A partially blind world class athlete from Michigan has filed a
Federal lawsuit in Detroit over some new rules being imposed on
visually-impaired athletes who compete in triathlons.
Aaron
Scheidies has been an athlete all his life, first at Farmington High
School and later at Michigan State. Now 30 years-old, he's a seven time
world champion and eight time Triathlon national champion. He has
competed in more than 200 triathlons, including the Iron Man
competition. Last year he was a finalist for an Espee award. You'd never
know he has only 20 percent of his vision.
But now Aaron is
facing an even greater obstacle by new rules he says are being imposed
by USA Triathlon, International Triathlon Union, and 3D Racing LLC.
Those
rules will force blind and visually impaired athletes, to wear "black
out" glasses while they compete. The idea is to level the playing field,
so all the athletes have the same level of impairment, to make it more
competitive.
Aaron says it's a dangerous idea that puts all
athletes at risk. "Any one that has any vision, any light perception at
all is going to use that vision for their balance. So the black out
glasses are basically knocking out one-third of someone's balance
system" he said.
Attorney Richard Bernstein, who himself is
legally blind agrees, "it is simply illegal to require someone to become
more disabled as an accommodation for them to be able to compete."
The
International Triathalon Union released a statement to FOX 2 that says
in part, "...the rule exists to create a fairer competition for all
athletes because partially blind athletes and completely blind athletes
compete in the same category and partially blind athletes have an
advantage over those who are completely blind. This rule is in place
only on the run portion, not in the swim and not in the bike portions.
No athlete has ever been denied the opportunity to race because of this
rule. A Physically Challenged Open Division allows all athletes to
participate."
Aaron says requiring black out glasses shows no
understanding of the blind and is just bad judgement. On Wednesday he
filed a federal lawsuit in Detroit saying he's not looking for financial
damages he just wants the organizations to drop what he calls a very
dangerous requirement.
Wednesday, June 19 2013 7:35 AM EDT2013-06-19 11:35:18 GMT
Detroit City Council member Kwame Kenyatta says he quitting Friday. Kenyatta didn't give a specific reason, but he says the council is virtually powerless now that Detroit is being run by an emergency manager.
Detroit City Council member Kwame Kenyatta says he quitting Friday. Kenyatta didn't give a specific reason to radio station WWJ, but he says the council is virtually powerless now that Detroit is being run by an emergency manager.
Wednesday, June 19 2013 7:22 AM EDT2013-06-19 11:22:49 GMT
Kid Rock has added an eighth date to his "$20 Best Night Ever" tour at DTE Energy Music Theatre. Officials say tickets for the Aug. 20 show will go on sale at 10 a.m. on June 22.
Kid Rock has added an eighth date to his "$20 Best Night Ever" tour at DTE Energy Music Theatre. Officials say tickets for the Aug. 20 show will go on sale at 10 a.m. on June 22.
Tuesday, June 18 2013 11:38 PM EDT2013-06-19 03:38:44 GMT
After initially defying federal regulators, Chrysler abruptly agreed Tuesday to recall some older-model Jeeps with fuel tanks that could rupture and cause fires in rear-end collisions.
After initially defying federal regulators, Chrysler abruptly agreed Tuesday to recall some older-model Jeeps with fuel tanks that could rupture and cause fires in rear-end collisions.
Tuesday, June 18 2013 11:29 PM EDT2013-06-19 03:29:11 GMT
An angry pastor is trying to keep his cool. He is mad at whoever tore apart his air conditioning unit to steal the copper, but he also says the entire community shares the blame.
An angry pastor is trying to keep his cool. He is mad at whoever tore apart his air conditioning unit to steal the copper, but he also says the entire community shares the blame.
Tuesday, June 18 2013 9:46 PM EDT2013-06-19 01:46:58 GMT
Nearly a hundred years ago, two girls from Detroit put a message in a bottle and threw it into the waters of the St. Clair River. Now that message is back on dry land after being found by a diver in 30 feet of water.
Nearly a hundred years ago, two girls from Detroit put a message in a bottle and threw it into the waters of the St. Clair River. Now that message is back on dry land after being found by a diver in 30 feet of water.
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