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++Issue 132 Contents.
- 01: Canadian Government Loses Milestone Web Access Case - Donna Jodhan victorious after her ‘rights infringed’.
- 02: Digital Government ‘Must Not Increase Exclusion’ - Policy advisor speaks out.
- 03: Free DAISY Book Recorder Software Upgraded. - New version of open source audio tool.
- News in Brief:
- 04: News in Brief: 04:
- 05: access standard; 05:
- 06: Refreshable Apple – Braille keyboard for
- 07: Third Survey – screen-reader trends questionnaire.
- 08:
- Section Two: Interview Special Feature - Diane Mulligan OBE.
- 09: Podcast Pioneer: Diane Mulligan OBE has battled with adversity to emerge as one of the world’s leading champions of the rights of people with disabilities, particularly those in the developing world. In an exclusive interview with E-Access Bulletin, she explains how new technologies can transform the lives of the world’s poorest people – and those who work to help them.
[Contents ends].
++Section One: News.
+01: Canadian Government Loses Milestone Web Access Case.
A blind accessibility consultant has won her case against the Canadian government for the lack of accessibility on its websites, the country's Federal Court has announced.
As reported in last month's E-Access Bulletin ( http://www.headstar.com/eablive/?p=508 ), Donna Jodhan sued the Canadian government after she was unable to apply for a government job online or complete an online census form without assistance from sighted government employees, arguing that this breached her rights.
Last week, Justice Michael Kelen returned a verdict in favour of Jodhan, ruling that the government had infringed the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms by failing to make its websites fully accessible, and was discriminating against disabled citizens. The government has now been given 15 months to make its websites accessible for blind and visually impaired citizens.
“I am humbled and elated that a decision has been made, and with great haste,” Jodhan told E-Access Bulletin. “The Canadian Government should not view this as a defeat but rather as one where we all get to ensure that the future of blind and sight-impaired kids will be a better one, where accessibility will be a reality. This case was never mine to win but that of our blind and sight-impaired community not to lose.”
The court's ruling stated that Jodhan's inability to access government information online “is representative of a system wide failure by many of the 146 government departments and agencies to make their websites accessible.”
More on the case can be found on Jodhan's personal blog: http://www.donnajodhan.blogspot.com/ and the blog of her accessibility company, Sterling Creations: http://sterlingcreations.ca/blog/
And you can comment on this story now, on EAB Live: http://www.headstar.com/eablive/?p=511
+02: Digital Government ‘Must Not Increase Exclusion’.
Digitisation of government services must not take place at the expense of increased exclusion of people with disabilities, a leading national policy adviser has told E-Access Bulletin.
Felicity Shaw is senior policy advisor for Race Online 2012, a campaign headed by the UK's Digital Champion Martha Lane Fox to bring online the nine million people in the country who have never used the internet ( http://raceonline2012.org ).
“We're making recommendations that government services should be digital by default, but part of that is making sure that nobody is excluded by that process. Making services digital is about making them better, more convenient and easier, not about leaving people behind who are excluded,” Shaw said.
Some of the more difficult and important work for Race Online 2012 will be helping people with a range of access issues to use the internet for the first time. “What's harder to tackle is people who may have multiple barriers to getting online, particularly disabled people who might have accessibility issues which make it harder or more expensive for them to access equipment.
“What we don't want is to have a campaign and promote just some of the elements that go with that, which ultimately increases exclusion for people who can't get online” said Shaw.
Part of Race Online 2012's work includes a âPeople's Taskforce' ( http://bit.ly/glTN2w ), featuring people from a variety of backgrounds who have been helped to go online, and are now helping others to use the internet. Members of the taskforce are helping to provide the campaign with ideas and information about accessibility, including Heather Lyons â“ who is visually impaired and campaigning for more affordable assistive technology â“ and Alan Thomas â“ who was diagnosed with ataxia, and now uses the internet to share information about his support website, livingwithataxia.org .
Shaw was among speaker's at last week's Future Democracy '10, Headstar's annual conference on the use of the internet and other new technologies to boost all parts of the democratic process ( http://www.headstar-events.com/fdem10 ).
And you can comment on this story now, on EAB Live: http://www.headstar.com/eablive/?p=518
+03: Free Daisy Book Recorder Software Upgraded.
The latest version of an open source audio recording tool designed to allow anyone to produce DAISY format electronic books has been released by the global DAISY Consortium of blindness organisations, publishers, technology companies and others.
