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Showing posts with label Barrier Free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barrier Free. Show all posts

Friday, 13 December 2013

Have Wheelchair, Will Travel

Have wheelchair, will travel


Inclusive travel is one of those tides that washes into public consciousness each time news breaks of a voyager in a wheelchair, only to recede from collective memory when the deed is done. The challenged itinerant is left to deal with problems like fitting through a hotel room door, boarding a plane or finding a toilet. Lately, however, several initiatives have been introduced that could have the disabled out and about in greater numbers. 



Varun Jain, a 29-year-old paraplegic from Rishikesh, is an inveterate traveller who launched his inclusive travel company two years ago.
 Travel My Way aims to reach out to wheelchair-confined travellers. "Having travelled often I recognized the need for travel companies and travel assistance providers for the differently abled," says Jain, who set about auditing hospitality and transport providers in the hills, and listing locally available caregivers. He also sensitized taxi drivers about how to interact with travellers with special needs. A camp operator near Mussoorie went so far as to make his campsite obstacle-free for the wheelchair-bound. "They may not partake in adventure sports but they should have the opportunity to enjoy the camaraderie at a campsite," Jain believes. 



About a year before Jain floated his pennant, a socially-oriented company called
 Travel Another India (TAI) and a disability advocacy collective from Ladakh called PAGIR embarked on a project to make Leh wheelchair-accessible through Himalaya on Wheels. They identified monuments, hotels and lodges, assistive facilities and itineraries that catered to those in wheelchairs. "Hotel owners built larger rooms so people in wheelchairs could navigate more freely. Even the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council promised to act on our recommendations for accessible pavements," says Gouthami founder of TAI. 



Further south, in Bangalore, Vidhya Ramasubban started a taxi service called Kickstart when she realized that the unavailability of adapted vehicles could curtail the mobility of the disabled (and also the elderly and infirm). Her fleet of modified cars has front seats that swivel out and ramps. The three-month-old service currently has more pensioners as clients than people with disabilities, but she hopes that will change. "As more of the disabled get jobs in the corporate sector they'll want to travel more," she predicts.
 



However, despite best efforts, such enterprises are not making the expected numbers, even though the estimated number of people in India with disabilities is 21.9 million. Even the ministry of tourism has lately woken up to their potential to contribute to domestic tourism and has identified Accessible Tourism as a new vertical to be developed. They've started by issuing guidelines to make tourist facilities, hotels and monuments barrier-free, and instituted an award for the Most Barrier-Free Monument/Tourist Attraction.
 


The problem is that people with disabilities have little or no faith in Indian establishments going beyond the brief. "I know that in India one can't depend on public transport. Even some hotels that claim to be accessible on sites like TripAdvisor are not really," says Shivani Gupta, founder of the consultancy AccessAbility. Gupta, a PG in inclusive environments, is often called to weigh in on structural modifications in buildings to render them disability-compliant. "While the ministry of tourism has issued star ratings for accessible hotels, and the Archeological Survey of India has committed to making historical sites accessible, much of the change is only on paper. Moreover, a wide range of disabilities demands a wide range of adaptive interventions, which are not comprehensively made," she points out.
 



Prof K Raghuraman, who teaches English at the
 Government Arts College in Chennai, suggests braille maps and city guides to help visually impaired people like himself find their bearings. "Museums should have tactile instructions navigational cards or audio guides," he adds. "When I went to a museum in Mys ore with my parents, they were too exhausted to explain all the exhibits to me What about guides trained in sign language for the deaf-mute?" 



Neenu Kewlani, who has scoliosis and polio, points out that specialised travel is the prerogative of the rich, who can afford to travel by air or in their modified vehicles and stay in pricey barrier-free rooms In 2011, Kewlani and three of her wheel chair-bound friends, Arvind Prabhoo Nishant Khade and Sunita Sancheti, set off on a 84-day tour of 28 state capitals They experienced first-hand the inadequacies of the road and pointed these out to state governments and non-profits. "When more disabled people are visible on the streets, it will encourage others to come out too," says Kewlani, who travelled with a portable shower chair and bedpans as public toilets make no room for wheel chairs. However, the disabled won't venture out until provisions are in place to guarantee their safety and comfort away from home — an admittedly daunting task in India where in classic cart-before-horse logic, hotels want to see the numbers before they make structural changes.
 

Change will be slow in coming but it will arrive, entrepreneurs like Piya Bose are confident. The founder of Girls on The Go, a travel company exclusively for wom en, is planning to set up a travel vertical for the disabled. She's beginning with a series of recces to holiday spots, starting with Goa (which entails identifying an accessible beach). "People need to under stand the business potential of this segment," she says, "Even countries in East Asia and Africa are ahead of us in this regard." Bose wants to eventually customize tours for travellers with different kinds of disabilities, no doubt the beginning of a long and promising journey.
 




