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Accessible toilet facility returns to Brighton Pride with Accessibility Matters

Last summer hundreds of people used the Access Facilities at Brighton Pride delivered by the volunteers of the Brighton & Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum through their Accessibility Matters initiative.

Working in partnership with Brighton Pride, Accessibility Matters has made significant progress in ensuring the event is accessible to everyone.

A favourite facility of recent years has been the High Dependency Unit (HDU)

Many people are expected to use these facilities again this summer and LGBT+ people who otherwise would feel unable to access the event are now able to do so with confidence.

Billie Lewis, Chair of the LGBT Community Safety Forum, said: “The HDU provided by Mobiloo will play a significant role within the community area at Preston Park ensuring that those who need our support the most will get it. It will also change the way people access their Pride on the day. The facility at the Access Tent will draw different people together again this year. We have changed the provider of the HDU this year to ensure we offer the best service with recognition for value for money and sustainability.”

Why do we need Mobiloo?

Mobiloo is a new product to the market, offering a safe and clean changing and toilet facility to meet the needs of all disabled people (and their Carers or Personal Assistants), within a mobile van.

Most disabled people want to live life no differently from anyone else. They want to be able to go shopping, enjoy the countryside, go out to eat, work, and enjoy life, but they live in a world designed primarily for people without physical impairments.

For many disabled people adequate toilet facilities are an important factor when planning a day out. If they cannot walk or stand, they may still be unable to use even the standard specialist accessible toilets that are sometimes provided. They may need support from one or two carers or personal assistants to use the toilet or to have their incontinence pad changed. Standard specialist accessible toilets rarely provide changing tables or hoists.

The absence of appropriate facilities can impact on whole families. Social activities and days out have to be planned down to the smallest detail to fit around a stop at suitable changing facilities or to get back home after only a few hours. The most intrepid may have ventured out to festivals or camping trips – but then often have to find a discreet area in a field or a dirty toilet floor instead of the dignified facilities we should all be entitled to.

Mobiloo recognises this gap in provision for disabled people. Its unique, mobile facility offers the right of access to the more rural locations, festivals, activities and events across the UK.

Accessibility Matters are currently working with Brighton Pride to ensure more accessible toilets are available across the Festival Park.

For Access questions, you can email access@lgbt-help.com. Please note that these contact details are for access issues regarding facilities for the deaf, blind, disabled and older Pride attendees only.

Other Pride related info such as stalls/vendors, road closures, act line ups and bus information cannot be answered here.

For all other pride related info visit here or email info@brighton-pride.org

To register for the Accessibility Matters Pride Access Plan please visit lgbt-help.com

For Access Tickets for the Brighton Pride Festival, on Saturday August 5, 2017, click here:

Men for Men, Man Monday special at Queens Arms

Davina Sparkle hosts a fun, raunchy, sexy show with three of her gorgeous hunks doing the full monty in the intimate surrounds of the Queens Arms.

A brilliant fun show, raunchy and very sexy with three of the largest strippers in the biz; Papa Bear Marshall, top Stripper TITUS (Gladiator) Rowe, and Black Mamba, the one and only Paul Grant.

Join them for a LARGE fun and naked show behind closed doors at the Queens Arms.

Ticket only event. Tickets £10 from the Queens Arms


Davina Sparkle
Davina Sparkle

Event: MEN FOR MEN, Man Monday Special hosted by Davina Sparkle

Where: Queens Arms, George Street, Brighton

When: Monday, July 3

Time: From 8.30pm

Cost: £10 ticket only event

To book tickets by card telephone 01273 725 331

Please note new opening hours at the Queens Arms:  Tuesday-Thursday from 5pm-late, Friday, Saturday and Sunday from noon-late. 

 

OPINION: Why being transgender was irrelevant in my General Election 2017 campaign

As I stood on stage, a room full of expectant people looking up at me I was totally focused on the next words that I would hear. “Sophie Rose Cook, Labour Party, 20,882.”

Sophie Cook, Labour Candidate for East Worthing & Shoreham

In the space of five short weeks we’d achieved the seemingly impossible, taking a previously safe Tory seat and making it a marginal, increasing the Labour vote by 114% with one of the biggest swings in the country at 19.8%.

At the start of the general election campaign no one gave the Labour Party a chance, both nationally and here in East Worthing & Shoreham.

The constituency had always been blue and the Tory incumbent, Tim Loughton, had been the MP for 20 years.

He felt safe and secure that no one could ever challenge him, and I’m sure that the selection of a little known transgender TV presenter as the Labour candidate only added to the feeling that he would increase his 15,000 majority.

My selection caused a few waves, I was told that “this isn’t Brighton” and that the people of the constituency wouldn’t warm to a transgender candidate.

The press gave my campaign some coverage and despite being one of nine transgender candidates I was the one that got the most attention due to my profile from working in football and TV.

“Labour candidate could become first transgender MP” said one headline whilst another mentioned the fight for LGBT rights, “Trans activist is fighting to oust anti-LGBT Conservative politician.”

Being transgender and in the public eye I was already used to abuse, both online and in the real world. I’d been trolled by various groups including receiving death threats on Twitter and as I stepped into the political arena I was bracing myself for a renewed onslaught of hatred.

But then something unexpected happened.

Instead of the abuse I was greeted with love and support, sure there were still a few transphobic remarks online but nothing like I’d experienced previously.

I’d heard first hand accounts of trans people moving out of the constituency because of abuse and yet, when I started to talk to people, they responded with warmth and openness.

My gender identity that had hit the headlines around the world seemed to mean nothing to the constituents that I met, it was never mentioned on the doorsteps, the street stalls or the hustings. The only people who made it an issue were the press, not the voters. They listened to the policies, my ideas, passion and belief and they embraced me.

On June 8 nearly 21,000 of them chose to put their mark next to my name on the ballot paper.

They weren’t voting for a trans woman, they were voting for Sophie Cook, they were voting for the Labour Party. They saw beyond the headlines and the things that made us different and in their way struck a massive blow for trans equality.

We now have the most diverse parliament ever with 45 LGB MPs, I missed out on adding a T to that by 5000 votes.

We need transgender politicians, after all everyone in society needs to feel represented. But the main reason why I believe that the time is right for a trans MP has nothing to do with equality or diversity, it’s down to the constituents who put their faith in me to represent them, regardless of my gender identity.

Since the election I’ve spoken to hundreds of people who said that I’ve given them hope for the first time.

That feeling goes both ways, they saw that there is more that unites us than separates us, they saw a person rather than a label, and they too gave me hope for a brighter tomorrow.

 

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