It is crucial for members of a group to understand why the following communication guidelines are so important when one or more of the members are DeafBlind. Sight and hearing are our two distinct senses and when either or both are limited, communication does not flow as freely. Being in a group setting makes communication even more of a challenge.
DeafBlind persons are often left behind or left out of discussions when a hearing group does not take the time to ensure full participation. It is important to have established communication rules or guidelines that ensures all participants have equal access during all portions of meetings.
The following guidelines are suggestions to assist with communications between members of your meeting or group and will help the conversation flow better in person, virtually or in hybrid situations. The top suggestion is to assign a communication facilitator for your meeting. This person can be a member of the meeting however his or her role is to ensure that all members are following the rules of inclusion during the meeting. The facilitator will ensure that all participants have access to what is being shared.
For example, often time votes on motions are made and by the time the DeafBlind person gets the call to vote, the motion has already been determined passed or failed. In addition, because the DeafBlind person cannot see people's hands raised or hear a voice vote, the interpreter must indicate the vote of each person by name. This will take longer than a visual count of hands.
When referring to print or electronic information, whether by handout or PowerPoint presentation be sure that any meeting documents meet the accessibility requirements. Providing the documents to the members of the meetings, interpreters, and CART if they are attending ahead of time is extremely helpful. When referring to the documents avoid pointing or the use of "this" or "that".
The interpreter is likely not able to see what you are referring to, so they cannot convey the information accurately to the DeafBlind person. It is preferred that you describe specifically what you are referring to ("please look at the first sentence in the 3rd paragraph" or "click on the 2nd tab from the left that says FOLDER"). This is generally helpful to everyone in the group, not just the interpreter and the DeafBlind member.
Use the raise hand feature
CART – services will need to be ordered prior to the meeting. The host will need to assign the CART person to be the close captioner prior to the meeting beginning.
Interpreters – will need to be ordered prior to the meeting. Interpreters will need to be made co-host.
On a virtual meeting interpreters should be given co-host rights so they can be pinned and use the spotlight function.