Hi Anna
They are awful, but I guess they may be a necessity. We'll see what the
verdict is.
Now, could that accident have been stopped with hold to run buttons?
Were they on the lift?
I don't have a problem with platform lifts as such, just those pesky
buttons!
I am the female equivalent of Mr Tickle - I have extraordinarily long
arms (to make up for my extraordinarily short legs) and so have to fold
them double in order to press the button with any ease. Most of the
time I have to use my elbow. NOT ideal.
Ahh, that's not absent-minded. Your mind is on higher things! ;)
Thanks for your thoughts.
Kind regards,
Helen
-----Original Message-----
From: Anna Charles-Jones [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Tuesday, November 23, 2010 12:43 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Platform Lifts
Hi Helen,
I'm a chair user and like you, find them a complete pain. My ex (who
was also a chair
user) had a potentially nasty accident on a platform lift when his back
wheel was touching
the wall as the lift was moving and his tyre sort of got 'sucked' down
the gap between the
platform and wall as the lift was moving upwards. I can see that
they're a cheaper option
and therefore allow access to places where people otherwise might argue
on an access
statement that a full passenger lift wasn't reasonable/affordable etc
but like you, I
really don't like them! I also have an absent-minded habit of
forgetting that I have to
keep pressing the button and then having a mad panic as to why the lift
has stopped
moving! (This is just me being daft and in no-way disability-related!)
All the best,
Anna
Anna Charles-Jones
Learning Development Adviser
Learner Development Service
Student Services
Student and Academic Services
Manchester Metropolitan University
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Manchester
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United Kingdom
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>>> "Bryant, Helen" <[log in to unmask]> 23/11/2010 12:33 >>>
Hi all,
I have a proposition to put to you:
As a wheelchair user, I find continuous pressure buttons (hold to run)
on platform lifts a complete pain in every part.
I know it's mandatory, but I spoke to a lovely man this morning:
Graham Payne
Department for Business, Innovation & Skills
Environmental and Technical Regulation Directorate
Bay 1105, 1 Victoria Street
London SW1H 0ET
Tel: 020 7215 0923 / 1973
and Graham said that, if we thought they were A Bad Idea we could
challenge it with the HSE because he said that policies, guidelines and
regulations were ripped up all the time because they were found to be
outdated. He also said that disabled people might be in a body which
made such decisions.
So, what are your views on this? Have you had complaints from
wheelchair users who haven't been able to use platform lifts easily
because of these buttons, or have people been saved from potentially
dangerous situations because of them? Indeed, do some people find them
dangerous?
Who, if anyone, would be up for trying to change the status quo (OK, who
HASN'T got a guitar riff in their head now?!) and who thinks we should
leave well alone?
Sorry, that's a lot of questions!
I have to confess that somebody I know had an accident on a platform
lift without hold to run buttons, but I am unsure of the cause.
Cheers,
Helen
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