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Don't "Dis"
Ability
DON'T TREAD
The
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Disability
UAL ACCESS No
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FROM CHARITY TO CONFRONTATION
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Doris Zames Fleischer
BEAUTI
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SILENCE=DEATH
The Disability Rights Movement
The Disability
Rights Movement
From Charity to Confrontation
Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames
TC
TEMPLE UNIVERSITY PRESS
PHILADELPHIA
Temple University Press, Philadelphia 19122
Copyright © 2001 by Temple University
All rights reserved
Published 2001
Printed in the United States of America
@ 8 The paper used in this publication meets the requirements of the American National
Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials,
ANSI z39.48-1984
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Fleischer, Doris Zames.
The disability rights movement : from charity to confrontation / by Doris Z. Fleischer
and Frieda Zames.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN I-56639-811-8 (cloth : alk. paper) - ISBN I-56639-812-6 (pbk. : alk. paper)
I. Handicapped-Civil rights-United States. 2. Discrimination against the
handicapped-United States. I. Zames, Frieda, 1932- .
II. Title.
HVI553 .F58 2000
323.3-dc21
00-039282
To our mother and father, Pauline and Joseph Zames
Contents
Personal Notes xiii
Preface XV
Acknowledgments xix
Chronology xxi
Abbreviations and Acronyms xxvii
I. "WHEELCHAIR BOUND" AND "THE POSTER CHILD" I
FDR, the "Cured Cripple" I
League of the Physically Handicapped 5
The March of Dimes 7
Parent-Initiated Childhood Disability Organizations 8
The Poster Child and the Telethon IO
Changing Views of Disability in the United States II
2. SEEING BY TOUCH, HEARING BY SIGN I4
Blindness and Deafness: A Comparison I4
Sign Language and Oralism I5
Braille and Talking Books I8
Sheltered Workshops I9
The Lighthouse 20
Mobility for Blind People: Guide Dogs and White Canes 20
Jacobus tenBroek and the National Federation of the Blind 2I
VIII CONTENTS
NYC Subway Gates: A Controversy in the Blind Community 22
NFB: Trailblazer for Sections 504 and 50I 24
NFB and ACB: Different Approaches to Blindness 25
Deafness as Culture 26
American Sign Language 27
The Gallaudet University Uprising 28
Black Deaf Advocates 29
Education of Deaf Children 30
Helen Keller, the Social Reformer 3I
3. DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION AND INDEPENDENT LIVING 33
Deinstitutionalization 33
Early Accessibility Efforts in the Colleges 36
Ed Roberts and the Independent Living Movement 37
Proliferation of the Independent Living Concept 43
Characteristics of Independent Living Centers 45
Independent Living as an Extension of Rehabilitation 46
Evaluation of the Independent Living Movement 47
Independent Living and the New Disability Activism 47
4. GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION:
SECTION 504 49
The Cherry Lawsuit for the Section 504 Regulations 50
Section 504 as a Spur to Political Organizing 5I
ACCD, Propelling Section 504 52
The Section 504 Demonstrations 53
The Transbus Controversy 56
Accessible Transit and New York City 57
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) 63
California Accessible Buses 64
Mainstreaming Public Transit 65
The Civil Rights Significance of Accessible Transportation 69
CONTENTS IX
5. THE STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE: IN THE STREETS AND
IN THE COURTS 7I
Disabled In Action 71
New York Lawyers for the Public Interest 76
Recognizing Disability as a Civil Rights Issue 77
Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund 77
The Need for Disability Rights Attorneys 79
ADAPT 82
Justice For All 85
6. THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT 88
Enacting the ADA 89
The ADA and Section 504 93
Title I: Employment 95
Title III: Public Accommodation 95
Title II: Public Services (State and Local Government) 98
Title II: Public Transportation IOI
Title IV: National Telephone Relay Service IOI
Title V: Miscellaneous IOI
The Supreme Court and the ADA IO2
The Myth of "The Disability Lobby" 105
Backlash I06
Every American's Insurance Policy I09
7. ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE по
Employment Discrimination IIO
Affirmative Action III
Disability Employment in Corporate America II2
Employment of People with Developmental Disabilities II3
Employment of People with Psychiatric Disabilities II4
The Criminalization of People with Psychiatric Disabilities II7
Different Approaches to Psychiatric Disabilities II8
Mangled Care I2I
X CONTENTS
A Two-Tier Health Care System I2I
People with Special Needs in Managed Care 123
An Arbitrary Patchwork I24
Falling through the Cracks: Children with Special Health Needs I26
Long-Term Care in the Community I27
Health Policy Reforms I28
The Nexus between Jobs and Health Care 129
8. "NOT DEAD YET" AND PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE 132
Opposition to "the Death Train" 132
The Supreme Court 133
AIDS Activists 134
Pain Management 135
Focus on Cure: A Pernicious Message 137
The Eugenics Movement and Euthanasia I38
The Politics of Physician-Assisted Suicide I40
Netherlands "Slippery Slope" VS. U.S. "Political Strategy" I4I
First-Year Report on Physician-Assisted Suicide in Oregon 142
Legalizing Disability Discrimination 142
Dangers of an Inflexible Law I43
"A Better Solution" 144
The Distinction between Severe Disability and Terminal Illness 145
9. DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY I49
Universal Design 149
Accessible Taxis I52
Teletypewriters and Relay Systems 152
A Clash of Cultures I53
The One-Step Campaign 153
Wheelchair Ingenuity I54
Accessible Classrooms and Laboratories I55
The Computer as an Accommodation 156
Psychopharmacology I58
CONTENTS XI
Bioethical Dilemmas 159
The Internet and a Miracle Baby I62
Medical and Genetic Information I63
"Slash, Burn, and Poison" I65
Transforming Scientific Orthodoxy: AIDS Activism 166
Toward a New Vision: Three Queries I68
IO. DISABLED VETERANS CLAIM THEIR RIGHTS I70
Legislation and Self-Advocacy 170
Rehabilitation: The Man, Not the Wound 172
Paralyzed Veterans of America 173
Automobiles: Opening "New Vistas" 174
The Pattern of Denial I76
Atomic and Chemical Guinea Pigs 179
Holding a Nation Accountable 181
II. EDUCATION: INTEGRATION IN THE LEAST RESTRICTIVE
ENVIRONMENT I84
A "Quiet Revolution" 184
Enforcing the IDEA: Early Efforts 185
Least Restrictive Environment 187
An Appropriate Identity 188
The IDEA in the Courts 189
The Special Education Controversy I93
Somnolent Samantha 197
A Microcosm of the Real World 199
I2. IDENTITY AND CULTURE 200
Three Strands of the Movement 200
Disability Pride: Celebrating Difference 201
Changing Perceptions and the Media 207
Assessment of the Movement 2II
A Stealth Movement 2I5
Notes 217
Index 265
Personal Notes
IN THE EARLY 19 50s I attended Brooklyn College, located on a campus built in the 1930s
in the pseudo-Georgian style of the 1830s. In order to enter the two main buildings, Boylan
Hall and Ingersoll Hall-mirror images facing each other across a central quadrangle-I
had to go up two steps. On rainy days I was terrified of falling because my crutch tips
would slip. Snowy or icy days were worse. Never once at Brooklyn College did I think that
those two steps in any way could be changed. I had to make do as best I could. I thought
that it was my responsibility to fit in. I felt lucky just going to college since relatively few
people with disabilities had such an opportunity at that time. It never occurred to me to
ask for anything, certainly not to make demands-not even for a banister.
Why did most people with disabilities of my generation and many that followed-some
of whom even gained considerable prominence in the modern disability rights movement-
make the same assumption that I did? What caused the leap in consciousness of people
with disabilities in the 1970s? How did this new vision give birth to a civil rights movement
for people with disabilities? How has this civil rights movement affected people with
disabilities as well as the wider society? These are the questions that inform this book.
-Frieda Zames
The most important thing that ever happened to me occurred two years before I was born.
My sister (and now my coauthor) contracted polio. Despite her stay in a hospital and
convalescent home during my first five years, she was always a presence in my life. In our
home, my entire family and our circle of friends celebrated every one of my absent sister's
birthdays. My parents even "conned" me into thinking that each of the frequent long train
and bus rides that we took to visit her was a treat. Although I was too young to be allowed
into the hospital, I loved standing outside and waving to her, for to me she was Rapunzel
high up in the tower. When she came home and solved my problems and taught me how
to fight back, I imagined myself the hero for rather absurdly holding up my five-year-old
fingers to traffic in the middle of the rather empty streets near our house as she slowly
crossed using her crutches and braces.
The much publicized Chair in Bioethics at Princeton's Center for Human Values, Peter
Singer, wrote in Practical Ethics, a book he assigned in his course at the university: "When
the death of a disabled infant will lead to the birth of another infant with better prospects
XIV PERSONAL NOTES
of a happy life, the total amount of happiness will be greater if the disabled infant is
killed." If my parents somehow could have known that at two and a half my sister would
become disabled, and had they chosen the path that Professor Singer prescribes, would
his Benthamesque vision of the greatest good for a greatest number have been achieved?
To respond to this question, I think of the many nondisabled people I know who have not
lived lives as productive or fulfilling or happy as my sister's. When I consider her social roles
as mathematics professor and disability rights activist, her loving personal relationships,
and the daily lessons in living I have learned from her, I don't know about that other sibling
who might have taken her place. And the point is, neither does Professor Singer. But I do
know one thing for certain. I'm not ready to trade her in.
-Doris Zames Fleischer
Preface
IN THE ANATOMY OF PREJUDICE (1996),¹ Elisabeth Young-Bruehl analyzes what she believes
to be "the four prejudices that have dominated American life and reflection in the past
half-century-anti-Semitism, racism, sexism, and homophobia."2 No reference is made to
disability discrimination. Misrepresented as a health, economic, technical, or safety issue
rather than discrimination, prejudice based on disability frequently remains unrecognized.
Although disability bias impacts upon a great many people, often with devastating
consequences, Young-Bruehl's omission is not surprising. R. C. Smith, author of A Case
About Amy (1996)³-an analysis of the 1982 Supreme Court ruling that denied a public school
accommodation of a full-time sign-language interpreter for Amy Rowley, an extremely
intelligent, profoundly deaf child-observes:
Unkind words against homosexuals, African-Americans, Hispanics, and other minorities at least
prompt rebuke from people who, though not members of these stigmatized groups, still recognize
the prejudice. But prejudice against individuals with disabilities commonly goes undetected by
a general public too unaware of its own feelings to recognize what has been said or written as
prejudicial.4
Perhaps this oversight stems from a collective fear of disability since everyone is subject to
illness, accident, the declining powers of advanced age-all forms of human vulnerability.
"Handicapism," also referred to as "ableism," is the only "ism" to which all human beings
are susceptible.5
This denial of the reality of disability results in stereotypes that continue to prevail. Films
present people with disabilities either condescendingly as "inspirational," endeavoring to
be as "normal" as possible by "overcoming" their limitations, or as disfigured monsters
"slashing and hacking their way to box office success."⁶ The inspirational figure hearkens
back to Tiny Tim from Dickens's A Christmas Carol, a receptacle for the pity of those who
did not have poor Tim's misfortune. In fact, "in the nineteenth century notion of charity,
afflicted [the term used at the time for the disabled] people might be said to be created
in order to provide opportunities for Christian folk to exercise their Christian virtue." In
the process, the lucky nondisabled could surreptitiously celebrate their superiority while
simultaneously imagining that, by means of their charity, they were imitating the life
of Christ.
XVI PREFACE
When the authors of this book began their work over five years ago, the issue of disability
rights had not yet entered into the public consciousness. Although President George
Bush had signed the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) in 1990, which gave people
with disabilities many of the same civil rights won by other groups, the struggle of the
disability community to secure these rights appeared to lack the drama of the struggles of
African Americans or women and indeed did lack the media attention. Even the controversy
regarding an appropriate memorial for Franklin Delano Roosevelt, which did attract media
attention, pointed to the surprising invisibility of disability and to a lack of awareness of
the profound separation of images of power (the Presidency) and images of disability
(the wheelchair). Disappointing as actor Christopher Reeve's emphasis on spinal cord
regeneration, rather than disability rights, has been to many in the disability community,
his struggle-after an accident left him quadriplegic-did catch the attention of a public
watching a superman who once flew, but now cannot walk, re-create his life.
Until recently, the media did not seem cognizant of the significant number of people
with disabilities in the United States (not to mention the rest of the world), nor the degree
to which "invisible disabilities" such as psychiatric disorders, heart disease, diabetes, cancer,
and learning disabilities predominate over visible ones. According to 1994-1995 data, over
20 percent of Americans-fifty-four million-were disabled, with almost half of them having
severe disabilities.⁸ As a consequence of medical and technological progress, the disability
and the aging populations will continue to grow. It is not surprising that as people age, the
probability increases that they will become disabled, and the likelihood of that impairment
being severe also increases. What is surprising is the prevalence of disability for specific
age groups: almost one-fourth of people forty-five to fifty-four, over one-third of those
fifty-five to sixty-four, almost one-half of those sixty-five to seventy-nine, and almost three
quarters of those eighty years and above.
The public's avoidance of acknowledging the ever-threatening possibility-and after a
certain age, probability-of disability is not unexpected. Yet, the results of a 1998 study-
indicating that even for adults with disabilities, only 54 percent have heard of the ADA9-
reveals that despite the social and political gains achieved by disability activists in the past
twenty years, the educational challenges ahead are significant. For example, the failure to
select a handicapped-accessible site for the December 3, 1997, Presidential Conference on
Race in Akron, Ohio, illustrates how often the pervasiveness of disability is unappreciated;
officials did not consider that people with disabilities are included among racial minorities.
Almost a decade after passage of the ADA, this landmark legislation fueled by the civil
rights movement is being seriously challenged in the courts. In 1999, the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled in three separate employment cases that physical impairments that can be
controlled by medication or assistive devices did not constitute a "disability" under the
Americans with Disabilities Act. More threatening, however, to the viability of the ADA are
challenges to the constitutionality of Title II of this law. In the year 2001, the Supreme
Court is expected to rule in Garrett v. University of Alabama on whether Congress has
the authority under the "equal protection" clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to ban
discrimination by states against individuals with disabilities. In 2000, the Court, in Kimel
v. Florida Board of Regents, invoking the doctrine of "sovereign immunity" as embodied in
the Eleventh Amendment, held that Congress lacked the power to require states to pay
damages for violations of another federal statute-the Age Discrimination in Employment
Act. A decision against plaintiff Garrett could eliminate Title II's ban on discrimination
PREFACE XVII
against people with disabilities by state or local governments in any sphere-employment,
access to public services, education, health care, or other programs administered by states
and localities.¹⁰
Because many people with disabilities require "reasonable accommodation"¹¹ under the
ADA in order to achieve equality, civil rights for this population are in jeopardy. While
critics of the ADA overestimate the cost of such accommodation, they also underestimate
the cost of discrimination, not only to individuals with disabilities, but also to society
in general. The U.S. Senate recognized this frequently untapped potential in people with
disabilities when, on June 16, 1999, it passed by a vote of 99 to o the long-overdue Work
Incentives Improvement Act permitting those who require health care benefits to work
without losing such benefits. On that occasion Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.)
declared, "We must banish the patronizing mind-set that disabled people are unable. In
fact, they have enormous talent, and America cannot afford to waste an ounce of it."¹²
This book is an effort to document the enormous talent that brought forth the disability
rights movement.
Acknowledgments
WE WOULD LIKE TO acknowledge the valuable contributions of the following people:
Samuel W. Anderson, Michael Auberger, Rims Barber, Sylvia Bassoff, Kim Baxter, Elizabeth
Benjamin, Philip Bennett, Marcia Bernstein, Frank Bowe, Marca Bristo, Dale Brown, Paul
Camacho, Dennis Cannon, Daniel Carr, Judi Chamberlin, James Cherry, Ira Cochin, Judith
Cohen, Diane Coleman, Gerald R. Costa, Alice Crespo, Justin Dart, Anne Davis, Jim Davis,
Mary Delgado, Susan Dooha, Marya Doonan, Melinda Dutton, Anne Emerman, Tod
Ensign, Robert Fasano, Fred Fay, Keith Frank, Eunice Fiorito, Barbara Fisher, A. E. Foster,
Lex Frieden, Tim Fuller, Martin Gensler, Ellen Gerson, Stephen Gold, Karen Luxton
Gourgey, John C. Gray, Mark Green, Richard Greer, John Gresham, Rachelle Grossman,
Joe Harkins, Florence Haskell, Eileen Healy, Paul Hearne, Nelson Hendler, Ilse Heumann,
Judith E. Heumann, Alan Hevesi, Olga Hill, Catherine Huynh, Paul Jendrek, Blanche
Kwas Johnson, Susan Jouard, Lois Kaggen, Martin Katzen, Bruce Alan Kiernan, Sherry
Lampert, Nadina LaSpina, Martin Leff, Robert and Toby Levine, Edward Lewinson, Diane
Lipton, Edward Litcher, Paul Longmore, Kitty Lunn, Robert Lynch, Nicholas M. and M.
M., Sandra Marlow, Carr Massi, Rosemarie McCaffrey, Michael McCann, John M. McNeil,
Terence Moakley, Marilyn Newman, Raphael Nisan, Ellen Nuzzi, Roxanne Offner, Marcia
Osofsky, Celeste Owens, Harvey Pacht, Sandra Parrino, Gary Pitts, Keisha Powell, Rami
Rabby, James Raggio, Daniel Robert, Edward Roberts, Nancy Rolnick, Phyllis Rubenfeld,
Lani Sanjek, Marilyn Saviola, Susan Scheer, Robert Schoenfeld, Carmen Silver, William
Skawinski, Eleanor Smith, Mary Somosa, Richard Spiegel, Marvin Spieler, Steven Stellman,
Jean Stewart, Paul Sullivan, Karen Tamley, Arthur Teicher, Marvin Wasserman, James
Weisman, Judith Wessler, Harry Wieder, Charles Winston, Barry Winthrop, Arthur Wohl,
Sidney Wolinsky, Alexander Wood, Deborah Yanagisawa, Ernest Zelnick, Barbara Zitcer,
Gerry Zuzze.
Special thanks to Michael Ames, for his wise editorial counseling and his continuing
encouragement and support; Leonard Fleischer, without whom this book could not have
been written-like Faulkner's Dilsey, he endured; Michael Imperiale, for providing us with
supplies and the nourishment we needed to take on and complete this project; the helpful
people at Temple University Press-Charles Ault, Jennifer French, Tamika Hughes, and
Irene Imperio; and Yvonne Ramsey, for her patience, editing acumen, and good humor.
Chronology
1817
The first school for deaf students in the United States is established in Hartford,
Connecticut.
1829
Louis Braille invents the raised dot system for the blind known as Braille.
1841
Dorothea Dix begins her efforts to improve conditions for people with
disabilities incarcerated in jails and poorhouses.
1864
The National Deaf-Mute College-known as Gallaudet College in 1954 and later
Gallaudet University-is established.
1880
The Congress of Milan bans the use of sign language in schools for deaf people.
-
The National Association of the Deaf is founded.
1903
Helen Keller publishes her autobiography, The Story of My Life.
1904
Winifred Holt Mather establishes Lighthouse No. I for blind people in New York
City, the first of many throughout the world.
1909
Clifford Beers, author of A Mind That Found Itself, organizes The National
Committee for Mental Hygiene, later known as The National Mental Health
Association.
1914
The War Risk Insurance Act becomes law.
1917
The Smith-Hughes Vocational Education Act becomes law.
1918
The Smith-Sears Veterans Rehabilitation Act becomes law.
1920
Disabled American Veterans of the World War is founded-later known as
Disabled American Veterans.
-
The Smith-Fess Vocational Rehabilitation Act becomes law.
1921
The American Foundation for the Blind is founded.
-
Franklin Delano Roosevelt contracts polio.
I
The United States Veterans Bureau is established-later known as the
Department of Veterans Affairs.
1922
Edward F. Allen establishes the National Easter Seal Society in Elyria, Ohio.
1923
Henry Kessler, a pioneer in rehabilitation medicine, initiates surgical techniques
that allows muscular control of artificial limbs.
1927
Franklin Delano Roosevelt co-establishes the Warm Springs Foundation.
1929
Dorothy Harrison Eustis and Morris Frank found Seeing Eye, the first guide dog
training school in the United States.
XXII CHRONOLOGY
-
National Easter Seal Society establishes Rehabilitation International.
1932
Franklin Delano Roosevelt is elected President of the United States.
1935
The League of the Physically Handicapped is organized; it disbands in 1938.
The Social Security Act, providing federal old age benefits and grants to the
states for assistance to blind people and children with disabilities, becomes law.
I937
The March of Dimes is founded.
The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis is founded.
I940
Jacobus tenBroek organizes the National Federation of the Blind in
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.
I943
The Barden-LaFollette Act dealing with vocational rehabilitation becomes law.
I947
Paralyzed Veterans of America is organized.
1948
Tim Nugent initiates services and a sports program for students with disabilities
at the University of Illinois, and the university institutes a paratransit system on
its wheelchair accessible campus.
1949
United Cerebral Palsy Association, uniting all local cerebral palsy organizations
in the United States, is founded.
1950
Elizabeth Boggs forms a parents' group working for improved services for
children with developmental disabilities.
-
Gunnnar Dybwad and others organize the Association of Retarded Citizens,
which later develops branches throughout the United States and the
world.
1951
Howard Rusk opens the Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine at the New York
University Medical Center in New York City.
1955
Jonas Salk develops the first successful polio vaccine.
1956
A law is enacted enabling people aged fifty or older to qualify for Social Security
Disability Insurance.
1960
The Social Security disability program is amended to allow people under fifty to
quality for Social Security Disability Insurance.
-
William Stokoe's paper on Sign Language Structure legitimizes American Sign
Language and ushers in the movement of Deafness as culture.
1961
Former members of the National Foundation for the Blind found a new
organization, the American Council of the Blind.
1962
Edward Roberts sues to gain admission to the University of California, the same
semester that James Meredith requires a lawsuit to become the first black person
to attend the University of Mississippi.
1964
The Civil Rights Act, which will impact significantly on subsequent disability
rights legislation, becomes law.
1965
The Social Security Act is amended, establishing Medicare and Medicaid.
I968
The federal Architectural Barriers Act becomes law.
I
Prodded by Harold Willson, the California state legislature guarantees that the
Bay Area Rapid Transit system will be the first rapid transit system in the United
States to accommodate wheelchair users.
1970
Judith E. Heumann organizes Disabled In Action in New York City.
The Urban Mass Transportation Assistance Act becomes law.
1971
The Mental Patients Liberation Project is initiated in New York City, and similar
projects begun by "psychiatric survivors" emerge throughout the nation.
CHRONOLOGY XXIII
1972
Amendments to the Social Security Act allow recipients of disability benefits
under the age of sixty-five to qualify for Medicare.
-
The appalling conditions at Willowbrook State School in New York City for
people with developmental disabilities are exposed as the result of a television
broadcast from the facility.
-
Demonstrations are held in Washington, D.C., by disability activists protesting
President Nixon's veto of what will become the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
-
Guide Dog Users is organized in New York City.
Passage of amendments to the Social Security Act creates the Supplemental
Security Income program.
-
Edward Roberts establishes the Center for Independent Living in Berkeley,
California-a symbol of the Independent Living Movement emerging
throughout the nation and the world.
-
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia decides in Mills v. Board of
Education that every school-age child is entitled to a free public education
regardless of the nature or severity of the individual's disability.
1973
The Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board-later known
as the Access Board-is established under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 to
enforce the Architectural Barriers Act of 1968.
-
The Rehabilitation Act of 1973, including Section 504, becomes law.
1974
The first convention of People First-the largest U.S. organization of and led by
people with developmental or cognitive disabilities-is held in Salem, Oregon.
1975
The American Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities is organized in
Washington, D.C.
-
Wade Blank relocates adults with severe disabilities from a nursing home into
apartments, initiating what will become the Denver, Colorado, Atlantis
Community.
-
The Education for All Handicapped Children Act, later known as the Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act, becomes law.
Edward Roberts becomes director of the California Department of
Rehabilitation.
1976
James Cherry wins lawsuit (Cherry v. Mathews in U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia) requiring that the Secretary of Health, Education, and
Welfare develop and promulgate Section 504 regulations.
-
Disabled In Action of Pennsylvania v. Coleman (known as the Transbus lawsuit) is
filed in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
1977
Following nationwide demonstrations by disability activists, HEW Secretary
Joseph Califano signs the regulations for Section 504 and the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act.
-
Lloyd v. Regional Transportation Authority is decided in U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Seventh Circuit, establishing a private right of action under Section 504.
1979
U.S. Supreme Court decides Southeastern Community College v. Davis, a suit
impacting on accessible public transportation.
-
Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund is founded in Berkeley, California.
-
The National Alliance for the Mentally Ill is founded in Madison, Wisconsin.
1980
Black Deaf Advocates is founded.
XXIV CHRONOLOGY
1981
The year is designated as the International Year of Disabled Persons by the
United Nations.
1982
The U.S. Supreme Court decides in Hendrick Hudson Central School District v.
Rowley that there is "no Congressional intent to achieve strict equality of
opportunity or services" in the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
1983
ADAPT, denoting American Disabled for Accessible Public Transit, is organized.
Edward Roberts and Judith E. Heumann (together with Joan Leon) organize the
World Institute on Disability in Oakland, California.
1984
The National Council on Disability becomes an independent federal agency.
1986
The U.S. Supreme Court decides in the Baby Jane Doe case (Bowen v. American
Hospital Association) that parents' refusal of needed surgery does not violate
Section 504.
Irving Zola founds the Society for Disability Studies.
1988
The Gallaudet University uprising results in its first deaf president, I. King
Jordan.
The Fair Housing Act is amended to include people with disabilities.
Civil Rights Restoration Act becomes law, in effect overturning the U.S. Supreme
Court's 1984 Grove City College v. Bell decision regarding the discrimination on
the basis of sex in federally assisted education programs or activities.
1989
ADAPT v. Skinner-decided by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit-helped pave the way for accessibility of public transportation.
Ralf Hotchkiss establishes the Wheeled Mobility Center at San Francisco State
College, from which his International Wheelchair Program emanates.
Ronald Mace establishes the Center for Universal Design in Raleigh, North
Carolina.
Daniel R. R. v. State Board of Education (Fifth Circuit) in Texas-the first of four
significant inclusion cases (from 1989 to 1994) involving children with
developmental disabilities-results in consistent legal decisions that the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act mandated the integration of these
children into regular classes with full supports.
1990
ADAPT now denotes American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today as the
organization focuses on a new primary purpose.
President George Bush signs the Americans with Disabilities Act into law.
1995
The American Association of People with Disabilities is established in
Washington, D.C.
Diane Coleman and others organize Not Dead Yet to oppose Jack Kevorkian and
supporters of physician-assisted suicide.
Justin Dart and others organize Justice For All in Washington, D.C.
Billy Golfus's film, When Billy Broke His Head-a personal view of the disability
rights movement-premiers on public television.
1996
The paradigm shift in scientists' characterization of the development of AIDS
begins the process of changing AIDS from a fatal disease into a chronic one.
Veterans Health Care Eligibility Reform Act (dealing with Vietnam veterans)
becomes law.
I997
The U.S. Supreme Court validates the state prohibition on physician-assisted
suicide in Vacco v. Quill and Washington v. Glucksberg, while deciding that this issue
CHRONOLOGY XXV
is properly within the jurisdiction of the states.
1998
Persian Gulf War Veterans Act becomes law.
-
The U.S. Supreme Court decides in its first Americans with Disabilities Act case,
Bragdon v. Abbott, that the act's definition of disability includes asymptomatic
HIV.
-
The U.S. Supreme Court decides in Pennsylvania Department of Corrections. Yeskey
that the Americans with Disabilities Act covers state prisons.
1999
The U.S. Supreme Court decides in Carolyn C. Cleveland v. Policy Management
Systems Corp., et al. that people receiving Social Security disability benefits are
protected against discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act if
and when they are able to return to the work force.
-
The U.S. Supreme Court decides in Olmstead v. L.C. and E.W. that individuals
with disabilities must be offered services in the "most integrated setting."
-
The U.S. Supreme Court decides in three employment cases, Sutton et al. v. United
Air Lines, Inc., Murphy v. United Parcel Service, Inc., and Albertsons, Inc. v. Kirkingburg
that individuals whose conditions do not substantially limit any life activity
and/or are easily correctable are not disabled according to the Americans with
Disabilities Act.
The Work Incentives Improvement Act, allowing to work those who require
health care benefits, becomes law.
Abbreviations and Acronyms
AAPD
American Association of People with Disabilities
AARP
American Association of Retired People
ABA
Applied Behavioral Analysis
ACB
American Council of the Blind
ACCD
American Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities
ACLU
American Civil Liberties Union
ACRMD
Association of Children with Retarded Mental Development
Act-Up
AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power
ADA
Americans with Disabilities Act
ADAPT
American Disabled for Accessible Public Transit, later American Disabled for
Attendant Programs Today
AFB
American Foundation for the Blind
AHCA
American Health Care Association
AHRC
Association for Help of Retarded Children
AIDS
autoimmune deficiency syndrome
ALS
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
AMA
American Medical Association
ANSI
American National Standards Institute
APTA
American Public Transit Association
ARC
Association of Retarded Citizens (currently known as The Arc)
ASL
American Sign Language
BART
Bay Area Rapid Transit
BCID
Brooklyn Center for Independence of the Disabled
BCIL
Boston Center for Independent Living
BDA
Black Deaf Advocates
CARR
Committee Against Right on Red
CHIP
Child Health Insurance Program
CIA
Central Intelligence Agency
CIDNY
Center for Independence of the Disabled in New York
CIL
Center for Independent Living (Berkeley, California)
DAV
Disabled American Veterans
XXVIII ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS
DAVWW Disabled American Veterans of the World War
DIA
Disabled In Action
DNR
do-not-resuscitate (order)
DREDF
Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund
DSP
Disabled Students Program
EEOC
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
EPSDT
Early Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Testing
EPVA
Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Association
ERB
Emergency Relief Bureau
FAHA
Federal Aid Highway Administration
FDA
Food and Drug Administration
GMHC
Gay Men's Health Crisis
HCFA
Health Care Financing Administration
HEW
U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare
HILC
Harlem Independent Living Center
HMO
health maintenance organization
HPLSU
Handicapped Persons Legal Support Unit
HUD
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
ICD
Institute for the Crippled and Disabled, later International Center for the
Disabled
IDEA
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
IEP
individualized educational plan
IL
independent living
ILC
independent living center
ILRU
Independent Living Research Utilization (program)
IYDP
International Year of Disabled Persons
JFA
Justice For All
JOB
Just One Break
LD
learning disability
LIU
Long Island University
LRE
least restrictive environment
MiCasa
Medicaid Community Attendant Services Act
MiCassa
Medicaid Community Attendant Services and Supports Act
MSA
Medical Savings Account
MTA
Metropolitan Transportation Authority (New York City)
NAAV
National Association of Atomic Veterans
NAD
National Association of the Deaf
NAMI
National Alliance for the Mentally Ill
NCD
National Council on Disability
NFB
National Federation of the Blind
NIH
National Institutes of Health
NMHA
National Mental Health Association
NOD
National Organization on Disability
NYLPI
New York Lawyers for the Public Interest
NYSCPD
New York State Coalition of People with Disabilities
OVR
Office of Vocational Rehabilitation
ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS XXIX
PARC
Pennsylvania Association for Retarded Children
PH
physically handicapped
PVA
Paralysed Veterans of America
QILC
Queens Independent Living Center
SABE
Self Advocates Becoming Empowered
SDS
Society for Disability Studies
SILC
Statewide Independent Living Council
SKIP
Sick Kids Need Involved People
SSDI
Social Security Disability Insurance
SSI
Supplemental Security Income
TAB
temporarily ablebodied
TDD
telecommunication device for the deaf
TT
text telephone
TTY
teletypewriter
UCP
United Cerebral Palsy (local organizations)
UCPA
United Cerebral Palsy Association (national organization)
UMTA
Urban Mass Transportation Administration
USDOT
U.S. Department of Transportation
VA
Veterans Administration
VESID
Vocational and Educational Services for Individuals with Disabilities
WID
World Institute on Disability
WIIA
Work Incentives Improvement Act
WIN
Wheelchair Independence Now, later Win Independence Now
WPA
Works Progress Administration
The Disability Rights Movement
Chapter One
"Wheelchair Bound" and
"The Poster Child"
"HOPE FOR THE CRIPPLED" was the name
President-to be one of the most significant
of a postage stamp issued in 1970, said
political figures of the twentieth century.
Judith E. Heumann, current Assistant Sec-
Yet both the nation and the man had an
retary of the U.S. Department of Education
obsession with the myth of his total recov-
and quadriplegic wheelchair user, in her
ery. FDR had to be seen, and had to see
1980 testimony to the United States Com-
himself, as a "cured cripple,"2 not a person
mission on Civil Rights.¹ The stamp pic-
diminished by disability. As his wife Eleanor
tured "a person seated in a wheelchair rising
observed, however, the disability may have
to a standing position [that] indicated what
been a "blessing in disguise,"3 steeling and
people thought of a disabled individual in
sensitizing the man. According to historian
a wheelchair.
You are not considered to
Doris Kearns Goodwin:
be a whole person; however, once you are
in this standing position-that is normal-
The paralysis that crippled his body expanded
his mind and his sensibilities. After what
ity." In January 1999, the nation saw an-
Eleanor called his "trial by fire," he seemed
other image on their TV screens. Defending
less arrogant, less smug, less superficial, more
President Clinton from impeachment, the
focused, more complex, more interesting.
President's Chief Counsel Charles Ruff took
He returned from his ordeal with greater
center stage in the Senate chambers in his
powers of concentration and greater self-
wheelchair. How have our images of people
knowledge. "There had been a plowing up of
with disabilities (until recently called "the
his nature," Labor Secretary Frances Perkins
observed. "The man emerged completely
disabled") changed in the last fifty years?
warmhearted, with new humility of spirit
and a firmer understanding of profound
philosophical concepts." No longer belonging
FDR, the "Cured Cripple"
to his old world in the same way, he came to
empathize with the poor and underprivileged,
The ability to stand and to walk was unnec-
with people to whom fate had dealt a
difficult hand.⁴
essary for Franklin Delano Roosevelt-who
had contracted polio eleven years before he
The extent to which the public was aware
was elected to his first of four terms as
of Roosevelt's disability varied widely. While
2 CHAPTER ONE
for many people with disabilities FDR en-
ingness to confront the reality of Roose-
gendered faith in their own possibilities,
velt's disability:
the general public preferred not to see
their President's physical impairment. Al-
Roosevelt's being crippled was hardly what
though some did not know, others refused
made him one of our greatest Presidents.
Memorials exaggerate in visual terms
to learn, and still others refused to tell that
the features of those paid this granite
the President was disabled. New York Times
homage. Wouldn't representing him in a
columnist Maureen Dowd describes her fa-
wheelchair have the effect of overplaying his
ther's experience:
being crippled?
In the 30's my father, a D.C. police detective,
President Roosevelt was seen by all but a
traveled to the Deep South to bring back a
few as not being disabled. His memorial
prisoner for trial. As he waited at the railroad
should so depict him, as he was perceived
station to come home, some nasty-looking
and is remembered. To do otherwise is a form
vagrants surrounded him.
of revisionism.⁷
"You're from Washington," one said to
him. "Do you see the President?"
"Lester Hyman, a Memorial Commission
"Yes," replied my father, who worked on
member, said that they had decided not to
protective details for President Roosevelt.
"There are some ugly rumors going around
display a wheelchair or braces in order to
that the President is a cripple," the bum
show Roosevelt as people then knew him."8
growled. "We're going to kill any man says
Although Maureen Dowd appeals for an
that's true."
honest depiction of the President as he re-
"The President," my father lied pleasantly,
ally was, her language and attitude reveal her
"is a fine, athletic man" [which unbeknownst
limited understanding of disability. Her ref-
to Dowd or her father had some element of
erence to Roosevelt as "wheelchair bound"-
truth since Roosevelt swam frequently].⁵
rather than a "wheelchair user"-is a melo-
Of the many who were cognizant of the
dramatic construction no longer accepted
President's contraction of polio, only a
by people with disabilities, for the phrase is
privileged few knew the degree to which it
an anachronism of a pre-accessible society.
limited his mobility.
This reference, more than a quibble about
The continuing public self-deception re-
political correctness,⁹ demonstrates how
garding Roosevelt's disability is dramati-
the language perpetuates common miscon-
cally illustrated by the decision to create a
ceptions about people with disabilities.
Washington, D.C., memorial depicting FDR
Although Dowd concludes that Roose-
as though he were not a wheelchair user.
velt's concealment of his disability stemmed
Karl E. Meyer in the New York Times "Edi-
from his courage, more likely his political
torial Notebook" indicated that "there will
savvy told him that as President of a na-
be no visual reminder of this fact [Roo-
tion in the throes of a disabling economic
sevelt's inability to stand unassisted] in the
depression and devastating world conflict,
FDR memorial due to be dedicated next
he needed to be perceived as a forceful and
spring [1997]. On the contrary, he is to be
vigorous leader. At that time, power and
shown standing tall in one of the three
disability were felt in a visceral way to be mu-
sculptures planned for the seven-acre site
tually exclusive. More indicative of Dowd's
on the banks of the Potomac." Although
as well as the popular misconception is her
Meyer's article was critical of this alteration
assumption that what people with disabili-
of the truth about FDR, two letters to the
ties need are the following: first, to gain in-
editor expose the persistent public unwill-
spiration, from a "supercrip" like Roosevelt,
"WHEELCHAIR BOUND" AND "THE POSTER CHILD" 3
to overcome their impairments; and second,
and the amputees. As Roosevelt aide Sam
like Tiny Tim, to serve as an inspiration to
Rosenman remembered:
nondisabled people.
At one of the hospitals [Oahu, Hawaii],
Worthwhile as these symbolic roles may
the President did something which affected
be, they are not the major needs of peo-
us all [Roosevelt's entourage] very deeply. He
ple with disabilities, as John Gliedman and
asked a secret service man to wheel him slowly
William Roth discovered in their study, The
through all the wards that were occupied by
Unexpected Minority. 10 Their research on chil-
veterans who had lost one or more arms and
dren with disabilities led the authors to an
legs. He insisted on going past each individual
unanticipated conclusion: this population's
bed. He wanted to display himself and his
useless legs to those boys who would have to
most urgent need was a political movement to
face the same bitterness
remove social impediments. Not burdened
With a cheering smile to each of them
by stigma, discrimination, or inaccessibil-
and a pleasant word at the bedside of a score
ity, many people with disabilities, like most
or more, this man who had risen from a bed of
other people, would be resourceful enough
helplessness ultimately to become President
to recognize and fulfill their own poten-
of the United States was living proof of what
tial. Perhaps the one overriding purpose for
the human spirit could do.¹³
portraying Roosevelt as he really was is to
At Warm Springs, Georgia, a rehabilita-
reassert the historical truth with which the
tion center established by Roosevelt before
nation has never fully come to terms: for
his Presidency, he also revealed what his wife
many years, from 1932 to 1945, what was
called "an understanding of the suffering
arguably the most demanding job in the
of others." There new "polios" had the
world was accomplished from a wheelchair.
opportunity to see old "polios" living pro-
There were two public occasions when
ductive lives in a noninstitutional setting,
FDR deliberately permitted people to see
alive with intellectual stimulation, spon-
the severity of his disability.¹¹ These inci-
taneity, and fun. 15 As FDR biographer Hugh
dents suggest his awareness of the relation-
Gregory Gallagher puts it, "There was flirt-
ship between coping with bias (because of
ing, falling in love, sexual hanky-panky-
disability or race) and transcending obsta-
and much gossip about it all."¹⁶ Demon-
cles (physical and attitudinal). In 1936, at the
strating an insight into the deepest needs
request of Mordecai Johnson, president of
of other "polios," many of whom were ado-
Howard University, Roosevelt allowed the
lescents or young adults, FDR was known
audience to observe his physical vulnera-
affectionately as "Dr. Roosevelt" at Warm
bility at the dedication of a new building
Springs. 17 Under his direction, the establish-
on campus: "He let himself be lifted from
ment attended not only to paralyzed limbs,
the car and set down in full public view,
with newly devised treatments, but also to
and then he proceeded to walk slowly and
injured self-images.
painfully to the podium."¹ Appreciating
Roosevelt chose Fred Botts-an early pa-
the crippling effects of prejudice, especially
tient at Warm Springs who had a serious
in this period when racial barriers were sanc-
disability-as registrar in charge of admis-
tioned by law, Roosevelt was willing to ap-
sions and, informally, as representative of
pear before the student body as a model of
patients' interests. 18 Sharing FDR's vision of
achievement in the face of great odds.
the operation, Botts served as the "guardian
Six years later, he presented himself in
of the spirit" of Warm Springs. The removal
his wheelchair at a hospital as a means of
of Botts from his post after Roosevelt's
asserting his identification with the injured
death signaled the loss of patient primacy at
4 CHAPTER ONE
Warm Springs and its transformation into
confirms Longmore's sense of the distorted
a more conventional institution controlled
social view of disability as a transgression":
by professional medical administrators.
"Because some patients did recover, and a
For the most part, however, as historian
few recovered spectacularly, those who did
Paul Longmore indicates, FDR lived accord-
not came to be perceived as having somehow
ing to a bargain that misrepresented the
failed the test of American wholesomeness.
nature of disability:
If only they had tried a little harder, surely
they would have made it from iron lung
This Bargain could only be struck in a society
to rocking bed, from bed to braces, from
that viewed disability as a transgression,
braces to crutches, from crutches to the IOO-
something the disabled person could, with
effort, "manage" and control-"a private,
yard dash."21
emotional or physical tragedy best dealt
Though FDR and his circle strove to de-
with by psychological coping," Longmore
ceive a public that invited the deception, the
says. This view of disability has been called
President fell victim to the same dissem-
the "medical model": it sees the disability
bling that he was perpetrating: disability
itself as the problem, to be dealt with in
equals weakness; therefore, he is in fact not
private, something between doctor and
"really" disabled. The fiction the public was
patient.
"The Bargain," Longmore points
out, "disallows any collective protest against
fed that he could walk without a great deal
things like prejudice or discrimination."
of human or mechanical aid became the
internalized hoax that he would walk with-
Doris Kearns Goodwin in No Ordinary
out assistance. The symbolic value placed
Time describes the "unspoken code of
on walking, inappropriate as it may have
honor" adhered to by White House and
been, was given dramatic expression in Dore
press photographers as well as newsreel
Schary's 1958 play and 1960 film, Sunrise at
film makers:
Campobello. The heroic ending, signifying
FDR's re-entrance into political life after
In twelve years, not a single picture was ever
printed of the President in his wheelchair.
his "victory" over polio, is represented by
No newsreel had ever captured him being
his walking with crutches to the platform
lifted into or out of his car. When he
to nominate Al Smith at the 1924 Demo-
was shown in public, he appeared either
cratic Convention.
standing behind a podium, seated in an
The image of walking is not merely
ordinary chair, or leaning on the arm of a
Schary's metaphor. It is a collective sym-
colleague. If, as occasionally happened, one
bol, as in the "Riddle of the Sphinx" in
of the members of the press corps sought
to violate the code by sneaking a picture of
Sophocles' Oedipus: "What walks on four
the President looking helpless, one of the
legs in the morning, two in the afternoon,
older photographers would "accidentally"
and three at night?" The answer-man-
block the shot or gently knock the camera
refers to the human condition, for a person
to the ground. But such incidents were rare;
crawling in infancy on all fours or hobbling
by and large, the "veil of silence" about the
in old age with a cane, as if with three
extent of Roosevelt's handicap was accepted
legs, represents dependency; but a man at
by everyone-Roosevelt, the press, and the
the height of his powers walks on his own
American people.2
two legs. A problem arises, however, when
In the Shadow of Polio, a description by
metaphor is confused with reality. With TV
Kathryn Black of her mother's struggle with
reporting making a Roosevelt-like "splen-
polio, "an embarrassing rebuke to all the
did deception" impossible today, disability
heroic 'can-do' propaganda of the period,"
stigma-despite the passage of the Ameri-
"WHEELCHAIR BOUND" AND "THE POSTER CHILD" 5
cans with Disabilities Act-is still so perva-
was "politicized and radicalized" when she
sive that it is improbable that anyone with
was informed that she would have to pass
an impairment as severe as FDR's could be
a physical examination in order to obtain
elected President.²
a secretarial job for which she was "per-
fectly qualified."
Haskell recognized that the physical ex-
League of the Physically Handicapped
amination would unjustly doom her em-
ployment chances even though her disabil-
While FDR, the press, and the public were
ity would not interfere with her perfor-
denying the President's disability, the
mance. In fact, her disability was not even
League of the Physically Handicapped, at
discovered until she was in fifth grade, and
the same time, was making disability dis-
then only accidentally. Other highly capable
crimination visible. One of the first dis-
individuals with diverse physical disabili-
ability organizations to articulate its pur-
ties had similar experiences; frequently, they
pose in unequivocally political terms, the
were rejected for less qualified nondisabled
league was a militant group formed in the
workers. On those unusual occasions when
1930s to oppose discrimination in govern-
they were hired, they were often paid wages
ment and private employment.23 The 1935
well below the regular salary for their occu-
Social Security Act, while providing income
pation regardless of their competence.
support and vocational rehabilitation for
Despite the selection by Home Relief
people with disabilities, did not completely
Agencies of a number of recipients for
serve the needs of those capable potential
government jobs, records of people with
employees who were able to compete in
disabilities were stamped "PH" (physically
the workforce if given the opportunity. The
handicapped), disqualifying those candi-
original nucleus of the league, six individu-
dates from consideration. The Wednesday,
als who formed a sit-in protest at the New
May 29, 1935, occupation of the ERB di-
York City office of the Emergency Relief
rector's office was an impromptu reaction,
Bureau (ERB) director, Oswald W. Knauth,
resulting from the six protesters' frustration
from May 29 to June 6, 1935, were convinced
at being unable to confront Knauth directly
that their physical disabilities were being
to demand employment opportunities. The
used as an excuse to treat them as if they
press was unaware of the protest until the
were unemployable. Thus, they perceived
following afternoon when the wife of one
themselves as a minority unprotected by the
of the demonstrators brought a huge crowd
law rather than "medical models" victim-
of supporters, later joined by even more on-
ized by physical impairments.
lookers, to the building. Emboldened, the
Although most of its members were mo-
occupiers not only insisted on an audience
bility-impaired, the league demonstrated
with the director, but also added new de-
the value of coalition of individuals with
mands: fifty jobs would have to be offered
different disabilities. Among its members
to league members immediately, and ten
were people with a variety of disabilities re-
more jobs made available each week; salaries
sulting from childhood poliomyelitis (also
would have to be no less than twenty-seven
known as infantile paralysis), cerebral palsy,
dollars for married employees and twenty-
heart conditions, and tuberculosis, as well
one dollars for single employees; workers
as from accidents. Florence Haskell, who
with disabilities would have to be integrated
contracted polio in 1916, the year of the first
with, rather than segregated from, nondis-
major polio epidemic in the United States,
abled workers.
6 CHAPTER ONE
Although the exact date of the league's
in his administration; second, it served as
formation is unknown, Haskell remembers
respite for the weary travelers.
it as occurring shortly after this nine-day
When they met with Harry L. Hopkins,
protest and the ensuing trial. Up to that
head of the WPA, on the following day,
point, most of the activities of those who
they insisted on a permanent jobs program
would later become league members were ad
for-as well as a national census of-people
hoc responses to events. The most dramatic
with physical disabilities. A census was re-
of these events was a ten-day near-comic
quired to verify the league's contention that
trial of eleven ERB picketers-some sit-in
there were many qualified potential work-
protesters joined by other demonstrators-
ers with physical disabilities. The protesters
arrested on June 6, 1935. Besides asking
demanded that the census be paid for by
Mayor Fiorello La Guardia to preside over
the WPA, but supervised by the league, for
the trial, the unorthodox and erratic judge,
they wanted to be certain that the project
Overton Harris, compared himself to
was carried out properly. The Washington Star
Christ, expressed his desire to escape to
described the league members as seeking
Tahiti, and urged the defendants to be prac-
"not sympathy-but a concrete plan to end
tical and forget their constitutional and
discrimination against employment of the
human rights. Newspaper accounts, such
physically handicapped on WPA projects":
as "Crippled Pickets 'Torture' Harris," in-
The 21-year-old girl president [Sylvia Flexer,
dicated that the press noted the farcical
later Sylvia Flexer Bassoff] of the youthful
quality of the trial.2⁴ The publicity the mem-
League of the Physically Handicapped-lame
bers received from this trial, as well as
from infantile paralysis since she was fourteen
political actions such as demonstrations,
months old-is tired of stock phrases which
picket lines, sit-ins, and hunger strikes,
lead nowhere, she declared today.
inspired them to organize formally. They
She and her companions, who laid 24-hour
raised enough money to rent office space,
siege to a WPA headquarters Saturday in a
successful attempt to arrange an interview
where they elected officers and regularly
with Administrator Harry L. Hopkins, are
discussed tactics.
sick of the humiliation of poor jobs at best-
Despite their success in eliminating the
often no work at all. "We are looking to the
"PH" category and acquiring Works Pro-
Federal Government because we know the
gress Administration (WPA) jobs for them-
States would turn us over to local agencies
selves and others in New York City, league
and we'd be right back where we started," she
declared.25
members recognized that their task was in-
complete. Job discrimination because of dis-
In August 1936, the league sent Roosevelt
ability was still accepted nationwide. On the
and Hopkins a "Thesis on Conditions of
first of their two trips to Washington, D.C.,
Physically Handicapped," a ten-page docu-
on May 8, 1936, thirty-five members traveled
ment making the case for government inter-
in a flatbed truck for over thirteen hours in
vention in employing people with physical
order to appeal to FDR, the disabled Presi-
disabilities.
dent, to provide access to government em-
At this point, the attention of the League
ployment for people with physical disabil-
of the Physically Handicapped returned to
ities throughout the country. The league's
obtaining WPA jobs for people with physical
occupation of the offices of the WPA served
disabilities in New York City. The League for
two purposes: first, it dramatized members'
the Advancement of the Deaf joined in this
determination to meet with, if not President
effort. Whatever concessions the League of
Roosevelt, then at least with a major figure
the Physically Handicapped received were
"WHEELCHAIR BOUND" AND "THE POSTER CHILD" 7
more than negated by numerous layoffs,
vealed contradictory assumptions. Mem-
which spurred the league again to go to
bers were described both as Communists
Washington in August 1937 in order to
and Communist dupes, unable to organize
urge Hopkins to secure jobs for workers
their own protests without guidance from
with physical disabilities. Limited by meager
outside agitators. New York City WPA di-
funds, league members slept the first night
rector Victor Ridder first acknowledged the
on the WPA lawn and the second on the
validity of the league's contention that gov-
grounds of the Washington Monument.
ernment owed jobs to people with physical
Meeting with no success, they once again
disabilities because of the employment bar-
sought government job opportunities in
riers they encountered. Shortly after, how-
New York City for workers with disabilities.
ever, he labeled league activists "trouble-
Ultimately, many of the league leaders were
makers who were mentally as well as physi-
employed by civil service.
cally disabled." Although disabled veterans
Because of the personal success of many
were given priority in employment, civilians
of the members, as well as the dissension
with similar disabilities were considered un-
triggered by the red-baiting of a small mi-
employable. ERB director Knauth claimed
nority, the League of the Physically Handi-
that New York City had no obligation to give
capped gradually ceased to exist. During its
unemployable people work, so they should
approximately four years of activism, from
seek jobs in private industry.
1935 to about 1938, its achievements were
On their first trip to Washington, when
noteworthy. Imbibing the 1930s spirit of
Hopkins denied the league's claim that the
social agitation, refusing to remain invisi-
WPA was discriminating against workers
ble, league members broke the stereotype
with disabilities, he advised members to
regarding disability. Rather than evoking
provide proof of their assertion. Despite the
pity, they were impelled by their anger to
league's submission of the "Thesis," which
risk social disapproval. Armed with a sense
included an analysis-with some statistical
of solidarity with other unemployed work-
evidence-of the disability employment sit-
ers with disabilities, they struggled against
uation in New York City, as well as a rec-
discrimination that unjustly limited their
ommendation for a national census, the
job opportunities. Considering the num-
document was ignored. The most blatant
ber of manual labor jobs at that time and
contradiction, however, was that FDR, the
the lack of access for workers with dis-
leader of the government that was designat-
abilities to private-sector jobs, league mem-
ing these workers with disabilities as unem-
bers believed that government had an obli-
ployable, was himself disabled.
gation to employ people with disabilities.
The actions and accomplishments of mem-
bers changed their self-perception, for, as
The March of Dimes
Haskell says, "People faced the public for the
first time, not with self-consciousness, but
Employing the slogan "Dance-that others
with honor. We were able to work, marry,
may walk," Birthday Balls, held from 1934
and have children. We could do what others
through 1945, celebrated the birthday of
do in our society." Because their legacy was
the President who was more severely dis-
not known, later generations of disability
abled than many of the workers denied jobs
activists would have to reinvent their vision.
because of their disabilities. Attended by
Public and governmental reaction to the
over three million Americans, by 1937 there
League of the Physically Handicapped re-
were seven thousand Birthday Balls funding
8 CHAPTER ONE
Warm Springs and programs in commu-
of Time," the March of Dimes campaign was
nities where the money was raised.²² Even
comedian Eddie Cantor's master stroke.³
on January 30, 1945, while the President
Using his coast-to-coast radio show, Cantor
was on an arduous ocean voyage to meet
asked listeners to send their dimes directly
Churchill and Stalin at Yalta, Mrs. Roosevelt
to the White House. Two days after the ap-
was attending the rounds of yearly Birthday
peal, the results seemed disastrous. A White
Balls to support the March of Dimes.²⁸ In
House aide complained to the March of
order to remove politics from the efforts to
Dimes committee, "You fellows have ruined
deal with the polio epidemics, and because
the President; all we've got is $1,700.50. The
the Birthday Balls were not raising enough
reporters are asking us how much we've
money, the National Foundation for Infan-
got. We're telling them we haven't had time
tile Paralysis and its fund-raising arm, the
to count it." Over the next days, however,
March of Dimes, were both initiated in 1937.
more than two hundred thousand letters
Despite the overwhelming support for the
arrived and the message from the White
March of Dimes, the National Foundation
House changed dramatically: "The White
for Infantile Paralysis drew criticism for be-
House was buried under an avalanche of
ing radical because it provided whatever the
mail. The White House mail chief reported,
polio patient required, from medical care to
"The government of the United States darn
equipment, without means-testing. "Con-
near stopped functioning." This initiative,
servative medical opinion found this policy
providing the financial base of the Na-
to be a dangerous precedent-perhaps even
tional Foundation for Infantile Paralysis,
communistic in concept."
launched what eventually proved to be the
Nonetheless, several factors contributed
successful effort to discover a polio vac-
to the success of the foundation in its
cine.31 The work of Dr. Jonas Salk, who
eighteen-year struggle against polio, from
produced the killed virus injected vaccine,
the organization's inception in 1937 to the
and of Dr. Albert Sabin, who developed the
development of the Salk vaccine in 1955.
live virus oral vaccine, was entirely funded
Profoundly dedicated to providing care for
by the March of Dimes.³
those affected by polio, Roosevelt also was
determined to eradicate the disease. Basil
O'Connor, the President's former law part-
Parent-Initiated Childhood Disability
ner who "used the prestige of the presidency
Organizations
to fight a germ, was selected as direc-
tor of the foundation. Capable and reso-
In 1958, with polio having virtually disap-
lute, O'Connor was willing to take whatever
peared in the United States, the March of
risks necessary to serve the purposes of the
Dimes took on a new challenge: confronting
foundation. When O'Connor realized that
the complex array of childhood disabilities
success seemed imminent, he allowed the
known as birth defects.³³ Although the 1937-
foundation to go into debt to finance the
1958 March of Dimes predated the other
final research required to develop the Salk
organizations that served children with spe-
vaccine. His "passionate" devotion to his
cific disabilities, it was an anomaly, for it
task became almost "obsessive" when his
was not parent-initiated.34 Furthermore, the
daughter, a mother of five, told him after
development of the polio vaccine, the ex-
she contracted the illness, "I've gotten some
traordinary achievement of this March of
of your polio."
Dimes-a concerted effort of government,
A wordplay on the newsreel "The March
volunteers, and scientists to find a means
"WHEELCHAIR BOUND" AND "THE POSTER CHILD" 9
of preventing polio-has not served as a
tisements in the New York Post in an effort
paradigm for coping with other childhood
to find parents who shared her concerns.
conditions that still exist. Unlike polio,
In 1951, Ida Rappaport, formerly of AHRC,
which is caused by three specific viruses,
formed her own organization, Association
many of the other childhood disabilities-
of Children with Retarded Mental Devel-
such as muscular dystrophy, spina bifida,
opment (ACRMD) because of a policy dis-
Down syndrome, and cerebral palsy-are
agreement with Ann Greenberg. Perhaps be-
congenital ailments that occur for a great
cause of her own son's condition, Greenberg
variety of reasons.
wanted to devote the energies of her organi-
Like many other groups of its kind,
zation primarily to those with profound de-
United Cerebral Palsy (UCP) was begun
velopmental disabilities, while Rappaport
by parents of children with cerebral palsy
chose to focus on those, like her child, with
who advertised in a local newspaper, seek-
moderate developmental disabilities.
ing other parents in similar situations.³⁵
During the 1950s, parents and a few oth-
UCP's original purpose was to make physi-
ers, in particular Gunnar Dybwad of ARC,
cians aware of the inadequacy of services
the Association of Retarded Citizens (now
for children with disabilities. The first UCP,
known as The Arc), organized in 1950 by
originating in New York City as a result
a group of parents and friends of people
of an advertisement placed in the New
with delayed development, "began to liber-
York Herald Tribune in March 1946, was a
ate people confined in
custodial institu-
model for the many UCPs formed in nu-
tions."³⁶ These activists learned more than
merous cities throughout the country. By
anyone had known before about the abilities
1949, all the UCPs had joined together into
and potential of people with developmen-
one national entity, the United Cerebral
tal disabilities when they are treated as full
Palsy Association.
human beings. Although ARC was initiated
Today, local UCPs provide direct services
mainly by parents, the acronym acquired
to children and adults with cerebral palsy
new meanings as people with developmen-
and their families, including evaluation and
tal disabilities became increasingly involved
treatment, parent counseling and family
with the organization. For example, the for-
support programs, residences and camps,
mer Tulsa ARC is now known as Tulsa Ad-
day treatment and workshops, and career
vocates for the Rights of Citizens with De-
development and advocacy. National UCP
velopmental Disabilities.
deals with advocacy on the federal, state,
The National Easter Seal Society was
and local levels, promoting legislation and
formed in 1922 in Elyria, Ohio, by Edgar F.
programs that benefit people with cerebral
Allen after his teenage son and fifteen others
palsy and other disabilities. The UCP Re-
were killed in a streetcar accident.³ Realiz-
search and Educational Foundation con-
ing that all of the sixteen who died might
ducts research on the causes and prevention
have been saved if a hospital had been lo-
of cerebral palsy as well as on improving
cated near the accident, Allen first founded
the motor functions of people with cere-
a hospital and later spearheaded a drive to
bral palsy.
create a medical facility for children with
Another example of a parent group, the
disabilities. Allen was strongly influenced
New York Association for Help of Retarded
by his own survey indicating that many
Children (AHRC), was founded in 1949
children with mobility impairments were
by Ann Greenberg, the mother of a child
hidden away by their parents, who feared
with Down syndrome, who placed adver-
detection could result in their children's
IO CHAPTER ONE
institutionalization. Yet, these children ur-
tended to focus on a specific disability, such
gently needed medical and educational ser-
as the 1937-1958 March of Dimes for polio,
vices. Joining with Rotary Clubs and other
the United Cerebral Palsy Association, and
volunteers, Allen organized the National
the Muscular Dystrophy Association. These
Society for Crippled Children, later known
organizations concentrated on the cause of
as the National Easter Seal Society, which
the disability, not its effect. One significant
became the prototype for state programs es-
factor influencing this fragmentation was
tablished after the 1935 Social Security Act.
that each of these organizations focused on
Although originally serving as a national
the search for a cure for, or prevention of,
clearinghouse for disability information, by
the particular disability. The success of the
1929 the National Easter Seal Society de-
Salk and later Sabin vaccines in preventing
veloped a separate international organiza-
the acute infectious disease of polio seemed
tion. Renamed Rehabilitation International
to justify this approach.
in 1972, this arm of the society provides
Emphasizing children proved to be an
for dissemination of information and ex-
effective way of raising funds. The poster
change of ideas in many parts of the world.
child was probably inspired by the "exploita-
Modeling its funding campaign after the
tion of touching photographs of crippled
Christmas Seal effort to combat first tu-
children," used as early as 1933 in fund-
berculosis, and then respiratory illnesses,
raising efforts for Warm Springs, predating
the National Easter Seal Society, reflect-
the cleverly-devised and attention-grabbing
ing middle-American values, has remained
March of Dimes campaign (as the fund-
more compatible with small-town church
ing arm of the polio foundation). 40 This
groups than with cosmopolitan urban cen-
concept was imitated by other childhood
ters. 38 While maintaining a presence in each
disability groups, as the child selected for
state in the union, the National Easter
the year to represent the organization of a
Seal Society has continued projects from
particular disability was always physically
speech therapy to elimination of physi-
appealing, a symbol of vulnerability evok-
cal barriers for people with motor impair-
ing sympathy. One unstated, though er-
ments. 39 Extending his mission to include
roneous, message communicated by these
adults, Allen demonstrated his farsighted-
posters was that disability was somehow
ness in the 1920S and 1930s by present-
limited to children.
ing economic arguments for education and
Whatever public misconceptions arose
employment-rather than charity-for peo-
out of the fund-raising strategies employed
ple with disabilities so as to allow them to
by these organizations, the techniques used
achieve equality and independence. Because
in later years by the telethons were far more
of its origins, the society has been asso-
blatant and undignified. Real children with
ciated with rehabilitation, housing, trans-
disabilities were paraded across the stage as
portation, and accessibility for people with
objects of pity, while the amount of money
a variety of disabilities, especially mobil-
raised was flashed on the television screen.
ity impairments.
The implication that somehow this money
would be used to cure these particular chil-
dren, and children like them, was mislead-
The Poster Child and the Telethon
ing. For example, a I993 article reported that
much of the money collected as a result of
Except for Easter Seal, organizations that
the Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy Asso-
served people with mobility impairments
ciation Telethon has always gone toward
"WHEELCHAIR BOUND" AND "THE POSTER CHILD" II
the cost of the telethon itself.41 Another use
our Thirteen Colonies unless they could
of this money is not widely known: "Much
demonstrate ability to support themselves
of Jerry's money goes into investigating ge-
independently.
Immigration policy
netic screening to prevent people with MDA
effectively forbade entrance into the country
[sic] from even coming into the world. Jerry's
of persons with physical, mental, or emotional
disabilities. Because popular perceptions
kids are people in wheelchairs on television
equated disability with inability [within the
raising money to find a way to prevent their
colonies and later the states], existence of a
ever having been born."⁴²
disability appeared reason enough to deny
The public images put forth by the poster
a person the right to participate in societal
children and the telethons negated the re-
life. Within families, persons with disabilities
ality of adults with disabilities. It is al-
were hidden, disowned, or even allowed to
most amusing to record both the Pollyan-
die through the withholding of life-support
services. Within disabled individuals, self-
naish and macabre assumptions of dis-
perception inevitably reflected prevailing
abled youngsters who had little awareness
social attitudes, keeping people from even
of the existence of adults with disabilities.
attempting to become self-reliant.44
Some thought that all children with disabil-
ities were cured as adults; others thought
With an expanding U.S. population, pres-
that they all died before reaching adult-
sure mounted first for institutionalization,
hood. Later, adults with disabilities took
and later rehabilitation, of people with dis-
on the task of questioning their absence
abilities. In the early decades of the twenti-
from all these public relations strategies.
eth century, however, the work of writer and
How could children with disabilities ma-
social critic Randolph Bourne-who had "a
ture into productive adults if they had no
highly visible [physical] disability" that "in-
models? How could adults with disabili-
volved little functional impairment"-was
ties participate in society if they were in-
described by the renowned poet, Amy Low-
visible? Was the money acquired by means
ell, with this caustic remark: "His writing
of telethons worth the damaging miscon-
shows he is a cripple. Deformed body, de-
ceptions? In response to these questions,
formed mind."⁴⁵ When Bourne related his
these adults determined that the princi-
experience as a person with a disability,
pal need of children with disabilities is not
especially in his "often quoted and so lit-
the services to which telethons contribute,
tle understood" essay entitled "The Handi-
but rather a civil rights movement dimin-
capped," he placed "his psychological strug-
ishing "society's role in handicapping dis-
gle to achieve 'self-respect' within the
abled people."43
context of a society that [devalued] him be-
cause of his disability. From the stigmatized
social condition that had isolated him as an
Changing Views of Disability in the
adolescent and had kept him unemployed
United States
as an adult, he knew of 'no particular way
of escape."
Such a widespread movement was incon-
Longmore notes why Bourne's story is
ceivable until the 1960s, considering the
so significant: "When devaluation and dis-
legacy of segregation of people with dis-
crimination happen to one person, it is
abilities that dates back to the Thirteen
biography, but when, in all probability,
Colonies:
similar experiences happen to millions, it
Disabled individuals were prohibited from
is social history." Like Longmore, sociol-
settling in the towns and villages of
ogist Irving Zola points out the neces-
I2 CHAPTER ONE
sity for a recorded history of people with
proposed by eugenicists and professionals
disabilities:
who dealt with people with disabilities:
In 1912, the eugenic section of the American
The reason that people with disabilities are
Breeders' Association, later renamed the
often thought to have had no history is really
American Genetics Association, drafted a
that they've had no recorded history. Only
model sterilization law to be applied to these
recently have there been any histories of
disability. It's been partly because society has
"socially unfit" classes. By the beginning
of World War I, sixteen states had adopted
denied that there was anything important to
sterilization statutes. A few eugenicists even
be learned. It was partly because, as with any
advocated the mercy killing of individuals
minority group, the people were so of the
with epilepsy or mental handicaps, especially
Other that they were never given any of the
those who were mildly mentally retarded.
tools to record any aspects of their history:
"history" would be, supposedly, only one of
The eventual recognition that people
successes, of the heroes of the society, not
with disabilities are not only capable of par-
those who had difficulty, in some ways, fitting
in. So, people with disabilities have followed
ticipating in the workforce, but also entitled
the paths of people with color, and women,
to benefits, was expressed by changes in
of trying to reclaim what has long been lost.
laws, such as the 1918 rehabilitation legis-
lation:
The early twentieth century, the period in
From the beginning [of the nation],
which Bourne lived, was "an era when prej-
institutions for mentally and emotionally
udice and discrimination against disabled
impaired persons were custodial rather
people seemed to have been intensifying
than educational. Persons with sensory and
sharply":
physical disabilities were more likely to
be taught at least fundamental academic
If in New York City he [Bourne] was
material, but instruction was less to prepare
rejected as a luncheon guest because of
these individuals for vocations than to satisfy
his "unsightliness," in Chicago he might have
religious and societal expectations and to
been arrested for showing up at all. A [1911]
resolve ethical concerns. It was not until
city ordinance [repealed in 1974] warned: "No
large numbers of veterans returned from the
person who is diseased, maimed, mutilated, or
First World War, however, that any Federal
in any way deformed so as to be an unsightly
initiative [training and employing veterans
or disgusting object or improper person to
with disabilities] emerged.47
be allowed in or on the public ways or other
public places in this city, shall therein or
The 1935 Social Security Act establishing
thereon expose himself to public view."
"old age and survivors benefits, unemploy-
ment compensation, and programs for dis-
Bourne's opportunity to get an educa-
abled youth and adults" reflected the real-
tion was unusual, for most children with
ization "that assistance to disabled individ-
disabilities were treated more like the boy
uals was as much a matter of social justice
with cerebral palsy who, in 1919, was expelled
as charity."48
from public school in Wisconsin, despite
During World War II defense plants des-
his ability to keep up with the class aca-
perately needed workers, so "government
demically, because "the teachers and other
propaganda urged employers to get past
children found him 'depressing and nause-
their prejudices" against people with dis-
ating." In fact, "segregation and steriliza-
abilities as is evident in this war film
tion of deaf people, blind people, people
monologue:
with developmental disabilities, even peo-
Sure enough, blind. But they can do it as well
ple like Bourne who had tuberculosis" was
as anybody, and they volunteered, releasing
"WHEELCHAIR BOUND" AND "THE POSTER CHILD" 13
workers with eyes for other duties.
All
dividuals with specific impairments. Most
through the factory now you may glimpse
of the service-provider disability organiza-
things like this, an unobtrusive limp that
tions for people with motor impairments,
means only one good leg. Or like this, of
however, did not recognize the common
course you really don't need more than
one arm for this job. Maybe a man
requirements of their clients-a barrier-
might be a better worker without his
free environment and wheelchair-accessible
hearing with all this noise. But the point
transportation. By the 1970s, people from
is, whereas, industry started out to make it
different disability groups began to real-
possible for these physically handicapped
ize that working together would be more
people to help themselves, now it ends up
beneficial for everyone than working sep-
that these handicapped people are helping
arately or competitively. Consequently, a
their country.49
new concept emerged: the idea of disability
Of course, like Rosie the Riveter employees
as a social and political force. What per-
with disabilities lost their jobs after the war
haps was revolutionary was what underlay
to make room for the returning soldiers.
this new awareness. The predominant is-
She was sent back to the kitchen while
sues for blind people-literacy-and for deaf
people with disabilities were once again
people-language-had primarily involved
considered unemployable.
changes in people with disabilities. However,
Furthermore, because government still
the creation of universally accessible sur-
failed to provide many of the supports
roundings necessitated a redesigning of so-
required by people with disabilities, pri-
ciety for everyone.
vate agencies developed, each serving in-
Chapter Two
Seeing by Touch,
Hearing by Sign
SINCE BLIND PEOPLE HAD access to spo-
Whether deafness is "preferable" to blindness,
ken language, they needed a tactile alpha-
if acquired in later life, is arguable; but to
bet, such as Louis Braille's 1829 elegant
be born deaf is infinitely more serious than
raised dot method for reading and writ-
to be born blind-at least potentially so.
For the prelingually deaf, unable to hear
ing. Following the logic of English gram-
their parents, risk being severely retarded, if
mar and word order, the Braille system
not permanently defective, in their grasp of
served to integrate blind people into the
language unless early and effective measures
larger society. On the other hand, deaf
are taken. And to be defective in language, for
people required a visual syntax, necessitat-
a human being, is one of the most desperate
ing a form of communication that tended
of calamities, for it is only through language
to separate them from the hearing world.
that we enter fully into our human estate and
Integration for deaf people has required
culture, communicate freely with our fellows,
acquire and share information. If we cannot
them to concentrate on speaking and lip-
do this, we will be bizarrely disabled and cut
reading, which too often have been Her-
off-whatever our desires, or endeavors, or
culean tasks requiring effort that they could
native capacities. And indeed, we may be so
have more productively spent on acquiring
little able to realize our intellectual capacities
sign language-the key to their ability to
as to appear mentally defective.¹
learn and to communicate.
Under Roman law, deaf people were treat-
ed as though they were "retarded"; they
Blindness and Deafness: A Comparison
"were generally outcasts, considered une-
ducated and ineducable, and outside the
Blind people, like those with other dis-
privileges and obligations of the law."2 In
abilities, have had to prove their capability;
modern times, because of the obstacles to
deaf people have had to prove their human-
communication between the hearing world
ity. In Seeing Voices, Oliver Sacks suggests
and the deaf, the phrase "deaf and dumb,"
that the common assumption that deaf-
in which "dumb" originally meant simply
ness is less problematic than blindness may
the inability to speak, came to mean deaf
be mistaken:
and stupid.³ In mid-sixteenth century Spain
SEEING BY TOUCH, HEARING BY SIGN I5
most deaf people were deprived of their
In the event that Mr. Irwin's physical
birthright, their legacy.4 In order to circum-
blindness is offered as an obstacle to the
vent the legal hurdles, a Spanish priest, Pe-
proper exercise of the duties of this office,
dro Ponce de Leon, devised oralism, a means
I submit that such an objection, in light of
of teaching deaf nobility the capacity to ap-
his manifest ability and success, is wholly
unworthy of consideration by those who, like
proximate speech well enough to satisfy the
ourselves, are constantly teaching, preaching
requirements of inheritance law. Ironically,
and professing to believe in the capabilities of
oralism would become "the grand tragedy
blind people.
against which modern 'Deaf' culture [not
to be confused with 'deafness' as disability]
Leadership in organizations for deaf peo-
has constructed itself."5
ple dramatically differed from leadership in
Oralism is available to only a small per-
organizations for blind people, especially
centage of those who are profoundly deaf,
after the 1880 Congress of Milan.⁸ A vic-
most often the postlingually deaf. Gener-
tory for the oralists, this congress of edu-
ally, people who are hard-of-hearing use
cators of deaf people, where deaf teachers
speech while those who are profoundly deaf
were excluded from voting, banned the use
use sign language. Since the ability to speak
of sign language in schools. Notables such
was traditionally a source of political in-
as Alexander Graham Bell, Samuel Gridley
fluence in the deaf community, those who
Howe, and even the "patron saint of pro-
used sign language were disadvantaged. The
gressive education," Horace Mann,9 spear-
1988 uprising at Gallaudet University, the
headed the oral movement in the United
world's only institution of higher education
States. The result of their efforts was to
for people who are deaf or hard-of-hearing,
make deaf and dumb-signifying mental
signaled a change. After the protest, deaf
deficiency, as well as inability to speak-a
advocacy was no longer solely a province
self-fulfilling prophecy. Approximately one
of the oral deaf. Being a deaf child of
hundred years of oral education for deaf
deaf parents, relying on American Sign Lan-
children resulted in a large alienated, illiter-
guage, gained currency in the new radical
ate, and powerless deaf population, one that
deaf community.
had internalized the negative self-image the
In contrast, blind people have long held
educational system had imposed on them.
leadership roles in organizations for the
Therefore, it is not surprising that deaf
blind, such as the American Foundation for
people did not insist on gaining leadership
the Blind (AFB) founded in 1921.⁶ Robert
roles in organizations that served them un-
Benjamin Irwin, the first full-time executive
til the 1980s.
director of AFB (from 1929 to 1948), was
blind from the age of five, supported him-
self through college and graduate school,
Sign Language and Oralism
and strongly advocated integration of blind
people in all aspects of life, including edu-
Advocates of oralism did not recognize that
cation and employment.⁷ Partially sighted
in prohibiting deaf children's use of sign
at birth and blind by the age of twenty-
language, they were depriving these learners
three, Henry Latimer, executive secretary of
of their inherent biological adaptive mech-
the Pennsylvania Association for the Blind,
anisms for communication. For the hear-
made the following incisive remark in his
ing world, the channel of communication
speech nominating Irwin for his new role
is "mouth-to-ear"; for the deaf, the channel
at AFB:
is "manual and facial gestures" to eye.¹⁰ A
I6 CHAPTER TWO
few unusual deaf children may eventually
lan sought to impose "spoken" language on
learn "spoken" English by a combination
deaf children, they were tampering, unwit-
of lip-reading and partial hearing capacity.
tingly, with the composition of the learners'
Most prelingually deaf children lacking ac-
brains. Moreover, these educators of deaf
cessibility to sign language, however, will
children were violating the deaf commu-
attain no, or limited, language ability. On
nity's particular expression of what modern
the other hand, Nora Ellen Groce's Everyone
linguists call the "Universal Grammar"-
Here Spoke Sign Language: Hereditary Deafness
that innate plan natural to all evolving lan-
on Martha's Vineyard demonstrated how deaf
guages. Supporting the concept of a Uni-
people can blend successfully with the rest
versal Grammar, researchers have found
of the community, even achieve distinction,
that very young deaf children from differ-
when the sign language for which they have
ent cultures use gesture in similar ways as
a natural predilection is regarded as any
they progress from simple to more complex
other language and allowed to flourish. 11
combinations, developing a type of gestu-
Because of the high incidence of deafness
ral grammar.15 Even if the intention of the
on Martha's Vineyard, one in four by the
Congress of Milan was to integrate deaf peo-
mid-nineteenth century, "the entire com-
ple into the greater community, its method
munity learned Sign, and there was free and
was misguided, for languages, spoken and
complete intercourse between the hearing
signed, are not deliberate inventions. They
and the deaf. Indeed the deaf were scarcely
are intricate systems, designs that uncon-
seen as 'deaf,' and certainly not seen as at all
sciously develop as a process, historically,
'handicapped.'"¹²
over generations, to suit the biologically dis-
Two factors reveal how the oral educa-
tinctive attributes of a group.1
tors were inadvertently creating a functional
The oralism that began in the 1880s was
form of retardation in individuals whose
a regressive movement in deaf education.
potential, had they been encouraged to ac-
In the 1750s, the abbé de l'Epée realized
quire a first language-Sign-will never be
that in order to teach religion to the im-
known. First, there is a specific and early
poverished Parisian deaf, he would have to
time frame-"up to the age of six,
steadily
function as if he were a missionary in a
compromised from then until shortly after
foreign land, learning the street sign lan-
puberty"-for language acquisition on the
guage of the deaf.¹⁷ Thomas Gallaudet, an
human maturation clock. 13 Once the crit-
American, finding no cooperation in Eng-
ical period has passed without the proper
land in his quest for a procedure for teach-
stimulation, language learning is usually
ing language to his neighbor's deaf child,
impaired forever. Second, inhibiting rather
discovered de l'Epée's successful method in
than fostering language, as the oralists were
Paris. 18 Since Gallaudet neither knew sign
heedlessly doing by barring Sign, frequently
language nor had experience as an educator,
results in the failure of children to develop
he persuaded Laurent Clerc, a teacher of
cognitive skills completely.
deaf students, to accompany him to Amer-
If the cognitive scientists who describe
ica to establish a school for the deaf in
language as a "mental organ" are correct,
Hartford, Connecticut, in 1817.¹⁹ Clerc, who
then language is not a "cultural artifact"
was profoundly deaf, was trained at the Na-
but a "biological birthright," an instinct
tional Institute for Deaf-Mutes, founded by
as organically linked to being human as
de l'Epée in Paris.²⁰ The abandonment of
web-spinning is to being a spider.¹⁴ Thus,
oralism in American deaf education until
when the educators at the Congress of Mi-
the 1880 Congress of Milan was propitious,
SEEING BY TOUCH, HEARING BY SIGN 17
an accidental result of Gallaudet's discour-
was a countervailing ethos vigorously sup-
agement by the English oralist educators.
porting the teaching of sign language. The
A natural, uniquely North American sign
National Association of the Deaf (NAD),
language evolved from the merging of the
originally called the National Convention
Parisian sign language with American Eng-
of Deaf-Mutes, held its first meeting in
lish. As an indication of the progress be-
Cincinnati at about the same time as the
ing made in the education of the deaf,
Milan Congress.25 Drafting a constitution
President Abraham Lincoln signed legisla-
and electing a deaf educator, Robert P. Mc-
tion in 1864 authorizing the seven-year-old
Gregor, as its first president, this group of
Columbia Institution for the Deaf, Dumb,
educated and successful deaf people, repre-
and Blind to confer college degrees with Dr.
senting twenty-one states, formed an asso-
Edward M. Gallaudet (the son of Thomas
ciation that still plays a significant role in
H. Gallaudet, founder of the first school
deaf politics. Americans, including a pro-
for deaf students in the United States) as
fessor at the National Deaf-Mute College
president of the institution. 21 Although deaf
(later known as Gallaudet College) and the
people were attaining success and becoming
president of NAD, were delegates at the first
integrated in the hearing society in the nine-
International Congress of the Deaf, orga-
teenth century, oralism gained ascendancy
nized in Paris in 1889, one hundred years
in the education of deaf children.²² The ef-
after de l'Epée's death, in response to the
fect was increased segregation of deaf peo-
demeaning proscription of sign language.2
ple in socialization and employment, a con-
Frequently alienated from the rest of so-
sequence of reduced educational achieve-
ciety because of a communication barrier,
ment by deaf students who had been de-
deaf people were inclined to form separate
prived of their natural language.
clubs where they could socialize with oth-
Although the American delegation at Mi-
ers like themselves. Despite the directive re-
lan voted against the pure oral method, by
quiring oralism in the schools, in the clubs
1900 oralism had undermined deaf educa-
deaf people used the form of expression
tion in America and rendered many deaf
that was natural to them, sign language.
educators unemployed.23
Although these clubs served an essential
Deaf people were well organized in the
purpose-encouraging human interaction,
mid-nineteenth century, with their own
providing required information, and forg-
newspapers, clubs, unions, and congresses.
ing deaf consciousness-they tended to iso-
But as popular misconceptions of Darwinism
late generations of deaf people from the
and the theories of eugenics spread, social
world around them. Although most people
theorists argued that by their "clannish"
join homogeneous groups, this proclivity
behavior the deaf were going to marry only
among deaf people has been exacerbated by
each other and produce ever larger numbers
of deaf children. (In fact most children of
the demoralizing effects of oralism. Their
deaf parents can hear.) To break up the deaf
own language, Sign, and the culture that
communities and integrate deaf people into
emanates from their language found expres-
hearing society, leading educators of the deaf
sion only clandestinely in the deaf clubs.
demanded that sign language be suppressed
Because many deaf people incorporated the
and that the deaf learn to speak. The vigorous
sense of shame fostered by their oral edu-
objections of deaf people were ignored-how
cation, their natural language became a se-
could they know what was best for them?2⁴
cret burden shared only among themselves.
Oralism took about twenty years to take
Once a source of private humiliation for a
firm root in the United States because there
great number of deaf people, sign language
I8 CHAPTER TWO
only recently is becoming visible in pub-
Braille and Talking Books
lic places.
The great potential of this language,
Just as deaf people gravitated to sign lan-
fostered by new technology, is evident in the
guage before educators recognized its value,
growing academic interest in Sign:
blind students at the Missouri School for
the Blind embraced Braille in I854 before
it was accepted by their teachers.² At last,
With its usual kinetic visual mode, sign
a touch system was available that enabled
presents an artistic form that is at once
blind people to write as well as read, for
ancient in its oral (nonwritten) tradition
and postmodern in its exploration of visual
other touch systems made only reading pos-
media. ASL [American Sign Language]
sible. Because of the simplicity of Braille,
literature provides a unique postmodern bardic
blind people could use their fingers to read
tradition. The stories, poetry, and folkloric
and a stylus to write.
language games of the Deaf have been
In 1829, Louis Braille, a young blind
passed on for years by "sign of hand" (as in
teacher and former student at the Royal
"word of mouth"). But, as oral traditions
may be recorded and preserved, so ASL
Institute for Blind Children in Paris, pub-
lished his modification of Charles Barbier's
may now be produced and reproduced in
mass quantity thanks to the development of
technique. 30 Barbier's phonetic scheme con-
video technology. While the impact of visual
sisted of twelve-unit cells, while Braille's al-
technology on ASL literature is analogous to
phabetic method consisted of six-unit cells.
the impact of the printing press on written
An officer in the Napoleonic Army, Barbier
literature, it may be too early to discern
created his raised-dot secret military code
the implications of that technology. At the
very least, video has enabled the works of
for night writing, employing a hinged frame
leading Deaf poets and storytellers to become
for holding paper and a pointed implement
nationally recognized and analyzed.27
for punching dots. When Barbier demon-
strated his invention at the institute where
Braille was working, the young educator rec-
Many deaf people before the 1980s were
ognized not only the value for blind people
limited because of misconceptions about
of an embossed dot code for reading, but
their language and their learning potential.
also of a frame and stylus for writing.
On Martha's Vineyard or an isolated vil-
Braille's legacy to blind people has been
lage in the Yucatan or in other locations,
both his appreciation of the requirement for
when sign language, carrying no stigma,
an easy tactile formulation-combining the
was treated as different but equal to spoken
features necessary for reading and writing-
language, deafness was not a drawback.28
and his skill in devising such a method-
However, most people do not live in envi-
ology.31 Since each Braille six-unit cell has
ronments as inclusive as these. At best, even
sixty-three potential combinations, it is pos-
when deaf people are integrated in a com-
sible to have a specific combination for each
munity, they operate in a language different
of the letters of the alphabet and the in-
from the majority. Blind people functioning
dividual marks of punctuation, as well as
in the same language as the rest of soci-
for frequently used words. Braille's design
ety did not have the kind of obstacles that
is so versatile that the arrangement can be
deaf people had to overcome. Yet, until the
applied not only to language, but also to any
introduction of touch systems for written
ordered sequence, such as musical notation,
language, blind people had limited access
the periodic chemical table, or mathemati-
to reading and writing.
cal systems.
SEEING BY TOUCH, HEARING BY SIGN I9
Despite France's official recognition of
records and playback machines, usable by
Braille in 1854, it took England until 1905
blind people. Besides convincing Congress
and the United States until 1932 to formally
to appropriate funds for talking books, the
accept a uniform version of Braille as the
AFB also contended with the copyright pro-
medium for reading and writing for blind
tection of writers and speakers by restricting
people. Invented in 1890 by Frank Hall,
the equipment to blind people. Responding
the Braillewriter-a six-keyed Braille type-
to Helen Keller's request, FDR issued a 1935
writer in which each letter is a combina-
executive order allowing the Works Progress
tion of keys similar to a musical chord-
Administration to manufacture playback
eventually helped promote standardization
machines.³⁷ By lowering the cost of the ma-
of Braille. Yet, the United States required
chines, the President's decree made them
a long time to adopt a consistent Braille
obtainable by an increasing number of blind
code because different schools and differ-
people. More suitable than Braille for cer-
ent localities employed diverse touch sys-
tain publications, talking books expanded
tems, as well as variations on Braille's orig-
learning possibilities for blind people. Years
inal method. In the "war of the dots"-
later talking books would become valuable
this competition between these incompat-
not only to blind people, but also to people
ible schemes-blind people were the losers,
with a variety of other impairments, such as
for they could read only the limited num-
certain learning or motor disabilities.
ber of books published in the particular
code that they knew.³⁴ A nationally ac-
cepted Braille system, the natural key to
Sheltered Workshops
literacy for blind people,³⁵ was comparable
to an established sign language, the natural
The effort to make deaf people function
means to cognition and communication for
as if they were not deaf was evident in the
deaf people.
oralist movement. It was assumed for blind
While Braille gives blind people access to
people, however, that accommodations had
only a limited number of books, Thomas
to be made. Considered able to travel in-
Edison's 1877 invention of the phonograph
dependently and capable of performing
augmented the books available to blind peo-
menial tasks, deaf people were employed
ple by utilizing recorded texts, which by
more often than blind people. Separate
1934 under the auspices of the American
occupation-oriented facilities that employ
Foundation for the Blind evolved into "talk-
people with disabilities, known as "shel-
ing books. Unlike most technological ad-
tered workshops," were created for blind
vances, long playing (LP) records were used
workers since they were regarded as unem-
by blind people before they were used by
ployable in the general workforce.
the general public, for talking books pre-
An outgrowth of the work departments
ceded commercial LPs by fourteen years.
located in special residential schools for
People with voices appropriate for selected
blind children, sheltered workshops pre-
recordings, many of whom were famous
pared graduates, as well as newly-blinded
actors, offered their services despite the
adults, to earn a living. In 1840, Samuel Gri-
small remuneration.
dley Howe founded the work department
In order to make the potentiality of talk-
at the Perkins Institution in Massachusetts,
ing books a reality, the American Founda-
a facility that became the model for the
tion for the Blind (AFB) hired an electri-
sheltered workshop.³⁸ Howe's intention was
cal engineer to develop inexpensive, durable
to foster a sense of self-respect and self-
20 CHAPTER TWO
reliance in the blind workers, not to provide
communities that would have the wisdom
profit for the institution. Yet critics argue
to accept them.
that the workshops were basically flawed,
for they did not encourage integration of
their workers into the general workforce,
Mobility for Blind People: Guide Dogs
and, in slack times, they retained only their
and White Canes
best employees. Furthermore, some work-
shops exploited their workers, too often
For blind people, unlike deaf people, mo-
paying them far less than minimum wage
bility was the key to independence, the op-
and offering no fringe benefits.
portunity "to forgo the comfort of sheltered
lives and move out into the bustling traffic
of their sighted peers."41 Blind people seem
The Lighthouse
to have always used staffs and animals, es-
pecially dogs, as guides. Prior to World War
Winifred Holt Mather, the founder of the
I, however, American leaders in the blind
Lighthouse movement, quoted a French
community, because of their effort to make
commanding officer addressing soldiers
blindness unobtrusive, exhibited a lack of
blinded in battle during World War I: "The
enthusiasm for the guide dog movement.⁴²
greatest menace to the blind is the short-
After World War I, dogs were used as guides
sightedness of the seeing."³⁹ This apho-
in Germany, first for soldiers blinded in the
rism expressed the prophetic vision that led
war, then for blind civilians. The 1926 visit
Mather to recognize as early as 1904 the pos-
of wealthy Philadelphia socialite Dorothy
sibility for and significance of independence
Harrison Eustis to a German school where
for blind people. Well-traveled and fluent
guide dogs were trained inspired her 1927
in four languages, she was instrumental in
Saturday Evening Post article that caught
establishing Lighthouses offering services
the attention of young and recently-blinded
to blind people in such places as New York,
Morris Frank. Following his trips through-
Paris, Bordeaux, Rome, Calcutta, Canton,
out the country, where he demonstrated the
Osaka, Kyoto, and Cuba.⁴⁰
independence that guide dogs accord blind
Her progressive notion of a movement
people, Frank joined Eustis in 1929 in es-
for blind people, in a context not confined
tablishing the first United States guide dog
by national limits, anticipated the interna-
training school, Seeing Eye.
tional movement for people with disabilities
By tapping their staffs as they walked,
that would not receive prominence until the
blind people were able to signal others
1980s. Despite being reprimanded for im-
regarding their presence and also gener-
modesty and arrogance by representatives
ate echoes providing necessary information
of the public and the medical profession for
about their surroundings.⁴³ The replace-
not appreciating her supposed limitations
ment of clattering horses' hooves and noisy
as a woman and a nonprofessional, she per-
iron wheels by high-speed, quiet, rubber-
severed in her efforts to prevent blindness,
tired automobiles required that blind peo-
to provide services and training for blind
ple use the clearly visible, red-tipped white
people, and to encourage their integration
cane. With support from the Lions Club of
into the outside world. Decrying the error
Peoria, Illinois, in 1930, a city ordinance was
of institutionalizing blind people, she real-
enacted mandating that motorists yield the
ized that their inclusion in the wider society
right-of-way to people who presented them-
would serve not only them, but also the
selves as blind by displaying their white
SEEING BY TOUCH, HEARING BY SIGN 2I
canes.⁴⁴ After this so-called White Cane Law
explained "that we oppose a system of relief
was passed in 1931, Lions Clubs through-
which insists upon the means test, bud-
out the nation worked effectively toward
geting, individual need individually deter-
the passage of similar laws in other states.
mined, and large social worker discretion,
Spurred by the accidental death of Thomas
which in our experience have been veritable
D. Schall, the blind Minnesota senator who
instruments of oppression."⁴⁴
was fatally injured by a car in 1935, the AFB
TenBroek described NFB as comparable
advocated for the white-cane movement and
to the American Federation of Labor: "Be-
also offered canes at wholesale prices.
cause we [NFB] are trying to do for our
By the 1960s, mobility instruction-a spe-
people what organized labor is trying to
cialized discipline for teaching blind people
do for its people, because of the similar-
how to use the cane as a mobility tool-
ity in organizational structure, in purpose
had become a formal profession. Although
and in work, and because of the laboring
the pencil-tipped cane, tapped from side to
man's inherent sympathy for the underpriv-
side by the blind traveler, has been the tradi-
ileged and the'conditions under which they
tional mobility device used by blind people,
live, organized labor has responded more
since the late 1980s a small but growing per-
than generously, materially, morally, and
centage of this population has been success-
with political support." Without the right
fully introduced to the constant-contact
to organize, however, workers in sheltered
rolling-tip cane. 45 The rolling-tip cane is less
workshops still have neither the protection
likely to get stuck and offers more informa-
of minimum wage laws nor unemployment
tion about the surface of the ground than
compensation. Although many of these
the traditional cane.
workers could function in a competitive en-
vironment, they are trapped in workplaces
devoid of opportunity or hope because of
Jacobus tenBroek and the National
discrimination rather than lack of ability.
Federation of the Blind
Though most civil service examinations
were not open to blind candidates until the
The increased mobility and independence
early 1960s, NFB, from its inception, op-
that blind people experienced with the use
posed exclusion of blind people from civil
of dogs and canes expanded their edu-
service employment. The members of the
cational and vocational opportunities, as
late 1930s League of the Physically Hand-
well as enabled them to organize to pro-
icapped fought for their inclusion in the
mote their economic well-being. Although
civil service workforce at a time when people
the 1942 annual convention of the Na-
with even minor disabilities were relegated
tional Federation of the Blind (NFB) dealt
to either dependence on family or work in
with employment problems-including ex-
segregated shops. However successful they
ploitation of blind workers in sheltered
were in their ambitious endeavor, their goal
workshops-the original focus of the or-
was limited and once achieved, the League
ganization was Social Security benefits for
of the Physically Handicapped disbanded.
blind people.4 Founded in November 1940
On the other hand, NFB, perceiving its
in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, by Jacobus
struggle in a civil rights context before the
tenBroek, NFB, in its first convention, called
1960s civil rights movement, is still a vital
for a national pension for blind people,
organization working for social change.
without means testing, as part of the Social
Some of tenBroek's goals anticipated spe-
Security Act.⁴⁷ In his 1944 address, tenBroek
cific objectives articulated by disability ac-
22 CHAPTER TWO
tivists three decades later. He exhorted his
cize the special powers supposedly engen-
audience to strive for legislation amending
dered by blindness. Recognizing the effort
the Civil Service Act of the United States so
necessary to deal with the loss of a vital
that discrimination on account of blindness
sense, he focused on the determination and
would be prohibited. He called blind peo-
tenacity required to compensate. In an at-
ple's "demand for equality" one of the "fun-
tempt to demystify blindness, he described
damental principles underlying our [NFB's]
it as "nothing more or less than the loss of
program and guiding our activities
be-
one of the five senses and a corresponding
cause it is not based upon any notion that
greater reliance upon the four that remain-
all men are physically or mentally equal,
as well as upon the brain, the heart, and
but that they have an equal right to insist
the spirit."⁵ Echoing a phrase used by ten-
upon opportunities for which they are prop-
Broek, Kenneth Jernigan, who succeeded
erly qualified."
the first NFB president in the late 1960s,⁵²
Differentiating NFB from the agencies
argued in a speech entitled "Blindness-
purporting to serve the blind, tenBroek
Handicap or Characteristic" that "blind-
announced that "the National Federation
ness is only a characteristic
nothing more
of the Blind is not an organization speak-
or less than that."53 Although appearing to
ing for the blind; it is the blind speak-
be an affirmation of tenBroek's position,
ing for themselves." Although the 1957
Jernigan's assertion represented a concep-
Kennedy-Baring Bill, ensuring blind work-
tual leap. Rami Rabby, an NFB officer, in-
ers the right to organize and bargain col-
dicated that Jernigan meant that blind-
lectively in the workshops without intim-
ness would be only a characteristic and
idation, was unsuccessful, the publicity
not a disability if blind people were prop-
surrounding the failed legislation brought
erly trained and social attitudes were ap-
NFB national recognition.49 The January
propriately modified.54 Yet the New York
II, 1958, issue of The New Yorker presented
City subway gate issue of the 1970s and
a favorable profile of President tenBroek
1980s revealed the implications of Jerni-
as a representative of the movement he
gan's approach.
was leading:
Most of the country's three hundred and
twenty-five thousand blind people who
NYC Subway Gates: A Controversy in
work are employed in the special sheltered
the Blind Community
shops that society-with the best and most
charitable intentions-has set up for us, where
When the New York City chapter of the
we can make baskets and such, and come to
American Council of the Blind (ACB) sued
no harm. Only about two or three percent of
the Metropolitan Transportation Authority
us are holding normal jobs out in the world.
My organization is convinced [that] at least
(MTA) in 1983 for the 1970 purchase of sub-
twenty times that many could be doing so
way cars, the R-44 and R-46, which lacked
if they had the chance. What we seek for
gates protecting people from falling onto
the blind is the right to compete on equal
the tracks, NFB objected. When blind riders
terms.
Actually, I can't say what the limits
use the subway, they tap their canes along
are. Every time I think I have hit on some job
the side of the train until they reach the
that a blind man couldn't conceivably hold, I
entrance door. Without these gates, blind
find a blind man holding it.50
passengers easily can mistake the space be-
TenBroek did not minimize the problems
tween the cars for the subway door and, as
inherent in blindness, however, or romanti-
a result, fall onto the tracks. NFB's ratio-
SEEING BY TOUCH, HEARING BY SIGN 23
nale for taking issue with ACB's legal action
killed by a moving train after he fell onto
was based on the assumption that since
the subway tracks. Dorothy Matano, pres-
blindness is only a characteristic, a properly
ident of ACB, noted that "Bert was an
trained blind person had no need for special
experienced and able traveler who used
accommodation. ACB and NFB have not
the subway for many years. These death
hesitated to take contrary positions pub-
traps for the blind cover twenty percent
licly; in fact, ACB was born in 1961 out of
of the subway system."⁵⁵ On January 26,
an internal conflict in NFB.
1983, a second demonstration was called
Though several blind people who were
by ACB in front of the MTA office in
seasoned travelers were killed or maimed
order to focus public attention on the
because there were no gates between the
MTA's criminal negligence. Groups repre-
subway cars, NFB firmly maintained its po-
senting people with a variety of disabili-
sition. In 1970 a blind woman fell from
ties endorsed the demonstration, and over
the subway platform into the space be-
two hundred individuals participated in
tween the ends of the cars and onto the
the protest.
tracks. When the train moved on, she lost
Reluctant to take legal action until this
both her legs and an arm. Another tragedy
last accident, Concerned Citizens for Sub-
concerned a blind newsdealer who had
way Safety finally became persuaded that
been a subway user for thirteen years. In
only the threat of a lawsuit by ACB would
1974, he walked from the subway platform
compel the bureaucratic MTA to take the
into what he thought was the door open-
steps necessary to make the R-44 and R-
ing of the subway car. Amidst scream-
46 subway cars safe for blind passengers.
ing fellow passengers, he fell between two
While the private law firm-LeBoeuf, Lamb,
subway cars onto the tracks. The engi-
Greene & MacRae-representing ACB pro
neer, unaware, moved on, killing the man.
bono was negotiating with the MTA in or-
ACB sought an effective response to these
der to acquire the protective gates, NFB's
tragedies, even taking to the streets in a July
Rabby appeared on a television news pro-
1974 demonstration.
gram insisting that blind people did not
In the early 1980s, ACB organized Con-
need gates to use the subway system safely.
cerned Citizens for Subway Safety, a coali-
Rabby's argument was that subway gates,
tion of provider and consumer groups of
which were actually for the protection of
blind and partially-sighted people deter-
all passengers, were considered as serv-
mined to get the MTA to take action to
ing the needs of only blind passengers.
prevent people from falling onto the sub-
Rabby feared that the public's assumption
way tracks. When the former director of the
that blind people required special treat-
Blind Veterans Association, David Schnair,
ment would adversely affect their partici-
fell between two cars onto the tracks, he
pation in society-for example, in employ-
was saved from serious injury or death
ment, housing, and transportation. The
by a bystander. As a consequence of the
conflict between the two major national
unemployed bystander's actions, he not
organizations of blind people left policy-
only acquired a job but also received a
makers bewildered. ACB won its Section 504
congratulatory call from President Reagan.
of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 lawsuit
This kind of rescue, however, was an ex-
against the MTA in 1985, as the U.S. District
ception. A week later, on December 27,
Court in New York considered the lack of
1982, a well-known and well-liked employee
subway gates to be discriminatory against
of the Lighthouse, Bert Zimmerman, was
blind people.
24 CHAPTER TWO
NFB: Trailblazer for Sections 504
peatedly passing the required Foreign Ser-
and 501
vice examination, each time with a higher
grade, Rabby was judged "noncompetitive"
Although the president of NFB tends to
in 1987 because of his "serious lack of visual
determine the organization's general prin-
acuity." When disability attorney Tim Cook,
ciples and specific agenda, NFB president
disabled as a result of polio, saw Rabby on
Kenneth Jernigan's lack of enthusiasm for
"Good Morning America" debating George
coalition did not preclude NFB from using
Vest, director general of the Foreign Service,
its unique lobbying capability to support
on the feasibility of a blind person serving
Sections 504 and 501 of the Rehabilitation
in the job Rabby was seeking, Cook offered
Act of 1973-the first federal civil rights law
to represent Rabby in a Section 501 lawsuit.
and affirmative action law, respectively, for
At Minnesota Congressman Jerry Sikorski's
people with disabilities. When John Nagle,
congressional hearing on this issue, the
director of NFB's Washington office, testi-
room was stacked with about two hundred
fied on January IO, 1973, before the Senate
members of NFB. "Anyone who walked into
Subcommittee on the Handicapped of the
this buzz saw could see that the disability
Committee on Labor and Public Welfare
discrimination of the Foreign Service was
on the proposed Rehabilitation Act, he was
about to end," Rabby notes as he recalls his
the only witness to comment specifically
difference with the State Department:
on Section 504. Demonstrating his recog-
nition of the potential significance of Sec-
They argued that a Foreign Service Officer
is expected, for example, to be able to go
tion 504 before most other representatives
anywhere the Service decides. It's called
of disability groups did, and transcending
"the principle of worldwide availability."
the NFB's traditional position focusing on
Since I'm blind, there may well be places I
the rights of the blind, Nagle manifested his
can't go. But there are places that sighted
solidarity with all people with disabilities:
people can't go also because of their language
"The provision [Section 504]
is of major
limitations, the needs of their families,
and so on. Discrimination takes a form of
consequence to all disabled people.
It es-
tablishes that because a man is blind or deaf
employers applying unrealistically demanding
standards that they would like to apply to
or without legs, he is not less a citizen, that
everyone, but apply only to the person
his rights of citizenship are not revoked or
with a disability. A year or two after I filed
diminished because he is disabled. More-
my successful lawsuit, Edward Perkins, an
over, Nagle indicated his early appreciation
African American, replaced Vest and changed
of the legal ramifications of Section 504:
the discriminatory policy of the Service
"It gives him [a person with a disability] a
against women, minorities, and people
with disabilities.
legal basis for recourse to the courts that
he may seek to remove needless barriers,
The approach of both Nagle and Rabby
unnecessary obstacles and unjustified bar-
was an anomaly for NFB because the or-
ricades that impede or prevent him from
ganization tends to focus solely on issues
functioning fully and in full equality with
related to blindness. Still, NFB, the most
all others."
significant civilian disability rights group
As a significant force in NFB, Rabby used
until the early 1970s, exhibited its under-
Section 50I of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
standing, from the 1940s, of two character-
and the support of his organization to be-
istics of the modern disability rights move-
come the first blind diplomat in the Foreign
ment. First, not only did NFB's struggle
Service of the State Department.57 After re-
concern equality for blind people, but sec-
SEEING BY TOUCH, HEARING BY SIGN 25
ond, equality could be achieved only if blind
cover several feet wide at the edge of subway
people advocated for themselves. However, with
and train platforms.⁵ While ACB argues.
few exceptions, the third characteristic, the
that these strips prevent blind people from
concept of coalition with different disability
falling onto the tracks, NFB claims that
groups, has been antithetical to the spirit
properly trained blind people do not need
of NFB since Jernigan's emergence as its
this special accommodation.
leader. While Jernigan feared that blind peo-
ACB's Karen Luxton Gourgey, formerly a
ple lose political clout when they affiliate
member of NFB, considers what she calls
with other disability groups, ACB has always
NFB's "tyrannical" position on warning
supported coalition.
strips "an expression of self-hatred," a re-
fusal to allow blind people "a margin for
error."59 Crediting NFB with having "politi-
NFB and ACB: Different Approaches to
cal savvy, good Washington connections, as
Blindness
well as admirable membership drives and
fundraising strategies," Gourgey nonethe-
NFB and ACB offer different reasons for
less judges the organization's approach,
the emergence of the dissident NFB fac-
since Jernigan's leadership, as "a betrayal
tion that eventually became ACB in mid-
of the original NFB vision: It's okay to be
1957. NFB claims that the new faction was
what you are." Gourgey observes that NFB,
a puppet of nonprofit and government ser-
fearing that blind people will be viewed as
vice agencies, many of which benefited from
incompetent, "is more worried about pro-
the same workshops that NFB sought to
jecting the 'wrong' image or burdening the
reform by organizing the workers. Accord-
taxpayers than about safety."
ing to NFB, when dissenters lost elections
Rosemarie McCaffrey, president of Guide
held from 1957 to 1960, they decided to form
Dog Users in New York, notes that her
their own opposing group, ACB. On the
organization could thrive only in ACB since
other hand, ACB contends that the split
NFB considers the use of guide dogs as
emanated from NFB's authoritarian lead-
"a too dependent way of traveling." On
ership and undemocratic policies, resulting
the contrary, McCaffrey points out that she
in the national organization's arbitrary ex-
finds the use of a guide dog liberating: "I
pulsion of four NFB state delegations, as
can walk faster with a guide dog than with a
well as the dismissal of several high-ranking
cane. With a cane, I almost have to walk into
NFB officials.
something I'll have to detour around, but
Even more than twenty years later, issues
the dog takes me around the obstacle in the
continue to divide ACB and NFB. For exam-
first place. I certainly feel safer traveling at
ple, NFB fiercely defends the right of blind
night with a dog, so I'm less limited than I've
passengers to sit in emergency evacuation
ever been before.' Because NFB President
seats on airplanes and to keep their long
Jernigan himself used a sighted companion,
canes at their seats rather than in baggage
his wife, for traveling, McCaffrey indicates
compartments. Often using folding long
that she is mystified by his organization's
canes, ACB members do not consider ei-
position on this matter.
ther of these matters to be of paramount
In 1972, some ACB members in New York
concern. Another issue that aggravates the
City who were using guide dogs worked
rift between the two groups involves "de-
together to pursue their own issues, join-
tectable warning strips," truncated domes
ing Guide Dog Users, Inc. (founded in
joined together in a long narrow ground
New York in 1969), an organization that
26 CHAPTER TWO
would remain independent of, but affili-
Yet recriminations on both sides have not
ated with, ACB. After spreading to almost
abated, and when problems occur affecting
twenty states, Guide Dog Users-supported
blind people, the different approaches of
by members of ACB-initiated two projects:
the two organizations often rekindle old an-
a national lawsuit dealing with Hawaii's
tagonisms. The public strife between NFB
noncompliance with the Americans with
and ACB not only confused supporters of
Disabilities Act and a New York City ef-
the disability rights movement, but also
fort known as "Operation Refusal." Be-
continues to serve the purposes of those
cause there were no reported cases of ra-
unsympathetic to the movement who argue
bies in Hawaii, all dogs, even guide dogs,
that there is no way to satisfy the contra-
were prohibited from being brought into
dictory demands of disability groups. For
the state. The Hawaii affiliate of Guide
example, Philip K. Howard asks in The Death
Dog Users won the Americans with Dis-
of Common Sense, "Why is it appropriate to
abilities Act lawsuit contesting this ban,
handle [disability] issues as a 'right''' if, as
just as Guide Dog Users in New York, us-
the director of New York's Office for the
ing police officers as decoys in New York
Disabled is reported to have said, "You can't
City, were successful in discouraging taxi-
please everybody?"⁶²
cab drivers from refusing to pick up blind
Although differences between NFB and
people with guide dogs. Despite its signifi-
ACB may support Howard's argument, in
cant role in disability politics, NFB requires
most cases even when two disability groups
that its members conform to the position of
have favored different accommodations, a
the leadership, while ACB offers its mem-
compromise has been negotiated that sat-
bers the freedom to use their own judg-
isfied both sides. To illustrate, corner-curb
ment regarding their participation in dis-
cuts required by wheelchair users present
ability advocacy.
a problem for blind people who no longer
Although for many years after the divi-
have a step to warn them that they are in
sion the dispute between NFB and ACB re-
the street. One solution that emerged in the
mained bitter, by the 1980s the two organi-
mid-1990s was a "detectable warning strip"
zations were occasionally working together
across curb cuts, cautioning blind people
on specific issues. For example, NFB and
that they are approaching the edge of the
ACB joined together to save blind people's
sidewalk. At the same time as a sense of
right to send mail without postage, known
unity was being forged between different dis-
as Free Matter for the Blind, as well as to
ability groups in the late 1960s, the seeds
support a new library for the blind in New
of dissension became increasingly apparent
York City, the Andrew Heiskell Library for
not only within the blind community but
the Blind and Physically Handicapped. In
also the deaf community.
addition, the two organizations united in
support of a separate agency-the New York
State Commission for the Blind and Visu-
Deafness as Culture
ally Handicapped-to serve the vocational
needs of blind people so that they would
Just as NFB defines blindness as a "charac-
not have to be accommodated by the vo-
teristic," many deaf people, especially those
cational agency for the general disability
who became deaf prelingually, refer to them-
population, the New York State Vocational
selves as Deaf people (with a capital "D") in
and Educational Services for Individuals
order to assert their identity as a linguistic
with Disabilities.
minority with their own culture. To dis-
SEEING BY TOUCH, HEARING BY SIGN 27
ability activists working to consolidate their
American Sign Language
movement, the efforts of these subgroups-
NFB and Deaf people-to distinguish them-
The culture of Deaf people emanates from
selves from the disability community seems
and remains centered on their language,
to be an attempt to escape the stigma of
American Sign Language.67 Oliver Sacks
disability. The view of Deafness as culture
suggests that William Stokoe's 1960
instead of disability is given credibility by
"bombshell" paper on Sign Language Struc-
noted deaf linguists, Carol Padden and Tom
ture, the first-ever serious and scientific
Humphries, in Deaf in America,63 and by
attention paid to 'the visual communica-
Oliver Sacks, professor of clinical neurology,
tion system of the American deaf," ush-
in Seeing Voices.⁶⁴
ered in the movement of Deafness as cul-
Nadina LaSpina, president of Disabled
ture.⁶⁸ Barbara Kanapell, founder in 1972
In Action (DIA) of Metropolitan New York,
of Deaf Pride, an organization devoted to
presents an opposing view:
Deaf consciousness-raising, credits Stokoe's
work with fostering a special linguistic iden-
It's obvious that Deaf people have accepted
tity.⁶⁹ Sacks affirmed Kanapell's insight: "It
the nondisabled majority's definition of
took Stokoe's [1965] dictionary, and the le-
disability. They do not want to be defined as
disabled because they don't want to shoulder
gitimation of Sign by linguists, to allow the
all the negative baggage that comes with the
beginnings of a movement toward deaf
territory. Well, neither do we. That's why we're
identity and deaf pride," as well as "a dis-
working hard to free ourselves and them from
covery or rediscovery of the cultural aspects
all that baggage. By separating themselves
of deafness."
from us, by calling themselves members of a
Deaf people who identify themselves with
linguistic minority and calling us disabled,
Deaf culture do not perceive themselves as
all they are doing is perpetuating the notion
that disability is bad. And they're not really
belonging to a disability group; rather, they
helping themselves since the nondisabled
consider themselves as members of an eth-
majority is still going to think of them as
nic group with an inherited language and
disabled.65
a culture "in the traditional sense of the
term, historically created and actively trans-
Professor Frank Bowe, who is deaf and
mitted across generations." Bowe explains
a member of the Department of Counsel-
the rationale of Deaf people with the fol-
ing, Research, Special Education and Re-
lowing illustration:
habilitation at Hofstra University, argues
that the "Deaf culture advocates cannot
Were a deaf person to walk into a hotel at
have it both ways."66 Indicating the con-
which two conventions were being held-one
tradiction in their position, Bowe points
of individuals with physical and mental
disabilities, and the other of people speaking
out that "they cannot on the one hand
languages other than English-at which
benefit from the IDEA [Individuals with
would this deaf person feel most at home?
Disabilities Education Act], Section 504 [of
The leaders of the Deaf culture movement
the Rehabilitation Act of 1973], the ADA,
say the second-the meeting of people who
etc., provisions guaranteeing free public
speak different languages. Those people need
education, social services, and protection
interpreters to help them to understand
against discrimination-all of which costs
people who speak different languages. Those
people need interpreters to help them to
money, and at the same time hold them-
understand people who speak English; so
selves apart from others who also benefit
do Deaf people. Those people would have
from such provisions."
difficulty reading and writing English, not
28 CHAPTER TWO
only in speaking and understanding speech
advocates of Deaf culture really want these
in it; so do Deaf people. On the other
questions answered in the affirmative.⁷
hand, individuals with physical and mental
disabilities usually have no problems using
English, and do not need interpreters.⁷¹
The Gallaudet University Uprising
To the dismay of most hearing people,
"so strong is the feeling of cultural solidarity
Focusing on Sign and Deaf culture as the
that many deaf parents cheer on discovering
inspiration for the movement that culmi-
that their baby is deaf." Learning they
nated in the 1988 uprising at Gallaudet Uni-
could choose to abort if their fetus had
versity from March 6 through March 13,
inherited their predisposition to deafness,
Sacks seems to have underestimated the piv-
some deaf couples indicate, on the contrary,
otal role of the disability rights movement
that they would choose to abort if the
in the students' demands. Although Sacks
fetus did not inherit their deafness. Because
sees the Gallaudet protest emanating out
their inability to communicate with the
of the 1960s rights movements, he treats
hearing world caused many deaf people to
the struggle of people with disabilities as
feel isolated and excluded, they created their
just one of the contributing factors, equal
own community, as well as a legacy that
to the others. He perceives Deaf culture as
they wished to pass on to their children.
a movement in itself, not as part of an over-
President of the National Association of
arching movement for people with all types
the Deaf, Roslyn Rosen, a deaf daughter of
of disabilities.
deaf parents and a mother of deaf children,
The primary grievance that ignited the
explains why she would prefer not to be
student demonstration was the fact that
cured of her deafness: "I'm happy with who
Gallaudet, dedicated to the higher educa-
I am.
