Category: entrepreneurs with disabilities

2020 Reflections

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So, that was a year we’ll never forget, wasn’t it?

2020 was an unexpected rollercoaster and while I am not sorry to see the end of it and I’m eager to move forward and greet 2021 with hope for less chaos, I want to recognize some truly amazing things that 2020 brought us at DisabilityPride.net.

Firstly, Gerianne and I started 2020 off with a new adventure, participating in TeamWork Cooperative’s Self Employment Workshop where I learned just how much Gerianne hates market research and Gerianne and I both learned that there are many ways to go about building a successful business and we have to determine our own definition of successful. We enjoyed getting to know many other entrepreneurs and made a few friends while we were attending the workshops. Unsurprisingly, the workshop was cancelled in mid-March when everything was thrown into lockdown. While Gerianne did not “graduate” from the program we did gain valuable experience there and are incredibly grateful to TeamWork for giving us the opportunity to participate.

As we entered lockdown and people were required to isolate for a variety of reasons, our staffing pool became fairly shallow. Gerianne and I were together almost all day, almost every day for a fair chunk of March and April due to various isolation and quarantine requirements. This would have probably driven most working relationships into the ground but we managed to flourish as a team. The main part of the reason for this was our ability to get along and communicate very well. We both had bad days, we both had good days. They didn’t always coincide but we were able to work together through them and produce some amazing content and a wide variety of projects.

Gerianne was determined to not sit idle while the world was essentially shut down. She completed and excelled at several courses on online marketing and search engine optimization. We both participated in and completed ARCH Disability Law’s Community Champions stream on the United Nation’s Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Optional Protocols and how those can be used by disability rights activists in Canada. It was an eye-opening experience that gave us insight into the various avenues for and challenges with defending inclusion and disabled people’s human rights within Canada and around the world.

DisabilityPride.net just finished our first newsletter (check it out if you haven’t seen it!) and we have started to explore video production. We have big ideas and big plans, many of which started forming during this complicated adventure in various stages of lockdown.

Gerianne also began the adventure of diversifying her income opportunities and has been incredibly successful selling vintage and second-hand furniture and décor. We have also collected a number of stories from Gerianne’s customers that we hope to turn into either posts on the blog or a collection of vignettes for the newsletter’s next edition.

Though this year was professionally a success, I would be remiss to not acknowledge the difficulties in the non-professional sphere. I spent a significant length of time away from my children as they were visiting family out-of-province when lockdown began. Gerianne and I spent almost every night I was here with my kids reading us bedtime stories. I am forever grateful to my family, who kept my kids safe, happy and healthy during a time their father and I couldn’t be there with them physically.

Gerianne has been diligent about maintaining the health and safety of herself and her attendants, which means adhering to all guidelines from the Department of Health. As a result, she has been home more often in the last 9 months than she probably has in the last 4 years. She has missed participating in her community, including church, immensely. She has also deeply missed seeing her family and friends.

We have had an unprecedented year. 2020 will be a forever bittersweet time but I am proud to have accomplished so much during a global crisis. If there had to be anyone by my side during such an event, I’m infinitely grateful I had Gerianne (and my family) with me for this adventure.

Accessible Online Banking?

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Gerianne sitting at her desk wearing her head pointer and typing with it

When out and about in the “real world” we encounter a number of barriers to accessibility. A step into a store that’s too high for a wheelchair to climb safely, sidewalks closed for construction, signs in the middle of paths making it impossible for a wheelchair, powerchair or stroller to pass, doors without automatic openers, the list goes on…

I tend to think of the internet as a place with fewer barriers to accessibility. Most computer users with mobility issues have figured out adaptations to use their hardware, people who are hard of hearing, Deaf, or deaf have access to closed captions, folks who are vision impaired, blind, or have reading comprehension problems have screen readers, people with writing difficulties have voice to text for typing (which doesn’t work well for people with accents or speech impediments but that’s another story), etc…

But sometimes a barrier crops up that I don’t expect, in a place I never imagined. Gerianne was looking into online banking and came across a prompt for a digital signature. This is a barrier to access for folks who don’t have the dexterity to use a mouse and don’t have a touch-pad connected to their desktops.

We’ve encountered other barriers to access online too and they usually involve proving identity or the “I am not a robot” things. Timed tests for proving you are not a robot are the most common ones we encounter but I’m sure there are more. We do our best to navigate through them but I’m growing more aware of the lack of inclusion in the design process in a space that I thought was truly for everyone.

User experience designers need to be more aware of the barriers their users encounter, the same way designers of physical spaces need to build that awareness. I don’t have a solution for any of these barriers but it is important to make note and call them out when we encounter them so that we can have a more inclusive, accessible experience, online and offline.

Having one “standard” model of human that all of our environments are build around prevents full, equal access. No two bodies or minds have the same abilities and that’s part of what makes the world interesting and fun.

Social Celebration!

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We’re doing some happy dances and celebrating a social media milestone today!

In the past week, we have seen 10 new “likes” and 15 new followers on our Facebook page! We are so excited to welcome our new community members and hope that they enjoy everything we post!

Don’t forget to submit your “floats” for the Disability Pride Parade to virtual2020parade@disabilitypride.net by May 27th to be featured in the livestream and to be entered for prizes! Here is a sneak peek of what we’re working on!

Is it Really Time? By Gerianne Hull, Read by Chelsey Joudrie

Is it Really Time? By Gerianne Hull, Read by Chelsey Joudrie

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A poem about unconventional friendship, technology and changes in relationships.

The second in our series of poems written by Gerianne Hull and read by fans and friends. To help us make more videos like this, please support us by becoming a patron. Visit the link to our Patreon page and pledge as little as $1 a month. You’ll be entered into prize draws and receive a personal thank you!

Where’s Our Parade?

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In February, the idea of a Disability Pride Parade started forming. We had anticipated organizing a group of folks to participate in a Disability Pride Parade in Halifax, NS to coincide with National AccessAbility Week which starts the last Sunday in May. Then, our world was shut down due to Covid-19 and we put all plans on hold. The idea was still in the backs of our heads but we paused to take stock and figure out how to exist in this new world, without mass gatherings.

Earlier this week, Gerianne and I were talking about how we’d love to keep the idea of the parade alive. The proliferation of online gatherings has inspired us to try to organize an online parade. This does present some challenges, as it won’t look like a traditional parade but we’re nothing if not adaptable!

So, DisabilityPride.net calls our friends and fans to prepare their “floats” and send us pictures, videos, art, animations, showing us what Disability Pride means to you! We will create a video with your contributions and stream it live at a Facebook event.

We want to have the first part of the parade, the Facebook live event, on May 31st or June 1st so we would like to have the initial pictures and other content submitted by May 25th. Send them in a message to https://www.facebook.com/DisabilityPride.net/ or email them to me at mwilson@disabilitypride.net

If you miss the May25th deadline, that’s more than ok! we invite you to post your “float” to https://www.facebook.com/DisabilityPride.net/ between May 31st and June 6th to continue the parade throughout National AccessAbility Week!