Got a call this week from a regional newspaper about a report highlighting that several police stations in their area - which were open to the public - were effectively off limits to disabled people because of poor access.
Some disabled "mystery shoppers" visited the stations and found a myriad of barriers including no accessible parking, enquiry desks that were too high for wheelchair users - which meant their head barely reached above the counter - and no accessible toilet in the public waiting area.
It's bizarre that in twenty-first century Britain and more than five years after legislation on access to public goods and services came into force, these anachronisms persist and disabled people are still coming up against the same old barriers.
Whether it's public buildings or transport, when it comes to access there is a real gulf between disabled people's experiences and those of everyone else. Getting from A to B easily is often a real obstacle course.
For those of us who are not disabled, I imagine the experience is a little bit like the part in Alice in Wonderland when Alice suddenly grows and later shrinks and nothing in her world is at the right level or size - only much, much more frustrating.
We're social, follow us!