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If the 20 hotels there could share portable lifts, it would satisfy the requirements and protect their bottom line, said Judy Bowman, owner of Living Waters Spa. "I've never had a request for a pool lift in eight and a half years. It seems excessive," said Bowman, who has nine rooms and six condos. For large chains such as Hilton or Holiday Inn, the challenge is more likely about time than money because of their deep pockets. But chains can also get bogged down in bureaucracy, said Mehmet Erdem, a professor who studies hotel operations at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Corporate headquarters have to work with management companies, building owners and others to make sure upgrades are done uniformly and without tarnishing their brands. "The challenge is when we have 1,700 hotels and 200 are corporate owned, 500 are franchised and their others are managed by second- or third-tier companies," Erdem said. Twenty-four senators sided with the hoteliers in a March letter urging Attorney General Eric Holder to postpone the deadline and essentially start over with a comment and rulemaking process. John McGovern, an Illinois-based consultant who helps local governments comply with accessibility laws, said many municipal pools have had lifts for years. He's never heard a child getting hurt on the equipment. McGovern said most municipal pools that still need upgrades should be able to find the money. Some smaller cities with tight budgets might have to put off the upgrades, he said, but they should still be able to remain open. Mark Perriello of the American Association of People With Disabilities said pools have had plenty of time. The law changes were announced more than 18 months ago. He also said portable lifts miss the point
-- that disabled people should have access without asking for help. "There are people in the industry who do not want to do this," Perriello said. Many owners procrastinated, causing orders to back up. Margaret McGrath, vice president of marketing for pool equipment maker S.R. Smith, said the Oregon-based company hired extra workers to handle the influx of orders. "We've been beating the drum and for a long time, as is human nature, people put it off," McGrath said. Orders -- mostly for portable lifts -- piled up so quickly that requests the company could normally fill within days started taking up to three weeks, McGrath said. A few weeks later orders dropped noticeably after the government mandated bolted-down chairs. "It created a lot of uncertainty," McGrath said. "And when people are uncertain they just stop." In the Atlanta suburbs, Bob McCallister is in charge of getting Cobb County's pools ready for summer. He's got six indoor pools that already have accessibility upgrades, but two of them are big enough to require a second lift
-- at about $3,500 each. McCallister said he's lucky the county has a penny sales tax that pays for upkeep of its parks and recreation centers. Otherwise he might have a hard time finding money. "When mandates come up like this without appropriations, it's a hardship for a lot of agencies," McCallister said. "It seems like an overkill to me." ___ Online: American Association for People with Disabilities: American Hotel and Lodging Association:
http://www.aapd.com/
http://www.ahla.com/
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