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Source: (consider it) Thread: Accessibility
Belle Ringer
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Back in the 70s when wheelchair ramps were newly required, my Mom's church (quite wealthy, also an old building) complained that the government has no right to tell a church what to do, they should NOT be required to add a ramp. Peculiar stance for a church that had an internal ramp to the altar so little olds who don't do stairs (after somehow struggling up the stairs into the building) could go forward to receive communion.

I was puzzled why aren't churches leading the "include everyone" movement instead of protesting it?

In the late 80s the church I attended had a wheelchair rider who had to sit alone in a side alcove because there was no way to park a wheelchair with the congregation. (I sometimes sat on the floor next to her.)

I went to the clergy person with three different proposals of ways to seat her next to other congregation members. He laughed and said absolutely not, cutting away some pews to include a wheelchair would make the church less visually attractive for weddings.

Appearance is more important than including all of their own members in their most defining activity, the Sunday community worship? Yes, weddings are most important.

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Albertus
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Quite right. Got a squint: what more do you want? [Roll Eyes]

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Lamb Chopped
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Every church I see here has pews cut away for wheelchairs. Unfortunately, it's a very hilly and floody place, so older churches are half a story above the street, and getting into the church in the first place is the problem--some have installed elevators, but ramps are usually physically impossible in older buildings.

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rolyn
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The Churches I frequent, (more through work than worship), had a big drive on wheelchair ramps some years ago. Unfortunately most of the congregations are now either non-existent, or so small there's only a tiny possibility it'll include someone in a wheel-chair.

However these ramps are much appreciated by people such as myself who have the job of removing and re-installing memorials [Smile]

As for the matter of the Christian faith rendering it's practitioners petit, intolerant and less compassionate or helpful than their secular counter-parts? That certainly does appear opposite from what one might hope and expect.

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Galloping Granny
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As far as I know, ramps for church access are compulsory here as for any other public buildings, and all the churches I've seen have them – but then we don't have any 12th century heritage structures. Does being the Established Church mean the CofE is exempt from other legal obligations?
If you have chairs there's obviously no worries about wheelchairs; I'm not sure whether wheelchairs I've noticed on our Praise Be TV hymn programme are inset or in a wide aisle beside the pews.
As for the dirty looks for someone who couldn't kneel, it sounds like a good church to get away from. When we Pressies first exchanged visits with St Luke's down the road, I told the vicar beforehand that if I remained standing it wasn't because John Knox didn't approve but because I'd recently had hip surgery, and that was okay for him – but I do notice that nowadays standing and kneeling seem to be equally acceptable. I can think of several of our older Anglican friends might find kneeling as difficult as I would do now.

GG

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The Kingdom of Heaven is spread upon the earth, and men do not see it. Gospel of Thomas, 113

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Belle Ringer
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# 13379

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quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
Every church I see here has pews cut away for wheelchairs. Unfortunately, it's a very hilly and floody place, so older churches are half a story above the street, and getting into the church in the first place is the problem...

New churches where I currently live (no snow) are flat on a slab, no stairs or ramp. Older churches had to add a ramp. In either, the rider needs a companion to hold the door open to get in the building and then into the sanctuary. But how much electronics should a church be expected to spend money on?

I don't remember seeing pews cut away in any local church. (I've seen it elsewhere.) Not in any church I've ever sung in here, old or new. Catholic church (modern) and the two biggest non-denominationals have very wide aisles plus lots of space behind the pews., that works fine. Epis aisles not spacious but wide enough that a wheelchair is not a safety hazard. Methodist and Disciples of Christ a wheel chair totally blocks the aisle, creating a fire safety hazard, nor is there open space at the back of the church.

As has been said up-thread, reconfiguring old churches to accept wheel chairs can be puzzlingly difficult.

