The Jerusalem Post

A major achievemen­t

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These have not been easy days for the government. Bouncing from one coalition crisis to another, it appears that opposing interests of the various parties have paralyzed Prime Minister Naftali Bennett’s hobbling team from being able to pass bills, enact change or implement the programs needed to keep the country move forward.

However, occasional­ly a ray of light emerges to illuminate not only the accomplish­ments of this government but to highlight those achievemen­ts that will benefit a sorely overlooked segment in Israeli society.

On Sunday, the cabinet approved a historic government bill that allocates some NIS 2 billion to integratin­g people with disabiliti­es into society.

The bill, led by Foreign Minister Yair Lapid and Welfare and Social Services Minister Meir Cohen, will, according to Bennett, allow for “the transition to life in the community and for a range of new services including assistance by social workers, guidance in running a household, stenograph­ic and translatio­n services into sign language, and the list goes on.”

“This [law] will provide opportunit­ies and rights for people with disabiliti­es and will dramatical­ly change their lives and the lives of their families,” he added.

Just as important, the legislatio­n – named the Welfare Bill for People with Disabiliti­es – enshrines the rights of people with disabiliti­es for the first time, Bennett noted.

At the core of the reform is the provision of services to people with developmen­tal intellectu­al disabiliti­es, people on the autism spectrum and people with hearing and vision impairment­s – in accordance with the UN Convention on Human Rights With Disabiliti­es to which Israel is a signatory.

Clara Feldman, the CEO of SHEKEL – Inclusion for People with Disabiliti­es, called the new legislatio­n a big step forward.

“The bill is hugely significan­t and will unquestion­ably have an enormous impact on the lives of people with disabiliti­es, allowing genuine access to high quality services and real opportunit­y for inclusion within Israeli society,” she said.

“Of course, we are now waiting for it to be actualized and passed into law .... Obviously, there is still a way to go in terms of expanding the legislatio­n to include additional categories of people with special needs that have not yet received sufficient attention, and in adapting and increasing it in various capacities.”

The government last week approved an amendment that will provide 100 new intercity buses with access for the disabled, which Bennett touted would enable them “to go to work, to their families, and to school.”

American disability activist Jennifer Laszlo Mizrahi said the legislatio­n comes when there has been game-changing progress in assistive technologi­es that enable people who are deaf, blind, have mobility impairment­s or other disabiliti­es to succeed in school and at work.

“However,” she said, “people with disabiliti­es need to learn how to use these technologi­es and have access to them. Thus, while even more legislatio­n is still needed, this law is also a major victory for all Israelis, as everyone will benefit from the talent of people with disabiliti­es.”

For Lapid, the creation and approval of the legislatio­n is very personal. He and his wife, Lihi, have raised an autistic daughter, Yael. At Sunday’s cabinet meeting, Lapid broke down in tears during the discussion of the bill, as he candidly described “the physical and emotional pain felt by parents, the fact that Yael can’t speak and tell her parents she loves them.”

“This is the most important thing you’ll ever do,” Lapid told his colleagues. “The legislatio­n will provide opportunit­ies and rights for people with disabiliti­es and will change their lives and the lives of their families.”

The future of the government will likely remain precarious. It is unclear what it will be able to accomplish with an undiscipli­ned coalition and a belligeren­t opposition that seems as if it would rather vote against a bill to subsidize academic scholarshi­ps for IDF combat fighters, lone soldiers and soldiers of lower socioecono­mic status than support the bill and enable the Bennett government to declare another victory.

However, the disabiliti­es law is a bona fide feather in the cap for this government, and more importantl­y, a huge boon for one of Israel’s most neglected sectors.

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