Rose Ayling-Ellis: âWe all need the feeling of belonging somewhereâ
The actor and Strictly star pops in to chat about her new documentary, Signs for Change.
In her new documentary, Signs For Change, Rose Ayling-Ellis goes on a personal journey into the deaf experience to ask if attitudes are changing towards deaf people.
The actor and Strictly winner pops by to talk about how emotional it was to look back on her childhood and describes her work to make life on set better for deaf people.
Presenter Nikki Fox gets excited about a recent visit to a specialist disability-friendly gym, (spoiler alert, she forgot to wear a bra) and co-presenter Emma Tracey explores why blue badge theft is up 41% and what can be done to stop the rise.
Recorded and mixed by Dave O'Neill.
Produced by Keiligh Baker, Emma Tracey and Sophie Wallace.
The editor was Jonathan Aspinwall.
Transcript
EMMA- Nikki, I was doing the school run this morning and I canât tell you how close the school is to my house; thereâs literally one mistake I could possibly make, and I made it. I went down the wrong turn. So, the boys had gone ahead of me and, I donât know, it was sunny. I use my shadows to get around a lot, so when itâs really sunny I find it a little bit more difficult. My cane had something on it so the terrain was a bit different. Anyway, I ended up in someoneâs driveway.Â
NIKKI- No!
EMMA- Iâm saying to the boys, âBoys, where are you? Come backâ and they were like, âMum, youâre in someoneâs driveway!â And it was so funny because the older one stood there in disbelief and said, âYouâre in someoneâs driveway!â and the little one was like, âMum, mum, mumâ and I said, âCome and get me thenâ and the little one came and got me while the other one just walked on up to school.Â
NIKKI- Mum, youâre so embarrassing.Â
EMMA- Yes. I could hear the older one in front of me telling his friend, âMum just went into someoneâs drivewayâ.Â
NIKKI- [Laughs]
EMMA- And I was like, âOh thanks mate, thank youâ.Â
NIKKI- Hashtag blind life.
EMMA- Yeah. So, I said to the younger one, âOh look at the older one who just stood there and laughed, whereas the younger one gets a gold star for coming and getting meâ. And he said, âOh, does that mean I get iPad after school?â
NIKKI- Aw.
MUSIC- Theme music.Â
NIKKI- This is Access All. We are your weekly podcast all about disability and mental health. Iâm Nikki Fox and Iâm in London.Â
EMMA- And Iâm Emma Tracey and Iâm in Edinburgh. Later on in this episode Iâll be looking at what the impact of a 41% rise in blue badge theft is having on disabled people and what can be done about it. But first:
NIKKI- [Hums Strictly Come Dancing theme tune] Dancing onto the podcast this week weâve got a guest that we have been after for forever, itâs Rose Ayling-Ellis. She is brilliant. Weâre going to be asking her all about her brand new ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝ One documentary, Signs For Change. It all sounds pretty amazing, doesnât it? So, keep listening for the next half hour, and remember to subscribe to us on ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝ Sounds or wherever you get your podcasts.Â
Well, she is a woman of many, many, many talents and we have been dying to get her on the Access All podcast since we launched. So, Iâm delighted to say that todayâs guest is the wonderful Rose Ayling-Ellis. Hello Rose.
ROSE- How good is that?Â
NIKKI- Honestly, Rose, you are always spoken about since we launched. How long have we been going now, Ems? About over a year, havenât we?
EMMA- Over a year, and at least every two weeks someone says, âWhen is Rose Ayling-Ellis coming on?â
NIKKI- Honestly, itâs more than that.Â
ROSE- Brilliant. What a lovely thing to hear. Iâm here now, you donât have to wait anymore.
NIKKI- Oh, itâs brilliant to have you on. Thank you so much.Â
ROSE- Thank you for having me.Â
NIKKI- Weâre also joined by your interpreter, arenât we?
ROSE- Yeah. Sophie is behind the screen so Iâm watching her while talking to you guys.Â
NIKKI- Amazing. Well, itâs lovely to have you both on. Lovely to meet you too, Sophie. Now, itâs hard to know where to start with you Rose, because youâve packed so much in; over the last few months alone youâve been nominated for Best Actress in a Supporting Role at the Olivier Awards. And you were playing Celia in Shakespeareâs As You Like It, which sounds amazing and very hard core. I also watched you mentoring the deaf choir who performed at the Kingâs Coronation concert. You were brilliant at doing that. And now youâve got a new documentary coming out about deaf people and discrimination, and thatâs called Signs For Change. How do you do it all?
