Welcome to my website. I am an Access campaigner from "The Billy Ranch" Newport, Co. Mayo. I has a freak accident in 1981 that left me paralized from the waist down (T7 Complete)
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Wednesday, December 21, 2011
: Can you drive safely and talk on a hands-free mobile phone?
A: No, using your mobile in any way while driving increases your risk of an accident.
Our expert: Professor Mark Stevenson
Published 21/07/2010
Have your say
Do you use your mobile phone while driving? If so, why? Have your say on the messageboard below.
Conditions of Use
Most of us love our mobile phones. They make our lives so much easier – letting us send text messages, play music, download maps, surf the internet, and have a conversation – anywhere, anytime.
But one of the few places you should avoid using your mobile is the car, especially if you are the driver. Research clearly shows that driving while using your mobile increases your risk of an accident. However, is that still the case if your mobile is in hands-free mode?
While they free your hands for the steering wheel, hands-free phones don't make driving any safer, says Professor Mark Stevenson, senior director at The George Institute at the University of Sydney.
Whether you are using a hands-free mobile or a regular mobile phone your risk of an accident is "around four times higher compared to a driver who doesn't use a phone," Stevenson says.
Dangerous combination
Prof Stevenson has been studying the relationship between mobile phones and traffic accidents since 2005. He has been comparing individuals who've gone to hospital after traffic accidents, with their mobile phone billing records – to see if there's any correlation between car accidents and phone use.
Stevenson says their findings are similar to those of other researchers worldwide. That is: using any kind of mobile phone, including a hands-free mobile phone, significantly increases your risk of an accident.
Phone manufacturers developed hands-free mobiles in the mid-1990s, in an effort to reduce the number of phone-related accidents. Most of these phone units (either portable or built into the car) are activated by the driver's voice so the driver speaks and hears the caller's voice through the speaker. This helps to free-up your hands for the steering wheel.
Not about your hands
But it's not what your hands are doing (or not doing) that increases your chances of having an accident, Stevenson says – it's the effect of your phone call on your concentration.
When you answer your mobile phone while you are behind the wheel you disengage from the task of driving. Talking on a mobile phone also makes you less focused on the road itself and traffic conditions. It's this lack of attention to driving conditions that slows down your reaction time, thereby increasing your chances of having an accident.
And while having passengers in the car – and talking to them while driving – has also been found to increase the risk of accident, research has found this risk is less than that posed by mobile phone conversations. One possible reason is that passengers are more aware of the road conditions you're experiencing and so are more inclined to moderate their conversation.
People whose work requires that they drive a lot and use the phone – such as travelling salespeople – are especially at risk of phone-related accidents as they are more likely to engage in long and involved business conversations whilst driving.
Disconnect between science and the law
Unfortunately, current legislation in Australia (as in most other Western countries) doesn't seem to reflect the growing body of evidence that hands-free phones are just as dangerous as any other phone in the car, says Stevenson.
In all Australian states, using hand-held mobile phones while driving is illegal – while hands-free mobiles are perfectly legal. (The exception is P-plate drivers who are not allowed to use any type of phone, hand-held or hands-free.)
Also mobile phone manufacturers are able to market hands-free systems as safe alternatives to hand-held phones – despite the research evidence to the contrary.
The New South Wales Roads and Traffic Authority recommends you make your calls before or after your trip. If you need to make or take a call while driving, pull over safely by the side of the road. And if you must use a hands-free phone while driving then you should:
make sure the device is set up and working before you start the car.
keep your conversation short.
never take notes, look up phone numbers, or read or send text messages while driving.
avoid complex or emotional phone conversations whilst driving.
don't make calls in heavy traffic or poor weather conditions.
end the call if it is distracting you from driving.
As of July 23 2010 Professor Mark Stevenson will be based at the Accident Research Centre at Monash University.
Bureaucracy' leaves disabled man in hospital
By Anna Morozow
Updated December 21, 2011 14:59:08
PHOTO: A Legislative Assembly committee has been told a disabled man has been in hospital for more than year because he cannot get the public housing he needs. (Giulio Saggin, file photo: ABC News)
MAP: Canberra 2600
An ACT Legislative Assembly committee has been told a lack of cooperation between different government services has left a disabled man stuck in hospital for more than a year with nowhere else to live.
