sasha_feather: Retro-style poster of skier on pluto.   (Default)
[personal profile] sasha_feather
As you probably know, I am one of a handful of people who run Access at WisCon. I've done this for a few years and learned a ton. Access initiatives at WisCon have largely been very successful and well-regarded.

Karen Moore recently went to WorldCon and was struck by the difference in the lack of accessibility there vs. at WisCon. She wrote us a letter to say so, and gave me permission to quote her letter in my blog. Excerpts from her letter follow:

----begin----

As difficult as it is to juggle 1,000 convention members through the Concourse Hotel’s [WisCon's event site] elevators, I have never seen a wheelchair or scooter user wait for 55 minutes to get onto an elevator at WisCon. I’ve seen that happen multiple times this weekend. It has never been necessary at WisCon to take one elevator to the ground floor, transfer to a second elevator to reach the below-ground floors, traverse a tunnel between two buildings to reach yet a third elevator in order to reach a different floor in the other building to go from one panel to the next. That is a frequent occurrence at WorldCon; in fact, one scooter user we spoke to had concluded that the best she could hope for was to be able to attend a panel in every other timeslot, because the lengthy waits at multiple elevators meant that it took her at least two full hours to navigate from one panel to the next one.

As much of a hurdle it was to move awareness of access into the forefront of people’s consciousness at WisCon, you achieved that very effectively, with announcements, signage, blue tape and multiple other means of communicating to the able-bodied that perhaps taking the stairs would not be a huge burden, and that it would be worthwhile to do so to free up elevator space for those who cannot move between floors in any other way. At WorldCon, there was nary a whisper of such messages, save for a brief blurb titled “Be Kind to your Wheel-Footed Friends” in the Saturday newsletter – and that was AFTER I buttonholed the con chair on Friday afternoon and gave him merry hell about it.

As challenging as it is to finagle a wheelchair/scooter parking spot in some of those oddly-shaped meeting rooms at the Concourse, you still manage to do so in every single one. There is absolutely NO awareness of the need for wheelie/scooter parking spaces at WorldCon. Wheelchair/scooter users are on their own to try to squeeze into space, move chairs around, and try to find a spot to settle.

And even though it is far from ideal for wheelchair/scooter users to have to use that little elevator to navigate the half-flight of stairs to reach the last two panel rooms on the first floor, at least there IS an elevator. There is at least one room in WorldCon’s venue that can ONLY be accessed if one can climb stairs, and they programmed events in that room in every single time slot of the entire con.

And finally, as much pushback as I know Access has gotten from within the committee over its mission, at least none of WisCon’s concom (that I know of) has ever seriously suggested developing an entire track of programming that doesn’t exist, located in a room that doesn’t exist, and then put the damn thing in the pocket program book, the online program and everywhere else. Evidently, someone in the WorldCon committee finds it immensely amusing to think of a convention member with no cartilage left in his hips struggling painfully down multiple escalators, across the tunnel, up more escalators, then searching through a maze of corridors for a program event, only to find a sign that essentially says “Ha, ha, gotcha, Sucker!” The con chair heard from me on that topic as well, by the way. His response? “Well, I’m sorry you don’t see the humor in it.”

-----end-------

WorldCon does have an accessibility department, but it sounds like it is not succeeding. It also sounds like, from this last paragraph, that the ConCom trolled its own membership.

I repost this here not to pick on WorldCon or to cause drama, but rather to say, here is a problem, at this covention and at others. What can we do to work on addressing this problem?

Initiatives at WisCon succeeded because of committed activists and allies. I suspect that each convention will need insiders on their con coms to bring initiatives forward-- that change will have to come from the inside.

At one convention that I won't name at present, I think that criticism around accessibility caused a very strong backlash, and that comparisons to WisCon only made the backlash worse. We were seen as condescending outsiders to their in group. My own perspective is that I have practical experience that I want to share, but, the criticism was not taken as constructive and relationships were damaged.

This is not my intention here. Better access improves things for everyone involved, and it is not as hard to implement as one might think.

Thoughts?