ROSE- Oh, my agent manager sheâs got my timetable and she adds it all in. Sometimes I get a bit like, what am I doing tomorrow? And Iâm like, oh Iâm doing this tomorrow, Iâm doing that tomorrow. I try to do it week by week, because if I look at it more I would get completely overwhelmed. So, week by week I just take one day at a time. I just love what Iâm doing at the moment so it feels like everything is just so enjoyable.Â
NIKKI- Well, listen, weâre going to get into your new documentary in a minute. But first, weâve got to do it, weâve got to talk Strictly.Â
[Clip]
CLAUDIA- And we can now reveal the Strictly Come Dancing champions 2021 areâŚRose and Giovanni! [Cheering and applause]
[End of clip]
NIKKI- How was it? Because I know other people that have gone on Strictly and they say itâs so all-consuming, for those months youâre on the show itâs so intense. What was it like for you the whole experience?Â
ROSE- I love it. I really, really love it. I have such a great time. When we finished Strictly I did not have one week of doing absolutely nothing, and Iâd forgotten what it was like to sit on a sofa and watch telly. It was such a great experience. I learnt so much about myself, mentally and physically, and I learnt how strong my body could be.
NIKKI- Well, going on from Strictly and this huge moment, this dance and all the change that came from that, youâre now carrying on with that theme, arenât you, with this documentary that you have made. So, tell us a little bit about that? Itâs for the ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝ and itâs called Signs For Change. Did youâŚ? Well, tell us a little bit about it first.Â
ROSE- Basically this documentary is looking at my life, so there are some clips in it from my childhood, which is very emotional to watch, and kind of linking it up to the people I meet and the journey that goes on. And looking at the problems that me and my family experienced 30 years ago are the same problems that people still deal with nowadays, and what has changed and what is different from then. Weâre looking at technology, weâre looking at the different choices of language and stuff, and the attitudes against sign language. I think that was a big thing for me because with Strictly it became a big trend of everyone wanting to learn sign language and it being seen in such a positive light. But it hasnât always been that case, it hadnât, and it had actually been a struggle. Because sign language is an oppressed language; it had been oppressed for many, many years. And Iâm really excited for people to watch this documentary.Â
I think for a lot of people, a lot of hearing people they never met a deaf person before. The first time theyâd ever met a deaf person would probably be me on Strictly. So, this would be a good way to educate people. And also not just for them but also for parents, for parents who found out their child is deaf they wonât feel so alone; they have people talking about me. And the other thing is a deaf person presenting a show about deaf people on the ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝, I mean, how can that ever happen?Â
NIKKI- Yeah. And you know you were saying you were going through those clips and you were getting emotional, why were you getting emotional? Was it because things havenât changed in all these years? Or was it just going back to that moment in time?Â
ROSE- Well, because when youâre a child you donât know any different; that is your world and thatâs what youâre in. And I think looking back I realised how much harder it was. And you donât realise it until you look back to it. And Iâm sure everybody gets emotional looking at the child picture or the child video of themselves. And also my own character and where I came from.Â
NIKKI- What was hard, Rose?
ROSE- Thereâs a moment in the documentary that I did go up to my mother and said, âI wish I wasnât deafâ and that really shocked me because I donât actually remember that. And I was thinking thatâs really sad that a child feels like that, and itâs not the childâs fault; itâs the attitudes of society and environment that made them feel like that. And that made me really emotional.
NIKKI- But if you contrast that as well, because in the opening of our podcast we have a clip of you going, âItâs such a joy to be deafâ, and that change from how you felt when you were younger to now.Â
ROSE- Yes. I had to go on my own journey to get to that point and understanding it more. And I understand it more by meeting more and more deaf people throughout my life. I met a lot of deaf people, and a lot of people would be surprised how much deaf children are on their own; they barely ever meet each other. I think itâs heart-breaking.Â
NIKKI- Why is that? Is it just because itâs difficult to integrate in schools if they may be in a mainstream environment? Why?
