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Disabled Workers

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Disabled Workers. Lena Killingsworth. Elena Crocker. Michelle Mapes. Bethany Ireton. Lisa Mercado ... 1500's Poor Law required English counties to levy taxes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Disabled Workers


1
Disabled Workers
  • Lena Killingsworth
  • Elena Crocker
  • Michelle Mapes
  • Bethany Ireton
  • Lisa Mercado

2
History of Disabled Employees
3
History of Disabled Employees
  • 1500s Poor Law required English counties to levy
    taxes to care for disabled, orphans, widows, etc.
  • 1834 English law made Bastilles intentionally
    undesirable to save money.
  • Early Americans had a similar model with town
    poorhouses providing meager clothing, food,
    shelter, and medical care.

4
History of Disabled Employees
  • By 1880 most states had programs for people with
    specific disabilities, mostly institutions.
  • At the end of WWI, veterans disabled by war
    returned home began what is now known as the
    Federal-state vocational rehabilitation program.
  • In the 1940s state services for the blind were
    separated from this program

5
History of Disabled Employees
  • Late 60s and early 70s- laws were passed to
    allow access to buildings and public
    transportation
  • Late 70s and 80s - shift in social norms from
    large state institutions toward family
  • Late 80s to present Increased integration in
    education and workplace
  • Healthy People 2010- goal to reduce the number of
    people under 21 living in institutions to 0 by
    the year 2010

6
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
  • Requires integration with able-bodied peers as
    much as possible
  • Provides guidelines for alternative education
    placement

7
Federal Laws
  • Rehabilitation Act of 1973 including Sections 501
    and 505
  • Prohibits discrimination against qualified
    individuals with disabilities who work in the
    federal government

8
Federal Laws
  • Americans with Disabilities of 1990
  • Prohibits discrimination due to a disability in
    employment for any type of job.

9
Federal Laws
  • Civil Rights Act of 1991
  • Provides monetary damages in cases of intentional
    employment discrimination

Among disability organizations, American Disabled
for Attendant Programs Today is one of the few to
use civil-rights style street protests.
10
Federal Laws
  • Architectural Barriers Act
  • All buildings and facilities that have been
    constructed or altered in any way with federal
    funds must comply with federal standards for
    physical accessibility
  • Washington State Law against Discrimination
  • Prohibits discrimination on the basis of
    physical, mental, or sensory disability, and it
    also prohibits an employer from retaliating
    against an employee.

11
The Americans with Disabilities Actsigned July
26th 1990
12
The ADA says... 
  • "No covered entity shall discriminate against a
    qualified individual with a disability because of
    the disability of such individual in regard to
    job application procedures the hiring,
    advancement, or discharge of employees employee
    compensation job training and other terms,
    conditions, and privileges of employment."

13
Some Key Definitions (Provided by the Department
of Labor)
  • Disability
  • A physical or mental impairment that
    substantially limits one or more of the major
    life activities.
  • A record of such an impairment
  • Being regarded as having such an impairment even
    when no limitations exist.

14
  • Qualified individual with a disability
  • An individual with a disability who, with or
    without reasonable accommodation, can perform the
    essential functions of the employment position
    that such individual holds or desires.

15
  • Reasonable accommodation
  • Making existing facilities used by employees
    readily accessible to and usable by individuals
    with disabilities
  • Job restructuring
  • part-time or modified work schedules
  • reassignment to a vacant position
  • Acquisition or modification of equipment or
    devices
  • Appropriate adjustments or modifications of
    examinations, training materials or policies

16
  • Undue hardship
  • An action or accommodation that is excessively
    costly, extensive, substantial or disruptive, or
    would fundamentally alter the nature or operation
    of the business.
  • In general, a larger business will be expected to
    make accommodations requiring greater effort than
    a smaller business.

17
Americans with Disabilities Act
  • ADA Title I and V of 1990 Employment
  • Employees in the private sector and state and
    local governments must provide qualified disabled
    individuals the same opportunities as an
    able-bodied individual.
  • Employers are required to make appropriate
    accommodations, if necessary, unless the new
    accommodations cause undue hardship for the
    employer.

18
Americans with Disabilities Act
  • ADA Title II Public Transportation
  • Public transportation cannot discriminate against
    people with disabilities, regardless of the
    disability.
  • ADA Title IV Telecommunications Relay Services
  • Addresses telephone and television access for
    people with hearing and speech disabilities

19
Information About Laws
  • The same laws that prohibit discrimination due to
    a disability, also prohibit harassment on the
    basis of the characteristics of a disabled person
  • Businesses with only 1-3 employees are not
    affected by the afore-mentioned
    anti-discrimination laws, with the exception of
    the federal Equal Pay Act, which applies to every
    employer.
  • There may also be state laws- most of these apply
    to employers with five or more employees.

