From Disability Scoop:
“More States Move To Phase Out
Subminimum Wage”
Krystal Halford recalls feeling
jubilant after landing a job at an assembly plant in Eagan that employs people
with disabilities. But after opening her paycheck, Halford’s excitement turned
to dismay. For two weeks of work, Halford discovered that she had made just
$100 — amounting to less than $4 an hour. “It sent a message that I wasn’t
valued, that I didn’t deserve what others have because I happen to be
different,” said Halford, 32, who has Asperger’s syndrome, a developmental
disorder. Halford is among thousands of Minnesotans who have been paid less
than the minimum wage solely because they have a disability. They work at
dozens of centers across the state, known as sheltered workshops, that are
allowed under a loophole in federal law to pay people with disabilities based
on their productivity, rather than a fixed hourly rate. In many cases, their
pay amounts to less than $1 an hour for basic tasks such as sorting and
packaging merchandise, shredding paper or picking up garbage on work crews.
More than 8,000 Minnesotans with
a range of disabilities, including Down syndrome, cerebral palsy and autism
spectrum disorder, attend these cloistered workplaces — among the most of any
state, according to federal workforce data. Now, this separate and unequal
payment regime is coming to an end. This month, after years of pushing by
disability advocates, Minnesota became the latest state to move to abolish the
practice of paying people with disabilities a subminimum wage. Tucked deep
inside a 533-page budget bill is a measure that establishes a task force to
develop a plan to phase out subminimum wages by August 2025. Lawmakers also
approved $14.1 million in grants to help disability service providers transform
their business models and boost work options in the community.
The practice of paying subminimum
wages began in the Great Depression as a way to give people with disabilities a
chance to learn job skills. But in recent years, the practice has come to be
seen as discriminatory, exploitative and a violation of civil rights under the
Americans with Disabilities Act. A Star Tribune investigation in 2015 found
that many of those in Minnesota’s workshops spend years toiling in poverty and
isolation with little hope for advancement. At least eight states — including
Colorado, Maryland, Oregon and Washington — have moved to prohibit subminimum
wage employment in the hope of integrating more people with disabilities into
the general workforce. And early this year, President Joe Biden signaled his
desire to end subminimum wages as part of his broader proposal to boost the
federal minimum wage to $15 an hour for all workers, including those with
disabilities. “The world is moving in this direction,” said Jim Abeler, a state
senator in Minnesota who chairs the Human Services Reform Finance and Policy
Committee. “Everyone deserves a chance to be as independent as possible — and
they shouldn’t be trapped in a subminimum wage job when they could work at a
market wage.”
But the move to phase out
subminimum wages is expected to force dramatic changes at approximately 80
centers across the state that provide a wide range of support services for
people with disabilities. Many of these facilities — sometimes called “day activity
centers” — have long struggled to find skilled workers for their clients. The
demand for more staff is expected to intensify as centers transition more
people to jobs in the regular workforce. People may require one-on-one job
training, transportation and other services, providers said. Many parents of
adult children with disabilities have vigorously supported the alternative wage
system, partly due to fears that their children will have nowhere to go if
workshops close. In many smaller towns across Minnesota, workshops are bustling
hubs of activity, where individuals make social connections and participate in
crafts and learning activities. Many centers are the primary source of transit
for adults with disabilities, shuttling them to and from work and activities in
the community. Each morning, about 60 adults with disabilities arrive at
Options Inc. in Big Lake to do light assembly work, such as packing tools in
boxes. These individuals are paid based on the number of products they sort or
package each hour — a system known as piecework, which is allowed under a
special section of the 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act.
Brenda Geldert, executive
director of Options, said clients are asked several times a year if they would
like to work in the community — and efforts are made to place people in
mainstream jobs. Even so, many of the center’s clients prefer coming into the
center, where they have developed strong friendships and “a sense of purpose,”
Geldert said. “We have people who love it here and who absolutely do not want
to pursue independent employment,” she said. Jim Clapper, co-chairman of a
grassroots coalition of Minnesota families with loved ones with disabilities,
has been an outspoken supporter of subminimum wage employment. The system gave
his 34-year-old son, Bob, who has Down syndrome, the opportunity to become
accustomed to a structured work environment and build social skills, he said.
After three years in a workshop, Bob gained enough confidence to transition to
a mainstream job at a supermarket in St. Paul. “My son’s skills and work ethic
took a long time to develop, and he never would have gotten there were it not
for the (workshop),” Clapper said. “I would hate to see these choices
evaporate.” Yet some individuals with disabilities describe the experience of
working in sheltered workshops as dehumanizing.
Alex Jaffe, 33, who has
Asperger’s syndrome and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, recalled the
tedium of spending his days packing zip ties into plastic bags at a workshop.
When orders were slow, they would sometimes empty the bags and redo the work
just to stay busy. Because Jaffe was paid based on his productivity, he
received no income when orders stopped or a machine broke down. Jaffe, who is
now employed as a security guard at $19 an hour, said no one ever asked him
about his career ambitions or told him he was capable of working in the
community at a higher wage. “It was a whirlpool of despair,” said Jaffe, who
left the workshop and eventually received a bachelor’s degree in criminal
justice. “It’s the mind-numbing nature of the work that leaves you wondering,
‘Will I ever get a slice of the American dream?'” Noah McCourt, a disability
rights advocate with autism spectrum disorder, recalled feeling “hurt and
confused” when he received his first paycheck at a workshop in Watertown, where
he sorted recycled garbage on a conveyor belt. His total earnings for two weeks
were a mere $18. It was only later, when McCourt went online to research
federal wage laws, that he discovered that America had a separate pay system
for people with disabilities. “Looking back on it, there was no expectation
that you could ever amount to anything better,” McCourt said.
Despite recent efforts to expand
work opportunities, Minnesota still has one of the lowest rates of integrated
employment in the nation for people with intellectual and developmental
disabilities. A 2020 state survey found that only 57% of adults with
developmental disabilities report having a job with income — largely unchanged
from a decade ago. Only 17% of Minnesotans with developmental disabilities
believed their employment prospects would improve in the next two years, the
survey found. “It saddens me to say this, but there is still a strong
institutional bias in Minnesota against hiring people with disabilities,” said
state Sen. John Hoffman. Halford said she has tried to forget the 18 months she
spent at a sheltered workshop. The pay was so low that she would regularly skip
meals to save money and could not afford outings with friends. Since leaving
the facility, Halford has founded her own online jewelry and gift business and
landed work at a Cub Foods supermarket for nearly $13 an hour. “I still feel
like part of my life was taken from me,” Halford said. “You can’t treat grown
adults like children and expect them to be happy.”
^ It should be illegal to official
discriminate against people with disabilities – especially paying them subminimum
wages. The US Federal Government and the US State Governments need to change
their laws to reflect an inclusive workplace rather than a repressive
workplace. ^
https://www.disabilityscoop.com/2021/07/14/more-states-phase-out-subminimum-wage/29406/
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