ROSE- No. I think itâs because we focus so much on trying to get them to integrate into the hearing society and to fit in, and to fit them. But sometimes we tend to forget â weâre only trying to do our best, we obviously give children different things like hearing aid and learning to speak and stuff because we want them to be able to try in this world that is made for hearing people, because weâre only trying to do the best for people. And in that attitude we try to fit people. But sometimes no matter how hard you try they will always be deaf, they will never be hearing. Okay, we try to fit into society, but we also need the feeling of belonging somewhere. We need to belong to something and have a community that we can relate to. I think all of us as humans thatâs our nature. Take that away and you will never feel like you belong to either world.Â
NIKKI- First and foremost, Rose Ayling-Ellis, you are a banging actor, arenât you? Well, before Strictly you were in the largest soap, my PA Libby Quinn is in the gallery now, sheâs obsessed with EastEnders, she knows everything about it when it comes to EastEnders. So, sheâs actually staying in the gallery so she can watch you today. What was that like playing Frankie? That was your character, wasnât it? Did you feel like that was a big moment for you as well?Â
ROSE- I think so, yes, because it was really fun to have the opportunity to act every day and go to work and youâre doing that famous series. It really pushed you to understand how the programme worked, how it filmed, your position. And I realised thereâs so much you learn from it naturally anyway. And thatâs something I will keep on with me forever. And Frankie was a great character. She wasnât just a deaf person, she was also feisty. Sheâd get violent very quickly in a short amount of time. But sheâs also very kind and very loyal, and I just love her character. And her grandmother is Shirley Carter. I mean, that is a dream come true. I love Shirley Carter in that; sheâs such a great actress. And to be around with them was like being in a theatre all the time. They treat the set like a theatre, itâs great.Â
NIKKI- After you left you were saying that you sometimes felt a bit frustrated about the way your character was written. How would you have liked Frankie to have been portrayed?Â
ROSE- Itâs not EastEndersâs fault at all. The frustrating thing is that I didnât have anyone deaf writing the script or behind the scenes to sort of look over it. They could write a good story and great. The thing is itâs great that Frankie isnât just a deaf person and the story isnât about her being deaf, but you need to balance that; you canât forget that sheâs deaf too. And itâs such a fast pace; itâs like five months for a script to go on a TV. Five months, which is a really short time.
NIKKI- Sometimes you need just someone with the lived experience to have a look. I know what you mean. Itâs a bit like Liz Carr in Silent Witness.
EMMA- Yeah, she did a lot.
NIKKI- She did a lot, didnât she?
ROSE- Oh, sheâs brilliant. Sometimes you need someone behind the scenes because sometimes Iâd turn up on a set and theyâd be like pointed back arguing or something, and I canât follow everything thatâs being said. So, little details like that do get missed out. But it was still a great opportunity to do EastEnders; but could have been an opportunity to also slightly educate what our life is like at the same time.Â
EMMA- So much work though, Rose, on top of a very gruelling job, I would imagine.Â
ROSE- Yeah. And thatâs what I keep doing still. I still do that. But I donât mind it because I want the end result to be perfect. But sometimes you have to put in extra work if you want it to be perfect. But sometimes Iâm like I just want to turn up and just act, just like another actor would do, and just be good at my role.Â
NIKKI- So, Rose, you have got another drama coming up, havenât you, for ITV. Itâs a crime drama.Â
ROSE- Yes.
NIKKI- Can you tell us anything about that?Â
ROSE- Yeah, we probably start filming it next year at the wintertime. Itâs a crime and a thriller, and thereâs lots of problems within it, and I think a lot of people will be surprised by it.
NIKKI- Iâm surprised about this, Code of Silence. Will you come back in and tell us all about it when itâs due to go out?
ROSE- I have no idea when itâs going to be released.Â
NIKKI- No, well donât worry about Rose. But will you come back in?
EMMA- What weâre asking is will you please come back?
ROSE- Oh, will I come back when itâs been released? Yeah, of course, of course I will do.Â
NIKKI- Thank you so much for doing what you do, and thank you so much for coming on the podcast.Â
ROSE- It was lovely to meet you both.Â
MUSIC- Access All.