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Pomona
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quote:
Originally posted by Galloping Granny:
As far as I know, ramps for church access are compulsory here as for any other public buildings, and all the churches I've seen have them – but then we don't have any 12th century heritage structures. Does being the Established Church mean the CofE is exempt from other legal obligations?
If you have chairs there's obviously no worries about wheelchairs; I'm not sure whether wheelchairs I've noticed on our Praise Be TV hymn programme are inset or in a wide aisle beside the pews.
As for the dirty looks for someone who couldn't kneel, it sounds like a good church to get away from. When we Pressies first exchanged visits with St Luke's down the road, I told the vicar beforehand that if I remained standing it wasn't because John Knox didn't approve but because I'd recently had hip surgery, and that was okay for him – but I do notice that nowadays standing and kneeling seem to be equally acceptable. I can think of several of our older Anglican friends might find kneeling as difficult as I would do now.

GG

Yes, the CoE is exempt from a few areas of legislation - although some of those exceptions apply to all religious organisations and are not specifically due to being the Established church.

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Consider the work of God: Who is able to straighten what he has bent? [Ecclesiastes 7:13]

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M.
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Are you sure the CofE is exempt from the disability parts of the Equality Act? I've never heard this before.

The duties are not absolute: I thought the duty was to make reasonable adjustments. That will take into account the nature of the building.

I am happy to be corrected, as an ignorant (fairly) recent transplant from a free church.

And at our place, quite a few people stand for communion, I doubt anyone else has thought twice about it.

M.

[ 28. May 2015, 06:26: Message edited by: M. ]

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Baptist Trainfan
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M.: I think you are right.

From the Diocese of Coventry's website re. the Equality Act:

"It stipulates that all service providers should make ‘reasonable adjustments’ to their buildings and services so that disabled people can use them. ... It is therefore very important that churches engage with the Equality Act and rethink how their buildings are used by others. ... Under the Equality Act churches are ‘service providers’ (in more ways than one!) and therefore all activities that take place in the church and church hall need to be considered in terms of the risk people face when interacting with that environment".

No sign of any special dispensation there!

P.S. In our Free Church, people sit for Communion anyway ... we don't have any kneelers!

[ 28. May 2015, 06:41: Message edited by: Baptist Trainfan ]

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Curiosity killed ...

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I am sure you're right, M. - as is the Diocese of London, under the Equality Act (2010) all service providers have to make "reasonable adjustments" to make them accessible to disabled users.

It doesn't have to be ramps, that's just one of the options. The local church also provides:
  • a hearing loop (shame they bodged it and built in some additional feedback that hurts my ears),
  • large print hymn books. When I was doing it I used to produce four or five copies of a booklet for each service with all the hymns at 24pt for the two or three church members who were losing their sight and some spares for any visitors, as the large print books are big and heavy for the elderly people losing their sight, whereas an A5 booklet with the hymns in order for that service is lighter and easier to navigate;
  • in house service booklets in large print versions as well as 12pt.
  • readings printed as well as read so people can follow if they are losing their hearing or find it difficult to follow;
  • pointing out where people can go for a quiet space if they are suffering sensory overload,
  • giving enough information to enable people to decide what is appropriate for them,
  • people standing near a step to warn and give a hand up and down,
  • being able to position wheelchairs anywhere in church;
  • bringing communion to the seats if there are people struggling with mobility
  • not structuring a service so everyone moves except those with disabilities who are left marooned in their pews (as I saw done once)


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Boogie

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Of course, the person I mentioned in the OP didn't need any adjustments at all mobility wise - his guide dog is well able to negotiate crowds and steps.

All he needed was for people to let him go where everyone else was going.

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Fineline
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I suppose in theory a dog could upset someone. I used to support a woman with Down Syndrome who was absolutely terrified of dogs, to the extent that if she saw one, she would just freeze and shake and refuse to move for ages. Not to say that guide dogs shouldn't be allowed equal access, but sometimes different disability needs can clash and there isn't always an easy answer. Such as 'autism-friendly' showings of films, where children can make as much noise as they need to. Great for those autistic kids who need to make noise - not so much for those who find noise painful.
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Boogie

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quote:
Originally posted by Fineline:
I suppose in theory a dog could upset someone. I used to support a woman with Down Syndrome who was absolutely terrified of dogs, to the extent that if she saw one, she would just freeze and shake and refuse to move for ages. Not to say that guide dogs shouldn't be allowed equal access, but sometimes different disability needs can clash and there isn't always an easy answer. Such as 'autism-friendly' showings of films, where children can make as much noise as they need to. Great for those autistic kids who need to make noise - not so much for those who find noise painful.

