Reykjavík Grapevine - 10.08.2012, Side 28

Reykjavík Grapevine - 10.08.2012, Side 28
THE NUMBER 1 MUSIC STORE IN EUROPE ACCORDING TO LONELY PLANET SKÓLAVÖRÐUSTÍG 15, 101 REYKJAVÍK AND HARPA CONCERT HALL 28 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 12 — 2012 Feature | Accessibility You Can’t Always Go Downtown Continued be three hours in advance and costs ex- tra), so if someone asked Andri to go to a movie one night, he'd have to pass un- less somebody else could drive, which was often a long-shot. But isn’t that what public transporta- tion is for? It turns out that the Strætó bus system is also something of a sore point. “Strætó says now that they're ac- cessible but that's bullshit,” Andri says. Sólveig Ásgeirsdóttir, a customer relations representative at Strætó, says that while the f leet of around 80 buses doesn't have ramps or stairs, it’s not re- ally a problem. “When the bus stops, it goes down to the side where people walk in,” she says. “So it shouldn't be any problem.” If the bus is too far from the curb, or if the sidewalk is too low, that’s when a bus driver (or other passengers) may have to step in and help, she says. Iceland Versus The World: Be- hind The Curve But where does Iceland stand in com- parison to other countries? It is defi- nitely not the worst, but not nearly the best, says Eric Lipp, executive director of the Chicago-based Open Doors Organi- zation. The organisation earned interna- tional attention a decade ago when it released a report that detailed the travel preferences of disabled people. Through this nonprofit, Eric focuses on improv- ing accessibility in the travel industry and has for instance consulted for the airline Iceland Express about access. He has seen countries rebound from accessibility woes. And Iceland could be next in line, he says, if it gets its priori- ties straight. He says he marvels at the modern design for buildings in Japan and Swe- den, which make those countries near havens for people who use wheelchairs. “Accessibility is just woven into the fab- ric of the culture so that design becomes smarter,” he says. In the legal scheme, the U.S.’s Americans With Disabilities Act has been widely heralded as one of the world’s toughest for 22 years. Federal officials even sued New York’s famous Metropolitan Opera last year for failing to comply with the law. But people in Iceland, Eric says, “lack urgency” to make strides with ac- cessibility. “I sat with people and trained them and told them stories about me and my family. The people seem will- ing. The Icelandic people aren’t against access at all, but if there isn’t the right government movement there, it’s going to be harder to get things done,” he says. Eric says he still recommends that disabled travellers visit Iceland for its landscapes and friendly citizens. But the trip will not be easy, he cautions. “The hotels and whatnot aren’t required to do so much, so without regulation, they don’t. If someone took the horse to the water, I think they’d drink,” he says. For this reason, Eric has hope that Iceland can remake itself, and appeal to more disabled visitors and citizens. He says cities like Rio de Janeiro, which has used its booming economy to land a future World Cup, Olympics and Para- lympics, has doubled down on opening up access for wheelchair users as the city has developed. Reykjavík, too, will see more city de- velopment after the crash, an opportuni- ty that shouldn’t be wasted, Eric says. “I think that if you build it now, people will come. As you rebuild, focus on building with inclusion in mind,” he says. “It’s cheaper than they would expect. The important thing is that the private sector takes the initiative, not necessarily the government.” We Really Don't Like People Who Don't Make Fun Of Dis- abled People While Andri waits for full access, he might as well laugh at the situation. Probably the last thing Andri would want someone to think about him is that he's all business, trying to send anyone who can use two legs on a guilt trip. Quite the opposite. When Andri isn’t working at Þekkingarmiðstöð Sjálfsb- jargar, he devotes his time to a comedy sketch group with a wheelchair twist called Öryrki ( “legally disabled”). For more than five years, Andri and his peers have been using YouTube and Facebook as a means to challenge stereo- types about wheelchair users through Öryrki. "People always see disabled peo- ple in the paper whining," he says. "We wanted to change that image so we went and made fun of ourselves and did these ridiculous things." Among the catalogue of "ridicu- lous things" Öryrki has done is make a Facebook page that, like pages advocat- ing leash laws for dogs, discourages the presence of people in wheelchairs in public. "We made statuses like, 'Oh, I saw a wheelchair guy in the mall today. That really offended me,'" he says. In re- sponse to that one, someone messaged them saying they knew somebody in a wheelchair and the status offended them. “We sent them one line that said, 'Have you ever been bitten by a guy in a wheelchair? Then you don't know how it feels,’" he says. The group’s website (www.oryrki. is) includes videos from its YouTube ac- count: comedy sketches á la SNL, but with wheelchairs. In one such video, a man haggles with someone for his wheelchair. Eventually they settle, with the guy who walked there wheeling away and telling the man to send him the bill. "Of course," the man on the ground says. Another sketch is Santa Claus in a wheelchair, unable to spread the Christ- mas joy as the snow and ice-laden streets render his wheelchair nearly useless. "We tried to make the videos black humour," he says. "Some people don't like that. There was a rumour when we start- ed that we weren't disabled. They never thought that disabled people would make fun of themselves."“ “There was a rumour when we started that we weren't disabled. They never thought that dis- abled people would make fun of themselves."„ So What’s The Deal With The UN Convention On The Rights Of Persons With Disabilities? Iceland has not yet solidified its commitment to disability issues in the international realm, delaying its ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities after signing it in 2007. The law—the first human rights treaty of the 21st century—promotes full equality for the 650 million disabled people worldwide, granting them power to make their own medical and living decisions. It also pushes states to ensure full access and gives disabled people employment rights. More than 110 countries have ratified the convention since the UN drew it up in 2006, aiming it not only at wheelchair users, but also those who are blind, deaf, and mentally, physically, intellectually or develop- mentally impaired. The countries that have ratified the treaty, which include Brazil, Spain, United Kingdom, Denmark, and the latest, Liberia, adopt it by passing legislation at home. Iceland could soon bring its laws in line, too, and ratify the treaty. Alþingi, the country’s Parliament, passed a resolution last summer to work out policy recommendations and a disability strategy for 2012- 2014. “The main purpose of the policy program and the action plan is to harmonize with the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Dis- abilities,” says Minister of Welfare Guðbjartur Hannesson. “We’ve highly prioritized to be in front on everything about disabled people’s rights. For us, it is very, very important to implement all the newest agreements, like the UN convention.” As part of the policy program working to adopt the treaty, parliamen- tary committees began working this summer to hammer out details of new benefits for disabled people, like direct payments for their indepen- dent living. MP Guðmundur Steingrímsson says the committee he works on is in the development stages of working out a system for direct payments. A group of 40 to 60 people with disabilities could draw form an initial pot of 300 million ISK—a sum that would go to hiring personal assistants. “This is a simple idea of implementing a system so that disabled people can gain control over their own lives instead of receiving assis- tance from an institution. You can control assistance yourself,” Guðmun- dur says. “They’ll be able to decide where they want to go, but this won’t eliminate many hindrances.” “ We will always have a problem with old build- ings. The law wasn’t detailed, so it was easy to get around.„

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