Planning a Conference or Event?
Don’t forget to make it accessible to everyone!
For many years the DisAbled Women’s Network (DAWN) has been active in educating organizations and individuals on how to plan public events that take into consideration the needs of women with disabilities. Sadly, too many good conferences continue to be organized without accommodating these basic needs, so not everyone has been able to participate.
Women with disabilities are an integral part of our community. When you make your event accessible to us all, you have a greater chance for success and on-going support for your initiatives.
Here are some points to consider when planning your conference or event:
Budgeting for Access: Use accessibility as a budget line item when you do your financial planning. We suggest you provide enough funds to cover such services as sign language and oral interpretation, attendants, Braille translation and real-time reporting and captioning.
Finding a Location: You need to consider safety and accessibility when you choose a location for your event. Choose a building where disabled women will not have to enter through an unsafe entrance such as a rear door. Do not hold your event at a location where a disabled woman would have to use a freight elevator. This is degrading and totally unacceptable.
Contact your local DisAbled Women's Network (DAWN) group, or an Independent Living Centre to obtain a copy of the access guide for your city. The guide lists restaurants, community centres, hotels, libraries, theatres and more, that are accessible.
Checklist
Making the Location Accessible: Sometimes there are things we cannot control but there are actions we can take to make the event accessible to everyone. During meetings, background noise such as fans and piped-in music is a problem for deafened and hard-of-hearing women. For women who are environmentally sensitive, smoking and strong scents make your event inaccessible.
Timing Your Event: Women with disabilities need plenty of time to arrange transportation and to prepare for other needs. Some transportation systems need as much as four days notice. If you schedule your event on short notice, disabled women may not be able to attend.
Disabled women who must use specialized transportation systems have to arrange to be picked up at a certain time. If your meetings go over the scheduled time, disabled women will have to leave and miss part of your event. They may also miss out on spontaneous social events.
Sign language and oral interpreters, and real-time reporters are in great demand and short supply. They require from two to four weeks notice. This should be the first service you book to ensure accessibility to your event.
If you are showing a video, allow yourself at least one week to get it captioned.
Written Materials: All your printed materials need to be clearly and simply written. Use access symbols on your publicity materials only if you provide the service.
Producing your materials in large print, on cassette tape, and in Braille, makes your event accessible to visually impaired women, women who have low literacy levels, and women with learning disabilities.
To find a Braille translator, call a disability group, an Independent Living Centre or the Canadian National Institute for the Blind (CNIB) in your community.
Registration Form: Use the registration form to find out what your guests or participants will need. The information that you collect will be your guide to making your event accessible.
We suggest that your registration form include all access needs to help you plan and avoid any surprises.
Seating Arrangements: We have chosen a room or rooms large enough for wheelchair users.
Interpretation: Interpretation for deaf, deafened or hard-of hearing women is just as important as interpretation of other languages. Needs will vary for deaf, deafened or hard-of hearing women. Assistive listening systems may work only for some hard-of-hearing women with a T-switch on their hearing aids, while others may need to wear a headset. Some of the services you may provide include sign language and oral interpretation, real-time reporting, FM and infra-red systems. The FM and infra-red systems are amplifying units for people who are hard-of-hearing. Organizers often choose the FM system due to its strong amplification capacity and portability.
If your event includes the use of videos or film, these need to be captioned. Film can be either open-captioned or close-captioned. Open-captioned is similar to sub-titled film with the words shown on the screen. On a close-captioned film, the words are not visible on the screen without a close-captioned decoder. To access a decoder, contact a public library or cable company in your community.
These services are in high demand and require advance booking. For any event that is longer than one hour you need to book a minimum of two interpreters. Once you know your participants' needs, book right away.
Volunteers: At any event volunteers play an important role. Use volunteers as support persons and guides to answer questions, assist with refreshments and do other tasks. A designated table staffed by volunteers allows them to be found quickly when they are needed. Volunteers who wear an armband or name tag are easily identified.
We suggest that you provide your volunteers with sensitivity training on disability issues. This will increase their confidence in working with women with disabilities. Call a DAWN group or an Independent Living Centre for consultation and assistance.
Attendants: Attendants have both the knowledge and experience of providing personal care for women with disabilities. Duties can include helping with bathing, using the washroom, transferring in and out of a wheelchair and eating.
The task of an attendant cannot be filled by an untrained volunteer. As with interpreters, you need to book attendants in advance. Contact an Independent Living Centre for referrals.
We suggest you provide a table for attendants.
Equipment: We suggest you rent a spare wheelchair, and rent a bicycle repair kit and air pump to have on hand. You need to tell your volunteers where these items are located. You can rent a wheelchair from Rent-All Companies or wheelchair companies.
If your event is longer than one day, out-of-town participants may need equipment such as bath seats, commode chairs or hoyer lifts.
Meals and Refreshments: It is important to stick to scheduled meal times. This helps women who are diabetic and those who deal with chronic pain and fatigue.
Provide bendable straws at all meal times and refreshment breaks for women who need them.
Buffet-style meals create problems for large groups. Line-ups can be long and confusing, space can be overcrowded, and some women will not be able to carry their own tray. We suggest you arrange for table service to avoid frustration for participants.
At the Door: Meet the participants at the front door. Offer a tour of the site for visually impaired women and other disabled women before the event starts.
For Your Speakers: Speakers need to be aware that the participants will have different levels of literacy. They need to talk plainly, avoid the use of jargon and large words.
Some women with disabilities cannot sit for long periods. At the beginning of any event, speakers can tell participants it is okay to move and walk around.
Signs: We suggest you post signs to indicate the location of accessible washrooms, elevators and any other service. Signs need to be clear and easy to read.
Signs are easy to read if you use both lower and upper case. We recommend Times Roman serif; use at least 20 mm high for upper case and 15 mm for lower case.
Be sure the colour of the letters contrasts with the background. A good example is black on white.
A Final Comment: Some women have disabilities which are not visible. They may have difficulty walking or using stairs. We suggest you never question women who use ramps, special entrances or elevators that might be reserved for wheelchair users.
Make an on-site visit before you book the location. You cannot be totally certain of a location's accessibility with only a phone call. Bring your tape measure and DAWN's "Access Checklist" to personally assess the site.
For overnight accommodation at a hotel, be sure to check the "accessible" rooms. The bathroom should be equipped with grab bars and have a clear turning space of 1.5 m x 1.5 m. The telephone should be located close to the bed.
If possible, have a disabled woman accompany you on the on-site visit. Contact DAWN or an Independent Living Centre (ILC) in your community.
If you would like more information, please contact: DAWN Ontario: DisAbled Women's Network Ontario, dawnontario@sympatico.ca (705) 494-9078; TTY: (705) 474-7435.
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