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Friday, May 3, 2019

Same old story new question where can I sit?


where  CAN I SIT?   

the #detroit free press press provided  another stellar example about  the fractured  way  the auto industry is going about design and testing  of  autonomous, and/or #self-driving vehicles.  Names and players won’t be mentioned here because this type of article is neither novel or unique to that publication.  Here’s the formula.



A car builder or  testing facility (almost anyone  involved  in the process)  takes  a limited group of people out for  a demonstration ride.  The reporter  talks with the leadership and some of the riders and  things seem  to be progressing  and no firm answers are given as to when  all this  will be available (except for Tesla who knows when  everything is going  to happen).  

I imagine all these players in the game  watching each other’s  progress and trying to  determine when the consumer viability  tipping point will come.  You  know that point where enough people will  buy  the first ones of these and the fear  will go away (which it will),    

Yet….. none of these reporters  or riders, or engineers, or praisers orcriticsseeem to be people with  disabilities or seniors—you know people  who don’t  have adequate access to transportation now.  

There seems to be a  lot of tables where these folks (I’m one of them could be sitting.  We could be at the design  table.  We could be at the development and testing  table>  We  could be at the  regulation and safety table.  We could be at the financing table (someone issuing to have to get money to buy these cars). 

Well my point is this.  None of the press  has been asking “where can people with disabilitiies sit?  What  table would be the best  ones for inclusive  thinking and access to be discussed?  It appears we are  all too focused on the  function  of the individual cars and not the function of the industry.  What is this function?   Well if  we are going to  have  productive participants in our society and capitalize on the expertise of people who use technology  every single day.  Who uses a lot of technology  to solve every day  problems?  Oh yeah, people with disabilities.  Most of us have grown  up  using assistive tech and stretching  it to its  limits not for a few years but for  lifetimes.  

If there  are any groups in this country who are acutely aware of  functional  barriers and solutions it is the elderly and  the people with disabilities.  Most of the people  who are at the table now have created the vehicles we have now and  are limited to thinking  with all their body parts so to speak.  so the tendency will be to seek the solutions in the same places they  have always come from.  That’s called being a human being.  The argument here is that  the solutions are in other places and the people with them  are not being invited to the table.  

Many of us are ready to  make transportation in this country and around the world  inclusive, safe, efficient, and I dar say it fun…so get  us at  your tables now.   Let us share  our expertise.  If you don’t  µaybe your  lawyers and engineers  can fix  things later when you have built inaccessible  vehicles and systems again…. but  that seems  sort of a waste of  time and money.  So find us some seats  now and avoid all this for both of us.  

Sometimes the easiest way is  the best way and this  is one of those times. 

 

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