An deaf children's charity is calling on Assembly candidates to make a commitment to improve support for deaf children and young people... but they need your help!
The National Assembly for Wales has the power to make its own decisions and laws on key services, including education and health. That is why NDCS Cymru wants as many candidates as possible to pledge to improve services for deaf children and their families if they are elected to the Assembly on May 5.
You can assist this campaign by contacting your local election candidates to tell them about the pledge - our special online action makes this really quick and easy to do.
Other ways to get involved
Election candidates will soon be knocking doors and looking for votes. You can also help by downloading a copy of our pledge to pass on to them. (NDCS Cymru NAfW Election Pledge 2011.pdf (86 kb)
You can make a difference - candidates will listen to you because they want your vote! Thank you!
Contact
Friday, 25 March 2011
Thursday, 24 March 2011
No access for Mark

A DEAF film fan says visiting the flicks has become a nightmare after he was forced to leave a screening when staff refused to turn on the advertised subtitles. Martin Griffiths, 45, from Caerphilly, went to watch a 5.55pm showing of Black Swan at Cardiff’s Cineworld on February 14 after seeing it listed with subtitles.
Having suffered problems in the past, Martin checked the website and posters outside the cinema on Mary Ann Street before double-checking with staff – all of which confirmed there would be subtitles. But when the film began the on-screen text was missing and after Martin alerted staff they said they were powerless to help.
Martin, a charity project manager for Deafblind Cymru, said: “I always say: ‘Please can you check and make a phone call to the projection room to make sure they remember to put the subtitles on’. “They did that and I bought my ticket. As normal, none of the adverts or trailers had subtitles, but then the film started and there were no subtitles.”
Read More
Wednesday, 23 March 2011
Deaf Awareness workshop

SOURCE This is an PDF file.
VENUE: The Skill Learning and Development Centre, Rhyl
(Update date has now passed for this)..... Anyone attend ? how did it go ?
Tuesday, 22 March 2011
Corpus BSL project
For those who took part in this BSL project at Cardiff, there is to be NO roadshow in Cardiff to see results of it, find below official response, and if you want to attend Bristol, let them know.
Hello,
It is with regret that I have to say there will not be a roadshow in Cardiff. We wanted to visit all the cities involved in the corpus project and as we only received money for six events, we decided to group Cardiff and Bristol together as a single event.
I understand that you must be disappointed but I hope that won't put you off attending the roadshow in Bristol. We are currently investigating the possibility of paying for a minibus from Cardiff to Bristol if there are enough people interested in attending.
Kind regards,
Jordan
Jordan Fenlon, PhD
Research Associate, British Sign Language Corpus Project
DCAL Research Centre
University College London
49 Gordon Square
London
WC1H 0PD
CONTACT
Hello,
It is with regret that I have to say there will not be a roadshow in Cardiff. We wanted to visit all the cities involved in the corpus project and as we only received money for six events, we decided to group Cardiff and Bristol together as a single event.
I understand that you must be disappointed but I hope that won't put you off attending the roadshow in Bristol. We are currently investigating the possibility of paying for a minibus from Cardiff to Bristol if there are enough people interested in attending.
Kind regards,
Jordan
Jordan Fenlon, PhD
Research Associate, British Sign Language Corpus Project
DCAL Research Centre
University College London
49 Gordon Square
London
WC1H 0PD
CONTACT
Wednesday, 16 March 2011
Welsh deaf children put politicians on the spot..

My name is Kurtis Olding and on the 25th of January myself and eight other children – Paige Williamson, Aseela Abdo, Lewis Jones, Mitchell Price, Huma Khan, Jamie Miller, Leam Tucker, and Poppy Parritt – were chosen to go to the Senedd. We were chosen to speak to four politicians about how we could change the country for deaf people for the better.
I took part in the event to have a day off school, but the real reason I did it is because I wanted to put my point forward and hope for a change for a better future for the deaf people. I did it for the good of the deaf society in Wales. I think the politicians did listen to our comments and will try and do something to change the country for a better future for deaf people. We all asked some difficult questions that the parties could argue/debate about. I would like to thank the politicians for listening to us – I hope they will do something for the deaf children of Wales.
Questions put and answers given HERE
Labels:
access Wales,
acquired deaf,
deaf children,
politics
Wednesday, 9 March 2011
Deaf Consortium to Host Hustings

