Advocates Sue Washington Redskins Over Captioning
By Dave
Reynolds, Inclusion Daily Express
September 22, 2006
LANDOVER,
MARYLAND--The National Association of the Deaf is suing the Washington Redskins
professional football franchise and FedEx Field to force them to offer
closed-captioning during home games.
The advocacy group claims in a recently filed class action suit that the
stadium is violating Title III of the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act by
failing to provide captioning for announcements made over the public address
system. Title III was written to ensure that public facilities and services are
accessible to individuals with disabilities.
The suit was brought on behalf of all fans who are deaf or hard of
hearing and attend Redskins home games. It asks the U.S. District Court to
order the Redskins and FedEx Field to provide captioning on scoreboards and
video monitors for announcements, including play information, penalties called,
and safety and emergency information.
"I am a life-long, die-hard Redskins fan and I love watching the
Washington Redskins play at FedEx Field, but I miss out on the total game
experience because I cannot hear the information announced over the public
address system," Shane Feldman, one of three plaintiffs named in the suit, said
in NAD's statement. "Providing captioning is not rocket science; it is simple,
and it is the right thing to do."
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Reproduced here under special arrangement
with Inclusion Daily Express international disability rights news service.
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