Yes, that's very true fineline - but if it were the case I would have (at the very least) expected them to explain the situation to the guide dog owner.

The same problem can happen on buses as the same space is needed for wheelchair users and guide dog owners.

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Fineline
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I suppose the specificity or vagueness of their explanation would depend on the extent to which the other disabled person (I'm talking generally) wanted to keep their disability confidential to strangers. In reality, I find in my experience that churches are often full of people who all know each other, and they can be a little afraid of something unfamiliar, because it can threaten the comfortable situation they are in. Also, when it comes to different disabilities and needs, it is often the people who are most influential, and who are the most vocal, whose needs are prioritised, at the expense of other needs.

At a church I used to go to, there were fellowship groups which were quite big. Sometimes the pastor would ask for our suggestions and I occasionally said I'd find it easier if we sometimes could split into smaller groups for prayer. One woman always would immediately say we couldn't possibly do that because her husband had hearing problems where he couldn't hear if more than one person in the room was praying aloud at a time. She seemed to assume that her husband's difficulty automatically trumped anyone else's possible difficulties, and that it was inconceivable that he should ever be put in a situation where he couldn't hear prayers. I never felt able to join in the prayers or sharing in such a big group, and I eventually left the church. Which, looking back, was a shame, really. When different people have different needs, surely some compromise could be made.

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Fineline
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I don't think it's just churches though - I find a similar thing can happen in small, cliquey work-places, or small, cliquey colleges, particularly in out-of-the-way places where people aren't too hot on the legal requirements, and there isn't much outside influence. You get some places, which are generally bigger and more central, which are really hot on disability equality, and general etiquette and professionalism, and other, smaller, out-of-the-way, places where everything's a lot sloppier.

But then churches aren't supposed to be 'professional', I guess, and that could maybe make this more common in churches - churches often describe themselves as a 'family' and can be over-familiar with each other, and also with new people, in a way that would be frowned on in a workplace! You don't (well, shouldn't!) get welcomed on your first day in a workplace with 'Do you have a husband and children at home? Oh, you don't? That's okay - we have other single people here too!'

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Enoch
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quote:
Originally posted by Fineline:
I suppose the specificity or vagueness of their explanation would depend on the extent to which the other disabled person (I'm talking generally) wanted to keep their disability confidential to strangers.

None of us have the right to expect people to take account of our disability if we are equally determined that we shouldn't have to divulge its existence. The argument 'he/she should have known/been able to guess' is passive aggression in spades.
quote:

... At a church I used to go to, there were fellowship groups which were quite big. Sometimes the pastor would ask for our suggestions and I occasionally said I'd find it easier if we sometimes could split into smaller groups for prayer. One woman always would immediately say we couldn't possibly do that because her husband had hearing problems where he couldn't hear if more than one person in the room was praying aloud at a time. She seemed to assume that her husband's difficulty automatically trumped anyone else's possible difficulties, and that it was inconceivable that he should ever be put in a situation where he couldn't hear prayers. ...

I suppose when it comes to what trumps what, there's a difference between whether one is just giving vent to a preference, or whether this is based on an objective problem. I accept that you think she was just making a fuss on her husband's behalf, but partial deafness doesn't involve white sticks or wheel chairs. Much of the time it is invisible. There are quite a lot of people in the general population who have the sort of difficulties she was describing, particularly once they are past middle age. You may be dismissing her complaints as preciousness, but at least it might make you and others aware of something that is much more prevalent than most young people with good hearing in both ears will have realised.

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Albertus
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I think it says quite a lot, in that little anecdote, that it was the wife of the partially deaf man rather than the man himself who would speak up. One wonders whether the disability was more of a big deal to her- as an opportunity to draw attention to herself- than it was to him. I have seen people behave like that.
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cliffdweller
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quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
I think it says quite a lot, in that little anecdote, that it was the wife of the partially deaf man rather than the man himself who would speak up. One wonders whether the disability was more of a big deal to her- as an opportunity to draw attention to herself- than it was to him. I have seen people behave like that.

