Interim Report from Arkansas
Interim Report from Arkansas
The Braille Monitor
July,
2002
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Interim Report from
Arkansas
From
the Editor: In 1999 Arkansas was one of the first states to enact legislation
requiring state government to purchase only computer hardware and software that
could be made accessible to disabled users if needed. The law passed was a version
of the NFB's model technology act, legislation that Federationists across the
country are encouraging their state legislatures to enact. Everyone cheered
the action of the Arkansas legislature and praised their willingness to take
the lead.
Almost
immediately Arkansas hit rough water. It's just plain hard for some people to
understand that such legislation has implications for them. Among these were
the Arkansas officials in charge of implementing a statewide accounting system
for state government. Blind people could not use it efficiently, so the fat
was in the fire. The National Federation of the Blind brought suit, recognizing
that unless a flagrantly illegal program like this one could be fixed or removed,
such legislative protections as the Arkansas technology-access law would be
worthless. Nothing has yet been resolved, but on April 1, 2002, the following
story appeared in the Paragould Daily Press. It accurately describes
the current situation and the magnitude of the problem. Here it is:
System
Doesn't Provide Needed Access
by
Gail Jackson
Arkansas's new accounting system,
called AASIS, was supposed to streamline record processing, but difficulties
in working with the system drove employees in the state's Agency for the Blind
to sue to have it improved or removed. "It should never have been put online.
It is not accessible to the blind, and it keeps blind people from doing their
jobs," said Agency for the Blind Supervisor Larry Wayland, who along with
co-worker Donna Hartsell initiated the legal action.
The basis for the lawsuit is a 1999
Arkansas law that prohibits the state from purchasing any software or hardware
that is not accessible to the blind or the visually impaired. "Shane Broadaway
sponsored the 1999 bill, and Arkansas legislators seemed to be very proud of
the fact that they passed it," Wayland said, also pointing out that there
are federal laws that prohibit having a system that prevents blind employees
from doing their jobs and--according to the Americans with Disabilities Act--if
it's not accessible, that law needs to be changed.
The AASIS system tracks inventory,
employee records, timesheets, and processes checks. Wayland's department uses
it to access employee files. It's supposed to have a keystroke echo feature
and a speech feature that allows blind employees to command the system to read
back information, but it doesn't. Another feature that poses problems is that
some of the data is arranged in cells of dynamic rows and columns. The only
way to go from cell to cell is to use the tab feature. "In order to do
their jobs, employees have to hit the tab key four, five, six, seven hundred
times to get to a particular cell to change a file," Wayland said.
The system was supposed to be designed
so that everybody could do their own work, but it could cause visually impaired
employees to need assistance. Because of that, Wayland foresees that the AASIS
system, as is, could cost a lot of people their jobs. He said, "It's not
just us, but it's the possibility that other people would apply for a job that
would be required to use the system. Look, if you want blind people to work,
you've got to make it possible for blind people to work--that's what this agency
is all about."
Wayland knew in advance the Department
of Finance and Administration planned to supplant old accounting procedures
with the Arkansas Administrative Statewide Information System. Since it's his
responsibility to assess the technical aspects of the jobs within his department
and make recommendations on equipment that best suits the needs of the blind
and visually impaired, he asked if AASIS would be accessible to the visually
impaired. He said he was told it would be and that it would be more accurate
than the previous record-keeping system, but it hasn't panned out.
The system was blamed for child support
checks not going out, but Dan McDonal, administrator for the Office of Child
Support Enforcement, said that had nothing to do with AASIS. He said child support
payments are handled through ARCSIS, the Arkansas Child Support Information
System, and that the two systems are not connected whatsoever.
H.C. Lemmons, administrator at the
Greene County Department of Human Services, said AASIS has streamlined some
procedures, as intended, and is a big improvement over the old system, but Wayland
said other departments have complained about problems.
Wayland said the state had already
tested the program and knew when it went online July 1 that it wasn't working.
Arkansas purchased AASIS for $19 million in 2000, from SAP, a German company.
Ron Hopper, who was in charge of the system at first, was replaced, and the
state has spent additional millions (the estimate is more than $50 million including
the purchase price) making adjustments to the system. There's no time limit
on getting the bugs out, and the end is not in sight.
"I know I'm seeing an awful lot
of timesheets that I didn't have to sign before. I was under the impression
that this was supposed to eliminate all this paperwork," Wayland said.
"They're not even saying it can
be done. And as the bugs are all worked out, it could cause more work. The people
working on this just got raises while agencies are having to cut their budgets
a lot, including the Agency for the Blind," he added.
Arkansas legislators recently criticized
spending so much money on the system and questioned spending more to contract
with outside sources to study the system.
Wayland and Hartsell acted to require
the state to make the AASIS software system accessible to the blind in a suit
filed by the National Federation of the Blind, after the system went online.
An attempt was made to contact the Little Rock attorney and the head of the
Federation of the Blind at the national headquarters about the suit, but neither
responded. The state appealed the lawsuit, but the appeal was thrown out of
court.
Wayland
hopes that if they win, AASIS will be made accessible within a specific time
frame. "If it can be made accessible, it could open doors," he said.
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