EMMA- Ages ago you said you were going to a fancy-pants gym. And I want to know whether you wimped out like the rest of us do when saying that weâre going to go to a gym and never do or whether you actually went and what it was like?Â
NIKKI- Iâve been dying for you to ask me this because Iâve been so excited. I wouldnât say fancy-pants; itâs not really. Itâs a place called VIM Healthcare and I paid for a session. Theyâre based in Brighton so it was quite a long journey but, oh my goodness, it was so worth it, Emma. This place is unreal. This was the gym part of the whole thing they do, because they do do a lot of rehabilitation, and a lot of things if you havenât got enough money theyâve got lots of things they can do to help. But I had a session in the gym with two experts. Now, this was such a big deal for me because with muscular dystrophy â I know everyone has their own struggles â but Iâve had a big hangup about the gym because mineâs a muscle condition so my muscles will never get stronger. So, Iâve always felt like when Iâve gone somewhere to try and exercise I kind of got the feeling people are like well, why are you bothering, thereâs not much we can do. And Iâve always felt a bit like no oneâs wanted me to be there. I know that sounds a little bit pathetic.Â
EMMA- Thatâs lousy.
NIKKI- But thereâs something about my disability. You know, with a spinal injury you can â itâs not Top Trumps, you know â but obviously people with a spinal injury can work out their upper body and all that kind of stuff.Â
EMMA- Or whatever bit of body isnât spinally injured, that isnât affected by the injury in their spinal cord.
NIKKI- Exactly.
EMMA- But your musclesâŚ
NIKKI- Are all weak, every single part. I donât think my facial muscles are weak [laughs], but I think the extremities are supposed to be quite good.Â
EMMA- Your vocal muscles are pretty good.
NIKKI- Oh, I donât know whether they are. Not too bad. Not too shabs.Â
EMMA- Not too shabby.
NIKKI- But my arms and stuff, so I really did get that feeling. And I did go to the gym with my mum years ago but I was a lot stronger back then. But it really is one area thatâs intimidated me quiteâŚanyway. So, I went there and I was blown away. I will tell you one thing though, Emma, this will make you laugh. What does old Foxy do for the first time going to a gym in years? Really excited. Dave was there. A bit nervous actually. What do I do?
EMMA- You get the best sportswear you can, you limber up, you do all your stretching, youâre ready to rock and roll, youâre ready to smash this thing.Â
NIKKI- No. You donât, I didnât tie my hair up, nor did I wear a bra.
EMMA- [Laughs] So, everything that could wobble about or fling about and annoy you was doing that?Â
NIKKI- It was quite something. I was like, what on earth have I done? Iâve come to a gym, and Iâve got very long hair and itâs annoying at the best of times, I think my hair actually disables me more than having muscular dystrophy. Theyâve got an exoskeleton, okay, an actual exoskeleton.Â
EMMA- Thatâs that thing, that walkie thing?Â
NIKKI- Robocop suit. You can stand up and you can exercise standing up. Now, theyâve got a standing frame which I spent so much time on and they helped me do like, it looked like you were skiing because itâs one of those standing frames where you can ski. There was this reformer machine because exercises and core strength and all that are very important.Â
EMMA- Whatâs a reformer machine? Â
NIKKI- Kate Hudson and Goldie Hawn have got them, all the celebs have got them. Theyâre like a piece of kit that looks like you can do Pilates on it.Â
EMMA- Is this the thing with the bands, the rubber bands?Â
NIKKI- Yeah. Theyâve got like things you can hold onto and so you can lean to one side and it will give you some resistance.Â
EMMA- Okay, but it kind of supports you?Â
NIKKI- It supports you, yeah. Then you had to lean to the side and then you held onto this strap. And normally Iâd just be like, baby left, baby right, Iâd just be flying over. But because I was holding on I could really go for it. oh my goodness it hurt, everywhere hurt, everywhere hurt, but it was so good. And after the whole experience I just felt one, just so happy, I was a bit emotional actually; and two, yeah, even when I think about it now it was just so nice, it was just so nice to stand up. Iâve said this to you before, Emma, and Iâve probably said it on the podcast before, itâs not like I want to walk again like I used to, itâs just that standing up and moving helps me feel better sat down. I can get through my day better because I donât hurt as much, I donât swell up as much.
