PENNSYLVANIA — Attorney General Michelle Henry announced that her office recently entered into an agreement with a global indoor game and amusement company that has committed to providing full and equal access to people with severe disabilities at all four of its Pennsylvania locations.
The agreement between the Office of Attorney General and Round One Entertainment stems from an incident in March 2023 when Round One’s Lancaster location refused a guest with severe disabilities’ request for a reasonable modification to the company’s admission policy– namely, to waive the admission fees for his two personal care aides. The guest, a young man with autism who also uses a wheelchair, is unable to participate in the activities offered without the assistance of his care aides.
“Providing people with disabilities equal access to public accommodations is not just the right thing to do — it is the law,” Attorney General Henry said. “In response to our action, Round One cooperated and acted to address the matter by entering this agreement.”
In the agreement, or Assurance of Voluntary Compliance (AVC), Round One commits to making modifications to its admission policies.
State and federal disability laws require public accommodations to make reasonable modifications to allow people with disabilities to experience the full and equal enjoyment of goods and services unless the accommodation would impose an undue burden, directly threaten health or safety, or fundamentally alter the nature of the offered goods or services.
This matter was handled by Honors Deputy Attorney General Molly Pohlhaus of the Office of Attorney General’s Civil Rights Enforcement Section, under the direction of Chief Deputy Attorney General Corbett Anderson.
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