[nfbmi-talk] for what it is worth

Terry D. Eagle terrydeagle at yahoo.com
Sun Feb 9 00:34:15 UTC 2014


For those businesses that are passing the responsibility of public sidewalk
snow removal on to the city government, did the business owner not learn of
CUSTOMER SERVICE as a basic principle of operating a business?  Also how
about curb appeal and appearance of the approach to a business?  And, how
about liability for slip-and-fall accidents?  Sounds to me like those buck
passing businesses are graduates of recent BEP training classes.

-----Original Message-----
From: nfbmi-talk [mailto:nfbmi-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of joe
harcz Comcast
Sent: Friday, February 07, 2014 3:42 PM
To: nfbmi-talk at nfbnet.org
Subject: [nfbmi-talk] for what it is worth

Blind Kalamazoo couple pleads with people to clear their sidewalks - WWMT -
Kalamazoo MI Top Stories - News, Sports, Weather, Traffic

 

KALAMAZOO, Mich. (NEWSCHANNEL 3) - With more snow expected this week,
sidewalks will continue to get slick for people who depend on them for daily
transportation.

 

Newschannel 3 spoke Monday night with one couple in Kalamazoo who are blind,
and got their perspective on how important it is for people to keep
sidewalks

clear in the winter months.

 

The Vallenders say what usually takes about 15 minutes in the summer to get
to the bus stop or corner store now takes them an hour.

 

They told us that when sidewalks aren't clear it puts their lives in danger.

 

61-year-old Tim Vallender is legally blind, so to get to the store for a
gallon of milk or to find the bus stop, he must walk--even in the dead of
winter,

when sidewalks turn into slushy, icy mountains.

 

"You get off into parking lots before you know it sometimes, or one might
veer a little bit too far to the left as you can imagine and find the street
before

you know it," Tim said.

 

When the snow and ice impairs his ability to feel the edges of the sidewalk
with his cane, Tim says the only way to stay on course is to hear how loud
the

traffic is.

 

His journey can become treacherous, even life-threatening, dodging ice
boulders and crossing railroad tracks.

 

"I really crossed incorrectly, and I had a close call with a truck moving
about 30, 40 miles an hour," he said.

 

Tim's wife Modesta is also blind, and she relies on him when they go out.

 

"I hang on to my husbands arm, and try to stay up so i don't fall," she
said.

 

"Actually, my wife depends on me very much, so I have to especially guard my
life even more than I did as a single person," Tim said.

 

Tonight the Vallenders are hoping to send a message, asking people who can
see to imagine walking a day in their shoes.

 

"Well I would like people to think about how it would be as a blind person,
and think how they would react if the sidewalks wasn't cleaned off, and put

salt down for ice so you wouldn't slip and fall," said Modesta

 

We did some digging and found that many municipalities, including Kalamazoo,
have ordinances that say its the business or homeowners responsibility to
clear

public sidewalks.

 

But some businesses we talked to along Drake Road on Monday night tell us
its the city's responsibility.

 

So it seems there is some definite confusion out there about this.
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