By Tom Tunny, President, Hamilton Lions Club
The Hamilton Lions Club recognizes Monday, October 15 at “White Cane Day.”
Throughout the world, the long white cane is used by people who are blind or visually impaired as a tool for safe and reliable navigation. The white cane is a symbol of the user’s skills and talents, mobility and independence. It also allows the sighted person to recognize that the user is visually impaired. The white cane was initially developed and put into use as a measure of safety, especially in traffic situations. Sufficient training with an Orientation and Mobility specialist can aid in successful cane use, technique and safety. Several countries have traffic laws designed to protect the person using the white cane. Sometimes the white cane has a red band or strip for the purpose of contrast.
International White Cane Safety Day (October 15th) gives our citizens an opportunity to increase awareness of the white cane traffic safety laws. According to the World Blind Union, which is a global organization representing the 285 million blind or partially sighted people worldwide, “White Cane Day is observed worldwide to recognize the movement of blind people from dependency to full participation in society.”
For more information on the work of your local Lions Club, please contact me at 406-381-7819.