kestrell: (Default)
from the Benton Institute for Broadband and Society weekly digest:

What constitutes a lifeline in 2021? Is it a phone? A smartphone? A fixed-location broadband connection? Or some combination of all these services? Last week, the Federal Communications Commission's Wireline Competition Bureau launched a proceeding seeking public input on a report on the state of the FCC's Lifeline program. The report will have a huge impact on what services are available to Lifeline's low-income participants.
Read the rest of the article
https://www.benton.org/blog/what-will-fcc-do-next-lifeline

Kes: Just yesterday I linked to an article I wrote a couple of months ago
How We All Became Disabled, But We’re Still Not All Connected
https://kestrell.dreamwidth.org/379979.html

and in that article I cited a study regarding the
FCC's Lifeline program
https://www.fcc.gov/lifeline-consumers
which is supposed to make communication services more affordable.
However, according to a FCC report from early in 2019, the Lifeline program, which relies on the phone companies to distribute phones to those who need them, makes little or no attempt to ensure that people with disabilities have a phone that they can access:

"only 17% of the phones provided to low-income people through the Federally-subsidized Lifeline program offer access to Wireless Emergency Alert Notifications, and only 26% of the Lifeline phone include text-to-speech, an accessibility tool which allows visually impaired people to hear what appears on the phone's screen. In addition, accessibility features for people who are deaf or hard of hearing are even more scarce: 58% of Lifeline phones lack the video calling features necessary for ASL users, and most phones lack hearing aid compatibility.”

So, how much have you had to rely on your phone in the past year to stay connected? to work? to education? to food deliveries? to telehealth? to schedule your Covid-19 vaccine?

And, of course, maintaining disability services relies on *a lot* of filling out of forms, following up on telehealth visits, tracking down mistakes that have resulted in the cutting off of services, and, well, I like to say, you aren't disabled until you've filled out the paperwork. In triplicate. At least twice. Because someone will lose the paperwork the first time.

It's almost as if the real goal is to *prevent* people with disabilities from acquiring services.
kestrell: (Default)
This morning I spent two hours in a meeting listening to my health care program talk about their great plans for getting people with disabilities vaccinated. Granted, they are now getting homebound people vaccinated, and they have prioritized twenty high-risk communities which should be getting vaccinated by, um, June.

There was no word on when any of the people with disabilities in the meeting would be able to get vaccinated. We kept hearing that they had a plan, and they were going to discuss it, but somehow they ran out of time.

None of us with disability diagnoses have any sort of priority, not even the woman who uses a respirator.

However...

I recently read that the Kindly Ones https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erinyes
not only pursue naughty children who have murdered their parents, but also punish naughty high-ranking civil servants who have broken their sworn oaths.

Now I know what my next tattoo will be.

I'm just irked that I have to wait for this pandemic to be over to get it.

Are there any good temporary tattoos of the Kindly Ones?

Can you pay people to create them? Surely there are out-of-work graphic artists who would be willing to help out a poor blind woman?

February 2024

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