ADA Amendments Act will Restore Vital Civil Rights
Protections for Americans with Disabilities
Editor: After what seems like years of squabbling over the rights of
people with disabilities, Congress has passed the ADa Restoration Act,
which restores the rights of people with disabilities to those intended by
Congress when the legislation was passed. Court decisions over the past
decade had severely restricted those rights.
Here's the press release from the folks at ADA Watch.
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September 2008
The leaders of a national coalition of disability, civil rights and
social justice organizations praised the U.S. Senate today for taking
bipartisan action to restore vital civil rights protections under the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). In recent years, the ADA the
world's first human rights law for people with disabilities has been
dramatically narrowed in the courts leaving citizens with epilepsy,
diabetes, mental illness, HIV-AIDS and other disabilities unprotected from
discrimination. The ADA Amendments Act clarifies the intent of Congress
and reverses the "judicial activism" that has resulted in more than 90% of
employment-related ADA cases being dismissed on summary judgment.
For more than 8 years, ADA Watch and the National Coalition for
Disability Rights has called for restoration of the ADA. Since 2006, our
Road To Freedom bus tour and disability rights exhibit has traveled to all
50 states, generating widespread media attention and collecting thousands
of petition signatures calling on Congress to restore the ADA. The
organization's "Campaign for Fair Judges" promotes awareness of the
importance of supporting candidates who will advance judicial nominees
supportive of disability rights and civil rights generally.
ADA Watch/NCDR founder and president, Jim Ward stated today, "This
legislation will move the courts away from narrow interpretations of the
ADA and the expending of resources on determining if a person is
'disabled' enough to deserve the protections of the ADA. The courts should
now move to fairly determining whether there has been discrimination."
Board member, Marcie Roth added, "While hopeful, we remain concerned
that the rights of the more than 54 Americans with disabilities may still
be in jeopardy if activist judges continue to disregard the intent of
Congress. We call on both presidential candidates to support judges who
will uphold the intent of Congress so that we can lessen discrimination
and see a reduction in the shamefully high rates of poverty and
unemployment among people with disabilities."
ADA Watch and the National Coalition for Disability Rights (NCDR) is a
coalition of national, state and local disability, civil rights and social
justice organizations united to protect and promote the human rights of
children and adults with physical and mental disabilities. For more
information, go to www.adawatch.org [1] and www.roadtofreedom.org [2]
~~~~~
References
[1] http://m1e.net/c?18386373-OHwfJrgqn93Wk%403611348-RZLmrqiq3xNBI
[2] http://m1e.net/c?18386373-iZ5Jg0VYghHIQ%403611349-dSLiIQHgyVHq2