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Subject:
From:
Gary Peterson <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
St. John's University Cerebral Palsy List
Date:
Wed, 29 Sep 2004 15:01:47 -0500
Content-Type:
TEXT/PLAIN
Parts/Attachments:
TEXT/PLAIN (226 lines)
Hi all!

Anyone know how this weird formating info got into the begining of my
post here?

Thanks-Gary


On Wed, 29 Sep 2004, Gary Peterson wrote:

>  This message is in MIME format.  The first part should be readable text,
>  while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.
>
> --0-1507858933-1096445456=:14105
> Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: QUOTED-PRINTABLE
>
> Hi all!
>
> Found this in my files.  While it's slightly outdated, I still thought=20
> it was worth reading.
>
> Later-Gary
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2004 09:11:50 -0400 (EDT)
> From: [log in to unmask]
> Reply-To: [log in to unmask]
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: [DGV] Halting Progress for the Disabled
>
> ------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~-->
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> --------------------------------------------------------------------~->
>
> The Disability Grapevine Online Newspaper: Issue #37
> Sunday, August 29, 2004
> Year 5
> http://www.disabilitygrapevine.com
> ****The Number One Daily Newspaper for People with Disabilities****
> ****************************************************
> Please do not respond to this posting.  To send Articles, Letters to the
> Editor, or Classifieds, contact us at [log in to unmask]
> Just Ask Joe Questions, email Joe at [log in to unmask]
> ****************************************************
> Title of Article:
> Halting Progress for the Disabled
>
> Submitted By: Catherine Alfieri
> 7 Summer Tree
> Pittsford, NY 14534
> 585-586-1682
> Founder:
> Monroe County Women's Disability Network
> [log in to unmask]
> http://www.mcwdn.org
> VirtEd
> http://www.mcwdn.org/VirtEd2.html
> RochEd Online
> http://www.mcwdn.org/Roch/RochEd.html
> "See with your heart, Speak with your heart!"
>
> Written By:
> Albert R. Hunt
> Wall Street Journal
> Page A13
>
> Article:
> Even trite clich=E9s occasionally are on the mark; today, for 53 million
> disabled Americans the glass of life is both half-full and half-empty.
>
> A survey this summer by Harris Interactive of Americans with disabilities
> is disquieting: Only a little over one-third reported being employed, a muc=
> h
> higher percentage than non-disabled say they face inadequate health care or
> transportation or are less likely to eat out or attend religious services,
> and a majority express dissatisfaction with their lives. The political
> progress of the '90s seems to have slowed and some large corporations, such
> as Wal-Mart, have abysmal records.
>
> Yet accessibility to transportation, education and even employment has
> improved around the country. Advocates for the disabled say slow progress i=
> s
> being made with small businesses and some large corporations, such as
> Microsoft, which has worked assiduously to make its software accessible, an=
> d
> Verizon, get high marks.
>
> This dichotomy springs from the promise of the landmark 1990 Americans
> with Disabilities Act (ADA). It doesn't surprise Andy Imparato, head of the
> American Association of People with Disabilities. "It's useful to think of
> the ADA in two phases," he notes. "One is bricks and mortars;
> transportation, budget and telecommunications all are essentially more
> accessible. These are very tangible ways in which the ADA has enabled more
> disabled people to participate in society. But the rest is attitudinal; we
> still have a long way to go with how people think. We need much more
> dialogue, public education and positive experiences."
>
> This underscores the stakes in this year's presidential race. The ADA was
> pushed and signed into law by George Herbert Walker Bush in 1990 --
> overriding the objections of his chief of staff; he is a hero to many with
> disabilities. His son inexplicably has shown little interest in the issue
> and through executive actions and judicial appointments threatens to roll
> back much of his father's top domestic legacy.
>
> That would be tragic. The ADA has made America a much better place. Just
> look around and notice how differently those with disabilities are treated
> compared to a decade ago. (I have two sons, one of whom is disabled; the
> other was a CNN intern at last month's Democratic convention; two of his
> fellow interns were deaf.)
>
> Politically, the picture is mixed. In Congress, support for the disabled
