English Arabic Danish Dutch Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Irish Italian Russian Spanish Swedish

Accessible Holidays Cyprus - Making Cyprus Accessible

Home News by Accessible Holidays Cyprus Pageant furor stirs debate on disability

Main Menu

  • Home
  • About us
  • Lemonies Villa
  • Lemonies Villa Gallery
  • Villa Lemonies Availibility
  • Equipment
  • Transfers
  • Contact us
  • Trip to Omodhos 2008
  • News by Accessible Holidays Cyprus
  • Forum
  • Link to Us
  • Play our fun game
  • Sitemap

Visitors



27.3%United States United States
9.5%United Kingdom United Kingdom
5.5%Cyprus Cyprus
3.5%Italy Italy
3.1%Germany Germany
3%Greece Greece
2.8%Japan Japan
2.6%Brazil Brazil
2.6%India India
2.5%Turkey Turkey

Yesterday: 11
Last Week: 82
This Month: 236
Last Month: 367
Total: 475620


Follow Us on Facebook

JoomlaWatch 1.2.12 - Joomla Monitor and Live Stats by Matej Koval

Mini Bookings Calendar

S M T W T F S
29 30 1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31 1 2

Legend

Booked
All Categories ...

sound by jbgmusic


Pageant furor stirs debate on disability PDF Print E-mail

WAUSAU, Wis. - Elegant in a strapless taffeta gown, Janeal Lee beamed as she was crowned Ms. Wheelchair Wisconsin, her tiara sparkling in her hair and a bouquet of yellow roses in her lap.

Gifts were heaped on her, too — a new scooter, jewelry, a two-night stay at a Wisconsin resort — and there were hugs of congratulations, lots of pictures and a Marine to escort the 30-year-old math teacher with muscular dystrophy offstage.

Weeks after the joy of that January night in Green Bay, Miss Lee was stripped of the title — and asked to return the prizes, including the new scooter — after she was seen in a newspaper photograph standing up.

Now the Ms. Wheelchair America pageant is in an uproar over just how disabled a woman must be to wear the crown.

“This policy makes no sense,” said Andy Imparato, president of the Washington-based American Association of People with Disabilities.

A photo in the Post-Crescent newspaper of Appleton, Wis., showed Miss Lee standing in her Kaukauna High classroom. The pageant organization said candidates for the crown have to “mostly be seen in the public” using their wheelchairs or scooters. Miss Lee says she can walk up to 50 feet on a good day and stand while teaching, but uses a scooter as her main way to get around.

Gina Hackel, who won the 2004 Ms. Wisconsin Wheelchair title and was the coordinator of the pageant this year, said: “The eligibility criteria is very specific, just like Special Olympics.”

If Ms. Wheelchair America contestants can walk, “how can they be Ms. Wheelchair anything?” Miss Hackel asked.

In the furor over Miss Lee’s dethroning, the runner-up in the pageant refused to accept the crown. Kim Jerman, the second runner-up in the Wisconsin pageant, accepted the title. She advances to the national pageant July 19 to 24 at Albany, N.Y.

“I feel that it is unfortunate on how I received the title,” said Miss Jerman, 30, who has cerebral palsy and has never been able to walk. She said awarding the crown to someone who can walk “is not fair for me who needs a wheelchair all day. It is named Ms. Wisconsin Wheelchair for a reason. It is not named Ms. Disability.”

Story Continues →

 
Accessible Holidays Cyprus - Making Cyprus Accessible, Powered by Joomla!

valid xhtml valid css