Would an Italian-American rather
tion of people who are deaf or hard of
be a WASP?"
hearing, never had a deaf president since its
Unlike Rosen, however, more than 90 per-
founding in 1864. Sacks quotes a Gallaudet
cent of deaf children in the United States
professor exhorting the protesters: "Virtu-
are born to hearing parents, a statistic dis-
ally every black college has a black presi-
tinguishing Deaf culture from most other
dent, testimony that black people are lead-
cultures.⁷³ In fact, critics argue that the
ing themselves. Virtually every women's col-
focus on Deaf culture has been excessive,
lege has a woman as president, as testament
given the almost eleven million Americans,
that women are capable of leading them-
age fifteen and older, who have difficulty
selves. It's long past time that Gallaudet
hearing ordinary conversation (even with
had a deaf president as testimony that deaf
the help of a hearing aid), and the rela-
people are leading themselves." In fact, the
tively small number who use American Sign
action at Gallaudet culminated not only in
Language, roughly one-half million. 74 More-
the appointment of its first deaf president, I.
over, giving Deaf culture minority status
King Jordan, but also in setting the stage for
is fraught with potential problems: Since
the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act.⁷⁷
Sign is the first language of hearing children
Sacks mentions contributing factors to
of Deaf parents, should these children be
the Gallaudet revolt: "the mood of the
considered Deaf? Should deaf children be
'60s, with its special feeling for the poor,
removed from their hearing parents so that
the disabled, minorities-the civil rights
they may be raised in a family of their own
movement, the political activism, the var-
appropriate culture, Deaf? It is unlikely that
ied 'pride' and 'liberation' movements."78
SEEING BY TOUCH, HEARING BY SIGN 29
Yet, consistent with the proponents of Deaf
the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the ADA
culture, Sacks does not view the Gallaudet
of 1990.
struggle as arising out of an ongoing move-
ment of individuals with all varieties of
disabilities to advocate for themselves. Dis-
Black Deaf Advocates
ability rights advocates, however, represent-
ing the broad spectrum of disabilities, em-
Just as members of Deaf culture did not
braced the rebellion at Gallaudet, not only
appreciate that their movement was part of
as an integral part of their struggle, but
a broader disability rights movement, they
also as the continuation of an already es-
failed to recognize the extent to which they
tablished precedent. An at least equally dra-
accepted general public values. Not only did
matic event, though less publicized than the
Gallaudet mirror the racial segregation of
Gallaudet eruption, had occurred in 1977-
the time, but also as late as 1980, many
the twenty-five day sit-in by disability rights
black deaf people felt so alienated, cultur-
activists at the San Francisco headquarters
ally and linguistically, from the mainstream
of the Department of Health, Education,
deaf community that they formed their own
and Welfare to demand the signing of the
political group, Black Deaf Advocates. In
groundbreaking regulations implementing
Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
Identity, Erving Goffman points out that "it
1973.
should come as no surprise that in many
In addition, leaders of this 1977 victory,
cases he who is stigmatized in one regard
perhaps the most significant ever for people
nicely exhibits all the normal prejudices
with all kinds of disabilities, included deaf
held toward those who are stigmatized in
people. In fact, one of the prime movers of
another regard."⁸⁰ One effect of racial seg-
the Section 504 demonstrations was Frank
regation, legal and de facto, was that the
Bowe. While in No Pity Joseph Shapiro de-
sign language of black deaf people deviated
scribes the Gallaudet demonstration as "a
enough from the sign language of white
defining moment for the disability rights
deaf people that signed communication be-
movement" because of the media atten-
tween the two populations was difficult.⁸
tion it captured, he characterizes the 1977
Because of this segregation, few black
protest as "a blip on the screen of the na-
deaf people belonged to the National Asso-
tional consciousness."79 Still, the San Fran-
ciation of the Deaf (NAD), founded in
cisco sit-in-the culmination of the nation-
1880 as the political organization to op-
wide demonstrations for the signing of the
pose the onset of oralism. Since many
Section 504 regulations-was the first ma-
of the black deaf individuals who joined
jor coordinated political action by people
NAD felt alienated from the white ma-
with different disabilities to affect the gen-
jority, they assembled informally after the
eral disability population as well as the
NAD meetings to discuss their own is-
wider society. Furthermore, this 1977 sit-in
sues. By 1980, one hundred years after the
resulted in the implementation of major
formation of NAD, these informal gather-
disability legislation of which the Ameri-
ings developed into Black Deaf Advocates
cans with Disabilities Act was the logical
(BDA). Consisting of twenty-two chapters,
extension. Unlike legislation dealing with
including the New York City chapter estab-
other classes, the federal civil rights pro-
lished in 1983, national BDA meets annu-
tection for people with disabilities is em-
ally in different locations throughout the
bodied in two separate acts: Section 504 of
United States.
30 CHAPTER TWO
Sign language interpreters for black deaf
deaf children from kindergarten through
people are often their own hearing children.
high school, illustrates the evolution in
Since the interpreters who are "certified"82
the modern education of the deaf.⁸⁵ Bern-
according to the standards of the educated
stein taught deaf children at the Lexington
white deaf majority are not sufficiently
School for the Deaf in Manhattan from
comprehensible to many black deaf people,
1965 to 1966 and at St. Joseph's School for
black deaf people require interpreters who
the Deaf in the Bronx from 1967 to 1969.
can employ signs familiar to them. These
She says she felt "brainwashed" into think-
interpreters, although they lack certifica-
ing that sign language was "ugly, barbaric,
tion,⁸³ perform a vital function. Yet, they do
and bad" for deaf children. Oralism was the
not have the status or the imprimatur of
teaching method at the time.
legitimacy of the "certified" interpreters. Is-
After leaving St. Joseph's in 1969, Bern-
sues that concern the black deaf population
stein resumed teaching at the school in
also apply to other minority deaf groups,
1978, at which point she discovered that the
such as Native American deaf people. More-
educational method had changed to "total
over, the problems are complicated by eth-
communication," a technique using spoken
nic deaf groups who use American sign lan-
English and signed English concurrently.
guages other than American Sign Language,
Signed English is English with the vocab-
as for example Latino deaf people and the
ulary of sign language and the word order
variety of Asian deaf populations.84
and grammar of spoken English. The the-
Funding has become available to improve
ory was that employing this method, deaf
the skills of minority interpreters in order
children learned sign language and English
to enable them to become "certified." To
at the same time. According to Bernstein, "It
illustrate, LaGuardia Community College
didn't work. English and sign language have
in New York City received a 1996 grant that
different grammars and structures. Also,
mandated that the institution's interpreter
unlike English, 90 percent of sign language
program include the training of black in-
is body language and facial expression." Ju-
terpreters. Yet Celeste Owens, a member of
dith Cohen, executive director of Access Re-
Minority Interpreters for the Deaf, indicates
sources, an organization providing training
that little effort has been focused on the
on disability access issues including deaf-
limited comprehension of many minority
ness, offers this comparison: "While English
deaf people: "They may prepare minority
is linear, sign language is visual and three-
interpreters very well, but if the community
dimensional. Although sign language has
is not being kept up, these wonderful sign-
some iconic features, it is also an abstract
ers will not be understood by the people for
language like English."
whom they are signing."
Bernstein says that studies in the early
1980s proved that deaf children of deaf par-
ents understood the grammar and concepts
Education of Deaf Children
of language better than deaf children of
hearing parents. The reason for this phe-
An increasing awareness of the variety of
nomenon was that "deaf children of deaf
ethnic deaf communities was fostered by
parents were exposed to the complete use
a new respect for sign language evident in
of language through sign from birth, while
the gradual change from oralism to sign-
deaf children of hearing parents were learn-
ing in the American school system. The ex-
ing the most primitive gestures." As a re-
periences of Marcia Bernstein, who taught
sult of these studies, American Sign Lan-
SEEING BY TOUCH, HEARING BY SIGN 31
guage (ASL) has become a significant tool
Despite the antagonism of deaf purists,
in educating deaf children. Bernstein be-
the ability to speak and lip-read offers the
lieves that deaf children are ready and able
deaf person the advantage of the entry into
to acquire English as a second written lan-
the hearing world. Book editor and colum-
guage once they concretely and conceptu-
nist of the Chicago Sun-Times, Henry Kisor,
ally understand the grammar, syntax, and
postlingually totally deaf and completely
vocabulary of a sign language, such as ASL,
oral, disparages ideologues of both camps-
as a first language. Unlike signed English,
signers and oralists. Making a case for tai-
which uses sequential word order as in spo-
loring the teaching methods to the specific
ken English, ASL communicates in a sys-
needs of the individual deaf learner, Kisor
tematic, ideogrammatic performance. Now
fears the "New Orthodoxy," ASL, is merely
Bernstein believes that she uses "total com-
replacing the "Old Orthodoxy," oralism.⁸ᶜ
munication" more effectively than she did
Supporting Kisor's position, Keith Muller,
before studying ASL, for she employs ASL as
executive director of the League for the Hard
the medium for explaining the concepts es-
of Hearing-the nation's oldest and largest
sential for comprehending English. In fact,
hearing rehabilitation and service league-
Bernstein maintains that "ideally teachers
maintains that "there is no single method
of deaf people should be thoroughly profi-
by which all deaf kids can be educated."
cient in ASL."
Following the lead of a handful of state-
supported schools-in places like California
Helen Keller, the Social Reformer
and Indiana, and charter schools in Min-
nesota and Colorado-a New York City pub-
With the removal of barriers to education
lic school for the deaf instituted a landmark
and improved teaching techniques, people
change, in March 1998, requiring all teachers
with significant sensory disabilities-even
to instruct primarily in ASL. As the New York
dual disabilities such as Helen Keller's deaf-
Times reported:
blindness-increasingly have been able to
contribute to society. A pioneer in the strug-
They [educators and advocates for deaf
gle for disability rights, Keller was a highly-
children] say deaf students should be treated
like bilingual students, not disabled ones.
gifted hard worker who used her appeal-
In their view, students first need a primary
ing personality and physical attractiveness
language-American Sign Language-before
to raise money internationally for blind
they learn a second language, in this case,
people.⁹¹ But she also had the good for-
English.
In 1867, all twenty-six schools for
tune to have both the resources of a well-
the deaf used ASL. By 1907, all 139 such schools
connected family and the innovative edu-
had forbidden its use in an effort to make the
cational strategies of an inspired teacher,
deaf more like hearing people. Instead, they
Anne Sullivan.
were taught to read lips or [sic] to speak. New
York's embrace of American Sign Language
Who can forget such moments in Keller's
reflects a pendulum swing back.
autobiography, The Story of My Life, as the
way Keller learns, and delights in, the ex-
Consistent with this bilingual approach to
perience of language, first comprehending
teaching deaf students, a growing number
the meaning of the concrete term "water"
of colleges and universities-such as Brown,
and later the abstract concept "love"?" One
Georgetown, Chicago, Yale, and the Califor-
lesson evident from Keller's education is
nia state system-have accepted ASL in ful-
that by means of an intermediary, a kind of
fillment of foreign language requirements.88
translator similar to the modern "facilitated
Chapter Three
Deinstitutionalization and
Independent Living
THE TREND IN THE late 1950s and early
tend college after graduating from high
1960s toward deinstitutionalization allowed
school, she was told by a social worker that
people with severe physical disabilities to
"this idea is a fantasy, and fantasy can lead
begin entering the mainstream, bringing
to mental illness."¹ Emerman, however, not
a new population to the developing dis-
only graduated from college and earned a
ability rights movement. Nearly all peo-
master's in social work at Columbia Univer-
ple with serious physical impairments had
sity, but she also became a psychiatric social
trouble coping with a physical environ-
worker at Bellevue Hospital. By 1990, Emer-
ment so ill-adapted to their needs, and
man was a wife, a mother, and director of the
many were spurred into activism by the
Mayor's Office for People with Disabilities
discrimination and lack of understanding
in New York City. Others like Emerman,
they encountered.
who would become significant players in the
disability rights movement, would follow
this first test case out of Goldwater to live
Deinstitutionalization
independent lives.
Among them was Marilyn Saviola, also
An early experiment in deinstitutionaliza-
a quadriplegic wheelchair user, who in her
tion occurred at New York City's Goldwa-
late teens organized a separate ward for
ter Memorial Hospital, a long-term chronic
young adults at Goldwater:
care institution, where it was anticipated
that people would remain their entire lives.
[Previously] a young person might be next to
Although hospital officials assumed that
a dying octogenarian. "This was where the
these individuals, most of whom had se-
people the world wanted to forget about were
vere motor impairments, could not func-
thrown," Ms. Saviola said. Then she and other
tion in the mainstream, in 1958 a twenty-
young people took the social activism of the
one-year-old quadriplegic wheelchair user,
1960s to heart and pressed for their own ward.
"We fought very hard to get that place," said
Anne Emerman, was selected as a test case
Hermina Jackson, a quadriplegic who [also]
in independent living for this population.
later left Goldwater to become active in the
When she requested the opportunity to at-
disability rights movement. "I don't think a
34 CHAPTER THREE
lot of us knew how much potential we had
Still required to live at a subsistence level,
until we moved over there."2
ten years later, in 1983, Saviola became ex-
ecutive director of the Center for Indepen-
More like a college dormitory than a
dence of the Disabled in New York (CIDNY),
unit in a chronic care hospital, the young
the first independent living center in New
adults ward had brightly painted walls, "a
York State.
recreation room with a stereo, a kitchen
Reflecting a new federal objective of in-
where residents pitched in to prepare din-
cluding people with severe disabilities and
ners and [to arrange] expeditions to Broad-
expanding its coverage to include individu-
way shows." Chosen for their compatibility
als who might not be able to secure employ-
with young people, hospital personnel in
ment, but who could live independently,
this new ward did not wear uniforms, and
the term "vocational" was eliminated from
an elected council of residents advocated
the title of new legislation, which when
for the ward. Despite the many residents
enacted was simply called the Rehabilita-
who used respirators or ventilators, the at-
tion Act of 1973. Advancing the deinsti-
mosphere of the unit was typical for coeds
tutionalization process, this more expan-
of the 1960s: "There was rock music, late
sive view of rehabilitation services focused
night bull sessions and experiments with
on self-direction, rather than employment.
smoking and alcohol," as well as "romance."
Yet, as disability policy expert Edward D.
One of the young nurses in the unit, Deri
Berkowitz noted, "By the late 1970s, those
Duryea, explained, "They were sent there to
identified as severely disabled [people like
die, and suddenly they had life."
Saviola] accounted for more than half of the
Saviola began her emergence from insti-
vocational rehabilitation caseload."⁴
tutional life in 1965 by being the first pa-
Many formerly institutionalized people
tient to attend college while still residing
with significant disabilities residing in the
at Goldwater.³ Because New York State Vo-
community lived in dread of being forced to
cational and Educational Services for Indi-
return to institutions when their caretakers
viduals with Disabilities (VESID) claimed
could no longer provide for them. Paralyzed
that she was incapable of working, she was
by polio at ten years of age, Bernice White,
unsuccessful the first time she tried to get
a highly intelligent and beautiful woman
financial assistance for college. Yet Saviola
in her early twenties, prepared a lethal
was not discouraged. As she explains,
dose of pills in the late 1950s to ensure
that she would die before she would be
I appealed to Senator Javits, and he interceded
institutionalized again. Although by 1960
on my behalf, referring to the federal
she was married and living in her own home,
Vocational Rehabilitation Act. As a result,
VESID gave me a semester's tuition on a
she was not alone in preferring death to
probationary basis. After I got a bachelor's
"incarceration" in a nursing home.⁵
from Long Island University and a master's
In the late 1970S, Lyn Thompson of Cal-
in rehabilitation counseling from New
ifornia, immobilized by muscular dystro-
York University, I figured out a way to live
phy, was told she was not disabled accord-
independently. I rented my own apartment
ing to Medicaid law because she earned
in 1973. Medicaid paid for my 24-hour live-
more than two hundred and forty dollars
in personal assistance services attendant, a
van, and a driver, so that I was able to work
a month operating an answering service
as a rehabilitation counselor at Goldwater.
from her home.6 Consequently, she lost
But to keep Medicaid, I had to live at a
her income maintenance, her health cover-
subsistence level.
age, and her personal attendant. Informed
DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION AND INDEPENDENT LIVING 35
that she would be forced to enter an in-
previous autonomy. Implementation of the
stitution (at a considerably increased cost
new "vendor" system galvanized these con-
to taxpayers), Thompson could not accept
sumers into banding together to form a
the loss of independence she had estab-
unique personal assistance program, com-
lished with such difficulty. Despite her ef-
plying with all government regulations, in
fort to be a productive member of society,
which they maintain their independence.
Lyn Thompson, penalized by archaic laws,
Founded in 1980, this new program, Con-
took her own life in February 1978. The
cepts of Independence,8 has grown from
September 30, 1978, CBS-TV broadcast of
serving four consumers in the five coun-
"6o Minutes" focused nationwide attention
ties of New York City to serving more
on this tragedy.
than a thousand consumers in twelve coun-
Thompson was not informed about a per-
ties, seven of which are outside the city. If
sonal assistance services program evolving
these consumers had used traditional home
at that time in California that may have
care in 2000 rather than Concepts of In-
prevented her suicide. Ironically, on March I,
dependence, the services would have cost
1978, less than one month after Thompson's
the state an additional $28 million. Join-
death, a new California law allowed people
ing with groups such as the Alzheimer's
with severe physical disabilities to receive
Association and Sick Kids Need Involved
full support services while employed. More-
People (SKIP), Concepts of Independence
over, in 1977 after a reevaluation of a New
began in November 1997 to include con-
York City program permitting employed
sumers who required surrogates-usually
consumers of personal attendant care to
family members-to direct personal assis-
receive these services, the New York City
tance services. To ensure that the pro-
Human Resources Administration decided
gram is appropriate for those who use per-
not only to continue the program, but also
sonal assistance services, most board mem-
to extend it to future consumers who would
bers are long-term Concepts of Indepen-
be employed.
dence consumers.
Earlier, in 1976, New York City established
Chairing the board from its inception
the Independent Contractor Home Care
until her death in 1994, Sandra Schnur-
System, a program enabling self-directing
quadriplegic as a result of polio and di-
consumers of personal assistance services
rector of the New York City Office of
to hire, train, supervise, and fire their own
Half-Fare Transportation for People with
attendants.⁷ Because the program paid only
Disabilities-initiated and guided the pro-
the minimum wage without withholding
gram utilizing her organizational skills and
taxes and provided no employee benefits,
political connections.
the Independent Contractor System failed
Marvin Wasserman, Schnur's husband,
to comply with various state and federal
describes his wife:
regulations. Furthermore, the system did
not offer support to the non-self-directing
In 1952, Sandra, a wheelchair user who
and frail elderly. As a result, New York
had just graduated from high school, was
City initiated a "vendor" program in 1979-
advised by OVR [the Office of Vocational
a new system in which the city contracted
Rehabilitation, which later became Vocational
and Educational Services for Individuals
with nonprofit, community-based agencies
with Disabilities] to become a basket-
to manage the employment, training, and
weaver. Considering that she had weak
supervision of home care employees-thus
hands because of polio, this job was a
depriving self-directing consumers of their
poor choice, especially for a person with
36 CHAPTER THREE
her intelligence. When she asked to go
person is sometimes almost an invasion of
to college instead, she was told that she
their privacy. But that boy did so well and
was uncooperative, and her OVR case was
turned out to be so fiercely independent
closed. Thirteen years later, when OVR
that he made a believer out of me,"
offered to send her to college, she needed
he added.
two years of tutoring in mathematics,
King said he then began to realize the
science, and foreign language to make
inadequacies of the educational programs
up for the inadequate home instruction
for the handicapped. And, when he became
she had received. After graduating from
president of the college here in 1953, he
college, Sandra earned her master's in
set about attempting to correct those
rehabilitation counseling. Among her many
inadequacies, at least at his own school.
accomplishments, she wrote New York with
"We are blessed here with a campus without
Ease, an accessibility guide for wheelchair
hills and not so large that the handicapped
users in New York City-maybe the first
students can't get around," he said. "We'll
of its kind-published by the Easter Seal
gradually get this campus so that a student
Society in 1963. But she considered her
can go anywhere day or night whether he is
contribution to Concepts of Independence
blind or paralyzed." Years later, King said,
her greatest achievement.⁹
"We've had no disciplinary problems with
handicapped students except for one boy
who ran his wheelchair too fast down a
Programs like Concepts of Independence re-
campus walk. "10
vealed that many people with severe disabil-
ities could live independent, self-directed
After the first of these students graduated
lives in the community more economically
in the late 1950s, enrollment of students
and productively than in nursing homes.
with severe disabilities steadily increased at
Kansas State Teachers College.¹¹
One of the first college programs specifi-
Early Accessibility Efforts
cally geared for people with disabilities was
in the Colleges
established in 1948 on the wheelchair acces-
sible campus of the University of Illinois. 12
The story of Dr. John E. King-who in
Since in World War II paraplegic soldiers
1953 became president of Emporia State
survived combat for the first time, they re-
Teachers College, now Kansas State Teach-
quired accommodations never before pro-
ers College-also illustrates how, when peo-
vided, such as a barrier-free college environ-
ple with severe disabilities are given oppor-
ment, in order to participate in activities on
tunities, common assumptions about their
an equal basis with other students. Because
limitations may be dispelled:
of the foresight of Tim Nugent, founder
and director of the Division of Rehabili-
Dr. King first seriously considered the idea
of educating the handicapped at a regular
tation Education Services, the University
college campus when he was the provost
of Illinois developed services and programs
at the University of Minnesota's campus at
designed for students with disabilities. An
Duluth. He recalls that a Hungarian English
accessible paratransit system-a method of
professor at the school discovered a youth
transportation using lift-equipped vans-
in Duluth who was extremely able, but was
was devised for the limited area of the cam-
almost totally paralyzed. Believing in the
pus. Furthermore, Nugent initiated a sports
boy's mental ability, the school hired two
football players to carry him, feed him, and
program, which has evolved into a multi-
tend to all his wants.
faceted curriculum allowing students with
"At first we felt we were exploiting the
a variety of disabilities to engage in ath-
boy," King said. "You know, helping a
letic competition.
DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION AND INDEPENDENT LIVING 37
The University's acceptance of students
own self-doubt and the general skepticism
with increasing degrees of disability neces-
concerning the opportunities that would be
sitated the provision of independent liv-
available to him. 14 Roberts recalls:
ing services. By the fall of 1962, students
with severe disabilities shared responsibility
I had a serious fever, and in twenty-four
for the operation of the newly established
hours, I was paralyzed and in an iron lung.
Within earshot, my mother asked the doctor
University of Illinois residence, the Guy M.
whether I would live or die. "You should
Beckwith Living Center, renamed Beckwith
hope he dies, because if he lives, he'll be no
Hall in 1992. Until the 1970s, the University
more than a vegetable for the rest of his life.
of Illinois was one of the only major uni-
How would you like to live in an iron lung
versities with both a wheelchair-accessible
twenty-four hours a day?" So I decided to be
campus and programs specifically designed
an artichoke-a little prickly on the outside
for students with disabilities. 13
but with a big heart.
The transition was hard.
Everyone made
While the veterans' disabilities were all
the outlook [seem] bleak. I decided that I
war-related, the reasons for civilians' disabil-
wanted to die. Now it's very hard to kill
ities varied greatly-from polio to cerebral
yourself in a hospital with everything set up
palsy to accidents and innumerable other
to save your life. But the mind is a powerful
causes. Since they needed alterations for ac-
thing. I stopped eating. They started to force-
cessibility in the built environment, these
feed me. It was really demeaning. I dropped
individuals were motivated to seek alterna-
to fifty-four pounds.
My last special duty nurse left, and the next
tives to preconceived notions-for example,
day I decided I wanted to live. You see, that
regarding transportation and architecture-
was a big turning point. Up until then, these
as well as to consider legal and political
nurses were available and doing things for me
tactics to accomplish these goals. Early pro-
around the clock. I didn't have to make any
grams developed on college campuses for
decisions for myself because they were always
students with disabilities were initiated by
there. When they all finally left, that's when I
nondisabled people. However, by 1971 in
realized that I could have a life, despite what
everyone was saying. I could make choices,
Houston, 1972 in Berkeley, 1974 in Boston,
and that is freedom. I started to eat again.¹⁵
and later in other localities, people with
different disabilities would establish and
Although Roberts completed his first
direct their own centers for independent
three years of high school at home by
living-sometimes forming coalitions with
means of a telephone connected to the
like-minded groups-as they began to de-
classroom, both his mother and his social
mand social change that would enable them
worker told him during his senior year that
to participate in the wider society.
if he did not leave the house then, he never
would. Roberts describes his first experience
attending school with other students:
Ed Roberts and the
Independent Living Movement
I had taught myself glossopharyngeal
breathing-frog breathing, where you swallow
The counterculture activism of the stormy
air into your lungs, so I had been spending
Berkeley campus of the 1960s and early 1970S
time out of the iron lung before. But I was
resonated in Edward Roberts's energetic,
scared to go out and be seen by people.
I remember that day very clearly. I arrived
anti-institutional biases. Severely disabled
during lunch time. My brother lowered me
by polio at the age of fourteen and encour-
out of the back of the station wagon, and
aged by a feisty mother, he overcame his
it was like a tennis match-everyone turned
38 CHAPTER THREE
to look at me. I looked at someone, right in
Hospital, on the edge of the campus. Soon
the eyes, and they turned and looked away.
there were a bunch of us crips at Berkeley.
That was when I realized that maybe it wasn't
It was an exciting time. The protests and
my problem; maybe it was their problem.
student movements were rising all around us,
I checked myself out, and I realized two
and we were right there. John Hessler [another
things. First, their looking at me didn't hurt,
Cowell resident] and I used to roll right up
physically, and secondly I realized, hey, this is
to the front of the demonstrations and stare
kind of like being a star-and I've been a star
down the police. What could they do? When
ever since. 16
they threatened to arrest us, we just asked
them, "How are you going to get us there?
Deciding on a career in political science,
Do you have an iron lung in your prison?"
Roberts acted on his mother's suggestion
That's one drawback of the Americans with
that he select a university based not primar-
Disabilities Act I guess, because they didn't
have accessible jails back then, which meant
ily on accessibility, but on academic excel-
they didn't arrest us.²¹
lence in his field. "Armed with self-esteem
and a portable respirator, [Roberts] broke
Influenced to some degree by the impact
the disability barrier to higher education, by
of the 1963-1964 Berkeley Free Speech Move-
insisting that he had a right to an education,
ment, Roberts and his followers were more
by insisting that the doors to the Univer-
profoundly affected by the eruption at Peo-
sity of California at Berkeley be opened."¹⁷
ple's Park in Berkeley in late 1964, as well
Roberts had to sue to gain admission to the
as the students' reaction against the over-
University of California in 1962, just as in
whelming police presence in the university
the same semester James Meredith required
town. 22 Yet Roberts also acknowledges his
a lawsuit to become the first black person
debt to the Women's Movement:
to attend the University of Mississippi. 18
"When I first began talking with the admin-
I learned a lot from the Women's Movement.
istration," Roberts explains, "they told me,
They used to let me go to their meetings;
I guess they saw a connection between our
'We tried cripples, and they don't work. "19
experiences. I remember them talking about
After his successful lawsuit against the
how to deal with stereotypes of weakness and
university, Roberts still had the formidable
passivity that society placed on them. I heard
task of arranging for appropriate housing.
women talk about how they had manipulated
Because of the severity of his disability, he
men by capitalizing on these stereotypes. I
was attended to at the Berkeley Infirmary,
realized that disability is actually a strength.
Cowell Hospital, by orderlies doing public
If someone comes up to me and doesn't look
me in the eye, if all they see is my ventilator
service as an alternative to military service
and my chair, I can tell right away. If they
in Vietnam. 20 Steeped in the political milieu
don't see me as a human being, if they only see
of this makeshift dormitory, Roberts recol-
my equipment, I know that I can get whatever
lects how he and the quadriplegics that fol-
I want out of them. As long as this is not used
lowed him to the Berkeley campus created
pathologically, but to create beneficial change
a spirited atmosphere on the third floor of
for others, it is a strength. Disability can be
Cowell Hospital.
very powerful. We used the power of disability
in political strategies many times.²³
They [the university administrators] didn't
As Roberts reveals, not all civil rights ac-
know where to put me. The dorms weren't
accessible, and we had to find a place that
tivists, however, recognized the connection
would accommodate my eight hundred-
between their causes and his cause: "I re-
pound iron lung. They finally decided that
member meeting with Leonard Pelletier [the
I could live in a certain ward of Cowell
Native American activist] before he was ar-
DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION AND INDEPENDENT LIVING 39
rested. I met with Stokely Carmichael and
tional and even international prominence.
others in the Black Power movement. When
Roberts explains:
I told them that we were all fighting the
same civil rights battle, they didn't believe
Most people never thought of independence
as a possibility when they thought of us.
me; they didn't understand our similarities.
But we knew what we wanted, and we set
I did. Even now, many people don't real-
up CIL to provide the vision and resources
ize it."
to get people out and into the community.
Invited by his former college adviser,
The Berkeley CIL was revolutionary as a
Jean Wirth, to assist her in developing a
model for advocacy-based organizations;
nationally-funded pilot project for minor-
no longer would we tolerate being spoken
ity university students, Roberts submitted
for. Our laws said that at least 5I percent
of the staff and board had to be people
a grant proposal for people with disabili-
with disabilities, or it would be the same
ties as a minority. After being funded, this
old oppression. We also saw CIL as a model
proposal became known as the Disabled
for joining all the splintered factions of
Students Program (DSP) at Berkeley. Es-
different disability organizations. All types of
tablishing an agenda that suited these stu-
people used and worked in our center. This
dents' needs-wheelchair repair, accessible
was the vision we had for the future of the
movement.²⁴
housing, attendant care-they formed the
Rolling Quads, a political group that would
Carr Massi, a leading organizer of the
make wheelchairs commonplace in the
first independent living center in New York
Berkeley community. Roberts comments:
City, the Center for the Independence of the
Disabled in New York (CIDNY), relates her
My mother Zona managed the attendant
impressions of the CIL in 1977:
pool. I remember we sent someone to visit
with a high ranking military official who was
The Center for Independent Living in
responsible for the conscientious objectors.
California, which I visited in September,
Edna Brean [DSP representative] met with
is an impressive operation
Some people
him and told him about what attendants
have the impression that CIL is a "village"
do for people with disabilities and that
of people with disabilities. It is not. It deals
conscientious objectors would be ideal for the
in services, counseling, and training.
job. This official was enthusiastic; he thought
There is peer counseling, legal assistance,
this was like a punishment for these people
job development, training in independent
who refused to fight. So, we got them signed
living skills, and health maintenance. The
up. These were the kind of people we wanted
CIL degree program is the only one in the
to work with. We were very lucky.
United States that focuses on the psychology
of disability, using the peer counseling
Struggling against the agency mental-
approach practiced at the center. All this
ity that fostered dependence, the Rolling
is funded by private foundations and by
Quads worked toward achieving a barrier-
the government.25
free campus, one significant component of
Influenced by the CIL, Berkeley was re-
their effort to become self-reliant. Impelled
ferred to by the New York Times as the "mecca
by their desire to be in charge of their own
for the handicapped,"26 the city where peo-
lives, the Rolling Quads moved out of the
ple with disabilities were accepted as an in-
hospital and into the Berkeley community.
tegral part of the community. Also, given
Spearheaded by Roberts, they organized an
the diversity of Berkeley, people with vari-
agency in 1972 governed by and for people
ous disabilities looked just like one other
with disabilities, the Center for Indepen-
unusual group that populated the area.
dent Living (CIL) that eventually gained na-
Roberts notes:
40 CHAPTER THREE
We secured the first curb cut in the
toward people, and therefore toward disabled
country; it was at the corner of Bancroft
people, exists.
and Telegraph Avenue. When we first talked
I found people helpful but not over-
to legislators about the issue, they told us,
solicitous. In restaurants, hotels, and shops,
"Curb cuts, why do you need curb cuts? We
people are more used to seeing people in
never see people with disabilities out on the
chairs and understand how to best serve
streets. Who is going to use them?" They
their needs.
didn't understand that their reasoning was
circular. When curb cuts were put in, they
Jane Wipfler, a founding member of the
discovered that access for disabled people
New York Metropolitan Chapter of the Na-
benefit many others as well. For instance,
tional Paraplegia Foundation, expresses her
people pushing strollers use curb cuts, as
feelings about living in northern California,
do people on bikes and elderly people who
can't lift their legs so high. So many people
where she moved to from New York City
benefit from this accommodation. This is
in 1975:
what the concept of universal design is all
The most exciting news I have to share is the
about. Now Berkeley is a very accessible city.
attitude of people out here. Everywhere I go,
We [people with disabilities] are visible in
I see "wheelies"-rock concerts, flea markets,
the community because we can get around
movies, grocery stores, on the streets.
Many
everywhere fairly easily.
buildings display the wheelchair accessible
I look around, and I notice that a lot
emblem, and the front seats of all buses are
of us are getting gray. As we get older,
reserved for the elderly and the handicapped.
we realize that disability is just a part of
I've seen quadriplegics literally fly down some
life. Anyone can join our group at any
fairly steep hills in Berkeley without attracting
point in life. In this way, the disability
much attention. It really heartens me to see
rights movement doesn't. discriminate.
the handicapped as part of the community.
So those of us who are temporarily
able-bodied and working for access and
As founder of the Berkeley CIL, Roberts
accommodation now get older, and the
changes they make will benefit them
became the embodiment of the principle of
as well.27
self-determination for people with disabili-
ties. Roberts indicates how he harnessed his
anger so that it fueled his creative energies:
Two personal experiences evoke the at-
Most psychiatrists and service professionals
mosphere of the Bay Area in the 1970s. 28
who work with us tell us that anger is a bad
Simi Kelley, a wheelchair user, describes her
thing-a stage to get over or something that
summer in Berkeley in 1975:
we need to overcome. But anger is a powerful
energy. We don't need to suppress or get
Rounding the corner to my street, I see
over our anger; we need to channel it into
three or four beautiful, blond California
making change for the greater good. We need
women surrounding a young handsome man
to make sure that we don't turn our anger
sitting in a wheelchair. They're out there on
in on ourselves or our loved ones, but focus
the street throwing yogurt at one another and
it on removing obstacles and making things
laughing like they'll never stop.
happen
I get angry all the time. I'm angry
I go out to the store. I don't stop and think
that people with disabilities are second-class
about it; I just go. There are curb cuts on
citizens in this country. I get angry at how
every corner, so I don't have to deliberate over
97 percent of the billions of federal dollars
every maneuver.
spent either perpetuate our dependency on
There are many disabled people in Berkeley
the system or increase it.²⁹
(often called Berzerkeley), and they are such
an outgoing, active group that the ground
In order to foster independence for peo-
has been broken. A whole different attitude
ple with severe disabilities, the original CIL
DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION AND INDEPENDENT LIVING 41
was the model, not only for the satellite
disabilities while I was there. If he ever had a
agencies in each of the twenty-eight Cali-
question, he would come to me directly.
I
fornia counties, but also for the hundreds
went straight from being on welfare to this
throughout the United States and in other
state government position. People asked me
if I was going to become a bureaucrat. I told
parts of the world. Assistant Secretary of
them, "No, I think I'll be an 'advocrat."
Education Judith E. Heumann, who in 1978
was senior deputy director of the CIL, re-
In this position, which he held for eight
lates the accomplishments of members of
years, Roberts was responsible for twenty-
the CIL by engaging in an imaginary di-
five hundred employees and a budget of
alogue between observers of the CIL and
$140 million. Robert Levine, San Francisco
CIL representatives:
Bay Area Accessible Transportation Planner,
who contracted polio when he was fourteen,
"There's something that's going right. They're
remembers Roberts:
producing more rehabs than rehab, and why
is that happening?" We are saying it is very
When Ed became the head of the
simple: Disabled people know what disabled
Department of Rehabilitation in California
people need and want. (That is not true for
in the seventies, he was like a kid who had
all of us, but it is for many.) As a result of
slipped into the establishment. The faithful
that, we are able to help people move on. We
would go up to Sacramento and talk about
are peers. We are role models. That is critical.
how it was to be on the inside. Ed developed
When we go into most "establishment"
countywide CILs around the state, such as
organizations, we hardly meet any disabled
the San Francisco one at 812 Mission Street,
individuals; there are no peers that we can
where many of us joined together to discuss
look up to. I never met a disabled professional
issues and plan strategies.
until I was in my twenties. I had only
I also remember Ed speaking in New
nondisabled role models-who are not role
York in 1991. It was the annual meeting of
models to me because I am not nondisabled.
disability organizations held at the Republic
That oppression, which goes on, on a day-
Bank, and Ed gave a great speech on why
to-day basis, is something that we in the
we should be proud to be disabled. It was
independent living programs have been able
a rousing tour de force. Later he was asked
to change.³⁰
to name the three things most important
Acquiring his bachelor's and master's de-
to the disability community. He answered,
"Advocacy, advocacy, and advocacy." When
grees, as well as an appointment in politi-
I saw him at Gracie Mansion the following
cal science, at the University of California
year, he was, as usual, seeking money for the
at Berkeley, Roberts struggled against the
World Institute on Disability. "Hi Bob, how
prevailing assumption that his disability
are you doing?" he said, and I was impressed.
negated his intellectual capacity and his
Ed hardly knew me, and if he remembered my
employment potential. When Jerry Brown
name, he must have remembered thousands
was elected governor of California in 1975,
of others. A good trick if you're trying to
get money.32
he appointed Roberts director of the State
Department of Rehabilitation. Roberts
In 1983, Roberts and Heumann founded
recounts:
the Oakland California World Institute on
Disability (WID), a nonprofit public pol-
When I finally met him [Governor Jerry
icy, research, and training institute estab-
Brown], he asked, "Are you one of the leaders
of this [the landmark disability rights sit-in
lished to achieve independence and im-
of 1977]?" I told him that I was, and he
proved quality of life for people with dis-
listened. Not only did he hire me, but he
abilities. WID works collaboratively with a
never cut program funding for people with
local, national, and international network
42 CHAPTER THREE
of people with disabilities as well as policy-
azine Mouth: The Voice of Disability Rights, re-
makers, corporations, and nonprofit orga-
members Roberts as the person to whom
nizations.³³ In order to raise public aware-
she was directed when she had questions
ness of disability issues and the indepen-
about disability rights history. She was told
dent living concept, Roberts traveled to Rus-
that "Ed Roberts has all the answers," but
sia, Australia, Japan, and France. His I984
she did not see him that way:
MacArthur Foundation Award helped fund
many of his WID activities.
Ed didn't, as he was the first to admit, have
all the answers. But there was genuine treasure
A unique and innovative force in the mod-
imbedded in his tales of the early days of IL
ern disability rights movement, Roberts was
[Independent Living]. He had stories enough
mourned throughout the world by many
to make me wish, today, that I'd recorded
people, including the disability community,
every one of them. Both Billy Golfus [writer
when he died at the age of fifty-six of car-
and director of the well-received documentary
diac arrest in Berkeley, California, on March
film about the disability rights movement,
14, 1995. Although several independent liv-
When Billy Broke His Head] and I say we miss
him most late in the evening. That's when
ing centers (ILCs) were initiated before the
Emperor Ed the Head held phone court from
Berkeley CIL, Roberts deserves credit for
the iron lung where he spent his nights.
being the founder of the ILCs because of
Ed sent me a video about the first Center for
his success in establishing a nationwide,
Independent Living, the CIL in Berkeley that
and even a worldwide, Independent Living
he helped to found. That video was a sixties
Movement. Dr. Frank Bowe, professor at
period piece showing the IL guys wearing
Hofstra University, tells about Roberts's ef-
so-stylish bell bottoms and stringy long hair.
The founders of IL were bright white male
fect on people:
students of a prestigious university who grew
I think Ed had a "visionary" bent that people
up in homes where families could describe
found inspiring. He had the ability to think
themselves as "comfortable." In the '40s and
in very broad terms and to speak in an
'50s, polio had knocked down those families'
all-encompassing way so that everyone who
most-likely-to-succeed kids like bowling pins.
listened to him felt included in what he
America's best and brightest
had
been
had to say and encouraged to do more and
transformed over night into second-class
better. He was one of the first to get the
citizens by a microscopic organism with a
idea that it was not just his job to "deal
long Latin name
with" his disability; rather, society had some
What caused them to question their
obligations, too. In the 1960s, the very concept
second-class status? They'd hatched out of
that the University of California at Berkeley
privilege and protection into a world that
and the City of Berkeley had responsibilities
was changing radically. A people's cry for
to accommodate for Ed's needs and for
liberty and justice was visible, audible, and
those of other students like him was radical.
haunting America on its nightly news. The
Certainly, it never occurred to me in four
nation sat witness while solemn black people
years of college that Western Maryland
stood their ground as sheriffs set dogs on
College should accommodate my needs [as a
them for having the nerve to sit down at
deaf student]. I just never thought of it that
lunch counters, go to schools, or both
way. I saw'a college that worked the way it
Black pride arose from white oppression and
worked, and I thought my job was to adjust
black poverty.
to that way-or get out. But once someone
The independent living revolution arose
like Ed introduces a new way of thinking,
from among privileged white boys. And, bless
it can spread-as it did! I was one of many
them, those boys stormed the barricades to
who benefited.³⁴
free us [people with disabilities] from the
medical model. They fought tooth and nail for
Lucy Gwin, editor of the bimonthly mag-
curb cuts and restaurant access, and a new,
DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION AND INDEPENDENT LIVING 43
improved vocational rehabilitation system.
tion Agency to cofound the Boston Cen-
Ed Roberts did, later, rise above his privileges
ter for Independent Living (BCIL) in order
to spend the last years of his life touring the
that people with severe disabilities could
country for Partners in Policymaking. He
function autonomously outside an insti-
spoke then of freedom for everyone.³⁵
tution. Like the Berkeley CIL, BCIL pro-
vides peer counseling, personal care atten-
dant services, advocacy, and employment
Proliferation of the
referrals, as well as information regard-
Independent Living Concept
ing community-based housing and assis-
tive devices.
Berkeley was a harbinger for what was to
Experiencing disability discrimination
come, and what is still in the process of hap-
after he broke his neck in a 1967 car accident,
pening, as other cities become increasingly
Lex Frieden became an advocate for disabil-
accessible, though the climate, transporta-
ity rights and independent living.³⁷ When
tion, and culture may not be as hospitable
Frieden, a wheelchair user, was refused
to people with disabilities in other locales
admission to the completely wheelchair-
as they are in the Bay Area. The Boston
accessible Oral Roberts University in 1968,
Center for Independent Living was. estab-
he indicates how he became aware of the
lished in 1974 by Fred Fay, a quadriplegic
similarity between racial prejudice and prej-
disability activist and a Ph.D. in psychology;
udice-based on disability:
Paul Corcoran, a physician in rehabilitation
medicine; and Robert McHugh, a rehabili-
The school was built according to
1960s architectural standards-level with
tation counselor.³ After Fay broke his neck
wide doorways-so although wheelchair
in 1960 at the age of sixteen as a result of
accessibility was not deliberate, it seemed a
a fall from a trapeze, he spent two years
good place for me to go to school. When
rehabilitating at Warm Springs, Georgia,
they wouldn't accept me because they said
where he experienced people with disabili-
my presence in a wheelchair would be an
ties serving as board and staff members. Fay
imposition on the other students, at first I
received his undergraduate and graduate
was disheartened. But in a few days I realized
that this was discrimination-just like the
degrees from the University of Illinois, an in-
discrimination people of color had to deal
stitution noted for being receptive to and ac-
with-for a characteristic over which they had
cessible for students with severe disabilities.
no control and for which there was no logic.
With his vision of the potential of disability
The next school I applied to, the University
independence encouraged by Warm Springs
of Tulsa, was built according to 1930s Ivy
and the University of Illinois, Fay initiated
League standards with many steps, so the
dean of admissions had to meet me in
a halfway house in a Boston nursing home
the parking lot. He told me that the new
for people with severe disabilities who had
building would have level entrances, and
no family or friends to provide care.
if I would plan my schedule early, all my
Perceiving these nursing home clients as
classes would be in that building until
people who were "incarcerated against their
other buildings became accessible. This
will," Fay indicates that "their only crime
was reasonable accommodations before the
was needing attendant care in the morning
term was invented. Then he said that the
and at night; otherwise they were pretty
University of Tulsa would be honored to have
me. After I filed a 1976 complaint against
much independent for the rest of the day."
Oral Roberts, I received an apology and an
Disillusioned by this experience, Fay ob-
invitation to attend the institution. Some of
tained funding from the State Rehabilita-
my colleagues suggested that perhaps Oral
44 CHAPTER THREE
Roberts University had originally rejected me
ing, as well as to advance the use of research
because I would have been an embarrassment
project results.
considering Oral Roberts's reputation as a
Two accessible apartment complexes-
faith healer.
Creative Living I and II-built in 1974 and
1986 in Columbus, Ohio, served as tem-
While at the University of Tulsa in 1968,
porary independent living environments
Frieden helped organize a disability rights
for young adults with severe physical dis-
organization, Wheelchair Independence
abilities who were pursuing educational
Now (WIN), but the name was soon changed
or vocational training or beginning em-
to Win Independence Now: "We realized
ployment.4 These programs, funded by
that not all people with disabilities were
the Department of Housing and Urban
in wheelchairs, and we shared common is-
Development (HUD), prepare quadriplegic
sues." About the same time that Roberts
wheelchair users for self-sufficient futures.
founded the CIL in Berkeley, Frieden orga-
However expensive the cost of subsidiz-
nized Cooperative Living, an independent
ing these residents may appear, approxi-
living center in Houston, Texas, "that at-
mately thirty thousand dollars a year for
tempts to bridge the gap between hospital
six years per person, the investment is pru-
and community by means of a six-week
dent because of the long-term dividends.
program that teaches independent living
If recipients of Creative Living Services be-
skills."³⁸ In 1975, the same year that he was
come gainfully employed rather than to-
elected as the first secretary of the national
tally dependent on Medicaid, society ben-
disability rights organization, the Ameri-
efits by both their professional and eco-
can Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities
nomic contribution.
(ACCD), he formed the Coalition for Barrier
When the Rehabilitation Institute of Chi-
Free Living, an organization focusing on
cago organized an independent living com-
accessibility issues.
mittee in 1978 in order to set up an ILC, the
Founded by Frieden in 1977, the Inde-
institute's plan was to establish transitional
pendent Living Research Utilization (ILRU)
housing for recently-disabled people who
program, the think tank for the Indepen-
had completed rehabilitation.⁴¹ A member
dent Living Movement, defined the con-
of the committee, Marca Bristo, newly re-
cept of independent living.³⁹ Serving as a
habilitated following a spinal cord injury,
national center for information, training,
asked a provocative question: "Where do
research, and technical assistance in inde-
we go after we leave transitional housing
pendent living, ILRU incorporated indepen-
when there's no accessible housing?" Hav-
dent living provisions in the Rehabilitation
ing just attended a conference in Berkeley
Act of 1978. ILRU's staff, mainly people with
on sexuality and disability, Bristo was keenly
disabilities, develop techniques for accumu-
aware of the variety of disability accommo-
lating, synthesizing, and distributing infor-
dations being provided in the San Francisco
mation concerning independent living for
Bay Area. Supporting Bristo in her concern,
national and international rehabilitation
other members of the committee pointed
and educational agencies and institutions,
out that what was really needed was ac-
consumer organizations, and other inde-
cessible, affordable housing, where people
pendent living centers and councils. Similar
with disabilities could live independently
to the World Institute on Disability, ILRU's
alongside nondisabled people. "We don't
goal is to increase and disseminate knowl-
want to live in segregated, special housing,"
edge and understanding of independent liv-
asserted Bristo, expressing the sense of the
DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION AND INDEPENDENT LIVING 45
committee. Responsive to the committee's
state legislation mandating "visitability"-
recommendations, the institute abandoned
basic access to newly-built single-family
its original plan, and instead in 1980 estab-
homes for which owners receive financial
lished Access Living, the independent living
or other assistance from city or state gov-
center of Chicago.
ernment.⁴⁵ Known across the nation for
President and CEO of Access Living since
its pioneer work in fair housing,⁴ Access
its inception, Bristo has helped to create a
Living also provides technical assistance
model independent living center that serves
on the Fair Housing Amendments Act to
all of Chicago.⁴² Access Living provides the
over five hundred organizations across the
four core ILC services: information and re-
United States.
ferral, peer counseling, independent living
training, and advocacy. Unlike many of the
other centers, however, Access Living treats
Characteristics of
litigation of disability lawsuits as a signifi-
Independent Living Centers
cant aspect of advocacy. With a civil rights
team consisting of two staff attorneys and
Certain services are basic to all ILCs, yet
two technical assistants, Access Living deals
they vary in their programs, staffing or-
with a variety of disability issues includ-
ganization, and funding sources, as well
ing access to transportation and to schools,
as the consumers they target. Some ILCs
discrimination in housing, availability of
are associated with uncommon services; for
home services, and denials of sign language
example, one of the first services offered
interpreters for the deaf. With the excep-
by the Berkeley CIL was wheelchair repair.
tion of housing cases, the center's focus
Two early ILCs founded in New York City-
has been on large-scale cases to achieve sys-
the Center for Independence of the Dis-
temic change.
abled in New York in 1978 and the Brook-
Consistent with its initial purpose, Access
lyn Center for Independence of the Dis-
Living supports lawsuits filed against vio-
abled (BCID) in 1979-include personal at-
lators of the federal Fair Housing Amend-
tendant, deafness and blindness services, as
ments Act of 1988, which not only protects
well as housing, benefit, and transportation
people with disabilities against housing dis-
information. In addition, CIDNY, in part-
crimination but also requires that housing
nership with Tisch Hospital (one of the
developers comply with the principles of
facilities at New York University Medical
"adaptable design."⁴ Developed in the mid-
Center), provides primary care services to
1980s by the disability community in con-
people with disabilities. While Bronx Inde-
junction with architects, adaptable design
pendent Living Services helps crime victims
incorporates certain fixed access features
with disabilities, Queens Independent Liv-
but allows others to be added to existing
ing Center (QILC) includes the Cork Art
structures as they are needed. Thus, this
Gallery, which displays the work of artists
design enables all people to remain in their
with disabilities. Because people from eth-
homes if their physical conditions change
nic and racial minorities were underserved
as a consequence of disability or age.44
by ILCs, Harlem Hospital-in conjunction
Adaptable design, however, applies only
with QILC and Sylvia Walker of Howard
to newly constructed multi-family dwellings
University-created the Harlem Indepen-
with four or more units that were ready for
dent Living Center (HILC) in 1991, the last
first occupancy on or after March 13, 1991.
of six ILCs in New York City, all of which
In addition, Access Living supports city and
remain in existence today. At the same time
46 CHAPTER THREE
QILC, like many other ILCs, developed mi-
the general public, regarding disability civil
nority outreach programs to deal with mul-
rights legislation.
ticultural disability issues.
An ILC in a state where disability ac-
tivists are well organized has an increased
Independent Living as an
probability of receiving state funding, al-
Extension of Rehabilitation
lowing it to join with other ILCs from that
state to form a network. Some states with
Independent living centers were an exten-
effective ILC networks are California, Illi-
sion of the concept of rehabilitation in a
nois, Massachusetts, New York, and Penn-
civilian context. The convalescent project
sylvania. Not only do the ILCs in these
in the military hospital, the forerunner of
states share information and innovative ap-
rehabilitation, originated as a halfway pro-
proaches, but they also gain considerable
gram between the hospital and the battle-
political clout. Despite their efforts, disabil-
field. On the other hand, ILCs complement
ity rights activists did not succeed in get-
civilian rehabilitation, offering support to
ting federal subsidies for independent liv-
enable people with disabilities to become
ing services until the 1978 amendments to
integrated into the mainstream. Rehabili-
the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Although
tation refers to a medical field; indepen-
disability leaders requested funding for a
dent living denotes people with disabili-
variety of ILC programs, by 1978 ten ILCs
ties relying on their own resourcefulness
received only start-up money. With the pass-
to acquire the social services they need in
ing of the 1986 amendments to the act,
order to participate in society. "It [inde-
additional federal funds were provided for
pendent living] is deciding one's own pat-
establishment and operation of ILCs as well
tern of life-schedule, food, entertainment,
as legal services.⁴⁸
vices, virtues, leisure, and friends. It is the
The 1992 amendments to the Rehabilita-
freedom to take risks and the freedom to
tion Act of 1973 increased consumer control
make mistakes."51
of ILCs, for with this new legislation fed-
Gerben DeJong succinctly describes the
eral subsidies were allocated directly to the
differences between the rehabilitation and
centers rather than funded through state re-
the independent living approaches to dis-
habilitation agencies. These amendments
ability.⁵ While the rehabilitation model lo-
also mandated that each state establish a
cates the problem in the person with the
Statewide Independent Living Council, pri-
disability, emphasizing fixing the individ-
marily to prepare and monitor a three-year
ual, the independent living paradigm places
plan for independent living services.⁵ In
the problem in the attitudes of society
addition, these amendments were designed
and stresses changing the environment. The
to motivate ILC participants to advocate
language of rehabilitation uses expressions
for equal access to health care, housing,
such as "patient" or "client," connoting de-
public accommodations, communication,
pendence on authority, whereas the vocabu-
and transportation, and for equal opportu-
lary of independent living employs the term
nity to education and employment. Since
"consumer," suggesting control by the user
enforcement has not kept pace with the
of the service. The purpose of the rehabilita-
existing laws dealing with many of these
tion prototype is to enable the person with
issues, ILCs are faced with a significant
the disability to be as physically and eco-
challenge: to educate people with disabili-
nomically self-sufficient as possible. The ob-
ties, as well as businesses, government, and
jective of the independent living construct
DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION AND INDEPENDENT LIVING 47
is to fully integrate the person with the dis-
Independent Living and the
ability fully into the social, economic, and
New Disability Activism
political fabric of the community.
The emergence of people with severe dis-
abilities from institutions, in combination
with the strategies for independent living
Evaluation of the
that allowed them to participate in the com-
Independent Living Movement
munity, was a pivotal force in the evolving
disability rights movement. At a previous
In the late 1970s, Sandra Schnur, a quad-
time, many of the individuals who would
riplegic wheelchair user who would be-
become prime movers in the ongoing civil
come chair of the board of Concepts of
rights struggle for equal rights for peo-
Independence in 1980, expressed concern
ple with disabilities might have remained
that the ILCs would become another self-
hidden away in institutions or confined in
perpetuating, bureaucratic layer between
their homes. Edward Roberts, founder of
the disabled consumer and the provider of
the worldwide Independent Living Move-
services. Suggesting that ILCs encourage
ment, had to sleep in an iron lung. Assistant
preservation of the status quo rather than
Secretary of Education Judith E. Heumann,
social change, Mouth editor Lucy Guin as-
who founded Disabled In Action and, with
serted in the late 1990s: "The ILC movement
Roberts, established the World Institute on
still hasn't caught up with him [Ed Roberts].
Disability, requires attendant care for ac-
He was a gentle and a patient man. But he
tivities of daily living. By the late 1990s,
would have howled if he heard ILCs say,
Boston Center for Independent Living and
'We'd love to get people out of institutions,
American Coalition of Citizens with Dis-
but we aren't funded for that. "54
abilities cofounder Fred Fay would be lying
Yet however cautious some ILCs may be,
on his back "all day, every day in Concord,
others have engaged in controversial activi-
Massachusetts, operating not only his home
ties. For example, four New York City ILCs
but also state and national political cam-
provided funding for two buses of disabil-
paigns and international [disability] advo-
ity activists to travel to the demonstration
cacy through an economical combination,
organized on January 8, 1997, by Not Dead
which he developed, of personal assistance
Yet, the disability organization protesting
and three computers."⁵ Leading disability
against physician-assisted suicide in front of
advocate Justin Dart added, "Our society
the U.S. Supreme Court. Patricio Figueroa,
[still] puts people like Fred into nursing
first director of the CIDNY, pointed out
homes at far more cost than would be re-
that ILCs were the appropriate resource
quired to empower them."
for people with disabilities because the
The Independent Living Movement re-
service providers, themselves disabled, had
flected a change in social perceptions about
coped with the same problems and frus-
disability as illustrated in the difference be-
trations confronting their clients.⁵⁵ Tom
tween two popular Hollywood films, The
Clancy, NYU computer programmer and
Men (1950) and Coming Home (1978). At the
polio survivor, urged the disability com-
end of The Men, the hero, a World War II
munity to protect Ed Roberts's concept of
veteran in a wheelchair, asks his wife for
the ILC as an organization of people with
assistance in getting up a step. This scene
disabilities, advocating for and empower-
signals to the audience that the disabled
ing themselves.⁵⁶
veteran will be all right because he is finally
48 CHAPTER THREE
able to ask for help-something he often will
a former resident at Goldwater Hospital as
have to do to survive in a society with so
a chronic care patient, roused the audience
many obstacles. A fitting finale for a film of
with a challenge. Echoing images of Martin
that period, this scene would not have been
Luther King's "dream" and James Baldwin's
consistent with the 1970S sensibility, a time
"rainbow sign" and "fire next time," Clancy
when architectural and attitudinal barriers
invoked a new age that would supplant the
were no longer deemed unalterable by the
Age of Aquarius:
disability community. Unlike his counter-
part in The Men who deals with the necessity
Look out America, because I'm coming. I
of acceptance and adjustment, the disabled
have always had my dream and my rainbow,
Vietnam veteran hero of Coming Home learns
but now the picture is clearer and the colors
the value of protesting social injustice and
are brighter. I have tried and failed, cried
and raged in silence. I have sat and watched
educating a misinformed public.
because I could not keep in step with you, but
The prophetic language of the I970S dis-
I never gave up.
ability rights activists, many of whom bene-
You have not heard the last of me. In fact,
fited from deinstitutionalization and inde-
you have not yet heard me at all. Until recent
pendent living, is reminiscent of the rhetori-
times, you kept me out of sight and sound.
cal exhortations of the 1960s civil rights ora-
Now as you begin the search for a moral
tors inspiring listeners to fight for racial jus-
answer to the materialistic chaos which you
now have created, my voice will rise. For I
tice. For example, at "The Psychological Im-
am the living proof that physical and mental
pact of Disability," a conference held at the
perfection are not the answer. It is the inner
New York University Medical Center in New
fire that will not accept the "impossible."
York City on October 5, 1977, speaker Tom
Move over Aquarius! There is a new dawn
Clancy, a quadriplegic wheelchair user and
coming.⁵⁸
Chapter Four
Groundbreaking Disability
Rights Legislation: Section 504
ON OCTOBER 26, 1972, and again on
ing and programs in this enacted rehabil-
March 27, 1973, President Nixon vetoed early
itation act were reduced from the origi-
versions of what ultimately became the
nal proposal, neither the disability activists,
Rehabilitation Act of 1973-including Sec-
the legislators, nor the president, at the
tions 501-504-both times asserting that the
time of the act's passage, realized what had
legislation was too expensive. He also ar-
been wrought.
gued that the act "diverted the program
Although disability rights activists
from its vocational objective into medi-
strongly supported the Rehabilitation Act
cal and social welfare policies" and "added
of 1973, they did not play a role in adding
a variety of new categorical programs."¹
the inserted provisions, Sections 50I-504,
Throughout the country, disability activists
that significantly expanded disability rights.
protested these Nixon vetoes. In New York
Sections 501 and 503 bar employment dis-
City, Judith E. Heumann and eighty al-
crimination because of disability and
lies organized a sit-in on Madison Av-
mandate the use of affirmative action pro-
enue in October 1972, bringing traffic to
grams to hire qualified people with dis-
a halt.2
abilities. Section 501 applies to federal
At the annual meeting of the President's
agencies while Section 503 applies to recip-
Committee on Employment of the Hand-
ients of federal contracts. Section 502 cre-
icapped in May 1973, disability activists
ated the Architectural and Transportation
marched to-and rallied at-the Capitol de-
Barriers Compliance Board, now known
manding passage of the act.³ Following
as the Access Board, to enforce the Ar-
this demonstration, the participants took
chitectural Barriers Act of 1968, dissemi-
part in an all-night vigil in the rain at
nate information concerning barriers, and
the Lincoln Memorial. A compromise be-
provide technical assistance regarding their
tween both houses of Congress and Presi-
removal. Section 504, the provision with
dent Nixon resulted in a watered-down ver-
the most far-reaching repercussions, pro-
sion of the proposed legislation, the Re-
vided civil rights for people with disabil-
habilitation Act of 1973, that was signed
ities in programs receiving federal finan-
into law on September 26, 1973. While fund-
cial assistance.
50 CHAPTER FOUR
The Cherry Lawsuit for the Section 504
1973, "adapted and inserted" the language
Regulations
of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 at
the very end of the bill.5 When the bill was
As significant as this legislation was, how-
enacted, this provision became Section 504,
ever, its effectiveness would have been se-
the first federal civil rights law for people
verely limited without implementing reg-
with disabilities.
ulations. James L. Cherry, plaintiff in the
Almost immediately after passage of the
lawsuit that ultimately led to the issuing of
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Cherry began to
regulations for Section 504 of the Rehabil-
write letters to the Department of Health,
itation Act of 1973, asserted that without
Education, and Welfare (HEW) requesting
these regulations "disability rights would
the issuance of Section 504 regulations.
still be in the dark ages, and there would
Meeting with no success, he sought legal
be no Americans with Disabilities Act."4
support, as well as the assistance of disabil-
Steeped in the civil rights milieu of Howard
ity organizations and sympathetic legisla-
University Law School in 1968, Cherry, a
tors. When Representative Vanik also urged
white student with a severe disability, rec-
HEW to issue regulations for Section 504,
ognized the connection between social ac-
the congressman, like Cherry, received "an
commodation denied because of race and
unresponsive response"; in fact, Cherry re-
physical accommodation denied because of
marked that "in street terms, we were told
disability. Although Cherry appreciated the
to go take a hike." Hospitalized at the Na-
reasons for the unswerving focus on the
tional Institutes of Health from 1974 to 1976,
civil rights issues of African Americans by
Cherry spent much of that time telephon-
the Howard students, faculty, and admin-
ing potential allies: "Seeing me talking on
istrators, he was disappointed that his ac-
the phone constantly," Cherry commented,
cess issues were not addressed by repre-
"some nurses asked if I was making obscene
sentatives of the university. For example,
phone calls."
Cherry's request for a parking space near the
Finally, the Washington, D.C., law firm
building where his classes were held and a
Arnold and Porter directed Cherry to attor-
key to the elevator was rejected by the law
ney Victor Kramer of the Institute for Pub-
school administrators.
lic Interest Representation at Georgetown
When the Ninety-second Congress failed
University Law School. After hearing about
in 1972 to add a disability provision to the
Cherry's efforts, Kramer offered this advice:
1964 Civil Rights Act-despite the efforts
"Don't call anyone else; bundle up your ma-
of Senators Hubert Humphrey and Charles
terial and send it to me as soon as possi-
Percy and Representative Charles Vanik-
ble." Kramer then instructed his graduate
Cherry was frustrated that he had no legal
law students to prepare and file preliminary
remedy for the discrimination he encoun-
legal petitions for Section 504 regulations.
tered. Some legislators and members of
By late 1975, Kramer determined that the
their staffs, however, conjectured that laws
endeavor had resulted in the "exhaustion of
protecting the civil rights of people with
administrative procedure," legal terminol-
disabilities could be tacked onto another
ogy indicating that failure of the petition
federal law. Indeed, in From Goodwill to Civil
process, despite a sincere attempt, made le-
Rights, Richard K. Scotch revealed that staff
gal action appropriate.
members of the Senate Committee on La-
At this point Kramer asked Cherry,
bor and Public Welfare, in putting together
"Would you consider the next step, filing
the final draft of the Rehabilitation Act of
a lawsuit?" After almost two years of unsuc-
GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION: SECTION 504 5I
cessful efforts at employing administrative
Were it not for the Section 504 lawsuit,
remedies to urge HEW to issue Section 504
which resulted in the issuance of specific
regulations, Cherry enthusiastically paid
regulations, Cherry still believes that the
the filing fees to initiate the case on Febru-
history of disability law would be "a litany
ary 13, 1976, against HEW Secretary David
of cases, a crazy quilt of decisions, narrowly
Mathews. Kramer's argument for summary
defined, on issue, after issue, after issue."
judgment was that since Section 504 was not
Without precise regulations, Section 504
self- effecting, the need for regulations was
lawsuits would be based on the succinct,
implicit for Section 504 enforcement. HEW
but unelaborated, language of the law itself.
filed a cross motion for summary judgment
Confident about his legal actions, Cherry
claiming that since there was nothing in
was skeptical of the value of the nationwide
the legislative history of the act necessi-
Section 504 protests by disability activists
tating the issuance of Section 504 regula-
that followed his successful lawsuit: "The
tions, the law did not require comprehen-
demonstrators would have been more ef-
sive guidelines.
fective if they had dealt with my lawyers,
Fearing that a decision against Cherry
coordinated with my case. In fact, the sit-ins
would discourage further disability legisla-
may have delayed the signing of the Section
tion, Kramer asked the plaintiff if he would
504 regulations."
be willing to withdraw his lawsuit if he were
Questioning the advantages of organized
so advised. Notwithstanding the ultimate
demonstrations, Cherry wondered whether
decision of Cherry's attorneys to take their
these actions laid the groundwork for back-
chances with a judge whom they perceived
lash against Section 504, as some of those
as sympathetic to their position, in Cherry's
affected feared the cost of implementation.
words, "It was no slam dunk." On July 19,
"The impact of an individual is greater than
1976, Judge John L. Smith of the U.S. Dis-
the power of an organization without di-
trict Court for the District of Columbia
rection," Cherry asserted, "and even orga-
issued an order requiring that HEW de-
nizations with direction usually get their
velop and promulgate Section 504 regula-
inspiration from one or two people." Cherry
tions "with all deliberate speed."6
does not choose to engage in social actions
Although Judge Smith had not imposed
such as sit-ins and protests that place him
a specific deadline, his intention was clear.
in opposition to the law: "Let people like
Nonetheless, in an unprecedented act, Sec-
HEW Secretary Mathews get arrested, not
retary Mathews sent the regulations back to
me; they're the lawbreakers."
the Labor and Public Welfare Committee for
further review. On the same day, however,
Judge Smith issued a restraining order di-
Section 504 as a Spur to Political
recting Mathews to issue the regulations. In
Organizing
order to permit the government to state its
case, the U.S. Court of Appeals on January
After Cherry won his Section 504 law-
I9, 1977, stayed the order. The next day, the
suit, the struggle of other disability ac-
Carter administration assumed office and
tivists to secure the signature of HEW Sec-
Joseph Califano was designated Secretary of
retary Joseph Califano on the regulations
HEW. David Mathews was gone, the legal
became the central point of a broad-based
maneuvering ended, and it was now up to a
movement. This effort was especially con-
new administration to deal with the imple-
centrated in those cities where the ten
mentation of the act.
regional offices of HEW were located-
52 CHAPTER FOUR
Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver,
ACCD, Propelling Section 504
Kansas City, New York, Philadelphia, San
Francisco, and Seattle-as well as in Wash-
Cofounded April 30, 1975, by people with
ington, D.C. Until this point, the disabil-
a variety of disabilities-Fred Fay, Judith
ity rights movement had been local and
E. Heumann, Ralf D. Hotchkiss, Sharon
disparate. With this concerted endeavor to
Mistler, Roger Peterson, Al Pimentel, and
obtain implementation of the Section 504
Eunice Fiorito-ACCD received a grant
regulations, the movement became national
from the commissioner of the Rehabilita-
and focused.
tion Services Agency to serve as a national
The fact that candidate Carter sought the
cross-disability model.⁸ Fostering coalition-
votes of people with disabilities revealed his
building among disability groups through-
awareness of the ballot-box clout of this
out the country, ACCD played a pivotal role
frequently overlooked population. Aware
in the signing of the Section 504 regula-
of the symbolic meaning of the location,
tions. While she maintained her position as
Carter made a campaign speech on Septem-
first director of the New York City Mayor's
ber 6, 1976, in the place that FDR had made
Office for the Handicapped (later known as
famous, Warm Springs, Georgia:
the Mayor's Office for People with Disabili-
ties in New York City) in the administration
Section 504 prohibits discrimination against
of Mayor Abraham Beame, Fiorito served as
disabled citizens by recipients of federal
first president of ACCD.
financial assistance. These are fine in
Fiorito, who was the driving force behind
theory, but they will mean very little
ACCD, suggested why Beame may have
until an administration in full accord
supported her travels around the country
with their spirit stands behind the law.
No administration that really cared about
to organize the national disability coalition:
disabled citizens would spend three years
"Perhaps the blindness of his father played
trying to avoid enforcing Section 504. No
some part in the mayor's sensitivity to the
compassionate administration would force
concerns of people with disabilities. But
disabled consumers to take it to court before
Beame did warn me that if I was using
it would enforce the law.⁷
New York City resources for ACCD," Fiorito
continued, "the work should clearly serve
Once elected, President Carter was
people with disabilities in the city." These
strongly urged to satisfy the interests of
resources-telephoning, mailings, trips to
two conflicting constituencies: the disabil-
Washington-though relevant to New York
ity community and the many institutions-
City business, also contributed to the work
including hospitals, colleges and universi-
of ACCD.
ties, as well as local governments-whose
Fiorito honed her organizing talents
federal funding would soon be affected by
functioning as a staff person on New York
the signing of HEW's Section 504 regula-
Mayor John Lindsay's Committee on the
tions. Fearing costly and burdensome re-
Handicapped. Supported by committee
quirements, these institutions lobbied for
member Dr. Howard Rusk, in 1971 Fior-
watered-down regulations. The voice of the
ito developed a plan to set up a city of-
national disability movement, the newly-
fice for people with disabilities, the first of
formed Washington, D.C.-based American
its kind in the country. As Mayor Lindsay
Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities, how-
directed, Fiorito wrote to twenty disabil-
ever, reminded the president of his commit-
ity advocates inviting them to a meeting
ment to people with disabilities.
to discuss the possibility of initiating this
GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION: SECTION 504 53
new office. Fiorito, however, also called over
cratic administration than of the former Re-
two hundred disability advocates, many of
publican one. In order to offer their services
whom appeared at that meeting. By the
to expedite the issuing of the Section 504
time the mayor arrived-surrounded by this
regulations, over a dozen members of ACCD
throng as well as members of the press-
began meeting with Califano and his staff
he was forced to announce the creation of
two days after President Carter took office.⁹
the New York City Mayor's Office for the
About two months later, on March 18, 1977,
Handicapped, Fiorito explains, rather than
Bowe wrote a letter on behalf of ACCD to
merely to consider the wisdom of such an
Carter, with a copy to Califano, as a state-
undertaking, as he had planned.
ment of the organization's frustration with
As president of ACCD, Fiorito, who was
the government's delay.¹ Furthermore, the
blind, was joined by a brilliant twenty-five-
letter included a warning of ACCD's deci-
year-old deaf advocate, Frank Bowe, who
sion to take action if the Section 504 regu-
became executive director of the organiza-
lations were not signed by April 4, 1977.
tion. Consistent with the unifying mission
of ACCD, its director, president, and board
were people with different disabilities. Fior-
ito observed, "People with all kinds of dis-
The Section 504 Demonstrations
abilities were able to feel, it's okay to be a
person with a disability. I have the same
Attempts at last-moment negotiations be-
rights as anyone else has. We're not just poor
tween disability community leaders and
people with disabilities; instead, we believe
Califano failed because the new HEW sec-
in ourselves. And in politics you have to have
retary requested additional time to study
self-respect and self-liking in order to show
the Section 504 regulations. The leaders
that you mean business."
feared that Califano wanted this extra time
The Washington, D.C., location of ACCD
to weaken or evade the original intent of the
provided the organization with many ad-
regulations. Therefore, on April 5, 1977, dis-
vantages, such as the opportunity for its
ability activists demonstrated-and in many
spokespeople to confer with members of
locations also sat-in-at most of the HEW
Congress, their aides, and other govern-
offices in the ten federal regions and in
ment officials. Besides raising the con-
the nation's capital. The dramatic events of
sciousness of Washington insiders about
the D.C. sit-in, and especially the San Fran-
the determination of the disability com-
cisco sit-in, have been well-documented-
munity, ACCD developed a rapport with
for example, in Joseph Shapiro's account
significant individuals in the Carter admin-
in No Pity. 11 Despite Califano's refusal to
istration, including Peter Libassi, aide to
allow the demonstrators food or telephone
HEW Secretary Joseph Califano. In fact, on
access, the forty D.C. protesters remained
April 28, 1977, when Califano finally agreed
for twenty-eight hours. "Rather than allow
to sign the Section 504 regulations, Libassi
them to leave in small groups until they
telephoned Fiorito in New York City at 6:45
trickled down to nothing," Fiorito decided
in the morning to be certain that she ap-
that they should make a dramatic exit as a
proved of Califano's press release.
group calling attention to the insensitivity
Since candidate Carter had backed the
of Califano's response to the sit-in. How-
goals of the disability community in his
ever valuable the determination of all the
campaign for president, the leaders of
demonstrators throughout the country, it
ACCD expected more of this new Demo-
was in San Francisco that the unyielding re-
54 CHAPTER FOUR
solve of the disability community was most
The 504 demonstrations last year in
convincingly exhibited.
California were successful for a number of
As the number of days of the San Fran-
reasons: because the disabled community
cisco sit-in began to add up, disability ac-
was united; because the disabled community
tivists across the country were checking
absolutely unequivocally believed that 504
was our civil rights provision; because we
their newspapers with mounting astonish-
knew if we did not fight for this civil rights
ment and pride. "They're still there!" they
provision, we were in fact going to slide
kept saying. Close to half of the more than
backward instead of making further progress.
I20 initial protesters, representing a vari-
But the other factor was that because of
ety of disabilities, remained for twenty-five
the programs evolving in the Bay Area that
days, the longest sit-in at a federal build-
were controlled by disabled individuals, and
because changes were being made (curb cuts,
ing. Despite the difficulties endured, partic-
electric wheelchairs, Bay Area Rapid Transit
ularly by the severely disabled demonstra-
being accessible, etc.), we were more visible in
tors who were courageous and resourceful
our communities. So we went out into other
enough to manage without their needed de-
organizations; we approached, surprisingly,
vices or attendants, the San Francisco group
such groups as United Cerebral Palsy and
was well-organized and widely supported.
Easter Seal and those kinds of organizations
Since a great number of the protesters ei-
and they came in and worked with us. We
ther were employed by, and/or clients of,
received support from the churches and
synagogues and from the labor unions. We
the Berkeley Center for Independent Living,
had support from all over the place. The Black
they came to the experience with an estab-
Panthers fed us for four weeks during the
lished sense of community and, where rel-
sit-in. And we were supplied with food from
evant, job security. Whereas demonstrators
Safeway stores. It was a totally bizarre event;
in other cities had diverse occupations and
it really was. People that I could not conceive
employers, most of whom would not coun-
of being together were living in a building on
one floor for four weeks.¹³
tenance long-term absences, in a sense many
of the employed San Francisco protesters
were doing their jobs.
Lacking the organization and experience
The CIL was an integral part of the
in disability politics of the Berkeley CIL,
small Berkeley community, so the individu-
New York City's disability community was
als involved in the demonstration and their
represented by a small group of about eight
concerns were familiar in the general Bay
people who sat in at the HEW office at the
Area. Food, mattresses, and shower equip-
federal building in Manhattan. Although
ment were provided by sources as diverse
approximately fifty disability activists ral-
as McDonald's, the California Department
lied in the rain outside the building, the
of Health Services, and the drug program
New York disability rights organizations
of Delancy Houses. 12 Government officials,
had decided to have only their leaders par-
such as U.S. Representative Philip Bur-
ticipate in the sit-in. Because coalitions of
ton, San Francisco Mayor George Moscone,
diverse disability groups had not yet become
and State Director of Rehabilitation Ed-
a reality outside of California and Washing-
ward Roberts, offered their encouragement
ton, D.C., the New York City contingent was
and assistance.
almost entirely mobility impaired. Despite
Judith E. Heumann, leader of the San
the regional HEW director's effort to con-
Francisco sit-in and later assistant secretary
vince the protesters to reconsider their tac-
of the U.S. Department of Education, ana-
tics, she welcomed these uninvited guests
lyzed the event in 1978:
into an office, allowing them to bring in
GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION: SECTION 504 55
food and other supplies, as well as come and
signed Section 504 regulations in order to
go as they pleased.
be sure that they had not been diluted.
Since they had access to the phones,
With the signing of the Section 504 reg-
they were able to inform various media
ulations, the disability community discov-
outlets of the ongoing sit-in. For example,
ered its muscle. Borrowing the strategy of
one protester-who coincidentally had tu-
passive resistance from the 1960s civil rights
tored Felipe Luciano, later an NBC televi-
movement, the disability activists had the
sion news reporter-used that relationship
advantage of usually having to contend
to persuade Luciano to cover the sit-in. Hav-
with, at most, condescension and hostil-
ing been one of the leaders of the Young
ity, rather than physical violence. Reminis-
Lords-a youthful, progressive, Latino po-
cent of the 1930s League of the Physically
litical organization in the late 1960s and
Handicapped, the Section 504 protesters ab-
early 1970s-Luciano revealed his sensitivity
sorbed the social consciousness of a po-
to civil rights issues in his broadcast. While
litically active milieu and thus exceeded
the other reporters tended to concentrate
their own expectations. However, unlike the
on the nature and degree of the protesters'
earlier efforts by the League of the Phys-
disabilities, Luciano focused on the faces of
ically Handicapped, these nationwide Sec-
the demonstrators and on their issues. Be-
tion 504 demonstrations, orchestrated by
cause of their individual obligations to jobs
ACCD, were an initial thrust, generating
and families, the disability leaders sitting in
further actions.
at the New York City HEW office voted to
In 1978, Hofstra professor Frank Bowe,
disperse, en masse, after thirty-three hours.
then director of ACCD, asked the question,
Like many of the reporters, the HEW
"Why did it [the signing of the Section 504
officials misjudged the demonstration. In
regulations] happen?"
New York City, they arranged for a nurse
to stay overnight with the protesters. In
For a long time I had trouble answering that
San Francisco, on the first day, officials
question because so many different factors
served cookies and punch to the demon-
and influences seemed to have combined to
strators. 14 These responses reveal commonly
make it happen. Then, sometime later in 1977,
I happened to be reading a book about the
assumed, patronizing attitudes toward peo-
black civil rights movement, and I found the
ple with disabilities. Adults with disabili-
answer to that question
This advisor [to
ties were treated as if they were "medical
Martin Luther King] said, "People think that
models," unable to make reasoned decisions
revolutions begin with injustices. They don't.
about their capabilities, or as if they were
A revolution begins with hope." If you think
hysterical children to be placated. Surprised
about that, if you move back to the Spring
by the fervor, persistence, and stamina of
of 1977, then you will understand that the
the protesters, Califano and his staff could
reason disabled people came together and
demonstrated as they did in the Spring of
not have predicted the twenty-five-day San
that year was because they had hope.
Francisco sit-in. On April 28, 1977, Califano
It is a tremendously tragic commentary
signed not only the Section 504 regulations
upon the United States of America that it was
in their original form, but also the regula-
only in 1977 that disabled people came to have
tions for the Education for All Handicapped
enough hope to protest. It took two hundred
Children Act, now called the Individuals
years after this country was formed-two
with Disabilities Education Act. The San
hundred years-for these people to begin to
have hope. That is what happened. A law
Francisco demonstrators did not leave until
had been passed in 1973, the Rehabilitation
April 30, 1977, after they had examined the
Act of 1973, and included in it was Section
56 CHAPTER FOUR
504, which many people realized was going
ment was in contravention of existing leg-
to become the cornerstone of the civil rights
islation requiring accessible public trans-
of disabled Americans.
For four years we
portation unless it compelled manufactur-
had fought behind the scenes to try to get the
ers to produce Transbus.²⁰
law implemented and enforced. And at the
beginning of 1977, for the first time, we had
Although the plaintiffs had no success
some reason to hope that the law was at last
during the Ford administration, President
going to become effective.¹ 15
Carter's first Secretary of Transportation,
Brock Adams, responded to the Transbus
lawsuit. Consistent with Section 504, he
The Transbus Controversy
decreed on May 19, 1977, that all buses
purchased with federal funds on or after
Accessible transportation became the ma-
September 30, 1979, must have the same
jor Section 504 local government issue in
wheelchair-accessible design as Transbus.²¹
the 1980s as disability groups in differ-
Anticipating an impending congressional
ent parts of the country-such as Chicago,
decision to delay Transbus, the American
Rhode Island, Maine, and Philadelphia-
Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities, the
filed lawsuits against transportation agen-
National Council of Senior Citizens, and
cies. Perhaps because transportation, essen-
Paralyzed Veterans of America sponsored
tial for social participation, is a tangible
simultaneous July 12, 1978, demonstrations
and easily understood cross-disability issue,
in Chicago, Detroit, New York, Philadel-
many disability activists were drawn to the
phia, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and
cause. Also, the precipitous opposition to
other cities.²² In New York City, wheelchair
the mainstreaming provisions in Section
users and other people with disabilities
504 by most of the transit agencies through-
blocked the main thoroughfare in front of
out the nation provided the disability com-
the United Nations during rush hour.
munity with a clear focus.
Despite these protests, Congress, encour-
A 1976 transportation case set the stage
aged by pressure from the American Pub-
for the development of a wheelchair-access-
lic Transit Association (APTA)-which in-
ible lift bus that-beginning in the late 1970S
cluded General Motors-voted later in July
in California-eventually became the pro-
1978 to reevaluate the Transbus mandate,
totype for the nation. Thus, an appropri-
thus deferring the development of Trans-
ate technology was available for the newly-
bus. In keeping with the spirit-if not the
signed Section 504 regulations issued by the
letter-of Section 504, Transbus allowed ev-
Department of Transportation. In Disabled
erybody to get on and off the bus in the
In Action of Pennsylvania v. Coleman (E.D.,
same way in contrast to the General Motors
Pa. 1976),¹ 16 known as the Transbus law-
lift-equipped bus, which provides a separate
suit, a coalition of thirteen disability and
means of entering and exiting for people
senior citizen organizations¹⁷ sued three
who cannot negotiate steps.²³ Since a de-
federal transportation agencies¹⁸ so that
vice that all can use is more likely to be
the federal government would mandate the
properly maintained than one used only
wheelchair accessible Transbus.¹⁹ The plain-
by a particular population, Transbus, not
tiffs claimed that although Transbus-the
the lift-equipped bus, was the first choice
low-floor, wide-door, ramped bus-was tech-
of the disability community as well as the
nologically feasible, it would be produced
California transit agencies.
only if it were required by the government.
Dennis Cannon, Access Board accessibil-
Therefore, they charged that the govern-
ity specialist and wheelchair user, points out
GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION: SECTION 504 57
that APTA disseminated misinformation
liable, arrived at reasonable and predictable
indicating that a low-floor bus was techno-
intervals, they enjoyed comparatively high
logically infeasible, especially in snowy ar-
ridership by wheelchair users. On the other
eas where, supposedly, inadequate clearance
hand, wheelchair users, having no confi-
underneath would create insurmountable
dence in the poorly managed and therefore
problems. 24 "Stanford Research Institute re-
unreliable St. Louis lift-bus system, did not
vealed that because the primary business
ride the buses. Cannon observes, "To prove
of General Motors was producing automo-
their preconceived notion that wheelchair
biles, the corporation had a disincentive
users would not ride buses in significant
to develop an attractive easy-to-use acces-
numbers, many transit agency 'experts' gen-
sible bus, such as Transbus," Cannon notes.
eralized the St. Louis experience, while label-
Moreover, he adds that General Motors,
ing the Seattle program an anomaly. Thus,
the corporate giant of the industry, had
they reversed the adage, 'Success has many
already retooled for a more traditional bus
fathers; failure is an orphan.'
than Transbus.
Although Seattle and the metropolitan
James Raggio, general counsel for the
San Francisco area developed effective ac-
Access Board, indicates that the increas-
cessible transportation systems before New
ing numbers of low-floor buses being pur-
York City, the impact of the two smaller
chased by transit agencies in the 1990s
sites was limited. With residents and a work-
demonstrates the technological superiority
force from other localities dependent on
of the Transbus design.² He observes that
New York City's largest transit system in
not only are these vehicles easier to board
the country, this system provided the most
and more comfortable to ride than most
significant experiment in the feasibility of
other models, but also passengers do not
accessible public transportation. With an
tend to trip as frequently on low-floor buses
activist disability community willing to en-
as they do on lift-equipped buses. Because
gage in the contest, New York City would be
General Motors had an economic motive
a major setting for the struggle for accessible
in the 1970s for preferring to add lifts to
public transportation.
their existing design, rather than produce
A significant 1979 U.S. Supreme Court
Transbus, the lift-equipped model became
decision, Southeastern Community College v.
the accessible bus central to the Section 504
Davis, ruling against a plaintiff, a deaf nurse,
controversy.
although technically limited in scope to
the physical requirements of a professional
training program, seemed to have ominous
Accessible Transit and New York City
implications for other Section 504 lawsuits.
Consequently, Eastern Paralyzed Veterans
Soon after the Section 504 regulations were
Association (EPVA) attorney James Weis-
signed in 1977, New York City disability ac-
man chose to file a New York City public
tivists pointed to the Seattle accessible bus
transportation wheelchair-accessibility case
system as the paradigm for mainstreamed
(EPVA v. MTA) under two New York State
barrier-free transit. Yet the mindset of most
statutes that same year. He successfully ar-
directors of transit agencies was revealed
gued that MTA's failure to provide barrier-
by their response to contrasting 1980s ac-
free subway stations, when they were newly
cessible bus programs, one in Seattle, the
built or extensively renovated, failed to com-
other in St. Louis. Since the Seattle lift-
ply with the state's building code. His con-
equipped buses, besides being safe and re-
tention that inaccessible buses discrimi-
58 CHAPTER FOUR
nated against people with disabilities under
newly-purchased buses be lift equipped. Be-
the state's Human Rights Law-a nondis-
cause the decision did not require retro-
crimination statute-did not succeed, as the
fitting,³² one practical effect of Dopico was
court held that the inclusion of bus lifts
that it increased the acceptability of acces-
was "affirmative action" and not required
sible buses in the courts and initiated the
by the Law.27
purchase and use of these buses in New
In 1980, Disabled In Action of Metropoli-
York City. In Rhode Island Handicapped Ac-
tan New York (DIA) filed a Section 504 law-
tion Committee v. Rhode Island Public Transit
suit against city, state, and federal trans-
Authority,33 the Court of Appeals (First Cir-
portation agencies for "violating the rights
cuit) determined in 1983, however, that "the
of wheelchair users by operating buses that
benefit of the purchase [of accessible buses]
are inaccessible to them."28 Unlike the New
to the handicapped" did not outweigh "the
York State Human Rights Law, Section
financial expense that would be incurred by
504 requires "reasonable accommodation,"
the State."3 Thus the decisions in Dopico
adaptations providing access that do not
and Rhode Island revealed that interpreta-
incur prohibitive expense or require exten-
tion of Section 504 with respect to public
sive modifications. DIA's goal was to secure
transportation was still evolving.
a wheelchair-accessible multi-modal New
From 1976 until September 1980, disabil-
York City transit system, meaning fully ac-
ity leaders worked together with the MTA
cessible buses, "key" wheelchair accessible
as part of the Tri-State Regional Planning
subway stations²⁹ (an issue addressed in
Commission (representing New York, New
EPVA v. MTA), and a supplemental para-
Jersey, and Connecticut), successfully devel-
transit service in the form of door-to-door
oping a Section 504 transition plan for ac-
lift-equipped vans. Once the U.S. District
cessible transportation. On September 19,
Court (S.D. N.Y.) accepted two similar Sec-
1980, however, the MTA decided not to sub-
tion 504 class action lawsuits, Dopico em-
mit the transportation plan. Instead, the
phasizing paratransit and DIA stressing lift-
MTA asked for "a six-month extension or
equipped buses, the cases were joined under
partial exemption from the [Section 504]
the name of the earlier of the two, Dopico
requirements, on the grounds that it would
V. Goldschmidt.³⁰
cost too much and force the curtailment
Although the District Court ruled
of service to other riders." Recognizing
against the plaintiffs in Dopico, the U.S.
that the goals of the MTA and the disabil-
Court of Appeals (Second Circuit) found
ity community no longer were compatible,
in 1982 "that Section 504 does require at
a broad coalition of disability groups and
least modest, affirmative steps, to accom-
individuals concerned with transportation
modate the handicapped in public trans-
organized Mobility Through Access.³
portation." Furthermore, the court de-
Because of the MTA's Section 504 viola-
cided that "a $6 million expenditure for
tion, the first tactic employed by Mobility
transportation services to the handicapped
Through Access was a sit-in at the MTA
out of a total federal mass transportation
building in Manhattan on November 21,
subsidy to [New York] City of $490 million,
1980. Led by DIA, approximately fifty peo-
although a considerable sum, 'was not mas-
ple, some in wheelchairs, some on crutches,
sive either in absolute terms or relative to
and still others accompanied by guide dogs,
the city's total receipt of mass transporta-
expressed their outrage by blocking the
tion's assistance."
four elevators that served the first twelve
The Dopico decision mandated that only
floors of the twenty-four-story MTA build-
GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION: SECTION 504 59
ing. Not being allowed access to the bath-
nonviolent civil disobedience at the MTA
room, mobility-impaired activists were re-
sympathetically. The New York City disabil-
quired to be especially resourceful. The re-
ity community considered their action suc-
sult was a pail of urine left in MTA board
cessful for three main reasons. First, disabil-
member Stephen Berger's office. As one ac-
ity activists believed that they had gotten
tivist recalled, "A small support contingent
the "real" facts on Section 504 requirements
of some fifteen people carried posters and
for accessible mass transit to the public.
distributed informational leaflets on the
Second, many people with disabilities who
street and in the downstairs lobby. A half
had never before participated in social ac-
dozen of these had gotten up at five o'clock
tion were motivated to continue their in-
to be shuttled from their homes on Long Is-
volvement in disability rights issues. And
land into the City on a lift-equipped van."37
finally, lift-equipped buses that MTA had
From 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., the protesters
recently purchased to comply with Section
occupied the main stairwell and the admin-
504 began to appear on the streets of New
istrative offices of MTA chairman Richard
York City.
Ravitch and his staff on the seventh floor.
MTA sent written notices to members of
The demonstrators presented Ravitch
the disability community who had attended
with four demands:
the Section 504 transportation meetings,
(I) that the MTA submit by January 2, 1981,
informing them that on September 30, 1981,
the Alternative [Section 504] Transportation
lift-equipped buses would be available on
Plan developed in conjunction with the
the MI04, M14, and B41 routes. On the
disabled community to the Tri-State
appointed day, wheelchair user Denise Mc-
Regional Planning Commission and the
Quade was accompanied by CBS television
U.S. Department of Transportation; (2) that
news reporter Arnold Diaz and his camera
the MTA withdraw its request for a six-
month extension to submit a plan; (3) that
man, who planned to cover one of the first
the MTA discontinue its fraudulent media
uses of the new lift-equipped New York City
misrepresentation of the facts concerning
buses acquired to conform to the Section
transportation accessibility; and (4) that the
504 mandate. When McQuade attempted
MTA address the real needs of mass transit
to board the Mro4 bus, however, the driver
users and act in the best interest of all people,
did not have the key needed to operate the
disabled and nondisabled alike.
lift. Other wheelchair users, such as Anne
Characterizing the demonstration as inap-
Emerman, later director of the Mayor's Of-
propriate, Ravitch offered to negotiate with
fice for People with Disabilities from 1990
a small representative group if the members
to 1994, were having the same experience
would make an appointment in advance.
on other routes. Some have speculated that
The protesters refused, indicating that they
the MTA's contradictory behavior was con-
had been negotiating in good faith to no
sistent with the agency's conflicting atti-
avail since 1976.
tude toward wheelchair accessibility. What-
Worried about the bad press that would
ever the reason, the MTA's motive for ap-
result from arresting demonstrators with
parently reneging on its agreement remains
disabilities, the MTA arranged for the re-
a mystery.
moval of the protesters by police supervised
Once McQuade realized that the lift was
by a team of medics. MTA's concern regard-
not going to function, she lifted herself
ing media coverage was well placed, for the
from her wheelchair to one of the front
major television networks, radio stations,
steps of the bus. Diaz, recognizing that this
and New York City newspapers treated the
story was better than the one he had come
60 CHAPTER FOUR
to cover, waited with McQuade for seven
was so eager to accommodate Ellen Nuzzi,
hours while the MTA officials deliberated.
a scooter user, that he drove her-picking
The MTA's efforts to persuade McQuade
up no other passengers-directly from her
to allow herself to be carried onto the
home to her place of employment.³⁹
bus failed, for she persisted in her demand
Still, many disability activists believed
that, in keeping with Section 504, she be
that the MTA was employing tactics to dis-
enabled to board the bus by means of the
courage ridership on the buses by wheel-
lift. Finally, the MTA capitulated as the
chair users. There were only a few routes
bus driver obtained the required key. As
on which the infrequent accessible buses
McQuade got on the bus using the lift, she
operated, and even those rare vehicles of-
flashed the "V" sign for victory. Not only did
ten did not function consistently. Although
Diaz present her story on the local CBS news
the MTA used various media outlets to
program, but McQuade also appeared the
advertise some of its programs, such as
next day on the front page of the New York
the unsuccessful "Train to the Plane," the
Post. Ironically, but appropriately, ten years
agency made no effort to publicize the lift-
later McQuade was employed by the MTA.
equipped buses required by Section 504.
On the same day, Anne Emerman met
Outside of those involved with the ac-
with similar frustration when the driver of
cessible transportation coalition-Mobility
the bus she tried to board did not have
Through Access-few wheelchair users knew
the lift key.³⁸ She responded by moving
about these buses. Therefore, the MTA
her wheelchair to the front of the vehicle
created a self-fulfilling prophecy when it
and grabbing onto the windshield wipers.
claimed that the accessible buses were not
Perhaps, because there were no television
needed since few people made use of them.
cameras recording the event, Emerman was
Realizing that outreach was necessary to
treated more harshly than McQuade. Not
increase ridership on the accessible buses,
only did the police pull her fingers off the
Mobility Through Access initiated "Ride the
windshield wipers, but she also was given
Bus Days" in order to attract media at-
a summons for disorderly conduct. In fact,
tention to the Section 504 mandate. Fur-
one police officer remarked that she was
thermore, members of the coalition recom-
receiving the same kind of citation given to
mended responses to the common sources
prostitutes. Accompanied by her husband
of frustration experienced by wheelchair
and daughter, Emerman laughed at the ab-
riders. For example, if for any reason the
surd insinuation. Later that day, Emerman
bus driver did not deploy the lift, wheelchair
filed two complaints, one with the New York
users were encouraged to ask the driver to
City Commission on Human Rights against
call a supervisor. Then they were advised to
New York City Transit, and the other with
stand in front of the bus to prevent it from
the Civilian Review Board against the New
proceeding until the supervisor dealt with
York City Police Department. Since the po-
the problem.
lice had placed her wheelchair on the side-
On the first "Ride the Bus Day," April 20,
walk, Emerman never got on the bus that
1982, Michael Imperiale, disabled but not a
day, unlike McQuade. Nonetheless, Mc-
wheelchair user, accompanied Frieda Zames
Quade's success, proving that the lifts could
who was in a motorized scooter waiting for a
work properly, meant that the Section 504
lift-equipped M14 bus on the corner of East
accessible bus program had been launched
Third Street and Avenue A in Manhattan.⁴⁰
in New York City. A day later, an overly
When an accessible bus arrived, the driver
solicitous bus driver of a lift-equipped bus
declared, almost predictably, that the lift
GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION: SECTION 504 61
was broken. After Imperiale and Zames
mind her own business, and then a sum-
requested that the driver call his supervisor,
mons for disorderly conduct. Her convinc-
they stood in front of the bus. Suddenly
ing and unshakable testimony, in combina-
three police cars rounded the corner with
tion with the testimony of Anne Emerman
great urgency. Two police officers jumped
and EPVA attorney Weisman, persuaded the
out and accosted Imperiale, socking him
six-person jury to find on behalf of plaintiff
and using a billy club on various parts of
Imperiale.
his body.
Although Section 504 supported wheel-
After this event, James Weisman, attor-
chair users of public transportation, they
ney for Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Asso-
frequently experienced the frustration of
ciation, met with success in his effort to
broken lifts and untrained bus drivers. In
make the police understand that attempts
response, on November 4, 1982, EPVA filed
of wheelchair users to board the buses, in
a Section 504 transportation lawsuit, EPVA
keeping with Section 504, were lawful. When
v. MTA, against the MTA and New York
Emerman had been mishandled by the po-
City Transit for mismanagement of the
lice, Weisman recommended that posters
accessible bus program.⁴¹ EPVA's argument
explaining correct police procedure con-
was that wheelchair riders and nondisabled
cerning the rights of wheelchair bus rid-
riders received unequal bus service from the
ers appear in every police station. Perhaps,
New York City local transit agencies. The
after the Imperiale incident, police offi-
suit depended on more than twelve hundred
cials realized that unless officers were ap-
complaints filed by people with disabilities
propriately trained with respect to these
who had attempted to use accessible buses.
issues, vulnerable people could be endan-
The specific and inexpensive relief sought
gered. Rather than treat the wheelchair user
by EPVA included daily cycling of bus-lifts
as the transgressor, the police, now cog-
for proper maintenance, availability of bus
nizant of Section 504, began to settle con-
keys for wheelchair riders, and training of
flicts amicably between bus drivers and rid-
bus drivers for improved operation of lifts.
ers with disabilities.
Nonetheless, the cost of replacing two
Despite the new police sensitivity in deal-
hundred newly-purchased Grumman buses
ing with wheelchair bus riders, Imperiale
that had unreliable and unsafe lifts did ap-
filed a civil lawsuit in U.S. District Court
pear to be a stumbling block in EPVA's effort
against New York City for police violation of
to convince the court to mandate MTA's
his rights. In 1987, five and a half years later,
compliance with Section 504. Because two
when the case finally came to trial, the piv-
hundred buses were bought after the Sec-
otal witness was a disinterested bystander,
tion 504 transportation regulations of 1979
an Off Track Betting employee on her way to
were signed, these vehicles had to be acces-
work. Although the police officers involved
sible. EPVA's concern was that the expen-
in the action claimed to have been totally
diture involved could be deemed extraordi-
unaware of Imperiale's disability, as well as
nary, causing the judgment to favor MTA.
the presence of a person in a motorized
These two hundred buses were the last ship-
scooter, the onlooker recognized the situ-
ment out of 837 Grumman buses purchased
ation immediately. Her choice of language
by MTA, three times the number normally
may not have been "politically correct," but
bought in any other single year.
her powers of observation were acute. As a
Despite the agency's awareness that the
result of her cries to the police, "Stop hitting
buses were not roadworthy, MTA rushed to
the invalid," she received first a warning to
sign a contract with Grumman before Sec-
62 CHAPTER FOUR
tion 504 became effective in order to circum-
tion?"44 EPVA attorney Weisman revealed
vent the regulations necessitating accessi-
that Cuomo impressed upon Kiley that the
ble vehicles. In fact, MTA board member
governor's administration supported lift-
Stephen Berger boasted that the intentional
equipped buses and barrier-free subway sta-
timing of the bus purchase would save the
tions in compliance with Section 504.
city from spending money on accessibility.
Once a settlement appeared imminent,
Because of the consequence of this precipi-
Mayor Edward Koch suspended transporta-
tous acquisition, not only the two hundred
tion negotiations on June 21, 1984, publicly
accessible buses, but also the other 637 inac-
announcing his objection to accessible sub-
cessible buses, all the Grumman buses were
ways and his support for a paratransit plan
so inappropriate for New York City streets
instead.4 Regarding wheelchair accessible
that MTA was forced to sell the vehicles
transportation as a luxury that New York
at a loss. Thus, nondisabled as well as dis-
City could ill afford, Koch was frequently
abled riders were inconvenienced by being
in conflict with the disability community.
deprived of bus service and burdened by
In Goodwill to Civil Rights, Scotch points out,
additional taxes.
"While a member of the House of Represen-
Moreover, MTA began renovating ten
tatives, [Koch] was a leading proponent of
subway stations without including wheel-
civil rights for disabled people. Several years
chair accessibility in contravention of the
later, following his election as mayor of New
Public Buildings Law requirement that all
York City, he became a prominent critic of
newly-built or extensively modified sub-
the accessibility requirements of the Section
way stations be barrier-free. When Weisman
504 regulation."46
learned in 1982 that the MTA had ignored
A resumption of talks called by Kiley on
this law, he sought an injunction prevent-
June 28, 1984, between the MTA, EPVA, and
ing further renovations of the ten stations.
DIA, nevertheless, resulted in a compro-
Perhaps in order to embarrass EPVA, MTA
mise, followed by a ceremony on November
chairman Ravitch stopped modifications,
19, 1984, at Grand Central Station, acknowl-
not only at the ten designated stations, but
edging the signing of the New York State
at all subway stations. Although the New
Handicapped Transportation Act. In keep-
York Times editorial "There's a Wheelchair
ing with the Section 504 mandate, this act
on the Tracks" blamed EPVA for impeding
established the multi-modal transportation
subway improvement, the court determined
system that EPVA and DIA sought. First,
that MTA was at fault.⁴³
the MTA was required to spend $5 million
The 1982 election of New York Gover-
per year for eight years, 1985 through 1992,
nor Mario Cuomo, however, changed the
to make "key" subway stations wheelchair
relationship between MTA and wheelchair
accessible. Second, although only 65 percent
users of public transportation. Supported
of all New York City buses were mandated
by the disability community in his cam-
to be wheelchair accessible (with equip-
paign, Cuomo appointed Robert Kiley-a
ment properly operated and maintained),
transportation expert sympathetic to con-
the MTA eventually recognized the advan-
sumers of accessible transit-as MTA chair-
tage of providing IOO percent accessible
man. At a public forum in Brooklyn Heights
buses, a decision satisfying EPVA and DIA.
shortly after accepting his new position, Ki-
Finally, the settlement necessitated the for-
ley indicated that the first question Gov-
mation of an eleven-member committee,
ernor Cuomo asked him was, "What is
the Transportation Disabled Committee,
your view of accessible public transporta-
with five members appointed by the gov-
GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION: SECTION 504 63
ernor and six by the mayor, to develop
encouraged applying these barrier-free de-
a plan implementing a paratransit system
signs and specifications of buildings and
within seven months, known as Access-A-
facilities for people with physical disabili-
Ride. The ultimate victory of the disability
ties to the BART system. The ANSI stan-
community in the development of an acces-
dards had resulted from a 1961 conference
sible transit system in New York City paved
sponsored by the President's Committee on
the way for similar systems throughout the
Employment of the Handicapped and the
country.
National Easter Seal Society for Crippled
Children and Adults. Originally providing
"a mechanism for creating voluntary con-
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART)
sensus standards,"⁵ ultimately, these ANSI
specifications would become the required
New York City disability activists were con-
guidelines for train and subway systems
fident that their city's subway system could
throughout the country. By 1965, after three
become accessible in compliance with Sec-
years of planning for the new BART sys-
tion 504 because they knew that in the
tem, the board of directors determined that
Berkeley/San Francisco region such a sys-
plans would be made to accommodate all
tem, the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART),
categories of people with disabilities except
had been operating successfully since the
nonambulatory passengers. Willson, who
1970s. While those in New York City in-
did not accept the argument that costs
volved in accessible transit were dealing
precluded the inclusion of elevators and
with retrofitting an old subway system built
other requirements for wheelchair users,
at the beginning of the twentieth century,
became a frequent speaker at conventions
those in northern California in the 1960s
and meetings of people with disabilities, as
were planning the inclusion of wheelchair
well as various social, political, and religious
accessibility in the development of a new
groups. For three years, a stream of letters
train system. Harold Willson, senior eco-
flowed to the BART board and staff from
nomic analyst for the Kaiser Medical Care
many of the people who had been influ-
Program and a wheelchair user, was the
enced by Willson, including doctors, reha-
catalyst who successfully appointed himself
bilitation agencies, members of Congress,
the guiding spirit behind the creation of a
and the board of supervisors of San Fran-
barrier-free train system.
cisco.
Unlike tenBroek or the Gallaudet demon-
On February 29, 1968, the BART board
strators, Willson had no broad political
requested an additional $7 million from the
agenda outside of accessibility. Since he
California legislature for the inclusion of
lived near one BART station and worked
elevators in the new train system. A colorful
near another, he wanted to be able to use
illustration of the pressures brought to bear
the system to travel between his home and
on the California legislature occurred in
his place of employment. Yet, because of his
March 1968:
laser-beam focus on his particular concern,
making BART available to wheelchair users,
An ad hoc committee calling itself the
he got the respect of the BART staff as they
Committee for the Freedom of Mobility of
the Disabled called for a demonstration.
responded to the feasibility of his detailed
People in wheelchairs and on crutches and
specifications for wheelchair accessibility.
some with white canes, all carrying banners
Acquiring data from the American Na-
proclaiming the need for elevators in the
tional Standards Institute (ANSI), Willson
BART system, converged on the construction
64 CHAPTER FOUR
site of the downtown Berkeley BART station.
accessible buses if at least two manufactur-
Work was halted by the demonstration. The
ers were willing to produce them. The sub-
result was wide press coverage which added
mission of bids by three manufacturers-
to the public's awareness of the issues.⁵
General Motors, Flexible (earlier known as
Once the BART board declared itself in
Rohr), and American General-triggered a
favor of the inclusion of elevators, Willson
domino effect so that all the California
carried his campaign to the state legisla-
transit agencies sought to purchase acces-
ture. Willson and the board were joined
sible buses.
in Sacramento, the state capital, by rep-
Although the Section 504 regulations
resentatives of the Architectural Barriers
were not signed until 1977, Nathanael Gage,
Committee of the Easter Seal Society. Af-
deputy director of the Metropolitan Trans-
ter the state legislature agreed in I968 to
portation Commission of the Nine County
guarantee the redesigning of BART to ac-
Planning District around and including San
commodate wheelchair users, Willson and
Francisco, believed as early as 1975 that
the board continued to lobby Sacramento
the federal government would require all
until the $150 million in additional fund-
new buses to be accessible within a few
ing to provide wheelchair accessibility was
years. Demonstrating the forward think-
allocated in March 1969. Perhaps the most
ing that characterized the directors of Cal-
far-reaching effect of Willson's relentless,
ifornia transit agencies in the 1970s, Gage
almost quixotic, determination was BART's
conducted pilot demonstrations in the late
role as a Section 504 model for a barrier-free
1970s to test prototype buses with wheel-
train system. 52 Never again would skeptics
chair lifts.54
be able to argue that trains could not be
Unlike the California agencies, many
made wheelchair accessible. Furthermore,
transit agencies throughout the country
once wheelchair users were riding the trains,
did not support the creation of accessible
the great distance between the Bay Area sta-
buses on fixed routes because they believed
tions increased the likelihood of the con-
that wheelchair users would cause havoc.
necting bus system eventually becoming
In order to avoid the cost and the effort
wheelchair accessible.
involved in developing an accessible tran-
sit system, many transit officials sought to
have other organizations, such as social ser-
California Accessible Buses
vice agencies, deal with the problem. Peo-
ple in these agencies, who were not trans-
Perhaps because wheelchair users and other
portation experts, did not always find the
people with disabilities rode the BART
most efficient means of transporting their
system in northern California alongside
clients from place to place. For example, in
nondisabled people by the early 1970s, lo-
many localities, accessible paratransit sys-
cal transit agencies in California were es-
tems were devised in which people with
pecially receptive to accessible public trans-
disabilities were driven in accessible vans
portation. For example, Southern Califor-
from door to door. As a result, public tran-
nia Rapid Transit, a bus system, joined
sit expert Dennis Cannon indicated, "The
with two other California transit systems
transit industry created a Frankenstein, a
in a 1974 policy resolution that all new bus
paratransit-dependent population, so that
purchases would be wheelchair accessible.
the industry then could go to Congress and
According to California law, every transit
say, 'Our consumers don't want to use fixed
agency in the state was required to purchase
route systems. "55
GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION: SECTION 504 65
Beginning in the 1970S, encouraged by
Although Southeastern Community College
the I977 signing of the Section 504 reg-
v. Davis⁵⁷ was not a transportation case, this
ulations, disability advocates argued that
1979 decision had a profound effect on Sec-
the number of people requiring barrier-
tion 504 transportation lawsuits. Frances
free transportation would justify accessi-
Davis, a severely hard-of-hearing licensed
ble buses on fixed routes. Except in Cali-
practical nurse, was denied entrance to
fornia, directors of transit agencies tended
Southeastern Community College's asso-
to underestimate this ridership. These di-
ciate degree nursing program because of her
rectors soon discovered, however, that the
disability. Davis contended that the college
accessible paratransit systems on which the
was unlawfully discriminatory, in violation
industry relied were not only inadequate
of Section 504, to insist that functional hear-
to accommodate the disability population
ing was essential for acceptance into the
they served, but also that the cost of total
nursing program. The college argued that
dependence on this accessible door-to-door
extensive modifications would be necessary
transit was impractical. Although accessi-
for Davis to participate safely in the pro-
ble paratransit functions well as a primary
gram or to practice the nursing profession.
service in some small localities and as a
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled for the
supplementary service in many other areas,
college against Davis, deciding that the ac-
accessible paratransit cannot replace the ac-
commodation to provide equal opportunity
cessible fixed route transportation (buses
constituted affirmative action, so Section
and trains).
504-a nondiscrimination, not an affirma-
tive action, statute-was inapplicable. The
fact that one hundred and fifty hard-of-
Mainstreaming Public Transit
hearing and deaf nurses were already work-
ing for the federal government according
In the intervening years between the I977
to a 1976 Civil Service Commission survey
signing of the regulations for Section 504
would have supported Davis's contention
and the 1990 passage of the ADA, disability
that she could work safely as a nurse. 58 Not
leaders concentrated on the courts to ensure
introduced in the original lawsuit, however,
enforcement of Section 504. The evolution
this statistic could not be used by the plain-
of federal laws and litigation that provided
tiff on appeal. Davis, the first Section 504
access to transportation for the disabil-
case to reach the U.S. Supreme Court, es-
ity population epitomizes the Section 504
tablished a disappointing precedent for dis-
struggle of those who sought integration-
ability lawyers because the suit set the stage
as opposed to those who favored contin-
for the 1981 APTA transportation decision.
ued segregation-of people with disabilities.
Within weeks of the 1979 Davis ruling,
Section 504 in effect mandated that all re-
APTA filed a lawsuit (APTA v. Lewis) in
cipients of federal funds mainstream people
the D.C. Circuit contesting the 1979 Sec-
with disabilities. Transcending the partic-
tion 504 regulations of the U.S. Depart-
ulars of the case, the 1977 Seventh Circuit
ment of Transportation (USDOT).⁵ Mod-
Court of Appeals decision in Lloyd v. Illinois
eled on the HEW regulations, these US-
Regional Transportation Authority⁵⁶ created a
DOT regulations-clearly a mainstreaming
precedent for people with disabilities and
approach-required that not only newly-
their organizations to sue federal agencies
purchased buses be lift-equipped, but also
and recipients of federal funds to enforce
that existing bus fleets must be retrofitted
Section 504.
with lifts. In APTA v. Lewis, APTA cited
66 CHAPTER FOUR
the Davis decision, claiming that public
by local transit agencies of at least 3½ per-
transit accessibility would involve exces-
cent of the federal funds for transportation
sive expense, burdensome modifications,
services for people with disabilities. "Once
and technological problems, while afford-
the spending requirement was met, there
ing benefits for few people with disabil-
would be no federal scrutiny of the extent of
ities. The administration of newly-elected
the transportation services provided to the
President Reagan accepted the U.S. Court
handicapped."63
of Appeals (D.C. Circuit) unanimous APTA
By the early 1980s, accessible transit ex-
decision that extended the Davis rationale
pert Dennis Cannon had devised six "equiv-
to public transit agencies. The disability
alent service criteria" for accessible para-
community had assumed that Section 504
transit based on the concept of "equiv-
would advance the cause of integration, pro-
alent facilitation" in the building code. 64
moting equal access to society for people
The purpose of these criteria was to make
with disabilities, but as a consequence of the
paratransit systems, consistent with Section
1981 APTA decision, the 1979 bus retrofitting
504, function in a manner roughly equiva-
requirement was invalidated.
lent to the transportation service provided
Required to write new Section 504 regula-
to the general public. Cannon soon recog-
tions, USDOT issued the 1981 interim regula-
nized that accessible paratransit, even with
tions until final regulations were developed.
these criteria, could never provide trans-
Abandoning the 1979 Section 504 main-
portation services equal to public trans-
streaming regulations, USDOT returned to
portation. Only accessible public transit
a less precise concept of "special efforts"
could approach the public transportation
and coined a new term, "local option."
services offered to the general population.
