From NBC News/Yahoo:
“30 years after Americans with
Disability Act, college students say law is not enough”
Kyle Cox was on his way to class
during an ice storm in January 2019 when an outdoor wheelchair elevator at
Texas A&M University malfunctioned. For 30 minutes, Cox, a graduate student,
was trapped outside with sleet pelting him on an unseasonably frigid day in
College Station. Building staff draped him in blankets and coats while they
worked to free him from the handicap accessible lift designed to help disabled
students access the building with ease. By the time he had cleaned up and
composed himself, class was over. Cox, 24, of El Paso, Texas, who is pursuing a
master's in public administration, is hearing impaired and has Duchenne
muscular dystrophy, which requires him to use a wheelchair. While school
officials work to make Texas A&M accessible to people with disabilities,
Cox says he still faces challenges navigating the campus. “Problems like this
do happen on campus and I end up missing class or getting there late even when
I leave sometimes up to an hour before class to give myself enough time to make
it.” he said. The school said in a statement that it strives to be welcoming to
people with disabilities, saying it works to be “proactive in addressing
accessibility needs as well as to respond as quickly as possible when
individuals report problems.” But Cox says there’s more to be done. “Yes,
there’s an elevator for wheelchair users but it doesn’t help if it’s broken, or
if paths are blocked, or if I’m sitting in the wheelchair seating in the back
during a speech which I can’t hear because of my hearing impairment.” This year
marks 30 years since the Americans’ with Disability Act was enacted and while
significant strides have been made to accommodate students with disabilities at
colleges and universities across the country, some students and disability
advocates say the law doesn’t go far enough to meet the needs of the disabled. The
number of college students with disabilities has steadily increased over the
years, and now makes up a significant population of the national student body.
Nearly 20 percent of undergraduates reported having a disability in 2016, and
nearly 90 percent of colleges and universities reported enrolling students with
disabilities in 2011.
Under the ADA, public and private
colleges and universities must provide equal access to postsecondary education
for students with disabilities, but there is room for interpretation. If an
institution can prove that making the accommodations and modifications would
constitute an undue financial or administrative burden, the alterations aren’t
required. Every institution of higher education provides disability services
and accommodations in its own way, with its own interpretation of laws, said
Wendy Harbour, associate executive director for programs and development at the
Association on Higher Education And Disability. “A student might be disabled at
one college but not another, based on how they use documentation of students’
disabilities," Harbour said. "Or one campus may offer tutoring or
special programs for students with some disabilities, and others don’t. “There
is no national training, certification or licensure for professionals providing
disability services and accommodations,” she continued. Students with
disabilities at several institutions across the country, including Princeton,
the University of Maryland, the University of Georgia and the University of
Minnesota, have reported a wide array of challenges. NBC News spoke with over a
dozen college students with various disabilities who said that they have faced
significant difficulty with accessibility and accommodation beyond just
physical barriers, and that this has affected their sense of belonging on
campus. Loyola University Maryland in Baltimore follows the guidelines of ADA
by labeling room numbers in Braille to accommodate blind students, but freshman
McClain Hermes says that without including the office names, the accommodation
is of little help. Hermes, who is blind as the result of a genetic disorder,
said the signs are so inadequate that it’s led to several “embarrassing
mix-ups.” She’s walked into the wrong dorm room several times and once ended up
inside the university president’s office while looking for the campus
counseling center. “Am I expected to memorize every single room number and who
is in them on the entire campus while my sighted peers can simply look at the
sign and know where they are going?” Hermes said. “I’m very grateful that I
live in a time period where ADA is a thing. But there's still so much advocacy
that needs to be done for students with disabilities, and schools really should
be going above and beyond the basic minimum." The university maintains
that it is in compliance with ADA. "The standards require that signs that
designate permanent rooms and spaces, such as men’s and women’s restrooms, room
numbers, floor numbers and exit signs, include braille," Loyola University
Maryland said in a statement. Harbour says that the problem isn’t that schools
aren’t following the letter of the law but that they often don’t go beyond
compliance. Disabled students may have dorm rooms that are accessible, but they
can’t visit any other student on campus, or students in need of interpreters or
notetakers might receive one of poor quality, or a building might have just one
accessible bathroom or only one elevator. “In all these cases, the campus is
meeting the accommodation request and is in compliance, but they really aren’t
following the spirit of the law or helping students with disabilities feel
welcome.” If you can’t get to your classroom or you don't have an environment
that is conducive to learning when you have a disability, it is a huge
challenge, according to Beth Myers, a professor of inclusive education at
Syracuse University. “It's about going beyond compliance in terms of what the
ADA really means and what it means in terms of disability and inclusivity,” she
said. Colleges need to approach this not as a legal check mark but as a
diversity initiative, otherwise schools are not providing a welcoming space for
all students. Students need a wider range of support than was originally
thought when the ADA was first implemented, Myers said. “The ADA is an
important law and it has come far, but there is still much to think about when
it comes to true equitable access to a college space,” Myers said.
