South African Sign Language (SASL) has been the 12th official language in South Africa since 2023. Now, one company claims it’s the first to bring it into the workplace. Where in the world? On International Day of Persons with Disabilities (Dec. 3), Vodacom, a South Africa-based telecoms company, announced a new partnership with the National Institute for the Deaf to make the company more accessible. The company claims the initiative is the first in the country to embed SASL throughout the business. Beginning in January, workers will have access to a visual SASL dictionary in the employee app and a 12-module SASL course. Approximately 600,000 people in South Africa use sign language, according to a 2021 page from the National Council of and for Persons with Disabilities, but many are unemployed, in part, because of structural barriers: Job interviews are frequently inaccessible and recruiters often don’t have proper training to accommodate disabled job applicants in South Africa, according to TechNation News. Satellite view. Deaf workers in the US can face similar barriers, according to Cal Matters. The Americans with Disabilities Act requires reasonable accommodations. For more on sign language training in workplaces around the world, keep reading here.—KP |