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Wheelchair users put pubs to the test

By: KentOnline reporter multimediadesk@thekmgroup.co.uk

Published: 15:13, 11 November 2005

NOT EASY: Wheelchair-bound Dean, Trev and Barbara, volunteers Jackie Cloude and Jean Chauvin, and support manager Carolyn Robinson demonstrate the narrow doors at the Railway Tavern. Picture: ANDY PAYTON

MUST try harder. That was the verdict on pubs in a Kent village following a test of their premises for disabled access.

A team from the Mote Lodge Cheshire Home, Staplehurst, set off on a pub crawl around the village to carry out a “pub accessibility audit” in support of the national Make a Difference Day campaign.

Volunteer support manager Carolyn Robinson said: “We wanted to see how wheelchair users would get on if they wanted to go for a drink in Staplehurst.

“We wrote to all four pubs in the village first telling them what we were doing so that we weren’t too intimidating when we turned up.”

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“Obviously, as a wheelchair user, if you can’t even get in you've had it. But even inside there is a lot that publicans could do to make their premises more accessible to wheelchair users.

“More space between the tables, menus at the tables, not just on hard to read far-off blackboards. Even a lower bar so that they can actually reach over it to pay for their drinks.”

“It proved quite an eye opener, even for me. To be honest, I think everyone was a little disappointed.“

* Next week’s Kent Messenger will publish their full verdict and pub reaction.

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