Sure. But it's also true that often the spouse is more willing to advocate for you than you are yourself. The man may have been prone to just slink off and stop attending, while the wife is the one to speak up and advocate on his behalf. I've seen that dynamic quite often.

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Albertus
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Maybe. Perhaps just projecting across from people I've known (and been annoyed by).

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Fineline
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quote:
Originally posted by Enoch:
quote:
Originally posted by Fineline:
I suppose the specificity or vagueness of their explanation would depend on the extent to which the other disabled person (I'm talking generally) wanted to keep their disability confidential to strangers.

None of us have the right to expect people to take account of our disability if we are equally determined that we shouldn't have to divulge its existence. The argument 'he/she should have known/been able to guess' is passive aggression in spades.


Obviously you have to disclose it someone in order to have it accommodated for, but that doesn't mean that everyone has to know. If you've told the person in charge that, say, you have a mental health problem that means you need certain certain support, then that is confidential. They should not then be saying to everyone else 'Oh, we can't do this because someone's got a mental health problem which makes it difficult for them.' That would go for a workplace, a university setting, and a conference setting.

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Boogie

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# 13538

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It's a hard one isn't it?

Say the reason was that someone was terrified of dogs - who gets the reasonable adjustments, the person who needs the dog for mobility or the person who is afraid of the dog?

Taxi firms have no choice but to take guide dogs, some have refused and got into a lot of trouble.

Here is an example of this.

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Fineline
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quote:
Originally posted by Enoch:
I accept that you think she was just making a fuss on her husband's behalf, but partial deafness doesn't involve white sticks or wheel chairs. Much of the time it is invisible. There are quite a lot of people in the general population who have the sort of difficulties she was describing, particularly once they are past middle age. You may be dismissing her complaints as preciousness, but at least it might make you and others aware of something that is much more prevalent than most young people with good hearing in both ears will have realised.

Wait - why do you accept that I 'think she was just making a fuss on her husband's behalf'? I didn't say that, and it's not even what I was thinking, so you shouldn't accept something I haven't said.

I'm very aware of the reality of hearing problems and auditory processing problems, and the impact they have. The disability he had was real. I don't think she was being 'precious'. I think it was important that she speak up for him - but what I am challenging here is that she totally dismissed the difficulties I was having. She was perhaps thinking I was being 'precious' - I don't know. But I think with more understanding, and a willingness to acknowledge and hear others' difficulties, a compromise could have been reached. I was quite young at the time - I just felt I had been silenced by her, that we couldn't possibly ever do it any other way because her husband had hearing problems and that was that.

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Pomona
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Sorry, I was told by a member of the clergy that the CoE was exempt from the disabilities act - sorry if that's wrong!

Either way the CoE (and many other churches) is still pretty bad at accessibility provisions.

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North East Quine

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We made some expensive alterations to make our church wheelchair accessible, and to incorporate a disabled toilet. I was under the impression we had to, to conform to current legislation. The wheelchair access is through a side door, rather than the main door.

We also removed two side pews (one from either side of the church), to create two wheelchair / pram-friendly spaces. We have occasionally found that that wasn't enough; not at regular services, but at funerals when we have more very elderly / disabled people in the church.

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Fineline
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quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Say the reason was that someone was terrified of dogs - who gets the reasonable adjustments, the person who needs the dog for mobility or the person who is afraid of the dog?

I don't think it always needs to be so black and white - especially not in a church setting, where hopefully we are motivated by more than just the desire the meet the minimum legal requirements. Compromises can be made, and both parties can be considered and made to feel valued. Some situations may be impossible to resolve, but I'm pretty sure in a lot of situations, some kind of compromise could be made, and both sides could reach a better understanding of each other and more compassion.
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no prophet's flag is set so...

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I was surprised when visiting London that all tube stations were not accessible. This would not be acceptable here. It's an absolute given that any publicly accessible space is accessible.

