jesse_the_k: White woman riding black Quantum 4400 powerchair off the right edge, chased by the word "powertool" (JK 56 powertool)
Jesse the K ([personal profile] jesse_the_k) wrote2014-03-20 04:22 pm

Great and Not-So

One lap of four-breath, one length of five breath. Pant pant pant and all that with cruddy lungs. Still improving.

Sunlight! Forty-five fahrenheit degrees! Whee! Also, spring and no more SAD light until October.

Visited grocery, grabbed a bunch of spinach for the lasagna. Went to service desk to buy bus tickets, and discovered several access features which had been dismantled:

At the standing-height counter, the wheelchair-height cutout had been filled up with a lottery ticket dispenser (so the clerk had to leave their station and walk all the way around to hand me the tickets). The swipe-and-sign machine for credit cards has a swivel, so I can theoretically use it. But someone had pointlessly pushed a bookshelf under the counter, so I couldn't reach it.

I brought these issues up to the clerk. I managed to keep my cool. I pointed out that finding accessible features destroyed is very frustrating. Does this analogy work for you? Delighted to entertain suggestions.

Encountering demolished access features is like getting a big delivery of gravel at the bottom of your driveway that you never ordered. When you complain, the response is, "Oh, I'll help you park your car down the street" or "Oh, just wait, I'll round up a group of folks to help you move stuff out of the garage. It might be three hours — is that OK?"

I'm writing the grocery's central office. I suspect the response is going to be along the lines, "well, you were able to complete your purchase, and weren't our staff polite and helpful?"

Post a comment in response:

(will be screened)
(will be screened if not validated)
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

If you are unable to use this captcha for any reason, please contact us by email at support@dreamwidth.org