NDCS Cymru has joined forces with Wales Council for Deaf People, Deaf Access Cymru, and North Wales Deaf Association to host two hustings events.
The events, which will take place in Cardiff and Mold, will give people the opportunity to ask politicians from each of the four leading parties about deaf issues ahead of the National Assembly for Wales election in May.
If you would like to attend one of the events below, please book in advance:
Ty Hywel, Cardiff Bay – 18 March, 12 - 2pm

To book your place.
Clwyd Theatr Cymru, Mold – 19 April, 7 – 9pm

TO BOOK A PLACE VIA E-MAIL
COMMENT: Only TWO opportunities to question ? Why isn't the event on live feed ? or at more venues, ? the timing makes it almost impossible for many deaf to attend, especially those at work or in Mid-Wales. Given the technology available this is a poor way to offer deaf an chance to take politicians to task. We need MORE dissemination of what goes on from those attending, and, in a visual/titled nature.
Monday, 7 March 2011
50 years of quiet......
By Gill Roberts
THEY say the secret to a healthy and happy marriage is listening to one another. But for Mary and Barrie Evans from Lon Bryn Teg, in Neath, that has never been an option. The couple, who are celebrating their golden wedding anniversary on Friday, are both deaf. But their daughter Ruth Evans said despite never being able to hear each other, they have had a blissful 50 years together.
This year they will also both mark their 71st birthday at a joint celebration with their two children, four grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. "They married at Glyncorrwg Methodist Church," said Ms Evans. "They are over the moon that they have reached 50 years. "They go on holidays all the time and have a normal life. "They also both worked up until retirement. My father worked in a cardboard factory and my mother worked in old people's homes. "Now they both love bowls — that is their big hobby."
Ms Evans, aged 46, from Cimla, said her mother was born deaf and her father lost his hearing after contracting meningitis when he was aged 2. "My father was born in Birmingham and my mother was from Glyncorrwg," she added. "Her sister moved to Birmingham to become a headmistress for the deaf. My mother went up there with her and it was in Birmingham they met each other. "They got married and initially settled in Birmingham, but came back to Wales to have children. My mother wanted us to be Welsh.
"Me and my sister were just brought up with the fact that they could not hear anything. "They use sign language and lip reading. "When we used to cry as babies we had a monitor by the bed so the lights would go on and off. "Also they had vibrations under the pillow to wake them as an alarm. Now they have mobiles so they do a lot of texting. My mother will text her grandchildren quite a lot." The family are now getting ready for a special evening to mark the landmark anniversary on Friday. "We are putting on a big party at the Grosvenor Casino on High Street in Swansea," she said.
"We are expecting around 40 people. It is going to be lovely. "The whole family is looking forward to the celebration."
SOURCE
THEY say the secret to a healthy and happy marriage is listening to one another. But for Mary and Barrie Evans from Lon Bryn Teg, in Neath, that has never been an option. The couple, who are celebrating their golden wedding anniversary on Friday, are both deaf. But their daughter Ruth Evans said despite never being able to hear each other, they have had a blissful 50 years together.
This year they will also both mark their 71st birthday at a joint celebration with their two children, four grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. "They married at Glyncorrwg Methodist Church," said Ms Evans. "They are over the moon that they have reached 50 years. "They go on holidays all the time and have a normal life. "They also both worked up until retirement. My father worked in a cardboard factory and my mother worked in old people's homes. "Now they both love bowls — that is their big hobby."
Ms Evans, aged 46, from Cimla, said her mother was born deaf and her father lost his hearing after contracting meningitis when he was aged 2. "My father was born in Birmingham and my mother was from Glyncorrwg," she added. "Her sister moved to Birmingham to become a headmistress for the deaf. My mother went up there with her and it was in Birmingham they met each other. "They got married and initially settled in Birmingham, but came back to Wales to have children. My mother wanted us to be Welsh.
"Me and my sister were just brought up with the fact that they could not hear anything. "They use sign language and lip reading. "When we used to cry as babies we had a monitor by the bed so the lights would go on and off. "Also they had vibrations under the pillow to wake them as an alarm. Now they have mobiles so they do a lot of texting. My mother will text her grandchildren quite a lot." The family are now getting ready for a special evening to mark the landmark anniversary on Friday. "We are putting on a big party at the Grosvenor Casino on High Street in Swansea," she said.
"We are expecting around 40 people. It is going to be lovely. "The whole family is looking forward to the celebration."
SOURCE
Sunday, 6 March 2011
Health services are 'failing deaf children