EMMA- So, youâve been stretched out?
NIKKI- Yeah. And this kit is too expensive; I canât afford it at the moment. What was also lovely is they come up with a little app for it as well, so at the end of it youâve got your own tailormade plan. And so Iâve been doing the exercises. And then they sent me a whole list of equipment that, as and when I can afford it, I can get. They try and source me the cheapest stuff as well. I am going to get a standing frame when I can afford it. They found me some hand splints that Iâve needed. Theyâve told me to get a better splint boot situation. Itâs just amazing. I struggle to articulate it because it was just that amazing.Â
EMMA- No. How much would a standing frame be, even the cheapest one?Â
NIKKI- Well, the one that I ideally could do with that would do the job correctly is around about 5 grand. I canât afford that at the moment; Iâve got too much accessibility stuff to pay for when Iâm doing up my bathroom. As we know, itâs so expensive all this stuff is so expensive. There are cheaper available but you just donât know whether itâs a false economy, whether itâs going to actually do the job. So, Iâm still researching with that. I always thought, when I did get to stand in the exoskeleton years ago, I really felt quite lucky. I wish everyone that would want to have a go in this would get to have a go. And actually you can now, and that makes me really happy.
EMMA- I mean, this is another dayâs conversation because I was just about to say not everyone would want to go in an exoskeleton and standing frames arenât for everybody either.Â
NIKKI- No, theyâre not.Â
EMMA- Itâs hard to stay active when you're disabled, really hard.Â
NIKKI- I want to take you to this place. Iâd like to do a healthcare special. It would be nice, wouldnât it Ems, to know if everybody else would like a little healthcare special because we could properly plan that. So, if you would let us know. Get in contact with us on Access All. Email your thoughts to accessall@bbc.co.uk, or you can tweet us @ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝AccessAll.
MUSIC- Access All with Nikki Fox.
EMMA- Nikkiâs not here for this bit so itâs just me. You might remember back in March we had the wonderful Sophie Morgan on talking about when her blue badge got stolen.Â
[Clip]
SOPHIE- So, yeah, my car got broken into. Theyâve smashed the window on the passenger side.Â
NIKKI- So, your carâs damaged as well?
SOPHIE- Yeah, carâs damaged, exactly. Itâs a Motability car and so Iâve got to get that fixed and thatâs going to take some time; I think they said three weeks. And then obviously got to get the badge replaced, thatâs going to take some time as well; I think again another couple of weeks. So, in the meantime itâs, what, taxis and tubes. And as we all know, theyâre either expensive or unreliable, so itâs not ideal at all.Â
[End of clip]
EMMA- Well, since then the ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝âs data unit have been investigating the issue. Theyâve found that thereâs been a 41% rise in blue badge theft. And theyâve also spoken to disabled people who have been so upset with their car being broken into and with the weeks of waiting for their often specialised vehicle to be fixed and not having transport in the interim that theyâve stopped using their blue badge in new places, even though they really need to. Iâm joined by Mary, who has had her blue badge stolen, and also by Emma Vogelmann from Transport for All, the UKâs only disabled led group campaigning for better access to transport. Hi both, itâs absolutely brilliant to have you with us. Thanks for joining us.Â
MARY- Thanks for having us.Â
EMMA V- Pleasure to be here, thanks so much.Â
EMMA- Letâs start with you, Mary. What happened with your blue badge?
MARY- Unfortunately my blue badge was stolen. I went out with a friend. I went to a restaurant, and outside of the restaurant there were three parking positions, and one of them was a disabled bay. I thought oh, I should be considerate and take up the bay that I can park in, the disabled bay, and leave the non-disabled bays available for others who wouldnât be able to park in the disabled bay. And as I was in the restaurant enjoying my meal towards the end of my meal a man tapped me on the shoulder and said, âI think Iâve seen somebody break into your vehicleâ. Now, Iâve had unfortunate luck and Iâve had a car stolen before off of my driveway. And so because of that I donât leave valuables in my car â or so I thought. He said, âIâm telling you Iâve just seen somebody break into this vehicle. They rode up on a moped or motorbike, broke the driverâs side window and reached their hand in, and then drove offâ. And I thought, what on earth could they have taken. So, I went to see the car and it dawned on me it was the blue badge that they had taken. I had no idea that that was considered a valuable.Â
EMMA- And how did you feel when it was taken? What went through your mind?Â
MARY- Initially I was absolutely fuming that somebody would do that, because the very reason I have a blue badge is because I have mobility issues, and so without that blue badge now I am unable to park anywhere. I called the police and I was given a crime reference number, and I was told if I get stopped on my journey home by the police for driving with a broken window I can give them that crime reference number. And I was informed that they wouldnât investigate the theft of the blue badge.Â
EMMA- And did they give any reason for not investigating it?
