On June 17, 2026, John J. Shiptenko, the State Bar of Georgia ADA Coordinator assigned to my matter, told me I could file a grievance using my own voice-to-text tool. The emails and the grievance are linked here.
May 22, 2026. After a numbered “THIRD REQUEST” and a format conversion, the loop finally closed. The accessible-format resend worked where the first attempt had not. The reviewer, Adrienne D. Nash, confirmed it at 11:44 a.m. “I received both of your recent attachments, and I was able to access them,” she wrote. “They will also…
May 21, 2026. By the third day I numbered it. The subject line read “THIRD REQUEST.” That is what it took to get the State Bar of Georgia to confirm it had received my own evidence. Two prior asks had drawn no substantive confirmation. So the repetition itself became the message. A disabled filer should…
May 20, 2026. Ask the State Bar of Georgia whether your evidence arrived and you do not get a yes. You get a forwarding address. The ADA Coordinator, John J. Shiptenko, wrote back at 8:31 a.m. about the submission I had sent to be confirmed. His answer: “I received it as a courtesy copy. You…
May 19, 2026. I asked the State Bar of Georgia one simple thing: did my evidence arrive? The answer came from an unsigned inbox, and it told me, in effect, to stop asking questions. I sent the ADA Coordinator, John J. Shiptenko, a stand-alone request to confirm receipt of the prior day’s transmission and to…
May 18, 2026. When an institution has already lost your file once, you stop assuming the next one arrives. So I asked for a receipt. That should not be a hard ask. On this day it got no answer at all. I sent the State Bar of Georgia’s ADA Coordinator, John J. Shiptenko, a point-by-point…
