March 2, 2011
We would like to thank Senator Harkin for holding this important and timely hearing today.
The National Disability Rights Network (NDRN) is a nonprofit membership organization for the federally mandated Client Assistance Program (CAP) and Protection and Advocacy (P&A) systems, created by Congress in the 1970’s to protect the rights of children and adults with disabilities and their families. With a presence in every state and U.S. territory, and the District of Columbia, the CAP and P&A systems offer an advocacy and legal voice to people with disabilities, and aims to uncover and eliminate maltreatment and ensure compliance with laws designed to protect the rights of individuals with disabilities. The P&A and CAP systems include employment issues in their work, attempting to address the many issues that keep people with disabilities from achieving their goal of competitive employment.
The unemployment rate for people with disabilities as of February 1st was 13.6%, much higher than the 9.7% unemployment rate for people without disabilities. Additionally only 20.1% of individuals with a disability are even in the workforce and those that are face the prospect of employment in a segregated setting, or being paid less (and sometimes mere pennies on the dollar) than the minimum wage.
In January, NDRN issued a Call to Action entitled, “Segregated and Exploited: The Failure of the Disability Service System to Provide Quality Work."
This Call to Action lays out the unfortunate reality that today, across the country, hundreds of thousands of people with disabilities are being isolated and financially exploited by their employers. Most are paid only a fraction of the minimum wage while many company owners make six-figure salaries. For many people with disabilities, their dream of leaving their “job training program” will never come true. These people labor away making only a tiny portion of what they should because there is a system in place that provides no true alternatives.
As you will see and hear today, the truth is that people with disabilities can—and do—work in all areas of the American workforce. They thrive when they fully participate in their communities, and in turn, the nation thrives. Unfortunately, sheltered workshops and the sub-minimum wage still exist today because of self-interested employers and systematic neglect by federal agencies, buttressed by outdated stereotypes of people with disabilities and the low expectations held by the general public, lawmakers, and, sadly, even some families and the disability rights community.
For these reasons, this hearing is extremely timely. However, ultimately this Congress and this committee need to take some concrete steps to increase the employment options of people with disabilities. NDRN calls upon this committee and the Congress to:
Specifically for people with intellectual disabilities, the Congress and this Committee should:
Congress should take this opportunity to ensure that people with disabilities have a chance to be competitively employed. Simply put, sheltered workshops are just another institution segregating people with disabilities away, while the subminimum wage ensures these individuals a life of poverty.
This hearing is extremely timely, and NDRN looks forward to working with you Senator Harkin, and the entire HELP Committee, to achieve a world where people with disabilities have their choice of employment in integrated and competitively paid environments rather than segregated and subminimum wage positions.