killing_rose (
killing_rose) wrote in
accessibility_fail2010-03-13 02:15 pm
My college library, the continuing adventures
Because the library stairs are steep, I've noticed that I have more of a tendency to nearly fall while using them than I do on other stairs on campus. I've had a number of increasingly close calls in the past several weeks, primarily because my balance has been more shot than normal. I can live with the pain that using stairs creates for me; however, I figured that it wasn't really bright to keep risking my life for books.
As previously detailed, back in October or some such, the librarians don't allow students use the elevator. My hope was that they would be willing to let people use the elevator anyway, if they (I) actually needed to.
Today, I finally braved talking to the librarian. (Mostly because it was one who hasn't screamed at me in the past.)
And she said, "Well, we can check out an elevator key to you. But well, not today."
"Oh?"
"The elevator's broken. We're not letting anyone use it, though we have been sending books back and forth."
This makes sense to me, so I nod in agreement--I can stay on the first floor for a while. Or go up and down carefully.
Apparently, I can check out the key on Monday, probably.
This, however, is not the fail. I'm counting it as a accessibility win, albeit with caveats.
The fail is that, to talk to the nice woman at the desk, I had to walk up a flight of stairs to reach the first floor at all.
Oh, humans.
As previously detailed, back in October or some such, the librarians don't allow students use the elevator. My hope was that they would be willing to let people use the elevator anyway, if they (I) actually needed to.
Today, I finally braved talking to the librarian. (Mostly because it was one who hasn't screamed at me in the past.)
And she said, "Well, we can check out an elevator key to you. But well, not today."
"Oh?"
"The elevator's broken. We're not letting anyone use it, though we have been sending books back and forth."
This makes sense to me, so I nod in agreement--I can stay on the first floor for a while. Or go up and down carefully.
Apparently, I can check out the key on Monday, probably.
This, however, is not the fail. I'm counting it as a accessibility win, albeit with caveats.
The fail is that, to talk to the nice woman at the desk, I had to walk up a flight of stairs to reach the first floor at all.
Oh, humans.

no subject
Perhaps one of your classmates could be hornswoggled into staking out the joint. Xie would watch for the UPS delivery truck, and follow the muscular delivery person in. I'm betting the librarians want to keep on xir good side, and that won't require the delivery person to hump boxes of books up two flights of stairs.
no subject
Have you spoken to the library director about this? Because desk staff, even full librarians, are often not empowered to make changes in policy--not even for really, really benighted policies like the one to not let students in need of accommodation use the elevator.
no subject
no subject
I'm still skeptical, but I'm going to go in on Monday when the director's there and talk to her. And if that doesn't work...my dean loves me.
no subject
*deep sigh*
Thankfully my college has lifts in the library, and there is only one place in there I can't seem to access. Of course I have yet to attempt using one of the elevators to the stacks that my friend referred to as "super tiny."
no subject
I also realize that since the building's something like 50 years old, it would be absolutely impossible for *anyone* on this campus to have been the architect.
That said, my "oh humans" was aimed more at the (probably) long-dead architect and the fact that one of the reasons the administration--not the librarians--give as to why the library's issues haven't been fixed is because "the next library's going to have more accessibility!" As a campus, we've been waiting on New Library for five years, and it looks like it'll be another 10 at this rate.
I promise, I like librarians. You all keep me in books without bankrupting my bank account. My research librarians help me find books on esoteric topics and don't comment on the state of sanity. And my college library has Sandman. What's *not* to like?
It is the library-as-a-building and policies that have probably stayed the same for 50 years (if other issues I've had on campus are any indication) that frustrates me, not the people.
no subject
Possibly. On the other hand, I work in the student mailroom, so I could just *ask* Bruce the UPS dude tomorrow.
no subject
Once you are in the library, there is still only the one elevator; it's several decades old, and rapidly disintegrating. And, as previously noted, students can only access it if they have a key.
The disintegration's why I can believe the "we can put books in it, but..." line. If it weren't for the fact that I've watched my ex grit her teeth before going in the elevator while she worked at the library, I probably wouldn't.
I'd like to note that no one I know of was aware of the fact that you could get a key prior to yesterday when I finally asked.
no subject
They should just give keys to students with mobility disabilities upon request once (if?) they fix it. I hope it works out soon.