The Committee on Health, Community and Social Services is investigating the provision of social housing in the ACT, and has been told people with disabilities often have to wait a lot longer for housing because there is not enough suitable accommodation.
Fiona May from the ACT Disability, Aged and Carer Advocacy Service says one of her group's clients has been in hospital for about two years waiting for suitable housing.
"Because [ACT] Housing maintains that a house cannot be allocated until support services are in place and Disability ACT maintains that they cannot set up support services until a house is provided," she said.
Ms May says bureaucracy has prevented government agencies from working cohesively to find a solution.
She says the man has been in hospital so long he has become institutionalised and now does not want to leave.
"This client has very complex needs and does need a very high level of care, which he is getting in hospital," she said.
"Unfortunately neither Housing nor Disability are prepared to work together sufficiently in order to enable that to happen in a non-hospital setting at this time."
Ms May says the Government needs to collect data on how many of its public housing clients have disabilities or special needs, so it can provide more suitable accommodation.
She says ACT Housing does not keep comprehensive data on its clients' needs.
"Those are the sorts of things I think would inform Housing's planning," she said.
"If they know how many people are looking for social housing who have a disability that would inform how many houses they need to build that actually have the right sort of accessibility."
A spokesman for Community Services Minister Joy Burch says all agencies are working together to find a solution for the man, but his needs are very complex.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Dear Tom,
You may recall we recently met outside the Point in Dublin, when I offered to take a picture of you and your friend.
I am currently doing an Executive MBA at UCD Michael Smurfit Business School and as part of our course, my fellow student David Rehill and I are currently undertaking an Organisational Behaviour & Decision Making Assignment, which is focusing on Aer Lingus' Communication with Disabled and Elderly Passengers. In terms of our individual background, David is a Chartered Civil Engineer and an Associate at O'Connor Sutton Cronin & I am a Chartered Town Planner, have my own business and am an External Member of the NAMA Board. We both have done work in relation to disability issues and indeed my own brother has Cerebral Palsy.
We have developed a Passenger Communications Process diagram, a copy of which is attached, to illustrate the communications process that the average disabled and elderly Aer Lingus passenger will navigate. You will note that whilst Aer Lingus has responsibility for most passenger communication, also parties like DAA have major involvement in the communication process.
We consider it extremely important to capture the views of disabled and elderly former passengers in relation to their communication experiences when travelling with Aer Lingus or generally navigating through Dublin Airport and are therefore making contact with you to establish if you have travelled with the airline in recent years and if you experienced any communication difficulties in relation to the following:
Difficulties in reading aviation advertisements/ email advertisements;
Difficulties hearing/seeing (if TV) radio aviation advertisements or media interview ;
Difficulties using Aer Lingus website;
Difficulties hearing or using phone to make Aer Lingus booking, particularly if requiring special assistance;
Difficulties reading or accessing Aer Lingus booking confirmation email;
Difficulties reading / printing Aer Lingus boarding pass;
Difficulties reading Aer Lingus text alerts;
Difficulties travelling to Airport;
Difficulties navigating and using check-in, security, executive lounge, departure gate and embarking plane, whether assisted or unassisted;
Difficulties hearing announcements or reading or following signage in the airport;
Difficulties hearing or seeing air steward when giving security announcement physically or via video link;
Difficulties communicating with air steward regarding in flight services;
Difficulties reading Aer Lingus in flight literature;
Difficulties hearing or seeing air steward and captain when giving arrivals information; and
Difficulties disembarking, navigating passport control, baggage reclaim, customs, exit and onward travel to destination whether assisted or unassisted.
Or indeed if you are aware of any other disabled or elderly passengers that may be willing to advise us of their experiences?
Please note that our final report will be submitted to our Lecturer Dr Jacob Eisenburg, UCD Michael Smurfit Business School & Aer Lingus only on 16th December 2011. Aer Lingus has asked us to sign a Non-Disclosure Agreement, so whilst we can provide you with the section relating to your response, we are not at liberty to provide you with a copy of the final report.
I appreciate that I am asking quite a lot of you and you may not have the information or time to assist, but any assistance would be most appreciated. I also appreciate that the project has quite a short turn around time, with it only commencing last Friday and finishing on 16th December and its a busy time of year. If you have any queries in respect of the above, please do not hesitate to contact me on 086 881 5556.
Thank you.
Kind Regards
Alice Charles
Tuesday, December 06, 2011
Clooney Flick Draws Criticism For Use Of ‘Retarded’
Clooney Flick Draws Criticism For Use Of ‘Retarded’
George Clooney’s new film “The Descendants” is getting some major Oscar buzz. But that’s not why disability advocates are talking about the family drama.
The film features Clooney as a father trying to connect with his daughters while his wife is on life support following a boating accident.
A scene in the movie shows Clooney’s character, Matt, in a heated exchange with his daughter’s boyfriend, Sid, where both use the term “retarded” in a derogatory fashion.
The exchange has disability advocates on edge, warning others on blogs and social networking sites to stay away from the film.
“If hearing the word ‘retarded’ used several times in a gratuitous joke within a movie is something that is going to ruin a night out for you, save your time and heartache and do not see ‘The Descendants,’” reads a posting on the Special Olympics blog.
The group, which sponsors the “Spread the Word to End the Word” campaign to end use of the word “retarded,” told Disability Scoop in a statement that the organization “is always disappointed to hear when film writers use the r-word gratuitously and the usage makes it to the final product.”
The film is not the first to draw criticism for use of the word “retarded.” This summer advocatescalled out the movie “The Change Up” for its inclusion of the term. And three years ago, protests led to some changes in how the comedy “Tropic Thunder” was promoted.
Representatives from Fox Searchlight, which is distributing “The Descendants,” did not return calls requesting comment
Up For Auction
Up For Auction
The only fully-accessible house ever designed by famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright is headed for the auction block and now a group is trying to save it.
The Rockford, Ill. house designed by Wright in 1949 is fully accessible with switches, built-in desks and other features and furnishings designed to accommodate an individual in a wheelchair. What’s more, Wright worked to ensure that the beauty of the home could be appreciated from the viewpoint of someone who is seated.
The house was built at the request of Kenneth Laurent who experienced a spinal cord injury in World War II that left the lower half of his body paralyzed, according to officials at the Laurent House Foundation, an independent group that’s working to preserve the house.
Laurent and his wife, Phyllis, have lived in the home since its completion in 1952 — nearly 40 years before the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act set the bar for accessibility. But the couple now plan to move to an assisted living facility and are looking to sell. Without a buyer, however, the house appears headed for the auction block on Dec. 15.
Local conservationists with the Laurent House Foundation are hoping to save the historic home. They are working to raise the estimated $500,000 to $700,000 needed to buy the house in hopes of turning it into a museum.
Monday, December 05, 2011
The demonisation of the disabled is a chilling sign of the times
Comment is free
The demonisation of the disabled is a chilling sign of the times | Ian Birrell
There is a climate of hostility towards people for whom life is already difficult and it is being fostered by politicians and journalists
Peter Greener endured a barrage of hate from his neighbour. Sometimes, it was eggs thrown at his house, stones thrown at his windows or paint thrown at his fence; more often, it was words hurled in his face: spastic, cripple, scum, scrounger. These assaults went on for months, leaving the former Nissan car-sprayer in floods of tears, feeling suicidal and on antidepressants. He was scared to leave his home in Hebburn in South Tyneside and blamed himself for the upset it caused his wife and two children. "It made our lives hell," he said.
Like many people with conditions such as multiple sclerosis, Greener's regressive condition fluctuates. One day, it affects his memory, the next his speech. Sometimes, he uses a wheelchair; at other times, he can haul himself around on crutches. But this only led to more abuse, with angry shouts he was faking his disabilities and exaggerating his problems to get benefits.
A terrible story to shake our heads over and ponder how a person could be so vile, so inhuman, towards someone already suffering a tough time. But the real tragedy of the tale is that it is all too commonplace in this country. The only unusual thing is that the inadequate perpetrator was caught and given a comparatively strong sentence last month.