Deaf children with additional needs are having their futures blighted by bad, unprofessional and often non-existent support and medical care. Some medical staff are "overwhelmed by these children's complexity of needs" while others treat deafness as a minor condition that can be addressed later in the child's life, according to the largest study into the experiences of deaf children with complex impairments, published on Wednesday.
In one case, doctors failed to diagnose a deaf child as also being profoundly blind until she was 18 months old, despite the mother repeatedly reporting her daughter's inability to see.
In another case, the behaviour of a blind toddler who repeatedly hit his head against hard surfaces was dismissed as normal for a child with learning disabilities. It was not until the father persuaded the doctor to watch a film he had made on his laptop, that the child was diagnosed with a brain tumour.
Susan Daniels, chief executive of the National Deaf Children's Society (NDCS) at the University of Manchester, which funded the Complex Needs, Complex Challenges report, said: "We are alarmed by the findings of this research, which shows services are not geared up to support or care for children who are deaf and have other disabilities (sic)." The research revealed the "shockingly low" expectations some professionals have of these children: often, the report said, a result of them seeing a collection of conditions instead of the whole child.
SOURCE
Labels:
access,
acquired deaf,
deaf children,
Health,
medical
Saturday, 5 March 2011
History of 3 deaf schools at Cardiff

We are obliged to refer to an Article by Brian Lee.
"I DIDN’T know until reading Cedric Moon’s A Tale of Three Deaf Schools in South Wales that there used to be a school for deaf-and-blind children in Wood Street. Known as the Cardiff Oral School, it stood adjacent to St Dyfrig’s Church and was there from 1894 to 1898. A Miss S A Gibson, of 45 Clare Road, Cardiff, was appointed as a “teacher of deaf- and-dumb children at a salary of £70 a year”. However, she resigned after a year and was replaced by Emma Young, one of three applicants, at a salary of £100 a year.

It was later recorded that “deaf children to be transferred from Wood Street School to rooms used by the blind children at Adamsdown”, and the blind children transferred to another school. Other Cardiff Deaf school locations were Fitzalan Place 1898-1907, Howard Gardens 1907-1941, Llandaff School 1941-1943 and Jackson Hall in Westgate Street 1943-1950.
One person who was sent to Howard Gardens was Desmond Smith who was born in 1932 into a family of six sisters and three brothers. He became deaf when aged two after a fall down the stairs at home. He remembers that he spent a great deal of time speech training with the then new audio equipment and headphones.
Another Howard Gardens pupil David Hallewell, who was born deaf in 1930, remembers that the teachers were very strict oralists with much speech training involved. Signing was strictly forbidden. David lived near the docks and during the war where he lived there were smoke machines which “belched out an artificial fog to cover the docks and hide it from the Germans”.
Tremorfa-born Lawrence Viney was an early victim of the World War II when during an air raid alert, he ran to the nearest bomb shelter and hit his head on the door frame with such force it knocked him out, resulting in him being hospitalised for some time. On leaving hospital his mother noticed that he was misunderstanding things she said. He was eventually placed in the Oral School at Jackson Hall.
In his conclusion to this unique book, the author says: “The debate on oral or manual (sign and finger spelling) teaching methods was shown to be alive and kicking from the start. Of the three schools the Cardiff Oral School lasted longest, though in my view it was too small to be a really effective school.”
(A Tale of Three Deaf Schools in South Wales is published by The British Deaf History Society and obtainable from the society 11-13 Wilson Patten Street, Warrington,WA1 1PG at £10).
SOURCE
STOP PRESS: Tuesday 8th March 2011
2nd Book Launch of ‘A Tale of Three Deaf Schools in South Wales’.
At the Bridgend Centre for the Deaf, Tremains Road,
Brackla, Bridgend CF31 2AP
Doors Open 7 pm
Labels:
access Wales,
Cardiff,
deaf schools,
histories.
Wales it DOES recognise BSL Access ?

