Insight on the impact of the pandemic is highlighting surmountable issues the providers of sport and physical activity need to consider.
Simple changes and planning can make a real difference for disabled people and tools such as Activity Alliance’s reopening resource can help providers understand what’s needed.
We know disabled people, and those with long-term health conditions, are most likely to be among the groups of people who do not intend to return any time soon.
And issues like the digital divide and the lack of informal communication opportunities are affecting people’s confidence to come back to activity – with new rules and safety concerns also making people more anxious.
These issues need to be considered as sport reopens.
Reasons to be positive
Despite the challenges of the pandemic, over the past 12 months there’ve been numerous examples of providers doing amazing work, delivering sport and physical activity opportunities that have enabled disabled people to stay active.
Whether that’s the online sessions developed by WheelPower, Sense and Cerebral Palsy Sport creating new activity finders, Sport for Confidence finding new and innovative ways to deliver opportunities to their beneficiaries, or British Wheelchair Basketball launching their Inspire a Generation programme. There are so many great examples, too many to list in one blog.
At Sport England this work is central to what we do.
We have recently announced that a further £20 million will be spent through the Tackling Inequalities Fund, which has already reached 1,103 clubs and organisations that deliver to disabled people or people living with long-term conditions.
The second round of the Toyota Parasport Fund, which we deliver in partnership with the British Paralympic Association and Toyota, is now open – focusing on organisations looking to support disabled people to return to sport or activity following coronavirus.
And we’ve also committed to ensuring everything we do in the first year of delivery of our Uniting the Movement strategy will aim to try and reduce inequalities in sport and physical activity. To do this, we must directly engage disabled people and use their lived experience and expertise to co-produce a more accessible and inclusive system.
It is the responsibility of all of us to do more, as we seek to transform lives and communities through sport and physical activity.