield to Pedestrian" signs.
Prior to making any changes, the City
asks that the Federation provide a polling or petition list of representatives
from the blind community who agree the signs are offensive and should not be
placed at these intersections. Your correspondence clearly states the concern;
however, in community-initiated and government-response matters it is customary
and prudent to require some sort of verifiable show-of-support, such as petition
signatures. You may already have this information on record and need only send
it to Mr. Mitchell.
If I can be of further assistance, please
feel free to contact me. However, my constituent's concern has been addressed,
and I would now refer you to Councilman Himmelmann's Office.
Sincerely,
Edward P. Thomas
Councilman, District 10
I then wrote a letter to the traffic
engineer. Here it is:
Denver, Colorado
May 20, 1996
City Traffic Engineer
Department of Public Works, Transportation Division
City and County of Denver
Denver, Colorado
Dear Mr. Mitchell:
On May 17, 1996, I received a fax from
Councilman Ed Thomas. His letter indicated that you would be willing to take
down all of the "blind crossing" signs at the intersections earlier
identified. He further stated that you would, however, need a showing of support
for such action from the blind community.
We are happy to provide you with such
a showing of support. On Saturday, May 18, the National Federation of the Blind
of Denver held its regular monthly meeting, and at that meeting over sixty people
signed the enclosed petition. Only approximately five of those signing were
not blind or visually impaired. We hope that this strong showing at such short
notice will provide ample evidence that blind members of our community greatly
desire that the signs be removed.
We greatly appreciate your willingness
to review this issue and your effort to understand our point of view. We certainly
have no problem with the city's placing a "yield to pedestrian" sign
at Mississippi and Broadway. We share your belief that that intersection is
more dangerous than the others because of the high volume of turning traffic,
but we are pleased to know that you understand our position that the intersection
is no more dangerous for the blind than for other pedestrians.
We assure you that the city does not
incur greater liability by not placing "blind crossing" signs at various
intersections. The fact is that no one can make the world completely safe for
everyone. Blindness in and of itself does not make a person any less or more
safe. A careless blind person just like a careless sighted person faces great
risk when crossing a street. Similarly, blind and sighted pedestrians are equally
vulnerable to a careless driver who pays no heed to pedestrians.
Thank you very much for your prompt attention
to this matter. We are very glad that you have carefully considered this issue
and can now understand our point of view. Working with understanding and perceptive
public officials helps us to change what it means to be blind for the better.
Please let us know if you need any additional information. We would be curious
to know when we can anticipate the various signs being taken down.
Cordially yours, Scott C. LaBarre, Esq.
Director of Advocacy Affairs
National Federation of the Blind of Colorado
One would expect the story to end here,
except for one thing. Even though it took only the pleas of Ms. Guenther to
have the signs installed, it took a petition with nearly seventy signatures
to eradicate the signs. In addition, Ms. Guenther was not yet done with her
commentary. When she discovered that the city intended to remove the signs,
she wrote one last letter expressing her great concern for the blind and threatening
Denver officials and "blind associations" with every serious consequence
she could dream up. This is what she said:
Littleton, Colorado
May 15, 1996
Colorado Department of Transportation
Denver, Colorado
Attention: Brian L. McMitchell, Traffic Operations Engineer
Re: Blind Pedestrian Signs at Broadway
Intersections
Dear Brian:
As you may recall, I am one of the citizens,
along with others and business owners, who had contacted the Department of Transportation
over the past months regarding the placement of blind pedestrian signs at the
various intersections along Broadway. It has come to my attention that the National
Federation of the Blind has recently requested that these signs be removed.
I know that often such requests by the
general public are viewed with distaste by various blind groups. They consider
the posting of such signs as an affront to their independence, ability, and
their need to assimilate into everyday society. Let me assure you my request
to post the signs on Broadway was well thought out and comes not out of pity
for the "helpless blind pedestrian," or an attempt to stigmatize the
blind--but rather out of the respect that I have gained for them and a desire
to further facilitate their efforts to merge into society, balanced with a duty
to consider the overall interests of the rest of the public at large.
Bear with me while I elaborate on three
such individuals I have had the wonderful privilege to have met in my lifetime.
First, as a freshman in college many
years ago, I had a blind professor who taught social psychology. She was a talented
and inspirational mentor and provided terrific insight to young people as to
the needs of the blind. She was also warm and encouraging to those who offered
to assist her in facilitating the class.