"Special efforts" made unspecified reference
In 1982, in response to a request from Sen-
in federal public transportation law to "the
ator Alan Cranston (D-Calif.), Cannon re-
planning and design of mass transportation
designed his equivalent service criteria for
facilities and services" so that they could
accessible paratransit so that these stan-
be utilized by "elderly and handicapped per-
dards also could serve as minimum service
sons."61 "Local option" allowed local transit
criteria for lift-equipped bus systems.
agencies to choose to purchase buses with
The equivalence of the standards for ac-
lifts, or to establish a mixed system of some
cessible paratransit and lift-equipped bus
lift-equipped buses and some wheelchair-
systems to standards for public transit sys-
accessible vans, or to institute only a seg-
tems was determined by the following cri-
regated wheelchair-accessible door-to-door
teria: the eligibility of the ridership, the
(paratransit) system.⁶² Local transit agen-
response time of the accessible vehicle, the
cies could employ one of these "local op-
fares, the hours and days of the service, the
tion" choices to demonstrate their compli-
catchment area of the service, and the re-
ance with "special efforts."
strictions or priorities based on the purpose
In elevating "special efforts" and "local
of the trip. Each locality was responsible for
option" over mainstreaming, the 1981 in-
determining specific standards; for exam-
terim regulations appeared to disability ac-
ple, what might be considered reasonable
tivists to have undermined the Section 504
hours and days of service in one area may
national mandate for integrated accessible
be unacceptable in another. The judgment
public transit. Furthermore, the only cri-
depended on the degree to which there was
terion used to determine compliance with
equivalence between the accessible trans-
these interim regulations was the spending
portation systems and all forms of public
GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION: SECTION 504 67
transit in that region with regard to, say, the
them from getting into the job market,
hours and days of service. To illustrate, New
the costs of forcing them to stay on the
York City's twenty-four-hour, seven days a
disability and welfare rolls? These are surely
week availability of public transit would
very substantial costs in both human and
economic terms. Those are the costs that we
have to be duplicated in the city's accessi-
should be focusing upon and trying our best
ble paratransit system and lift-equipped bus
to avoid.⁶⁷
system.
On December 14, 1982, Senator Cranston
Later in December, Congress passed the bill
referred to accessible bus service as "fast
sponsored by both Senators Cranston and
becoming a lost hope in many parts of the
Riegle, the Surface Transportation Assis-
country"; in addition, he noted that "para-
tance Act of 1982, mandating that USDOT
transit [service] for handicapped persons
issue new regulations to establish national
[is] proving to be unsatisfactory."6 Thus,
minimum service criteria for paratransit
he offered a clear explanation of the need
services and lift-equipped buses for people
to establish these minimum service criteria,
with disabilities. 68
in compliance with Section 504, so that peo-
In 1985, in the Alexander v. Choate Sec-
ple with disabilities would be provided with
tion 504 Supreme Court decision,⁶ Justice
adequate accessible transportation:
Thurgood Marshall, representing the ma-
jority, pointed out that the use of the term
Just imagine, if you need to use a wheelchair,
"affirmative action" in the Davis decision
the enormous barriers you would face in using
those services as others use the bus or subway.
has been appropriately criticized "for fail-
If you need transportation to get to a new job,
ing to appreciate the difference between
you may lose that job because you have been
affirmative action and reasonable accom-
put on a paratransit waiting list. If you need
modation: the former is said to refer to a
to get to a medical clinic or doctor's office,
remedial policy for the victims of past dis-
even if you have given over twenty-four hours'
crimination, while the latter relates to the
notice, you might be turned down because the
paratransit service has insufficient capacity.
elimination of existing obstacles against the
If you use the paratransit service to get to a
handicapped. Thus, more consistent with
government office to conduct business, you
Dopico than with Rhode Island, the Choate
may learn upon arrival that despite what you
decision determined that accommodations
had been told by phone or letter, you need
for accessibility, including those for trans-
to go to another office a few miles away in
portation, must be made so long as they
addition to or instead of where you had gone.
are reasonable. Also in 1985 in Maine Associa-
Obviously, in most places, you cannot use the
paratransit service to complete your business
tion of Handicapped Persons v. Dole,⁷¹ a federal
that day or even the next; you have got to go
district court criticized Secretary of Trans-
back home and make a new request with a
portation Elizabeth Dole's "unimaginably
day or more advanced notice.⁶⁶
leisurely pace," ordering her to promulgate
final USDOT Section 504 regulations for
On December 20, 1982, Senator Donald
accessible transportation."
Riegle (D-Mich.) responded to a colleague's
Published on May 20, 1986, the final Sec-
question about the cost of accessible trans-
tion 504 USDOT regulations required "local
portation services:
option" with minimum service criteria for
What will be the costs of continuing the
all forms of accessible transportation. Any
present state of neglect? What will be the costs
local transit agency, however, that spent 3
of treating disabled and elderly individuals
percent of its average annual operating cost
as third-class citizens, the costs of precluding
on transportation services for people with
68 CHAPTER FOUR
disabilities was relieved of its obligation to
As Richard Treanor notes, however, in citing
meet minimum service criteria. 73 In ADAPT
the concurring opinion of Judge Carol Los
et al. v. Dole (E.D., Pa., 1988), the plaintiff
Mansmann in the Skinner case, "What re-
sought to enjoin the implementation of
mains unclear is how there could possibly be
these final Section 504 USDOT regulations.
a paratransit option as the sole and exclusive
Recognizing that the "local option" pro-
means of transportation of disabled peo-
vision could result in a denial of accessi-
ple if the regulations also require
that all
ble public mass transit, ADAPT was con-
new buses be lift equipped, since inevitably,
cerned that mobility impaired individuals
cities must replace worn-out buses. "76 Pro-
would be solely dependent upon segregated
posed new regulations were issued by the
transportation facilities. Consolidated with
Department of Transportation in March
ADAPT's complaint, the complaint of EPVA
1990 to conform to the Skinner decision that
challenged the use of the 3 percent spending
all new buses be accessible. In July of that
cap as a means of avoiding compliance with
year the Americans with Disabilities Act was
the minimum service criteria. In addition,
signed, providing further accessibility to the
the plaintiffs contended that "the 3 percent
pubic transit system.77
limitation chosen was selected in an arbi-
The ADAPT v. Skinner decision was a fit-
trary and capricious manner."74
ting end to an over twenty-year circuitous
Concluding that Congress had not yet leg-
course leading to a federal mandate requir-
islated mainstreaming, the District Court
ing accessibility of public transportation.
in ADAPT v. Dole determined that US-
Emanating from the effort to make the built
DOT's decision not to require that all newly-
environment barrier-free, accessible trans-
purchased buses be lift-equipped was law-
portation was the logical next step toward
ful.75 Therefore, the court accepted the
integrating people with disabilities into the
"local option" choices allowing segregated
mainstream. During the disability commu-
transportation for people with disabilities.
nity's struggle for accessible public tran-
Yet, finding the 3 percent figure unreason-
sit, seminal conflicts emerged: accommoda-
able, the court decided that USDOT may
tion versus affirmative action, mainstream-
not use cost considerations to "abrogate
ing versus special services for people with
entirely the rights granted by the statutes,"
disabilities, local versus federal solutions of
such as Section 504. Because the District
disability issues, and costs versus benefits of
Court upheld "local option," while at the
accessibility and mainstreaming.
same time denying the 3 percent cap, both
Eventually, the courts asserted that ac-
the plaintiffs and the defendant appealed.
commodation, as long as it was reasonable,
Although the Third Circuit Court of Ap-
was necessary though different from affir-
peals in ADAPT v. Skinner was divided on
mative action. Despite the courts' acknowl-
whether Congress intended "mainstream-
edgment of the need for "special- services"
ing" in the legislation, the plurality opinion
in certain situations for some people with
of the court written by Judge Edward R.
a variety of impairments, mainstreaming
Becker held that it was reasonable for local
was the primary goal for most individuals
transit authorities to use either accessible
with disabilities. However valuable local ex-
buses, paratransit, or mixed systems. The
periments may have been in providing re-
court also held that while costs could be
sponses to disability issues, courts tended
considered as one factor in the regulatory
to move toward broad federal resolutions.
process, the use of a 3 percent cost cap as
Ultimately, courts came to appreciate that
a safe harbor was arbitrary and capricious.
an initial outlay of funds for accessibility
GROUNDBREAKING DISABILITY RIGHTS LEGISLATION: SECTION 504 69
and mainstreaming, in keeping with the
engineering solution available is due to the
Section 504 mandate, resulted in economic
attitudinal barrier, not to the physical barrier.
benefits for people with disabilities as well
Cannon pointed out that discrimina-
as for society at large.
tion against people with disabilities, lim-
iting their mobility, is costly not only to
the disability population, but also to the
The Civil Rights Significance of
wider society.
Accessible Transportation
This particular discrimination, of course,
In his 1980 testimony before the U.S. Com-
has had a profound effect on the lives of
mission on Civil Rights, public transit au-
disabled people. It has a psychological effect,
among other things, but it also prevents
thority Dennis Cannon considered the con-
[them] from participating in society actively,
nection between the integration of people
getting jobs, paying taxes; in effect, paying
of color and the integration of people with
back some of the cost that is incurred in
disabilities. 78 He observed that what appears
providing the transportation services in the
to be a problem unique to the disability
first place. This lack of mobility in many
population-physical barriers-is in truth a
cases even affects the participation in the
civil rights issue.
fundamental democratic process, the right to
vote. Without transportation, in many cases
it is impossible even to cast your ballot in
In 1954 with the Supreme Court decision
an election, something which means that, at
Brown v. The Board of Education, many people
least in part, disabled people are excluded
assumed that full integration of public
far more or just as much from the process
education was just around the corner.
as black people were by closed polls and poll
Again in 1977, when Secretary Califano signed
taxes.
the HEW 504 regulations, disabled people
hailed the event as their emancipation and
Thus, relegated to second-class citizenship
expected doors to open and curbs to fall
no less than people of color, people with
virtually overnight. Obviously, none of these
disabilities, like other minority groups, have
events has occurred.
required civil rights legislation in order to
Barriers to the participation of black
people in society are primarily institutional,
secure equality of opportunity.
educational, and economic. Barriers to
The Section 504 struggle for inclusion
the participation of disabled people in
of people with disabilities into the main-
society include all of these, plus the
stream was played out primarily in the
additional barriers presented by the physical
transportation arena. It may be more than
environment. Because physical barriers
coincidental that one of the first issues
appear to be a "natural" part of the
addressed by both African Americans and
environment rather than existing because
of overt oppression, and because removing
people with disabilities seeking their civil
them is perceived as costly, opponents have
rights involved buses. Automobiles, espe-
tended to focus on barrier removal as
cially those with adaptive devices for people
the excuse for maintaining the institutional,
with disabilities, are expensive; moreover,
[educational], and economic barriers.
79
not all people with disabilities are able to
[But] I maintain that the only barrier
drive. Varying greatly in size, rapid transit
is an attitudinal barrier. If there were no
attitudinal barriers, when we perceive a
systems-subway, elevated, and commuter
problem such as transportation, the two
trains-were found in only ten localities in
parties would sit down and work out a simple
the United States in 2000.80 Buses, how-
engineering solution. The fact that that does
ever, requiring a modest fare, are the most
not occur even when there is, indeed, a simple
democratic form of public transportation.
70 CHAPTER FOUR
They link people to employment, educa-
of many people with disabilities to even
tion, entertainment-all forms of social in-
board buses until the late 1970s and the
tercourse.
1980s was representative of their de facto
In addition, the symbolic significance of
segregation. The signing of the Section 504
buses for both African Americans and peo-
regulations and the subsequent success of
ple with disabilities should be noted. The re-
the disability activists in many transporta-
quirement in the late 1950s that Rosa Parks
tion confrontations emboldened them to
sit in the back of the bus was emblematic of
work toward full participation of people
her second-class legal status. The inability
with disabilities in society.
Chapter Five
The Struggle for Change:
In the Streets and in
the Courts
THE STRUGGLE FOR CIVIL rights for peo-
based Justice For All (JFA) was sponsored by
ple with disabilities took place with less
a wealthy businessman with a disability who
visibility than, but in the same venues as,
was energized by an army of activists whom
the battles fought by African Americans-
he refers to as his mentors. Although most
the streets and the courts. Demonstrations
of the organizing, demonstrating, and liti-
were held; lawsuits were filed; new organi-
gating were triggered by desires to see new
zations sprung up. While the names associ-
laws passed and effective regulations issued
ated with the disability rights movement-
and implemented, accomplishing goals-
leaders such as Judith E. Heumann, Patr-
such as the signing of the Section 504 regu-
isha Wright, Wade Blank, Michael Auberger,
lations in I977 and the passage of the ADA in
and Justin Dart, and attorneys like Sid-
1990-have not marked the end of the battle.
ney Wolinsky and Stephen Gold-do not
resonate in the same way as, for example,
Medgar Evers and Thurgood Marshall, the
Disabled In Action
victories, large and small, of disability ac-
tivists brought about a similar revolution.
Conceived of as a New York citywide civil
The organizations that led the way were
rights organization committed to ending
both local and national. Disabled In Action
discrimination against people with all dis-
began as a grass-roots organization in New
abilities, Disabled In Action works to elimi-
York City. Disability Rights Education and
nate barriers that prevent the disability pop-
Defense Fund was formed out of an inde-
ulation from enjoying full equality. DIA was
pendent living center in California. ADAPT,
born out of the 1970 lawsuit, brought by Ju-
which shifted its focus after attaining its
dith E. Heumann-currently U.S. Assistant
original goal, began in Denver. And D.C.-
Secretary of Education and a quadriplegic
72 CHAPTER FIVE
wheelchair user-against the New York City
didn't see any relevance in my showing her
Board of Education when her application
how I went to the bathroom." Undaunted
to obtain a teaching license was rejected
by failing the board's medical examination,
because of her disability. According to board
Heumann appealed in the late 1960s to the
policy, people with disabilities could not be
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) to
teachers because they were deemed fire haz-
act on her behalf. Heumann recalls:
ards. Nonetheless, Heumann decided in col-
The ACLU said there was no reason for me
lege that she wanted to major in education:
to come down for an interview because it was
"That was both a statement that I wanted to
not a case of discrimination that they felt they
work with children, and it was also a state-
could win in court. It was purely a medical
ment that in the New York City school sys-
decision, and no judge was going to rule in
tem with seventy thousand people working
my favor on an issue like that. I remember
in it, there were no disabled people who had
those scenes so vividly; I remember trying
to talk to this person on the phone between
been accepted as teachers and were disabled
crying. It was like saying, "You've got to let
at the time they were certified."¹
me into your office; at least let me talk to you.
Because Heumann took her oral, written,
How can you tell me that I am such an invalid
and medical examinations in buildings that
person that you're not even going to let me sit
were physically inaccessible, she had to be
down and talk to you?" But at any rate, they
carried up and down the stairs. Although
did not let me sit down and talk to them, and
she passed the oral and written portions,
I dropped them.
she failed the medical. Heumann recollects
Still unintimidated, Heumann not only
her experience when she took the board's
publicized her struggle in the New York
medical test for teachers:
City press, but also continued pursuing her
This woman and two other doctors (men)
dispute with the board. Perhaps the most
were in the room to examine me, so it was
succinct headline appeared in the New York
three to one. They asked me the most bizarre
Daily News: "You Can Be President, Not
questions. Then I told them I had not brought
Teacher, with Polio."3 Two attorneys, having
my crutches and braces, so they marked me
read about her quarrel with the board in
down as insubordinate. Then, out of the clear
the local newspapers, offered to represent
blue sky the woman said to the other doctors,
her pro bono. One, formerly an attorney for
"She wets her pants." That was such an
insulting remark that I could not even react
the Scottsboro boys, was a customer at the
to it. I started to cry; again, I was so angry
Heumann family butcher shop.4 Heumann
that I did not know what else to do. Anyway, I
explains, "I was fortunate enough to get
failed the medical part of the exam, needless
Constance Baker Motley as the judge on the
to say. I wrote to ask the reason, and I got
case, who was the first black woman judge
the reason-one sentence: "paralysis of both
appointed to the federal district court, and
lower extremities, sequelae of poliomyelitis."2
she basically made it clear that she was going
Heumann remembers her answer to one
to keep the case and that it looked like she
of the "bizarre questions"-concerning how
was going to rule in our favor. So they settled
she used the bathroom-that she was asked
out of court."
during her medical examination: "She [the
Although no class action suit had been
doctor] wanted me to show her how I went
filed, the case established a precedent for
to the bathroom, and I remember telling her
other people with disabilities seeking certi-
that unless it was going to be a requirement
fication as public school teachers. Despite
for me to teach elementary school children
her success in court, Heumann still had
how to go physically to the bathroom, I
to contend with discrimination, before she
THE STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE: IN THE STREETS AND IN THE COURTS 73
eventually acquired a teaching job, as well
the university she attended-Long Island
as with hostility while on the job:
University (LIU) in Brooklyn, the spirit of
the times, as well as LIU professor Theodore
couldn't get a placement. Finally, I was placed
Childs. Heumann describes her relation-
in a school that I had been a student in, and
that was a very interesting experience because
ship with Childs:
it really brought home to me the problems
He [Ted Childs] is black, and he had been
that were going on in special education
very active in black political activities. I
The goals of many of the special education
would consider him, in a certain respect, to
teachers were not the same goals that they
be my mentor because he really put me in
had for nondisabled children
There was
touch with a lot of discrimination issues-the
a much lower expectation that disabled
problems of the minority group he was part
children, in fact, were going to be able to
of, the problems he had encountered and the
achieve. So, consequently, the quality of
political activities with which he had been
education was really substandard. Now, when
involved. He was an inspiration to me.
I went into the system-during my court
battle, I had been getting a lot of publicity
Heumann's conceptual breakthrough
and had been speaking out a lot on the
was that successful use of the media and
problems-a number of teachers in the school
had considered me rather a pariah because
legal system by the civil rights movement
of my statements about what I felt were the
of the 1960s had potential pertinence to
problems in special education.
disability. Including discrimination against
people with "physical handicaps" (referred
Before Heumann, a great number of ca-
to as "handicapism" or "ableism") in his cat-
pable individuals with disabilities were dis-
alogue of prejudices, Andrew Hacker has ob-
couraged from the teaching profession by
served, "Racism has much in common with
the Board of Education's prohibition. The
other 'isms." The observations of disabil-
board's logic-which appeared irrefutable to
ity advocate and Hofstra professor Frank
many would-be educators with disabilities-
Bowe, who is deaf, regarding prejudice are
was that leading pupils out of a building
applicable to race, ethnicity, and gender, as
in case of fire was part of a teacher's job
well as to disability:
description. As a result, Heumann, like nu-
merous applicants with disabilities before
What we are aiming for, what the hope is all
her, failed the medical portion of the re-
about
is to make people in this country
quired examination. Rather than accept this
see beyond that hearing aid, beyond that
decision, however, Heumann responded by
cane, beyond that guide dog, beyond those
crutches or that wheelchair-to the person.
aggressively challenging it, realizing that its
That is something that most people cannot
real purpose was to legitimatize discrim-
do. They see the disability and they stop. It
ination. She understood that a teacher's
is very difficult for many people to perceive
primary task is not to guide students in
that a disabled person can contribute to
the event of fire since others can provide
limits that are defined by his or her abilities,
this service.
intelligence, or potential, rather than by his
Relevant questions emerge from Heu-
or her disability. But that is what we hope to
do-get people to see beyond the disability.6
mann's experience. What made this pene-
trating insight available to her at that partic-
Because LIU was threatened with serious
ular time? What allowed her to perceive the
economic problems in the 1960s, school of-
issues in a political context? Contributing
ficials made its Brooklyn campus accessible
to her incisive analysis was her supportive
to people with disabilities in order to take
family, the liberal political atmosphere of
advantage of the potential enrollment that
74 CHAPTER FIVE
this population provided. Soon the univer-
Able; and through standard media sources.
sity served as a propitious breeding ground
DIA even has a singing group, the DIA
to nurture disability activists, generated by
Singers, encouraged by the venerable Pete
their physical proximity in one educational
Seeger and led by a gifted musician, Eric
institution and an activist milieu. For the
Levine-when he is not engaged in his other
many mobility-impaired students attend-
professional or political activities or on dial-
ing LIU and living in the university's dor-
ysis. The DIA Singers, who perform at the
mitories, travel had been extremely limited
Clearwater Folk Festival and other events
in the inaccessible environment of the time.
mainly in the New York Metropolitan area,
The energy unleashed by the gathering to-
have a repertoire that includes provocative
gether in one place of a heretofore often dis-
lyrics, such as the following:
enfranchised group of people, coupled with
the political upheaval of the 1960s, opened
Oh yes, I am disabled, but I'm able to say this:
"When you see me come, see a whole human
up new possibilities. Heumann was inspired
Not the parts that I might miss
by, and fostered, the new militancy. The
And I won't hide all my shortcomings
publicity resulting from her lawsuit against
If yours you'll also wear
the New York City Board of Education, as
For humanity, not ability, is the handicap we
well as the hundreds of supportive letters
share."
she received, served as an impetus for her
(From "Two Good Legs," words and music by
founding Disabled In Action in 1970 at the
singer-songwriter Patricia Shih)9
age of only twenty-two.⁷
To focus public attention on and gal-
Encouraged by Ed Roberts, Heumann
vanize support for significant issues, DIA
moved from New York City to the more ac-
plans and participates in public demonstra-
cessible and politically-active Berkeley, Cal-
tions. DIA demonstrated in Washington,
ifornia, in September 1973. Nevertheless,
D.C., joining other disability organizations
DIA continued to establish its identity, de-
from all over the nation, to gain passage
veloping new leaders as well as increasing
of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. In 1976
and diversifying its membership. In order
and 1977, DIA organized protests against
to counteract traditional negative stereo-
the United Cerebral Palsy telethon and, in
types of people with disabilities, DIA initi-
1993 and 1994, against the Muscular Dys-
ated consciousness-raising sessions, a prac-
trophy Association-Jerry Lewis-telethon,
tice borrowed from the women's movement.
for their paternalistic and demeaning at-
Recognizing its need, as a civil rights or-
titude toward people with disabilities. In
ganization, to publicize its mission to fos-
the 1980s, DIA members blocked accessi-
ter integration of individuals with disabil-
ble New York City buses when wheelchair
ities into the mainstream, DIA began us-
users were refused access. In 1997, DIA
ing advocacy methods it still employs. By
joined in a national disability demonstra-
testifying at public hearings-in addition
tion against the Greyhound Bus Company
to participating in public forums, confer-
for its failure to provide wheelchair accessi-
ences, and advisory committees-DIA ed-
bility. From its inception, DIA has organized
ucates not only government officials and
protests at inaccessible business establish-
leaders of established institutions, but also
ments, post offices, other government of-
the general public.⁸
fices, and polling sites, as well as demon-
DIA achieves further outreach by means
strated against federal, state, and city bud-
of a quarterly newspaper, the DIA Activist; a
get cuts to programs that are vital to the
column in a monthly publication, New York
disability population.
THE STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE: IN THE STREETS AND IN THE COURTS 75
Although DIA has received grants from
that all polling places have at least one
government and private foundations, its vi-
wheelchair-accessible entrance by 1990, vot-
ability does not depend on such grants since
ing sites were still inaccessible in the mid
the organization relies on the efforts of the
1980s. With no effort being made by the
members themselves. Operating without an
administration of New York City Mayor Ed-
office or paid staff, DIA has maintained this
ward Koch to locate accessible sites or reno-
luxury of independence by utilizing differ-
vate inaccessible ones as late as June 1984,
ent members' residences for various orga-
DIA realized the law was being ignored.
nizational activities. Taking its cue from
Consequently, Brooklyn Legal Services filed
Heumann, DIA plays the role of David to
a New York State class action lawsuit on
the Goliath of city, state, and federal govern-
behalf of DIA of Metropolitan New York
ment, as well as private businesses, large and
and several individual plaintiffs, naming
small. For example, DIA has won lawsuits
the New York City and the New York State
against the New York Metropolitan Trans-
Boards of Elections as defendants.
portation Authority, the New York City
The experience of DIA member Betsy
Board of Elections, and the Empire State
Gimbel, a wheelchair user, demonstrated
Building. Like many people with disabili-
the effects of Koch's noncompliance with
ties, most members of DIA are unemployed,
the law. Arriving at her supposedly acces-
living on government benefits. Hence, the
sible polling site at 6:30 in the morning in
organization is eligible to secure attorneys
November 1985, Gimbel found that all three
provided for people of limited means from
entrances had flights of steps. Following
the federally-funded Legal Services Corpo-
instructions from the Board of Elections,
ration. ¹⁰In addition, DIA has benefited from
she traveled around the city the entire day,
public interest law centers and the pro bono
from Brooklyn to City Hall to the Board
services of private law firms. Contrary to
of Elections and back to Brooklyn. Finally,
Philip K. Howard's contention in The Death
she voted at 6:30 in the evening at a polling
of Common Sense, 11 public interest lawyers are
site less accessible than her own. Ironically,
unlikely to accept frivolous lawsuits. These
several years earlier, at a 1981 conference cel-
lawyers are compensated by fixed salaries,
ebrating the International Year of Disabled
so their only incentive in the lawsuits they
Persons (IYDP), Koch challenged the dis-
pursue is success in winning noteworthy
ability community to vote in great numbers
cases. As a result, DIA wins most of its cases.
in order to become as politically effective
DIA's mission involves not only the pas-
as the older community. In response, DIA
sage of new laws that affirm and defend
member Olga Hill asked the mayor if he
the rights of people with disabilities, but
knew that less than a third of polling sites,
also the enforcement of existing legisla-
419 out of 1,337, were wheelchair accessible. 13
tion. Recognizing that without visibility
Despite his apparent evasion of the New
at voting booths people with disabilities
York State Election Law, Koch gave DIA
would never be perceived as a voting bloc,
lawyers verbal assurances during the 1985
DIA demonstrated its tenacity in its ten-
mayoral campaign that he would settle the
year effort to ultimately win its wheelchair
polling site lawsuit. Although the upstate
accessible polling site lawsuit, Hill v. New
New York Boards of Elections of Oneida
York City Board of Elections, finally settled
County and the City of Utica agreed to
in 1994. 12 Despite the passage of a 1980
settle a similar lawsuit based on the same
amendment-which DIA supported-to the
election law, lawyers representing Mayor
New York State Election Law, requiring
Koch would not sign a settlement agree-
76 CHAPTER FIVE
ment. Since Koch had reneged on his prom-
civil rights of people with disabilities, DIA
ise to the DIA lawyers, Jane Greengold
sought attorneys from legal services agen-
Stevens-the lead attorney representing the
cies to litigate disability rights cases. Having
plaintiffs-announced that she was going
emerged from Heumann's successful law-
to proceed with the suit within the month.
suit against the New York City Board of Ed-
In 1986, Judge Herbert Kramer ruled in fa-
ucation, DIA considered litigation as one of
vor of the plaintiffs, but the city continued
the most effective ways of implementing so-
to procrastinate until Stevens, on behalf
cial change. When Brooklyn Legal Services
of DIA and the individual litigants, filed
attorney Jane Greengold Stevens served as
a contempt motion in 1988. Judge Kramer,
principal lawyer in both Dopico and Hill,
who took an active interest in the case, re-
she sought legal assistance from NYLPI. In
quired that many polling sites be barrier-
the transportation suit, she called upon the
free by 1990. Nonetheless, the lawsuit was
pro bono services of a private law firm-
not settled until December 1994 when only
Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam & Roberts, a
five voting locations were still inaccessible.
member of NYLPI-while in the polling site
Furthermore, in order to ensure that
case, she worked with an attorney from
voting places would remain available to
NYLPI, Herbert Semmel.
people with disabilities and older citizens,
Forming a central plank in the Office
"The City Board of Elections [was] enjoined
of Economic Opportunity national war on
from relocating polling sites to nonacces-
poverty, legal services programs funded by
sible sites without prior written permis-
the federal government began their steady
sion of the court and after a statutory fair
decline in the 1970s. Furthermore, during
hearing by the Board of Elections.' Judge
this period of retrenchment even private
Kramer was especially concerned with the
foundations began to withdraw support for
issue of whether distance or steps was the
public interest law. Although racial equality
main barrier for older voters with disabili-
and economic opportunity (not disability
ties. As a result of the intervention of Legal
rights) was considered the crucial issue in
Services for the Elderly, the court was con-
the late 1970s, the fact that so many people
vinced that the primary hindrance for voters
with disabilities were living below the pov-
with disabilities regardless of age was steps.
erty level made this population eligible for
This experience revealed the natural politi-
public interest legal services. A March 1976
cal affinity between people with disabilities
Ford Foundation report observed, "If public
and older people, since their interests fre-
interest practice is to remain and grow, it
quently intersect.
must be seen as an enlargement of the scope
and responsibility of the legal profession."16
Combining the pro bono activities of
New York Lawyers for the
major law firms and corporate law depart-
Public Interest
ments with a public interest law office,
NYLPI was established in January 1976 to
In two pivotal DIA cases, the 1982 Dopico v.
provide private legal support for poor and
Goldschmidt transportation lawsuit¹⁵ and the
under-represented communities, including
Hill v. New York City Board of Elections polling
the disability population. 17 Private law firms
site lawsuit, New York Lawyers for the Public
and corporate law departments become
Interest (NYLPI) played a vital role. Appre-
members of NYLPI both by volunteering
ciating the limits of testifying at govern-
their expertise and by financially supporting
ment hearings and demonstrating for the
pro bono projects. As a reaction to contin-
THE STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE: IN THE STREETS AND IN THE COURTS 77
uing cutbacks in legal services programs,
Section 504 were signed. HPLSU was ter-
membership in NYLPI has increased from
minated within three years as other Legal
the original nine participants in 1976 to
Services Corporation offices became acces-
seventy-eight in 1999. 18 Once a body of laws
sible. Over time, some Legal Services Cor-
and legal precedents had been established
poration offices became barrier-free while
regarding civil rights for people with dis-
others moved to wheelchair-accessible sites.
abilities, NYLPI founded the Disability Law
Hearne's recognition of the insensitivity to
Center in 1991 within its public interest
disability issues of even these "defenders
law office.
of justice," as he ironically referred to his
legal colleagues, clarified his own purpose:
to play a part in the expansion of civil rights
Recognizing Disability as a
for people with disabilities. Hearne's expe-
Civil Rights Issue
rience, similar to the experiences of many
other people with disabilities, reveals that
Founder in 1977 of an early disability law
even well-informed and politically sophis-
center known as the Handicapped Persons
ticated people often do not appreciate the
Legal Support Unit (HPLSU), Paul Hearne
relationship between disability rights and
made disability litigation his mission until
other forms of civil rights.
his untimely death on May 3, 1998, at the age
of forty-eight.19 Hearne, a severely disabled
wheelchair user, described an incident that
Disability Rights Education and
caused him to work in disability law: "I had
Defense Fund
originally planned to work in poverty law,
but I discovered I was a person with a dis-
The leaders of the Berkeley Center for
ability that had a political dimension and
Independent Living founded the Disabil-
that became my life's work." In 1976, when
ity Rights Education and Defense Fund
an office of the Legal Services Corporation,
(DREDF) in 1979 after receiving a one hun-
Hearne's employer for two years, relocated
dred thousand dollar federal grant. Because
to a new office up two flights of stairs, the
New York City's Legal Services Corporation
civil rights lawyers Hearne worked along-
lost a portion of its federal funding as a con-
side and admired showed no awareness of
sequence of its noncompliance with Section
his needs. Forced to acknowledge Hearne's
504, this same one hundred thousand dol-
access problem, the Legal Services attorneys
lars was transferred to the Berkeley Center.20
maintained that Section 504, prohibiting
DREDF's mission is to promote the inte-
disability discrimination by recipients of
gration and civil rights of people with dis-
federal funds, did not apply to this federally-
abilities, and "to establish disability rights
funded government agency. They argued
as the recognized equivalent of race and
that since the Legal Services Corporation
gender-based civil rights."2 Led by people
was not a recipient of a federal grant, but
with disabilities and the parents of children
rather an agency of the government, the
with disabilities, DREDF is a national law
corporation was exempt from Section 504.
and policy center with offices in Berkeley,
Nonetheless, under the auspices of New
California, and Washington, D.C.
York Senator Jacob Javits, the Legal Services
Besides continuing to receive government
Corporation established a fully accessible
grants and contracts, DREDF-a nonprofit
office, HPLSU, with Hearne as director in
organization-also secures financial sup-
May 1977, a month after the regulations for
port from foundations and corporations,
78 CHAPTER FIVE
as well as attorneys' fees resulting from
vide training sessions not only for parents
successful disability litigation.²² Because of
of children with disabilities but also for
DREDF's involvement with disability issues
adults with disabilities to monitor compli-
on a grass-roots level, the organization has
ance with disability legislation.
been a key player since its inception in draft-
In order to foster integration of adults
ing, negotiating, and passing major federal
as well as children with disabilities into the
disability civil rights legislation such as the
mainstream, DREDF litigates cases enforc-
Americans with Disabilities Act. For exam-
ing access to housing, transportation, bene-
ple, in 1981 when the Reagan administration
fits, education, employment, and public ac-
attempted to weaken the regulations im-
commodation of the disability population.
plementing Section 504, the White House
DREDF also serves as a resource for infor-
received forty thousand letters as a result of
mation, referral, and technical assistance on
a nationwide DREDF alert.
disability rights laws and policies. Through
DREDF offered leadership in educating
the Disability Clinical Legal Education Pro-
Congress before the passage of two major
gram, DREDF, along with a consortium of
national laws, the Fair Housing Amend-
five law schools, trains law students by offer-
ments Act of 1988 and the Handicapped
ing a course in disability rights law, as well
Children's Protection Act of 1986. The for-
as a clinic for students to work on DREDF
mer law renders housing discrimination
cases.²⁴ A DREDF leader, Patrisha Wright,
against people with disabilities a federal of-
who played a prominent role in rewriting
fense. The second law provides that gov-
the ADA so that it would gain broad legisla-
ernment or business defendants who lose
tive acceptance, reflects on the ADA: "You
lawsuits pay attorney's fees to plaintiffs in
can't legislate attitudes. But you can level
special education or disability discrimina-
the playing field, and that's what the ADA
tion cases related to the Individuals with
is all about. It signifies the end of second-
Disabilities Education Act. Although gen-
class citizenship for people with disabilities
erally plaintiffs pay their own lawyers' fees,
in this country."25
Congress deemed the Handicapped Chil-
One of DREDF's most notable achieve-
dren's Protection Act necessary in order to
ments was its role in the 1988 Civil Rights
offer parents, regardless of their income,
Restoration Act, which in effect overturned
a means of protecting their children with
the U.S. Supreme Court's 1984 Grove City
disabilities from the potential bias of edu-
v. Bell decision.² According to Grove City,
cational institutions.
if a court ruled against any division of an
Committing one-third of its services to
institution in a civil rights lawsuit, only that
issues concerning the education of children
particular division, not the entire institu-
with disabilities, DREDF pursues cases in
tion, was required to comply with Section
which parents participate in planning their
504. Besides prejudice based on race, na-
child's individualized educational plan
tional origin, sex, and age, the Grove City
(IEP).²³ In fact, DREDF encourages par-
ruling applied to bias on account of disabil-
ents, as advocates for their children with
ity. In order to urge Congress to overturn
disabilities, to secure all the educational
Grove City by passing the 1988 Civil Rights
and related services mandated by state and
Restoration Act, DREDF provided materi-
federal laws. Grants and contracts received
als and information to, and testified before,
from the U.S. Department of Education
congressional committees. Once the act was
and the Equal Employment Opportunity
passed, it was applied to civil rights leg-
Commission (EEOC) enable DREDF to pro-
islation enacted since 1964, thus restoring
THE STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE: IN THE STREETS AND IN THE COURTS 79
those laws to the original intent. Before the
In the late 1970S, he averted the disper-
passage of the 1988 Civil Rights Restoration
sal of roughly I50 people with Hanson's
Act, DREDF brought the issues of people
disease, more commonly known as leprosy,
with disabilities to the rest of the civil rights
who lived together in a community on the
community by its "rigorous participation"
Hawaiian island of Molokai. Because their
in the ongoing Leadership Conference on
disease was contagious before the availabil-
Civil Rights, organized in 1980 to unite
ity in the early I970S of a category of drugs
leaders from the various civil rights move-
known as sulphones,30 these individuals-
ments. Thus, DREDF was instrumental in
who had been ripped from their families-
presenting disability discrimination as akin
had established an emotional attachment
to racial, ethnic, and gender discrimination.
to one another and their home. When land
developers realized the value of the prop-
erty on which these people with Hanson's
The Need for Disability Rights
disease lived, their community was jeopar-
Attorneys
dized. The dispute was tied up in litiga-
tion sufficiently long, however, so that the
Because of a continuing increase in lo-
issue ultimately was settled by federal leg-
cal, state, and federal disability legislation-
islation decreeing the area on which this
especially since Section 504 of the Reha-
community resided a national preserve un-
bilitation Act of 1973, the 1975 Individuals
der Federal Park supervision. Once there are
with Disabilities Education Act, and the
no Hanson's disease survivors left on the
1990 ADA-the need for attorneys special-
property, the area will become a permanent
izing in disability law has expanded consid-
memorial, a testament to the experience en-
erably. Impressed by the activist approach
dured by those who had this condition.
toward civil rights for people with disabil-
During the late 1980s and early 1990s,
ities of Berkeley's Center for Independent
Wolinsky dealt with a number of significant
Living (especially evident in the charismatic
architectural barrier cases. In an attempt
leadership of its director, Ed Roberts), one
to save about fifteen thousand dollars, the
prominent lawyer, Sidney Wolinsky, chose
owner of Specialty Restaurant failed to
to become a disability rights attorney in
make the entrance accessible when the es-
the mid-1970s.²⁸ Wolinsky, now director of
tablishment was undergoing major remod-
Litigation of Disability Rights Advocates
eling. As a consequence of the 1989 law-
of Oakland, California, described his first
suit Weissman v. Specialty, based on Califor-
major disability lawsuit, the mid-1970s Post
nia state law, an Alameda County Superior
Street, San Francisco, nursing home case
Court jury awarded the plaintiff $670,000,
(Bracco v. Lackner).²⁹ This successful litiga-
perhaps the largest verdict for a single in-
tion prevented the residents of the nursing
dividual ever in an architectural barrier de-
home, older people with disabilities, from
cision. Before his successful ADA class ac-
being forcibly transferred from one facility
tion lawsuit representing DREDF against
to another. To win his case, he used the
United Artists Theatres for its lack of ac-
concept of "transfer trauma," the probabil-
cessibility, Arnold v. United Artists Theatre Cir-
ity that his frail elderly clients would suffer
cuit (1996), Wolinsky won a landmark pre-
serious injuries if they were moved against
ADA judgment in an architectural barrier
their will. Originally specializing in elder
lawsuit, Henry v. Squaw Valley Ski Resort. The
law and problems of older people, Wolinsky
court decided in favor of the plaintiffs be-
increasingly focused on disability law.
cause the resort neither allowed wheelchair
80 CHAPTER FIVE
users on lifts nor provided accessibility on
disability law to the suits he has recently
the mountain.
litigated. Many of his early cases involved
Wolinsky also discusses his lawsuits deal-
airline carrier access, "a primitive pre-ADA
ing with psychiatric and learning disabili-
law," according to the attorney, "that did
ties (LDs). He is especially pleased with a de-
not offer much protection." By the late
cision in a 1993 case (Putnam v. Pacific Gas and
1990s, he noticed that he had been seeing
Electric) he brought involving a lawyer with
many fewer of these cases. In order to
a psychiatric disability-major depression-
get appropriate settlements in his early
who worked for Pacific Gas and Electric.
architectural barrier cases, he would have
"These kinds of cases are not being won.
to go to trial. "The good news is now
They either get thrown out of court before
defendants know how difficult it is to justify
they get to trial or receive a small recov-
steps, and they also know," he observes, "we
ery," Wolinsky observes. Yet, after Wolin-
get better settlements." Still, he emphasizes
sky's client, who was working under "a
the significance of geographical areas:
harsh supervisor," was refused an ADA ac-
commodation and then fired, an arbiter
If we get enough architectural barrier cases in
awarded the plaintiff $1.1 million. Wolinsky
a particular area, soon building departments
followed his victory in a much publicized
in that locality begin to get educated, and
we don't have to bring lawsuits. Because
class action lawsuit against Boston Univer-
people with disabilities in Oakland are aware
sity, Elizabeth Guckenberger v. Boston Univer-
of their rights, I can't remember the last
sity (1997), for its systemic refusal to accom-
time I had to bring a lawsuit in Oakland.
modate students with learning disabilities,
The Oakland Building Department has
with a similar class action lawsuit against
become knowledgeable about and sensitive to
the California Bar Association for failing to
access issues. But the bad news is that forty-
provide accommodation for students with
five minutes north in the Napa Valley, the
Building Department doesn't get it yet. From
learning disabilities. "Although it had been
my experience sometimes the periphery of the
previously good, the Bar had decided in its
country is the slowest to get it. Consider, for
great wisdom in 1997 to crack down on LD
example, Hawaii and south Floridà. And the
students," Wolinsky notes sarcastically:
point is that it doesn't seem to relate to need.
There are lots of elderly and lots of people
We started receiving floods of complaints
with disabilities in south Florida. Still there
from candidates taking the bar exams, whose
aren't enough activist organizations in some
LD accommodations were dramatically cut or
areas, so people are timid; they don't know
turned down totally. This California Bar case,
the law, and they don't assert their rights.
that's still in litigation, is a sign of what's
happening and what's to come. Fifteen years
Wolinsky acknowledges that his cases are
ago, if you were seriously dyslexic, you were
getting "more difficult" as the other side has
going to end up a janitor even if you had an
I:Q. of 150. Now a considerable number of
gotten increasingly sophisticated. "They're
people with learning disabilities are going
cleverer at job discrimination now. They
to college, and so you get cases like Boston
don't say we're not hiring you because you're
University. And some, who self-identify as LD,
disabled; they say they've found somebody
have even worked further along the system
more qualified." Also, he remembers that
to law school, so we have the California Bar
in the past his cases revolved around "core
case (Mueller v. Committee of Bar Examiners of
issues" while now he has moved into "some-
the State of California).
what fuzzier territory." He explains, "No-
Wolinsky compares the kinds of cases
body now refuses to settle cases with us
he dealt with when he began practicing
about inaccessible front entrances, but they
THE STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE: IN THE STREETS AND IN THE COURTS 8I
argue about width of aisles in stores and
cases may not be very helpful. We'll bring
their right to crowd aisles with display
the suits and hope we can settle them if not
racks." He is referring to the Disability
win them," he says. While he asserts that
Rights Advocates lawsuit against Federated
future cases will clarify the interpretation
Department Stores, which includes Macy's
of terminology relating to disability law, he
and Bloomingdale's.
emphasizes the importance of the growing
Another issue with which Wolinsky has
degree to which people with disabilities are
become recently involved concerns insur-
becoming cognizant of "what they are enti-
ance for people with disabilities. "Insurance
tled to."
companies routinely turn down people with
Another major litigator, a private Phila-
disabilities or charge them premiums that
delphia attorney, Stephen Gold, recollects
are too high," he contends. He describes
that about 50 percent of his caseload prior
a summary judgment that he won against
to 1992 involved disability litigation. With
United of Omaha (Chabner v. United of Om-
the passage of the ADA, however, he was
aha), which charged double the normal pre-
able to make a decent salary practicing only
mium to a person because he was in a
disability law. Gold states, "I have no interest
wheelchair: "We sued and sure enough they
in pursuing bad disability lawsuits. We had
had no hard evidence to go on to justify
too many bad ones following Section 504,
their unreasonable premium. They were just
and that does not serve the cause of disabil-
stereotyping. They figured, 'Oh well, he's in
ity rights. Also, of course, I am only entitled
a chair; he's not going to live too long; we'll
to attorney's fees when my plaintiffs pre-
charge twice the regular rate." Wolinsky
vail; when I lose, I get no money. But I get
regrets that because of their history and
more winning cases than I can handle. So we
their isolation from the rest of the disability
need more good disability lawyers.' James
community, deaf people have neither taken
Raggio, general counsel to the Access Board,
advantage of the laws that could serve them
agrees with Gold: "There are not enough
nor developed an adequate number of attor-
resources for the meaningful ADA lawsuits
neys from their own community. "Although
that should be litigated."
someone on our staff is hard of hearing,"
Gold describes how, quite by accident, he
Wolinsky indicates, "there are not enough
became a disability rights attorney:
good deaf lawyers. In my view there are a lot
more cases to be brought than have been
In the late 1980s, I was asked to litigate
brought. There don't seem to be a sufficient
a case for a school bus driver who wore a
number of hard-hitting advocacy firms that
hearing aid. Soon after I won this suit in
focus on the deaf community." Wolinsky
the Third Circuit using Section 504, I won
is especially concerned about the lack of
another disability employment case that
was based on a myth that perpetuates
sign language interpreters in public facili-
disability discrimination. Several blind
ties such as hospitals, courts, and schools.
people working in the Social Security
As he prepares for new disability cases,
Administration, who were providing
he reveals how much he would like to see
information by telephone, were refused a
people who are deaf and hard of hearing be-
promotion to a job that required them to
come more aggressive than they have been
furnish the same information in person. The
in pursuing their legitimate rights. Looking
supervisor was concerned that clients would
not have confidence in information given by
forward to a continuation of lawsuits in the
blind people.
employment context, Wolinsky anticipates
Another disability case that I won in
that "they will get so fact-specific that prior
the Third Circuit led to several wheelchair-
82 CHAPTER FIVE
accessible subway and elevator train stations
as a more attainable objective than personal
in Philadelphia. When I noticed that the
assistance services. With the 1990 passage of
newly-renovated subway station, which I
the ADA, ADAPT had made much progress
used to get to the Temple University Law
toward its first goal, accessible public tran-
School course that I was teaching, did not
have an elevator, I brought a Section 504
sit, so the organization moved on to its
lawsuit. Also, I had the good fortune by
current and principal concern: community-
1990 to co-counsel disability cases with Tim
based personal assistance services. Emerg-
Cook, a highly-respected disabled disability
ing out of Wade Blank's relocation of six-
lawyer who died young, at the peak of
teen adults with severe disabilities from
his career.
a nursing home into apartments in 1975,
ADAPT, from its inception, focused on in-
Although Gold refers to himself as merely
dependent living. Blank, founder of ADAPT,
"playing second fiddle" to Tim Cook in
describes how his recruitment by the nurs-
ADAPT's significant 1989 Section 504 trans-
ing home industry in 1971 introduced him
portation federal lawsuit, ADAPT v. Skinner,
to radical disability politics:
now Gold is known as the ADAPT lawyer.
The nursing home industry in Denver
Commenting on ADAPT's mission, Gold
recruited its nursing home administrators
maintains that it is important for disabil-
from the ranks of ex-ministers [like me]. The
ity activists to keep the pressing disabil-
industry had built too many nursing homes in
ity issues-vital to such a surprisingly high
Denver. There weren't enough old people, and
percentage of Americans-in the eye of the
the state institutions were dumping disabled
public and the lawmakers.
people out, so the nursing home industry
decided they would get them. A nursing
home executive called. He said, "You're
young. You're hip. Could you start a youth
ADAPT
wing for us?" So I started a youth wing.
I had sixty young people recruited
They
Despite the fact that ADAPT has been the
wanted coed living. They wanted to have pets.
plaintiff in successful disability lawsuits,
They wanted to have rock 'n' roll bands. So
the organization-according to one of its
three years into this experiment, this nursing
leaders, Michael Auberger-stresses "the tac-
home is just like a college dorm on a crazy
weekend all the time We [moved] a few
tics of street fighters."33 A student of the
of them out into apartments [in 1975], and
1960s and 1970s civil rights and antiwar
we let the aides and orderlies punch in at
movements, Auberger refers to the nonau-
the nursing home, then go to the apartment
thoritarian structure of ADAPT as it es-
and give them service. The nursing home saw
chews incorporation, officers, and board de-
where I was going and they couldn't let me go
in that direction.³⁴
velopment, relying instead upon leadership
and consensus. The acronym "ADAPT" has
Because of his "experiment," Blank was
had two different meanings: from June 1983
fired; the nursing home-removing all
to August 1990, it meant American Disabled
stereos, televisions, and animals-wiped out
for Accessible Public Transit; since August
all of the improvements that he imple-
1990, it has stood for American Disabled for
mented over a period of four years. Not fully
Attendant Programs Today.
cognizant of the enormous responsibility
When ADAPT in its early phase, 1983 to
he was undertaking, Blank decided to be-
1990, required a victory to become a credible
gin to move his young recruits out of "this
force in the disability rights struggle, the or-
hell" and care for them himself: "You think
ganization chose accessible transportation
marriage is a serious commitment; you try
THE STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE: IN THE STREETS AND IN THE COURTS 83
moving eight people who are severely dis-
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District
abled out into their own apartments and
of Columbia decided in favor of the Amer-
be responsible for dressing them, feeding
ican Public Transit Association in its law-
them, bowel programs, bathing them. But
suit against the U.S. Department of Trans-
within the first six months, I'd moved eigh-
portation concerning the Section 504 regu-
teen severely disabled people out, so now I
lations,³ the Denver Transit Authority-like
was wed to the concept. You know, I couldn't
many transit authorities across the nation-
walk away from it."
considered the decision a signal to cease
Pointing out that Section 504 and the
efforts to make public transportation ac-
ADA do not prevent people with disabili-
cessible. In order to advance the cause of
ties from being locked up in institutions,
accessible public transit, ADAPT protested
Blank notes the limitations of what he
against APTA at its regional conferences in
considers the social and economic elitism
localities throughout the country. ADAPT
of the mainstream disability movement:
positioned itself as the courageous "en-
"The Ed Robertses and the Judy Heumanns
fant terrible" facing the bully-APTA-or, in
don't deal with nursing homes. They've
Auberger's words, "the bad guy." ADAPT
never been in one. They don't understand
used nationwide demonstrations to rally
them.
You go around to the indepen-
the disability community in these localities
dent living centers, and you'll see a lot
to fight for buses with lifts.
of post-polios and a lot of spinal cord
Auberger argues, "We don't appear to
injuries. But you won't see a lot of peo-
public opinion to be reasonable, but we
ple who slobber and can't speak clearly
are."37 ADAPT's effort to get businesses to
like you do here [Atlantis and ADAPT]."
install ramps, as required by the ADA, be-
Learning how to challenge authority from
gins with letter writing, followed by demon-
his successful efforts in the 1960s civil
strations, and lawsuits only as a last resort.
rights movement, Blank encouraged peo-
"It's a hell of a lot easier to do it in a meet-
ple with severe disabilities to achieve their
ing.
It takes a hell of a lot of energy to
goals using confrontational tactics. By 1980,
do the demonstrations, to do the lawsuits,"
funded by the U.S. Rehabilitation Services
Auberger observes. "We'll do that if that's
Administration, the Atlantis Community,
what it takes. But my preference is, let's do
with I20 clients-including Blank's former
it nice and resolve it as amicably as possible."
nursing home recruits-had become an in-
When the contractor and owner of an
dependent living center providing hous-
elegant Denver restaurant violated city ac-
ing and home health services. Auberger
cessibility laws, the ADAPT protest demon-
describes Blank, who died on February
strated its usual flamboyance and wit. Set-
I5, 1993, while attempting to rescue his
ting up tables in front of the restaurant
eight-year-old son from drowning, as "a
where they ate cans of Chef Boy Ardee and
teacher, inspiring left-out people, people
drank cheap wine, ADAPT members dis-
with significant disabilities, to advocate for
played a sign that read "accessible seating."
themselves."35
Although ADAPT sometimes acts locally
Although ADAPT was officially estab-
pursuing disability activities in Denver, with
lished in Denver in June 1983 by Blank
its existing affiliate network throughout the
and the Atlantis Community, the success-
country, it always thinks nationally.
ful Denver 1982 demonstration for lift-
Transferring this successful strategy to
equipped buses propelled these disability
the personal assistance services issue,
advocates toward activism. In 1981, when
ADAPT, in its second incarnation since
84 CHAPTER FIVE
1990, identifies the $90 billion per year
Missouri, to demonstrate that "elderly peo-
nursing home industry, represented by the
ple and younger people with disabilities can
American Health Care Association (AHCA),
live in the community more economically,
as "the bad guy." Continuing to use con-
more productively, and more happily than
frontational techniques, ADAPT surround-
in nursing homes." ADAPT has been urg-
ed buildings such as the Chicago regional
ing that 25 percent of federal nursing home
office of the Department of Health and Hu-
dollars be redirected to a national attendant
man Services, the American Medical Asso-
services program to be available, as a basic
ciation (AMA) National Headquarters, and
civil right, to anyone needing such services.
the San Francisco convention site of AHCA.
Auberger contends that "this issue strikes a
In each case, ADAPT, declaring the location
responsive chord in most Americans since
a nursing home, required that people receive
they fear aging and ending up in a nurs-
ADAPT's permission to leave or enter the
ing home."
premises. Thus, these people were given a
In the summer of 1997, ADAPT focused
taste of the nursing home life against which
on both the nursing home issue-Medicaid
ADAPT was protesting.
Community Attendant Services Act
A 1992 ADAPT flyer succinctly expressed
(MiCasa)-and transportation-the Grey-
the organization's position on nursing
hound controversy. As a result of occupying
homes:
the office of then Speaker of the House
Newt Gingrich on several occasions from
Q. & A.
1995 to 1997, ADAPT pressured Gingrich to
Q. What's the difference between a
introduce the MiCasa bill. 39 Instead of being
nursing home and a jail?
sent to nursing homes, people under Mi-
A. The uniforms are different. The
Casa would be permitted to remain in their
weapons are different, in jail it's a
own homes with attendant services. "On
gun, in a nursing home it's pills.
the eve of the last election [1996], Gingrich
had promised, in a hand-written agreement
The parole is different. In jail, you
with ADAPT, to 'seek final passage and
serve your sentence and get paroled.
enactment [of MiCasa] into law prior to
In nursing homes there's no parole.
You're in for life!
the end of the first session of the 105th
Congress."40 When Gingrich commented
Referring to the nursing home industry
in a June 5, 1997, conference with ADAPT
as "a beast that nobody likes," Auberger
that "you know the institutional providers
indicates that government agencies and
[nursing homes] are going to go berserk,"
health maintenance organizations both re-
Auberger responded, "We're willing to take
alize that it is cheaper to provide services for
on the fight with them."
people with disabilities in the community
In addition to its efforts regarding Mi-
than in nursing homes.³⁸ Many people are
Casa, on August 8, 1997, ADAPT organized
in nursing homes, Auberger continues, be-
about forty demonstrations throughout
cause there is no support system available
the nation protesting the refusal of Grey-
for them to live in their own homes; were
hound to provide wheelchair accessibility
they given a choice, however, "more and
on its buses. The New York City protesters
more would move out." Auberger's solution
chanted, "At least Rosa Parks could get on
is to create models, such as those in Col-
the bus'-a reference to the Alabama woman
orado, Kansas, Vermont, and more recently
whose refusal to sit in the back of the
THE STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE: IN THE STREETS AND IN THE COURTS 85
bus sparked the civil rights movement."⁴¹
with cerebral palsy-as spokespeople. As a
A member of the New York City contin-
result, listeners who are intent upon get-
gent, Thomas K. Small, observed, "Buses
ting the message are forced to concentrate
are widely used by the disabled because
on the content of the speech regardless
they are cheaper than trains and planes,
of the speaker's clarity of diction. Despite
and 75 percent of people with disabilities in
some disability activist's discomfort with
the United States have low incomes." Phil-
ADAPT when it flaunts old images of dis-
adelphia disability rights attorney, Stephen
ability, the organization, as Auberger puts
Gold, added:
it, "is willing to take flak for its actions
Greyhound has already bought eighty or
since it works for people with the least
ninety inaccessible buses. For many people, in
who need the most and intend to get what
many parts of the country, these buses provide
they want."43
the only means of inexpensive long-distance
Auberger draws a parallel between the
transportation. If the company's allowed
American Revolution and the "Disability
to go ahead with their plan to purchase
Revolution." He likens the ineffective enti-
another two hundred of those buses, it will be
ties in the system, such as APTA and the
twenty-five years before people in wheelchairs
will be able to ride Greyhound buses. This
nursing home industry, to the powerful
is clearly discrimination in violation of the
British army, the Redcoats, who did not
ADA. Technology for accessible over-the-road
know how to fight in the new environment.
buses-with storage space for luggage-
Comparing ADAPT members to the army
such as Greyhound buses, is available as
of the American Revolution, he calls them
demonstrated by the accessible Canadian
"guerrilla fighters taking shots at the system
buses of this type.42
where it's vulnerable." Auberger explains,
In 1999 the Department of Justice reached
"The stuff ADAPT does in the streets makes
an out-of-court settlement with Greyhound
Justin Dart, who works through the system,
in which the bus company agreed to phase
seem sane when he talks about our rights in
in lift-equipped buses over the following
the halls of Congress."
two years.
Whether ADAPT members are sliding
out of their wheelchairs to crawl up the
Justice For All
steps of the Capitol as Congress deliber-
ates over the 1990 ADA, or disrupting the
Founded in 1995 by Justin and Yoshiko Dart,
speech of President Bush's Health and Hu-
Becky Ogle, Fred Fay, and Mark Smith, Jus-
man Services Secretary, Louis Sullivan, at
tice For All adopted a platform, Solidarity
the 1992 University of Illinois graduation
2000, committed to establishing a consen-
ceremony, they employ theatrical maneu-
sus in the disability community on the ma-
vers though their purposes are utterly se-
jor disability rights issues.4 By means of
rious. ADAPT considers its confrontational
action alerts, information updates, meet-
tactics most successful when police are so
ings, and conference calls, JFA created a
provoked that they are placed in the embar-
nationwide disability rights network. Con-
rassing position of arresting these ADAPT
sidering listening crucial to building con-
demonstrators with severe disabilities. Rep-
sensus, Justin Dart, post-polio wheelchair
resenting many people with serious dis-
user, toured all fifty states in 1996 in or-
abilities, ADAPT sometimes uses members
der to consult with disability groups in
with speech problems-such as individuals
each state.
86 CHAPTER FIVE
Dart, who contracted polio in 1948 at
telecommunication network chair, commu-
the age of eighteen, was born into wealth
nicating with disability leaders nationwide
and the corporate life. However, an expe-
while monitoring the latest events by means
rience at a 1966 media event at a Saigon
of the Internet.
facility for children with polio changed
Fay describes his work: "When I first
his life:
realized I'd be in bed for the rest of my
The floor of the place was covered with
life, I thought, 'Wow. I'm going to get
children ages four to ten, with bloated
awfully bored reading books.' But I con-
stomachs and matchstick limbs. They were
tinued my advocacy work, thanks to the
starving to death and lying in their own
phone, fax, and modem." Lying flat on
urine and feces. A little girl reached up to
his back in the motorized wheelbed that
me and looked into my eyes. I automatically
he designed, Fay uses a joystick to drive
took her hand and my photographer took
pictures. She had the most serene look I have
up "to a customized electronic work station
ever seen-and it penetrated to the deepest
[in his home] and reads material displayed
part of my consciousness. I thought, here
on either of two computer monitors resting
is a person almost dead, and she knows it.
on pull-out glass shelves suspended a foot
She's reaching out for God and has found a
from his head."48 Using this technology,
counterfeit saint doing a photo op
I
told
Fay says, "I conduct meetings [by means of
[my fiancée] Yoshiko, "We cannot go on as
video conferencing], write articles,
we have been. Our lives have got to mean
lobby
something. We have got to get into this fight
Congress, execute grass-roots campaigns,
and stop this evil. "45
and reach thousands of people with disabil-
ities every day."
After cofounding an independent living
While Fay was winner of the 1997 Betts
center in Texas in 1978-holding five guber-
Award for outstanding contributions to
natorial, one congressional, and five presi-
people with disabilities, Dart was a recipient
dential appointments associated with dis-
of a 1998 Presidential Medal of Freedom,
ability policy-as well as helping to shape
America's highest civilian honor. In accept-
the ADA, Dart used his own funds to sup-
ing the award, Dart thanked members of
port JFA, "a communication base for grass-
the disability rights movement by saying,
roots organizers and a lobbying force in
"This is your medal. I am so proud to be
Washington."
one of you. I will fight at your side until
Dart's wife, Yoshiko, her three foster
the last breath. "49 Dart has always credited
daughters, and a small band of other vol-
those who preceded him and those who
unteers throughout the nation perform the
have joined him in the movement with edu-
day-to-day tasks of the organization. Con-
cating and energizing him: "I think of Ed
gressional and White House watchdog and
Roberts dreaming up a revolution of in-
wheelchair user Becky Ogle attends numer-
dependence in his iron lung, and I think
ous meetings enabling her to report "up-
of many others on my list of empowering
to-the-minute information to the JFA head-
people." In 1995, when the 104th Congress
quarters at the Dart home."⁴⁶ Organizing
threatened to roll back existing federal leg-
conference calls, mailings, and meetings,
islation (such as ADA and the Individuals
Mark Smith coordinates the JFA network,
with Disabilities Education Act) providing
known as the Truth Team, from the orga-
opportunities to people with disabilities,
nization's Mississippi office. Fred Fay, who
Justin Dart recognized the need for a na-
has been in bed since 1981 with a progres-
tional, unified voice of the disability com-
sive disability (a spinal cord cyst), is JFA's
munity:
THE STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE: IN THE STREETS AND IN THE COURTS 87
The war for the survival of the disability rights
from government contracts and other
movement had begun. Our independence and
limitations.
Empowerment is the issue
rights were being debated in Congress.
of the age.
Nobody is going to give it to
We [JFA] realized that we would have
us [the disability community]. We have to
to do some hard-hitting advocacy. We
empower ourselves.⁵⁰
needed to be an independent entity, free
Chapter Six
The Americans with
Disabilities Act
AT AN APRIL 18, 1997, conference of dis-
Lex Frieden, the first permanent executive
ability advocates in Uniondale, New York,
director of the National Council on Dis-
Joseph Shapiro, author of No Pity: People
ability³-an independent federal agency ap-
with Disabilities Forging a New Civil Rights
pointed by the president-who served from
Movement,1 indicated that because the ADA
December 1984 to April 1988, indicates that,
had so much support, its passage was not
in a sense, both Dart and Shapiro were right:
a daunting task. In a meeting with New
York City disability rights advocates on the
But Shapiro's focus may have been too
following day, Justin Dart, who has been
narrow; he didn't open up his lens. He was
just taking a snapshot. He was concentrating
called the "father of the ADA," disagreed,
on a specific point in time-once the bill
pointing to the concerted effort to prevent
was before Congress, while Dart participated
the passage of, or weaken, the ADA by such
in the years of hard work, the struggle that
powerful forces as, for example, the five
paved the way for the passage of the ADA.
hundred thousand-member National Fed-
An Olympic gold medal swimmer makes
eration of Independent Business.² Having
getting from one end of the pool to the other
given top priority to defeating the ADA,
look easy. What you don't see is the years of
preparation and sweat that were necessary for
National Federation of Independent Busi-
success.4
ness was the subject of a Washington Post
front-page article entitled "The Organiza-
Dart's work on legislation that culmi-
tion That Never Loses." In addition, the
nated in the ADA had begun in the early
U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the New York
1980s when he was chair of Texas Governor
Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Restau-
William Clements's Task Force for Long-
rant Association, Greyhound Buses, and
Range Policy for People with Disabilities.⁵
the entire public transportation commu-
Dart points out that disability rights advo-
nity, as well as conservative elements of
cates recognized that the very real threat of
the Republican party represented by peo-
weakening the provisions of the ADA, in ef-
ple like Pat Buchanan and Representative
fect creating legislation legitimizing the seg-
Dick Armey (R-Tex.), joined in opposition
regation of people with disabilities, would
to the ADA.
be worse than no law at all:
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT 89
If you don't have a watered-down ADA law,
with Disabilities" in 1982.9 Maintaining a
the Bill of Rights and civil rights laws apply
unity of purpose with the former members
to you. But you can be exempt from these
of the council, vice-chair Dart conferred
laws if you have a Jim Crow law called a civil
rights law. The ADA advocates participating
frequently with the Carter appointees. In
in framing the legislation were willing to be
fact, he refers to Heumann, a woman about
flexible with regard to time limits, remedies,
twenty years his junior, as his mentor.
and undue hardship. However, they were
One of the NCD's recommendations
determined to prevent permanent exemption
approved by President Reagan was that
of coverage from any group of people with
"Congress should act forthwith to include
disabilities, such as people with AIDS or
persons with disabilities in the Civil Rights
psychological disabilities, or any separate but
equal provisions in the law.
Act of 1964 and other civil and voting
rights legislation and regulations." Later
the council resolved, however, that "disabil-
ity discrimination is distinctive," substan-
Enacting the ADA
tially different from other kinds of preju-
dice, and thus "a separate civil rights law"
In 1982, President Reagan dismissed all Pres-
was necessary to address disability bias. Paul
ident Carter's appointees on the National
Hearne-Frieden's successor as NCD exec-
Council on Disability (NCD), including Ju-
utive director, serving from July 1988 to
dith E. Heumann and Elizabeth Boggs-
September 1989-suggested that "unlike the
one of the founders in 1950, and later first
women's lobby, the disability lobby was not
woman president in 1958, of the National
strong enough to assert itself so that people
Association of Retarded Children.⁶ Mother
with disabilities would be included in the
of a child with a developmental disabil-
Civil Rights Act of 1964."¹¹ Acknowledging
ity, Boggs was "perhaps the nation's great-
the advantages of the ADA, some disabil-
est authority on programs that affect the
ity advocates still believe that inclusion of
mentally retarded, a woman of encyclo-
people with disabilities in the Civil Rights
pedic knowledge and enormous energy."
Act of 1964 would have underscored the
Boggs-a Ph.D. in theoretical chemistry and
requirement by the disability population for
mathematics, and a well-trained scientist-
the same civil rights protection as racial and
changed careers when she and her group
ethnic minorities as well as women.
organized classes for her son and other de-
Frieden describes the change of the NCD
velopmentally delayed children, in order to
from a governmental advisory body in 1978
enable them to register at public schools.⁸
to an independent federal agency under
When President Reagan replaced these
the 1984 Amendments to the Rehabilita-
appointees with Republican disability lead-
tion Act:
ers, he may not have realized that disability
issues often transcend liberal-conservative
Originally an advisory body under the
ideology. Recognizing the limitations of
Department of Education, the NCD was
Section 504, holding meetings with disabil-
housed in a small office in the basement
ity leaders in every state, the new coun-
of the Mary Switzer building.¹² Lacking
cil appointed by President Reagan-with
visibility, authority, and independence, the
South Carolina Commissioner of Rehabil-
council didn't have much congressional
support. During the 1983 review of the
itation, Joseph Dusenbury, as chair, and
Rehabilitation Act, it was probably Senator
Dart and Sandra Parrino as vice-chairs-
Weicker who recommended raising the status
published the "National Policy for Persons
of the NCD to make it independent of the
90 CHAPTER SIX
Department of Education. Once the council
Federal Disability Policy, written in the early
became independent, the president [Reagan]
1980s, Richard K. Scotch concludes that "the
picked the members, and the Department
effectiveness of the disability rights move-
of Education could no longer edit or censor
ment appears to have peaked in 1978. "20
NCD reports. 13
Dart refers to the 1988 version of the
Under the leadership of Parrino, Frieden,
ADA, proposed primarily to gain endorse-
and disability rights attorney Bob Burgdorf,
ments during an election year as "the reg-
NCD proposed an ADA14 that would re-
ulatory version" of the act.²¹ For example,
quire accessible public transportation and
the original version included a mandate to
removal of employment disincentives from
make all buildings accessible in two years,
social security. 15 Its February I, 1986, report,
"an unrealistic demand" according to Dart.
Toward Independence: An Assessment of Fed-
Hearne calls what he considered this in-
eral Laws and Programs Affecting Persons with
feasible mandate for precipitous universal
Disabilities-With Legislative Recommendations,
accessibility "the flat earth rule. The whole
suggested that "Congress should enact a
world had to be wheelchair accessible by be-
comprehensive law requiring equal oppor-
ing flat in two years," Hearne notes sarcasti-
tunity for individuals with disabilities, with
cally, "but this nonsense was wisely replaced
broad coverage and setting clear, consistent,
by the reasonable modification rules in the
and enforceable standards prohibiting dis-
ADA."22 While Frieden describes the 1988
crimination on the basis of handicap."¹
proposed legislation as having "a broader
Both Parrino and Frieden credit Alvis Kent
definition of disability and stricter provi-
Waldrep Jr., the only member of the Council
sions" than the enacted legislation, he views
who remained in the NCD during Parrino's
the 1988 bill somewhat differently from
entire tenure as chairperson, with naming
Hearne: "The thirteen-page 1988 version was
the ADA. 17
introductory, an outline for the more spe-
Toward Independence formed the basis of
cific fifty-two-page 1990 enacted bill. But if
an early version of the ADA introduced in
you ask me which one I prefer, I would have
1988 by Senator Lowell Weicker (R-Conn.)
to say that although the 1988 bill was the
and Representative Tony Coelho (D-Calif.).
stronger of the two, I'd choose the 1990 ADA
In the 1980s, many disability rights lead-
because it passed."²
ers believed that chances of passing com-
The 1990 enacted ADA, which Dart labels
prehensive disability legislation were slim.¹⁸
"the empowerment version," requires that
The best that was achievable, these leaders
people with disabilities and their advocates
presumed, were laws providing "services and
file complaints and lawsuits, when appro-
partial rights in incremental steps." Con-
priate, as a means of monitoring compli-
cerned about enforcement of Section 504, as
ance.²⁴ Unlike Dart, Hearne considers the
well as continued funding for disability ser-
enacted legislation as both regulatory and
vices, disability rights advocates feared back-
empowering:
lash resulting from further disability civil
rights legislation.¹⁵ Dart characterizes the
This law is very regulatory. It regulates states,
mindset of a large segment of the disability
municipalities, agencies, behavior, and they
community at that time: "We can't even en-
all have to comply with the Access Board. But
the law also empowers people with disabilities
force 504. Why waste our time talking about
to recognize that they have a role in society.
more? The day of civil rights is gone; there
And there are two other major differences
will never be another civil rights law passed."
between the proposed and the enacted ADA.
In From Good Will to Civil Rights: Transforming
The first one defined disability by giving a
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT 9I
laundry list of disabilities, an inefficient and
sion of people with learning disabilities and
anachronistic way of doing it. Ultimately the
AIDS in the ADA. Persuasion by individu-
ADA went back to what I supported, the well-
als like Dale Brown, founding member of
crafted Section 504 definition of disability.
Also, the legislation includes some essentials
the National Network of Learning Disabled
the original version didn't-the right to sue,
Adults, was required to include people with
attorney's fees for successful plaintiffs, and
learning disabilities on the task force.²⁸ Be-
the right to collect punitive damages.25
cause the assumption has prevailed that
people grow out of learning disabilities,
The disability community was aware of
this impairment in adults frequently has
and fought for the ADA unlike its initial
been unrecognized or treated with skepti-
response to the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
cism by schools, vocational rehabilitation,
which includes Section 504. As Edward D.
and even-Brown suggests-the task force it-
Berkowitz in Disabled Policy: America's Pro-
self. Furthermore, as Fred Fay recalls, "There
grams for the Handicapped notes, "In 1974,
were objections to having members with
for example, when President Ford met with
AIDS-we should not have representatives
a group of handicapped individuals, they
of people with AIDS; people with AIDS will
talked about the need for a barrier-free soci-
die,' [some disability advocates insisted].
ety, the desirability of a spokesman for the
Dart bristled. 'Of course they will die; so will
handicapped in the White House, and the
you and I. We are not into perpetuating pa-
importance of making Washington's Metro
ternalism,' [Dart responded]. He appointed
accessible to the handicapped. No one men-
two people with AIDS."29
tioned Section 504 of the Rehabilitation
Some legislators unsuccessfully attempt-
Act of 1973 Not until the 504 regulations
ed to include language in the ADA that
were at risk was the disability community
would have prevented people who have or
galvanized into action. By the time a small
are "regarded as" having AIDS, or individ-
group of disability advocates launched ef-
uals who are HIV-positive, from working in
forts leading to the ADA, the conscious-
jobs involving food handling. Rather than
ness of people with disabilities had been
accepting this addition to the law, the dis-
raised nationwide.
ability community assented to the inclu-
Established in 1988 by Brooklyn Con-
sion of language in the ADA requiring the
gressman Major Owens (D-N.Y.), the Task
publication of a list of infectious diseases
Force on the Rights and Empowerment of
transmittable through food handling. If
Americans with Disabilities was created to
reasonable accommodation cannot reduce
make recommendations to Congress on the
or eliminate the risk of transmission, the
ADA. In his role as co-chair of the task
law allows the employer to refuse to assign
force, Justin Dart brought together a dis-
food handling duties to the infected indi-
tinguished panel to gather information, de-
vidual. Many disability advocates perceived
velop ideas, and unite disparate elements
the failed attempt as an effort to discrimi-
of the disability community behind the
nate against people who are HIV-positive or
ADA. Present were representatives of of-
have AIDS.
ten overlooked disability groups, such as
Justin Dart reveals how the community
people with psychiatric and developmen-
had organized and coalesced across disabil-
tal disabilities.²⁷
ities in its support of the ADA:
To the surprise of many disability advo-
cates, some members of the disability com-
During the mid-months of 1989, virtually
munity expressed doubt about the inclu-
every disability rights organization and leader
92 CHAPTER SIX
in the country-more than eight thousand
have this experience. When people doubted
five hundred of them-signed and paid for
Hatch's vote on the ADA, I predicted correctly
a full page ad in the Washington Post urging
that he would vote for it.³¹
Congress to pass the ADA and to reject
"weakening amendments that would legalize
intolerable discrimination." For strategic
Dart characterizes the ADA victory in
reasons the ad was held for publication
Congress: "A ragtag hodgepodge of advo-
until February 7, 1990. It was hand-delivered
cates with disabilities, families, and service
to every office in Congress and to the
providers, who had never completely agreed
President and was distributed throughout
on anything before, joined together with a
the nation.
few farsighted members of the older civil
During the same period, the Epilepsy
rights movement, business, the Congress,
Foundation printed and all of us [the
and the Administration to defeat the rich-
disability community] distributed more
than one million New Year's postcards for
est, most powerful lobbies in the nation.
Congress: "Don't weaken a law that will
The fact that President Bush, who signed
strengthen America." Congress received
the ADA into law, as well as the legisla-
hundreds of thousands of messages-cards,
tors leading the effort for congressional
letters, calls, "No weakening amendments!"
approval of the ADA were either them-
This became the battle cry and the required
selves disabled or closely related to peo-
symbol of membership in our movement.
Communication to the President and the
ple with disabilities supports Representa-
members of Congress was clear: "a vote for
tive Coelho's observation: "The disability
one weakening amendment is a vote against
movement boasts 'a hidden army.' Since a
forty three million people with disabilities."
sixth of the nation's population has some
form of disability, 'disability impacts prac-
Guided through Congress by Senator
tically every family."33
Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) and Representative
Besides having spent his formative years
Steny H. Hoyer (D-Md.), the ADA over-
with an uncle, his mother's brother John,
whelmingly passed the Senate by 76 to 8
who used a wheelchair as a result of polio,³⁴
and the House by 377 to 28. Hearne recounts
President Bush had three children with
an experience that may have heightened the
disabilities. His daughter died of leukemia
awareness of two elected officials:
when she was three years old; one of his
In 1987 as a way of explaining the
sons had a colostomy after part of his colon
constitutionality of the Individuals with
was removed in 1986, while another son
Disabilities Education Act, I spoke as a lawyer
is dyslexic.³⁵ Parrino recalls Representative
for a child with a disability on one of the
Coelho's comment: "George Bush does not
discussion shows Fred Friendly ran on PBS,
get enough credit for the ADA. If he hadn't
"The Constitution: A Delicate Balance." A
wanted it, we wouldn't have had it. He made
gala honoring the participants on the show
was held up a huge flight of stairs at the
it very clear that he wanted that bill on
Philadelphia Hall of Man and Science. Soon
his desk at some point in time, and he
after I arrived, two tall men appeared. One
wanted to sign it."³⁶ Like President Bush,
took the front of my motorized scooter and
Representative Coelho (who has epilepsy),
the other the back, and they carried me up
Senators Weicker (R-Conn.) and Harkin,
the steps. One of them was Arizona Governor
and Representative Hoyer (who have family
Bruce Babbitt; the other, Utah Senator Orrin
Hatch, who had turned blue by this time,
members with disabilities), are examples of
said, "Now I know what you disability people
political figures with intimate knowledge of
are talking about." At that point it occurred
disability who played an active role in the
to me that maybe every elected official should
passage of the ADA.
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT 93
Despite the overwhelmingly enthusiastic
limits a major life activity, such as walking,
support for the ADA from all segments of
seeing, hearing, learning, breathing, caring
the disability population, the National Fed-
for oneself, or working."³ It protects "those
eration of the Blind-an organization that
who have a disability, those who have a
contends that blindness is an inconvenience
record of such an impairment," and those
rather than a disability-asserts that a per-
who are "regarded as having such an im-
son with a disability has the right to refuse
pairment."40 The law protects a blind or
an ADA accommodation. A complaint ex-
deaf person, or a person with a spinal cord
pressed by blind-from-birth NFB member
injury, but the ADA also applies to a person
Arthur Wohl, who was experienced at walk-
who has recovered from cancer or mental
ing without assistance using a white cane,
illness since such people have a record of
explains NFB's position. Wohl frequently
having a disability. Because a qualified in-
felt provoked by airline policy: "Often as I
dividual with a severe facial disfigurement
was getting off the plane, the flight atten-
is regarded as having a disability, the ADA
dant would first tell me to wait for all the
protects such a person from being denied
other passengers to leave the plane, and then
employment because an employer fears the
say get into a wheelchair. I was annoyed that
negative reactions of customers or cowork-
I had to wait, but I absolutely refused to get
ers. As in Section 504, the definition of in-
into a wheelchair. I said, 'I'm blind, but I can
dividuals with disabilities in the ADA in-
walk as fast and as well as anyone else.'
cludes people with psychiatric disabilities,
Justin Dart tells a similar story: "After
alcoholics, and recovered drug addicts.41 Yet
landing in England, I was informed that as a
the ADA specifically excludes current drug
wheelchair user, I had a right to ambulance
addicts because drug addiction is illegal.⁴
service. When I declined, I was told you can
In Disability Watch: The Status of People with
use the service or you can stay on the plane
Disabilities in the United States, H. Stephen
and go back to America. "38 Dart points out
Kaye notes: "Although people often asso-
that this attitude is antithetical to the spirit
ciate disability with its more visible man-
of the ADA, for the purpose of the law is
ifestations-such as wheelchairs, the canes
to serve people with disabilities, not limit
used by blind people, and sign language-
their choices.
the vast majority of people with disabilities
do not require them."43 As indicated by data
provided by the 1992 National Health In-
The ADA and Section 504
terview Survey, the most frequent causes of
disability in order of prevalence were back
Although many individual states had stat-
problems, heart disease, arthritis, asthma,
utes protecting people with disabilities
leg or foot problems, psychiatric disorders,
from discrimination, the character and de-
learning or developmental disabilities, di-
gree of these laws varied from state to state.
abetes, cancer, and cerebral vascular dis-
Incorporating policies and language from
ease.44 By 1997, psychiatric disability claims
the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the 1977 reg-
increased so significantly that they com-
ulations of Section 504, as well as previous
prised the greatest number of disability dis-
laws pertaining to equality for the disability
crimination complaints.⁴ As these statistics
population, the ADA federalized the legal
reveal, "invisible" disabilities account for
rights of people with disabilities.
the overwhelming percentage of the fifty-
The ADA defines disability as "a physi-
four million whose conditions are included
cal or mental impairment that substantially
in the ADA definition of disability. On the
94 CHAPTER SIX
other hand, the conditions usually thought
Title I of the ADA, enforced by the
of as disabling-mobility, visual, and hear-
Equal Employment Opportunity Commis-
ing impairments-are less prevalent than is
sion, bars employers from discriminating
commonly assumed.
against a qualified individual with a dis-
Section 504 was used primarily to address
ability because of the "disability of such
what disability advocates have referred to as
individual in regard to job application pro-
the comparatively "easy" issues-for exam-
cedures, the hiring, advancement, or dis-
ple, architectural and transportation acces-
charge of employees, employee compensa-
sibility. The major argument put forth by
tion, job training, and other terms, con-
disability advocates for the 1990 ADA was to
ditions, and privileges of employment."5
increase employment of people with disabil-
Just as the ADA definition of an individual
ities. Since employment discrimination-
with a disability is identical to the Section
often difficult to prove-is relevant to peo-
504 term, "handicapped person," the ADA
ple with all types of disabilities, visible and
meaning of a qualified individual with a
invisible, individuals with a greater variety
disability is similar to the Section 504 des-
of disabilities filed complaints and lawsuits
ignation, "qualified handicapped person."
under the ADA than those filing under Sec-
In order to prevent employment discrimi-
tion 504. In some cases, the ADA has re-
nation against qualified persons with dis-
sulted in thornier legal questions than Sec-
abilities, employers are barred from asking
tion 504. Whether or not a building is physi-
perspective job applicants if they have a
cally accessible is generally readily apparent;
disability. Title I went into effect on July 26,
however, whether a job applicant is rejected
1992, for employers with twenty-five or more
because of lack of qualifications or because
employees; since July 26, 1994, however, Title
of disability bias frequently is not so clear.
I requires employers with fifteen or more
Unlike other civil rights legislation, laws
employees to comply.
ensuring federal civil rights for people with
"Reasonable accommodation" for a qual-
disabilities occurred in two stages: first, Sec-
ified employee with a disability is mandated
tion 504 applying to entities receiving fed-
unless that provision causes the employer
eral financial assistance; second, the 1990
"undue hardship," which refers to signifi-
ADA dealing with both the public and the
cant difficulty or expense.51 "Reasonable ac-
private sector. Inasmuch as 80 percent of
commodation" may include, but is not lim-
American jobs was in the private-rather
ited to, the following: making existing fa-
than the public-sector, the ADA was re-
cilities used by employees readily accessible
quired as a supplement to Section 504 in
to and usable by persons with disabilities;
order to increase occupational opportuni-
restructuring jobs, modifying work sched-
ties for the 75 percent of unemployed peo-
ules, or reassigning employees to vacant po-
ple with disabilities who can and want to
sitions; acquiring or altering equipment or
work.47 "In signing the ADA, President Bush
devices; adjusting or revising examinations,
estimated that federal, state, and local gov-
training materials, or policies; and provid-
ernments spent almost $200 billion to sup-
ing qualified readers or interpreters.
port people with disabilities."⁴⁸ A 1990 to
While a qualified individual presently us-
1993 study determined that "the ADA has
ing alcohol may be covered by the ADA, a
played a significant role in enhancing labor
current illegal user of drugs who can per-
force participation of persons with disabili-
form the essential functions of the job is not
ties and in reducing dependence on govern-
protected by the law because alcohol use is
ment entitlement programs."49
legal while illegal drug use is criminal. Yet
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT 95
the ADA covers a person "erroneously re-
The defendant neither offered evidence of
garded" as using drugs or an individual who
the essential functions of the job at issue
has "successfully completed" or is "partici-
nor indicated which of these functions Ben-
pating in a supervised rehabilitation pro-
son could not perform with a "reasonable
gram" and is no longer engaging in the
accommodation." In addition, Northwest
use of drugs. Nonetheless, the ADA pro-
failed to show that either restructuring or
vides employers with the authority to hold
transfer would cause the airline "undue
all employees, regardless of disability, who
hardship."
abuse legal drugs or alcohol to the same job
EPVA attorney James Weisman points out
performance criteria as other employees.⁵²
that many ADA cases are avoided because
the opposing parties settle their differences
out of court. At a 1998 conference of so-
Title I: Employment
cial work professionals,⁵¹ he described his
role in settling an employment discrimina-
Two 1995 cases demonstrate how appellate
tion dispute:
courts have interpreted three terms fun-
A woman called me to ask for my help because
damental to Title I of the ADA, the "es-
she claimed that she was just fired because
sential function of a job," "reasonable ac-
she recently had a mastectomy. When I called
commodations," and "undue hardship." In
the chic Fifth Avenue department store [in
Riley v. Weyerhaeuser Paper Company,5 the
New York City] where she worked, I said to
court determined that the employers did
the manager, "I have a woman here who says
not discriminate on the basis of disabil-
you let her go because she had a mastectomy."
He could have given a legitimate reason for
ity because the company could not pro-
firing her. But no, he said, "it wasn't the
vide an alternate position for the employee
mastectomy; it was the cancer. It depressed
who was unable to perform the essen-
the other workers, so I thought it was best to
tial function of the job. Defendant Weyer-
get rid of her." Of course, when I informed
haeuser Paper Company successfully argued
the department store that this was an ADA
that plaintiff Riley could no longer be em-
violation, she was immediately reinstated.
ployed in the firm. Since all the jobs in the
If there were no ADA, would this woman
plant involved working around machinery
have felt that she had the right to demand
and Riley's disability-multiple sclerosis-
her job back? If there were no ADA, would
prevented him from performing any of
the department store have given her the
them, there was no position in the firm
job back?
appropriate for him. Thus, Weyerhaeuser
Paper Company was unable to provide "a
reasonable accommodation" for Riley.
Title III: Public Accommodation
In Benson v. Northwest Airlines, 54 the Eighth
Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the dis-
Like Title I covering employment, Title III
trict court's decision that the plaintiff, di-
of the ADA concerning public accommo-
agnosed with a repetitive motion injury,
dation derives from the Civil Rights Act
failed to establish his ability to perform the
of 1964. Effective since January 26, 1992,
essential function of his job. The appeals
the public accommodation provisions, reg-
court offered these reasons for its determi-
ulated by the Department of Justice, bar
nation that under Title I of the ADA, the
discrimination based on disability in any
district court should have shifted the bur-
public business or service operated by pri-
den of proof from Benson to Northwest.
vate entities.⁵ Moreover, goods, services,
96 CHAPTER SIX
and accommodations must be offered in
that the parties involved had reached a set-
the "most integrated setting appropriate
tlement whereby the observation tower of
to the needs of the individual. »57 Places
the Empire State Building would become
of "public accommodation" includes stores
available to people with disabilities, includ-
and shopping centers, restaurants, offices,
ing wheelchair users, by June 6, 1994. The
banks, theaters, museums, stadiums, and
concept of "readily achievable" when ap-
hotels and motels, as well as any site open
plied to the observation tower of the Empire
to the public operated privately such as
State Building-which in I994 attracted 2.5
schools, day care or senior citizen centers,
million visitors a year, each paying a $3.50
and recreational establishments.⁵
entrance fee-has a very different meaning
Title III requires that new, or newly al-
when applied to, say, a small neighborhood
tered, facilities constructed after January
grocery store.
26, 1993, be wheelchair accessible. Build-
The modifications by architect Peter Han-
ings less than three stories or less than
rahan-including the ramp leading from the
three thousand square feet per story do
eighty-sixth floor to the observation tower
not require elevators, except for shopping
surrounding the edifice-were designed in
centers and offices of professional health
Art Deco style, the same style as the Em-
care providers.⁶ In addition, the law man-
pire State Building. Furthermore, the rail-
dates that if "readily achievable," architec-
ings of the outside deck were gracefully
tural and communications barriers must be
constructed, allowing wheelchair users an
removed in existing structures. The term
unobstructed view from four different loca-
"readily achievable" is defined in the statute
tions: north, south, east, and west. Playfully
as "easily accomplishable and able to be
spoofing the access to the observation tower
carried out without much difficulty or ex-
of the Empire State Building, the satirical
pense. Factors to be considered include
television show Saturday Night Live presented
the nature and the cost of the structural
a cartoon of an absurd mile-long ramp ex-
modification, as well as the size, financial
tending from the eighty-sixth floor to Cen-
resources, and type of business. If removal
tral Park. Seven years after the lawsuit was
of the barrier is not "readily achievable,"
filed, artist Janet Koenig's poster celebrating
the ADA decrees that goods or services
Disabled In Action v. Empire State Building was
must be made available through alterna-
chosen by the Fordham Urban Law Journal
tive methods if such methods are "read-
as representing the collaboration of com-
ily achievable."
munity activism and law "to move the most
On January 27, 1992, the day following
rooted of institutions and structures. "63
the effective date of Title III, Disabled In
A similar Title III complaint filed by DIA
Action of Metropolitan New York and Bar-
at the same time as the Empire State Build-
rier Free Living, an agency providing tran-
ing case involved the Inter-Continental Ho-
sitional housing for people with disabili-
tel, the New York City headquarters for the
ties, demonstrated for accessibility to the
Clinton entourage during the 1992 Demo-
observation tower on the eighty-sixth floor
cratic Convention. Managers of the Clin-
of the Empire State Building. The protest
ton campaign were troubled when they
at a national symbol, one of the first Title
learned that an ADA complaint had been
III legal actions, called nationwide attention
initiated against the inaccessible hotel. Ex-
to DIA's Title III complaint against the Em-
peditiously, the hotel erected a temporary
pire State Building Company. By March 3,
ramp at the entrance during the weekend
1994, the Department of Justice announced
so that the parties could meet at the hotel
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT 97
a few days later to reach an agreement. A
heavyweights, the Justice Department and
year later, after all the modifications were
Days Inn":
completed, the hotel held a press confer-
"The Hauks constructed their hotel in
ence, together with the U.S. Justice Depart-
accordance with Days Inn standards," [the
ment, in order to exhibit the excellence of
attorney] continued, "had their building
its ADA compliance.
plans reviewed and approved by Days Inn
Despite the apparent success of the Title
prior to construction, and obtained Days
III complaint filed against the United Artists
Inn approval before opening." [The attorney]
Theatre Circuit by the Disability Rights Ed-
reported that Mr. Hauk said: "We believe in
ucation and Defense Fund, the organiza-
making buildings accessible to the disabled
and we thought that we had done just that.
tion's goal-accessible movie theaters-has
Our expectation was that Days Inn, when it
not yet been fully realized. United Artists
set forth standards for the building we could
agreed to make more than four hundred
construct and approved of our building, was
of its movie theaters across the country
watching out for whether our hotel was in
accessible by the year 2001. 64 Although all
compliance with Federal laws."
the theaters built before January 26, 1993,
"The Hauks were trying to work out
were required to be barrier-free, newly con-
modifications with the Justice Department
that may cost well into six figures," the
structed theaters built after that date were
lawyer said.
to be held to a higher standard of accessi-
Mr. Hauk said, again through his lawyer:
bility. The May 1996 resolution sent what
"We feel betrayed and abandoned by both
seemed at the time to be an unambiguous
Days Inn, which so far has washed its hands
message to all large movie chains regard-
of the matter, and the Justice Department,
ing Title III compliance.65 After the reso-
which seems to be using us to prove a point."
lution, however, a wheelchair inaccessible
The proprietors of twenty-three of the
movie theater design, known as "stadium
twenty-eight newly-built Days Inns agreed
seating," began to be used increasingly in
to negotiate with the Justice Department.
theater architecture. Consequently, peo-
The defendants were the owners of the five
ple with mobility impairments are still fre-
remaining Days Inns, the individual archi-
quently unable to get appropriate seating at
tects and general contractors of the hotels,
the movies.
as well as Days Inn of America, Inc., and
The February 1996 suit by the Justice
its parent company, HFS, Inc. Days Inn
Department against Days Inn, the biggest
of America and HFS argued that although
economy hotel chain in the country with
they fully support the ADA, they only fran-
seventeen thousand hotels in forty-nine
chise hotels, so they bear no responsibility
states, reveals the potential scope of the
in this controversy. Yet, John Wodatch of the
ADA. Twenty-eight hotels in seventeen
Justice Department contended that the fail-
states that were built since January 26,
ure of HFS to design and construct places
1993, were sued under Title III of the ADA
that accommodate everyone was an act of
for failing to comply with the public ac-
discrimination.
commodation law.⁶ The cases also illus-
Wodatch pointed out that owners and
trate, however, the vulnerability of small
architects must be alerted to follow the
business people. The attorney for Richard
law in the planning and building of new
and Karla Hauk, the owners of one of the
structures. In fact, he observed that the Days
charged motels, characterized the litigation
Inn cases-stemming from the complaints
as one in which individual entrepreneurs
of several dozen travelers-concern the least
are caught in the struggle "between two
burdensome type of compliance:
98 CHAPTER SIX
"New construction is the easiest part," he
Department of Transportation.70 The first
said. "We [the Justice Department] want
involves carriers in the business of trans-
them [owners and architects] to take a
porting people, such as private bus lines,
look when they build and then they won't
taxicabs, and limousines. With regard to
have to worry." A bathroom doorway to
accommodate a wheelchair, for example,
newly-purchased buses on fixed route sys-
would need a clear width of 32 inches. This
tems, all intracity buses are required to be
is a no-cost item in the design stage, he said,
accessible, while intercity buses must be ac-
but widening a doorway in a cinder-block
cessible beginning October 2000.7¹ Taxicabs
construction is another matter.
using sedan-type automobiles do not have
to be accessible, while taxicabs using vans
Building according to the ADA specifica-
must be accessible.
tions is uncomplicated and cost effective;
The second type of private transportation
problems arise when new structures not
covered by Title III deals with services inci-
in compliance with the ADA have to be
dental to the primary purpose of the busi-
retrofitted. By late 1999, Days Inn of Amer-
ness, such as hotel vans transporting people
ica and its new parent company, Cedant
to and from airports. Depending on the
Corporation, settled their lawsuit with the
seating capacity of the vehicle, the second
Justice Department by providing interest-
type requires either wheelchair accessibility
free loans to newly-built franchises of the
or "equivalent service."72 "Equivalent ser-
hotel chain for renovations necessary for
vice" in this context means that although
ADA compliance. 68 Wodatch noted that the
all hotel vans do not have to be accessible, a
settlement reveals "an industry-wide prob-
sufficient number of vehicles must be avail-
lem" and that "we [the Justice Department]
able to serve wheelchair users.
intend to follow up with other hotels and
hotel chains in the United States to ensure
that this problem doesn't exist."
Title II: Public Services
In addition to a movie theater chain and
(State and Local Government)
a hotel chain, the Justice Department dealt
with an ADA issue involving a restaurant
Title II of the ADA, dealing with public
chain, Friendly's family restaurants. In the
service⁷³ and public transportation, is based
May 19, 1997, settlement with the Justice
on Section 504. Like Title III, two different
Department, under Title III, the Friendly
agencies implement and enforce Title II:
Ice Cream Corporation agreed to a six-year
the Justice Department covers public ser-
program that would increase the accessi-
vice, and the Department of Transporta-
bility of 704 of its restaurants in fifteen
tion monitors public transportation. Effec-
states. The accommodations that will be
tive January 26, 1992, no qualified individual
provided include redesigned dining areas
with a disability may be excluded because.
to suit wheelchair users, accessible park-
of that disability from "participation in or
ing areas and curb cuts, modified exist-
denied the benefits of the services, programs
ing restrooms or newly-constructed acces-
or activities of a public entity."74
sible restrooms, and provision of menu
Moreover, Title II requires "program ac-
readers or audio versions of the menu for
cessibility," meaning that all public pro-
blind customers.
grams and services, when viewed as a whole,
Although Title II covers public transporta-
must be accessible to and usable by indi-
tion, Title III regulates two types of pri-
viduals with disabilities, "in the most in-
vate transportation, both overseen by the
tegrated setting possible." For example, if
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT 99
the setting is not accessible to a wheelchair
1992, EPVA filed suit against the New York
user, the government is required to move
City Department of Transportation in 1994.
the site or offer an alternative that allows
EPVA observed that with neither a plan nor
the wheelchair user to participate "in the
preparation for curb cuts in place, New York
most integrated setting possible." Struc-
City clearly would be unable to meet the
tural changes required for "program acces-
ADA effective date, January 26, 1995. Since
sibility" must be made as quickly and effi-
curb cuts are relevant to any locality with
ciently as possible, but no later than January
sidewalks, most of the nation is impacted by
26, 1995. A public entity employing fifty or
decisions in these cases. Despite complaints
more people must have devised a transition
by many localities that implementing the
plan by July 26, 1992, indicating the steps
law requiring curb cuts is an undue finan-
needed to implement changes.
cial burden, the Justice Department did not
An example of such structural changes,
extend the ADA compliance date.⁷⁷
curb cuts-sloped areas at street intersec-
Disability advocates argued that if lo-
tions⁷⁵-are required by people using wheel-
calities had acted in accordance with the
chairs and scooters. Because the Pennsyl-
1977 regulations of Section 504 (which later
vania Department of Transportation and
became the flexible federal ADA mandate),
the Philadelphia Streets Department were
most curb cuts would already be completed.
constructing and altering streets without
In 1995, when many members of Congress
building curb cuts at intersections, Dis-
were criticizing unfunded federal mandates,
abled In Action of Pennsylvania (together
the ADA was inappropriately targeted as a
with twelve individual plaintiffs) and East-
law to be suspended or limited to volun-
ern Paralyzed Veterans Association filed a
tarily compliance in a manner that takes
Title II class action lawsuit in July 1992. The
into account the needs of state and local
decision in this suit mandated that not only
governments. First, as civil rights legisla-
the defendants, but also ultimately all local-
tion, the ADA was mischaracterized as an
ities nationwide, were compelled to provide
unfunded federal mandate. Second, laws
curb cuts whenever streets were repaired or
are ineffective when compliance is not re-
newly constructed. Compliance with this
quired. The fact that this mischaracteriza-
ruling has been required since Title II went
tion of the ADA as an unfunded federal
into effect on January 26, 1995.
mandate lingers suggests that many policy-
Soon after, the plaintiffs sued the defen-
makers and social critics do not recognize
dants again, this time for the installation of
that people with disabilities are covered by
curb cuts on every street intersection in Phil-
civil rights legislation.78
adelphia, not just on those altered or newly
In another Title II case, a deaf attorney,
built. The settlement, favoring the plaintiff,
Michael Chatoff, sued the New York City
necessitated curb cuts on every corner in the
Police Department under the Public Ser-
downtown business district of Philadelphia
vices section of the ADA, on behalf of more
by December 31, 1996, and in the rest of the
than two hundred thousand deaf and hard-
city by December 3I, 200I. Since Title II had
of-hearing residents of New York City, for
required these curb cuts by January 26, 1995,
failing to make the 9II emergency system
this agreement represented a compromise.
directly accessible to teletypewriter users.
Noting that New York City had not pre-
On January 27, 1992, the effective date of
pared the required schedule for construct-
Title II, Chatoff filed the lawsuit in U.S.
ing curb cuts at all sidewalk corners man-
District Court (S.D.), arguing that the issue
dated by Title II of the ADA by July 26,
was "a matter of life and death. "79 Because
100 CHAPTER SIX
of this lawsuit, the New York City Police
ing, jury boxes, restrooms, and parking fa-
Department's Communication Division 9II
cilities, as well as assistive listening devices,
Emergency Call Center became fully accessi-
teletypewriters, and signage. Consequently,
ble by December I, 1992, to persons utilizing
LaCheen continued, people with disabilities
teletypewriters. As a means of implement-
are prevented from fully participating in the
ing this accessibility, members of the cen-
legal system in New York City as litigants,
ter participated in a training program that
lawyers, witnesses, jurors, court personnel,
included teletypewriter operation, disability
and spectators. Although the case was still
awareness sessions, and protocol in Ameri-
pending in 2000, courts that failed to make
can Sign Language for communicating with
modifications necessary to accommodate
people who are deaf, hard of hearing, or
people with disabilities by January 26, 1995,
speech impaired.
were in violation of Title II of the ADA.
A 1996 class action Title II lawsuit on be-
Decided on January 31, 1995, by the U.S.
half of the New York City Civic Association
Court of Appeals, Third Circuit, Helen L.
of the Deaf involved a similar issue: elimina-
v. Didario was a Title II lawsuit that may
tion of many New York City lever-activated
have far-reaching consequences for peo-
fireboxes and conversion of the remaining
ple with disabilities who are institutional-
fireboxes to intercoms. The court decided
ized in nursing homes although they wish
that the two-way voice system did not pro-
to remain in their own communities and
vide deaf people, who cannot use ordinary
in their own homes. 81 The appeals court
telephones or intercoms, with equal access
reversed the ruling of the U.S. District
to a vital public service. A solution offered
Court for the Eastern District of Pennsyl-
by the New York City administration, utiliz-
vania that Didario (the nursing home ad-
ing tapping codes so that deaf people could
ministrator) was in compliance with the
indicate different types of emergencies, left
ADA because he was not discriminating
many questions unanswered. For example,
against Helen L. Rather than accepting Di-
will the city provide a training program for
dario's argument that shifting attendant
the deaf population as well as the dispatch-
care services from the nursing home to the
ers handling these problems? The newspa-
home of Helen L. involved "fundamental
per accounts dealt only with the issue of
alterations," the appeals court determined
bias against poor communities where fire-
that the modifications constituted "reason-
boxes are often essential because telephones
able accommodations."
are not readily available.⁸ Discrimination
Because the ADA decrees that home at-
against deaf people was not mentioned.
tendant services be provided in the "most
On December 8, 1995, the Disability Law
integrated setting appropriate," the appeals
Center of New York Lawyers for the Public
court supported the plaintiff's claim that
Interest initiated Title II complaints against
the services she received in the nursing
fifteen courthouses in New York City be-
home could be given in a setting she pre-
cause they were not accessible to people with
ferred, her own home.⁸² The appeals court
all types of impairments. Filing on behalf
considered the nursing home a "segregated"
of Disabled In Action of Metropolitan New
environment, not consistent with the ADA
York, Cary LaCheen, senior staff attorney at
mandate requiring "the least restrictive en-
the Disability Law Center, argued that these
vironment," because in the institution He-
courts lack important features for people
len L. had "no contacts with nondisabled
with disabilities, such as accessible front en-
persons other than the staff of the nursing
trances, elevators, courtrooms, public seat-
home and visits from her two children."
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT IOI
Without demanding proof of "intentional
stations, except for commuter rail stations,
or overt discrimination," the appeals court
were required to be barrier-free was July 26,
determined that "unnecessary segregation
1993. If renovations involve extraordinarily
of individuals with disabilities in provision
expensive structural changes, however, this
of public services is itself a form of discrimi-
date may be extended to July 26, 2020,
nation" according to both the ADA and the
provided at least two-thirds of the key
Rehabilitation Act. The Supreme Court's
stations are accessible by July 26, 2010.
denial of certiorari in 1995 in the Helen L.
case sustains the Third Circuit court's deci-
sion. 83 Furthermore, as indicated by the 1995
Title IV: National Telephone
statistics, the average annual cost of caring
Relay Service
for a person in a nursing home is $45,000,
while the average annual cost of caring for
Unlike Titles I and III based on the Civil
a person in the attendant care program in
Rights Act of 1964, and Title II modeled
his or her own home is $10,500.84
after Section 504, Title IV mandating na-
tionwide, daily, twenty-four-hour intrastate
and interstate relay services originated with
Title II: Public Transportation
the ADA. 86 To ensure equal access to tele-
phone services, Title IV enables people with
Title II also mandates that people with dis-
hearing and speech impairments who use
abilities, including wheelchair users, have
teletypewriters to communicate with peo-
access to public transportation, which refers
ple who use voice phones. Relay operators
to transportation within and between cities,
cannot change the content of conversations,
such as bus and train systems, provided
limit the length of calls, maintain records,
by state or local governments. All newly-
or disclose to others the contents of relayed
constructed public transportation facilities
conversations. Rates for relay users cannot
and portions of existing facilities being al-
exceed rates charged for voice calls of equiv-
tered, such as train stations or bus depots,
alent duration, time of day, and distance
must be barrier-free. Fixed-route systems,
called. Title IV also requires television sta-
meaning commuter rail systems,8 subways,
tions to include close-captioning of public
trolleys, and buses, must ensure that peo-
service announcements that are federally
ple with disabilities, including wheelchair
funded, in whole or in part. The Federal
users, can access and use the vehicles. All rail
Communications Commission serves as the
systems must have at least one accessible car
implementing and enforcement agency.
per train. Furthermore, public entities that
operate fixed-route systems must provide
paratransit service, which is comparable in
Title V: Miscellaneous
service level and response time to service
typically available to fixed-route customers,
Title V consists of some key clarifications,
unless so doing would impose an undue
exclusions, and add-ons to the ADA.⁸⁷ First,
financial hardship.
the ADA cannot be employed as a means
Effective dates for required accessibility
of decreasing the standards established by
of rail stations were extended because they
Title V of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
are more difficult and expensive to modify
which consists of Sections 501 through 504
than vehicles such as trains, trolleys, and
and additions to Title V. Second, states are
buses. The effective date that all "key" rail
subject to the ADA, but the ADA does not
IO2 CHAPTER SIX
nullify state or local laws that provide pro-
write an opinion with major implications
tections equal to or greater than those of the
not only for the law on the disease itself but
ADA. Third, the winning party in an ADA
also for disability rights law in general."⁹¹
action, other than the U.S. government, may
On April 7, 1998, "Gay Men's Health Crisis
be awarded reasonable attorneys' fees, in-
in Brief," a weekly newsletter, noted that
cluding litigation expenses and costs. Other
"no matter what legal niceties are displayed
significant provisions involve the following:
to convince the highest court in the land
explanations of the definition of disability
on this matter, we who deal with the HIV-
according to the ADA; protection of people
positive virus every day on legal matters rec-
who have filed claims or participated in in-
ognize the following painful reality. An HIV-
vestigations, proceedings, or hearings under
diagnosis casts a long shadow of discrim-
the ADA; and the role of agencies in offering
ination over the person who lives with it
technical assistance to entities covered by
whether or not that person is symptomatic."
the ADA.
This lawsuit was especially compelling for
two reasons: "After seventeen years, the [U.S.
Supreme] Court [had] its first case involving
The Supreme Court and the ADA
AIDS,"92 and lower courts had been split
on the applicability of the ADA to invisible
On March 30, 1998, the U.S. Supreme Court
disabilities such as HIV.
heard oral arguments on its first ADA case,
On June 25, 1998, in a five to four ruling,
Bragdon v. Abbott, a lawsuit to determine
the Supreme Court held that the woman's
whether or not the ADA definition of dis-
decision not to have children because of
ability includes asymptomatic HIV.⁸ The
her HIV-positive status brought her within
case involved the appeal of a Maine den-
the ADA's definition of disability: an im-
tist who was found to have discriminated
pairment that substantially limits one or
against a woman-infected with the HIV
more major life activities.⁹ The New York
virus-by refusing to treat her in his of-
Times reported, "Millions of Americans
fice.⁸ Interestingly enough, her case was
with conditions like diabetes, epilepsy, and
supported by both the American Medical
even infertility and alcohol addiction ap-
Association and the American Dental Asso-
pear to have won important new protec-
ciation.⁹⁰ Before the case reached the U.S.
tion against discrimination as a result of
Supreme Court, the U.S. Court of Appeals
[this] Supreme Court ruling,
advocates
for the First Circuit accepted the argument
say.⁹⁴ Subsequent ADA decisions by the
that the woman's HIV status substantially
Supreme Court, however, countered this
limited a major life activity, reproduction,
impression.⁹⁵
and thus she was covered by the ADA. Con-
As with the Bragdon case, lower courts
sequently, the appeals court did not accept
were divided on the basic issue underlying
the weaker argument that because of her
the second ADA lawsuit considered by the
HIV status, she was regarded as having a
Supreme Court, Pennsylvania Department of
disability and therefore covered by the ADA.
Corrections v. Yeskey: Does the ADA cover
A week before the Supreme Court heard
state prisons?⁹⁶ When Ronald Yeskey, be-
the arguments in the case, the New York
cause of his disability-hypertension-was
Times reported in a front-page article that
denied the opportunity to shorten his state
"discrimination against people who carry
prison sentence by spending six months in a
the virus that causes AIDS offers the Jus-
youthful offender "boot camp," the district
tices a surprisingly blank slate on which to
court dismissed his complaint, finding the
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT 103
ADA inapplicable to state prisons. Ruling
tunity
to present, or to contest, these ex-
that the ADA does cover state prisons, how-
planations." The impact of the decision will
ever, the Supreme Court on June I5, 1998,
make it possible for millions of adults who
unanimously upheld the 1997 decision of
receive Social Security disability benefits to
the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
be protected against discrimination under
that had reversed the district court.97 Ar-
the ADA if and when they are able to return
guing for Yeskey, the U.S. Solicitor General
to the work force.
said that "the law applied to state prisons,
On June 22, 1999, the Supreme Court
[citing] the Rehabilitation Act's twenty-five
ruled on four cases involving two ADA is-
years of application to federal prisons."
sues: First, in Olmstead v. L.C. and E.W.,¹⁰¹ the
The ADA, "a logical extension" of the Reha-
Court upheld the "integration regulation"
bilitation Act, "could work without undue
of the ADA, which ordains that individuals
difficulty," he added.99
with disabilities must be offered services in
On May 24, 1999, the Supreme Court de-
the "most integrated setting." The Court
cided Carolyn C. Cleveland v. Policy Manage-
further stated, "Undue institutionalization
ment Systems Corp., et al., a case dealing with
qualifies as discrimination by reason of
the differing definitions of disability in the
disability." Second, in three employment
ADA and in the Social Security Disability
cases, Sutton et al. v. United Air Lines, Inc., 102
Insurance (SSDI) provision of the Social Se-
Murphy v. United Parcel Service, Inc., 103 and
curity Act. 100 Delivering the opinion of the
Albertsons, Inc. v. Kirkingburg, 104 the Court
Court, Justice Stephen Breyer stated:
determined that individuals whose condi-
The Social Security Act and the ADA
tions do not substantially limit any life ac-
both help individuals with disabilities,
tivity and/or are easily correctable are not
but in different ways. The Social Security
disabled according to the ADA.
Act provides monetary benefits to every
William Stothers, deputy director of The
insured individual who "is under a
Center for an Accessible Society, describes
disability"
The ADA seeks to eliminate
the Olmstead decision: "The high court up-
unwarranted discrimination against disabled
held
individuals.
that Georgia's Department of Hu-
In our view, however, despite
the appearance of conflict that arises from
man Resources could not segregate two
the language of the two statutes, the two
women with mental disabilities in a state
claims do not inherently conflict to the point
psychiatric hospital long after the agency's
where courts should apply a special negative
own treatment professionals had recom-
presumption
That is because there are
mended their transfer to community
too many situations in which an SSDI claim
care."¹⁰⁵ This ruling, Stothers adds, "is con-
and an ADA claim can comfortably exist side
sistent with research that demonstrates the
by side.
Cleveland explains the discrepancy between
social and economic value of having indi-
her SSDI statements that she was "totally
viduals with disabilities live in their com-
disabled" and her ADA claim that she could
munity with the appropriate services." Olm-
"perform the essential functions" of her job.
stead, in which seven states-down from
The first statements, she says, "were made in
twenty-six-filed an amicus curiae brief with
a forum which does not consider the effect
the Court supporting the State of Geor-
that reasonable accommodations would have
on the ability to work."
gia, is characterized by disability attorney
Stephen Gold as a defining moment for the
The unanimous Supreme Court decision
ADA. 106 If the Supreme Court had ruled
vacating the summary judgment against
in favor of Georgia, he observes, the ADA
Cleveland offered both parties "the oppor-
would have become a mere shell of what it
104 CHAPTER SIX
was intended to be, stripping away its major
and, therefore, is entitled to the basic assur-
civil rights provision-integration.
ances that the Act affords-focuses on her
Each of the three employment cases had
past or present physical condition without
a different twist: In Sutton, two pilots were
regard to mitigation that has resulted from re-
turned down for jobs because they did not
habilitation, self-improvement, prosthetic devices,
meet the airline's minimum requirement of
or medication. "109 Stevens noted that the case
uncorrected visual acuity at 20/100 or better,
asks whether the ADA allows people to
a condition that was correctable. In Murphy,
claim its protections "in the same way as Ti-
a mechanic/driver was fired for high blood
tle VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 does for
pressure, a condition correctable with med-
every single individual in the work force."
ication. Finally, in Albertsons, a truck driver
Continuing the analogy to race, he stated,
was dismissed because of a serious vision
"Congress
focused almost entirely on the
impairment causing him to fall below the
problem of discrimination against African-
Department of Transportation standards
Americans when it enacted Title VII.
But
of visual acuity. In all three decisions, the
that narrow focus could not possibly justify
majority of the Supreme Court supported
a construction of the statute that excluded
the employer. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
Hispanic-Americans or Asian-Americans or,
delivered the opinions of the Court in both
as we later decided (ironically enough
)
the Sutton and Murphy cases. In the Sutton
Caucasians."¹⁰ Moreover, he added, "The
opinion she wrote, "A 'disability' means only
Court was cowed by respondent's [United
where an impairment 'substantially limits'
Airlines] persistent argument that viewing
a major life activity, not where it 'might,'
all individuals in their unmitigated state
'could,' or 'would' be substantially limiting
would lead to a tidal wave of lawsuits.
if mitigating measures were not taken. A
The Court's approach would seem to allow
person whose physical or mental impair-
an employer to refuse to hire every per-
ment is corrected by medication or other
son who has epilepsy or diabetes that is
measures does not have an impairment that
controlled by medication
or every person
presently 'substantially limits' a major life
who functions efficiently with a prosthetic
activity."¹⁰⁸ She continued:
limb." Both Sutton and Murphy were about
whether people were "disabled" as the ADA
Congress did not intend to bring under
defined the term, Stevens argued in Sutton,
the [ADA] statute's protection all those
instead of about whether people had en-
whose uncorrected conditions amount to
disabilities
Had Congress intended to
countered disability discrimination.111
include all persons with corrected physical
Disability rights attorney Chai Feldblum,
limitations among those covered by the Act, it
who helped draft the ADA, explains how the
undoubtedly would have cited a much higher
decision will militate against the intention
number [than forty-three million] of disabled
of the Congress when it passed the ADA-
persons in the findings. That it did not is
keeping people with disabilities in the work
evidence that the ADA's coverage is restricted
force: "These decisions create the absurd
to only those whose impairments are not
mitigated by corrective measures.
result of a person being disabled enough to
be fired from a job, but not disabled enough
Disability advocates concur with Justice
to challenge the firing."¹¹² While disabil-
John Paul Stevens in his strong dissents in
ity activist and scholar Nadina LaSpina, a
Sutton and Murphy. In Sutton, Stevens stated
wheelchair user, attributes the success in
that the question "whether an individual is
Olmstead to the mobilization of the dis-
'disabled' within the meaning of the Act-
ability community by American Disabled
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT I05
for Attendant Programs Today (ADAPT),
that of the disability community's. With
she holds disability activists responsible for
the passage of time, the Court may re-
loss of the three Supreme Court employ-
visit the issues in the employment cases,
ment cases:
ultimately recognizing that the disability
Busy organizing to fight the Olmstead
discrimination-not the definition of dis-
threat, our community did not pay very much
ability-should be the primary focus. Per-
attention to the three employment cases
haps, had there been a national cross-
being reviewed by the Supreme Court. And
disability organization, such as the Amer-
that was a big mistake. The Justices didn't
ican Coalition of Citizens with Disabili-
hear from us, but you can bet they heard from
the business community. In the papers, the
ties (1974-1983), the disability community
op-eds and letters to the editors were all from
would have been galvanized to carefully ex-
business interests hellbent on undermining
amine the implications of-and effectively
the ADA
assert its position on-these pivotal employ-
And while the ADA's enemies wailed and
ment cases.
raved, our community kept quiet. Why?