Churches are generally retrofitted to be accessible, with any new construction requiring it. I don't think I've heard controversy about it. It it just required. Toilets/washrooms - I cannot recall seeing any within the past 20+ years that were not accessible.

The current debate locally is whether public institutions should provide toilets/washrooms for people who identify as neither male or female.

Re dogs. They are automatically allowed if they are service dogs. They cannot be refused under any circumstances. Our church has a service dog in training coming. It was simply an announcement and is a short paragraph in the bulletin (pew service leaflet). The church went with it without any question whatsoever.

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Doc Tor
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quote:
Originally posted by no prophet's flag is set so...:
I was surprised when visiting London that all tube stations were not accessible. This would not be acceptable here. It's an absolute given that any publicly accessible space is accessible.

You know how old some of those stations are?

(The answer is 1863, btw.)

[ 28. May 2015, 19:07: Message edited by: Doc Tor ]

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Chamois
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Orginally posted by no prophet's flag has set:
quote:
I was surprised when visiting London that all tube stations were not accessible. This would not be acceptable here. It's an absolute given that any publicly accessible space is accessible.

Churches are generally retrofitted to be accessible, with any new construction requiring it.

As somebody has already posted up-thread, the UK Equalities legislation specifies that organisations providing services to the public must take "reasonable steps" to ensure access. This is interpreted to allow reasonable time for adjustments to be made. The London underground stations are gradually being retrofitted to be accessible and I enjoy watching new "accessibility" symbols appearing on the tube maps. For a lot of the older stations on cramped premises this is quite a challenge - as it is for older churches - but when a station is refurbished or newly constructed it is compulsory.

As far as assistance dogs are concerned, I thought they were allowed anywhere and have been for years. I'm sure I can remember signs reading "No dogs except guide dogs" from my childhood. I'm surprised a church wouldn't accept a person with a guide dog as fully mobile throughout the premises. What did they think the dog was going to do????

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Fineline
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I wonder if it's just that not everyone knows all the rules and legislation - that even though they are supposed to read it and know it, realistically not everyone does. You start a job and are supposed to read all the policies and procedures, in huge folders, but many people just skim though.

And I guess lack of awareness will happen more often in an environment where the people in authority are not challenged by people who know the legislation. When I was studying recently, I asked if I could go part time because of my disability, and the head of department said no, absolutely not - that no one was permitted to study the course part time. When I had my needs assessment, I was told that I have a legal right to be able to go part time, and the disability coordinator emailed the department to inform them of this, and so they had to let me go part time. But they clearly hadn't known (or had known but were hoping it wouldn't be challenged!) beforehand. It was a similiar story for other things - like asking if I could have lecture notes beforehand. They were very reluctant to do anything to help, but since then, more people with disabiliities have done the course, because now they can go part time, and now the department is hopefully more aware of the legislation and more accommodating.

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Photo Geek
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My very small Episcopal Church has a ramp into our narthex and is currently searching for a way to also make our undercroft accessible, so that everyone can enjoy coffee hour. The cost of any project is always a big issue but we believe this is very important.

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"Liberal Christian" is not an oxymoron.

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cliffdweller
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quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
Maybe. Perhaps just projecting across from people I've known (and been annoyed by).

I can certainly resonate with that! there are those
[brick wall] folks.

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"Here is the world. Beautiful and terrible things will happen. Don't be afraid." -Frederick Buechner

Posts: 11242 | From: a small canyon overlooking the city | Registered: Jan 2008  |  IP: Logged
no prophet's flag is set so...

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quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
quote:
Originally posted by no prophet's flag is set so...:
I was surprised when visiting London that all tube stations were not accessible. This would not be acceptable here. It's an absolute given that any publicly accessible space is accessible.

You know how old some of those stations are?

(The answer is 1863, btw.)

It makes no difference here, it simply has to be made accessible. They do a pretty good job mostly of keeping the architecture matching. In many places, it is necessary to build additional entrances, build elevators on the outside of existing structures etc. There is a tax scheme to compensate private businesses re this. I don't mean to start a pond war, but the time frame for these sorts of changes expired in 1988 in my province, so some places are rather behind.

They've also indicated via Human Rights that accessibility being possible is not sufficient. Accessibility must be with dignity, which means it is not okay for the wheelchair person to have to make special arrangements, find a staff person etc. They call the requirement "substantive equality" where mere "technical compliance" isn't enough. The concept of "universal design" applies, meaning all structures must be equally accessible by all.

"Accessibility should not just be a matter of whether or not it is possible for persons with disabilities to perform tasks, but also whether it is possible to perform tasks in a dignified and easy way." Link

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Out of this nettle, danger, we pluck this flower, safety.
\_(ツ)_/

Posts: 11498 | From: Treaty 6 territory in the nonexistant Province of Buffalo, Canada ↄ⃝' | Registered: Mar 2010  |  IP: Logged
Palimpsest
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One of the things poisoning the well here in the North West is that people have had bad experiences with dogs, not trained service dogs, but "therapy dogs", meaning an untrained pet that someone wants to take everywhere because they have a note from a compliant doctor saying they're a special snowflake who needs their pet.
When said pet misbehaves, people don't know the difference.

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Boogie

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One thing that really is making life more accessible to blind people is technology. I have several completely blind friends on facebook. We make sure all photos are described, of course. Speech technology is fabulous now on smart phones and tablets.

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Garden. Room. Walk

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Paul.
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quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
One thing that really is making life more accessible to blind people is technology. I have several completely blind friends on facebook. We make sure all photos are described, of course. Speech technology is fabulous now on smart phones and tablets.

Do you mean you add your own audio descriptions to photos? How do you do this?
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Hiro's Leap

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The London Tube is a hellish place to navigate with a mobility impairment. Only a quarter of stations are step-free, and apparently wheelchairs were actually banned until 1993 for fire safety.

This is only part of the problem. The corridors are narrow, very busy and people move fast - it's difficult to go slower than the crowd. There's also a massive amount of walking. I have a friend with rheumatoid arthritis and she struggles badly down there. A few day's visit is OK but she couldn't work in London any more.

That said, it's hard to see how this can be cured without an astronomical expenditure, and even then, London's so riddled with tunnels, deep foundations, cables etc that there's not necessarily space to improve some sections.

Interesting (and impressive) that Canada is so far head of the UK in terms of access. I've met loads of foreign visitors who felt we were streets ahead of their home countries, so I guess there's a wide spectrum.

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Doc Tor
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quote:
Originally posted by no prophet's flag is set so...:
It makes no difference here, it simply has to be made accessible.

You would have to essentially close a station at a time and take 5 years reboring all the tunnels. For each and every underground station, except the newest ones on the Jubilee and DLR.

It sucks hard not to have full (or even partial) accessibility, but the Tube does still manage to carry one and a quarter billion people every year.

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Forward the New Republic

Posts: 9131 | From: Ultima Thule | Registered: Jul 2005  |  IP: Logged
Curiosity killed ...

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When tube stations have additional work done, accessibility (pdf map) is built in. Tottenham Court Road will have lifts when it reopens, Kings Cross St Pancras already does, as do Farringdon, Bank and Earls Court, all of which had work carried out recently. Oxford Circus certainly deserves the exclamation next to the name.

I started paying far more attention when my daughter was in a wheelchair for a time and that continued when I moved The Luggage™ across London regularly getting my daughter to and from university. I certainly wouldn't recommend supporting a wobbly daughter up escalators with one arm and carrying a wheelchair under the other.

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Mugs - Keep the Ship afloat

Posts: 13794 | From: outiside the outer ring road | Registered: Aug 2006  |  IP: Logged
Boogie

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# 13538

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quote:
Originally posted by Paul.:
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
One thing that really is making life more accessible to blind people is technology. I have several completely blind friends on facebook. We make sure all photos are described, of course. Speech technology is fabulous now on smart phones and tablets.

Do you mean you add your own audio descriptions to photos? How do you do this?
No - written descriptions, all text is then converted to speech at the other end.