Next, while performing volunteer work
for the Denver Victims Center, I had an opportunity to train for my volunteer
position with a blind counterpart. I found her very anxious to allow others
to facilitate her needs, while teaching us how not to assume her needs, nor
be condescending in our approach. Again, she taught us what a vital and valued
member of the community any handicapped person can be.
Lastly, while working with a state administrator,
I met a man who had invented a device that would scan book pages, and magnify
the print onto a television device--so the sight-impaired could continue to
read. As he told us about his invention, it was clear that he did not create
it for its revenue potential, but for his mother--who was nearly blind and loved
to read. He did it to help facilitate her needs--and to improve the quality
of her life. In essence, he did it out of love and respect for the sight-impaired.
In short, by no means were the concerned
citizens nor the DOT, ignorant of the wishes of the blind population when discussions
on the blind pedestrian signs erupted last fall. Many of us have had both personal
interaction with the blind population as well as exposure to organizations for
the blind.
The numerous experiences that I had last
summer watching the blind cross Broadway were far less than inspirational. They
were frightening. In my correspondence with you I'm sure I described the blind
pedestrians as they crossed against the light, in front of six lanes of traffic,
while drivers and sighted pedestrians watched in apprehension and dread. This
situation occurred over and over again last summer, as I drove that route each
day from Littleton to work to downtown. Perhaps some of these students had not
mastered the skills required to maneuver through the intersection, but whatever
the reason, these situations, consistently, exposed both the blind pedestrian
and the motor vehicle operator to the ultimate price of a fatality.
It is my sincere intent to at least diminish
this hazard to our blind population via the placement of the blind pedestrian
signs. The act, in my opinion, is certainly not foundation for a battle of the
wills but, rather, a time when all parties need to look open-mindedly at the
safety and liabilities of everyone.
I can assure you, Brian, everyone that
I talked to last fall at the Department of Transportation were well aware of
the concerns of various associations for the blind. Each staff member reiterated
to me the importance of the blind pedestrian relying on their own senses to
cross through intersections. We agreed that audible signals were out of the
question--as it would create just that false sense of security that could be
hazardous. (However, in the neighboring jurisdiction of Ft. Collins they do
have audible signals for the safety of blind pedestrians at intersections just
north of the C.S.U. campus.)
Unlike what some cities in the nation
use, the signs that we agreed to are caution-yellow, with only a single silhouette
of a pedestrian with a white cane. There is no written verbiage that might be
construed as a stigma to our blind population. Again, DOT was very aware and
sensitive to the wishes of the blind federation from prior experience with that
organization.
There is no evidence whatsoever that
these simple signs disrupt the environment that the blind pedestrian still faces
when they enter the Broadway intersections. The traffic lights are still engaged
in directing the main flow of traffic. I drive through those very intersections
every single morning and have not witnessed one driver stop, slow down, or look
both ways before driving through a green light. It was never our intent to disrupt
the flow of traffic--or the subtle sounds that flowing traffic makes--as we
are aware that they are the exact tools that the blind pedestrian must follow
in order to cross the intersection safely.
These innocuous signs were adopted specifically
so as not to interfere with the learned skills of the blind pedestrian but would
merely alert the motorist to add caution when crossing the intersection. It
is simplistically no different than caution signs we would place to alert drivers
to a railroad track, a pedestrian crossing, a school zone (where we even require
drivers to reduce speeds), or a deaf child. Unfortunately, in the hurried rush
of our lifestyles today, we drivers must be reminded of our duties to use extra
caution while driving.
I am currently celebrating my eighteenth
year in the insurance industry, and I would be remiss if I didn't remind all
parties involved in this issue of the liability that faces the driver of a vehicle
that may strike one of these pedestrians. On a microscopic scale the driver
could be found liable and either pay astronomical medical bills through their
insurance carrier or, if uninsured, could face personal financial disaster.
In addition, the trauma that the driver
faces when striking a pedestrian is enormous. I have personally been involved
in cases of pedestrian fatalities and seen the psychological impact of depression
and guilt on the driver and their family in the aftermath. All one has to do
is watch the faces of the Gates employees standing on the corners of Broadway
and Mississippi while blind pedestrians run, against the light, across six lanes
traffic, to imagine all of the tens of other witnesses that stand to be affected
by just one incident of this nature.
On a more macro scale is the cost of
these types of insurance claims, the court costs, legal fees, and the large
insurance settlements that are associated with them. All of these costs are
reflected in inflated insurance premiums for Coloradans.
