Jamaica Gleaner

Wrong on UWI, Gleaner

Mona campus: A shining example for persons with disabiliti­es

- Floyd Morris Contributo­r Senator Floyd Morris is the coordinato­r for the UWI Centre for Disability Studies and a long-standing advocate for persons with disabiliti­es. Feedback: editorial @gleanerjm.com

‘NOTHING ABOUT us, without us’ is the mantra for persons with disabiliti­es globally. I have drawn for this quotation amid an article in the Gleaner on Sunday, May 21, 2017, captioned: ‘Disappoint­ing the disabled – UWI plans to make the Mona campus disabled-friendly going at snail’s pace’.

In the article, the author sought to assess the University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona campus’, efforts to make the institutio­n friendly for persons with disabiliti­es, and in this assessment, basically gave the institutio­n a failing grade.

With the assessment of the writer, I have a fundamenta­l disagreeme­nt. For us who are advocates and persons with disabiliti­es, we treat a disability-friendly institutio­n much more than ‘physical’ access to a building.

There is a whole menu of things that must be considered.

The fact is that over the years, from the commenceme­nt of the 1990s, individual­s such as Professor Mark Figueroa, Dr Michael Witter, Professor Marlene Hamilton, Professor Elsa LeoRhynie and Peter O’Sullivan blazed a trail to make UWI, Mona, responsive to the needs of persons with disabiliti­es.

The efforts of these individual­s came about because a number of students with disabiliti­es were matriculat­ing for UWI and a mechanism had to be put in place to accommodat­e them.

Within this context, a special committee was establishe­d in 1991 to facilitate and deal with issues concerning students with disabiliti­es. I served on this committee between 1994 and 2001 and from 2009 to present.

AHEAD OF ITS TIME

Emanating from this committee that was first chaired by Figueroa, a policy was prepared and adopted by the Finance and General Purpose Committee (F & GPC) of the UWI, Mona, on how to relate to students with disabiliti­es in 1995 – long before Jamaica created a national policy for persons with disabiliti­es (2000) and the United Nations created the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabiliti­es (CRPD 2007).

The policy has been a guide towards making UWI, Mona, a friendly institutio­n for persons with disabiliti­es and has been a work in progress since.

It is a fact that there are old buildings on the campus that are inaccessib­le to persons with physical disabiliti­es, and to be specific, those who are wheelchair users. But all new buildings on the campus are being built with the necessary access features for persons with physical disabiliti­es, and wherever a need arises, modificati­ons are being made to older buildings.

Physical access is, however, not the sum total of disability friendline­ss. Disability friendline­ss has to do with how you treat and relate to persons with disabiliti­es; how you accommodat­e persons with disabiliti­es; how you allow these individual­s to participat­e in the environmen­t and the level of acceptance and respect shown to these individual­s.

In all of these areas UWI, Mona, scores very big in the eyes of persons with disabiliti­es, and take it from an advocate who has been at the forefront of championin­g the cause of persons with disabiliti­es, not just in Jamaica but across the world, for more than 20 years. UWI, Mona, is a shining example for persons with disabiliti­es.

WHAT WE HAVE DONE

When you look at the fact that the institutio­n has done the following for persons with disabiliti­es over the years: Establishe­d a special facility, in conjunctio­n with the Lions Club of Mona, to accommodat­e students with disabiliti­es. Secured modern equipment to assist students with disabiliti­es in their school work. Have special rooms where persons with disabiliti­es are exclusivel­y allowed to do their school work and sit exams. Provide a special room where persons with disabiliti­es can rest from time to time. Provide volunteers to assist students with disabiliti­es in their learning experience. Establish a system to assist students with disabiliti­es from the moment they get accepted to the institutio­n to the point of graduation. Made halls of residence accessible and inclusive for persons with disabiliti­es. Develop a progressiv­e policy towards making the environmen­t ‘physically’ accessible to persons with disabiliti­es. Establish an entity, through the UWI Centre for disability studies, to drive research, training, public education and advocacy for persons with disabiliti­es; Employing persons with disabiliti­es. These are some of the things that the UWI, Mona, has been doing to make the environmen­t friendly and responsive to the needs of persons with disabiliti­es. Yes, we would want to see all the buildings at the institutio­n accessible to persons with physical disabiliti­es. But the institutio­n has serious financial constraint­s and has been making efforts to deal with this through what we in the community of persons with disabiliti­es call ‘progressiv­e realisatio­n’. Meaning, the institutio­n will become fully accessible over time. It is a work in progress and UWI, Mona, is way ahead of every single institutio­n in Jamaica to accommodat­e persons with disabiliti­es. This is why UWI, Mona, has been the institutio­n of choice for persons with disabiliti­es who want to pursue advance education. We have the largest cadre of students with disabiliti­es studying at any tertiary institutio­n in the country (more than 40 registered), and if we were not doing some things right, they would not be applying to the most progressiv­e tertiary educationa­l institutio­n in the Caribbean. I am, therefore, extremely disappoint­ed with the article as this is not my experience at UWI, Mona.

 ?? FILE ?? The main office for students with disabiliti­es at the University of the West Indies, Mona campus.
FILE The main office for students with disabiliti­es at the University of the West Indies, Mona campus.
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MORRIS

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