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BATTERY PARK CITY, N.Y. — Janielle Fermaint sat outside in the rain for nearly 20 minutes last week waiting to be let into the new Battery Park City library.
Fermaint, 24, has cerebral palsy and uses a wheelchair to get around. She cannot push the library’s heavy doors open herself, so she has to wait for someone to respond to the buzzer outside.
“It’s impossible,” Fermaint said this week, after waiting a much shorter time to get into the library. “If they have money for a flag with a lion on it, they have money for automatic doors.”
Those doors give the wheelchair-bound a sense of independence, she said.
“When I don’t have that, my self-esteem goes down,” Fermaint said. "It’s like, OK, here we go again.”
The new $6.7 million library on North End Avenue just opened in March.
Library officials say the buzzer system complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act, and they cannot swap the library’s current glass doors with automatic ones.
“We did look into changing them,” said Jonathan Pace, library spokesman. “But the type of door we have, we just can’t change.”
The library inherited the doors from the Riverhouse condo building, which rises above the new branch, Pace said.
The decision not to replace the doors was not related to the New York Public Library’s $37 million budget cut this year, Pace said.
Fermaint goes to the library almost every day to read and to search for volunteer opportunities on the computer. An aide accompanies her, pushing her wheelchair and pressing the buzzer outside the library. But the aide cannot open the door and maneuver Fermaint inside at the same time.
“It strips a level of independence for people who are already dependent in so many ways,” said Cathy Valladares, who accompanied Fermaint to the library this week.
Valladares works for Job Path, an organization that helps people with developmental disabilities. A lack of automatic doors is a problem throughout the city, but it is particularly galling to see brand-new buildings open without them, Valladares said.
After Fermaint and her mother raised the issue at Community Board 1’s BPC Committee earlier this month, the board agreed to take up the cause.
“It would also be good for people with strollers,” said Linda Belfer, chairperson of the committee, who uses a wheelchair. “To keep people waiting outside in inclement weather is not the greatest thing to do.”
Fermaint is confident that she will get automatic doors installed eventually.
When she and her family first moved to Battery Park City 11 years ago, the World Financial Center didn’t have automatic doors either.
Beth Haller, Ph.D., is Co-Director of the Global Alliance for Disability in Media and Entertainment (www.gadim.org). A former print journalist, she is a member of the Advisory Board for the National Center on Disability and Journalism (https://ncdj.org/). Haller is Professor Emerita in the Department of Mass Communication at Towson University in Maryland, USA. Haller is co-editor of the 2020 "Routledge Companion to Disability and Media" (with Gerard Goggin of University of Sydney & Katie Ellis of Curtin University, Australia). She is author of "Representing Disability in an Ableist World: Essays on Mass Media" (Advocado Press, 2010) and the author/editor of Byline of Hope: Collected Newspaper and Magazine Writing of Helen Keller (Advocado Press, 2015). She has been researching disability representation in mass media for 30+ years. She is adjunct faculty in the Disability Studies programs at the City University of New York (CUNY) and the University of Texas-Arlington.