Because we thought we had more urgent
matters to address, more important battles to
fight? Because we couldn't really identify with
The Myth of "The Disability Lobby"
nearsighted pilots the way we could with two
women locked up in an institution? Because
Echoing many ADA critics, Philip K.
secretly or not so secretly many of our own
Howard's statement in The Death of Com-
people feel annoyed when those who are not
mon Sense, "The disabled lobby is wag-
"truly disabled" try to reap the fruits of our
ing war against every other citizen,"¹¹⁶ as-
hard work? Whatever the reason, the damage
sumes a clear adversarial relationship be-
is done. 113
tween nondisabled and disabled people. Ap-
Disability attorney Peter Thompson de-
parently, the author has not accepted dis-
scribes the damage. As Justice Stevens pre-
ability as a universal possibility, or even
dicted, Thompson says that his clients with
probability, for most of humankind. Fur-
diabetes, epilepsy, or severe arthritis will
thermore, he ignores the great number of
no longer automatically be considered dis-
nondisabled people intimately connected
abled.¹¹⁴ Consequently, the time-consum-
with loved ones with disabilities, for whom
ing, expensive effort to determine "the ex-
they care and advocate. Although Howard
tent to which the person is impaired," he
presents the "disability lobby" as a potent
points out, will discourage lawyers from
adversary, another critic of the ADA, Brian
bringing claims. For example, Thompson
Doherty, asserts in the American Spectator
indicates that one of his clients who received
that "no grass-roots movement campaigned
a disciplinary memo after experiencing an
for the bill. "117 At the same time, Doherty
epileptic seizure at work is not only unable
imagines a well-orchestrated, well-financed
to sue as a result of the Supreme Court
campaign in which "a disabled person from
decision but also cannot invoke the law to
every member's district was sent to lobby
prevent further harassment.
for the ADA. "118 Doherty never indicates
Just as the Court failed to appreciate the
who sent these lobbyists. The truth was
real disability issues inherent in Davis (1979)
that many individuals with disabilities, and
and Rowley (1982), the Court has misinter-
members of grass-roots organizations such
preted these three employment cases. 115 In
as independent living centers, ADAPT, DIA,
decisions following Davis and Rowley, the
and the American Council of the Blind, as
Court's position was more consistent with
well as Gallaudet students, used their own
I06 CHAPTER SIX
limited financial and physical resources to
gender, the ADA has been the recipient of
advocate in Washington for a bill that they
backlash. Justin Dart has suggested that all
considered essential for their own achieve-
movements that allow a formerly powerless
ment of equality.
people to determine their own destiny en-
Besides organizing a celebration on the
gender hostility in individuals comfortable
day of the signing of the ADA, disability ac-
with the status quo. Dart explains, "Many
tivists coordinated two earlier ADA marches
of these journalists and media personalities
in Washington in order to rally support for
antagonistic to the ADA expect oppressed
the legislation. People with varying degrees
people to stay in their place."¹²⁰
of disability traveled from all parts of the
The anticipated backlash has been sur-
country, some from as far as California,
prisingly pernicious, however, spreading
many at their own expense. Harry Wieder, a
confusion and misinformation about the
New York City demonstrator with a disabil-
legislation. For example, in his Reason ar-
ity, describes his experience at the second of
ticle "Unreasonable Accommodation: The
the two marches:
Case against the Americans with Disabil-
ities Act," Doherty reveals a lack of un-
We took the Amtrak train at 5:30 in the
derstanding of the meaning of significant
morning from Pennsylvania Station to Union
terms essential for comprehension of the
Station in Washington, D.C. We joined
the march to the Capitol and stayed there
law. In fact, Doherty argues that an ADA
while the Senate was debating the ADA.
complaint involving the ramping of four
At the last demonstration, some people in
steps to a diner will contribute to establish-
wheelchairs climbed up the Capitol steps,
ing "the specific meaning" of "ambiguous
which some of us thought really made a
phrases" such as "undue burden" and "rea-
point, and others thought fit the negative
sonable accommodation," two terms appli-
stereotypes too much, so we all don't think
cable only to Title I and Title II, not to Title
alike. This time, even though they told us
to go, we stayed in the Capitol for hours, all
III public accommodation cases. The appro-
kinds of people, blind people, deaf people,
priate term for this Title III case that Do-
people in chairs, people with developmental
herty described is "readily achievable." The
impairments, all kinds. Then when we got
law is simple; the complication is caused
word that the Senate passed the bill, we
by Doherty's lack of understanding of the
cheered and hugged and went home. It
legislation he is criticizing. For the $5 mil-
would have been nice to sleep over at a hotel
lion business cited in Doherty's example, a
because we could have used the rest, but
the hotels were too expensive, so we went
ramp to remove the barrier of four steps
home the same day even though we were
is indeed "readily achievable," meaning the
very tired. 119
owner can comply with little difficulty or
expense. Furthermore, the carefully crafted
Except for the planning these crusades re-
language of the legislation, characterized by
quired, the disability community by and
Doherty as ambiguous, is clear-cut though
large formed an ad hoc, loosely-organized
flexible enough, in fact, to suit the great
army committed to the passage of the ADA.
variety of situations to which it is applied,
from a multinational corporation to a small
business.
Backlash
James Bovard, in his American Spectator
piece "The Lame Game," denigrates the
Like other civil rights legislation pertain-
ADA by referring to a litany of preposter-
ing to discrimination because of race or
ous employment lawsuits, often without
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT I07
indicating their final disposition. 121 Many
that people with disabilities are treated
of these cases, such as the one involv-
equitably in employment. 125
ing a guidance counselor arrested for co-
Demonstrating how employers evade the
caine possession who claimed ADA protec-
ADA, Janofsky revealed the persistence of
tion, 122 were probably dismissed forthwith.
disability discrimination and the resource-
These unlikely suits, reiterated by ADA an-
fulness of those who practice it. The poor
tagonists, "aren't typical, however, and in
employment statistics for people with dis-
most of them the plaintiff loses." Ironi-
abilities prior to the ADA provide am-
cally, the quote is from Doherty, one of
ple evidence that bias in hiring for these
the ADA's severest critics, who offers his
underemployed workers was not initiated
own list of ridiculous ADA employment
by the ADA. On the contrary, unfair em-
cases.
ployment procedures, such as the one de-
Early in his July 19, 1996, ADA segment
scribed by Janofsky, were the reasons an
on ABC's "20/20" television program, John
ADA was required.
Stossel resurrected the inventory of fool-
Stossel also criticized the ADA because
ish ADA employment complaints. Stossel's
"most of the complaints are not coming
failure to air any portion of a half-hour
from the blind or people who are paralyzed.
videotaped interview with a prominent dis-
They're coming from people with sore backs
ability rights attorney, James Weisman, on
or stress-related complaints." Stossel's anal-
a March 12, 1993, "20/20" segment involv-
ysis fails to consider the difference between
ing an ADA issue lends credence to Dart's
visible and invisible disabilities. Since peo-
doubts about Stossel's evenhandedness re-
ple with visible disabilities are much more
garding the ADA debate. Dart questioned
likely to be rejected when seeking employ-
Stossel's impartiality when the television
ment than people with invisible disabilities,
commentator turned down offers to have
the workforce includes many more individ-
disability advocates appear on the July I9
uals with sore backs or stress problems than
program."
with visual or motor impairments. Employ-
Claiming that the ADA has "employers
ees with disabilities can file ADA complaints
running scared," Stossel offered his reason
much more easily than unsuccessful job ap-
for the supposed failure of the employment
plicants with disabilities, as Janofsky's de-
title, Title I, of the ADA:
piction of employers' circumvention of the
law so effectively illustrates.
They [employers] fear any disabled person
could tie them into knots, that if they hire
Furthermore, Stossel reveals the com-
disabled people, they might never be able
monly held misconception that the ADA
to fire them. As a result, we're told many
was specifically designed only for people
employers are now so fearful they simply
with ostensible disabilities, when in fact the
avoid the disabled. After interviewing for the
definition of disability includes hidden as
job, a disabled person's simply told, "Sorry,
well as obvious disabilities. For example,
someone else was better qualified." Lawyers
is an individual with a severe, though not
like [Julie] Janofsky who represents many
companies say it goes on all the time. 124
immediately discernible, heart condition or
psychiatric disability less disabled than a
Rather than an argument against the ADA,
person who is clearly blind? Yet as Stos-
Stossel's explanation could be used to make
sel demonstrates, too often only disabilities
the case for increased enforcement of the
that are observable are deemed legitimate
legislation or, as some disability advocates
while conditions that are not overtly evi-
contend, for affirmative action to ensure
dent are considered spurious. As noted in
I08 CHAPTER SIX
an EEOC report, "Given that there are many
dations" provided by Sears, 99 percent re-
more people with hidden disabilities than
quired little or no cost. As Reno and Thorn-
there are people with visible disabilities," it
burgh agree, "Most people in the business
is not surprising that so many ADA employ-
community understand that the ADA has
ment cases involve these often impercepti-
been good for business; it has expanded
ble disabilities. 126
the markets served by most establishments
Using one specific anecdote as evidence,
and opened the doors to productive peo-
Stossel suggests that the "reasonable ac-
ple with disabilities, all at a minimal cost."
commodations" required by the ADA to en-
Major industries have been especially recep-
able people with disabilities to be employed
tive to the disability population; in fact,
often cost "a fortune." Janet Reno, Attor-
the probability of people with disabilities
ney General in the Clinton administration,
being hired increases with the size of the
and Dick Thornburgh, Attorney General in
company.¹²⁹
the Bush administration, however, disagree.
The impression given by commentators
Reflecting the population at large, both at-
such as Doherty, Bovard, and Stossel-and
torneys general have had intimate experi-
in books like Philip K. Howard's The Death
ence with disability; Reno has Parkinson's
of Common Sense, and Walter Olson's The
disease, and Thornburgh has a child with
Excuse Factory: How Employment Law Is Para-
a developmental disability. Unequivocally,
lyzing the American Workplace130-is that the
Reno and Thornburgh jointly dispute those
ADA generates a deluge of frivolous ADA
they label "journalistic naysayers" who have
lawsuits. Yet, Reno and Thornburgh agree
charged that "the law imposes unreasonable
that "one thing is clear: The ADA has not
burdens":
resulted in a flood of litigation." The Justice
Department reported in 1995 that "litiga-
They [these journalists] mischaracterize the
tion under the [ADA] Act has been rare. The
ADA by implying that it requires businesses
to spend outrageous sums removing barriers
Justice Department and the Equal Employ-
almost overnight. These criticisms miss
ment Opportunity Commission together
the mark. The ADA's requirements provide
have averaged fewer than twenty-five suits
flexibility to business and government. The
during each of the past five years."131 James
ADA strikes a carefully calibrated balance
Raggio, general counsel of the Access Board,
between the rights of people with disabilities
observed, "Of course you can point to cases
and the legitimate concerns of business
stretching the limits of the ADA. Lawsuits
and government, including costs. It merely
codifies common sense. 127
on the fringes are to be expected. That's the
way the system works. But the overwhelm-
In fact, in Transcending Compliance: 1996
ing majority of the cases are valid. They
Follow-up Report on Sears, Roebuck and Com-
concern a legitimate issue, and they deserve
pany (hereafter Sears Report), Peter Blanck
to be aired. "132 Bernadette B. Wilson, EEOC
states that the average cost of providing
supervising program analyst, responds to
workplace accommodations at Sears be-
criticism of the ADA:
tween 1993 and 1995 was $45, less than half
of the $121-dollar average cost from 1978
And contrary to some widely circulated
to 1992, as reported in the 1994 study.¹²⁸
misinformation that this agency [EEOC] is
overrun with frivolous ADA charges, no-cause
The Sears Report, sponsored by the Annen-
findings are rendered in far fewer instances
berg Washington program where economist
with ADA cases than they are with our other
Blanck is a senior fellow, notes that of
statutes. And while monetary awards for cases
more than seventy "reasonable accommo-
resolved under the Civil Rights Act and our
THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT 109
other statutes declined between 1994 and
Every American's Insurance Policy
1995, monetary awards increased for those
who file ADA charges. This hardly represents
Too frequently, the public conceives of the
the profile of a frivolous case load. 133
ADA as a law serving a special minority
In his introductory remarks to the March
whose concerns are separate and distinct
12, 1996, Commissioners' Meeting of the
from the interests of the general popula-
EEOC, chairman Gilbert F. Casellas relates
tion. People in the disability community
the story of a Rapid City Journal columnist,
describe nondisabled individuals as "tem-
Richard Kahler, who gained an understand-
porarily able bodied" or "TABs" as a means
ing of the reality of the ADA after first be-
of fostering the recognition that, rather
ing swayed by the myths. In his April 1995
than an anomaly, disability is a natural as-
article, Kahler attacked the ADA as "a re-
pect of the human condition. As people age,
curring nightmare that just keeps getting
they are likely to experience increasing de-
worse." After receiving information from
grees of disability, first in their parents and
people with disabilities and their advocates,
then in themselves.
however, he admitted that he "blew it." In a
Clay Haughton, director for Civilian
September 1995 piece, he quoted Justin Dart
Equal Opportunity for the Defense Depart-
of Justice For All: "It's a fallacy that the ADA
ment, addressed this issue:
costs too much. It's discrimination that
costs too much. We can't afford not to get
No one is immune to developing a disability,
and almost no one, regardless of race, gender,
the disabled into the work force so they can
religion, or economic status, will go through
lead independent and productive lives."134
life without suffering from some form of
Although American business has been
physical or mental impairment. It's truly the
presented as viewing the ADA unfavorably
equal opportunity situation, and those of
by news commentators, on television and
us who are disabled are a constant visual
in print, 135 a July 2, 1995, Harris Poll offers a
reminder of the frailty of each member of the
different picture. The poll reported that 80
human race. And so accepting this possibility
and adjusting to disabilities, those are matters
percent of executives of small, medium, and
that must concern all of us.¹³⁶
large corporations indicated that the cost of
accommodating people with disabilities has
Becky Ogle, chairperson for Justice For All,
either not increased or increased only a little
observes that "the ADA can be viewed as
since the passage of the ADA. Moreover,
an insurance policy against discrimination
66 percent stated that litigation has not
that every American in this society should
increased since the ADA while 14 percent
cherish and protect as a matter of enlight-
said that litigation has increased only a
ened self interest."137
little. Overall, 82 percent of these executives
concluded that the ADA is worth the cost
of implementation.
Chapter Seven
Access to Jobs and
Health Care
UNLIKE OTHER TARGETS OF job discrim-
disabilities will be employable. The growing
ination, people with disabilities have an ob-
disability and aging population-a conse-
stacle embedded in the language that de-
quence of advances in medicine-presents a
fines them. The term "disability" has vary-
compelling economic argument for encour-
ing meaning in at least three different con-
aging these people to become job holders.
texts: In the Workers' Compensation pro-
This rationale played a significant role in
gram "disability means the damages that
the enactment of the 1990 ADA, a law focus-
one person collects from another as a result
ing heavily on employment. Eleven years be-
of an insult or injury. In the Social Secu-
fore the ADA was passed, disability advocate
rity Disability Insurance program, disability
Frank Bowe stated that it is better for people
refers to a condition that links ill health and
with disabilities, as well as for the nation, if
unemployment." And in the context of civil
they are working, supporting their families,
rights laws, "disability" is linked to discrimi-
and contributing to the community rather
nation. Disability advocates believe that the
than being dependent; it is better if they are
Supreme Court misinterpreted the applica-
taxpayers rather than tax users.³
tion of the Americans with Disabilities Act
in three 1999 employment cases, treating
them as if they pertained to benefits-the
Employment Discrimination
first two definitions-rather than, more ap-
propriately, relating the claims to the third
The 1998 study by Louis Harris and As-
definition-discrimination² Since disabil-
sociates for the National Organization on
ity is commonly associated with disability
Disability (NOD) reveals that 79 percent of
benefits-implying the inability to work-
the nondisabled population of working age
employment for people with disabilities ap-
are employed, compared to only 29 percent
pears to be a contradiction.
of people with disabilities, a difference of
On the contrary, with modern technol-
50 percentage points.4 NOD president Alan
ogy such as computers, motorized wheel-
Reich comments, "At a time when the U.S.
chairs, teletypewriters, and Kurzweil read-
unemployment rate is at an historic low and
ers, an increasing number of people with
there is a crying need for workers, it is as-
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE III
tounding to learn that the employment gap
work. So I couldn't even get there for the
remains so wide." Although the primary in-
tryout. And without a job, I couldn't buy a
tention of the ADA was to increase employ-
car. And without a car, I couldn't work.8
ment opportunities for people with disabil-
Moreover, women as well as racial and
ities, "at least 85 percent of the charges are
ethnic minorities with disabilities confront
filed by those who are already employed."5
dual employment discrimination. Rebecca
The difficulty in proving employment dis-
Ogle of Justice For All notes that "it's a
crimination is compounded by the inability
ceiling for all women; it's a double ceiling
of rejected applicants with disabilities to
for women with disabilities."⁹ While Com-
compare their qualifications with those of
missioner Joyce E. Tucker of the EEOC refers
people who are hired.
to the need for her agency to focus its out-
Despite being a highly regarded graduate
reach efforts on minorities with disabilities
with a master's of science in social work
seeking jobs, 10 EEOC Commissioner Paul S.
from Columbia University, Caren Potoker-
Miller compares racial prejudice to disabil-
who uses a scooter because of rheumatoid
ity discrimination:
arthritis-required almost two years and
nearly fifty interviews to get a job appro-
In my mind, there is no difference between
being asked to be sent to segregated schools
priate for her qualifications.6 Although her
because you are black or being sent to
fluency in Spanish should have made her
colonies because you have mental retardation
especially employable in New York City, she
and society believes that you will be better
"faced blatant discrimination" in her inter-
off with your own kind. There's no difference
views as she was asked insulting questions,
between being asked to leave a restaurant
such as "Why are you in that thing?" and
because you are black or because you use
"What is wrong with you?" Potoker still be-
a wheelchair and you're considered a fire
hazard. There's no difference between being
lieves that she was "lucky" to finally get a
denied the right to vote because you are black
position: "It just happened that the agency
or because of an inaccessible polling place.
that hired me was opened to employing peo-
And yes, there's no difference between being
ple with disabilities."
denied the right to a job or to a promotion
Most Americans with disabilities who
because you are black or because you are blind
are employed hold only marginal jobs, and
or deaf. All of it's discrimination. No such
many of those who are unemployed are so
thing as separate but equal.¹¹
discouraged that they are not even look-
ing for work.⁷ The experience of wheelchair
Affirmative Action
user Raphael Nisan-a forty-three-year-old
immigrant from Baku, Azerbaijan, who is
While the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 requires
seeking American citizenship and employ-
affirmative action in federal employment
ment-illustrates how the system some-
and federal contracts, the ADA's omission
times places impediments in the path of
of an affirmative action requirement has
even the most ambitious and determined
resulted in the failure of the private sec-
job-seeker with a disability:
tor to seriously pursue qualified workers
with disabilities. Eastern Paralyzed Veterans
I interviewed at at least a dozen places. I had
my accounting certificate, plus all the years of
Association attorney James Weisman asserts
work experience in Baku. But nobody would
that although preferences were awarded to
hire me. One place was willing to give me a
veterans with disabilities for service to the
shot, but I couldn't get Access-A-Ride to give
nation, preferences given to civilians with
me a subscription for van service to and from
disabilities have been tainted:
II2 CHAPTER SEVEN
For example, the newsdealer concessions
John Wingate, former director of the
in federal buildings granted to people with
International Center for the Disabled, ar-
disabilities was patronizing, protectionist,
gues that members of a group that have
and separatist, confirming rather than
been discriminated against have never ob-
countering the negative stereotypes
concerning disability. This kind of
tained their fair share of employment by
employment focused the public's attention
using nondiscrimination laws only.14 These
on the disability rather than on the
laws, he observes, are effective in address-
capability of the worker. In the old days,
ing discrimination against people already
people with disabilities did not have
employed, not against job seekers. Anne
access to education or employment. The
Emerman, a quadriplegic wheelchair user
1990s generation has the qualifications
and former director of the Mayor's Of-
to be competitive with the nondisabled
population. Society's consciousness is
fice for People with Disabilities, is un-
changing. The expectation of the disability
equivocal about the pressure required to
population is also changing. Then too, if
prod business to employ qualified people
the general public has encountered people
with disabilities: "What is needed is af-
with disabilities in classrooms, in public
firmative action that includes goals and
transportation, in restaurants and shops,
timetables,¹⁵ as well as a vigorous search
in theaters and stadiums, in factories
for competent people with disabilities to
and offices, the anti-disability bias will
fade away.¹²
fill positions for which they are appropri-
ate. More than three-quarters of the disabil-
"If you build it accessible, they will come,"
ity population between the ages of sixteen
comments Terence Moakley, associate exec-
and sixty-four, able and eager to work, are
utive director of Eastern Paralyzed Veter-
unemployed."16
ans Association.¹³ Moakley's point is that
if public places are barrier-free, people with
disabilities will participate in every aspect
Disability Employment in
of social life as employees and employers,
Corporate America
students, consumers, spectators, and travel-
ers. Moakley, who unlike Weisman, is both
The 1994 Sears Report of the Annenberg
a veteran and a wheelchair user, is skep-
Washington program examining the em-
tical, however, of accessibility and integra-
ployment practices of Sears Roebuck and
tion, alone, serving as the solution to disabil-
Company, before and after the passage of
ity discrimination, especially with regard to
the ADA, determined that the impact of the
employment:
law on American business is "evolutionary,
not revolutionary."¹⁷ The appraisal of the
For people with disabilities, there are other
disincentives to getting a job besides physical
effectiveness of the ADA by Sears employees
barriers. When they get jobs, they often lose
who participated in the Sears Report varied
health systems supports such as Medicaid,
greatly. Blind computer programmer Don
Medicare, and personal attendant services.
Mott comments, "I don't think [the ADA]
And people who own small businesses are so
had any impact on Sears. The company was
misinformed that they are afraid they'll go out
doing these things for people with disabil-
of business because of the cost of providing
ities before the ADA." Another blind com-
accommodations and health insurance for
disabled workers. Besides, without some kind
puter programmer, Alan Sprecher, observes,
of pressure, it'll be hard to persuade corporate
"Most people don't know the requirements
America that people with disabilities should
or implication of the law until someone
be hired because they can do the job.
makes an issue of it."
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE II3
Yet another blind Sears employee, import
States cites the federal definition of "devel-
manager Brad Shorser, has a different per-
opmental disability" as
spective on the ADA's influence: "The ADA
has helped raise the consciousness of hiring
any severe chronic disability attributable
managers, who now seem more willing to
to a mental or physical impairment, or
combination thereof, that is manifested
accept people with disabilities. But it's not
before the age of twenty-two years, is likely
just the ADA. It's everything that led up to
to continue indefinitely, and will result in
it, including the civil rights legislation of
substantial limitation in function in three
the 1960s. Combined with Sears's policies,
or more of the following areas: I) self-care, 2)
the ADA is helping to break down psycho-
receptive and expressive language, 3) learning,
logical barriers about people with disabili-
4) mobility, 5) self-direction, 6) capacity
ties." An administrative assistant who is vi-
for independent language, 7) economic self-
sufficiency, and 8) necessity for special services
sually impaired agrees: "The ADA is helping
that are of extended duration.¹ 18
people get information. Now we're not as
afraid. There's somewhere to go." Tony Nor-
Although in most localities the self-advo-
ris, a quadriplegic footwear department ex-
cacy group for people with developmental
ecutive, expresses a similar view: "The ADA
disabilities is called People First, the na-
has been good in awakening the public to
tional group is called Self Advocates Be-
people with disabilities."
coming Empowered (SABE). SABE defines
The Sears Report refers, however, to im-
"self-advocacy" as "teaching people with a
pediments to the employment of qualified
disability how to advocate for themselves
people with disabilities such as the "Linger-
and to learn how to speak out for what
ing prejudices [by employers] about hidden
they believe in. It teaches us [people with
cognitive and mental disabilities." Further-
developmental disabilities] how to make de-
more, "even among people with disabilities
cisions and choices that affect our lives so
who have achieved integration into the work
that we can become more independent. It
force, a perceived glass ceiling limits their
also teaches us about our rights, but along
career advancement, and [their] sense of
with learning our rights, we learn our re-
separateness is difficult [for them] to over-
sponsibilities."
come." Sprecher reveals, "I don't know if I've
Evolving in the 1970s out of community
ever been or ever will be part of the gang."
recreation clubs, the self-advocacy move-
Echoing this feeling, Shorser remarks, "I
ment was supported by nondisabled staff
don't expect we'll ever get to the point where
but organized and run by people with devel-
prejudice against people with disabilities
opmental disabilities. Beginning as a local
disappears completely."
grass-roots movement, by 1990 there were
380 groups of people with developmental
disabilities in the United States and British
Employment of People with
Columbia. Groups such as these and their
Developmental Disabilities
advocates have been pressuring the Justice
Department to use the 1980 Civil Rights
Inspired by the 1960s civil rights struggle
of Institutionalized Persons Act more effec-
and the 1970S Independent Living Move-
tively to protect the rights of people with
ment, self-advocacy fostered independent
cognitive disabilities in institutions.¹⁹
living and employment for people with
The movement has been encouraged by
developmental disabilities. A demographic
the growing number of those with develop-
study of self-advocacy groups in the United
mental disabilities living in group homes,
II4 CHAPTER SEVEN
an alternative to institutional care. During
really need. They are often supported by
the period from 1977 to 1992, the number
family and friends, and when necessary,
of people in group homes increased dra-
even a fiscal intermediary. I also work to
matically from 14 to 52 percent. The na-
get these consumers to be on boards of
tional quarterly magazine Community Advo-
directors of agencies that serve people with
developmental disabilities so that they have
cacy Press: People with Developmental Disabil-
some say in the policies and procedures
ities Speak Out for What They Believe helps
that affect them. People with developmental
unify self-advocacy groups and supports
disabilities may learn in different ways
members in their efforts to live indepen-
than others, or they may be slower than
dently in the community. For example, the
others, but they have capabilities, and many
Fall 1997 issue was devoted to the skills
can work.
necessary for people with developmental
Supporting Pacht's assertion, the employ-
disabilities to secure and maintain jobs,
ment of people with developmental dis-
as well as the self-esteem that emanates
abilities (who are consumers of services
from work.
of state agencies assisting this population)
Harvey Pacht-who serves as both direc-
increased over 300 percent from 1988 to
tor of public education and group support
1996.²³
for the Self-Advocacy Association of New
York State and as New York City regional
grass-roots organizer-describes how he and
Employment of People with Psychiatric
his wife have worked to achieve indepen-
Disabilities
dence:
My wife, Ethel, was born brain-damaged
On April 29, 1997, EEOC released the EEOC
because her birth mother, who died during
Enforcement Guidance: The Americans with Dis-
the delivery, was not getting enough oxygen.
abilities Act and Psychiatric Disabilities, explain-
Several years after we were married, we
ing the ADA as it pertains to employees with
adopted a one-month-old Down syndrome
psychiatric disabilities.²⁴ EEOC chairman
baby girl, Samantha Jean. Now that she's in
Gilbert F. Casellas describes the document:
a special education class in public school, an
aide comes in the morning to prepare her
"It provides practical instruction to employ-
for school and get her on the bus and in the
ers and persons with psychiatric disabilities
afternoon to take her off the bus and care for
on their respective rights and responsibili-
her until we get home. We both work; I do
ties."25 The EEOC Enforcement Guidance indi-
my advocacy work, and my wife works in a
cates that employers may not discriminate
sheltered workshop. So we're able to support
against qualified workers with psychiatric
ourselves in our own condominium.²¹
disabilities, even those who are taking med-
Pacht points out that the Self-Advocacy
ication to control their impairments.²⁶ Al-
Association of New York State was founded
though mandated to make reasonable ac-
and named by Bernard Carabello, a former
commodations for employees with psychi-
"inmate," who in 1972 left Willowbrook, the
atric disabilities, employers are restricted
institution closed in 1987 as a result of the
from asking job applicants if they have a
Geraldo Rivera exposé.2² Pacht continues:
history of psychiatric disabilities. Yet for
workers with psychiatric disabilities, as for
My job is to encourage the formation of
self-advocacy groups all over New York State
employees with physical impairments, em-
so that consumers of services for people
ployers are not required to diminish work-
with developmental disabilities, themselves,
place performance standards in order to
determine what programs and services they
comply with the ADA. According to the
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE II5
EEOC Enforcement Guidance, however, "rules
ing that the claimant has a 'substantially
of conduct that are not 'job-related and con-
limiting impairment."
sistent with business necessity" may not
According to the EEOC Enforcement Guid-
be enforced.
ance, "Between July 26, 1992, and September
The EEOC Enforcement Guidance seeks to
30, 1996, approximately 12.7 percent of ADA
dispel "myths, fears and stereotypes" about
charges filed with the EEOC were based on
psychiatric disabilities such as "anxiety dis-
emotional or psychiatric impairment." Of
orders, depression, bipolar disorder (manic
all 72,687 complaints filed with the EEOC
depression), [and] schizophrenia." Plain-
under the ADA in these four years, 9,216 have
tiffs' lawyers observe that "many people
alleged discrimination resulting from a psy-
with emotional problems are winning im-
chiatric disability, the largest source of com-
portant concessions from their employers
plaints after back problems.³² By 1997 the
in out-of-court settlements, including un-
number of psychiatric disability claims in-
paid leaves, modified hours, job transfers,
creased to 15.3 percent, the largest single cat-
and in some cases, five- and six-figure cash
egory of all disability claims, outnumbering
payments. But when negotiations fail, liti-
those pertaining to HIV, cancer, substance
gation is risky."2⁸ Although the EEOC En-
abuse, vision, hearing, and diabetes-related
forcement Guidance indicates that people are
disabilities combined.³³ "The National In-
disabled even if their symptoms disappear
stitute of Mental Health says one in ten
when they take medication, trial courts
Americans experiences some disability from
have determined that people did not have a
a diagnosable mental illness in the course of
psychiatric disability if medication relieved
a year."
their symptoms. Caught in a Catch-22 situa-
Two U.S. senators who acknowledge that
tion, employees with psychiatric disabilities
they have family members who have had
have limited recourse under the employ-
psychiatric disabilities, Pete Domenici (R-
ment discrimination laws because if their
N.M.) and Paul Wellstone (D-Minn.), suc-
impairment is treated successfully, they are
cessfully sponsored legislation designed to
considered nondisabled under the ADA;
establish parity between psychiatric and
yet if their symptoms persist, they may be
physical disabilities. 34 Effective January I,
considered unable to perform the essential
1998, this law requires "that insurers set the
function of the job.
lifetime and annual reimbursement caps as
While companies have won 92 percent of
high for psychiatric disability as for phys-
all final court decisions from 1992 through
ical illness." Alphonso V. Guida, Jr., vice
1997 under the ADA, companies have won
president of the National Mental Health
even more often for psychiatric disability
Association and an advocate for people with
cases.29 The Mental and Physical Disability
psychiatric disorders, asserts, however, that
Law Reporter found that by June 1998, al-
"many insurers and employers are taking
though "it has been employers who have
steps to bypass the federal law, changing the
complained most of unfair treatment un-
structure of their benefits to impose dis-
der the ADA, the facts strongly suggest the
criminatory inpatient and outpatient visit
opposite: employees are treated unfairly un-
limits in place of previous spending caps."
der the Act. "30 The EEOC recommends new
Ronald E. Bachman, actuary at the account-
legislation addressing the Catch-22 problem
ing firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, observes
in order to "eliminate some of the more pro-
that "the net impact [of day and visit limits]
cedural and substantial roadblocks [to em-
in these cases is to have less mental health
ployees winning ADA cases], such as show-
coverage."
II6 CHAPTER SEVEN
Contrary to comments of Dr. Sally L. Sa-
notes that "the stigma attached to psy-
tel, psychiatrist and lecturer at Yale's School
chiatric disabilities" precludes those with
of Medicine, the EEOC Enforcement Guid-
such disabilities from using the EEOC En-
ance is not "sending dysfunctional people
forcement Guidance as an excuse for absen-
the message that the world-or in this case
teeism: "I don't see people lining up to
the workplace-revolves around them."³⁶ In
say, 'I have a mental illness. I need a day
fact, Satel's misrepresentation of the EEOC
off from work."³⁸ Adhering to the EEOC
Enforcement Guidance reveals that she does
Enforcement Guidance serves not only em-
not recognize the essence of Title I, the em-
ployees with psychiatric disabilities, Kramer
ployment section of the ADA that protects
points out, but also employers: "Some of
only a qualified individual with a disabil-
my sicker patients are workers of extraor-
ity who is capable of performing the es-
dinary dedication, who, for reasons related
sential function of the job. Instead, Satel
to their illness-compulsiveness and obses-
treats the EEOC Enforcement Guidance as if
sional guilt-work scrupulously at tasks
it interfered with the appropriate demands
others avoid; smart employers do accom-
of the workplace that provide limits for
modate their needs.' Commenting on the
potentially unruly workers with psychiatric
value of diverse perspectives in the gene
disabilities.
pool, Kramer indicates that obsessive peo-
Psychiatric disabilities are not confined
ple are thorough, depressed people make
to the prototype of the undisciplined em-
good prognosticators, and artists have a
ployee she refers to in her article. Moreover,
tendency to mania. Referring to Abraham
the purpose of the law is not rehabilita-
Lincoln, who was "recurrently depressed,"
tion of people with psychiatric disabilities.
Kramer observes that "those who suffer
Rather, the law is intended to protect these
mental illness included the most productive
people from discrimination based solely on
members of society."
the stigma associated with their disabili-
People with invisible disabilities, includ-
ties.³⁷ Ostensibly supporting workers with
ing psychiatric impairments, do not have to
psychiatric disabilities, Satel fears that "we
inform employers of their conditions un-
can expect waves of backlash discrimination
less they are seeking reasonable accommo-
as employers become skittish about hiring
dations. A person requesting an accom-
a class of people they'll never be able to
modation, however, may be asked to sub-
fire. Co-workers' resentment will build as
mit documentation-which can be a let-
the stereotypical behaviors of the mentally
ter from a physician, psychologist, or other
ill go unchecked." Satel's concern for the
specialist-verifying the disability and out-
consequences of the EEOC Enforcement Guid-
lining the necessary accommodations. The
ance for people with psychiatric disabilities
employer is permitted to choose the specific
could have been expressed for the extension
accommodation so long as it is effective
of civil rights to any demographic group-
for accessing the job. The EEOC Enforcement
racial minorities, women, as well as people
Guidance mandates that "Employers must
with physical disabilities.
keep all information [even when offered vol-
Although psychiatrists Satel and Dr. Pe-
untarily] concerning the medical condition
ter D. Kramer agree that work is vital
or history of applicants or employees, in-
for the well-being of people with psychi-
cluding information about psychiatric dis-
atric disabilities, they disagree, however,
ability, confidential under the ADA.
Em-
about the future medical and social effects
ployers must collect and maintain such in-
of the EEOC Enforcement Guidance. Kramer
formation on separate forms and in sepa-
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE II7
rate medical files, apart from the usual per-
Although in Fall 1997 the U.S. Justice
sonnel files."⁴¹
Department described this incarceration of
Claudia Center, attorney for the San
people with psychiatric disabilities as un-
Francisco Employment Law Center, asserts
constitutional, this trend has been increas-
that "the same job-based analysis that gov-
ing: "On any day, almost two hundred thou-
erns the application of the [ADA] statute
sand people behind bars-more than one in
to physical disabilities must apply to psy-
ten of the total-are known to suffer from
chiatric disabilities. The appropriate test
schizophrenia, manic depression, or major
[for employability] is whether the conduct
depression, the three most severe mental
caused by a psychiatric disability renders
illnesses. The rate is four times that in the
that person unqualified to perform the es-
general population. And there is evidence,
sential job functions of a particular po-
particularly with juveniles, that the num-
sition. "42 Unlike the forms of "reasonable
bers in jail are growing." Sheldon Green-
accommodations" for people with physi-
berg, director of Johns Hopkins University's
cal disabilities, however, Center indicates
Police Executive Leadership Program in Bal-
that people with psychiatric disabilities
timore, says that it is unconscionable that
may need different accommodations such
police get hours of executive training for
as "tailored shifts and schedules, leaves
situations they seldom encounter involving
of absence, and adjustments to job du-
hostages, terrorists, and riots, and only a
ties and the working environment," as well
few hours of technical training on handling
as employer education regarding these
people they come across often-people with
requirements.
psychiatric disabilities.⁴⁴
Advocates for people with psychiatric dis-
abilities compare the criminalization of this
The Criminalization of People with
population since the 1960s to the dehu-
Psychiatric Disabilities
manizing treatment of people with this dis-
ability in the nineteenth century. As noted
As a result of the mass closing of public
in the New York Times, "Mental hospitals,
hospitals for people with psychiatric dis-
or asylums, grew out of a crusade in the
abilities beginning in the 1960s-in part fos-
1840s by Dorothea Dix, the Boston re-
tered by the development of new antipsy-
former, who warned that 'insane persons'
chotic drugs-jails and prisons became the
were being confined in 'cages, closets, cel-
nation's new hospitals for people with psy-
lars, stalls, pens: chained, naked, beaten
chiatric disabilities. Laurie M. Flynn, exec-
with rods, and lashed into obedience. "45
utive director of the National Alliance for
One of the main reasons that the discharge
the Mentally Ill-an advocacy group of rela-
of people with psychiatric disabilities from
tives and friends of people with psychiatric
hospitals has resulted in such disaster is
disabilities-emphasizes, "Part of mental ill-
that the plan was not carried out as de-
ness in America now is that you are going to
signed. Dr. Richard Lamb, one of the orig-
get arrested. What experts call the criminal-
inators of the 1960s plan, remembers that
ization of the mentally ill has grown as an
local governments were expected to pro-
issue as the nation's inmate population has
vide community-based settings where dis-
exploded and as corrections officials and
charged patients could continue their treat-
families of the emotionally disturbed have
ment, including medication and therapy.
become alarmed by the problems posed by
"But," Lamb notes, "largely for economic
having the mentally ill behind bars."43
reasons, this was never done." Ironically,
II8 CHAPTER SEVEN
community clinics and group homes with
perately sought.5¹ Moreover, many of the
live-in counselors, rather than hospitals or
bizarre symptoms of the Capitol gunman,
prisons, are the most effective and economi-
Russell Weston Jr., "also characterize the
cal way of providing services for people with
paranoid schizophrenia of John Nash, the
psychiatric disabilities.⁴⁶
brilliant, nonviolent Princeton mathemati-
When two Capitol police officers were
cian,"⁵² the subject of Sylvia Naser's book, A
fatally shot in Washington, D.C., on July
Beautiful Mind, about the winner of the 1994
24, 1998, by an individual who had been
Nobel Prize in Economics.
diagnosed as paranoid schizophrenic, New
York Times op-ed page columnist Frank Rich
stated that "no one said the obvious: It
Different Approaches to Psychiatric
is the gaping cracks in American mental-
Disabilities
health care that most clearly delivered
Russell Weston Jr. [the gunman] to his
The consumer mental health movement
rendezvous with history."⁴⁷ Rich added, "A
originated as early as 1908 with the estab-
comprehensive system of mental-health ser-
lishment of the Connecticut Society for
vices, including support for parents with
Mental Hygiene (renamed in 1909 the Na-
sick adult children who refuse treatment,
tional Committee for Mental Hygiene) by
doesn't exist. If it had, the Westons might
Clifford W. Beers, author of Mind That
have had more success in rescuing their
Found Itself: An Autobiography (1908), a mem-
son-as might the equally loving family
oir chronicling his harrowing personal ex-
of Michael Lauder, the Yale Law School
periences in a succession of mental insti-
prodigy charged June 1998] with murdering
tutions.⁵³ The federal Census Bureau re-
his fiancée." While the nation spent one-
quested in 1923 that Beers and his associates
third less for those with serious psychiatric
gather data concerning various state men-
disabilities in 1998 than it did in the 1950s,
tal institutions. Besides developing "model
and well over three times as many people
commitment laws" that were adopted by
with these disabilities are in jails and pris-
several states in the 1920S, the National
ons than in psychiatric facilities,48 "we have
Committee for Mental Hygiene adminis-
the science to treat mental illness at a suc-
tered studies that altered the treatment of
cess rate comparable to physical illness."⁴
people with psychiatric disabilities.
Although the public usually hears about
In 1950, the National Association of Men-
schizophrenia, which affects about 2.7 mil-
tal Health (by 1979 known as the Na-
lion Americans, "in the context of lurid
tional Mental Health Association): was es-
headlines," like those that followed Andrew
tablished, combining three organizations:
Goldstein's arrest and later conviction for
the National Committee for Mental Hy-
pushing Kendra Webdale off a subway plat-
giene, the National Mental Health Foun-
form to her death,50 most people with psy-
dation, and the Psychiatric Foundation (a
chiatric disabilities are not violent. Even for
fund-raising organization). The National
Goldstein, whose actions seemed to sup-
Mental Health Foundation was formed in
port the arguments for reinstitutionaliza-
the early 1940s by conscientious objectors to
tion and involuntary treatment of people
World War II-working in psychiatric hospi-
with serious psychiatric disabilities, the real
tals in place of military service-who were
problem was that the treatment he repeat-
appalled by the conditions in these hos-
edly begged for was in such short supply
pitals. The National Mental Health Asso-
that he was unable to get the help he des-
ciation (NMHA) was instrumental in the
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE II9
passage of the 1980 Mental Health Sys-
tions. Judi Chamberlin, a former psychi-
tems Act-encouraging the development
atric patient who refers to people like her-
of America's Community Mental Health
self as "psychiatric survivors," insists, "The
Centers-as well as the 1990 Americans
stereotypes, of course, have little to do with
with Disabilities Act and the 1996 Mental
the facts. Most people with psychiatric dis-
Health Parity Act. The NMHA argues that
abilities are living successfully in the com-
improved access to and quality of men-
munity, raising families, working, going to
tal health services will markedly decrease
school and, in general, leading essentially
the cost to society of medical care, welfare,
'normal' lives. A study published in 1998
homelessness, prison, and reduced human
in the Archives of General Psychiatry finds
potential in school and the workplace.⁵⁴
that most patients discharged from psychi-
In the early 1970s, about the same time as
atric hospitals pose no greater threat of vio-
the rights movement of people with phys-
lence to the community than similar people
ical disabilities was emerging, the rights
without psychiatric disabilities. 60 The study,
movement of people with psychiatric dis-
which includes those with psychiatric dis-
abilities expanded as consumers organized
abilities such as depression, schizophrenia,
in such cities as New York, Boston, and Van-
and bipolar illness, reveals that the signif-
couver. 55 The mental health system was slow
icant factor in predicting whether or not
to respond to the lack of recourse for many
individuals are at risk for committing vi-
consumers forced into compliance without
olence to others is if these individuals are
due process of law-one result of the closing
alcoholics or drug abusers, not if they have
of mental hospitals and the development
psychiatric disabilities.
and use of psychotropic medications. 56 Too
Although some "psychiatric survivors"
often isolated from the wider society and
are unaware of the ADA or the law's applica-
ignored even by the disability rights move-
tion to them, others were heartened by the
ment, former psychiatric patients organized
firm stand of disability activists who refused
around issues of patients rights,⁵ stressing
to weaken the legislation by excluding peo-
consumers using their experience with the
ple with psychiatric disabilities. By the late
health care system to help other consumers
1990S, however, "psychiatric survivors" were
with issues of daily life and empowerment
expressing concern about the meaning of
through mutual support and self-help.58
"parity," with respect to insurance, between
While the New York City group became
people with psychiatric disabilities and peo-
known in the 1970s as the Mental Patients
ple with physical disabilities. As Chamberlin
Liberation Project, similar organizations in
asserts, "Without parity in terms of rights,
other cities, independent of each other, were
parity in terms of [insurance] payment can
also demanding that their members have a
result in people being coerced into treat-
voice in their own psychiatric treatment as
ment that they find totally unacceptable. If
they struggled against what they considered
people with psychiatric disabilities get their
"a helping system that did things against
rights, everything else they are struggling
their will, things like forced institutional-
for will follow."
ization, drugging, and electric shock."
Yet Richard Greer, president of the Vir-
Because of the negative stereotypes, the
ginia Alliance for the Mentally Ill and an
stigmatizing and discrimination, former
advocate who describes his son as "mentally
psychiatric patients frequently hide their
ill," not only uses language different from
impairments, thus depriving themselves of
Chamberlin's, but also approaches this dis-
peer support and reasonable accommoda-
ability from a perspective different from
I20 CHAPTER SEVEN
those who refer to themselves as "psychi-
run program, the Mental Health Voter Em-
atric survivors." The fledgling National Al-
powerment Project, was founded in 1994
liance for the Mentally Ill opened its first
by Ken Steele, who, after controlling his
office in the District of Columbia in 1979.61
schizophrenia with medication, devised his
In the 1990s the National Alliance nur-
own treatment-advocacy.⁶ By 1999, Steele's
tured and supported chapters in each state
Project with seventy volunteers had regis-
in the country. Whereas "psychiatric sur-
tered thirty-five thousand "mental health
vivors" believe that the National Alliance for
consumers" in the New York Metropolitan
the Mentally Ill overemphasizes the biolog-
area. A major aim of the project-to turn the
ical basis for psychiatric disabilities, Greer
forty-four million people who have experi-
notes that his organization takes pride in
enced "some form of mental illness" into a
having encouraged research on the brain
significant voting bloc-is supported by the
that is useful in dealing with "mental ill-
NMHA, which by 1999 sought to replicate
ness."⁶² On the other hand, the NMHA deals
Steele's effort nationwide.⁶⁷
with psychiatric disabilities using a bio-
Nonetheless, there are significant issues
psycho-social approach, thus fostering a
on which the three camps agree. The
combination of "consumer-focused" strate-
NMHA, "psychiatric survivors," and the Na-
gies appropriate to the particular needs of
tional Alliance for the Mentally Ill all strive
the individual.
to remove the stigma-what Chamberlin
While the National Alliance for the Men-
prefers to call discrimination-associated
tally Ill generally supports "involuntary out-
with psychiatric disabilities. All are work-
patient commitment" legislation enacted
ing toward deinstitutionalization with re-
by a majority of states, both the NMHA
sources redirected so that services can be
and "psychiatric survivors" fervently oppose
provided in local communities. As Greer
these laws. 64 Perhaps the major reason for
indicates, some states, such as New Hamp-
the differences in the underlying assump-
shire, are better than others in moving
tions of these three camps stems from the
toward this model. All fear that threats to
membership: the National Alliance for the
the 1988 Fair Housing Amendments Act
Mentally Ill is primarily made up of rel-
jeopardize group homes, a way that the
atives, often parents, and friends of peo-
three groups strongly support for some peo-
ple with "mental illness"; "psychiatric sur-
ple with psychiatric disabilities to live in
vivors" are people who themselves have
the community.68 Yet these three advocacy
experienced, or episodically experience, a
groups are concerned that although many
psychiatric disability; and the NMHA is
people with developmental disabilities have
an umbrella organization linking advo-
been successfully moved out of institutional
cates (including parents of young children
settings into group homes of fifteen or fewer
with psychiatric disabilities), consumers,
residents (or into their own homes), the
and providers.
result of deinstitutionalizing people with
Joseph Rogers, a leader in mental health
psychiatric disabilities remains controver-
for over fifteen years, notes that self-help-
sial. Seeking to eliminate the disincentives
consumer-run programs in the community
to employment, members of all three camps
in which people are engaged in their own
approve of Social Security laws that have
treatment-in combination with life sup-
been rewritten so that people with dis-
ports, such as housing and employment,
abilities, including those with psychiatric
have proven most effective for people with
disabilities, are able to maintain benefits
psychiatric disabilities. 65 One consumer-
while earning reasonable incomes. Finally,
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE I2I
the NMHA, "psychiatric survivors," and the
who evaluates "mental health plans" for
National Alliance for the Mentally Ill vigor-
businesses, points out that from 1992 to 1997
ously assert that managed care companies
managed care companies have made enor-
generally deal ineffectively with people with
mous profits from "mental health care,"
psychiatric disabilities.
much more than from physical health care.
Moreover, Wrich reveals that people in se-
vere psychiatric distress, such as acute de-
Mangled Care
pression, not only have not gotten the im-
mediate treatment they require, but even the
With more than 140 million Americans
delayed treatment they finally do receive is
covered by some form of managed care
questionable: "Anywhere from 20 percent
in the event of psychiatric disability, Dr.
of the time to 30 percent of the time it
Harold Eist, president of the American
either was not the right level of care, or if
Psychiatric Association, recalls his trou-
it was the right level of care, the lengths of
bling conversation with an insurance com-
treatment were not sufficient to take care of
pany executive:
the problem."
I said, "Why are you [the executive] doing
this [taking advantage of] the mentally ill?"
A Two-Tier Health Care System
He said to me, "Because they're vulnerable."
It's known that if you put impediments
in the way of the mentally ill, it will be
Managed care organizations often operate
more difficult for them to fight through
in a manner that is inconsistent with the
them
I hear hundreds and hundreds of
needs of people with disabilities, a popu-
heartbreaking cases on a regular basis. And
lation with lower income and greater care
every time I hear of one of these cases, I VOW
needs than the average person. Tending to
that I will fight this scourge of managed
use health services more frequently and re-
care harder and harder because it's not
care; it's managed cost, and as somebody
quiring greater use of specialty and long-
said, "mangled care"
They delay access
term care, people with disabilities generally
to care. They don't provide sufficient care.
do not fit within most "capitation payment"
They throw people out of the hospital too
structures,70 which are designed for average
soon, people who are still very, very ill. So
patients. The Journal of the American Medi-
how can they possibly get people better
cal Association reports that older people and
quicker [as they claim]? What they try to
chronically ill poor people "were more than
do is put a Band-Aid on and get rid of
people quicker.69
twice as likely to decline in health in an
HMO as in a fee-for-service plan,"⁷¹ such as
Although Keith Dixon, CEO of the Vista
Medicare.
Behavioral Health Plans, argues that pri-
Starting in Fall 1998, people with disabil-
vate managed care companies are bring-
ities and older people who receive health
ing needed capital and expertise to the
care through Medicare were asked to choose
"shambles" of a nonmanaged, "publicly tax-
from a variety of new options, including tra-
supported mental health system," he con-
ditional Medicare, HMOs, Medical Savings
cedes that "there's something inherently
Accounts (MSAs), and other types of health
disturbing about Wall Street investors in-
plans.⁷² A study by older people and their
vesting in companies whose responsibility
supporters noted that "beneficiaries with
is for one of the most vulnerable sectors of
chronic illnesses, requiring many expensive
our population." James Wrich, a consultant
health care services, would be hurt by the
I22 CHAPTER SEVEN
MSA program because the money in the
not willing to risk losing, as indicated by
MSA would not cover their medical costs
the fact that roughly 96 percent of physi-
under the deductible." Because the vari-
cians participated in the Medicare program.
ety of other types of health plans-lumped
Since those paying the higher fees may re-
under the rubric Medicare Plus Choice-are
ceive better services than Medicare patients,
private, they include many financial incen-
a two-tier system may be established. "In
tives to reduce care, provisions that do not
a two-tier system," Lani Sanjek, associate
serve the needs of people with disabilities.74
executive director of New York StateWide
Although the revised system was de-
Senior Action Council, asks, "Would those
signed to reduce federal spending on Medi-
with special needs, people with disabilities,
care and to save consumers money, the
many of whom have very limited resources,
program began precariously as insurance
receive the benefits of improved technology
companies decided whether or not to par-
and care obtainable by the general public?"
ticipate, and the government attempted to
Often, people with disabilities have re-
accomplish a formidable task-to educate
quirements-such as durable medical equip-
Medicare's thirty-nine million beneficiaries
ment, assistive technology, and personal
about the complicated choices available.⁷⁵
assistance-not covered by many health in-
Rather than reducing federal spending, the
surance plans, certainly not the managed
proliferating varieties of Medicare plans in-
care models that were driving medical prac-
creased federal spending and presented re-
tice in the United States in the 1990s.
cipients with confusing choices to com-
Since this health care system was set up to
prehend; moreover, in 1998 over four hun-
deal with acute, rather than chronic, health
dred thousand Medicare beneficiaries were
problems, the long-term services and sup-
dropped by HMOs. At a 1998 meeting of
ports essential to people with disabilities
the National Bipartisan Commission on
are seldom provided." For example, other
the Future of Medicare, the concern of
states learned from the hastily executed 1993
older people about threats to the traditional
experiment when Tennessee placed all its
Medicare system was demonstrated by the
Medicaid recipients, all at once-including
protest of dozens of members of the Gray
those with special needs-into managed
Panthers.⁷ Demanding that the commis-
care.⁷⁸ Although the plan resulted in a major
sion hold public hearings, they held up
expansion of coverage to people previously
signs saying, "No more Medicare cuts!"
uninsured, care was disruptive for those
Disability activists have raised serious
who required the coordination of several
questions about the real possibility of for-
doctors and services-people with disabili-
mally establishing a two-tier health care sys-
ties and older people.
tem in the country based on the economic
Since HMOs tend to avoid accepting peo-
level of the recipients of services. For ex-
ple with disabilities because they fear they
ample, the 1997 Kyl Amendment permits
may be frequent users of expensive medi-
doctors to charge more than the Medicare
cal services, examples of people who sought
rate, whatever the market will bear. The only
payment for significant medical treatments
consequence for these physicians would be
most often involve those who were in ap-
their inability to treat Medicare patients
parently good health, but became seriously
for two years. Before the Kyl Amendment,
ill or disabled after joining an HMO. As
if physicians did not accept Medicare fees,
Sanjek points out, "If we look at 1995 to 1996
they were not allowed to treat Medicare
Medicare data, we see that IO percent of the
patients-a population that doctors were
recipients used 70 percent of the medical
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE 123
cost. Of course, HMOs have been selecting
internist who determines access to specialty
their members from the 90 percent that use
care, may not have the expertise to deal with
only 30 percent of the cost." Sanjek offers an
a specific disability nor to make judgments
example of the recruitment strategies often
regarding appropriate specialists. Dr. Stuart
used. by HMOs to "cherry pick" those they
Jamieson of the University of California San
deem to be the least costly Medicare clients,
Diego Medical Center observes that even
people without visible disabilities:
when a patient is assigned to a specialist,
an HMO, in its effort to be cost-effective,
An HMO invites prospective clients to a hotel
"doesn't recognize that one doctor has a
breakfast. After the HMO representative
makes a pitch to encourage the Medicare
special skill over another doctor."⁸⁰
recipients to join the HMO, those who wish
to become members are invited to walk up
the steps to the mezzanine to sign up. In
People with Special Needs
this way the HMO has ruled out people
in Managed Care
who have difficulty leaving their homes,
traveling, or climbing steps. According to
Susan Scheer of the New York City Pub-
the HMO's assumptions, they've eliminated
lic Advocate's office describes how work-
a large percentage of potentially expensive
clients.
ing people with disabilities-who were in
managed care because of the health plan
HMOs advise people to join a plan that
at their places of employment-experienced
suits their present medical requirements;
difficulty when they tried to obtain the
yet destined to change with age, medical
durable medical equipment they required.⁸¹
necessities are really unpredictable at any
age. Therefore, a plan that initially may seem
Three cases involved wheelchairs, two manual
appropriate may be totally inadequate after
and one power. All of them were in the Oxford
HMO, and in each case the individual was
the consumer experiences a catastrophic ill-
told that the plan didn't cover wheelchairs.
ness or an accident. Everyone needs lifetime
When they complained and appealed, each
benefits that cover a broad spectrum of un-
was given some money to cover the cost of
foreseen medical circumstances. Dr. Linda
the wheelchair. But the one who complained
Peeno, an HMO medical director from 1987
the loudest, the longest, and the best got
to 1991, describes the industry's rationale for
ten times as much as the person who did
tending to deny doctors' requests for assis-
the least complaining. This is arbitrary and
capricious.
tive devices such as a computerized voice
machine for a young woman who was strug-
Scheer refers to other durable equipment
gling to deal with a rare, catastrophic brain
that people with disabilities had to fight
stem stroke that prevented her from speak-
for, such as a commode for a quadriplegic
ing.79 According to HMO logic, "She pur-
and a voice synthesizer for a person who
chased a Volkswagen plan and wants Cadil-
had a stroke. Scheer's point is that the
lac care-she will have to live with [what the
services people receive are dependent on
HMO labeled] her choices."
the degree to which they were capable of
Moreover, given the myriad disabilities
contending with the HMO. To illustrate,
and the potential cutting-edge treatments,
Scheer describes the case of an Oxford client
a particular managed care organization is
who had a stroke:
unlikely to include within its network of
providers all the needed services. The "gate-
While the man was rehabilitating in a
keeper," usually a general practitioner or
Staten Island facility, Oxford refused to
I24 CHAPTER SEVEN
continue to pay although there was no
rarely notice my disability in New York City,
plan in place for him to go home. After the
believe it or not. I'm actually faster on these
family put up a fuss, Oxford allowed him
wheels. What I always like to say is 'rubber
a little more rehab time. At the discharge
on wheels is faster than rubber on heels."
meeting, Oxford promised speech therapy,
occupational therapy, and home care. But
Determined to keep on working after his
they didn't give anywhere near the number
1992 spinal cord injury, Wood travels around
of hours they promised. They claimed it was
the city welcoming tourists with disabilities,
the family's responsibility to give home care.
among his other responsibilities with Big
In this case, as in many others, that was
Apple Greeters.
almost impossible. The man was about six
Because these activities have taken such
feet two inches, 240 pounds, and hemiplegic.
a toll on his wheelchairs, Wood has re-
His wife was about five feet tall, and she had
multiple sclerosis. His daughter-in-law, who
quested a thirty-two hundred dollar tita-
was about the same size as his wife, had two
nium wheelchair, stronger and more ex-
small children.
pensive than the two thousand dollar alu-
His son, a cop who was running his father's
minum wheelchair for which Oxford has
business at night, was very good at fighting
provided most of the cost in the past. Hav-
Oxford and got the Public Advocate [office]
ing no wheelchair policy until 1995, Oxford
involved. But since the man who had the
paid for wheelchairs on a case-by-case ba-
stroke didn't have the home care he needed,
he fell when he tried to get to the bathroom
sis. With its new wheelchair policy, Oxford
himself. So he landed back in the hospital
claims that "in the spirit of human care,"
in rehab, and his story appeared in the
the HMO "will cover wheelchairs with a
New York Daily News. Then Oxford paid the
contribution of five hundred dollars." Wood
maximum amount for his care. After the
points out, however, that five hundred dol-
publicity, I received many similar complaints
lars would not allow him to purchase the
at my office.
kind of chair he requires: "I wouldn't be able
Alexander Wood, a paraplegic wheelchair
to take the wheels off and put the chair in
user with Big Apple Greeters-a nonprofit
back of my car. I wouldn't be able to propel
company geared toward boosting tourism
myself. I wouldn't be able to be independent
in New York City-also was refused a wheel-
the way I am now." According to the HMO
chair by Oxford.⁸² "Up to now, I've been
Council of New York, insurance coverage of
pretty successful with Oxford," Wood
wheelchairs is not mandatory in New York,
points out, "but I've had a strategy. I tell the
New Jersey, or Connecticut.
truth. When they turned down my request
for a pillow to prevent pressure sores, I told
them, 'IfI get pressure sores, I may need an
An Arbitrary Patchwork
operation and end up in the hospital. That
would cost a lot more than a pillow.' Within
Disability groups, older people, and doctors
ten minutes I got a phone call from Oxford
have begun to influence legislators and the
approving my pillow."
general public regarding HMOs. This shift
Wood's struggle with Oxford to get an
in public opinion may have been reflected
appropriate wheelchair was described on
in the $1.1 million awarded to Joyce Ramey-
the nightly local NBC-TV news program for
in a binding arbitration with her Medicare
the greater New York City area. With his
HMO-because as a dialysis patient, she was
lightweight, easy-to-maneuver wheelchair,
denied access to an HMO-approved kidney
Wood explains, "I can get anywhere I need
specialist for two years. 83 In 1997, twenty-
to; I can compete with anyone I want; I
one states passed comprehensive consumer
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE 125
rights bills dealing with HMO issues, such
If people with life-threatening illnesses-
as mandates especially beneficial to people
who were turned down for treatment by
with disabilities. These mandates included
their health plan-lived in California rather
nondiscrimination based on genetic infor-
than, say, New York in 1996, their doctors
mation, disability, or preexisting condition;
could have appealed to "a panel of indepen-
"point of service" (which means permission
dent physicians with no financial stake in
to go outside the HMO if the organization
the decision. Had Robert Fasano been a
cannot provide a needed service); and ac-
resident of Oregon rather than New York
ceptance of a specialist as the primary care
while an early version of the Oregon Medi-
physician when appropriate.84 Responding
caid plan rationing health care-ultimately
to the outrage of constituents (people with
struck down as an ADA violation-was in
disabilities-denied essential treatment by
effect, the favorable outcome of his liver
HMOs-and their families), the House of
transplant might have been tragically al-
Representatives overwhelmingly voted by
tered.⁸⁹ Disabled because of a liver ailment,
late 1999 to expand the rights of patients
Fasano became a recipient of Medicare, a
in managed care programs, including the
federal health insurance system that does
right to sue their insurance companies for
not cover drugs. Since Medicare would not
punitive damages.⁸⁵ Yet as of July 2000,
pay for the expensive medication that he
Congress had not enacted a patients' bill
would require following his upcoming liver
of rights.
transplant, Fasano had to "spend down"
The health care system in the United
and then wait for last minute acceptance by
States, still an arbitrary patchwork in flux
Medicaid, which does cover medication. Ex-
in the 1990s, has had devastating effects
periencing one medical crisis after another,
on too many people with severe illnesses.
including end-stage liver disease in which
As former New York Lieutenant Governor
toxins distort brain functioning, Fasano for-
Betsy McCaughey Ross observes:
tunately received a liver transplant at New
York City's Mount Sinai Hospital in 1990,
For many people with serious illnesses,
in time to save his life.
including some forms of cancer, experimental
treatments like bone marrow transplants
Although in the 1990s, for many people
are often the only hope. But insurance
like Fasano or those with AIDS on pro-
companies often deny coverage of these
tease inhibitors, pharmaceuticals are essen-
expensive treatments. They are not required
tial to survival, the 1965 decision to exclude
to cover experimental therapies, even when
drugs from Medicare benefits seemed ap-
no conventional remedy exists.
Thousands
propriate to prevent costly red tape and
of patients in nationally known health plans
fraud when it was made in the pre-computer
have opened letters [in which they are refused
vital medical care], suddenly finding out how
age.⁹¹ Frequently costing no more than
uninsured they actually are.⁸⁶
one or two dollars, medications were not
only inexpensive at that time, but they
Moreover, Dr. Jonathan Finley of New York
were also not nearly as significant a fac-
City's Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
tor in health care as they would later be-
Center indicates that potentially lifesaving
come with advances in technology. Because
plans of treatment (such as "high dose
Medicare has not caught up with current
chemotherapy with stem cell rescue"), sup-
medical realities, many people with disabil-
ported by peer-review data, are inaccurately
ities requiring expensive pharmaceuticals
labeled "experimental" by insurance com-
are forced to become Medicaid recipients
panies and routinely denied.⁸⁷
or to join managed care plans that-except
I26 CHAPTER SEVEN
for covering drugs-do not adequately serve
Falling through the Cracks: Children
their needs.
with Special Health Needs
Described in an April 1998 brief filed
by Legal Aid on behalf of the Connecti-
Melinda Dutton, senior health policy spe-
cut Union of Disability Action Groups as
cialist for the New York State Children's De-
an "abrupt, unprecedented break with over
fense Fund, notes that by early 1999, nation-
twenty years of federal court jurisprudence
wide, "progress has been made on behalf of
in the Medicaid arena," Desario v. Thomas⁹²
children with disabilities generally." Peggy
galvanized the disability community. A tem-
McManus, codirector of the Maternal and
porary setback for disability advocates, this
Child Care Health Policy Research Center,
February 1998 decision by the U.S. Court
describes the effect of the 1996 welfare over-
of Appeals of the Second Circuit upheld
haul on children with disabilities: "The in-
a federal law that permitted New York,
frastructure that has been created as a safety
Connecticut, and Vermont to deny some
net for kids with special needs is crum-
Medicaid funds to poor people with se-
bling.' In the same year, the New York Times
vere disabilities.93 As Justice For All notes,
reported that "the number of children on
"In reversing the district court's injunc-
the disability rolls
tripled [since 1989],
tion, the Court of Appeals authorized states
and costs
quadrupled, to more than five
to ration health care by providing only
billion dollars a year."97 This number grew
the type of treatment needed by 'most'
not because of welfare fraud, as had been in-
Medicaid recipients." The threat to ac-
correctly reported,⁹⁸ but rather as a result of
cess of Medicaid services was so great that
the swelling childhood poverty rate, a loos-
a broad coalition of eighty-one state and
ening of eligibility rules that provided bene-
national disability, disease, provider, reli-
fits to children with "mental impairments,"
gious, and labor organizations filed an am-
as well as court decisions-especially the
icus curiae brief in support of the plain-
1990 Supreme Court's Zebley ruling, that re-
tiff's position.
sulted in increased accuracy in government
After disability advocates persuaded the
assessment of children with disabilities.⁹⁹
Clinton administration to review this rul-
Dutton continues, "With the changes in-
ing, federal policy was changed. The fed-
cluded in the Balanced Budget Act of 1997,
eral Health Care Financing Adminis-
the safety net is better than ever, but many
tration noted in a September 1998 letter
children with special health needs are still
to Medicaid directors that a state "may
falling through the cracks."
not impose arbitrary limits' like those ap-
Dutton is referring to the block grants to
parently endorsed by the Appeals Court,
the states included in this act-resulting in
on necessary equipment." Consequently, in
the expansion of Medicaid as well as the new
January 1999 the U.S. Supreme Court in
federal Child Health Insurance Program
Slekis v. Thomas vacated the ruling, return-
(CHIP)-that benefit children with disabil-
ing the case to the Court of Appeals for
ities. With states receiving increased Medi-
the Second Circuit for further considera-
caid funding, "more children who meet cer-
tion in light of this new federal directive
tain qualifications related to their medical
concerning the scope of Medicaid cover-
condition or disability are able to partici-
age. Slekis demonstrates what disability ac-
pate in Medicaid without regard to their
tivists vigorously assert: the necessity for
parents' financial resources," Dutton states.
vigilance in a time of volatility in health care
While an existing Medicaid waiver pro-
policy.
gram¹⁰⁰ provides health insurance for many
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE I27
children with severe disabilities or illnesses,
asserts that "they may not be able to get
the program has significant limitations:
the machine they need to breathe, or the
only children with specific diagnoses are
home care they require, or the wheelchair
eligible; unlike in other Medicaid programs,
inserts that they grow out of every year. If
the dollar amount of services is capped per
we just look at children with special health
year; and historically, there have been wait-
needs who are uninsured, we would grossly
ing lists for eligible children.
underestimate the challenge. These private
CHIP covers children whose parents earn
insurance products were not written with
too much for Medicaid, but too little to
children with disabilities in mind." Dutton
afford private health insurance. Although
observes that in order to craft a big-picture
many children with disabilities are included
solution that would eliminate the cracks
in CHIP, the provisions of the new pro-
in the system, families of and advocates
gram are not nearly as comprehensive as
for children across various disabilities, ill-
those of the thirty-year-old Medicaid pro-
nesses, and programs must be provided with
gram. 101 For example, the Early Periodic
the resources they require to organize. Such
Screening, Diagnosis and Testing (EPSDT)
coalition building, she adds, would facili-
provision in Medicaid requires that if treat-
tate communication among-and provide
ment, service, or equipment-such as an or-
a sense of empowerment to-these families
gan transplant, a wheelchair, or an air con-
and advocates, as well as create a mobilizing
ditioner (for an asthmatic child)-is med-
political force that would increase public
ically necessary for a child's health, wel-
awareness of these issues.
fare, growth, and well-being, it must be
granted. Efforts by advocates of children
with special health needs to get provisions
Long-Term Care in the Community
in CHIP equivalent to Medicaid's EPSDT
failed, for there was no political will-
The National Council on Disability, an or-
even among the most liberal legislators-
ganization that played a pivotal role in the
to have that broad Medicaid package in-
enactment of the ADA, indicates that long-
cluded in the new program. With caps sim-
term home health care (including "effective
ilar to those in private insurance and with
rehabilitation, prevention of secondary dis-
each state defining its own benefit package,
abilities and complications, and indepen-
too often CHIP does not adequately serve
dent living"), which is vital to many peo-
children with the most serious disabilities
ple with disabilities, is excluded from most
and illnesses.
managed care programs.¹⁰³ Some people
Dutton points out that "despite the im-
with physical, psychiatric, or developmental
provements, we've got a long way to go to get
disabilities need personal assistance services
all children with special health needs access
in order to live independently in the com-
to all the health services they require." Many
munity. Yet, as Melvin R. Tansman, director
uninsured children, a significant number
of health policy at Eastern Paralyzed Veter-
with disabilities, who are eligible for Medi-
ans Association, states, "There is no com-
caid or CHIP are not enrolled "because their
prehensive federal policy that addresses the
parents don't know what their children are
need for long-term care."¹⁰⁴ Many disability
entitled to. "102 While children with special
advocates indicate that independent living
health needs who are covered through their
is usually not only less expensive than insti-
parents' private health insurance may be
tutionalization, but also that many people
eligible for routine medical care, Dutton
with disabilities prefer participation in the
128 CHAPTER SEVEN
community to what they perceive as "incar-
that the 1997 funding levels were more rea-
ceration" in a nursing home. The nature
sonable than the 1994 levels. Furthermore,
of independent living is determined by the
they point out that the cuts are fiscally ill-
home care needs of the particular individual
advised because, for example, if a person
served. Some require as much as twenty-
who needs home care is denied Medicare ser-
four-hour services; for others an hour in
vices amounting to twenty thousand dollars
the morning and an hour in the evening
annually, then that individual will be placed
would suffice.
in a nursing home costing Medicaid fifty
Moreover, NCD observes that "escalat-
thousand dollars a year. A series of stud-
ing restrictions from private [health care]
ies conducted from the mid- to late 1990s
insurers have increasingly pushed high-
by New York City comptroller, Alan Hevesi,
risk, high-utilization people with disabili-
"Net Loss I, II, and III," demonstrates the
ties into public sector programs"-Medicare
economic advantage of home health care
and Medicaid. 105 Since "hospitals have
for people with chronic conditions. Hevesi
strong financial incentives to discharge
states, "If you do harm-cut home care ser-
Medicare patients as soon as possible,"
vices and put people in nursing homes-and
growing numbers of people-younger than
you save money, you have a debate. But if
sixty-five-with disabilities, as well as many
you do harm by institutionalizing people
older people with chronic conditions, are
and you lose money, as our studies have
being served by home health care. 106 Many
revealed, how can you argue against long
Medicaid beneficiaries also depend on
term health care in the community?"¹¹
home health care. "Because of advances in
medical science and technology, people liv-
ing at home can receive complex services
Health Policy Reforms
that were once available only in nursing
homes or hospitals. An example is infusion
In Achieving Independence (1996), the NCD
therapy, which supplies medication and nu-
provided to the president, the Congress, and
trition to patients with cancer, AIDS or
the nation with an analysis of federal laws
other serious illnesses." Other complicated
and programs affecting the disability pop-
treatments possible in the home that were
ulation, including an assessment of trends
once provided only by doctors and nurses
in the health care system. In order to en-
include dialysis, chemotherapy--even suc-
sure that private and public entities pro-
tioning the excess mucus from the trachea
viding health care services do not discrim-
of a two-year-old "whose brain does not
inate against people with disabilities, NCD
emit the signals for him to breathe properly
offered to establish an advisory committee
while he sleeps. "107 Yet political pressure to
to work with the Department of Justice. 111
reduce mounting Medicare and Medicaid
The NCD suggested special consideration
spending threatens to limit the provision of
of issues and promulgation of regulations
this crucial long-term home health care. 108
"clarifying the application of Titles II and
In part as a response to fraudulent pro-
III of the ADA and Sections 503 and 504
viders, the Balanced Budget Act of 1997
of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 to pri-
froze home health care at 1994 funding
vate health insurance companies and health
levels, resulting in a 30 percent cut in ser-
plans," including those that service Medi-
vices. 109 Noting that the act punished the
care and Medicaid recipients.¹¹²
consumers of services rather than the perpe-
Although Medicaid was specifically cre-
trators of fraud, disability advocates argue
ated for people with limited incomes, many
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE 129
of whom are disabled or older, Medicare
"an incentive [for government] to meet the
originally was established to deal with the
health needs and long-term services needs
acute health care requirements of older peo-
of people with disabilities. "118 As the NCD
ple who contributed to Social Security. The
pointed out, mechanisms for the presen-
1972 amendments to the Social Security
tation of suitable appeals and grievances
Act, however, allowed recipients of disability
to entities-such as ombudsmen-not con-
benefits under the age of sixty-five to qualify
nected to health plans would enable people
for Medicare. 113 Yet by 1999, the expanded
with disabilities and other consumers to
Medicare program was not adequately serv-
challenge health insurance decisions. The
ing the needs of the roughly five mil-
NCD also endorsed the transformation of
lion Medicare beneficiaries under the age
"Medicaid's institutional bias" into a pre-
of sixty-five with disabilities,¹¹⁴ the fastest
sumption that "long-term services and sup-
growing group of Medicare recipients. 115
ports should be provided in the home and
In order to update Medicare, the NCD
community, with congregate-care settings
urged Congress to periodically review the
as a last resort."
benefit package so that services, such as
Recognizing the increasing numbers of
medical treatment and therapy, as well as
people with disabilities dependent upon
assistive technologies, reflect current health
Medicaid-sponsored managed care health
care and medical practices. 116 "A [1998] Na-
plans, and the potential for these plans to
tional Organization on Disability/Harris
incorporate Medicare recipients, the NCD
survey of Americans with disabilities noted
emphasized the importance of significant
that 69 percent of adults with disabilities
federal control in establishing standards
who are not employed gave the need for
and monitoring compliance. 119 Contending
continued medical treatment or therapy as
that segmentation of the health insurance
a reason for not returning to work. These
market based on risk militates against ac-
services are rarely covered by employer-
cess to coverage by many people in the dis-
sponsored health insurance. "117 The NCD
ability population, the NCD favors a health
advised that Medicare recipients with dis-
care system by the year 2006 that spreads
abilities should be encouraged to return to
risk by including everyone; thus, public and
the workforce by allowing them to retain
private insurers would compete on the basis
their Medicare benefits when they acquire
of price and quality, not price and risk. 120
jobs. Both workers with disabilities and the
general public would benefit from such a
provision since these gainfully-employed in-
The Nexus between Jobs
dividuals with disabilities would no longer
and Health Care
be receiving Social Security payments.
Inasmuch as Medicaid payments are es-
The disincentives resulting from the nexus
sential to many people with severe disabil-
between jobs and health care for people with
ities, the NCD recommended the continu-
disabilities have presented a major obsta-
ation of appropriate funding levels, estab-
cle to the employment of potential work-
lishment of a federal definition of disability,
ers with disabilities who can and want to
and the maintenance of a "federal private
work. Since Medicaid-the sole source of
right of action." With projected increased
reimbursement for long-term services and
state control over Medicaid, a "federal pri-
supports-has been available only to people
vate right of action" would enable Medi-
who are not working, many people with
caid recipients to petition federal courts as
disabilities have been forced to remain un-
130 CHAPTER SEVEN
employed. In order to remain on Medi-
vided by MediCal. 126 MediCal is California
care by 1999, recipients of Social Security
Medicaid, the California health care system
Disability Insurance were precluded from
for those on SSI, 127 a federal benefit program
earning more than seven hundred dollars a
for people with disabilities and older people
month. 121 In addition, because of "preexist-
living at the poverty level. Since even with a
ing condition exclusions, limits on benefits,
well-paying job he could not afford to pay
and caps on payments," most health in-
for his in-home services, he doubted that he
surance companies do not adequately cover
would be able to accept employment after he
people with disabilities. 122 Consequently,
completed his Ph.D.
many workers with disabling conditions, no
When Longmore was offered a fellowship,
longer covered by health insurance com-
he discovered that-according to the rules
panies, have been forced to become Social
of SSI-he was neither allowed to accept the
Security beneficiaries on Medicare or Med-
fellowship nor royalties from the book he
icaid rather than employees.
had published, a biography of George Wash-
"Because there is no well-established or
ington. A few months after a story appeared
well-funded system to provide supports to
in the Los Angeles Times about Longmore
maximize employment, and there is a well-
burning his book in front of the Social Secu-
established system for providing cash com-
rity offices to demonstrate against the injus-
pensation, people with disabilities may have
tice he was forced to endure, an amendment
no choice except to leave the workforce and
to a congressional bill corrected some of the
accept the cash. "123 In order to get potential
inequities against which he had protested.
workers with disabilities out of government
Yet income maintenance programs for peo-
subsidized income-maintenance programs
ple with disabilities such as Workers' Com-
and into the workforce, Rebecca Ogle of Jus-
pensation, SSDI, and SSI have continued
tice For All maintains that the nation would
to keep many qualified people out of the
be best served by "a national non-means
labor force.
tested program for home and community-
On a more optimistic note, President
based services and supports. A growing
Clinton quotes President Franklin Roo-
bipartisan effort in the Congress to counter
sevelt: "No country, no matter how rich,
the disincentives to employment for benefi-
can afford to waste its human resource. "128
ciaries with disabilities who have the ability
EEOC vice chair Paul M. Igasaki elaborates
and desire to work was demonstrated by
on this point:
the 1999 unanimous Senate vote, as well
as the 412 to 9 House vote, for the Work
Corporate America is beginning to realize
that a diverse work force makes economic
Incentives Improvement Act (WIIA). 125 The
sense and is critical to its success. A 1993
conference version of WIIA, approved in
Standard and Poor's study showed that those
November 1999 and signed by President
companies that achieved some threshold
Clinton in December 1999, would permit
level of diversity had stock market records
states to set up buy-in programs to ex-
that were almost two and one-half times
tend Medicaid coverage to Supplemental
better than similarly situated companies.
That diverse work force includes individuals
Security Income (SSI) and SSDI recipients
with disabilities. 129
who work.
Paul Longmore, historian and director of
Employment laws applicable to the fed-
the Institute on Disability, San Francisco
eral government-but not to the private
State University, is a polio survivor who
sector where over 85 percent of the jobs
requires the in-home support services pro-
are found-require affirmative action for
ACCESS TO JOBS AND HEALTH CARE I3I
people with disabilities. Consequently, the
ple with disabilities at the Defense Depart-
vocational talents of people with severe
ment: "She's a quadriplegic, Phi Beta Kappa,
impairments who require home care ser-
and she says it this way. 'I can't dress myself.
vices, such as Judy Gilliam, are seldom re-
I can't walk. I can't drive. I can't pick up
alized outside of the federal government. 130
a glass of water. But I can work.' And her
Claiborne Haughton Jr., director for Civil-
work, I'm here to tell you, is consistently
ian Equal Employment Opportunity, de-
characterized by superior quality and pro-
scribed Gilliam, his GS-I5 manager for peo-
ductivity."¹³¹
Chapter Eight
"Not Dead Yet" and
Physician-Assisted Suicide
WITH INCREASINGLY SOPHISTICATED
The organization was founded in Spring
technology for life-sustaining treatment,
1996 in reaction to public support for le-
doctors frequently are given the awesome
galization of assisted death that had been
responsibility of determining when a life
promoted by the well-publicized suicides
should end. Anthropologist Margaret Mead
aided by Jack Kevorkian.³ Mark O'Brien-
observed that "society is always attempting
journalist, poet, and member of Not Dead
to make the physician into a killer-for in-
Yet, as well as the subject of the 1997
stance, to kill the defective child at birth
Academy Award-winning documentary
It is the duty of society to protect the physi-
"Breathing Lessons"-responds to the Ke-
cian from such requests."¹ People with dis-
vorkian ethic:
abilities are particularly vulnerable to judg-
ments that their lives are not worth living.2
It is tempting to pity a man in an iron lung.
But pity has become a lethal weapon. On
January 8 [1997], the Supreme Court heard
Opposition to "the Death Train"
arguments in favor of killing people like me-
out of pity-to end our suffering. An iron lung
On January 8, 1997, while the U.S. Supreme
has been my second skin since the 1955 polio
Court was hearing Vacco v. Quill-a case in-
epidemic. For forty years, people have said,
"That poor thing-how he must suffer! He's
volving the constitutionality of state laws
terminally ill, you know." I'm not "suffering,"
prohibiting physician-assisted suicide-
"terminal," or even "ill." Don't waste your
people from many parts of the nation
pity on me. I want to live. Every year, the
demonstrated in front of the Court. Many
practitioners of mercy death kill thousands
of the demonstrators, people with severe
of people against our will-out of pity. If the
disabilities-blind people, deaf people, peo-
Supreme Court declares mercy death legal,
ple in motorized wheelchairs-displayed
that's like declaring open season on people
with disabilities. We are not contagious or
signs proclaiming the sardonic name of
dangerous. And we aren't affiliated with any
their organization, Not Dead Yet, in
political party. We are people who hear the
"spooky-shaped" letters evoking the spirit
death train. We will not board that train
of Halloween.
willingly.4
"NOT DEAD YET" AND PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE 133
In the amicus curiae briefs submitted by
role in shaping that newspaper's approach
Not Dead Yet and American Disabled for
to assisted suicide. 10 Betzold reveals that
Attendant Programs Today (ADAPT), attor-
"in his writings and statements, Kevorkian
neys Diane Coleman and Stephen Gold-
advocates a society that allows euthanasia
supporting former New York State attor-
for the dying, the disabled, the mentally
ney general Dennis Vacco's effort to uphold
ill, infants with birth defects, and comatose
the constitutionality of the state's ban on
adults; and he sanctions experiments prior
physician-assisted suicide-contended that
to their death and organ harvesting. He en-
"the creation of a right to assisted suicide
visions a global system of death on demand
for a class of individuals based on health
run by doctors who operate without over-
status or disability is a lethal form of dis-
sight from government or ethicists."¹¹
crimination that violates the ADA." The
Critic of physician-assisted suicide Nat
disability community was concerned about
Hentoff of New York City's Village Voice
the potentially ominous consequences of
notes:
physician-assisted suicide for those peo-
It's a bitter irony [that a] quintessentially
ple whose quality of life may be consid-
liberal judge [Ninth Circuit Court Judge
ered unacceptable by members of the med-
Stephen Reinhardt] has opened the door
ical profession.
wide not only to assisted suicide but also
Responding to the much publicized No-
to euthanasia, because the majority of the
vember 22, 1998, "60 Minutes" spectacle of
resultant dead will be the poor, the disabled,
Kevorkian injecting Thomas Youk-a man
and other vulnerable people. Many of them
with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)-
will persuade themselves to die because they
feel nobody thinks their lives are worth
with lethal chemicals,6 Coleman, founder
preserving. Or that keeping themselves alive
and president of Not Dead Yet, asserted:
will cost too much, thereby burdening their
"Reporters ignore the fact that most of
families and companions.12
Kevorkian's victims have been disabled, not
terminal, ignore the discrimination and
oppression that drove each of them to
The Supreme Court
despair-ignore the injustice in a society
that helps people die, but refuses to help
Reversing the 1996 rulings in the Second
us [people with disabilities] live with the
Circuit Court of Appeals in Vacco v. Quill
basic respect and the simple supports we de-
and in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
serve."7 Kevorkian, who claims he has helped
in Washington v. Glucksberg the U.S. Supreme
more than 130 people commit suicide, was
Court on June 26, 1997, unanimously up-
found guilty of second-degree murder in
held state criminal laws against physician-
the Youk case, after prosecutors had unsuc-
assisted suicide. 13 Prior to Quill, competent
cessfully attempted to convict him in five
adults in New York State had the right to
former cases.⁸
refuse medical treatment, and physicians
Michael Betzold explains in his 1997 ex-
were allowed to honor the requests of such
posé of journalist Jack Lessenberry, "The
patients to withhold or terminate life sup-
Selling of Dr. Death," how Kevorkian be-
port. At the same time, intentionally assist-
came a national hero.⁹ A personal friend of
ing another person to commit or attempt
Kevorkian and his attorney Geoffrey Fieger,
suicide was a felony according to New York
Lessenberry reported on Kevorkian for the
State law.
New York Times from 1993 until publication
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals
of the Betzold exposé, thus playing a major
recognized that the right to refuse life-
I34 CHAPTER EIGHT
sustaining treatment gives those patients
be recognized that assisted suicide and
who become dependent on life support the
euthanasia will be practiced through the
opportunity to have some control over the
prism of social inequality and prejudice that
timing of their death. Finding no ratio-
characterizes the delivery of services in all
nal basis for the state allowing patients
segments of society, including health care."
to end life by requesting cessation of life
He noted that even if they are not dying,
support while, simultaneously, denying pa-
"persons requiring dialysis, respirators, in-
tients similar control when life support is
sulin or long-term nursing care would all
not involved, the court ruled in favor of Dr.
be candidates for euthanasia."¹
Quill. This difference, the court held, vio-
Yet allegiances on this issue are unpre-
lates the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S.
dictable, as illustrated by the court chal-
Constitution. Attorney General Vacco, ap-
lenges by the National Right-to-Life
pealing the court's decision, argued before
Committee to the Oregon aid-in-dying mea-
the U.S. Supreme Court in 1997 to uphold
sure, an initiative approved by the voters
New York State's ban on physician-assisted
in 1994, preventing physician-assisted sui-
suicide.
cide from taking effect until a later Oregon
While the appeals court decisions in both
vote in 1997. On the other hand, three New
Quill and Glucksberg supported physician-
York law firms-Arnold & Porter; Cravath,
assisted suicide, Judge Reinhardt's defini-
Swaine & Moore; Debevoise & Plimpton-
tion of "terminal" in the latter case as
each with a history of pro bono legal con-
any "medical condition that is incurable
tributions to disability causes and orga-
and irreversible" seemed threatening to
nizations, supported physician-assisted sui-
many people with disabilities and chronic
cide.¹⁸ Also, liberal Harvard law profes-
illnesses.¹ 14 As early as 1958, law profes-
sor Laurence H. Tribe argued before the
sor Yale Kamisar warned of courts and
U.S. Supreme Court in 1997 for physician-
physicians, even clerics, allowing family
assisted suicide.
members to remove feeding tubes and res-
In his majority opinion in Vacco v. Quill
pirators from people who were suppos-
validating the state prohibition on physi-
edly terminal. 15 Anticipating a movement
cian-assisted suicide, Chief Justice William
towards active euthanasia for the socially
H. Rehnquist noted that this issue is prop-
vulnerable, Kamisar cautioned that some
erly within the jurisdiction of the states:
of those patients' lives could have been ex-
The state has an interest in protecting
tended considerably. In his essay "Against
vulnerable groups including the poor,
Assisted Suicide-Even in a Very Limited
the elderly, and disabled persons from
Form," Kamisar quoted his former col-
abuse, neglect and mistakes. The court of
league, Robert Burt: "It would be ironic
appeals dismissed the state's concern that
if [at a time when millions of Americans
disadvantaged persons might be pressured
lack adequate health care] the judiciary se-
into physician-assisted suicide as "ludicrous
lected physician-assisted suicide as the one
on its face." We have recognized, however,
the real risk of subtle coercion and undue
health care right that deserves constitu-
influence in end-of-life situations. 19
tional status."¹⁶
Strongly influenced by Kamisar's analy-
sis, Ninth Circuit Judge Robert Beezer, in
AIDS Activists
his dissenting opinion in Glucksberg, quoted
from a 1994 report by the New York State
Most AIDS activists take a position sanc-
Task Force on Life and the Law: "It must
tioning physician-assisted suicide, contrary
"NOT DEAD YET" AND PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE 135
to the majority of other disability rights
overdose of sleeping pills for a patient with
activists. Three terminally-ill patients, one
end-stage leukemia, a woman who was seek-
with cancer and two with AIDS, as well as
ing his assistance in dying.22 Quill defended
Dr. Timothy Quill and two other doctors,
his action with a question: "Are we going to,
initiated the case in support of physician-
as a culture, override a person's deathbed
assisted suicide. An amicus curiae brief sup-
request, a person who is dying who says, 'I
porting the patients and doctors included
need some help here?"
not only the well-known gay rights orga-
Supporting Quill's position, Dr. Lon-
nization, Lambda Legal Defense and Ed-
nie Shavelson argued for the establishment
ucation Fund, and some religious groups,
of protocols for physician-assisted suicide:
but also the National Association of People
"It [physician-assisted suicide] is happening
with AIDS.
anyway, whether it's legal or not.
I see
Larry Kramer, a vocal activist in the AIDS
a tremendous amount of hidden, under-
movement, indicates that "since the start of
ground practice [of such suicides] in which
the epidemic, there have always been doc-
nobody knows if there are abuses. I see po-
tors one could talk to
All
of
us
who
have
tential disasters." Confirming Shavelson's
been on the front line have experiences-
assertion, a survey published in I997 of II8
plural-with people who didn't want to suf-
members of the Bay Area Community Con-
fer anymore. Although he knew many
sortium, an association of local AIDS doc-
desperately ill people who had procured
tors, revealed that 53 percent of the respon-
lethal medication, he was profoundly af-
dents reported helping at least one of their
fected by the death of Brad Davis, the star
patients to commit suicide.²³
of Kramer's AIDS play, The Normal Heart:
"The medicine was very painful, and it
wasn't working, and he just saw no sun-
shine ahead or anything. He was just go-
Pain Management
ing to get sicker and sicker, and he didn't
want to put his family through that. And
Other medical practitioners argue that the
he did not want to suffer the pain him-
technology to manage pain is available. Pe-
self." Stirred by this incident, Kramer allied
diatric AIDS nurse Sheila Diamond states
with a Seattle group, Compassion In Dying,
that "there is really no such thing as in-
that was pursuing "a constitutional right to
tractable pain, but only pain which is under-
'self-deliverance." Revealing that he felt like
recognized, under-treated." Reinforcing
"the casting director," Kramer recruited two
Diamond's assertion, hospice doctor Ira By-
other physicians-his own psychiatrist, Dr.
ock explains:
Samuel Klagsbrun, and an old friend, Dr.
Not only do we know that people's pain of
Howard Grossman-to affiliate with Quill
their terminal illness often goes inadequately
in the lawsuit.
treated, it's often not even addressed. Beyond
On October 30, 1996, for the first time a
that, as if that weren't bad enough, our
small group of medical practitioners, four
current non-system of health care routinely
physicians and a psychologist, publicly en-
pauperizes people simply for being chronically
dorsed the campaign of Jack Kevorkian, ini-
ill and not dying quickly enough
When
tiated in 1990, for physician-assisted sui-
you look at the curriculum of medical
training, there is very, very little attention to
cide.²¹ In 1991, Quill, a mainstream physi-
caring for people at the end of life. Even pain
cian, wrote his unprecedented public con-
control occupies no more than a handful of
fession regarding his prescribing a fatal
hours in a four-year course of study.
136 CHAPTER EIGHT
Dr. Kathleen Foley, palliative care specialist
doctors accepted myths such as that third-
at New York's Memorial Sloan-Kettering
degree burns do not hurt, or that children-
Cancer Center and a pioneer since the mid-
because of their undeveloped nervous sys-
1970s in the field of palliative care and
tems-do not feel pain, or that cancer pain
pain management, points out that "even
can never be alleviated. In fact, Carr indi-
oncology residents and fellows are poorly
cates that although 90 percent of instances
trained. It's a well-documented fact that
of cancer pain can be managed successfully,
those asking for assisted suicide almost
at least 30 to 40 percent of these cases are
always change their mind once we have their
undertreated. Furthermore, 30 to 40 per-
pain under control."25
cent of cancer patients experience clinical
Both proponents and opponents of phy-
depression, which Carr insists can be treated
sician-assisted suicide agree that pain man-
and reversed. Carr and Hendler maintain
agement is a preferable option to state-
that with the treatment of depression-
sanctioned suicide. Dr. Daniel Carr (in-
a major cause of suicide among patients
ternist and anesthesiologist at the New
with acute physical illnesses-in combina-
England Medical Center in Boston, who
tion with proper palliative care, physician-
has helped craft two sets of pain manage-
assisted suicide could well be rendered un-
ment guidelines issued by the federal gov-
necessary.
ernment) and Dr. Nelson Hendler (clini-
Carr is concerned that managed care
cal director of the Mensana Clinic near
"threatens to take away all the hard-fought-
Baltimore, who has written extensively on
for advances [achieved] over the last cou-
pain management) support the medical
ple of decades" in pain control. While the
profession's movement of the 1990S from
physiology of pain requires aggressive and
a disease-centered to a patient-centered ap-
early treatment, managed care organiza-
proach.²⁶ For example, formerly doctors
tions tend, in Carr's words, to "delay, defer,
were so concerned with the cancer patient's
and deny." Thus, he adds, appropriate pain
tumor or the AIDS patient's white blood cell
management and managed care are "at log-
count that they often neglected attending to
gerheads with what we [pain management
the patient's experience of the illness. Carr
experts] know should be done." Although
refers to the federal guidelines for pain con-
in 1996 Congress required health plans to
trol, a graded step-wise progress from less
cover at least forty-eight hours of hospi-
to more invasive as the medical situation
tal care for mothers and newborns, and in
requires. Hendler criticizes the multiple dis-
1997 President Clinton recommended sim-
incentives to pain management: insurance
ilar safeguards for mastectomy patients,²⁷
companies that refuse to pay for pain med-
many critics of the current health care sys-
ication prescribed by physicians, medical
tem are skeptical about the outlook for
societies and medical schools that remain
pain management procedures. Because "a
insufficiently involved in pain management,
drive-by mastectomy"-breast surgery for
and the Drug Enforcement Agency that ag-
which managed care organizations formerly
gressively pursues doctors dispensing phar-
covered only one day in the hospital-
maceuticals for pain control.
is a dramatic denial of an essential ser-
Both Carr and Hendler agree that pain
vice, such practices received much public
is frequently undiagnosed or misdiagnosed
condemnation. Since pain management is
and, as a result, undertreated or even mis-
such a complex issue, however, the mishan-
treated. Carr points out that for too long
dling of this vital service by these organi-
"NOT DEAD YET" AND PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE 137
zations may continue to be neglected for a
Other disability advocates point out that
long time.2⁸
although Reeve is articulate, well-informed,
and socially conscious, he is new to disabil-
ity culture and issues. They commend his
Focus on Cure:
efforts to improve funding and legislation
A Pernicious Message
for people with disabilities, as well as to
encourage equipment suppliers to decrease
Campaigning for research into a cure for
costs.³³ More to the point has been Reeve's
spinal cord injuries, Superman star Christo-
ability to resume working in his field. He
pher Reeve, who uses a ventilator and a mo-
directed a well-received HBO special, In the
torized wheelchair, provokes disability ad-
Gloaming, in late 1996, and in 1998 he di-
vocates who believe that he is inadvertently
rected and starred in a remake of Alfred
sending a pernicious message: disabled peo-
Hitchcock's 1954 classic film Rear Window,
ple are not whole unless cured. Reeve notes
with the protagonist in the new version
that "until five years ago, it was believed that
using the modern technology available in
spinal cord could not regenerate. Now it's
the late 1990s. Yet the fact that Reeve has
proved that it can. Research deserves our
been able to continue his involvement in so
support, though there's a long way to go."29
many activities-his autobiography, Still Me,
Many in the disability community, however,
was published in 1998³⁴-does not preclude
argue that this costly research, whose prac-
the possibility that he may still be in the
tical application may not be apparent for
"mourning phase" for his paralysis result-
many years, "could drain resources from
ing from his 1995 horseback-riding accident.
the more realistic [and in some cases even
Regardless of Reeve's focus on cure in his
desperate] needs of the present."³⁰
discourse, in his life he demonstrates his de-
Speaking in neither of her official roles-
termination as a person with a disability to
as chair of the National Council on Disabil-
participate in the world utilizing his unique
ity nor as president and CEO of Access Liv-
intelligence, talents, and visibility.
ing, the Chicago independent living center-
In his book Moving Violations, journalist
Marca Bristo does not object to Reeve's de-
John Hockenberry, who also has a spinal
sire to encourage research or even to seek a
cord injury, writes: "There is much more
cure for spinal cord injuries.31 The increased
effort put into curing spinal cord injuries
survival rate of spinal cord injured people
or discussing the legal issues involved in
has resulted from research, she observes. Yet,
suicide for the severely disabled than there
uncomfortable with Reeve soliciting from
is integrating disabled folks into society at
the private rather than the public sector, she
large. Pray to be normal no matter how im-
considers "the hype" that he uses to gener-
possible it seems is the sentimental message.
ate donations detrimental to the disability
The alternative is too horrible to contem-
rights movement. Frustrated by the mass
plate.' "35 Disability activist and quadriplegic
media's general inability to perceive disabil-
motorized wheelchair user Daniel Robert
ity in a civil rights context, many disability
describes the quandary in which people
advocates view Reeve's March I, 1998, two-
with disabilities find themselves: "And there
hour television special, Christopher Reeve: A
we are, between a rock and a hard place,
Celebration of Hope, as a sophisticated version
between waiting for a 'Cure' (read Miracle)
of a Jerry Lewis telethon, employing pity to
and waiting to be 'offed.' The sum total of
elicit contributions.³²
all the media attention given to Christopher
138 CHAPTER EIGHT
Reeve and Jack Kevorkian
boils down to
life, but Dr. Dickey refuses to perform the
this simple formula. If they can't fix us we're
operation. Anne is torn by uncertainty until
better off dead. It's our civic duty."36
God reveals a lengthy vision of the child's
future, filled with pain, madness, and crime.
Her doubts resolved, she accepts Dr. Dickey's
judgment, and the baby's soul leaps into the
The Eugenics Movement and
arms of a waiting Jesus.³⁹
Euthanasia
Pernick reveals why Haiselden was not
Medical historian Martin S. Pernick docu-
only supported by so many prominent early
ments the sensational story of Dr. Harry
twentieth-century Americans, but also won
Haiselden, a prominent Chicago surgeon,
editorial endorsements from some of the
who in 1916 was as well known to Ameri-
country's most prestigious publications, in-
cans as Jack Kevorkian is in the 1990s. As
cluding the New York Times and the New
Pernick explains, when Haiselden decided
Republic:40 "The common progressive belief
in November 1915 to allow a newborn baby
that science provided objective means for
with an impairment to die, he told a re-
distinguishing good lives from bad ones hid
porter for Hearst's Chicago-American that al-
the subjectivity of the values people actually
though he had permitted other newborns
used to make such judgments. And because
to die quietly, he wanted to make this case a
they believed their values to be objectively
public issue:
proven, they could dismiss ethical or po-
litical criticisms as biased, unscientific, and
Haiselden and his supporters were torn
therefore irrelevant."41
between passionate expressions of sympathy
One of the most egregious examples of
and love, versus, in the next breath, expressing
contempt, hatred, fear and loathing for those
the perversion of medicine was the mass
born with disabilities.
The disabled were a
killing of people viewed as mentally or
menace, an evil stalking beast, that was going
physically inadequate by the Nazi doctors.
to devour society. Haiselden was investigated
Robert J. Lifton links this so-called "bio-
three times by different legal authorities,
medical vision" practiced by leading physi-
for allowing impaired newborns to die, and
cians in Nazi Germany with the eugenics
each time he was upheld, but he was expelled
movement that continued to be deemed
from the Chicago Medical Society for writing
newspaper articles and making a movie, [The
respectable in the United States and Eng-
Black Stork].³⁸
land in the 1920S and even beyond. 42 In 1923,
Fritz Lenz, a German physician-geneticist,
Working with "muckraking" Hearst jour-
complained that "Germany had nothing to
nalist Jack Lait, Haiselden was both writer
match the eugenics research institutions in
and star of The Black Stork, a film whose
England and the United States."43
storyline resembled a widely publicized in-
Lenz rebuked the German people be-
cident involving a newborn girl with spina
cause of "their backwardness in the do-
bifida:
main of sterilization as compared to the
United States [for] Germany had no equiva-
The main plot of this remarkable film begins
lent to the American laws prohibiting mar-
with Claude, who has an unnamed inherited
riage
for people suffering from such con-
disease. Despite repeated graphic warnings
from Dr. Dickey (played by Haiselden
ditions as epilepsy or mental retardation."
himself), Claude marries his sweetheart,
Virginia Kallianes and Phyllis Rubenfeld
Anne. Their baby is born so severely disabled
discuss the impact, especially on women
that it needs immediate surgery to save its
with disabilities, of the reoccurrence of the
"NOT DEAD YET" AND PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE 139
eugenics movement in the late twentieth
the I930S euthanasia movements in England
century:
and the United States. These movements
Given the repression of sexuality and social
inspired execution by Nazi doctors of two
proscription of mothering among disabled
hundred thousand people judged deficient
women, it is not surprising that they
because of their physical and mental im-
look suspiciously upon selective abortion
pairments.⁴ Although Hitler rescinded this
or genetic technologies that are used to
euthanasia policy on August 24, 1941, the
prevent reproduction by disabled women
only official order reversed in his twelve
or the birth of disabled babies. Some
years of power,⁴⁸ the killing of people with
of this concern arises from the legacy of
sterilization abuse among disabled women,
disabilities continued by means that were
particularly in the early 20th century United
not always obvious, such as withholding
States eugenics movement. Many see in
of treatment, medication, or food. Yet the
advancing reproductive technologies, such as
Nuremberg court did not require that repa-
genetic screening combined with abortion,
rations be paid to the families of those with
the return of eugenics practices and claim
disabilities who were killed, nor that their
society is reverting to attitudes such as
murderers be punished.
those embodied in the 1927 United States
Supreme Court case upholding compulsory
In this context, Coleman and Gill's ref-
sterilization in the state of Virginia which
erence to Kevorkian's admission that his
came from Oliver Wendell Holmes's often
suicide device was designed as an answer
quoted statement: "Society can prevent those
for quadriplegics is a chilling harbinger to
who are manifestly unfit from continuing
many people with disabilities of "the right
their kind."⁴⁴
to die" becoming "the duty to die. Echoes
J. P. Landman, in his 1932 study of the
of Nazi rhetoric are evident in Kevorkian's
sterilization movement in the United States,
defense of "medicide": "The voluntary self-
refers to "overzealous and overardent eu-
elimination of individual and mortally dis-
genicists" who "regard
the feebleminded,
eased or crippled lives taken collectively can
the epileptics, the mentally diseased, the
only enhance the preservation of public
blind, the deformed, and the criminals as
health and welfare."⁵¹ Women's roles as nur-
inimical to the human race
[because]
turers and caretakers make them especially
these people perpetuate their deficiencies
vulnerable when they become dependent:
and thus threaten the quality of the ensuing
generations."⁴⁵ Because they contended "a
If anyone doubts that women will be exploited
and endangered by assisted suicide, the
nation must defend itself against national
doubters should study Kevorkian's "clients."
degeneration as much as against the ex-
The first eight were all middle-aged or elderly
ternal foreign enemy," these eugenicists be-
women with chronic illnesses and disabilities.
lieved, according to Lenz, that the nation
Many said they feared being a burden on
should endeavor "to exterminate these un-
others. An autopsy on one of them revealed
desirables."
no evidence of any physical illness. Women
In their 1996 testimony delivered before
with disabilities are going to be the first to
feel a "duty to die."52
Congress, Diane Coleman and Carol Gill
succinctly articulated the strong objections
Despite the current prosperity, oppo-
to physician-assisted suicide by many mem-
nents of disability rights always claim that
bers of the disability community.46 Hav-
resources are scarce; therefore, people with
ing experienced discrimination and perse-
disabilities are apprehensive about being
cution, people with disabilities and incur-
perceived as costly, unproductive expend-
able chronic diseases fear a reemergence of
ables.⁵³ Campaigners for a right-to-die
140 CHAPTER EIGHT
movement in the 1990s Derek Humphry
for three years. The Emanuels note the
and Mary Clement state that "in the fi-
"historical precedent for blocking efforts to
nal analysis, economics, not the quest for
sanction euthanasia": Despite much public
broadened individual liberties or increased
debate in the United States from 1890 to
autonomy, will drive assisted suicide to the
1906 regarding legalization of physician-
plateau of accepted practice."⁵⁴ More radi-
assisted suicide, in 1907 the Ohio legislature
cally, John Hardwig asserts, "In fact, there
failed to support the measure and, as a
may be a fairly common responsibility to
result, "euthanasia all but disappeared from
end one's life in the absence of any terminal
the public agenda until the last few years."
illness at all. Finally, there can be a duty to die
While the Emanuels believe that "legisla-
when one would prefer to live. "55 In reaction
tors understand that deep down the public
to this mindset, Coleman and Gill warn that
is ambivalent about euthanasia," Emerman
assisted-suicide proponents have been feed-
is profoundly concerned about this con-
ing public misconceptions regarding the so-
troversy. Given the common public misun-
cial expense of disability in their character-
derstandings about disability and assisted
ization of services, devices, and technology
suicide, as well as the complexity of this
for people with disabilities as resulting in
contentious issue, those in the disability
an inherently undignified lifestyle.
community who are fervently opposed have
their work cut out for them, she maintains.
They must embark on "a crusade to edu-
The Politics of Physician-Assisted
cate the public." She was referring to the
Suicide
Gallup survey revealing that 75 percent of
Americans believe doctors should be legally
As former director of the New York City
permitted to "end a patient's life by painless
Mayor's Office for People with Disabil-
means," as well as the poll of the American
ities, Anne Emerman and law professor
Society of Internal Medicine indicating that
Yale Kamisar predicted, the decision re-
40 percent of all doctors had provided assis-
garding the "Pandora's box" of physician-
tance to their patients who sought a means
assisted suicide is being determined in state
to end their lives. 60
legislatures rather than in the Supreme
A 60 to 40 percent vote by Oregon citi-
Court.5 Ezekiel and Linda Emanuel chron-
zens on November 4, 1997, on a new refer-
icle the national experience with efforts to
endum not to repeal the 1994 referendum
legalize assisted suicide: "Since 1995, nearly
permitting physician-assisted suicide,⁶¹ as
fifty bills have been introduced in more
well as Attorney General Janet Reno's June 5,
than twenty states concerning assisted sui-
1998, ruling removing "the last legal obsta-
cide, but none of the bills [until the Ore-
cle to the full operation of Oregon's land-
gon 1994 referendum] calling for legaliza-
mark assisted-suicide law," added to Emer-
tion have passed. Today [July 24, 1997]
man's apprehension. "It is ironic," Emer-
thirty-five states have laws that explicitly
man says, "that at a time when technol-
criminalize euthanasia and doctor-assisted
ogy permits people who are very disabled
suicide."⁵⁷
to be independent and productive mem-
Although Oregon voters had approved
bers of society, they have to contend with
legalizing physician-assisted suicide in 1994
this movement for assisted suicide. "63 Con-
by a 5I percent to a 49 percent margin, the
firming Emerman's fears, Reno's decision
referendum was held up by legal challenges
signified that other states may pass com-
"NOT DEAD YET" AND PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE 141
parable legislation sanctioning physician-
to allocate scarce resources to people with
assisted suicide without federal restriction.
disabilities: "Whether it's a 'voluntary' DNR
Though the front-page New York Times ar-
order, a surrogate decision by a family mem-
ticle describing Reno's Oregon judgment
ber, an involuntary 'futility guideline,' or
noted the strong opposition of the Roman
health insurance denials, we [people with
Catholic Church to authorized assisted sui-
disabilities] are being eliminated through
cide, no reference was made to the intense
the withholding of medical treatment."
and vocal objection of most of the disability
Futility guidelines, developed by the AMA
community.64
and many individual hospitals, allow doc-
tors to withhold medical treatment against
the expressed wishes of a patient or the
Netherlands "Slippery Slope" vs. U.S.
patient's family.67 Referring to a statement
"Political Strategy"
in the December I997 fund-raising letter of
the pro-euthanasia organization Compas-
Characterizing the policy of the Nether-
sion In Dying, Coleman revealed that "pro-
lands as a "slippery slope," psychiatrist
euthanasia advocates are now raising funds
and psychoanalyst Herbert Hendin issued a
for expansion of their advocacy efforts to
warning to the United States: "The Nether-
openly include people with nonterminal
lands. has moved from assisted suicide to
conditions."
euthanasia, from euthanasia for people who
Unlike in the Netherlands where the as-
are terminally ill to euthanasia for people
sisted suicide movement was accurately de-
who are chronically ill, from euthanasia for
scribed as a slippery slope, the United States
physical illness to euthanasia for psycholog-
right-to-die campaign is a "political strat-
ical distress, and from voluntary euthana-
egy," asserted Coleman,68 "as people with
sia to involuntary euthanasia (called 'termi-
disabilities are regularly bombarded with
nation of the patient without explicit re-
messages that [they] cost too much to be
quest'). "65 In their 1996 congressional tes-
allowed to live. She referred to the vision
timony, Coleman and Gill offered several
embodied in a statement by the founder of
illustrations of the relaxation of laws and
the right-to-die organization, the Hemlock
policies protecting the lives of people with
Society, Derek Humphry: "Like it or not,
disabilities in the United States: Oregon's
the connection between the right-to-die and
endeavor to ration health care based on
the cost, value, and allocation of health care
"quality of life" judgments made by nondis-
resources are part of the political debate,
abled people reveals the vulnerability of
albeit frequently unspoken."70 Citing well-
people with costly conditions; lifesaving or-
documented physician biases about qual-
gan transplants regularly are denied to peo-
ity of life for people with impairments and
ple with rather mild disabilities; assisted
chronic illnesses, Coleman fears further jus-
breathing frequently is not presented as an
tifications for refusing to provide appropri-
option to people with disabilities who need
ate health care for the disability population:
ventilators; and many using ventilators in-
"People with disabilities have no confidence
dicate that they are increasingly requested
that either the civil or criminal justice sys-
to contemplate "do-not-resuscitate (DNR)"
tem will value [their] lives enough to protect
orders and withdrawal of life support.
[them] equally in a society which is more
Coleman pointed out that bioethicists
and more open in its certainty that everyone
have asked if American society is willing
would be better off without [them]."⁷¹
142 CHAPTER EIGHT
First-Year Report on Physician-Assisted
divorced or never married, Shapiro won-
Suicide in Oregon
ders whether a care-giving spouse would
have altered the patients' decisions. Finally,
In 1999, the New York Times compared two re-
while the report underplayed the signifi-
ports on assisted suicide, one in the Journal
cance of fear of financial consequences in
of Medical Ethics on the fifteen-year practice
the patient's choice of assisted suicide, oth-
in the Netherlands, the other by the State
ers disagree. As Shapiro notes, "At a recent
Health Division on the one-year experience
public meeting in Oregon, Ric Burger, a di-
in Oregon.⁷² The New York Times reported
abetic who uses a wheelchair, complained
that the Journal of Medical Ethics found a
that the state's Medicaid program now pays
"fatal confusion" in the Netherlands be-
for assisted suicide [supposed "death with
cause assisted suicide is technically illegal
dignity"] but not for enough hours for
but widely practiced: "In one in five cases
in-home aids necessary for many elderly
surveyed there, euthanasia was performed
and disabled to live-in dignity-in their
on patients who had not requested it, and
own homes."
on patients for whom other untried treat-
ments for their illnesses were still available."
In contrast, the New York Times indicated
Legalizing Disability Discrimination
that the Oregon report found no confusion
or abuses resulting from the law: "Only I5
In her 1998 testimony before Congress, Di-
people, 8 men and 7 women, were helped to
ane Coleman maintained that the Oregon
die in 1998. Thirteen were cancer patients,
assisted-suicide law not only "violates the
and many, their doctors said, were decisive
Americans with Disabilities Act, [but] un-
personalities, or people acting on long-held
der a disparate impact analysis, may also
principles."
violate the Civil Rights Act of 1964."⁷ She
Dr. Kathleen Foley and other specialists
added, "People with terminal illnesses gen-
in terminal care are skeptical about Ore-
erally qualify as people with disabilities, yet
gon's positive judgment regarding the effect
policymakers have completely ignored the
of the legislation.73 Not only was the state's
ADA violations inherent in assisted-suicide
report based on twenty-minute telephone
laws. Unfortunately, discrimination based
interviews with the doctors who prescribed
on health status is still fundamentally ac-
the lethal drugs, but the 40 percent of the
ceptable in this culture, still so deeply in-
doctors in the Oregon cases who refused to
grained that hard for people to recognize
give the drugs because of their misgivings in
it when it stares them in the face."
assisting in a suicide were not represented.