20
Facts about the ADA
  • In one study 49 of employers lack money for
    accommodation
  • In another study 28 of employers made
    accommodations prior to the ADA whereas 33 made
    the accommodations after ADA.
  • Estimated 30 of disabled workers hired before
    ADA and after ADA

21
Myths about the Americans with Disabilities
Act(Provided by the Department of Justice)
  • The ADA is rigid and requires businesses to spend
    lots of money to make their existing facilities
    accessible.
  • The ADA forces businesses and the government to
    spend lots of money hiring unqualified people.
  • Accommodating workers with disabilities costs too
    much.
  • The government is no help when it comes to paying
    for accessibility.

22
Myths about the ADAcontinued
  • Restaurants must provide menus in Braille.
  • Sign language interpreters are required
    everywhere.
  • The ADA protects people who are overweight.
  • The ADA is being misused by people with bad
    backs and emotional problems

23
  • The challenges disabled people face at work
  • What organizations can do to accommodate them.

24
The four general classifications of accommodations
  • Communication
  • Scheduling
  • Job description
  • Physical accommodations

25
Barriers to employment
  • Lack of related experience
  • Lack of required skills/training
  • Supervisor knowledge of accommodation
  • Attitudes/stereotypes
  • Cost of accommodations
  • Cost of supervision
  • Cost of training

26
Most important accommodations for disabled
individuals
  • Accessible parking/public transit stop nearby
  • Need for an elevator
  • Adaptations to work station
  • Special work arrangements
  • Handrails or ramps
  • Job coach
  • Specific office supplies

27
Diversity
28
Diversity
  • As a minority in the U.S., this culture is
    extremely diverse. The diversity lies in the
    numerous classifications and diagnoses that the
    professional world categorizes under the terms
    mental retardation and mental handicap. These
    terms represent a wide variety physical and
    mental developmental disorders that often
    overlap, relate and coexist.

29
Diversity
  • Throughout the history of the United States,
    these disorders have been discovered and defined,
    studied and fought over, even discarded
    completely. Medical and psychological
    explanations and theories continuously evolve and
    as these changes take place, so does the
    treatment and opportunities for mentally
    handicapped people.

30
U. S Census Bureau
  • Total disabilities in U.S as off 2003
    77,429,844.
  • Employment disability
    11,834,527
  • Data are limited to the household population
  • and exclude the population living in
    institutions,
  • college dormitories, and other group
    quarters.


31
Attitudes toward individuals with disabilities in
the work place
  • Two studies were conducted to develop and test
    measures that assess beliefs about what
    constitutes a disability, affective reactions to
    working with individuals with disabilities, and
    beliefs about the reasonableness of workplace
    accommodations, in general and within context of
    the ADA( Popovich, Scherbaum, Polinko,2003).

32
Attitudes toward individuals with disabilities in
the work place
  • The participants in this study were 118
    undergraduate students at a large midwestern
    university(29 men and 89 women). Half of the
    sample had worked with an individual who was
    disabled. The average length of the work
    experience for those who had worked with a
    disable individuals was 5 months.

33
Attitudes toward individuals with disabilities in
the work placeResults
  • In general,there was a discrepancy between what
    the participants believed were disabilities and
    what are actually covered by ADA.

34
Attitudes toward individuals with disabilities in
the work placeResults
  • Participants considered more of the physical
  • or sensory-motor conditions to be
    disabilities
  • than the psychological conditions

35
Attitudes toward individuals with disabilities in
the work placeResults
  • Participants believed that schizophrenia, mental
    retardation and alcoholism are not disabilities.

Adaptive Sports FoundationFacts Figures
36
Attitudes toward individuals with disabilities in
the work placeResults
  • Experience with persons who have disabilities was
    associated with more positive affective reactions
    but not with higher ratings of the reasonableness
    of workplace accommodations. Perhaps greater
    contact with this population had either prevented
    or destroyed the more negative stereotypes
    associated with disabilities.

37
Attitudes toward individuals with disabilities in
the work placeRecommendations
  • In both studies were found that the participants
    had little knowledge of what conditions are
    actually covered by the ADA. Luck of knowledge
    may lead to stereotypes that could manifest as
    discrimination in the workplace.

38
Attitudes toward individuals with disabilities in
the work placeRecommendations
  • Interventions to correct these misconceptions
    could be as simple as increasing awareness by
    providing employers with informational pamphlets
    and meetings.
  • Organizations could also develop more involved
    interventions such as training programs.

39
Disability across the Globe
40
Australia
  • Disability Discrimination Act 1992, and the body
    of case law provide the framework for disability
    rights in Australia.

41
Australia
  • The basic law affecting the rights of persons
    with disabilities in Australia is the
    Commonwealth (Federal) Disability Discrimination
    Act 1992 (DDA).

42
Australia
  • This is a statute of very broad application. It
    prohibits discrimination against people with
    disabilities in employment, education, access to
    premises, provision of goods and services,
    accommodation, membership in clubs and
    associations, sport and administration of
    Commonwealth laws and programs. It is unlawful to
    harass any person who has a disability.

43
Australia
  • The DDA establishes victimization of a person who
    makes a complaint under the Act, who provides
    information relevant to a proceeding under the
    Act, or who appears as a witness before the Human
    Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission as an
    offence punishable by six months imprisonment.

