A Connecticut advocacy group for the hearing-impaired has filed a lawsuit against a movie theater chain for failing to provide accommodation for deaf and hard of hearing movie patrons.
The suit was filed last week in U.S. District Court in Connecticut against Bow Tie Cinemas, which operates 12 theater complexes in Connecticut and also has cinemas in six other states.
The lead plantiff is the Connecticut Association of the Deaf, which is being represented on a pro bono basis by attorneys at McCarter & English. The Connecticut Office of Protection and Advocacy for Persons with Disabilities and the National Association of the Deaf are also backing the plaintiffs. The claim is being brought under the Americans with Disabilities Act, which prohibits businesses from discriminating based on disability and requires reasonable efforts to make services accessible.
The plaintiffs say that deaf people who attempted to go to Bow Tie theaters in Hartford and West Hartford were told that the captioning devices that make the movies accessible to deaf patrons were either unavailable or did not work. To read more in the Connecticut Law Tribune, please follow this link. Source: Connecticut Law Tribune
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