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Marcie Roth

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    You'll see in the corner the record button
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    So you should see that it's recording now,
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    and I'm going to mute myself now,
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    and you'll go ahead and do your intro.
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    Thank you Marcie.
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    Hi there, I'm Marcie Roth
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    and I have been working
    in disability rights
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    for my whole adult life,
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    and actually, since I was
    a freshman in high school.
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    I am currently the executive director and
    CEO of the World Institute on Disability,
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    and I have been working
    over the years in services
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    for people living in residential programs
    early in my career
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    with people in,
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    children in school settings,
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    people in vocational rehabilitation,
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    and then people in
    community living environments,
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    then along the way, I
    became very involved in disability rights
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    and very involved in the
    early days of advocacy
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    before the ADA was introduced.
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    And then I worked for disability advocacy
    organizations almost ever since.
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    In addition to my own disability,
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    I'm also the parent of two
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    now adults with disabilities.
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    My Husband also has a disability,
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    and much of my family also happen
    to be people with disabilities
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    so disability rights is just part of
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    everything I am and most everything I do.
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    I did spend from 2001 and onward
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    focusing very much on what happens
    for people with disabilities
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    before, during, and after disasters.
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    And that's been a real particular
    laser focus of mine ever since,
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    and in fact, I've had the opportunity
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    as an appointee in the
    Obama administrashion
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    to spend just about 8 years at FEMA,
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    establishing FEMA's Office of
    Disability Integration Coordination,
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    and building a cadre of disability experts
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    of the same pond, supporting governors
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    and emergency managers
    and most particularly
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    engaging people with disabilities,
    and disability organizations
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    in emergency preparedness
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    and throughout disaster response recovery
    and mitigation.
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    So one last piece since I've been with
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    the World Institute on Disability
    since last September,
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    my ongoing focus on global
    disability rights has really been
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    something that I've had much more
    opportunity to be actively involved in
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    and I have spent the time since joining
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    WID building a strategic planning process
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    and supporting the organization to
    establish new priorities,
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    taking a look at the
    organization's mission
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    and very recently establishing
    four particular areas of focus
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    for the organization as we move forward.
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    Thank you Marcie. Excellent, okay
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    I apologize that my neighbor is chipping
    a lot of brush today,
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    so it's making extra sound
    whenever I unmute
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    but don't worry, it won't interfere
    with your recording.
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    Okay, so the first question is
    about the past.
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    So tell of your first memory
    realizing that there were
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    accessibility issues, discrimination,
    or lack of inclusion.
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    What is your personal story
    or connection
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    to the American's with Disabilities Act?
    What do you remember
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    about the day that it was signed,
    if applicable?
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    And what was the impact on
    you and on others?
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    Remember to tap something
    so that the camera shifts to you
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    before you start.
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    I first became aware of disability
    at a very young age.
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    I had a best friend in first grade,
    his name was Gregory,
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    and he and I were
    just wonderful friends.
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    We spent a lot of time together,
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    and then all of the sudden
    one day, Gregory was gone,
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    and I didn't know what happened to him
    or where he went
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    and it wasn't until many years later
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    that I found out that Gregory
    had Down Syndrome,
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    and he had been removed
    from my Kindergarten class,
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    and first grade I think it was
    at that point,
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    and apparently he had been sent
    to some other school somewhere.
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    And the loss of his friendship
    was pretty surprising
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    and I didn't understand, you know,
    where he went.
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    Looking back on it, it's kind of peculiar
    that we didn't get to still be friends
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    'cause he didn't move away, he just
    stopped going to my school.
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    But, I...
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    I remember just being confused and then
    over the next number of years,
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    I lived in a town that was also
    the home of Save the Children,
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    and I was always very interested in
    the work that Save the Children was doing,
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    and I am embarrassed to admit
    my earliest involvement
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    in humanitarian work was from a,
    you know, very charity-model approach,
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    and I spent a lot of my childhood
    raising money for Save the Children,
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    and getting involved in other activities
    that were very much following
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    the charity-pity model and certainly not
    a model of
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    making space for and supporting and
    lifting up other people with disabilities.
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    the onset of my disability wasn't until
    many years later,
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    but when I was in high school,
    I had a requirement to do
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    I can't even remember
    what it's called now!
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    Community service! Sorry.
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    I had an opportunity to do, or I had
    an obligation to do community service,
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    and I started off, this was the year
    of the first Earth day
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    and I started crushing glass
    at the local recycling center,
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    and it turned out that
    that was really boring,
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    but lots of my classmates were
    volunteering
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    at a state institution
    for people with disabilities,
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    and I joined them once a week and
    looking back on it again,
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    it was pretty shocking that at
    13 years old,
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    I was assigned as the teacher
    of a classroom of 30 adults
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    who had never had the opportunity
    to attend school, and they now had
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    a 13 year old teacher once a week.
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    Needles to say, I learned way more
    from them than they learned from me,
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    but we had a lot of fun, and many of them
    became friends
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    very much along the rest of my path.
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    Unfortunately, some of them are
    no longer alive,
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    but there are a couple of people who
    are still very much a part of my life
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    and fortunately, they were successful in
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    liberating themselves from
    that state institution.
