Top Stories - Google News

Showing posts with label German. Show all posts
Showing posts with label German. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

German iPhone app guides handicapped around cities (AP)

BERLIN – Raul Krauthausen, who has used a wheelchair since childhood, has always been uncomfortable with the services Germany provides for the physically handicapped, like special taxis and grocery delivery — saying they feel patronizing and further isolate him from the able-bodied world.

So Krauthausen took matters into his own hands and launched wheelmap.org, an iPhone application and website in German and English that allows users to share ratings and tips on how accessible shops, bars and other places are.

"Sometimes I feel I'm treated like a child who isn't allowed to decide specific things by myself," said the 30-year-old who suffers from a genetic disorder that makes his bones brittle. "I want to remain flexible and not be dependent on when a driving service has time to pick me up."

It turned out he wasn't the only one who felt that way. With some 300 new user-ratings daily, wheelmap.org now has details on 30,000 locations. Around 80 percent of tagged spots are in Germany, but site ratings for cities like London and New York are slowly growing, Krauthausen said.

"Wheelmap.org wants to help show people with mobility impairments everything that's achievable," he said.

Krauthausen attributes Wheelmap's success to its availability as an iPhone application and the "Wiki principle" — the idea that anyone, anywhere can contribute. Users rate locations without registering, but must log in to add specific comments.

Ingo Stoecker, a regular user and beta tester for the app, said he hopes the site will encourage often reclusive handicapped urbanites to explore surroundings they see as potentially perilous to navigate. Some 4.5 million of Germany's 82 million people are physically handicapped.

"Most or many wheelchair users are rather introverted — they'd rather not go out," said Stoecker, who suffers from a birth defect resulting in incomplete spinal development.

"I think if they knew of such an app, they would maybe get out more."

Stoecker, 30, can navigate very short distances on crutches and drive a special car. He uses Wheelmap to find bars or cinemas for weekend nights in Berlin or traveling outside the city with friends from his wheelchair basketball team.

"It's helpful when our team is on the road to unknown cities where we have games," he said on a recent day, using the app to pick out a not-yet rated sandwich shop in Berlin's Alexanderplatz. "We can see how to get around and what there is to do."

On the iPhone app, locations are tagged as either green, yellow or red — totally, partially and not at all accessible. Unrated locations are gray.

Stoecker rated the sandwich shop yellow. It had a curb about four inches (10 cm) high — low enough for him but prohibitive for more disabled urbanites.

While many large cities from San Diego to Vienna offer guidebooks for handicapped visitors, Anette Stein, an education researcher at the Bertelsmann Foundation think tank, and other experts said they were unaware of any other application that allowed users to add instant comment.

"I find the Wheelmap project highly exciting and can well imagine that it could spread through social networks and consequently see enormous growth," Stein said.

Beyond helping the handicapped, Krauthausen said he hopes Wheelmap will persuade more business owners to make their stores barrier-free, something Germany legally requires, but in reality is often not implemented.

"Often it's simply a matter of one or two steps preventing you from getting in. For that, there's a cheap solution," he said.

Stein said change will come if businesses see themselves losing customers or developing reputations as handicapped-unfriendly.

"Wheelmap generates a type of pressure on proprietors and establishments and will arguably cultivate an interest for them not to be shown as gray or red, but as green" Stein said.

To finance wheelmap.org, Krauthausen has relied on both private donations and a governmental stipend.

Though he welcomes the public funds, he worries the government might be trying to "buy its way out" of the problem of making handicapped Germans more independent.

"The whole reason there are organizations like ours is because the government has failed to do anything themselves," he said.

Krauthausen and Stein both pointed to a 2007 United Nations study rating Germany as one of the worst industrialized nations for handicapped accessibility.

The Labor Ministry said things are improving, and that the U.N. study has been a catalyst for improving federal initiatives to aid the disabled; the Cabinet is expected to pass an action plan, written with a focus group of handicapped Germans, in March.


View the original article here

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

German bank WestLB to 'offload' third of assets (AFP)

FRANKFURT (AFP) – The regional German bank WestLB said Wednesday that Germany's government had submitted a restructuring plan to the European Commission that included cutting a third of its assets by 2015.

These cuts come on top of a 2008 plan that already involved reducing its assets by half, the bank said.

The new proposals also included plans to ease the purchase or transfer of its assets by putting risky holdings such as bad loans in a "bad bank" to be disposed of later when conditions are more favourable.

The bank would split its activities into four parts, some of which could be taken up by savings banks while others were sold to investors, said the bank.

These steps would incur new charges, which would be passed on to shareholders and regional and federal authorities, the statement said.

It did not say how much those charges would be.

Deputy finance minister Steffen Kampeter said they had put three options to the European Commission and that it was now up to it to respond, Dow Jones Newswires reported.

The owners of WestLB -- regional savings banks and the German state of North-Rhine Westphalia -- had until Tuesday to submit with the federal government a plan to restructure the bank to the European Commission.

They were also expected to propose candidates who were ready to take it over. Media reports have identified interested buyers as the US investment funds Apollo, JC Flowers and Lone Star.

WestLB got into trouble through risky investments in the US real estate market that went sour in 2007, and has depended on state aid since then to stay in business.

The EU Commission approved the aid but demanded the bank be restructured and either made viable or sold off.

It called for more efforts from the bank in return for the 3.4 billion euros ($4.6 billion) in public aid it had obtained to set up the "bad bank" facility into which the group has already dumped 77 billion euros of toxic assets.

If Brussels is not convinced by efforts to turn WestLB around, the Commission could order that it be dismantled.

EU Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia estimated earlier this month that WestLB had received a total of about 16 billion euros in aid from German taxpayers.


View the original article here