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Inclusive Recreation

girl in wheelchair

Fort Worden Trails Evaluation
An enthusiastic young volunteer assumes a disability in this DASH project in UGN’s 2016 Day of Caring.

~ Do not allow what you
cannot do to limit what you
can do
~

 

Young Professionals Network volunteers and family members – along with a few interested bystanders, travel the accessible beach trail with simulated disabilities in the first stage of their Fort Worden trails evaluations.

By |2021-12-13T23:29:21+00:00November 10th, 2016|Archives, projects|Comments Off on Inclusive Recreation

Jefferson Healthcare Accessibility

DASH has worked with Jefferson Healthcare to improve accessibility for many years.  In 2010 our focus turned to working systematically on the obstacles patients encountered on Sheridan Street and the Jefferson Healthcare campus before they could enter the hospital and clinics.

Lynn and Sarah come to the end of the sidewalk near the JHC Hospital

Lynn Gressley and a blindfolded Sarah Bowman leave the clinics in DASH’s 2010 Disability-for-a-Day event.

Sidewalk outside of Jefferson Healthcare Hospital in Port Townsend, WA

2016 – Sheridan Street has sidewalks leading to accessible routes into Jefferson Healthcare

By |2021-12-13T23:29:29+00:00November 1st, 2016|Archives, projects|Comments Off on Jefferson Healthcare Accessibility

DASH’s History of Partnership with Jefferson Healthcare

DASH has worked with Jefferson Healthcare to improve accessibility for many years.  In 2010 our focus turned to working systematically on the obstacles patients encountered on Sheridan Street and the Jefferson Healthcare campus before they could enter the hospital and clinics.  

In 2010 DASH worked with the Walkable and Livable Communities Institute on the application for a Transportation Improvement Board (TIB) Grant for Sheridan Street alongside the hospital. We stayed on top of that project through 2013, providing much input to the city on all aspects of the project that are important for people with disabilities. This was the first stage of improving accessibility at Jefferson Healthcare.

Once Sheridan Street improvements had been made, DASH worked steadily with the hospital on issues of parking, pedestrian access, transit connections, wayfinding, ADA requirements in and around the campus and much more.

The expansion of the campus for the new Emergency and Specialty Services Building was an opportunity for DASH to become a significant stakeholder from the start. At several meetings over the last 2 years with the hospital design and construction team, DASH Board members consulted and made recommendations on every aspect, focusing intently on details that make a difference for people with all kinds of disabilities. We based our recommendations on ADA requirements but also did frequent field evaluations in and around the hospital to ensure that our input covered everything that will make a better experience for anyone needing hospital care.

We brought in local experts with vision and hearing impairments to make sure that we did not miss pointing to changes that are often obvious to people with a vision or hearing problem but can easily be missed.  

This has been a major project for DASH covering many years and including just about everything involving physical access to the hospital. Along the way, much work also has been done on how attitudes, training and sensitivity can be as important as the physical access.

DASH’s most recent involvement at the hospital will be the bench that we will gift to Jefferson Healthcare for the main entrance. A comfortable and comforting bench is symbolic of the way we have consistently worked to ensure that all patients will experience the hospital as a place of healing that is accessible to all. We are now raising the funds to pay for the bench and a plaque in honor of our long-term President, Lynn Gressley who was a patient at the hospital. We ask all who care about making our hospital accessible to contribute.    

By |2016-12-09T19:52:47+00:00October 18th, 2016|Uncategorized|Comments Off on DASH’s History of Partnership with Jefferson Healthcare

Inclusive Technology Improves Access to Fort Worden Beaches

A beach wheelchair and beach walker are now available to use at the Fort Worden beach area without cost.

This article about the beach wheelchair appeared in the Port Townsend Leader in August:

http://www.ptleader.com/news/business/
beach-wheelchair-is-latest-gain-in-
accessibility/article_2932caac-6981
-11e6-9112-c3fc467f65de.html

By |2016-12-09T19:58:50+00:00October 13th, 2016|news, projects|Comments Off on Inclusive Technology Improves Access to Fort Worden Beaches

Project to create an accessible playground for Jefferson County begins.

There are NO Accessible Playgrounds in Jefferson County

JUMP! is a group of physical and occupational therapists, parents of children with disabilities, and community members that has formed to build a new accessible and inclusive playground at HJ Carroll Park.  We have found a fiscal sponsor in the Mike Beery Memorial Children’s Fund, and will be accepting donations to help us build this playground.  We have received approval from the Jefferson County Parks & Recreation department to donate this playground to the County.  After our contract is reviewed by the County Legal dept. we will then be presenting to the Board of County Commissioners.  Once we have that approval, we will be launching our website, so stay tuned!

We will be the first accessible playground in all of Jefferson County and will be joining Clallam, Kitsap and many other counties in providing accessible, inclusive playgrounds.

 

One of many examples of an accessible playground

 See the link below for more info on Port Angeles’ new playground:

Peninsula Daily News August 2016

http://archive.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20160801/NEWS/308019992

For more info contact: jumpplayground@gmail.com

By |2017-07-31T01:53:50+00:00September 18th, 2016|news|Comments Off on Project to create an accessible playground for Jefferson County begins.

Hard Ship | A Really Great Big Story

Many more followers of the Race to Alaska tuned in to watch Team Alula cross the finish line than watched the first-place winners cross the same line.  Three paralyzed men from Australia took up one of sailing’s most grueling challenges—a 750-mile race to Alaska through some of the most treacherous and remote waters on the planet.  Here is their journey start to finish line.

By |2016-12-09T19:53:04+00:00September 9th, 2016|news|Comments Off on Hard Ship | A Really Great Big Story