In fact, Coleman pointed out that Con-
As Foley observes, perspectives essential to
gress included language in the ADA stating
comprehending people's motives in seeking
that disability discrimination may warrant
assisted suicide were omitted: "We lost the
more "judicial and legislative scrutiny" than
voices of the patients; we lost the voices of
it has frequently been given: "Individuals
the families."
with disabilities are a discrete and insular mi-
Although the report indicated that only
nority who have been faced with restrictions
one person specified fear of pain as a reason
and limitations, subjected to a history of
for seeking assisted suicide, Joseph Shapiro
purposeful unequal treatment, relegated to
refers to others with similar objectives. Since
a position of political powerlessness in our
those who opted for suicide were "several
society."75 She cited a dramatic example of
times more likely" than the norm to be
such "unequal treatment," an experiment
"NOT DEAD YET" AND PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE 143
that occurred at Children's Hospital of Ok-
Dangers of an Inflexible Law
lahoma between 1977 and 1982. Twenty-four
babies with spina bifida died because their
In his article "Whose Right To Die?" on-
parents did not know they were being used
cologist Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel reveals that
in a study testing whether parents would ac-
interest in euthanasia-which dates back
cept "do-not-treat" recommendations from
to 1870-was generated not by new tech-
doctors.
nologies that extend life, but rather by the
Explaining that the Oregon law cannot be
discovery of pain-relieving drugs such as
understood outside its social context, Cole-
morphine that could also result in pain-
man described the first widely reported case
less death.⁷⁷ Although drugs administered
involving an eighty-year-old woman with
aggressively-not to hasten death but to
breast cancer whose doctors denied her re-
relieve pain-may ultimately induce death,
quest for assisted suicide because they diag-
this practice, both ethically and legally sanc-
nosed her as depressed. Once Compassion
tioned, is not physician-assisted suicide.
In Dying found a doctor who would grant
Since depression, not pain, primarily moti-
her suicidal request, her case met the ex-
vates patients to request physician-assisted
plicit requirements of the law. As Coleman
suicide, Emanuel notes that our usual ap-
observed, "Nothing in the law says the in-
proach to people in psychological distress is
dividual has to be informed about indepen-
"psychiatric intervention-not
a
syringe
dent living or social service options, noth-
and life-ending drugs." Moreover, patients
ing says that an individual has to actually
kept alive by technology who no longer
be provided any medical or service alterna-
wish to live do not require new legislation
tives he or she might prefer, and nothing
permitting physician-assisted suicide since
says people can't shop around until they
they already have the constitutional right to
find a doctor who will do it." In addition,
discontinue medical interventions.
Coleman notes that "since there's no en-
Fearing legalization of physician-assisted
forcement mechanism, there are no legal
suicide, Emanuel predicts that the most vul-
consequences for failure to report assisted
nerable will be "children, the demented, the
suicides."76
mentally ill, the old, and others." No doubt
Coleman described this type of discrim-
paramount among "the others" would be
inatory law to hasten death as tantamount
people with disabilities, for frequently pre-
to "a denial of equal protection of the
sumptions made by healthy people about
law under the Fourteenth Amendment."
those who are suffering, or those assumed
Although she noted that courts have so
to be suffering, would not be countenanced
far not granted "suspect class' status to
by the objects of those presumptions. Many
people with disabilities," the landmark U.S.
people with visible impairments are con-
Supreme Court assisted suicide ruling rec-
cerned that the same kind of presumptions
ognized disability discrimination: "The
often are made by nondisabled people about
State's interest goes beyond protecting the
the quality of life of people with disabilities.
vulnerable from coercion; it extends to pro-
According to a 1996 Washington Post poll,
tecting disabled and terminally ill people
marginalized demographic groups, other
from prejudice, negative and inaccurate
than people with disabilities, also tend to
stereotypes, and 'societal indifference.'
feel threatened by legalization of physician-
[A] seriously disabled person's suicidal im-
assisted suicide: African Americans opposed
pulses should be interpreted and treated the
legalization 70 percent to 20 percent; people
same way as anyone else's."
over seventy opposed it 58 percent to 35
I44 CHAPTER EIGHT
percent.⁷⁸ Lacking the universal and com-
was there, in other words, it could be much,
prehensive health care of the Netherlands,
much worse here. "81
patients and doctors in the United States
could be making decisions about physician-
assisted suicide while encouraged to cut
"A Better Solution"
costs. The significance of this factor will be
amplified "in the context of demographic
Describing the popular support for phy-
and budgetary pressures on Social Security
sician-assisted suicide as "neither strong
and Medicare as the Baby Boom generation
nor deep," Emanuel observes that answers
begins to retire, around 2010."79
to questions on the subject are dependent
Believing, like Emanuel, that ethical am-
on how these queries are crafted. "For the
biguities regarding physician-assisted sui-
majority of people with disabilities, whose
cide are better addressed on a case-by-
only information about living with disabil-
case basis than by an inflexible rule, ethics
ity comes from health care providers, to-
professor emeritus Lewis Smedes main-
day's trends do not bode well," cautions Di-
tains that "sometimes it is better just to
ane Coleman: "In those critical early hours,
leave things murky."⁸⁰⁰ Harvard's Michael
weeks, and months after injury, people
J. Sandel explains why even laws that are
could easily be swayed to make a so-called
disregarded from time-to-time serve a pur-
'choice' for death."⁸² In his article "Amer-
pose: "It [physician-assisted suicide] should
icans Want a Right to Die. Or So They
be burdened morally by the sense that we
Think," David E. Rosenbaum refers to "the
are taking a life, something that isn't en-
opinion surveys [that] have not addressed
tirely ours to take. Preserving the laws on
the wrenching specifics
that for many
the books is a way of keeping this sense
people first have meaning when they face
of burden." Similarly, Emanuel asserts that
them personally."8³
physician-assisted suicide should remain il-
Nancy Rolnick, a CI-2 quadriplegic-
legal and exceptional so that those who
paralyzed from the neck down as a result
make "moral judgments" will be "account-
of an automobile accident and unable to
able before the law."
breathe without a respirator (or the phrenic
Rather than providing the technology
nerve pacer she now uses)-describes her
and services that would allow people with
fundamental difficulty with the "right to
disabilities to live productive lives in the
die" movement:
mainstream, the health care system too fre-
quently supports-sometimes even elicits-
Before my accident, I saw Brian Clark's play
misguided suicidal impulses in vulnerable
Whose Life Is It Anyway? about a young man
paralyzed in an accident, struggling for the
people. Given the many people with dis-
right to cease living. Along with my husband
abilities who may be included among the
and friends, I sided with the protagonist,
"marginalized," the warning of psychia-
never questioning his decision. After my
trist Herbert Hendin threatens the disabil-
accident, I saw the movie made from the play,
ity population in the United States: "The
and while I still identified with the young
Netherlands? With a homogenous, pretty
man, I thought, "Gee, this guy is making his
much law abiding citizenry, almost all of
move much too soon. He's not giving himself
the chance to find out what it's like to live
whom have medical coverage? And America,
outside the hospital." In other words, as a
with many different cultures represented,
disabled person, my perspective changed. I
many marginalized people, tens of millions
no longer automatically accepted suicide as a
without health care insurance? As bad as it
good solution to disability.
"NOT DEAD YET" AND PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE 145
So what is a better solution? I can only
Not only did the jury consider Robert La-
answer for myself. First of all, I've been
timer's deed a mercy killing, but there also
surrounded by people who fully expected me
was an outpouring of public support for
to come home from the hospital and pick up
my life-my husband, my children and their
Tracy's father. Disability advocates asked,
spouses, a few good friends, and my nurses.
however, why does the killing of a nondis-
Their attitude has been-do it. At crucial
abled child evoke outrage while the killing
moments I met disabled people who inspired
of a child with a disability is accepted? An-
and guided me-a paraplegic woman when
other question they posed concerned the
I first entered the rehabilitation hospital,
necessity for the medical procedures that
and as I left the hospital, a young woman
Tracy was forced to undergo to improve
quadriplegic who became my mentor, for she
her condition. "News accounts
had created a fantastically independent life
suggest
for herself. Other disabled people along the
the girl was relatively stable and happy
way have been important to me, and of course
before doctors started operating on her
working with disability advocacy groups has
to 'correct things." Was it these surgeries
given a new focus to my life.⁸⁴
rather than the cerebral palsy that caused
Tracy's reported suffering? Disability advo-
Recognizing the significance of her acces-
cates fear that the notion that killing a per-
sible living quarters, as well as her pri-
son with a disability is different from killing
vate insurance-which provides her with
anyone else encourages courts to condone
care and equipment to achieve maximum
physician-assisted suicide.
independence-Rolnick continues, "Given
Utilizing the joystick on a motorized
the tools and the proper support, most peo-
wheelchair, twenty-six-year-old Elizabeth
ple with disabilities want to continue laugh-
Bouvia, a college graduate studying for a
ing, loving, and living."
master's degree in social work, lived in-
dependently in her own apartment with
her husband until, over a short period of
The Distinction between Severe
time, everything she sought to accomplish
Disability and Terminal Illness
seemed to unravel:
The following examples reveal how the dif-
The dean of the program where she had
planned to get her master's degree in social
ference between severe disability and ter-
work told her that no matter how well she
minal illness easily may become obscured
might do, there was not going to be a job
by the courts. In making judgments, do
at the end of her efforts. In despair, she
courts value the life of a person with a
dropped out of school, and the state then
disability as much as the life of a nondis-
took away the van it had made available for
abled person? American disability rights ad-
her transportation to and from school.
Her little family fell apart as her husband
vocates have seized upon the case of Tracy
left her, and she suffered a miscarriage.
Latimer, a twelve-year-old Canadian child
She retreated back to her father's house,
with cerebral palsy who was killed by her
but together they decided this arrangement
father, Robert Latimer, in 1993 by means of a
would not be convenient for him. With her
lethal dose of carbon monoxide.85 Although
world out of control, she decided to take
Tracy's father was convicted of second de-
her own life. She checked into Riverside
gree murder-a verdict usually carrying a
Hospital in California and made the demand
that she be kept comfortable as she starved
mandatory life sentence without a chance of
herself to death. Within a very short time,
parole for ten years-the jury recommended
the psychiatric staff of that medical facility
parole after one year.
had officially designated her as mentally
146 CHAPTER EIGHT
competent, and the American Civil Liberties
cian, had committed suicide with court ap-
Union was in court pleading her right to this
proval, Johnson-in the September/October
bizarre form of suicide.
1990 issue of the Disability Rag-revealed
her impression that Bergstedt, himself, was
Although her disability, cerebral palsy, was
never consulted regarding his life or death
not progressive, the California Supreme
decision.
Court judged her 1983 bout with depression
Founder of the Independent Living
as an acceptable reason for allowing the
Movement and winner of a MacArthur "ge-
hospital to assist in her suicide. Bouvia's
nius" fellowship, Edward Roberts, who like
subsequent change of heart-her decision
Bergstedt relied on a respirator, expressed
to go on with her life-underscored the fact
his feelings about the case:
that the court would be highly unlikely to
The whole thing is outrageous. I am getting
accept depression of a nondisabled person
angrier and angrier about these cases. They
as suitable grounds for physician-assisted
feed on each other. The attorneys, the courts,
suicide.⁸⁷
the judges, they don't know anything. They
In 1984, Mary Jane Owen, blind disabil-
see somebody like Bergstedt, and they say, "Of
ity activist, editor, writer, and former fac-
course he wants to die." What's happening is
ulty member of the graduate program in
we're killing disabled people in this country
social work at San Francisco State College,
and then act like we're doing them a favor.
It's outrageous. I've been on a respirator
made this observation about the Bouvia,
for twenty-six years, and I watch these
case: "What we keep telling each other about
people's cases. They're just as dependent on
Bouvia illustrates more about how we feel
a respirator as I am. The major difference
about disability than it does about how this
is that they know they're going to be forced
young woman is dealing with her depres-
to live in a nursing home-or they're already
sion. She is trapped by the snare of our ter-
there-and I'm leading a quality life. That's
ror and prejudices. She has come to person-
the only difference. It's not the respirator. It's
the money.
ify our horror of vulnerability, frailty and all
the 'imperfections' of disability."88
Lacking the technology that would make
The highly publicized requests for phy-
it possible for him to live and work indepen-
sician-assisted suicide by two other quadri-
dently, thirty-four-year-old Larry McAfee, a
plegics also were sanctioned by the courts.
quadriplegic, clearly planned to commit sui-
Without having ever met Kenneth Bergst-
cide in 1989, a decision supported by the
edt, a highly intelligent quadriplegic, Las
court, the clergy, and his family. "McAfee,
Vegas District Court Judge Donald Mosley
who became disabled in 1985, won court
ruled in June 1990 that a physician could
approval to hook up a switch to his mo-
sedate Bergstedt and then remove the respi-
torized chair to allow him to turn off his
rator upon which he depended for breath-
own respirator and kill himself. Disability
ing.⁸⁹ Using peculiar logic, Mosley deter-
activists got involved, fought for other op-
mined that Bergstedt's death in this man-
tions for him, and showed McAfee the pos-
ner would not be suicide; rather, Bergstedt
sibility of community living arrangements
would be regulating his medical care. Nei-
[that] no one else (including those that
ther a newspaper reporter who covered the
[were] helping him win his death) had told
case, nor Mary Johnson in her capacity as
him about."⁹⁰ Once he acquired the oppor-
editor of the Disability Rag, nor any disabil-
tunity to function in the community (using
ity activist was able to speak to Bergstedt
a puff-and-sip motorized wheelchair) and
directly. After Bergstedt, assisted by a physi-
to work in the professional world (employ-
"NOT DEAD YET" AND PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE 147
ing a voice-activated computer), McAfee
"the mysteries of the universe with the mind
changed his mind, for he found new mean-
of a latter-day Einstein."⁹³ In 1963, Hawk-
ing in his increasingly self-directed life. The
ing, just twenty-one years old, working in
1992 made-for-television film dramatizing
Cambridge on his Ph.D. in physics, was told
McAfee's plight made no reference to the
that he had two and a half years to live as
role of disability advocates, who showed
a result of ALS, a degenerative motor neu-
McAfee how to live rather than how to die.
ron disease that causes atrophy of muscles
Like McAfee, who could utilize his pro-
throughout the body. Inexplicably, however,
fessional training and skills as an engineer
Hawking continues to thrive beyond any
when he was provided with the proper tools,
reasonable expectation. With a voice synthe-
many people with severe disabilities are liv-
sizer, provided after his 1985 tracheotomy
ing fulfilling and productive lives employing
resulting from his bout with pneumonia,
appropriate technologies. In 1992, a coali-
and a small personal computer mounted on
tion of six independent living centers of
his wheelchair, his ability to lecture and to
New York City gave its annual award for
collaborate with other physicists, as well as
outstanding achievement by a student with
to publish books and articles, has not been
a disability to an African-American teenager
compromised.
with cerebral palsy. Although he was orig-
For Hawking, the knowledge that he had
inally labeled as "retarded," once he was
a severe disability seemed to act as a spur,
given the chance to use computers to oper-
focusing his intellect and his energy on his
ate a power wheelchair, a voice synthesizer,
study of cosmology: "Before my condition
and a word processor, he was upgraded to
had been diagnosed, I had been very bored
very intelligent. While still profoundly dis-
with life. There had not seemed to be
abled, the youngster was no longer hand-
anything worth doing. But shortly after I
icapped in revealing his talents. 91 Disabil-
came out of hospital, I dreamt that I was
ity rights advocate Professor Frank Bowe,
going to be executed. I suddenly realized
who is deaf, draws a distinction between the
that there were a lot of worthwhile things
words "disability" and "handicapped":
I could do if I were reprieved."⁹ In fact, a
Our disabilities are not going to disappear,
colleague suggested that Hawking's illness
but what we can work on are the handicaps.
may have made new creative possibilities
In this room today I am not handicapped. I
available to him:
can talk to anyone here and you can talk to
me because I have an interpreter. I am still
As he gradually lost the use of his hands,
disabled; I am as deaf as I ever was-as I was
he had to start carefully choosing research
this morning, as I will be when I go to bed
projects that could be tackled and solved
tonight. But I am not handicapped in this
through geometrical arguments that he
room. And because this room is accessible,
could do pictorially in his head, and he
people, whatever their disability, can get
developed a powerful set of tools that nobody
into it. So the people in this room are not
else really had. So in some sense, when you
handicapped. They are still disabled, but they
lose one set of tools, you may develop other
are not handicapped. This means that the
tools, but the new tools are amenable to
people in this room can do whatever their
different kinds of problems than the old
intellect, their knowledge, their training, their
tools. That means certain kinds of problems
ability enable them to do.92
you can solve, and nobody else can.
Technology has allowed Stephen Hawk-
As Intel vice president Stephen Nacht-
ing, the world renowned British physicist
heim observes, "Wherever Hawking rolls
with a severe disability, to continue to pierce
along the Gothic splendor of Cambridge
I48 CHAPTER EIGHT
or anywhere throughout the world, he has
are a Paralympic champion. You have to be
constant access to the Internet, a faster
outstanding in absolute terms.⁹⁷
voice synthesizer and infrared remote con-
Can the value of a life be judged by the
trol of doors, lights and his personal en-
degree of a disability? Can these lives of
tertainment center."95 Nachtheim charac-
people with serious disabilities be described
terizes Hawking as "a man who does what
as unworthy to be lived? Too commonly,
he wants and tries to be minimally inconve-
policy decisions reflect a confusion between
nienced by his disability, so he uses all the
terminal illness and disability, as well as an
technology he can to overcome a problem."
arrogance and complacency in judging the
Making only passing reference to Hawking's
value of a life, even for those who have not
very apparent and well-known disability, a
made world-shaking contributions. As Not
I997 New York Times front-page article de-
Dead Yet attorney Diane Coleman stated
scribed the visit of "the brilliant theorist"
in the conclusion of her 1998 congressional
to the California Institute of Technology.⁹⁶
testimony, "Our society is wrestling with
Hawking explains:
what is perhaps the most pivotal issue of
our time: whether a cost-benefit analysis
I regard my disability like color blindness-
will determine the value of a human life,
something that is an inconvenience but
whether people with disabilities, including
which one can live with and get 'round.
Obviously, my disability is more severe than
terminal illnesses, belong in our society as
color blindness, but to me it is incidental
a part of humanity's diversity, or whether
and does not shape my world view. The way
we [people with disabilities] will be pushed,
for disabled people to be appreciated is to
subtly and not-so-subtly, toward the Final
be successful. For the physically disabled,
Exit solution."⁹⁸
this means being smarter than the next
guy. No one is going to be impressed if you
Chapter Nine
Disability and Technology
THE DISABILITY RIGHTS MOVEMENT "is
goes beyond minimum codes and standards
a by-product of the technological revo-
to create designs that serve the broadest
lution," in the words of one commenta-
public [including people with disabilities]
tor.¹ "Breakthroughs in medicine, the de-
throughout their life spans."³ Wheelchair
velopment of computers that allow the
designer Ralf Hotchkiss describes the evolv-
hearing and speech impaired to use tele-
ing "revolution in human interaction," a
phones, and advancements in motorized
consequence of inventors, artists, and archi-
wheelchairs have meant that more people
tects who are redesigning the infrastructure
with severe handicaps can live longer, can do
and creating a new aesthetic for the chang-
more for themselves and have the potential
ing environment: "Without changes in how
for enjoying fuller lives." Without political
things are laid out physically, the changes of
activism, however, technological advances
mind [allowing for inclusion of people with
do not automatically translate into gains for
disabilities] will be slower to come."4
people with disabilities.
Often involving subtle design changes
and adaptations to already existing prod-
ucts and environments, universal design
Universal Design
is more practicable and cost-effective than
many people realize.⁵ For example, it is nei-
"Growing up in a world full of barriers,"
ther difficult nor expensive to provide coun-
the design pioneer Ronald L. Mace, a polio
ters at a level that accommodates children
survivor and a wheelchair user, had a clear
and people in wheelchairs or to include la-
incentive for creating his visionary concept
bels with large type, readable by partially
of universal design.² Not only did he have to
sighted and older people.⁶ Yet too frequently
be carried up and down stairs so he could at-
lack of technical feasibility is one of the first
tend classes at North Carolina State-from
arguments offered against universal design,
which he graduated in 1966-but also he
observes disability rights advocate Professor
could not fit his wheelchair into the men's
Frank Bowe.⁷
room. Universal design is "the holistic ap-
When universal design is disparaged de-
proach" to accessible environments "that
spite the compelling arguments for the con-
150 CHAPTER NINE
cept, the real problem may be a lack of
would be created by the size of the accessi-
will to be inclusive, or more insidiously,
ble unit.
the profit motive masquerading as an effort
JCDecaux's way of dealing with this sup-
to protect the public. One glaring example
posed dilemma was to create two separate
involved the 1992 decision to set up an ex-
and unequal units, an "elegant kiosk" for
periment putting pay toilets, inaccessible to
the general public and an accessible toilet
wheelchair users, on the streets of New York
for wheelchair users. The accessible unit
City. The manufacturer, JCDecaux, wanted
necessitated inconvenient special cards, as
to impose the same unit on the United
well as a full-time attendant, for-unlike
States that he had sold in Paris and other
the kiosk-it was not self-flushing and self-
cities in Europe, where there is no ADA.
cleaning. Howard misunderstood the im-
The fallacious explanation given by JCDe-
plication of the facts he offered: "The reg-
caux for not providing a single model for a
ular units averaged over three thousand
street toilet in compliance with ADA and
flushes per month, or 50 percent more than
"universal design" was accepted in a New
the average in Paris. The larger units re-
York Times editorial: "Units large enough
served for the disabled were basically un-
for wheelchair users will inevitably accom-
used, the cost of the full-time attendant
modate unsavory activity like prostitution
wasted."
and
drug
abuse.
The company therefore
Rather than proving that the disabled
insists that their [the accessible toilets'] use
advocates were, as Howard referred to them,
be restricted to disabled patrons who gain
"unreasonable zealots" demanding a tech-
access with key cards."8
nology for which they had no real use,
Six months later, in an article "Toilet
the disability community's refusal to par-
Wars," subtitled "How a battle over hand-
ticipate in the four-month street toilet ex-
icapped rights is keeping those spotless
periment was a political gesture. On the
wonders off the street," New York mag-
contrary, accessible street toilets would be
azine appeared to have been persuaded
very useful for wheelchair users, especially
by JCDecaux's public relations campaign.⁹
women, who have great difficulty finding
The same can be said for the American
appropriate facilities. In fact, disability ac-
Broadcasting Company's television mag-
tivists were demonstrating that they would
azine "20/20" in its segment aired three
not accept second-class status. Moreover,
months earlier, "There Goes Another Good
consistent with the concept of universal de-
Idea."¹⁰ Like the New York Times, New York
sign, these "larger units" would have been
magazine and "20/20" erroneously assumed
accessible not only to individuals who use
that it was the disability community who
wheelchairs and other mobility devices, but
was selfishly thwarting technological im-
also to people with small children, baby
provement. Philip K. Howard, in The Death
strollers, luggage carriers, large packages,
of Common Sense (1994), continued to as-
and countless other things.
sert the misleading notion that "in New
After New York City had just completed
York, the unintended consequence of
the JCDecaux experiment, San Francisco is-
giving the disabled the 'right' to do
sued a Request for Proposals (RFP) for a
everything in the same way was the im-
street toilet, requiring compliance with the
position of a de facto prohibition of side-
ADA. It should be noted that in San Fran-
walk toilets." The spurious case JCDe-
cisco disability activists had more political
caux made was that technology did not
clout than in a megacity such as New York.
exist to deal with the social problems that
Also, unlike in New York City, public offi-
DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY I5I
cials in San Francisco were open to man-
children-the tables require a relatively sim-
ufacturers of street toilets other than the
ple technological device enabling them to
well-known and well-connected JCDecaux.
be lowered and raised. These kinds of tables,
Proposals came from places as far away as
however, are rarely found in medical facili-
Germany and Israel. These manufacturers
ties. Physicians infrequently take advantage
offered designs for single units, complying
of the easy enlargement of typed material,
with the ADA, that incorporated technol-
using computers or copying machines, to
ogy that solved the potential social prob-
offer written instructions in large print for
lems connected with the size of the acces-
people who are partially sighted. Nor do
sible units. At this point, JCDecaux sud-
medical practitioners tend to utilize the
denly revealed that it, too, had the tech-
tape recorder to give written information
nology to manufacture a single accessible
to blind people.
unit that would be safe on the streets of
To allow for communication between
New York City. Even when solutions to
medical personnel and people who are hard
technological problems are not immedi-
of hearing, assistive listening devices, such
ately evident, the will to find answers of-
as the kind employed in theaters, are needed
ten serves as a spur to creativity, just as a
but rarely provided in medical facilities. Al-
lack of determination precludes the solving
though required by the ADA, sign language
of problems.
interpreters are seldom available for deaf
Many people still blame the disability
people during their medical procedures, as
community for New York City's failure to
demonstrated by the refusal of Mount Sinai
provide street toilets after the four-month
Medical Center to provide a sign language
experiment.¹² Yet the reason for this fail-
interpreter for Jeffrey Bravin, the deaf hus-
ure was that the community boards, indi-
band of a hearing pregnant woman attend-
vidually, voted against the JCDecaux plan,
ing Lamaze classes. 13 The center had ille-
which included, with each public toilet, two
gally discriminated against the husband,
or three obtrusive advertising kiosks. Al-
violating state and federal laws requiring
though JCDecaux intended these kiosks to
accommodations for people with disabil-
add considerable profit to its operating ex-
ities. Alan J. Rich, lawyer for the couple,
penses, the community boards objected to
said that "the birth
was
like
a
'Marx
having their neighborhoods cluttered with
Brothers movie,' with Mrs. Bravin 'trying
advertising.
to interpret between contractions,' to ex-
The New York Times misinterpretation of
plain what Mr. Bravin was supposed to
the accessible street toilet issue is no sur-
be doing."
prise considering the frequent failures of
As with the installation of lifts on buses,
even the medical profession to be sensi-
accessibility in medical facilities requires
tive to the concerns of people with dis-
a new approach, relating rather common-
abilities. Until the 1990s, entrances to-and
place technology to the needs of people with
bathrooms in-many hospitals were built
disabilities. In 1990, the Center for Indepen-
without consideration for wheelchair acces-
dence of the Disabled in New York received
sibility; in fact, bathrooms in many doc-
a major grant from the Robert Wood John-
tors' offices are still inaccessible. In order
son Foundation to establish a primary care
for examining tables to meet the demands
facility, open to all members of the commu-
of universal design," thus becoming usable
nity, but totally accessible to people with
by people with mobility impairments as well
disabilities. 14 The Downtown Family Care
as others-such as older people and small
Center, opened in August 1995, marked the
I52 CHAPTER NINE
first time that a disability service and advo-
Teletypewriters and Relay Systems
cacy group, such as an independent living
center, received funding to provide medical
The Communications Act of 1934 ostensi-
care in an environment consistent with uni-
bly made the telephone accessible to every-
versal design. The fact that this center was
one. In reality, however, people with hear-
an anomaly when it was conceived under-
ing disabilities were excluded from utilizing
scores the inaccessibility of many medical
this technology because modern methods
facilities, even in the 1990s.
of telephone amplification, as well as the
teletypewriter (TTY), were as yet not in-
vented. Considering the numbers of people
who are deaf or hard of hearing at birth
Accessible Taxis
(or at an early age)-combined with those
whose hearing diminishes with advancing
Although wheelchair-accessible taxis are
years-a large segment of the population
found in a variety of locations throughout
could not take advantage of the telephone
the world, some major cities have resisted
without additional technology. Not until
this much-needed technology. Most mini-
the 1964 invention of the TTY could the
vans that have been converted into acces-
1934 law be universally applied.¹⁶ The use
sible taxis have, at the rear of the vehicle,
of the TTY became increasingly widespread
a lowered floor, a manual ramp, and a hy-
after 1971 when a smaller, more compact,
draulic "kneeling" suspension. Wheelchair
and more affordable model was developed.
users who drive this type of modified mini-
Because of lack of consultation with
van clearly demonstrate that this vehicle
those being served by the TTY, a prob-
is technically viable as an accessible taxi.
lem arose regarding the naming of this
Nonetheless, until as late as 2000 techno-
new technology. Though in 1979 the TTY
logical infeasibility continued to be the ex-
was renamed the telecommunication device
planation given for the unavailability of ac-
for the deaf (TDD), the designation was
cessible taxis in many cities such as New
changed again in 1990 to text telephone (TT)
York, the site of the largest taxi fleet in the
when the TDD proved useful not only for
country.15
deaf people, but also for others, such as
The mechanical concepts for wheelchair
people with speech impairments. Since the
accessible taxis, similar to the techniques
sign for TT in American Sign Language is
used in accessible buses, have been avail-
similar to the sign for toilet, the deaf com-
able for many years. As a result of prod-
munity insisted on returning to the TTY
ding by disability advocates, technology-
designation.
similar to hydraulic lifts used to move goods
A flashing light signals the "ringing" of
on and off trucks-was applied to buses
the TTY, a "telephone" comprised of a type-
by the late 1970s. Employing either this
writer and a narrow screen. The TTY allows
technology or low-floor ramps, wheelchair-
deaf people-by typing messages to each
accessible taxis have proven to be a financial
other-to communicate on the telephone.
success, despite doubts about their prof-
The relay system combined the technologies
itability. As with accessible taxis, however,
of the TTY and the telephone, enabling a
too often both business and government
deaf person and a hearing person to com-
cling to rigidly-held, preconceived notions
municate. Either the deaf person or the
about the limits of technology despite evi-
hearing person can initiate a phone call
dence to the contrary.
by dialing a special 800 number. Then, the
DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY 153
operator acts as an intermediary between
go further in a developing country than in
the two parties, typing to the deaf person
the United States. Yet the determination
and speaking to the hearing one. Califor-
of the disability community to refuse to
nia was the first of only a few states with
compromise about the elevator had been
statewide relay systems until Title IV of the
appropriate. Not merely a gratuitous time
ADA required that one relay system func-
or labor-saving convenience, the elevator for
tion throughout the country by July 26, 1993.
a person unable to climb stairs means inde-
Whereas the law necessitating lifts on buses
pendence, dignity, and equality.
was a catalyst for employing available tech-
nology, the TTY created the possibility for
real implementation of an existing 1934 law.
The One-Step Campaign
Another illustration of an effort to employ a
A Clash of Cultures
commonplace technology that would serve
people with disabilities, as well as older peo-
When Mother Teresa, reflecting her ascetic
ple and others, is the One-Step Campaign
religious vision, refused to include modern
that began in New York City in 1993. Be-
appliances such as dishwashers and wash-
cause of an architectural tradition in the
ing machines in her planned New York City
city, many apartment buildings, stores, and
homeless shelter in 1989, she discovered that
restaurants were built with a single step in
the city building code required one of the
front of their entrances. For most people
mechanical devices she had rejected, the ele-
who walk, a single step is hardly noticeable;
vator. Not recognizing the danger-as well as
for most wheelchair users, however, that
the humiliation-to mobility-impaired peo-
step is insurmountable without the burden
ple, Mother Teresa intended to have them
and indignity of securing help. Generally,
carried up and down the stairs. Deriding
building a ramp as a level-changing device
the regulation mandating elevators, Philip
is "readily achievable" under the ADA as
K. Howard failed to grasp the significance of
well as an improvement to business, for
this traditional technology for a great num-
an accessible establishment is available to
ber of homeless individuals: "No person de-
an increased number of customers, includ-
cided to spite Mother Teresa. It [an elevator]
ing those with baby carriages and shop-
was the law. And what it [the law] required
ping carts.
offends common sense."¹⁷ For many low-
Since constructing a ramp in place of a
income people with disabilities for whom
single step can be easily accomplished with
stairs are a formidable barrier, the elevator
little difficulty or expense, in most cases this
is a necessity, not, as Howard contended, a
modification is required by the ADA as well
frivolous means of satisfying "middle-class
as many local laws. The reason the One-
standards."
Step Campaign has been a greater problem
Furthermore, Howard's indication that
than disability activists had assumed is not
Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity
related to the alterations required. Rather,
abandoned their intention to build a home-
the difficulty stems from the inability of too
less shelter in New York City because of their
many business people to alter their think-
problem with the elevator is inaccurate. 18 In
ing and appreciate the benefits that would
fact, they did not leave New York City be-
accrue-not only to the general public, but
cause of the elevator controversy, but rather
to their own financial interests-by replac-
because they decided that their funds would
ing single steps with ramps.¹⁹
I54 CHAPTER NINE
Wheelchair Ingenuity
The foremost U.S. wheelchair inventor
and designer, as well as the leading dis-
People with motor impairments not only
seminator of information on wheelchair
required changes in the built environment,
technology worldwide, Ralf D. Hotchkiss
but also ingenuity in wheelchair design. Al-
received the prestigious 1989 MacArthur
though the I937 Everest & Jennings (E&J)
Award and the I994 Henry B. Betts Award.
wheelchair patent was an improvement over
Setting an example for originators of assis-
the former model, further modifications
tive technologies for people with disabili-
were stifled by E&J's monopolistic control
ties, Hotchkiss eschews patenting his mo-
of the wheelchair market.²⁰ A combina-
bility devices. Instead, he leaves them in the
tion of the 1977 United States Justice De-
public domain in order to encourage the
partment antitrust lawsuit and the newly-
continuity of the creative process, thus en-
emerging wheelchair industry terminated
deavoring to prevent a reoccurrence of the
E&J's national and international strangle-
E&J fiasco.
hold on the production and distribution
Not beguiled by high-tech glamour,
of wheelchairs. Moreover, between the 1940s
Hotchkiss prefers practical solutions that
and the 1980s, the lack of rehabilitation en-
benefit the greatest number of people at
gineers with disabilities played a significant
the least cost. For example, he indicates that
role in the failure of wheelchair moderniza-
more people will be served by inexpensive,
tion. Competition did not serve wheelchair
easily repairable, customized wheelchairs
users until the early 1980s.2¹ With the dra-
and barrier-free environments than by ex-
matic increase in the number of wheelchair-
travagant technologies such as computer-
using rehabilitation engineers, as well as the
ized walking stimulators for people with
variety of innovations springing forth from
spinal cord injuries.²³ In addition, he has
diverse parts of the world, wheelchair design
realized that increasing the mobility of
has been revolutionized.
wheelchair users enhances the employment
Because of the devastating effects of
opportunities of people with disabilities, a
violent conflict, disease, and inadequate
demographic group dramatically underrep-
medical care, developing countries-often
resented in the workforce of every country.
plagued by rough terrain and limited ma-
Echoing Roberts's and Heumann's accom-
terials-have been a source of creativity
plishments in the World Institute on Dis-
in the construction and maintenance of
ability and appreciating the common con-
wheelchairs. As Ralf D. Hotchkiss explains:
cerns of wheelchair riders, Hotchkiss's focus
on disability issues is international.
There's a level of hands-on understanding
In 1989 at San Francisco State, Hotchkiss
that a lot of Third World bike builders
established the Wheeled Mobility Center,
and blacksmiths have that can inform
from which his International Wheelchair
the application of our new mathematical
optimization [wheelchair] models. You need
Program emanates, serving both students
to mix the new with the old. With rougher
on campus as well as in the developing
roads and fewer cars, they [wheelchair users
countries to which he travels. Although
in developing countries] have far more use
Hotchkiss fears that the task exceeds hu-
for all-terrain wheelchairs. With far less
man ingenuity, he seeks to devise a wheel-
money to buy new chairs, many more riders
chair that can traverse unpaved rural areas
repair, modify and improve their own chairs.
By helping them network and share their
and yet maneuver easily in a home. Be-
developments, we have tapped into a gold
cause wheelchair users understand the re-
mine of new wheelchair designs.²²
quirements of other wheelchair users like
DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY I55
themselves, Hotchkiss encourages the in-
ever, are rarely produced although the tech-
clusion of people with disabilities in rehabil-
nology is available. Modular design is a
itation technologies. Furthermore, he has
significant engineering technique because
observed in his travels all over the world
modular and folding wheelchairs and scoot-
that people tend to trust the technical ex-
ers usually fit in automobiles, adding greatly
pertise of others living with similar impair-
to the mobility of the user.
ments. Recognizing that there are twenty
In Andrew Wyeth's famous 1942 painting
million people-predominantly in devel-
"Christina's World," a young woman dis-
oping countries-in need of wheelchairs,
abled by polio is sitting on the ground look-
Hotchkiss's ultimate goal is to set in mo-
ing out on her limited vista.2⁴ John Hock-
tion the education of an army of sixty
enberry, in his 1995 memoir Moving Viola-
thousand professional technicians build-
tions: War Zones, Wheelchairs, and Declarations
ing and repairing wheelchairs. Hotchkiss's
of Independence, and in his 1996 one-man
creativity is in direct contrast to the early
performance Spoke Man, described his ex-
wheelchair manufacturers, whose closed
periences as a wheelchair-riding journalist,
minds were reflected in the inflexibility of
traversing the world.² The circumscribed
their wheelchairs.
view of the subject of Wyeth's painting is
Before the new approach to wheelchair
being supplanted by the free-wheeling and
technology that Hotchkiss embodies, mod-
liberating vision of Hockenberry's work.
els were not adapted to the needs of the
individual user as is, for example, the fluid
aerodynamic prototype employed by the
Accessible Classrooms and
modern wheelchair athlete or wheelchair
Laboratories
dancer. Not only do modern motorized
and computerized wheelchairs and scoot-
Exhibiting a resourcefulness reminiscent of
ers suit the technology to the consumer,
Hotchkiss's ingenuity, mechanical engineer
but they also serve people with different
Ira Cochin of the New Jersey Institute of
kinds and degrees of disability. Unable to
Technology and biologist Ben Van Wagner
propel the chair by themselves until the
of Fresno Pacific College created innova-
invention of these assistive devices, many
tive classrooms and laboratories. In 1977
quadriplegics were indeed "bound" by and
Cochin, who was blind and later became
"confined" to their wheelchairs because
deaf, devised instruments-in what he called
the chairs did not offer freedom of inde-
the Macrolab-so that people with sen-
pendent mobility. With older people's in-
sory and speech impairments could be inte-
creasing acceptance-and society's decreas-
grated with nondisabled people in schools
ing stigmatizing-of motorized scooters,
and industry. For example, Cochin con-
advancing age no longer deters many peo-
nected an oscilloscope to a microphone so
ple's participation in the social mainstream.
that deaf (as well as hearing) students lit-
Moreover, increasingly manufacturers are
erally could see how frequencies changed
employing modular design, which refers to
by viewing sound waves on a screen. With
detachable units or components of mech-
Cochin's instruments, blind people-by in-
anisms. With modular design, wheelchairs
terpreting sound-were able to determine
and scooters may become reasonably priced
the chemical constituents of a product, us-
and easily repaired so that users may have
ing a modified spectrometer, and to accu-
control of their assistive devices. Folding
rately measure weights up to a milligram,
and modular motorized wheelchairs, how-
using a precision balance scale. Referring to
I56 CHAPTER NINE
the "designing" of an early speech synthe-
The Computer as an Accommodation
sizer at the lab, William Skawinski, blind
chemist at the New Jersey Institute of Tech-
The computer serves not only those with
nology who directed the Macrolab, indi-
multiple chemical sensitivity and motor im-
cated that the key to the program was that
pairments, but also many others with a va-
the students served were involved in the
riety of disabilities. Better than the TTY
development of all of these instruments.
and the relay system, the new "informa-
After his own careful research and much
tion superhighway" will allow deaf people to
medical consultation, Ben Van Wagner cre-
use a telephone that includes an interactive
ated an environment that no longer precip-
television monitor. Consequently, they will
itated "sick-building syndrome." Van Wag-
be able to employ the language they gener-
ner, a professor of science education, de-
ally consider most natural, sign language.
scribes how he felt when he was diagnosed
Just as this new technology can serve as
with multiple chemical sensitivity: "The tox-
ears for deaf people, the Kurzweil reader
ins of the synthetic 1990s had finally weak-
and computer add-ons, such as the voice
ened my immune system," Van Wagner ob-
synthesizer and Braille keyboard, can pro-
serves, for "I was suffering from extreme
vide eyes for blind people. For example,
fatigue, lightheadedness, and arthritis so
although totally blind, Dr. Peter Torpey-
bad that I could barely walk." Van Wagner
who has not required eyesight to pursue
feared that since he had become allergic to
the ideal color-printer in seventeen years of
formaldehyde, he might not be able to go
creating software-types with a Braille com-
on teaching.
puter keyboard at the Xerox Corporation.28
Still undaunted, Van Wagner persisted in
Computers also accommodate many peo-
his probing and ultimately discovered the
ple with cognitive and learning disabilities,
solutions that he was seeking:
as well as those with autism: "for many
autistics, the internet is Braille."2 Temple
I have adapted my zoology courses so as to use
Grandin, author of Thinking in Pictures: And
alternative dissection materials from the local
Other Reports from My Life with Autism,30 seizes
fish market, non-formaldehyde substitute
on the internet and the web as "the best
specimens and computer technology.
possible metaphors for her own brand of
My college has
allowed me to establish
thinking." In response to one critic's obser-
a new "toxin-free" classroom outside of the
official science building and has provided me
vation that Thinking in Pictures has "occa-
with an excellent office with a window that
sional signs of autism, abrupt transitions,
opens, which frees me from my
air-tight
sudden leaps of thought not easy for the
office
As I continue to research the issue
reader to follow," Grandin says, "I'm going
of Environmental Illness, it is apparent that
to write another book in which I try to
it is a significant problem for many students
explain how associative thinking [leaps of
and adults.
thought] works like links on the internet."
People who are unable to use their hands
People with disabilities, including those
because of, for example, paralysis or severe
with sensory and speech impairments and
repetitive strain injury are still capable of us-
multiple chemical sensitivity, can be suc-
ing voice-activated computers by means of
cessful students and employees when they
software such as IBM's Dragon Dictate. 31 In
are afforded appropriate, reasonable accom-
the early 1990s, veteran New York Newsday re-
modations.
porter Susan Harrigan developed a serious
case of carpal tunnel syndrome resulting
DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY 157
from her typing on a computer keyboard.³²
gan by examining one easy-to-track disabil-
She credits her use of a voice activated com-
ity, spinal cord injury. Consistent with the
puter, in combination with the ADA's "rea-
employment statistics for the general dis-
sonable accommodation" requirement, for
ability population, only one-third of those
the opportunity to resume her career. After
with spinal cord injuries were employed. Yet
Christopher Reeve became a quadriplegic
those who were already computer literate
because of a horse-riding accident, Dragon
before their injury found jobs faster than
Dictate enabled him to continue using a
those who did not have computer skills.
computer. Brian Dickenson, who has ALS-
Of those employees with spinal cord in-
"which has stripped him of the power to
juries, two-thirds used computers on the
speak, swallow, move his legs or arms, wiggle
job. There was no salary gap between em-
his fingers or turn his head"-is still able
ployees with spinal cord injuries and non-
to work as a columnist for the Rhode Is-
disabled employees when both groups were
land Providence Journal-Bulletin, using his eye
computer users. Those employees with spi-
movements to write on a computer employ-
nal cord injuries who were not computer
ing the Eyegaze system.³³
users had an income 36 percent lower than
Furthermore, advances in telecommuni-
their nondisabled counterparts.
cations have ushered in choices heretofore
Although Brewer observes that a partner-
unavailable to people with disabilities, such
ship was developing between industry, gov-
as the option of bringing the workplace or
ernment, research organizations, and the
classroom into the home by means of com-
disability community regarding web access,
puter technology. Computers function in-
she finds no such industrywide interest
teractively so that students with disabilities
in working with the disability community
can use distance learning to participate in
in the development of computers them-
the classroom and employees with disabil-
selves. For example, accessibility and costs
ities can take part in workplace activities,
still are significant deterrents to getting
even though they are not physically present.
computers to people with disabilities. Paul
Moreover, virtual reality technology is being
Schrader, director of the National Techno-
used as a tool, preparing people with disabil-
logical Program at the American Founda-
ities for real-life situations.³ Judy Brewer-
tion for the Blind in Chicago, notes that
director of the Web Accessibility Initiative
despite the later improvement in the sys-
International Program at the World Wide
tem for people with visual disabilities, when
Web Cambridge Consortium-points out
Windows-the visually-based operating sys-
that not only is it incumbent on people with
tem for Microsoft-opened, the door was
disabilities to learn new technologies, but
closed for blind people.³
they must also claim them as they are evolv-
While computer costs have decreased, the
ing, as illustrated by the interaction between
prices are too often out of reach for people
the disability population and individuals
with disabilities, many of whom are un-
developing technical guidelines for writing
employed or dependent on limited bene-
accessible web pages.³
fits. Disability advocates suggest that since
Evidence that computers tend to level the
computers become obsolete so quickly in
playing field, thus minimizing the limit-
corporate America, procedures could be im-
ing effects of disability, was presented at
plemented to make these no longer state-
the May 1998 New Orleans conference of
of-the-art computers available to people
the President's Council of Employment of
with disabilities. Given the multiplicity of
People with Disabilities. The researchers be-
web sites particularly geared to people with
I58 CHAPTER NINE
specific disabilities, the internet is an es-
chopharmacology may be resulting in cos-
pecially valuable resource for this popula-
metic drugs devised to produce specific
tion. Having diminished less quickly than
personality changes or to induce docility
the cost of computers, the cost of add-
or, even worse, pharmaceuticals that im-
on technology-necessary to make comput-
pair brain activity much like amphetamines
ers accessible for those with a variety of
or cocaine.³ Moreover, the specter of ris-
impairments-doubles the price of comput-
ing health expenditures has elevated cost-
ers for many people with disabilities. Just as
effectiveness to such a premium that the
including access into the original plan of a
quick-fix of chemical treatment appears to
building is simpler and less expensive than
be the present-day panacea, replacing more
renovation, designing access into new com-
time-consuming, personal, and expensive
puter technology is easier and less costly
psychoanalytic procedures.
than add-ons. Besides, consistent with the
Cognizant of the pharmaceutical indus-
concept of universal design, much of the
try's search for expanded markets, advocates
computer technology developed to accom-
for children with psychiatric disabilities are
modate people with disabilities ultimately
apprehensive about the speed with which
serves the general population.
antidepressant drugs-never approved by
the Food and Drug Administration for
children or adolescents-have flowed into
Psychopharmacology
the children's market: "Critics worry
that not enough is known about how an-
Just as computers have opened new possi-
tidepressants work on the growing brain
bilities for many people with physical im-
and that cost-conscious insurance compa-
pairments, the development of new phar-
nies will turn too quickly to drugs in-
maceuticals has removed barriers for many
stead of costly psychotherapy."⁴⁰ Although
of those with severe psychiatric problems.
roughly three million children have severe
Such people no longer feel as restricted
depression and over two thousand between
by their disabilities-in their professional
the ages of five and nineteen commit sui-
as well as their personal lives-as they did
cide every year, most of the antidepressant
before the advent of these drug therapies.
medicines prescribed for children have been
Yet psychopharmacology is a double-edged
based solely on medications for adults.⁴¹
sword, requiring those who employ this new
Without denying the possible value of the
technology to confront critical issues.
appropriate use of drug therapy in specific
According to Dr. Peter Kramer, author of
instances, Dr. Leon Eisenberg, professor of
Listening to Prozac, new medications serve
social medicine at Harvard Medical School,
many people with psychiatric disabilities
is concerned about the effect on youngsters
who would never be open to psychoana-
of the change in the practice of medicine.
lytic approaches.37 Yet even about his pa-
"Managed care and psychotropic drugs are
tients on psychotherapeutic drugs, Kramer
a Satanic mix," Eisenberg warns.
observes, "When medication altered their
In addition, disability advocacy groups-
temperament, as occasionally it appeared
such as Citizens for Responsible Care in Psy-
to do, my response was ambivalent. Yes,
chiatry and Research-and bioethicists, as
the men and women attained relief, but
well as federal and state agencies, question
perhaps something precious was lost in
the ethical appropriateness of experimen-
the process. Peter R. Breggin, author of
tation in which researchers either use drugs
Toxic Psychiatry, adds that the trend in psy-
that provoke psychotic symptoms in psychi-
DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY I59
atric patients or deprive these patients of
chotic episodes." Describing himself as be-
the medications they require:
ing used as a "guinea pig," Andrew Brown-
stein, a person with severe manic-depression
Federal ethics officials estimate that there
and a subject of a study at the National
have been one hundred to three hundred
Institute of Mental Health, comments, "I
experiments in which patients were taken
off their medicines when no new medicines
don't know how doctors can watch you be
were being tried; rather, they were taken off
in that kind of pain and not do anything."
their medicines to observe the patients as
In Conquering Schizophrenia: A Father, His
they relapsed in order to study the illnesses.
Son, and a Medical Breakthrough, Peter Wei-
Among those experiments were some in
den describes the remarkably beneficial ef-
which potentially toxic drugs like PCP, a
fects that new pharmaceuticals have had on
hallucinogen known as "angel dust," and
ketamine, an anesthetic related [to] it, were
his schizophrenic son.43 Not available un-
given to provoke patients into relapses.⁴²
til 1997, these drug therapies significantly
improve the functioning of schizophrenics
Dr. John K. Hsiao, a psychiatrist represent-
without side effects, Weiden states. In ad-
ing the National Institute of Mental Health
dition, he points out that although psy-
in Bethesda, Maryland, indicates that al-
choanalysis may work with neurotics, even
though nothing should be done that could
Freud acknowledged that talking therapy is
permanently harm patients, "We can ask
not as effective for schizophrenics. Marvin
patients to put up with an exacerbation of
Spieler, who refers to himself as "a mentally
symptoms. They should be given a chance
ill consumer," says, "My illness will be with
to contribute to science
We don't have
me until I die. I take my 'pink beauties'
animal models to study, so we have to do
as I call lithium carbonate to maintain my
what work we can in humans."
sanity. For I know without them the gates
On the other hand, Dr. Adil Shamoo-
of Riker's Island [a New York City prison]
a biomedical ethicist at the University of
or worse will open for me."44 Despite the
Maryland at Baltimore County-who for
dangers these pharmaceuticals pose, expe-
years has studied the use of vulnerable peo-
riences such as Weiden's and Spieler's will
ple as subjects in experimentation, notes,
encourage the continued development of
"Many of these experiments
give no med-
such technology.
ical benefits to the subjects.
There have
been several attempted and successful sui-
cides among the subjects of the experi-
Bioethical Dilemmas
ments. There are no other kinds of medical
experiments in which you induce the dis-
Decisions regarding the appropriate uses
ease in humans to study it." In Fall 1997, The
of technology require reference to real hu-
Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology reported
man beings in specific circumstances. Given
on controversial experiments: In one, "thir-
the new procreative alternatives with which
teen men and women with schizophrenia
people are presented by biological and ge-
were not only taken off their medicines,
netic engineering, who could criticize the
but then injected with ketamine to pro-
desire of prospective parents to use this
voke psychotic symptoms in the subjects
technology to prevent their baby from be-
so the symptoms could be studied"; in an-
ing born with sickle cell anemia or cys-
other, "thirty-eight patients were given a
tic fibrosis? Yet the capacity to create de-
drug called methylphenidate, which quickly
signer offspring-with predetermined phys-
threw 60 percent of them into severe psy-
ical characteristics, intelligence quotients,
I60 CHAPTER NINE
or personality traits-is too reminiscent of
in conjunction with intensive therapy by
the distorted vision of the eugenicist. Even
skilled professionals. Dr. Randolph Mal-
the technology that allows expectant par-
lory, director of the Deafness Rehabilitation
ents to acquire increasingly detailed infor-
master's program at New York University,
mation about the fetus creates new ethical
questions the value of procedures such as
and pragmatic problems. The practice, in
this one, suggesting that perhaps we should
some parts of China, of aborting female
accept being deaf as "another way of being
fetuses in order to produce sons rather
in the world and involvement with Deaf
than daughters has become prevalent be-
culture as a reasonable alternative" to main-
cause of the "one child per couple" dic-
stream society.47 On the other hand, critics
tum, employed to reduce the population.
of this view argue that the focus on Deaf
We may agree that the moral issue, as well
culture has been excessive, given the great
as the resulting gender imbalance, necessi-
number of Americans who have sufficient
tates education and perhaps stronger mea-
hearing loss to affect communication, ap-
sures to discourage this misguided and po-
proximately twenty-eight million, and the
tentially dangerous use of new reproduc-
relatively small number of this population
tive technology.
who use American Sign Language, roughly
How do we deal, however, with a response
one-half million.⁴
by some deaf couples to a new option?
Commenting on the ethical issues con-
Learning they could choose to abort if the
cerning conjoined (Siamese) twins, Dr. Alice
fetus had inherited their predisposition to
D. Dreger, a historian of anatomy, notes
deafness, they indicate, on the contrary,
that the implications of this condition go
that they would choose to abort if the
beyond its rare occurrence of one in fifty
fetus did not inherit their deafness. Do
thousand to one hundred thousand:
we accuse them of limiting their child's
horizons? Or do we accept the argument
Dr. Dreger and others who share her views
that the deaf community's isolation from
see parallels between medical attitudes
the mainstream has resulted in a unique
toward conjoined twins, and toward those
children born with other anomalies, including
culture and language that this couple might
ambiguous genitals, dwarfism, congenital
seek to protect as a cherished legacy?
deafness, and the like. Such conditions
Although the surgical procedure known
have invited aggressive attempts at fixing
as a "cochlear implant" tends not to be
often through a long series of operations,
controversial for postlingually profoundly
medications and rehabilitations; and most
deaf adults, do we recommend cochlear
have required that the therapies be performed
implants for children who are prelingually
on children too young to have a say in
whether they want to be treated or not.
profoundly deaf? While these devices that
[Dreger] argues that decisions about who
provide electrical stimulation to the audi-
is in pain and who should be fixed-
tory nerve have been used successfully since
whatever their purported abnormality-
about 1980, language acquisition was con-
must go beyond mechanical, economic
sidered more difficult when first exposure to
or even philosophic considerations, to
sound came from a cochlear implant, rather
include the voices of those who know
than from the exquisite natural hearing of
best [people who live with the condition
and who are capable of commenting
an infant.⁴ Yet by the late 1990s, prelin-
on it.]49
gually deaf children with profound hear-
ing loss were able to develop understanding
Bioethicist Dr. Alan Fleischman observes
and speech by means of cochlear implants
the tension in the dominant culture-in-
DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY I6I
creasing accommodation of the disabilities
tist professor Jim Crow. Nevertheless, Dr.
in adults with simultaneous decreasing tol-
Allen Crocker, scientific advisor to the Na-
erance of abnormality in children: "We'll
tional Down Syndrome Congress, is skepti-
blame families if they knew there would be
cal of what he considers a still scientifically
an abnormal child but chose not to abort,"
unproved formulation, supported only by
Fleischman fears.
anecdotal evidence.
Since parents usually function as the ad-
Dr. Lawrence Leichman, however, found
vocate for their disabled child, how do we
what he calls "scientifically significant" dif-
judge the 1983 case of Baby Jane Doe, a new-
ferences between those of his many pa-
born with spina bifida?⁵⁰ Given a negative
tients with Down syndrome who were tak-
prognosis, the baby's parents refused the
ing Lawrence's formula and those who
shunt operation that could have drained the
were not. Leichman describes Lawrence's
fluid from their infant's brain, and probably
approach-dealing with Down syndrome
would have improved her medical condi-
as a treatable genetic problem-as "revolu-
tion. Based on a more optimistic medical
tionary because this is something parent-
judgment, the government sued the baby's
led, not physician-led, not scientist-led. In-
hospital, arguing that she was entitled to
stead, there's a group of parents, and it's
the surgery as a civil right according to Sec-
now become a very large group of par-
tion 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
ents, who said, 'We want to do something
When, as in the Baby Jane Doe case, differ-
more for our children. Will you help us?
ent physicians offer diametrically opposite
If not help us, will you not stand in our
prognoses about complex technical proce-
way? If not stand in our way, will you at
dures, what criteria can parents use to make
least follow us?' And that is revolutionary
a serious medical decision?
in medicine."
How reliable can we consider medical re-
Upon what criteria should those mak-
search initiated not by scientists and physi-
ing life or death determinations regard-
cians, but by parent advocates of chil-
ing who gets a donated organ-surgeons,
dren with disabilities? If the impairment,
nurses, psychiatrists, and social workers-
as in Down syndrome, is progressive, and
base their decisions? Without interviewing
the promising parent-directed therapy is
the patient, the medical centers at Stanford
at worst harmless, some parent advocates
University and the University of California
contend that they cannot wait for well-
at San Diego rejected Dr. Philip Bach's ef-
controlled, large, randomized, double-blind
fort to sign up Sandra Jensen, a woman with
studies. With only a high school education,
Down syndrome, for a heart-lung trans-
self-taught Dixie Lawrence, who formerly
plant. Because the doctors thought she
ran an adoption agency for severely disabled
would not be able to follow the complex
children, challenged the medical establish-
schedule of post-transplant drugs, they con-
ment after she adopted a one-year-old baby
sidered her a poor risk for scarce organs. As
girl with Down syndrome.5 The results of
the New York Times indicated:
the nutritional formula Lawrence devised,
now taken by over fifteen hundred children
They picked the wrong woman to reject. Ms.
with Down syndrome, including her own
Jensen, a lifelong advocate for the mentally
daughter, is deemed hopeful by physicians
disabled, was on hand when President George
Bush signed the Americans with Disabilities
and scientists, such as pediatrician Dr. Pe-
Act in 1990. She and her friends raised a.
ter Wallstein, Down syndrome researcher
ruckus. Both medical centers eventually
Dr. Lawrence Becker, and nutritional scien-
relented and she got her transplant at
I62 CHAPTER NINE
Stanford in 1996, although she died six
of life, doctors did not close the spine, so
months later of complications unrelated to
the babies were allowed to get infections
her mental disability.
and die in the hospital. With improved
antibiotics-and shunts to relieve the pressure
In order to reconsider ethical dilemmas and
of hydrocephalus-by 1960 doctors did
standardize procedures pertaining to the
close the spine, and these babies did not
process by which candidates for transplants
have to die or be developmentally delayed.
are selected, new federal regulations were
But since there still weren't that many
published in late March 1998.
women around with spina bifida who had
given birth to babies, doctors had neither
Rather than regulations, however, many
experience nor literature to help these
bioethical dilemmas require case-by-case
expectant mothers.
judgments. Should we encourage the wo-
man with multiple sclerosis, who has dif-
On the internet, Scheer fortunately found
ficulty walking, to use a motorized scooter
an especially knowledgeable and creative ob-
if the stigma she experiences outweighs the
stetrician in California who consulted with
advantage of her increased mobility? How
her team of doctors in New York City. Work-
do we reply to the student in a wheelchair,
ing together on many of her difficult medi-
who could easily attend school employ-
cal issues, they developed a rotating sched-
ing distance learning, but instead chooses
ule of antibiotics for Scheer. She describes
not to take advantage of the technology
one Memorial Day when she was experienc-
because he prefers the socialization inher-
ing very debilitating symptoms:
ent in being physically present in school,
even if it may require arduous and costly
My gastrointestinal specialist spent his
travel? People are best served by solutions
entire vacation day searching the internet
provided not for categories or types, but
and faxing me a stack of articles that we
tailor-made for a particular person in a spe-
could use to deal with my condition. This
cific situation.
doctor had already figured out a way to
stop my contractions, which had occurred
dangerously early in my pregnancy. He
halted the labor by using a pump that
The Internet and a Miracle Baby
administered medication continuously, and
with a monitor I could mark the contractions
Susan Scheer, a brilliant Yale graduate with
twice a day. When I stuck the monitor into
spina bifida,53 who had held several signif-
the computer, it could be read in Atlanta,
icant positions in New York City govern-
and they could readjust the medication
ment, received the individualized care ap-
when necessary.
propriate for her unusual medical needs.⁵
After learning that she was going to have a
She also received a great deal of sup-
baby, Scheer discovered, using the internet
port from people she met on the internet
and email, "a wonderful network of people"
through "Disabled Mommies," one of the
who helped her with her pregnancy and de-
chat rooms of America Online. With some,
livery, as well as with caring for her infant
she extended the relationship using email.
daughter, Melissa, who doctors referred to
In this way she got to know thirty-two moth-
as "a miracle baby":
ers or pregnant women with disabilities, a
few even with spina bifida, who told her
Because it was assumed that babies with
about their experiences with pregnancy and
spina bifida would not have a good quality
motherhood.
DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY 163
Medical and Genetic Information
tutions, accessing people's medical records
without their consent, often without their
Because she orchestrated the use of the in-
knowledge." Dr. Francis Collins, director
ternet herself, Scheer could be certain that
of the National Center for Human Genome
the technology would be used to serve her
Research, refers to the impediments im-
own purposes. Yet when institutions deter-
posed on patients and physicians to ensure
mine how computers store, retrieve, and
the privacy of medical records: "The system
process medical information, people may
forces people to take drastic steps to protect
have cause for apprehension. Inasmuch as
themselves. It is putting a terrible burden
computers are altering diagnostic proce-
on patients. [Doctors] are forced sometimes
dures dramatically, many medical profes-
to have interactions with insurance agents
sionals, especially in the mental health field,
or with other physicians or with HMOs
are concerned that the uniqueness of the
where [doctors] have to pretend [they] don't
individual is being disregarded. In fact, in-
have the information. It's a very strange
stead of being dealt with as individuals re-
dilemma-to choose between patient con-
quiring appropriate treatment specifically
fidentiality and telling the truth.'
designed for them, too often patients are
On the other hand, Larry Gostin, George-
being lumped into categories for short-term
town University law professor, makes a co-
cost-effectiveness.
gent argument for sharing medical infor-
This approach is driving the prevailing
mation: "We have a huge amount of data
trend in health care delivery in the United
about a whole range of diseases-cancer,
States. For example, in an effort to curb
heart disease, schizophrenia. But all this
costs, an increasing number of companies
information is kept by an individual doc-
are employing new computer technology to
tor
or managed care organizations. If we
measure treatment of workers with psychi-
could have systematic, retrospective stud-
atric disabilities as therapists compare the
ies to look back at diseases,
there would
symptoms of their patients with "a data base
be a great deal of information we could
of hundreds of similar cases."55 Maryland
find out." Information privacy consultant
psychiatrist Dr. Harold Eist responds, "It is
Robert Gelman refers to the capacity to
astonishing that someone could even pro-
track down the names of women who took
duce outcomes studies. The doctor-patient
the anti-nausea drug DES while they were
relationship is as much ruled by art as by
pregnant. As a result of collecting this in-
science. Medicine is too complex, individ-
formation requiring access to many medi-
uals and their experiences differ so much,
cal records, health researchers were able to
and there is so much chaos in biology that
make the link between the drug and certain
looking at outcomes studies can never di-
cancers in the children of these women.
rect you to what the appropriate treatment
Genetic testing has been introduced into
for any individual would be."
clinical practice at a time of decreasing
Moreover, A. G. Greitenstein, director of
privacy and confidentiality resulting from
the Justice Resource Institute, warns that
computerization. The New York Times re-
with computers there is less security than
ports that "it has become increasingly clear
with paper charts: "We don't have someone
that the Human Genome Project, the plan
policing the gates. So you have a huge op-
[initiated in 1990] to sequence human DNA
portunity for folks that are not supposed to
and map the position of human genes,
be looking at people's records within insti-
would have to turn into a project in com-
I64 CHAPTER NINE
puter science." Thus two technologies,
about what to tell your children or, indeed,
computer and genetic, have fused: "the com-
whether to have children. So the information
puter is the management vehicle, the lan-
is quite powerful. And this information feeds
guage to decipher, download, organize, and
on existing inequities in our system. We
can't currently protect persons who know
manipulate genes," explains Jeremy Rifkin,
they are at risk for certain diseases or, in
author of The Biotech Century.⁵ Despite
fact, have certain diseases, with respect to
the potential medical value, computerized
health insurance or employment.
We
DNA sequencing and genetic mapping raise
can't yet assure you that the information,
unprecedented questions.
should we get it, would be protected and kept
How do we determine what bioethicist
confidential.
Adrienne Asch refers to as "the fair use of
genetic information for both medical and
When a patient informed her insurance
non-medical purposes, such as employment
company that she had a mutated gene that
or insurance?"6 How do we ascertain the
significantly predisposed her to breast can-
social repercussions of providing individu-
cer, her request for coverage for removal of
als and families with information regarding
both breasts was denied on the grounds that
their genetic predisposition to illnesses and
she already had a preexisting condition, a
disabilities? Patient advocate Mary Jo Ellis
genetic defect, when she took out her health
Kahn points out the conflict between the
policy.⁶ Twenty states have passed laws pro-
promise of a breast cancer cure that the
hibiting health maintenance organizations
Human Genome Project provides and the
and health insurance companies from in-
legal and ethical problems that lag far be-
creasing the cost of insurance for people
hind the scientific breakthroughs: "I am a
who have a gene mutation. Yet many peo-
breast cancer patient with a family history,
ple belonging to support groups of families
and I have two daughters, and although
with different genetic disorders believe that
finding out our genetic status may be very
they have encountered not only insurance
useful to the family to learn who needs to
discrimination but also employment bias
be followed more carefully and what med-
because of their condition.
ical care we should receive, it's too dan-
In late 1996, companies marketing tests
gerous at this point because my daughters
to determine whether or not women have
could lose their health insurance based on
the gene mutations that significantly in-
just testing."6
crease their risks for breast or ovarian can-
Reiterating Kahn's concern about health
cer informed physicians of the potential
insurance, Patricia King of Georgetown Law
for insurance and job discrimination. In
School notes other problems-such as pri-
addition, physicians were advised that the
vacy of information and accessibility of
Equal Employment Opportunity Commis-
medical care, as well as discrimination based
sion's interpretation of the language in the
on an individual's genetic traits:
ADA indicates that discrimination based
on the results of genetic tests is unlaw-
Not only do you have a problem getting
ful. However, the EEOC's associate legal
health insurance; you may have a problem
counsel, Peggy Mastroianni, warned that
getting employment because, remember,
this opinion has not yet been tested in the
most health insurance in this country is
provided for by employers. Health insurance
courts. Apprehension regarding discrimi-
is expensive. So you not only have to worry
nation resulting from genetic testing has
about your coverage; you have to worry about
broad implications, for tests have been-
your employment. And you have to worry
and are being-developed for other diseases,
DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY 165
such as cystic fibrosis, Huntington's disease,
more subtle and specific" than what Dr. Su-
and an inherited form of ALS.⁶³
san Love-surgeon, researcher, fund-raiser,
Other issues involving the value of these
and breast cancer activist-calls surgery, ra-
tests remain unresolved. First, the fact that
diation, and chemotherapy: "slash, burn,
a person tests positive for a specific gene
and poison." To illustrate, if a woman
mutation does not mean that the individual
got breast cancer because of a specific mu-
will contract the related disease. Second, in-
tation on a particular gene causing un-
formation about an individual's probability
controlled growth-as opposed to modu-
of contracting a disease does not ensure
lated growth, which occurs in normal cells-
that appropriate treatment exists for that
scientists would figure out an injection
condition, as in the case of breast cancer.
to turn the mutated gene off.66 This po-
Finally, it is often difficult to weigh the
tential paradigm shift, more likely to be
medical benefits of presenting an individual
available to the next generation than this
or a family with information concerning
one, is comparable to the 1960s conversion
predisposition to disease against the psy-
from radical mastectomy to present surgi-
chological toll.
cal techniques, radiation, and chemother-
Furthermore, how can we discourage the
apy. Because the medical community has
patenting of DNA sequences, the raw ge-
not kept up with the research, Love, de-
netic data? Instead of publishing the re-
spite her skepticism, still uses current tra-
sults of new research, biotech firms tend
ditional procedures, for nothing else has
to keep "intellectual property" secret, even
proven effective at all. Yet she looks for-
though 90 percent of them are associ-
ward to the future. Karen Stabiner, author
ated with universities.⁶ When discoveries
of To Dance with the Devil: The New War
about the human genome are not shared
on Breast Cancer, observes: "Change, [Love]
in the scientific community, the probabil-
would argue, will come only if we start look-
ity of detecting flaws or achieving new in-
ing at breast cancer in a totally different
sights decreases considerably. For example,
way. Imagine breast cancer cells as rehabil-
a biotech company has patented the ge-
itatable criminals, she would suggest; we
netic sequence for toxic shock syndrome
need to change the environment in order
although the firm has not developed an
to change them."67
appropriate drug for this dangerous dis-
Contrary to the increasingly common
ease. The director of the National Center
recommendations of the pharmaceutical
for Genome Research believes that only
industry⁶⁸ and the American College of Ob-
newly-designed drugs should be patented,
stetrics and Gynecology,69 Love argues that
for he fears that biotech companies-from
long-term-more than ten years-use of re-
which the infusion of funds for genetic re-
placement hormones for postmenopausal
search flows-employ business rather than
women significantly adds to their risk of
science ethics.
developing breast cancer. In fact, Love crit-
icizes both the pharmaceutical industry
and the medical profession for redefin-
"Slash, Burn, and Poison"
ing menopause as an illness, "just as the
baby boomers hit middle age," thus cre-
Yet genetically-based therapies, as for ex-
ating a disability out of a natural condi-
ample in the treatment of breast cancer,
tion: "A woman's ovaries don't shut down
are indeed promising. This new approach
at menopause. They continue to produce
one day may allow for "manipulations far
low levels of hormones well into a woman's
166 CHAPTER NINE
eighties. Synthetic hormones don't replace
Transforming Scientific Orthodoxy:
something that is missing when women
AIDS Activism
reach menopause. They add something that
is not naturally there," Love asserts.⁷⁰
Steven Epstein in Impure Science⁷⁵ recounts
Supporting Love, Dr. Christiane North-
how AIDS activists, transforming them-
rup-cofounder of the Women to Women
selves into self-educated analysts of drug
Clinic in Yarmouth, Maine, and a lead-
regulations, "have mastered the science of
ing women's health advocate-asks, "Why
their disease in a manner that changed
would the female body be designed to go
the history of medicine." They denounced
into planned obsolescence at age forty-
what they saw as the unnecessarily sluggish
two?""¹ Like Love, Northrup publicizes her
pace of the drug approval process and self-
concern that women may be risking over-
indulgently elegant guidelines of scientific
doses of estrogen because of misinformed
bodies, such as the Food and Drug Adminis-
doctors and greedy pharmaceutical compa-
tration (FDA) and the National Institutes of
nies. Northrup states that "there are mech-
Health (NIH).⁷ Reaffirming the 1970s femi-
anisms in the body to take over what might
nist health movement's skepticism of tradi-
be changing during menopause." Finding
tional medical protocols, Gay Men's Health
fault with what Northrup refers to as "the
Crisis-in concert with other AIDS groups,
same one-size-fits-all" hormone therapy for
especially Act-Up (AIDS Coalition To Un-
all women, both Northrup and Love claim
leash Power)-pressured the FDA into relax-
that women can control their health as they
ing standards used to determine a drug's
mature by eating properly, staying fit, and
efficacy.78 Rather than precipitating confu-
maintaining emotional vitality rather than
sion, this increased freedom produced new
by accepting the standardized regimen of
drugs, created and tested with the guidance
hormone replacement.72
of AIDS activists.
Like Love and Northrup, the National
Time magazine "Man of the Year" for 1996,
Breast Cancer Coalition-mainly women
Dr. David Ho, played a major role in the
with breast cancer and members of their
paradigm shift in scientists' picture of AIDS
families-works to bring visibility to breast
development. When scientists believed that
cancer and funding to research of the dis-
the AIDS virus lay dormant during the
ease.73 Founded in 1991 by Fran Visco, the
early and middle years of infection, doctors
organization has demonstrated on the steps
delayed treatment until the virus appeared
of the Capitol and lobbied members of
to emerge from its hibernation; however,
Congress. Visco observes that "before we
the experiments of Dr. Ho and University of
began, the federal government spent less
Alabama AIDS researcher Dr. George Shaw
than $90 million on breast cancer research.
presents a different model of AIDS:
This year [1997] we're spending $530 mil-
lion on breast cancer research." Having
The results showed that in every day of every
learned from the AIDS activists who began
year, in every infected person, HIV produced
in the early 1980s to procure funds where
not thousands, not millions, but billions
there seemed to be none, breast cancer ac-
of copies of itself. And every day the body
launched billions of immune cells to counter
tivists are promoting research and pressur-
the threat. The wonder was not that the
ing the medical community for new kinds
immune system eventually crashed. Given
of treatments.⁷⁴
such intense fighting and heavy casualties,
the wonder was that it lasted so long.79
DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY 167
Consequently, instead of waiting until the
Referring to Salk's struggle to develop
reemergence of the illness, oncologists be-
a polio vaccine in the early 1950s, Weniger
gan using combinations of the newly-form-
and Essex note that "history teaches" that
ulated drugs from the very start of the in-
an organization different from the NIH
fection, thus changing AIDS from a fatal
"should run an expedited vaccine program
disease into a chronic one similar to diabetes
in the face of a public health emergency." Al-
or hypertension.
though by 1949 John Enders and colleagues
Noting the increasingly remarkable pace
received a Nobel Prize for growing polio
of AIDS research, Dr. Jerome Groopman,
virus in test tubes, Salk "applied this discov-
Harvard Medical School professor, is con-
ery in developing a vaccine." Weniger and
cerned about those people infected with the
Essex extend the analogy between the Salk
AIDS virus who may not have access to the
vaccine and a potential AIDs vaccine:
expensive drugs required for their survival.⁸⁰
Besides battling their disease, many of those
But Enders, along with Albert Sabin and
who are insured are forced to cope with
other eminent polio researchers, fought to
bottom-line oriented HMOs reluctant to
stop trials of the Salk vaccine. Calling
pay for so-called experimental new thera-
Salk's vaccine "quackery" and "kitchen
pies. Certainly, many of the AIDS patients
chemistry," they favored waiting for an ideal
included among the forty million unin-
vaccine. The independent March of Dimes,
sured Americans are unlikely to be able to
whose principal mission was to stop polio,
afford the approximately fifteen thousand
courageously put the Salk vaccine to the test
anyway.
dollars a year for medication necessary to
On April 12, 1955, the headlines announced
sustain their lives. "Though Dr. Groopman
to an expectant world, "It Works!" The Sabin
says that 'time is of the essence' in treating
oral polio vaccine came into use around 1962.
the HIV-positive now, he is frustrated by a
But the availability of the Salk vaccine seven
deficient health care system that can't move
years earlier saved tens of thousands of lives.
remotely 'as quickly as science is moving."
Ultimately, most scientists are convinced
In 1997, scientists discovered that even
that only a vaccine will put an end to the
when the AIDS virus could not be detected
worldwide AIDS epidemic.⁸ Echoing the
in the blood, it was still hiding in certain
AIDS activists' successful assault on the
cells producing a reservoir of HIV. At the
FDA focus on pure, rather than practical,
1998 Twelfth World AIDS Conference in
science, Bruce G. Weniger, a member of the
Geneva, Dr. Ho and other researchers in-
Presidential Advisory Council on HIV and
dicated that "they had gone back to the
AIDS, and Max Essex, professor of virology
drawing board to map new strategies to
at Harvard and chairman of the Harvard
eliminate the latent reservoir.' The day be-
AIDS Institute, call for the NIH to move
fore the conference Dr. Ho declared, "Every
beyond the "scientific orthodoxy" that is
nation must overcome denial and address
impeding the promising development of an
this [AIDS] pandemic for what it really is-
AIDS vaccine. 82 Weniger and Essex criticize
an international emergency in which sixteen
"the NIH culture" for minimizing the value
thousand people are sentenced each day to
of applied research, the empirical rather
a slow and miserable death."85
than theoretical science that could result
Less euphoric than the 1996 Eleventh
in a vaccine that would "work to prevent
World AIDS Conference in Vancouver, the
HIV infection, or to forestall AIDS, or just
Geneva conference emphasized the disap-
to reduce contagiousness."
pointments and problems: the failure of
I68 CHAPTER NINE
a promising AIDS vaccine; the lack of ag-
in the Days of AIDS.91 One woman partic-
gressive, preventative, worldwide programs
ipating in the conference-which featured
promoting sex education, use of male and
the works of well-known authors such as
female condoms, and needle exchange; and
Larry Kramer, Tony Kushner, and Edmund
the patients for whom drug therapy was not
White-commented on the social and po-
successful. 86 Many of the benefits from the
litical impact of AIDS activists like those
protease inhibitors and drug combinations
writers: "The most important thing any
seemed to have been achieved by 1998 as
writer can do is remember that he is part of
the mortality rate appeared to be reaching
history,' [she] said, adding that it was partly
a plateau.⁸⁷
because of AIDS writing and advocacy that
Even for the vast majority of those who
a cure was now possible. 'You did it,' the
potentially could be helped by the new
woman told the panel of artists."
drugs, thirty-four million people affected
with AIDS, the cost per year of the medi-
cation is far beyond their reach. Although
Toward a New Vision: Three Queries
pharmaceutical companies are working to
produce drugs that are increasingly effective
Basic questions concerning disability and
and easy to take, Gabriel Rotello, author of
technology need to be addressed. First, why
Sexual Ecology: AIDS and the Destiny of Gay
is it that modern technology cannot meet
Men, insists, "Activists will have to fight to
challenges consistent with the principles of
make them cheaper."8 Moreover, because in
universal design, to make universally ac-
the United States AIDS cases shifted demo-
cessible dentist chairs, mammogram ma-
graphically by 1988 from the white gay com-
chines,⁹² and medical facilities available to
munity (about one-third of all AIDS cases)
people with disabilities and older people?
to racial and ethnic minority communities
And instead of expecting people to adapt
(more than one-half of all AIDS cases), some
to equipment, why can equipment not be
African-American community leaders sug-
adapted to people, including office furni-
gest it is time for this new AIDS population,
ture that prevents computer users from de-
like earlier AIDS activists, to "Act-Up."⁸⁹
veloping repetitive strain injuries or com-
Unlike disability or gay rights activists,
puters that conform to the needs of peo-
who focused on civil rights, AIDS activists
ple with various disabilities? Second, how
were single-minded, fixed on issues con-
can we assert the primacy of the individ-
nected with survival, health, and cure. They
uals served over the "business ethics" of
separated themselves even from the gay and
biotech and pharmaceutical companies or
lesbian community, for AIDS activists felt
"a deficient health care system"? Finally,
that they did not have the luxury of con-
what can be done to assure that technolog-
centrating on long-term concerns such as
ical innovation, rather than producing new
discrimination or access. Their sense of ur-
constraints, will expand the potential for
gency was sparked by what appeared to be
choice and for inclusion for all people, in-
the sudden decimation of a whole popula-
cluding those with disabilities and chronic
tion, frequently young men at the prime of
illnesses?
their lives.⁹ Like no other disability group,
To deal with these questions, a new con-
AIDS activists have had the inspiration to
sciousness is required that transcends so-
elevate their calamity almost to an art form,
lutions to discrete technological problems.
as evidenced by the three-day Key West con-
Barriers to access may recede, and a new
ference in early January 1997 on Literature
vision may emerge, if designers of envi-
DISABILITY AND TECHNOLOGY 169
ronments and inventors of new technolo-
tive perspectives-from the vantage point of
gies bring all those involved into the cre-
people with differences that stem from dis-
ative process. This receptiveness may inspire
abilities, or age, or the variety of possibilities
an imaginative leap that fosters the capac-
that shape the human condition.
ity to experience the world from alterna-
Chapter Ten
Disabled Veterans
Claim Their Rights
THE ACTIVISM OF DISABLED veterans
garded Harvard junior before he became
from World War I to the Gulf War seeking
paraplegic as a result of an injury sustained
medical services, benefits, education, and
during World War II, illustrates this per-
jobs impacted the disability rights move-
vasive discrimination.¹ Despite Klinefeld's
ment. Because the general public accepted
ability to walk with crutches, negotiate
rehabilitation and inclusion into the main-
stairs, and drive a car, Harvard was "con-
stream for disabled veterans of the two
vinced that a paraplegic simply couldn't
world wars more readily than for civilians
do the work," according to Dr. Howard
with disabilities, disabled veterans were the
Rusk, a pioneer in rehabilitation. Thanks
first to make progress in social integration.
to Rusk's pressure on his friend, Dr. Arlie
A question became self-evident. If veterans
Bock, the head of health services at Har-
could be successful as students, employers
vard, Klinefeld went on to earn his Ph.D.
and employees, husbands and fathers, com-
at Harvard. Although he eventually secured
munity leaders and neighbors, why couldn't
the college teaching job he sought, Kline-
civilians? In addition, a few disabled veter-
feld once again had to struggle, this time
ans organizations, breaking with many of
against the false assumption that his dis-
their colleagues, recognized that their po-
ability made him unemployable. Innumer-
litical influence would be enhanced if they
able experiences such as Klinefeld's con-
joined with civilians with similar disabili-
firmed the need for disabled veterans, like
ties. All people-veterans and civilians-with
their civilian counterparts, to contend with
spinal cord injuries resulting from battle,
unresponsive bureaucracies and defy atti-
accident, or illness share the need for acces-
tudinal barriers, often more resistant than
sible transportation and a barrier-free envi-
physical ones.
ronment. Disabled veterans, though more
readily included in the mainstream, also
discovered that they were not immune from
Legislation and Self-Advocacy
the same kind of discrimination as civilians
with disabilities.
As a result of the assumption that society
The story of Herb Klinefeld, a highly re-
owes a debt of gratitude to its disabled vet-
DISABLED VETERANS CLAIM THEIR RIGHTS 171
erans, they have been generally given prefer-
established, combining many government
ential treatment over civilians with disabili-
activities for disabled veterans under one
ties. For example, although members of the
administrative unit.
League of the Physically Handicapped were
The Disabled American Veterans of the
labeled unemployable in the mid-1930s, the
World War (DAVWW) evolved out of two
government had been attempting to assist
groups: the Ohio Mechanics Institute for
disabled veterans in their efforts to secure
Disabled Soldiers, a self-help organization
jobs since World War I. Yet immediately af-
formed from a Cincinnati training school
ter this war, however, the U.S. government
for disabled veterans, and a group of dis-
was overwhelmed, unprepared to deal with
abled veterans from the University of Cin-
hundreds of thousands of returning dis-
cinnati.⁵ The DAVWW, organized as a
abled veterans who were coping with con-
national body on September 25, 1920, devel-
ditions such as blindness, tuberculosis, and
oped a network of local chapters through-
amputation, as well as the effects of poi-
out the country, as a consequence, ini-
son gas on their respiratory systems.² Veter-
tially, of the efforts of Robert Marx, the
ans faced many obstacles: no single govern-
DAVWW's first national commander. Act-
ment agency was responsible for veterans'
ing as an advocacy group for disabled vet-
issues; bureaucratic paperwork was difficult
erans, DAVWW joined the American Le-
to negotiate; hospitals were overcrowded;
gion and other veterans' groups in secur-
available rehabilitation and training pro-
ing legislation that resulted in the creation
grams were inadequate; jobs were scarce;
of the Veterans Bureau. Formally chartered
and there was no protection from discrimi-
by Congress in 1932, DAVWW membership
nation against people with disabilities.
increased dramatically in such times of cri-
Two new concepts were initiated with the
sis as the Great Depression, World War II
War Risk Insurance Act, which became fed-
(when the name was changed to Disabled
eral law in 1914 and was amended in 1917.³
American Veterans [DAV]), and the Korean
First, the amount of payment received by a
War.⁶ After World War II, the DAV developed
disabled veteran was determined by the de-
a program to train national service officers
gree of disability incurred as a result of mil-
to lend support to other disabled veterans
itary service; military rank was no longer a
through counseling and assistance in filing
consideration as it had been in the past. Sec-
claims.⁷
ond, Congress funded vocational training
In order to take full advantage of their
and rehabilitation in order to help disabled
political clout, veterans' groups frequently
veterans become employable. The original
sought to disassociate themselves from ci-
legislation was replaced by two later acts,
vilians with disabilities. Although FDR
the 1917 Smith-Hughes Vocational Educa-
tried to introduce "a unified rehabilitation
tion Act and the 1918 Smith-Sears Veterans
program for civilians and veterans," veter-
Rehabilitation Act.⁴ However advantageous
ans' groups successfully lobbied for "a spe-
this legislation was in theory in providing
cial program for those injured in military
training, jobs, and follow-up services for dis-
service. Ultimately, the law increasing ben-
abled veterans until they became indepen-
efits and services for disabled veterans was
dent, disabled veterans encountered frustra-
enacted in March 1943.⁹ A separate law, the
tion when they sought the actual benefits
Barden-LaFollette Act, expanding the 1920
and services, for they had to deal with over-
Smith-Fess Vocational Rehabilitation Act,
lapping laws and government agencies. In
was passed in June 1943 for civilians with
1921, the United States Veterans Bureau was
disabilities.¹⁰
172 CHAPTER TEN
Rehabilitation: The Man,
New York, in early 1944 15 He described this
Not the Wound
facility as "a combination of a hospital, a
country club, a school, a farm, a vocational
Although vocational rehabilitation began
training center, a resort, and a little bit
in the 1920s, focusing only on employ-
of home as well." Although dubious about
ment of people with disabilities, Dr. Henry
the psychiatric aspect of rehabilitation, phi-
Kessler and, later, Dr. Howard Rusk ex-
lanthropist Bernard Baruch would become
panded the meaning of the term "rehabil-
Rusk's most supportive benefactor.
itation." Rehabilitation evolved out of the
Yet Rusk also had to overcome the resis-
need to find a means of dealing with dis-
tance of his medical peers to his new con-
abled soldiers neither ill enough to remain
ception of rehabilitation. As he explained:
in the hospital, nor well enough to return to
battle. Kessler, an orthopedic surgeon who
These weren't strangers to whom I was
talking. These were my old friends and
served in World War I, referred to as "the
colleagues, fine men and excellent doctors,
'Pied Piper of rehabilitation' and 'one of
but the kind of rehabilitation I wanted to
the great pioneers in the field,' appreciated
do had never been done. And they didn't see
the requirement for rehabilitative medicine
any need to start it.
They seemed to think
before World War II."¹¹
I was trying to push some kind of "social
While he initiated surgical techniques in
service boondoggle." It got back to me later
that some of them even referred to the idea
1923 that allow muscular control of artifi-
as Rusk's Folly.17
cial limbs,¹² by World War II he developed
an innovative rehabilitation program for
Rusk enlisted the services of Dr. George
more than three thousand amputees. When
G. Deaver, medical director of the Institute
Kessler realized that insufficient attention
for the Crippled and Disabled (ICD)¹⁸ in
was being paid to permanently disabled ser-
New York City, to train air force person-
vicemen after their wounds had healed, he
nel in his techniques for teaching para-
wrote, "The Navy treated the wound, not
plegics how to walk on braced legs. 19 At
the man."13 Although Kessler's superiors
this time, before a barrier-free restructuring
did not understand his comprehensive ap-
of the built environment was a consider-
proach, he was successful in training limb-
ation, and before lift-equipped buses and
makers, encouraging patients to become in-
modern wheelchairs were invented, walk-
formed consumers, and making the medical
ing was essential in order for paraplegics
profession and recently disabled servicemen
to participate in many life activities. Using
aware of the concept of rehabilitation.
this "total care" approach,2 Rusk made it
Sensitive to the problems of the wounded
possible for disabled veterans to achieve in-
airmen he was treating, Rusk slowly and
creasing degrees of independence as they
painstakingly discovered from his patients
gained the skills and self-assurance to par-
that "the whole man" required more than
ticipate in society. Some attended institu-
occupational counseling.14 He needed emo-
tions of higher learning, while others be-
tional, social, and educational support, as
came entrepreneurs or employees. Kessler's
well as training for his family and his friends
and Rusk's vision of rehabilitation of dis-
to accept him in his new condition. In or-
abled veterans fostered the movement for
der to provide recuperating airmen with
rehabilitation and deinstitutionalization of
an atmosphere more congenial than a hos-
civilians with disabilities, which ultimately
pital environment, he established the first
developed into the consumer-directed Inde-
Air Force Rehabilitation Center at Pawling,
pendent Living Movement.
DISABLED VETERANS CLAIM THEIR RIGHTS 173
Paralyzed Veterans of America
jobs; and to foster the development of PVA
nationwide. 24 In addition, PVA urged legisla-
More than other major veterans organiza-
tors to enable the Veterans Administration
tions, Paralyzed Veterans of America (PVA)
(VA) to provide attendants for those veter-
recognized the affinity between its mem-
ans who were so disabled that they could
bers' issues and those of civilian paraplegics
not otherwise live in the community.
and quadriplegics. Perhaps because these
By World War II, advances in medical sci-
veterans shared a particular disability, most
ence such as "the advent of antibiotics and
often requiring the use of a wheelchair, they
newer and better medical and surgical tech-
tended to acknowledge their link to civilians
niques" made it possible for paraplegics and
with similar disabilities. Articles in Paraple-
quadriplegics to survive, for the first time,
gia News, a monthly newspaper that began
in significant numbers.² Prior to World War
publication in July 1946, revealed these veter-
II, such patients rarely lived beyond a year
ans' discomfort with the disparity between
because of bedsores and acute kidney and
the treatment of disabled veterans and that
bladder problems. Rusk noted that "of the
of disabled civilians. References were made
four hundred men who became paraplegic
to "civilian paraplegics" who have not had
in World War I, a third died in France, an-
the advantages available to veterans, and
other third died within six weeks thereafter,
more specifically to "techniques of medi-
and of the remaining third, 90 percent were
cine, surgery, and rehabilitation" unattain-
dead within a year."2 In contrast, three-
able by "most non-veteran paraplegics."21
fourths of the twenty-five hundred surviv-
Perhaps this receptive vision made possi-
ing paraplegics of World War II were alive
ble the unanimous resolution of Septem-
twenty years later, and of those fourteen
ber 1947 at the second PVA convention,
hundred were still working.
ten months before President Harry S. Tru-
The concerted national effort to reha-
man desegregated the armed services in July
bilitate disabled veterans led to surprising
1948.2 This resolution protested the segre-
breakthroughs for all people with disabil-
gation policy of a southern hotel with a suc-
ities. Quadriplegics, formerly approached
cinct statement sent not only to the hotel
with hopelessness and futility by the medi-
but also to the press: "A spinal cord knows
cal profession, were not only surviving but
no bias." As a result, African Americans were
working, attending college, driving cars, ini-
served, without distinction as to race, for the
tiating and managing businesses, and liv-
first time in a Richmond, Virginia, hotel.
ing independently in accessible homes. Al-
Beginning with the Van Nuys Califor-
though the term "wheelchair accessibility"
nia Veterans Hospital in early 1945, para-
was not commonly used until more than
plegics and quadriplegics in similar hos-
a decade later, references to the need that
pitals throughout the country formed in-
mobility-impaired veterans had for "houses
dividual groups that eventually merged in
fitted with special equipment"29 or "remod-
1947 into a national organization, Paralyzed
eling conventional dwellings to wheelchair
Veterans of America.² The disabled veter-
living"30 appeared in Paraplegia News in the
ans in the hospitals created such groups in
late 1940s. Disabled veterans contended that
order to advocate for continuing medical re-
"for every dollar
spent on their rehabili-
search and rehabilitation programs, as well
tation, the federal government is securing
as for vocational and driver training pro-
a return of ten dollars by way of income
grams; to publicize disabled veterans' needs
tax, to say nothing of the immense gain
for appropriate housing, automobiles, and
in the men's morale and productive capac-
174 CHAPTER TEN
ity."³¹ Allan R. Cullimore, president emeri-
hand controls generally worked on the same
tus of Newark College of Engineering (now
principle.³⁶
New Jersey Institute of Technology), made
The April I949 Paraplegia News described
a clear case for employing people with dis-
a "driving device for the quadriplegic pa-
abilities:
tient," an apparatus appropriate for people
with limited but not total paralysis of their
The fact-the real fact, the realistic and
upper extremities. (The use of the term "pa-
practical side of the employment problem-
is that everybody is handicapped.
The
tient" in a publication encouraging inde-
normal person is a pure figment of the
pendence for veterans was a vestige of the
imagination
Different kinds of people
"medical model" at a time when all people
must do different kinds of things, for in
with disabilities were considered sick or hos-
any particular job all people do not fit. We
pitalized whether or not they were in a med-
try to put the right persons in the right
ical facility.) The appliance included a heavy
jobs picking them not for what they lack,
band that held the driver in a secure upright
but what they have, what they need, to do
the job.³
position and an apparatus that attached the
right arm and hand to the steering wheel
while the left hand was strapped to the
accelerator and brake. Thus, quadriplegic
Automobiles: Opening "New Vistas"
drivers able to use the mechanism could
steer with the arm and hand as well as start,
With the enactment of Public Law 663 in
increase speed, and stop with the left up-
1946, members of the armed forces who had
per hand.
become amputees or paraplegics in World
Information about many of the devices
War II were granted free automobiles. Ac-
developed for the veterans of World War II
cording to Paraplegia News, "When a man
reached the civilian disability population.
who has been limited to wheelchair exis-
For example, a Canadian woman wrote a
tence can own and operate a car, new vistas
letter to Paraplegia News requesting a copy
are open to him. The incentive provided
of the article that described the equipment
carries over to all phases of his life."3 The
designed for quadriplegic drivers:
inaccessibility of public transportation also
provided a compelling argument for grant-
I
was
born with a quadruple handicap-
ing automobiles to veterans with mobility
legs off just below the knees and arms just
impairments.
below the elbows. I have grown up on two pair
of artificial limbs, which I am able to manage
Beginning in the late 1940s, along with
quite well, and get around without aid of a
the advent of automatic transmissions on
cane, or anything. I am an artist by profession
a large scale,35 hand controls-a technologi-
and able to do, with my two arms together,
cally simple device-became available. Many
almost everything the average normal person
of these mechanisms included an arm at-
can do-but have not driven a car. I would
tached to the steering column with a brake
love to drive a car and just in the last month
and dimmer switch built into the device.
I have been giving it serious thought and
trying to learn what controls are available
Accelerating was achieved by squeezing the
that would help me most. Your quadriplegic
hand lever while braking was accomplished
controls sound like just the thing!37
by pushing the lever away from the body
toward the floor. Costing between thirty
Wheelchair users who could not transfer
and sixty-five dollars, the various models of
from their wheelchairs to the car seat were
DISABLED VETERANS CLAIM THEIR RIGHTS 175
unable to drive until the invention of de-
ity probably because, unlike the motorized
vices enabling them-in their wheelchairs-
wheelchairs of the late 1960s and the motor-
to maneuver in and out of automobiles.
ized scooters of the late 1970S, this converted
Advertisements appeared in Paraplegia News
golf chassis was appropriate neither for in-
from 1959 to 1964 for such transfer appara-
door use nor for loading into an automobile
tuses as a custom-made hydraulic lift for el-
or a van.
evating a wheelchair user seated in his or her
An advocate for disabled veterans, Henry
chair, a portable ramp, and a device known
Viscardi-who at twenty-seven learned to
as the Hoyer Kartop-Lift.38 Mounted on
walk with artificial legs-instructed am-
top of the car, the Hoyer Kartop-Lift trans-
putee veterans not only in the art of walking
ferred the wheelchair user from the chair
with prosthetic limbs but also in driving.40
to the driver's seat, utilizing hydraulic lift-
Focusing on the high unemployment rate
ing action. Although Hoyer lifts continue
of disabled veterans after World War II, Vis-
to be useful for transferring quadriplegic
cardi joined other prominent business lead-
wheelchair users to and from beds, bath-
ers in 1949 to form Just One Break (JOB), an
tubs, and toilets, the concept of hoisting
organization in New York City that found
an individual out of a wheelchair into a car
jobs for thousands of disabled veterans, and
never became widely accepted by mobility-
later even for civilians with disabilities. The
impaired drivers.
ability to drive was a significant factor in
Yet hydraulic lifts did become popular
allowing many of these disabled veterans, es-
as a means of raising wheelchair users,
pecially those who were mobility impaired,
seated in their wheelchairs, into vehicles.
to work.
Most wheelchair users who could not trans-
Once paraplegic, triplegic, and quadriple-
fer independently from their wheelchairs to
gic veterans owned automobiles and oper-
their car seats preferred to remain in their
ated them, some using hand controls, many
wheelchairs while driving. This preference
civilians with disabilities recognized that
was not surprising considering that, unlike
they too were capable of becoming drivers.
the driver's seat, these wheelchairs were de-
Although special parking privileges had
signed to provide the specific support many
been extended to disabled veterans shortly
of these mobility-impaired drivers required.
after World War II, the definition of disabil-
Although more often employed to provide
ity and the specific privileges varied from
wheelchair users access to buildings than
state to state. Requiring such privileges as
automobiles or vans, portable ramps did
much as the disabled veterans, civilians with
become a commonly-used device, beginning
motor impairments organized on a local
in the 1980s, for allowing wheelchair users
level to obtain special parking permits. Even
to enter accessible taxis.
after securing permits for drivers with dis-
An advertisement for a fully hand-con-
abilities, these organizations were engaged
trolled motorized vehicle, custom-built on
in ongoing struggles to maintain such hard-
a golf cart chassis, appeared in Paraplegia
sought privileges.⁴¹ Originally focused on
News in the early 1960s.³ The description of
parking privileges for all those with motor
the self-loading, power-elevating platform
impairments, civilians as well as veterans
suggested that the wheelchair user enter the
with disabilities began dealing with broader
cart in his chair and drive the ambulation
concerns, such as removing architectural
device on streets and sidewalks. This model
barriers, coping with employment discrim-
of a motorized vehicle did not gain popular-
ination, achieving political influence, and
176 CHAPTER TEN
enabling people with serious disabilities to
congressional hearings revealed that mili-
participate in the wider society.
tary personnel were exposed to dangerous
levels of chemical and biological agents.
The veterans coping with Gulf War syn-
The Pattern of Denial
drome faced a bureaucracy tempered by the
struggle of the Vietnam veterans. Yet, simi-
While earlier veterans' organizations helped
lar to Vietnam veterans with Agent Orange
to ignite the disability rights movement,
syndrome or post-traumatic stress disor-
later veterans-reflecting the rights move-
der, veterans with Gulf War syndrome had
ments of the 1960s and 1970S, including
to deal with serious doubts about their
the growing assertiveness of people
condition that frequently-unlike paralysis
with disabilities - countered unresponsive
or amputation-was not immediately dis-
bureaucracies and government cover-ups. If
cernible nor apparently relevant to the civil-
civilians with disabilities were gaining ser-
ian population. As Gulf War veteran and
vices and independence, what did a nation
American Legion lobbyist Steve Robertson
owe those who had acquired their disabili-
asserted, "The one thing that stands out in
ties by serving their country? Many Vietnam
my mind is that I don't want to be in the
veterans-inspired by civil rights activism-
same position as the Vietnam veterans that
learned to oppose an existing veterans bu-
had to fight and fight and fight and fight to
reaucracy that denied the validity of their
get the medical attention that they needed
illnesses,42 especially conditions resulting
and they deserved."46
from exposure to Agent Orange and from
Despite the Pentagon's portrayal of the
post-traumatic stress disorder.⁴³
1991 Gulf War as surgical, clean, and high
These concerns were considered "totally
tech, in reality this military operation had
alien to the members of the traditional
unhealthy consequences for service person-
lobby,"44 organizations such as Veterans of
nel and perhaps even their families. Robert-
Foreign Wars, the American Legion, and
son was healthy when he was deployed to
the Marine Corps League. Of course, all
the Middle East, but he has been ill since
issues of Vietnam veterans were complicated
his return to the United States: "I had a
by these traditional organizations confus-
chronic cough, diarrhea, aching joints, fa-
ing their own anger about the failure of
tigue. I would sweat profusely, even when I
military policy-and their disappointment
was in an area where I should be cool.
in some Vietnam veterans who were skep-
I just don't feel like I have the physical
tical about the war-with the loyalty and
strength to do the things I was doing be-
courage of those who served in Southeast
fore." General Ronald R. Blanck, comman-
Asia. Even by the late 1970s and early 1980s,
der of Walter Reade Army Medical Center,
Vietnam veterans with war-related disabili-
reported seeing veterans of this conflict with
ties were still struggling to attain "visibility
the series of inexplicable ailments of Gulf
and subsequently a legitimate voice in vet-
War syndrome: tiredness, weight loss, joint
erans' affairs."
and muscle aches and pains, hair loss, and
Although awareness of the illnesses re-
sore gums.
sulting from the use of Agent Orange dated
Two years after the conflict, Tod Ensign-
back to 1969, references to this ailment did
an attorney specializing in military law and
not appear in newspapers until roughly ten
director of Citizen Soldier,47 a nonprofit
years later. Less than five years after the 1991
organization devoted to defending and ex-
Gulf War, however, newspaper accounts of
panding the full civil, constitutional, and
DISABLED VETERANS CLAIM THEIR RIGHTS 177
disability rights of active military personnel
"Their cases are much more complex than
and veterans-discussed the synergistic ef-
other vets because they involve so many
fect that may have caused these health prob-
more toxins than have ever been dumped
lems. Among these causes Ensign cited mas-
on people: experimental shots and pills,
sive oilfield fires that burned for months,
massive amounts of oil-well fire pollution,
pollutant fumes from kerosene lamps and
radioactive depleted uranium, and low lev-
heaters that were used in tenting areas, and
els of multiple types of chemical warfare
depleted uranium shells that are radioactive
agents," notes Paul Sullivan, currently ex-
at low levels.
ecutive director of the National Gulf War
Those on active duty would be hesitant to
Resource Center.⁵² "Included in this toxic
reveal their symptoms, Ensign noted in 1993,
soup are pesticides and insecticides," Sul-
"because today, with the pressure to get rid
livan adds, "so we're dealing with overlap-
of people, a person might well be putting
ping illnesses resulting from the combina-
his career on the line." Robertson concurred
tion effects of overlapping toxins. Sul-
with Ensign's assessment: "Every active duty
livan describes the long-term, potentially
person that I've talked to, and this is an ab-
lethal consequences of these kinds of toxins:
solute statement-everyone that I've talked
in the course of battle, Gulf War military
to-says, 'I know other guys that are sick, but
personnel often were exposed to "a very
they don't want to come forward." Cure,
fine respirable, depleted uranium oxide dust
not compensation, Robertson emphasized,
that settles in the lungs and the bones and
is the real goal of the very sick and disabled
is known for causing cancer, birth defects,
veterans of this conflict.
as well as brain and kidney damage."
Two government studies contrast the
Veterans' groups have indicated that the
chronic health problems of military person-
Pentagon's denials regarding Gulf War ex-
nel deployed in the Persian Gulf region be-
posure adversely affected the treatment re-
tween 1990 to 1991, with troops that did not
ceived by returning Desert Storm troops at
serve in the Gulf War.48 The results reveal
hospitals run by the Department of Veter-
that Gulf War troops reported more than
ans Affairs: "Because doctors were told that
three times, and as much as five times, the
chemicals had not been used, many veterans
rate of illnesses such as fatigue, memory
were sent straight to the psychiatric depart-
loss, joint stiffness and/or pain, rashes, di-
ment," reported Sullivan in 1997 when he
arrhea, and depression, as troops who were
was spokesperson for Gulf War Veterans of
not deployed in the Gulf. In 1997, eighty
Georgia.54 Veteran Steve Robertson points
thousand Gulf War veterans "sought special
out that the Departments of Defense and
medical checkups from the government."⁴
Veterans Affairs "in just about every case"
By 1999, more than one hundred thousand
claimed that the constellation of symptoms
Gulf War veterans filed claims for benefits
known as Gulf War syndrome is stress-
with the VA for service-related illness. Con-
related: "The psychiatrist at Walter Reade
tradicting earlier studies by a presidential
Hospital told me that I had a lot of pent-up
commission and the Institute of Medicine,
angers, frustrations, and hostilities, about
a scientific survey endorsed by the Pentagon
being deployed and spending time in the
determined in late 1999 that an experimen-
Persian Gulf."55
tal drug distributed to roughly 40 percent of
Although by 1999 the Department of Vet-
the nearly seven hundred thousand Ameri-
erans Affairs refused to grant 60 percent
can troops who served in the Persian Gulf
of the disability claims of Gulf War veter-
may be a cause of Gulf War syndrome.⁵¹
ans,⁵⁶ Sullivan cited the 95 percent denial
178 CHAPTER TEN
rate in 1997: "The doctors believed that the
of Veterans Affairs had received disability
soldiers must be faking it."⁵⁷ Insisting that
claims from 39,419 soldiers who had been
he had returned home from the Vietnam
exposed to Agent Orange during their ser-
War in perfect health, although that conflict
vice in Vietnam.
was much more stressful and frightening
Chief of the Division of Epidemiology at
than the Gulf War, Marine gunnery sergeant
the American Health Foundation in New
Wayne Godfrey-who developed severe joint
York City, Dr. Steven Stellman, emphasizes
aches and a chronic bleeding skin rash after
the greater potential toxic exposure of Viet-
his service in Desert Storm-was appalled
nam veterans as compared to Gulf War vet-
by the notion of some scientists that stress
erans: "Approximately seven hundred thou-
was the main cause of the health problems
sand soldiers participated in the Gulf War
of veterans of the more recent war.58
while 2.3 to 3 million troops served in Viet-
Post-traumatic stress disorder was a sig-
nam. In the Gulf War, exposures occurred
nificant psychological ailment for perhaps
over a period of forty days while a typi-
as many as 450,000 Americans who served
cal tour of duty for a Vietnam combatant
in Vietnam, I5 percent of the three million
was thirteen months, and some even had
U.S. troops deployed in that war zone.59
two tours. Also, the Vietnam War lasted
In addition, since American military planes
from 1964 to 1975.' "62 Yet Stellman points
sprayed over twelve million gallons of Agent
out that there is a significant similarity be-
Orange over jungles and crops in Vietnam
tween the two wars. "As with Gulf War vet-
between 1962 and 1971, veterans of this con-
erans, the early complaints of Vietnam vet-
flict also have been concerned about their
erans, individually, appeared vague. These
exposure to that herbicide. The health of
symptoms didn't tell much: fainting, mem-
twelve hundred veterans who took part in
ory loss, difficulty sleeping, fatigue, skin
an operation known as "Ranch Hand" was
conditions, and aches and pains. But as a
especially scrutinized because they had "the
grouping of symptoms, a pattern emerged.
most extensive exposures to herbicides of
In the Vietnam War, the spectrum of symp-
any group of Americans who served in
toms was related to combat and Agent Or-
Southeast Asia."⁶ Because a chemical in
ange." This correlation may be attributed
Agent Orange, dioxin, is known to cause
to the fact that combatants were far more
cancer and birth defects in laboratory an-
likely than noncombatants to be exposed
imals, many members of the armed forces
to Agent Orange.
who were stationed in Vietnam blamed this
The Institute of Medicine of the Con-
toxin for the diverse physical problems af-
gressionally-chartered National Academy of
fecting them and their families.
Sciences produced a comprehensive report
Ensign observes that "the general con-
in 1993, updated in 1996 and again in 1998,
sensus of scientists who were independent
on the health effects of Agent Orange. Stell-
was that anyone who was in a forward zone,
man indicates that the study found evi-
where spraying was done in the south, was at
dence of association between exposure to
risk."61 Twenty to thirty years after these sol-
Agent Orange and various types of can-
diers' exposure, Congress mandated in 1991
cers, such as Hodgkin's disease, lymphoma,
that limited compensation be awarded for
and lung and prostate cancers. "The gov-
ailments caused by Agent Orange. By April
ernment clearly participated in a major
1993, only 486 veterans had been granted
coverup of the Agent Orange issue," Stell-
compensation although the Department
man notes.⁶³
DISABLED VETERANS CLAIM THEIR RIGHTS 179
Atomic and Chemical Guinea Pigs
tedly this would have a little of the Buchen-
wald touch."
Unlike troops in the Gulf War and the Viet-
Although by the end of the 1970s atomic
nam War whose health was compromised in
veterans obviously were experiencing dis-
battle-related activities, the approximately
proportionately high rates of cancer and
180,000 soldiers exposed to radioactive fall-
leukemia, not until 1990 did Congress fi-
out between 1946 and 1962 were engaged in
nally order the Department of Veterans Af-
the more than two hundred U.S. govern-
fairs to provide limited compensation. San-
ment atmospheric tests of nuclear bombs.
dra Marlow, the daughter of an air force
Tod Ensign refers to this exposure of mil-
colonel who observed nuclear weapons tests
itary personnel as deliberate, "in the sense
from the front trenches of Camp Desert
that they were put in the area where fallout
Rock, Nevada, in 1955,⁶⁷ describes why she
was
likely.
A few of them were actually
became an atomic veterans activist:
put right into the bomb shelters right at
the site, right near, within a mile or two of
My father died [from leukemia] in December
ground zero."
of 1977. Three years later I became academic
and scientific chairperson of the National
One of these was Anthony Guarisco, a
Association of Atomic Veterans [NAAV]. I am
sailor stationed in 1946 on Bikini Atoll,
no longer alone in seeking the truth about
where he saw "the first postwar atomic
the effects of nuclear radiation. NAAV now
test"-the explosion of two atomic bombs
has over seventy-five hundred members and is
near ninety unoccupied warships.6 When
growing every day. The members are veterans
Guarisco and other sailors were ordered "to
and their wives, widows and children. They
check radiation levels and attempt decon-
include those who worked on Trinity, the
first atomic test, as well as the servicemen
tamination by scrubbing the decks," they
who cleaned up the contaminated rubble
did not realize that they were really involved
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Many have
in an experiment to determine how much
developed cancers and other debilitating
radiation a man can endure. Diagnosed
illnesses; all share deep personal anxieties
with "a degenerative disease of the spine"
about the medical effects of exposure to
twenty years after the bomb test, Guarisco
radiation
The atomic veterans were
experiences intermittent pain and difficulty
neither informed of the dangers nor were
they volunteers.⁶
walking.
Like Guarisco, two to three thousand ser-
In 1997, the Disabled American Veter-
vicemen "unknowingly participated in clas-
ans attempted to locate veterans who took
sified medical experiments-including tests
part in Operation Castle, a series of nuclear
of flash-blindedness and the psychologi-
weapons tests in the northwestern Marshall
cal effects of radiation-between 1946 and
Islands in the central Pacific conducted
1963."⁶⁶ Guarisco referred to a letter that he
from March I through May 14, 1954. David
found in 1982, written by a deceased army
W. Gorman, DAV Washington Headquar-
scientist who encouraged "the use of hu-
ters executive director, said:
man subjects in radiation research" while
acknowledging a potential public relations
Of particular interest is information on the
problem: "Evoking Nazi experiments, the
levels of radiation exposure among Operation
Castle participants so the DAV can assist those
scientist warned [that] "Those concerned in
veterans in obtaining adequate medical care
the Atomic Energy Commission would be
and compensation for service-connected
subject to considerable criticism, as admit-
disabilities related to exposure to ionizing
180 CHAPTER TEN
radiation. The DAV is concerned that many
veterans-on the staff of the senator most
of these atomic veterans were exposed to
involved with these issues-has been unable
dangerously high levels of radiation that
to get reliable recent statistics. Gensler says,
could have serious health consequences, even
"VA statistics are meaningless. It's hard to
decades after their initial exposure.
separate the ineptness from the secrecy at
Dr. Martin Gensler, aide to Senator Paul
the VA." Gensler was told that atomic vets
Wellstone (D-Minn.), observes, "If an atom-
were getting 99 percent compensation for
ic veteran who was at ground zero and never
their claims, but he discovered that these
smoked in his life gets lung cancer, he has
numbers had nothing to do with radiogenic
no real chance of getting compensation.
problems. Rather, the statistics dealt with
Yet even if a Vietnam veteran spent all his
other physical problems such as disfigure-
time in a café in Danang-nowhere near
ment or flat feet.
dioxin-and smoked two packs of cigarettes
Similar to the atomic veterans, sixty thou-
a day, if he gets lung cancer," he will be
sand American soldiers and sailors during
compensated.70 Since the Veterans Health
World War II were used as human guinea
Care Eligibility Reform Act went into effect
pigs in secret tests involving chemical war-
on October 9, 1996, certain diseases are pre-
fare.⁷¹ Unaware of the danger and misled by
sumptively service-related, according to the
their superiors, these participants thought
VA, if military personnel were in the South-
they were serving their country by, for ex-
east Asia theater between specific years in
ample, contributing to shortening the war
which Agent Orange was used in Vietnam.
or, more mundanely, testing summer uni-
For atomic vets, on the other hand, the ex-
forms. Instead, they were testing gases as
posure is always determined to have been
lethal as sulfur mustard, nitrogen mustard,
under five rads-which excludes them from
or lewisite, a gas containing arsenic.
compensation-even though there is no way
Dr. Constance Pechura, director of a
to reconstruct the dose since the records are
study by the National Academy of Sciences
so poor.
Institute of Medicine on the U.S. mili-
Though no scientist at the April 21, 1998,
tary's chemical warfare experiments, indi-
Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, chaired
cates that the level of exposure of the par-
by Senator Tim Hutchinson (R-Ark.), would
ticipants in these tests sometimes was as
defend this determination regarding the
high as that experienced on the battlefield
exposure of atomic vets, they continued to
in World War I: "Despite the fact that it was
be denied compensation. Gensler explains
well known by 1933 that there were serious
why they are not receiving the benefits to
long-term health effects from this kind of
which they are entitled: "They are doing
exposure, including emphysema, nothing
so badly because they have no clout. Many
was done to monitor or to follow up on
are dead, so the only ones left are their
these men's health. And, in fact, in some
widows and children." Though Gensler calls
cases, symptoms that they had were delib-
the situation tragic, he adds that Senator
erately recorded as something else." These
Wellstone is trying to correct this injustice.
