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[Headline] 6 held in protest by disabled
[Subheading] Stage sit-in in Anderson’s L.B. Office

By Bob Houser, staff writer
Long Beach Press Telegram, 10/8/85, p. B/1

[This story continues on ADAPT 212 but the text is included here for easier reading.]

Photo on top of the article by Leo Hetzel/Press-Telegram: Seen from above, George Cooper lies on the floor legs stretched out, back against some furniture. His empty manual wheelchair sits across the small crowded space. A police officer rests one hand on the wheelchair and looks down at George on the floor. In the foreground is someone's arm and hand on his/her crutch.
Caption: Disabled protester, who was helped from his wheelchair by fellow demonstrators, lies on the floor of Rep. Glenn Anderson's office Monday as a Long Beach police officer urges him to leave.


Six of 26 sit-ins seeking public transit access for disabled people were arrested for trespassing Monday in the office of Rep. Glenn Anderson, D-Long Beach.

The protesters, many disabled and in wheelchairs, were removed from Anderson's sixth-floor office office in the Post Office building at Third Street and Long Beach Boulevard when they told Long Beach police officers they were going to stay until they could talk to Anderson.

Boyd Kifer, Anderson’s district representative, explained that Anderson was on the House floor in Washington, D.C., and unable to talk to them. They said they would wait.

Responding to a citizen's arrest request by the post office’s station manager, Lyle Van Dorne, police issued misdemeanor citations to six persons on the sidewalk in front of the post office.

Ten of the group avoided citations by leaving the office. Names of the other 10 were recorded in field interviews that involved no arrests.

Police Sgt. Dave Buchanan said the demonstrators were out-of-state people representing a national organization, American Disabled for Accessible Public Transit (ADAPT).

Buchanan told the sit-ins that they would be given the citations rather than being booked at the station if they confined their demonstration to the public sidewalk.

He also pointed out that a couple of the sit-ins, who had early evening flight reservations, would miss them if they insisted on going through the longer booking process.

Jim Parker, of El Paso, Tex., spokesman for ADAPT, said his group comes to national conventions of the American Public Transit Association, now in session in Los Angeles, every year "to continue to press our demand for a policy of full, 100 percent accessibility to public transit for
disabled people.”

Parker said Anderson was targeted for the demonstration because he is chairman of the House Transportation Committee.

Parker agreed with a statement from Anderson’s office that the congressman has voted in line with their wishes. He deplored Congress’ failure to overturn a Reagan administration order that killed a federal mandate for nationwide transit accessibility for the handicapped.

About a dozen Long Beach police officers assisted in removing the protesters.

The police group included a woman officer, K.M. Daeley, who communicated with some of the disabled in sign language.

In a statement Monday evening, Anderson noted also that "it was this administration, not Congress, which overturned a requirement that the handicapped be given full accessibility to public transit.”

That move, by administrative order, nullified the full access provision of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Parker said, leaving that issue to the option of each state.

Ironically, California opted, by state law, for full accessibility in new purchases of public transit vehicles, a fact that Parker saluted.

In fact, Parker said Los Angeles is one of the better cities in the nation for lift-equipped buses.

Nevertheless, the ADAPT group registered its protest in Long Beach and in a second day of demonstrations in downtown Los Angeles.

Eight were arrested in Los Angeles Sunday for failure to disperse and interfering with police during a demonstration by about 130 activists.

Anderson appealed to ADAPT to help block the Reagan administration’s intended cuts in public transit operating funds.

"I would be pleased,” he said, "to try and make sure that administration officials sit down and discuss this important issue with the elderly and handicapped community.”

Sgt. Buchanan said the Long Beach demonstrators, left the post office at about 1:30 p.m. Monday, but returned several hours later.

"Three of them blocked traffic on Long Beach Boulevard with their wheelchairs,” he said, "but we just rolled them back to the sidewalk and they dispersed again.”

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