Health & Fitness Just Can't Wait Crohn's disease sufferer pursues legal access to non-public restrooms. Judith Doner Berne Special to the Jewish News M y name is Jill Sklar and I have Crohn's disease': the 39-year-old Huntington Woods wife, mother and journalist testified at a recent state Senate hearing on a proposed Restroom Access Act. Sklar's six-year campaign to allow people with certain medical conditions to use employee-only restrooms results from her own 20-year battle with Crohn's. Years of dashing to a public restroom when someone refused to let her use a non-public facility in a retail store — and the occasional embarrassment of not getting there in time — prompted her to pursue legislation to permit it. The Restroom Access Act (House Bill 5046) is designed to aid people who suffer from inflammatory bowel diseases such as Crohn's and ulcerative colitis as well as other gastrointestinal, urological and neurological conditions that, either temporarily or perma- nently, cause bowel or urinary incontinence or urgency. To use a private restroom, the proposed law requires a person to present a doctor's statement on a prescription form that indi- cates he or she suffers from a disease that requires immediate access to a toilet. When the Michigan House passed it by a 72-35 vote last fall, it also induded pregnant women. It's that version that awaits a sec- ond hearing by the Senate's Commerce and Tourism Committee where "chances are very, very good" that it will come out of committee and onto the floor this session, says Norm Saari, chief of staff to committee chairman Jason Allen, R-Traverse City "I know that Brooks Patterson [the Oaldand County executive] is a strong propo- nent of this proposed legislation' Saari says. It has also been unanimously endorsed by the Oaldand County Board of Commissioners. If the bill receives Senate approval, Gov. Jennifer Granholm is expected to sign it into law. Supporters say that more than 50,000 Michigan residents could be affected. Jews Susceptible To Crohn's, Ulcerative Colitis If the Restroom Access Act becomes law in Michigan, it will help people with ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, two conditions which affect Jews at a greater rate than the general popula- tion. "Jewish people have several times the risk of having Crohn's disease and A34 August 7 . 2008 Jill Sklar and her son, Jonah, 12 Sklar, who formerly wrote for the Detroit Jewish News, originally made the case for such a law to her state representative, Andy Meisner, D-Ferndale. "We were able to develop a best-in-the- country model legislation, which many states have copied," Meisner says. "I can't believe it has taken six years," Sklar says. Maryland passed similar legislation 20 years ago. And while Michigan has delayed, it has become law in Illinois, Minnesota, Texas, Kentucky and Tennessee, and is under con- sideration in 12 other states. Michigan, Sklar told the Senate commit- tee,"is the only state where it has had to be ulcerative colitis," said Dr. Mitchell S. Cappell, chief of the Division of Gastroenterology at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. They are about four times more like- ly to suffer from Crohn's disease and about seven times more likely to suffer from ulcerative colitis than the general population in America, he reported, citing statistics presented in the introduced multiple times. There's no good reason for the hold-up: she says. The bill has bi-partisan support and although the Michigan Chamber of Commerce had reservations, it's supported by the Michigan Association of Retailers. "The whole point of this legislation is that we can't wait," Sklar says. "I've been following the bill very closely': says State Sen. Gilda Jacobs, D-Huntington Woods."It's ridiculous that we are so slow. I just applaud Jill. She's been so tenacious." Both Sklar and Meisner see the proposed law as a win for business as well as the Afflict- ed consumer."There's explicit language in the bill that a business doesn't need to spend one American Journal of Gastroenterology in 2006. "There is a genetic component which is specific to Ashkenazi Jews," said Cappell, a Southfield resident and member of Young Israel of Southfield. Overall, about 750,000 Americans have ulcerative colitis and a similar number have Crohn's disease. The conditions are closely related and penny to comply with the act," he says. And "although I'm a strong proponent of an injured plaintiff having his day in court, the bill offers special protection so that retail- ers don't have any added legal exposure': Meisner says. "I've walked into some really scary bath- rooms," Sklar says, "and just been grateful they existed." The bill also states that the act doesn't apply if showing a person where the restroom is would mean leaving the store unattended. Sklar is in remission thanks to several sur- geries and a once-a-week injection, but she still feels more comfortable shopping on the Internet rather than in local stores, she told the Senate committee. "Those of us who are affected with these conditions often are forced to do our shop- ping online in the comfort of our homes, where bathroom access is a given': she says. "We could spend more dollars locally if the bill becomes law" "From a medical point of view, there's a need for access to bathrooms': says Dr. Mitchell S. Cappell, M.D., PhD., chief of the Division of Gastroenterology at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. "It benefits society with a very small accommodation required." But he also sees "a small potential for abuse. " To assure that people use the law legitimate- ly, Cappell suggests that the prescription be renewed once every year or twont shouldn't be something that you get for life." "Nothing in the bill prevents a doctor from putting an expiration date on the prescrip- tion," Sklar says. Sklar has written three books, two to help those with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, and the last, The Five Gifts of Illness, for which she interviewed more than 100 people who have suffered a chronic or life-threaten- ing illness. Her father-in-law, Farmington Hills gastroenterologist Dr. Manuel Sklar, wrote the forward to her first two books. She is married to attorney Joel Sklar. Their son Jonah, 12, is a seventh-grader at the Roeper School in Birmingham. The Sklars are members of Temple Emanu-El, Oak Park. ❑ together are referred to as inflamma- tory bowel disease, Cappell said. "Both involve inflammation of the colon or small intestine." He listed these common symptoms: rectal bleeding, diarrhea, abdominal pain and fever. The diarrhea may be severe, and in such cases, may require urgent access to a restroom. - Judith Doner Berne