World War II participants took their oath
By April 1993, only 1,166 of these atomic
of silence so seriously that, almost without
veterans had been granted compensation
exception, they said nothing about these
of the 13,334 atomic veterans who had filed
mustard gas tests for nearly fifty years. Not
disability claims with the VA. Gensler, the
only did they keep the secret from their
congressional aide probably most knowl-
wives and families, but they also jeopardized
edgeable about the concerns of atomic
their medical treatment and their compen-
DISABLED VETERANS CLAIM THEIR RIGHTS 181
sation by concealing their experiences from
nonexistent-emerged when a Georgia vet-
their doctors and the VA.
erans' group sought them under the same
In March 1993, when the Pentagon an-
act.⁷² Conceding that there were gaps in
nounced that it was declassifying test infor-
these otherwise meticulous logs, the Pen-
mation and releasing the participants from
tagon in 1996 announced its intention to in-
their VOWS of secrecy, these World War II sol-
vestigate after veterans' groups pointed out
diers began speaking out. Still, their efforts
that several pages were missing for key dates.
to secure compensation-like their inability
Despite the denial of Pentagon spokesper-
to redeem their suffering-were frustrating
son Brian Whitman, veterans' groups were
and demoralizing, as exemplified by Rus-
suspicious that the government was con-
sell O'Berry, a veteran who attributes his
cealing information about the detection of
repeated hospitalizations for chronic lung
chemical or biological weapons during the
disease, emphysema, and asthma to his par-
Gulf War.
ticipation in mustard gas tests:
They were especially concerned about the
When I filed for VA benefits, they told me
period in 1991 when combat engineers blew
that they didn't have anything on record.
up the Kamisiyah ammunition depot, pos-
Then they said my records were burned up
sibly exposing nearly a hundred thousand
in St. Louis in a fire. So, I had to write to
U.S. military personnel to nerve gas as a
the Freedom of Information Act to get my
result of explosions on March 4, March
records. And I do have those records now
IO, and perhaps March I2.73 The testimony
confirming the dates that I did go in the gas
of Gulf War veterans before congressional
chambers, how long I stayed, so forth
The monthly checks that I receive will never,
committees indicated that Kamisiyah was
never compensate me for what I've been
only one of many such events. In fact, while
through physically and mentally because it
the Presidential Advisory Committee on
has certainly ruined my life. And I know of
Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses had counted
others that it's ruined, and there's a lot of
fifteen similar occurrences, Pat Eddington,
others that have passed on, that's not here
whistle-blower on the Central Intelligence
today to talk about this, and I'm speaking for
Agency (CIA) and former CIA research an-
them, too.
alyst, claimed that there were "fifty or sixty
By April 1993, of the 295 veterans of mus-
solid incidents."⁷ Although the Pentagon
tard gas tests filing claims with the VA, only
initially estimated that only four hundred
fifty-nine had been granted compensation.
soldiers were exposed, the figure later grew
As for atomic veterans, current valid statis-
to five thousand and even later to twenty
tics for mustard gas veterans are becoming
thousand.75 James J. Tuite, a former senate
increasingly difficult to secure as the politi-
staffer who led a congressional investiga-
cal impact of this aging and dying popula-
tion into Gulf War illnesses, said in 1997
tion continues to diminish.
that "when the assessments are done and
the analyses are finished, we're going to find
out there was theater-wide exposure."
Holding a Nation Accountable
In the same year, DAV executive direc-
tor Gorman urged the government to ex-
Just as O'Berry's allegedly burnt records
tend indefinitely the two-year time period
were resurrected when the mustard gas
that Persian Gulf War veterans with undi-
test participant employed the Freedom of
agnosed illnesses are allowed to prove that
Information Act, Gulf War combat logs-
their disabilities emerged from their ser-
that the Defense Department claimed were
vice in Southwest Asia.⁷⁶ Because the on-
182 CHAPTER TEN
set of these illnesses may take longer than
Although they may have American sub-
two years, Gorman asserted that the regu-
sidiaries, half of the companies that make
lation should be changed "until it can be
up the sixty-nine defendants are not Ameri-
determined what is making these men and
can.⁸⁰ Among them are three German com-
women sick." He added:
panies: Degesch, manufacturer of cyclone
The need for the Department of Veterans
B used in death camps in World War II;
Affairs to reconsider that eligibility period has
Preussag, producer of poison gas used in
been heightened by recent acknowledgments
World War I; and Thyssen, whose founder,
by the Department of Defense that many
Fritz Thyssen, was one of the big financial
thousands of our troops in the Persian Gulf
backers of Adolph Hitler in the 1930s.
were likely exposed to depleted uranium,
Originally filed in state district court of
diseases endemic to Southwest Asia, and
Brazoria County, Texas (Twenty-third Cir-
pesticides. In addition, U.S. troops were given
vaccinations, inoculations, and anti-nerve
cuit) in 1994 and still pending in 1999, the
agent pills without apparent regard for their
Coleman case represents the efforts of be-
side effects
It is clear to the DAV that issues
tween four and five thousand Gulf War
involving health care and compensation will
veterans to circumvent legal prohibitions
never be resolved without the full disclosure
against government and military liability,
and cooperation by all government agencies
uncover the causes of their ailments, gain
concerned.
compensation for their medical problems,
Fearing a Pentagon whitewash, advocates
and prevent companies from profiting from
for Gulf War veterans, such as Pat Edding-
chemical and biological weapons of mass
ton and Matt Puglisi, director of Gulf War
destruction. Frank Spagnoletti, a lawyer for
Syndrome Research for the American Le-
the plaintiffs, describes the suit: "This is
gion, in 1996 had called for comprehensive
like a military operation we're engaged in.
public hearings employing a special prose-
They'll stop at nothing to remain in the
cutor and an oversight body independent of
dark."81 Among the investigators Spagno-
the Defense Department.77
letti has gathered to track down evidence
"As a result of a 1950 lawsuit, U.S. v.
regarding the shipment of weapons to Iraq
Feres, the military cannot be held account-
is Admiral Elmo Zumwalt II, former chair-
able legally for anything it does to peo-
man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the officer
ple while they are on active service. This
responsible for ordering the use of Agent
military immunity set a deadly precedent,"
Orange in Vietnam. One of the admiral's
Ensign asserts. 78 Although the U.S. gov-
sons is assisting in the investigation; the
ernment and the military are legally im-
other died as a result of Agent Orange-
mune from financial obligation, theoret-
related cancer after the Vietnam War.⁸²
ically corporations can be held account-
Gary Pitts, another attorney for one of the
able.79 Not only have Gulf War veterans
four law firms representing the plaintiffs,
of New England and of Georgia used the
refers to the suit as a David and Goliath
Freedom of Information Act to acquire
affair since the defendants are represented
records, but also veterans brought a billion-
by twenty-five or thirty law firms. Yet Pitts is
dollar lawsuit (Marshall Coleman et al. v.
optimistic about his chances of winning be-
ABB Lumus Crest et al.) in November 1994
cause of the strength of his case. Although
against companies-including Bechtel, M.
he believes that the lawsuit may take up to
W. Kellogg, Dresser Industries, and In-
three years to come to trial because of unre-
terchem, Inc.-that exported what the plain-
solved jurisdictional arguments, this case,
tiffs considered deadly technologies to Iraq.
he insists, is not just about the roughly
DISABLED VETERANS CLAIM THEIR RIGHTS 183
one hundred thousand Gulf War veterans
the government did not keep track of who
affected by dangerous exposures. "If these
was exposed to potential toxins, when, how
companies that made money off Saddam, if
much, and in what combinations. Since
they're not chastened-and that means hit
records were not kept, it should not be in-
in the pocketbook-they will have all kinds
cumbent upon veterans to prove a biological
of incentives to sell chemical and biological
link between exposure and illness, Sullivan
weapons to other dictators in the future,
points out. 85 Rather, if they have illnesses as-
and that threatens everyone."83
sociated with such exposures, then, accord-
In contrast to the veterans of World
ing to the law, they can be granted benefits
War II and the Korean War who unswerv-
such as health care and compensation. Sul-
ingly followed government orders even at
livan suggests that the cost of these benefits
the expense of their health and appropri-
may total as much as $6 billion.
ate remuneration, veterans of more recent
"Because the country hired these soldiers
wars-a large percentage of Vietnam veter-
and sent them off to war, the nation as-
ans and a much larger percentage of Gulf
sumed a responsibility for returning each
War veterans-have demanded full disclo-
veteran to as whole a person as possible
sure of the facts and just recompense for
if that soldier should be wounded while
their sacrifices. The National Gulf War Re-
serving," says Sullivan. "More than a le-
source Center was the leading organization
gal commitment, it's a moral commitment.
that pushed through a major compensation
The fact that so many have their disability
bill, the 1998 Persian Gulf War Veterans Act,
claims denied-and that it takes the most
directly aimed at both diagnosed and un-
intense red tape in order to get assistance
diagnosed conditions associated with toxic
as a combat-wounded veteran-is uncon-
exposures connected with that conflict.⁸⁴
scionable and tells us something about our
The law acknowledges that it is not fair that
society."⁸⁶
Chapter Eleven
Education: Integration in the
Least Restrictive Environment
THE FAILURE OF THE states, even as late
federal court decision in Pennsylvania in
as the 1960s, to provide many children with
1971, invoking the Fourteenth Amendment,
disabilities with the educational opportuni-
required that the state provide every "re-
ties they required indicated the necessity for
tarded" child with access to a free public
appropriate federal legislation. Two experts
education.² In Mills v. Board of Education of the
in the education of children with disabilities
District of Columbia, another district court in
observe:
1972 expanded the precedent established in
While the nation was seeking to improve
the PARC case and ruled that every school-
the quality of the minority child's schooling,
age child was entitled to a free public edu-
the handicapped child's educational needs
cation regardless of the nature or severity of
remained forgotten, even though these needs
the individual's disability.³
were easily as great as those of the most cruelly
The Developmental Disabilities and Bill
disadvantaged able-bodied children. At that
of Rights Act and the Education for All
time perhaps one handicapped child in eight-
Handicapped Children Act, passed by Con-
over one million handicapped children-
received no education whatsoever, while more
gress in 1975, included principles stemming
than half of all handicapped children did not
from federal court decisions-primarily
receive the special instructional services that
PARC and Mills-concerning equal educa-
they needed.¹
tional opportunities for students with dis-
abilities. The former act provides funding
"to assist and encourage states to improve
A "Quiet Revolution"
care and training for developmentally dis-
abled citizens,"⁴ individuals with mental
Although the U.S. Constitution does not
and/or physical impairments that mani-
guarantee every child the right to an ed-
fested themselves at birth or in early child-
ucation, the Fourteenth Amendment does
hood causing substantial functional limi-
affirm every person's right to equal pro-
tations.⁵ The latter law, renamed in 1990
tection under the law. Favoring the Penn-
the Individuals with Disabilities Education
sylvania Association for Retarded Children
Act, required that each state find, identify,
(PARC) in its suit against Pennsylvania, a
and assess all children with disabilities re-
EDUCATION: INTEGRATION IN THE LEAST RESTRICTIVE ENVIRONMENT 185
siding in that state, as well as tailor educa-
published in March 1971, four years be-
tional programs to suit each child's partic-
fore the passage of the IDEA, illustrates
ular needs by means of an "individualized
this tendency:
educational plan. It extends to children
with disabilities the principle of equality of
The prima facie evidence that racial
educational opportunities underlying the
discrimination sometimes marched under
landmark 1954 Supreme Court decision in
the flag of special education in many school
systems was especially compelling.
A
Brown v. Board of Education.7
particularly flagrant misuse of handicap
The disabilities of many of these children
classification was discovered in the Missouri
were "undiscovered or misclassified," as the
school system. There virtually no black
story of Donald Snow illustrates:
children were placed in classes for the
learning disabled, whereas black children
Once a patient at the old Willowbrook State
made up about one-third of the students in
Hospital, he was mistakenly diagnosed as
classes for the educably mentally retarded.
mentally retarded when he was tested as a
Learning disability, it seemed, obeyed the
three-year-old child in 1965. Willowbrook
color line in Missouri.¹²
employees noted that although he seemed
very active, intelligent, and alert, he did appear
Two precepts underlying the IDEA, indi-
to have a hearing problem. It was not until he
vidualizing the programs for students with
was nine years old that doctors realized that
disabilities and integrating them into the
his difficulties indeed were caused by hearing
loss, not retardation. Soon after because of
mainstream, militated against the continu-
this misdiagnosis, Snow won a one and half
ation of segregation on the basis of race and
million dollar lawsuit.⁹
disability. In fact, the IDEA specifies that
"states must establish procedures to assure
Although many educational reformers re-
that the testing and evaluation materials
ferred to the IDEA as a "quiet revolution'
and procedures used to evaluate and place
in special education," they also harbored
children [with disabilities] are not racially
reservations about the new legislation.10
or culturally discriminatory."13
The IDEA provides "comprehensive pro-
cedural requirements, such as written no-
tice, due process hearings, access to records,
Enforcing the IDEA: Early Efforts
and right to counsel, permitting parental
or guardian challenges to an IEP" in or-
Implementation of the IDEA, however, was
der to ensure that parents play a pivotal
difficult. For example, the Children's De-
role in the child's education. 11 Reformers
fense Fund, led by Marian Wright Edel-
were concerned, however, about the primacy
man, spent four years in the courts, from
of the role of experts-physicians, psychol-
1975 to 1979, obtaining a consent decree
ogists, administrators, social workers, and
mandating that the state of Mississippi
educators-in devising the IEP, and the de-
obey the provisions of the law. 14 Rims Bar-
valuation of the function of the parents,
ber, director of Human Services Agenda,
particularly when the parents were at a dis-
who in 1979 served as director of the Mis-
advantage because they were uneducated,
sissippi Project of the Children's Defense
non-English-speaking, poor, or minority.
Fund, refers to the consent decree as "a
One goal of the IDEA was to break the tra-
second-generation school desegregation is-
ditional patterns of segregation that were
sue."15 He explains this characterization:
perpetuated by linking racial discrimina-
"In the 1968/1969 school year, only white
tion with disability discrimination. A study
schools had special education classes in
I86 CHAPTER ELEVEN
Mississippi. After school desegregation in
cific criteria, such as an IEP, for devising an
1969/1970, only black children were in spe-
appropriate education for each child with
cial education classes the following year,
a disability between the ages of five and
1970/1971." The purpose of the consent de-
twenty-one.18
cree was to prevent racial imbalance in spe-
Judge Eugene H. Nickerson's December
cial education and to provide remedies to
1979 ruling in favor of the plaintiff in Jose
assure that classroom placement was ap-
P. ordered the New York City Board of Ed-
propriate for each student. After implemen-
ucation to evaluate all children with dis-
tation of the Mississippi consent decree in
abilities and place them in an appropriate
1979, the New York Times pointed out that
educational program by April I, 1980. Con-
the policy of New York City's public school
sequently, the board had to accomplish a
system allowed for greater segregation of
daunting task: to find and evaluate children
children with disabilities from nondisabled
with severe disabilities, to evaluate children
children than would have been tolerated
with less severe disabilities, and to set up an
in Mississippi.¹⁶
IEP team for each one of these children with
A major reason that the IDEA was inade-
disabilities. In New York City in 1979, there
quately enforced was that many schools did
were approximately thirty thousand chil-
not have the appropriate services, certainly
dren with severe disabilities and more than
not for children with severe or multiple dis-
two hundred thousand with less severe dis-
abilities. In order to fulfill the mandate of
abilities. 19 Since most of the thirty thousand
the IDEA, class action lawsuits were filed.
newly-found children with disabilities had
One lawsuit-Jose P. v. Board of Education-
severe impairments-and most of them had
filed by Brooklyn Legal Services chief coun-
received no formal education whatsoever-
sel John C. Gray on behalf of a Puerto Ri-
many required special segregated educa-
can student with a disability resulted in the
tional services. On February I, 1979, when
appointment of a special master to oversee
Jose P. was filed, the prevailing view at the
compliance with the IDEA by the New York
Board of Education was that most of the
City Board of Education. 17
children covered by this lawsuit belonged in
The amici curiae for the plaintiffs in the
segregated special education classes.
Jose P. lawsuit included Advocates for Chil-
The actual plaintiff, Jose P., was repre-
dren of New York, as well as the plaintiffs
sentative of the many educational problems
in United Cerebral Palsy v. Board of Education
concerning children with disabilities that
and in Dyrcia S. v. Board of Education (a re-
the case addressed. Attorney John C. Gray
lated case on behalf of Hispanic children
described Jose P.: "A deaf child of a non-
with disabilities who had limited English
English speaking welfare mother, Jose P.
proficiency). The plaintiffs in the Jose P. case
was a mostly ignored pupil sitting in the
argued that the defendants, the New York
back of a Bronx classroom in 1979. When
City Board of Education and the New York
his mother asked about her child, she was
State Education Department, failed to com-
told to take him to an audiologist to be
ply with the IDEA "in a timely manner"
evaluated although she had no economic
and with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation
way of doing that."
Act of 1973, which prohibited "discrimina-
This situation demonstrates the obsta-
tion against handicapped persons in any
cles faced by many children with disabili-
program which receives federal assistance."
ties whose impairments are compounded by
The IDEA-dealing only with primary and
the poverty and limited English proficiency
secondary school education-sets forth spe-
of their parents or guardians. The Jose P.
EDUCATION: INTEGRATION IN THE LEAST RESTRICTIVE ENVIRONMENT 187
requirement that the Board of Education
excluded these children from "the main-
provide bilingual tests, evaluations, instruc-
stream of childhood."²
tions, programs, and services for those chil-
Gray points out that the two most signif-
dren whose native language was not Eng-
icant factors determining whether a child
lish, as well as to ensure that parents of these
was integrated or segregated was "the sever-
children receive all information in their own
ity of the child's disability and the person-
language, was designed to deal with one
ality of the parents." Gray is referring to
of these issues.²¹ Since many of the man-
the degree to which the parents believe that
dates in this watershed decision were not ad-
the child needs special protection in the
equately implemented-especially with re-
classroom, as well as to the understand-
gard to children with developmental and
able overprotectiveness of some of these par-
learning disabilities, as well as emotional
ents. Also, because small towns usually have
problems-the lawsuit remained unsettled
only a few children with disabilities, Gray
by 2000.
notes that, where possible, these children
have traditionally been accommodated in
the mainstream.
Least Restrictive Environment
In contrast, New York City was "su-
persegregated, for these children were not
Because the Jose P. judgment necessitated
only segregated from nondisabled children
first locating the unserved children with
but again segregated by specific disability."
disabilities and developing IEPs, the "least
While some schools served children with
restrictive environment" (LRE) requirement
mobility impairments, others served blind
of the IDEA received little attention until
children, others served children with par-
the 1990s. The LRE stipulates that, when-
tial vision, others deaf and hard-of-hearing
ever feasible, the child with a disability
children, and still others children with de-
should be educated with nondisabled chil-
velopmental disabilities. Moreover, regular
dren to the maximum extent appropri-
education and special education became
ate. A child with a disability may be re-
separate entities in the New York City Board
moved "from the regular educational en-
of Education, and within special educa-
vironment only when the nature or de-
tion "feudal duchies," as Gray labels them,
gree [of the child's impairment] is such
emerged.
that education in regular classes cannot be
Another factor reinforcing segregation
accomplished satisfactorily even with the
was a funding formula by which districts
use of supplementary aids and services."²
received more money for a child in special ed-
To illustrate, although a deaf child or a
ucation than for a child in regular education.
child with a severe developmental disabil-
Although schools were supposedly working
ity may be better served in a segregated
toward integration of children with disabili-
special class than in an integrated regu-
ties into regular classes, Gray calls attention
lar class, inclusion in the general class-
to "the internal contradiction in reward-
room is appropriate for many children with
ing districts for increasing the number of
disabilities. Similar to the vision underly-
pupils placed in special education." Also,
ing school desegregation for children from
Gray states, the requirement in Jose P. that at
racial and ethnic minorities, the desegrega-
least one elementary school and one inter-
tion of children with disabilities improves
mediate school in each community district,
education "by breaking down the barriers of
and one high school in each high school re-
prejudice and misunderstanding" that have
gion, be accessible proved to be inadequate
I88 CHAPTER ELEVEN
to serve all the children with disabilities in
New York University, characterized the New
New York City. Mary Somoza, member of
York State educational establishment as un-
School Board District 2 and parent of two
responsive to the real needs of children
children with severe disabilities, Alba and
with disabilities. 26 A disability activist, Paula
Anastasia, both wheelchair users, points out
Wolff, asked Professor Alter, "Why is New
that "an accessible school in the same dis-
York ranked so low in the country in inte-
trict may be so far from a child's neighbor-
grating children with special needs into gen-
hood that the vital after-school social inter-
eral classrooms?" Alter replied, "Culture, a
action of the child with a disability with his
funding system that was in effect a bounty
or her classmates may be precluded." Gray
system, and historical justification for that
indicates that the Section 504 mandate that
system. When I went to school in the Bronx
all distinct programs in each district must
in the 1950s, I never saw a disabled kid." Alter
be accessible-later reaffirmed with compli-
was referring to the culture that stigmatized
ance dates in the ADA-necessitated even
and concealed people with disabilities, and a
further retrofitting of school buildings.
funding process-violating the IDEA-that
Ironically, the children potentially easiest
continues to reward schools for segregating
to integrate in the classroom, wheelchair
children into special education classrooms,
users or other children with mobility im-
as well as an educational bureaucracy sanc-
pairments with at least normal intelligence,
tioning these procedures. This approach-
frequently could not get to schools or en-
common in many parts of the country²⁷ and
ter school buildings because of inaccessible
still practiced in New York City in 2000-
school buses and school buildings. However
serves neither children with disabilities who
understandable the board's inability to put
are isolated from the general population
the LRE immediately into effect given the
nor nondisabled children who are presented
enormity of the challenge posed by Jose P.,
a false vision of the human condition.
disability advocates criticized the board for
A former New York City public school
its failure to develop an incremental plan
teacher in the early 1970s, who taught a
to implement the LRE using the IDEA and
class of children with physical disabilities,
Section 504. These activists conjectured that
describes a protest initiated by the pupils
had they played a role in Jose P. equivalent to
themselves:
their participation in the 1980 Dopico trans-
portation lawsuit, the LRE would have been
The approximately twenty children in my
given appropriate recognition by the early
class, ranging in age from nine to sixteen, had
1980s. While the Dopico suit-increasing ac-
a wide variety of motor impairments. Even
cessibility to public transit-fostered inte-
though they were very different mentally,
emotionally, physically, and socially, they
gration of people with disabilities, Jose P.
were inappropriately segregated from the
has been less successful in desegregating
nondisabled kids and lumped together in one
children with disabilities in the New York
class. As a result, it was almost impossible
City public school system.²
to teach them. But they were very intelligent
and high-spirited. So when the principal
prohibited them from using the playground
An Appropriate Identity
at the same time as their nondisabled peers,
my class was outraged. While I was out of
the room, they prepared signs expressing
At a 1996 panel discussion on special edu-
their indignation. Some wore them on their
cation, Professor Mark Alter, chair of the
bodies; others attached them to the back of
Department of Teaching and Learning at
their wheelchairs. They planned to stage a
EDUCATION: INTEGRATION IN THE LEAST RESTRICTIVE ENVIRONMENT 189
demonstration, and I decided to encourage
hearing aid, a part-time interpreter, and tu-
them. Exhibiting their signs, they marched
tors enabled the young student to function
around the inside foyer that served as the
at a very high level. Her parents contended,
entrance to the school. They didn't change the
however, that since Amy could hear only
principal's mind, but they made a statement,
and they felt terrific about it. There were no
about half of what was said in class, grant-
curb cuts or wheelchair accessible buses at
ing the additional assistance they sought
that time. But there was something in the air,
would allow their child to perform up to her
and they sensed it.28
maximum potential. "The issue was quickly
framed as one of containing the costs, which
Assistant Secretary of Education Judith
would surely swamp all school systems if
E. Heumann reflects on how even more than
disabled people were allowed under this law
twenty years after the IDEA, as children with
to have just anything they wanted."32
disabilities were being included in accessible
Acknowledging that Congress intended
general classrooms, educators too often re-
for parents of children with disabilities to
sisted "accepting the reality of disability as
be involved with the development of their
one of the many ways of being and function-
child's IEP throughout the educational pro-
ing in the world."29 To illustrate, Heumann
cess, the Court nonetheless ruled that the
describes a teacher who measured the suc-
school had to provide a meaningful, but not
cess of the integration of a wheelchair user
necessarily the best, education. In his book
by the degree to which the pupil refrained
about this case, R. C. Smith explains, "Amy
from using his wheelchair. "He's more like
was cursed in being deaf and bright because
the other children now,' the teacher said.
she would always get by and always be told
This teacher, and too many others like her,"
she was doing fine.
And the courts would
Heumann says, "see inclusion as assimila-
ultimately demand nothing more from ed-
tion rather than desegregation or integra-
ucators than that they ensure that disabled
tion of children with disabilities. I would
children 'get by.' The Court's declaration
prefer that teachers encourage these chil-
that there was "no congressional intent to
dren to acquire an appropriate identity, to
achieve strict equality of opportunity or ser-
accept and take pride in who they really are."
vices" contradicted a fundamental princi-
ple of the IDEA: "Each child requires an
educational plan that is tailored to achieve
The IDEA in the Courts
his or her maximum potential." Neither
the Court nor the press seemed to under-
The 1982 Hendrick Hudson Central School
stand that the Rowley case concerned ap-
District v. Rowley decision, the first U.S.
propriate accommodation, not guaranteed
Supreme Court case interpreting the 1975
results: "A [full-time] sign language inter-
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act,
preter in her classes with hearing students
held that the state was responsible for af-
was what the family wanted and all the fam-
fording children with disabilities an ad-
ily ever wanted. Never was there the least
equate and meaningful education.³ Amy
suggestion that the school be required to
Rowley, an elementary school girl with lit-
achieve certain results with Amy."35
tle residual hearing, was an "A" student
In the 1980s, judicial decisions were in-
mainstreamed into the general classroom.
consistent with regard to LRE cases. Some
Although her parents requested a full-time
courts determined that placing children
sign language interpreter for their daughter,
with disabilities in segregated "handicap-
the district argued that its provision of a
ped only" schools satisfied the legal require-
190 CHAPTER ELEVEN
ments; others demonstrated a strong prefer-
In arriving at these decisions, the courts
ence for integration and mainstreaming em-
compared academic and nonacademic ben-
bodied in the mandates of the IDEA. 36 Dis-
efits of regular and segregated education.
ability rights attorney Diane Lipton main-
Included among the nonacademic benefits
tains that "still other cases involved stu-
were the availability of socialization and
dents with physical disabilities, such as
role models. Furthermore, the courts con-
cerebral palsy or deafness, in which fed-
sidered two pivotal questions: What is the
eral courts concluded that the physical ac-
effect on the other children in the class of
commodations and methodologies related
having a child with a disability in the regular
to these accommodations took precedence
classroom? Does the presence of the child
over 'the least restrictive environment' is-
with the disability in the classroom detract
sues."37 In a "precursor" to the 1989 to 1994
from the education of the other children?
inclusion cases, the 1983 Roncker v. Walters
With regard to the Greer and Holland
decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals (Sixth
cases, a third question was added: Is the
Circuit)-rather than requiring a boy with
cost of services-itinerant special education
a developmental disability to attend the
teachers, supplementary aids, and parapro-
school district's segregated "handicapped
fessionals-so unreasonable as to impair the
only" school-upheld his right to remain
education of the other children in the dis-
in a special classroom in a regular public
trict? Holland won her case against the
school. In mandating the child's placement
school board at every level: at the adminis-
in the more integrated of the two schools,
trative hearing, at the federal district court,
"the court in Roncker supported IDEA's
and at the court of appeals. In 1994, the U.S.
presumption in favor of regular education
Supreme Court refused to hear the Holland
placement."
case, thus upholding the court of appeals.
From 1989 to 1994, four significant inclu-
The testimony of the teachers from the pri-
sion cases involving children with develop-
vate school-in which Rachel Holland's par-
mental disabilities-Daniel R. R. v. State Board
ents placed their child during the five years
of Education (Fifth Circuit) in 1989 in Texas,
of litigation in order to ensure her inclusion
Greer v. Rome City School District (Eleventh
with nondisabled children-supported the
Circuit) in 1991 in Georgia, Oberti v. Board of
plaintiff's case in the suit.
Education of the Borough of Clementon School
Lipton emphasizes that "the teachers
District (Third Circuit) in 1993 in New Jersey,
were surprised at how Rachel thrived as a
and Sacramento City Unified School District v.
result of her inclusion in the regular class-
Rachel Holland (Ninth Circuit) in 1994 in
room, how the other children benefited, and
California-resulted in consistent legal deci-
how delighted, as educators, they were to
sions that the IDEA mandated the integra-
learn so much about teaching children with
tion of these children into regular classes
disabilities. The teachers said that they to-
with full supports.³⁸ In keeping with the
tally changed their minds about inclusion
IDEA, the courts found that children with
since it was great for Rachel and great for
disabilities must be educated in the least
the other kids." Since children with develop-
restrictive environment, employing the nec-
mental disabilities generally have been con-
essary supplementary aids. Moreover, aca-
sidered the most difficult to include in reg-
demic grade level was not deemed an appro-
ular classrooms, these four appellate cases
priate factor in determining whether or not
impacted on all children with disabilities.
children should be integrated into regular
"If a child like Rachel Holland could be
classrooms.
integrated so successfully," Lipton asserts,
EDUCATION: INTEGRATION IN THE LEAST RESTRICTIVE ENVIRONMENT 191
"educators began to recognize that inclu-
Keep your chin up and hang tough,
sion could work for children with other
especially when therapy gets rough! You'll be
disabilities, such as physical or learning dis-
in my prayers.
abilities."
A 1994 settlement between plaintiffs Alba
Although the publicity resulted in the
and Anastasia Somoza, very bright ten-year-
school board placing Alba in a regular class,
old twins with cerebral palsy, and the New
she was not provided with the adaptive
York City Board of Education may have been
equipment or the trained school person-
affected by the uniformity of these four
nel that would allow her to benefit fully
decisions, together with Anastasia's highly
from this placement. Nor was Anastasia
publicized interchange with President Clin-
furnished with the equipment and services
ton. The settlement affirmed the IDEA's
that she required to profit from her educa-
provision of educational and related ser-
tion on a level consistent with her ability.
vices for children with disabilities in the
Representing both twins pro bono at spe-
least restrictive environment. Because Anas-
cial education hearings, a member firm of
tasia had been placed in a mainstream class
New York Lawyers for the Public Interest-
while Alba, who is nonverbal, was put in
Weil, Gotshal, & Manges-arrived at a set-
a special education class, Anastasia said to
tlement in which the board consented to
President Clinton in a February 1993 tele-
several accommodations. The board agreed
vised children's town meeting, "I have a twin
to give both girls motorized wheelchairs,
sister, and we go to the same school. She's
to train Alba in the use of her adaptive
in a special class. Why can't she be in a
equipment, to educate substitute parapro-
regular class like me?" The twins' mother,
fessionals about the twins' medical needs,
Mary Somoza, recalls:
and to prepare the school's staff for the
integration of children with disabilities into
I nearly fell off my seat. I had been working
mainstream classes. In addition, the board
so hard to get Alba out of special education,
where she was not being given anything,
offered to make periodic evaluations on the
neither an education-since they had no real
children's progress.
curriculum-nor appropriate supports. Also,
With the increasing acceptance of chil-
I told Anastasia that she was the only child
dren with severe disabilities into regular
at that town meeting with a disability, so
classrooms, school districts are facing new
she would be speaking for all children with
challenges in the late 1990s.⁴ Nicholas M.-
disabilities. But I never expected her to say
what she did. The President had tears in his
an educator, disability rights advocate, and
eyes, and they've been writing to each other
parent of M.M., an autistic child-believes
ever since.39
that parents of children with disabilities
should have three options: a segregated pro-
Mary Somoza proudly exhibits President
gram, "partial inclusion," or total integra-
Clinton's response to a letter from Anasta-
tion.41 If all these alternatives were provided,
sia:
children could move from one environment
to the next as their development progressed.
Thank you so much for your great letter
Since only two possibilities were available to
and for sending the book on water exercises.
I'll certainly need it in the next few months.
his child in New York City in 1997, segre-
My knee is healing just fine, but being
gation or total inclusion, Nicholas M. was
injured has humbled me and taught me a lot.
attempting to create a third choice, what
Most especially, I have an even greater respect
he called "inclusion with a safety net" or
for anyone who uses a wheelchair.
"partial inclusion."
192 CHAPTER ELEVEN
Having initiated a successful lawsuit in
grader Mark Hartmann in a regular class-
1995 against the New York City Board of
room with support services, school officials
Education in order to obtain intervention
reported that the effort was not success-
services for two-year-old M.M., Nicholas M.
ful: "Still Mark had daily episodes of loud
had already experienced the challenge of
screeching and often hit, pinched, kicked,
confronting a bureaucracy. In 1995, when
bit or removed his clothing," they said.43 At
the cost of providing early intervention ser-
the end of the school year, when officials
vices for his child became economically pro-
determined that Mark should be placed in a
hibitive, Nicholas M. called on New York
special class for autistic children at Leeburg
Lawyers for the Public Interest, which finds
Elementary, Mark's parents sued.
firms willing to offer pro bono legal assis-
They moved their son 230 miles away
tance on specific issues. Using recommen-
to attend a regular class in Blacksburg,
dations from psychologists and neurolo-
Virginia, a town with a reputation for in-
gists that M.M. receive Applied Behavioral
clusionary policies. In fact, the Blacksburg
Analysis (ABA), Weil, Gotshal & Manges-
middle school principal, who strongly en-
the law firm that represented M.M. in his
dorsed inclusion, proudly claimed that the
case against the board-argued against the
pupils in his school accepted children with
board's denial of early intervention services.
disabilities as a natural part of the student
Like M.M., many autistic children have re-
body.44 In order to avoid Mark's placement
sponded well to ABA, an almost Pavlo-
in a segregated class, Mrs. Hartmann and
vian, forty-hour a week intensive therapeu-
Mark spent Monday through Friday sepa-
tic technique that prepares children for
rated from the rest of the family. "We drive
learning.⁴²
two thousand miles a month, and yes, I
"Before the ABA therapy, M.M. was in his
need a new car, but it's worth it." Mark
own world; he did not make eye contact,
is making progress now," Mrs. Hartmann
and could not deal with physical contact,"
observed. Mark's special education advisor
Nicholas M. recalls. "When I tried to pick
at the Blacksburg school indicated that
him up, he would scream, arch his back,
Mark demonstrated clear signs of improve-
and sometimes even vomit. Now, he climbs
ment in school: "Besides becoming better
into our bed and cuddles up to me, and
adjusted socially, Mark is making academic
he can imitate and learn from his peers."
progress.
In social studies class, he par-
Although the firm won the lawsuit on
ticipates and takes notes with all the other
appeal, employing the IDEA, Nicholas M. is
students. And he's getting ready to take a
concerned that too many parents of autistic
quiz, that we looked at this morning, that
children are neither aware of their children's
will be the same as the other students in
needs, educational and social, nor their
the class."
rights. Nicholas M., who is also a member
After a Loudoun School local hearing
of the Autism Advocacy Group-a Staten
officer agreed with the school that Mark
Island-based parents organization-insists
belonged in a segregated class, the Hart-
that "programs must fit the child; the child
manns challenged the decision in federal
must not be forced to fit into someone's
district court. Ruling that the Loudoun
theory."
School Board efforts were inadequate, the
In 1993, when the Ashburn Elementary
judge sided with the family. The court indi-
School in Loudoun County, Virginia, at-
cated that "given the strong presumption
tempted to accommodate autistic second-
for inclusion under the Individuals with
EDUCATION: INTEGRATION IN THE LEAST RESTRICTIVE ENVIRONMENT 193
Disabilities Education Act, disruptive be-
The Special Education Controversy
havior should not be the significant factor
in determining the appropriate educational
Examination of preschoolers in public
placement for a disabled child." In response
schools in New York State-as well as stu-
to the 1997 U.S. Court of Appeals (Fourth
dents attending Dalton, a fashionable New
Circuit) reversal of the district court's rul-
York City private school-reveals that place-
ing, the Hartmanns commented, "We would
ment of students in special education is
like the Supreme Court to take the case,
too often governed by financial incentives
now that we've proven Mark [in 1997, a sixth
rather than serving the needs of children
grader in Blacksburg Middle School] can be
with disabilities. The New York Times re-
successfully included."
ported that "at least two-thirds of the
Mark's father points out, "If you don't
[preschoolers in New York State] are en-
do this [include children with disabilities
rolled in the same school that evaluate their
in regular classrooms], we know what hap-
disability, a clear conflict of interest. Since
pens. To pick a state, 189,000 Virginians
the same private nonprofit agency that re-
with disabilities are in institutions at a cost
ceives payment for teaching these special
of eighty-seven thousand dollars a year each
education preschoolers has the responsibil-
to the taxpayers. If we can get Mark to be in-
ity of determining which children will be
dependent, earning a wage, being a produc-
placed in their special education program,
tive member of society, that's a better way to
the incentive for these agencies to inflate
go." Having spent two hundred thousand
the number of children who require special
dollars on legal fees, the Hartmanns tried
education is obvious.
but failed to get the U.S. Supreme Court to
The learning disability program from
rule on the degree to which the federal law
1984 to 1992 initiated at Dalton demon-
requires inclusion in this case.
strated that "if there are thirty spots for
The U.S. Supreme Court did render a de-
learning disability students, you will magi-
cision, however, in Cedar Rapids v. Garret F.
cally have thirty learning disability students.
(1999), a case in which a bright quadriplegic
If there are sixty, you'll have sixty."47 Rec-
student with a ventilator required a trained
ognizing that "too many children were be-
aide in order to attend school.4 Ruling for
ing given harmful and unreliable labels,"
the student, Garret Frey, "the Court adhered
the kindergarten teachers at Dalton refused
to its view in a 1984 case that as long as a
to administer the screening tests for spe-
student's needs can be met by someone who
cial education in Fall 1992. When the test
is not a doctor, the required services do not
for learning disability was first adminis-
fall within the excluded 'medical services'
tered in 1984 at Dalton, the number of stu-
category." The decision, "a substantial vic-
dents requiring intervention of specialists
tory" for families of children with severe dis-
soared; once the test was abandoned in 1992,
abilities, obligates school districts under the
the number plummeted. Dalton provided a
IDEA to pay for nonmedical services related
valuable experiment for evaluating students
to a student's education. Justice John Paul
with learning disabilities because fewer dis-
Stevens stated in the majority opinion, "A
torting socioeconomic variables tended to
rule that limits the medical services exemp-
be present at this preeminent private school
tion to physician services is unquestionably
than at many other schools.
a reasonable and generally workable inter-
New York City Schools chancellor Ru-
pretation of the statute."
dolph Crew announced a proposal in 1996
I94 CHAPTER ELEVEN
to deal with the bloated segregated spe-
teachers, the support systems to meet the
cial education program in the New York
needs of these youngsters."⁵
City public school system, involving chil-
Some parents were apprehensive that
dren with physical, sensory, or multiple
their children suddenly would be trans-
disabilities, emotional or cognitive impair-
ferred from a small special education class
ments, and chronic illnesses. Consistent
to a large general education class with
with programs in other cities, the plan
neither forethought nor appropriate assis-
was supposed to allow students with so-
tance, such as technical aids and parapro-
called minor learning disabilities as well as
fessional help. Still other parents expressed
behavioral problems to receive extra help
skepticism about the preparation of teach-
from teachers and therapists while remain-
ers and students for diversity, involving not
ing in regular classrooms.⁴⁹ Some of the
only pupils from different cultures, but also
stated purposes of the plan-cutting the
with various disabilities. Referring to the
cost of special education and preventing
disproportionate number of non-English
some children from inappropriately being
speaking students placed in special edu-
designated as special education students-
cation in New York City, Advocates for
may have been achieved, but not to the
Children attorney Roger Juan Maldanado
benefit of many children with special needs.
wondered if evaluators who cannot under-
For example, by failing to test many stu-
stand the child's language or culture can
dents whom teachers recognized as having
accurately determine the student's disabil-
special needs, the system never included a
ity status.
significant number of these children in the
The 1997 reauthorization of the IDEA in-
statistics pertaining to special education.
cludes two requirements addressing some
As a result, although the number of stu-
of the concerns of those who criticize the
dents in special education may have been
implementation of the law. First, the IEP
limited, too many of them were permitted
must consider the language needs of the
to flounder in general education without
child with a disability; second, a state can-
the programs or supports they required for
not have a funding formula that is a dis-
success.
incentive to integration of children with
Still, Crew's plan did focus attention on
disabilities, referred to as "inclusion." At-
the thorny issues inherent in special ed-
torney Diane Lipton suggests that although
ucation. Disability advocates, parents of
in some states the second requirement may
children with disabilities, and educators
be sufficient to eliminate the disincentive
prophetically feared that if the driving force
to inclusion, in other states a lawsuit may
behind the changes in the New York City
be necessary to make the second mandate
school system was budgetary, then children
effective.
with "mild disabilities" would be "dumped"
The federal government's threat to deny
into general education without the support
a significant portion of education fund-
of the IDEA-which includes the protection
ing to states that do not comply with the
of an IEP, designed specifically for each stu-
IDEA may well serve as another effective
dent. 50 As education professor Mark Alter
implementation mechanism. For example,
explains: "If that youngster [a student with
the 1999 New York State financing formula
academic or behavioral problems] is to re-
"encourages schools to put children in the
main in general education, there must be
most isolated environments, because they
appropriate supports for that kid. Right
[schools] receive more money for a self-
now, they don't have the resources, the
contained special-ed class than any other
EDUCATION: INTEGRATION IN THE LEAST RESTRICTIVE ENVIRONMENT 195
type of class." Consequently, in 2000, New
dren leave school without diplomas and
York State could lose $335 million in fed-
that an enormous number of them end up
eral funds, money the federal government
in jail soon afterward. Fewer than 2 percent
has warned New York would be withheld
of them go on to four-year colleges-as com-
because of the state's noncompliance.
pared with about 28 percent of students who
The two plans proposed to correct this
are visually impaired and I5 percent of the
situation demonstrate the difference be-
deaf." Staples points out that the explosion
tween a genuine effort to educate children
in learning disabilities in the 1980s can be
with special needs as opposed to a short-
attributed to the move from teaching read-
sighted, supposedly cost-saving approach,
ing by the phonics method as opposed to
assuring failure. Allowing a "reasonable"
"the 'whole language' craze."⁵⁶ Fearing that
seven-year phase-in period, the State Re-
these children are being dragged "indiscrim-
gents Plan provides incentives for school
inately into the mainstream," he compares
districts to place special education students
their plight to the experience of children
in integrated environments with support
with disabilities before the 1970s when many
service-"where students are more likely to
were institutionalized, hidden away, or even
improve their academic performance, com-
strapped into their chairs screaming.57
munication, and socialization." In contrast,
While "6o Minutes" commentator Leslie
Governor George Pataki's plan offers prac-
Stahl presents the issue as a contest between
tically no support services and proposes an
children with disabilities and nondisabled
unrealistic two-year phase-in.
children, she acknowledges that "twenty-
The primary reason that special educa-
five years ago [many children with disabili-
tion has become controversial is because of
ties] probably wouldn't have had any kind of
its increasing costs. New York Times colum-
school. Unless parents could afford to pay
nist Brent Staples argues, however, that de-
for special care, disabled children were of-
spite such costs, special education is no
ten ignored or institutionalized, sometimes
"scandal" as some critics have claimed.54
in appalling conditions." Regardless of the
Concerned that "states have embarked on
cost, Stahl notes, "it's very hard to criticize
a campaign to define learning disabilities
the current system. No one wants to go back
out of existence," Staples questions what he
to the bad old days."58
views as distorted priorities: "The central
Yet Stahl observes the increasing num-
goal was always to educate children who
bers of children designated as disabled:
had traditionally been viewed as ineducable.
"One in every eight public school children in
Integration was an important but distinctly
this country is now in special education
secondary objective." He is especially wor-
That's more than five million children, and
ried about children with "abnormal activ-
special education now costs taxpayers more
ity in the parts of the brain that process
than thirty-two billion dollars a year. That's
phonemes," who are being labeled inappro-
one-quarter of all school money being spent
priately as "mildly disabled." Since in a small
on one-eighth of the kids." Therefore, Stahl
percentage of children "the brain processing
indicates, parents of children in regular ed-
mechanism is off kilter,"5 most educators
ucation are concerned that their children
and disability advocates believe that these
are being "shortchanged in order to pay for
students benefit from intensive and long-
special ed."
term supports.
Another parent complains that instruc-
Citing government data, he adds "that
tion for his nondisabled children was "being
about 43 percent of learning-disabled chil-
pared back to pay for special education,"
I96 CHAPTER ELEVEN
for example, by "the elimination of the
are trained to meet their special needs. And
program for gifted and talented children."
further, that disabled children who are not
This parent exhibits the same "either/or
as severely impacted should be moved into
fallacy" in his thinking as does Philip K.
the mainstream only when necessary support
services have in fact been contracted and are in
Howard who states in The Death of Com-
place at the school; when the administrative
mon Sense: "Gifted students, in contrast to
and educational staff have received the
disabled children, receive virtually no sup-
training to understand the rights, available
port or attention from America's school sys-
services and learning styles of these students,
tem."59 Both comments-the parent's and
and when the peers of these students, their
Howard's-suggest that disability and intel-
parents, and the parents of the disabled
ligence are mutually exclusive.
students have been part of the transition
The mother of a child with a severe
planning process.⁶
disability sees the debate from another
Though educators agree that with proper
perspective:
preparation and supports "mainstreaming
students with minor disabilities would be
That's the kind of thing [special ed] I want
my tax dollars to go for. I see it as an
healthier and far less costly than the seg-
investment.
I see this school as a boot
regated approach," New York City has had
camp experience for him, a really intense
a history of mainstreaming roughly one-
time when he can gain as much skills as he
fourth the percentage of special education
can because in the long term, if he didn't
preschoolers as compared to the nation as
learn how to brush his teeth by himself,
a whole. 62 The detrimental effects of mis-
and he didn't learn how to get around in an
electric wheelchair, and he didn't learn how
classifying children and unnecessarily seg-
to effectively tell people that he needed to
regating them are compounded, for once
use the bathroom, then for the rest of his
designated as learning disabled or emotion-
life we would have to be paying people to do
ally handicapped, children tend to retain the
that. Now we're not going to have to [pay for
label and the stigma throughout their ed-
these services]. I don't want our child or any
ucation. Even for children properly placed
other child who has disabilities that they had
in special education, however, the IDEA's
no control over to be scapegoats for a much
requirement that they be reassessed each
larger problem.
year in order to be given the opportunity
"The much larger problem" to which
to be mainstreamed is generally ignored.⁶³
this mother referred is addressed in a New
Some educators, including Secretary of
York Times editorial that reveals that while
Education Richard S. Riley and Assistant
problems in special education are evident
Secretary of Education Judith E. Heumann,
throughout the nation, New York has a far
maintain that rather than ameliorating the
less successful program than many other
educational situation for children who were
localities. 60 For example, special education
not succeeding in school, special education
experts and parent advocates Barbara Fisher
has segregated and demoralized many of
and Richard Spiegel, who "lobbied long
these students. A majority of children in
and hard" for the IDEA, doubt that New
New York City's special education program
York City's education system has the flexi-
are classified as learning or emotionally
bility to deal with the variety of approaches
disabled, often ambiguous and subjective
necessary to serve children with special
designations that still lend themselves to
needs:
racial and ethnic stereotyping:
We
believe that the most fragile of our
children are best served and should remain
New York City's special education system
in environments where instructional staff
ensures a second-class education, particularly
EDUCATION: INTEGRATION IN THE LEAST RESTRICTIVE ENVIRONMENT 197
for black boys, becoming a trap that incubates
numbers of students with invisible disabil-
failure
Nationwide, black students are
ities, especially learning disabilities, when
twice as likely to be in special education
these students entered college, they faced
programs as white children, with much
new challenges. In late 1995, the provost
higher rates in predominantly white districts,
according to some academic studies. Yet,
of Boston University (B.U.), Jon Westling,
these same students perform better in regular
who was not a learning disabilities expert,
classes with extra support, federal studies
"stiffened" the institution's policy regard-
suggest. While many agree on the need
ing "reasonable accommodations" for stu-
for specially geared classes for profoundly
dents with these conditions.⁶² To support
retarded children or those with other special
his approach, on several public occasions
needs, many advocates and educators say
he referred to Somnolent Samantha, a sup-
New York has gone too far.
The degree
to which children identified as disabled are
posedly real student with a learning dis-
taught in regular classrooms varies widely
ability, who turned out to be fictitious. As
from state to state. In Vermont [in 1994], 87
a result of his policy changes at B.U., ten
percent of special education students were in
students with learning disabilities, encour-
regular classes, compared with 7 percent in
aged by advocacy groups for such students,
New York [City].⁶⁴
filed a class action lawsuit in federal dis-
trict court in Boston in July 1996 against
Since 1989, when Vermont removed fi-
Boston University.
nancial incentives for keeping children in
The university lawyer responsible for the
segregated placements, the state has been
case, Larry Elswit, argued that the suit
the model for integration of children into
"is about a university's right to set aca-
regular classrooms. The 85 percent of the
demic standards," for, he added, the ADA
annual budget for children with disabilities,
does not prevent an academic administra-
formerly allocated for separate classes and
tor from participating in judgments about
separate schools, instead was spent on ex-
academic modifications. On the other hand,
tra teachers, aides, therapists, and services
the learning-disabled students contended
in regular schools. "According to the cur-
that "the University and Mr. Westling have
rent concept, special education is a service,"
violated Federal laws requiring that educa-
Heumann explained to a disability studies
tional institutions provide 'reasonable ac-
colloquium, "not a place. "66 Heumann was
commodations' to those with learning dis-
pointing out that since each student should
abilities." Advocates for people with learn-
be educated in the least restricted environ-
ing disabilities asserted that Westling's "dis-
ment appropriate for that individual stu-
missive words and actions" regarding this
dent, the money for services should be con-
issue were tantamount to "illegal discrimi-
nected to the learner, not limited to a special
nation."
education classroom. Consistent with this
Boston University's Office of Learning
approach, in Vermont after 1989 "special ed-
Disabilities Support Services achieved na-
ucation money followed the children [with
tional recognition for the services it pro-
disabilities] to the regular classes."
vided for students with learning disabili-
ties: a summer program, appropriate tutor-
ing, relevant information, and special as-
Somnolent Samantha
sistance. Of the twenty-nine thousand stu-
dents registered at Boston University, only
Although with the passage of the IDEA,
480 were learning disabled. Many of these
elementary and secondary schools systems
students specifically had chosen this school
were becoming increasingly aware of the
because it was reputed to have the supports
198 CHAPTER ELEVEN
they required. Elizabeth Guckenberger, a
bar." Yet Boston University Chancellor John
dyslexic third-year law student, describes
Silber's comment was not supportive of stu-
her experience:
dents with learning disabilities: "Some of
the things that pass for learning disabilities
I was drawn to B.U. because I thought there
would be an attitude of understanding about
used to be called stupidity."6 In her 1997
learning disabilities. I have always had to work
decision favoring the plaintiffs in Elizabeth
very hard. Things take me much longer than
Guckenberger v. Boston University, Judge Patti
they take my twin sister, who is not dyslexic.
B. Saris stated:
I'm doing well in law school, but I need my
accommodations. I get a reduced caseload,
B.U.'s internally contentious, multitiered
which means I'm not going to finish in the
evaluation process involving evaluators
usual three years, and I get extended time on
who were not only inexperienced but also
tests and a quiet room to take them in.
biased caused delay and denial of reasonable
accommodations and much emotional
Applying the ADA definition of discrim-
distress for learning disabled students. The
ination, this lawsuit was spearheaded by
court concludes that the implementation of
Anne Schneider, who claimed that her
B.U.'s initial accommodations policy violated
daughter, a B.U. student with learning dis-
the ADA and Section 504 during the 1995-96
academic year.70
abilities, had not received the services she
had expected from the university.68 Having
Too frequently, experienced educators
worked ten years with students with learn-
like Westling are skeptical of "learning dis-
ing disabilities and their parents, Schneider
abled" as a diagnosis, learning disabilities as
labeled the implicit accusation that these
bona fide conditions, and the experts who
students are frauds "the big lie." She in-
identify the symptoms. Familiar with nei-
sisted, "I haven't seen a phony yet"; the uni-
ther these disabilities nor the appropriate
versity has to "abide by the law and stop the
techniques for dealing with them, educators
harassment." Indicating that it would have
may be suspicious of students who request
been easy to have hired tutors and other
special services designed for people with
personal accommodations for her daughter,
learning disabilities. Officials on campuses
Schneider noted that her concern "tran-
other than Boston University claimed that
scends the personal: I don't sleep at night
they were seeing students who paid for di-
because I worry about all the other kids
agnoses that were "dubious" and then de-
[with learning disabilities], and not just the
manded services that they did not require.71
four hundred eighty [in the B.U. learning
With a growing sensitivity to diverse
disabilities program]. B.U. became the na-
learning styles and the development of new
tional model. We were the example of how
teaching strategies, educators-rather than
to do it right. [So] we're talking about three
merely weeding out "poor students"-have
hundred fifty thousand kids [with learning
sought to educate an increasingly wide spec-
disabilities] across the country."
trum of learners. By the late 1990s, stu-
Speaking for university administrators,
dents with learning disabilities comprised
however, Elswit claimed that the issue is
roughly 5I percent of the students with dis-
basically academic: "Within our academic
abilities from kindergarten through twelfth
standards, we will do whatever we can to
grade, and more than twice as many college
help students with learning disabilities over
students-3 percent since 1988-identified
the bar. Time and a half on tests and note-
themselves as learning disabled. Since ADA
takers can be fine efforts to help students
detractors often cite people with invisible
over the bar. What we won't do is lower the
disabilities as examples of an unexpected
EDUCATION: INTEGRATION IN THE LEAST RESTRICTIVE ENVIRONMENT 199
population served by the ADA, individuals
told by the teacher. Education is learning
with conditions such as learning disabilities
how to interact with others."
often bear the brunt of criticism against
Heumann agrees with Stussman that "all
the law.
students in inclusive environments benefit
from learning that although human beings
can vary greatly in appearance, background,
A Microcosm of the Real World
and perspective, all people have their hu-
manity in common."5 Students with dis-
Just as accommodations for people with
abilities are served because, if they are pro-
disabilities serve the general population (as
vided with adequate supports and resources
curb cuts help many others besides those in
in the general classroom, they are more
wheelchairs), the approaches used in special
likely to be held to the highest standards
education are valid for all students, observes
of achievement than if they are segregated.
special education expert Richard Spiegel.⁷²
Integration increases the probability that
"Rather than taking for granted that each
these students with disabilities will secure
student has to learn according to some arbi-
challenging jobs, earn good salaries, and
trary standard arrived at by somebody in a
participate fully in the community. "It is
think tank," he adds, "educators could mea-
not the way people communicate, transport
sure the growth of each student according
themselves from place to place, or sense the
to an individual evaluation. Using this ap-
world that limits their ability to achieve,"
proach, instead of just being a weeding-out
Heumann maintains; "it's the way society
process, the education system could serve
reacts to them."
all children." As Assistant Secretary of Ed-
By studying, working, and playing with
ucation Heumann notes, "In a way you can
peers with disabilities, nondisabled stu-
see every child as having special needs. So
dents also profit, "for they gain lasting
the ideal is a system in which every child
lessons of character as valuable as academic
gets an individualized education."
knowledge," Heumann asserts. She offers
Born with cerebral palsy, Barak Stuss-
an example that supports the findings that
man, a technology coordinator for ACCESS
the achievement of nondisabled children
ERIC in Rockville, Maryland, demonstrates
may even improve when they have class-
why inclusion, like an individualized educa-
mates with significant disabilities:
tion, benefits nondisabled students as well
I have been told about a disabled child who
as students with disabilities.⁷ Describing
had very few communications skills, who
himself as "living the American dream-
was placed in an inclusive class in Tulsa,
married, with two cars, two kids, and a
Oklahoma. Before she got there, the children
mortgage on a townhouse," Stussman in-
in the class had a reputation for being less
dicates that with the advent of new tech-
than attentive in class. But when the disabled
nology and new legislation, in the future
student arrived, the students took great
"adults will have to deal with people of dif-
pride in learning what she meant when she
ferent limitations." Stussman asserts that
made various sounds and in interpreting her
sounds to the teacher. In order to learn what
this interaction fösters learning: "I believe
their new classmate was saying, the students
the public school system should be a micro-
became quieter in class, and by the end of the
cosm of the 'real world.' Education is more
semester, everybody was learning more.
than just what you learn in books and are
Chapter Twelve
Identity and Culture
Three Strands of the Movement
access to society that disability rights legis-
lation provides. Edward Roberts, Judith E.
Lex Frieden, former director of the Na-
Heumann, Fred Fay, and Lex Frieden are
tional Council on Disability, refers to the
examples of early leaders of the disability
two "strands" of the disability rights move-
rights movement who were intrinsically in-
ment that came together in the effort to
volved in both of these two strands.
pass the Americans with Disabilities Act.¹
There is, however, a third strand-com-
The first strand-made up of people with
prised of institutionalized people with signifi-
disabilities living independently in the com-
cant disabilities-focusing on deinstitution-
munity, without personal assistance services-
alization with all the supports necessary
emphasizes civil rights as a means of se-
to allow them to live in the community.
curing equal access to transportation, ed-
Wade Blank and members of the contin-
ucation, employment, housing, and health
uing ADAPT crusade, who are identified
care. The second strand-composed of peo-
with this strand, brought the issues of in-
ple with severe disabilities who require per-
stitutionalized people with disabilities to
sonal assistance services in order to live inde-
the wider disability rights movement. Fred
pendently in the community-stresses the
Fay of Justice For All observes, "Shamefully,
services they need for maintaining their in-
here in America we have a couple of mil-
dependence.
lion people with disabilities incarcerated in
Despite the different priorities embodied
institutions-many against their will, many
in these two strands, they share common
drugged into silence, many strapped down
goals, as the struggle for the ADA demon-
in their beds-people who, with a little assis-
strates. Many people who are now living in-
tive technology and a little attendant care,
dependently in the community without per-
could be living productive lives in the com-
sonal assistance services recognize the in-
munity."2 Isolated not only from the greater
evitability of the decline that comes with ad-
society, but also until the 1980s from the dis-
vancing age, and hence, their eventual need
ability community, this third strand infused
for such services. Many people who now
the disability rights movement with a new
require personal assistance services need the
radicalism and militancy.
IDENTITY AND CULTURE 20I
Cheryl Marie Wade, 1994 recipient of a
Disability Pride:
National Endowment for the Arts Solo The-
Celebrating Difference
atre Artist Fellowship, comments sardon-
ically on the alienation of people associated
Disability activist Mary Jane Owen chal-
with this third strand from the mainstream
lenges the obvious impediment to the devel-
disability community: "OK. I admit it. I
opment of a group identity by people with
am weaker and more vulnerable than most
disabilities: "It's hard to organize around
nondisabled people and many disabled peo-
having something in common-disability-
ple, too. So throw me out of the movement.
that none of us really wants."5 Yet she
Take away my Crip Power button."³ Yet she
presents an analogy between people with
explains:
disabilities and another minority group:
"But the children of slavery came together
We who are on the outside, living
around physical characteristics that the ma-
independently, using attendants for intimate
jority society taught were ugly. 'Black is
care, owe to those of our brothers and
beautiful' seemed an audacious assertion
sisters still dependent on family care or
when it was first made." Similarly, Owen
institutions to tell the truth about the pain
suggests that despite the marginalized sta-
and struggle of this life as well as the joy
and freedom.
But if our shame tells us
tus imposed on the disability population
that our needs lack dignity, that we lack
by the greater society, people with disabil-
dignity, then the next thing we hear our
ities can bond with one another in mu-
shame say is that it is more dignified to
tual affirmation.
die than to live with these basic needs that
How can people with disabilities join with
take away our privacy and seem like such a
other people with disabilities unless they
burden.
feel pride in themselves and a desire to
identify with, and be among, others with
Nonetheless, Wade clearly positions herself
disabilities? "When I was growing up, I was
on the side of life: "But it [personal assis-
terrified of walking into a room of peo-
tance services] is the only deal in town. And
ple with disabilities and admitting that I
no matter how difficult, well worth it when
was one of them. Now I just love being
you consider the alternatives."
in a community of people with disabili-
The contradictions, the "gnarled strands"
ties," says Leslie Heller, who has cerebral
of "the disability experience," have been
palsy.⁶ How do people who have been stig-
characterized as a "hard to unravel
tan-
matized, even ostracized, acquire this pride?
gled, knotted ball" of
Do they take the stigma and transform
it into a badge of honor, as does Nadina
isolation and differentness versus a common
LaSpina? "I would not trade my disabil-
identity; images of weakness, vulnerability,
ity for anything. We will not change to
enforced childishness, learned helplessness
fit the mold. Instead, we will destroy the
versus defiance, willingness to make waves
mold and change the world to make sure
and change the status quo; pity, destroying
there is room for everyone," insists LaSpina,
dignity, fear of our differentness, our
who has polio. She is referring to her be-
"imperfection," as if perfection were humanly
achievable; and then our own fear, raw fear
lief that by means of legislation, regulation,
of attitudes that would destroy our kind,
and technology the world should adapt to
whether by genocide, selective abortion,
her needs.
euthanasia, assisted suicide or rationing
LaSpina used analogy to explain her feel-
of care.⁴
ings:
202 CHAPTER TWELVE
I'm proud of being Italian. There are things
opportunity to find out who I really am. I had
I'm ashamed of, like the existence of the
to start from square one to become a member
Mafia-but these things do not stop me from
of a community that from time immemorial
embracing my Italian-ness. I love being a
has been discriminated against and viewed as
woman, but I hate going through menopause.
defective by mainstream society. Transferred
But I wouldn't want a sex-change operation
to a world of disability culture, I developed
just because of menopause. Certainly the pain
deep and meaningful relationships with
and physical limitations of disability are not
people in the disability rights movement.
wonderful, yet that identity is who I am. And
Some became disabled early in life; some like
I am proud of it.⁷
me became disabled later in life, but they
all took pride in who they were and what
Is this disability pride really a reflection
they were doing. They encouraged me to feel
of what Erik H. Erikson defines as "ego
attractive and creative and powerful in my
own way. I don't have to be angry or full of
integrity," the last of his "eight ages of
self-pity anymore. These are my people. 12
man": "the acceptance of one's one and
only life cycle as something that had to
Interweaving narrative, journal entries,
be and that, by necessity, permitted of no
letters, and poetry, Jean Stewart recounts in
substitutions"?8 Especially for those born
her autobiographical novel, The Body's Mem-
with a disability, or those who become
ory, her own personal transformation after
disabled at an early age, their disability is
becoming disabled at the age of twenty-
as much a part of their "one and only life
eight-her discovery of her new identity as
cycle" as any of their other characteristics.
an activist in the disability rights move-
Therefore, the individual sense of pride that
ment:¹³
a person with a disability feels must refer to
that self that evolved with a disability, not
After surgery because a tumor on my hip left
some substituted nondisabled self.
me motor impaired, I experienced profound
depression. I lost my bearings entirely. When
For an individual who becomes disabled
I went down the street, it seemed as if I was
after forming a sense of self as nondis-
invisible. My disability had such a profound
abled, the new identity as a person with a
impact on my sense of self that I felt sexually
disability may be nurtured by establishing
erased. Before I became disabled, I had
relationships with other people in the dis-
self- identified as a writer and a member of
ability community whose sensibilities have
movements for social change. Now an issue
been shaped by similar experiences.⁹ Daniel
of social change arrived on my doorstep with
a resounding thud.14
Robert, a movie prop man before he was di-
agnosed as having multiple sclerosis, forged
She recalls that her introduction to dis-
a new self-image as a person with a dis-
ability rights made her aware of her kinship
ability by becoming a disability rights ac-
with "an oppressed minority, [her] own peo-
tivist. "Once I stopped being what I had
ple," peers who understood her experiences
been, I needed to be part of a commu-
and whose experiences she understood.
nity," Robert explains. 10 "I see pride most
Now that she had what she considered "a re-
strongly when I can be proud of others in the
alistic frame of reference," she had reason to
community," Robert notes, emphasizing his
carry on despite chronic pain and demoral-
belief that disability pride cannot happen
ization. "My role models were indomitable.
in isolation:11
They were gutsy; they just bulldozed their
Before my disability, I was a superficial
way through obstacles. They showed me
person, caught up with competitiveness
how to use my anger and indignation pro-
and machismo. The disability gave me the
ductively. In a no-nonsense way," she says,
IDENTITY AND CULTURE 203
"they were changing the world." Since there
crimination." Soon her work would center
seemed to be no such organization, in 1994
around independent living and disability
she founded the Disabled Prisoners Justice
policy development on a local and national
Fund to link prisoners with disabilities-
level. "But these two events," Bristo points
one of the most vulnerable and abused pop-
out, "provided the spark that connected me
ulations in the country-with attorneys.15
to my true identity as a woman with a dis-
As a result of a 1977 diving accident,
ability and the emerging movement for the
Marca Bristo-president and CEO of Access
rights of people with disabilities."
Living, the Chicago independent living cen-
Steven E. Brown, cofounder of the Insti-
ter, as well as chairperson of the National
tute on Disability Culture in Las Cruces,
Council on Disability-became a wheelchair
New Mexico, observes:
user as a young adult. 16 "My initial response
was to go on with my old life," Bristo notes,
People with disabilities have forged a group
"so I didn't try to extend my relationship
identity. We share a common history of
oppression and a common bond of resilience.
with other people with disabilities. But two
We generate art, music, literature, and other
incidents pulled me out of my denial and
expressions of our lives and our culture,
started me on a journey that enabled me to
infused from our experience of disability.
meet many remarkable people with disabili-
Most importantly, we are proud of ourselves
ties and to be involved in a time of historical
as people with disabilities. We claim our
change in the disability rights movement."
disabilities with pride as part of our identity.
The first incident occurred after her rehabil-
We are who we are: we are people with
disabilities.¹⁷
itation for a spinal cord injury. "I wanted to
continue my work as a nurse by going into
Robert F. Murphy in The Body Silent de-
teaching and research," Bristo remembers.
scribes how his degenerative disability, a
Because Vocational Rehabilitation consid-
tumor of the spinal cord leading to atro-
ered her career goal unrealistic, the agency
phy of the body, impelled him to exam-
refused to support her in her effort to ac-
ine the society of people with disabilities
quire a master's in nursing. She appealed
with the same analytical tools that he used
and won.
to study esoteric cultures in remote geo-
Perceiving her struggle as "self advocacy,"
graphical areas, such as the southern Sahara
Bristo describes herself as "still feeling dis-
and the Amazon. 18 His argument is that
connected from the movement." She refers
people with disabilities inhabit a separate
to the second incident, however, as "the one
culture inside the wider culture. As Mur-
that made me self-identify as a person with a
phy states:
disability, that made me reach out to others
with disabilities, that made me relate my
Just as an anthropologist gets a better
perspective on his own culture through
disability to my work." While reviewing pa-
long and deep study of a radically different
tient charts, she realized to her dismay that
one, my extended sojourn in disability
unlike all the other patients, none of the
has given me, like it or not, a measure of
women with disabilities were asked ques-
estrangement far beyond the yield of any
tions regarding their sexuality. "I was struck
trip. I now stand somewhat apart from
by the way the sexuality of these women
American culture, making me in many ways
was being negated," Bristo indicates, "and
a stranger. And with this estrangement
has come a greater urge to penetrate the
I recognized that my own experience of
veneer of cultural differences and reach an
disability and my observation of disability
understanding of the underlying unity of all
had a political dimension. It was about dis-
human experience.
204 CHAPTER TWELVE
Murphy recalls his protestations at the
ample, in 1982, Cass Irvin of The Disability
following comment made by a black anthro-
Rag, a newspaper devoted to recording and
pologist colleague: "I always think of myself
preserving the history of people with dis-
as being black just as you always think of
abilities and their rights movement, regis-
yourselfas being white." With Murphy's dis-
tered her skepticism regarding this concept:
ability came a realization that "I [Murphy]
"Unlike most minority groups, we [people
would no more have thought of myself as
with disabilities] do not have our own cul-
white than I would have thought of myself
ture and traditions. But we do have a past
as walking on two legs." In other words,
and we should learn about it and feel pride
when one is within the so-called "normal"
in the accomplishments of our forebears
group, one does not know there is a clas-
and we should feel anguish at how badly
sification; it is what ethnolinguists call an
our people have been treated."2
"unmarked category." When one feels com-
By 1994, however, Carol Gill, a quadri-
pelled to defend oneself against a hostile
plegic psychologist who was one of the
environment, then the reality of both the
first to use the term "disability culture,"
environment and the individual's "embat-
referred to some of the "core values shared
tled identity" becomes evident.
by people with disabilities" such as "tol-
Murphy's dedication of his book, "To all
erance for others' differences" and "highly
those who cannot walk-and instead try to
developed skills at managing multiple prob-
fly," underscores his conclusion:
lems."2 Elaborating on her perception of
the resourcefulness that people with dis-
It takes a rare combination of intelligence,
abilities are required to develop because of
courage, and persistence to conquer the
mental and physical quarantine thrown
their differences, Gill describes her "ideal
up around the disabled by a society that
world":
secretly sees in them its own epitaph
The
intensity of purpose required by the drive
Society would accept my experience as
for autonomy makes the successful people
"disability culture," which would in turn be
[with serious disabilities] unusual. They have
accepted as part of "human diversity." There
entered the mainstream of social life, and they
would be respectful curiosity about what I
have done this through great determination
have learned from my differences that I could
and unflagging effort.
teach society. In such a world, no one would
mind being called Disabled. Being unable
Murphy explains how nonetheless, they
to do something the way most people do it
have forged their own culture: "But no mat-
would not be seen as something bad that
ter how well they become assimilated into
needed curing. It would be seen as just a
society, their struggle sets them apart from
difference.²²
their able-bodied fellows. They have a dif-
ferent history and follow a separate agenda;
Gill reflects on the social value of diver-
they remain part of the Other. Their other-
sity:
ness, however, is positive and creative, for
their self-assertion is a profound celebra-
Differences might make you proficient in
tion of life."19
some contexts, deficient in others, or not
The meaning of the term "culture" be-
matter at all. For example, if I can't run, I
comes so modified when linked with dis-
might be an inferior messenger if time is
critical. However, my inability to run might
ability that until the 1990S many disability
just as likely have stimulated me to address
activists did not accept the authenticity of
time more creatively or to develop ways to
the concept of "disability culture." For ex-
send messages swiftly that are as efficient
IDENTITY AND CULTURE 205
as running, or vastly superior. In other
ited amount of advantage to go around and
words, ideally, even if I had a difference that
disabled people will use it all up-more than
might impinge on me in some contexts, I
fairness. The Declaration of Independence
wouldn't be judged generally deficient because
was really about a strategy to make the best
a recognized feature of Disability culture
would be the fact that such limitations can
community we can."
be fodder for innovation and for a rich and
Deborah Ossoff Yanagisawa, a disability
valuable human experience.
activist who is legally blind, remembers that
she was always uncomfortable when people
The well-known journalist John Hocken-
treated her disability as an unequivocal dis-
berry, who has a spinal cord injury, also
aster.24 Having grown up happily in a family
describes disability as a cultural resource
in which congenital blindness was common,
that the wider society ignores at its peril:
she wanted to say, "Maybe, but maybe not."
"Suppose, when making his case for being
Among her responses to her disability, she
allowed to use a golf cart, Casey Martin-
realized, were positive feelings like her sense
the professional golfer with a disability-
of community and pride stemming from
said, 'Yes, of course my disability constitutes
her connection to the culture of disability.
an advantage because like other people with
"I knew," she adds, "that some folks' as-
disabilities, I have expertise in adapting to
sumption that my life was spoiled by my
change.' But no, he said needing the golf
disability was simplistic and incomplete."
cart is a disadvantage, and so the market-
When Yanagisawa read the following para-
driven homogeneous mainstream could say,
ble, she was struck by how well it matched
'all's right with the world.'"23 Hockenberry
with her own experience. The story begins
asks, "Why aren't people with disabilities a
by acknowledging that although "being dis-
source of reassurance to the general public
abled is a deep wound, a source of pain," it
that although life is unpredictable and cir-
is, similar to other wounds, also "a gift":
cumstances may be unfavorable, versatility
and adaptation are possible; they're built
As Eastern wisdom has always known, it is
hard to tell good luck from bad luck. I recall
into the coding of human beings?"
the old story about the farmer who found
"Why is it," Hockenberry continues, "that
a beautiful wild horse, and the neighbors
a person would not be considered educated
said, "What good luck," and the farmer said,
or privileged if he went through school
"Maybe." Then the farmer's son tried to tame
and never learned there was a France or
the horse and fell off, breaking his leg. The
a French language? But if a person went
neighbors all said, "What bad luck," and the
through school and knew nothing about
farmer said, "Maybe." Then a war started and
the army came to conscript all the young
disability, never met a disabled person, never
men, and they took everyone's son except the
heard of American Sign Language, he might
farmer's son with the broken leg. "What good
be considered not only educated, but also
luck," the neighbors said, and the farmer
lucky? Maybe we in the disability commu-
said, "Maybe." And on and on it goes. Life is
nity," Hockenberry suggests, "need to get
the way it is, not the way we wish it was, and
out of the clinical realm, even out of the
disability is a constant embodiment of this
basic truth.25
equity realm, into the cultural realm, and
show that a strategy that leads to inclusion
Disability culture is gaining increased
makes a better community for everyone.
acceptance in the academic world as evi-
That's really what the Declaration of Inde-
denced by the hundreds of disability stud-
pendence was about," Hockenberry. asserts,
ies courses nationwide,26 such as Nadina
"more than advantage-as if there was a lim-
LaSpina's "Celebrating Difference: Disabil-
206 CHAPTER TWELVE
ity Culture," offered in class and on-line
denial of the presence of impairments, nor
since Spring 1995 at New York City's New
a rejection of the utility of intervention and
School for Social Research. A number of
treatment. Instead, Disability Studies has
other scholars with disabilities, among
been developed to disentagle impairments
them Paul Longmore at San Francisco State
from the myth, ideology and stigma that
influence social interaction and social policy.
and Phyllis Rubenfeld at New York City's
The scholarship challenges the idea that the
Hunter College, have been fostering an ap-
economic and social status and the assigned
preciation of disability culture by working
roles of people with disabilities are inevitable
toward the creation of disability studies pro-
outcomes of their condition.
grams in their respective institutions. At the
University of Illinois in Chicago, a graduate
Disdainful of pity, disability culture-a
program in disability studies was approved
major focus of disability studies-celebrates
in Fall 1998.² Indicating that the topic of
its heritage and sense of community, using
disability is slowly working its way into his-
the various forms of expression common to
tory, literature, political science, and soci-
other cultures such as, for example film, lit-
ology courses, David Pfeiffer, editor of the
erature, dance, and painting. Walter Brock's
Society for Disability Studies' SDS Quarterly,
1998 film If I Can't Do It evokes both the
likened disability studies to ethnic studies.
painful social alienation of Arthur Camp-
Just as university departments are devoted
bell Jr., a highly intelligent person with se-
to an examination of gender, race, or ethnic-
vere cerebral palsy, as well as his later exhil-
ity, a disability studies program would treat
aration resulting from his political leader-
disability as an "ordinary human variation,"
ship in disability militancy.29 Portraying the
explains Rubenfeld.
film as "ultimately less about disabled peo-
Professor Simi Linton, a scholar and ac-
ple than about viewers' own feelings," Mary
tivist with a disability, and her colleagues at
Johnson, in her review of Brock's work, reit-
Hunter College have developed a working
erates the film maker's own words that open
definition of disability studies.2⁸ Focusing
the documentary:
on disability as a "social phenomenon, so-
cial construct, metaphor and culture," dis-
Mr. Brock says that Mr. Campbell had
been described to him only as a disability
ability studies "reframes" the study of dis-
rights activist. He wasn't prepared to meet
ability "utilizing a minority group model."
a man with severe cerebral palsy and barely
Disability studies not only explores "ideas
intelligible speech. He describes his response:
related to disability in all forms of cultural
"What kind of life could this guy have?
representation throughout history," but it
Maybe the most merciful thing to do would
also examines "the policies and practices of
be to put him out of his misery." Ten years
all societies to understand the social, rather
later [after Brock got to know Campbell
than physical and psychological, determi-
well], that response still shocks Mr. Brock.
"Where does such prejudice come from?" he
nants" of disability as experience:
asks himself.³⁰
Disability Studies both emanated from
"A slashingly dark humor,"31 one of the
and supports the Disability Rights
characteristic qualities of disability art, is
Movement, which advocated for civil
illustrated by Billy Golfus's view of the
rights and self-determination. The
focus shifts the emphasis away from
disability rights movement in his incisively
a prevention/treatment/remediation
witty film, When Billy Broke His Head, and by
paradigm, to a social/cultural/political
Lynn Manning's poem, "The Magic Wand,"
paradigm. This shift does not signify a
a sardonic comparison of two stereotypes-
IDENTITY AND CULTURE 207
one based on race, the other on disability.
high professional standards, years from now
In this poem, the white cane belonging to
mainstream dance companies may include
a blind man, who happens to be African
dancers with disabilities."
American, becomes the catalyst for a sudden
A member of the Council of Actor's Eq-
transformation:
uity since June 1990 and chair of its disabil-
ity committee, Lunn has actively worked to
Quick-change artist extraordinaire,
increase access to theaters for all people with
I whip out my folded cane
and change from black man to blind man
disabilities as well as to foster employment
with a flick of my wrist.
for actors with all kinds of impairments.
It is a profound metamorphosis-
Lunn declares, "If Actor's Equity supports
From God-gifted wizard of roundball
nontraditional casting to encourage em-
dominating backboards across America,
ploying women and ethnic minorities, peo-
To God-gifted idiot savant
pounding out chart-busters on a cockeyed
ple with disabilities also must be included.
whim;
Of course that means accessible audition
From sociopathic gangbanger with death for
spaces as well as all the required accom-
eyes
modations, and all these assumptions are
to all-seeing soul with saintly spirit;
accepted across the board now by all the
From rape driven misogynist
to poor motherless child;
performance unions."
From welfare-rich pimp
Like Kitty Lunn, Dana Tozer-who had
to disability-rich gimp;
been "a stand-up dancer" for eighteen years
And from "white man's burden"
before she broke her back in an automobile
to every man's burden.
accident-feared the dancing chapter of her
life was closed. 34 Nonetheless, Tozer is now
It is always a profound metamorphosis.
Whether from cursed by man to cursed by
a wheelchair-dancing member of the Cleve-
God;
land Ballet Dancing Wheels, a company
or from scripture-condemned to God-
"creating a new vocabulary of dance" by
ordained;
featuring both "stand-up" and "sit-down"
my final form is never of my choosing;
performers dancing together. Company di-
I only wield the wand;
You are the magician.32
rector Mary Verdi-Fletcher, born with spina
bifida, is challenging more than commonly-
Because of a spinal cord injury, a conse-
held assumptions about aesthetics. Verdi-
quence of slipping on ice, Kitty Lunn be-
Fletcher describes people's response to the
came a wheelchair user after living as a
company's work: "People have said, 'I totally
nondisabled person for thirty-six years and
changed my mind about my perceptions
working as an actor and dancer.33 A balle-
of disability and of dance. Next time I see
rina since she was eight years old, Lunn not
a person rolling down the street in their
only teaches dance from her wheelchair to
wheelchair, I'm not going to say, that poor
children with disabilities, but also founded
guy or that poor girl. I'm going to say, I
her own dance company combining dis-
wonder if they're a dancer, or I wonder if
abled and nondisabled dancers. She consid-
they're a lawyer or a doctor."
ers this connection of wheelchair dancing
to traditional dancing a form of inclusion:
"If we pursue this as professionals, if we
Changing Perceptions and the Media
set the standards like the African-American
dancers who wanted to do classical ballet
Besides playing a critical role in the passage
instead of modern dance, if we maintain
of major legislation from 1973 to 1990, the
208 CHAPTER TWELVE
disability rights movement "has brought to-
well served by Justin Dart's relationship
gether people from all stations and back-
to three presidents: Reagan, Bush, and
grounds who share a common experience
Clinton. When President Bush signed the
and a common interest that relate to dis-
ADA, Justin Dart was on one side of the
ability, and inspired them to work for them-
president and Evan Kemp, another well-
selves and others," Lex Frieden points out. 35
connected disability rights advocate, was on
"Because of the movement, there's been an
the other.
enormous amount of progress," observes
"One effect of having some access to in-
Eunice Fiorito, a pivotal force in the struggle
siders in government has been the increas-
for disability rights. 36 She adds:
ingly sophisticated approach to the media
that the disability community has been ex-
Many people with disabilities feel good
hibiting in the late 1990s," Scheer adds. "Lit-
about themselves now, and that has triggered
their activities in the community, where
igating cases and lobbying elected officials
they have been doing things along with
were the traditional techniques that the
nondisabled people. The effect has been
community used in the past. But now these
not only much more consciousness-raising
techniques are used in combination with
about disability issues among people with
establishing connections with television, ra-
disabilities themselves, but also among
dio, and newspaper reporters and educating
nondisabled people. And in turn that has
them." Scheer notes that "the language in
caused everyone to feel an unprecedented
degree of comfort when talking about
the news accounts and editorials, although
disability.
far from perfect, is much improved; for ex-
ample, 'wheelchair user' is finally beginning
Susan Scheer, former deputy director of
to replace 'wheelchair bound.' Also, stories
the Mayor's Office for People with Disabil-
have more balance, and the result is that the
ities, indicates that the class of educated
public is beginning to understand disability
professionals with disabilities spawned by
issues."
the movement are achieving influential po-
James Weisman, counsel for Eastern Par-
sitions: "They're becoming lawyers, judges,
alyzed Veterans Association, is scathingly
and doctors; they're entering the academy
critical of the editorial policy of the New
and politics. They are changing, and they
York Times regarding issues affecting peo-
will continue to change people's attitudes
ple with disabilities: "But it is the Times
towards disability, professionally and so-
which has opposed accessible transporta-
cially."37 When Edward Roberts became di-
tion, and the Times which opposed amend-
rector of the California State Department of
ing the building code to mandate access in
Rehabilitation in 1975, he was an anomaly;
new construction. And the Times opposed
Judith E. Heumann's appointment as as-
the Americans with Disabilities Act.
If a
sistant secretary of the Office of Special
loophole can be found, or the law changed,
Education and Rehabilitation Services at
believes the New York Times, people with
the U.S. Department of Education, though
disabilities can be excluded without moral
very meaningful to the disability commu-
consequence." Ironically, Weisman points
nity, was no surprise. Moreover, Heumann's
out, "When the New York Times opposed the
role in the Clinton administration demon-
Americans with Disabilities Act, Republican
strates how some former disability activists
Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina, an
have moved from outside the power struc-
outspoken opponent of civil rights laws,
ture to inside the corridors of power. Also,
told Congress that even 'this liberal New
the disability rights movement has been
York newspaper' opposed the ADA."
IDENTITY AND CULTURE 209
To support his characterization of the
militant attitude among many of the dis-
newspaper, Weisman offers examples of New
abled. "43 The second article, "Architecture
York Times editorials from November 1979
in the Age of Accessibility," pointed out
to May 1991. Responding to Section 504
that "it [accessibility] is reshaping the entire
of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, one ed-
built environment. And it is defining the
itorial stated: "The costs of rendering the
architecture of the 1990s as much as any
handicapped 'equal' have threatened to be-
stylistic impulse."44
come especially acute in publicly financed
Without ignoring arguments against the
transportation."³ Over four years later, an-
accessibility laws, the article presented the
other editorial reacted to a court injunction
reasons for the new architectural standards:
concerning subway station reconstruction:
"Advocates of barrier-free architecture are
"The first object of a wise but concerned
pursuing the even more ambitious goal of
policy cannot be to make people with seri-
what they call universally accessible build-
ous disabilities move as if they did not have
ings; comfortable, usable and safe for any-
them. "40 More than five and a half years after
one whose physical capabilities differ from
this editorial, another editorial expressed
those of an able-bodied, average-sized adult.
skepticism about the social value of the
As baby boomers go gray, the thinking goes,
Americans with Disabilities Act: "With sur-
there will be more need than ever for en-
prisingly narrow public scrutiny, Congress
vironments that are easy to get around."
is moving swiftly to extend broad civil rights
Appearing about ten months later, a New
protection to the nation's 40 million dis-
York Times front page article, "New Needs
abled citizens. The sentiment is laudable
for Retirement Complexes' Oldest," demon-
But the legislation is vague
costs could
strated how the meaning of accessibility has
be monumental
Predictions about the
become painfully clear to retirees who, in
bill's projected benefits are obviously spec-
their eighties, can no longer negotiate the
ulative."⁴¹ And most surprisingly, less than
one flight of steps to their Florida condo-
two years later, an editorial attacked the
miniums that they scarcely noticed when
concept of wheelchair accessibility: "Unfor-
they were in their sixties.⁴
tunately
federal law requires newly con-
In "Disrupting Sales at Greyhound: Dis-
structed public facilities to be accessible to
abled Protest Bus Access," the New York
the handicapped."⁴²
Times offered an evenhanded account of
As Scheer states, "By 1997 the approach
how disability advocates-mostly wheel-
of the New York Times, as well as other news-
chair and scooter users-demonstrated
papers, to disability issues showed signs of
against the inaccessibility of the over-the-
change. The Times gave increased promi-
road buses of the nation's largest interstate
nence and serious treatment to the dis-
bus company.46 Another example of a de-
ability community." A sample of newspa-
tailed and sympathetic report of a disabil-
per articles appearing since 1997 supports
ity issue-by a newspaper not known for
Scheer's observation. The June I997 Sunday
its support of the disability rights move-
New York Times lead articles in the "Week
ment, the Wall Street Journal-was evident in
in Review" and the "Real Estate" sections
"The Vision Thing: Mr. Magoo Watches U.S.
dealt thoughtfully with concerns important
Cultural History and Struggles to Adapt."
to the disability community. Although the
This article traced the background of this
first of these articles, "Disability Culture,"
"comic" figure, revealing its inappropri-
tended to sensationalize the subject, the
ateness as a representation of the expe-
author made an effort to explain the "new
rience of blindness. Although the Handi-
210 CHAPTER TWELVE
capped Adults Association protest in late
(not Ted) Turner the night before President
I997 against traffic hazards near a busy
Bush signed the ADA. "I happened to be
shopping center paralyzed Bronx rush-hour
there," Frieden remembers, "when Turner
traffic, the New York Daily News gave an
called the Washington Bureau of CNN and
almost favorable description of the demon-
said the ADA signing ceremony should be
stration.⁴⁸
covered live." Frieden continues:
Later in the same year, "Dateline NBC,"
featuring journalist John Hockenberry,
Since the ceremony was scheduled for IO a.m.,
honestly portrayed examples of illegal em-
the Atlanta office argued that they could not
ployment and housing discrimination fre-
preempt their IO a.m. World News for what
seemed to them an insignificant law. But the
quently experienced by people with visible
Washington staff insisted that this was the
disabilities. Still, Hockenberry concluded
most important legislation since the 1964 civil
the program in a celebratory spirit, demon-
rights law, and CNN would be negligent if it
strating the freedom that he enjoys as a
didn't show the world this news event. Atlanta
wheelchair user on the Brooklyn Bridge
finally resolved themselves to presenting the
accessible walkway-an accommodation se-
signing, and millions of people around the
cured by disability activism. 50 "Technolo-
world saw and heard the President say about
the ADA, "Let the shameful wall of exclusion
gies That Enable the Disabled," a lengthy
come tumbling down."
front-page article in the "Money and Busi-
ness" section of the New York Times, pre-
The second most important event, Frieden
sented with clarity and specificity illustra-
explains, happened the day after the Sen-
tions of significant contributions to society
ate's final passage of the law: "The ADA
that people with very severe disabilities are
was the headline in the New York Times, the
making because of technologies that allow
Washington Post, and every other major Amer-
them to express their considerable talents.⁵¹
ican newspaper. That was the first time that
By 1999, the New York Times featured a
millions of people were exposed to disability
front-page article acknowledging the
rights as the number one story."
"Power of the Disabled" as a political force
Alongside the mainstream media, in
with regard to two seminal issues. 52 The
which twenty-two journalists write regular
first concerned the unreasonable require-
columns on disability issues, a disability me-
ment that many people with disabilities
dia network has evolved so that by 2000, an
choose to be either workers or beneficia-
estimated three thousand to thirty-five hun-
ries. The second dealt with "the highly
dred newsletters, two hundred magazines,
unusual turnabout"-a product of effec-
and fifty to sixty newspapers were regularly
tive disability activism-that resulted in
published.54 Although most of these publi-
nineteen of twenty-six states withdrawing
cations are devoted to a particular organi-
from a U.S. Supreme Court brief support-
zation or disability, a few-covering cross-
ing institutionalization of many people
disability concerns-are broad-based, such
with disabilities.
as New York Able newspaper, and Mainstream
Lex Frieden emphasizes what he consid-
and We magazines, as well as the politically
ered the two most important media events
activist Ragged Edge and Mouth magazines.⁵⁵
related to the disability rights movement
Given the increased number of people with
and "maybe the most important aspect of
disabilities appearing in advertisements, as
the ADA since laws are as much percep-
well as in television and film, the emergence
tion as reality." First, he notes the de-
of glossy magazines, such as We, targeted
cision made by CNN News president Ed
to upper-income consumers with disabili-
IDENTITY AND CULTURE 2II
ties is not surprising. "We, a magazine that
cerned that they rarely get the opportunity
calls itself 'a lifestyle magazine for people
to speak for themselves about their issues in
with disabilities,' has made the advertis-
the mainstream media. "Can you imagine
ing department at the General Motors Cor-
the broadcast of a serious panel discussion
poration take notice." A General Motors
on race relations in the United States with-
spokesperson said, "We're doing a lot of
out a person of color being present or a dis-
niche marketing to people with disabilities,
cussion of gender discrimination without
and this publication is reaching them in a
a woman being present?" asks Anne Emer-
totally different way than they've ever been
man, former director of the New York City
reached. It's more upscale." In addition,
Office of People with Disabilities. "Our
approximately forty radio programs and
issues are always being discussed by people
thirty-eight to forty television programs are
who are experts about us-politicians, pol-
broadcast throughout the nation. While
icymakers, doctors, social workers-but not
most of these are local broadcasts, both
us. It's as if they thought, what do we know
Greg Smith's "On a Roll" and Bob Enteen's
about ourselves? With all the enlightened
"Living Without Limits" are nationally syn-
thinking about disability, there's still that
dicated radio programs.⁵⁷
residue of paternalism." Emerman adds,
Between 1995 and 2000, the rapid growth
"Sometimes disability advocates say, 'Well
in dial-in services, making approximately
we're getting visibility in ads, and some-
sixty mainstream newspapers-including
times even an actor with a disability appears
the New York Times, USA Today and the
in a show.' That's good, but it's not the same
Chicago Tribune-available to blind people
as speaking for yourself in a serious public
by means of computer and telephone, has
forum, like other people do, about the hard
been "startling," declares Charles Winston,
issues that affect not only your quality of
founder and director in 1990 of the Na-
life but maybe even your survival."
tional Telability Media Center. A nonprofit
Eunice Fiorito, first president of the
research organization created to promote
board of the American Coalition of Citizens
the growth and development of mass media
with Disabilities, asserts, "What's missing is
for people with disabilities, the center seeks
a strong unified public voice on disability
to identify the media that serves people with
issues, the kind of voice that can only em-
disabilities and disseminate this informa-
anate from a cross-disability national coali-
tion in all fifty states. Winston, who became
tion that speaks for the nation's fifty-four
blind while working in journalism and pub-
million people with disabilities. That's what
lic relations, recognized the disability com-
the American Coalition of Citizens with
munity's need for a clearinghouse to pro-
Disabilities once did, and we need an orga-
vide a resource base for the increasing num-
nization like that again."⁵⁹ "What's more,"
ber of disability publications and broad-
Fiorito continues, "people with disabilities
casts emerging throughout the country.
need to know their rights. We need training
sessions on the ADA and on the IDEA, like
the ones we had on Section 504, because
Assessment of the Movement
if we don't monitor compliance, nobody
will. Eventually, we'll get enforcement with
Although welcoming the rise in newsletters,
penalties for noncompliance, but that will
newspapers, magazines, radio and television
take another generation." Fiorito was refer-
broadcasts, and internet sites in the disabil-
ring to the fact that although the ADA has
ity media, many disability advocates are con-
clear-cut effective dates for its various pro-
212 CHAPTER TWELVE
visions, there are no inspectors that check
abled people in the workforce.63 "We won't
for ADA compliance. Both the ADA and the
see a huge shift in employment statistics
IDEA are complaint-driven, which means
for the disability population," Bristo adds,
that enforcement most often occurs when
"until we can assure that the telecommu-
individuals or organizations either threaten
nication systems that businesses use are
or actually file complaints or lawsuits. Legal
developed in such a way that they don't
fees are available for successful complaints
cut out people with disabilities." Bristo is
and lawsuits, but there are no sanctions for
suggesting that these systems would have
noncompliance.
to be developed or altered, at reasonable
Although many disability advocates com-
costs, to be accessible to people with var-
plain about the lack of ADA compliance,
ious disabilities, such as sensory or mo-
the Dole Foundation's Paul Hearne uses
tor impairments.
a wide lens to examine the ADA: "Is the
In her capacity as NCD chairperson,
ADA working?" he asks.60 "Have we gotten
Bristo describes herself as "a link between
rid of racism yet because of the 1964 Civil
the disability grass roots and Washington."
Rights Act or sexism because women were
Yet she credits "the people in the savvy dis-
added to the law in 1972? Since the ADA
ability community with breathing life into
became effective in 1992, it's preposterous
the ADA with their activism." Fostering co-
to assume that all people with disabilities
hesion in the community, she encourages
should have jobs by now, to which they
"passing the passion on to the next gener-
arrive in their accessible vehicles." Hearne
ation and to new groups yet untouched by
differentiates between the "easier issues,"
the progress we have achieved." Despite the
with which the disability community has
setbacks that Bristo anticipates, she main-
achieved some success-transportation and
tains that "we of the disability community
accessibility-as opposed to the "harder is-
have set in motion something that can't be
sues," which present formidable challenges
stopped."
for the future-employment, education, per-
The energy and commitment is evident
sonal assistance services, and health care, as
"in the faces of the young and in the world's
well as institutionalization of and experi-
response," she observes:
mentation on people with disabilities.⁶
"Harder than passing the ADA," asserts
At the NCD, I get calls many times a month
from other governments or disability leaders
Marca Bristo, chairperson of the National
in other countries for guidance around the
Council on Disability since May 1994, "is the
disability rights agenda, the law, and other
struggle to take the promise of the ADA,
programmatic issues. And this gives me my
and the values embedded in that law, and
greatest hope-the ripple effect, the still
push them across public policy. We have
untapped impact on the whole world. When I
the daunting challenge to look at all of our
travel to other countries, even though I can't
systems and to change them."62 To illus-
speak the language, we can communicate
because we speak the same language when it
trate, Bristo refers to the necessity for "an
comes to disability.
overarching national policy on employment
for people with disabilities, a new way of
Bristo acknowledges, however, the for-
thinking about the issue and committing to
midable task of coping with disability dis-
it, like the culture shift on smoking." The
crimination. To begin to deal with this ob-
goal, for Bristo, is to make the percentage
stacle, Bristo indicates that "we have to erase
of employed working-age Americans with
some of those very practical barriers for
disabilities comparable to that of nondis-
people with disabilities who want to work,
IDENTITY AND CULTURE 213
as well as for their potential employers."
Independent living centers are not expanding
Bristo's concern stems from the way the
enough for the people who need to be served.
American health care system is designed.
Annually, less than $100 million goes into
People with disabilities realize that the in-
the independent living centers that keep
come they earn from their jobs may jeop-
people productive at all stages of their lives,
and one and a half billion dollars is spent
ardize their necessary health care benefits
for rehabilitation, which serves fewer people
such as, for example, their personal atten-
and provides fewer jobs. Also, ethnic and
dant services or essential medication. Even
racial minorities and young people are not
though increases may often be unjustifiable,
adequately involved in disability advocacy.
employers fear that their health insurance
It's our job in the movement to attract this
costs will rise precipitously if they hire peo-
underrepresented population.
ple with disabilities.
Scheer suggests that young people are not
Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC) coun-
attracted to the movement in the 1990s as
sel Susan Dooha refers to people with dis-
they had been in the 1970S because-"like
abilities as the "canaries in the mine" in
the civil rights movement and the women's
regard to the 1990s experiment with health
movement-the disability rights movement
care financing and delivery.6⁴ Compared to
seems to be a victim of its own success."6
the needs of the general public, the med-
On the whole, mainstreaming has increased
ical requirements of people with disabil-
the participation of people with disabilities
ities tend to be more specialized, imme-
in the wider society, but it has diminished
diate, and acute. Not only do they fre-
the sense of community, the bonding, be-
quently require a network to provide for
tween members of the disability popula-
their health care needs, but their prob-
tion, Scheer observes. "They're willing to
lems are often more varied and extensive
fight for themselves-get note-takers, access
than those of nondisabled people. Since
to libraries-but they're not as involved in
the weaknesses of a managed care system
the movement as people were in the 1970s."
in providing health services become evi-
Also, she comments on how young people
dent first in the disability population, many
with disabilities are enjoying the benefits of
people with disabilities face changes in the
accessibility that came out of the struggle
delivery and financing of health care with
of the generation that preceded them:
trepidation. Dooha believes, however, that
the regulations barring discrimination in
They take these benefits for granted; they
the ADA ultimately may ensure that peo-
think they were always there, and they'll
ple with disabilities receive access to ap-
always be there. They don't realize that
propriate health care, including specialists,
if they're not vigilant, they can lose what
they've got. Clearly, the disability rights
durable medical equipment, and medica-
movement is not as visible, not as entrenched,
tions, as well as long-term care and personal
as other civil rights movements. So, as a
assistance services.⁶
fringe movement, it's more vulnerable than
Still, Frieden-pointing to the health care
the other movements. For example, if in flush
crisis that will erupt in about 2005 with the
times, like the 1990S, the expenditure of money
aging of the baby boomers-asks, "Where
can be used as an excuse against accessibility,
is the infrastructure they need for medical
special education, and health care, then what
will happen in bad economic times?
services, for assisted living in their own
homes and communities?"⁶⁶⁶ Frieden also is
Disability advocate Frank Bowe offers
concerned about the future of the disability
one reason that the legacy of the disabil-
rights movement:
ity rights movement-more than other civil
214 CHAPTER TWELVE
rights movements-is difficult to transfer
disability community will have to become
from one generation to the next. 68 Since
increasingly political, consistently involved
parents of children with disabilities usually
in party and elective politics:70 "We're less
are nondisabled, these children must, them-
political than other minority groups. We're
selves, confront the stigma of disability and
mainly a middle-class movement, so we're
then emerge with self-esteem sufficient to
not the rainbow we should be. And the
allow them to discover and carry on the
fact that we're not representing a diversity
tradition of disability activism. "The process
is problematic because it means that some
of moving toward assertiveness and inde-
people are disenfranchised, and that limits
pendence, then, must begin anew with each
our political clout." In fact, she asserts that
child [with a disability]."
the disability rights movement has to be an
Judith E. Heumann proposes ways for
integral part of the overall movement for
the disability community to face the social
change:
and political realities of disability as well
as counter the charitable model of cure:
We have to appreciate what poverty means in
"We have to demystify who we are so peo-
this country because poverty is a significant
cause of disability, and poverty adversely
ple understand that disability is a natural
affects disability.71 It is critically important
part of life. The barriers to integration al-
that we look to our other civil rights partners
low people to think disability is an unmit-
and the larger economic picture. Then we
igated tragedy. But if the proper policies
can become a bigger player, and a diversified
were implemented, we could make contri-
movement will naturally evolve. Though the
butions that we're not able to make now be-
gains of the disability rights movement over
cause people assume we're not able to make
the last thirty years have been impressive, they
are relatively few in relation to what we yet
them."69 Calling for an increasingly strong,
have to do.
honest, and forthright dialogue with the
American people, Heumann urges the dis-
"After all the accomplishments of the dis-
ability community to make the effort to
ability rights movement," Anne Emerman
understand the fears of the wider society,
notes, "if in the late 1990s, the director of the
and "put a face to those concerns."
Center for Independence of the Disabled in
The movement has not been as effective
New York, Marilyn Saviola, can say, 'All the
as it could be, Heumann believes, because
rights and all the programs we've fought
disability advocates have not been strategic
for-the ones that keep people like me out of
enough:
institutions-are back on the table,"2 then I
have grave concerns for the future."3 Emer-
We need to be more knowledgeable and
man raises the questions pivotal for the fu-
analytical about what exists in other countries
for people with disabilities-like on-the-job
ture of the disability rights movement:
accommodations with government supports,
How do we educate young people with
modifications of apartments and homes, and
disabilities-like young people from racial
appropriate health care. Clearly, health care
and ethnic minorities-to learn about and
is a disability issue for everyone because if
embrace their heritage? How do we inspire
you don't get the right coverage, a medical
them to translate that insight into more than
condition can become a disabling one. And
sustaining-but even expanding-the hard-
what are we doing to educate the baby
fought-for achievements of the disability
boomers, because they are us tomorrow?
rights movement? How do we encourage
them to forge stronger connections to like-
In order to be seen as a constituency
minded people from other communities and
to be listened to, Heumann continues, the
other movements?
IDENTITY AND CULTURE 215
And how do we get nondisabled people
movement has been referred to as a "stealth
to understand that ours is truly a civil
movement."
rights struggle, to realize that policies
Perhaps one reason that even many po-
that serve people with disabilities tend
to benefit everybody, politically, socially,
litically sophisticated people are unaware of
and economically? How do we explain to
disability activism is the lack of a charis-
nondisabled people that they are not in
matic figure: no Martin Luther King Jr. nor
competition for programs and funding
Malcolm X, no Betty Frieden nor Gloria
with the disability population, but rather
Steinem, to epitomize the movement. Cer-
people with disabilities are their friends, their
tainly the movement has worked toward
families, and in all likelihood, at some point
bringing the issues of people with disabil-
in their lives, themselves?
ities before the public, for like Ralph El-
lison's "Invisible Man," many members of
the disability population, historically, were
A Stealth Movement
ignored, isolated, removed from the com-
munity. Sherry Lampert, a highly intelli-
"The disability rights movement is at the
gent woman with cerebral palsy, describes
forefront of the human rights movement
her feelings when her parents-who experi-
because it's one of the most serious-one
enced her disability as their shame"-tried
of the toughest nuts to crack," observes
to hide her by placing her in a hospital
wheelchair innovator Ralf Hotchkiss.⁷ Why
ward for children who were developmentally
is this movement different from other rights
delayed: "I felt like I wasn't part of the hu-
movements? The movement comprises not
man race."78
only the largest minority-fifty-four million
Yet disability, more than other move-
Americans with disabilities-but also im-
ments, eludes embodiment in one figure.
pacts on their families and friends, who usu-
The reason is the inclusiveness of the move-
ally are nondisabled. People with disabilities
ment, and its relevance to such a wide and
is the only protected class that anyone can
varied spectrum of the population. And
enter at any time through birth, accident,
herein lies the movement's strength-its
illness, or advanced age. Most individuals,
great and ever-increasing numbers-as well
at some point in their lives, will have a
as its weakness. Shortly before her death in
disability. With the aging of the American
June 1997, Betty Shabazz reminded a group
population and the advancement of medi-
of students in Newark, New Jersey, that her
cine and technology, by 1994-1995 a fifth of
husband, Malcolm X, often said that if you
the nation's population had some form of
see a picture of the world and your face isn't
disability. The year 2020 will mark almost
in it, your job is to put your face there.
a revolution in medicine; chronic disease
She might have added, is there one face
will predominate rather than infectious dis-
with which a quadriplegic wheelchair user,
ease.75 Dr. Joanne Lynn, director of George
a blind person, a deaf person, a frail elderly
Washington University's Center to Improve
person, a person with AIDS, a person with a
Care of the Dying, emphasizes that "most
psychiatric disability, a person with diabetes
women have eight years of disability before
or cancer, a veteran exposed to nerve gas,
they die; most men, five or six."76 However,
and a nondisabled parent of a child with
unlike other civil rights movements-the
a severe disability can identify? Disability
African-American civil rights movement,
activism has many faces; can one face be
the women's movement, the gay and lesbian
emblematic of all the faces of the disability
rights movement-only the disability rights
rights movement?
Notes
Preface
I. Elisabeth Young-Bruehl, The Anatomy of Prejudice (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
1996).
2. Paul Robinson in "Intolerance," New York Times, Sunday, May 19, 1996, sec. 7, p. 41, reviewed Young-
Bruehl's The Anatomy of Prejudice. Emphasis added. In their excellent history of the gay rights movement in
America, Out For Good (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1999), authors Dudley Clendenin and Adam Nagomey
refer to the movement as "the last great struggle for equal rights in American history to this point" (p. 13).
AIDS is prominently discussed in their book, but there is no mention of the Americans with Disabilities
Act or other disability legislation relevant to people with HIV or AIDS. The authors link the gay rights
movement to other struggles for equal rights-by African Americans, women, Native Americans-but not
to the disability community. Although they call the gay and lesbian population an "invisible people,"
equally invisible are people with disabilities whose goals are much the same.
3. R. C. Smith, A Case About Amy (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1996). See Hendrick Hudson
Central School District v. Rowley, IO2 S.Ct. 3034 (1982).
4. R. C. Smith, "An Audience for Amy," Ragged Edge, May/June 1998, 31-32.
5. In his catalogue of isms, comparable to racism, Andrew Hacker, professor of political science at
Queens College of the City University of New York, includes handicapism. See Hacker, Two Nations: Black
and White, Separate, Hostile, Unequal (New York: Scribners, 1992), 20.
6. Paul Longmore's presentation, Disability Studies Colloquium, New York City Hunter College
School of Social Work, December 5, 1997. Longmore refers to With a Song in My Heart as an "inspirational"
film, Nightmare on Elm Street as a "horror" film, and My Left Foot as a "realistic" film about a person with a
disability, reflecting Christy Brown's "fierce lifelong battle against condescension and contempt." See also
Martin F. Norden, The Cinema of Isolation: The History of Physical Disability in the Movies (New Jersey: Rutgers
University Press, 1994).
7. Peter Hall, "Inventing the Poster Child," the first part of a four-part program, "Beyond Affliction:
The Disability History Project," National Public Radio. The program was aired at different times in various
parts of the country during the week of May 4, 1998.
8. John M. McNeil, "Current Population Reports: Americans with Disabilities 1994-95," published
by U.S. Department of Commerce, Census Bureau, August 1997, I-2. Unless otherwise indicated, statistical
data is from this source.
9. "Follow-up to 1994 Research," Ragged Edge, September/October 1998, 5-6. Reference to the 1998
Harris Poll by Louis Harris and Associates for the National Organization on Disability from this source.
IO. The three 1999 employment cases are Sutton v. United Airlines, Inc., II9 S.Ct. 2139; Murphy v. United
Parcel Service, Inc., II9 S.Ct. 2133, and Albertson's Inc. v. Kirkingburg, II9 S.Ct. 2162. The U.S. Court of Appeals
218 NOTES TO PREFACE
in the Garrett case held for the plaintiff, 193 F3d 1214 (rith Cir 1999), but the State of Alabama has appealed
to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court's decision in the Kimel case can be found in I20 S.Ct. 631
(2000). In City of Boerne v. Flores, 52I U.S. 507 (1997), the Supreme Court held that under the Fourteenth
Amendment, Congress may enact civil rights legislation only if the statute is designed to remedy a history of
unconstitutional conduct and if the remedy is proportionate to the history of such violations. Prominent
disability rights attorney Stephen Gold fears that the new federalism evident in the Kimel decision and
other Supreme Court rulings does not bode well for disability rights advocates. References to threats to
Title II of the ADA from conversations with John Gresham, senior litigation counsel at New York Lawyers
for the Public Interest, May 12, 2000, and Stephen Gold, April 28, 2000.
II. Examples of "reasonable accommodations" include ramps for wheelchair users, computer voice
synthesizers for blind people, and assistive listening devices for those who are hard of hearing. Because
they are not prohibitively expensive, most "reasonable accommodations" are not difficult to provide.
I2. Robert Pear, "Senate Approves Health Care for Disabled," New York Times, June 17, 1999, A28.
References to Senator Edward M. Kennedy from this source. On October 19, 1999, the House passed the
Work Incentives Improvement Act by an overwhelming vote (Justice For All, email [email protected], October
20, 1999). On December 17, 1999, WIIA (PL 106-170) was signed by President Clinton.
Chapter One
I. Judith E. Heumann, "Statement," Civil Rights Issues of Handicapped Americans: Public Policy Implications
(Washington, D.C.: A Consultation Sponsored by the United States Commission on Civil Rights, May 13-14,
1980), 231. When Heumann-winner in 1993 of the first Betts Award for outstanding contribution to people
with disabilities-made this statement in 1980, she was the deputy director of the Berkeley, California,
Center for Independent Living. References to the postage stamp, "Hope for the Crippled," from this
source.
2. Hugh Gregory Gallagher, FDR's Splendid Deception, rev. ed. (Arlington, Va.: Vandamere Press, 1994),
96.
3. Gallagher, FDR's Splendid Deception, 27.
4. Doris Kearns Goodwin, No Ordinary Time (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1994), 16-17.
5. Maureen Dowd, "Not-So-Splendid Deception," New York Times, May 2, 1996, A2.
6. Karl E. Meyer, "Editorial Notebook," New York Times, May 12, 1996, sec. 4, P. 13.
7. "Letters to the Editor," New York Times, May 16, 1996, 24.
8. Dowd, "Not-So-Splendid Deception," A2. At the April 19, 1998, New York City 504 Democratic Club
dinner, Christopher Roosevelt, grandson of FDR, stated that the National Organization on Disability had
pledged to raise private funds to add a statue of FDR in his wheelchair to the national memorial.
9. Though sympathetic to a historically accurate depiction of Roosevelt in the memorial, George
F. Will exaggerates the importance of political correctness in the controversy. "The Only Thing To Fear:
Political Incorrectness," New York Post, May 9, 1996, 33-
IO. John Gliedman and William Roth, The Unexpected Minority: Handicapped Children in America (New
York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1980).
II. Although his March I, 1945, speech President Roosevelt made reference to his braces, "about ten
pounds of steel around the bottom of my legs," the radio audience was hearing about, not seeing, evidence
of his disability (Goodwin, No Ordinary Time, 586). The fatigue FDR was experiencing near the end of his
life would be recognized by 1984 as post-polio syndrome, a continuous weakening of the muscles originally
affected by the polio virus. He died on April 12, 1945.
12. Goodwin, No Ordinary Time, 533.
13. Goodwin, No Ordinary Time, 532.
14. Gallagher, FDR's Splendid Deception, 27.
I5. In the Jim Crow South, African Americans who contracted polio were turned away from hospitals
and facilities such as Warm Springs in Georgia. Although too many were inadequately treated, some were
sent to Tuskeegee Infantile Paralysis Institute in Alabama (A Paralyzing Fear: The Story of Polio in America,
NOTES TO CHAPTER ONE 219
the Center for History in the Media at George Washington University, Paul Wagner Productions, a Nina
Gilden Seavey film).
16. Gallagher, FDR's Splendid Deception, 57. Winner of the 1996 Betts Award, Gallagher played a pivotal
role in the development and passage of the federal Architectural Barriers Act of 1968.
17. Gallagher, FDR's Splendid Deception, 41.
18. Gallagher, FDR's Splendid Deception, 4I-42, 154. References to Fred Botts from this source.
19. Mary Johnson quoted Longmore in "The Bargain," The Disability Rag (September-October 1989), 6.
In 1961, Eleanor Roosevelt told Judith Heumann and her mother, Ilse, that if FDR were as young as Judith
when he contracted polio, he would have dealt with it better than he did (interview with Ilse Heumann,
June 22, 1996).
20. Goodwin, No Ordinary Time, 586-87.
2I. Martha Fay, "Lungs of Iron," review of Katherine Black's In the Shadow of Polio, appeared in the New
York Times, Sunday, June 2, 1996, sec. 7, p. 19.
22. As a 1996 presidential candidate with a clear physical impairment resulting from World War
II wounds, Bob Dole-whose disability is much less severe than Roosevelt's was-appeared ambivalent
regarding disability issues. Although he established the Dole Foundation (a nonprofit organization
promoting employment for people with disabilities), Dole when campaigning for the presidency, seemed
unsure how to position himself as a person with a disability.
23. Unless otherwise indicated, references to the League of the Physically Handicapped from interview
with Florence Haskell, December 3, 1995, and Herman Joseph's interviews with Sylvia Bassoff, December
7, 1985, and Haskell, March 29, 1986.
24. "Crippled Pickets "Torture' Harris," New York Times, June 21, 1935, 21.
25. Frances Lide, "Girl Leader of Cripples Asks Plan to End "Discrimination," Washington Star, May II,
1936.
26. References to slogan from the film A Paralyzing Fear.
27. Unless otherwise indicated, references to the Birthday Balls, the National Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis, and the March of Dimes from Gallagher, FDR's Splendid Deception, 147-51.
28. Goodwin, No Ordinary Time, 575-
29. Stated in the film A Paralyzing Fear. References to Basil O'Connor from this source.
30. References to Eddie Cantor from the film A Paralyzing Fear.
3I. Other means were used to raise funds to find a cure for polio. For example, in movie theaters, films
would be stopped in the middle to allow collection cans for the March of Dimes to be passed up and down
the aisles; the patrons did not seem to mind. Shown in the film A Paralyzing Fear.
32. The oral Sabin vaccine replaced the injected Salk vaccine throughout the world because not only is
the Sabin vaccine cheaper and easier to administer than the injected vaccine, but with the oral vaccine the
recipient's immunity also is transmittable even to those who have not swallowed it since the virus is alive.
