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Judge signs off on agreement for Boston to install or repair thousands of access ramps at city intersections; rejects last-minute objections by Florida man


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Right. But where will these improvements have priority and be constructed first? Is there a transpatent work order so we can see what and where will be improved with a timeline?

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seems like an earnest enough fellow and has been involved with the ADA movement from the very start but how he determined that the actions of the city of Boston affects the entire country's disabled community eludes me.

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seems like an earnest enough fellow

Oh well in that case, it's okay to slow down already much delayed infrastructure improvements.

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They should release data every six months or yearly regarding what improvements have been completed and what was fixed.

It would also be interesting to track how the improvements have held up.

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Why can't/won't the city do this without being forced to by a settlement?

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Something about being a "car guy" and something about "if you're a pedestrian, cars are going to hit you".

It's almost like...the city leadership doesn't care about pedestrians unless they're literally forced to?

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Why can't/won't the city do this without being forced to by a settlement?

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They have been.
They've been working on this for at least 20 years, in neighborhoods across the city, upgrading sidewalks/corners (not just ones in "poor condition") with the goal of eventually having every corner in the city be fully accessible.

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They have been doing it already.
They put in the new yellow ramps with the traction bumps (or whatever they are called).

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A lot of corners in my part of town have those as well as well as down in the square.

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Also sometimes called detectable paving or detectable surfaces. There are probably other names, but those are the ones I know of.

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Those bumpy surfaces are the one of the most misguided requirements to come out of the ADA. They're expensive, not durable, and benefit such a small population that many of them will never get "used".

The ADA really needs to be revisited to account for cost/benefit. When DOJ comes up with new rules they don't seem to do any analysis at all.

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On the Dorchester/Mattapan line they had been working on this since the spring.

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How about when they are blocked by city owned or contracted plows during snowstorms? That is still ok?

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The city will spend millions moving snow for drivers. Plows and sand trucks run day and night even if it barely snows. The city even lets drivers steal public property via space savers.
But the city owned sidewalks next to parks or schools? You are lucky if the city half ass shovels them a week after a big storm.

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What about the rest of the sidewalks that are in atrocious shape?

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Chaos for pedestrians along borders of responsibility between the state, DCR, various local governments. Maybe they fixed it but the throat used to be pretty bad for this. Also trying to walk from lower Allston to Watertown used to be like playing frogger.

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