ALDA Chicago
 

News from ALDA


Watch this space for news about ALDA Chicago business and events and other news of interest to people who are late-deafened or have other hearing loss. 
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  • 12 Mar 2013 9:21 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    An open-captioned, live theater performance of Book of Mormon is being provided by "Broadway In Chicago" on Sunday, March 31. A small group of ALDAns is planning to attend. You are invited to join them if you wish. Details appear below.

    Sunday, March 31, 7:30 PM
    Bank of America Theatre, 18 W. Monroe, Chicago

    The theater has set aside a block of tickets in the orchestra section for those using captioning. The captions will be displayed on a panel near this section, providing "a good view of stage and captions". The theater is also offering these seats at a special price of $55 per ticket. To purchase tickets for this performance at the special price, call Nancy Clark at: 312-977-1701 ext. 1259.  Be sure to mention the ALDA group and the need for captioning.

    Iris Sherman, ALDA Chicago Outreach Chair, is planning to go. If anyone is interested in joining her for dinner at the "Italian Village" before the show, please email her at isherman@comcast.net. Thank you.

    For more info on scheduled sign-interpreted or captioned performances, go to www.broadwayinchicago.com/theatreinfo_specialneeds.php then scroll down the page.

    Discounted parking is available with your ticket stub. For other info, go to www.broadwayinchicago.com.

    If anyone wants to request open captioning for other Broadway in Chicago shows/performances, they can do so by emailing Nancy Clark at NClark@broadwayinchicago.com.

  • 07 Mar 2013 9:43 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)
    In honor of ALDA Chicago's 25 years as an organization, member Fran Bowden has quilted this commemorative wall hanging and donated it as a fundraiser. Find out more on our Events page.

    Quilted Wall Hanging
  • 08 Dec 2012 1:09 PM | Beth Botts (Administrator)

    The AMC movie theater chain has put a list online of screens that have captioning devices, to enable people with hearing loss to enjoy movies. Find the information here.

  • 17 Aug 2012 5:53 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)
    Click the below link to see ALDA Chicago's expenses for 2011

    2011 ALDA Pie.pdf
  • 13 Aug 2012 9:18 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    ALDA Chicago will be hosting a movie and dinner event at multiple locations in the greater Chicago area on Saturday, November 17. This social will allow us to be advocates for the theater accessibility we all want, simply by showing up together as a group to attend the movies. It’s also an opportunity for you to get to know other ALDA members who live near you.

    The plan is for each group to meet at their theater lobby at a specified time for socializing, enjoy the movie of their choice, and then meet up again afterwards for dinner.  Invite your friends and family to join us. The more the merrier!

    Locations are still being arranged. If you are interested in hosting one of our sites, please contact Social Chair Sarah Wegley at skwegley@gmail.com for information.


    ALDA Chicago is partnering with Collaborative for Communication Access via Captioning (CCAC) an international organization to make Show Us the Captions! a national event during the month of November. Our goals are to

    • Promote captioning to potential moviegoers who don’t know their theater has it.
    • Demonstrate the real need for captioning to theater owners.
    • Raise awareness of inclusion and accessibility issues to the general public.
    • Say thanks to the cinemas participating!
    Find out more at our Facebook page.
  • 28 Jul 2012 4:23 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)
    A Message from Social Chair Sarah Wegley to All Members

    Hi everyone,
    I am looking for people to serve on a 25th Birthday Party planning committee. Our mission is to plan an amazing event for next April to mark ALDA Chicago's 25 years as a group. The next board meeting is in 2 weeks and I would like to have some names by that time. Please let me know if you are interested.

    Our first responsibility is to select a restaurant/banquet facility and a speaker.  I'd like to have this done before the board meeting in October so we can move on to the fun party stuff after that. All ideas are welcome. We will communicate via group emails.

    If you don't want to be on the committee, but you have a suggestion for a great restaurant or speaker, please contact me via email at skwegley@gmail.com Thanks!
  • 07 Jun 2012 12:17 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)
    ALDA Chicago once again will offer scholarships to attend ALDAcon 2012 in Columbia, SC, at the beautiful Marriott Hotel from October 17th thru 21st.  Here is your chance to attend one of the warmest conventions ever, with good old Southern hospitality.  Just click on the ALDAcon Scholarship tab on the blue menu at left, and fill out the form.  All applicants will be given serious consideration.  Apply now!

    As of the deadline of August 1, 2012, applications are no longer being accepted for this year's convention.  The scholarships will be offered once again starting about April for next year's ALDAcon 2013 in Albuquerque, NM.
     
  • 04 Apr 2012 3:12 PM | Beth Botts (Administrator)
    The AMC movie theater chain has agreed to install closed captioning devices in all of its digitally-equipped theaters in Illinois by the end of 2014, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan announced Wednesday. 

    The settlement comes two years after Chicago-based Equip for Equality approached the attorney general's Disability Rights Bureau to complain about the lack of captioning in movie theaters. The attorney general's office decided to approach AMC as the state's largest theater operator, with about 5,000 screens in 320 theaters.