44
Australia
  • The DDA and implementing regulations apply to all
    employers, with the exception of the Armed Forces
    and other defense-related employers to all
    private and public employees and to all public
    and private service providers. The DDA prohibits
    all forms of discrimination and mandates national
    standards to guarantee

45
Australia
  • The right to be accommodated
  • Barrier-free access to transportation
  • Barrier-free access to telecommunication
  • Barrier-free access to public buildings and
    services, and regarding access to membership in
    private organizations

46
India
  • The 1995 Act of India,292 on rights of persons
    with disabilities, spells out the states
    responsibility towards prevention of impairments
    and protection of disabled persons rights in
    health, education, vocational training,
    employment, and rehabilitation..

47
India
  • The appropriate state government identifies posts
    in every establishment, public or private, that
    can be reserved for disabled persons and reviews
    them periodically, at least every three years,
    taking into consideration the development of
    technology. No less than three percent of posts
    must be provided to disabled persons in every
    establishment of which one percent each shall be
    reserved for individuals who are blind or who
    have low vision, individuals who are hearing
    impaired, and persons with motor disability or
    cerebral palsy.

48
Mexico
  • Two government agencies are largely responsible
    for the major policies regarding the rights of
    people with disabilities. The Presidential Office
    for the Advancement and Social Integration of
    Persons with Disabilities and the National
    Advisory Council for the Social Integration of
    Persons with Disabilities. The main objectives of
    above agencies is to promote the integration of
    people with disabilities into social life on an
    equal footing with all others.

49
Mexico
  • One private company is working to end disability
    discrimination is FEMSA. It runs a national
    program entitle the Program for the Integration
    of people with Disabilities.

50
Mexico
  • The Opening Spaces Program run by the Secretary
    of Labor and Social Security handles training and
    job placement opportunities. In 2002 the program
    served a total of 2,367 people with disabilities,
    433 of whom were placed in a job. Between January
    and September 2003, 2,891 people received
    assistance, and 533 obtained a job.

51
Mexico
  • Transportation in Mexico City is largely
    inaccessible to people with disabilities. The
    metro system has 175 operating stations, but only
    5 stations are wheelchair accessible. Guide
    rails, Braille signs, step treads, and large
    print logos have been installed in 30 stations.
    Out of 1400 bases only 50 wheelchair accessible
    and provide a secondary support for people with
    disabilities rather than an inclusive.

52
Mexico
  • In general, few communication resources are
    available for persons with disabilities. The
    government does not typically use alternative
    formats such as Braille to provide information on
    its activities.

53
Mexico
  • According to the 2000 census, only 25 of the
    total population with disabilities is
    economically active. The remaining 75 are
    economically inactive.
  • Children with disabilities continue to be
    deprived of education, even though the necessary
    physical and service infrastructure is already
    partially in place. There is no national policy
    requiring public or private schools to be
    accessible to people with disabilities.

54
Sweden
  • Swedens disability policy has political,
    economic, and social goals.

55
Sweden
  • The political goal, formulated by the government
    in 1976, is to make society accessible for all,
    to provide disabled persons the opportunity to
    participate in the social community,and to live
    in a manner, to such a degree as possible,
    equivalent to others. Responsibility for
    achieving this objective is shared by society as
    a whole.

56
Sweden
  • The labor market policy is based on the principle
    of universal entitlement to work, and an emphasis
    has been placed on young people, minorities, the
    disabled, and the long-term unemployed. Swedens
    emphasis has historically been on a strong work
    ethic and full employment. of differences in
    clientele due to specialized programs. Specific
    occupational training is conducted under the same
    programs for the disabled as the non disabled.

57
Sweden
  • The national Accessibility Center in Sweden is
    part of the Swedish Disability Ombudsman, HO. The
    Center was established in 2001. This was shortly
    after the adoption by the Riksdag in spring 2000
    of a new working plan for disability policy,
    "From Patient to Citizen".
  • The working plan is a result of Sweden's
    endorsement in 1993 of the standard UN
    regulations according to which people with
    disabilities are to enjoy full participation and
    equality in society.

58
Russia
  • Official government statistics claim that
    approximately 1 million people with disabilities
    across Russia are employed. Therefore,
    approximately 12-14 of the total Russian
    disabled population of working age is officially
    majority of these employed persons have
    disabilities that do not require accommodations
    in the workplace or transportation assistance
    getting to their job. Another large percentage of
    these persons are employed at sheltered
    businesses and factories that are owned and
    managed by disability NGOs, at very low wages and
    little hope of future job security.

59
Russia
  • The arrangement for "officially employed"
    disabled persons is to be employed for a minimal
    fee, with the understanding that they are not
    required to ever come to work. This arrangement
    used to benefit the employer with tax breaks.
    Moreover, the employer did not have to make any
    changes to the workplace or provide much needed
    transportation. These kinds of schemes and
    sheltered employment opportunities for disabled
    persons have survived the transition from
    socialism to a mixed capitalist economy.

60
Class Discussion
  • How do you personally define disability?
  • Has the ADA been successful in decreasing
    discrimination against people with disabilities?
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