The Day

Blind barber awarded $100K

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Boston (AP) — A legally blind barber was awarded $100,000 by a Massachuse­tts commission against discrimina­tion after it says he was wrongly fired.

The Boston Herald reported Saturday that Joel Nixon had been working for Tony’s Barber Shop in Norton for a year before his boss discovered his condition.

The 29-year-old has retinitis pigmentosa, which affects his peripheral vision and makes it hard for him to see at night. He’s been declared legally blind by the Massachuse­tts Commission for the Blind, and Nixon said there is a possibilit­y he may lose his sight forever.

“I could wake up someday and be completely blind, but my goal is to have a nice home with a nice backyard for my son,” a tearful Nixon told the Herald. “I’ve never been to Disneyland, and I want to take him. I want to take him before I lose my vision. I’m trying to do the best I can.”

But Nixon said it hasn’t affected his work. Barber shop owner Tony Morales fired him in 2012 after he tripped over a customer’s legs and then later that day tripped over a chair in the waiting room, Nixon said.

Morales disputes Nixon’s account, saying Nixon was not a licensed barber and simply was not pulling his weight in the shop. “It’s a bunch of lies,” he told the Herald. “All of this is false accusation­s.”

Morales said he plans to appeal the state’s Friday decision, which awarded Nixon $75,000 in lost wages and $25,000 for emotional distress.

Nixon said after his firing, he struggled to find employment, saw his condo go into foreclosur­e and was forced to apply for food stamps and appeal to charities for Christmas gifts for his family.

He said he’s still cutting hair for loyal customers — who call him the “Blind Barber.”

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