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14 THE COOPERATOR —  APRIL 2020  COOPERATOR.COM  Providing a Full Range of   Architectural & Engineering Services  In-house professional   expertise in:  Exterior Restoration &       Historic Preservation  Construction Inspection  Alteration Review  Architectural Design  Engineering:  n  Mechanica  l   n  Electrical  n  Plumbing  n  Structural  Energy Audits  Forensic Investigation  Façade Safety Inspection       Program Reporting  Green Design –       LEED Professionals  Client satisfaction    assured by the active   daily involvement of    the firm’s principals  www.lawlessmangione.com  info@lawlessmangione.com  914.423.8844  100+ Years  /   380+ Buildings   /   1000s of Satisfied Owners, Residents and Boards  l   State-of-the-Art Financial Reporting    l   Responsiveness & Communication are Our Top Priorities    l   Leader in Technology & Compliance Tracking    l   Energy Auctions & Volume Purchasing to Reduce Building Costs    l   Long-Term Continuity of Managers & Systems    l   Greening NYC One Building at a Time  Management  for the Ages  675 Third Ave. New York, NY 10017 212-370-9200    ellimanpm.com info@ellimanpm.com  RANKED #1 RESIDENTIAL MANAGEMENT COMPANY IN NYC  EllimanRethink_NEW_DEPM ad_V1.indd   1  4/18/19   11:46 AM  electrical  blackout,  when  power  goes  off    for 24 hours or more?  First, let’s examine who the “vulnerable   residents” really are. According to Allan   B. Fraser, senior building code special-  ist at the National Fire Protection Asso-  ciation, generally speaking, there are fi ve  also those with partial hearing. Th  e lat-  categories of disability: lack of mobility,  ter oft en use a combination of lip-reading   impaired vision, deafness or impaired  and hearing aids to understand spoken   hearing, speech disorders or inabilities,  communication; both of these are oft en   and cognitive disabilities. Each of these  disrupted during emergencies.  categories represents a diff erent challenge   when it comes to managing emergency  you’ve got sirens going off , it can seriously   situations.  Mobility  “Folks with mobility disabilities use   one or more devices — things like canes,   crutches, manually-operated wheelchairs,   scooters — whatever they need to maneu-  ver  through their environment,” Fraser   explains. Anyone who has diffi  culty walk-  ing — or indeed, is even extremely unco-  ordinated — is considered disabled in this   way for our purposes. “A mobility disabil-  ity can be an issue with any part of a body.   Maybe you can’t open doors, or you can’t   go down stairs, you can’t press keypads,   whatever that might be.”  An  important  consideration  here  is   that  not all mobility  issues  are  obvious   to the eye. Fraser himself mentions this   when he gives lectures on the subject. “I   played hockey in high school and college   and have had operations on both knees,”   he  says.  “So  if  I  had  to  run  down  10  or   12 fl ights of stairs in a hotel, I couldn’t   run. It might take me too long — and you   can’t see that. I also happen to be Type II   diabetic as I’ve gotten older, and what else   you can’t see is I had heart surgery in 2007   and I’ve got two stents in my heart.” In his  not hamper a person’s ability to shimmy   case — and there are many, many more  out a fi re escape, or quickly descend ten   like him — someone who looks perfectly  fl ights of stairs. But a speech impairment   able to walk down 70 fl ights of stairs may  is still relevant to this discussion.   have extreme diffi  culty doing so.  Vision  “When  you  get  into  blindness  or  low   vision, that includes people with partial   or  total  vision loss,” Fraser says. “Some   people with this disability can distinguish   light and dark, sharply contrasting colors,   and very large print, but can’t read small   print and have trouble negotiating dimly   lit spaces, or tolerating hard glare.”  “Many people who are blind depend   on their sense of touch and their sense   of hearing to perceive their environment,   what’s around them,” Fraser continuess.   “Th  ere’s a risk that a person with a visual   impairment could miss a visual cue such   as a new obstruction that occurred dur-  ing the event that could aff ect egress, so   if something falls off  a wall of a building   or gets moved because of an earthquake,   they’re not going to see it.”  Less dramatically, there’s also the pos-  sibility that a visually challenged resident  building—regardless of age or physical   will not be able to read certain handouts.   “If you’re handing out information, it   needs  to  be  in  multiple  formats.  So  you   can’t hand someone an 8 ½” x 11” piece   of paper with 12-point font on it and say,   ‘Well, now, I gave this to all the residents.’   It needs to be available in large print, and   probably in Braille.”  Hearing  Th  is category includes the deaf, and   “If you’ve got fi re alarms going off ,   aff ect whatever hearing they have,” Fraser   says. “People who are deaf or hard of hear-  ing must rely on reading for information,   and must be able to clearly see the face of   the  person  who’s speaking if they’re  lip-  reading. Th  ose who use sign language—  and, by the way, American Sign Language   is  the third most  common  language  in   this country, behind English and Span-  ish!—so people who are hard of hearing   or deaf may have diffi  culty understanding   oral communication or receiving notifi ca-  tions by equipment that is exclusively au-  ditory, such as telephones, fi re alarms, or   public distress systems.”  Let’s say the building is being evacu-  ated because of an earthquake. If the su-  per gestures to his left  and says, “Don’t go   that way,” how will this be interpreted by   a deaf person? “People who are more vi-  sual than they are auditory, that’s the way   they’re likely going to go, even though I   said don’t go that way,” Fraser says. Th  e   messages have to be phrased to avoid   negatives.  Speech and Cognitive Impairments  Obviously, a speech disability would   “One example that’s very clear is tele-  phones in an elevator,” Fraser says. “Say   the elevator gets jammed, the person gets   stuck, they pick up that phone and can’t   tell anybody what’s going on. So that can   be an issue.”  Cognitive impairments, Fraser ex-  plains, can be caused by a wide range of   conditions, including but not limited to:   developmental disabilities, multiple scle-  rosis, depression, alcoholism, Alzheim-  er’s, Parkinson’s, traumatic brain injury,   chronic fatigue, stroke, and some psychi-  atric conditions. “All result in the decrease   in ability to process and understand infor-  mation,” he says. “Th  ey impair a person   from accessing building features due to   the inability to process and understand   the information necessary to use those   features.”  Helping Out   So how to plan for everyone in your   VULNERABLE...  continued from page 1


































































































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