It’s been a year since we first read about the NAD’s complaint against the Redskins. In a nutshell, complainants wanted access to announcements and rulings and that sort of thing during games.

This morning, the Washington Post printed an update on the complaint.

I’m fuzzy on what the update itself is, but basically the NAD says the Redskins franchise hasn’t done enough. The Redskins say they don’t know what more they can do, and no way in heck are these announcements going up on the JumboTron.

Read into the situation what you will.  I’m not familiar enough with the case to know what technological remedies have been accepted or rejected, and so as a Redskins fan I just have to sit, let the lawyers battle it out, and hope someday I’ll have the same game experience as everyone else.  But one thing I glean from the WaPo piece is that the Redskins would like to believe that asking for equal access for all paying fans, deaf or not, is woefully unjust.

David Donovan, attorney for the team, said in an interview last week that the team had gone above and beyond to accommodate deaf and hearing-impaired fans.

“At this point, we are scratching our heads,” Donovan said. “As far as we are concerned, we have done everything that we have been asked to do. There is no other stadium in the NFL or professional sports that has attempted to accommodate the hearing impaired as much as we do.”

The thing is, if they can accommodate hearing fans by maintaining a sound system and hiring the personnel to run it and send out these announcements, then why is making sure the same information is available visually going “above and beyond” for the “hearing impaired?” Why isn’t it instead a scenario of making sure all fans get what they paid for - a good ol’ game of gridiron and all the trappings that come with it?


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