The Reserve Bank is changing our bank notes thanks to one teenage boy.
A 13-year-old blind boy who started asking the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to print tactile banknotes more than a year ago has seen his campaign pay off.
Connor McLeod’s idea was sparked when he was given money for Christmas, but could not tell the amount he had.
“I received some notes at Christmas time and I kept having to ask Mum what they had given me,” said Connor, who has been blind since birth due to a congenital disorder.
“I didn’t touch notes because it was really annoying and embarrassing that I couldn’t differentiate between them, but I could differentiate coins so I used to go around with only coins in my wallet getting stuff from the canteen with them.
“And then it just sort of hit me that my life isn’t going to be all coins, so I thought I’d better make things a little easier, and easier for others as well.”
Related: A 9 y/o boy who is going blind reminds us how beautiful the world can be.
The young New South Wales teenager – who has represented his school at state level athletics, rides a push bike, abseils, rock climbs, swims, and plays the drums and keyboard – started a petition to allow vision-impaired people to be able to tell the difference between denominations.
The Human Rights Commission and Vision Australia supported his campaign, and 57,000 people signed the petition.
The campaign culminated with a meeting last November with the RBA, where Connor lobbied the main decision makers for change.
Top Comments
Not to detract at all from his efforts, which I think are very courageous and awesome for a young person, but I thought the windows being a different shape on each denomination was to help visually impaired people to distinguish the notes? I was a bank teller when the polymer notes were introduced, and this was one of the features, being that the window has a completely different feel, that the notes from the Reserve Bank highlighted. I feel that millions of taxpayer dollars are being spent on something that is already there.
Great to hear - what wonderful initiative and follow through from Connor - a great lesson for all of us. His family must be so proud. Whether or not the Reserve Bank should have thought of this earlier is a bit pointless now, so good on the Bank for acting on it now.