Attitude,
Not Cost, Barrier to Disabled Workers
by Catherine Komp
Originally appeared in the March 9, 2006 edition
of The NewStandard
Recent data shows employers who make an effort
to accommodate employees with disabilities can do so at little cost
and great benefit, exposing deeper discrimination behind dismal
employment numbers.
Mar. 9 - Impressing a potential employer
during an interview and getting a good job offer is difficult for
many. But for those with disabilities - who must prove they are
as qualified as non-disabled candidates - finding any job has its
own challenges.
When Congress enacted the Americans with Disabilities
Act (ADA) fifteen years ago, supporters hoped the equity legislation
would increase disabled peoples' opportunities for employment. But,
according to researchers at Cornell University, the employment rate
for people with disabilities peaked around 25 percent in the 1990s
before dropping below 20 percent by 2004.
The Department of Labor attributes this low
employment rate, in part, to the misconception that accommodating
people with disabilities in the workplace is prohibitively costly.
In fact, research indicates that the opposite is true. The Labor
Department's Job Accommodation Network (JAN), which helps employers
hire, retain, and promote people with disabilities, has found that
most workplace accommodations can be implemented at little or no
cost.
Since cost is not the main barrier, say disability
advocates, more needs to change than simply architecture and ergonomics.
"Most disabled people would tell you that
the bigger concerns they have around the workplace are not around
physical accessibility," said Andrew Imparato, president of
the American Association of People with Disabilities. "They're
more around attitudes. I think it's easier to legislate and see
change around bricks and mortar than it is around attitudes."
Low-cost, High-impact
The JAN survey, which will continue through September 2007, released
preliminary findings last month based on feedback from 778 employers
that had contacted the agency for information about employing people
with disabilities.
The vast majority of the employers surveyed
had called because they were interested in learning how to retain
their employees, who on average had been employed for seven years
and were paid about $13 per hour.
About half reported that implementing workplace
adjustments came at no expense, and about 43 percent reported a
one-time cost that averaged around $600.
"Many employers tell us it's as simple
as making a flexible schedule [for an employee]," said Anne
Hirsch, director of services for JAN and co-author of the study.
She told The NewStandard that many accommodations are similar
to those commonly purchased to make it easier for non-disabled employees
to do their jobs, like telephone headsets or specialized computer
software that can aid people with vision or range of motion impairments.
Cassie James, self-services coordinator at Liberty
Resources, a Philadelphia-based advocacy group for people with disabilities,
said many employers wrongly assume that adaptive improvements will
be pricey. James, who uses a wheelchair comfortably at her office,
said there are many obstacles that need simple fixes rather than
state-of-the art solutions.
She gave the scenario of needing to adjust desk
height for someone in a taller wheelchair. "If I went out and
thought about how can we make this, I might be able to get one of
those long working tables and put it on a couple of bricks and it's
just as good," James said.
The law firm Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman
is one company that found cost-effective ways to create a better
work environment for disabled employees. The internationally-based
firm, which employs over 1,000 people, discovered that minor adjustments
- like using instant messaging for some office communications and
moving desks so that employees' backs were not facing the door -
could help accommodate two employees with hearing loss.
"With the deaf employees, that was something
new for us, and we actually went to them and asked, 'What can we
do to make life easier and help you communicate with us and help
us communicate with you?'" explained Britta Stromeyer, human-resources
manager at the firm. Pillsbury law has joined other large companies,
including Cingular, Embassy Suites Hotels and IBM, in working with
the Employer Assistance & Recruiting Network (EARN), a federally
funded accessible-technology company that helps connect businesses
to people with disabilities who are looking for work. Stromeyer
said she initially used EARN's services because of problems finding
quality candidates through traditional labor recruiting sources,
but discovered added benefits beyond simply attracting qualified
employees.
"It makes a difference in teamwork in general
when you really have a diverse pool of opinions and ideas,"
Stromeyer told TNS.
