jamespowers said:It gets to be ridiculous when you have to put in wheelchair ramps at ice skating rinks and roller rinks.
Brad Bowers said:I'm trying not to be my "grouchy" old self, but just trying to show people the other side of things. You don't think about it until you've been there.
Joseph Casazza said:I'm north of DC, in Wheaton, the least fashionable part of the immensity that is called Silver Spring, eastern Montgomery County.
Joseph Casazza said:We Americans never want the government interfering in anything, unless it is to our advantage! "Don't tell me what to do! But make my neighbor stop doing that!" An nice historical example is the Coconut Grove fire and its aftermath. There were 492 dead after the fire in the Coconut Grove club in Boston in 1942, and, as is always the case after such a disaster, the cry was that something must be done! The result, all across the US, revolving doors were required to have flanking exits. Exit doors were required to open out. Occupant capacity placards, exit lights and emergency lighting were required. Fire sprinklers were required. The Life Safety Code originated from the Coconut Grove fire. Lots of government interference. Would you rather not have the regulations? I'm sure many ot these regulations were bitterly complained of at the time, an the argument was the same - makes it too tough to get started in business, too expensive to retrofit the place, etc.
Joseph Casazza said:I'll not go into the details here, but some deaths were caused by the gas and other were caused by the trouble people had exiting. Fire code regulations about exits and sprinklers in public buildings are not stupid government interference. Yes, we can wait for "market forces" to take care of things, but the public demanded action, and action is what it got. The action was not inappropriate. Very American, very democratic. Guess a lot of people didn't want to be the next to die while waiting for market forces to take charge. It took a little longer to get rules about combustible materials, but we have a bunch of those now too. No, we are not perfectly safe. But I, for one, do not long for those good old days.