A small percentage of those receiving the oral vaccine, however, contract polio, so the federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention recommended that beginning January I, 2000, all four doses of the vaccine
should be the injected inactivated form of the virus. Information on Sabin and Salk vaccines from "U.S.
Panel Proposes a Change in Administering Polio Vaccine," New York Times, June 21, 1996, A14; "Morning
Edition," National Public Radio, June 16, 1996; and Denise Grady, "Doctors Urge Polio Shots to Replace
Oral Vaccine," New York Times, December 7, 1999, A2I.
33. No longer a menace in the United States after the Salk and Sabin vaccines, polio did not disappear
from the world. Ironically, because of the nature of the disease, improvement in sanitation-which
prevented most other diseases-sometimes brought on polio epidemics as children never acquired the
immunity to polio that they would have in a less sterilized environment. Discussed in the film A Paralyzing
Fear.
34. Parents did play some role in combating polio; for example, in the Mothers' March on Polio-a
campaign waged to raise money for the March of Dimes before Salk's successful polio vaccine-in the
evening women went from house to house where lighted porches designated the residents' desire to make
a contribution. Shown in the film A Paralyzing Fear.
35. Information concerning United Cerebral Palsy, the Association for the Help of Retarded Children,
220 NOTES TO CHAPTER ONE
and Association of Children with Retarded Mental Development from interview with Rachelle Grossman,
August 20, 1997, former assistant director of the Department of Family and Clinical Services at AHRC.
36. "The Overdue Revolution" in "Beyond Affliction: The Disability History Project," National Public
Radio, May 1998. The four-part program, "Inventing the Poster Child," "What's Work Got To Do with It,"
"The Overdue Revolution," and "Tomorrow's Children," was aired at different times in various parts of
the country during the week of May 4, 1998.
37. Nora Groce, The U.S. Role in International Disability Activities: A History and a Look Toward the Future
(Oakland, Calif.: International Disability Exchanges and Studies Project, 1992), 17-20. Unless otherwise
indicated, information on Easter Seal from this source.
38. Interview with Eileen Healy, April II, 1997, former director of the New York City office of Easter
Seal.
39. Interview with Eileen Healy, April II, 1997.
40. Gallagher, FDR's Splendid Deception, 146.
41. Leslie Bennetts, "Jerry vs. the Kids," Vanity Fair 56(8) (September 1993): 82.
42. John Hockenberry, Moving Violations: War Zones, Wheelchairs, and Declarations of Independence (New
York: Hyperion, 1995), 33. Hockenberry apparently meant MD (muscular dystrophy), not MDA (Muscular
Dystrophy Association).
43. Gliedman and Roth, The Unexpected Minority, IO.
44. Frank Bowe, "An Overview Paper on Civil Rights Issues of Handicapped Americans: Public Policy
Implications," Civil Rights Issues of Handicapped Americans: Public Policy Implications (Washington, D.C.: A
Consultation Sponsored by the United States Commission on Civil Rights, May 13-14, 1980), 8-9.
45. Paul K. Longmore, "The Life of Randolph Bourne and the Need for a History of Disabled People,"
Reviews in American History 13(4) (December 1985): 583-86. References to the life and times of Randolph
Bourne, as well as to sterilization and mercy killing for people with disabilities, from this source.
46. Irving Zola is quoted in additional material prepared for the written transcript of "Beyond
Affliction: The Disability History Project."
47. Bowe, "Overview Paper," 9. See chapter IO for discussion of veterans and disability.
48. Bowe, "Overview Paper," 9.
49. "What's Work Got To Do with It" in "Beyond Affliction: The Disability History Project."
Chapter Two
I. Oliver Sacks, Seeing Voices: A Journey into the World of the Deaf (California: University of California
Press, 1989; reprint, New York: HarperPerennial, 1990), 8-9.
2. Harlan Lane, When the Mind Hears: A History of the Deaf (New York: Random House, 1984; reprint,
New York: Vintage, 1989), 93.
3. As late as July 1997, news sources as sophisticated as the New York Times and National Public Radio
referred to deaf people as deaf-mutes without noting how offensive many in the deaf community consider
this term-which reflects a lack of awareness of the authentic language of some deaf people, sign language.
4. Lane, When the Mind Hears, III. Reference to Ponce de Leon from this source.
5. Andrew Solomon, "Defiantly Deaf," New York Times magazine, Sunday, August 28, 1994, sec. 6,
38-45, 62, 65-68.
6. Frances A. Koestler, The Unseen Minority: A Social History of Blindness in America (New York: David
McKay Company, 1976), 23.
7. Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 18-19, 31-32, 90. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Henry
Randolph Latimore and Robert Benjamin Irwin from this source.
8. Sacks, Seeing Voices, 26-27. Unless otherwise indicated, references to the Congress of Milan from
this source.
9. John Dewey referred to Horace Mann with these words in "The Challenge of Democracy to
Education," The Later Works, 1925-1953, vol. II, ed. Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University
Press, 1991), 182.
NOTES TO CHAPTER Two 22I
IO. Steven Pinker, The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language (New York: William Morrow and
Company, 1994), 237.
II. Nora Ellen Groce, Everyone Here Spoke Sign Language: Hereditary Deafness on Martha's Vineyard
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1985).
I2. Sacks, Seeing Voices, 32.
13. Pinker, The Language Instinct, 293.
14. Ibid., 18-19.
I5. Researchers discovered that deaf children in China and the United States follow the same patterns
in learning and using sign language. "Morning Edition," National Public Radio News, January 15, 1998.
16. Carol Padden and Tom Humphries, Deaf in America: Voices from a Culture (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1988), 118-19.
17. Lane, When the Mind Hears, 53-54, 63.
18. Ibid., 162, 182-83.
I9. Ibid., 199, 222.
20. Ibid., 6.
21. After the blind students of the Columbia Institution were transferred to another school in 1865, the
Columbia Institution became known as the Institution for the Deaf and Dumb. The college division, then
called the National Deaf-Mute College, was changed to Gallaudet College in 1893 in honor of Thomas
Gallaudet, and later became Gallaudet University. See "The History of Gallaudet University," on the
university's web site: http://www.depts.gallaudet.edu
22. Lane, When the Mind Hears, 397-99.
23. Sacks, Seeing Voices, 27.
24. "The Overdue Revolution" in "Beyond Affliction: The Disability History Project," National Public
Radio, May 1998. The four-part program, "Inventing the Poster Child," "What's Work Got To Do with It,"
"The Overdue Revolution," and "Tomorrow's Children," was aired at different times in various parts of
the country during the week of May 4, 1998.
25. Lane, When the Mind Hears, 394-95. References to the first meeting of the National Convention of
Deaf-Mutes from this source.
26. Lane, When the Mind Hears, 404.
27. H-Dirksen L. Bauman, "Beyond Speech and Writing: Recognizing American Sign Language
Literature in the MLA," Profession, The Modern Language Association of America, 1997, 174.
28. Sacks, Seeing Voices, 32.
29. Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 95-96.
30. Description of Braille from Hilarie Lynne Luxton, "Factors Affecting Rehabilitation Teachers'
Braille Instruction of Adults Who Are Blind and Visually Impaired" (Ed.D. diss., Teachers College, Columbia
University, 1993), 15-16.
31. Louis Braille was a student in Valentin Hauy's Parisian school (Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 397-
98). Hauy was one of the three great founding fathers of education of blind people, along with Samuel
Gridley Howe and Johann Wilhelm Klein (Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 303).
32. Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 96-98.
33. Ibid., 99-101.
34. Luxton, "Factors," 17-19.
35- According to the 1991-1992 Census, of the almost ten million Americans age fifteen and older
who have difficulty reading words and letters even with glasses or contact lenses, approximately eighty-
five thousand use Braille and only ten to fifteen thousand use Braille extensively. Statistical information
provided by the American Foundation for the Blind. Because school systems used mainstreaming as an
excuse to cut costs by reducing the number of Braille teachers, "in the past 30 years, the percentage of blind
children learning Braille in the United States has fallen to less than IO percent from about 50 percent," the
National Federation of the Blind reported ("70% of Blind Lack Jobs; Computer Mouse Shares the Blame,"
New York Times, July 3, 1999), AI2.
36. Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 130. References to long-playing records for blind people from this
source.
222 NOTES TO CHAPTER Two
37. Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 146.
38. Ibid., 209. Social reformers, such as Samuel Gridley Howe-and Dorothea Dix with whom he
worked closely-were finding public funding for institutions that would provide care, education, and
employment opportunities for individuals who were considered "mentally unfit," which included children
and adults with birth defects, as well as those who were developmentally delayed, epileptic, dyslexic, deaf,
autistic, and blind. Information on Howe and Dix from interview with Sandra Marlow, June 23, 1997, former
librarian at Fernald State School for People with Mental Retardation, an institution established by Howe
in the early 1850s.
39. Winifred Holt Mather, Edith Holt Bloodgood, and Rufus Graves Mather, First Lady of the Lighthouse:
A Biography of Winifred Holt Mather (New York: The Lighthouse, The New York Association for the Blind,
1952), IIO.
40. Ibid., 29, 84, 163, 165, 166, 171, 173, 206.
41. Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 315-16.
42. Unless otherwise indicated, information about the guide dog movement in the United States from
Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 304-7. Although legally blind, Stephen Kuusisto, author of Planet of the Blind
(New York: Dial Press, 1998), spent his childhood and young adulthood "passing" as sighted. Because of
the stigma associated with each, the concept of "passing" is relevant to disability as it is to race.
43. Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 315. The story of the white cane movement from this source.
44. About twenty years ago, the passage of a federal law requiring localities, nationally, to permit
cars to turn right on a red light, roused William Pickman-from the New York City chapter of the
American Council of the Blind-to organize the Committee Against Right on Red (CARR), a citywide
coalition representing blind people and others with disabilities, parents of young children, and older
people. Consequently, the federal government did not mandate right on red in New York City.
45. Information on the difference between the pencil tip and rolling tip canes from interview with
mobility instructor Marilyn Newman, May 2, 1998 and with one of her clients, Keisha Powell, December
8, 1996. Newman is the author of "Mobility Techniques that Affect Safety in Travel for Blind and Visually
Impaired People," Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, January 1998. According to Newman, in the
late 1980s Raymond Alaire, a Canadian, invented the rolling tip cane for his blind daughter.
46. Floyd Matson, Walking Alone and Marching Together (Baltimore, Maryland: National Federation of
the Blind, 1990), 27.
47. Ibid., 23.
48. Ibid., 3I-34. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Jacobus tenBroek from this source.
49. Matson, Walking Alone and Marching Together, 87-88.
50. Ibid., 109-10.
5I. Ibid., 100.
52. Ibid., 798. Richard Severo, "Kenneth Jernigan, Advocate For the Blind, Is Dead at 71," New York
Times, October 14, 1998, A2I.
53. Matson quoted Jernigan in Walking Alone and Marching Together, 176. Authors' emphasis.
54. Interview with Rami Rabby, October 26, 1996.
55. "How Many More Must Die?" DIA Activist, March 1983, 2.
56. Richard K. Scotch, From Goodwill to Civil Rights: Transforming Federal Disability Policy (Philadelphia:
Temple University Press, 1984), 54-55. References to John Nagle from this source.
57. References to Rami Rabby's lawsuit against the Foreign Service of the State Department from
interview with Rabby, October 26, 1996.
58. Although other earlier types of detectable warning strips" frequently were used, by the 1990s most
blind people had indicated their preference for truncated domes.
59. References to Karen Luxton Gourgey, Ph.D., Director of the Computer Center for Visually Impaired
People at Baruch College, from interview with Gourgey, September 26, 1996.
60. References to Guide Dog Users and Rosemarie McCaffrey from interview with McCaffrey, May 28,
1998. According to McCaffrey, Seeing Eye or Guiding Eye provides guide dogs free of charge to owners at
least sixteen years old who take a training program of four weeks with the first dog and three weeks with
any succeeding dogs.
NOTES TO CHAPTER Two 223
6I. Although Alice Crespo, founder and director of Independent Recreation of the Disabled, has had
"very positive experiences" with her two guide dogs, she expressed doubt about getting a third: "I loved
my two dogs, Xenta and Sunshine. But when each of them died, I really got depressed. I'm not sure I want
to go through that pain again." Interview with Alice Crespo, April II, 1996.
62. Philip K. Howard, The Death of Common Sense: How Law is Suffocating America (New York: Random
House, 1994), 152.
63. Padden and Humphries, Deaf in America, 44.
64. Sacks, Seeing Voices, 153. The view that "Deaf" signifies a linguistic minority, not a disability, is the
thesis of Harlen Lane's The Mask of Benevolence: Disabling the Deaf Community (San Diego: Dawn Sign Press,
1999).
65. Nadina LaSpina, "They Don't Want To Be Like Us," DIA Activist, June 1996, 15-16.
66. References to Frank Bowe's criticism of Deaf culture from Bowe's letter to the authors, January 3,
1993. Similar to advocates of Deaf culture, NFB expects to benefit from legislation prohibiting disability
discrimination while at the same time denying that blindness is a disability.
67. Because of its historical roots, ASL, the sign language of the United States, is closer to the sign
language of France than to the sign language of England.
68. Sacks, Seeing Voices, 143. Unless otherwise indicated, references to William Stokoe from this source.
Stokoe, who "helped change the way deaf people are educated around the world," died on April 4, 2000
(Eric Nagourney, "William Stokoe Jr., Sign Language Advocate Dies at 80," New York Times, April II, 2000,
BIO).
69. Sacks, Seeing Voices, I5I. References to Barbara Kanapell from this source.
70. Padden and Humphries, Deaf in America, 2.
71. Frank Bowe letter to authors, January 3, 1993.
72. Edward Dolnick, "Deafness As Culture," The Atlantic Monthly, September 1993, 38. References to
Roslyn Rosen from this source.
73. Dolnick, "Deaf As Culture," 39.
74. Statistics from the 1991-1992 Census provided by the League for the Hard of Hearing in New York
City.
75. These three questions were suggested by a letter by Kate Gladstone in New York Able, October 1996,
2 and 13.
76. Sacks, Seeing Voices, 157.
77. Joseph P. Shapiro, No Pity: People with Disabilities Forging a New Civil Rights Movement (New York:
Times Books, 1993), 75.
78. Sacks, Seeing Voices, 151.
79. Shapiro, No Pity, 74.
80. Erving Goffman, Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity (New York: Simon & Schuster,
1963), 138.
81. References to sign language and political organizing of black deaf people, minority interpreters
for the deaf, and the comments of Celeste Owens from interview with Celeste Owens, September 30, 1996.
82. In order to be certified, interpreters must pass an examination and pay a fee.
83. A subset of interpreters who are not certified acquire the label "qualified" by accomplishing specific
tasks.
84. Latino Deaf Advocates and Asian Deaf Advocates are political groups similar to Black Deaf
Advocates.
85. References to Marcia Bernstein from interview with Bernstein, January 12, 1997.
86. Interview with Judith Cohen, March 20, 1997, author of Disability Etiquette: Tips on Interacting with
People with Disabilities, illustrated by Yvette Silver and published by Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Association,
in 1998.
87. Felicia R. Lee, "New York to Teach Deaf in Sign Language, Then English," New York Times, March
5, 1998, B3. Reference to recent instruction in ASL in schools for deaf students from this source. Deaf
students were not taught to lip-read or speak; they were taught to lip-read and speak.
88. Bauman, "Beyond Speech and Writing," 175.
224 NOTES TO CHAPTER Two
89. Henry Kisor, What's That Pig Outdoors? A Memoir of Deafness (New York: Penguin Books, 1990),
255-58. As a supplement to sign language, there are those who advocate "cued speech," breaking words
into syllables and conveying these words with hand signals and lip-reading. Thus, these advocates argue,
the academic achievement of deaf people would improve as they could link visual signs to language as
it is spoken and written. See Lynette Holloway, "Among the Deaf: Ubiquitous Sign Language Faces a
Challenge," New York Times, June 22, 2000, AI.
90. Lee, "New York to Teach," B3.
9I. Walter Kendrick, "Her Hands Were a Bridge to the World," [Review of Helen Keller: A Life by Dorothy
Hermann] New York Times, Sunday, August 30, 1998, sec. 7, p. IO.
92. Helen Keller, The Story of My Life (New York: Doubleday, 1991).
93. Cheryl Marie Wade, "Disability Culture Rap," The Ragged Edge, ed. Barrett Shaw (Louisville: The
Advocado Press, 1994), 15-16.
Chapter Three
I. Interview with Anne Emerman, April 30, 1997.
2. Douglas Martin, "A Victor Fears For the Future," New York Times, April 29, 1997, BI, B6. References
to the young adults' ward at Goldwater Memorial Hospital from this source.
3. References to Marilyn Saviola's education and career from interview with Saviola, June 27, 1997.
4. Edward D. Berkowitz, Disabled Policy: America's Programs for the Handicapped (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1987), 179.
5. Incarceration is a term used by many disability rights activists to describe people who are
unnecessarily institutionalized against their will.
6. Frieda Zames, "The Right To Choose," Disabled In Action Advocate, December 1978, I. References to
Lyn Thompson from this source.
7. References to the Independent Contractor Home Care System from material provided by Marvin
Wasserman, July 7, 1997.
8. To preserve the rights of self-directing home care consumers, Victoria I. and Ira E. Holland
and Edward Litcher established an organization in 1977 that developed into the program Concepts
of Independence. References to the expansion of Concepts from conversations with Concepts Client
Coordinator Carmen Silver, July 6, 1999, and February 7, 2000.
9. Interview with Marvin Wasserman, July 7, 1997. Concepts of Independence is so highly regarded
that the son of Sandra Parrino, chair of the National Council on Disability from 1983 to 1993, travels from
Westchester to New York City to hire his personal attendants from this innovative program.
IO. Ed Shook, "A College Eases Handicaps of 56 Students by Removing Barriers to Active Campus
Life," The Kansas City Star, October 4, 1959, IOA. (Material about Kansas State Teachers College provided by
Keith Frank, Disabled Students Services Coordinator, Emporia State University, July 25, 1996.)
II. Duane F. Hetlinger, "Physically Handicapped College Graduates," Vocational Guidance Quarterly,
Winter 1963, 85.
12. References to the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana from material provided by the
university's Rehabilitation Education Center, April 29, 1996. The 1948 campus at Galesburg was moved
to Champaign-Urbana in 1949.
13. The predecessor of Gallaudet College-the Columbia Institution for the Deaf, Dumb, and Blind-
was established in 1864 to provide accessibility to higher education for deaf students and blind students.
It became limited to deaf students in 1865.
14. Unless otherwise indicated, information about Edward Roberts from conversations with Roberts,
May 23, 1994, and July 17, 1994.
I5. Jon Oda (Edward Roberts's attendant for three years), "Highlights from Speeches by Ed Roberts"
(unpublished manuscript), April 1995, I. Oda manuscript provided by Bruce Alan Kiernan, board member
of World Institute on Disability and close personal friend of Roberts.
16. Oda, "Highlights," 2.
NOTES TO CHAPTER THREE 225
17. Cheryl Marie Wade, "Disability Culture Rap," The Ragged Edge, ed. Barrett Shaw (Louisville: The
Advocado Press, 1994), 17.
18. Douglas Martin, "Disability Culture: Eager to Bite the Hand That Would Feed Them," New York
Times, Sunday, June I, 1997, sec. 4, P. I.
I9. Oda, "Highlights," 3.
20. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Cowell Hospital from Berkowitz, Disabled Policy, 200.
2I. Oda, "Highlights," 3-4.
22. Interview with Bruce Alan Kiernan, January I9, 1998.
23. Ed Roberts's comments on the relationship between disability rights and other civil rights
movements, including the Women's Movement, as well as the Disabled Students Program, from Oda,
"Highlights," 4-5.
24. Oda, "Highlights," 6.
25. Carr Massi, National Paraplegia Foundation News, January 1977, I. Massi was president of the New
York Metropolitan Chapter of the National Paraplegia Foundation in 1977.
26. Berkowitz, Disabled Policy, 20I-2. Column by Georgie Ann Geyer, "Wheelchair Power! The Disabled
Go Public," that appeared in the New York Times on July 5, 1975, was supplied by Judith E. Heumann's
mother, Ilsa Heumann, to Berkowitz (p. 266, note 27).
27. Oda, "Highlights," 6.
28. Articles of both Simi Kelley and Jane Wifler appeared in the National Paraplegia Foundation News,
November 1975, 3.
29. Oda, "Highlights," 7.
30. Judith E. Heumann, "Handicap and Disability," Disability: Our Challenge, John P. Hourihan, ed.
(New York: Teachers College, Columbia University Press, 1979), 17.
31. Oda, "Highlights," 3.
32. Interview with Robert Levine, August 15, 1997.
33. Description of WID from WID Blue Ribbon Panel Newsletter, October 1992, I: I.
34. From Frank Bowe's May 28, 1996, letter to the authors.
35. Lucy Gwin, "True History," Mouth, January-March 1997, 7(5&6): 26-27. Partners in Policymaking is
a group of disability activists who continue in 2000 to educate parents of children with disabilities about
the disability rights movement and effective lobbying strategies.
36. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Fred Fay and the Boston Center for Independent Living
from interview with Fay, July 5, 1996.
37. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Lex Frieden from interview with Frieden, July 16, 1997.
38. Berkowitz, Disabled Policy, 202.
39. Information about Independent Living Research Utilization from material provided by ILRU, July
24, 1997.
40. Information about Creative Living I and II, Columbus, Ohio, from material provided by Creative
Living, April 26, 1996.
41. References to Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago and Marca Bristo, chairperson of the National
Council on Disability since May 1994, from interview with Bristo, April 30, 1998.
42. Unless otherwise indicated, description of Access Living from conversation with Mary Delgado,
May 6, 1998, Access Living information and referral administrator.
43. Adaptable design features are as follows: At least one building entrance must be on an accessible
route. All public and common-use areas must be on readily accessible routes. All doors into and within
all premises must be wide enough to allow passage by wheelchairs users. All premises must contain an
accessible route into and through the dwelling unit. All light switches, electrical outlets, thermostats, and
environmental controls must be in an accessible location. Reinforcements in the bathroom walls for later
installation of grab bars around toilet, tub, and shower must be provided. Usable kitchens and bathrooms
must be provided SO that a wheelchair user can maneuver about the space. See Kleo King, Know Your Fair
Housing Rights, Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Association, 1997, 7.
44. See Paul K. Longmore, "Introduction," in H. Stephen Kaye, Disability Watch: The Status of People with
Disabilities in the United States (Volcano, Calif.: Volcano Press, 1997), 13.
226 NOTES TO CHAPTER THREE
45. Description of visitability from interview with Karen Tamley, Housing Policy coordinator with
Access Living, June 3, 1998, and Eleanor Smith of Concrete Change in Atlanta, July 6, 2000, who developed
the concept of visitability. This concept is defined by four basic features in the design of buildings: level
access at one entrance, at least, although not necessarily at the front entrance; interior doorways no less
than thirty-two inches in width (including bathroom doors); switches and outlets at heights reachable by
people with different disabilities; and reinforced supports behind walls permitting the attachment of grab
bars used in bathrooms. Although adaptable design is a legal term, visitability-not a legal term-is defined
by Smith as a grass-roots movement to ensure that new housing is accessible to all people as visitors. The
concept of visitability has been incorporated in legislation in Georgia and Texas.
46. Josie Byzek, "Living in the Past," Ragged Edge, May/June 1998, 13.
47. Encyclopedia of Disability and Rehabilitation (New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1995), 399.
48. Funds also were allocated specifically for counseling and training of elderly blind adults and
independent living rehabilitation of people with disabilities. The legislation providing for these latter two
programs contradicts the spirit of the independent living paradigm. The first is not consistent with the
ILC cross-disability focus; the second is an oxymoron because independent living and rehabilitation reflect
different approaches to disability. Queens Independent Living Center, Inc.: A Timeline and History, compiled by
Susan Jouard (executive director from 1983 to 1988), I5.
49. Encyclopedia of Disability and Rehabilitation, 403.
50. Similar to the composition of the ILC boards, a majority of the Statewide Independent Living
Council (SILC) boards had to be people with disabilities. To avoid conflict of interest, SILC members
could not be staff members of ILCs nor employees of state agencies. The three-year plan required approval
by the chair of the SILC and the head of the rehabilitation agency.
5I. Christopher G. Bell and Robert L. Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum of Individual Abilities
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, 1983), 84, footnote 95.
52. Gerben DeJong, "Independent Living: From Social Movement to Analytic Paradigm," The Psycho-
logical and Social Impact of Physical Disability (New York: Springer Publishing Company, 1984). Comparison
of rehabilitation to independent living from this source.
53. Sandra Schnur's presentation at Summer 1979 conference of the New York State Coalition of
People with Disabilities (NYSCPD) at New York University's Weinstein Hall.
54. Gwin, "True History," 27.
55. Patricio Figueroa's presentation at Summer 1979 NYSCPD conference.
56. Tom Clancy's presentation at Summer 1979 NYSCPD conference.
57. Justin Dart's references to Fred Fay from a 1992 unpublished version of Justin Dart, "The ADA: A
Promise To Be Kept," P. 8, received May 27, 1997, from Dart.
58. In 1977, a few members of DIA agreed to work with the Mayor's Office for People with Disabilities
on a conference. When told that Tom Clancy-the TV poster figure for a public service announcement to
"hire the handicapped"-would be a major speaker, they went to see him, fearful that he would embarrass
them. Although they found him charming, sensitive, and intelligent, they were not prepared for the stirring
speech that he delivered.
Chapter Four
I. Christopher G. Bell and Robert L. Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum of Individual Abilities
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, 1983), 47.
2. Chava Willig Levy, A People's History of the Independent Living Movement (Lawrence, Kans.: Research
and Training Center on Independent Living, 1988), I5.
3. References to the May 1973 demonstrations at the Capitol and the Lincoln Memorial as well as the
legislative and executive compromise resulting in the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 from Richard B. Treanor,
We Overcame: The Story of Civil Rights for Disabled People (Falls Church, Va.: Regal Direct Publishing, 1993),
59-60.
4. References to James Cherry from interview with Cherry, October 16, 1996.
NOTES TO CHAPTER FOUR 227
5. Richard K. Scotch, From Goodwill to Civil Rights: Transforming Federal Disability Policy (Philadelphia:
Temple University Press, 1984), 52. See Scotch, PP. 5I-52, for the names of congressional staff involved in
adapting (from Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act) and drafting the language that ultimately became
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. In addition, the key role of the staff of the Office of Civil
Rights of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (the agency initially authorized to implement
Section 504)-particularly Martin Gerry and John Wodatch-in drafting the Section 504 regulations cannot
be overestimated. See Scotch, 59, and chap. 4.
6. Cherry v. Mathews, 419 F. Supp. 922 (D.D.C. 1976).
7. Scotch, From Goodwill to Civil Rights, 104.
8. References to Eunice Fiorito and her roles in the American Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities
and the Section 504 demonstrations from interview, June 6, 1997. Fiorito died on November 22, 1999.
9. Levy, A People's History, I5.
IO. References to Frank Bowe's letter to Joseph Califano from Treanor, We Overcame, 72.
II. Joseph P. Shapiro, No Pity: People with Disabilities Forging a New Civil Rights Movement (New York:
Times Books, 1993), 66-69.
I2. Levy, A People's History, 17.
13. Judith E. Heumann, "Handicap and Disability," Disability: Our Challenge, John P. Hourihan, ed.
(New York: Teachers College, Columbia University Press, 1979), 20.
14. Shapiro, No Pity, 66.
15. Frank Bowe, "Handicapping America: Barriers to Disabled People," Disability: Our Challenge, John
P. Hourihan, ed. (New York: Teachers College, Columbia University, 1979), 88-89.
16. William Coleman was Secretary of Transportation in the administration of President Ford.
17. These organizations included Disabled In Action of Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, and
Baltimore, as well as the American Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities, the Center for Independent
Living in Berkeley, Easter Seal of Pennsylvania, National Council of Senior Citizens, and Paralyzed Veterans
of America.
18. The defendants in the case were the United States Department of Transportation (USDOT),
the Urban Mass Transportation Administration (UMTA), and the Federal Aid Highway Administration
(FAHA).
19. Interview with James Raggio, general counsel for the Access Board, July 25, 1997. In 1976, Raggio
was an attorney in the Public Interest Law Center of Philadelphia, a nonprofit law firm that represented
the plaintiffs in the Transbus lawsuit.
20. The laws to which the plaintiffs referred were Section 16(a) of the 1970 Urban Mass Transportation
Assistance Act and Section 165(b) of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1973. In the late 1960s and early 1970s,
Transbus was one-of the prototypes developed as a result of the $27 million federal grant awarded to the
Booz Allen Hamilton Company.
2I. Frieda Zames, "Letter to the Membership," DIA Advocate, June 1977, I.
22. References to the July 12, 1978, Transbus demonstrations from Disabled In Action press release
packet.
23. In the early 1970s, both the General Motors lift-equipped bus and the discarded Transbus were
developed in a contest to create an accessible "Bus of the Future."
24. Interview with Dennis Cannon, December 24, 1996. References to Stanford Research Institute and
General Motors from this source.
25. Interview with James Raggio, July 25, 1997. Raggio's reference to low-floor buses from this source.
26. Interview with Dennis Cannon, December 24, 1996.
27. 99 S.Ct. 2361 (1979). See reference to Southeastern Community College v. Davis later in this chapter in
"Mainstreaming Public Transit." See EPVA Inc. et al. v. Metropolitan Transportation Authority et al. 79 A.D.2d
516 (1980).
28. "Group for Disabled Sues on Bus Design," New York Times, August 23, 1980, sec. 2, P. 26.
29. "Key" refers to subway, trolley, and commuter rail stations, including all end stations and those
serving major activity centers, as well as stations having specific characteristics, such as many riders or
transfer opportunities to other trains and different transportation modes.
228 NOTES TO CHAPTER FOUR
30. Twenty-four defendants were parties to Dopico v. Goldschmidt, including the following: New York
State's Metropolitan Transportation Authority; New York City Transit; Mayor Edward Koch; New York
State's and New York City's Departments of Transportation; and Carter's third Secretary of Transportation,
Neil Goldschmidt. Although the case concerned New York City's public transportation system, state and
federal agencies were involved because they had relevant supervisory and financial responsibilities. The
plaintiffs include wheelchair users David and Rhea Dopico, Vincent and Muriel Zgardowski, as well-as
DIA of Metropolitan New York, the only organizational plaintiff.
3I. 687 F2d 644. References to the U.S. Court of Appeals (2d Cir) decision in Dopico (1982) from Bell
and Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum, 137-38.
32. As a result of the 1981 APTA v. Lewis (D.C.) decision, retrofitting was not mandated.
33. 718 F2d 490 (Ist Cir 1983).
34. Bell and Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum, 138. The disparity between the Dopico and Rhode
Island decisions may be attributed to the difference in expenditures for public transportation in the two
localities. The cost for public transit accessibility in New York City in comparison to the total public transit
budget was minimal. In Rhode Island, a locale with a comparatively small public transit budget, the cost
of public transit accessibility was a significant percentage of that budget.
35. "Handicapped Block Elevators at M.T.A.," New York Times, November 22, 1980, sec. 2, P. 27.
36. Those who attended the strategy sessions at the office of EPVA purposely chose a variation on the
abbreviation MTA.
37. Jean Stewart, "What Do We Want? Access! When Do We Want It? Now!!!" DIA Advocate, January
1981, I-2. List of demands presented to MTA chairman Richard Ravitch from this source.
38. References to Anne Emerman's September 30, 1980, Ride the Bus Day experience from interview
with Emerman, July II, 1996.
39. Interview with Ellen Nuzzi, February 16, 1997.
40. References to Michael Imperiale's lawsuit from interview with Imperiale and his attorney, Diane
Morrison, December 7, 1996.
41. Interview with EPVA attorney James Weisman, April 8, 1996. While EPVA v. MTA (1982) was a federal
Section 504 lawsuit, EPVA v. MTA (1979) involved the New York State Building Code and Human Rights
Law.
42. Susan Sugar Nathan, Esq., "The Cost of Accessible Transportation: Myth and Reality," Disabled In
Action Speaks, May 1981, 6. References to Stephen Berger's role in MTA's purchase of Grumman buses from
this source.
43. Interview with James Weisman, April 8, 1996. Weisman referred to the 1982 New York Times editorial
"There's a Wheelchair on the Tracks." The Public Buildings Law, requiring that all newly-built or extensively
renovated subway stations be wheelchair accessible, was suspended for subways for eight years.
44. Interview with Ellen Nuzzi, February 16, 1997.
45. Ellen Nuzzi, "The Battle for Accessible Public Transit in NYC Continues," DIA Activist, November
1984, I.
46. Scotch, From Goodwill to Civil Rights, 188, note I8.
47. Anne Emerman, "We Won," DIA Activist, March 1985, I-2. References to the 1984 New York State
Handicapped Transportation Bill from this source.
48. References to Harold Willson and the development of the BART system from Robert Levine, BART
and the Handicapped, Document No. WP 17-1-75, prepared by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission
for the U.S. Department of Transportation and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
49. Scotch, From Goodwill to Civil Rights, 29-30.
50. Bell and Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum, 38, footnote 149.
5I. Levine, BART and the Handicapped, 17.
52. The May 19, 1998, settlement of the class action lawsuit filed against BART on behalf of eight
riders with mobility impairments revealed the necessity for constant vigilance by people with disabilities
to maintain accessibility. Almost thirty years after the system was built, the plaintiffs were successful in
requiring BART to make extensive renovations. "BART Settles Class Action Lawsuit," Disability News Service,
June 1998, I(5): 8.
NOTES TO CHAPTER FOUR 229
53. References to the 1974 California policy resolution on accessible bus purchases from interview with
Dennis Cannon, December 24, 1996.
54. Interview with Robert Levine, transportation planner for the Nine-County San Francisco Bay
Area, August 16, 1996. During this period, not only were wheelchair-accessible buses purchased by this
commission, but also a coordinated paratransit system was developed in the district.
55. Interview with Dennis Cannon, December 24, 1996.
56. 458 F2d 1277 (7th Cir 1977).
57. 99 S.Ct. 2361.
58. Bell and Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum, II2, footnote 55.
59. 655 F2d 1272 (C.A.D.C. 1981). Drew Lewis was President Carter's second Secretary of Transportation.
6o. The opinion of Third Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Carol Los Mansmann in ADAPT (American
Disabled for Accessible Public Transit) v. Burnley, 867 F2d 1471 (1989), provides much valuable background
information on this issue and is referred to here at length. The defendant in the original case was
Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole, but was changed to James Burnley when he became Secretary,
and then to Samuel Skinner when he succeeded Burnley in early 1989. Although the decision in the Burnley
case was vacated not long after the ruling, in effect replaced by the holding by a larger Third Circuit Court
in ADAPT v. Skinner, 881 F2d 1184 (1989), Judge Mansmann's comments in Burnley remain pertinent. In the
Skinner decision, a divided court held that paratransit was a valid option, but that the 3 percent budget
cap was not.
Since 1990, ADAPT, a national disability organization, has been known as American Disabled for
Attendant Programs Today. "Special efforts" was referred to in the 1970 Urban Mass Transportation
Assistance Act, an amendment to the 1964 Urban Mass Transportation Act, sponsored by Representative
Mario Biaggi (D-N.Y.), that provided federal funds to local transit agencies.
61. Opinion of Judge Mansmann.
62. Ibid.
63. Ibid.
64. References to "equivalent service criteria" for paratransit and lift-equipped buses from interview
with Dennis Cannon, December 24, 1996.
65. Opinion of Judge Mansmann.
66. Senator Alan Cranston, December 14, 1982, I28 Congressional Record S15.714, daily edition. The
fact that in recent years transit authorities throughout the nation are encouraging their wheelchair users
to ride fixed-route buses rather than paratransit reflects the lower costs of these buses.
67. Senator Donald Riegle, December 20, 1982, I28 Congressional Record S15.714, daily edition. The
approximate 1998 cost figures for New York City (roughly the same as in 2000) are as follows: Buses cost
from $271,000 to $41,000. Lifts cost from $5,000 to $11,000. Paratransit passengers cost the company $27.50
per one-way trip, while bus passengers (disabled or nondisabled) cost only $1.85 per trip. Passengers make
use of bus lifts in over 50,000 one-way trips per month. Passengers with disabilities make use of paratransit
in roughly 125,000 one-way trips per month. All figures from conversation with Stephen Nacho, Director,
Bus Company Relations Center, June 22, 2000, except for the last figure supplied to the authors on the
same day by an anonymous paratransit official. Because few New York City subway stations are accessible,
few people with mobility impairments use this mode of transportation.
68. Opinion of Judge Mansmann.
69. 469 U.S. 287.
70. Opinion of Judge Mansmann.
71. 623 F. Supp. 920 (D.Me. 1985).
72. References to the final USDOT Section 504 regulations from opinion of Judge Mansmann.
73. The 3½ percent criteria in the interim regulations was reduced to 3 percent in the final Section 504
USDOT regulations.
74. Opinion of Judge Mansmann.
75. References to the District Court decision in ADAPT v. Dole, 676 F. Supp. 635 (1988), from opinion
of Judge Mansmann.
76. Treanor, We Overcame, 304.
230 NOTES TO CHAPTER FOUR
77. Because in November 1998 the New York City paratransit system (known as Access-A-Ride) was
still not functioning in a manner consistent with "minimum service criteria," three paratransit users and
five disability organizations sued the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and New York City Transit
under the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act. South Brooklyn Legal Services attorney Lee Ginsburg, who
represented some of the plaintiffs, said that if the city adheres to the settlement, "disabled New Yorkers
will have for the first time in history reliable transportation that will allow them to go to work, school and
appointments. This should have national repercussions" (Richard Weir, "Disabled Reach Pact with City
in Transportation Suit," New York Times, Sunday, October IO, 1999, sec. 14, p. 9). The 1989 ADAPT v. Skinner
decision relied on the U.S. Court of Appeals 1987 ruling in Disabled in Action of Pennsylvania v. Sykes (833
F2d 1333) in holding that Department of Transportation regulations mandated the purchase of accessible
buses.
78. Dennis Cannon, "Statement," Civil Rights Issues of Handicapped Americans: Public Policy Implications
(Washington, D.C.: A Consultation Sponsored by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, May 13-14, 1980),
329-30. References to Cannon's "Statement" from this source.
79. The authors have substituted "educational" for "attitudinal" because it is clear from the context
that Cannon intended the former word rather than the latter.
8o. Metropolitan areas of Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Phil-
adelphia, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C., have rapid transit-subway, elevated, and/or commuter
trains-in 2000.
Chapter Five
I. Judith E. Heumann, "Statement," Civil Rights Issues of Handicapped Americans: Public Policy Implications
(Washington, D.C.: A Consultation Sponsored by the United States Commission on Civil Rights, May I3-
14, 1980), 234-35. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Heumann's experience with and lawsuit against
the New York City Board of Education from this source.
2. Judith E. Heumann, "Handicap and Disability," Disability: Our Challenge, John P. Hourihan, ed.
(New York: Teachers College, Columbia University Press, 1979), I2. References to Heumann's experience
with the American Civil Liberties Union and with Ted Childs from this source.
3. Edward D. Berkowitz, Disabled Policy: America's Programs for the Handicapped (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1987), 197.
4. Interview with Ilse Heumann, Judith Heumann's mother, June 22, 1996.
5. Andrew Hacker, Two Nations: Black and White, Separate, Hostile, Unequal (New York: Scribners, 1992),
20.
6. Frank Bowe, "Handicapping America: Barriers to Disabled People," Disability: Our Challenge, John
P. Hourihan, ed. (New York: Teachers College, Columbia University, 1979), 90.
7. The founding of Disabled In Action occurred within a month of her rejection by the Board of
Education (Berkowitz, Disabled Policy, 198). Again Heumann fought against disability discrimination when
in 1975 she was arrested for refusing to leave a plane (that she had boarded unaccompanied) because the
airline considered her a safety hazard (Ibid.). Her action propelled Senator Harrison Williams (D-N.J.) to
publicly appeal for an end to such discrimination.
8. The following DIA chapters were formed after DIA of Metropolitan New York: DIA of Baltimore,
DIA of Kentucky, DIA of New Jersey, DIA of Pennsylvania, DIA of Rockland (New York), DIA of Syracuse,
DIA of Virginia, DIA of Western New York. By 2000, DIA of Metropolitan New York, Pennsylvania, and
Syracuse were still actively engaged in political activity. Many of the leaders of other DIAs became employed
in public or private agencies such as, for example, independent living centers.
9. From the album "Leap of Faith," Flying Fish Records, #90485.
IO. In 1996, as a result of congressional action, the Legal Services Corporation (LSC) could no longer
initiate class actions lawsuits. Hence, many of its most prominent attorneys, such as Jane Greengold
Stevens, principal attorney representing the plaintiffs in Dopico v. Goldschmidt (1982), resigned from the LSC.
II. Philip K. Howard, The Death of Common Sense: How Law is Suffocating America (New York: Random
House, 1994).
NOTES TO CHAPTER FIVE 231
I2. The purpose of Hill v. New York City Board of Elections (Supreme Court of Kings County) was to
enforce Section 4-IO4 of the New York State Election Law.
13. Frieda Zames, "Accessible Polling Site Lawsuit Settled," DIA Activist, May 1995, 15-16.
14. Judge Herbert Kramer, "Memorandum to the Supreme Court of Kings County," June IO, 1986, 7.
15. 687 F2d 644 (2d Cir).
16. The Ford Foundation and the American Bar Association Special Committee on Public Interest
Practice, "Public Interest Law: Five Years Later," 1976.
17. References to the history of NYLPI from Betty Hounslow, "New York Lawyers for the Public Interest
Celebrating I5 Years" (New York: NYLPI, 1991).
18. New York Lawyers for the Public Interest Annual Luncheon Program, June 16, 1999.
19. References to Paul Hearne, the Legal Services Corporation, and DREDF start-up grant from
interview with Hearne, June 25, 1997. From September 8, 1989, until his death, Paul Hearne was president
of the Dole Foundation, a nonprofit organization created by then-Senator Bob Dole fostering the
employment of people with disabilities.
20. Hearne (interview, June 25, 1997) indicated that New York City's Legal Services Corporation lost
$250,000. The other $150,000, formerly earmarked for Handicapped Persons Legal Support Unit, was
applied to fund a February 1980 conference in Minnesota, described by Hearne as "the first training
program for lawyers in the country on the legal rights of people with disabilities." Hearne and attorney
James Weisman presided over the conference.
21. Unless otherwise indicated, references to DREDF from "A Brief History" prepared by DREDF, I-2.
22. Interview with DREDF attorney Diane Lipton, July 31, 1997.
23. References to DREDF's role in the education of children with disabilities from interview with
DREDF attorney Diane Lipton, July 31, 1997.
24. "What DREDF Is and Does," prepared by DREDF, p. I.
25. Rodman D. Griffin, "The Disabilities Act," CQ Researcher, December 27, 1991, 995.
26. 465 U.S. 555.
27. Interview with DREDF attorney Diane Lipton, July 3I, 1997.
28. Interview with Bruce Alan Kiernan, January 19, 1998.
29. Unless otherwise indicated, all references to Sidney Wolinsky from interview with Wolinsky, April
22, 1998. One of Wolinsky's cases, Elizabeth Guckenberger v. Boston University (1997), is discussed in chapter II.
Chabner v. United of Omaha, 994 F. Supp. 1185 (N.D.Cal. 1998) is under appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit.
30. Although sulphones are drugs that render a person with Hanson's disease noncontagious, these
medications do not reverse the course of the disease.
3I. Unless otherwise indicated, all references to Stephen Gold from interview with Gold, July 7, 1997.
The cases referred to by Gold are Strathie v. Department of Transportation, 716 F2d 227 (3d Cir 1983) (dealing with
the bus driver), National Federation of the Blind v. LaPore, settled in the Eastern District Court of Pennsylvania
in 1982, and Disabled in Action of Pennsylvania v. Sykes, 833 F2d III3 (3d Cir 1987), cert. denied, 108 S.Ct. 1293
(1988).
32. Interview with James Raggio, July 25, 1997.
33. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Michael Auberger and ADAPT demonstrations from
interview with Auberger, July II, 1996.
34. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Wade Blank from Laura Hershey, "Wade Blank's Liberated
Community," The Ragged Edge, ed. Barrett Shaw (Louisville: The Advocado Press, 1994), 150-51.
35. Interview with Michael Auberger, July II, 1996.
36. APTA v. Lewis (655 F2d 1272).
37. Brian Doherty, "Unreasonable Accommodation," Reason, August/September 1995, 22. References
to ADAPT's protests against establishments that fail to provide ramps from this source.
38. Auberger is so anxious to do battle with the nursing home industry that he is willing to join forces
with the HMOs to bring down powerful but vulnerable institutions. Fred Fay, on the other hand, sees the
HMOs as the enemy to be eliminated.
39. Interview with Stephen Gold, July 7, 1997.
232 NOTES TO CHAPTER FIVE
40. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Newt Gingrich from "Newt Sponsors CASA [later known
as MiCasa]," Mouth, July/August 1997, 5. On November 16, 1999, Senators Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) and Arlen
Specter (R-Pa.) introduced an updated version of this legislation now known as the Medicaid Community
Attendant Services and Supports Act (MiCassa).
41. Garry Pierre-Pierre, "Disrupting Sales at Greyhound, Disabled Protest Bus Access," New York Times,
August 9, 1997, 26. Reference to Thomas K. Small from this source.
42. Interview with Stephen Gold, July 7, 1997. See chapter 6, note 71, for details of Department of
Justice settlement with Greyhound, April I, 1999.
43. Disability activists such as Mary Johnson, former editor of Disability Rag; Anne Emerman, former
director of the New York City Mayor's Office for People with Disabilities; and Robert Levine, coordinator
of the New York City "One-Step" Campaign, though sensitive to ADAPT's goals, fear that the vision of
individuals with disabilities crawling up steps may evoke images of powerlessness and dependency rather
than pride and independence.
44. Jennifer Burnett, "Solidarity 200 Roars: Unity!" Mouth, January-March 1997, 4, 53.
45. Jean Dobbs, "And Justin for All," New Mobility: Disability Culture and Lifestyle, March 1998, 36.
Reference to founding of JFA from this source. Dart has indicated that his disability activism also was
spurred by the suicide of his brother, Peter, after his long struggle with polio and a head injury.
46. Burnett, "Solidarity 200 Roars," 53.
47. Burnett, "Solidarity 200 Roars," 53. Besides his role at JFA, Fred Fay also functions as chair of
the Disability Advisory Committee to the Democratic National Committee as well as cofounder of the
American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD), modeled on the American Association of Retired
People (AARP).
48. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Fred Fay's use of technology to perform his JFA activities
from Deborah Ellen, "Lobbying for Rights of People with Disabilities," Connections, March 1998, 6. Though
Fred Fay is required to lie supine, "his office [in his home] has sixty-four square feet of ceiling mirrors that
allow him to maneuver easily" in his wheelbed.
49. Dobbs, "And Justice for All," 37. Justin Dart's reference to Ed Roberts from this source.
50. Burnett, "Solidarity 200 Roars," 4, 53.
Chapter Six
I. Joseph P. Shapiro, No Pity: People with Disabilities Forging a New Civil Rights Movement (New York:
Times Books, 1993).
2. Unless otherwise indicated, references to efforts to defeat or threats to weaken the ADA from
interview with Justin Dart, June 14, 1997.
3. Sandra Parrino, National Council on Disability chairperson from 1983 to 1993, said of Lex Frieden,
who had served with Justin Dart on Governor William Clements's task force: "Frieden recruited and hired
the staff; he organized the office, and he developed policy." Interview with Parrino, June 30, 1997.
4. Interview with Lex Frieden, July 16, 1997.
5. Ibid.
6. Interview with Justin Dart, June 14, 1997.
7. Edward D. Berkowitz, Disabled Policy: America's Programs for the Handicapped (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1987), 13.
8. Nora Groce, The U.S. Role in International Disability Activities: A History and a Look Toward the Future
(Oakland, Calif.: International Disability Exchanges and Studies Project, 1992), 136.
9. Interview with Justin Dart, June 14, 1997. References to President Carter NCD appointees from this
source.
IO. Justin Dart, "Introduction-The ADA: A Promise To Be Kept," Implementing the Americans with
Disabilities Act, eds. Lawrence O. Gostin and Henry A. Beyer (Baltimore, Md.: Paul H. Brookes Publishing
Co., 1993), xxii. References to a separate disability civil rights law from this source.
NOTES TO CHAPTER SIX 233
II. Interview with Paul Hearne, June 25, 1997. Title 9, the 1972 amendment to the Civil Rights Act of
1964, included women in the law.
I2. The Switzer building was named for Mary Switzer, the innovative, forceful administrator of
the Office of Vocational Rehabilitation in the 1950s and 1960s, who funded programs that led to the
independent living and disability rights movements (Groce, The U.S. Role in International Disability Activities,
55, 128-31).
13. Interview with Lex Frieden, July 16, 1997.
14. Interview with Sandra Parrino, June 30, 1997.
I5. Interview with Justin Dart, June 14, 1997.
16. Toward Independence: An Assessment of Federal Laws and Programs Affecting Persons with Disabilities-With
Legislative Recommendations (Washington, D.C.: National Council on Disability, February 1986), 13. Paul
Hearne says that many of the recommendations in Toward Independence were similar to those published in
the report of the 1977 White House Conference on the Handicapped.
17. Interviews with Sandra Parrino, June 30, 1997, and Lex Frieden, July 16, 1997.
18. Unless otherwise indicated, references to the probability of civil rights legislation, such as the ADA,
from Dart, "Introduction-The ADA," xxii.
I9. Interview with Justin Dart, June 14, 1997.
20. Richard K. Scotch, From Goodwill to Civil Rights: Transforming Federal Disability Policy (Philadelphia:
Temple University Press, 1984), 164.
2I. Dart's view of the 1988 version of the ADA from interview with Justin Dart, June 14, 1997.
22. Interview with Paul Hearne, June 25, 1997.
23. Interview with Lex Frieden, July 16, 1997.
24. Interview with Justin Dart, June 14, 1997.
25. Interview with Paul Hearne, June 25, 1997.
26. Berkowitz, Disabled Policy, 208-9.
27. Interview with Justin Dart, June 14, 1997. References to Congressman Major Owens's 1988 Disability
Task Force from this source.
28. References to Dale Brown and the National Network of Learning Disabled Adults, 1980 to 1994,
from interview with Brown, April 26, 1998. This organization deals with the "internalized oppression," as
well as the outright discrimination, experienced by learning disabled adults.
29. Fred Fay, "Empowerment: The Testament of Justin Dart Jr.," Mainstream, March 1998, 24.
30. From a 1992 unpublished version of "The ADA: A Promise To Be Kept," 4-5, received from Justin
Dart, May 27, 1997. By 1997, there were fifty-four million people with disabilities in the United States.
3I. Interview with Paul Hearne, June 25, 1997.
32. Dart, 1992 unpublished version of "The ADA: A Promise To Be Kept," 5.
33. Coelho, quoted in Rodman D. Griffin, "The Disabilities Act," CQ Researcher, December 27, 1991,
1004. By 1994-95, a fifth, not a sixth, of the nation's population had some form of disability according
to the ADA definition (John M. McNeil, "Current Population Reports: Americans with Disabilities, 1994-
1995," p. I, published by U.S. Department of Commerce, Census Bureau, August 1997). Coelho's statistic
was based on an earlier census.
34. Interview with Sandra Parrino, June 30, 1997.
35. Griffin, "The Disabilities Act," 1004.
36. Interview with Sandra Parrino, June 30, 1997.
37. Conversation with Arthur Wohl, April 1982.
38. References to Justin Dart's trip to England from interview, June 14, 1997.
39. 42 USC I2IO2 (2)(a)(b)(c).
40. Ibid.
41. The Section 504 definition of a person with a disability from Scotch, 69. In the ADA definition of a
person with a disability, "drug addict" in Section 504 was changed to "recovered drug addict." See 42 USC
12114 (b)(1)(2)(3).
42. 42 USC 12114 (a). Disability advocates chose not to oppose North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms's
insistence that disabilities such as pedophilia and kleptomania also be excluded from ADA coverage.
234 NOTES TO CHAPTER SIX
43. H. Stephen Kaye, Disability Watch: The Status of People with Disabilities in the United States (Volcano,
Calif.: Volcano Press, 1997), 13.
44. References to the 1992 Health Interview Survey from Kaye, Disability Watch, 12-13.
45. Geanne Rosenberg, "When the Mind Is the Matter: Mental Disability Cases Pose Painful Workplace
Issues," New York Times, November 7, 1998, CI-2.
46. Steve Gold's comment about the purpose of ADA.
47. "Follow-up to 1994 Research," Ragged Edge, September/October, 1998, 5-6.
48. Janet Reno and Dick Thornburgh, "ADA-Not a Disabling Mandate," Wall Street Journal, July 26,
1995, AI3.
49. Peter Blanck, "Employment, Integration, Economic Opportunity, and the ADA: Empirical Study
from 1990-1993," 79 Iowa Law Review (1994), 853-54.
50. 42 USC I2II2 (a).
5I. 42 USC 12III (9).
52. 42 USC 12114.
53. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit affirmed the District Court's ruling in 77 F2d
470.
54. 62 F2d по8 (1995).
55. The social work conference, "From Disability to Ability," was held at New York City's Fordham
University on April 14, 1998.
56. 42 USC 12182.
57. 42 USC 12182 (b)(r)(B).
58. 42 USC 12181 (7).
59. 42 USC 12183 (a)(r)(2).
60. 42 USC 12183 (b).
61. 42 USC 12181 (9). In Pascuiti v. New York Yankees (98 Civ. 8186), Southern District (N.Y.) Judge Shira
A. Scheindlin stated that the ADA is "silent as to who bears the burden of proving that [barrier] removal
is readily achievable," and the courts have not yet dealt with the issue.
62. 42 USC 12182 (b)(2)(A)(v).
63. Matthew Diller, "Introduction: Civil Disturbances-Battles for Justice in New York City," Fordham
Urban Law Journal, May 1999, 16(5): 1321.
64. References to the May 1996 Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund's ADA complaint against
United Artists Theatre Circuit from interview with DREDF attorney Diane Lipton, July 3I, 1997.
65. Furthermore, assistive listening devices for people who are hard of hearing became commonplace
in legitimate theaters as well as movie theaters.
66. Frieda Zames, "Unseating People with Disabilities," New York Able, February 1999, IO. "Stadium
seating" is described in Iver Peterson, "Catching On at the Movies: A Clear View for All," New York Times,
Sunday, January 3, 1999, sec. I, p. 27.
67. Unless otherwise indicated, references to the 1996 Justice Department suit against Days Inn from
Betsy Wade, "Disabled Access to Inns at Issue," New York Times, Sunday, April 14, 1996, sec. 5, p. 4.
68. References to the settlement of the five lawsuits brought by the Justice Department against Days Inn
Hotels and its parent company, and John Wodatch's response to the settlement, from http://www.nytimes.
com/reuters/business/business-leisure-cend.html posted December 2, 1999. (Cedant was formed through
a 1997 merger between HFS, Inc., and CUC International, Inc.)
69. "Justice Department Agreement with Friendly's," Washington Fax: President's Committee on Employ-
ment of People with Disabilities, May 1997, 2. References to this agreement from this source.
70. See 42 USC 12184ff.
71. "Greyhound Must Comply," New York Able, November 1998, I. The details of a Department of Justice
settlement on April I, 1999, with the over-the-road bus companies are as follows: new buses purchased or
leased by over-the-road companies that gross over $5.3 million per year (such as Greyhound) must be
wheelchair accessible by November 2000; new buses purchased or leased by over-the-road bus companies
that gross under $5.3 million per year must be wheelchair accessible by October 2001. From a conversation
with Terence Moakley, Associate Executive Director, Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Association, June 22, 2000.
NOTES TO CHAPTER SIX 235
72. Fixed-route vehicles seating sixteen or more must be accessible. Fixed-route vehicles seating
less than sixteen, and demand-response vehicles seating sixteen or more, require either accessibility or
equivalent service.
73. Public service refers to programs or activities of any state or local government such as police and
fire departments. 42 USC 12131.
74. 42 USC 12132 sec. 202.
75. Furthermore, curb cuts provide access to sidewalks not only for wheelchair and scooter users, but
also for older people and small children, as well as for people with baby carriages, strollers, and shopping
carts.
76. Kinney v. Yerusalim, 812 F. Supp. 547 (E.D.Pa.), aff'd 9 F3d 1067 (3d Cir 1993), cert. denied, II4 S.Ct.
I545 (1994).
77. EPVA was still negotiating with New York City government on the curb-cut lawsuit as of this
writing.
78. For example, Pietro Nivola of the Brookings Institution said that the disability laws-these
unfunded federal mandates-are sapping federal money for transportation ("On the Line," WNYC-AM,
February 18, 1999).
79. "TDD," DIA Activist, April 1992, 3.
8o. Newspaper accounts include the following: Bob Liff, "Many Fire Boxes in Watered-Down Plan,"
New York Daily News, April 24, 1996; Dan Janison, "Hizzoner Gets Burned in Alarm-Box Firefight," New
York Post, April 24, 1996; Paul Moses, "Fire Box Compromise," New York Newsday, April 24, 1996.
81. Helen L. v. Didario, 46 F3d 325 (3d Cir 1995).
82. In a class action ADA lawsuit, Center for Disability Advocacy Rights attorney Valerie Bogart-
representing three plaintiffs threatened with being placed in a nursing home against their will-said,
"Congress [in enacting the ADA] has made a very strong statement against institutionalization" (Jennifer
Steinhauer, "Ruling in Favor of Patients Denied 24-Hour Home Care," New York Times, February 17, 1999,
B4).
83. Conversation with ADAPT attorney Stephen Gold, February 2, 1997. There were two plaintiffs in
the Helen L. case, Helen L. and ADAPT. The U.S. Department of Justice joined the plaintiffs in the Helen L.
lawsuit as an amicus curiae.
84. The comparative costs appear in Helen L.
85. See 42 USC I2146ff. Commuter rail systems, such as Amtrak, provide transportation between rather
than within cities.
86. See 47 USC 225 and 47 USC 6II. For a description of the relay system, see "Teletypewriters and
Relay Systems" in chapter 9 of this book.
87. See 42 USC 12201ff.
88. See II8 S.Ct. 2196. Linda Greenhouse, "Supreme Court Considers If Disabilities Act Covers HIV
Case," New York Times, March 31, 1998, AI9.
89. Ibid. "The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has reported that there is no documented
case of a dentist or hygienist being infected with HIV from a patient. Mr. McCarthy [the attorney for the
dentist] said that there were seven such cases and that the risk was understated and underreported."
90. "NCD Bulletin," publication of the National Council on Disability, December 1997, I.
9I. Linda Greenhouse, "Court to Weigh Whether HIV Is a Disability," New York Times, March 23, 1998,
AI.
92. Ibid., AI3.
93. Linda Greenhouse, "Justices See HIV as Disability: Ruling on Bias Law," New York Times, June 26,
1998, AI.
94. Peter T. Kilborn, "Wide Impact Is Seen for Ruling on HIV," New York Times, June 27, 1998, AIO.
95. See the June 22, 1999, Supreme Court rulings in Sutton et al. v. United Air Lines, Inc., Murphy v. United
Parcel Service, Inc., and Albertsons, Inc. v. Kirkingburg later in this chapter.
96. See 118 S.Ct. 1952. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
v. Yeskey from Linda Greenhouse, "Federal Anti-Bias Law Protects States' Disabled Inmates, Court Says,"
New York Times, June 16, 1998, Ar8.
236 NOTES TO CHAPTER SIX
97. The court of appeals did not indicate the type of accommodation required for Yeskey.
98. From "U.S. Supreme Court Considers: Does the ADA Apply to State Prisons?" Disability Network
Newsletter (published by New York Lawyers for the Public Interest), Spring 1998, 5. Comments of the U.S.
Solicitor General on Pennsylvania Department of Corrections v. Yeskey from this source.
99. Although the Yeskey case established the intent of the ADA, a California lawsuit, Wilson v. Armstrong,
dealt with a constitutional question that the U.S. Supreme Court had not yet heard as of this writing: Does
Congress have "the authority to extend the law to the states and to breach state immunity from suit in
federal court?" (Greenhouse, "Federal Anti-Bias Law Protects States' Disabled Inmates, Court Says," AI8).
The Supreme Court is expected to rule on this issue in 2001 in Garrett v. Alabama.
IOO. Carolyn C. Cleveland v. Policy Management Systems Corp., et al., 199 S.Ct. 900 (1999).
IOI. II9 S.Ct. 633.
IO2. II9 S.Ct. 2139.
103. II9 S.Ct. 1331.
104. II9 S.Ct. 2162.
105. "Individuals Belong in the Community, Not Institutions, Says Supreme Court," The Center for
an Accessible Society: Background Briefing, June 22, 1999, I-2. Reference to William Stothers and Amici in
Olmstead from this source. http://www.accessiblesociety.org/bkgdadatitle2.htm
106. Conversation with Stephen Gold, July 19, 1999. References to Gold's response to Olmstead from
this source. The plaintiffs in Olmstead have both a psychiatric and a developmental disability. Rodriguez v.
City of New York (2d Cir 1999) threatens Olmstead, as the defendants argued successfully that the type of
care that people with cognitive disabilities (such as Alzheimer's disease) require to monitor their safety is
a "different service" from the home care provided for those with physical disabilities.
107. Disability advocates are critical of some aspects of the Olmstead ruling: Only when "treatment
professionals have determined that [it] is appropriate" is community placement required. "States can
resist modifications that would fundamentally alter the nature of their services and programs." Without
a definition of "a reasonable pace," states with "a waiting list that moves at a reasonable pace will have a
defense against those who file suit."
108. The Supreme Court decision in Sutton et al. v. United Air Lines, Inc. References to Justice Sandra
Day O'Connor's opinion in Sutton from this source. In writing the majority opinions for the Court in
Murphy v. United Parcel Service, Inc., and Albertsons, Inc. v. Kirkingburg, Justices O'Connor and David Souter,
respectively, referred to the Sutton decision.
109. The Supreme Court dissent in Sutton et al. v. United Air Lines, Inc. Emphasis in original. Unless
otherwise indicated, references to Justice John Paul Stevens's opinion in Sutton from this source.
IIO. Justice Stevens was pointing out that the Court's ruling that the ADA covers only those with
existing unmitigated "substantial disabilities" was as if the Court had ruled that only African Americans
could use the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
III. "Supreme Court Rules in Title I Cases," The Center for an Accessible Society background briefing,
June 22, 1999, I-2. http://www.accessiblesociety.org/bkgdadatitler.htm
II2. Justice For All action alert regarding June 22, 1999, Supreme Court decisions.
II3. Nadina LaSpina, "Supreme Court Rulings: Victory and Defeats," DIA Activist, Summer 1999.
References to LaSpina from this source.
II4. "Morning Edition," National Public Radio, June 29, 1999. References to Peter Thompson from this
source.
115. See "Mainstreaming Public Transit" section of chapter 4 in this book for Davis and "Litigating the
IDEA" section of chapter II of this book for Rowley. The Supreme Court treated the three June 22, 1999,
ADA employment cases as if they were based on a benefits-rather than a civil rights-law.
II6. Philip K. Howard, The Death of Common Sense: How Law is Suffocating America (New York: Random
House, 1994), 150.
II7. Brian Doherty, "Unreasonable Accommodation," Reason, August/September 1995, 19-26. Refer-
ences to Doherty from this source.
II8. Doherty, "Unreasonable Accommodation," 19. Emphasis added.
II9. Interview with Harry Wieder, March 5, 1997.
NOTES TO CHAPTER SEVEN 237
I20. Conversation with Justin Dart, July 22, 1997.
I2I. James Bovard, "The Lame Game," American Spectator, July 1995, 30-33.
I22. Ibid., 31. John Stossel also treats this case as if it were covered by the ADA.
123. Conversation with Justin Dart, July 22, 1997.
124. Stated by Stossel on "20/20," July 19, 1996.
125. During the second presidential debate on October 16, 1996, when Republican candidate Bob Dole
criticized affirmative action, President Clinton responded, "Again I say, think of the Americans with
Disabilities Act. Make an effort to put a ramp up there so someone in a wheelchair can get up." The term
"affirmative action," which does not appear in the ADA, refers to employment issues. The term in the ADA
that applies to the requirement to build ramps is "readily achievable."
126. Proceedings: U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) Meeting, March 12, 1996, 33.
127. Janet Reno and Dick Thornburgh, "ADA-Not a Disabling Mandate," AI3. References to Reno and
Thornburgh from this source.
128. "New Sears Report Shows Decrease in Accommodation Costs," Washington Fax, March 1996, I.
References from the Sears Report from this source.
129. "Four Years After the ADA," Working Age: AARP Newsletter, November/September 1996, 4.
130. Walter Olson, The Excuse Factory: How Employment Law Is Paralyzing the American Workplace (New
York: Free Press, 1997). In his November 28, 1997, op-ed article in the New York Times, Olson, of the Manhattan
Institute, again revealed his misunderstanding of the ADA when he contended that anesthesiologist Frank
Ruhl Peterson's unethical act-stealing narcotics from his patients to feed his own drug habit while
continuing to practice medicine-is protected by the ADA. The ADA does not sanction illegal behavior nor
protect any unqualified workers, including professionals.
131. Reno and Thornburgh, "ADA-Not a Disabling Mandate," AI3.
132. Interview with James Raggio, July 25, 1997.
133. Proceedings, 7.
134. Ibid., 8.
135. John Stossel of "20/20" (ABC-TV) and James Bovard of the Wall Street Journal are cited in Proceedings
as telling "half truths about the ADA" (p. 34).
136. Proceedings, 8I-82.
137. Ibid., 40.
Chapter Seven
I. Edward D. Berkowitz, Disabled Policy: America's Programs for the Handicapped (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1987), 5.
2. The three ADA employment cases are Sutton et al. v. United Air Lines, Inc., Murphy v. United Parcel
Service, Inc., and Albertsons, Inc. v. Kirkingburg. See chapter 6.
3. Philip Shabecoff, quoting Frank Bowe, in "On the Job, Myths Are Reality and Damaging." New
York Times, Sunday, May 13, 1979.
4. References to 1998 Harris Poll from "Follow-up to I994 Research," Ragged Edge, September/October
1998, 5.
5. "Four Years After the ADA," Working Age: AARP Newsletter, 1996, 12(4): 3.
6. Caren Potoker, "Finding a Job Is aJob," DIA Activist, Summer 1999, I-2. References to Potoker from
this source.
7. Claiborne Haughton Jr., director for Civilian Equal Employment Opportunity for the Defense
Department, Proceedings: U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) Meeting, March 12, 1996, 74.
8. Daniel Robert's interview with Raphael Nisan, April 20, 1997.
9. Proceedings, 89. Dr. Margaret Nosek, director of the Center for Research on Women with Disabilities,
said, "Previous research indicated that women with disabilities constitute our nation's most severely
oppressed minority" (press release, Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, July 7, 1997).
IO. Proceedings, 2I.
238 NOTES TO CHAPTER SEVEN
II. Ibid., 7I-72.
I2. Interview with James Weisman, April 8, 1996.
13. Interview with Terence Moakley, April 8, 1996. References to Moakley from this source.
14. Speech by John Wingate at a celebration of the ADA at Gracie Mansion, August IO, 1993. References
to Wingate from this source.
15. Goals and timetables refer to an effort to hire a determined number of qualified members of a
specific population within a specified time period.
I6. Interview with Anne Emerman, July 18, 1996.
17. "Part Three: Core Implications for the Twenty-First Century," Sears Report, I-2. References to the
Sears Report from this source.
18. Nancy Anne Longhurst, The Self-Advocacy Movement by People with Developmental Disabilities: A
Demographic Study and Directory of Self-Advocacy Groups in the United States (Washington, D.C.: American
Association on Mental Retardation, 1994), I-6. References to the definition of "self-advocacy" and the
evolution of the "self-advocacy movement" throughout the United States and British Columbia from this
source.
I9. Mary Hayden, "Absence of Justice," Mouth, March/April 1998, 34.
20. Achieving Independence: The Challenge for the 21st Century (Washington, D.C.: National Council on
Disability, 1996), 99.
2I. Interview with Harvey Pacht, April 3, 1998. References to Pacht from this source.
22. As Bernard Carabello indicates in his job resumé, "With nearly six thousand inmates, Willowbrook
typified the overcrowded, understaffed institutions relied on to 'handle the problem' of the developmentally
disabled." Carabello has championed the movement for self-advocacy for people with developmental
disabilities in New York State and across the nation.
23. The statistic was cited by Charles Lakin, director of the Research and Training Center on Commu-
nity Living in Minneapolis. See Dirk Johnson, "Tight Labor Supply Creates Jobs for the Mentally Disabled,"
New York Times, November I5, 1999, AI, A22.
24. Robert Pear, "Employees Told To Accommodate the Mentally Ill," New York Times, April 30, 1997,
AI, D22. Unless otherwise indicated, description of EEOC Enforcement Guidance from this source.
25. "EEOC Releases Policy Guidance Concerning the ADA and People with Psychiatric Disabilities,"
New York Able, May 1997, 3.
26. "Americans with Disabilities Update," National Council on Disability Bulletin, March 1997, I.
27. EEOC Enforcement Guidance: The Americans with Disabilities Act and Psychiatric Disabilities, March 27,
1997, I.
28. Ann Davis, "Courts Reject Many Mental-Disability Claims," Wall Street Journal, July 22, 1997, B6.
References to outcome of these claims in trial courts from this source.
29. Geanne Rosenberg cites John Parry, director of the American Bar Association's Commission on
Mental and Physical Disabilities Law, in "When the Mind Is the Matter: Mental Disability Cases Pose Painful
Workplace Issues," New York Times, November 7, 1998, CI. Darryl Van Duch indicated in the National Law
Journal (June 29, 1998, Boi) that employers won 86 percent of the disability cases resolved by the EEOC.
Van Duch quoted a study of the American Bar Association Commission on Mental and Physical Disability
Law in which twelve hundred cases filed since 1992 were reviewed.
30. Darryl Van Duch, "Employment and Labor Law" web site http://www.ljextra.com/practice/labor-
employment/0629ada.html, posted June 29, 1998, I. EEOC recommendations from this source.
31. EEOC Enforcement Guidance, I.
32. Pear, "Employers Told To Accommodate the Mentally Ill," AI. References to the National Institute
of Mental Health from this source.
33. Rosenberg, "When the Mind Is the Matter," CI-2. Rosenberg pointed out that "preliminary
numbers for the 1998 fiscal year show yet another increase" for psychiatric disability claims.
34. Sheryl Gay Stolberg, "Breaks for Mental Illness: Just What the Government Ordered," New York
Times, Sunday, May 4, 1997, sec. 4, p. I. Unless otherwise indicated, references to parity for psychiatric
disabilities from this source.
35. Robert Pear, "Insurance Plans Skirt Requirement on Mental Health," New York Times, December
26, 1998, A20. Reference to Ronald E. Bachman from this source.
NOTES TO CHAPTER SEVEN 239
36. Sally L. Satel, "When Work Is the Cure," New York Times, May IO, 1997, Ai9. References to Satel from
this source.
37. Professor Michael Dorf of Columbia University Law School and former Supreme Court clerk to
Justice Anthony Kennedy commented on the Supreme Court's June 1997 ruling that states may confine
sex offenders to mental institutions after they have already completed criminal sentences: "In some ways
that reflects a prejudice against people with mental illness, not just some concern about society" ("On the
Line," WNYC-AM Radio, June 27, 1997).
38. Stolberg; "Breaks for Mental Illness," sec. 4, p. 5, quoting Peter D. Kramer.
39. Peter D. Kramer, "The Mentally Ill Deserve Job Protection," New York Times, May 6, 1997, A21. Unless
otherwise indicated, references to Kramer from this source.
40. Kip Opperman, "Confidentiality: Who Needs To Know?" Connections, February 1997, 8. Opperman,
who describes the requirements for an employee requesting disability accommodation, notes that they
pertain also to college applicants and students.
41. EEOC Enforcement Guidance, 17.
42. Proceedings, 58-61. References to Claudia Center from this source.
43. Fox Butterfield, "Prisons Replace Hospitals for the Nation's Mentally III," New York Times, March
5, 1998, AI, A26. Unless otherwise indicated, references to the criminalization of people with psychiatric
disabilities from this source.
44. "Morning Edition," National Public Radio, June IO, 1997. In response to the ADA, the Police
Executive Research Forum, a coalition of progressive police chiefs, is working with the Justice Department
to create a comprehensive training curriculum and model policy for police departments to deal with people
with "mental illness."
45. Butterfield, "Prisons Replace Hospitals," AI, A26. The Mental Health Bell, symbol of the National
Mental Health Association, was forged out of metal melted down from "barbaric" chains and shackles
formerly used to restrain people with psychiatric disabilities (Michael Faenza, "Chains and Shackles
Replaced with Programs and Services," New York ABLE, January 2000, 26M-27M. Faenza is president
and CEO of the National Mental Health Association).
46. In 9 Highland Road (New York: Vintage Books, 1995), New York Times reporter Michael Winerip
makes a compelling case for the benefits of group homes for people with psychiatric disabilities.
47. References to the July 24, 1998, shooting of two Capitol police officers by John Weston Jr. from
Frank Rich, "This Way Lies Madness," New York Times, July 29, 1998, AI9.
48. Michael Winerip, "Bedlam on the Streets," New York Times, Sunday, May 23, 1999, sec. 6, PP. 45-46.
The numbers in the 1950 to 1998 comparison were adjusted for inflation and population growth. Winerip
adds, "Fewer than half of Americans with schizophrenia receive adequate care according to a 1998 national
survey" (p. 45).
49. Rich, "This Way Lies Madness," A19.
50. Erica Goode, "With Help, Climbing Back from Schizophrenia's Isolation," New York Times, January
30, 1999, AI. Kendra Webdale's violent death, which occurred on January 3, 1999, prompted the adoption
in August 1999 of the Assisted Outpatient Treatment Act in New York State, providing for court-ordered,
involuntary treatment of almost any person at least eighteen years old who has a history of serious mental
illness. The New York Times featured a front-page series of four articles (April 9-12, 2000) on "Rampage
Killers," people with serious psychiatric problems who went on shooting sprees. Given the sensational
examples presented, readers easily could have missed the following statement buried in the jump page
of the third article: "Few of these people [with psychiatric disabilities] commit murder, of course, and
shootings by the mentally ill account for only a tiny fraction of all homicides" (Fox Butterfield, "Hole in
Gun Control Law Lets Mentally Ill Through," New York Times, April II, 2000, A24).
5I. Winerip, "Bedlam on the Streets," 42-44, 70. That the Assisted Outpatient Treatment Act is known
as Kendra's Law is misleading, for as John Gresham, senior litigation counsel for New York Lawyers for
the Public Interest, notes, "It is extremely unlikely that the tragedy of Kendra Webdale would have been
prevented if such a law had existed at the time of her death" (conversation with Gresham, November 18,
1999).
52. Rich, "This Way Lies Madness," Ar9. Rich refers to Sylvia Nasar, A Beautiful Mind: A Biography of John
Forbes Nash, Jr. (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998).
240 NOTES TO CHAPTER SEVEN
53. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Clifford W. Beers and the NMHA from Faenza, "Chains
and Shackles Replaced with Programs and Services," 26M-27M and the Association web site http://www.
nmha.org. Beers's Mind That Found Itself: An Autobiography, which is out of print, is available from Reprint
Services Corporation.
54. Interview with Patrick Cody, vice president for Communications of the NMHA, January 26, 2000.
55. Interview with Judi Chamberlin, March 26, 1998. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Cham-
berlin and the organization of people with psychiatric disabilities ("psychiatric survivors") from this source.
56. Interview with Marvin Spieler, consumer advocate for Mental Health Association of New York
City, January 25, 2000.
57. Judi Chamberlin, "Psychiatric Survivors: Are We Part of the Disability Movement?" The Disability
Rag, March/April 1995, I, 4-6.
58. Interview with Marvin Spieler, January 25, 2000.
59. Chamberlin, "Psychiatric Survivors," 4. In Transforming Madness: New Lives for People Living with
Mental Illness (New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1999), Jay Neugeboren describes people who,
though they have experienced long-term, serious psychiatric disorders, have emerged with meaningful
lives. Yet, as Neugeboren recounts, his own brother has not recovered from this illness.
60. National Public Radio News, May 15, 1998. References to the Archives of General Psychiatry study
from this source.
61. Interview with Richard Greer, March 24, 1998. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Greer and
the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill from this source.
62. The National Alliance for the Mentally III, which has fostered biochemical approaches to mental
illness, has accepted over $II million from the pharmaceutical industry, as reported in Mother Jones (Ken
Silverstein, "Prozac.org," November/December, 1999, 22-23).
63. Interview with Patrick Cody, January 26, 2000.
64. Interview with Marvin Spieler, January 25, 2000. The rebel Connecticut Chapter of the National
Alliance for the Mentally Ill opposes "involuntary outpatient commitment" laws, as indicated by a
statement issued by the chapter's board- of directors in February 2000. The position of the National
Council on Disability regarding "involuntary outpatient commitment" is consistent with that of NMHA
and "psychiatric survivors" ("From Privileges to Rights: People Labeled with Psychiatric Disabilities Speak
for Themselves," the NCD Report, January 20, 2000).
65. "Talk of the Nation," National Public Radio, July 31, 1997. Joseph Rogers is executive director of
the Mental Health Association of Southeastern Pennsylvania and of the affiliated National Mental Health
Consumers' Self-Help Clearinghouse, both in Philadelphia.
66. References to Ken Steele from "Talk of the Nation," National Public Radio, October 25, 1999,
and from Michael Faenza, "Voter Project Goes National," and Ken Steele, "The Making of the Voter
Empowerment Project," both articles in New York City Voices: A Consumer Journal for Mental Health Advocacy,
September/October 1999, I, 4, 7.
67. Surgeon General Dr. David Satcher reported that "while 22 percent of the population has a diag-
nosable mental disorder" and "a range of effective treatments exist for nearly all mental disorders, including
the'most severe, nearly two-thirds of all people [with such disorders] do not seek treatment" because of
lack of information and appropriate insurance coverage as well as fear of stigma. Satcher's definition of
mental disorders includes not only psychiatric but also cognitive disabilities such as Alzheimer's disease,
attention-deficit disorder, or hyperactivity. Robert Pear, "Mental Disorders Common, U.S. Says; Many Not
Treated," New York Times, Sunday, December 13, 1999, AI.
68. The Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988 prohibits discrimination against people with dis-
abilities in housing sales, rentals, or financing; requires reasonable modifications of existing premises;
and mandates basic accessibility in newly constructed multi-family dwellings (Kleo King, Know Your Fair
Housing Rights, published by Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Association, 1997).
69. "60 Minutes: HMO-Managed or Mangled," CBS-TV, January 5, 1997. References to Keith Dixon
and James Wrich from this source.
70. A capitation payment is the fixed price that a managed care organization determines is appropriate
to provide all health care per managed care consumer for a specific year.
NOTES TO CHAPTER SEVEN 24I
71. Robert Pear, "Elderly and Poor Do Worse Under HMO Plans' Care," New York Times, October 2,
1996, AIO.
72. Information about the Fall 1998 changes in the Medicare system from "All Things Considered,"
National Public Radio, June 9, 1998.
73. Rebuilding Medicare for the 21st Century, The National Campaign to Protect, Improve, and Expand
Medicare, 1999, 13.
74. Interview with Lani Sanjek, March 4, 1999. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Sanjek,
Medicare Plus Choice, a two-tier health care system, the Kyl Amendment, and HMO client recruitment
strategies from this source.
75. "All Things Considered," National Public Radio, June 9, 1998. By February 1999, there were forty
million Medicare beneficiaries (Rebuilding Medicare for the 21st Century, 7).
76. Robert Pear, "Panel Finds Medicare Costs Are Underestimated by U.S.," New York Times, June 3,
1998, A23. Reference to Gray Panthers, a national grass-roots organization of older people, from this source.
77. Achieving Independence, 8I.
78. Interview with Elisabeth Benjamin, New York City Legal Aid Attorney, April 16, 1998. References
to the 1993 Tennessee Medicaid plan, which included people with incomes up to three times the poverty
level, from this source.
79. Linda Peeno, "What Is the Value of a Voice?" U.S. News and World Report, March 9, 1998, 40-46.
Reference to "Cadillac care" from this source.
8o. "Frontline," Public Broadcasting System, April 14, 1998.
8I. Interview with Susan Scheer, June 19, 1998. References to Scheer's work at the New York City Public
Advocate's office from this source.
82. Interview with Alexander Wood, June 18, 1998. Reference to the Oxford HMO response to Wood's
request for a pillow from this source. On June 23, 1998, Wood's struggle with Oxford to get an appropriate
wheelchair was described on NBC-TV News.
83. Milt Freudenheim, "Pioneering State for Managed Care Considers Change," New York Times, July
14, 1997, AI, D8. Unless otherwise indicated, references to HMO consumer rights bills from this source.
84. Examples of consumer bill of rights mandates described by Representative Frank Pallone (D-N.J.)
in "On the Line," WNYC-AM, June 9, 1998.
85. David E. Rosenbaum, "House Hears Grim Tales about Managed Care," New York Times, October
8, 1999, A23. While California enacted similar legislation less than two weeks before the House vote, the
House bill still required reconciliation with the Senate version before becoming federal law. See also James
Sterngold, "Trailblazing California Broadens the Rights of Its HMO Patients," New York Times, September
28, 1999, AI, A20. The New York Times stated in an editorial (June 14, 2000), "The Supreme Court's unanimous
decision [on June 12, 2000 in Pegram v. Herdrich, No. 98-1949] that patients cannot sue health maintenance
organizations for giving their doctors financial incentives to hold down costs is a reasoned analysis of
the state of federal law. But the decision also underscores the need for Congress to set standards for
how the managed-care industry operates and to expand the rights of patients who have been harmed by
managed-care decisions, including the denial of care" (p. A26).
86. Betsy McCaughey Ross, "One Man's Battle with Managed Care," New York Times, December 28,
1996, A27.
87. Bob Herbert quoted Dr. Finley in "A Chance to Survive," New York Times, July 4, 1997, AI9.
88. Ross, "One Man's Battle," A27.
89. Interview with Robert Fasano, December 3I, 1996. Oregon state officials have been rethinking the
concept of health care rationing since 1994; nonetheless, doctors and federal Medicaid regulators have
doubts about the program (Peter T. Kilborn, "Oregon Falters on a New Path to Health Care," New York
Times, Sunday, January 3, 1999, AI).
90. Robert Fasano, a social worker, and his wife, an attorney, were forced to reduce their savings
precipitously-a requirement known as "spending down"-so that he would be eligible for Medicaid.
91. References to the exclusion of medication from Medicare from "Morning Edition," National Public
Radio, February 5, 1999.
242 NOTES TO CHAPTER SEVEN
92. "Medical Equipment," New York Times, January 20, 1999, AI2. DeSario v. Thomas, 97-6027 (2d Cir
1998) became Slekis v. Thomas, 98-5070 (S.Ct. 1999) when the case was reviewed by the U.S. Supreme Court.
References to the September 1998 Health Care Financing Administration letter to Medicaid directors from
this source.
93. Unless otherwise indicated, references to DeSario v. Thomas from Jonathan Rabinowitz, "Court
Panel's Ruling Limiting Medicaid Services Is Appealed," New York Times, April 7, 1998, B6.
94. Justice For All email [email protected], January 22, 1999. Reference to the amicus brief of the
coalition of eighty-one state and national organizations (represented by the Greater Upstate New York
Law Project and the Legal Aid Society of New York City) supporting the plaintiffs from this source.
95. Interview with Melinda Dutton, February 24, 1999. References to the effect of the Balanced Budget
Act of I997 on the safety net for children with disabilities from this source.
96. Peter T. Kilborn, "Disabled Children Feel Pain of Cuts," New York Times, March 24, 1997, Aro.
97. Robert Pear, "Fearing Errors, U.S. Will Review Cutoff in Aid to Disabled Youth," New York Times,
December 18, 1997, A21.
98. Accepted by members of Congress such as former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), Repre-
sentative Gerald Klecxka (D-Wisc.) and news commentators such as Sam Donaldson, Diane Sawyer, and
Mike Wallace, the 1994 bizarre accusation-that poor parents were coaching their children to feign "mental
disorders" in order to receive SSI benefits-was totally discredited by Joyce Purnick in "Throwing Out the
Disabled, Or the Fraud?" New York Times, August 8, 1996, BI. Names of legislators and news commentators
who accepted this discredited charge from Ken Silverstein and Alexander Cockburn, Counterpunch, July 15,
1995, I.
99. Pear, "Fearing Errors," A21. References to the Zebley ruling from Marta Russell's Beyond Ramps:
Disability at the End of the Social Contract (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press, 1998), 156. See Sullivan v.
Zebley, 493 U.S. 52I (1990).
100. This Medicaid waiver program, known as the Katie Beckett program, was established in the late
1970S and early 1980s for children with severe disabilities or illnesses by Family Voices, the national advocacy
organization founded by Katie Beckett's mother, Julie Beckett.
IOI. Children with disabilities whose immigrant status prevent them from receiving Medicaid generally
do not receive CHIP benefits.
IO2. For example, in 1997 in New York State, 77 percent of uninsured children who were eligible for
Medicaid or CHIP were not enrolled.
103. Achieving Independence, 85.
104. Melvyn R. Tanzman, "Work Incentives and Long Term Care Programs Proposed by President
Clinton," New York Able, February 1999, 8.
105. Achieving Independence, 8I.
106. Robert Pear, "Medicare Cuts Would Reduce At-Home Care for Patients," New York Times, February
9, 1997, A30. Unless otherwise indicated, references to complex medical services provided in the home from
this source.
107. Ian Fisher, "Families Provide Medical Care, Tubes and All," New York Times, June 7, 1998, AI.
108. Although in "Medicare Cuts Would Reduce At-Home Care for Patients," A30, Pear discusses
the threat to only Medicare recipients of long-term home health care, Medicaid beneficiaries are also
threatened.
109. "MarketPlace," National Public Radio, March 12, 1998. References to 1997 cuts in home health care
from this source.
IIO. Interview with New York City comptroller Alan Hevesi, July 21, 1997.
III. Unless otherwise indicated, references to recommendations of the NCD regarding Medicare and
Medicaid from Achieving Independence, 90-91.
II2. Sections 503 and 504 apply to federal contractors and recipients of federal funds.
II3. Berkowitz, Disabled Policy, 106.
II4. Interview with Lani Sanjek, March 4, 1999.
II5. Anne Emerman, "Testimony on the Future of Medicare," New York Able, January 1999, 7.
II6. Achieving Independence, 86.
NOTES TO CHAPTER EIGHT 243
II7. Tanzman, "Work Incentives," 8.
I18. References to the NCD recommendations regarding Medicaid and health care ombudsman from
Achieving Independence, 90-92.
II9. Achieving Independence, 89. The federal Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), the agency
that oversees Medicare and Medicaid, is the largest purchaser of managed care in the country ("Rising
Medicare Standards," New York Times, Sunday, December 29, 1996, sec. 4, P. 8).
I20. Achieving Independence, 88-90.
I2I. Former employees on SSDI receive Medicare after two years, even if they have not reached the age
of sixty-five. For a nine-month trial period, a person on SSDI may earn more than seven hundred dollars a
month and still remain on SSDI. If that person earns more than seven hundred dollars a month for longer
than nine months, then that individual may lose SSDI and therefore Medicare.
I22. Achieving Independence, 83.
123. Ibid., 74.
124. Proceedings, 30-31. Rebecca Ogle also points out the need for intensive education, habilitation, and
rehabilitation services to prepare young people with disabilities for mainstream employment.
125. References to WIIA from John F. Harris, "House Passes Job Benefit for Disabled," Washington Post,
October 20, 1999, Ao2, and "WIIA Vote Counts," email [email protected], November 22, 1999.
126. Supplemental Security Income, a federal welfare program initiated in 1974, is provided to disabled
or older individuals, ineligible for Social Security Disability Insurance, who cannot work. Unless people
have worked under the social security system for no less than ten years (forty three-month periods, not
necessarily consecutively), they are ineligible for SSDI.
127. References to Paul Longmore's employment problems from "Beyond Affliction: What's Work Got
To Do with It" (aired at different times in various parts of the country on National Public Radio during
the week of May 4, 1998).
128. President Clinton's January 14, 1999, remarks on his Disability Initiative to encourage employment
of people with disabilities. See Suzanne Christy, "President Includes Disabled: $2 Billion Budgeted to
Bolster Employment Opportunities," New York Able, March 1999, I and I2.
129. Proceedings, 13.
130. Sections 50I and 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 require affirmative action to employ
qualified people with disabilities in the federal government. Some local governments have affirmative
action requirements similar to that of the federal government. The ADA, which applies to employment in
the private sector, however, does not mandate affirmative action.
131. Proceedings, 75.
Chapter Eight
I. Nat Hentoff quoted Margaret Mead in "We Hear the Death Train Coming," Village Voice, February
4, 1997, 12. See also Michael Specter, "The Dangerous Philosopher," The New Yorker, September 6, 1999,
46-55. For a comprehensive analysis of some of the cases and issues discussed in this chapter, see Gregory
E. Pence, Classic Cases in Medical Ethics (New York: McGraw Hill, 2000).
2. "People with physical and mental disabilities still continue to be segregated, institutionalized,
tortured in the name of behavior management, abused, raped, euthanized and murdered" (Norman Kunc
and Emma Van Der Klift, "A Credo For Support," Moebius Syndrome News, 1995).
3. Although he is frequently referred to as Dr. Jack Kevorkian, not only was his Michigan medical
license revoked in 1991, but also "the only remedies he 'prescribes' are poisons" (Michael Betzold, "The
Selling of Dr. Death," The New Republic, May 26, 1997, 22-23).
4. Mark O'Brien, "Maybe You'd Rather Die Than Be Me," DIA Activist, January 1997, 3.
5. Nadina LaSpina quoted Diane Coleman and Stephen Gold in "We Want To Live," New York Able,
January 1997, 7.
6. The CBS program "60 Minutes" presented Jack Kevorkian's videotape of his euthanasia of Thomas
Youk. Although in their response to this "60 Minutes" broadcast producers of the November 23, 1998,
244 NOTES TO CHAPTER EIGHT
ABC program "Nightline" decided against disability representation, on February 28, 1999, "60 Minutes"
presented people living meaningful lives with ALS.
7. Diane Coleman, letter to Not Dead Yet Members and Supporters, January 25, 1999.
8. Pam Belluck, "Dr. Kevorkian Is a Murderer, the Jury Finds," New York Times, March 27, 1999, AI, A9.
Jack Kevorkian was found guilty of murder in Pontiac, Michigan, on March 26, 1999.
9. Michael Betzold, Appointment with Dr. Death (Troy, Mich.: Momentum Books, 1993). References to
Jack Lessenberry from Michael Betzold, "The Selling of Dr. Death," New Republic, May 26, 1997, 22-28.
IO. "Lessenberry has also published pieces flattering toward Kevorkian and Fieger in Esquire, George,
Vanity Fair and other publications" (Betzold, "The Selling of Dr. Death," 25).
II. Betzold, "The Selling of Dr. Death," 22.
12. Nat Hentoff, "Class Warfare to the Death," Village Voice, May 21, 1996, I2.
13. John Gresham of New York Lawyers for the Public Interest provided information about Vacco v.
Quill, II7 S.Ct. 2293 (1997). See Washington v. Glucksberg, II7 S.Ct. 2258 (1997).
14. LaSpina, "We Want To Live," 7.
15. Nat Hentoff, "Death's Enemy: Yale Kamisar," Village Voice, May 28, 1996, IO. Hentoff paraphrased
from Kamisar's Minnesota Law Review article, "Some Non-Religious Views Against Proposed 'Mercy Killing'
Legislation."
16. Hentoff, "Death's Enemy." Hentoff quoted from Kamisar's essay that appeared in the University of
Detroit Mercy Law Review.
17. Hentoff, "Death's Enemy." Hentoff quoted Robert Beezer.
18. Information from annotated list of participating law firms distributed at June 19, 1997, luncheon
of New York Lawyers for the Public Interest.
19. "Excerpts from Court's Decision Upholding Bans on Assisted Suicide," New York Times, June 27,
1997, AI8.
20. David France, quoting Larry Kramer, in "A Life-and-Death Decision," New York Times, January 13,
1997, 26-27. Discussion of The Normal Heart as a spur to Larry Kramer's support of Jack Kevorkian's assisted
suicides from this source.
2I. "Small Group of Doctors Supports Concept of Assisting in Suicide," New York Times, October 3I,
1996, A20.
22. "60 Minutes," CBS Television, January 5, 1997. References to publications by Timothy Quill and
Lonnie Shavelson in the New England Journal of Medicine from this source. See Timothy Quill, "Death and
Dignity: A Case of Individualized Decision Making," NEJM, 324(10) (March 7, 1991): 691-94.
23. "A Poll of AIDS Doctors Finds That Many Help in Suicides," New York Times, February 6, 1997, AI8.
New York Times reference to this survey of San Francisco Bay Area physicians from February 5, 1997, article
published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
24. References to Sheila Diamond and Dr. Ira Byock from "Nightline," ABC-TV, January 9, 1997.
25. References to Kathleen Foley from Paul Wilkes, "The Next Pro-Lifers," New York Times Magazine,
Sunday, July 21, 1996, 45.
26. Daniel Carr and Nelson Hendler stated their views on pain management on the WNYC-AM
program "On the Line," March 24, 1997. References to Carr and Hendler from this source.
27. Robert Pear, "Clinton Names Panel to Draft Health Consumer Bill of Rights," New York Times,
March 27, 1997, BII.
28. Brian Lehrer, well-informed radio host of "On the Line" (WNYC-AM), offered this observation
during his interview with Carr and Hendler.
29. "Reeve Feels Others Show As Much Courage," Brainerd Daily Dispatch, October 28, 1996, 6A.
30. David Peterson, "Reeve's Honesty Charms His Audience," Minneapolis Star Tribune, October 28, 1996,
AI2. When a television commercial using computer animation showed Reeve walking, "many advocates
for the handicapped were aghast, maintaining that no such cure is in the offing, and that the spot cruelly
offered false hope to people who should be concentrating on adapting to life with their disabilities"
(Bernard Stamler, "Christopher Reeve Is Sanguine about His Madison Avenue Connections, but Some Are
Skeptical," New York Times, June I5, 2000, CIO).
31. Information about and comments of Marca Bristo from authors' April 30, 1998, interview with
Bristo.
NOTES TO CHAPTER EIGHT 245
32. "Superman's Telethon," Ragged Edge, May/June 1998, 27.
33. "Reeve Feels Others Show As Much Courage," 6A.
34. Christopher Reeve, Still Me (New York: Random House, 1998).
35. John Hockenberry, Moving Violations: War Zones, Wheelchairs, and Declarations of Independence (New
York: Hyperion, 1995), 204.
36. Daniel Robert, "A Rock and A Hard Place-Superman, Dr. Death and You and Me," New York Able,
February 1997, II.
37. Martin S. Pernick, The Black Stork: Eugenics and the Death of "Defective" Babies in American Medicine
and Motion Pictures (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996).
38. Stated by Martin S. Pernick in "Tomorrow's Children: Beyond Affliction: The Disability History
Project," National Public Radio, May 1998.
39. Pernick, The Black Stork, 5-6.
40. Ibid., 7. Although the New York Times supported Haiselden on eugenics, the newspaper eventually
took issue with his publicity-seeking.
4I. Pernick, The Black Stork, I6.
42. Robert J. Lifton, The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide (New York: Basic
Books, 1986), 23.
43. Ibid., 23. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Fritz Lenz from this source. Lenz was referring to
the research, such as that at Cold Spring Harbor, New York, guided by Charles B. Davenport and financed
by the Carnegie Institution in Washington and by Mary Harriman.
44. Virginia Kallianes and Phyllis Rubenfeld, "Disabled Women and Reproductive Rights," Disability
and Society, 1997, 12(2): 212.
45. Quoted in footnote in Lifton, The Nazi Doctors, 23. Reference to "national degeneration" from this
source.
46. Diane Coleman, J.D., and Carol Gill, Ph.D., testified before the Constitution Subcommittee of the
U.S. House Judiciary Committee on April 29, 1996. References to Coleman and Gill from this source.
47. The 1996 Israeli documentary Healing by Killing, produced and directed by Nitzan Aviram, pointed
out that without "the technical know-how from euthanasia" and "euthanasia teams" already in place, the
Holocaust may not have been possible.
48. In By Trust Betrayed (Arlington, Va.: Vandamere Press, 1995, 202-3), Hugh Gregory Gallagher credited
this reversal to many people who risked their lives: disabled people themselves, as well as others, including
some clergy, some doctors and nurses, and even some Nazi party members. While the execution of Jews,
gypsies, homosexuals, and others was not condemned by most German people, many were troubled by the
killing of what they considered to be "German" people with disabilities.
49. Marta Russell, Beyond Ramps: Disability at the End of the Social Contract (Monroe, Maine: Common
Courage Press, 1998), 27-28. References to the Nuremberg Court from this source.
50. In Freedom To Die (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1998), authors Derek Humphry and Mary Clement
imply that there indeed is a duty to die: "Is there, in fact, a duty to die-a responsibility within the family
unit-that should remain voluntary but expected nevertheless?" (p. 313).
5I. Michael Betzold in a letter published in the June 30, 1997, New Republic-commenting on his May
26, 1997, New Republic article, "The Selling of Dr. Death"-described Kevorkian as "a man who advocates
medical experiments as part of euthanasia for people who are disabled and depressed."
52. Coleman and Gill, testimony before the Constitution Subcommittee of the House Judiciary
Committee on April 29, 1996. In her July 14, 1998, testimony before the Constitution Subcommittee of
the House Judiciary Committee, Coleman indicated that although Kevorkian's acts violate Michigan law
according to the state Supreme Court, he is "still killing people with non-terminal disabilities, and now
even harvesting their organs."
53. John Hess, formerly of the New York Times, argued on WNYC-AM on "New York and Company,"
June 6, 1996, that in the United States, the economy is currently booming, and therefore scarcity is a
manufactured product of a conservative social agenda.
54. Humphry and Clement, Freedom to Die, 313.
55. John Hardwig, "Is There a Duty to Die?" Hastings Center Report, March-April 1997, 27(2): 8o.
Emphasis added.
246 NOTES TO CHAPTER EIGHT
56. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Anne Emerman's views on physician-assisted suicide
from her January IO, 1997, conversation with authors. Wilkes, "The Next Pro-Lifers," 42. Wilkes quoted Yale
Kamisar.
57. Ezekiel J. Emanuel, associate professor of ethics and medicine at Harvard Medical School, and
Linda L. Emanuel, vice president for ethical standards at the American Medical Association, "Assisted
Suicide? Not In My State," New York Times, July 24, 1997, A2I. This article appeared before the referendum
victory for physician-assisted suicide in Oregon on November 4, 1997. See Timothy Egan, "Right To Die:
In Oregon, Opening a New Front in the World of Medicine," New York Times, November 6, 1997, A26.
58. Neil A. Lewis, "Reno Lifts Barrier to Oregon's Law on Aided Suicide," New York Times, June 6, 1998,
Ar.
59. Emanuel and Emanuel, "Assisted Suicide?", A21. References to the Emanuels from this source.
60. France, "A Life-and-Death Decision," 26. Sheryl Gay Stolberg, in "Assisted Suicides Are Rare, Survey
of Doctors Finds," New York Times, April 23, 1998, AI. Stolberg, offering statistics that conflicted with those
presented in France's article, indicated that although only 5 percent of physicians admitted that they have
given lethal injections, more say they would do so if such action were legally sanctioned.
6I. Timothy Egan, "Right to Die," A26.
62. Lewis, "Reno Lifts Barrier," AI. References to Reno's ruling on Oregon's assisted suicide law from
this source. Although according to the Associated Press, November II, 1997, "Administrator Thomas
Constantine [of the Drug Enforcement Administration] warned that doctors who take part in assisted
suicides would be violating federal narcotics law and risk losing their licenses to prescribe drugs," Reno
reversed that position on June 5, 1998.
63. Interview with Anne Emerman, November 8, 1997.
64. Because on October 27, 1999, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill that would make
prescribing lethal drugs for terminally-ill patients a federal crime, elected Oregon officials considered a
legal challenge that could bring the issue to the U.S. Supreme Court. See Robert Pear, "House Backs Ban on
Using Medicine To Aid in Suicide," New York Times, AI, A29; and Sam Howe Verhovek, "Oregon Considers
Challenge," New York Times, October 28, 1999, A29.
65. Summary of the warning posed by Herbert Hendin-author of Seduced by Death: Doctors, Patients
and the Dutch Cure (New York: W. W. Norton, 1996)-from Charles E. Rosenberg's "Slippery Slope," New York
Times, Sunday, November 24, 1996, sec. 7, P. 33. In "Kevorkian on Trial," Psychiatric Times, February 1999,
16(2), Hendin related the "slippery slope" danger to Kevorkian's euthanasia of Thomas Youk.
66. Coleman, letter to Not Dead Yet Members and Supporters, January 25, 1999. References to
Compassion In Dying from this source.
67. Diane Coleman, testimony before the Constitution Subcommittee of the House Judiciary Com-
mittee, July 14, 1998.
68. Interview with Diane Coleman, March II, 1999.
69. Coleman's 1998 Congressional testimony.
70. Humphry and Clement, Freedom to Die, 313.
71. Coleman's 1998 Congressional testimony.
72. Editorial, New York Times, February 27, 1999. References to this comparison from this source.
73. Joseph Shapiro, "Casting a Cold Eye on 'Death with Dignity," U.S. News & World Report, March I,
1999, 56. References to Shapiro's discussion of the 1999 Oregon report from this source. Shapiro quoted
Kathleen Foley.
74. Unless otherwise indicated, discussion of legalizing disability discrimination from Diane Cole-
man's July 14, 1998, testimony before the Constitution Subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee.
75. 42 USC 12101 (a)(7); emphasis added.
76. Interview with Coleman, March II, 1999.
77. Ezekiel Emanuel, "Whose Right To Die?" Atlantic Monthly, March 1997, 73-79. Emanuel's references
to the danger of the legalization of physician-assisted suicide for vulnerable populations from this source.
78. David E. Rosenbaum, "Americans Want a Right To Die or So They Think," New York Times, Sunday,
June 8, 1997, sec. 4, p. 3. "The better off financially and the better educated
the
more
likely
[people]
were
to favor legal assisted suicide," Rosenbaum noted.
NOTES TO CHAPTER NINE 247
79. Emanuel discusses the effect of budgetary pressures on decisions regarding physician-assisted
suicide. Both Dr. Kathleen Foley and Dr. Joanne Lynn (editor of Handbook for Mortals: Guidance for People
Facing Serious Illness [New York: Oxford University Press, 1999]) stated on "The Open Mind" (PBS-TV, aired
November II, 1998, and March 3, 1999) that these demographics will forge a cultural shift in attitudes
toward death and dying. As Lynn indicated, two generations ago people died suddenly, but now they tend
to "die by inches."
80. Rosenbaum, "Americans Want a Right to Die," 3. References to Michael J. Sandel from this source.
81. Wilkes, "The Next Pro-Lifers," 26.
82. Coleman's 1998 congressional testimony.
83. Rosenbaum, "Americans Want a Right to Die," 3.
84. Nancy Rolnick, "The Right to Live/The Right To Die," New York Able, December 1995, 12, I9.
References to Rolnick from this source.
85. References to the Latimer case from "Murder of Disabled Daughter Draws I-year Sentence," Ragged
Edge, January/February, 1998, 5. Bioethicist Adrienne Asch at a December 5, 1997, Disabilities Studies
Colloquium at New York City's Hunter College School of Social Work stated, "A father killing his twelve-
year-old daughter is neither personal assistance services nor physician-assisted suicide; we have other words
for that."
86. Mary Jane Owen, "The Elizabeth Bouvia Suicide Case: Is Psychiatry Only for Able-Bodied?" The
Detroit News, February 6, 1984, sec. A, P. II.
87. While Joseph P. Shapiro in No Pity: People with Disabilities Forging a New Civil Rights Movement (New
York: Times Books, 1993), 274, indicated that in 1988 Bouvia was wishing for death, Richard B. Treanor in
We Overcame: The Story of Civil Rights for Disabled People (Falls Church, Va.: Regal Direct Publishing, 1993),
264, stated that she was a happy person in 1988.
88. Mary Jane Owen, "We're Cowards to Think This Suicide Is Right," The Washington Post, February
12, 1984, Bos (in "Sunday Outlook").
89. Mary Johnson, "Life and Death: Unanswered Questions," The Ragged Edge (Louisville: The Advocado
Press, 1994), 187-93. References to comments on this case by Kenneth Bergstedt and Edward Roberts from
this source.
90. "Around the Nation," Incitement, July 1992, 8(2): 15. In chapter 9 of No Pity, Joseph Shapiro offers a
thorough discussion of this case.
9I. Republic Bank funded these yearly awards ceremonies honoring two or three students for their
accomplishments, as well as several adults, who have served the disability community in New York City.
92. Frank Bowe, "Handicapping America: Barriers to Disabled People," Disability: Our Challenge, John
P. Hourihan, ed. (New York: Teachers College, Columbia University, 1979), 90.
93. Michael White and John Gribbin, Stephen Hawking: A Life in Science (New York: Penguin Books,
1993), 15. White and Gribbin quoted from Dennis Overbye's Lonely Hearts of the Cosmos (New York: Little
Brown, 1999).
94. A Brief History of Time, 84 min., 1992, Paramount Pictures Corporation. Comments of Hawking's
colleague from this source.
95. Howard B. Hain, quoting Stephen Nachtheim, in "Light Years Ahead: One-on-One with Stephen
Hawking," We, October 1997, 14.
96. Malcolm W. Browne, "A Bet on a Cosmic Scale and a Concession, Sort Of," New York Times, February
12, 1997, AI, A22.
97. Hain, "Light Years Ahead," 14, quoting Hawking.
98. Diane Coleman's mention of "Final Exit" is a reference to Derek Humphry's bestseller, the right-
to-die movement's call to arms, Final Exit (Eugene, Ore.: Hemlock Society, 1991).
Chapter Nine
I. Richard B. Treanor in We Overcame: The Story of Civil Rights for Disabled People (Falls Church, Va.:
Regal Direct Publishing, 1993), 122, quoted Steven A. Holmes, New York Times, March 18, 1990. Holmes
248 NOTES TO CHAPTER NINE
described technological innovations for "people with severe handicaps." Some discussion of the impact of
technology on veterans is included in chapter IO.
2. Wolfgang Saxon, Obituaries, "Ronald L. Mace, 58, Designer of Buildings Accessible to All," New
York Times, July 13, 1998, B9. References to Mace-who was instrumental in the passage of the 1988 Fair
Housing Amendments Act and the 1990 ADA-from this source.
3. Definition of universal design (memorandum by Scott Shanklin-Peterson, senior deputy chairman
of the National Endowment for the Arts) from an accessibility project initiated in September 1997 at The
Millay Colony for the Arts.
4. Ralf Hotchkiss is quoted in Report on the "American Creativity at Risk" Symposium, Rhode Island,
November 1996, 16.
5. Description of universal design from Beyond Access, a film about the Millay Colony for the Arts.
6. From material distributed-by the Center for Universal Design at North Carolina State University-
at the June 19-20, 1998, New York City conference. See also Jim Davis, "Design for the 21st Century
Starts Now," Ragged Edge, November/December 1998, IO-14; and Jim Davis, "Developing an Accessible
Penn Station," New York Able, March 1998, 3, 16.
7. Frank Bowe, "Handicapping America: Barriers to Disabled People," Disability: Our Challenge, John
P. Hourihan, ed. (New York: Teachers College, Columbia University, 1979), 91.
8. Editorial, New York Times, November 13, 1992.
9. Peter Hellman, "Toilet Wars," New York magazine, May 3, 1993, 38-43.
IO. "20/20," ABC-TV, March 12, 1993.
II. Philip K. Howard, The Death of Common Sense: How Law is Suffocating America (New York: Random
House, 1994), 116-17. Howard's references to the New York City street toilet issue from this source.
I2. A German company placed one of its accessible street toilets near City Hall in Manhattan for about
six months in 1995. Although this experiment complied with the ADA, the company did not contract with
New York City to set up street toilets throughout the five boroughs.
13. References to Bravin v. Mount Sinai Medical Center, 1999, (S.D.N.Y.) from Barbara Stewart, "Judge
Finds Bias at Hospital in Dealings with Deaf Man," New York Times, April 17, 1999, B4. Stewart quoted the
Bravins' lawyer. Just as interpreters are required for people who speak foreign languages, the ADA mandates
sign language interpreters for deaf people in hospitals. Disability advocates have suggested that hospitals
and private doctors should have access to a service providing a pool of sign language interpreters.
14. References to this grant from information provided by Eileen Healy, president of the board of
CIDNY; Marilyn Saviola, executive director of CIDNY; and Gerry Zuzze, CIDNY coordinator of Outreach
and Training.
15. The exact number of major cities with accessible taxis is difficult to determine because they are
springing up continually. The June 29, 2000, proposal by New York City Taxi and Limousine Commissioner
Diane Magrath McKechnie states that as of July I, 2001, all vehicles purchased for use as yellow taxis must be
accessible to people with disabilities, including wheelchair users. By July I, 2001, the livery services provided
to wheelchair users must be equivalent to the services available to others. Taxi and livery companies
are exempted from this requirement if they offer an alternative accepted by the Taxi and Limousine
Commission. From Taxi and Limousine Commission hearing, June 29, 2000.
16. According to deaf advocate Martin Leff, the reason it took so long for the TTY to be used in great
numbers was "sleepy people and no money. Business woke up when it saw the financial potential. By 2000,
approximately two million TTYs have been sold at an average price of two hundred dollars each."
17. Howard, The Death of Common Sense, 5. Howard's discussion of the incident is incomplete. The New
York City Department of Buildings and the Missionaries of Charity accepted a compromise: the elevator,
paid for by the city, would go only to the second floor, where all necessary services for homeless people
who could not negotiate steps would be provided.
18. As Anne Emerman-the director of the Mayor's Office for People with Disabilities at that time-
revealed in a August 17, 1997, interview, Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity stated their reason for
leaving New York City in a letter to Emerman.
I9. Usually, it is easier to attain compliance in Title II ADA issues like curb cuts than Title III ADA
issues like One-Step. In the former, it is necessary to deal with one municipal agency whereas in the latter, it
NOTES TO CHAPTER NINE 249
is necessary to deal with each individual entity, one by one. Richard Connette-winner of the first Richard
Gelman award conferred on an individual who has made a major contribution benefiting the disability
population in New York State-reorganized the One-Step Campaign in New York City in 1994.
20. Ralf D. Hotchkiss, "Ground Swell on Wheels," The Sciences (July/August 1993), 16.
2I. Unless otherwise indicated, references to wheelchair technology and the work of Ralf D. Hotchkiss
is based on an interview with Hotchkiss and his wife, Deborah Kaplan, an attorney formerly at World
Institute on Disability, aired in 1993 on "Disabled In Action Speaks," WBAI-FM.
22. Ralf Hotchkiss is quoted in "Pioneering Mobility," Graduating Engineer (December 1994), 31. The
need for a new approach to wheelchairs and scooters even in the United States is evident to most mobility-
impaired drivers since they can much more easily get their cars repaired than their wheelchairs or scooters.
23. More appropriate for most quadriplegics than computerized walking stimulators, motorized
wheelchairs are required by many in this population.
24. Andrew Wyeth, "Christina's World," exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City
since 1973.
25. John Hockenberry, Moving Violations: War Zones, Wheelchairs, and Declarations of Independence (New
York: Hyperion, 1995). Spoke Man was presented at the American Place Theater in New York City, from
February 2I to March 24, 1996.
26. References to Ira Colchin from Walter H. Waggoner, "Blind Are Trained to Read Instruments in
Newark Program," New York Times, Sunday, December 18, 1977, sec. II, PP. 12-13, and to William Skawinski
from interview, June I9, 2000. References to multiple chemical sensitivity from Ben Van Wagner, "Science
for People with Disabilities-President's Column," Science Is for Everyone, Fall 1995, I-2.
27. Hofstra professor Frank Bowe, who is deaf and a disability advocate, uses similar terminology to
indicate the remarkable benefits of technology to people with sensory impairments. The Kurzweil reader
changes print on paper to speech while the voice synthesizer changes print on the computer screen to
speech.
28. Dolores King, "Changing Attitudes," Disabled In Action Activist, Spring 1999.
29. References to the computer as an accommodation for autism and comments of Temple Grandin
from Harvey Blume, "Autism & the Internet" http://www.media-in-transition.mit.edu/arricles/blume.
html, IO-II.
30. Temple Grandin, Thinking in Pictures: And Other Reports from My Life with Autism (New York: Vintage,
1996).
3I. In order for Dragon Dictate to work properly, not only must the individual learn the appropriate
computer commands, but also the computer must become familiar with the individual's voice patterns,
vocabulary, and phrasing.
32. The increased use of computers, especially since the mid-1980s, has resulted in a growing number
of professionals with disorders that were formerly associated only with blue-collar workers-for example,
repetitive strain injuries such as carpal tunnel syndrome and tendinitis (from interview with Michael
1997). McCann, Ph.D., board member of the New York Committee on Occupational Safety and Health, April 23,
33. Bruce Felton, "Technologies That Enable the Disabled," New York Times, Sunday, September 14,
1997, sec. 3, p. II.
34. "In Virtual Reality, Tools for the Disabled," New York Times, April 13, 1994, Cr, C6.
