|
Pique
Newsmagazine "Whistler for the Disabled"
"New
Whistler website for the disabled launched"
Interest
in resort to increase as Paralympics near
Published
Date: 2006-08-24 Time: 08:21:52
By
Andrew Mitchell;
With
the Whistler Adaptive Sports Program growing in leaps and bounds,
and a growing interest in the village as a host city for the 2010
Paralympic Winter Games, the resort is officially on the radar for
disabled athletes and tourists.
Helping
those athletes and tourists make the most of their visit is the
focus of a new website, www.whistlerforthedisabled.com. The website
provides would be visitors and people in Whistler with information
on village and mountain access, as well as transportation options
to and from the resort. Also, it provides a detailed overview of
accessibility at hotels, restaurants, bars, clubs, stores and other
attractions, including specific information for specific disabilities.
Visitors
to the site can also shop for groceries and fill prescriptions online,
and obtain medical care, dental care and physiotherapy.
Other
features include information on where to find the disabled parking
spot nearest to attractions, and movie and entertainment listings.
The
site was designed by Huey Tollett, who is hearing impaired. According
to the press release announcing the website,
"It’s
a very unique website for the disabled and a first for a resort
community in North America to have a website totally focused on
their needs and services. Whistler for the Disabled focuses in on
all types of disabilities and the access information needed by each
group," he wrote.
"We
will be targeting all the major Disabled Groups to show that Whistler
is a friendly place for them to come visit no matter their disability.
With the Paralympics just a few years away the website is a much-needed
information portal for people with disabilities coming to visit
Whistler to access information."
Tollett
says he came up with the idea based on his own experiences. He started
to lose hearing in 2003 and became totally deaf in 2004. At the
time he was living full time in Whistler, and found it difficult
to lead his normal life.
"I
found it really difficult to do the things I used to do," he said.
"There was no information on where to find things or get help that
were specific to your disability. I had to get my friends to make
phone calls for me if I was in the village because there were no
TTY pay phones (for deaf communication.)
"Luckily
I knew Whistler like the back of my hand so it was not that bad
but I could only imagine a disabled tourist coming here and not
knowing where things were or how to access them on their own."
Tollett
spent a year doing research for his website, consulting with other
disabled residents, and he expects to double it in the next little
while by adding a newsletter and tour operator guide.
For
example, the Accommodation section lists hotels that are disabled
friendly, with details on features – such as whether roll-in
showers are available, the number of hand rails in bathtubs, close
captioning for televisions, braille phones, acceptance of seeing
eye and helper dogs, alert systems, and whether pool and hot tub
areas are wheelchair accessible. Tollett hopes to write more about
tour options, assessing the mobility and level of communication
needed for different activities.
Tollett
says he is disappointed with the decision not to build a Paralympic
sledge hockey arena in the village, but says it only reinforces
the need for his website.
"I
think now more than ever we need to start marketing to the disabled
and showing them that Whistler is disabled friendly, and that this
was only a financial decision," he said. "There is a lot of work
to do to achieve that goal. The Whistler for the Disabled website
will just be a start in that area.
"I
am hoping that some of the $4 to $5 million the RMOW will receive
in default payments will go into infrastructure for disabled access
in Whistler, transportation for the disabled, and into programs
like WASP (Whistler Adaptive Sports Program)."
|