New Year honours for disabled people, and God versus Mammon

One of the great things about writing a disability blog is that I can celebrate the achievements of disabled people. In this year’s New Year’s Honours List there were several honours for service to disabled people. Congratulations to all those people.

I know two of those people well. Bill Wrightson has worked tirelessly for years on access to the built environment. If I need any info on that topic it is always Bill I turn to. His advice is always thoughtful and sound. He has made a huge contribution in his field.
Good on you Bill!

Robert Martin must surely be the first person with an intellectual disability to become a member of the Order of Merit. As the first person, and probably still the only person with an intellectual disability to speak at the UN he is someone I admire enormously. The thing that always struck me about Robert’s life is that he grew up in Kimberly during the sixties and had never heard of the All Blacks! That speaks volumes to me. He is now of course a huge fan. The other thing is that he led a revolt in a sheltered workshop long before any government mooted the repeal of the DPEP Act.
Great stuff Robert!

New Year’s Eve was fairly quiet in this corner of Wellington. We spent the evening sampling the ‘rocket fuel’ very alcoholic eggnog punch contributed by a friend. As we contemplated the Wellington skyline ­ we have a good view across to Mt Vic ­ we couldn’t help but reflect on the relative position of God and Mammon in the twenty-first Century. The fitful gleam of the Christmas cross on the top of Mt Victoria is out-glared by the sign on the crane dominating the view from our window. We wondered what purpose the sign served. Who but disgruntled apartment dwellers like us can see it, and I can’t remember the last time I needed a crane.

After a few more glasses we speculated about the possibility of a sniper attack to “take out” the interloper. Not that any of us would know what to do with a rifle even if we had one. What price energy saving and global warming? If the corporates so obviously don’t care why on earth should I?

Before anyone asks me what relevance the last few paragraphs have to information accessibility, disability issues etc, let me remind you that I am a well-rounded person, sadly in every sense following the festive season, and therefore will blog about whatever else takes my fancy!

Happy New Year!

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Christmas Cheer

The silly season is upon us. Most of us have succumbed to that distinct feeling of panic in the air, which gradually intensified as, like lemmings we rushed towards Christmas celebrations. Every year I tell myself I won’t get caught up in the mad rush, and every year I fail dismally.

The thing that really annoys me is that there is always so much to do before Christmas, yet, Christmas over, I have some time to relax, enjoy and treat myself, and nothing interesting is open. How dare other people take a holiday at the same time as me!

Every year Christmas is more commercialised. Saccharine so called carols blast from every shop. Fake snow is everywhere, and I struggle to find any reference to the real origins of our biggest festival.

We all eat and drink too much, overspend on our credit cards and spend the next month or so regretting both.

We rush around trying to get all our work finished before the holidays, even though most of it will wait till next year. And I really miss all the regular programmes on National Radio not to mention, and yes will I ‘fess up – I miss Shortland St!

But before I am accused of having a severe case of ‘bah humbug’ I can tell you that our pohutukawa is blossoming. I have just heard a beautiful concert of mediaeval Christmas music, and feeling a bit sad that I won’t see quite a few of my family members at Christmas.

And during the holiday season there will be a picnic in the Karori Wildlife Sanctuary, and maybe a ferry ride to Days Bay. Novels will be read and music listened to. Wellington is peaceful over the holiday season and we will relax, with time to reflect on the past year and plan for the next.

I wish everyone a peace and joy at Christmas, a safe and restful break, and a happy and successful New Year.

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Rise up and protest against inaccessible information

Rise is the new print publication from Ministry of Social Development. It is also available on their web site. I don’t know what it is about as I can’t read it, and I suspect lots of other people won’t be able to either. I can say it is probably one of the ugliest publications I have ever seen, and I have seen a fair few. It’s probably a designer’s dream but it’s a reader’s nightmare. I think you would almost need to have 2020 vision to read it, or at the very least a good pair of reading specs. I tried it on a colleague who is within the range of so called normal sight and he struggled.

It is not entirely clear to me who the audience is. It is described as MSD’s flagship publication, and I would like to read one or two of the articles, but the headings in particular are an abomination. Some are large but in a strange distorted font. Others are tiny and grey on white. Body type is too small and again is grey. What IS it with grey?

The web isn’t much better. We tried the pdf and found some visual elements didn’t show and others flashed alarmingly. The possible cause was a version issue, The Rise document is in version seven of the Adobe Acrobat and the machine we viewed it on had version five of the reader.

We then tried the Word document. It was a bit more readable. However there was no contents page with handy hyperlinks, the images were very large and the lines of the body text too long and justified, which does not read well on the screen, and there are no page numbers. This is definitely not an equivalent document, not even to the original print one.

There are probably reasons for all of this relating to publication processes, but as the reader the message I get is that only some audiences are important. Others don’t matter.

It is really time that large organisations with dollars to spend on communications start to take their audiences seriously, and have proper planned and integrated processes to get their messages across. And readers shouldn’t put up with it any more.

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High contrast site? Low access

Colour contrast is really important to me, and lots of other people with partial sight. I don’t use any enlarging software – Firefox works well enough, even if some sites break, which they often do. Sadly most web site designers and builders simply don’t get it.

So here I go, harping on about it again.

www.456bereastreet.com
was recommended as a useful site for access info. Well maybe… If we want our sites and the information they contain to be credible then we have to walk the talk. Here’s an example of a site where they just don’t quite get it.

poor_contrast_1.jpg

The site is generally grey text on a white background, which actually meets the accessibility standard for colour contrast. But wait there’s more. The site attempts to helpfully offer a high contrast option which fails miserably on almost all counts, passing just one colour blindness test. The measurement tool I use is from Vision Australia, based on the W3C standard, and gives accurate, trustworthy and reliable results in my experience.

poor_contrast_2.jpg
You really gotta wonder!

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