DAISY (digital accessible information system) books created with the Obi 1.2 software ( http://bit.ly/fqzspr ) can contain chapters, sub-sections and pages, allowing users with print disabilities to easily navigate through the content. The Obi tool is also fully accessible to screen-readers.
Version 1.2 of the Obi tool features a number of improvements and upgrades for users, including an adaptation to work with Microsoft Windows 7. Users can now also manage large DAISY production projects more easily; and MP3 and WAV format audio files can now be imported into projects.
All DAISY content is produced to a standard ( http://bit.ly/hcPbOF ) developed by the DAISY Consortium, whose aim is to see all published information made readily available to people with print disabilities through digital talking books.
And you can comment on this story now, on EAB Live: http://www.headstar.com/eablive/?p=513
++News in Brief:
+04: Standard Lesson:
A free ‘webinar’ (internet seminar) explaining the recently launched British Standard on web accessibility BS 8878 (see E-Access Bulletin issue: 130: http://www.headstar.com/eablive/?p=498 ) will be hosted by assistive technology charity AbilityNet on 8 December. The webinar will provide an overview of the standard and how to implement it, including a question and answer session: https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/763164576 Short link: http://bit.ly/gCD5Gd
+05: Refreshable Apple:
A video demonstrating how to use the Refreshabraille 18, a Braille display and keyboard, built by the non-profit American Printing House for the Blind, with an Apple iPhone or iPod, has been posted on YouTube. A link to the video and a transcription can be found on the âStoneKnight' blog run by transcription specialist Mirabai Knight: http://blog.stenoknight.com/2010/11/natcapvidmo-day-28- refreshabraille-18.html Short link: http://bit.ly/dIU26U
+06: Third Survey:
The third periodic survey tracking trends and changes in assistive technology is underway from US non- profit WebAIM. The Screen Reader User Survey is intended to help all organisations that create assistive technology products, accessible web content and web standards. It takes around ten minutes to complete and will close on January 10, with results published around March 2011: http://webaim.org/projects/screenreadersurvey3/ Short link: http://bit.ly/ikApbJ
[Section One ends].
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++Section Two: Interview Special Feature - Diane Mulligan OBE.
+07: Podcast Pioneer By Dan Jellinek.
This has been a busy year for Diane Mulligan.
At the start of 2010 Mulligan was awarded an OBE for services to disabled people and equal opportunities. Last week, she was back at Buckingham Palace for a reception held by the Queen for the Diplomatic Corps. In-between, she has been spearheading a campaign to improve the rights of disabled people in developing countries, in her role as Global Disability Advisor for international charity Sightsavers.
One of the UK's leading campaigners for disabled people's rights worldwide, and a candidate for the 2012 election to the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (another of this year's accolades), Mulligan has faced many struggles on her path to high achievement.
Leaving school with few qualifications due to undiagnosed dyslexia and ADHD, she has worked in the NGO sector all her working life, starting with environmental issues and then championing human rights, women's rights and disability rights.
The internet and other technologies play a major role in her life and work now, but growing up she lacked the technological support on offer to today's schoolchildren like her own 10- year-old son, Zephaniah.
“My son has ADHD and dyslexia, and he is using software that helps him, especially with homonyms â“ he can write âno' and know whether it should be spelled âknow' or âno' â“ and pictorial software,” she says. “He still can't hold a pen and write, aged 10, but he went straight to using digital technology and is now able to produce work of a standard that is really high for his age. It's so good for his self-esteem.
“I left school with hardly any qualifications, but if I had had a laptop and software I would have been able to do the same.”
These learning challenges are not the only problems Mulligan has had to overcome: after many years of working abroad, she was involved in a serious road accident in Indonesia which led to one of her legs being amputated. Returning to the UK, to Seaford on the Sussex coast, she received good medical care but a lack of proper psychological support spurred her to set up the Sussex Amputee Support Group offering advice, emotional support and information for people experiencing limb loss.
The group has its own website ( http://www.sussexamputeesupport.co.uk ), a tool which has proven essential to its work building a support community, Mulligan says.
“Getting that up on the internet was really key,” she says. “Some people said the information was not accessible to a lot of people â“ most amputees are over 80 â“ but I disagree: my dad is over 80 and he is using online conferencing. But it is also all available in large print and other formats.”
Technology has also helped her with her sporting passion, rifle shooting: she was on course to compete in the 2012 Paralympics until work and family commitments rendered the training schedule impossible.
