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WATCHDOG REPORT: Misuse harms the legitimately disabled

The Post and Courier
Thursday, May 15, 2008


Melissa Haneline
The Post and Courier

Video

The Post and Courier Watchdog team recently hit the streets of Charleston to gauge the abuse of handicapped parking system.

The Post and Courier Watchdog team recently hit the streets of Charleston to gauge the abuse of handicapped parking system. Watch »

BY THE NUMBERS

-- In 2007, the state issued nearly 137,000 blue permanent placards for the handicapped to South Carolina residents.

-- That's up by nearly 24,000 issued in 2003.

-- Last year, the state issued 21,302 temporary placards compared with 17,489 in 2003.

-- More than 63,000 permanent and temporary placards were issued in Berkeley, Charleston and Dorchester counties alone.

-- According to Census Bureau records, 87,678 people in these counties have some form of disability.

Parking Cheaters: The series

Monday: People without disabilities using DMV-issued handicapped placards

Tuesday: Handicap placards make it easy to cheat

Wednesday: What can be done to stop parking cheaters? A lot

Today: Misuse harms the legitimately disabled.

Other stories coming soon on Watchdog:

P-Tags: People misuse P-tags, too

Coin Jammers: How cheaters jam meters and rip off taxpayers

Airport scammers: How people use placards to get free parking at airports

Market cheaters: Vendors at City Market say people use placards because of frustration.

And more ...

Don't let the pizza delivery sign atop Kathy Andria's car fool you.

On bad days, her crooked spine and arthritic bones ache so much she can hardly walk. Other times, it's the perfect job because it keeps her moving and the cargo is light.

Still, the juxtaposition of a food delivery sign against the handicapped-parking placard hanging from her rearview mirror has raised plenty of eyebrows. A police officer once assumed her placard was bogus because of her job, and he wrote her a ticket.

Andria's experience illustrates how challenging it is for law-enforcement officers to discern violators from the hundreds of thousands of disabled people who rely on parking privileges for the handicapped.

Roughly half a million residents in South Carolina- the state isn't sure exactly how many - have handicapped-parking placards. Last year alone, the state Department of Motor Vehicles issued nearly 137,000 of the blue permanent placards and 21,302 temporary placards, which are red.

Tightening rules for handicapped parking — as many states have done and South Carolina is considering — could subject legitimate users to more scrutiny, cost them more to park and add more stress in their already stressful lives.

Andria, 45, says she welcomes the extra scrutiny if it means cutting down on the kind of abuse she sees virtually everywhere she goes.

Andria was injured about 20 years ago while delivering pizza in West Ashley. 'A 15-year-old boy who had just gotten his permit that day was doing about 70. He broadsided me, folded around me like a hotdog.'

The accident left Andria with a shattered hip, crushed pelvis, and four fractured vertebrae. Today, the pain still comes and goes. If she's feeling OK, she won't even use a space for the handicapped. But when she needs to, it's frustrating to find all the reserved spots taken.

She once saw a woman pull into a space for the handicapped at Citadel Mall, step out in high heels and walk around to her trunk to fetch a television set. She then heaved the heavy appliance onto her shoulder and hauled it into the store.

Andria didn't confront that woman, but she has cornered others and even called the police.

Janet Schumacher, the city of Charleston's disabilities issues coordinator, has a form of multiple sclerosis and sometimes relies on her placard for the handicapped to park close to building entrances.

She estimates that about 75 percent of people using the placards have legitimate disabilities, 20 percent are using placards that don't belong to them and that five percent are flagrant cheaters.

But she sees the issue more as a reflection of people's character rather than a criminal matter.

Harriet McBryde Johnson, a local lawyer with a congenital neuromuscular disease, says placard abusers are 'a real problem. We see altered placards, expired placards, and people using them in such large numbers in certain areas, that it's hard to believe so many are needed.'

For many disabled people, conveniently located handicap parking spaces makes the difference 'between being able to get out of a car and go where they need to go and being stuck.'

She said some in the medical community need to take the issue seriously. 'It's a violation of professional ethics if that's happening,' she said, referring to the possibility that some doctors sign placard applications for employees. 'People shouldn't be using grandma's tag, or borrowing it. It's serious business and the law.'

As Andria drove around downtown one recent morning, rain poured down on her windshield. Bad weather tends to aggravate her condition, and it seems like the parking abuses are more prevalent on such days, she said. Everybody wants a good parking spot.

Contact Ron Menchaca at rmenchaca@postandcourier.com or 937-5724. Contact Tony Bartelme at tbartelme@postandcourier.com or 937-5554.




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Comments

This article has  3 comment(s)

Posted by Strider on May 16, 2008 at 8:09 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Have you seen how easy it is to get a placard? My Mom lived with me for awhile, she was very sick but she was able to walk a little so the doctor, without us asking, filled out the paper work for her to get one. That was nice of her and I believe doctors should be able to do that. When I went to the DMV to get one the lady behind that counter asked me how many I wanted. I said just one I guess even though I have two cars we could switch it back and forth. She said "Hey, they are only a dollar each you should get one for any of her friends so you don't have to switch it to their cars". I ended up getting two that were good for 4 years, I believe. Anyway, my Mom has passed and I still have those placards. Sometimes I give handicapped people ride to stores and things like that so I still use them (ONLY FOR THAT PURPOSE). But they were far to easy to get and keep.



Posted by mstaterhed on May 16, 2008 at 3:28 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I agree, it is way too easy to get a placard. My mom has Rheumatoid Arthritis and SLE, as well as heart problems, she couldn't get halfway through a grocery store without needing to sit down, but refused to get a handicapped placard. She finally broke down after her latest shunt had to be inserted and got handicapped plates. I inherited the RA and SLE from her, but like my mom; I only use it when I HAVE to get something done and simply can't afford the extra energy it takes to walk any more distance than necessary. When you're in pain, but have no food and a tight budget ( delivery is beyond my means) you HAVE to go grocery shopping... and then see a woman with a child cut you off to get the handicapped space and saunter off into the store in high heels. I used to wear high heels... Now I wear flats all the time, with orthotics. But I've seen doctors ask patients with a torn ligament in thier knee if they want a handicapped tag..... and sign off on a permanent tag instead of a temporary. I think the temporary tags should have a limit of what the injury is. A torn ligament is maybe a month... not SIX months....



Posted by RedHorse7 on May 19, 2008 at 1:33 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I have personally witnessed numerous violations of the parking placards. I saw the driver of a car wheel into a parking space at Home Depot, put the placard on the rear view mirror, and hop out like a rabbit. He was approximately 17 years old and was not transporting a handicapped person. He didn't even have the decency to fake a limp.




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