After getting booted out of a water park, a mom claimed she was discriminated against. Apparently, all the men couldn’t stop staring. It all began when then-43-year-old Madelyn went to spend a day with her kids at the local waterpark. However, never could she have imagined that what began as an innocent family outing would end in such unfairness, humiliation, and rage. But it wasn’t the obnoxious children splashing other a foot away from her, nor the overpriced food and tickets at the waterpark what set her off. She hadn’t been in the water for five minutes before the staff singled her and turned her day into a nightmare.
Madelyn accused employees at the AO Water Park of discriminating against her because of her fuller figure. According to the mom, she was asked to leave the community pool because the staff deemed her string bikini inappropriate and told her to cover up, Daily Mail reported (SEE PHOTO). She allegedly went to the park with four family members. After getting in the pool with her niece and nephew, she said she was approached by pool staff, who told her to put on shorts because her bottoms were too small. Sheaffer asked to speak to a manager, according to DDN, but when a supervisor came over, she was told her top was too small too. Again, she was ordered to cover up or leave the park.
The demand didn’t sit well with the mother. “I am a 43-year-old woman who did not have the confidence — or the body — to put on a bikini until [I] was 40 years old,” she explained. “I will not be discriminated against because I look too good in one,” she added, alleging that she was asked to cover up because of her fuller figure. “I just felt like I was singled out,” she told 41Action News. “I felt like it was both age and body discrimination, and I felt like I could look around me and I could see a handful of other girls half my age, wearing the same size swimming suit and not being singled out and told to put on clothes or leave.” After being told to cover up or leave, Madelyn asked the supervisor to call the police so she could file a complaint. When officers arrived, she was escorted off the premises, but according to the bikini-clad mom, the cops sympathized with her. “Fifteen minutes later the police did arrive and said that while they did not agree, they had to do their job,” she wrote in a post on Facebook.
“‘We can’t actually say anything,’ they said as we walked outside, ‘but I hope from the expressions on our face you can tell how we feel.’ They were compassionate. They too, thought it was ridiculous,” the woman explained. “This was not a thong. It was a standard, summertime, two piece, string bikini. The same as everyone else, who felt confident enough in their body to wear one.” Officials at the AO Water Park had no comment about the incident, but the city officials said that “the facility made the call and we rely on their judgment.” The City added that it’s up to the manager to decide whether a patron’s attire is appropriate for the park and they don’t feel like they discriminated against the woman. Of course, the full-figured woman feels differently. According to an exclusive interview with Daily News, she said the staff saw a scantily-clad woman rather than someone who overcame obesity and adversity to become a role model. “I am a person who at one time wore clothes that covered my arms and legs completely,” she said. “I am not someone who would wear something that was revealing or inappropriate.” While Madelyn is right in some regards, a public pool also has the right to decide what’s appropriate for a family-friendly environment.