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JCPD working with OUR to improve service to the disabled

Published:Sunday | June 24, 2018 | 12:00 AM
Dr Christine Hendricks, executive director of the Jamaica Council for Persons with Disabilities.

The Jamaica Council for Persons with Disabilities (JCPD) is working with the Office of Utilities Regulation (OUR) to improve service provided by utility and telecommunications companies to consumers within the disabled community.

Executive Director of the JCPD Dr Christine Hendricks said that the collaboration is essential for promoting greater inclusion of these persons in the society.

"We are aware that persons with disabilities are an underserved population in our society, and so, this initiative with the OUR is welcomed by the disabled. We looked at the challenges persons with disabilities face when seeking services in these facilities and at how these companies can better serve this group," she said.

 

Meetings

 

To facilitate improvement efforts, the council hosted two town hall meetings, along with representatives from the OUR and the utility companies, to discuss the challenges and develop possible solutions to better serve this group.

The first meeting was held on May 22 in Montego Bay, St James. It was attended by persons with disabilities residing in the western section of the island.

The second meeting was held on May 29 in Kingston with representatives from the OUR, the JCPD, utility and telecommunications companies, and the Office of the Cabinet. Persons with disabilities from parishes within the central and eastern regions of the island attended the meeting.

Among the challenges outlined by them were issues of access to these facilities, inability to effectively communicate with customer-service agents, and limited telecommunication options for persons who are visually impaired.Some proposed solutions included establishing special desks for persons with disabilities in these offices, training staff in sign language and in how to assist persons with disabilities, and closed captioning for telecommunications services.

"They listened to the challenges and also listened to some of the proposed solutions, some of which they admitted they would not have thought of because persons with disabilities are usually the best people to tell you how to serve them. Out of those engagements, we had commitments for the companies to work closer with the JCPD and ensure that when persons with disabilities come into their offices, they would be better served," she said.