Yesterday was international day of persons with disabilities, but in this country they remain locked in a state of virtual apartheid. They are forced to the fringes of society, ostracised from things the rest of us take for granted such as getting a job or going on public transport. Such is the estrangement that a survey last week found two-thirds of Britons actively avoid disabled people because they have no idea how to act around them.
The idea of treating them like anyone else is obviously too much for most Britons. But the Greener case highlights something a new and troubling trend in this supposedly tolerant nation. Note the use of the word "scrounger", the spiteful claim that he was faking his disabilities. This kind of abuse is being increasingly heard. With economic storm clouds darkening, disabled people have become easy scapegoats in the age of austerity.
Polls have found substantial increases in the number of disabled people experiencing aggression and abuse, with evidence that the attitudes of the rest of society towards them are worsening. Many disabled people were already scared to go out after dark or travel on public transport such is their justified fear of encountering hostility.
Little wonder many people with disabilities are downbeat. Alice Maynard, chair of the charity Scope and a lifelong wheelchair user, told me she was terrified by the surly mood. "I'm quite an optimistic person by nature, but are we facing a truly ghastly scenario, in which we will live surrounded by hate and with a very limited social care system?"
It is not just the vicious attacks capturing headlines that dislocate lives. Take David Gillon, a software engineer who helped build Eurofighter jets before losing his job three years ago. He walks with crutches and has been physically attacked and regularly shouted at in the street since he slipped and injured his back two decades ago.
Earlier this year, someone reported him to the government's benefit fraud hotline. Officials dismissed the allegation as soon as they walked in his front door, but his condition, which is stress-related, worsened for several months. Now he feels so threatened he barely leaves his house. "If I go out, I know I could suffer more abuse," he said. One cruel act – and another person left a virtual prisoner in their own home.
As the parent of a defenceless daughter with profound disabilities, such stories disturb me. They should disturb us all. So what lies behind this harsh new mood towards the disabled?
Unfortunately, much blame rests on the shoulders of the media and certain parts of government. There has been a new dialogue over disability, characterised by the constant drip-drip of stories implying vast numbers of disability claimants are bogus, that benefits are doled out without proper checks and taxpayers fund free cars for thousands of children with minor behavioural disorders.
Many emanate from the Department for Work and Pensions, which has twisted facts, manipulated statistics and distorted data to win support for its drive to cut costs and crack down on benefit fraud. This cascade of spurious claims and scandalously spun stories ends up demonising the disabled. It does no credit to Iain Duncan Smith, the secretary of state, who proclaims himself a compassionate Conservative. Ministers say they cannot be blamed for the actions of the media, but they know how the game is played.
Meanwhile, there has been a significant increase in articles about "cheats", "scroungers" and "skivers" in the media. Not just tabloids, but broadsheets and broadcasters. A recent Glasgow Media Group study revealed a near-tripling of these words in papers, alongside a reduction in reports on discrimination and sympathetic stories about disabled people. Focus groups found people suggesting seven in 10 claimants were fraudulent; in reality, levels of fraud for disability benefits are 0.5%, much lower than for other benefits – and less than the level of errors made by officials.
Among those feeling the coldest chill of this new mood of intolerance are people with mental health conditions, already so often victims of bullying and hate crimes. They may not look obviously disabled, so are targeted as "scroungers". The charities Mencap and Mind have received numerous calls from people distressed by the witch hunt; one person said they felt like an "object of hate and derision with no escape".
No one, least of all those with disabilities, disputes the need to prevent fraud. Every pound stolen by a fake claimant is a pound not spent on vital services or much-needed support. Nor is this an argument about the need or otherwise for cuts. My view is that there remains huge inefficiency in public services, although many poor services are being ring-fenced and cuts imposed in the wrong places. But as people scrap for resources and stresses intensify, resentment is growing against the disabled, undermining any good things the government is doing in this area.
It is grossly irresponsible for journalists and politicians to collude in this manner to create a climate encouraging hatred, hostility and abuse towards people for whom life is already so difficult. This would be true at any time, but especially at a time of such uncertainty, when people are fearful of the future and looking for others to blame for their misfortune. Those with disabilities should not be made scapegoats for other people's sins.
