Monday 8 June 2020

A View on Disability Equality post-Coronavirus



I have been an independent disability equality advocate for over fourteen years, running All Inclusive CIC. My business style has always focused on the positives of disability inclusion in the built environment, in designing and developing services, inclusion in strategic and development decision-making within organisations, and delivering inclusive customer service. I feel with any organisation that I work with, this philosophy encourages a culture of embedding and promoting good practice for disability inclusion to happen. In turn, this improves deep understanding across local communities for disabled people.

My fear now, is that post-Coronavirus, economics will now rule all business and voluntary sectors, potentially damaging the hard work to improve disability inclusion that All Inclusive, and other organisations like mine, have done over the last twenty years and more. The purple pound is still a concept with underwhelmed momentum. The potential spending power of disabled people, and the key to unlock this potential, isn’t really understood by commerce and industry. The key to unlocking the purple pound potential understanding is inclusive design, both within the built environment and in the development of services. Post Coronavirus training, beyond subjects for a company’s compliance, will be shelved because of lack of financial resources and high employment will impact on the number of disabled people employed. The care system, that many disabled people rely on, is creaky even on its knees in certain areas, and this assessment was before the pandemic. Looking at the future when we start piecing this back to normal, I dread even to think. Councils will have even less money, post Coronavirus, to invest in care services.  This raises four questions for me:

·       Is the picture this black?
·       Is disability equality totally reliant on financial resources to improve?
·       Is inclusive design all about expensive changes?
·       Can the purple pound help the economy improve?

For the sake of this article, I am going to personalise some of the issues to illustrate what I am saying, but, hopefully, it also highlights the wider implications.

Let’s start with the question that encompasses all four questions; is the future for disability equality bleak and black? Initially maybe, but one of the overriding strengths of the disability sector is creativity. We have always either solved problems, developed service solutions or improved the general thinking on disability, on a shoe string of a budget. So, when this recession hits, many of us in the sector will adapt and survive. Disability crosses all the characteristic strands of equality, and therefore, it effects all sorts of minority communities. I am an optimist and I believe, for my own organisation, if we can survive somehow for the next 18 months, the economic curve downwards, that every sector is facing, will start heading back up. I am under no illusion that the Coronavirus pandemic will change the world of work forever. Yes, some things will revert back but, for lots of us, the speed of the worldwide spread of Coronavirus is a big shock; that shock will influence how we act and operate in the future. So black and bleak for a time, but improving as we adapt.

For me, inclusive design of the community, the built environment and service development and design, is the cornerstone of the future of disability equality. Inclusive design encompasses, and incorporates entirely, the Social Model of Disability. The hidden benefit is wider than that though. By using the principles of inclusive design, it makes life a great deal easier for other sections of society, creating a win win for everyone. Let’s face it, whatever we do, from shopping to using call centres, if our experience of the customer service journey is straight forward and simple, no matter our access needs, it makes life better. We need to move from calling for improved disability access and call it simply ‘accessibility for all’. I agree, some building infrastructure changes like fitting an appropriate ramp, lift or accessible toilet, can be expensive, but there are many more changes to a building that are about furniture placement, building flow and signage, for example, that may be inexpensive to alter but have a positive impact on access for disabled people. Another idea is that if organisations have disabled representation by having directors, trustees or focus groups that advise the Board, then services, or the selling of products, will be looked at through the eyes of a disabled person and access issues can be resolved at source.

I spend lots of my working life delivering experiential training or talks to improve the customer service journey for disabled people. For me, the interactions with people are on a par with how accessible a building or service might be. Indeed, I’ve experienced situations where the building hasn’t been the most accessible but, because the staff have ‘gone above and beyond’ to make me feel accommodated and valued as a customer, it has made that customer journey better. I am not advocating that poor physical access is acceptable, however, staff attitude plays a major role about how you feel about a place. In my introduction, I commented that post-Coronavirus, anything outside compliance training will be an extremely hard sell, just down to organisations needing to survive. I do not believe it will be impossible, just that disability equality consultants will need to be resourceful.

I am going to highlight how I believe the purple pound has a part to play in the economic recovery of the country in my conclusion. It is fair to admit that today, with things still in partial lockdown, it looks bleak. Hopefully, in this article, I have expressed how disability equality will have a positive impact on society. Furthermore, it is about unlocking the potential revenue of the purple pound. Get physical access and customer service right, and disabled people can spend more in retail, leisure, and the holiday market. Employ disabled people; we are creative, resourceful and loyal, all traits vital to sustain and grow businesses. Consultants like me will add value to your business medium to long term. Agreed, in the next eighteen months money will be tight, but investing in disability equality should bring a healthy return.

Iain Speed
Managing Director
All Inclusive CIC