Some students have taken matters into
their own hands: Anna Landre, a junior
at Georgetown University, said she spends hours every week on meetings and
emails with administrators to push for better accommodation. Landre, who was
born with spinal muscular atrophy and uses a wheelchair, said she has
repeatedly dealt with broken elevators, inaccessible push plates and
dilapidated ramps that would take her through dark alleys. “Sometimes it's a
real fight to get accommodations implemented,” she said. “And even if changes
are made, there continues to be a disconnect. It’s really difficult for me from
a standpoint of feeling like a part of this community.” The onus of navigating
this has cost her countless hours of studying and socializing, she said. It
becomes emotionally draining at times. “Georgetown is committed to ensuring
that our campus is accessible and inclusive. With a 200-year-old campus on
hilly terrain, we have faced a number of accessibility challenges over the
years, but we are continuing facility enhancements across campus to ensure ADA
compliance,” a university spokesperson said in a statement. “We have made
significant progress expanding accessibility and it remains at the forefront of
campus planning for facility improvements and construction.” Any barriers,
physical or otherwise, can bring up feelings of exclusion, said Christa Bialka,
a professor of special education at Villanova University. “When you look at
students with disabilities, even if they are feeling academically capable, if
they are not feeling socially integrated that could cause them to feel
withdrawn and could potentially increase the likelihood that they could drop
out of school.” According to federal data, only a third of students with
disabilities who enroll in a four-year college or university graduate within
eight years. At a two-year school, less than 42 percent graduate. Over the
ADA's 30 years, the definition of disability has evolved, as have the needs of
those with disabilities. “We need to revisit what we see accessibility meaning
and push back our initial understanding of what it means to have an accessible
space,” Bialka said. “It’s understanding that it's physical and it’s mental.
It's invisible and visible, it’s so many different things.” While Kyle Cox said
he has seen improvements at Texas A&M University, he believes there is
always room to do better for students with disabilities, not just at his school
but at all schools. “The focus should be making people feel more included, like
they are a part of the larger society,” he said. “Not about just helping them
get by.”
^ It has been 30 years since the
ADA and yet there is still so much that needs to be done in every single State
and Territory across the country to both follow the law and to include people
with disabilities into the education system. I’m not only talking about
universities and colleges that are hundreds of years old (long before the ADA)
but even much newer places. I remember all the trouble I had with a local
Community College and trying to get a person in a wheelchair to be able to
attend classes in a building that was about 2-3 years old and should have been 100%
ADA compliant, but was not. Dealing with all the different college people (the Professor
and the Administration) to come up with acceptable work-arounds wasn’t easy
either. In the end it was a long battle –
one that should never have needed to be made in the first place – but we won. Colleges
and Universities across the country should know the ADA and any State Disability
Laws and follow them. They should all do that not because they are afraid of a
Government Fine or a Bad Report, but because it is the right thing to do. The
days of ignorance about the disabled are over. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/30-years-americans-disability-act-002139910.html
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