Education is the ‘magic key’ for disability right
Education is the ‘magic key’ for disability rights
Today is the UN International Day of Persons with Disabilities. For several years, RESULTS has been campaigning for the rights of disabled children to access education around the world. We’re currently in an appalling situation: of the 67 million primary aged children in the world who are not in school, over one third live with a disability, and over 90% of disabled children in sub-Saharan Africa do not attend school. Exclusion from education all too often leads to exclusion from the workforce, so disabled people around the world are massively more likely than non-disabled people to be living in extreme poverty. Our failure to educate disabled children in the world’s poorest countries is a violation of human rights that quite literally kills.
But there is a positive side as well. When disabled people are able to access their fundamental right to education, the benefits for society can be enormous. Just take the example of Anne Wafula Strike, a British-Kenyan Paralympian athlete who was the first East African to ever compete in a wheelchair sprint at the Paralympics in Athens in 2004. Anne grew up doubly disadvantaged, as a disabled girl in rural Kenya, but she has gone on to achieve more than most of us can imagine as a mother, teacher, author and athlete. Anne puts her success down to the fact that her supportive father pushed her to stick with education, even when things were so difficult – even the toilets at Anne’s school were inaccessible for her – that she wanted to quit.
On Tuesday this week RESULTS worked with the All-Party Parliamentary Groups on Global Education for All and on Disability, and a group of other charities who work on inclusive education including ADD International and Sightsavers, to bring Anne in front of a group of MPs and Lords in the House of Commons. The meeting was chaired by Rt Hon David Blunkett MP, Vice-Chair of the APPG on Global Education for All and attendees included Chris Holmes, the Director of the 2012 Paralympic Games. Anne’s inspirational story helped to inform and educate the parliamentarians and other attendees about how the UK Government could help to ensure that all disabled children are able to access education.
In fact, the UK along with the rest of the international community is already committed to this goal, as it is enshrined in the Millennium Development Goals: MDG 2 commits us to ensure that all children are able to complete a primary education by 2015 – all children, not all except those living with disability. But far too little is still being done to meet this aim.
There are good initiatives out there: for example the UK Department for International Development in Uganda is currently supporting the Ugandan Government to carry out a detailed mapping of special needs education provision, but we’re a very long way from systematically addressing this issue on the scale that is needed to reach the millions of excluded disabled kids. Many of the MPs who were present on Tuesday have committed to raise this issue with the Government and ask for more action to be taken, and we are hopeful that we are starting to see some changes.
As Anne said on Tuesday, ‘education was the magic key that opened doors for me…When I was growing up and even still today, I did not want sympathy, I wanted opportunity. I wanted to be given the opportunity to prove what I can do for the community, and I know this is what many other disabled people want as well.’ Today, please join the effort to make this happen. For more information about how you can help, contact the RESULTS office.
Sunday, December 04, 2011
Jeet Kune Do in Wheelchairs
Top from left, Martin O’Neil (Lurgan) Alan De Preter (Belguim) Neil Click (Longford), James Devine (Dublin)
Bottom from left, Paul Tobin (Laois), Tom Chambers (Mayo) Mark McNulty (Donegal) Colm Whooley (Dublin)
Jeet Kune Do in Wheelchairs
A Real Eye Opener!
