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Denisegilmore
Registered user
Username: Denisegilmore

Post Number: 102
Registered: 10-2000
Posted on Thursday, October 21, 2004 - 8:15 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

http://www.raggededgemagazine.com/1100/1100votestory.htm

http://www.raggededgemagazine.com/drn/drn_votenews04.html
Denisegilmore
Registered user
Username: Denisegilmore

Post Number: 106
Registered: 10-2000
Posted on Friday, October 22, 2004 - 12:40 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

"EEOC Fact Sheet re People with Intellectual Disabilities" (like me: dg)

A Press Release from The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission, http://www.eeoc.gov:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 20, 2004

NEW EEOC FACT SHEET ADDRESSES EMPLOYMENT RIGHTS OF PEOPLE
WITH INTELLECTUAL DISABILITIES

Dispelling Myths and Fears Can Promote Employment
Opportunities

WASHINGTON - In observance of National Disability
Employment Awareness Month, the U.S. Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC) today released a fact sheet
on the application of the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA) to persons with intellectual disabilities in the
workplace. The new publication is available at
www.eeoc.gov.

The term "intellectual disability" describes the condition
once commonly referred to as "mental retardation."
Approximately one percent of the United States' population,
an estimated 2.5 million people, have an intellectual
disability. Estimates indicate that only 31 percent of
individuals with intellectual disabilities are employed,
although many more want to work.

"More often than not, individuals with intellectual
disabilities face barriers in the workplace posed not by
mental impairments but by other people's attitudes," said
Commission Chair Cari M. Dominguez. "With this fact sheet,
the EEOC aims to break down myths, fears and misperceptions
that stand in the way of employment opportunities and
sometimes even lead to harassment on the job. People with
intellectual disabilities want to work and have a lot to
contribute. Employers who are not tapping into this
community are missing out."

The new fact sheet addresses such topics as:

* when an intellectual impairment is covered by the ADA;

* when an employer may ask an applicant or employee
questions about his or her intellectual disability;

* what types of reasonable accommodations employees with
intellectual disabilities may need on the job;

* how to address safety concerns and conduct issues in
the workplace; and

* how an employer can prevent harassment of employees
with intellectual disabilities.

This fact sheet helps to advance the goals of the New
Freedom Initiative President George W. Bush's comprehensive
strategy for the full integration of people with
disabilities into all aspects of American life. The New
Freedom Initiative seeks to promote greater access to
technology, education, employment opportunities, and
community life for people with disabilities. An important
part of the New Freedom Initiative's strategy for
increasing employment opportunities involves providing
employers with technical assistance on the ADA. Information
about other EEOC-driven activities under this program also
is available on the agency's web site.

In addition to enforcing Title I of the ADA, which
prohibits employment discrimination against people with
disabilities in the private sector and state and local
governments, and the Rehabilitation Act's prohibitions
against disability discrimination in the federal
government, EEOC enforces Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
of 1964, which prohibits employment discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, and national origin; the Age
Discrimination in Employment Act, which prohibits
discrimination against individuals 40 years of age or
older; the Equal Pay Act; and sections of the Civil Rights
Act of 1991.

Contact: Jennifer Kaplan, (202) 663-7084
David Grinberg, (202) 663-4921
(202) 663-4494 (TTY)

# # #

=====================

JOIN AAPD! There's strength in numbers! Be a part of a
national coalition of people with disabilities and join
AAPD today. http://www.aapd-dc.org

Denisegilmore
Registered user
Username: Denisegilmore

Post Number: 107
Registered: 10-2000
Posted on Friday, October 22, 2004 - 12:49 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Here's part of our plight:
------------------------------
"Chicago Tribune Coverage of Disability Vote"

From the Chicago Tribune, http://www.chicagotribune.com/:

Voting initiative targets disabled

By Trine Tsouderos
Tribune staff reporter

October 20, 2004

Determined to vote in the primary elections earlier this
year, Darrell Price said he had to climb out of his
wheelchair and crawl down a flight of steps to his polling
place in a residential building on the Near South Side.

Price eventually had to tip a regular voting booth down
toward him, an awkward move that leaves him still wondering
whether he voted for the right people.

"It was condescending. It was humiliating," said Price, 37,
who has cerebral palsy. "All I want to do is vote. I
shouldn't have to go through all of this just to vote."

With another election looming, advocates say such daunting
experiences may become rarer and voters like Price more
plentiful if a national campaign aimed at dramatically
increasing voting by the disabled is successful.