Stagg Field track

Date: 2012-09-06 05:53 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
All Worldcons pick up some local fannish traditions and the fake track comes from one of the local Chicago conventions. One of the items was Stephen Hawking and Albert Einstein on the Higgs Boson. It's very unfortunate if the descriptions and participants were not enough to convey the joke. As a member I personally regret hearing that some people didn't see it coming and were inconvenienced yet at the same time I am saddened if conventions are not allowed any attempt at humor.

Re: Stagg Field track

Date: 2012-09-06 07:59 pm (UTC)
rosefox: Green books on library shelves. (Default)
From: [personal profile] rosefox
If you can't figure out opportunities for humor that won't cause physical pain to people who don't get the joke, you need remedial joking lessons.

Re: Stagg Field track

Date: 2012-09-06 08:43 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
The participants weren't listed on the program grids, which is what I was looking at most of the time (and what other people seemed to be looking at most of the time).

Re: Stagg Field track

Date: 2012-09-07 04:45 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Somewhere between 15% and 20% of the people whose name badges I read were using fannish names rather than legal names.

At least 10%, probably more, of the members present were cosplaying throughout the entire con.

Given those two facts, plus the fact that I lacked any prior awareness of Chicago-area fandom's fondness for fake program items, what precisely would lead me to conclude that the program about the Higgs Boson was phony?

When I read the description of that panel, I assumed that the panelists would be cosplayers with a lot of science cred to carry off an interesting/amusing imagined discussion between Hawking and Einstein. I mean, after all, it's WorldCon, and they do all sorts of way cool stuff, far more ambitious than a local or regional con - why would I conclude that was someone's lame attempt at humor rather than an actual program item?

The point is that "universal access" means SO much more than just wheelie parking spaces and big-print programs - it means examining every aspect of a con and asking hard questions about whether or not EVERY convention member can and will experience it as intended.

Humor doesn't play the same everywhere; what a Midwesterner finds funny will baffle someone from the east coast, and something that tickles a southerner's funnybone might leave a northerner totally stone-faced. So expecting convention attendees from around the globe to understand local humor is asking an awful lot.

Re: Stagg Field track

Date: 2012-09-07 08:28 am (UTC)
jackandahat: A brown otter, no text. (Default)
From: [personal profile] jackandahat
I'm wondering if none of the people who are saying "But it said Charles Xavier/Einstein/Cleopatra so everyone knew it was fake!" have ever heard of balloon debates.

In a balloon debate, a bunch of people are assigned characters - may be fictional, may be historical - and have to argue for an audience why they shouldn't be thrown out of a hypothetical sinking balloon. And people get really into it - for example a Harry Potter one where people dressed as their characters. I once chaired dressed as Death, and someone else chaired several times as Anne Robinson.

So especially at a con, with the amount of cosplay, I'd just assume they'd got someone who could do a decent costume and would be appearing in-character rather than as themselves.

Re: Stagg Field track

Date: 2012-09-07 05:58 pm (UTC)
julieandrews: (Default)
From: [personal profile] julieandrews
I've never seen one of those. That sounds awesome!

Re: Stagg Field track

Date: 2012-09-07 06:03 pm (UTC)
jackandahat: A brown otter, no text. (Default)
From: [personal profile] jackandahat
I ended up asking my journal (after my Canadian housemate looked blankly at me) and the only people who had any idea were fellow English people. So apparently it's not a thing anywhere else!

Re: Stagg Field track

Date: 2012-09-10 01:34 pm (UTC)
julieandrews: (Default)
From: [personal profile] julieandrews
I can think of some people who regularly go to Wiscon who'd be really good at a panel like that! They'd have to book it in the biggest room, I think. :)

Re: Stagg Field track

Date: 2012-09-10 01:39 pm (UTC)
jackandahat: A brown otter, no text. (Default)
From: [personal profile] jackandahat
Yeah - all you need is someone who has knowledge on a particular subject and some acting skill, and with a pool of people that big that's not so hard to find.

Profile

sasha_feather: Retro-style poster of skier on pluto.   (Default)
sasha_feather

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021 222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 25th, 2025 08:21 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios