USA TODAY US Edition

Colo. legislator’s use of wheelchair shows accessibil­ity gaps

State has made progress but allies keep working

- Natasha Lovato

The Colorado Capitol looks different than it did four years ago.

One notable addition: The ramps on the House floor didn’t used to be there.

When Democratic Rep. David Ortiz of Littleton took office in 2021, he became the first Colorado legislator to use a wheelchair, highlighti­ng critical gaps in accessibil­ity needs in the historic building.

Although accessible ramps have been installed, the Capitol building still poses safety concerns for those using wheelchair­s, as some areas are still inaccessib­le despite elevators.

The 41-year-old served in the U.S. Army and was left paralyzed from the waist down nine years ago after surviving a helicopter crash in Afghanista­n.

In the past four years, he has introduced 21 bills regarding disability rights, including six this year, and said Colorado’s recent increase in disability rights embodies why representa­tion matters.

“This is a club you can join any time, and by club, I mean becoming disabled,” Ortiz said in a recent interview. “I can’t tell you how many of my colleagues have championed disability rights bills because they see how difficult it is for me to just do my basic job in a building that’s not even fully accessible itself or hear them parroting my talking points, which gives me goosebumps to hear them say this is a club we can join any time.” Ortiz added that the real heavy lifting will happen when more people with disabiliti­es become lawmakers.

“Whether they’re blind, or deaf, or live life in a wheelchair, or have cerebral palsy – unless people like that get elected to office, our voices won’t truly be represente­d, and that’s the bottom line.”

How does Colorado rank when it comes to accessibil­ity?

Ortiz believes Colorado is leading the way in accessibil­ity in lawmaking, although some parts of the state still lack basic accessibil­ity.

Former Ms. Wheelchair Colorado and current Denver nurse Chris Lane, 55, agrees.

Lane was celebratin­g her son’s 17th birthday on Oct. 28, 2016, with a rock climbing trip in Clear Creek Canyon when she slipped and fell 80 feet.

“When I hit the bottom, I was no longer the nurse – I became the patient,” Lane said.

The fall shattered Lane’s wrist and T6 thoracic vertebrae.

The damage to her spinal cord was so great that she became an incomplete paraplegic.

“I am 100% a wheelchair user,” she said. “I have my spirit, I have my brain, I just don’t have the use of my legs, and that’s OK.”

Lane said that the pivotal moment for her as a new paraplegic was when she went to her local recreation center to swim using a chair lift, only to find it broken.

“I was so disappoint­ed, and I just remember thinking, is this what my life is going to be like in a wheelchair? My first want in my life as a new paraplegic, is this really how it will be?

“The next day, I wrote a letter to the rec center asking to install two working chair lifts. It took a while, but they did it so I and other people could get into the pool, and that fired me up to be an advocate for those of us in wheelchair­s and with disabiliti­es.”

Although her life is different than she imagined, she said she has “never been angry, I just made the best out of what I have – I get up, get out and get rolling. This community is one anyone could join anytime.”

A Colorado-born app tracks accessibil­ity

Lane and Ortiz told the Coloradoan that utilizing technology like the Roll Mobility app has been helpful for them and others who are disabled.

Roll Mobility started in Colorado and currently is available in 37 countries on Apple and Android devices. The app was inspired by accessibil­ity-forward establishm­ents such as Brewabilit­y Lab, the site of Lane’s recent interview with the Coloradoan, part of the USA TODAY Network. The brewery and restaurant located on South Broadway in Englewood is fully accessible to anyone with physical, developmen­tal or intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

Roll Mobility app co-founder Rachel Zoeller said she discovered the need for an app that could track and rate the accessibil­ity of restaurant­s, public spaces, businesses, trails, and parking areas after becoming a wheelchair user herself.

“Before Roll Mobility, there wasn’t really a place to catalog that informatio­n,” Zoeller said.

“It’s exhausting to live a disabled life and constantly fight for rights, so it catalogs all the experience­s we are living and having. ADA is the bare minimum for what people with disabiliti­es deserve.”

“Whether they’re blind, or deaf, or live life in a wheelchair, or have cerebral palsy – unless people like that get elected to office, our voices won’t truly be represente­d, and that’s the bottom line.”

Rep. David Ortiz

‘I want to enjoy some of the freedoms I’ve fought for.’

After four years as a lawmaker representi­ng his community and those with disabiliti­es, Ortiz announced he would not run for reelection.

Although he will leave at the end of his term this year, Ortiz believes his work made an impact and encourages those living with a disability to get involved with politics and take his place.

“I’ve served, I’ve done my job, and I’ve made a lot of sacrifices to do so, and now I want to enjoy some of the freedoms I’ve fought for,” he said.

That includes exploring the IVF process with his wife, he said.

“I’m 41 years old; I’m not trying to be Robert De Niro having a kid in his 80s, so you know that’s why I’m leaving, to enjoy some of the things that are personal for me.”

But that doesn’t mean his advocacy work is over.

Ortiz said his “dream scenario coming back” would be working with advocacy organizati­ons and helping them “and up their game, and lobby more effectivel­y and efficientl­y and to recruit and train people to run for office.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY NATASHA LOVATO/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Chris Lane is nurse and a former Ms. Wheelchair Colorado.
PHOTOS BY NATASHA LOVATO/ USA TODAY NETWORK Chris Lane is nurse and a former Ms. Wheelchair Colorado.
 ?? ?? Colorado Rep. David Ortiz on the Colorado Capitol floor. He was the first state legislator to use a wheelchair.
Colorado Rep. David Ortiz on the Colorado Capitol floor. He was the first state legislator to use a wheelchair.

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