Showing posts with label South Beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Beach. Show all posts

Saturday, March 15, 2025

MIAMI BEACH CONTRAGULATES ITSELF FOR BEING INCLUSIVE

WHILE ENSURING PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES ARE EXCLUDED

The Marlin Hotel is an historic Art Deco gem in the heart of South Beach.

The Collins Avenue landmark has a nice restaurant.

The City of Miami Beach is content to prevent wheelchair users from entering.

The locked gate blocks wheelchair users from using the marked accessible route.

I know Global Accessibility Awareness Day focuses on digital access for people with disabilities.

But I discovered this on GAAD, so I will go old school and make this GAAD post about physical access.

The city allows buildings to have certificates of occupancy and business to make millions while discriminating against wheelchair users.

Must people with disabilities scream and beg for dignity and access?



Saturday, January 28, 2023

ACCESS FOR ALL IS THE KEY TO EQUITY AND INCLUSION

PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES DESERVE 

A BARRIER-FREE PATH TO THE BEACH 


Mobi-Mat is an ADA compliant portable non-slip wheelchair beach access mat that provides an accessible path over the sand.

There are several Mobi-Mat paths in Miami Beach.

The only issue is maintenance.

If there are divots or bumps, they block the path of wheelchair users.

Cities MUST invest in maintaining accessibility equipment.


Saturday, December 24, 2022

MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL

DIVERSITY, EQUITY AND INCLUSION MUST

INCLUDE PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES


We’re all in this together. Proud to share this wheelchair accessible Mobi-Mat image from South Beach. 

Combine people with disabilities, people of color + LGBTG community and we have a majority.

Thursday, March 7, 2019

HONEYBEAR OUR RESCUE SIAMESE -- 4

IN A SHOE BOX ON MY BED
Hundreds of dollars in cat toys.

And the best toy of all is a dusty old shoe box.

Tossed on the bed for a moment...

...before it goes in the trash.

Nope, forget trying to figure out if it's eligible for the recycling bin.

Lidless shoe box now #1 toy for our rescue Meezer girl.

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

HONEYBEAR OUR RESCUE SIAMESE -- 3

LOVES TO BE PETTED

Daddy Steve.

I love you.

But if you don’t rub my belly right now.

My front left paw is going to accidentally hit the delete button. 

Tuesday, March 5, 2019

HONEYBEAR OUR RESCUE SIAMESE -- 2

WANTS ME TO ALWAYS WORK FROM HOME

She insists I:

Get more done.

Write more creatively.

Produce more efficiently.

Get more whisker kisses.

Monday, March 4, 2019

HONEYBEAR OUR RESCUE SIAMESE -- 1

SAYS “DADDY, I CAUGHT A MOUSE”

Well, it’s technically a track ball.

And she’s also discovered the “enter” key is quite close by.

Depressing it gets quiet a reaction from her Cat Daddy.

But not quite as much as hitting the “delete” key after he’s typed out a few full screens of draft work product.

Monday, August 24, 2015

GIANT COSMIC CRAP WHEELCHAIR VAN


FROM THE EARTHBOUND TOMBOY FILES...


By Heidi Johnson-Wright



I think it was the day I drove through a tropical thunderstorm with my window down that I knew. I didn’t want buckets of rain soaking me to the skin as I crossed the McArthur Causeway, but I had to see in order to drive. This required sticking my head out the window because my windshield wipers had failed. And they picked a mighty inconvenient time to go on the fritz. 

Something in my gut told me that my $60,000+ customized wheelchair-accessible was a lemon. But it wasn’t always like that. The first couple years were magical.

 I remember my joy on the day I picked it up. Finally, the two and half years I’d spent convincing the state vocational rehab folks I needed the van paid off. They agreed that -- as a power wheelchair user -- I needed the van to stay employed. They agreed to pay for the customized lift, wheelchair lock-down system and driver’s seat if my husband and I bought the Dodge Grand Caravan. In addition, the state got to select the van conversion provider.

This left me with little choice in the process, but that was fine with me. I simply couldn’t go on driving a Chevy Cavalier that could not accommodate my power chair. I had to leave the wheelchair at my office, which meant I had no chair to use otherwise. Any place I needed to go outside the office left me no choice but to hobble around on crutches. I could only walk short distances and couldn’t carry anything with me. It was an arrangement that had become unworkable.

Those first couple years with the van, I felt like a 16-year old who’d just gotten her license. Gone were the days when I sweated going to off-site meetings and trainings for work. Now that I could transport my chair in the van, a whole new world had opened up for me.  On my off time, I went to movies, poetry readings, malls and restaurants – things impossible for me in the past. I could grocery shop, pick up dry cleaning and run to the drugstore by myself, tasks I desperately wanted to contribute to ease my husband’s caregiver burden.
 
All was smooth sailing until we moved from Ohio to Miami. Then it was as if some evil cosmic force awoke and took a humongous crap on me and my van.  A huge, stinky crap that coated the outside and inside, smeared all over the Dodge factory parts along with the after-market conversion parts. Let me count the ways:


  • The customized and very pricey automatic door that opened to deploy the ramp broke like 800 times, often trapping me in the van. (Okay, maybe it was only 80 times.)

  • An improper sealing job at the factory allowed water inside resulting in a stinky mildew bloom in the upholstery.

  • The ramp motor died twice.

  • Both the driver’s and passenger’s windows dropped down into the doors without warning.

  • The left turn signal came and went as it pleased.

  • The fuel pump died.

  • The relay switch that powered the sliding door’s remote control worked some days but not others.

