Precedent-setting Decision on Emergency Evacuations for
People with Disabilities Issued in Maryland
Editor: We are happy to see the growing realization among the folks who
do emergency planning that they must consider the special needs of people
with disabilities. I've been involved a bit on the local level and have
found a preoccupation with those who are mobility-impaired to the
exclusion of those with other kinds of disabilities. But that's a start. I
figure once the committee is satisfied with the plans for people in
wheelchairs they'll be willing to expand their horizons a bit.
A Maryland court recently ruled that public places must consider the
needs of those with disabilities in their evacuation plans. Here are
excerpts from the press release.
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For the first time, a court has declared that the Americans with
Disabilities Act (the ADA) requires places of public accommodation to
consider the needs of people with disabilities in developing emergency
evacuation plans. This groundbreaking decision - issued on December 28,
2004 by Judge John W. Debelius III of the Circuit Court for Montgomery
County, Maryland - means that shopping malls, stores, restaurants, movie
theaters, museums, and other private entities subject to the ADA
throughout the country, whether landlords or tenants, must now seek to
accommodate people with disabilities in the development and modification
of emergency evacuation procedures.
"This is a significant decision that should greatly enhance the
safety of persons with disabilities in the post-September 11th
world," said Elaine Gardner, Director of the Disability Rights
Project at the Washington Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights and Urban
Affairs. "The ADA always has been understood to help get people with
disabilities into places of public accommodation. Now, for the first time,
it also has been found to require that public places try to get those same
people out in the event of a fire, terrorist attack, or other
emergency."
The court's significant decision arises out of a lawsuit that was filed
in Spring 2003 by Katie Savage, a Washington, D.C. resident who became
trapped during an emergency evacuation in a local shopping mall that had
no accessible exits for persons with disabilities. Ms. Savage, who uses a
wheelchair, was shopping at a Marshalls store in Silver Spring, Maryland's
City Place Mall on September 3, 2002, when the store and the Mall were
evacuated. After Marshalls required her to exit into an area of the Mall
that is below ground level, Ms. Savage found that she was trapped there
and unable to evacuate, because the elevators were shut down and all the
exits had stairs. Abandoned by store employees and trapped, Ms. Savage
resolved to use her terrifying ordeal as a vehicle for ensuring that
fellow citizens with disabilities would not be similarly victimized in
emergency evacuation situations. Ms. Savage joined the Disability Rights
Council of Greater Washington (the DRC) in filing a lawsuit against
Marshalls and City Place Mall that alleged violations of the ADA in both
the Mall's emergency evacuation plan and Marshalls' corporate-wide
evacuation policies.
In briefs filed with the court last Fall, Marshalls took the position
that the ADA does not require places of public accommodation to modify
evacuation plans in order to accommodate the needs of people with
disabilities. The court, however, rejected Marshalls' view and held that
"a store's nationwide evacuation procedures would certainly
constitute a public accommodation's 'policies.'" Therefore, the court
wrote, "it is certain that Title III of the ADA does apply to this
situation."
"I am delighted by the court's decision and hope that it has a
lasting impact on improving safety for people with disabilities,"
said Ms. Savage. "Regrettably, Marshalls and other major retailers
have seen fit to evacuate non-disabled persons, while leaving people with
disabilities to fend for themselves in an emergency. That is not only a
poor business decision, it is also now against the law."
One of Ms. Savage's attorneys, Steve Hollman, agreed. "We've all
heard stories about people with disabilities being trapped and left to die
on September 11th and in other emergency situations," said Mr.
Hollman, a partner with Hogan & Hartson L.L.P. in Washington, D.C.
"Hopefully, this decision will serve as a wake-up call to public
accommodations across the country that they must start considering the
needs of people with disabilities in their evacuation plans."
The Opinion of the Court also was significant for refusing to allow a
tenant to abdicate its responsibility to patrons with disabilities by
merely placing them outside a store's entrance in an emergency evacuation
situation and leaving actual evacuation to a shopping mall's owners.
[snip]