There are many things you can learn from a restaurantâs website: what stream the trout they serve swam in, which mountain range supplies the salt, whether thereâs gluten-free bread. What you may not be able to establish, if youâre a wheelchair user, is whether youâll be able to eat there. Courtesy of reader Jamie Hale I now know something about this. Jamie, who is a wheelchair user, advises institutions and theatres on disability access and runs the disabled-led arts organisation Criptic Arts, among other things. He emailed to request I include information in my reviews about disability access.
I often get requests to include details on vegan options, meat sourcing, piped music and so on. If I covered them all there would be little space for the actual review. Instead, I mention issues where appropriate. Iâm not writing a guide book. If youâre concerned, check the restaurantâs website for yourself. But disability access is different, Jamie said, because websites rarely display that information. I got the point and suggested we meet for lunch. I would be responsible for booking somewhere that met Jamieâs needs.
Hereâs the headline: itâs bloody difficult. I checked dozens of websites. All but one contained no information on accessibility at all. There were messages about sustainability, employment standards, even modern slavery, but nothing about whether Jamie would be able to go inside. Many donât list phone numbers. âI usually have to email six or seven places,â Jamie said. Letâs hear it then for the recently opened Jamie Oliver Catherine Street, which has a clear and positive line about wheelchair accessibility on the website, confirmed by a phone call.
We met there for lunch: nice enough gravadlax, chicken en croute, and a rump steak. Jamie looked about the space approvingly. âTables at varying heights, chairs both with and without armrests, a lot of space between tables, and full access because itâs on the flat.â This, he said, was not common. The biggest issue can simply be getting inside, courtesy of one or two steps. ââAll it takes is a foldaway ramp, which costs around £100, less than most tables would spend. Many places donât bother.â Disability access is covered by the 2010 Equality Act. It includes an âanticipatory requirement to make reasonable adjustmentsâ. But itâs civil law. Itâs up to individuals to take legal action against hospitality businesses for failing to comply rather than, say, local councils. âAnd thatâs costly and risky.â
What would Jamie like restaurants to do? âMake everything clear on the website, even if itâs just that there are three steps and no wheelchair access. Having that information would take away huge stress. If I know they donât have an adapted toilet, I can plan ahead.â But obviously they should go further. âItâs not just a shame that I canât go to certain restaurants. Itâs a moral obligation to remedy that.â Have an adapted toilet. Make it reachable between tables. Donât use it as a store room.
And what can the rest of us do? âWhen you go to a restaurant tell them you know a wheelchair user who would like to visit and ask if theyâve got a ramp. The more they are asked about it, the more theyâll think about it.â As he says: âThe absence of wheelchair users in your restaurant doesnât mean they couldnât be a presence.â Jamie acknowledges it remains tricky for me to provide conclusive information about accessibility in my reviews. Those with disabilities would still have to check for themselves. But after our lunch one thing is clear: Iâll never look at a dining room in the same way again.
To learn more about Jamie Haleâs work visit jamiehale.co.uk