Archive for October, 2010

[funny] Danger! Wheelchairs!

Red October 27th, 2010 No Comments

Saw this when I was out and about today… Had a chuckle!

Caution! Wheelchairs!

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Is it “more OK” to bully disabled people?

Red October 25th, 2010 3 Comments

Fascinating story in The Guardian regarding crime against disabled people:

The statistics should shame us all. Nine out of 10 people with learning difficulties have suffered bullying or harassment – indeed, even as the thugs from Eccles were being convicted this week, cases emerged of a disabled woman being bottled as she arrived at her home in Essex and a Yorkshire woman tipped from her wheelchair and mugged. And there is at least one trial going on over the killing of a disabled person, with another looming.

There is no official data on hate crimes against the disabled, since the government does not think it is worth publishing. One helpline has fielded a near-doubling in the number of calls from disabled victims this year, but there have been just 576 prosecutions over the last two years, compared with 11,264 for racial and religious crimes over the last year alone.

We need to wake up to this whirlwind of hate, driven by fear of difference and a symptom of a society that fails to embrace those with disabilities. Communities must look out for those in need of help. Teachers must stop tolerating hateful language and bullying. Police and council officials must tackle the low-level abuse that devastates life for so many – and, as in the Pilkington and Askew cases, can end up with a funeral.

What on earth is going on? I know this is a report from the UK, but I imagine its findings are replicated here too.

What’s been your experience with bullying? Have you – or someone you know – ever been attacked?

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Countdown’s “accessible” check-out is ridiculous

Red October 15th, 2010 3 Comments

After blogging about Countdown’s new inaccessible self-service kiosks, I was pleasantly surprised to find the following sign hung up adjacent to one of Countdown’s checkout aisles:

Countdown's accessible checkout

“Great!”, I thought. Low counter, reachable EFTPOS, pretty brunette on deck – here I come! So I made a bee-line for the identified checkout lane, only to discover…

Click ‘read more’ to find out!

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Deaf can now TXT in an emergency

Red October 15th, 2010 2 Comments

The NZ Police have today announced a new text message service for deaf people who wish to report an emergency. It never really occurred to me before that members of the deaf community may struggle to report an emergency if they have to use a telephone to do so. Anyway, I think this is great news. Click ‘read more’ for the full news release!

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Government bullying must stop

Red October 14th, 2010 10 Comments

From the NZ Herald:

An Auckland mother and daughter have been sentenced to community detention after admitting to defrauding the Ministry of Health of carer support payments of more than $40,000.

Let me say this, for the record: Everyone bends the rules. Life is tough when you’re affected by disability, be it your own, or a family member’s. For people who receive Ministry of Health funding, life is a hell of a lot tougher than those who receive ACC payments. So it pains me to see people being treated like criminals by Government when in reality, they’re only trying to get some flexibility around what limited support is available to them.

I’ll say it again: everyone does it. Disability support funding is limited, and the constraints around it are incredibly restrictive. For many parents of children with significant disabilities, it means they are unable to work, as they spend most of their time supporting their kid. Of course they’re going to attempt to get a small amount of compensation for this work – in this case, $40,000 over 8 years, of money that they were entitled to anyway. Yet the Ministry sees fit to chase them down and slam them with 5 months home detention.

It makes me sick.

On top of this, I know for a fact they’re investigating families who have been using family members as support staff, as I blogged about the other day. This despite the High Court ruling that family members should be allowed to be paid for providing support services. The Government, of course, are appealing this.

This bullying of innocent families (who, let’s be honest, have enough on their plate) must stop. The Government is relying on the apathy, relative inertia and fear of the disabled community to make life hell for the people who deserve it least. No other group in society is so reliant on the Government from birth as people like myself who are born with a disability. We must support each other, and band together to tell whoever is behind this vendetta against good, hard-working families who are dedicated to their kids, that enough’s enough.

P.S. – The Herald ran with the headline “Fraud brings detention” – doesn’t fraud usually mean people are better off? As a good friend of mine quipped, “In this instance, it probably means they didn’t starve quite so much”.

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Ministry of Health make me feel like a criminal

Red October 11th, 2010 24 Comments

I get a phone call this morning from IRIS, who manage my support services, and it goes like this:

IRIS: So… Looking through your latest report, it says here your support worker is your sister?

Me: Yes, is that a problem?

IRIS: Well, the Ministry have said that family members living in your home can’t be your support staff.

Me: But when I signed up for Individualised Funding, you said that it would be fine..?

IRIS: Not anymore. We can provide you with a support person until you find another one, but right now she can no longer work for you.

So what am I supposed to do, IRIS? Not get dressed in the morning? Go through the rigmarole of hunting down, interviewing, selecting and training another support person? Cancel an arrangement that’s working so well for me at the moment? Therein lies my biggest frustration, really – my support systems have never been as good as they are right now, and the Ministry want to take that away? I’m sorry, but fuck that.

I checked it out with my sister, and she tells me she’s living at her boyfriend’s for now. So I rang IRIS back to tell them the good news. My case manager tells me she’ll ask her boss if they will “accept this” and get back to me, but would I like them to send one of their staff over anyway?

No, IRIS, I wouldn’t.

This isn’t any old job. This is my life: my wellbeing, my independence, my dignity. Right now, my sister is doing an exceptional job, and she will continue to do so. Why on earth are they so hell-bent on removing what works so well?

More than anything, why do I get this uneasy feeling that I’m “in trouble”? I hate it how, as disabled people, we’re locked into these systems whereby you constantly feel like you’re in danger of breaking the rules, not that anyone really knows what the rules are. It’s the same thing if you’re on an invalids benefit, where you’re never really sure how much you can work in fear of having your benefit cut, so you don’t do anything. All these systems, rules, and other fucking people managing your life keep us in shackles, for the benefit of the bureaucrats who spend taxpayer money on fucking porn movies.

Frankly, I’m over it.

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Oh yeah?

Red October 1st, 2010 No Comments

Wheelchair access

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Wheel Blacks Issue Celebrities a Challenge

Red October 1st, 2010 1 Comment

2010 NZ Wheel Blacks

Members of the Wheel Blacks will take on celebrities and sports personalities in a charity exhibition match of wheelchair rugby at the Auckland Spinal Unit gymnasium in Otara on 10 October.

The No.8 Celebrity Wheelchair Rugby Match will be held at the Auckland Spinal Unit Gymnasium at 30 Bairds Road, Otara, Auckland at 1pm on Sunday 10 October. To make a donation to the NZRF or to purchase tickets to the event please visit www.no8.co.nz.

Limited tickets to the event will be available for purchase on www.no8.co.nz from 27 September.

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