The Future of Rehabilitation by Joanne Wilson
The Future of Rehabilitation by Joanne Wilson
The Braille Monitor
August/September, 2002
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The Future of Rehabilitation:
Partnerships with Consumer
Organizations
by Joanne Wilson
Commissioner, Rehabilitation
Services Administration
United States Department
of Education
Joanne
Wilson
From the Editor: For
many years Dr. Joanne Wilson was a loved and respected leader of the National
Federation of the Blind. Now that President Bush has named her to direct the
entire rehabilitation program in the United States, she returned to our convention
on Monday afternoon, July 8, representing the administration. This is what she
said:
The bamboo plant, the public
rehabilitation system, and the organized blind have much in common. If you plant
a bamboo seed, you will water and fertilize that spot, and you will wait four
years, and nothing will appear. Finally, in the fifth year, the plant will begin
to grow. It will grow as much as three feet in one day, and within one growing
season it will grow to a height of ninety feet. You will wonder what was happening
those first four years. Were they wasted time? No, what was happening was that
the bamboo plant was growing down into the ground. It was establishing a firm
root system that would anchor the plant when it began to grow to that great
height in the fifth year.
The tilling of the soil
of the public rehabilitation system began in 1916, '17, and '18 when World War
I veterans began coming back from the war, injured and in need of rehabilitation.
The seed of the rehabilitation program was planted in 1920 with the passage
of the Smith-Fess Act, which allowed civilians to be served by the rehabilitation
program.
For the first twenty years
of the rehabilitation program blind people weren't restricted from participating
in the services nor were services required. It was just presumed that blind
people were unemployable. As a matter of fact, from 1920 to 1938 only 4.5 blind
people per state were put to work, and these jobs were very traditional work:
chair-caning, basketry--things of that sort.
In 1936 came passage of
the Randolph-Sheppard Act, which allowed blind people to open facilities serving
food in our federal buildings. In 1938 came the Wagner-O'Day Act. This permitted
the federal government to buy certain items from sheltered workshops for the
blind. In 1943 the Borden-La Follete Act was passed. It expanded the emphasis
on employment, but it also allowed for separate agencies for the blind. These
agencies started out just buying things, providing low-vision aids and vision-restoration
surgery for blind people.
In 1950 Mary Switzer became
the second director of the rehabilitation program. As a matter of fact, the
building I work in is named after Mary Switzer; the desk that I sit at, people
claim, was her desk. Mary Switzer decided that maybe, just maybe, people with
significant disabilities might have some real rehabilitation potential. So,
to the list of those to receive rehabilitation, she added an emphasis on working
with the mentally retarded, the mentally ill, and the blind. In 1954 additions
to the Rehabilitation Act allowed for training programs to train professionals
in the field of blindness and other disabilities. More money was being devoted
to research on employment and disability issues. And, important to the blind,
state facilities were allowed, including residential centers serving the blind.
Mostly these followed the medical model, but at least services were available.
In 1967 the funding for
the rehabilitation program tripled. From 1968 to 1973 Mary Switzer became the
head of the Social and Rehabilitation Services Administration, which meant that
the programs now worked with lots of socially disadvantaged people as well as
people with disabilities. Her important contribution during this time was the
fact that she emphasized individualized services for folks with disabilities
and other socially disadvantaged people.
In 1973 we begin to see
the first little sprouts of our bamboo plant. It started to appear above the
ground. For the first time the program changed its emphasis from vocational
rehabilitation exclusively to rehabilitation of the whole person. It changed
its name because for the first time it started to emphasize and gather momentum
toward individual-centered services. There was less agency domination. It became
important not that minimal services be offered to folks with disabilities but
that they be provided the services that would assist them to achieve employment
and meet their potential. It was the first time that this sort of thing had
happened.
In future reauthorizations,
rehabilitation continued to sprout in these directions and grow taller and taller.
Through each reauthorization there was more consumer focus, consumer choice,
consumer empowerment, and a growing emphasis on civil rights. On Fred Schroeder's
watch as commissioner of rehabilitation RSA exerted more emphasis on high-quality,
meaningful employment in integrated settings. In other words, he started emphasizing
elevated expectations for folks with disabilities. The rehabilitation system
moved from being the primary cause of social change to being a respondent to
social change. A shift in leadership took place from rehab professionals to
the disability community. Things were starting to change.
These are some of the historic
facts about the growth of the rehabilitation system. But what really caused
some of these changes? What was the Miracle Gro that was making all this happen?
What made this system change from a minimal system that bought things for people
to become one that was responsive to people and really empowering people with
disabilities? One might point out that there were world events like wars and
increased leadership among the professions and politics. But we in the field
of blindness know the truth. Our organization was out there pushing in this
direction and being the Miracle Gro to make these things happen. It was not
always easy. There were pushing and struggling and often fights. But the blind
were organized, so these did happen.
