Queenstown Lakes district mayoral candidates (from left)
Vanessa van Uden, Michael Scott and Simon Hayes. Photo by
James Beech.
The race for the mayor's office of the Queenstown Lakes
district reached a new level in Arrowtown yesterday - in a
wheelchair and on crutches.
Mayoral aspirants Vanessa van Uden, Simon Hayes and Michael
Scott were challenged by Disabilities Resource Centre
advocate Stefanee Woodham, of Arrowtown, to try out the aids
and experience first-hand the challenges of mobility for
residents living with a disability.
"I just want them to think and acknowledge how hard it is to
get around, and I've said I'll visit whichever one of them
gets in office and ask them to improve accessibility in the
district," Mrs Woodham said.
"We can't help the ice, we can't help the hills. The one
thing we can do is police the yellow lines so they can access
the drop-kerbs outside."
Mr Hayes navigated slowly while Ms van Uden sat in the
wheelchair and Mr Scott hobbled on crutches down the steep
incline, from Arrowtown Surgery to Arrowtown Pharmacy.
They commented on the physical difficulties they were
experiencing and imagined how disabled people and carers
coped every day, especially in icy conditions.
It was Mr Hayes' turn in the hotseat and Ms van Uden's chance
to push him along Buckingham St, from the Arrowtown Bakery
corner to the pharmacy.
Mr Hayes was unable to enter the pharmacy in the wheelchair
due to the high step and had to call for staff assistance,
which was what disabled people had to do, Mrs Woodham said.
The advocate said people in wheelchairs and their carers
often had to travel on roadsides and contend with traffic,
when there was a lack of space on footpaths, or just a grass
verge available.
Mr Scott, in the chair, manoeuvred with cars passing him in
Buckingham St, but needed a helping push from Mr Hayes to get
up the kerb to the pharmacy footpath.
The group also tried wheeling and walking on crutches through
puddles along the muddy verge to St Paul's Church.
"It's incredibly difficult [to push a wheelchair] on that
corner where it's uneven and cambered," Mr Hayes said.
"I think Stefanee illustrated the problem pretty well and
pretty quickly."
When asked what he would do to aid mobility if in office, Mr
Hayes said there had to be a compromise between accessibility
and village amenity.
More information was needed to see how extensive the problem
was.
Ms van Uden said practicality for all users had to be
balanced with amenity.
Awareness needed to be raised in the community not to park in
front of drop-kerbs.
The Buckingham St road width was not huge and residents did
not want signage cluttering the street, she said.
Mrs Woodham was among the people the council could work with
during urban design phases, rather than retrofit, she said.
Mr Scott said it was "not as easy as it looked" to use a
wheelchair or crutches.
"It's a district-wide problem and everything to be done [in
Arrowtown] would have to go through the village association.
"We need to keep Arrowtown as a village and we need to think
smarter where we need to put things in town."
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