MARY- No, they didnât actually. They just said thatâs not the way they deal with blue badge theft. They advised that theyâve given me the crime reference number so if I get stopped that should be fine. And then itâs upon me to then register the blue badge as stolen so that they can block it. But the blocking is a redundant exercise because the blue badge has my picture at the back, so if you are using the blue badge and an enforcement officer is around at that time that you put the blue badge out the enforcement officer could potentially ask a person, let me see the badge and ensure it aligns with the person. But oftentimes when you park there arenât enforcement officers standing there.Â
EMMA- So, you think even though a badge might be blocked it will still be used by someone?Â
MARY- Yes, 100% certainly, definitely.Â
EMMA- What was the impact on you in the time after you got your blue badge stolen in terms of emotional, in terms of what you could do, in terms of the idea of someone having your picture on their dashboard as well?
MARY- So, the picture side of things, I guess Iâll go backwards, the picture side of things was really scary. Itâs similar to when a house has been burgled, the person has been in your house and theyâve seen your picture everywhere, but you donât know who the person is. They could be somebody standing right next to you and theyâve got this picture of you, and youâre unaware. They know what theyâve done to you but you have no idea who the person is. So, it is scary in that sense. Physically it was draining dealing with getting the car fixed. And the way that the person had broken the window meant that it actually required quite specialised repair work, and so it took quite some time, a number of weeks, which was highly stressful. It impacted my ability to work, my ability to get to and from work.Â
EMMA- Weâve heard from people whoâve been afraid to display their blue badge, the new one, after one has been stolen before; are you one of those people?Â
MARY- Definitely. Now I think twice, I think thrice about using my blue badge, particularly if Iâm going to a new area.Â
EMMA- Yeah. Now coming to you, Emma, youâve been listening to Maryâs story; and we know that 1,484 badges were stolen in England in the year up to March 2022. That was a 41% rise on the previous year. Thatâs according to figures from the Department of Transport. We know why theyâre stolen or we know some of the reasons: we know theyâre stolen to sell on the black market; we know theyâre stolen to get out of congestion charges, particularly in London. But Emma, what can be done to stop these thefts?Â
EMMA V- Ultimately we really need a commitment from law enforcement to take this as a serious issue. Particularly when a car is broken into and it shouldnât be that a disabled person needs to view their badge as a valuable, but unfortunately it now is, as you mentioned, with it being sold illegally. So, I think we really need a commitment from law enforcement to take this seriously.Â
EMMA- So, in terms of investigating thefts or in terms of stopping them in the first place or both?Â
EMMA V- I would say both because I think once the blue badge is stolen it is very difficult to track its usage.Â
EMMA- Itâs hard when itâs all kind of administrated by different councils. Apparently most of the prosecutions were dealt with by four councils out of all the councils. So, it sounds like some councils are caring about it more than others. Mary, whatâs your ideal scenario? What do you think needs to happen with blue badges to cut down on things like what happened to you?Â
MARY- So, I think the current blue badge system is quite archaic. I think the fact that we have these physical plastic cards that are easily stolen, I think if we cast our minds back a few years or decades ago, I canât remember how far back it was now, we used to have to display our road tax discs in our windscreens and suddenly people realised that this was inefficient, and so now cars have road tax without those discs displayed and where a car is driving on the road without road tax that is easily detectable by law enforcement and is picked up. I donât understand why in 2023 we canât have something similar for blue badges.
EMMA- Emma, some London boroughs have companion passes which are electronic and work alongside the blue badge so that you donât have to have it displayed. Why is this not happening all across the UK? Why is it not a national scheme?
