• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Advice/Information
  • About DNS
  • Subscribe to DNS
  • Advertise with DNS
  • Support DNS
  • Contact DNS

Disability News Service

the country's only news agency specialising in disability issues

  • Home
  • Independent Living
    • Arts, Culture and Sport
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Employment
    • Housing
    • Transport
  • Activism & Campaigning
  • Benefits & Poverty
  • Politics
  • Human Rights
You are here: Home / News Archive / Minister’s access award is hard to swallow

Minister’s access award is hard to swallow

By guest on 3rd December 2011 Category: News Archive

Listen

Disabled activists have been left “bewildered” by the decision to present the minister for employment with an award for the accessibility of his website.

Chris Grayling beat off competition from all 648 other MPs to win the accessibility award in this year’s MP Web Awards.

The awards were organised by BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT, and recognised MPs who have embraced the web, and are using it to “engage effectively with their constituents”. The accessibility award was judged by the disability charity AbilityNet.

Grayling is the Conservative minister responsible for the government’s incapacity benefit reforms, including the much-criticised “fitness for work” tests.

He has been heavily criticised by opposition MPs and disabled activists for helping to fuel hostile media coverage of the issue through his department’s presentation of government statistics.

Kaliya Franklin, the disabled blogger and activist who co-founded The Broken of Britain, said disabled people were feeling “demonised and scapegoated” by the coalition’s rhetoric on benefits.

She said this attitude was underlined by Grayling’s “implacable opposition” to a more accurate and sensitive test for out-of-work disability benefits and his “insistence that work is good for us, even for people undergoing chemotherapy treatment”.

She said: “Many will be left feeling bewildered and further betrayed by this award for services to disabled people at a time disability hate crime has increased… with the public perception of disabled people as fraudulent scroungers clearly linked to the language used by government ministers, particularly Chris Grayling.”

Eleanor Lisney, another leading disabled activist and herself an information specialist, also pointed to the irony of Grayling being handed such an award.

She said AbilityNet should be aware of the high cost of adapting technology for disabled people at a time when the government was “cutting funds for access support for the same disabled people”.

She said: “Technology which can be so helpful is also so costly and unaffordable to many disabled people who are struggling to make ends meet with the many cuts affecting their lives in the present economic climate.”

AbilityNet said its judging had been “expert, impartial and based upon global technical guidelines on accessibility”, with an “automated accessibility check” on all the websites, followed by a mini-audit of the 23 sites with the best scores.

No-one from the charity was available to comment further on the decision to award the prize to Grayling.

A BCS spokeswoman said the judging and the award were “completely apolitical” and based purely on the accessibility of Grayling’s website.

1 December 2011

Share this post:

Share on X (Twitter)Share on FacebookShare on WhatsAppShare on RedditShare on LinkedIn
Image of front cover of The Department, showing a crinkled memo with the words ‘Restricted - Policy. The Department. How a Violent Government Bureaucracy Killed Hundreds and Hid the Evidence. John Pring.’ Next to the image is a red box with the following words in white: ‘A very interesting book... a very important contribution to this whole debate’ - Sir Stephen Timms, minister for social security and disability. plutobooks.com and the Pluto Press logo.

Related

‘Muddled’ blue badge reforms ‘are to blame for renewal delays’
6th February 2015
UN debate will be reminder of true inclusive education
6th February 2015
IDS breaks pledge on PIP waiting-times, as tens of thousands still queue for months
30th January 2015

Primary Sidebar

On the left of the image are multiple heads of different colours - white, aqua, red, light brown, and dark green - all grouped together, then the words ‘Join our campaign for a decent life for Disabled people. Campaign for Disability Justice’
Image of front cover of The Department, showing a crinkled memo with the words 'Restricted - Policy. The Department. How a Violent Government Bureaucracy Killed Hundreds and Hid the Evidence. John Pring.' Next to the image is a red box with the following words in white: 'A very interesting book... a very important contribution to this whole debate' - Sir Stephen Timms, minister for social security and disability. plutobooks.com and the Pluto Press logo.

Access

Latest Stories

Scores of DWP failings linked to deaths were kept from MPs voting on benefit cuts, secret reports reveal

DWP staff ignored rules on how to respond to claimants who report suicidal thoughts, secret reports reveal

New official figures disprove claims that social security spending is ‘spiralling out of control’

Changes to energy bill discount scheme will discriminate against many disabled people, campaigners warn

Disabled peer hits back at claims of ‘filibustering’ over ‘vague’ and ‘poorly drafted’ assisted suicide bill

Government-owned train company has been failing on disability awareness training for more than four years

Government’s ‘generational’ SEND reforms will leave more children in segregated settings

SEND reforms ‘are a missed opportunity’ to dismantle the barriers driving disabled pupils from mainstream

Disabled activists call on Clooney to abandon movie that is set to paint Alzheimer’s as ‘fate worse than death’

Government’s advisers warn DWP minister he may need to ‘shift entrenched concerns’ over work reforms

Readspeaker
Image of front cover of The Department, showing a crinkled memo with the words 'Restricted - Policy. The Department. How a Violent Government Bureaucracy Killed Hundreds and Hid the Evidence. John Pring.' Next to the image is a red box with the following words in white: 'A very interesting book... a very important contribution to this whole debate' - Sir Stephen Timms, minister for social security and disability. plutobooks.com and the Pluto Press logo.

Footer

The International Standard Serial Number for Disability News Service is: ISSN 2398-8924

  • Accessibility Statement
  • Privacy Policy
  • Site map
  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Threads
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2026 Disability News Service

Site development by A Bright Clear Web