The passage of the ADA 22 years ago was a watershed moment in civil rights history, as it was the first time that the law contained protections for the civil rights of deaf and hard of hearing people and other people with disabilities.

The National Association of the Deaf was heavily involved in the passage of this critically important law that provided the right to sign language interpreters and captioning access for deaf and hard of hearing people in many areas such as employment, state and local governmental services, and public accommodations. Also under this law, no one could legally be denied a job or services simply because a person is deaf or hard of hearing.

 

"Despite 22 years of this law, discrimination and inequality remains. Yes, much work remains to achieve full equality for all, and to reach this goal, the NAD is ready to work with its members and allies to overcome all forms of discrimination and audism." said NAD Chief Executive Officer Howard A. Rosenblum.

The White House and federal agencies as well as nonprofit agencies are marking this date with ceremonies, celebrations, and hearings. The NAD Vice President, Secretary, and Staff Attorney will be present along with other advocates at the ADA Celebration at the White House on July 26th.  We will join many other advocates from the disability community at the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee  markup hearing to ratify the United Nations Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities. In addition, NAD CEO Howard A. Rosenblum will participate in the ADA Anniversary Roundtable on Disability Employment hosted by Senator Harkin. This Roundtable will include Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis, Delaware Governor Jack Markell (the new Chair of the National Governors Association), Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner, as well as other key leaders in government, the disability community, business and philanthropy.

Join us and celebrate the 22nd Anniversary of the ADA, and more importantly, become a NAD member and help us  make it possible to achieve full equality for deaf and hard of hearing people in the United States!

source: http://www.nad.org/news/2012/7/celebrating-22-years-ada

 

Anonymous Shopping: How Much Sign Interpreting Agencies Really Charge in the UK

Posted on August 13, 2012

I decided a few weeks ago that what the profession needed was a bit of mystery shopping, so I contacted all the agencies on the list via email and requested a 'signer' for a small business conducting a recruitment interview for an apprentice, one of which was deaf. We were flexible on times, but needed the 'signer' for an hour in the morning. After getting a response I sent an email back with a confused query about qualifications and registration. You can see the responses for yourselves. All discussions took place via email and I have kept the responses should anyone wish to challenge the information provided. My personal opinion is that as a general rule, interpreter led agencies come out on top.

 

AGENCY  QUOTE  NOTES

Aditus

£120 + travel + £30 admin fee

Claimed to only use fully qualified and registered interpreters

Couldn't provide anyone in house for the time requested, offered to find an alternative from their databases

Included full terms and conditions

Explained the registration process clearly.

Action on Hearing Loss

£168 + travel

Claimed all interpreters used were qualified and registered

(3 hr minimum)

Appa

RSLI – £50 per hour

Offered to help me apply to ATW to cover costs – then their fee becomes all inclusive

CSW – £45 per hour

Explained the difference between interpreter and CSW as interpreter has level 6 BSL and CSW level 3 or 4

(2 hr minimum)

Recommended we use a level 4 CSW

Offered me an interpreter for the afternoon even though I had requested the morning

Applied Language Solutions

Unknown

Emailed. No response.

Bee Communications

£250 + VAT + travel

Offered advice on interviewing a deaf person

Try to offer fully qualified (level 5) called MRSLI

Said I probably didn't need that level and could book a cheaper trainee

Later offered someone fully qualified and to lower the fee to £240 inclusive

Big Word

£50 (3 hour minimum)

Claimed that registered and qualified signers were only needed for 'official representation' such as courts, but not for job interviews

Total cost = £150 + VAT + travel time + expenses

Offered to locate an interpreter local to me so as to save on travel costs

BSL Beam

N/A

Stated straight away that they were not an agency, but explained their position in the market

Offered some reputable specialist agencies local to the area

Offered a detailed and comprehensive explanation of the NRCPD registration process

Explained the risks of using someone unqualified

Provided an explanation of Access to Work

BSL Link4Comm

£136.50 + travel

Claim to only use experienced NRCPD registered interpreters

(3 hr minimum)

Mentioned equality legislation and the impact of using unqualified people

Mentioned code of conduct

City Lit (Sign Here)

Unknown

Transparent – said they didn't have anyone available until Sept

Redirected me to the NRCPD website – told me how to book direct to save money

Gave me an indication of industry standard fees to expect and pointed me towards information on working with an interpreter

Fully explained what registration and qualification meant – only organisation to correct my use of the term 'signer' and explain the difference

Outlined the legal ramifications of using a 'signer'

Clarion

£159 + travel + VAT

Said "don't necessarily need a fully qualified interpreter but you would want minimum level 3."