“It's all done on computers with laser beams from the end of the gun onto a screen â“ they track your movement until you fire so you can see how accurate you are, whether you are swaying all over the place. But I've had to drop out from the fast-track now. It takes up at least two evenings a week, and every other weekend.
Computers and the internet have also proven enormously valuable with her main current work role. She joined Sightsavers in 2007, and is leading the organisation's strategy for raising awareness of the link between disability and poverty in developing countries, where 80% of disabled people live, almost all below the poverty line. In 2000 most world leaders signed up to achieving eight âanti-poverty' Millennium Development Goals by 2015, but disabled people and disability rights are noticeably absent from these goals, and much of Mulligan's work with Sightsavers is to campaign for their inclusion and recognition.
With front-line teams in more than 30 countries, the charity has created a global online network and uses a web-based conferencing facility called Elluminate ( http://www.elluminate.com ).
“It has considerably cut down international travel, and colleagues with low vision access the same information I can,” Mulligan says.
“I do three-day training sessions for all my staff and in August we piloted doing a session online. We had 50 people in Pakistan, India and Sri Lanka, and guest speakers, over three days in Sightsavers offices. Everyone could access the PowerPoint, raise their online hand. They could find out what people could do in different countries and share best practice.
“Now I run one every month, 60 minutes on social inclusion, as a round-up and opportunity for any of our 300 employees worldwide to ask any questions they have and contribute examples. It's almost like a radio show, I can answer questions, and I have other people contributing. Once I'd done it once, I thought that's the way forward to me â“ I don't have to travel, it saves me jetlag and means I don't have to stay away from my family.”
Mulligan records the webinars and puts them onto a podcasting site called Podbean ( http://www.podbean.com ), each bookmarked so people can browse between items without having to listen to the whole hour. Currently they are only available to Sightsavers staff, but “there are no trade secrets”, so Mulligan is looking at ways of making them more widely available. The service uses low bandwidth, so it is accessible even in places like rural India, she says.
Another technology that is revolutionising her work is âphlogging', a service from a company called ipadio that is “like blogging, but using a mobile phone” ( http://bit.ly/8Q4YF ). Users can call in from anywhere in the world and record a voice message from their mobile, using local rate numbers, to broadcast the voice clip onto their website, blog or social network.
Tools like this and ones that can help speak web content out loud can be useful for communication not only with blind people but for targeting remote communities who are either illiterate or for whom the written word is not the medium of choice, Mulligan says.
“We also try and encourage people to create video diaries, to give our supporters an insight into what we do and how we do it. And we convert our reports to MP3.”
Some of these technologies are hard for people in poorer countries to access, but there is usually a way, she says. “Even if you go to some of the poorest parts of the world you find people with mobile phones. In India, social networking is massive, and the blind people I know there are using it as much as their sighted colleagues. And in countries like Indonesia, you see internet cafes on the corner of every street.”
Sightsavers have also worked with accessible technology specialists Dolphin to create the Sightsaver Dolphin pen ( http://bit.ly/gWM16t ), a low cost memory stick carrying magnification and screen-reader software aimed at students in developing countries.
“So there are many new technologies out there, it's just about harnessing them. The only stumbling block I've got is getting someone to get headphones and a mike, and log on. It's that barrier of the unknown, people think it's going to be hard. The barriers disabled people face in the developing world are almost the same as disabled people face here â“ liberation takes place in that space between our two ears, before anywhere else.”
And you can comment on this story now, on EAB Live: http://www.headstar.com/eablive/?p=515
[Section Two ends].
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++End Notes.
+How to Receive the Bulletin.
+How to Receive the Bulletin.
To subscribe to this free monthly bulletin, email eab-subs@headstar.com with 'subscribe eab' in the subject header. You can list other email addresses to subscribe in the body of the message. Please encourage all your colleagues to sign up! To unsubscribe at any time, put 'unsubscribe eab' in the subject header.
Please send comments on coverage or leads to Dan Jellinek at: dan@headstar.com .
Copyright 2010 Headstar Ltd http://www.headstar.com . The Bulletin may be reproduced as long as all parts including this copyright notice are included, and as long as people are always encouraged to subscribe with us individually by email. Please also inform the editor when you are reproducing our content. Sections of the bulletin may be quoted as long as they are clearly sourced as 'taken from e-access bulletin, a free monthly email newsletter', and our web site address: http://www.headstar.com/eab is also cited.
+Personnel:
- Editor: Dan Jellinek.
- Reporter: Tristan Parker.
- Editorial advisor: Kevin Carey.
ISSN 1476-6337.
[Issue 132 ends].