United Spinal Member Sues for Safe and Lawful Ferry Access to the Statue of Liberty


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United Spinal Association member and employee David Heard, a wheelchair user, filed a lawsuit Thursday against Statue Cruises, LLC, for its failure to provide safe and lawful ferry access for wheelchair users, thereby violating the Americans with Disabilities Act and the New York State and New York City Human Rights Laws.

Wheelchair-using tourists from all over the world are among the 4.2 million people who visit the Statue of Liberty every year.

The complaint states, “Tens of thousands of disabled Americans who depend on wheelchairs for mobility – including many military veterans who were disabled in the service of this country – cannot easily visit the Statue of Liberty or Ellis Island, because defendant Statue Cruises, LLC (“Statue Cruises”), which holds the exclusive right to operate ferry boats to the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island, does not make its ferry boats accessible for wheelchair users.”

United Spinal President and CEO James Weisman sent a letter last December to the National Park Service that described significant and dangerous problems regarding wheelchair accessibility on the ferry and requested appropriate changes be made in order to comply with the law. These problems included transition plates and ramps that are at an unlawful slope, gangways that are too narrow with unlawful handrails and restrooms that are inaccessible and unusable.

In a letter responding to United Spinal, Superintendent of the Statue of Liberty National Monument stated that, “the National Park Service and Statue Cruises believe that the ferry is in full compliance with all applicable accessibility laws” and declined to take any steps to compel Statue Cruises to remedy the alleged violations.

United Spinal had received multiple notifications from wheelchair users identifying accessibility problems on the ferry boats. As a result, plaintiff David Heard visited the Statue of Liberty where he, too, faced the same dangerous obstacles and difficulties using the inaccessible ferry boats.


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