Councilman in wheelchair expresses humiliation following mandatory debate

City councilman, Chris Hinds, does not hide that he's in a wheelchair.

"I've been a disability advocate for years. All my material has my wheelchair in it," Hinds said.

So, when he showed up for a mandatory debate Monday afternoon at Cleo Parker Robinson Dance, he was surprised they were surprised.

"The first person that greeted me said, 'Oh, I didn't know you were in a wheelchair,'" Hinds expressed.

The debate was supposed to take place on a stage that did not have wheelchair access.

Hinds says the first solution proposed was unacceptable if not impossible; to lift him and his chair onto the stage.

"I said this wheelchair is 400 pounds and I weigh close to 200 pounds," Hinds said.

So, he left his chair and hoisted himself onto the stage. He says he felt humiliated.

"I was effectively just lying on the stage," Hinds said.

The debate was eventually moved to the floor in front of the stage, but Hinds says the damage was done.

"I felt like a circus clown," Hinds said.

Denver Clerk and Recorder Paul Lopez said his office does not plan, advertise, or facilitate debates and that Cleo Parker Robinson signed an application stating they were basic ADA compliant.

In a statement, Cleo Parker Robinson Dance says, "There were no requests for additional or enhanced accommodation."

Hinds says they should have known.

"Someone didn't do some just basic research," he said.

The dance studio also says if they had more time, something could've been figured. Hinds arrived just before the debate started.

"That's unfair because they're telling me that I should have been more prepared when clearly they were unprepared," Hinds said.

Clerk Lopez says he has reached out to Hinds to apologize.

"I don't think anybody should have to go through that," he said. "We're going to be making sure that we're working with any one of the folks that are sponsoring debates to make sure that they understand those ADA requirements."

Hinds says he hopes this never happens again.

"I hope that the takeaway is that we need to learn from this and understand why it's so important that we have disability representation," he said.

Cleo Parker Robinson says they were already working to make sure their stage is more accessible in the future when this event happened.

CBS News Colorado reporter and anchor, Justin Adams, was the moderator for this debate but had no hand in planning for the event.

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