(3 hr minimum)

I asked if level 3 was enough, the response was that it depends

Codex Global

Unknown

Refused to quote without full information and details

Cohearentvision

N/A

No one available – pointed me towards the London Interpreters website

Communication ID

£125 + VAT

Explained the difference between RSLI and unqualified.

Claim to only use RSLI

Mentioned ASLI and NRCPD

Deaf Agency

One off fee of £42 (first time customer)

Said "We like to keep our costs down and try to be a flexible as possible"

Usually £126 + travel + VAT

Claim all staff are registered

Deaf Direct

Unknown

Recommended booking an agency locally and offered some contact details

Mentioned NRCPD and recommended booking someone fully qualified, checking registration status and then explained why this was important

Told us we could save money by booking an interpreter directly from the NRCPD website

Explained ATW and provided a link to the website

Deaf Positives

£145 + VAT + travel

Claimed that a registered interpreter was required but not essential

Clarified what RSLI meant

Said "The other type of sign language interpreter is Registered Trainee Interpreter and they are trainees from approx level 1 to level 3."

Deaf Umbrella

£143.14 inclusive of travel and VAT

Told me that MRSLI's were more expensive

(2 hr minimum)

Said " Unless your candidate has specifically requested a fully qualified Interpreter, a lower level of sign support would be completely appropriate. "

MRSLI did not need to be booked unless client specifically requested one, but they take weeks to book in advance

They had a member of staff available to interpret

Suggested ATW as a way of covering the cost of interpreting and a member of staff could help

Diversus

£162 + VAT + travel

Pushy – kept requesting my full details and a confirmation

Sourced an interpreter before I'd even confirmed I wanted one

Essex Interpreting

£120 + travel + VAT

Claim to use only registered interpreters. Mostly qualified, some JTI

Femaura

Unknown

Said "Level 6 is full qualified"

Only really wanted to talk over the phone

Interpreting Matters

£170 + VAT

Claim to only use registered interpreters

Full explanation of NRCPD registration process

Price dependent on interpreter fee

Explained ATW

Explained the ramifications of using unqualified people

Islington Council

N/A

Explained that they only cover council bookings in Islington

Recommended booking a registered interpreter

Mentioned ASLI

Offered a guide for industry standard freelance fees

Just Communication

£210 + VAT

Claim to "only use qualified registered interpreters"

K-International

Unknown

Emailed twice. No response.

Language Empire

£175 + travel + VAT

Said "Interpreters with a Level 4 is the minimum qualification we use..."

(3 hr minimum charge)

Fees are for 'Special Disability Interpreting' – Charges are the same for CSW's and Interpreters, 'Finger Spelling', 'Deaf Blind Manual' & 'Deaf Blind Hands On' & 'Lipreaders'

Language is Everything

Wouldn't state their charges

Claim to use qualified & registered interpreters

Stated interpreter industry standard charges as:

Clear about the legal ramifications of using someone unqualified – Mentioned DDA

£90-£130 + travel

Referred me to ASLI

Language Line

N/A

Outsource all bookings to Clarion

Lexicon Sign Stream

Unknown

Explained the qualification and registration process in detail

Explained minimum charges and industry standard fees

Offered to source a local interpreter

Merrill Corporation

£260 + VAT + travel

Claim to only use qualified and registered interpreters

Mentioned NRCPD and safeguarding and standards

Provided an attachment outlining the roles of BSL interpreters, STTR & Lipspeakers (NRCPD registered) – all comprehensive and accurate

MLIS

Unknown

Claim to only use qualified translators and never trainees

Very non committal until had all of my details

Neal Communication (NCA)

£150 + travel + VAT

Asked about qualification levels but preferred to speak over the phone so no clear response

(3 hr minimum)

Newham Language Shop

£120 + VAT

Claim to only use qualified interpreters and do not ever use unqualified interpreters

Offered to email some advice on how to work with a "signer"

Onestop Agency

£50 per hr, 3 hr min + travel

Claim to only use fully qualified interpreters or trainee interpreters

Total £150 + travel

Recommend not using level 3 NVQ signers and only use those on the register

Say their charges are based on interpreter 3 hour minimum charges

Offered a brief explanation of using a BSL interpreter

Pearl Linguistics

£70 per hour

Claim "we have access to more BSL interpreters than any other language agency"

(3 hr minimum)

Fully explained the difference between a level 3 signer and what it means to be fully qualified and registered

Total £210 + travel + VAT

Said "As to your situation, I believe you should be fine with a "level 3".

