Cape Argus

Physically challenged still face discrimati­on

NCPD is a resource on reasonable accommodat­ion embracing a diverse workforce

- Therina Wentzel

PEOPLE enact laws – and people must apply them fairly and consistent­ly for all people to benefit. Whoever they may be. South Africa has wonderful legislatio­n to protect and promote the rights of persons with disabiliti­es. But what is it worth if we don’t give effect to it? What are we saying about our willingnes­s to work with people irrespecti­ve of their impairment? What are we saying about our unconquere­d prejudices, or our sense of humanity?

Section 9 of the Bill of Rights enshrined in our constituti­on guarantees that people may not face discrimina­tion on the basis of disability (among other prescripts).

Section 10 guarantees the right to human dignity. The word “dignity”, in the modern context, has come to mean “respect” or “status”, and these are valid definition­s; but historical­ly – and legally – it has another meaning: worthiness. That is what the Latin word dignitas, from which it is derived, means. The right to human dignity, thus, refers to the right to be valued, respected and treated ethically. To have worth.

On a more practical level, our Employment Equity Act (EEA) – enacted in 1998, nearly 20 years ago – is intended to give effect to Section 9 of the constituti­on. In legal terms, it is meant to achieve equity in the workplace by promoting equal opportunit­y and fair treatment in employment through the eliminatio­n of unfair discrimina­tion.

This means giving persons with disabiliti­es a fair opportunit­y at finding and winning a job, and being able to do a job well and be promoted. The EEA requires employers to take steps to promote equal opportunit­y and eliminate discrimina­tion.

This brings into play another important term: reasonable accommodat­ion. What that means is that employers are required to create workspaces which all people can equitably access and work in. What use is it employing someone who is a wheelchair user if he or she cannot negotiate a flight of steps into a building or there is no lift?

The upshot is that persons with disabiliti­es are not appointed or are placed in a compromisi­ng situation.

Why do persons with disabiliti­es make up less than 1% of the working population? Persons with disabiliti­es are just as smart, well educated, motivated, capable and worthy as able-bodied people. Could it be that they’re being discrimina­ted against because of their disability, which is illegal?

The National Council of and for Persons with Disabiliti­es (NCPD) has taken up the cudgels on behalf of a paramedic who is enduring such discrimina­tion.

In short, the paramedic (whom we shall not name, as his complaint is ongoing) is a wheelchair user. This does not stop him from doing an important – and lifesaving – job: he is an emergency care officer in a provincial control room, where he dispatches ambulances to emergencie­s and telephonic­ally provides medical advice.

But because the control room is situated in a government building where reasonable accommodat­ion has not been applied (even though it was officially opened in 2015, years after the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimina­tion Act and EEA came into effect) and the lifts have not been maintained, it’s impossible for him to get to the control room. There is no parking for persons with disabiliti­es, doors are not accessible and no fire escape.

His managers’ solution? Without official notificati­on, they shipped him off to a district control centre in a hospital 35km away, where he has sat at a desk between a casualty waiting room full of sick, coughing people and a sluice room.

The patients can hear his conversati­ons, compromisi­ng the confidenti­ality of the people he assists. And there are no emergency exits for persons with disabiliti­es, putting him at risk. He is also unable to access training and promotion opportunit­ies, so his career is hampered.

The provincial health department for which he works has, on top of the laws it is supposed to obey, its own Code of Good Practice on Employment of Persons with Disabiliti­es. This lofty document states that employers must reasonably accommodat­e persons with disabiliti­es to reduce the impact of their impairment on their ability to do their work; employers must use cost-effective ways to provide equitable working space and experience.

The NCPD took this matter up on the paramedic’s behalf – but his management ignored us too, forcing us to take the legal route. Now, months down the line, management has backed down: the lifts in the provincial building have just been repaired, allowing him to return to work at his original place of work.

Parking is also now being made available to him, and the lack of a fire escape – in a building that is less than five years old – is being investigat­ed, as is improving ground-floor access.

But the paramedic still faces discrimina­tion. Now that he is being returned to his original workplace, he is being penalised by being made to work office hours only – on statistics – instead of paramedic shift work.

So he will no longer earn overtime for working nights, weekends and public holidays. In our hearts we still harbour unjustifia­ble prejudice against persons with disabiliti­es, and so we choose to break the law instead.

Yet it doesn’t have to be that way, and we at the NCPD can assist. The NCPD is a wonderful resource for all employers to use in creating workplaces that accommodat­e all levels of ability. We are advise and consult on how to apply reasonable accommodat­ion in the workplace, and how to include persons with disabiliti­es into a workforce and embrace a diverse workforce.

It is, after all, the law. People have the capacity to end discrimina­tion and restore human dignity. We’re the people to help make it a reality.

THE NATIONAL COUNCIL OF AND FOR PERSONS WITH DISABILITI­ES (NCPD) HAS TAKEN UP THE CUDGELS ON BEHALF OF A PARAMEDIC

Therina Wentzel is the National Director of the National Council of and for Persons with Disabiliti­es.

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 ?? PICTURE: OUPA MOKOENA ?? HELP TO RESTORE DIGNITY: The EEA requires employers to take steps to promote equal opportunit­y and eliminate discrimina­tion, the writer says.
PICTURE: OUPA MOKOENA HELP TO RESTORE DIGNITY: The EEA requires employers to take steps to promote equal opportunit­y and eliminate discrimina­tion, the writer says.

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