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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, August 13, 2001 |
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Challenging them further
FOR THE disabled, the introduction of the Persons with
Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full
Participation) Act 1995, meant that their world had grown bigger.
The Act required to keep in mind concerns of the physically
impaired during construction of public buildings.
The Spastics Society of Tamil Nadu (SPASTN) recently conducted
access audits (surveys) of prominent buildings in Chennai like
Spencer Plaza, Government Tidel Park, Museum and Central Station.
The audits were designed to identify the barriers that make these
buildings unwelcome to people with physical and mental
disabilities.
The museum and railway station were constructed when the needs of
the disabled were rarely considered. But Spencer Plaza and Tidel
Park came up after the legislation was introduced.
At the museum, for over the last 100 years, no attempt has been
made to improve accessibility. There are no toilets for visitors,
the ticket counter is in a small building close to the sculpture
gallery, the gallery and ticket office are hidden behind a
gateway, the single step to reach the ticket counter on a shallow
plinth doesn't have space to take a wheelchair and the
transaction at the counter is through a grille, which makes it
difficult for those who cannot hear.
After buying the ticket, a visitor is guided through a passage
which is narrow and turns through two right angles, an impossible
manoeuvre for wheelchair users and hazardous travel for people
with mobility problems. There is no ramp or handrail and the
nosings are not highlighted.
Inside the museum, the small plaques with descriptions beside
each exhibit are mounted at different heights.
As the plaques are inside a glass and the letters are not
embossed, the visually impaired cannot touch and read. Audio
guides can be used to improve access to the exhibition.
At the Central Railway Station, there are only steps to the main
entrance despite space for the construction of a ramp. The
visually impaired will find it extremely difficult to move around
on the cramped platforms. While for the physically impaired, it
can be quite a task getting into the trains.
To reach the reservation hall on the first floor, there are lifts
and steps. But the lifts are not signposted, the lift buttons are
beyond the reach of a wheelchair-user, the visually impaired
cannot touch and read the control panel and there is no door
reactivation device to protect those who might be delayed in
getting out of the lift.
There are no announcements and also no mirror to enable a
wheelchair-bound person to move safely. On the day of the survey
only one lift was working.
The high reservation counters are beyond the reach of the
wheelchair users. No counter is provided with induction loop to
help those with hearing problems. Besides, the staff are also
seated behind a reflective glass, which makes lip-reading
difficult for those who cannot hear.
There is no passenger lift in the main building to provide access
to the first floor restaurant and waiting room.
Spencer Plaza and Tidel Park have ramps at the entrance (although
steeper than the national design guidance recommends), but the
excessive use of marble and plate glass on the flooring can prove
hazardous for the visually impaired.
At Tidel Park, steps to the first floor are built on a curve and
the step nosings are not highlighted. While at Spencer Plaza, the
information booth is located in a sunken central court and on the
first floor, there are two flight of steps.
No warning is given about this sudden change in the level, step
nosings are not highlighted and the flights are not fitted with
ramps or handrails. There is also no seating facility in the
plaza.
Of course there are fundamental problems that almost all
buildings in Chennai face if they open their doors to the
disabled.
The Persons with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of
Rights and Participation) Act, 1995, calls this kind of
unfavourable condition for the handicapped as discriminatory.
Despite repeated approach to the concerned authorities, in
Chennai we are still waiting to see a favourable change in this
direction.
CLARE GOODRIDGE
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