| The Ascension VIRTUOSO portable wheelchair lift
Since the Ascension VIRTUOSO portable wheelchair lift is weather-hardened, it provides new opportunities for outdoor facilities, such as amphitheaters, parks and recreation facilities, and fairgrounds to access stages, platforms, or risers as high as 60".
The Ascension VIRTUOSO portable wheelchair lift reaches 60" stages and platforms, providing more accessibility options for larger venues, such as convention centers, arenas, and stadiums.
The Ascension VIRTUOSO portable wheelchair lift can be compressed to move through doorways as narrow as 36".
If I Could Walk Tomorrow - A Reflection of all the Things We Take ...
How many times have you heard a television personality on a telethon or even your own doctor tell you the unexpected could happen to you? You hear it all the time as non-profit organizations try to raise money. Cancer can strike anyone at any time. Diabetes, stroke, heart disease, Parkinson’s, muscular dystrophy, the list goes on and on. It does not matter who you are, how much money you have, how old you are, or where you are from. Any of these ailments could strike you or a loved one and change your life in an instant.One day you could wake up and have some sort of life limitation. For all intents and purposes, you could wake up tomorrow, get in a car accident, and become a paraplegic or quadriplegic. The truth is we do not know what the future holds because we do not have a crystal ball that we can peer into on a regular basis.
Disabled hit the buffers
A GRANDMOTHER has spoken out about the lack of provision for wheelchair users at a train station and The Comet can reveal only one out of seven stations investigated in Comet country has step-free access to all platforms.Wendy Crawley, of Wilbury Road, Letchworth GC, is angry her 18-year-old granddaughter - who she did not wish to name - cannot board a train at Letchworth GC station because there is no working lift there.Mrs Crawley said: "There is no access to the platform for the disabled."They run a taxi to the nearest station with a lift, which is usually Stevenage, but that's discrimination and people should be treated the same. .
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