The JAN report found that of the employers surveyed,
nearly 9 in 10 reported retaining a valued employee through better
workplace accommodations. In addition, three-quarters cited increased
productivity, and over half said they eliminated the costs of hiring
and training a new employee.
Employers also reported indirect benefits like improved interactions
with co-workers and customers, increased company morale and improved
workplace safety. Report co-author Hirsch said that all of these
results are nothing more than the product of good management skills.
"Employers who are proactive look at [workplace accommodations]
as how can we use this to improve work for everyone," she said.
Attitudes Must Follow
While the results of JAN's survey indicated that many employers
of people with disabilities found little cost and great benefit,
survey respondents were limited to companies that had sought out
the agency to help them accommodate employees.
Advocates for people with disabilities interviewed
by TNS shared a common concern that in the larger market,
stereotypes and discrimination present greater hurdles.
"The biggest barriers are still attitudinal,"
said Linda Richman, deputy executive director of Liberty Resources.
In her view, many employers mistakenly believe that hiring a person
with a disability means that "you're automatically compromising
somehow on the quality or volume of work." "That means
that workers that really want to work [might not] have the right
exposure to the business world," she explained, "and it
also means employers
are still carrying around a lot of misconceptions
about what it would really be like to work with a person with a
disability every day."
Richman, who runs an intensive 18-month job-training
course for people with disabilities, added that in today's economic
climate, they are lucky if one student per month is hired.
"We really have the decks stacked against
us a lot of the time," Richman said. "[The economy] makes
it hard because our folks are all entry level, and most companies
these days have a glut of really experienced people that are taking
entry level jobs because they don't have anything else." In
addition to a tight job market and employer misconceptions, people
with disabilities are sometimes hindered by their own apprehensions
about the employment process, according to Kristen Stern, an employment
consultant at the Milwaukee-based education, advocacy and independent-living-services
organization Independence First.
"A lot people that have disabilities may
be afraid to go back to work. If it's a [newly acquired] disability,
they might not know if they can do the job, or they might not have
the confidence needed to do the job," Stern told TNS.
Imparato, of the American Association for People
with Disabilities, stressed the need for more fundamental change
to increase employment rates and financial independence for people
with disabilities.
"The ADA is an equal-opportunity law,"
Imparato said, "so it works well for people with disabilities
who have skills and who are qualified for jobs that are open."
But, he added, "we still have a lot of barriers in terms of
our education system, our rehabilitation system, where there are
a lot of people with disabilities who are not competitive in the
modern labor market, and the ADA is not going to change that."
The possibility of losing Social Security benefits
and access to reliable transportation has also prevented some from
venturing into the job market, Imparto noted.
Imparato is currently serving on a federal advisory
panel to develop recommendations to reform Social Security benefits
that would permit people with disabilities to both work and receive
federal assistance for medical bills and other supportive needs.
"I believe we've defined eligibility for
that program based on outdated attitudes about what people with
significant disabilities are capable of doing in the workplace,"
said Imparato. He advocated revising eligibility requirements to
give more weight to the degree of functional impairment, which would
allow more opportunities for people to both work and receive benefits.
For Babs Johnson, national spokesperson for
American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today (ADAPT), one of the
organizations that pushed for passage of the ADA, the issue of employment
rates among people with disabilities relates directly to the organization's
mission of fighting against the institutionalization of people with
disabilities and enabling them to attain greater independence.
"I believe that it's healthy for everybody
to [work]," said Johnson. "We all need to feel like we
are contributing to society, and employment is one of the main ways
that people do that."
Catherine Komp is a staff writer for The
NewStandard, a non-profit, anti-commercial news outlet. She
works as an independent radio news producer and reporter in Richmond,
Virginia, and is the Media Section Editor for Clamor
magazine.
Copyright 2006 The NewStandard. All rights reserved.
The NewStandard
is a nonprofit publisher that encourages noncommercial reproduction
of its content.
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