Skip to content

Phone it Forward by donating your old smartphone to CNIB

Specially designed accessibility apps can help a person with vision loss do everything from navigate the streets more safely to read a menu or food product label
promo - Robyn Rennie pif - Feb 8 19
Artist Robyn Rennie encourages you to drop off your old smart phones so they can be turned into life-altering devices for those vision loss. Supplied photo/CNIB

NEWS RELEASE
CANADIAN NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR THE BLIND
********************
Half a million blind and partially sighted Canadians, like artist Robyn Rennie, could experience the life-changing potential of mobile technology.

From school to work to life in the community, specially designed accessibility apps would give these users unprecedented levels of information and independence.

Imagine not being able to read labels when you’re shopping, or a restaurant menu when you’re dining out, or not even being able to recognize the denomination of the bills in your wallet?

People with vision loss can now do these things with the help of smartphone accessibility apps.

Navigating the streets becomes safer with apps that read street signs and provide turn-by-turn directions.

Unfortunately, many people with vision loss cannot afford smartphones, but you can put your old smartphone into the hands of people who need them by donating it to the CNIB's Phone it Forward program and get a tax receipt, too, Rennie said.

Donating is easy. Pick up a Phone It Forward envelope, follow the instructions inside, and then mail it, free-of-charge, to the CNIB Foundation Ontario. They will refurbish your old phone, install accessibility apps, and then change the life of someone who is blind.

"It's recycling for a great cause," said Rennie.

The Phone It Forward envelope pick-up location in Newmarket is at the CNIB office at 1091 Gorham St., Suite 202. Hours are by appointment only, call  ahead (905) 898-6413. Get Directions

For more information, visit the website.

********************