Action Blog

Paying lip service to web accessibility just won’t do

Posted on 25 August 2009 in Sandi's Blog

You would think that, in my job and with my burning desire to make sure that all disabled folk are getting the best out of technology, I would be able to get more people to understand why it is so important for the Internet to be Inclusive and that Accessibility isn’t something that you think about as an add-on after you have built your website. It is an integral part of every website. You wouldn’t build a 50-story building without a lift now, would you?

How one visually impaired girl got fit and healthy

Posted on 20 August 2009 in Sandi's Blog

I went to my GP a while ago and asked for an MOT. I was stressed, tired and feeling sluggish all the time. I wasn’t particularly unhealthy. I don’t smoke and I wasn’t overweight, but I didn’t do any exercise and was certainly having a few too many shandies of an evening. Living with a visual impairment is exhausting, with everything you do requiring some sort of decision, so it is easy for stress levels to get high and your overall state of mind and body play a big part in how you handle it all.

What the ‘Green Paper’ says about Attendance Allowance

Posted on 20 August 2009 in Kevin's Blog

In July the Government presented a Green Paper to Parliament entitled 'Shaping the Future of Care'. In it they set out proposals for creating a new care and support system and how the money could be found to pay for it. One proposal has set alarm bells ringing for many people who are getting Attendance Allowance.

Gratitude comes in all shapes and sizes

Posted on 18 August 2009 in Sandi's Blog

At this exact point in time, I am glad that there is no cure for retinitis pigmentosa. I know that sounds pretty peculiar, but this dreaded disease has changed my life for the better.

I am a person!

Posted on 14 August 2009 in Kevin's Blog

‘The Prisoner’ was a fascinating 60’s television series. It portrayed a culture where people no longer had names, just numbers and were under the control of Number One. At one point the Prisoner, Number 6, cries out ‘I am a person... I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, or numbered! My life is my own!’ Cut backs in service provision, euphemistically called ‘streamlining’, often result in the removal of personal contact in favour of cheaper less time consuming methods. A recent home visit re-iterated the need to meet and listen to a person.

A visually impaired geek finds happiness with a small but perfectly formed Mac Mini

Posted on 13 August 2009 in Sandi's Blog

Although I purchased my beloved Mac Mini on the same day I got my iPhone back in June, I wanted to wait a while to have the experience of using it day in and day out, as I anticipated there was going to be an adjustment period since I did port over from a PC running the dreaded Vista after all. It is not like me to wholeheartedly diss something outright, but really, it is just not right when you have regular freezes and crashes because of conflicts between your operating system and software when they are made by the same company!

The ruined carpet

Posted on 7 August 2009 in Kevin's Blog

I often give talks to groups of elderly people who are experiencing sight loss about the possible benefits available. Unfortunately some are reluctant to claim. Receiving benefits can significantly increase a person’s income and provide them with a better life so, wanting to encourage people to claim, I often use a true story.

Individual or collective – Is disability a personal thing?

Posted on 6 August 2009 in Sandi's Blog

When I got an email last year from the RNIB asking people to join their Taken for a Ride campaign and lobby Parliament for visually impaired people to get the appropriate level of DLA, I felt compelled to do so. I have never been the protesting or heckling type, but as any sort of injustice just niggles away at me, I could not ignore this call to action.

Disclosing a disability at work

Posted on 5 August 2009 in Sandi's Blog

As so many visually impaired people are able to cope with minor modifications to their work environments without having to officially wear the disability badge, they live in fear of being caught out and are hanging on to whatever useful vision that they have and are waiting until the eleventh hour to tell their boss that getting that new pair of glasses they have been allegedly putting off just isn’t going to cut it.

Indispensable? - Give us a break!

Posted on 31 July 2009 in Kevin's Blog

Believing a Welfare Rights Officer to be ...always busy ...always in demand ...a font of expert knowledge ...indispensable ...I needed a reality check before I could book leave. Discover the Indispensability Test and why I can go on holiday without pangs of guilt.

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