Action for Blind People says it cannot afford the upkeep of three
hotels in Devon, Somerset and the Lake District
Blind guests fear for future of three specialist hotels
The futures of the UK’s three remaining specialist hotels for blind
people are in doubt, sparking fears that visually impaired people
could be left isolated.
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/oct/02/blind-guests-fear-for-future-of-three-specialist-hotels-sold-by-charity
Action for Blind People is selling the Cliffden in Teignmouth, Devon;
the Lauriston in Weston-super-Mare; and Windermere Manor, in the Lake
District, because it can no longer justify the running costs.

The charity is hopeful that the hotels will stay open under new
management, but critics of the sale believe that closure is more
likely and that blind and partially sighted people will suffer.
David Haynes, 69, from South Milford, Yorkshire, said: “Without this
sort of facility, I don’t know what people will do. You can’t imagine
what it’s like leaving your house without any sight at all. People go
there because all the staff are trained with regard to working with
visually impaired people. It’s safe and secure.”
As well as being a regular visitor, Haynes sits on the Action for
Blind People customer council. He is angry the council was not
consulted over the decision, which was made by senior management and
approved by the charity’s trustees, most of whom are blind or
partially sighted
The three hotels have swimming pools, textured surfaces, talking alarm
clocks, large-button phones, braille menus and facilities for guide
dogs. They also provide a pick-up service from nearby stations and run
supervised trips.

Action for Blind People said 2,000 visually impaired people used the
hotels last year – just under half the total number of guests –
although many went more than once. The charity said an increase in
sighted guests is one reason it cannot justify the extra expenditure
of £950,000 needed to run and maintain the hotels over the next three
years.

But Haynes said the hotels provided an invaluable opportunity for the
visually impaired to talk to each other and interact with the sighted.
“We all learn from each other,” he said.

“It’s an indictment of 21st-century Britain that there’s no provision
for the visually impaired to go to a hotel. All hotels have to have
access for people in wheelchairs but they don’t all have to have staff
trained to work with the visually impaired, to do small things like
saying your meat is at eight o’clock [on your plate], your potatoes
are at four o’clock.”


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Christine Newcombe, vice-chair of Guide Dogs Circle, is another patron
angry about the decision. She describes the hotels as a lifeline,
particularly for the most vulnerable, who are completely blind, like
herself. “People are going to be isolated,” she said. “There’s been no
consultation. No one has actually asked blind people what they
actually want. The hotels offer peace of mind, health and safety.

“I just go with a friend and and leave John [her husband] at home. We
have both got guide dogs. We just have a nice time. They do trips
during the stays, [and] that would be difficult in an ordinary hotel.”
An Action for Blind People spokeswoman said: “We’re doing everything
we can to find suitable buyers for the three Vision hotels to make
sure they stay open, but we do understand that a lot of people are
upset by the news that Action for Blind People will no longer be
running the hotels. “This has been a very difficult decision to make
as we know how much Vision hotels mean to customers, staff and
volunteers. To have kept the hotels open, we would have had to divert
funds from other services and after careful consideration, we decided
that this was not the right thing to do.”


She said the hotels were still taking bookings.



-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU


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