Article: In-flight movies prompt lawsuit, Teenager says under r law, films need captions

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  found on another list
Date:    Tue, 18 Feb 2003 12:53:47 -0600
From:    Randy Fisher <refisher@hr.state.ks.us>
Subject: FW: Article:  In-flight movies prompt lawsuit, Teenager says
unde r law, films need captions

-----Original Message-----
From: Robin Jones [mailto:guiness@uic.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2003 9:16 AM
To: GREATLAKES@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU
Subject: Article: In-flight movies prompt lawsuit, Teenager says under
law,
films need captions


The following article is forwarded to you by the Great Lakes ADA and
Accessible IT Center for your information:

Houston Chronicle
February 14, 2003
In-flight movies prompt lawsuit
Teenager says under law, films need captions
By ROSANNA RUIZ and L.M. SIXEL

A hearing-impaired teenager from Houston has taken on the airline
business
because the carriers don't offer in-flight movies with captions.

A federal lawsuit was filed earlier this week on behalf of Sam Bynum, an
18-year-old high school senior who is severely hearing-impaired and
relies
upon captioning to watch TV and movies.

It contends Continental, American, United and several other carriers are
violating the Americans with Disabilities Act by not accommodating him
and
more than 25 million others who have a severe hearing loss. He hopes to
have
the lawsuit certified as a class action.

Bynum likes to watch movies on planes but can't enjoy them like those who
listen with headphones, said his lawyer, Marian S. Rosen.

"To see a film and not understand what is said is like not watching a
film
at all," Rosen said. She has also sued several movie production companies
and movie theatre operators for not offering movies with captions for
those
who are hearing impaired.

United Airlines spokesman Jeff Green said the airline doesn't typically
comment on pending litigation. But, he said, there are technical problems
with putting captions on the screens.

For one, they'd be hard to fit on the small screens used on planes. With
screens ranging in size from a paperback to a sheet of notebook paper,
the
type would either be tiny or take up much of the screen.

A spokeswoman at American Airlines said company policy prohibits
officials
from commenting on pending litigation. A representative from Continental
Airlines did not return a call for comment.

But Houston lawyer Brady Edwards argued that adding subtitles would not
be
onerous.

The airlines run news shows on their movie/television screens, said
Edwards,
who represents passengers in a similar disability accommodation case.

There is room for the name of Larry King at the bottom of the screen, he
said, so why not subtitles?

And he said the change would help the hearing impaired better understand
the
safety messages.

Edwards represents mobility-impaired passengers in wheelchairs and
scooters
who have sued Norwegian Cruise Lines after finding a ship serving
Galveston
where entire decks were inaccessible and their wheelchairs wouldn't fit
in
the hallways and elevators.

Many times, it doesn't cost a company much to make an accommodation, he
said, adding that Norwegian Cruise Lines contends it doesn't have to
comply
with the Americans with Disabilities Act because it operates under
foreign
flags.

Norwegian Cruise Lines does not comment on pending litigation, according
to
the company's lawyer, Tom Wilson of Vinson & Elkins.

Disability laws require that companies must make reasonable
accommodations
to comply with the disabilities act, said Edwards' partner, David George.

The legal issue in the airlines' case may be determined by the cost of
making captioned movies available.

For example, George said, small mom and pop businesses are not required
to
provide elevators to disabled customers because that would be too much of
a
financial burden. On the other hand, requiring a major hotel chain to
provide elevators would be seen as a reasonable accommodation.

In this case, if airlines "are required to spend millions to retrofit
every
plane, that may not be reasonable, but if they just have to install
software, that may be considered reasonable," George said.

Copyright 2003 Houston Chronicle
Source: http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/business/1780221

------------------------------

End of ADA Digest - 17 Feb 2003 to 18 Feb 2003 (#2003-16)
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