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The Gazette, Montreal, Monday, October 3, 1988
Final [edition] 50 cents

Title: Police arrest 28 wheelchair activists after protest in hotel lobby

By Michael Doyle and Catherine Buckie of the Gazette

Twenty-eight wheelchair protesters were arrested and charged with mischief last night after 50 of them staged a noisy demonstration in the lobby of the Sheraton Center on Dorchester Blvd.

The protesters were demonstrating against the lack of mass transit facilities for the handicapped. They sang We Shall Overcome and chanted “Access is a Civil Right!” as they blocked off elevators and escalators at the downtown hotel.

Police took the wheelchair activists to the Bonsecours St. station. They were to be arraigned before a judge at 1 a.m. today.

“We don’t want to hold them for nothing,” said Const. Bernard Perrier. “We want to put them before a judge as soon as possible. It will be up to the judge to decide what happens to them after that.”

The demonstrators were mostly members of a U.S. group, American Disabled for Accessible Public Transit (ADAPT). They are here to badger transit-authority representatives from across the continent – including officials of the Montreal Urban Community Transit Corp. – who are attending the convention of the American Public Transit Association.

“We’re just trying to make their convention as inaccessible to them as public transit is for us,” group organizer Rev. Wade Blank of Denver, Colo., said earlier that day.

A squad of about 80 police officers was called in to clear the hotel lobby.

One protester, Bob Kafka, a 42-year-old Vietnam veteran from Austin, Texas whose neck was broken in a car accident, had chained himself to a railing in the lobby. Police cut the chain with shears.

The activists decided to demonstrate at the Sheraton because a large number of delegates to the transit convention are staying there, Kafka said.

“We’re sorry for the inconvenience, but we’ve been inconvenienced all our lives,” he said.

Hotel general manager Alfred Heim, who used a bullhorn to read a portion of the Eviction Act to the protesters before the police moved in, said he expected some trouble because the protesters attend each transit convention.

The demonstration closed the westbound lanes on Dorchester Blvd. outside the hotel for about two hours.

It was the second time yesterday that the demonstrators had disrupted traffic on Dorchester Blvd. Earlier, more than 75 of the wheelchair activists blocked traffic outside the Queen Elizabeth Hotel, site of the convention.

Police there put up barricades to contain the activists, who were eventually allowed to line up single-file on the north side of the street, away from the hotel entrance.

Picture, Page A-3
The end

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