The Arizona Republic

Groups sue over limited access for concerts

Disabled people want to rock out at Red Rocks

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DENVER - A coalition of groups that advocate for the rights of the disabled is suing the city of Denver claiming it’s discrimina­ting against people who use wheelchair­s by failing to provide necessary access for them at concerts at Red Rocks.

Disability Law Colorado, Civil Rights Education and Enforcemen­t Center and the Colorado Cross-Disability Coalition represent six plaintiffs in the federal class-action lawsuit.

KUSA-TV in Denver reports that Red Rocks only has two wheelchair-accessible rows, one in the front and one in the back.

The lawsuit alleges the city is failing to prevent people who aren’t disabled from getting space in the front row at Red Rocks. It demands the city clearly mark the accessible rows as being for disabled customers to discourage others from occupying them. It also seeks to require city staff to ask people occupying space in the front row about their disability needs and to move them elsewhere if they’re not disabled.

Frank Mango is one of the plaintiffs. He said he’s been going to Red Rocks for 30 years. Accessibil­ity became an issue for him three years ago after a fall in a home-improvemen­t accident. He’s now in a wheelchair.

“It’s just frustratin­g, because I’m a big, huge, monster concert fan and I’ve always been even before my accident,” Mango said. “Now being in a wheelchair, a lot of my passions are out of my reach. That’s the least I can do (go to concerts), one of the easy things I can do now. It should be fairly easy. It’s just frustratin­g that it’s almost impossible to get front row here.”

Mango said he doesn’t like sitting all the way in the back. He said seats in the first row are almost always sold out for face value and available only at inflated prices on third party sites.

Mango said that ticket sites may warn customers when they’re buying frontrow tickets that they’re buying accessible seating.

However, he said that hasn’t stopped people who aren’t disabled from buying them.

“I know that’s a lot of people coming in fraudulent­ly, buying the front row seats,” he said. “That’s one of the biggest concerns, as they have no morals or no ethics. I can go in and press this button, they’re going to let me buy the ticket, when I get to Red Rocks, they’re not going to question me whether or not I need those seats or not for disability.”

Alison Butler Daniels, director of legal services at Disability Law Colorado, said the city is allowed to ask people who buy front-row seats if they have a disability that requires them to be in the seats.

“They can’t further inquire about their disability, but they can ask that simple question,” she said. “And if the answer is no, then they can be re-seated to one of the other 9,000 plus seats within Red Rocks and people who actually needs those seats can be reseated to those accessible seats.”

Butler Daniels said the plaintiffs aren’t asking for money. “We’re asking them to make the necessary changes so that people who use wheelchair­s can enjoy this amazing Colorado treasure,” she said.

“We think a lot of self-policing would happen if everybody understood that was in fact the accessible section,” Butler Daniels said.

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