But the greatest cost of all is the loss
or additional handicap of a viable member of our blind community and the lost
contributions they might have made. I am very concerned for my blind friends
that in our rush to integrate our blind populations that we are willing to compromise
their safety, as well as the financial and emotional security of the rest of
the community.
On an even broader scale are the liability
ramifications for the city and the blind associations if the signs are removed.
They were posted to assist in the safety of the blind pedestrian and the motorist.
Once removed, it is very reasonable that legal counsel could argue the liability
of the city and/or the blind associations for removing one of the safety mechanisms
that may have prevented the incident from occurring--thus leaving the city and/or
association appearing culpable in a fatality.
As we look around us, in just a few short
years we have made tremendous strides for our handicapped population in this
country. We have placed numbers in Braille on our elevators, restructured sidewalks
to accommodate those in wheelchairs, upgraded parking spaces, provided handrails--and
other accommodations too numerous to mention--all acts of helping to facilitate
the integration of the handicapped into day-to-day society. As I travel to foreign
countries who lack many of these advancements, I am reminded of our progress
and am extremely proud of this country's, and Colorado's contribution to improve
the quality of life and the right of all of our handicapped. What may have been
forgotten is that it is not only the blind population that have fought for these
changes, but the sighted community members and concerned legislative bodies
as well.
I am very saddened by those blind associations
who may still believe that all of us out here are ignorant and afraid of all
blind people or that we are insensitive to their needs. I invite members of
associations such as the National Federation of the Blind of Colorado to my
children's elementary school to help our children to learn of the abilities
and achievements of our blind, rather than to promote what they still perceive
to be ignorance and fear of this impairment.
I sincerely appreciate your time and
consideration to this issue, Brian. I'm confident that the Transportation Division
will give fair consideration to the overall impact on the community of this
sign-removal issue. I hope you will contact me if I might answer any further
questions for you on this topic.
Sincerely,
Sonja J. Guenther
Ms. Guenther's letter speaks for itself.
However, some of her factual statements do not ring true. I have crossed with
our students at the very intersection she mentions on countless occasions. I
have never observed our students wildly and recklessly crossing against the
light. If anything, we often have to encourage our students to move more quickly
across the six lanes of traffic so that they reach the opposite side before
the end of the green light. When students first come to our Center, they are
often fearful of travel and move a mite more slowly and cautiously than is advisable.
Usually, after growing comfortable with cane travel, our students assume normal
walking speeds.
It is also interesting to note that the
Federation, according to Ms. Guenther, could be legally liable if an accident
occurs after removal of the signs. She implies that we take the safety of the
blind too lightly and thereby needlessly risk the lives of our students. Again,
I must state that Ms. Guenther has never contacted us directly to discuss the
true safety needs of the blind. Of course we are concerned with safety. We review
basic safety rules with our students over and over again precisely because we
want them to be safe. Our students do not travel independently until their instructors
believe that they are capable of doing so.
The events surrounding this story go
to prove that the blind have not yet come all the way to first-class citizenship
in this country. Many people still prefer to believe that the blind face higher
levels of danger when simply crossing the street. Ms. Guenther's prejudices
are clear as early as her first letter. She characterizes the blind students
as "trying to cross the street." She goes on to describe them as having
"only their canes and their other senses" with which to do the job,
and she then depicts the blind as feeling their way around an idling vehicle
parked across the sidewalk and "straining to listen for the traffic before
working their way across the intersection." These descriptions make clear
that this woman filters her observations through her strong prejudice that alternative
techniques are stressful and inferior. The irrefutable fact is that not a single
one of our students ever had an accident before, during, or after the installation
of the "blind crossing" signs. Whether Ms. Guenther agrees or not,
calling special attention to the safety of blind pedestrians only confirms society's
general belief that the blind are less safe than other pedestrians. The part
of society most concerned about the safety of the blind is, of course, the blind
themselves. We were not the ones who petitioned for these safety signs. Fortunately,
city officials ultimately listened to the blind community and responded positively
to our views about our safety.
On many occasions people ask why I give
so much time to the National Federation of the Blind. The answer is simple:
together we are far stronger than any one of us is alone. Without the collective
work of the Denver Chapter, the "blind crossing" signs would still
be standing along South Broadway. This incident gave us the opportunity to educate
many people and spread a positive message about blind people. The objections
of one individual blind person would more than likely have fallen upon deaf
ears, but our collective and strong voice allowed us to set the tone concerning
blindness in this City. Although the safety issue still looms as a major barrier
blocking our path to true equality in our land, actions like those we took here
in Denver will help us climb the remaining stairs to full, first-class citizenship.
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