    The devices will be installed as AMC theaters are switched to digital projection, according to Noel MacDonald, AMC's vice president for operations. First priority will be given to the 41 theaters in the Chicago area, he said. "We are happy to add this last piece to our digital conversion," he said. 

    The agreement also calls for the installation of description devices for people who are blind or have other visual impairments. These headphones deliver a play-by-play description of a movie's action and setting.

    "This is a spectacular achievement in the civil rights of people with disabilities," said Amy Peterson, senior attorney with Equip for Equality. "I hope others in Illinois will follow AMC's lead." 

    "It is a rare day when we get to celebrate success," said Amber Smock, program director of Access Living, recalling how disappointed she was as a child when she could not hear or understand the movie "Peter Pan." 

    Other advocacy groups, including the Hearing Loss Association of America, also joined the effort.

    The announcement is a great step forward for people living with hearing disabilities in Illinois, said Marsha Kopp, president of ALDA Chicago, the local chapter of the Association of Late-Deafened Adults Inc. "It means we can attend the movies when we like and share the experience with our hearing family members and friends," Kopp said.

    The agreement requires that 25 percent of AMC's digitally-equipped theaters in the state have closed captioning by June 1, 2012; 50 percent by Dec. 1, 2012; and 100 percent by April 1, 2014. 

    It does not necessarily mean that all AMC theaters will have closed captioning. It states that all digitally-equipped theaters will have closed captioning installed, but does not require AMC to convert all its theaters to digital. 

    The new captioning devices, which are on a bendable, adjustable arm that sticks in the seat's cupholder, replace the Rear Window system that has been used in some theaters for more than a decade. That system, which depended on captions reflected in a mirror, was only available at some showings and required patrons to sit only in certain seats. With the new system, Madigan said, theater patrons will be able to have captioning at any showing in any equipped theater. 

    AMC theaters already equipped for closed captioning, according to MacDonald, include the AMC River East 21 theater in Chicago, where the news conference was held; the AMC Leows 600 N. Michigan Avenue theater in Chicago; and the AMC Randhurst 12 in Mount Prospect.   However, the theaters' websites have not yet been updated with information about the captioning.

    AMC's IMAX theaters and certain special showings, such as Metropolitan Opera performances, are not included in the settlement requiring captioning, because the distributors of their programming do not yet include caption or description tracks in the movies, according to Sun Dee Larson, AMC's vice president for film marketing and communications.

    In fact, only about 90 percent of movies that are released to theaters include a caption track, Larson said, and captioning devices will not work unless the distributor includes that track. She said she hopes that increased demand will drive distributors to include caption and description tracks in all movies. 

    Madigan said one of the reasons she is pleased with the agreement is that it was reached without litigation, although there is a decade-long history of legal action in other states by advocates attempting to push theater chains, including AMC, to provide equal access to the movies for people with hearing and vision impairments. ALDA Inc., the parent organization of ALDA Chicago, worked with other disability-rights advocates to reach a 2011 settlement in California under which AMC agreed to install closed captioning in all its theaters in that state by late 2013. 

    Asked about other theater chains, Madigan said, "They're going to be next." 

    Regal Cinemas, the nation's largest movie theater chain, and Cinemark, another large chain, also have committed to installing closed captioning as they convert to digital projection, stating that the installation by the end of 2012. Neither chain has committed to a timetable for Illinois.

    Another frontier for advocacy is the internet. Few movies, TV shows or other videos streamed on the internet are captioned. The National Association of the Deaf has a lawsuit pending against Netflix over this issue.   


  • 21 Feb 2012 1:26 PM | Beth Botts (Administrator)
    Any serious-minded non-profit organization relies on human and financial resources to help achieve its goals and grow. ALDA Chicago is no exception.

    As an ALDAn, potential member, community activist or service provider for those with hearing loss, your contribution of time, talent and special skills is vital to our success. As we enter our 24th year, we hope you can take pride in our organization and all that we have accomplished while also recognizing that there is still so much to do. The bottom line is that we need your help to do it.

    Each of the following committees needs at least one volunteer (and preferably more) to head up and/or assist in fulfilling its duties:
     · Advocacy
     · Exhibits
     · Fundraising
     · Newsletter
     · Website
     · Workshops

    Please accept our invitation to become an active participant in our future and the future of others who are or will face hearing loss. You CAN make a difference.

    If one of the above areas interests you, grab the opportunity to get your feet wet and move it forward, to put your own stamp on it if that be the case. In turn, you will probably get to add a new skill to your repertoire or resume, learn a little something from the experience or just take pride in giving something back or a job well done.

    What do you say? Are you up to the challenge? Can we count on you? If so, contact President Marsha Kopp at ms_kopp@yahoo.com about donning that ‘new hat.’ Thank you.
  • 13 Feb 2012 4:22 PM | Beth Botts (Administrator)

    Journalist and author Jeffrey Zaslow who died in a car crash in Michigan last week was the first reporter to write about ALDA in 1991.   Learn more about Zaslow here.   Read his article about ALDA here.

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