News Archives

Michael Parkinson: The deaf are discriminated against

Michael Parkinson is still haunted by the isolation experienced by his grandparents, who were both profoundly deaf. The chat-show host says we must all do more to help the hard of hearing.

As a boy growing up in a South Yorkshire pit village, Michael Parkinson would sit and play dominoes with his redoubtable grandparents after school. There was very little else he could share with them – no family anecdotes, no wartime memories, no tales from school – because they were profoundly deaf.

“They had no connection with the outside world,” he says. “The sadness was that my grandfather was a fascinating character but you couldn’t get to him. They were so cut off by their affliction that my grandmother used to talk to herself. My grandfather would cheat terribly, putting threes against fives, twos against sixes, because she was too busy nattering to herself to notice…..More to the story

NAD Letter to 21st International Congress on Education of the Deaf

NAD President Bobbie Beth Scoggins sent a letter to the 21st International Congress on Education of the Deaf urging them to recognize sign language as a civil, human and linguistic right.

Scandal of 100,000 deaf people pushed to margins of public life

A BUSINESSMAN is offering to pay the deposit for any independent deaf candidate to stand at the next Scottish Parliament elections.

Writing in The Scotsman today, Jeff McWhinney said the barriers for a deaf candidate, such as the need for interpreters for British Sign Language (BSL), prevented proper representation of issues important to 100,000 Britons.

And experts said Scotand and its proportional representative list system would allow such a potential politician to break through for the first time.Mr McWhinney was chief executive of the British Deaf Association from 1995-2004. He is now managing director of Significan’t, a social business which provides a video interpreting service for deaf people.

He said he would happily “put my money where my mouth is” by supporting potential candidates in any UK elections or by-elections.He said: “Deaf people have been marginalised, ignored and unheard for decades. Perhaps if there were deaf MPs, or at least deaf candidates, the parties would take notice of the issues that dominate their daily lives. “Last week, in its programme for government, the new coalition government at Westminster said that it ‘will introduce extra support for people with disabilities who want to become MPs, councillors or other elected officials’.

I hope this includes interpreter support for deaf candidates..”Mr McWhinney cited the example of Liberal Democrat candidate for Lewisham East in the 2001 General Election, David Buxton, who faced £500-a-day costs for interpreters. He said: “Since good interpreters do not come cheap, he soon reached his limit. Because he is deaf he was automatically put at a disadvantage.”Significan’t would be prepared to pay the deposit for any deaf BSL user standing as an independent candidate in any British constituency at a by-election or general election.

“Professor Graham Turner, director of the Centre for Translating and Interpreting Studies in Scotland at Heriot-Watt University, said a number of developments with BSL have taken place in Scotland. And he said there were precedents for elected politicians who were deaf in other countries, such as Hungary and Canada.

He said: “The list system in Scotland would create a potential opening that does not exist south of the Border. We know it’s not beyond the bounds of possibility, though the first-past-the-post voting system works against a deaf candidate.”A proportional representation system would be the only way you could imagine people putting support behind a deaf candidate.

Good news in any language SIGN language expert Tessa Padden “says” the offer is good news for deaf people in Scotland. She signs, from top: “good”; “news”; “deaf person/people”; “Scotland”.The thumbs-up gesture is recognisable to everyone as representing something good; “news” is signified by the letter “N” – created by placing two fingers on the palm – then two fingers just below the ear signifies “deaf”; the sign for “Scotland” involves a mime of playing the bagpipes….Source

50-to-life for killing unborn baby

Deaf News – Deaf man get 50 years to life for killing an unborn baby

A Sacramento Superior Court judge sentenced a 32-year-old man to 50-years-to-life imprisonment today for killing his girlfriend’s unborn baby by stabbing her in the stomach.

That’s after Danny Ray Poplin Jr. serves 12 years for corporal injury and assault with a deadly weapon in connection with his Dec. 31, 2006 attack, Judge ruled.

