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PRIVACY

Woman told to remove hearing aid at concert for 'interfering with the sound'

Susan Davies, 80, says she was "humiliated" after she was told to take out the devices in the middle of a concert at Aberystwyth Arts Centre in Wales

Susan Davies(Susan Davies/SWNS)

A woman told to remove her hearing aids at an arts centre for "interfering with the acoustics" has won a £4k payout.

Susan Davies, 80, says she was "humiliated" after she was told to take out the devices in the middle of a concert. Susan, of Aberystwyth, Wales, was attending the town's AberMusicFest when she and other audience members were told to "take off or turn down" their hearing aids.

Staff at Aberystwyth Arts Centre claimed the devices were "interfering" with the concert hall's acoustics. But Ms Davies says various sound engineers have since told her this was "nonsense". During one show, an employee approached Ms Davies' row and said: "Can you turn your hearing aid down it's interfering with the acoustics."

During another, a male audience member stood up and shouted: "Turn your hearing aids off!" And during a third Susan said a staff member stood at the front of the audience and reiterated the same command before "sniggering and bursting out laughing".

Ms Davies said the incidents were "humiliating", "upsetting" and "distressing" - and have left her unable to return to the Arts Centre, which she once "loved". She wrote to the University of Aberystwyth, which runs the centre, to complain but says their responses were "so disappointing".

The pensioner then decided to submit a disability discrimination claim, and in March received a £4,000 out-of-court settlement from the University. She has donated the sum to the Royal National Institute for Deaf People. Ms Davies said: "It was a humiliating, upsetting, and distressing experience.

"It also made me very angry that in this day and age when we're meant to be aware of people with disabilities that we're still treated in this way. On the first occasion, an employee walked up the aisle to my row during the concert and called across to say: 'would you turn your hearing aid down, you're causing acoustic interference'.

"On the second, a gentleman in the audience stood up and shouted: 'Turn your hearing aids off!' At this point, another gentleman in the audience who like me was wearing hearing aids replied: 'How do you expect us to hear if we haven't got our hearing aids on?' And then during a third show, a senior member of staff stood at the front of the audience and told us to turn off our hearing aids before she sniggered and burst out laughing.