There are phones for the deaf-blind now too, telebraille (and dogs of course, dual trained. If you see a dog with a white and red chequered harness it is a guide dog plus hearing dog)

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Garden. Room. Walk

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Albertus
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I imagine that if your Facebook friends are anything like mine most of their picture descriptions will be either 'these are my kids' or 'this is my cat'... [Snore]
Posts: 6498 | From: Y Sowth | Registered: Jan 2008  |  IP: Logged
Boogie

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# 13538

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quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
I imagine that if your Facebook friends are anything like mine most of their picture descriptions will be either 'these are my kids' or 'this is my cat'... [Snore]

DOG - naturally! [Biased]

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Garden. Room. Walk

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Fineline
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Describing whatever picture you post is pretty standard in disability-oriented groups and pages on FB - all pictures posted are described in detail, including the colours. Often it's a meme with some quote on it, so the person posting will say what the words are, what colour the words are, and what the background picture is.
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Boogie

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quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:

I started paying far more attention when my daughter was in a wheelchair for a time and that continued when I moved The Luggage™ across London regularly getting my daughter to and from university. I certainly wouldn't recommend supporting a wobbly daughter up escalators with one arm and carrying a wheelchair under the other.

I often wonder how older people manage on the underground. My parents were not disabled, but easily tired in later years. There seem to be very few places where they could have had a rest between long walks.

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Garden. Room. Walk

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Belle Ringer
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quote:
Originally posted by Fineline:
quote:
Originally posted by Enoch:
I accept that you think she was just making a fuss on her husband's behalf, ...You may be dismissing her complaints as preciousness,

Wait - why do you accept that I 'think she was just making a fuss on her husband's behalf'? I didn't say that, and it's not even what I was thinking.

I'm very aware of the reality of hearing problems and auditory processing problems, and the impact they have. The disability he had was real. .. what I am challenging here is that she totally dismissed the difficulties I was having.

Yes, this is how I read it - she wanted her husband's disability honored but Findline's dismissed.

We've had discussions in the past about conflict of disabilities. Amber used to post about conflicts between adjustments for different disabilities.

The first I ran into conflict between disabilities was back in the 70s when they started cutting curbs into slopes so wheelchair riders could travel the sidewalks. Great! But it confused the guide dogs who had been trained to stop at a curb, signaling to the human a step into traffic. No curb, no stop before entering traffic!

Obviously the dogs have been retrained, but it's just an example of taking care of one person's needs blocking another person with different needs.

A handicapped toilet is usually higher because of people with bad knees or transferring from a wheelchair need height. A friend is a wheelchair rider but she is short, the higher toilets are too high and the lower standard toilet stalls to narrow for her wheelchair. Yet, how many different toilets can a place be required to install?

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Fineline
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quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:

I started paying far more attention when my daughter was in a wheelchair for a time and that continued when I moved The Luggage™ across London regularly getting my daughter to and from university. I certainly wouldn't recommend supporting a wobbly daughter up escalators with one arm and carrying a wheelchair under the other.

I often wonder how older people manage on the underground. My parents were not disabled, but easily tired in later years. There seem to be very few places where they could have had a rest between long walks.
I imagine a lot of people simply avoid it. I've always found the underground difficult, for different reasons, and whenever I've been in London, I've increasingly tried to find ways to avoid the underground - walking, going by bus, etc. Then I moved away to a quieter part of the country so I could avoid London altogether! I think it must be hard for lots of disabilities. I find walking onto a moving thing like an escalator difficult because of visual processing difficulties and poor coordination. Normally, I avoid escalators, or I get onto an escalator very slowly, holding onto the sides tightly, but the underground is so full of people walking fast and pushing past each other that it's hard to do that.

But I agree it's difficult to change the underground system because it's so old, and so it will be a slow process. I noticed when I was living in Canada that buildings and transport were a lot more accessible than in the UK - well, actually, first I simply noticed that I saw a lot more people in wheelchairs than I'd seen in the UK, and then I realised it was because it was easier for people in wheelchairs to access things. And I saw that it was easier in Canada for things to be accessible because everything was so much newer, and there was more space. The streets where wider and straighter, the buildings were newer, bigger and more spacious - everything was more spacious, and more uniform.

