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  • Court says money discriminates against blind people

    Court says money discriminates against blind people

    1 hour, 21 minutes ago

    The U.S. discriminates against blind people by printing paper money that makes it impossible for them to distinguish among the bills' varying values, a federal appeals court ruled Tuesday.
    The ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit upholds a decision by a lower court in 2006. It could force the Treasury Department to redesign its money. Suggested changes have ranged from making bills different sizes to printing them with raised markings.
    The American Council for the Blind sued for such changes but the Treasury Department has been fighting the case for about six years.
    "I don't think we should have to rely on people to tell us what our money is," said Mitch Pomerantz, the council's president.
    The U.S. acknowledges the design hinders blind people but it argued that blind people have adapted. Some relied on store clerks to help them, some used credit cards and others folded certain corners to help distinguish between bills.
    The court ruled 2-1 that such adaptations were insufficient. The government might as well argue that, since handicapped people can crawl on all fours or ask for help from strangers, there's no need to make buildings wheelchair accessible, the court said.
    "Even the most searching tactile examination will reveal no difference between a $100 bill and a $1 bill. The Secretary has identified no reason that requires paper currency to be uniform to the touch," Judge Judith W. Rogers wrote for the majority.
    Courts can't decide how to design the currency, since that's up to the Treasury Department. But the ruling forces the department to address what the court called a discriminatory problem.
    Pomerantz says it could take years to change the look of money and until then, he expects that similar-looking money will continue to get printed and spent. But since blindness becomes more common with age, people in the 30s and 40s should know that, when they get older, "they will be able to identify their $1 bills from their fives, tens and twenties," he said.
    Officials at the Treasury Department and the department's Bureau of Engraving and Printing, which prints the nation's currency, had no immediate comment on the ruling. The government could appeal to the Supreme Court.
    While the government has been fighting to overturn the lower court ruling, it has been taking some steps toward modifying U.S. currency for the visually impaired.
    The most recent currency redesign of the $5 bill introduced in March features a giant "5" printed in purple on one side of the bill to help those with vision problems distinguish the bill.
    The appeals court also ruled that the U.S. failed to explain why changing the money would be an undue burden. The Treasury Department has redesigned its currency several times in recent years, and adding features to aid the blind would come at a relatively small cost, the court said.
    Other countries have added such features, the court said, and the U.S. never explained what made its situation so unique.
    Not all blind people agreed the money needed to be changed. The National Federation of the Blind sided with the government and told the appeals court that no changes were needed.
    Charlie Richardson, the legally blind manager of Charlie's Express Stop inside the Capitol in Albany, N.Y., said he doesn't oppose changing the money but disagrees with the ruling.
    "To actually be discriminated against is to have something denied to you," Richardson said. "We're not denied the use of money."
    __
    Associated Press writer Valerie Bauman in Albany, N.Y., contributed to this report.



    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080520/...ge/blind_money
    Last edited by MIR; 05-20-2008, 02:37:10 PM. Reason: Making it easier for blind people to read :P
    Cant stand the 32 bit and above gaming.
    Gamers for the return of 2d sprite filled games!

  • #2
    Considering the facts, it would be rather difficult to use paper money as a blind person. Yeah, we should fix that.
    I may be lazy, but I can...zzzZZZzzzZZZzzzZZZ...

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    • #3
      I think it would be worth the cost, because this would give counter-feiters yet another feature to mimic, in addition to allowing blind people to read what they spend. It could be as simple as trimming a small design into a little of the long edges(so vending machines wouldn't likely notice), but knowing the government, they'll want to somehow make a raised braille mark on the bill, which simply isn't going to work given how money is stacked and flattened in wallets and folded.
      This reality is mine. Go hallucinate your own.

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      • #4
        Did you realize that each coin not only has its own feel (the edge) but its own noticeable heft? The US Quarter is equal to the size and heft of a 10 pence but the edge is really different. This idea about doing something with the edges (or even raised ink) would work.
        Cant stand the 32 bit and above gaming.
        Gamers for the return of 2d sprite filled games!

        Comment


        • #5
          Well, I think several other countries have different sizes for each bill, also I think canadian money has a metal bar or something on the money so you can run your money through some machine which can read the bill and tell you what it is. I'm not sure if that machine exists for us bills.

          Oh yeah, there is negatives to changing the money prematurely tho. Soda machines, and other machines that take money will need to get an upgrade to accept the bill. I used to work in a casino, so I know the problems this causes, cause alot of times we were running out of 10 dollar bills to give people cause our machines werent upgraded fast enough. It costs money to do that.

          I think theres a certain interval when they change the bills again, so I think they should wait until then to do it.

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          • #6
            Also include that the different sized bills cost more to make.
            Cant stand the 32 bit and above gaming.
            Gamers for the return of 2d sprite filled games!

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            • #7
              Coins are one thing, but the paper money is nearly identical aside from the visual aspects. I still think they should do something about how boring the stuff looks compared to some countries.

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              • #8
                I've been to Europe and Brazil and they have different colored paper money and different sizes for distinguishing the value,which not only looks cool but makes it easy for anyone to distinguish what the note is.The US is so far behind on many things,and soooooo slow to change things too.
                Spoiler Alert! Click to view...

                THE BAD GUY!!!!!!

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                • #9
                  It might be they don't want to change the size of the bills due to such a move greatly upsetting anybody with an automatic paper money reader.

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                  • #10
                    yea like those big drug dealers! who the hell has one of those besides a bank(Maybe?) or the big drug dealers?
                    Spoiler Alert! Click to view...

                    THE BAD GUY!!!!!!

                    Comment

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