> crosses party lines. There is no more important champion than Ted Kennedy,
> and there are Republican supporters like John McCain, not surprisingly, but
> also staunch conservatives such as Congressman Pete Sessions in the House
> and Orrin Hatch in the Senate. Yet the GOP-run House leadership recently
> blocked a bill to provide more health-care services for lower income
> families with disabled children because it wasn't financed with offsetting
> budget cuts, an issue it ignored when a big tax cut for special interests
> sailed through.
>
> Some of the most notable champions are on the local level, including
> America's most notable Democratic and Republican mayors -- Chicago's Richar=
> d
> Daley and New York's Michael Bloomberg. Mayor Daley has vowed to make
> Chicago "the most accessible city in the nation." His Disabilities office i=
> s
> cabinet rank and no politician has worked more effectively with a sometimes
> skeptical business community than Rich Daley. There are 149 Chicago schools
> that are accessible today up from almost none when Mayor Daley took office.
>
> In New York, advocates say, Michael Bloomberg was that city's first mayor
> to really reach out to those with disabilities. He has increased the number
> of accessible taxicabs, made numerous buildings and sidewalks more
> accessible and pushed career exploration and job-shadowing programs.
>
> But there are other state and local officials as bad as Messrs. Daley and
> Bloomberg are good. At the top of that list is the newly elected governor o=
> f
> Mississippi, Haley Barbour. Facing a budget squeeze, the former Republican
> Party chair, and tobacco lobbyist, rejected measures like increasing the
> state's small cigarette tax and instead is slashing Medicaid benefits for
> poorer Mississippians. For thousands of disabled, this means a reduction in
> prescription drug benefits and access to necessary medical care and a loss
> of transportation services to those who need it.
>
> These cuts will be devastating for people like Traci Alsup, a 36-year-old
> Jackson, Miss., quadriplegic. She's scheduled to lose her prescription drug
> coverage, amounting to about $800 a month or just about what she gets from
> disability payments; she'd face additional expenses from any hospitalizatio=
> n
> and for her wheelchair. This would necessitate giving up her inexpensive
> apartment and having to move back to a nursing home: "I am full of anxiety
> and I'm depressed. This isn't right."
>
> In the presidential race, John Kerry hasn't said much -- there was no
> mention in his Boston acceptance speech -- and George W. Bush has been a
> disaster. Cutbacks in health care and housing proposed by the White House
> disproportionately affect those with disabilities. Five years ago the
> government set a goal to dramatically increase the number of disabled
> federal employees; there are less today than when this president first took
> office. Tragically, he has choked off promising research with embryonic ste=
> m
> cells that eventually could profoundly affect many disabilities.
>
> Mr. Bush rarely uses the presidential bully pulpit for public dialogue or
> education. "This White House considers us a nuisance, too high maintenance,=
> "
> says one leading disabilities advocate.
>
> Bush judicial nominees, like Jeffrey Sutton and William Pryor, are openly
> hostile to the Americans with Disabilities Act, following the lead of
> Antonin Scalia; the Supreme Court justice, from the bench, refers to people
> with disabilities as "handicaps," and belittles the notion they have basic
> rights. The High Court has eroded some of the ADA and on 5-to-4 votes
> narrowly upheld other parts. Many legal analysts believe that with any
> vacancies filled by Scalia wannabes the court may well gut the act.
>
> If you're blind, deaf or in a wheelchair, the stakes on Nov. 2 are
> enormous.
> ****************************************************
> The Author's views reflect only their opinion and do not necessarily reflec=
> t
> that of The Disability Grapevine.
> ****************************************************
> Do not copy any of these articles without the author's permission.
> ****************************************************
> The Disability Grapevine Online Newspaper Archives are at:
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> ****************************************************
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> Managing Editor: Marijo Cannaday
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> --0-1507858933-1096445456=:14105--
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