About elevators and chair lifts in places of worship.
Comments closedCategory: Local Church
Accessibility and Inclusion Ideas in Churches
Several churches have written to ask about funding resourcces. Please comment here about how your church has funded its accessibility projects and/or what your conference…
Comments closedThree resources on web accessibility: Church website design tips: things to DO Here are three guidelines for legibility from Effective Color Contrast 1. Exaggerate lightness…
Comments closedThe following publications about making buildings accessible are available at Partners for Sacred Places :
Comments closedA Reading the Signs column . . . A Can-do Forum about accessibility for the whole church family. By guest writer, the Rev. Ross Tyler,…
Comments closedA Reading the Signs column
I no longer recall which came first, the fall on an icy sidewalk that necessitated a lesson for Treasure in how to dog guide a walker-using partner or the timely Christmas letter from Rachel Scott. My friend of years is a retired nurse/instructor in gerontology who has mastered the graceful art of using a wheelchair.
Comments closedBy Jo Ackerman, Pastor of Clay Center, Nebraska
The Nebraska Conference is proud of its churches that are making an effort to be accessible to all of God’s people. The term “accessible,” as used in many of our churches, means being able to gain entrance to the building. Some churches have constructed ramps and installed elevators; others consider a rear entrance sufficient.
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