Access Is Often Judged by Convenience

A person stands in a museum space, speaking to a group. The text overlay reads: “Access Is Often Judged by Convenience.” SignAble Vi5ion branding and Leah Riddell’s name appear on the image.

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One thing I’ve noticed over the years is that access is often supported right up until it becomes inconvenient.

Most organizations agree that inclusion is important.

Most people agree that communication access matters.

Most employers, service providers, museums, community groups, and organizations genuinely want to do the right thing.

Until there is a cost.

Until it takes extra planning.

Until someone has to change the way they’ve always done things.

That’s often where the real test begins.

I’ve seen situations where access was supported when funding was available, but disappeared when budgets became tight.

I’ve seen organizations promote inclusion publicly while privately debating whether an interpreter is really necessary.

I’ve seen Deaf individuals asked to compromise, wait, adjust, or “make do” because providing full access was viewed as difficult.

The reality is that access isn’t really being tested when it’s easy.

It’s being tested when it requires commitment.

When a workplace chooses to provide communication access even when budgets are tight.

When a museum redesigns a program because visitors deserve equal participation.

When an employer invests in training because they want staff to understand Deaf employees and customers better.

When leaders decide that inclusion is part of doing business rather than an optional extra.

That’s when values become actions.

The truth is that accessibility has never been about convenience.

If it only exists when it’s easy, then it isn’t really accessibility.

It’s preference.

The organizations that impress me most aren’t the ones with perfect systems.

They’re the ones willing to learn.

The ones willing to ask questions.

The ones willing to admit they don’t have all the answers but are committed to improving.

I’ve seen this happen through workplace training, museum training, leadership sessions, and accessibility planning.

The organizations that move forward aren’t necessarily the ones with the biggest budgets.

They’re the ones that decide inclusion matters enough to make it part of how they operate.

Because at the end of the day, access shouldn’t depend on convenience.

It should depend on commitment.

If your organization is ready to move beyond good intentions and build stronger communication access practices, I provide training to help you get there.

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A person stands in a museum space, speaking to a group. The text overlay reads: “Access Is Often Judged by Convenience.” SignAble Vi5ion branding and Leah Riddell’s name appear on the image.

Access Is Often Judged by Convenience

One thing I’ve noticed over the years is that access is often supported right up until it becomes inconvenient. Most organizations agree that inclusion is important. Most people agree that communication access matters. Most employers, service providers, museums, community groups, and organizations genuinely want to do the right thing. Until there is a cost. Until it takes extra planning. Until someone has to change the way they’ve always

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