Implications of Attacks on the ADA
Implications of Attacks on the ADA
The Braille MonitorJanuary/February
2002
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Implications
of Attacks on the ADA
From
the Editor: I recently received the following note and article from Scott LaBarre,
President of the NFB of Denver and an attorney who frequently does work involving
the Americans with Disabilities Act. This is what he said:
The
following article provides a nice summary of the overall effect of the ADA.
It is by far the most difficult employment discrimination statute under which
to operate. People know it's wrong to discriminate against others because of
their gender or their race, but people do not automatically think of discrimination
against the blind or disabled as wrong. They don't even conceive of it as discrimination.
They would say: "It's obvious that a blind man can't work in a dangerous
cheese factory," or "It's obvious that a blind man alone on a cruise
ship is at risk in heavy seas." The article appeared in the Chicago
Tribune on November 25, 2001.
Legal
Tide Has Turned Against the Disabled in the Courts
by
Lennard J. Davis
Lennard
J. Davis is Professor and Head of the Department of English of the University
of Illinois at Chicago.
Most
Americans react to the idea of disability with good wishes and a silent prayer
to the effect that "there but for the grace of God go I." With this
level of detachment, few may have noticed a disturbing and seemingly ineluctable
trend in which the courts have been whittling away at the provisions of the
Americans With Disabilities Act, passed with much fanfare and hoopla in 1990
under Bob Dole's stewardship, George Bush Sr.'s imprimatur, and bipartisan Congressional
support.
Ten
years later it has been estimated that 95 percent of the cases brought before
the courts under the provisions of that act have gone against people with disabilities.
The
Supreme Court has been steadily hacking away at the provisions of the ADA. Two
recent cases could end the effectiveness of that legislation. The first case
is one in which an employer wants the right to determine whether the job that
an employee may want is a danger to his or her health. Chevron withdrew the
offer of a refinery job to a man because he tested positive for asymptomatic
chronic hepatitis C. Chevron maintained that the man would be doing possible
harm to himself by accepting the position.
While
the ADA provides that an employer cannot discriminate against someone with a
disability, Chevron asks that employers be allowed to discriminate to protect
the person from possible harm.
In
bringing this case, Chevron is appealing a decision of a federal appeals court
in San Francisco that rejected "paternalistic rules that have often excluded
disabled individuals from the workplace." If the case is decided in favor
of Chevron, it will weaken the ADA by allowing employers, not employees, to
decide health issues.
The
second case could have even more profound consequences in dismantling the ADA.
In Toyota vs. Williams, the auto company argues that Congress has defined disability
too broadly. In this case an employee of the company had carpal tunnel syndrome
that limited the use of her hands. She was able to perform her job perfectly
well until she was transferred to a different task, which she could not perform.
Her
employer claimed she is not disabled because, although she could not perform
her new task, she could brush her teeth, pick up objects in her home, and so
on. Toyota demands that those claiming coverage under the ADA must demonstrate
that they are "severely restricted from using their hands to perform a
broad range of basic functions needed to meet the essential demands of everyday
life."
The
ADA defines disability broadly as "a substantial limitation in one or more
life activities." In addition, a person is considered to be in the protected
class not only if he or she has a disability but also if the person is "regarded"
as being a person with disabilities.
The
latitude of this definition has had employers up in arms. They fear they will
be beset with requests from their employees for accommodations and will be sued
for violations of the act. This, they say, will reduce employers to poverty.
However, recent estimates of small businesses calculate that accommodations
cost, on average, less than $5,000, of which half can be made up by federal
credits.
States'
Rights
The
Supreme Court, with its new activism, has decided previous cases so that states'
rights predominate over federal protections in the area of disability. It has
also ruled that people with correctable disabilities, such as hypertension and
myopia, are not protected under the law, even if their employer discriminates
against them for having such conditions. The net effect of these decisions has
been to continue whittling away the protections designed by Congress for people
with disabilities.
The
lack of knowledge or interest in these developments on the part of non‑disabled
people is part of a larger picture. We have created a firewall between them
and us. While many white people have embraced the cause of people of color and
while many straight people have taken up the cause of gay, lesbian, bisexual,
and transgendered people, few have taken up the cause of people with disabilities.
Perhaps
the reasons for this are telling. No whites will become black; few straights
will become gay; but every person can become disabled. All it takes is the swerve
of a car, the impact of a football tackle, or the tick of the clock to make
this transformation. Christopher Reeve, one day Superman, next day a quadriplegic,
is the most dramatic example of this quick‑change act.
Baby
Boomers
Today's
baby boomer generation is fast heading toward disability. The World Health Organization
predicts that by 2020 there will be more than 690 million people older than
sixty-five, in contrast with today's 380 million. Two‑thirds of the elderly
will be in developing and underdeveloped nations.
The
increase in the elderly population will cause a major change in the disease
patterns of these countries. There will be increasing rates of cancer; kidney
failure; eye diseases; diabetes; mental illness; and other chronic, degenerative
illnesses such as cardiovascular disease.
Although
identity politics is popular these days, what people fear is that disability
is the identity one may become but that one didn't want. This is the silent
threat that makes folks avoid the subject, act awkwardly around people with
disabilities, and consequently avoid paying attention to the backlash against
disability rights.
Even
without the baby boomers 15 percent to 20 percent of people in the U.S. have
disabilities. Add to this caregivers and family members, and about half of the
population is dealing with disability. People with disabilities make up the
largest physical minority in our country‑‑too large a group to ignore
and too large a group to roll back the protections afforded to them.
We
have to recognize that "them" is actually "us." If employers
are concerned that the protected class is too large, they may have to reconsider
their position as more people become disabled.
Effects
of Time
Most
people would be better off identifying with people with disabilities than fearing
them. As you begin to notice your hearing going, your hands stiffening, your
eyes in need of stronger glasses, you may well want to rethink what laws are
being consigned to the dustbin of history. Would it be such a miscarriage of
justice if all of us were protected from discrimination just as all of us are
protected from voter fraud and unwarranted search and seizure?
It
isn't necessarily bad to be disabled, but it is bad to be discriminated against,
unemployed, poor, and blocked by bad laws, architecture, and communication.
One
out of five people now living near you has a disability. They are your uncles
and aunts, grandmothers and sisters. Pretty soon they'll be you. We need to
think twice before we disregard the trend of the courts in eviscerating disability
rights. To do so, we act literally at our own peril.
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