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I would say it's more like a handful of wheelchair students saying that they are offended that the rest of the school participates in athletics, because it's a painful reminder of their disability, and makes them feel excluded, and the other half saying that they couldn't care less. The ramp is an objective hindrance, athletics is subjective. yes, their feelings are real and raw, but should the rest of the world have to walk on egg shells because of it?
I think a slightly more accurate version of this would be if the handful of wheelchair students are noticing that the school has built only enough ramps to be legally compliant, meaning most of them are in inconvenient locations, often causing students to have to rush and be late for class - all while the athletic department is getting all the press and funding.
Drawing attention to repeated, systemic, sustained inequities isn't, IMHO, a bad thing. And if you're writing something that makes you worry, it's probably worth thinking about why, whatever you ultimately decide to do about it.