Please, please, please remember to include people with speech disabilities when planning your event.
If there are timed speaking slots, is there a way that these can be adjusted for people who stutter, or who need longer to say what they want to say?
Can you ensure that people who speak sign language and need interpreters or use AAC/similar technology to communicate can fully participate?
If you have a zero-tolerance policy for bullying, harassment, and discrimination, can you add provisions for a lack of tolerance towards discrimination against those with speech disabilities?
Even just adding 'this event strives to be accessible towards those with speech disabilities, please let us know if there is anything you need' to the description of it or to information about it can make a huge difference. Ask participants about their accessibility needs, and if they tell you something that would make it easier for them, do it. No questions asked. Because as someone with a speech disability, it is terrifying walking into a room where you are the only person who speaks differently, and where your voice and the way you speak is automatically valued less than the voices of everyone else. Where you get laughed at as soon as you open your mouth. Where people talk over you, and ask inappropriate questions, and downright ignore you whenever you try to say anything. And it shouldn't be like that. We should be able to go to events and enjoy them, and have our ideas heard.
(This also applies to things like spoken assignments for school, where speech disabled people regularly get marked down for the way they speak, as well as ordering food in shops, where we get ignored or spoken over, and the plethora of other situations where society views our speech as less important than that of people without speech disabilities)
Include us. Listen to us. Our voices are just as important as yours.