Positive Signs

Initially free – money accessed through government scheme

Claimed to only ever use qualified or experienced personnel

Later avoided disclosing their charges, just said "variable"

Free' interpreters available through apprenticeship scheme, funded using public funds

Prestige

£289 + VAT

Said all their interpreters were BRCPD registered (could have been a typo) and explained that all people registered had to submit evidence of qualifications

Mentioned the code of conduct that interpreters were expected to follow

Mentioned the three hour industry standard minimum fee and their charges reflected that

Quick Lingo

£250 + VAT

When quote was challenged, the response was "we charge for the service which includes travel time, travel expenses, plus minimum interpreting time charge."

Said "Level 3 is sufficient for this assignment and we can provide at least that."

RAD

Unknown

Emailed twice. No response.

Remark!

£120 + £10 travel + VAT

Very pushy, tried to sell me a BSL course

Offered a RSLI

Said "Costings for a qualified interpreter can be very expensive as there are not many qualified interpreters out there "

Sold themselves as deaf led and community focused. Profits fund activities in the deaf community.

Said they could only find an interpreter (in house) for the afternoon and no interpreters were available for the morning; did not offer to source a freelancer

I had requested a morning booking. Said short notice meant no other interpreters were available unless I wanted to change the date

Rosetta Translation

£75 per hour

No response when I enquired about qualifications

(3 hr minimum)

Half Day £300. + travel + VAT

Sign Language Direct

£250 + VAT (3 hr minimum)

Said "Since this regards an interview, the 3rd level shall be fine." – in response to my query about qualifications

Half Day  £300 / Full Day £450 (1 interpreter)

Said that fully qualified interpreters were only 'obligitory' for police and social services

Half Day £600 / Full Day £900 (2 interpreters)

Sign Solutions

£145 + travel + VAT

Checked interpreter availability and quoted based on the interpreter fee – told me where the interpreter was travelling from

Offered to negotiate travel expenses

Signing Works

£135 + VAT + expenses

Explained industry standard booking half day or full day

Bristol based – offered a comparative fee.

Claim to only use qualified interpreters for job interviews

Advised about ATW

Explained the complexity of BSL levels and why it was specialist and required some who  was qualified

Signs In Vision

£35 per hr + travel + £15 admin fee

Mentioned NRCPD & ASLI & recommended checking for badges

(3 hr minimum)

Explained the NRCPD registration included CRB, insurance and qualification

Total £120 + travel

Included a Deaf Awareness document

Included T&C with explanation of NRCPD & ASLI at the top

Silent Sounds

£144 + travel

Recommended a Trainee Interpreter for the interview

Highlighted the time involved with training

SL-I-D

£120 including travel

Mentioned ATW and reclaiming costs

(Half day minimum)

NRCPD registered

Explained the ramifications of using someone unqualified

SLBF

Unknown

Emailed twice. No response.

Surrey Council

£150 + travel + VAT

Claims to only use registered interpreters

(First Point)

(3 hr minimum)

Terp Tree

£170 + travel + VAT

Explained industry 3 hour minimums

(3 hr minimum)

Claim to only use qualified and registered interpreters

Follow up email sent with client recommendations

(Will waive fee if unhappy with service)

Mentioned ATW

The Sign Language Bank

Unknown

Emailed twice. No response.

Today Translations

Said it can be fine for some signers to "freely pass on the meaning of spoken langauge" but as a general rule they won't risk it.

Added that "Job interviews are stressful for everyone. If you add hearing problems on top of that...you can imagine how wrong it can go!"

