Here is the press release from BCID's attorneys regarding our
lawsuit. Thousands of people with disabilities in NYC (and
elsewhere) will benefit from BCID's advocacy.
Dear
all,
We’ve
sent out our press release announcing our settlement with the
City! Please find the release below, and feel free to forward
it to your listservs or anyone else you think would be
interested.
All
the best,
Rachel
Smith
For
Immediate Release
Contacts:
Christine
Chuang,
Senior Staff Attorney
Disability
Rights Advocates
(510)
529-3457
|
Sid
Wolinsky,
Director of Litigation
Disability
Rights Advocates
(510)
665-8644
|
Dan
Brown,
Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP
(212)
634-3095
|
Susan
Dooha,
Executive Director, CIDNY
|
NEW
YORK CITY AND DISABILITY ADVOCATES REACH HISTORIC
AGREEMENT PROVIDING FOR COMPREHENSIVE IMPROVEMENTS TO NEW
YORK CITY’S DISASTER PLANNING
New
York, NY
–
As the two year anniversary of
Hurricane Sandy approaches, disability rights
advocacy groups and the City of New York announced the
settlement today of a longstanding federal class action that
will result in the most comprehensive disaster plan in the
country. The historic plan includes City disaster
preparedness enhancements aimed at improving the lives and
safety of nearly 900,000 New Yorkers with disabilities. Read
the full agreement
here.
The
lawsuit was brought by
Disability
Rights Advocates,
a non-profit legal center
specializing in impact litigation on behalf of people with
disabilities, and Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP,
which together represented Brooklyn
Center for Independence of the Disabled (BCID), Center for
Independence of the Disabled, New York (CIDNY), Gregory D.
Bell, and Tania Morales on behalf of all New Yorkers with
disabilities.
The settlement
was reached in response to a 119-page ruling by Judge Jesse M.
Furman issued on November 7, 2013 that found the City failed
to provide people with disabilities meaningful access to its
emergency preparedness programs and services.
The
agreement includes the following:
·
Shelters:
By September 2017, the City will have a minimum of
60 accessible emergency shelters to accommodate approximately
120,000 people with disabilities.
·
Disability
Coordinator:
The City will hire a Disability and Access and Functional
Needs Coordinator to ensure that the City’s emergency plans
meet the needs of people with disabilities.
·
Canvassing: By
August 2017, the City will have a fully operational
Post-Emergency Canvassing Operation where canvassers go
door-to-door after a disaster to assess needs and request
critical resources for people with disabilities (e.g., food,
water, electricity, medical care, and medical equipment).
·
Transportation:
By August 2017, the City will develop revised and improved
accessible transportation plans through an inventory and
analysis of its transportation assets and by fostering
partnerships with transportation providers. The City will also
develop plans for the effective deployment of accessible
vehicles during emergencies.
·
Evacuation
Task Force:
A High Rise Building Evacuation Task Force will be assembled
consisting of subject matter experts and representatives from
City agencies and disability organizations. The task force
will create and implement a high rise evacuation plan by
September 2018.
·
Disability
Community Advisory Panel: The
City will establish a panel to gather expertise and feedback
from the disability community.
Susan
Dooha, Executive Director of CIDNY, commented: “Nearly
25 years after passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act,
we have achieved a landmark decision to end exclusion of
people with disabilities from the planning for emergencies and
disasters. Finally, New Yorkers with disabilities will be able
to evacuate to accessible shelters. They will get timely,
appropriate information in ways they can use. No one will be
left on the side of the road because of a lack of accessible
transportation. We look forward to working with the Mayor and
the City’s agencies to take these agreements from the page to
the real world.”
Joan
Peters, Executive Director of BCID, commented: “We
are very pleased that the City has collaborated with the
disability community to develop this comprehensive plan, which
includes access to the shelter system, accessible
transportation, and assistance with evacuation from high rise
buildings. This agreement recognizes that all New Yorkers
should benefit from the City’s disaster planning.”
Christine
Chuang, Senior Staff Attorney at DRA, said: “This
case was about saving the lives of New Yorkers with
disabilities. As a result of this agreement, New York City
will now have one of the most integrated emergency plans in
the country. Most importantly, the lives and safety of New
Yorkers with disabilities will no longer be put unnecessarily
at risk during disasters.”
Dan
Brown of Sheppard Mullin commented:
“Judge Furman’s detailed and thoughtful decision provided a
roadmap for the parties to reach this agreement on
comprehensive emergency plans that will protect the lives and
safety of hundreds of thousands of our most vulnerable
citizens before, during, and after emergencies.”
This
action comes on the heels of other successful emergency
planning cases litigated by DRA in Los Angeles, Oakland, and
Richmond, CA as part of DRA’s National Emergency Preparedness
Initiative, which strives to change the face of disaster
planning to incorporate the needs of people with disabilities
nationwide. DRA recently filed a lawsuit against the District
of Columbia for its failure to adequately plan for the needs
of people with disabilities in its emergency planning. For more information, please see
www.dralegal.org.