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Leorning Cniht
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quote:
Originally posted by Fineline:
Describing whatever picture you post is pretty standard in disability-oriented groups and pages on FB - all pictures posted are described in detail, including the colours.

I see this a lot, but it's usually in some filler photo that's added to an article. The purpose of the photo (it'll be a stock photo of a woman looking sad, or a mother and her children, or a police car of whatever) is to provide visual interest so you're not looking at a wall of text. It doesn't add information.

In those cases, for blind people, I wonder whether having the article interrupted by "a picture of a feminine-presenting person wearing a pink top sitting at a desk using a computer" is in any way helpful.

I don't know - I'm not blind - but I'm skeptical.

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Pomona
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quote:
Originally posted by Palimpsest:
One of the things poisoning the well here in the North West is that people have had bad experiences with dogs, not trained service dogs, but "therapy dogs", meaning an untrained pet that someone wants to take everywhere because they have a note from a compliant doctor saying they're a special snowflake who needs their pet.
When said pet misbehaves, people don't know the difference.

Or you have a serious anxiety disorder or agoraphobia and a dog allows you to leave the house.

Seriously, it's comments like this that help stigma against mental health issues going. Mental illnesses are as real reasons for getting a therapy/assistance animal as blindness or deafness.

FYI most countries require registration and training for therapy animals, the US being behind on this does not negate the helpfulness and often lifesaving help therapy animals provide.

Please educate yourself on the need for therapy animals before making ignorant comments like this.

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Consider the work of God: Who is able to straighten what he has bent? [Ecclesiastes 7:13]

Posts: 5319 | From: UK | Registered: Jun 2012  |  IP: Logged
Boogie

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# 13538

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quote:
Originally posted by Leorning Cniht:

In those cases, for blind people, I wonder whether having the article interrupted by "a picture of a feminine-presenting person wearing a pink top sitting at a desk using a computer" is in any way helpful.

I don't know - I'm not blind - but I'm skeptical.

Yes they are - they ask for the descriptions and appreciate them.

I am sending a book of photos of Gypsy's puppyhood for her eventual owner. There is a chance s/he won't be able to see them, but a friend or member of the family will be able to describe them.

This is the pinned header to our Facebook group "For ALL photos please remember that some members cannot see the pictures you post. Therefore don't forget to add a description of all images."

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Garden. Room. Walk

Posts: 13030 | From: Boogie Wonderland | Registered: Mar 2008  |  IP: Logged
Hiro's Leap

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quote:
Originally posted by Leorning Cniht:
I see this a lot, but it's usually in some filler photo that's added to an article. The purpose of the photo (it'll be a stock photo of a woman looking sad, or a mother and her children, or a police car of whatever) is to provide visual interest so you're not looking at a wall of text. It doesn't add information.

True. However, if you don't caption it, the blind person is left uncertain about what they missed and if it was important. The website becomes that bit less user-friendly for them.

Similarly, a photo on Facebook saying "Me with the kids in the kitchen" might not mean a lot to someone who can't see it, but they are then more part of the conversation.

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Leorning Cniht
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quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:

I am sending a book of photos of Gypsy's puppyhood for her eventual owner. There is a chance s/he won't be able to see them, but a friend or member of the family will be able to describe them.

But in this case, the photos of the dog are the content. Your intent is to document her life as a puppy. If you had written a journal about her puppyhood and illustrated it with a load of dog-related clipart, would you expect the friend or family member doing the reading to describe the clipart? Would you also expect them so say "the heading is set in 20 point Garamond in dark blue"?

Unless it was a particularly beautiful layout that you were describing because it was particularly good, I don't think you would. Not every detail of the visual layout is important, or information, and doesn't necessarily translate to an audible presentation.

So I think you'd want to distinguish between images that are really part of the content and images that are mostly filler.

ETA: Clearly, if you are reading something to a blind person, he or she can ask you questions about the "unimportant stuff". That is where I would expect web screenreaders and the like to aim towards - presenting only the important stuff by default, but being able to present everything on request.

[ 29. May 2015, 16:10: Message edited by: Leorning Cniht ]

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