Wednesday, 11 December 2013

Empower the Disabled, demand Activists in Raipur

Empower the Disabled, demand Activists

An Interview of Rajnish Kumar Arya 

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Raipur: Peeved at the manner in which the government is implementing the state policy on disability, activists are demanding setting up a separate ministry for empowerment of persons with disabilities.


Talking to TOI, on the occasion of International Day of Persons with Disabilities, under the theme of “Break Barriers, Open Doors: for an inclusive society and development of all” – disability activist Rajneesh Kumar Arya, said the estimated population of persons with disabilities in Chhattisgarh is about 38, 31,779. According to Census 2011 data on disabilities are yet to be published.


Pointing out  that education is one of the most effective tools by which children with special needs could achieve social and economic empowerment , he said even after enactment of different laws, like the PWD Act 1995, 12 years of Sarva Shiksha Abhiyaan (SSA) and three years of RTE Act, 2010, the situation of education for children with special needs are on margin.


Still about 80 % of rural as well as 50 % of urban part of children with special needs are out of reach of education facilities. Under SSA, Arya Said, Rajiv Gandhi Shiksha Mission has appointed only 177 mobile resource advisors in against of 292. There are 142 blocks in Chhattisgarh. As per MHRD provision, there should be three such MRAs in each and every block from each major disability area like visual impairment, hearing impairment and mental retardation, but in the case of Chhattisgarh it is just two.


Adding that there is no district resource centre in the state, the activist said he felt that there should be some degree courses in state universities, including B. Ed. Special or M. Ed. Special.  “It is a matter of surprise that not a single university in Chhattisgarh has included a chapter or paper focusing on disabilities in general education”.



Even SCERT of Chhattisgarh has not contributed much on this, he said. Arya an expert working in the field of disability, rehabilitation claimed that inclusion of barrier free environment for persons with disabilities (PWDs) are on papers and not on ground in the state. He said even the office of commissioner for persons with disabilities; at Durg is not barrier free or disabled friendly.

Source : Times of India, Raipur Print Edition, Page no. 2 dated 4th December, 2013

Thursday, 5 December 2013

Not a Disabled Friendly Electoral System in India



Not a Disabled Friendly Electoral System in India


While it tried through media campaigns to improve the voter turnout for the Delhi Assembly elections, a large number of persons with disability (PwDs) were still unable to reach the polling booths — as they were not disabled friendly — and could not exercise their franchise.

A case in point was that of Neeru Gautam, who works in the disability sector with Sahyogi. A resident of Block 34 of West Patel Nagar, Ms. Gautam decided to cast her vote by taking her power chair all the way to the polling station in Block 26 Community Centre.

However, on reaching her polling booth, she realised there was no ramp to enter and the entrance to the room was also blocked by a wooden pole which had been put in the middle of the passage to segregate the incoming and leaving voters.

“As my chair could not enter the room, I asked the election staff to come out and help me cast my vote. But despite repeated pleas, no one came forward. Then one person offered to lift me physically, which I refused outright and I came back without casting my vote,” she rued.

Ms. Gautam incidentally had been voting in every election. “Earlier, I had a helper who would take me inside the booth but ever since I became independent due to my power chair, I have not felt the need for one. The Election Commission should have ensured ramps and barrier-free access for the PwDs in this election.”

Some PwDs also vented their anger on social networking sites. Abha Khetarpal, a wheelchair user and president of NGO Cross the Hurdles, wrote on the Facebook page of Dr. Satendra Singh, Coordinator with the Enabling Unit of the Equal Opportunity Cell of the University College of Medical Sciences, how polling booth number A-28 in Subhash Nagar, where she had to cast her vote, had no ramps for wheelchair users and no Braille stickers.

She commented: “So, in this politics of vote bank, polling stations are inaccessible. How can this be called government of the people, by the people and for the people?”

Ms. Khetarpal also noted the media often asks for proof about such shortcomings in the electoral system. “But taking pictures is not allowed — a disabled system indeed.”

For his part, Dr. Singh said: “I haven’t seen any attempts on the part of the Election Commission to publicise voting facilities for the disabled. There is no information on radio or media. However, kudos to the EC Delhi to finally make their website accessible to visually impaired. Sadly, EC’s website is still inaccessible.”

Despite the heavy odds, some PwD voters remained determined to cast their vote. Virender Kalra, a bank manager and a resident of Subhash Nagar, was one of them. When he found there was no ramp for his wheelchair to climb on, he got two persons to lift him and take him inside the polling booth. “I was determined to vote and did so to play my role in ensuring a healthy democracy,” he said.

Source : http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-newdelhi/not-a-disabled-friendly-electoral-system/article5423840.ece