Newport man pushes the boundaries to conquer yet another challenge
There is something about Tom Chambers that enlivens the spirit. Wheelchair bound since an accident in 1981, the Newport man’s spirit knows no bounds. The sports fanatic has completed numerous marathons, pushed the wheels through countless races and inspired a multitude through his unyielding belief that anything is possible. The big man was always active, playing football with his native Burrishoole in his youth and later lining out across the water in England. When a car in 1981 left him disabled but nothing could harness his love of life and ambition to push back the boundaries time and time again. Tom never ceases to amaze, but his latest venture is even more interesting than usual. The Newport man has taken up Martial Arts. Jeet June Do (The way of the Intercepting Fist) now has a Newport exponent and Chambers is more than enthusiastic about his new achievement. “If you always put limits on everything you do, it will spread into your work and your life. There are no limits. There are only plateaus, and you must not stay there, you must go beyond them.” It is a method of self-defence for those of us with spinal injuries and it really works. I was delighted to get involved. I have met some amazing people and I’m learning new skills all the time. Jeet Kune Do (The Way of the Intercepting Fist) was founded by Sifu Bruce Lee over 35 years ago. He emphasized on intercepting your components attack before it’s launched or at the latest while it’s in motion. In order to achieve the goal of interception there are a few key principles to abide by: Simplicity, economy, longest weapon/nearest target! Martin O’Neil began the first JKD School in Ireland in 1987. He has been active in martial arts for 27years and he is the first person in Europe to be certified full instructor in Jun Fan Gung Fu, Jeet Kune Do, by Sifu Lama M Davis II. He is ranked by Sibak Taky Kimura and Sifu Andy kimura at Advanced level 2 in Jun Fan Gung Fu. Martin became only the second person outside the USA to receive the rank of level 2 in Jun Fan Gung Fu from Sibak Taky Kimura and Sifu Andy Kimura. Taky Kimura was perhaps Bruce Lee’s closest friend during the Seattle period. Being a Japanese-American, Kimura lived a life that was marred by anti-Asian racism, which ran rampant in the United States during World War II and afterward. When Kimura was 36, he met Lee, then 19, and signed up for marital arts lessons. Immediately, his self-confidence grew, and his self-defence ability improved. Lee eventually promoted him to the fifth rank of Jun Fan gung Fu and gave him permission to teach the system. From 1960 to 2005, Kimura oversaw the functions of the Jun Fan Gung Fu Club of Seattle. Together with his son Andrew, he now operated the Jun Fan Gung Fu institute there. Martial arts for people with a disability took a major step forward in 2008 when Spinal injuries Ireland (who run a Jeet Kune Do self defence program) were privileged to host a seminar in Jun Fan Jeet Kune Do, with Sibak Andy Kimura as the guest instructor. Andy Kimura, Senior instructor at the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute of Seatttle is the son of Sigung Taky Kimura, Bruce Lee’s closest friend and highest ranked student. The Jun Jan Gung Fu Institute of Seattle was founded in 1960 by the late Bruce Lee the founder of the Martial Art OF Jeet Kune Do. Spinal Injuries Ireland have being pursuing their goal to create a self-defence program that ‘Really works’ for wheelchair users since 2003. Spinal Injuries Ireland’s JDK instructors Declan Breen and Colm Whooley met Andy Kimura and Alain De Preter of Antwerp JKD at a seminar in Belfast held by Martin O’Neil of JKD Ireland. It was while attending this seminar that the seed of an idea was planted. Would it be possible to get Andy and Taky Kimura Kimura to agree to hold a seminar for Spinal Injuries Ireland? The first step in this journey was October 2008 when six members of Spinal Injuries Ireland JKD self defence program travelled to Antwerp in Belgium to train with Alan De Preter of the Antwerp School of Martial Arts. It is fair to say that Alain De Preter and his colleagues were impressed with the technical ability and passion of the group. At the end of the weekend Alain agreed to ask Taky and Andy Kimura when he was next in Seattle if they would consider putting a seminar for Spinal Injuries Ireland together. Alain De Preter outlines would how committed and passionate Spinal Injuries Ireland JKD self-defence group where about developing a real and practical self defence program. Taky and Andy agreed to travel from Seattle to the National Rehabilitation Hospital in Dublin where Spinal Injuries Ireland run their JDK self defence program for both inpatients and individuals from around the country. Tom is glad to report the programmes are going from strength to strength that Kelly McCann (He is a combatives instructor and former Marine with more than 25 years of experience is self-defence) who is interested in what we are doing would love to meet up with us. Thomas loves travelling from Newport Co Mayo every month to the self-defence training day and hopefully one day will have his own school in the West and his dream came through on the 23rd of June 2009 following a very steep self-defence weekend by Martin and Alain under the supervision of guest instructor Sifu Andy Kimura of the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute of Seattle he received his first of many certificates in Jeet Kune Do and he proudly hangs on the wall of his house. What will Chambers next challenge be but one thing is certain he will play te hand of cards he is dealt with.
Tom Chambers
The Billy Ranch
Knocknageeha
Newport
Co.Mayo