Hey group,
I wouldn't wish this on my worst enemy.  Linda and I are both totally blind.  
We just finished packing up our personal belongings in preparation for the 
painting contractors and carpeting people who will be arriving next week.  The 
thing is, we have accumulated a lot of stuff in living here for the past 
twenty-four  years.   When a painter comes in, they have to move everything and 
that means record cabinets, stereo equipment, books, VCR tapes, cassettes, all 
of our heavy coats, etc. etc.  it took us quite a while to do it all.
Even now, after two full weekends of filling cartons, I still have our sound 
system to disassemble.  That will mean labeling every single cable so that I 
know how to put it back when they're finished.
Not every room in the house is being painted this time.  Our kitchen, hallway 
and hall closet, living room and upper hallway are being done.  This house is 
so old that the corners of the walls are starting to crack and some pieces of 
plaster are falling down.  It isn't as awful as it sounds.  On the corners of 
walls made of sheetrock, the builders usually use something called a corner 
bead.  It's a metal plate which extends from the floor to the ceiling and 
protects the edges of the sheetrock from being damaged.  But as a house gets 
older, it settles and the thin layer of wet plaster which covers that beading, 
dries out and cracks.  Almost every single corner in this entire house has the 
same problem but the ones on the main floor are the worst.  We live in a 
hillside home.  that means the house is built with an additional floor at the 
rear.  Yu can come in the front door through our main entrance and the kitchen 
will be on your left.  On your right, is an alcove which holds the stairs going 
up to the second floor.  if you walk straight ahead, you come into our living 
room/dining room area and there's a door on your right which leads to a second 
set of steps going down.  This is a relatively modern home so both flights of 
steps are right above each other.  if you go down this second set of steps, you 
are on our lower floor.  there's a half bath down there, a laundry room and a 
big family room where I'm now sitting.  At the end of the family room is a 
double glass door which leads out onto the patio at the rear of the house.
The front of this floor, where the stairs come down, is actually under ground.  
If you look at the back of our house, you'll see the patio, then two more 
floors above that.  From the front, there's only one additional floor.
There are a lot of hillside houses in Pennsylvania because the area is so 
hilly.  

Now back to the renovation.  We had to fight the landlord tooth and nail to get 
this work done.  We ended up filing a complaint with the Human Relations 
Commission stating that they were treating us differently because of our 
blindness.  they were, there's no doubt about that.  We are blind so they 
didn't figure we'd need new paint or carpeting and they refused to do any 
renovations.  On top of that, they tried to imply that we had refused the work. 
 It was an awful mess!  We had to bring in our own contractors to do the work.  
But in the settlement, we got them to agree to spend up to twenty-five hundred 
dollars on repairs, painting and carpeting.  We got smart there and used people 
who had worked for the landlord's agent.  In that way, we could be sure that 
the work would be done right.  The contractors would have us to deal with and, 
if they messed up, the landlord's agent is a really nasty character.  I have 
had several fights with him in the past.  It doesn't take much for this guy to 
go to four letter words, yelling screaming and threatening.  

We had an old gas stove that was about ready to blow up.  The pilots were so 
badly corroded that they wouldn't stay lit and the oven changed temperature as 
much as ninety degrees at any given time.  They sent in some so-called gas 
appliance expert who claimed that the stove was fine.  So we brought in our own 
licensed professional and he condemned the stove in writing.  The township 
building inspector sited the landlord and gave him ten days to replace the 
stove.  We got a new one but it's the cheapest one they could find.  At least 
it's a new one and it has those electronic lighters, not the old fashioned open 
pilot type we used to have.

The same thing happened with the refrigerator and they tried to give us an 
apartment sized one instead of the standard nineteen cubic foot model we had.  
I forcefully reminded the landlord that we were entitled to the same equipment 
we had before and that right was protected by law.  That sent him off into 
another one of his famous screaming fits.
We did get the right refrigerator.

But the biggest joke of all was our driveway.  When it was installed thirty 
years ago, the contractor had done a terrible job.  As it got older, the center 
of the asphalt sank until there was a huge hole in the middle of the pavement 
which measured about eight inches deep in places.  We begged and pleaded to 
have that driveway repaired and they refused.  But the building inspector wrote 
them a letter informing the owner that if one of us was injured by falling, the 
owner would be liable for all kinds of damages.
The driveway was resurfaced about two weeks later.  


As you can imagine, the relationship we have had with the landlord hasn't been 
all tea and roses.  but we can't afford to move.  If we could, we'd be out of 
here.  Those two flights of steps are hell for my wife.  Her knee surgery 
didn't work well and she has to climb up and down those stairs.  It causes her 
a lot of unnecessary pain.  We like the house but we could do without those 
blasted stairs.
I wanted to have a stair climber installed but Linda won't hear of it.
they aren't very safe for blind people anyway.

Well, that's our story my blind friends.  It has been one hell of a ride up 
till now.
I hope that those contractors get in and out of here with the least possible 
trouble.
 
.    John and Linda Justice
With guide dogs Jake and Zachary
PERSONAL E-MAIL:  [email protected]
John and Linda Justice
With guide dogs Jake and Zachary
PERSONAL E-MAIL:  [email protected]
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