Hi
RBI has assured they will be engaging us everytime there is a change of design 
of currency notes. They have been clearly told not to make any change in 
dimention of the existing notes. I have checked that in the new plastic notes 
which is going to be a pilot, The design is not changed and only the material 
will be changed.
With respect to coins, it falls in the jurisdiction of MOF and for that we may 
need to use court intervention to bring in standardisation.
Harish Kotian



-----Original Message-----
From: AccessIndia [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
avinash shahi
Sent: 20 March 2014 16:08
To: disability-studies-india
Cc: jnuvision; accessindia; sayeverything
Subject: [AI] The trouble blind people have with £1 coins

Does anybody know What RBI and Finance Ministry are doing to make
Indian Notes identifiable by blind?
Someone should take it up with RBI and finance Ministry and if need
arises, Courts...
http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-magazine-monitor-26637515
19 March 2014 Last updated at 11:44


A new 12-sided British pound coin is to replace the round one after 30 years.
With very different edges to other coins, it'll make it easier to
identify if you're blind, writes Ouch's Damon Rose.

I must be one of the most trusting souls in the UK. When I buy a pint,
a packet of mints or anything really, I am often to be seen holding up
a note and asking the seller: "Is this a fiver or a tenner?" Being
blind it's hard to distinguish which note is which.

They're a little different in size but if you really want to know what
paper money you're holding, blind people will either use a keyring
note measuring gauge or a little electronic device that vibrates once
if it's a £5, twice if it's a £10, three times if it's £20 and so on.
Phone apps also exist. But it's a faff.

Coins are much easier to distinguish by touch because, unlike notes,
they don't bend or get soggy with age. Fifty pence pieces are a
particularly feelable delight, closely followed by 20 pence pieces
which can feel a bit like the other round coins in your pocket because
you always find yourself sorting money at speed at point of purchase.


Presently, the big, chunky £2 pound coins are the most
distinguishable. The milling on the edge of a £1 coin for some reason
can get rubbed away so you have to bear this in mind. I've found
myself trying to buy a coffee with a couple of two pence pieces and
being told quizzically: "The coffee is two pounds, not 4p," by a
barista who thought I was trying to con him.

But a unique, hefty 12-sided coin is an accessibility masterstroke -
it won't be mistaken for either a 50 or 20 pence piece. The Royal Mint
consults with interested parties such as Age Concern and the RNIB when
designing new currency.

I'm hoping the new plastic notes, due out in 2016, are either robust
enough to judge without a gauge or will have Braille. Current notes
aren't suitable as the dots get squashed.


--
Avinash Shahi
M.Phil Research Scholar
Centre for The Study of Law and Governance
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi India



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