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Human Rights
PSAC POLICY ON
THE PROVISION OF ALTERNATE FORMATS
FOR MEMBERS WITH DISABILITIES
The Public Service Alliance of Canada is
committed to ensuring that all our members are well informed of their rights,
benefits and duties as union members. In addition, the Alliance, in promoting employment
equity with its own staff, seeks to ensure that all employees of PSAC have all the tools
to do their work with proficiency.
In order to ensure full access to union
information, members and staff with sensory, learning and other disabilities may require
"alternate formats" (braille, large print, cassettes, captioned or signed
videos) in place of conventional print and video.
Making Alliance information available in
alternate formats not only complies with the intent of the Alliance Human Rights Policy,
it is in line with the Canadian Human Rights Act. This provision of material in an
accessible format is essential to the active participation of union members and staff with
disabilities.
In order to implement this policy, the
Alliance will undertake the following activities:
1. Members and staff will be invited to
self-identify their special needs in terms of alternate formats to the Alliance; such
invitation will include the development and distribution of an alternate format needs
questionnaire. This invitation will be extended to members through locals, Components and
Regional Offices, and by means of the distribution of the questionnaire in the Alliance
Magazine, all PSAC event registration packages and the membership orientation package.
2. The PSAC will develop a mailing list
from information gathered through the questionnaire with input from MDACs and Locals which
will identify the members' choice of alternative format.
3. Printed materials produced by the
Alliance, which are intended to reach all union members, will be provided to those
who have self-identified in the alternate media they have specified. This will include the
Alliance magazine.
4. Printed materials produced by the
Alliance, which are intended for a specific audience, will be made available, upon
request, in the requested alternate format. This will include documents for
educational courses, collective bargaining teams, Regional Women's Committees and so on.
5. Wherever possible, all printed documents
produced by the Alliance will be produced in large print (using 14 point type or larger).
This will cut down on costs associated with producing separate large print documents and
will make Alliance materials easier to read for all members.
6. For each video produced by the Alliance,
an open-captioned version must also be produced and made readily available. The captioning
will follow the official language (English/French) being used in the audio portion.
7. Where the Alliance is producing print
material or videos in cooperation with another organization or is purchasing this material
from an external source, all attempts will be made to ensure the materials are available
in alternate formats.
ALTERNATE FORMATS LIKELY TO
BE REQUESTED
Formats for
Persons with visual disabilities
Descriptive Narration:
In video and film, the spoken word is used to fully explain action scenes, charts, and
other visual components.
Computer Files (Diskettes or
Modems): When a publication is put on computer file, the user can gain access
to information through a computer connected to a braille printer, voice synthesizer, large
print monitor or any other system enabling access.
Formats for
persons with hearing disabilities:
Captioned videos and films:
The spoken word appears in written text on the bottom of the screen as in subtitles.
"Open" captions can be seen by everyone while "closed" captions are
visible only through a special decoder.
Signed Videos and Films: The
spoken word is transferred to sign language on screen.
TECHNICAL CONSIDERATIONS
In house production is possible in the
following cases:
AUDIO CASSETTES: Audio
cassettes produced internally may be practical especially for short documents, such as Union
Update. High quality tape recording and duplicating equipment are required.
BRAILLE: A one-sided
braille printer was purchased by the Alliance through ACCESS '93 funding.
COMPUTER FILES: These
are easily copied internally onto diskettes or transferred by modem for distribution.
LARGE PRINT: New
documents are to be produced in large print by using 14 point text or larger from an
in-house computer on 8 1/2 X 11 paper, wherever possible. Large print from older documents
is to be produced using technology such as scanners which convert the characters to
computer data that can then be used to produce sharp and clear text in 14 point or larger
from the computer.
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