  • The van frequently overheated, overflowing the radiator.

  • The customized electronics that allowed me to switch gears at the touch of a button got so out of whack that I had to take the bus to work while my van was in the shop – for six weeks.

  • The custom driver’s seat broke a gear and wouldn’t move.

  • The radio died on my birthday in 2001: Sept. 11.

  • The fuel line went into vapor lock numerous times, utterly disabling the van. Sometimes it mysteriously fixed itself after the van burst forth with a giant farting backfire.

  • A young man on a 10-speed heading to his South Beach waitering job slammed into the van’s passenger side, knocking off a protective underside panel.

  • Two different drivers backed into me.  

  • Did I mention Dodge issued two recalls requiring significant repairs?

Now that I’m on my second van, I think back on that big, purple hunk of junk. There were times I wanted to put a concrete block on the accelerator and let that van fly into Biscayne Bay. I still hold it responsible for most of my gray hairs.

Yet it gave me freedom in life that I could never take for granted. I’m forever grateful, gray hairs and all.

http://earthboundtomboy.blogspot.com/2015/08/giant-cosmic-crap-wheelchair-van.html

Friday, January 2, 2015

BAD VACATION, Part Two





earthBound tomToy

By Heidi Johnson-Wright

The next day, my husband's job interview went just fine. We were turning the tide. I called the airline again. Perhaps they had good news. While the customer service rep had me on the phone, he noticed I was from Ohio.



"I see you're from Columbus, ma'm," he said.



"Yes, that's correct," I responded, thinking this info would help him locate our bags.



"I'm a celebrity of sorts in McConnelsville, Ohio," he claimed.



"Oh, really?" I replied, just to be polite.



He continued: "Why yes, my four-year old daughter was murdered there."



When I hung up, we were no closer to getting our luggage, and I was creeped out by the child murder anecdote.



Our third night was spent in a different hotel: this one at ground zero for South Beach nightlife. How cool! How fun! How freakin' noisy! We had failed to consider there would be a DJ jamming tunes until 4am around the pool, a pool that was separated from us by one thin pane of glass. Even our portable white noise machine was no match.



The next morning, we rose at 7am to head to my job interview. I hoped my under-eye concealer would hide the dark circles. Okay, we'll be fine. We'll re-group.



Uh, no. The only elevator in our historic art deco hotel was sporting a big "out of order" sign and rather boastfully, I might add. Like a teenage boy flaunting his first hickey.



Now that we were facing four flights of hotel stairs, the airplane's one flight seemed, by comparison, like a walk in the park. Or a roll to the tarmac.



I stayed put while my husband descended the stairs to the lobby registration desk. Fifteen minutes later, we were both descending in the elevator. Seems "out of order" really meant "routine elevator maintenance."



I made it to my interview, which went well. That was the watershed moment of the trip; we were certain of it. We passed the remainder of the day pleasantly, shopping, dining and strolling around Miami Beach.



The next day, we changed lodging again. We had planned months ago to stay at three different hotels so we could write about our trip and sell it as a free-lance travel story.



The last hotel was a beautiful art deco property from the outside, but careworn inside. The lobby was dingy and wheelchair access was via a luggage cart ramp on the side. But we were committed to pulling this trip out of the crapper. We even resolved to ignore the room's imperfections: blood on the box springs, smashed insect stains on the wall, threadbare carpet and an unpleasant conglomeration of odors not in our best interest to contemplate.



We stayed out late, enjoying a balmy Miami night, and climbed into bed around 1am.



Just as we'd begun to drift off the sleep, we were startled by a very loud, very shrill emergency klaxon. Whatever could it be? A fire? An emergency? A hurricane four months before the start of the season?



We couldn’t ignore it, and threw on clothes. Down to the lobby we went, along with many other guests. “False alarm,” we were told by the same trio of hotel staffers who were the only ones working. The klaxon stopped.



Annoyed and weary, we returned to our room. Once again, we laid down our heads.



Ten minutes later – you guessed it – the klaxon sounded again.



Now we were very annoyed, weary and worried the elevators might automatically turn off if this was a real fire, even a small one. We pulled on our sweats and went back down to the lobby.



In between answering one call after another, the guy at the front desk looked up and emphatically told our bedraggled group of tired guests, once again, this was a false alarm. But this time the klaxon continued.



What to do, what to do? We decided that fate was telling us to get the hell out of Dodge, so my husband when back upstairs to pack our things. I stayed in the lobby, where I watched a hotel staffer run to the hotel’s front entrance just as Miami Beach Fire/Rescue arrived.



“It’s a false alarm,” cried the staffer, using his body to try to block fire service personnel from entering the hotel. He did not succeed.



Soon we made our escape, then spent the night sleeping in the airport and caught a plane home the next morning.



Some folks would forget such misery after returning home, or would simply re-tell the story for laughs at parties. We are not such people.



Over the next week, my husband and I filed complaints about the hotel from hell to every regulatory agency we could think of, including the Miami Beach Building, Code Compliance and Fire departments.



We thought this would probably take us to the point of closure. Alas, no. The owner of the hotel with the non-stop fire klaxon called and left a lovely message on our home answering machine. In a decidedly threatening tone, he told us that he knew we’d filed the complaints and that we better “watch our backs.” After hearing his message, we filed a complaint with our local police. We never heard from him again.



As for our bags, they were finally located by the airline one month to the day after we’d filed the lost luggage report. Fed Ex delivered them completely intact, everything inside just as we’d packed it. No explanation.