Archive for April, 2009

Further Thoughts on the ADAPT Protests

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

My thoughts concerning the ADAPT protests from last evening are somewhat deepened after reading William Peace’s take on the issue. Disability advocacy activities are truly civil rights efforts. Until we convince the world that our issues are not inherently medical or rehabilitative, we will always be coming to the table at a distinct disadvantage.

People with disabilities are not a diagnostic or rehabilitation challenge. We are people whose needs differ from the “norm” in understandable and manageable ways. To my friends, family and colleagues: please listen to what I say when I describe a need. For me, its not the active or malicious discrimination which is the most damaging; its the il-considered action. The un-thoughtful failure to provide access at a meeting is different only in degree from the failure to consider alternatives to ones choice of living arrangements. Both make assumptions about the world that are basically flawed and in need of revision.

Adapt Struggles for Civil Rights

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

I’ve been following an unfolding struggle for civil rights both at the White House and on the steps of our nation’s capitol. Unfortunately, I didn’t hear about it on the radio; nor see it on T.V.; nor read the words of protesters in the newspaper. The participants: people with disabilities seeking to have their voices heard against the backdrop of a world of indifference. Ninety-one people with a diversity of impairments were arrested for having the courage to stand up for their beliefs. By chaining themselves to the White House fence, they made a statement which should resonate with those who are concerned about equal treatment for all our citizens.

ADAPT advocate crawling up the capitol steps

Adapt demonstrators met with Obama officials on Monday and were told that their concerns to include long-term supports in current health care proposals would have to wait. “The administration stated that its only commitment currently
is to extend insurance to the people who are uninsured, and that the people in nursing homes and institutions would need to continue to wait until an unspecified
time in the future when it is proven that the health care reform worked.”

Nursing homes and other large institutions of “care” are often the most expensive and least appropriate places for people to live. Yet there appears to be an intensely entrenched bias which protects these institutions even in the face of considerable evidence that preferable alternatives exist.

If we are to have a truly national health plan than we must consider all of our citizens regardless of their living situation or health status. The Community Choice Act, currently being debated in congress is a first step in this direction. All of us may have the opportunity of being placed in a long-term nursing facility against our will. Current Medicaid rules only endorse this option.

Adapt’s recent press release provides more information on current advocacy activities. One may keep up with events as they happen by following ADAPT on Twitter.

While I do not feel empowered enough to be a protester and chain myself to a building, I fervently applaud those who have the courage to put their lives and reputations on the line for the things they believe. Thank you ADAPT members for your commitment and sacrifice .

I Love RSS

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

What I both love and hate about my life on the Internet is the crazy-making amount of information which lives just off the end of my fingers. Need a recipe for bananas foster — its out there. Need to know how to repair a Boeing 737 — its manual is probably in a database accessible via Google. Then there are the host of web pages that I want to read on a regular basis and never seem to have the time to get to. What’s happening with the Idaho Legislature? What are the headlines in the New York Times? What new software is available for my mobile phone?

This is where RSS comes in. RSS (opinions differ on what the acronym stands for) allows me to quickly survey many different web sites and get a quick overview of what is new on each. Instead of going to the BBC, the New York Times, Scientific American ETC and scanning past the ads and other things to see what’s new, I just open an RSS feed. This gives me a concise listing of the new information, usually sorted in reverse chronological order.

Both Firefox and modern incarnations of Internet Explorer have the ability to open RSS feeds. Here are links to more information.

Once you have RSS working, you will be able to know whenever something new is published in this blog. This is the subscription address for this feed: http://www.equaltext.com/equalities/feed/

Here’s hoping this makes your life on the net just a little easier!

New ADA Handbook Available

Monday, April 27th, 2009

The Southwest DBTAC announces that a new Disability Law Handbook
is now available on their website at:
http://www.swdbtac.org/html/publications/dlh/index.html.

They describe this booklet as providing: “…the basics of the
Americans with Disabilities Act and other disability related
laws. Written in an FAQ format, The Disability Law Handbook
answers questions about the Americans with Disabilities Act, the
ADA Amendments Act, the Rehabilitation Act, Social Security, the
Air Carrier Access Act, the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act, the Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act,
and the Fair Housing Act Amendments.”