From the CBC:
“Digital solutions during the
pandemic put disabled people on more equal ground. Don't forget us once it's
over”
(As a disabled person, John
Loeppky says it is hard to watch accessibility only improve during the pandemic
because able-bodied people were affected. He hopes disabled people are not
forgotten when the pandemic is over.)
This opinion piece is by John
Loeppky, a disabled artist and freelance writer/editor in Regina. For more
information about CBC's Opinion section, please see the FAQ. I sometimes think
about those of you who are so zealous about going back to the pre-pandemic
"normal." I picture you sitting in a bar, grinning with glee about
the return to your non-disabled version of utopia. It's always a packed event.
All the tables are so high that no manual wheelchair like mine can hope to
reach them. Everyone is mask-free, engaging in chit-chat destined for nowhere
good at an ungodly speed and volume. Did
they forget about us? Never mind, I know they did. I know you did. In your relentless attempts to return to the
past, you've forgotten almost a quarter of the population, like me, who want
opportunities to engage. I'm talking about the disabled community. Many of us don't want to close Zoom and go
back to your version of "normal." Our existence wasn't valued there.
It often wasn't even acknowledged.
The price of your
inconvenience You will more than likely become disabled in your lifetime.
Whether you identify that way is up to you. Father Time is undefeated, and
Uncle Disability isn't far behind. You
sell yourself a lie that you are different from us, that you won't have to
worry about those pesky pre-existing conditions, that your healthy body will
carry you through the pandemic and this is all just a temporary solution to a
fleeting problem. To be honest, I
can't really blame you for being so naive.
The pandemic proved that digital
access is possible. It just wasn't seen by many as necessary before. Now, like
a stage whisper, it's gone. We saw you
devalue digital as different, worse, a discount version. Sure, Zoom doesn't
need ramps or accessible transit, but still you balked at the price of your
inconvenience. God forbid your needs not be centred for all of five minutes. Digital access means freedom. It may be
imperfect, but it's my version of access in all its crip, disabled,
neurodivergent, messy glory. It's hard some days to feel proud of disability,
to accept a backhanded compliment ("You're so resilient!") while
systems try to eradicate you from the planet. Yet, here we are. Not to be self-indulgent, but here I am. Disabled folks of this generation rely on the
internet as one of the only ways to connect — global health crisis or not. Did
you really think we wouldn't notice when you started slipping? Do you really
think your event — no matter how creative, how groundbreaking, how astonishing
— matters more than disabled people staying alive?
What are you going to do? I
know there are many in the disability community who feel comfortable and need
that in-person time. Fair play. But I have to ask: why can't you create that
digital access too? I hear you
repurposing old arguments. It's all about resources, energy and priorities. I
see you desperately crossing out accessibility plans. I see you hastily
removing all mentions of recorded sessions. I see you pouring all your
resources into the comfort and convenience of face-to-face. I don't see you being an ally, even if
your outward persona professes otherwise. Making things digitally accessible is
hard. You're trading one set of barriers for another. But that's always the
excuse, isn't it? It's too hard, it's too uncomfortable, it might mean that you
once did something wrong and will have to acknowledge that you weren't always creating
the safest space. There are
people in our communities doing this work. Look to them. It won't happen
instantly or easily, but it has to happen if we want a more equitable society.
When I last decided to yell about this, privileged as I am, I wrote,
"It's very hard to watch the adaptations many of us beg for — remote
working, live-streamed art, food delivery — become ubiquitous and unchallenged
as soon as abled people find themselves needing them." It's funny, in a
sick sort of way, how cyclical this all is. The non-disabled giveth and the
non-disabled taketh away. I have hope — I have to for my own health — that
digital access will slowly come further and further into the collective
consciousness, but in many ways, it feels as if we've lost out on a tremendous
opportunity to make seismic shifts.
So what are you going to do
about it? Interested in writing for us? We accept pitches for Opinion and
First Person pieces from Saskatchewan residents who want to share their
thoughts on the news of the day, issues affecting their community or who have a
compelling personal story to share. No need to be a professional writer!
^ This is a very eye-opening piece
that all of us should stop and think about. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/digital-solutions-pandemic-disabled-1.6362734
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