I am upset. Last night I tried to watch the Democratic Presidential Debates on CNN.com via their new “Live Video from CNN.com” feed and it was not captioned. CNN.com cannot claim ignorance; they are familiar with the technical requirements. They’ve been dragging their feet on this issue for too long and now I have been cheated out of the opportunity to follow a critical part of the U.S. presidential campaign.

It’s my turn to ask the candidates a question:

What changes will you make to ensure that companies like CNN.com can no longer deny access to deaf and hard of hearing Americans – which coldly leaves deaf and hard of hearing people in the dark?

All of the candidates including the leading democratic candidates, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John Edwards can also show their commitment to civil rights by refusing to participate in any live web streaming debates or web video appearances unless the corporation captions them. They have taken the initiative to have their own web videos captioned, and I applaud them for that. CNN.com has more resources and funds than the presidential candidates. Their only excuse is to hide behind the law. As a result, CNN.com has consistently refused to provide web video captioning for years.

This isn’t the first time I’ve been concerned about this issue. I’ve sent CNN emails since 1999 asking them to caption their web videos only to receive automated replies similar to the following:

Thank you for the e-mail you sent CNN.com about our Free Video service! This auto reply is your notification that we have received it.

Your inquiry will be reviewed in the order it was received. In the interim, please visit our “Frequently Asked Questions” page at http://www.cnn.com/help/video for possible resolution to your issue. Technical questions submitted through this area will receive a response. Other feedback will be included in the response report that is prepared and made available each day to our producers and senior management.

Again, thank you for contacting us, and please visit the attached links for more information on our anchors, programs and schedules:

(And the email goes on and on touting CNN.com’s features)

I’m fed up with CNN.com. For people like me, CNN.com has been my primary source of news in the last few years — often providing valuable information that impacts the quality my life — even more so now that I don’t have cable TV.

If there’s one thing that deaf and hard of hearing adults can find common ground on, it’s the lack of captioning via vital news websites like CNN.com. We need to step up now and take CNN.com to task for lack of captioning, especially during a live national presidential debate. It’s time to flood them with complaints, demanding a response.

Please send a brief email to the following people and urge them to caption all of their web videos and live video feeds:

Richard D. Parsons
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Time Warner
(CNN is a subsidiary of Time Warner)
richard.d.parsons@timewarner.com

CNN.com Product complaint form (select “video”)
http://www.cnn.com/feedback/forms/form9d.html

And contact the following Democratic presidential candidates informing them that you were unable to follow their debate via the Internet and you expect them to address this issue in their campaign and in future web videos:
http://www.hillaryclinton.com/help/contact/
http://my.barackobama.com/page/s/contact2
http://johnedwards.com/about/contact/form/

You can also contact the Republican Presidential candidates asking them to demand that CNN.com caption the live video feed during the upcoming Republican Presidential Debate.
http://www.johnmccain.com/Contact/
webteam@joinrudy2008.com
https://www.mittromney.com/CommentForm
http://www.imwithfred.com/contact.aspx

Here’s a sample email:

Dear Mr. Parsons,

As a deaf person, I was unable to watch the CNN.com Democratic Presidential Debate through the “Live Video from CNN.com” due to the lack of captioning. As a proud American, I could not participate in an important discourse on national issues that could have helped me determine which candidate I want to vote for during the Democratic primaries and the 2008 election. I urge you to immediately require that all videos from your subsidiary, CNN.com, be captioned.

Please issue a response to the entire deaf and hard of hearing community on this matter.

Sincerely yours,

(YOUR NAME HERE)


© Copyrighted material. This article cannot be copied, reproduced or redistributed without the express written consent of the author. As with every blog on this website, this blog does not reflect the opinion of DeafDC.com.