Todd, you can begin with the building's owner.  You might want to  include 
the help of your local, Federally funded Center for Independent  Living  
(CIL), to check out the area for compliance.  If the ramp is  not in 
compliance, the CIL will assist you in resolving this issue.  An  injury to 
anyone 
using this ramp could prove costly and might motivate someone  in city/town 
management to get the ball rolling.
 
Best Wishes
 
 
In a message dated 8/14/2012 11:49:59 A.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

I went  to my local city courthouse this morning and they have a long 
sloped walkway  that goes up to the door, and the door has a handicapped entry 
thing.   The problem is that in order to even get to the bottom of the long 
sloped  walkway (which appears in compliance), on each side of it there are 
steep  sidewalks that go down to the handicapped parking.  Where the curb cut  
ramp was, there was probably 3 feet of  REALLY steep, almost flipped my  
chair backwards even leaning forward with my stomach on my legs pushing.   
Whoever can get up that one (paras obv), then there is another 20ft or more of  
less steep walkway, but still much steeper than the long sloped walkway up 
to  the door.  Is there anything I can do that will actually get a  
response?  Thanks

Todd 
c-6 inc  '89

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