Across the U.S., organizations offering services to the
disabled are registering new voters, arranging candidates
forums and working to make polling places accessible--all
in the hope of transforming a sizable though largely
invisible voting bloc into one that can't be ignored.

"In the future, you will hear candidates playing as much to
disabled voters as they do to women and soccer moms," said
Ann Ford, executive director of the Illinois Network of
Centers for Independent Living, who is spearheading the
effort in Illinois. "It seems the only way we will impact
people who make those decisions is to have them a little
bit afraid of us on Election Day."

The potential clout of the disabled is readily apparent in
the 2000 census, which showed that 20 percent of the U.S.
population is disabled.

"If you look at those numbers, we could change elections!"
said Karen Tamley, program director of Access Living, a
Chicago-based service organization. "We represent huge
portions of the population, but the turnout is less than
other groups, like seniors and rganized labor."

The goal for a loose coalition of 25 organizations working
on the issue in Illinois is to get 10,000 new disabled
voters to the polls Nov. 2, Ford said.

"And this is just for openers," she said.

The national objective is to increase Election Day turnout
by 1 million new disabled voters, said Jim Dickson, vice
president of governmental affairs for the Washington-based
American Association of People with Disabilities, which is
coordinating the effort.

"We are trying to develop the nation's largest voting
bloc," Dickson said.

In Chicago, Access Living contacted 3,000 disabled and
unregistered voters, sending them the materials to do so.
Focused on getting out the vote, the organization held a
rally Tuesday.

Chicago-based Equip for Equality, a non-profit group that
offers services to the disabled in Illinois, has trained
new election judges in accessibility issues in Cook County.

Elsewhere, the DuPage Center for Independent Living in Glen
Ellyn registered voters and plans to host a candidates
forum on disability issues Wednesday. Downstate, the
Springfield Center for Independent Living is working with
election boards to make polling places more accessible. The
group is also helping disabled voters understand the
process of absentee voting.

"Nationally ... the disability community is just starting a
push in a really concentrated way," Tamley said.

And advocates say there is plenty of room for improvement.
The disabled are at least 15 percent less likely to vote,
according to a study conducted in 1999 for the Bureau of
Economic Research and other organizations.

In 2000 an estimated 42 percent of eligible disabled voters
cast ballots in Illinois, compared with 52.8 percent of all
eligible voters, studies show. One of the biggest problems,
experts say, is that polling places tend to be difficult,
even impossible places to navigate for voters in
wheelchairs or for the blind, the deaf and those with other
disabilities.

"Even today, 14 years after our wonderful Americans with
Disabilities Act, there still are many polling places that
are not accessible," Ford said.

And some that are, aren't so easy to navigate that a vote
can be cast with relative ease, she said.

Federal and Illinois laws require polling places to be
accessible to the disabled except in emergencies or if a
suitable building isn't available.

Despite the law, many polling places still present tough
challenges for the disabled, critics say.

For Ray Campbell, a coordinator at the DuPage Center for
Independent Living, a visual impairment means never being
able to vote privately. Election judges are assigned to
read aloud the names of candidates and mark off the choices
for the blind.

"Nobody else has to do that," Campbell said. "I have voted
for almost 21 years and I am a little sick and tired of
telling somebody how I want to vote."

A 2001 Government Accountability Office survey of more than
500 U.S. polling places during the 2000 general election
found that 16 percent were free of impediments to the
disabled.

Over half had barriers but offered disabled voters the
option of casting ballots in their cars. Nearly 30 percent
of the polling places had impediments but didn't provide
that option.

"Isn't that inexcusable?" Ford said. "To think that we
allow that to happen to anybody in our society today? If
any other minority group were treated like that, imagine
what would happen. The outcry would be deafening."

Some money is being spent to improve accessibility to
polling places. Illinois has received about $2.4 million in
federal funds for such purposes through the Help America
Vote Act of 2002. Cook County received almost $500,000 in
disability access grants and is surveying all 2,400
precincts to try to find ways to improve.

"To us, it just absolutely has to happen. I literally pound
people about voting, I put them on a real guilt trip," Ford
said. "If they can't get in, they are going to get
discouraged and they are just going to go home."

Of all minority groups, the disabled are among the most
victimized, Ford said.

"I think we have come to realize of all the groups, the one
that is farthest left behind is people with disabilities,"
she said. "We will not have a voice until we are players in
the political process."

Copyright ) 2004, Chicago Tribune

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chicago/chi-0410200335oct20,1,5478502.story

Take a look at justice@jfanow.org or www.aapd-dc.org




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