From the BBC:
“Covid: Deaf woman wins claim
over lack of sign language at briefings”
A deaf woman has won a claim
against the government after a judge found a lack of sign language at two Covid
briefings "served to disempower, to frustrate and to marginalise".
Katie Rowley, 36, from Leeds, started court action after the sessions went
ahead without interpreters on screen. The government denied breaching
its legal obligation to make broadcasts accessible to deaf people. In
his ruling, a judge said the lack of provision constituted discrimination.
Katie Rowley, 36, from Leeds,
launched the court action against Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove in
relation to the "data briefings" on 21 September and 12 October 2020.
She had argued that being unable to access the official information had caused
her stress and affected her wellbeing. Finding in her favour, Mr Justice
Fordham said: "The lack of provision - the provision of subtitles only -
was a failure of inclusion, suggestive of not being thought about, which served
to disempower, to frustrate and to marginalise." Though he agreed with Ms
Rowley's claim in respect of both, the judge said subsequent briefings were not
in breach of equality legislation. The level of damages awarded to the claimant
would be assessed by a county court judge, he added. After the ruling, Ms
Rowley thanked the judge and her legal team and said she was "very happy
with the outcome". She said she was "emotional that we have achieved
what we needed to be equal but sad at the same time that we had to fight for our
rights".
Similar briefings in Wales,
Scotland and Northern Ireland included British Sign Language interpreters on
screen. A Cabinet Office spokesman said after the ruling: "We are pleased
that the court ruled our policy of using on-screen British Sign Language
interpreters was lawful during the pandemic. "Our priority has always been
to reach the largest possible audience with important public information, and
we will continue to ensure that British sign language interpretation is made
available during Covid-19 briefings." Officials said there had been more
than 170 Covid briefings and "only two" had been found to be unlawful
because British sign language was not provided on screen. Ms Rowley, who was 25
weeks' pregnant when she launched the judicial review claim, previously said
the stress caused by being unable to access information at the briefing
impacted upon her wellbeing. Many who use BSL as their first language say they
cannot rely on subtitles because the average reading age for deaf people is
nine years. "I have dyslexia myself - I am a slow reader - so that means
when I was reading the subtitles, I would miss so much information and [it]
would just mess up my head. It would be so difficult - it became
impossible," Ms Rowley previously told the BBC through an interpreter.
^ This win is a win for every Deaf
and Hard-of-Hearing person in the UK. It’s sad that the court had to make this
happen rather than the Government itself -
they should have known better. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.