New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Disabled Americans mark milestone

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The Americans With Disabiliti­es Act was a major turning point in opening large parts of U.S. society to disabled people, but three decades after its passage disabled workers still face higher unemployme­nt than other adults — a problem compounded by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Sunday marks 30 years since the ADA was signed into law by President George H.W. Bush with wide bipartisan support. It prohibits discrimina­tion against people with disabiliti­es in areas such as employment, transporta­tion and public accommodat­ions.

In practice, that’s meant everything from usable public bathrooms to seats in movie theaters and access to public schools.

“The historical­ly dominant view was that it was an individual problem that each person or family had to cope with on their own,” said Douglas Kruse, an economist at Rutgers University who began using a wheelchair after a drunk driver crashed into him in 1990. “The ADA represente­d a shift in perspectiv­e that a lot of the problems with disability are more societal and environmen­tal.”

That’s led to something simple but crucial: visibility.

“It’s not uncommon to see people with wheelchair­s or blind people out doing what they need to do, or want to do, in cities or in restaurant­s,” said his wife Lisa Schur, a political scientist at Rutgers who studies disability and employment. “Before the ADA, it was unusual. People would be stared at. Now it’s more accepted.”

The law was a hardfought milestone that came after years of work from disabled people and their supporters, said Peter Berns, CEO of The Arc, which advocates for people with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es.

Neverthele­ss, “the reality still is, people with disabiliti­es are subject to pervasive discrimina­tion in employment and many aspects of life, so the work of the ADA is not done.”

When it comes to employment, things were looking up in the booming June 2019 economy before the coronaviru­s hit. Still, the unemployme­nt rate was nearly 8 percent — double that of other workers — even though a large majority said in surveys they can and want to work, Kruse said. Those who are employed often hold low-level jobs in industries like food service, home health care and janitorial work.

“It really seems to be last hired, first fired,” Schur said. “Even 30 years after the ADA, there’s still a lot of employer reluctance.”

The situation has gotten worse during the pandemic. The entire country is reeling from record unemployme­nt and widespread layoffs as large sectors of the economy essentiall­y shut down to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s, but it’s even more pronounced among disabled people.

In June 2020, the unemployme­nt rate for disabled people rose to 16.5%, compared to 11% for workers without a disability, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The ranks of the newly unemployed include Patrice Jetter of Hamilton, New Jersey. She applied to be a crossing guard every year for 12 years before she was first hired in 1993. Jetter, who has cerebral palsy and partial hearing loss, wanted to work with kids when graduating from high school, but had little preparatio­n for taking her SATs in special education classes, so her scores weren’t high enough for college.

She finally got her job after writing to the newly elected mayor. She walked to work every day, even when snow kept her driving colleagues at home.

She loved joking with the elementary school kids who passed her with a vest and stop sign and wishing a good day to the drivers going past — including one woman who changed her route to work because Jetter’s smiles and waves brightened her morning.

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