The National Federation
of the Blind was organized in 1940. Lots of little things took place day to
day, brought about by lots of people. Lots of rather unspectacular events occurred
making the spectacular happen. Let's look at the evolutionary development of
the National Federation of the Blind. We might ask, do the phases of this change
coincide with what was happening in the rehabilitation system? No, when I analyzed
it, in reality they were pulling the rehabilitation system along.
The first phase of the
blindness movement dealt with getting food on the tables of blind people, getting
the welfare check, dealing with Social Security, trying to get people some money
so that they could survive. As I read the literature, I kept finding familiar
citations in the history; the names that very often reappeared were tenBroek,
the founder of the National Federation of the Blind, and Matson, Floyd Matson,
who is in this room today. Just look around the room.
The next phase of the blindness
movement was that of finding jobs for blind people. Our early leaders took on
reforming the civil service laws. Early in the history of the organized blind,
blind people were not allowed to work in state or federal employment. They could
not take the civil service test. Our leaders said, "This isn't right."
So the federal government agreed that blind people could take the civil service
test but said that they would all get the score of seventy. Regardless of what
score a blind person earned, everyone was given a seventy. Our leaders fought
to get the system we have today.
The other day I was talking
to Jim Omvig. He was sent by the organized blind to go work for the Social Security
Administration. His mission was to ensure that Social Security claims representatives
could be blind people. Jim is here today; look around the room.
In 1958 at the request
of the leadership of the National Federation of the Blind, Dr. Jernigan took
over one of the worst agencies for blind people in this country. Long before
it was popular, long before Mary Switzer emphasized individual-centered services,
Dr. Jernigan proved that with proper training, which meant teaching both skills
and philosophy about blindness, people could be successfully employed in high-quality
jobs and could live independent lives. I was Dr. Jernigan's student; Dr. Maurer
was Dr. Jernigan's student. Many people in this room could testify that the
individual-centered service model worked. Look around this room.
The next stage of the blindness
movement was that of fighting for civil rights. The National Accreditation Council
was an accrediting body that said it would say which agencies serving the blind
were good ones. The problem was that blind people thought that many of the agencies
NAC was accrediting were awful ones, that NAC's accreditation standards were
way too low and weren't taken seriously by anybody. Many people demonstrated
and had their voices heard on this issue. Look around this room.
In 1992 Congressman William
Jefferson of Louisiana was on a committee that introduced the first choice provisions
into the Rehabilitation Act. Why did Congressman Jefferson do this? Who asked
him to do it? Who was in the room when it happened? Look around this room.
Two years ago Fred Schroeder,
the commissioner of rehabilitation, wanted to have passed an extended employment
rule in our rehabilitation system which would say that no longer could sheltered
workshop placements be counted as successful employment outcomes in the rehabilitation
system--lots of controversy on this issue. But letters were written. Many blind
people and people with other disabilities said that they believed in this rule.
Who did that? Look around this room.
The next phase of the blindness
movement goes beyond civil rights. It is where we go to the heart of the blind
and to the heart of the professionals, where we come to see blind people as
truly equal. That is why I see the blindness movement pushing for better adjustment
and training programs for blind people. In the rehabilitation world we can work
to put on paper the hooks, the wording, the tools in the Rehabilitation Act
that will work toward more social and economic equality for people with disabilities.
But the rehabilitation system can't do it all. Who can do it? Look around this
room.
I am here today because
President George W. Bush listened to blind people, listened to your wishes about
whom you wanted as commissioner of rehabilitation. I have learned that, if an
organization is to change and be effective, the people it serves must be heard.
This is a principle of our democracy; it's a principle of the private business
world; it's a principle of this administration. I have learned a lot by looking
and listening and hearing what the blind have to say. Because of that I have
developed certain principles that I believe will work in the rehabilitation
system.
I believe that people with
disabilities, including those with the most significant disabilities, like the
blind, can work in competitive, high-quality employment in integrated settings
and live full, productive lives as people with disabilities. What does this
mean--what does this "competitive," "integrated jargon"
mean? It means that blind people can work at real jobs and get comparable wages
for those real jobs. This policy has been sanctioned by the Clinton administration,
by the Bush administration, and by most organizations dealing with disabilities
in this country. Two groups hide behind the shield of choice in opposing this
rule. One of these is the people who run the sheltered workshops, and the other
is a small group of blind people. What these folks say is that blind people
ought to have the choice to work in sheltered employment if they want to, to
choose sub-minimum wages, and to choose not to have advancement. I ask you,
who do you know that, when given the option of other opportunities out there,
would make this choice? Look around this room.
