Top of page
Accessibility

UK seeks BSL board members to improve accessibility for deaf people

sign language interpreter works on the stage
Photo: Dreamstime

The British Sign Language (BSL) Advisory Board is recruiting for a new co-chair and 15 new board members.

The terms of the current chair and members are due to run out on 31 December 2025 after members were recruited for a 3-year term in 2022.

The BSL Advisory Board chair advert will be live for 4 weeks, and the BSL Advisory Board member advert will be live for 6 weeks.

Minister for Social Security and Disability, Sir Stephen Timms MP, said: This Government is committed to championing the rights of BSL users and Deaf people.

The BSL Advisory Board plays an integral role in advising the government on the day to day issues that Deaf people face and we will work closely with them so that their views and voices are at the heart of everything we do. I look forward to continuing to work with the Board to deliver on our shared goals of breaking down barriers to opportunity for BSL users.

Following the passage of the BSL Act, the BSL Advisory Board was created to advise the government on key issues impacting the Deaf community in their everyday life.

It is the first dual language board advising the UK government, and operates in both BSL and English. The Board meets regularly and has established subgroups to focus on particular priorities including education and health and social care.

The Board has also established 2 short term working groups focussing on the Deafblind interpreter shortage and accessible technology.

Guided by lived experience, the BSL Advisory Board is central to the government’s mission to break down barriers to opportunity. It ensures the government meets its BSL Act duties, advising on key issues for Deaf people in education, health, technology, and Deafblindness.

You might also like

Back view of man in his electric wheelchair at underground platform waiting for train with motion blur of passing train in the background Back view of man in his electric wheelchair at underground platform waiting for train with motion blur of passing train in the background

UK Law Commission to review transport accessibility law for disabled people

The UK Law Commission began a three-year review of transport…

young woman in wheelchair with colleagues working in office young woman in wheelchair with colleagues working in office

UK introduces mandatory ethnicity and disability pay gap reporting

Minority ethnic groups and people with disabilities are to benefit…

Person with Down Syndrome talking with female coworker in the office. Person with Down Syndrome talking with female coworker in the office.

UK government support moves people with disabilities closer to work

For years people on sickness benefits with no requirement to…

A woman with a disability through the city with his means of transport. She keeps some roses in her hand. A woman with a disability through the city with his means of transport. She keeps some roses in her hand.

UK opens public consultation on disability benefit reform

The UK government has launched a consultation aimed at reshaping…