• Xanthrax
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    4 months ago

    My sister can’t move her feet at the ankle. She’ll never drive unless we can afford a custom 50k car. She has a 3,000 dollar mobility scooter. We had to spend about a month mapping the city to figure out WHERE THE FUCK SHE COULD GET ON AND OFF THE SIDEWALK.

    Edit: Let me elaborate further:

    It was so bad, that if we didn’t think ahead, we would have to go back a half a mile. I’m not joking. You ever seen those roads between neighborhoods with no turn offs? Better make sure that side walk ends with a ramp, otherwise, you have to go ALL the way back. You also can’t lift the scooter, it’s over 100lb. If you’re reading this, please petition your town to add more ramps to the sidewalk.

    My sister has to have every bone from her pelvis to her ankle broken, REGULARLY. They have to cut all of her muscles, stretch them, reconnect them, and then inject them with botox. They then set them in a cast. This is just so she can properly grow, due to cerebral paulsy. And then, just to rub dirt in the wound, we can’t even use the sidewalk properly. We’re surrounded by beautiful nature and trails. She doesn’t get to experience that. Please petition your towns to add more ramps to the sidewalk. I’ll get off my soap box.

    • @uis@lemm.ee
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      224 months ago

      We had to spend about a month mapping the city to figure out WHERE THE FUCK SHE COULD GET ON AND OFF THE SIDEWALK.

      Wow. It even worse than my shithole.

      • Xanthrax
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        4 months ago

        Dude it gets worse. They installed decorative boulders on our sidewalk instead of adding ramps. The stones were SANDSTONE AND IMMEDIATELY ERODED.

        It was pointless, got in the way, and cost tax payer money.

        The boulders used to take up 1/3 of the walk way, so I’m happy they’re being weatherd.

        • @AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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          74 months ago

          Jesus christ who is in charge of this, lol. I’m so sorry. That sounds frustrating as hell, I really have no good words.

      • @Xylian@lemmy.world
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        54 months ago

        Just make it national law to follow an industry standard that includes ramps everywhere a intentional transition between roads or entrances to properties are.

        Germany has DIN 18317 and DIN 18318 for that. DIN = Deutsche Industrie Norm (German industry standard)

        • @uis@lemm.ee
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          24 months ago

          Same with GOSTs here.

          GOST = ГОСТ = (Меж)государственный Стандарт = (Inter)national Standard

          Was just National Standard during USSR.

          • @JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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            14 months ago

            Wait you used both Latin and Cyrillic scripts to describe that.

            Are they both used in former Soviet countries? Are the Cyrillic words phonetically closer to what GOST would sound like?

            • @uis@lemm.ee
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              14 months ago

              Are they both used in former Soviet countries?

              I’m trying to understand your question. Latin and Cyrillic scripts? Depends on language. In Russian only Cyrillic. Polish I think uses Latin.

              Are the Cyrillic words phonetically closer to what GOST would sound like?

              GOST is transliteration of ГОСТ. International Standard is translation. Or Interstate Standard if “государство” is translated as state.

      • @Moggy@lemmy.world
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        84 months ago

        Sidewalks with ramps on them are a technology that has existed for a very long time. The only reason they aren’t there, is because somebody didn’t want to pay for them. I’m not blaming cars. I’m blaming politicians that are lazy as fuck about actually helping their people. And to an extent, many of those people, for not recognizing this as an obvious issue and pushing for it to be fixed.

    • Dharma Curious
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      84 months ago

      It never ceases to amaze me, as a child and care giver of a parent with physical disabilities, how much this world is designed with no regard for people. It’s incredible. Fuck city planners.

      My mom had a similar issue in our town, though no where near as bad. Her wheelchair is quite a bit heavier, but we got a small folding ramp that we bungee to the back of her chair and take with us everywhere. Whenever we find somewhere that she can’t go because of a step of less than 12 inches/30cm we can use that. It it’s more than that, we just have to figure something else out or not go there. It’s not okay the way everything is designed. And it doesn’t make sense. Everyone, regardless of mobility, can use a ramp, not everyone can use a step. Why is it so hard to get the fucking ramp?

    • Anise (they/she)
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      4 months ago

      I am a healthy adult and I’m also continually enraged at the state of sidewalks in my area. When I walk my dog there are some routes I simply cannot take because the sidewalk just… ends. I think some lots extend all of the way to the street and it’s up to the property owner to put in sidewalks and many simply don’t. If I walk across their lawn to get to the next private sidewalk I get yelled at for messing up the grass that they spend “so much time and money” maintaining; fine, it’s your property and I’ll stay off, but what a waste of resources. Unless it’s a particularly quiet road, I shouldn’t have to walk in the street. The city-maintained sidewalks that do exist are a travesty: no curb cuts as you noted, tree roots that create huge steps, holes, and some have no curbs so people just drive on the sidewalk. The city doesn’t want to do anything about it because these are either privately “maintained” and they can’t, or it costs money and they don’t want to.

      I do think that mobility scooters should come in off-road versions because I’ve never seen one. I don’t see why $3000 can’t buy something closer to an electric ATV with knobbly tires, full suspension, and a torquey motor that can mount curbs like a boss, but it’s a chair format and is limited to fast-walking speeds so that it isn’t a car. It’s probably a low-volume issue.

      • arthurpizza
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        14 months ago

        Probably don’t see any off road chairs because people often only have 1 chair and it has to stay tiny enough to get through a doorway.