EMMA V- Itâs not accessible to all disabled people. And I know that the current blue badge processing system is not perfect either; but relying on technology isnât potentially the answer. And I think thatâs because so many disabled people either donât have access to the internet all together or have huge accessibility barriers. And another reason that itâs difficult to attach a blue badge to a specific vehicle for example is for disabled people who donât use the only one vehicle. Lots of disabled people will rely on being transported in different carersâ cars, different friendsâ and familiesâ cars, and with them as a passenger. So, the ability to move that blue badge from vehicle to vehicle is really important. So, I think technology can certainly play role in this. I donât think that that current trial for electronic blue badges is the right way to do it, and that trial wouldnât support it being rolled out nationally as it currently is.Â
EMMA- The British Parking Association, the BPA, which represents the UKâs parking and mobility sector said, âWhile traffic wardens can report the misuse of a badge, the process of recovering it is more difficult. The vehicleâs owner must be identified or present for a badge to be seizedâ. We also contacted the Department for transport about this issue and they said, âWeâre deeply concerned by anyone exploiting the blue badge scheme, a vital resource helping many people travel with confidence. Whilst theft is a police matter, we work closely with local authorities to help them tackle fraud and misuseâ.Â
Emma and Mary thank you so much for joining me. Now, I do want to hear from you on this. Have you had your blue badge stolen? Are you afraid to display your blue badge? What should be done to prevent blue badge thefts? Get in touch. you can email accessall@bbc.co.uk. You can tweet us @ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝AccessAll. Or you can send us a WhatsApp, either voice mail or text, and make sure you put Access at the start. And our number is 0330 123 9480.
NIKKI- Hey, that was a proper great programme that, Ems.Â
EMMA- So brilliant to speak to Rose.
NIKKI- I mean, sheâs just beautiful.Â
EMMA- Friend of the programme now.Â
NIKKI- I know it sounds a bit luvvie, but Iâll tell you honestly listeners, sheâs lovely.
EMMA- Now, tell your friends that you listen to Access All. That is your job for this week, okay?
NIKKI- Yes, itâs your only job. because Iâm off on holidays and Iâm back in July, Em. It sounds like such a long time, doesnât it?Â
EMMA- Youâre not going to be away for long but I will miss you.Â
NIKKI- You are going to be on your tod for the next couple of weeks.Â
EMMA- Yeah. So, you can join me. Iâll be with my guests, Stevie Wonder, Lady Gaga and Michael J Fox, live from our Hawaii studios, broadcast at the same time on ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝ One.
NIKKI- Oh stop it! Youâre havenât really. If you get Michael J Iâm flying back. Oh no, Iâm not even flying, am I, Iâm getting the ferry.Â
EMMA- Youâll be a while [laughs].Â
NIKKI- [Singing] I donât care how you get here, just get hereâŚ
EMMA- Get here in the end.Â
NIKKI- lg okay, we should probably say goodbye now, shouldnât we, to everyone. Goodbye. Â
EMMA- Bye.Â
[Trailer for Newscast]
PRESENTER- You know when youâre worried about something, but then you talk to your friend who knows more about the subject than you do, and straightaway you start to feel better? Thatâs what we try and do every day on Newscast.Â
CLIP- Now, theyâre saying that that would be simple to do, it would give everyone certainty.Â
PRESENTER- We talk to people who are in the news:
CLIP- You were chasing me round with a plate of cheese.Â
PRESENTER- We talk to people who know whatâs going on in the news:
CLIP- At least I didnât get up and slap anybody.Â
PRESENTER- We talk to people who understand what the news means:
CLIP- I think that heâs decided heâs going to listen, and then he might just intervene.
PRESENTER- And we talk to the best ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝ journalists, asking the most important questions:Â
CHRIS- Whatâs wrong with chinos? You donât want them, people to start wearing chinos?Â
CLIP- Donât start me, Chris.Â
PRESENTER- Thatâs Newscast from ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝ News, the podcast that knows a lot of people who know a lot about the news.Â
CLIP- And I was like, go on Kate, put some more welly into it!
CLIP- Listen to Newscast every day on ĂŰŃż´ŤĂ˝ Sounds.Â
CLIP- Iâm glad I asked that.Â
CLIP- Iâm very glad that you asked that!
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Access All: Disability News and Mental Health
Weekly podcast about mental health, wellbeing and disabled people.