Recent comment on another welsh site was "Now the yes vote is unanimous, will this mean BSL will achieve equal status alongside the Welsh language ?". Below is the WAG official stance. It stands by interpreter support, does not put BSL on equal footing really. There was no real access at all to inform deaf people of the YES vote or referendum itself.
British Sign Language (BSL)
Delivering in British Sign Language: Advice for Public Services
British Sign Language (BSL)
"We've taken positive action towards ensuring public services in Wales will be able to deliver their services in British Sign Language (BSL).
Facts:
BSL is a visual, spatial language with its own grammar, syntax, idioms, and regional variations. BSL is the first, or preferred language of an estimated 3,000 citizens of Wales.
BSL is recognised by the Welsh Assembly Government as a language in its own right.
More information about BSL can be found by visiting the useful links section at the bottom of this page.
BSL Futures is a unique scheme to improve access to public services for BSL users across Wales. The project was created in partnership with RNID Cymru, Deaf Association Wales and the Association of Sign Language Interpreters. The project set out to increase BSL teaching capacity and train more than 30 new interpreters and achieved its aim to train and register at least 30 professional BSL interpreters to work in Wales. The project was funded £2.7m by Welsh Assembly Government and the European Social Fund.
We have taken a leading role to ensure that services and service providers in Wales are fully able to meet the needs of BSL users across Wales.
The Assembly Government developed, for the public sector in Wales, best practice advice on providing services in BSL. This Best Practice advice will mean better utilisation of interpreter services in Wales. Capacity has been increased as a result of the BSL Futures project and will improve delivery of services in BSL in Wales by ensuring availability of interpreters to public bodies."
SOURCE
Labels:
access Wales,
acquited deaf,
BSL,
equality,
sign language,
WAG
Friday, 4 March 2011
Wales says YES !

Wales has voted 2 to 1 in favour of the 'YES' vote, There are some considerable reservations deaf people had no idea of what it was all about, or were informed, either in their communications formats or at their clubs. I know most of my local deaf club had no idea there was even an referendum in the offering, let alone what it was about. Not since the BDA had funding 5 years ago, to inform on electoral policies, have welsh deaf got much at all from the political process via information.
What will the result actually mean - for Wales and the rest of the UK? The consequences of a referendum can range far beyond the question on the ballot paper. The direct result will be a substantial increase in the Welsh assembly's legislative powers.
At present, the assembly has powers over 20 broad policy areas, including health, education, the environment and transport, but it must ask parliament for primary law-making powers on a case-by-case basis. Now Wales votes Yes, the assembly could pass laws without first having to gain the consent of Westminster.
What is done with those powers, though, will depend greatly on the outcome of May's election, and any coalition negotiations that may follow. The implications of a Yes vote do not stop there. A substantial Yes vote will give a more general boost to the standing of the Welsh assembly.
A more powerful Welsh assembly and the Westminster government's planned reduction in Welsh MPs from 40 to 30 would likely produce a distinct shift in Wales's political centre of gravity. What goes on in London would still matter for Wales. But rather more of Welsh political life would tend to focus on Cardiff Bay.
Some consequences of a Yes might extend well beyond Wales. A more powerful Welsh assembly would reduce, though not eliminate, the asymmetries in devolution across the minority nations of the UK. This might lead to a renewed focus on devolution's major remaining anomaly - the position of England. The boost to the standing of the assembly and its ministers from a Yes might have consequences for Wales' weight in on-going discussions about revisions to the Barnett formula that governs the block-grants given to the devolved bodies.
The emerging consensus among Wales' political elite in recent years has regarded devolution as a developing process, with steadily growing - though not fervent - public support. Many people have criticised the Welsh referendum as being unduly technical - for concerning a matter of detail rather than one of fundamental principle. This may well be true. The outcome of the 2011 referendum vote is likely to do much to shape Welsh politics, and Wales' position within the UK, for many years to come.
Cymru Am Byth....
Thursday, 3 March 2011
Are you Deaf and Welsh ?

Online welsh deaf are vastly unrepresented via an site or forum or any centralised area where they can gain or exchange information and viewpoints on the their daily lives, or their aspirations, would you like to see such a site set up ? and, importantly, would you support it ? suggestions and or support welcome.
Important: (1) NOT an social area as such, as it is pointless vying with Twitter and Facebook.
(2) NOT a dedicated BSL, site but an inclusive one. Let's take barriers down.
NO welsh site has ever fully represented all wales, can the deaf and HI do it ? Look at North Welsh Deaf Association see what they can do, and why, with SOUTH Wales being the most highly populated area, is completely unable to display anything like it ?
Labels:
access,
access Wales,
acquired and Deaf people,
BSL,
Forum,
lip-reading.
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