Handicapped

Principal Lichelle Watne helps student Jared Quintana down the stairs to the cafeteria with a mobile chairlift at Hillcrest Elementary School in Ogden on Thursday. (NICHOLAS DRANEY/Standard-Examiner)

Chairlift helps Hillcrest Elementary student get to lunch

OGDEN — Jared Quintana’s journey to his Hillcrest Elementary School cafeteria used to take him and the person pushing his wheelchair out the front door, down a ramp, around the school through wind, rain or snow, up three stairs and into the back door of the basement lunchroom.

Now the second-grader simply rides “Jared’s machine.”

Handicapped boy robbed while collecting funds for wheelchair basketball

CARY, N.C. -- Seated in his wheelchair, Nolan Turner, 12, staked out his neighborhood Thursday evening to sell water bottles and raise money to bring his wheelchair basketball team to his elementary school.

One-armed Florida prep star overcomes birth injury

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Landus Anderson is one of the top high school players in the Florida Panhandle.

Teacher Shelly Moss guides a “blind” Naftali Sanchez,16, through the Ben Lomond High School cafeteria on Thursday. Sanchez is wearing blacked-out goggles that block her sight so she can learn the challenges blind people face daily. (MATTHEW ARDEN HATFIELD/Standard-Examiner)

Ben Lomond High peer counselors 'disabled' for a day

OGDEN -- Neftali Sanchez waited in silence on a bench inside Ben Lomond High School, helpless to see the way to the school cafeteria.

"I'll be back for you," teacher Shelly Moss called to the 16-year-old, hurrying toward the lunch line to help Neftali's classmate, Jasmine Ayala, 15, who was struggling to move forward in her wheelchair.

Conductor, audience not making such beautiful music

Michael Palumbo's deep, dark secret is finally out.

Apparently, the Weber State University music professor hates handicapped people. And small children. Oh, and puppies and kitties and bunnies. And maybe even a rainbow or sunset or two.

Steve and Anita Ure (seated in front of window) adopted six special-needs children who are now grown. The Hooper couple also has three children who live on their own. Pictured clockwise from front left are daughter-in-law Maria and the adopted Ure children: Vance, Barbara, Chris, Jeff, Tony and Mike. (JENNIFER GHAN/Special to the Standard-Examiner)

Hooper couple meets special needs of 6 adopted children

HOOPER -- Raising a child with disabilities is a challenge to any parents. Adopting children with disabilities is another matter altogether, but one couple knew it was something they were just meant to do.

Steve and Anita Ure had talked about adopting children even before they were married. They had seen children being airlifted out of Vietnam in the 1970s and vowed to someday adopt.

(NICK SHORT/Standard-Examiner) Gyla lies on the floor on the FrontRunner on Thursday near Farmington. A group of people raising puppies for Canine Companions for Independence took the train to give the dogs some experience around the trains.

Canines take FrontRunner as part of training to help disabled

OGDEN -- Misty changed Glenna Foremaster's life. As the Ogden resident sat on a FrontRunner car Thursday, her assistance dog, Misty, approached a man in a wheelchair sitting near them. Happy to see the animal, the man sparked up a conversation with Foremaster and the other passengers as Misty licked his hand.

David Wisansky, right, an investigator with the California Department of Motor Vehicles talks with Magdalene Osherenko as he confiscates the Disabled Person Parking Placard from her April 12, 2011, after she left her vehicle with the placard hanging from her rear-view mirror along Camden Drive in Beverly Hills, California, where parking is scarce or expensive. The driver received a citation for misuse of the placard. (Al Seib/Los Angeles Times/MCT)

DMV cracks down on fraudulent use of disabled parking passes

In Beverly Hills, a DMV agent confiscates a disabled parking placard from a woman leaving a fitness center.

In downtown Los Angeles, a motorist launches into a rant about "evil" meter readers after acknowledging that he's using someone else's disabled parking pass.

And in neighborhoods near UCLA, 17 students are stopped and questioned as they scurry to class, their cars parked in restricted zones, disabled parking badges dangling from their rear-view mirrors.

Fraudulent use of disabled parking placards -- those blue or red badges that allow motorists to park for free or in specially reserved spaces -- has exploded in the last decade, according to California motor vehicle officials. With 1 in 10 California drivers now legally registered to carry the passes, transportation experts say abuse has become commonplace. At any given moment, on any given street, more than a third of the vehicles displaying the tags -- and parking without paying -- are doing so illegally, say officials with the California Department of Motor Vehicles.

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