In November, a jury found Poplin guilty of first-degree murder in the death of his girlfriend’s baby, which he suspected to have been that of another man. It wasn’t until DNA tests returned before trial that he knew it was, in fact, his own. His girlfriend was about six months pregnant.

His girlfriend, 28-year-old Vanessa Roberts, survived the stabbing and was in court today to watch the sentencing.

The first-degree murder charge carried a sentence of 25 years to life, a term then doubled because of a prior “strike” conviction: In 1996, Poplin was pleaded guilty to a felony count of first-degree burglary.

At the request of Poplin’s defense attorney – and with no objection from the prosecution – Fall also agreed to recommend that Poplin, who is deaf, be housed at a special needs facility run by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Source

Deaf boy left on school bus Mom demands answers

Deaf News – Deaf boy left on school bus Mom demands answers

A mother is demanding answers after her 8 year-old son is forgotten on a school bus and left alone in the bus yard.

“He’s still scared to ride the bus. This has changed him,” says Jessi Hart.

Making matters worse, her son Hunter is deaf.  He was riding a special needs bus at the time and Hart believes the driver should have been even more alert.

The incident happened April 7th when Hunter was on his way to Roundy Elementary School. Hunter fell asleep in the back of the bus and missed his stop. The driver continued back to the bus lot and went home, leaving Hunter inside.

Approximately 15 minutes went by before another driver at the lot noticed, and got Hunter out.

“She [the driver] could have killed my son. I have every right to know what happened to that woman or if she’s still driving a bus,” says Hart.  “And that’s all I wanted to know.”

She contacted Action News for help and we set out to get answers.

“All I can say is procedures were not followed,” says Lauren Longmire, Clark County School District Bus Operations Coordinator.  “Had they been followed correctly than this would not have happened.”…..Read more

Augusta pays deaf man to settle lawsuit

Augusta pays deaf man to settle lawsuit

The city will pay $5,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by a deaf man who claims city police discriminated against him by refusing to call an interpreter.

Wayne Draper, 44, of Augusta sued the city and the Augusta Police Department, claiming they violated his rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Maine Human Rights Act….read on

Deaf Woman Escapes Fire

Deaf Woman Escapes Fire…by By Jumping Through Second Story Window.

Cindy Chavarria escaped a massive fire in her Pinon Trails apartment building with only a few scratches, a feat not possible without a special smoke detector.“She wouldn’t have been able to hear anything. She wouldn’t have known anything. She’s really grateful,” said Jazmin Espinoza, who translated her sister’s sign language.Chavarria is deaf and lives alone. She said her smoke detector, equipped for the hearing impaired, alerted her to the fire.“She first noticed it when she saw the fire alarm flashing,” said Espinoza.Chavarria opened her door, saw the shooting flames and jumped through her second floor window, in fear for her life.“She was really scared,” said Espinoza. “She didn’t know what to think. She was like… ‘I don’t know if I was going to make it out on time.’ She didn’t know what to do.”….read more

Fraudster nets $130,000 from deaf community

A deaf Christchurch fraudster who sent text messages pretending she was mortgage magnate Mike Pero defrauded more than $130,000 from Christchurch’s deaf community.

Christine Doreen Ticehurst, 40, stole $84,000 from deaf couple Debra Jamieson and Michael King by pretending to assist them build a house….read on

Deaf woman killed by bus during safety test-drive

Authorities from the Detroit Police Department reported, “a city worker test-driving a bus for safety” struck a woman as she was crossing the road at 6:30 a.m. Reports stated the woman, identified as 49-year-old Ethel Davis, was hit by the DDOT bus at the junction of Livernois and Courtland….read on

Hospital Worker Allegedly Raped Deaf Mute Psych Patient – 25 Feb 2010

A hospital employee is being investigated for allegedly raping a male patient a the shower in the psychiatric unit of Kings County Hospital Center—where a 49-year-old woman died in a waiting room after being repeatedly ignored by staffers. The victim, described in the Daily News as “developmentally disabled, deaf and mute!!……read on

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