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Large size people have a number of
difficulties with public accommodations. Some of these include:
seating in restaurants, waiting rooms, transportation terminals,
buses, trains, cars, airplanes, offices, movie theaters,
auditoriums, and many other places. The most difficult seating is
attached seating where the seat is attached at a fixed distance from
the table, or to the seat next to it. Other difficulties include
chairs with arms that are set too narrowly to fit wider hips;
restaurants that have only booths, or a limited number of tables
with movable chairs; bathroom stalls that have narrow doors; and
picnic tables where the bench is attached at a fixed distance from
the table.
Airline seating is notoriously small, even for people of average
size. Airplane bathrooms are very small, and difficult for people of
size as well as people with disabilities.
In subways, some stores, and other checkpoints, there are often
turnstiles that are too small for large bodies to fit through.
One difficulty is that sometimes bathrooms are renovated to help
people with disabilities, but the end result is that the bathroom is
made less accessible to large people. For instance, sometimes they
install hand grab bars on either side of the toilet so that people
who use wheelchairs can lift themselves onto and off of the toilet
seat. But if the grab bars are not set wide enough apart, a person
with large hips cannot fit in between them.
Architects, furniture designers, interior decorators, and other
planners are often not aware of the needs of the larger people who
will frequent the places they design. There have been some
improvements, however. Some new movie theaters, for instance, have
installed what they call "love seats" that can fit two average size
people or one large person. Newly built sports arenas often have
wider seats in certain sections (for which they charge more money).
The Council on Size & Weight Discrimination considers public
accommodation a serious issue, and encourages consumers and members
of the public to complain when there is no appropriate seating in a
public place. Letters can be sent, or phone calls made, to the
owners or managers of the property. We urge activists not to be
angry or aggressive, but rather to suggest changes in a constructive
way, and to point out how much better the facility would be if it
could accommodate people of all sizes.
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