The Supreme Court will consider the strength of the Americans with Disabilities Act on Wednesday when it hears a dispute over whether a self-appointed “tester” of the civil rights law has the right to sue hotels over alleged violations of its provisions.

How the justices rule could have a significant impact on the practical effectiveness of the landmark legislation, which aims to shield individuals with disabilities from discrimination in public accommodations and a host of other settings.

At the center of the dispute is Deborah Laufer, a disability rights advocate who has brought hundreds of lawsuits against hotels she says are not in compliance with ADA rules requiring hotels to disclose information about how accessible they are to individuals with disabilities.

Laufer, a Florida resident who uses a wheelchair and has a visual impairment, doesn’t intend to visit the hotels she’s suing. Instead, the complaints are made in an effort to force the hotels to update their websites to be in compliance with the law. Legal experts say the strategy, known as “testing,” is necessary to ensure enforcement of the historic law.

  • themeatbridge
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    211 year ago

    There’s a simple protection against this sort of trolling: Comply with the ADA.

    • @givesomefucks
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      -101 year ago

      She seems to go after tiny independent hotels, you know, the ones who barely have a website…

      It’s not like she’s complaining about lack of ramps or actual accommodations, she’s literally suing them over what their website doesn’t say.

      Seriously, this is a bit of a rabbit hole, and the more you read about it, the worse she looks.

      • themeatbridge
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        1 year ago

        Tiny independent hotels should still comply with the ADA. I’m not saying she’s not a troll, but the means to defeat her is doing the bare minimum as required by law. In this case, the lawsuit was dropped and the decision rendered moot once the hotel updated their website to say that they don’t offer ADA-compliant accomodations. And if she was filing nuisance suits, 32 different states have anti-SLAPP laws.

        • @givesomefucks
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          -51 year ago

          Tiny independent hotels should still comply with the ADA.

          No one is saying they shouldn’t…

          • @Madison420
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            21 year ago

            You’re not saying it directly no, you’re just heavily implying it by context and omission.

            • @givesomefucks
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              -41 year ago

              Article has a point, it’s the governments job to enforce this stuff

              • @Madison420
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                21 year ago

                Yes! And it’s the peoples job to make sure the government does it’s fucking job! Is civics not taught anymore? How is this legitimately a hard concept to grasp.

              • @[email protected]
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                1 year ago

                And others replied: how? The government has an atrocious record of enforcing laws like this. For fuck’s sake, we can barely get the various levels of government to enforce issues that are way more serious like workplace safety laws, wage theft, or food safety laws, despite there supposedly being an avenue to actually report these violations, and despite those violations carrying fines that should incentivize government enforcement. Do we really expect the federal government, with all of its deadlocks and stalemates, to fund a new office (or provide funding for an existing department) to accept complaints, process, investigate, and enforce ADA compliance?

                Without an individual avenue to force compliance, the ADA will be rendered utterly feckless. At best the landscape for disabled people will fracture into yet another red-state/blue-state scenario where blue states are forced to craft and pass state-level mirrors of the ADA that includes a private avenue for enforcement (or funds enforcement at the state level), further complicating the legal landscape for regional/national companies who now have to comply with 20+ different laws instead of one. Meanwhile, red states will do nothing, leaving disabled people stuck without any realistic avenue to enforce compliance and address discrimination.

                • @givesomefucks
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                  01 year ago

                  Without an individual avenue to force compliance, the ADA will be rendered utterly feckless

                  What?

                  I’m explicitly saying the ADA should be funded enough that paid government employees can do these checks…

                  You’re saying because an individual can’t immediately sue, that there’s nothing for the ADA?

                  Like, do you think it just doesn’t exist? Or they don’t do anything till someone sues?

                  At first I thought maybe I did a bad job wording this, but after this many replies and me clarifying…

                  I don’t think the issue is me champ.

                  It’s just weird to see so many people arguing against government regulation and wanting stuff enforced primarily thru private lawsuits. And I wanted to understand why, but the novelty has worn off

                  • @[email protected]
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                    11 year ago

                    The point you seem to be missing is that the ADA currently has a relatively limited mechanism for direct government enforcement, because the current mechanisms were designed under the assumption that individuals could also sue to enforce the ADA. Most of the government agencies currently enforcing the ADA only produce guidelines and issue regulations, with relatively few lawsuits originating directly from the government. Enhancing the government’s ability to enforce the ADA requires passing an amendment to the law through Congress to potentially create a new office with enforcement authority (or grant additional enforcement authority to an existing office), and to provide adequate funding so it can keep up with the additional workload. The odds of this amendment being passed on its own are infinitesimal; even if it passed the GOP-controlled House (who would almost certainly oppose it on principle, and even the reps who didn’t oppose it would have far more important issues to spend political capital on), it would almost certainly be filibustered in the Senate, where it would die.

                    The only way it would possibly pass is if it was attached to a must-pass bill, such as one to address the debt limit or avoid another government shutdown. Even then, it’d be vulnerable to negotiations–it may be included initially, but underfunded or dropped entirely in order to accommodate other, more important goals. Even if by some miracle it did survive negotiations intact, it would then be a constant target for defunding or dissolvement by conservative legislators looking to deliver red meat to their base.

                    Yeah, in an ideal world, it would be nice if the government took care of enforcing the law. But this isn’t an ideal world. Getting rid of individual enforcement trades a system that produces mostly desirable outcomes and ensures compliance with the law even when exploited by bad faith actors and replaces it with a system that is much slower due to the additional bureaucracy and the inevitable backlog piling up from underfunded and overworked agents, and is also vulnerable to the whims of a handful of extremists, placing the quality of life for millions of disabled people at risk.

                    That’s why I say the ADA will be feckless without an individual avenue to force compliance: even if the government does take over all the enforcement work previously done by individuals, it’ll be much slower, and the government will be strongly incentivized to focus on large, wide-ranging cases over smaller, individual violations, leaving them unaddressed for years (or even ignoring them outright so they don’t get accused of being “hostile to small business”)

      • @BassTurd
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        91 year ago

        Do tiny independent hotels not have to comply with ADA rules? Do they get exceptions for having a noncompliant website? Whatever her motives are doesn’t matter, because what she’s doing is good for society, the ADA, and helps keep business in check. The easy solution for these hotels is to just do things right up front and not put themselves in a position to get sued.

        • @givesomefucks
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          21 year ago

          No, the easy solution is funding our government so they can hold businesses accountable…

          Stop trying to privatize regulation, it pretty much never works out the way it should.

          • @BassTurd
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            81 year ago

            Both can exist. If there was a way to report the business to a government entity that then held the offenders liable, that would be ideal. Skip court, the business remedy the situation, the lady gets all of the changes complete. Either way, what she’s doing is a good thing and this is the best avenue to get results, and it’s working.

            • @Madison420
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              1 year ago

              This is quite literally why we have the rights we have. Stop trying to hand government all the power. We can have both but we need at least one means to actually be effective.