Discrimination Continues Against Hearing Loss Individuals
What does it say for a profession that prides itself on helping the less fortunate when it fails to follow the law to the detriment of one of its own?
April 08, 2020 at 02:03 PM
2 minute read
Despite the clear language in the Americans with Disabilities Act, Title III, stating that places of public accommodation shall have hearing assistance devices so as not to discriminate against people with hearing loss, the discrimination continues unabated at the highest level.
The latest example: the New York State Bar Association.
At its January 2020 annual meeting at the Hilton Hotel in midtown Manhattan, the audience at the well-attended panel seminar on "White Nationalism and Domestic Terrorism," which panel included the New York attorney general, was not provided with any hearing assistance devices. As a result, I, a recently retired hearing loss attorney in practice for 54 years, was unable to hear anything that was said by the panel members despite their use of microphones.
What does it say for a profession that prides itself on helping the less fortunate when it fails to follow the law to the detriment of one of its own?
Howard Davis
Attorney, New York, N.Y.
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