35. References to Judy Brewer, the May 1998 New Orleans Conference of the President's Council on
Employment of People with Disabilities, Paul Schrader, and the cost of add-on computer technology, from
"Talk of the Nation, Science Friday," National Public Radio, May 8, 1998. Although "people with disabilities
are perhaps the single segment of society with the most to gain from the new technologies of the electronic
age
only one-quarter of people with disabilities own computers, and only one- tenth ever make use of
the internet." H. Stephen Kaye, "Computer and Internet Use among People with Disabilities," Disability
Statistics Center: Report I3, March 2000 http://www.dsc.uscf.edu. Kaye says the reason for the problem is
that many people with disabilities are poor, and so they cannot afford the kind of computer they need, the
specialized software to make it accessible to them, and the monthly charges of an internet service provider.
36. One of the services provided by the American Foundation for the Blind is the evaluation of
250 NOTES TO CHAPTER NINE
assistive technology for blind people. The National Federation of the Blind filed an ADA lawsuit in Boston
Federal District Court against America Online for failing to provide blind people with accessible services
compatible with "screen access programs that convert text into synthesized speech or Braille" (Pamela
Mendels, "Advocates for Blind, in Suit, Say AOL Impedes Access to Internet," New York Times, November 5,
1999, A25).
37. Peter D. Kramer, Listening to Prozac (New York: Viking, 1993). In "New and Old Depression Drugs
Are Found Equal," Erica Goode reports that a new government study revealed that "Prozac and other drugs
of its generation are not any better-or any worse-than older compounds in treating major depression"
(New York Times, March 19, 1999, Ar).
38. Peter D. Kramer, Should You Leave (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1997). Kramer begins chapter IO
with this observation.
39. Peter R. Breggin, Toxic Psychiatry (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1991). Dr. Sherwin B. Nulands
is concerned about the assumption of "a psychopharmacological fantasy that, in the name of science,
offers
simple, painless self-transformation if you take the right pill" ("The Pill of Pills," New York Review
of Books, June 9, 1994, 4).
40. Barbara Strauch, "Use of Antidepression Medicine for Young Patients Has Soared," New York
Times, Sunday, August IO, 1997, AI, 24. References to Dr. Leon Eisenberg from this source. The Journal of
the American Medical Association reported that between 1991 and 1995, the number of teenagers taking
antidepressants doubled and the number of two- to four-year-old children taking some form of Ritalin (a
psychostimulant used to treat children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) tripled ("Nightline,"
ABC-TV News, February 24, 2000).
41. "All Things Considered," National Public Radio News, May 26, 1998.
42. References to experiments with drugs that provoke psychotic symptoms from Philip J. Hilts,
"Psychiatric Researchers Under Fire." New York Times, May 19, 1998, FI, F5. On January 19, 1999, Lynda
Richardson ("New Rules Proposed for Medical Experiments on Mentally Ill," New York Times, B4) reported
that "a [New York State] advisory panel had proposed new rules that would allow medical experiments
involving some risk to be performed on mentally ill patients and others incapable of giving consent."
43. References to Peter Weiden, author of Conquering Schizophrenia: A Father, His Son, and a Medical
Breakthrough (New York: Knopf, 1998), from New York and Company, WNYC-AM, February IO, 1998.
44. Marvin Spieler, "A Car Ride to Hell," New York City Voices: A Consumer Journal for Mental Health
Advocacy, July/August 1999, 14.
45. Interview with Samuel W. Anderson, Ph.D., Associate Research Scientist, Columbia University and
Director of Communication Sciences Laboratory, New York Psychiatric Institute, August 13, 1997.
46. Interview with audiologist Dr. Ernest Zelnick, Ph.D., December 23, 1997. Zelnick points out that
cochlear implants are appropriate only for the small population for whom even the extremely sensitive and
programmable digital hearing aids are ineffective. He adds that digital hearing aids are far more effective,
though considerably more expensive, than the older technology-analogue or linear hearing aids.
47. Dr. Randolph Mallory, "On the Line," WNYC-AM, July 23, 1997. In their study, Mario Svirsky and
his colleagues at Indiana School of Medicine at Indianapolis discovered that the language proficiency
of children who received cochlear implants developed at a rate similar to that of hearing children. The
National Association for the Deaf (NAD) is reassessing its skeptical view of cochlear implants. References
to Svirsky and the NAD from http://www.abcnews.com, March 2, 2000.
48. Statistics provided by the League for the Hard of Hearing in New York City.
49. Natalie Angier, "Joined for Life, and Living Life to the Full," New York Times, December 23, 1997, F5.
References to Dr. Alan Fleischman from this source.
50. One of the coauthors provided Nat Hentoff-who has written articles on the Baby Jane Doe case-
with a copy of the amicus brief filed on the side of the government by several disability rights organizations.
Significant Hentoff articles on the subject appeared in the Village Voice of January 3 and January IO, 1984.
See also Gregory E. Pence, Classic Cases in Medical Ethics (New York: McGraw Hill, 2000), chap. 8.
5I. References to Dixie Lawrence's parent-directed therapy for Down syndrome from "ABC News
Nightline," December 20, 1996.
52. References to transplants from Sheryl Gay Stolberg, "Live and Let Die Over Transplants," New
NOTES TO CHAPTER NINE 25I
York Times, Sunday, April 5, 1998, sec. 4, p. 3. The question of who should get preference in receiving "the
nation's scarcest medical resource," human organs, continues to be a controversial issue as the country
moves toward a policy in which "organs are shared broadly across regional lines, with sickest patients being
given first priority" (Sheryl Gay Stolberg, "Agreement on Plan to Revamp Organ Distribution," New York
Times, November 12, 1999, AI, A31).
53. Spina bifida means "open spine" in Latin. Once amniocentesis became routine for high-risk
pregnant women, only economically deprived pregnant women gave birth to babies with spina bifida.
As a result, the racial and ethnic profile of babies with spina bifida altered dramatically, and funding for
the Spina Bifida Association declined precipitously.
54. Interview with Susan Scheer, July 26, 1997. References to Scheer and "the miracle baby" from this
source.
55. Milt Freudenheim, "Corporate-Paid Psychotherapy: At What Price?" New York Times, April 12, 1994,
D2. The article is appropriately subtitled, "Therapy Isn't Quantifiable." References to Dr. Harold Eist from
this source.
56. "Morning Edition," National Public Radio, March 4, 1997. References to Larry Gostin and Robert
Gelman from this source.
57. Gina Kolata, "Advent of Testing for Breast Cancer Genes Leads to Fears of Disclosure and
Discrimination," New York Times, February 4, 1997, CI, C3. The new rules that President Clinton announced
to ensure the privacy of personal medical records initiated a vigorous debate involving physicians, health
care providers, insurance companies, and HMOs (Robert Pear, "Rules on Privacy of Patient Data Stir Hot
Debate," New York Times, October 30, 1999, AI, Aro).
58. Gina Kolata, "Biology's Big Project Turns into Challenge for Computer Experts," New York Times,
June II, 1996, CI. Two teams have been competing in a race to decode the human genome: one the
public consortium that wishes to make information freely available and the other a private company,
Celera, seeking "enough proprietary safeguards to make a profit" (Nicholas Wade, "Genome Decoding
Plan Is Derailed by Conflict," New York Times, March 9, 2000, A20). On June 19, 2000, the two teams
jointly announced that they have mapped a rough draft of the human genome. University of Pennsylvania
professor Arthur Kaplan notes that bioethicists are concerned that DNA information could be secured
without an individual's knowledge and that tests and drugs resulting from genetic mapping may not be
affordable by a significant number of people (CNN News, June 19, 2000).
59. Interview with Jeremy Rifkin regarding The Biotech Century: Harnessing the Gene and Remaking the
World (New York: J. P. Tarcher, 1999), Pacifica Radio Archives. In this book Rifkin considered the potentially
dangerous consequences of granting any institution or group the authority to redesign the planet's genetic
blueprint.
60. Adrienne Asch, "The Human Genome and Disability Rights," The Disability Rag and ReSource,
January/February 1994, I2.
61. "The Newshour with Jim Lehrer," Public Broadcasting System, January I, 1997. References to
Patricia King from this source.
62. Kolata, "Advent of Testing for Breast Cancer Gene," CI. References to discrimination based on
genetic tests from this source. Although Dr. Susan Love does not consider prophylactic mastectomy good
medical procedure, Denise Grady of the New York Times reported in opposition on January 14, 1999, in
"Removal of Healthy Breasts Is Found to Cut Cancer Risk" (p. AI).
63. See David L. Wheeler, "Scientists Worry about the Implications of Genetic Testing for Inherited
Disease," Nancy R. MacKenzie, ed. Science and Technology Today (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1995), 324.
Hoping his policy would be replicated by the private sector, President Clinton prohibited "the misuse of
genetic tests to discriminate against any American" by federal agencies ("President Acts to Bar Genetic
Discrimination," Associated Press, New York Times web site http://www.nytimes.com, February 8, 2000).
64. References to DNA patenting from "Weekend Edition," National Public Radio, June 23, 1996.
65. "On the Line," April 16, 1997, WNYC-AM, interview with Karen Stabiner, who referred to Susan
Love's terminology.
66. Stated by Stabiner, "On the Line," April 16, 1997. References to the "potential paradigm shift" in
breast cancer treatment from this source. Nicholas Wade ("Scientists Cultivate Cells at Root of Human
252 NOTES TO CHAPTER NINE
Life," New York Times, November 6, 1998, AI) reported that researchers hope to "introduce genes into the
body to remedy inherited disease." Other researchers-such as biologist Sandra Steingraber, author of
Living Downstream: A Scientist's Personal Investigation of Cancer and the Environment (New York: Vintage Books,
1998)-stress environmental toxins rather than genetic predisposition as the major cause of cancer.
67. Susan Bolotin in "Slash, Burn, and Poison" (review of Karen Stabiner's To Dance with the Devil: The
New War on Breast Cancer [New York: Delacorte Press, 1997]), New York Times, Sunday, April 13, 1997, sec. 7,
P. 8, quoted Stabiner.
68. "Premarin, an estrogen product is already the biggest-selling drug in the United States" (Susan
Love, "Sometimes Mother Nature Knows Best," New York Times, March 20, 1997, A25).
69. "The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology recommends that postmenopausal women
be on 'replacement' hormones for the rest of their lives unless they have a compelling reason not to be"
(Love, "Sometimes Mother Nature Knows Best," A25). This hormone replacement has been recommended
to help women stave off osteoporosis, heart disease, and some discomforts of menopause, as well as possibly
Alzheimer's disease (Alexis Jetter, "Should You Trust Her?" Health, July/August 1997, 104).
70. Love, "Sometimes Mother Nature Knows Best," A25. "In Drug Marketing Starts Legal Battle: Makers
of Postmenopausal Products Clash with Regulators," Denise Grady reported, "Two drug companies seeking
to tap the vast market of postmenopausal women at risk for breast cancer, heart disease and bone loss
have clashed with each other and run afoul of the Food and Drug Administration over their marketing
practices, prompting a flurry of lawsuits, government warning letters and accusations that inaccurate
assertions could endanger women's health" (New York Times, Sunday, March 28, 1999, A28).
71. References to Dr. Christiane Northrup from Jetter, "Should You Trust Her?", 103-4.
72. Love, "Sometimes Mother Nature Knows Best," A25. In this article, Love refers to "Graham Colditz,
one of the authors of the Nurse's Health Study [a definitive fourteen-year study of 120,000 nurses issued in
1995], who estimated that 90 percent of heart disease cases could be eliminated if people changed their life
style; this means encouraging women to exercise, watch their diet, and quit smoking." Love believes that "a
healthier life style" decreases not only the probability of heart disease in postmenopausal women, but also
osteoporosis and breast cancer, "with less risk" than estrogen replacement ("On the Line," WNYC-AM,
May 8, 1997). Love's and Northrup's skepticism has been supported by the results of "a huge federal study"
indicating that estrogen replacement therapy-with or without progestin-for postmenopausal healthy
women may result in increased probability for heart attacks, strokes, and blood clots" (Gina Kolata,
"Estrogen Question Gets Tougher," New York Times, April 6, 2000, A22).
73. "Sunday Morning," May II, 1997. References to Fran Visco from this source. See also Sheryl Gay
Stolberg, "Now, Prescribing Just What the Patient Ordered," New York Times, Sunday, August IO, 1997, sec.
4, P. 3, concerning how, with regard to women's health issues, feminism-together with the movement
toward patient self-education and activism-countered medical paternalism and the cost-cutting excesses
of managed care.
74. Stated by Stabiner, "On the Line," April 16, 1997. Stabiner offered another reason for the new
militancy: "Gender bias played a terrific role in the sense that we weren't doing any research on women's
disease until the early part of this decade. You have a lot of very angry women, and you have a lot of
baby boomers, who grew up with social change and with this notion that they could do things that would
affect the way the world worked" ("Sunday Morning," CBS Television, May II, 1997).
75. Steven Epstein, Impure Science (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997).
76. Jeffrey Goldberg, in "Breakthrough," New York Times, Sunday, January 12, 1997, sec. 7, P. 16, described
Epstein's work.
77. Frank Bruni, "Act-Up Doesn't Much, Anymore," New York Times, March 21, 1997, BT.
78. AIDS activists' guidance in producing new drugs, from Goldberg, "Breakthrough," 17. There
were five dramatic Act-Up demonstrations from 1987 to 1992 at the following sites: two pharmaceutical
companies, the Food and Drug Administration headquarters, the New York Stock Exchange, and the White
House lawn (Bruni, "Act-Up Doesn't Much, Anymore," BI).
79. Christine Gorman, "The Disease Detective," Time, December 30, 1996/January 6, 1997, 62.
8o. Frank Rich, "Not If, But When," New York Times, August 3, 1996, 19, quoted Dr. Jerome Groopman.
References to Groopman from this source.
NOTES TO CHAPTER TEN 253
8I. Gorman, "The Disease Detective," 58.
82. Bruce G. Weniger and Max Essex, "Clearing the Way for an AIDS Vaccine," New York Times, January
4, 1997, A23. References to Weniger and Essex's criticism of the National Institutes of Health approach to
the AIDS crisis from this source.
83. Lawrence K. Altman, "Some Scientists Are Hopeful Again for an AIDS Cure," New York Times, July
I, 1998, AI9. Bob Jaffe, Director of State Affairs, Gay Mens' Health Crisis in New York City, indicated to
authors on January 7, 1998, that in 1997 scientists discovered the latent reservoir of HIV in supposedly
cured patients.
84. Altman, "Some Scientists Are Hopeful," AI9.
85. Dr. David Ho, "Too Much Pessimism on AIDS Therapies," New York Times, June 27, 1998, AIS. In
a report released ahead of the Thirteenth International AIDS Conference (which began July 9, 2000), the
United Nations projected that "about half of all I5-year-olds in the African countries worst affected by
AIDS will eventually die of the disease even if the rates of infection drop substantially in the next few
years
And if infection rates remain high, the odds are that more than two-thirds of the 15-year-olds will
die from AIDS in countries like Botswana." Lawrence K. Altman, "U.N. Warning AIDS Imperils Africa's
Youth," New York Times, June 28, 2000, AI, AI2.
86. Lawrence K. Altman, "AIDS Meeting Ends with Little Hope of Breakthrough," New York Times,
Sunday, July 5, 1998, AI, AII. References to the prohibitive cost of AIDS medication from this source.
87. "Morning Edition," National Public Radio, August 31, 1999.
88. Gabriel Rotello, "The Risk in a 'Cure' for AIDS," New York Times, I4 July 1996, sec. 4, P. 17; and
Sexual Ecology: AIDS and the Destiny of Gay Men (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1997).
89. "National Public Radio News," March 30, 1998. Although in 1988 African Americans made up only
I3 percent of the U.S. population, they accounted for 57 percent of all new infections of the virus that
causes AIDS, and AIDS was the leading cause of death of African Americans between twenty-five and
forty-four years of age (Sheryl Gay Stolberg, "Eyes Shut, Black America Is Being Ravaged by AIDS," New
York Times, June 29, 1998, AI). AIDS in the United States has become "increasingly a disease of the poor and
disadvantaged" (editorial, New York Times, Sunday, December 5, 1999, AI6).
90. See Randy Shilts, And the Band Played On: Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic (New York: Viking
Penguin, 1988), an exposé of the political expediency and irresponsibility of members of the government,
health, and science establishment during the early 1980s while AIDS was allowed to spread unchecked.
9I. Dinitia Smith, "Viewing AIDS Writing through Prism of Hope," New York Times, January 13, 1997,
CII, Cr5. References to Literature in the Days of AIDS from this source.
92. Mammogram machines accessible to most women-like the Bennet Contour-Plus in Berkeley,
California-have been produced, but they are few in number. See Dr. Debra Shabas, "Knowledge Is
Empowerment: Breast Cancer Prevention for Women with Disabilities," We, September-October 1999,
47.
Chapter Ten
I. Howard A. Rusk, A World To Care For: The Autobiography of Howard A. Rusk, M.D. (New York: Random
House, 1977), 89-90. References to Herb Klinefeld from this source.
2. "Wars & Scars: A Diamond Anniversary History of the Disabled American Veterans," DAV Magazine,
July/August 1995, I-2. References to obstacles to securing services faced by World War I veterans from this
source.
3. Frances A. Koestler, The Unseen Minority: A Social History of Blindness in America (New York: David
McKay Company, 1976), 25I. References to the War Risk Insurance Act and the establishment of the U.S.
Veterans Bureau in 1921 from this source.
4. Richard B. Treanor, We Overcame: The Story of Civil Rights for Disabled People (Falls Church, Va.: Regal
Direct Publishing, 1993), II. Richard K. Scotch, From Goodwill to Civil Rights: Transforming Federal Disability
Policy (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1984), 20.
5. "Wars & Scars," 2-4. Unless otherwise indicated, references to DAVWW from this source.
254 NOTES TO CHAPTER TEN
6. Treanor, We Overcame, I5. "Wars & Scars," IO.
7. Treanor, We Overcame, I5.
8. Edward D. Berkowitz, Disabled Policy: America's Programs for the Handicapped (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1987), 169. See also Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 259.
9. Koestler, The Unseen Minority, 260, refers to Public Law 78-16.
IO. Rodman D. Griffin, "The Disabilities Act," CQ Researcher, December 27, 1991, IOOI. The Smith-
Fess Vocational Rehabilitation Act covering civilians with disabilities was passed two years after the
1918 Smith-Sears Veterans Rehabilitation Act covering disabled veterans. Scotch, From Goodwill to Civil
Rights, 20.
II. Paraplegia News, September 1956, 4. Rusk, A World To Care For, 99.
I2. Nora Groce, The U.S. Role in International Disability Activities: A History and a Look Toward the Future
(Oakland, Calif.: International Disability Exchanges and Studies Project, 1992), I23-24. See also Henry H.
Kessler, The Knife is Not Enough (New York: W. W. Norton, 1968).
13. Groce, The U.S. Role in International Disability Activities, 28. References to the Kessler's comprehensive
approach to rehabilitation from this source.
14. Discussion of "the whole man" from Rusk, A World To Care For, 66.
15. Rusk, A World To Care For, 52. References to the Air Force Rehabilitation Center at Pawling, New
York, from this source.
16. Rusk, A World To Care For, 43, 149.
17. Ibid., 77-78.
18. The institute was known first as The Red Cross Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men in 1917,
then as the Institute for the Crippled and Disabled by 1919, and finally as the International Center for the
Disabled by 1981, retaining the abbreviation ICD.
I9. Rusk, A World To Care For, 48-49.
20. Ibid., 66.
2I. Paraplegia News, December 1950, 4-5.
22. Paraplegia News, August 1949, 3. References to the September 1947 anti-segregation PVA resolution
from this source.
23. Paraplegia News, August 1946, I, and August 1949, 3.
24. Paraplegia News, October 1946, I, 3. PVA's goals from this source.
25. Paraplegia News, December 1950, 4.
26. Rusk, A World To Care For, 42-43.
27. Ibid., 76. Numbers of surviving paraplegics of World Wars I and II from this source.
28. Paraplegia News, April 1949, 3; April 1950, 4; June 1950, 4; March 1952, 4; August 1957, 8-9 and
12-13; and September 1961, 13. Although in the November 1946 Paraplegia News (p. I), automobiles for
triplegics and quadriplegics were considered appropriate only for rehabilitation because they were regarded
as unemployable, by the later 1940s this restrictive assumption was less prevalent in the newspaper.
29. Paraplegia News, March 1948, I.
30. Paraplegia News, August 1948, 5.
3I. Paraplegia News, March/April 1953, 3.
32. Paraplegia News, September 1950, 3.
33. Paraplegia News, November 1946, I. Mobility-impaired veterans were also granted the cost of
outfitting their cars with hand controls.
34. Paraplegia News, October 1946, 3.
35. Automatic transmission was introduced by General Motors as an option in the 1940 Oldsmobile
(Guinness Book of Car Facts and Feats [Middlesex, England: Guinness Superlatives Limited, 1980], 252). This
technology, however, was not commonplace in cars until over five years later.
36. Advertisements for different models of hand controls appeared in Paraplegia News throughout the
late 1940s and the 1950s.
37. Paraplegia News, April 1950, 4.
38. Advertisements for the following appeared in Paraplegia News: the Hoyer Kartop-Lift in April 1959,
the hydraulic lift in June 1961, and the portable ramp in February 1964.
NOTES TO CHAPTER TEN 255
39. Paraplegia News, June 1961, I2.
40. Groce, The U.S. Role in International Disability Activities, 156-57. References to Henry Viscardi from
this source.
41. For example, the failure of the administration of New York City Mayor John Lindsay in 1966 to
limit the use of special parking permits by people with disabilities can be credited to the organized drivers
with disabilities.
42. Wilber J. Scott, The Politics of Readjustment: Vietnam Veterans Since the War (Hawthorne, N.Y.: Aldine
de Gruyter, 1993). Scott notes that the strategies and determination of the ostracized gay activists were
instructive to veterans who became activists as a result of their experience in Vietnam.
43. Description of veterans bureaucracy from interview with Paul Camacho (Joiner Center for the
Study of War and Social Consequences, University of Massachusetts, Boston), June I2, 1997.
44. Paul Camacho, "The Future of the Veterans' Lobby and Its Potential Impact for Social Policy," The
American War in Vietnam, ed. Jayne Werner and David Hunt (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University [Southeast
Asia Program], 1993), 116-17. Efforts of Vietnam veterans to gain visibility from this source.
45. Interview with Paul Camacho, June 12, 1997.
46. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Gulf War-related disabilities from "America's Defense
Monitor," Center for Defense Information, Program Number 634: "War May Be Hazardous To Your Health,"
(initial broadcast, Public Broadcasting System, May 9, 1993).
47. Tod Ensign described Citizen Soldier in interview, June 18, 1997. Ensign coauthored, with Michael
Uhl, GI Guinea Pigs: How the Pentagon Exposed Our Troops to Dangers More Deadly Than War (New York:
Wideview Books, 1980).
48. Philip Shenon, "Two Studies Seem To Back Veterans Who Trace Illnesses to Gulf War," New York
Times, November 26, 1996, AI, A16. References to these studies from this source.
49. "Studies on Gulf War Illnesses Are Faulted," New York Times, Sunday, June IS, 1997, AI8.
50. Interview with Paul Sullivan, April 26, 1999. Sullivan's references to the complex and potentially
lethal nature of Gulf War syndrome from this source.
5I. Steven Lee Myers, "Drug May Be Cause of Veterans Illnesses," New York Times, October 19, 1999,
AI8. The chemical involved, pyridostigmine bromide, was used as a pretreatment for soman, a nerve agent
that Iraq never used in the Gulf War. See also Steven Lee Myers, "Study of Ill Gulf War Veterans Points
to Chemical Damage," New York Times, December I, 1999, AI8, for scientific study revealing "signs of brain
damage" in Gulf War veterans "caused by exposure to toxic chemicals."
52. The National Gulf War Resource Center is a coalition of fifty-eight veterans and other groups
involved in promoting health care for Gulf War veterans. Patricia Axelrod, military scientist who specializes
in weapons systems analysis and winner of a MacArthur grant to do research on depleted uranium, insists
that the term "depleted uranium" is an oxymoron, a convenient way for the Department of Defense to
marginalize the toxic effects of what is called depleted uranium but is in reality Uranium 238. From Amy
Goodman's interview with Patricia Axelrod, "Democracy Now," WBAI, May 30, 2000.
53. In his interview on May 5, 1999, Gary Pitts referred to the recent discovery by Howard Urenovitz at
the University of California in Berkeley that chromosome 22 was damaged by exposure to toxins in half of
the twenty-four Gulf War veterans that he examined while no such damage was evident in any of those in
the control group.
54. Philip Shenon, "Chemical Arms in Gulf War: Medical Mystery and Credibility Crisis," New York
Times, January 2, 1997, AI4. In 1989, when the Veterans Administration became a cabinet level agency, the
name was changed to the Department of Veterans Affairs.
55. Even as late as January 20, 1999, "Frontline: The Last Battle of the Gulf War," aired on PBS-TV,
suggested that evidence of Gulf War syndrome was inconclusive. "The program was primarily based on
an interview with Stephen Joseph, Assistant Secretary for Health at the Department of Defense, whose
poor handling of the Gulf War illness issue was cited in the press as the reason he is no longer at the
Department," said Paul Sullivan in a May 18, 1999, interview in which he referred to "Thanks of a Grateful
Nation," the 1998 cable television mini-series, as offering a valid, though popularized, account of the
injustice done to Gulf War veterans.
56. Interview with Paul Sullivan, April 26, 1999.
256 NOTES TO CHAPTER TEN
57. Shenon, "Chemical Arms in Gulf War," A14.
58. Shenon, "Two Studies," AI6.
59. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Vietnam and World War II related disabilities and illnesses
from "America's Defense Monitor," Program Number 634. For discussion of post-traumatic stress disorder,
see Robert J. Lifton's Home From the War (New York: Basic Books, 1973).
60. William A. Buckingham, "Operation Ranch Hand: Herbicides in Southeast Asia, 1961-1971,"
posted October 18, 1997, http://cpcug.org/user/billb/ranchhand/ranchhand.html (Buckingham is author
of Operation Ranch Hand: The Air Force and Herbicide in Southeast Asia, 1961-1971 [Washington, D.C.: U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1982].) Not only has Dr. Joel E. Michalek, U.S. Air Force statistician for the
Ranch Hand study, observed a persistent connection between diabetes and dioxin among Vietnam veterans,
but also Dr. Michael Gough, chairperson of a federal advisory panel for this study from 1990-1995, said
that he is certain that "diabetes will be turned into a compensable disease" for these veterans. Gina Kolata,
"Agent Orange and Diabetes: Diving into Murky Depths," New York Times, March 30, 2000, A16.
61. Ensign is quoted in "America's Defense Monitor," Program Number 634. In Ok-Lee v. Dow Chemical
Co. et. al.-a class action suit filed in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia (December 3, 1999)-more than
one thousand American veterans who served in Korea in the late 1960s claim that defoliants such as Agent
Orange have had a delayed toxic effect on them.
62. Interview with Dr. Steven Stellman, March 26, 1997. References to Dr. Steven Stellman and Dr.
Jeanne Stellman, professor of public health at Columbia University, from this source. The Stellmans' work
was drawn upon heavily by the National Academy of Sciences report on Agent Orange.
63. Dr. Steven Stellman added, "Although this coverup was whispered about for a long time, in 1991
New York City Congressman Ted Weiss held a series of oversight hearings resulting in documentation that
implicated the Reagan White House in an attempt to conceal the facts. According to the House Report,
when Ed Meese was the Attorney General, he used the Domestic Policy Council as a political tool for
delaying and suppressing research efforts into Agent Orange."
64. Unless otherwise indicated, references to "atomic guinea pigs" from "America's Defense Monitor,"
Program Number 634.
65. Michael D'Antonio, "Atomic Guinea Pigs," New York Times, August 31, 1997, Sunday, sec. 6, p. 38.
References to Anthony Guarisco from this source.
66. See also Eileen Welsome, The Plutonium Files: America's Secret Medical Experiments in the Cold War
(New York: Delacorte Press, 1999).
67. Interview with Sandra Marlow, June 23, 1997.
68. Sandra Marlow, "A Daughter's Story," The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, January 1983, 30.
69. "DAV Targets Aid to Vets Who Took Part in Nuclear Testing," New York Able, March 1997, 6. Reference
to David W. Gorman from this source.
70. Interview with Dr. Martin Gensler, May 25, 1999. References to Gensler and his explanation for the
denial of compensation to atomic vets from this source. The views expressed by Gensler do not necessarily
reflect those of Senator Paul Wellstone. The Pentagon's October 21, 1999, reiteration of its claim that the
cancer rate of atomic veterans did not differ significantly from other veterans who served during the same
time period drew media attention as well as skepticism from atomic veteran supporters.
71. References to World War II chemical warfare tests from "America's Defense Monitor," Program
Number 634.
72. Philip Shenon, "Pentagon Says Gulf War Data Seem To Be Lost," New York Times, December 5,
1996, AI, B18. References to the gaps in the logs from this source.
73. Philip Shenon, "Study Sharply Raises Estimate of Troops Exposed to Nerve Gas," New York Times,
July 24, 1997, A18.
74. "On the Line," WNYC-AM, December 13, 1996.
75. Shenon, "Study Sharply Raises Estimate," AI8. Reference to James J. Tuite from this source.
76. "DAV Supports Easing Burden of Proof for Gulf War Vets," New York Able, March 1997, 3. References
to extending time period for regulations governing proof of Gulf War-related illnesses from this source.
77. "On the Line," WNYC-AM, December 13, 1996. See Feres v. United States 340 U.S. 135 (1950).
78. Interview with Tod Ensign, June 18, 1997.
NOTES TO CHAPTER ELEVEN 257
79. Dennis Bernstein, "Gulf War Syndrome Coverup," Covert Action Quarterly, No. 53, Summer 1995, 9.
Unless otherwise indicated, references to Coleman v. Alcolac from this source.
8o. Interview with Gary Pitts, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs, May 5, 1999. References to Pitts
and foreign companies that are defendants in Marshall Coleman et al. v. ABB Lymus Crest Inc. et al. from this
source. Pitts indicates that companies use subsidiaries in a "shell game" in order to hide what they have
done.
81. References to attorney Frank Spagnoletti from Newsletter of the Gulf War Veterans of Massachusetts,
December 17, 1997, I(3): 3.
82. In a case of life imitating art, the story of Admiral Elmo Zumwalt II is reminiscent of the plot of
Arthur Miller's play, All My Sons.
83. Although following the Gulf War the Chemical Weapons Convention prohibited the sale of
dangerous chemicals, Pitts explained (in his interview of May 5, 1999) that companies can get around
this prohibition by selling two or more benign chemicals that form a lethal compound when combined.
84. Interview with Paul Sullivan, April 26, 1999. References to the 1998 Persian Gulf War Veterans Act
(PL 105-277) from this source. This act followed on the heels of a similar 1994 Act (PL 103-446), which
veterans groups had almost written off as ineffective.
85. When many variables prevent statistically establishing cause and effect with regard to, for example,
Gulf War syndrome, the phenomenon is referred to as "confounding."
86. Interview with Paul Sullivan, April 26, 1999. As Representative Christopher Shays (R-Conn.) stated
(March 4, 1999), because military men and women have become "understandably distrustful of the
Pentagon on medical matters," some have resisted mandatory anthrax vaccinations jeopardizing "their
military careers and even their liberty." As a result, Representative Benjamin Gilman (R-N.Y.) and others
introduced (on July 19, 1999) HR 2548, a bill to suspend further implementation of the Department of
Defense anthrax vaccination program.
Chapter Eleven
I. John Gliedman and William Roth, The Unexpected Minority: Handicapped Children in America (New
York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1980), 173.
2. Pennsylvania Association for Retarded Children v. Pennsylvania, 344 F. Supp. I257 (E.D. Pa. 1971) and 343
F. Supp. 279 (E.D. Pa. 1972) from Christopher G. Bell and Robert L. Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum
of Individual Abilities (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, 1983), 57.
3. References to Mills v. Board of Education of the District of Columbia, 348 F. Supp. 866 (D. D.C. 1972)
from Gliédman and Roth, The Unexpected Minority, 176-77.
4. Bell and Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum, 59.
5. Edward D. Berkowitz, Disabled Policy: America's Programs for the Handicapped (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1987), 207.
6. Gliedman and Roth, The Unexpected Minority, 466, note I.
7. Bell and Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum, 27, footnote 73.
8. Ibid., 57.
9. "The One and a Half Million Dollar Goof," Disabled People Speak to Medical People, February 1990, 20.
IO. Gliedman and Roth, The Unexpected Minority, 174.
II. Bell and Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum, 57-58.
I2. Gliedman and Roth, The Unexpected Minority, 179, 467 (note 10).
13. Bell and Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum, 57.
14. Gliedman and Roth, The Unexpected Minority, 466, note 4.
I5. Interview with Rims Barber, May 28, 1999. Unless otherwise indicated, references to the 1979
Mississippi consent decree from this source.
16. Gene I. Maeroff, "Suit Spurring Mississippi Efforts To Teach Handicapped Children," New York
Times, April 5, 1979, AI3. Comparison between mainstreaming children with disabilities in Mississippi and
New York City from this source.
258 NOTES TO CHAPTER ELEVEN
17. References to the Jose P. lawsuit from Jose P. v. Board of Education, 79 C 270, December 14, 1979, 2-6.
18. After assessing the child's present level of education, the IEP establishes annual goals, special
education and related services to be provided, and projected dates for and anticipated duration of services,
as well as objective criteria and evaluation procedures and schedules appropriate for the child (Gliedman
and Roth, The Unexpected Minority, 182-83).
19. The authors arrived at these estimates by calculations based on the population of the United
States, approximately 225 million, and the population of New York City, about 7 million. The authors also
included in their calculations estimates of the number of children with severe disabilities nationwide that
required identification, around I million, and the total number of children with disabilities nationwide,
roughly 8 million.
20. Interview with John C. Gray, May 16, 1997. References to Gray from this source.
2I. The Jose P. judgment of December 13, 1979, mandated that the language requirements for this
population be consistent with the consent decree in Aspira of New York, Inc. v. Board of Education.
22. Bell and Burgdorf, Accommodating the Spectrum, 58.
23. Gliedman and Roth, The Unexpected Minority, 218.
24. Interview with Mary Somoza, July 29, 1997.
25. Both the 1979 Jose P. education lawsuit and the 1980 Dopico transportation lawsuit were Brooklyn
Legal Services cases.
26. Panel discussion on special education, New York City Bar Association, December 5, 1996. References
to this panel discussion from this source.
27. Interview with attorney Diane Lipton, director of the Children with Disabilities and Families
Advocacy Program for the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund, July 31, 1997.
28. Interview with former New York City public school teacher, August I, 1997. The school to which
she referred was on 96th Street and Park Avenue in Manhattan.
29. Disability Studies Colloquium, "Inclusion: The Challenge, the Opportunity," New York City
Hunter College School of Social Work, December 5, 1997. Judith E. Heumann's reference to the resistance
of some educators to "accepting the reality of disability" from this source.
30. Rather than "inclusion," Heumann favors the terms "desegregation" and "integration" because of
the political connotations of the two latter words.
31. Interview with Diane Lipton, July 31, 1997. See Hendrick Hudson Central School District v. Rowley, IO2
S.Ct. 3034 (1982). Unless otherwise indicated, references to the Rowley case from the Lipton interview.
32. Mary Johnson, "Amy and the Supremes," Ragged Edge, May/June 1998, 29.
33. Johnson, "Amy and the Supremes," 29. Johnson is quoting from R. C. Smith, The Case About Amy:
Health, Society and Policy (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1996).
34. A 1975 House Committee on Education and Labor Report quoted in Kipp Watson, "The Rowley
Case: A Broken Promise," DIA Activist, January 1983, 8.
35. R. C. Smith, "An Audience for Amy," Ragged Edge, May/June 1998, 31.
36. Diane Lipton, "The 'Full Inclusion' Court Cases: 1989-1994," Presented at Wingspread Conference,
Racine, Wisconsin, April 28 to May I, 1994, 2.
37. Ibid., 3. References to Roncker v. Walters, 700 F2d 1058 (6th Cir 1983) from this source.
38. Interview with Diane Lipton, July 31, 1997. See Daniel R. R. v. State Board of Education, 874 F2d 1036
(5th Cir 1989); Greer v. Rome School District, 950 F2d 688 (rith Cir 1991); Oberti v. Board of Education, 995 F2d
1204 (3d Cir 1993); and Sacramento City Unified School District v. Holland, 14 F3d 1398 (9th Cir 1994). References
to these cases from interview with Diane Lipton.
39. Interview with Mary Somoza, July 28, 1997. President Clinton's letter to Anastasia as well as the
description of the Somoza settlement with the New York City Board of Education from this source.
40. Interview with Barbara Zitcer, director of the Nursery School of the Young Men and Women's He-
brew Association of North New Jersey, December 21, 1997. Zitcer observed that children identified as autistic
began to be included with supports into her regular nursery school classrooms between 1994 and 1995.
41. Interview with Nicholas M., December 21, 1997. References to Nicholas M. and M.M. from this
source. Catherine Maurice's Let Me Hear Your Voice: A Family's Triumph Over Autism (New York: Fawcett
Books, 1994) profoundly impacted Nicholas M.'s response to autism.
NOTES TO CHAPTER ELEVEN 259
42. In her book Targeting Autism: What We Know, Don't Know, and Can Do to Help Young Children with
Autism and Related Disorders (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1997), Shirley Cohen, professor
of special education at Hunter College, referred to another technique that has been successful with some
autistic children-Dr. Stanley I. Greenspan's emotionally-based approach, designed to re-ignite the autistic
child's developmental processes.
43. Tamar Lewin, "Family Tests Law on the Meaning of Inclusion," New York Times, Sunday, December
28, 1997, sec. I, p. 20. References to Ashburn Elementary School officials and the Hartmanns' legal fees
from this source. See Hartman v. Loudoun County Board of Education, 962809P (4th Cir 1997).
44. "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer," Public Broadcasting System, March 24, 1998. Unless otherwise
indicated, references to the Hartmann "inclusion" case from this source.
45. References to Cedar Rapids v. Garrett F. from Linda Greenhouse, "Court Says School Must Pay for
Needs of Disabled Pupils," New York Times, March 4, 1999, I and 18. See Cedar Rapids School District v. Garret
F., II9 S.Ct. 37 (1997).
46. Editorial, "The Special Education Nightmare," New York Times, June 24, 1996, A14.
47. Michael Winerip, "A Disabilities Program That 'Got Out of Hand," New York Times, April 8, 1994,
B6. References to Dalton from this source.
48. Pam Belluck, "A Plan To Revamp Special Education," New York Times, November 26, 1996, AI. See
Ann Colin, Willie: Raising and Loving a Child with Attention Deficit Disorder (New York: Viking Press, 1997).
49. Interview with Barbara Fisher, May 31, 1999. "Special education" has at least three different
meanings: full-time segregated education, part-time segregated education, and education in the general
classroom with supports. References to the difference between the stated intention of the Crew plan and
the actual results from this source.
50. Panel Discussion on Special Education, New York City Bar Association, December 5, 1996. Unless
otherwise indicated, references to concerns of advocates, parents, educators, and of attorney Roger Juan
Maldanado, regarding special education in New York City from this source.
5I. Belluck, "A Plan To Revamp Special Education," B4.
52. Interview with DREDF attorney Diane Lipton, July 31, 1997. References to the Reauthorization of
the IDEA from this source.
53. Jill Chaifetz, "Saving Special Ed: System Dooms Too Many Children, but There's a Chance to Fix
It," New York Times, Sunday, May 30, 1999, sec. 14, P. 13. References to the State Regents Plan and Governor
George Pataki's plan from this source.
54. Brent Staples, "Special Education Is Not a Scandal," New York Times, Sunday, September 21, 1997,
sec. 6, PP. 64-65. References to Staples from this source.
55. Winerip, "A Disabilities Program That 'Got Out of Hand," B6. Winerip notes that the learning
disability most often mentioned, dyslexia-in which the brain processes letters and symbols backwards-
accounts for only a small portion of learning problems.
56. Brent Staples states, "Whole-language enthusiasts thought that children were naturally disposed to
reading and writing and learned those skills just as they learned to speak." Unlike the phonics method, the
whole-language method-emphasizing words and phrases as clusters of meaning independent of sounds-
does not stress connecting letters to sounds, sounds to syllables, and syllables to words, and so forth.
57. Conversation with Edward Lewinson, Ph.D., December 5, 1996. Retired Seton Hall history professor
Lewinson, blind from birth, received an excellent integrated public school education in Detroit in the 1930s
and 1940s. Even before the passage of the IDEA, some schools mainstreamed children with disabilities who
were able to function in an integrated setting. Mainstreaming tended to be most successful when parents
were assertive advocates for their children.
58. "60 Minutes," CBS-TV, June 9, 1996. Remarks of commentator Leslie Stahl, as well as those of
parents of both nondisabled and disabled children who appeared on this segment, "Special Ed," from this
source.
59. Philip K. Howard, The Death of Common Sense: How Law is Suffocating America (New York: Random
House, 1994), 151.
6o. Editorial, New York Times, June 24, 1996, A14.
61. Barbara Fisher and Richard Spiegel, "Diaspora: Special Education-NYC," DIA Activist, January
260 NOTES TO CHAPTER ELEVEN
1997, 8. In an interview on May 31, 1999, Fisher and Spiegel pointed out that because many teachers do not
know how to deal with students with disabilities, an increasing number of "consultative teachers" should
be provided on-site to train general classroom teachers by modeling teaching techniques appropriate for
a wide spectrum of learning styles.
62. Editorial, New York Times, June 24, 1996, A14.
63. Lynda Richardson, "Minority Students Languish in Special Education System," New York Times,
April 6, 1994, A2, B7.
64. Richardson, "Minority Students Languish," A2, B7. References to segregation and racial and ethnic
stereotyping in New York City's special education program from this source. This article was still relevant
in 2000.
65. Tamar Lewin, "Where All Doors Are Open For Disabled Students," New York Times, Sunday,
December 28, 1997, sec. I, p. 20. References to the 1989 shift in special education in Vermont from this
source.
66. Disability Studies Colloquium, New York City Hunter College School of Social Work, December
5, 1997. Reference to Judith E. Heumann's view that special education money should follow the student
from this source.
67. Tamar Lewin, "Fictitious Learning-Disabled Student Is at Center of Lawsuit against College," New
York Times, April 8, 1997, B9. Unless otherwise indicated, references to this lawsuit, attorney Larry Elswit,
plaintiff Elizabeth Guckenberger, and services provided by Boston University for students with learning
disabilities from this source.
68. Debra Ellen, "Taking the Case to Court," Connections, September 1996, 3(4): 3, II. References to Anne
Schneider from this source.
69. Joseph P. Shapiro, "The Strange Case of Somnolent Samantha," U.S. News and World Report, April
14, 1997, P. 31.
70. Reference to the August 15, 1997, decision in Elizabeth Guckenberger v. Boston University, 957 F. Supp.
306 (D.C. Mass.) from disability rights attorney Frank Laski, Disability Rights Advocates of Oakland, and
lawyers from the firm Clark, Hunt & Embry of Cambridge, Massachusetts, who represented the plaintiffs. A
second Guckenberger decision, 974 F. Supp. I06 (D.C. Mass. 1997), further clarified the issue of "reasonable
accommodation." By the time the lawsuit was decided, Jon Westling had become president of Boston
University.
71. Shapiro, "The Strange Case of Somnolent Samantha," 3I. Statistics on the number of students
with learning disabilities from this source.
72. Interview with Richard Spiegel, May 31, 1999. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Spiegel
from this source. Spiegel indicates that techniques used in special education-students' preparation of
portfolios and oral presentations, as well as their performance of job-related tasks-are valid educational
strategies for all those in the general classroom.
73. Lewin, "Where All Doors Are Open For Disabled Students," sec. I, p. 20.
74. "Inclusion: It's Not All Academic," The Eric Review, Fall 1996, 4(3): 17. References to Barak Stussman
from this source.
75. Disability Studies Colloquium, New York City Hunter College School of Social Work, December
5, 1997. Judith E. Heumann's references to the benefits of inclusion to both nondisabled students and
students with disabilities from this source.
Chapter Twelve
I. Interview with Lex Frieden, July 16, 1997.
2. "Talk of the Nation, Science Friday," National Public Radio, May 8, 1998.
3. Cheryl Marie Wade, "It Ain't Exactly Sexy," The Ragged Edge (Louisville: The Advocado Press, 1994),
89-90. References to Wade from this source.
4. Barrett Shaw, "Introduction," The Ragged Edge, ed. Barrett Shaw (Louisville: The Advocado Press,
1994), xi.
NOTES TO CHAPTER TWELVE 26I
5. Mary Jane Owen, "Like Squabbling Cubs," The Ragged Edge, ed. Barrett Shaw (Louisville: The
Advocado Press, 1994), 7. References to Owens from this source.
6. Douglas Martin, "Disability Culture: Eager to Bite the Hand That Would Feed Them," New York
Times, Sunday, June I, 1997, sec. 4, PP. I, 6. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Leslie Heller and Nadina
LaSpina from this source.
7. Nadina LaSpina and Daniel Robert, "Pride and Identity," Ragged Edge, March/April 1998, 13.
8. Erik H. Erikson, Childhood and Society (New York: W. W. Norton, 1950), 268.
9. Leonard Kriegel, author of Flying Solo: Re-imagining Manhood, Courage and Loss (New York: Beacon
Press, 1998), is an example of a person living a fulfilling and successful life with a disability, who has little
or no involvement with disability politics. Having contracted polio at eleven years old, he does appear to
feel a kinship with other writers with disabilities. Yet his positive sense of self and his creativity as a writer
seem to stem from his capacity to mine his experiences as a person with a disability.
IO. Martin, "Disability Culture," sec. 4, P. 6.
II. LaSpina and Robert, "Pride and Identity," 3.
12. Interview with Daniel Robert, August 14, 1997.
13. Jean Stewart, The Body's Memory (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989). In 1981, the International Year
of Disabled Persons, Stewart-as program director of the Clearwater Great Hudson River Revival-received
the go-ahead from Pete Seeger to create a fully accessible festival for people with all kinds of disabilities.
The annual Clearwater Revival was one of the first outdoor festivals in the world to become accessible to
the disability community and has continued to serve as a model for other such festivals.
14. Interview with Jean Stewart, January 12, 1998. Unless otherwise indicated, references to Stewart
from this source.
I5. Further information on people with disabilities in prisons is available in Jean Stewart's unpublished
manuscript, Inside Abuse: Disability Oppression Behind Bars.
16. Interview with Marca Bristo, April 30, 1998. References to Bristo from this source.
17. Steven E. Brown, "We Are Who We Are
So Who Are We?" Mainstream, August 1996, 3I.
I8. Robert F. Murphy, The Body Silent (1987; reprint, New York: W. W. Norton, 1990). References to
Murphy's treatment of disability as "a separate culture," as well as the "unmarked category" and "embattled
identity" from Murphy, The Body Silent, 102-3.
I9. Ibid., 160-61.
20. Cass Irvin, "Preface: Why We Do What We Do," The Ragged Edge (Louisville: The Advocado Press,
1994), xiv.
2I. Martin, "Disability Culture," sec. 4, p. 6. Quotations are Martin's paraphrase of Gill's remarks.
22. Carol Gill, "Questioning Continuum," The Ragged Edge (Louisville: The Advocado Press, 1994), 45.
Unless otherwise indicated, references to Gill from this source.
23. John Hockenberry's discussion of disability as a cultural resource from his presentation at the
International Center for the Disabled in New York City on March 18, 1998. The U.S. Court of Appeals
in the Seventh and Ninth Circuits came to opposite conclusions in cases involving accommodations for
professional golfers with disabilities. In Martin v. PGA, 204 F3d 994 (9th Cir 2000), the court held that golfer
Casey Martin could use a golf cart in competition and that using such a vehicle did not alter tournament
play. In Olinger v. U.S. Golf Association, 205 F3d IOOI (7th Cir 2000), however, the Seventh Circuit came to
a different conclusion, ruling that the use of such a cart would fundamentally alter the nature of the
tournament. The PGA has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review the decision of the Ninth Circuit in
light of the two interpretations of the ADA. It is also likely that golfer Ford Olinger will appeal to the
Supreme Court on the Seventh Circuit ruling against him. See Marcia Chambers, "PGA Seeks a Review of
Cart Suit," New York Times, July 4, 2000, D4.
24. Interview with Deborah Yanagisawa, April 29, 1998. References to Yanagisawa from this source.
25. Joan Tollifson, "Imperfection is a Beautiful Thing: On Disability and Meditation," Staring Back:
The Disability Experience from the Inside Out, ed. Kenny Fries (New York: A Plume Book, 1997), IIO.
26. "Disability Studies," Ragged Edge, January/February 1998, I8. Reference to David Pfeiffer from this
source.
27. Anthony Ramiriz, "Disability As a Field of Study?" New York Times, December 21, 1997, sec. 14, P. 8.
References to Phyllis Rubenfeld from this source.
262 NOTES TO CHAPTER TWELVE
28. Definition of Disability Studies quoted in Paul Longmore, "The Second Phase: From Disability
Rights to Disability Culture," The Disability Rag & ReSource, September/October 1995, 16(5): 4-II.
29. For Arthur Campbell Jr., the most frustrating and limiting aspect of his disability is his dif-
ficulty making his speech understood. The weakness of the otherwise effective film is its failure to
distinguish between the final personal depression of its protagonist and the state of the disability rights
movement.
30. Mary Johnson, "Just One Man's Story, But It Speaks for Many," Sunday, New York Times, sec. 2, p.
23.
3I. Martin, "Disability Culture," sec. 4, P. I.
32. Lynn Manning, "The Magic Wand," ed. Kenny Fries, Staring Back: The Disability Experience from the
Inside Out (New York: A Plume Book, 1997), 165.
33. Interview with Kitty Lunn, July 2, 1997. References to Lunn from this source.
34. "Sunday Morning," CBS-TV, May 23, 1999. References to Dana Tozer and the Cleveland Ballet
Dancing Wheels from this source. Severe cerebral palsy has not prevented Daniel Keplinger (subject and
writer of the 2000 Oscar winner for best documentary, King Gimp) from painting-"using a specially
designed headpiece to hold a brush"-works that are "fierce, almost defiant, but also strangely beautiful"
(Julie Solomon, "A Painter Happily Emerges from a Determined Battle," New York Times, Sunday, June 5,
2000, E5).
35. Interview with Lex Frieden, July 16, 1997.
36. Interview with Eunice Fiorito, June 6, 1997. References to Fiorito from this source.
37. Interview with Susan Scheer, July 26, 1997. References to Scheer from this source. By continuing to
serve as attorney general while living with Parkinson's disease, Janet Reno is helping to change the public
perception of disability. See Sheryl Gay Stolberg, "Reno Puts a Face on an Often Private Disease," New York
Times, Sunday, August 15, 1999, A14.
38. James Weisman, "Myth & Media: Bigoted," The Disability Rag, September/October 1991. Weisman's
criticism of the New York Times from this source.
39. Editorial, New York Times, November 18, 1979.
40. Editorial, New York Times, January 3, 1984.
41. Editorial, New York Times, September 6, 1989.
42. Editorial, New York Times, May 28, 1991.
43. Martin, "Disability Culture," sec. 4, p. I.
44. David W. Dunlap, "Architecture in the Age of Accessibility," New York Times, Sunday, June I, 1997,
sec. 9, p. I. References to new architectural standards from this source.
45. Sara Riner, "New Needs for Retirement Complexes' Oldest," New York Times, March 23, 1998, AI.
46. Garry Pierre-Pierre, "Disrupting Sales at Greyhound, Disabled Protest Bus Access," New York Times,
August 9, 1997, 26.
47. Lisa Bannon, "The Vision Thing: Mr. Magoo Watches U.S. Cultural History and Struggles to
Adapt," Wall Street Journal, July 31, 1997, AI, A8. References to Mr. Magoo from this source. On July 2, 1997,
the NFB urged the Disney organization to halt production of its live-action film, "Mr. Magoo," calling the
stereotyped figure as offensive to blind people as Little Black Sambo and "Amos 'n Andy" are to black people.
See Roxana Hegeman, "No More Mr. Magoo Say Blind Group," New York Daily News, July 3, 1997, 3.
48. Greg Gittrich, "Disabled Rip Bay Plaza Traffic Peril," New York Daily News, August 7, 1997, Metro
sec., 2.
49. In Walter Goodman's September 9, 1997, New York Times review of "Dateline NBC," aired the same
day, he condescendingly indicated that John Hockenberry's reference to his inability to enter the Ziegfeld
Theatre or the new Armani store, because of their inaccessibility, trivialized the program. Also, Goodman
stated, "the program presents evidence that a law [ADA] is being widely violated, at least in spirit." On the
contrary, the program presented evidence that the law is being widely violated in fact, not just "in spirit."
50. When a renovation was required on the Brooklyn Bridge walkway in the 1980s, New York City
considered building an inaccessible modification. Urged by bicyclists and joggers to insist on accessibility,
Disabled In Action struggled to secure a walkway available to wheelchair users, bicyclists, and joggers. Early
in August 1985, DIA members from Brooklyn and Manhattan met in the middle of the modified Brooklyn
NOTES TO CHAPTER TWELVE 263
Bridge accessible promenade to toast with champagne the newly renovated walkway. See Maria Fugate,
"Disabled Bridge Gap," New York Daily News, August IO, 1985.
51. Bruce Felton, "Technologies That Enable the Disabled," New York Times, Sunday, September 14,
1997, sec. 3, PP. I, IO, II.
52. David E. Rosenbaum, "Health Benefits Bill Shows Power of the Disabled," New York Times, June 7,
1999, AI, AI8. Reference to the "turnabout" in nineteen states from this source.
53. Interview with Lex Frieden, July 16, 1997. References to two major media events related to the ADA
from this source.
54. Interviews with Charles Winston, director of the National Telability Media Center, August 16, 1997,
and June 14, 1999. References to disability media, dial-in services, and the National Telability Media Center
from this source.
55- Publisher and editor Angela Melledy founded New York Able, the only cross-disability newspaper in
New York City, in June 1995. Mary Johnson, long-time editor of the Disability Rag, now editor of the Ragged
Edge, and Lucy Gwin, editor of Mouth, are nationally-known disability activists.
56. Constance L. Hays, "Niche Magazines on Maladies Take a Peppier and Glossier Route," New York
Times, June 9, 1997, D23. Reference to General Motors response to We from this source. The fact that
We placed Jerry Lewis on its front cover in an issue (March/April 1999) lauding his Muscular Dystrophy
telethons reveals that this publication stresses marketing rather than politics. For magazines devoted to
disability politics, Lewis has been a representation of the unacceptable "charitable model."
57. Greg Smith's program emanates from Dayton, Ohio, and Bob Enteen's program from New York
City.
58. Interview with Anne Emerman, August 17, 1997. References to Emerman from this source.
59. Interview with Eunice Fiorito, June 6, 1997. References to Fiorito from this source.
60. Interview with Paul Hearne, June 25, 1997. References to Hearne from this source.
61. Hearne is referring to medical practices such as the experiment conducted in Children's Hospital
of Oklahoma, between 1977 and 1982, in which twenty-four spina bifida babies lost their lives. John R.
Woodward, "It Can Happen Here," The Ragged Edge (Louisville: The Advocado Press, 1994), 230-35.
62. Interview with Marca Bristo, April 30, 1998. References to Bristo from this source.
63. Issued by Presidential Executive Order on March 13, 1998, the Task Force on Employment of Adults
with Disabilities was recommended in the 1996 Achieving Independence, a publication of the NCD under
Marca Bristo.
64. Interview with Susan Dooha, August 15, 1997. References to Dooha from this source.
65. These requirements for people with disabilities were listed in the "ADA Compliance Work Group
Agenda," developed by the New York City Task Force on Medicaid Managed Care, February 18, 1997.
66. Interview with Lex Frieden, July 16, 1997. References to Frieden from this source.
67. Interview with Susan Scheer, July 26, 1997. References to Scheer from this source.
68. Frank Bowe, "An Overview Paper on Civil Rights Issues of Handicapped Americans: Public Policy
Implications," Civil Rights Issues of Handicapped Americans: Public Policy Implications (Washington, D.C.: A
Consultation Sponsored by the United States Commission on Civil Rights, May 13-14, 1980), II. Reference
to transferring the legacy of the disability rights movement from this source.
69. Interview with Judith E. Heumann, January 16, 1998. References to Heumann from this source.
70. Marvin Wasserman, president of the New York City 504 Democratic Club-founded in 1983 and
named after Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973-refers to his political club as the only one in
the country that focuses primarily on issues of people with disabilities.
71. The connection between disability and poverty is illustrated by homeless children who lack access
"to vital preventive care and the management of chronic conditions." For example, "an astonishing 38
percent of the kids in the city's [New York] shelter system have asthma," a condition that is life-
threatening for children. Even in its milder forms as a chronic condition, asthma adversely affects
functioning in school. See Bob Herbert, "Children in Crisis," New York Times, June IO, 1999, A31. (Herbert
quoted from a report by the president of the Children's Health Fund, Dr. Irwin Redlener.)
72. Douglas Martin, "A Victor Fears for the Future," New York Times, April 29, 1997, Br.
264 NOTES TO CHAPTER TWELVE
73. Interview with Emerman, April 30, 1997. Emerman's references to the future of the disability rights
movement from this source.
74. Ralf Hotchkiss is quoted in Report on the "American Creativity at Risk" Symposium, Rhode Island,
November 1996, 16.
75. "National Public Radio News," June 20, 1997.
76. Sheryl Gay Stolberg, "The Good Death: Embracing a Right to Die Well," New York Times, Sunday,
June 29, 1997, sec. 4, P. 4.
77. Interview with Sherry Lampert, May IO, 1997.
78. Martin, "Disability Culture," sec. 4, p. 6.
Index
ABA. See Applied Behavioral Analysis
Alexander v. Choate, 67
ABB Lumus Crest et al., Marshall Coleman et al. v., 182
Allen, Edgar F., 9-IO. See also National Easter Seal
Abbott, Bragdon v., IO2
Society
ACB. See American Council of the Blind
ALS. See amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
ACCD. See American Coalition of Citizens with
Alter, Mark, 188, I94
Disabilities
America Online, I57 n36
Access Board, 49, 56-57, 81, 90, 108
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), 72, 146
Access Living (of Chicago), 45
American Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities
Accommodating the Spectrum of Individual Abilities
(ACCD), 52-56
(Bell and Burgdorf), 46 n51
American Council of the Blind (ACB): and New
Achieving Independence: The Challenge for the 21st
York City subway gates, 22-23; contrasted to NFB,
Century, 114 n20, I28
25-26; and Washington lobbying, 105
ACLU. See American Civil Liberties Union
American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today
ACRMD. See Association of Children with Retarded
(formerly American Disabled for Accessible
Mental Development
Public Transit) (ADAPT), 66 n60, 82, I04-I05, 133
Act-Up. See AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power
American Foundation for the Blind (AFB): and
ADA. See Americans with Disabilities Act
computer technology, 157; and leadership roles
Adams, Brock, 56
for the blind, I5; and talking books, 19; and white
ADAPT. See American Disabled for Attendant
cane movement, 2I
Programs Today (formerly American Disabled for
American National Standards Institute (ANSI), 63
Accessible Public Transit)
American Public Transit Association (APTA):
ADAPT v. Burnley, 66n6o
and Section 504 regulations, 65-66, 83, 85; and
ADAPT et al. v. Dole, 68
Transbus controversy, 56-57
ADAPT v. Skinner, 68, 82. See also ADAPT v. Burnley
American Sign Language (ASL): and academic
AFB. See American Foundation for the Blind
interest in, 18; as central to Deaf culture, 27-28;
affirmative action, 24, 49, 58, 65, 67, 107, III-II2, 131
and criticism of Deaf culture, 160; and educating
Age Discrimination in Employment Act, xvi
deaf children, 30-3I; and Gallaudet uprising, I5;
Agent Orange, 176, 178, 180, 182
and nonwhite deaf advocates, 30; and Title II
AHRC. See Association for Help of Retarded
public services, 100; and TT/TTY designations, I52
Children
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA): criticism
AIDS (autoimmune deficiency syndrome), 89, 9I,
of, xvii, 105-109; enactment, xvi, 26, 28-29, 89-93,
102, 125, 128, 134-135, 166-168
IIO, 127; Supreme Court decisions, 102-105; Titles
AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power (Act-Up), 166, 168
I-V, 93-I02: See also affirmative action; assisted
Albertsons, Inc. v. Kirkingburg, I03-I04
suicide; EEOC Enforcement Guidance; Sears Report
266 INDEX
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), 133, 147, I57, 165
Becker, Lawrence, 161
Anatomy of Prejudice, The, (Young-Bruehl), XV
Beers, Clifford W., Mind That Found Itself, 118
And the Band Played On: Politics, People, and the AIDS
Beezer, Robert, 134
Epidemic (Shilts), 168 n90
Bell, Alexander Graham, I5
antidepressants, I58
Bell, Christopher G., and Robert L. Burgdorf,
Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA), 192
Accommodating the Spectrum of Individual Abilities,
Appointment with Dr. Death (Betzold), about Jack
46 n51
Kevorkian, 133n9, nII
Bell, Grove City v., 78-79
APTA. See American Public Transit Association
Bennet Contour-Plus (mammogram machine),
APTA v. Lewis, 65-66, 83 n35
168 n92
ARC. See Association of Retarded Citizens
Benson v. Northwest Airlines, 95
Architectural and Transportation Barriers
Berger, Stephen, 59, 62
Compliance Board. See Access Board
Bergstadt, Kenneth, 146
Arc, The. See Association of Retarded Citizens
Berkowitz, Edward D., Disabled Policy, 34, 9I
Armstrong, Wilson v., 103 n98
Bernstein, Marcia, 30-31
Arnold v. United Artists Theatre Circuit, 79, 97
Betzold, Michael, Appointment with Dr. Death,
Asch, Adrienne, 145 n85, 164
133 n9, nII
ASL. See American Sign Language
"Beyond Affliction: The Disability History Project"
assisted suicide: and AIDS activists, 134-135; and
(radio program), XV n7, 9 n36, I2 n46, I3 n49, 17 n24
euthanasia, 138-141; and pain management, 135-
Beyond Ramps: Disability at the End of the Social
137; severe disability vs. terminal illness, 145-148;
Contract (Russell), I26 n99
and Supreme Court rulings, 133-134
Biotech Century, The: Harnessing the Gene and Remaking
Association for Help of Retarded Children
the World (Rifkin), 164
(AHRC), 9
Birthday Balls (March of Dimes), 7-8
Association of Children with Retarded Mental
Black Deaf Advocates (BDA), 29-30
Development (ACRMD), 9
Black, Kathryn, In the Shadow of Polio, 4
Association of Retarded Citizens (ARC, The Arc), 9
Black Stork, The: Eugenics and the Death of Defective
Atlantis Community, 81
Babies in American Medicine and Motion Pictures
atomic testing, 179-180
(Pernick), 138
Augberger, Michael, 71, 82-85
Blanck, Peter, 108
autism, 156, 191-192
Blanck, Ronald R., 176
autoimmune deficiency syndrome. See AIDS
Blank, Wade, 71, 82-83, 200
automobiles: and disabled veterans, 173-175; and
blindness: compared to deafness, 14-15; and
white canes, 20
mobility, 20-21. See also Braille, Louis; Magoo,
Mr.; talking books
Baby Jane Doe case, 161
Board of Education, Brown v., 69, I85
Bach, Philip, I6I
Board of Education, Dyrcia S. v., 186
Bachman, Ronald E., II5
Board of Education, Jose P. v., 186-188
Balanced Budget Act of 1997, I28
Board of Education, United Cerebral Palsy v., 186
Barber, Rims, I85
Board of Education of the Borough of Clementon School
Barbier, Charles, I8
District, Oberti v., 190
Barden-LaFollette Act of 1943, 171
Board of Education of the District of Columbia, Mills v.,
BART. See Bay Area Rapid Transit
184-185
Baruch, Bernard, 172
Boch, Arlie, 170
Bassoff, Sylvia Flexer, 6
Body Silent, The (Murphy), 203-204
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), 54, 63-64
Body's Memory, The (Stewart), 202-203
BCID. See Brooklyn Center for Independence of
Boggs, Elizabeth, 89
the Disabled
Boston Center for Independent Living (BCIL), 43, 47
BCIL. See Boston Center for Independent Living
Boston University, Elizabeth Guckenberger v., 80,
BDA. See Black Deaf Advocates
197-198
Beautiful Mind, A: A Biography of John Forbes Nash, Jr.
Botts, Fred, 3-4
(Naser), II8
Bourne, Randolph, II-12
INDEX 267
Bouvia, Elizabeth, 145-146
Center for Independence of the Disabled in New
Bovard, James, I06-107
York (CIDNY), 34, 39, 45, 47, I5I, 214
Bowe, Frank: on Deaf Culture, 27; on disability
Center for Independent Living (Berkeley) (CIL),
as civil rights movement, 213; on disability VS.
39-42, 44, 45, 54
handicapped, 147; on disability prejudice, 73; on
cerebral palsy: and severe disability VS. terminal
Ed Roberts, 42; on employment, по; and Section
illness, 145-146; and Somoza twins, 191; and
504 demonstrations, 29, 53, 55; on universal
technology, 147, 207 n34
design, 149
Chabner v. United of Omaha, 79 n28, 8I
Bracco v. Lackner, 79
Chamberlin, Judi, II9-I20
Bragdon v. Abbott, IO2
Chatoff, Michael, 99
Braille, Louis, 14, 18-19
Cherry, James L., 50-51
Braille keyboard, I56
Cherry v. Mathews, 50, 51n6
Bravin v. Mount Sinai Medical Center, 151113
Child Health Insurance Program (CHIP), 126-127
Breathing Lessons (film), about Mark O'Brien, 132
Childhood and Society (Erikson), 202n8
Breggin, Peter R., Toxic Psychiatry, 158
Children's Defense Fund, 185
Brewer, Judy, 157
Childs, Theodore (Ted), 73
Bristo, Marca, 44-45, 137, 203, 212-213
CHIP. See Child Health Insurance Program
Brock, Walter, If I Can't Do It (film), 206
Choate, Alexander v., 67
Brooklyn Center for Independence of the Disabled
"Christina's World" (painting), I55
(BCID), 45
Christmas Carol, A (Dickens), XV. See also Tiny Tim
Brown, Dale, 9I
CIDNY. See Center for Independence of the
Brown, Jerry, 41
Disabled in New York
Brown, Steven E., 203
CIL. See Center for Independent Living (Berkeley)
Brown v. Board of Education, 69, I85
Citizen Soldier, 176-177
Burgdorf, Bob, 90, 46 n51
City of New York, Rodriguez v., I03 nio6
Burger, Ric, 142
civil rights: and 1960s black movement, 21, 28, 55,
Burnley, ADAPT v., 66 n60
73, 83; and disability issues as, 79-82, 89, 202. See
Burt, Robert, 134
also No Pity
Bush, George, xvi, 85, 92-94, 108, 161, 208, 210
Civil Rights Restoration Act of 1988, 78-79
By Trust Betrayed: Patients, Physicians, and the License
civil service: and discrimination toward the blind,
to Kill in the Third Reich (Gallagher), 139 n48
2I-22; and League of the Physically Handicapped
Byock, Ira, I35
demonstration, 5-7
Clancy, Tom, 48
Califano, Joseph, 5I, 53, 55, 69
Classic Cases in Medical Ethics (Pence), 132 nI
Campbell, Jr., Arthur, 206
Clements, William, 88
cancer: and ADA eligibility, 93; and atomic
Clerc, Laurent, I6
weapons, 179-181; breast, 95, 143, 164-165,
Cleveland Ballet Dancing Wheels, 207
168 n92; and insurance companies, 125; and pain
Cleveland, Carolyn C., IO3
management, I36
Clinton, William (Bill) Jefferson, 96, 108, 126, 130,
Cannon, Dennis, 56-57, 64, 66, 69
136, 191, 208
Cantor, Eddie, 8
Cochin, Ira, 155
Carabello, Bernard, II4
cochlear implant, 160
Carmichael, Stokely, 39
Coelho, Tony, 90, 92
Carolyn C. Cleveland, Policy Management Systems
Cohen, Shirley, Targeting Autism, 192 n42
Corp., et al. v., 103
Coleman, Diane, 133, 139-144, 148
Carr, Daniel, 136
Coleman, Disabled In Action of Pennsylvania v., 56, 58
Carter, Jimmy, 5I-53, 56, 89
Colin, Ann, Willie, 194
Case About Amy, A (R. C. Smith), on the education
Collins, Francis, 163
of a deaf child, XV, 189
Columbia Institution for the Deaf, Dumb, and
Casellas, Gilbert F., 109, II4
Blind, 17
Cedar Rapids v. Garret F., I93
Coming Home (film), 47-48
Center, Claudia, II7
Committee of Bar Examiners of the State of California,
268 INDEX
Mueller v., 80
DIA. See Disabled In Action
Communications Act of 1934, 152
Diamond, Sheila, 135
Community Advocacy Press (developmental
Diaz, Arnold, 59
disabilities/independent living magazine), II4
Dickens, Charles, A Christmas Carol, XV
Compassion In Dying, 135, 141, 143
Dickenson, Brian, 157
computers, 155-158
Didario, Helen L. v., IOO-IOI
Concepts of Independence, 35-36, 47
Disability Law Center. See New York Lawyers for
Congress of Milan (of 1880), I5-17
the Public Interest
conjoined twins, I60
Disability Rag (magazine), 204
Connecticut Society for Mental Hygiene, II8
Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund
Conquering Schizophrenia: A Father, His Son, and a
(DREDF): founding and overview of, 71, 77-79;
Medical Breakthrough (Weiden), I59
and Title III public accommodation, 97
Cook, Tim, 82
Disability Watch: The Status of People with Disabilities in
Corcoran, Paul, 43
the United States (Kaye), 93-94
Cranston, Alan, 66-67
Disabled American Veterans (DAV, formerly
Crew, Rudolph, 193-194
DAVWW), 171, 179-182
critics, of the ADA. See Doherty, Brian; Howard,
Disabled In Action (DIA): and public accessibility,
Philip K.; Olson, Walter; Stossel, John
56, 62, 99, 100; and public demonstrations, 58-59,
Crocker, Allen, I61
96; founding and overview of, 7I-76, 99
cross-disability advocacy, 52, 56, 105, 2IO-2II
Disabled In Action v. Empire State Building, 75, 96
Crow, Jim, I61.
Disabled In Action of Pennsylvania v. Coleman, 56, 58
Cullimore, Allan R., 174
Disabled in Action of Pennsylvania v. Sykes, 68 n77
Cuomo, Mario, 62
Disabled Policy: America's Programs for the Handicapped
curb cuts, 26, 40, 42, 54, 98, 99, 189, 199
(Berkowitz), 34n4, 9I
Disabled Students Program (DSP), 39
Dalton (private school), special education at, 193
Dix, Dorothea, I9 n38, II7
Daniel R. R. v. State Board of Education, 190
Dixon, Keith, I2I
Dart, Justin: and the ADA, 88-92, 93, 106-107, 109,
Doherty, Brian, 105-107, 108
208; on independent living, 47; and Justice For
Dole Foundation, 77 n18
All, 71, 85-86
Dole, ADAPT et al. v., 68
Dart, Yoshiko, 85
Dole, Maine Association of Handicapped Persons v.,
DAV (formerly DAVWW). See Disabled American
56, 67
Veterans
Domenici, Pete, II5
Davis, Frances, 57, 65-67, I05
Dooha, Susan, 213
Davis, Southeastern Community College v., 57, 8 n27,
Dopico v. Goldschmidt, 58, 67, 76, 188
65-67, I05
Dow Chemical Co. et. al., Ok-Lee v., 178 n61
Days Inn of America, 97-98
Dowd, Maureen, 2
deafness, compared to blindness, 14-15
DREDF. See Disability Rights Education and
Deaf in America: Voices from a Culture (Padden and
Defense Fund
Humphries), I6 n16, 27
Dreger, Alice D., I60
Death of Common Sense, The: How Law Is Suffocating
DSP. See Disabled Students Program
America (Howard), 26, 75, 105, 108, 150, 153, 196
Dusenbury, Joseph, 89
Deaf culture, 26-29, 160
Dutton, Melinda, I26
Deaver, George G., 172
duty to die, 139-140
deinstitutionalization See independent living,
Dybwad, Gunnar, 9
institutionalization
Dyrcia S. v. Board of Education, I86
DeJong, Gerben, 46
de l'Epée, abbé, 16-17
demonstrations. See protests
Early Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Testing
Department of Transportation, Strathie v., 81n30
(EPSDT), I27
Desario v. Thomas, I26
Easter Seal. See National Easter Seal Society
Developmental Disabilities and Bill of Rights Act
Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Association (EPVA):
of 1975, 185
and the ADA, 95, 99, 208; and affirmative action,
INDEX 269
III-II2; and long-term care, 127. See also EPVA v.
FDA. See Food and Drug Administration
MTA; ADAPT et al. v. Dole
FDR Memorial, xvi
Eddington, Pat, I82
FDR's Splendid Deception: The Moving of Roosevelt's
Edelman, Marion Wright, 185
Massive Disability and the Intense Efforts to Conceal It
education: and the IDEA, 185, 189-193; least
from the Public (Gallagher), In2-3, 3
restrictive environment, 187-188; individualized
Federal Aid Highway Act of 1973, n20
education plan, 78, 194. See also reasonable
Feldblum, Chai, 104
accommodation; special education
Feres, U.S. v., 182
EEOC. See Equal Employment Opportunity
Fernald State School for People with Mental
Commission
Retardation, I9 n38
EEOC Enforcement Guidance: The Americans with
Fieger, Geoffrey, 133
Disabilities Act and Psychiatric Disabilities, II4-II6
Figueroa, Patricio, 47
Eisenberg, Leon, I58
Final Exit: The Practicalities of Self-Deliverance and
Eist, Harold, 121, 163
Assisted Suicide for the Dying (Humphry), 148n98
Elizabeth Guckenberger, Boston University v., 80,
Finley, Jonathan, I25
197-198
Fiorito, Eunice, 52-53, 208, 2II-212
Elswit, Larry, 197, 198
fireboxes, 100
Emanuel, Ezekiel, 140, 143, 144
First Lady of the Lighthouse: A Biography of Winifred
Emanuel, Linda, 140
Holt Mather (Mather et al.), n39
Emergency Relief Bureau (ERB), 5-7
Fisher, Barbara, I96
Emerman, Anne, and accessible public transit, 59-
Fleischman, Alan, I60
61; on assessing the disability rights movement,
Florida Board of Regents, Kimel v., xvi
211, 214; on assisted suicide, 140; and college
Flying Solo: Re-imagining Manhood, Courage and Loss
experiences, 33; on employment, II2
(Kriegel), 202n9
Empire State Building, Disabled In Action v., 75, 96
Flynn, Laurie M., II7
Encyclopedia of Disability and Rehabilitation, 46 n47
Foley, Kathleen, 136, 142
Enders, John, 167
Food and Drug Administration (FDA), 158, 166, 167
Ensign, Tod, 176-179, 182; GI Guinea Pigs, 176 n47
Ford, Gerald, 56, 9I
EPSDT. See Early Periodic Screening, Diagnosis
Frank, Morris, 20
and Testing
Free Speech Movement, 38
Epstein, Steven, Impure Science, 166
Freedom To Die: People, Politics, and the Right-to-Die
EPVA. See Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Association
Movement (Humphry and Clement), 139 n50
EPVA v. MTA: 1979 case, 57-58; 1982 case, 58-6In4I
Frieden, Lex: and the ADA, 88-90, 200; and
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
college discrimination/inaccesibility, 43-44;
(EEOC), 94, 108-109, IIIn7, п4-п16, 130, 164
on the disability rights movement, 208, 210; on
ERB. See Emergency Relief Bureau
independent living, 213
Erikson, Erik H., Childhood and Society, 202
Friendly Ice Cream Corporation settlement, 98
Essex, Max, I67
Fries, Kenny (ed.), Staring Back, 205 n25
eugenics, 12, 17, 138-140, I60
From Goodwill to Civil Rights: Transforming Federal
Eustis, Dorothy Harrison, 20
Disability Policy (Scotch), n56, 50, 62, 90
euthanasia, 133-134, 138-143, 20I
Everyone Here Spoke Sign Language: Hereditary
Gage, Nathanael, 64
Deafness on Martha's Vineyard (Groce), I6-18
Gallagher, Hugh Gregory, By Trust Betrayed, 139 n48;
Excuse Factory, The: How Employment Law Is Paralyzing
FDR's Splendid Deception, In2-3, 3
the American Workplace (Olson), 108
Gallaudet, Edward M., 17
Eyegaze system, I57
Gallaudet, Thomas H., 16-17
Gallaudet University, 1988 uprising, I5, 28-29
Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988, 45, 78, I20
Garrett v. University of Alabama, xvi
Family Voices, I26 nioo
Garret F., Cedar Rapids v., 193
Fasano, Robert, 125
Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC), 102, 166, 213
Fay, Fred: and the ACCD, 52; on AIDS, 9I; and
Gelman, Robert, I63
independent living, 43, 47; and Justice For All,
Gensler, Martin, 180
85-86
Gerry, Martin, 50n5
270 INDEX
GI Guinea Pigs: How the Pentagon Exposed Our Troops
Haughton, Claiborne (Clay), 109, 131
to Dangers More Deadly Than War (Ensign and
Hawking, Stephen, 147-148
Uhl), 176 n47
HCFA. See Health Care Financing Administration
Gill, Carol, 139-141, 204-205
Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), I26
Gilliam, Judy, 131
Health, Education, and Welfare, U.S. Department
Gliedman, John, and William Roth, The Unexpected
of (HEW), 504, 29, 50-55, 65, 69
Minority, 3, II, 43
health maintenance organization (HMO), 84,
Glucksberg, Washington v., 133-134
I2I-125, 163-164, 167
GMHC. See Gay Men's Health Crisis
Hearne, Paul, 77, 89, 90, 92, 212
Godfrey, Wayne, 178
Helen L. v. Didario, IOO-IOI
Goffman, Erving, Stigma, 29
Hemlock Society, 141
Gold, Stephen, 71, 8I-82, 85, 103, 133
Hendin, Herbert, 141, 144
Goldschmidt, Dopico v., 58, 67, 76, 188
Hendler, Nelson, I36
Goldstein, Andrew, II8
Hendrick Hudson Central School District v. Rowley, 189
Goldwater Memorial Hospital, 33-34, 48
Henry v. Squaw Valley Ski Resort, 79
Golfus, Billy, When Billy Broke His Head (film), 206
Hentoff, Nat, 133
Goodwin, Doris Kearns, No Ordinary Time, I,
Herdrich, Pegram v., 125 n85
3 nII, n13, 4, 8n28
Heumann, Judith E.: and assessment of movement,
Gorman, David W., 179, 181-182
214; college discrimination/inaccessibility 7I-76;
Gostin, Larry, 163
on the IDEA, 189; on "normality," I; and Section
Gourgey, Karen Luxton, 25
504 demonstrations, 49, 54; on special education,
Grandin, Temple, Thinking in Pictures, 156
196-197, 199. See also American Coalition of
Gray, John C., 186-187
Citizens with Disabilities; Disabled In Action;
Greenberg, Ann, 9
National Council on Disability; World Institute
Greenberg, Sheldon, II7
on Disability
Greer, Richard, II9-120
Hevesi, Alan, I28
Greer v. Rome City School District, 190
HEW. See Health, Education, and Welfare, U.S.
Greitenstein, A. G., I63
Department of
Gresham, John, xvii nio
HILC. See Harlem Independent Living Center
Greyhound Bus Company, 74, 84-85, 88, 98 n61
Hill v. New York City Board of Elections, 75-76, 77 nii
Groce, Nora, Everyone Here Spoke Sign Language,
HIV. See AIDS
16-18; U.S. Role in International Disability Activities,
HMO. See health maintenance organization
9n37
Hockenberry, John, 205, 210; Moving Violations,
Groopman, Jerome, I67
IIn42, 137, IS5
Grove City v. Bell, 78-79
Holland, Rachel, Sacramento City Unified School District
Guarisco, Anthony, 179
v., 190-191
Guckenberger, Elizabeth, 80, 197-198
Home From the War: Learning from Vietnam Veterans
Guida, Jr., Alphonso V., II5
(Lifton), 178 n59
Guide Dog Users, Inc., 25-26
Hopkins, Harry, 6-7
Gulf War syndrome, 176-178, 181-183
Hotchkiss, Ralf D., 52, 149, 154-155, 215
Gwin, Lucy, 42, 210 n55
Housing and Urban Development, U.S.
Department of (HUD), 44
Hacker, Andrew, Two Nations, xvn5, 77n5
Howard, Philip K., Death of Common Sense: and the
Haiselden, Harry, 138
disabled lobby, I05, 108, 196; and disability issues
Handicapped Children's Protection Act of 1986, 78
as a right, 26; and frivolous lawsuits, 75; and
Handicapped Persons Legal Support Unit
technology, 150, 153
(HPLSU), 77
Howe, Samuel Gridley, IS, I9-20
Harkin, Tom, 92
Hoyer Kartop-Lift, 175
Harlem Independent Living Center (HILC), 45
Hoyer, Steny H., 92
Hartman v. Loudoun County Board of Education,
Ho, David, 166-167
192n43
HPLSU. See Handicapped Persons Legal Support
Haskell, Florence, 5-7
Unit
INDEX 271
Hsiao, John K., 159
Johnson, Mary, 146, 206, 210 n55
HUD. See Housing and Urban Development, U.S.
Johnson, Mordecai, 3
Department of
Jordan, I. King, 28
Human Genome Project, 163-165
Jose P. v. Board of Education, 186-188
Humphrey, Hubert, 50
Just One Break (JOB), 175
Humphry, Derek: Final Exit, 148n98; and Mary
Justice For All (JFA), 71, 85-87, 109, III, 126, 130, 200
Clement, Freedom to Die, 139 n50
Hutchinson, Tim, 180
Kahler, Richard, I09
Hyman, Lester, 2
Kahn, Mary Jo Ellis, I64
Kallianes, Virginia, 138
ICD. See Institute for the Crippled and Disabled.
Kamisar, Yale, 134, 140
See also International Center for the Disabled
Kamisiyah ammunition depot, 181
IDEA. See Individuals with Disabilities
Kanapell, Barbara, 27
Education Act
Katie Beckett program, I26 nioo
IEP. See individualized educational plan
Kaye, H. Stephen, Disability Watch, 93-94
If I Can't Do It (film) (Brock), 206
Keller, Helen, 19, 3I-32
Igasaki, Paul K., 130
Kelley, Simi (later Simi Linton), 40
Illinois Regional Transportation Authority, Lloyd v., 65
Kemp, Evan, 208
ILRU. See Independent Living Research Utilization
Kendra's Law, 118
Imperiale, Michael, 60-6I
Kennedy-Baring Bill of 1957, 22
Impure Science: AIDS, Activism, and the Politics of
Kennedy, Edward M., xvii
Knowledge (Epstein), 166
Keplinger, Daniel, King Gimp (documentary),
In the Shadow of Polio: A Personal and Social History
207n34
(Black), 4
Kessler, Henry, 172
Independent Contractor Home Care System, 35
Kevorkian, Jack, 132-133, 135, 138, 139
independent living: and college accessibility,
Kiley, Robert, 62
36-37; and deinstitutionalization, 33-36; and
Kimel v. Florida Board of Regents, xvi
rehabilitation, 46-47; and services of, 45-46. See
King Gimp (documentary), by and about Daniel
also individual center names
Keplinger, 207 n34
Independent Living Research Utilization (ILRU), 44
King, John E., 36
individualized educational plan (IEP), 78, 185-
King, Patricia, 164
189, 194
Kinney v. Yerusalim, 99 n76
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA),
Kirkingburg, Albertsons, Inc. v., 103-104
27, 55, 78-79, 86, 92, 184-197, 2II-212
Kisor, Henry, What's That Pig Outdoors, 3I
Institute for the Crippled and Disabled (ICD), 172.
Klinefeld, Herb, 170
See also International Center for the Disabled
Knauth, Oswald W., 5
Institute on Disability Culture, 203
Koch, Edward, 62, 75-76
institutionalization, II, 118, 119, 127, 210
Koestler, Frances A., An Unseen Minority, I5 n6, n7,
Inter-Continental Hotel case, 96
I8 n29, I9 n32, n36, n37, 20 n43
International Center for the Disabled, 172 n18
Kramer, Herbert, 76
internet, 86, 148, 156-158, 162-163, 2II
Kramer, Larry, I35, I68
"invisible disabilities," xvi
Kramer, Peter, Listening to Prozac, 158; Should You
Irvin, Cass, 204
Leave?, 158 n38
Irwin, Robert Benjamin, I5
Kramer, Victor, 50
Kriegel, Leonard, Flying Solo, 202n9
Janofsky, Julie, 107
Kurzweil reader, по, I56
Javits, Jacob, 34, 77
Kuusisto, Stephen, Planet of the Blind, 20 n42
JCDecaux, 150-I5I
Kushner, Tony, I68
Jensen, Sandra, 162-163
Kyl Amendment, I22
Jernigan, Kenneth, 22, 24, 25
JFA. See Justice For All
L.C. and E.W., Olmstead V., 103-105
JOB. See Just One Break
LaCheen, Cary, IOO
272 INDEX
Lackner, Bracco v., 79
by People with Developmental Disabilities, II3 n18
LaGuardia, Fiorello, 6
Longmore, Paul, xvn6, 4, II, 130, 206
Lait, Jack, 138
Loudoun County Board of Education, Hartman v.,
Landman, J. P., 139
192n43
Lane, Harlan, When The Mind Hears, 14n2, I6 n17,
Love, Susan, 165-166
n22, n25, n26
Lowell, Amy, II
language: and deafness VS. blindness, 14; and
LRE. See least restrictive environment
Sign VS. oralism, I6-18. See also American Sign
Luciano, Felipe, 55
Language; phonics; Sign (language)
Lunn, Kitty, 207
Language Instinct, The: How the Mind Creates Language
Lynn, Joann, 215
(Pinker), IS nio, I6 n13
LaPore, National Federation of the Blind v., 81n30
M., Nicholas, and M. M. (autism), 191-192
LaSpina, Nadina, 27, 104, 20I-202, 205-206
Mace, Ronald L., 149
Latimer, Henry, I5
Macrolab, 155-156
Latimer, Robert and Tracy, 145
"Magic Wand, The" (poem) (Manning), 206-207
Lauder, Michael, II8
Magoo, Mr., 209
Lawrence, Dixie, I61
Maine Association of Handicapped Persons v. Dole,
LDs. See learning disabilities
56, 67
League of the Physically Handicapped, 5-7, 21,
Mallory, Randolph, I60
55, 171
manic depression, II5, II7, I59
learning disabilities (LDs), 80, 9I, 156, 185, 187,
Mann, Horace, I5
193-199
Manning, Lynn, "The Magic Wand", 206-207
least restrictive environment (LRE), 100, 184,
March of Dimes, 7-8, IO, I67
187-191. See also Individuals with Disabilities
Marlow, Sandra, 179
Education Act
Marshall Coleman et al. v. ABB Lumus Crest et al., 182
Leichman, Lawrence, I6I
Marshall, Thurgood, 67
Lenz, Fritz, 138-139
Martin v. PGA, 205 n23
Lessenberry, Jack, 133
Matano, Dorothy, 23
Let Me Hear Your Voice: A Family's Triumph over
Marx, Robert, 171
Autism (Maurice), 191n41
Massi, Carr, 39
Levine, Robert, 41
Mastroianni, Peggy, 164
Levy, Chava Willig, A People's History of the
Mather, Winifred Holt, 20
Independent Living Movement, 49 n2
Mathews, Cherry v., 50, 5In6
Lewis, APTA v., 65-66, 83n35
Mathews, David, 5I
Lewis, Jerry (Muscular Dystrophy Telethon), IO-II,
Matson, Floyd, Walking Alone and Marching Together,
74, 137
21n46
Libassi, Peter, 52
Maurice, Catherine, Let Me Hear Your Voice, 191n41
Lifton, Robert J., Home from the War, 178 n59; The
McAfee, Larry, 146-147
Nazi Doctors, 138
McCaffrey, Rosemarie, 25
Lighthouse movement, 20
McGregor, Robert P., 17
Lincoln, Abraham, 17, II6
McHugh, Robert, 43
Lindsay, John, 52
McManus, Peggy, I26
Linton, Simi (formerly Simi Kelley), 206
McQuade, Denise, 59
Lions Club, 20-21
MDA. See Muscular Dystrophy Association
Lipton, Diane, 190-191
Mead, Margaret, 132
Listening to Prozac (Kramer), 158
Medicaid, 34, 44, II2, 122, I25-I30, 142. See also
Living Downstream: A Scientist's Personal Investigation
Medicaid Community Attendant Services Act
of Cancer and the Environment (Steingraber),
Medicaid Community Attendant Services Act
165n66
(MiCasa), 84. See also Medicaid Community
Lloyd v. Illinois Regional Transportation Authority, 65
Attendant Services and Support Act
Long Island University, 73-74
Medicaid Community Attendant Services and
Longhurst, Nancy Anne, The Self-Advocacy Movement
Support Act (MiCassa), 84n39
INDEX 273
Medical Savings Account (MSA), I2I-122
National Mental Health Association
Medicare, II2, I2I-125, 128-130, 144
National Committee for Mental Hygiene, 118
Medicare Plus Choice, I22
National Council on Disability (NCD), 88, 89-90,
Melledy, Angela, 210 n55
127-129, 200, 203, 212
Men, The (film), 47-48
National Deaf-Mute College, 17. See also Gallaudet
Mental Health Parity Act of 1996, II9
University
Mental Health Systems Act of 1980, II9
National Easter Seal Society, 9-IO, 36, 54, 63-64
Mental Patients Liberation Project, 199
National Federation of the Blind (NFB): contrasted
Meredith, James, 38
to ACB, 25-26; and the ADA, 93; and founding of,
Metropolitan Transportation Authority (of New
21; and New York City subway gates, 22-23; and
York City) (MTA), 22-23, 57-62, 75
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 24-25
Meyer, Karl E., 2
National Federation of the Blind v. LaPore, 81n30
MiCasa. See Medicaid Community Attendant
National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, 8. See
Services Act
also March of Dimes
MiCassa. See Medicaid Community Attendant
National Gulf War Resource Center, 177, 183
Services and Support Act
National Institutes of Health (NIH), 166, I67
Miller, Paul S., III
National Mental Health Association (NMHA),
Mills v. Board of Education of the District of Columbia,
118-121
184-185
National Mental Health Foundation, 118
Mind That Found Itself: An Autobiography (Beers), II8
National Network of Learning Disabled Adults, 9I
Mistler, Sharon, 52
National Organization on Disability (NOD), по,
Moakley, Terence, II2
I29
Mobility Through Access, 58
National Society for Crippled Children. See
Mosley, Donald, I46
National Easter Seal Society
Mother Teresa, I53
National Telability Media Center, 2II
Mount Sinai Medical Center, Bravin v., 151 n13
Nazi Doctors, The: Medical Killing and the Psychology of
Mouth (magazine), 210
Genocide (Lifton), 138n42
Moving Violations: War Zones, Wheelchairs, and
NCD. See National Council on Disability
Declarations of Independence, 137, 155
Netherlands, policy on assisted suicide, I4I-142, 144
MSA. See Medical Savings Account
Neugeboren, Jay, Transforming Madness, 119 n59
MTA. See Metropolitan Transportation Authority
New York Able (newspaper), 210
(of New York City)
New York City Board of Elections, Hill v., 75-76, 77 nu
MTA, EPVA v.: 1979 case, 57-58; 1982 case, 58-61n41
New York City 504 Democratic Club, 214 n70
Mueller v. Committee of Bar Examiners of the State of
New York Lawyers for the Public Interest (NYLPI),
California, 80
76-77, 100, 191-192
Muller, Keith, 3I
New York Times, editorial policy on disability,
multiple chemical sensitivity, 156
208-210
Murphy, Robert F., The Body Silent, 203-204
New York Yankees, Pascuiti v., 96 n61
Murphy v. United Parcel Service, Inc., 103-104
NFB. See National Federation of the Blind
Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA), IO-II, 74
Nickerson, Eugene H., I86
NIH. See National Institutes of Health
NAAV. See National Association of Atomic Veterans
9 Highland Road (Winerip), 118n46
NAD. See National Association of the Deaf
Nisan, Raphael, III
Nagle, John, 24
Nixon, Richard, 49
NAMI. See National Alliance for the Mentally Ill
NMHA. See National Mental Health Association
Naser, Sylvia, A Beautiful Mind, II8
No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor: The Home
National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI), II7,
Front in World War II (Goodwin), I, 4
I20-I2I
No Pity: People with Disabilities Forging a New Civil
National Association of Atomic Veterans
Rights Movement (Shapiro), 28 n77, 29, 53, 88
(NAAV), 179
NOD. See National Organization on Disability
National Association of the Deaf (NAD), 17, 28, 29
Northrup, Christiane, 166
National Association of Mental Health. See
Northwest Airlines, Benson V., 95
274 INDEX
Not Dead Yet, 47, 132-148
Pennsylvania Department of Corrections v. Yeskey,
Nugent, Tim, 36
102-103
Nurse's Health Study, I66 n72
People First, II3
NYLPI. See New York Lawyers for the Public Interest
People's History of the Independent Living Movement, A
(Levy), 49 n2
Percy, Charles, 50
O'Berry, Russell, 181
Perkins, Edward, 24
Oberti v. Board of Education of the Borough of Clementon
Pernick, Martin S., The Black Stork, 138
School District, I90
Peterson, Roger, 52
O'Brien, Mark, 132
Pfeiffer, David, 206
O'Connor, Basil, 8
PGA, Martin v., 205 n23
O'Connor, Sandra Day, 104
phonics, VS. whole-language method, I95
Ogle, Rebecca (Becky), 85-86, 109, III, 130
Pimentel, Al, 52
Ok-Lee v. Dow Chemical Co. et. al., 178 n61
Pinker, Steven, The Language Instinct, I5 nio, I6 n13
Olinger v. U.S. Golf Association, 205 n23
Pitts, Gary, 182-183
Olmstead v. L.C. and E.W., 103-105
Planet of the Blind: A Memoir (Kuusisto), 20 n42
Olson, Walter, Excuse Factory, I08
Plutonium Files, The: America's Secret Medical
One-step campaign, 153
Experiments in the Cold War (Welsome), 179 n66
Operation Castle, 179
Policy Management Systems Corp., et al., Carolyn C.
oralism, I5-17, 19, 29-31
Cleveland v., 103
Oregon, law on physician-assisted suicide, 140-143
poliomyelitis, Sabin and Salk vaccines, 8-10, 167. See
OVR. See Vocational Rehabilitation, Office of
also March of Dimes; Roosevelt, Franklin Delano
Owen, Mary Jane, 146, 20I
Politics of Readjustment, The: Vietnam Veterans Since the
Owens, Celeste, 30
War (Scott), 176 n42
Owens, Major, 9I
polling sites, 75-76, III
Oxford HMO, 123-124
Ponce de Leon, Pedro, I5
post-traumatic stress disorder, 176
Potoker, Caren, III
Pacht, Harvey, 114
Pacific Gas and Electric, Putnam v., 80
poverty: and benefits to children, 126; and the deaf,
Padden, Carol, and Tom Humphries, Deaf in
32; and disability, 214; and language skills, I5,
America, I6 n16, 27
186-187; legal services programs, 76
pain management, 135-137
Practical Ethics (Singer), xiii-xiv, 132 nI
Presidential Conference on Race, xvi
Paralyzed Veterans of America (PVA), 56, 173-174
Paraplegia News (monthly newspaper), 173-175
President's Committee on Employment of People
PARC. See Pennsylvania Association for Retarded
with Disabilities, 49, 63, I57
Children
privacy, of medical records, 163-164
parents, initiation of childhood disability
protests: and ADAPT, 83-84, 96; and the DIA,
58-59, 74; and Gallaudet University, 15, 28-29;
organizations, 8-IO
Parks, Rosa, 84
and Gray Panthers, 122; and Handicapped
Adults Association, 209-210; and League of the
Parrino, Sandra, 89-90, 92
Pascuiti v. New York Yankees, 96 n61
Physically Handicapped, 5-6; and Section 504
demonstrations, 49, 53-56
Pataki, George, 195
pay toilets, 150-151
psychiatric disabilities, 93, II4-121, 158, I63
Psychiatric Foundation, II8
Pechura, Constance, 180
Pegram v. Herdrich, 125 n85
"psychiatric survivors," II9-121
Public Transit Authority, Rhode Island, Rhode Island
Pelletier, Leonard, 38
Pence, Gregory E., Classic Cases in Medical Ethics,
Handicapped Action Committee v., 56, 58, 67
Puglisi, Matt, I82
132 nI
Pennsylvania Association for Retarded Children
Putnam v. Pacific Gas and Electric, 80
PVA. See Paralysed Veterans of America
(PARC), I84
Pennsylvania Association for Retarded Children v.
Pennsylvania, 184 n2
QILC. See Queens Independent Living Center
INDEX 275
Queens Independent Living Center (QILC), 45-46
Rosen, Roslyn, 28
Quill, Vacco v., 132-135
Rosenman, Sam, 3
Ross McCaughey, Betsy, I25
Rabby, Rami, 22-24
Rotello, Gabriel, Sexual Ecology, 198
Ragged Edge (magazine), 210
Rowley, Amy, XV, 189
Ragged Edge, The (book), (Shaw, ed.), 20In3, n4;
Rowley, Hendrick Hudson Central School District v., 189
204 n20, n22; 205 n26; 2I2 n61
Rubenfeld, Phyllis, 138-139, 206
Raggio, James, 57, 81, 108
Ruff, Charles, I
Ramsey, Joyce, I24
Rusk, Howard, 52, 170, 172-173
Ranch Hand operation, 178
Russell, Marta, Beyond Ramps, I26 n99
Rappaport, Ida, 9
Ravitch, Richard, 59
SABE. See Self Advocates Becoming Empowered
Reagan, Ronald, 23, 66, 78, 89-90, 208
Sabin, Albert, 8-10, 167
reasonable accommodation: and accessible public
Sacks, Oliver, Seeing Voices, 14, 27-29
transit, 58, 67; and ADA backlash, 106, 108; and
Sacramento City Unified School District v. Holland,
computers, 157; and education, 156, 197-198; and
Rachel, 190-191
employment, 9I, 94-95, II4, 116-117; and public
Salk, Jonas, 8-10, 167
services, 100; and the Supreme Court, 103
Sandel, Michael J., 144
Reeve, Christopher, xvi, 137-138, I57
Sanjek, Lani, I22
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 24, 29, 34, 46, 49-55, III
Satel, Sally L., II6
Reich, Alan, IIO
Saviola, Marilyn, 33-34, 214
Rehnquist, William B., 134
Schall, Thomas D., 2I
Reinhardt, Stephen, 133, 134
Schary, Dore, Sunrise at Campobello (play and film), 4
Reno, Janet, 108, 140-141
Scheer, Susan, 123, 162-163, 208-209, 213
Rhode Island Handicapped Action Committee v. Rhode
Schnair, David, 123
Island Public Transit Authority, 56, 58, 67
Schneider, Anne, 198
Rich, Frank, II8
Schnur, Sandra, 35-36, 47
Ride the Bus Days, 60-6I
Schrader, Paul, I57
Riegle, Donald, 67
Scotch, Richard K., From Goodwill to Civil Rights,
Rifkin, Jeremy, Biotech Century, 164
24n56, 50, 62, 90
right to die, 139, 141, 143, 144, 148n98
Scott, Wilbur J., The Politics of Readjustment, 176 n42
Riley, Richard S., 196
Sears Report (ADA compliance), 108, II2-II3
Riley v. Weyerhaeuser Paper Company, 95
Seeing Voices: A Journey into the World of the Deaf
Ritalin, 158 n40
(Sacks), 14, 27-29
Rivera, Geraldo, II4
self-advocacy, II3-II4, 170-171
Robert, Daniel, 137, 202
Self-Advocacy Association of New York State, II4
Roberts, Edward: and career achievement, 208;
Self-Advocacy Movement by People with Developmental
the Independent Living Movement, 37-43,
Disabilities, The: A Demographic Study and Directory
47; and personal assistant services, 200; and
of Self-Advocacy Groups in the United States
physician-assisted suicide, 146; and Section
(Longhurst), II3 n18
504 demonstrations, 54. See also Center for
Self Advocates Becoming Empowered (SABE), II3
Independent Living (Berkeley)
Sexual Ecology: AIDS and the Destiny of Gay Men,
Robertson, Steve, 176
(Rotello), 168
Rodriguez v. City of New York, 103 n106
Shabazz, Betty (Mrs. Malcolm X), 215
Rogers, Joseph, I20
Shamoo, Adil, 159
Rolling Quads (Berkeley), 39
Shapiro, Joseph P., 142; No Pity, 28 n77, 29, 53, 88
rolling-tip cane, 21
Shavelson, Lonnie, 135
Rolnick, Nancy, 144-145
Shaw, Barrett (ed), Ragged Edge, The (book), 20In3,
Rome City School District, Greer v., I90
n4; 204 n20, n22; 205 n26; 212 n61
Roncker v. Walters, I90
Shaw, George, I66
Roosevelt, Eleanor, I, 1n19
sheltered workshops, I9-22, 25, II4
Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, xvi, I-8, 130
Shilts, Randy, And the Band Played On, I68 n90
276 INDEX
Should You Leave? A Psychiatrist Explores Intimacy
Stewart, Jean, The Body's Memory, 202-203
and Autonomy-and the Nature of Advice (Kramer),
Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity
158 n38
(Goffman), 29
Sick Kids Need Involved People (SKIP), 35
Stokoe, William, 27
Sign (language), I4-I5. See also American Sign
Stossel, John, 107-108
Language
Stothers, William, 103
SILC. See Statewide Independent Living Council
Strathie v. Department of Transportation, 81n30
Singer, Peter, Practical Ethics, xiii-xiv, 132 nI
Stussman, Barak, 199
sit-ins. See protests
suicide. See assisted suicide
Skawinski, William, I56
Sullivan, Paul, 177-178, 183
Skinner, ADAPT v., 68, 82. See also ADAPT v. Burnley
Sullivan v. Zebley, I26 n99
SKIP. See Sick Kids Need Involved People
Sunrise at Campobello (play and film) (Schary), 4
Slekis v. Thomas, I26
Supplemental Security Income (SSI), I26 n98, 130
Smedes, Lewis, 144
Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1982, 67
Smith-Fess Vocational Rehabilitation Act of
Sutton et al. v. United Air Lines, Inc., 103-104
1920, 171
Switzer, Mary, 89
Smith-Hughes Vocational Education Act of 1917, 171
Sykes, Disabled in Action of Pennsylvania v., 68 n77
Smith, John L., 5I
Smith, Mark, 85
TAB. See temporarily able bodied
Smith, R. C., A Case About Amy, XV, 189
talking books, 18-19
Smith-Sears Veterans Rehabilitation Act of 1918, 171
Tansman, Melvin R., I27
Social Security Act of 1935, 5, IO, 12, 21, 103, 129
Targeting Autism: What We Know, Don't Know, and Can
Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), 103,
Do to Help Young Children with Autism and Related
по, 130
Disorders (Cohen), 192 n42
Society for Disability Studies, 206
taxis, accessible, 152
Somnolent Samantha, 197-199
TDD. See telecommunication device for the deaf
Somoza, Mary, 188-191
telecommunication device for the deaf (TDD),
Southeastern Community College v. Davis, 57, 8n27,
152-153
65-67, I05
telethons, and exploitation for fund-raising, IO-II.
Spagnoletti, Frank, I82
See also Lewis, Jerry; Reeve, Christopher
special education, 77-82, II4, 185-197
teletypewriter (TTY), 99-I00, IOI, IIO, 152-153, I56
Specialty, Weissman v., 79
temporarily able bodied (TAB), 40, I09
Spiegel, Richard, 196, 199
tenBroek, Jacobus, 2I-22, 63. See also National
Spieler, Marvin, I59
Federation of the Blind
spina bifida, 9, 138, 143, 161, 162, 207, 212 n61
text telephone (TT), 152. See also telecommunication
Squaw Valley Ski Resort, Henry v., 79
device for the deaf; teletypewriter
SSDI. See Social Security Disability Insurance
Thinking in Pictures: And Other Reports from My Life
SSI. See Supplemental Security Income
with Autism (Grandin), I56
Stabiner, Karen, To Dance with the Devil, I65
Thomas, Desario v., I26
Stahl, Leslie, I95
Thomas, Slekis v., I26
Staples, Brent, I95
Thompson, Lyn, 34-35
Staring Back: The Disability Experience from the Inside
Thompson, Peter, IO5
Out (Fries, ed.), n25
Thornburgh, Dick, 108
State Board of Education, Daniel R. R. v., 190
Tiny Tim, XV, 3
Statewide Independent Living Council (SILC), 46
To Dance with the Devil: The New War on Breast Cancer
Steele, Ken, I20
(Stabiner), 165
Steingraber, Sandra, Living Downstream, 165 n66
toilets, pay, 150-151
Stellman, Jeanne, 178 n62
Toward Independence: An Assessment of Federal Laws
Stellman, Steven, 178
and Programs Affecting Persons with Disabilities-With
sterilization, forced, 12, 138-139
Legislative Recommendations, 90
Stevens, Jane Greengold, 76
Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, Empathy, and Love
Stevens, John Paul, 104-105
Must Replace the Drugs, Electroshock, and Biochemical
INDEX 277
Theories of the New Psychiatry (Breggin), I58
Van Wagner, Ben, I55-156
Tozer, Dana, 207
Vanik, Charles, 50
Transbus, 56-57
Verdi-Fletcher, Mary, 207
Transcending Compliance: 1996 Follow-up Report on
VESID. See Vocational and Educational Services for
Sears, Roebuck and Company, 108, II2-II3
Individuals with Disabilities. See also Vocational
Transforming Madness: New Lives for People Living with
Rehabilitation, Office of
Mental Illness (Neugeboren), 119 n59
Vest, George, 24
Transportation, U.S. Department of (USDOT), 56,
Veterans Administration (VA), 173, 177-181. See also
59, 65-68, 83, 98, 104
Veterans Bureau
Treanor, Richard B., We Overcame, 49 n3
Veterans Affairs, Department of, 177-179. See also
Tribe, Laurence, 134
Veterans Administration; Veterans Bureau
Truman, Harry S., 173
Veterans Bureau, 171. See also Veterans Administra-
TT. See text telephone
tion; Veterans Affairs, Department of
TTY. See teletypewriter
veterans, disabled: and film portrayals of, 47-48; vs.
Two Nations: Black and White, Separate, Hostile,
disabled citizens, 7; and legislation/self-advocacy
Unequal (Hacker), xvn5, 77n5
170-171; and rehabilitation, 172. See also Agent
Tucker, Joyce E., III
Orange; Gulf War syndrome; Paralyzed Veterans
Tuite, James J., 181
of America; Veterans Administration
Veterans Health Care Eligibility Reform Act of
UCP. See United Cerebral Palsy (local organizations)
1996, 180
UCPA. See United Cerebral Palsy Association
Viscardi, Henry, 175
(national organization)
Visco, Fran, I66
Unexpected Minority, The: Handicapped Children in
Vocational and Educational Services for Individuals
America (Gliedman and Roth), 3, II, 43
with Disabilities (VESID), 26, 34. See also
United Air Lines, Inc., Sutton et al. v., 103-104
Vocational Rehabilitation, Office of
United Artists Theatre Circuit, Arnold v., 79, 97
Vocational Rehabilitation, Office of (OVR), 35-36
United Cerebral Palsy (local organizations) (UCP), 9
voice-activated computers, 156
United Cerebral Palsy Association (national
voice synthesizer, I56
organization) (UCPA), 9, IO, 54, 74. See also United
Cerebral Palsy v. Board of Education
Wade, Cheryl Marie, 201, 32n93, 38 n17
United Cerebral Palsy v. Board of Education, 186
Waldrep, Jr., Alvis Kent, 90
United of Omaha, Chabner v., 79 n28, 8I
Walking Alone and Marching Together (Matson), In46
United Parcel Service, Inc., Murphy v., 103-104
Wallstein, Peter, 161
universal design, 40, 149-152, 158, I68
Walters, Roncker v., I90
Universal Grammar, I6
War Risk Insurance Act, 171
University of Alabama, Garrett v., xvi
Warm Springs (Georgia), 3-4, 8, IO, 43, 52
Unseen Minority, The: A Social History of Blindness in
Washington v. Glucksberg, 133-134
America (Koestler), IS n6, n7, I8 n29, I9 n32, nn36-37,
We (magazine), 2IO-2II
20 n41, n43
We Overcame: The Story of Civil Rights for Disabled
Uranium 238, 177 n52
People (Treanor), 49n3
Urban Mass Transportation Assistance Act of 1970,
Webdale, Kendra, 118
56 n20
Weicker, Lowell, 89-90, 92
U.S. Golf Association, Olinger v., 205 n23
Weiden, Peter, Conquering Schizophrenia, 159
U.S. Role in International Disability Activities, The: A
Weisman, James, 57, 6I-62, 79, 95, 107, III, II2,
History and Look Toward the Future (Groce), n37
208-209
U.S. v. Feres, 182
Weissman v. Specialty, 79
USDOT. See Transportation, U.S. Department of
Wellstone, Paul, II5, 180
Welsome, Eileen, The Plutonium Files, 179 n66
VA. See Veterans Administration
Wenniger, Bruce G., I67
vaccines: AIDS, 167-168; anthrax, 183 n86; Gulf War,
Westling, Jon, 197-198
182; polio, 8
Weston, Jr., Russell, II8
Vacco v. Quill, 132-135
Weyerhaeuser Paper Company, Riley v., 95
278 INDEX
What's That Pig Outdoors? A Memoir of Deafness
Wolinsky, Sidney, 71, 79-81
(Kisor), 31n89
Women's Movement, 38, 74, 213
wheelchair: accessibility, 13, 37-44, 62-66, 74-77,
Wood, Alexander, 124
79-86, 96-97, I5I-152, 209; design, 154-155. See also
Works Progress Administration (WPA), 6-7, I9
Greyhound Bus Company; Transbus
Work Incentives Improvement Act (WIIA), 130
Wheelchair Independence Now (WIN). See Win
Independence Now
Workers' Compensation, IIO, 130
When Billy Broke His Head (film) (Golfus), 206
World AIDS Conferences (Eleventh, Twelfth, and
When the Mind Hears: A History of the Deaf (Lane),
Thirteenth), 167-168
14 n2, I6 n17, 17 n22, n25, n26
World Institute on Disability (WID), 4I-42, 44,
White, Bernice, 34
47, I54
White Cane Law, 2I-22
world wide web. See internet
White, Edmund, 168
WPA. See Works Progress Administration
WID. See World Institute on Disability
Wrich, James, I2I
Wieder, Harry, I06
Wright, Patrisha, 71, 78
WIIA: See Work Incentives Improvement Act
Wyeth, Andrew, "Christina's World" (painting), I55
Willie: Raising and Loving a Child with Attention Deficit
Disorder (Colin), 194n48
Yanagisawa, Deborah Ossoff, 205
Willson, Harold, 63-64
Yerusalim, Kinney v., 99 n76
Wilson, Bernadette B., I08
Yeskey, Pennsylvania Department of Corrections v.,
Wilson v. Armstrong, 103 n98
102-103
WIN. See Win Independence Now
Youk, Thomas, 133
Win Independence Now (WIN), 44
Young-Bruehl, Elisabeth, The Anatomy of Prejudice, XV
Winerip, Michael, 9 Highland Road, II8 n46
Wingate, John, II2
Zames, Frieda, 60-6I
Winston, Charles, 2II
Zebley, Sullivan v., I26 n99
Wipfler, Jane, 40
Zimmerman, Bert, 23
Wodatch, John, 50 n5, 97-98
Zola, Irving, II-12n46
Wohl, Arthur, 93
Zumwalt II, Elmo, I82
HEALTH CARE AND DISABILITY/SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
Advance Praise for The Disability Rights Movement
"More than a history, The Disability Rights Movement documents the wrenching evolution of
attitudes: From isolation and charity to confrontation and rights; from sheltered workshops to
independent living; from telethons of pity to technology's power; from 'cripples' and 'invalids'
to People with disabilities! Comprehensive and well-written, Fleischer and Zames capture the
substance and spirit of the disability rights movement and bring it to life." -Frederick A. Fay,
Ph.D., Chair, Justice For All, and disability rights advocate for four decades
"Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames take the reader on a guided tour through the
still-brief history of the Disability Rights Movement, and they draw upon many first-person
accounts to enrich the narrative. Although I was "present at the creation" of much of this, I still
learned a great deal. A unique feature of this book is the first-hand recounting of the remarkable
work of the Disabled in Action (DIA) of New York. This group never gave up in their struggle to
make the nation's biggest city accessible, despite enormous odds and powerful political opposi-
tion. Their story alone is worth the price of this book." -Frank G. Bowe, Ph.D., Professor,
Hofstra University, and author of Physical, Sensory and Health Disabilities
"Frieda Zames and Doris Zames Fleischer have crafted the most comprehensive history of the
disability rights movement to date. Many firsthand sources and never-before-published inter-
views make this a must-read for anyone seeking to understand the roots of today's most
pressing disability rights issues." -Mary Johnson, Editor, Ragged Edge magazine
© Carol Rosegg
Doris Zames Fleischer has been a member of the Humanities and
Social Sciences Department at New Jersey Institute of Technology
since 1988. Frieda Zames, Associate Professor of Mathematics
Emeritus at New Jersey Institute of Technology, has been a
disability rights activist for over twenty-five years. Both sisters
live in New York City.
Cover design: Erin Kirk New
Printed in U.S.A.
ISBN 1-56639-812-6
Temple University Press
90000
Philadelphia 19122
www.temple.edu/tempress
cloth ISBN 1-56639-811-8
paper ISBN 1-56639-812-6
9 781566 398121