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By: Peter Abrahams, Practice Leader - Accessibility and Usability, Bloor Research Published: 2nd April 2008 Copyright Bloor Research © 2008 |
The Employers' Forum on Disability (EFD) is the leading employers' organisation in the UK focused on disability as it affects employers and service providers. It recently announced the formation of the Business Taskforce on Accessible Technology (BTAT), quoting from the briefing paper objectives.
‘The taskforce will enable CIOs from UK and global business to:
The taskforce is made up of the CIOs, or equivalent positions, from B&Q, BUPA, Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC), Intercontinental Hotels Group (IHG), Goldman Sachs, KPMG, Lloyds TSB, Royal Mail Group, Sainsbury's and Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA). Steve Lamey, chief operating officer, HMRC, chairs the Taskforce and Susan Scott-Parker, CEO, leads for EFD. The intention is that the Taskforce will not become much bigger to ensure that it does not become unwieldy.
My initial reaction to this announcement is: "This is a heavy weight organisation with excellent objectives and should be able to exert significant influence on all the relevant stakeholders in the accessibility space. It is therefore an excellent announcement."
My second reaction is to ask a set of questions:
I am sure that all these questions will be answered over the next few months as the taskforce swings into action, maybe some of them will be answered at the next formal meeting in May.
I look forward to being able to write more about taskforce; its modus operandi, its findings, reports and the positive impact it has on accessible technology.
Whilst I am blogging about EFD I should also mention another announcement.
‘EFD's highly popular series of Briefing Papers has been revised and updated with new case studies and the latest developments in the law.
Sponsored by Transport for London and renamed EFD Briefings, these best practice resources for employers feature up-to-date guidance and examples of how businesses recruit and retain people with disabilities.'
These include briefing papers on the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) and a set of papers on employment adjustment for specific disabilities including sight problems, deaf and hard of hearing, and upper limb disorders (RSI). The full set of 18 reports is only £61.20 for non-members and therefore should be purchased by any self respecting human resources department.
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