USA TODAY US Edition

People with disabiliti­es have plenty to protest

Probe wanted in death of quadripleg­ic Black man

- Chelsey Cox

A Washington Post tally found nearly a quarter of those shot and killed by police had a mental illness.

July marks the 30th anniversar­y of the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act and Disability Pride Month. But that’s not why people are marching.

Disability rights advocates in Austin, Texas, protested the treatment of Michael Hickson, 46, a quadripleg­ic Black man who died of COVID-19, The Austin American-Statesman reported. Doctors determined Hickson could not be saved after his organs failed, but advocates argued that his life was devalued because of racism and ableism. The Texas Americans with Disabiliti­es Action Planning Team (ADAPT) called for an investigat­ion into Hickson’s death.

Families protested in Rockland County, New York, against state coronaviru­s restrictio­ns limiting visitation­s to their developmen­tally disabled relatives in group homes, a CBS affiliate reported.

Advocates in Tennessee lobbied the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Civil Rights to force the state to change its COVID-19 response plan. Health care workers can no longer prioritize younger patients without disabiliti­es over older, disabled patients, Bloomberg Law reported. Conditions that allowed for health workers to exclude people with disabiliti­es from care based on their diagnosis were eliminated from the plan.

Last week, a disability rights group sued the New Hampshire State Department, claiming that its absentee ballot system could hurt voters who are blind.

Those disputes and protests followed demonstrat­ions by hundreds of thousands of other Americans against police brutality and discrimina­tion, an issue that greatly affects people with disabiliti­es.

“Folks with non-apparent disabiliti­es are especially vulnerable to police violence, especially if they’re racially marginaliz­ed,” said Reyma McDeid, cochair of the National Council on Independen­t Living’s Anti-Racism and Equity Task Force. “It impacts your ability to interact with a police officer.”

In 2018, Marcus-David Peters was shot by a Richmond, Virginia, police officer during an apparent psychotic episode. In 2010, a Seattle police officer shot and killed a Native American man for not dropping his woodcarvin­g knife – the man was partly deaf.

About one-third of people killed by police have a mental or physical disability, McDeid said. A Washington Post tally found nearly a quarter of those shot and killed by police had a mental illness.

Six years ago, Dontre Hamilton, who had schizophre­nia, was shot 14 times by a Milwaukee police officer who had not received any specialize­d training on interactin­g with people with mental illness. After George Floyd’s death, people of color with disabiliti­es were inspired to march for Hamilton and others, The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported.

Atines Davis, who flew in from Maryland for the protest, taught the crowd how to sign “Black Lives Matter” in American Sign Language.

Chants of “Sign his name” instead of “Say his name” broke out at a Washington protest against police brutality organized by the National Alliance of Multicultu­ral Disabled Advocates.

In Delaware, protesters marched in June for Jeremy “Bam” McDole, a Black man in a wheelchair who was killed by police in 2015, who shot him within two seconds of asking him to drop his gun.

Police are “deliberate­ly obtuse in refusing to understand the danger that they place Black and brown and other multiply marginaliz­ed disabled people in,” said Lydia X. Z. Brown, an adjunct lecturer in Disability Studies at Georgetown University. “Many of my friends and comrades in the Black disabled community, regardless of the type of disability, faced some of the most intense and horrific harassment from police.”

Such experience­s with police can foster distrust, which can lead to underrepor­ting crimes against people with disabiliti­es.

‘That person is a target’

A study conducted in 2019 by the nonprofit Stop Street Harassment found that people with disabiliti­es are more likely to experience sexual harassment and assault. People with disabiliti­es were the victims of sexual or aggravated assault, robbery and rape at twice the rate of people without disabiliti­es, according to a summary released in 2017 by the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

One in five surveyed said their disability made them a target.

“Clearly people can tell by interactin­g with me or observing me that I’m not ... normal by ableist definition­s of normal, even if they wouldn’t know the specific language to use. But many people would think, ‘that person is a target,’ ” said Brown, who has autism and survived a near-sexual assault.

In a Washington survey of people with disabiliti­es who said they experience­d harassment, only 12% said they filed a police report. Distrust of police was one reason, according to a report by the D.C. Office of Human Rights. The office found that people with disabiliti­es are publicly targeted for harassment more often than any other marginaliz­ed group aside from immigrants.

Noor Pervez, 24, who uses a wheelchair, said he has been physically harassed while waiting for the Metrobus in Washington.

“Out of nowhere, this lady comes up to me and starts hitting me with a pamphlet,” he said. The woman seemed agitated and muttered the word “wheelchair” while hitting him, Pervez said. No bystanders intervened.

Pervez reached out to the anti-harassment nonprofit Collective Action for Safe Spaces (CASS) instead of transit police.

Attorney Albert Elia, who is blind, said he was harassed and threatened by a man while boarding a crowded Metro subway car with his service dog in 2018.

“I would accidental­ly bump into somebody, and … they would not just get offended, they would shove me back. I have been pushed, I’ve been [punched], particular­ly on the Metro,” he said. “I would say that in the four years I lived in D.C., it happened half a dozen times.”

A commuter for more than 20 years, Elia said his worst experience­s with harassment occurred in D.C.

“Oftentimes, people with disabiliti­es are harassed or mistreated, especially when trying to access transporta­tion,” said Stephanie Franklin, the Office of Human Rights communicat­ion director.

Some advocates were frustrated when Washington passed a landmark anti-street harassment bill in 2018 without naming people with disabiliti­es.

“It has symbolic importance, to name a particular community explicitly,” Brown said.

Though it’s too late to amend the Street Harassment Prevention Act, an advisory committee seeks a nonvoting representa­tive from the disabled community, Franklin said.

“It wouldn’t surprise me if [City Council] and other people responsibl­e for thinking through who is most vulnerable to street harassment aren’t thinking about marginaliz­ed disabled people,” Brown said.

 ?? KAREEM ELGAZZAR/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER ?? Robert Harris is lifted out of his wheelchair to protest the death of George Floyd at a event June 6 in Cincinnati.
KAREEM ELGAZZAR/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Robert Harris is lifted out of his wheelchair to protest the death of George Floyd at a event June 6 in Cincinnati.
 ?? NETWORK RORY LINNANE/USA TODAY ?? People using wheelchair­s and other mobility aids lead protesters June 7 in Milwaukee.
NETWORK RORY LINNANE/USA TODAY People using wheelchair­s and other mobility aids lead protesters June 7 in Milwaukee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States