Said "Most of sign interpreters grew up in a household were one or both of the parents were deaf"

Explained that becoming a sign langauge interpreter requires study and practise

Total Communication

£200 including VAT and travel

Told me the interpreter quote was for fully qualified. After I asked about level, I was told that they were "Level 6 , Trainee Interpreter.  So it is above Level 3″

Ubiquis

£300 + VAT + travel

Claimed to only use fully qualified and experienced interpreters

Offered information about qualifications and registration

Stated that unqualified interpreters would charge less

Offered a local alternative to their company

UK Language Solutions

£60 per hour + £30 per hour travel

Said "A level 3 qualified interpreter may be acceptable for some interpreting assignments"

(2 hr minimum)

But claim to only use qualified and registered interpreters

Veritas Language Solutions

£164.60 + £32 VAT

Aimed to source an interpreter close to the booking to save on travel

Said the interpreter had a two hour minimum charge, but would not state whether they were qualified even though I specifically asked

Wolfestone

£75 + VAT

Requested information about qualifications but received no response

Additional hours £50 per hour

 

 

This entry was posted in ... BSL, deaf, deaf access, interpreting, sign language and tagged agencies, BSL, Deaf, Interpreter, mystery shopping by interpreteranon.

7 thoughts on "Anonymous Shopping: How Much Interpreting Agencies Really Charge"

1. Sally Paull on August 13, 2012 at 23:03 said: 

oh yes ......so the anonymous mystery shopper called "Emma Biel" playing ignorant... trying to put words over to us in an e mail ( there was no phone conversation ) such as ... another agency offered to do the booking for £500.00 I must be in the wrong job she said .....yeah right...not very professional and certainly not too clever, whats wrong with the list as it is ? lets see who is brave enough to do a mystery shop around amongst freelancers varying prices for what they are really worth.... why do interpreters feel they need to do a mystery shop on agencies is beyond my thinking. This list looks fairly okay to me, I can live with it. at least some of us can ensure Deaf people are being matched up with the best terps and getting a quality service at the same time perhaps terps have too much " time on their hands" to do mystery shops geddit ?

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◦ Steve Savery on August 14, 2012 at 07:31 said: 

Personally, I think 'mystery shoppers' are a great idea for all industries and I found this very interesting. Not so much the price, as you appear to have focussed upon, but the varying degree of professionalism and ability to understand the client requirements. I have paid more, in other industries to this, just because others were either slow at communicating or failed to understand the requirements properly.

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3. Jules Dickinson on August 14, 2012 at 06:30 said: 

Leaving aside the way in which the mystery shopping exercise was conducted (and it is a real pity if the tactics described were in fact used) I find it incredibly depressing that the message from a number of companies is 'level 3 is sufficient'. It is indicative of the increasing erosion of standards in the profession, particularly in the 'Access to Work' field. It is sad that 'interpreting agencies' are happy to collude with this process and I struggle to understand their justification in allowing people with no interpreter training to work in this field. Shame on all of them.

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4. Paul Neal on August 14, 2012 at 09:14 said: 

I agree that mystery shopping is a good way to identify standards of quality. I'm for it. Can this "Emma Biel" (as named in Sally's response) contact me via NCA to give me further feedback on how we did? We'd like to know if there's anything we can work on, improve upon. The information given above is limited of course, hence this request!

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5. positivesignslondon.com deafapprentice.com on August 14, 2012 at 10:55 said: 

Hi Paul Going on from there .. I would be happy to forward you e mails from / to "Emma Biel" so that you can see how vague and amateur the original request was – I knew it was a mystery shopper immediately since the e mail had clues, though I thought it might be linked to our Inclusive Apprenticeships campaign – see http://www.deafapprentice.com and so we played their game too ! Its high time for agencies to support each other, even if terps dont like us 

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◦ interpreteranon on August 14, 2012 at 11:25 said: 

Hi Sally,
The important points of this exercise are to show that agencies are using level 3′s for important assignments such as interviews and disregarding the registration system to increase their profit.
The exercise also shows how many agencies are charging a horrific amount for providing an interpreter at an interview and it is the interpreters that get labelled as expensive.
I am sorry if you feel interpreters do not like agencies. It is not quite as simple as that. There may always be a need for agencies unless other solutions are found.
What interpreters witness and do not like is agencies who spread misinformation, disregard registration and the standards that Deaf people and interpreters have fought for years and the charges that occur for what is often a brief service.
The agencies that came out best were often the interpreter, and some Deaf, led agencies. Any agency providing a good service to the Deaf community by using registered interpreters, who keep their costs down and who inform their referrers of registration categories has nothing to worry about from a mystery shopper's survey.
It's about time this industry was transparent and accountable to the Deaf community.
Jennifer Smith
Owner of blog

◦ source: http://interpreteranon.wordpress.com/2012/08/13/anonymous-shopping-how-much-interpreting-agencies-really-charge/