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68-18 Approving Update to ADA Transition Plan of 2013 and Title VI Plan: Non Discrimination in City Services, Programs & Activities under the Civil Rights Act of 1964
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68-18 Approving Update to ADA Transition Plan of 2013 and Title VI Plan: Non Discrimination in City Services, Programs & Activities under the Civil Rights Act of 1964
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City Council - City Clerk
City Council - Document Type
Ordinances
City Counci - Date
12/10/2018
Bill Number
68-18
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numerous public parks. However, a few lots are not in compliance, and the City intends, where <br /> easily achievable,to make all its parking lots ADA compliant by November 1, 2019. <br /> The City will adhere to PROWAG (Public Right-of-Way Accessibility Guidelines)for existing <br /> or for any future city-owned or operated surface parking lots. <br /> On Street Parking.The City estimates that there are a total of 897 on-street parking spaces <br /> in the downtown central business area.' South Bend's Central Business District is an area <br /> comprised of about 25 blocks from Marion Street on the north down to Western Avenue on the <br /> east and from Lafayette to the River (the Central Business District Zone). <br /> On-street parking in downtown South Bend consists of angled two hour free parking the <br /> width of Michigan Street,with parallel spaces serving the remainder of downtown street parking. <br /> Even with parking garages,the total available downtown street parking is barely adequate during <br /> peak business hours for the needs of restaurants, professional businesses and offices, retail <br /> stores, and other places of public accommodation concentrated in the downtown area. <br /> PROWAG requires that there be 18 ADA reserved on-street spaces in the Central Business <br /> District ("CBD") Zone (2% of 897 total), of which three (3) must be van accessible. Prior to the <br /> City's 2016 Smart Street Project affecting the CBD Zone, converting Main Street and St. Joseph <br /> Streets from one-way to two-way, the City had reserved well more than the ADA number of <br /> required parking spaces on the downtown streets for disabled persons, but these spaces did not <br /> meet the 2011 draft PROWAG standards for on-street parking in terms of space width for areas <br /> where the sidewalks were 14 feet wide or more. <br /> For angled parking, creation of one PROWAG parking space requires the loss of two <br /> regular spaces. For parallel parking, creation of one PROWAG space requires extensive sidewalk <br /> loss, which affects pedestrian sidewalk traffic, including persons in wheelchairs, and outdoor <br /> business usage of sidewalks. Nonetheless, the City will use PROWAG in the Central Business <br /> District although it will result in fewer spaces overall reserved for disabled persons. <br /> Most of the PROWAG compliant ADA parking is in the angled parking of Michigan Street. <br /> Three van accessible spaces are located on Main Street (an addition of two van accessible <br /> spaces); one van accessible space is on Jefferson Boulevard close to the disability entry to the St. <br /> Joseph County Courthouse and the County City Building and seven more standard size disabled <br /> spaces are on Michigan Street. Eight standard size PROWAG disabled spaces have been <br /> constructed as follows: two (2) spaces on Jefferson Boulevard—serving the County-City Building <br /> and the federal and county courthouses; two (2) spaces on Washington Street (also serving the <br /> 1 Source is Downtown Parking Study, Rich&Associates, Inc.(February 2016). <br /> Page 19 <br />
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