This may sound familiar
to you; I believe that the major barrier to people with disabilities in getting
employment and living full, productive lives is the misunderstanding and low
expectations of society, of disabled people themselves, and of the rehabilitation
system. You know, to some degree all of us have lowered expectations. My boss,
President George W. Bush, often says that we suffer from the "soft bigotry
of low expectations." My job in the rehabilitation system is to institutionalize
the practice of elevated expectations. If we in the rehabilitation system just
provide services, we move people from full dependency to a little less dependency.
But, if we really give them elevated expectations, people move to real independence.
Researchers frequently
come into my office, mostly asking for money. A group came in the other day
from Cornell University. They do research on what makes people with disabilities
go back to work. I said, "Okay, give me the bottom line. What's the answer?"
They said, "A big
factor is their perceived attitudes about their disability. We did a study about
blind people. We studied a whole group of them. We asked, `Is your blindness
going to be a barrier to your getting employment?' Two-thirds of the people
who answered that question said yes, they thought their blindness was going
to be a barrier to their employment. Only 20 percent of that group got jobs."
Then they looked at the remaining third of the population who had been asked
this question and who had answered no, they did not believe that their blindness
was going to be a problem in getting employment. That population had 80 percent
employment."
Then I asked, "So
what makes that third believe that their blindness isn't going to be a problem?"
They said, "A force
is at work in their lives that convinces them that it really isn't."
I want our rehabilitation
system to be that force. But I also know that we need help from you. Look around
this room.
My third principle for
rehabilitation is choice. I believe that people with disabilities have the right
to choose what the heck they want to do with their lives--what kind of training
they want, what kind of services they want, whom they want to provide that training.
You can't provide choice just by giving people a bunch of information. Choice
is made with perspective. The other day I was down in the exhibit room, and
I was with Cathy. She was going from booth to booth gathering information about
technology. She was listening to the people and picking up brochures. We got
finished, and I asked, "Cathy, which one are you going to choose?"
She answered, "Oh,
I don't know. I'm going to let Joe go get the equipment, and then I'll ask him
how he likes it." Later I was down in the lobby, and I saw people picking
up the list of restaurants. But I listened, and they were asking other people
which restaurants they had tried and what they thought of them. We don't make
choices from lists and piles of information. We make choices by getting some
perspective. How do we get that perspective? In the area of blindness, look
around this room.
My fourth principle of
rehabilitation is my conviction that the primary role of rehabilitation is to
empower individuals with the information, education, training, confidence, and
elevated expectations so that they can make their own choices. Counselors no
longer need to be gatekeepers with prescriptive thinking. We need counselors
who believe in people with disabilities, who dream with consumers, who take
risks, and who actually invest time and money in the folks they work with. How
is this going to happen? I have six members of my staff from RSA at this convention.
I believe that the answer is an immersion experience with experts on blindness
and disability. Look around this room.
My next principle: I believe
that rehabilitation works best with a framework of accountability, efficiency,
and less bureaucratic administration. Why? Because we're not just dealing with
numbers; we're dealing with real people and real lives. Look around this room.
Last principle: I believe
that rehabilitation works best in partnership, in partnership with our state
agencies, in partnership with other providers, but, most important, in partnership
with consumers and consumer organizations. Dr. Maurer has always said that,
if we want strong organizations of the blind, we must have strong rehabilitation
programs. And if we want strong rehabilitation programs, we must have strong
organizations of the blind. What does this really mean? It's pretty simple.
If you give people good training and good jobs and they don't have to fight
and scrap to get them, they go away as happy customers. They will then be there
to defend the rehabilitation program and to mobilize to spread the good news
about rehab. Look around this room.
I have two simple priorities
for the rehabilitation system. One is to mandate a recognition and respect for
consumer organizations. We need to recognize that there are experts, a resource
out there that has not been fully used in our rehabilitation system. Look around
this room.
My second priority is to
help the professionals who are now in the program or are training to work in
the rehabilitation system to develop a philosophy of high expectations and then
to give them the tools and the go-ahead to use those high expectations. Wouldn't
it be wonderful if, after a blind person came into one of our rehab offices
to talk to the rehab counselor, he or she got up from that meeting and said,
"Boy, am I ever glad I came in here today. Why? Because my counselor gave
me hope. He believed in me more than I believed in myself. He gave me control.
And you know what else? He referred me to some other blind people, and I found
out that I am not alone. Other people are out there, and if they can do it,
I can do it too. And you know what? I'm going to run out and shout it to the
world, let everybody know that this is a good program." Those are the goals
that I hope we can reach.
One last fact about bamboo.
The root system of bamboo not only grows deep, but it grows wide. The roots
will grow out from the original seed twenty or thirty feet. A gardener told
me once that from those roots new bamboo stocks grow. You can try to cut away
that original stock, but you can't get rid of the bamboo. It's all over the
place. The voice of the organized blind, like the bamboo roots, is here to stay
and to be the Miracle Gro for the public rehabilitation system. Look around
this room.
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