Calgary Herald

Volunteers, amateur inventors build everyday devices for the disabled

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For many Canadians with disabiliti­es, it’s the little things that make day-to-day living a bit harder.

Kent Hehr, federal minister for persons with disabiliti­es, knows how difficult things can be. He’s been in a wheelchair since he was 21.

Hehr watched with interest Friday as he attended a Lipsync buildathon in Calgary. About two dozen volunteers gathered to assemble mouth-controlled devices that allow users to move the cursor on a computer or mobile phone.

The event was put on by Makers Making Change, a non-profit initiative that helps the disabled live independen­t lives. Project manager Zee Kesler said once assembled, the Lipsyncs will be given to individual­s who need them.

“Something like this Lipsync would be like $2,000 to $3,000 commercial­ly, and this version is only $200 to $300,” she said.

“A Lipsync could make a massive difference in their life, where something just as simple as opening the door could seem like something we take for granted. But for somebody else, they have to ask for help with it, so that’s a huge deal.”

The buildathon­s are held across the country. They attract many volunteers with virtually no experience, who are taught how to put together the Lipsyncs and how to solder.

“We don’t know how to do it, but we’re excited. It makes us feel good. We see it as a real opportunit­y to try something new,” said Marina Korostensk­y, who along with other Telus real estate employees, did it as a team building exercise.

“We were offered help and we were reassured that everything is fine, and if we break something, it can be fixed.”

The Lipsyncs are not the only products Makers Making Change assembles.

Kesler said the group pairs engineers, software developers and general “tinkerers” with a person who has a disability to help design prototypes.

They’ve created a nail clipper, a key holder and a device that can hold a pen for people who have difficulty with fine motor skills.

 ?? BILL GRAVELAND/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Federal Disabiliti­es Minister Kent Hehr gets a demonstrat­ion of the Lipsync, a device that allows users to control computers by blowing through a straw.
BILL GRAVELAND/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Federal Disabiliti­es Minister Kent Hehr gets a demonstrat­ion of the Lipsync, a device that allows users to control computers by blowing through a straw.

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