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    And so, they and many others
    taught me a lot,
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    but the real pivotal experience for me,
    I was working back at
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    that state institution, it was my first
    paid job in disability services,
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    and I had been hired to work
    in what was called a "cottage"
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    for 40 women with
    intellectual disabilities,
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    and this "cottage" was on
    beautiful grounds,
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    but the women lived in a building,
    20 on one side, 20 on the other side,
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    and my responsibilities included
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    assisting them in bathing and
    getting dressed and in eating.
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    Many of them were unable
    to feed themselves.
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    Some because they just had never been
    given the opportunity,
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    and others because of their
    physical disability
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    and a lack of any sort of
    adapted utensils or other equipment.
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    So as I was feeding people, sort of
    the routine was the same every day.
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    The plate would come out,
    and there would be
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    3 mounds of food on the plate.
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    One mound was always brown,
    one mound was always green,
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    and one mount was always white.
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    You know the meat, the vegetable,
    and the starch.
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    And, you know, I know that people like to
    eat their meal different ways.
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    There would also be a dessert every day,
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    jello, or ice cream, or
    something again always in a mound.
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    And so I would spend time with each of the
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    individuals who were having their meal
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    and would sort of be working together,
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    trying to figure out did they prefer to have
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    to eat their dessert first?
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    Some people liked to do that. Did they prefer
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    a little bit of the brown and a little bit
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    of the white all on the same fork?
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    Did they not want their food touching?
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    You know and I would sort of work back and Forth
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    with them to try and figure out what
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    their preference was and I got in trouble
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    because I was spending too much time
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    and ultimately, I was moved to a different
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    position because I was taking too much
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    time giving people an opportunity to make
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    some choices and express some preferences.
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    So that was extremely pivotal and in
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    many ways you know, those early early
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    experiences have really totally driven
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    who I am and what I believe all these years Latter.
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    In terms of the Americans with Disabilities Act
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    I had a very close personal experience
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    with what was then called
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    "public law 94142" the Education of
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    All Handicapped Act, later on renamed
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    the Individuals with Disabilities Act, IDEA
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    and I had a very personal family
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    experience with IDEA and became aware of
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    legislative initiatives and how the IDEA
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    had just been passed. And then I started
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    to become more aware of the work being
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    done. And this was back in the 70s
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    work being done on some other legislative
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    initiatives and the 504, the passage of
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    the Rehabilitation Act, followed by the
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    504 sit-in in San Francisco to get the
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    regulations put in place. That really
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    caught my attention and between the little
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    bits of information I was getting there
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    and the work I was doing
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    and then becoming a full-time advocate
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    going to work for an independent living center
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    in 1982, I then became extremely involved
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    in systems change and how to develop
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    policy, how to organize, how to support
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    the rights and voices and preferences of
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    other people and because I lived in
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    Connecticut and the original author of
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    the Americans with Disability Act,
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    the first time the bill was introduced was
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    Senator Weicker of Connecticut, and
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    Senator Weicker, father of a great young man
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    who had Down Syndrome,
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    Senator Weicker was very involved with the
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    disability advocacy community in
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    Connecticut, and I then had the incredible
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    opportunity to go to Boston and testify
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    at one of the Congress major hearings--
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    field hearings on the Americans with
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    Disability Act. So you know of course that
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    first time around, the bill didn't pass
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    but boy oh boy we were revved up and in the
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    passage of the ADA, in the period in which
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    once the bill was re-introduced and votes
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    were organizing, I remember that we had
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    stacks and stacks and stacks of bright
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    pink postcards and we were organizing
  • 19:05 - 19:13
    folks across the state to develop,
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    to sign those postcards supporting the
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    passage of the ADA and then you know this
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    was sort of a wonderful but maybe a littal
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    bit misleading experience, we actually were
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    successful. The bill got passed! And I
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    remember thinking "Oh, well this wasn't that hard
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    I mean, you know, we had to
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    go at it twice, but well this wasn't so hard.
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    Let's take on some more legislation!"
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    so it turns out that it wasn't as easy
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    as it looked to me. It wasn't just about
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    hot pink postcards and meetings and
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    marches--that all helped but even that
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    sometimes these days, it doesn't seem to
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    be enough to change policy.
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    so that's my earliest journey to 1990.
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    Thank you Marcie. Okay we're going to the
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    present now. So just so you know, I do
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    have another interview at 2:00, so we're
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    going to have 3 more sections: the present
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    the future, and the call to action.
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    So just to pace yourself within those.--thank you
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    okay so within the present, has the ADA
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    made a difference? Tell us about your
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    "aha" moment that told you that the ADA is
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    or is not making a difference and to what
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    extent based on your passions and areas of
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    expertise, where do you see or not see the
  • 21:06 - 21:08
    impact of the ADA?
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    So the ADA has had a huge
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    and sweeping impact
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    and it's important for me
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    to begin as I begin to talk
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    about the present day as we're embarking
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    on ADA 30 it's really important to start
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    with how much things absolutely have
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    changed, you know so certainly some of the
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    architectural barrier removal efforts,
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    some of the significant improvements
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    in equally effective communication,
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    some of the requirements around programs,
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    you know all of those have significantly changed
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    most--- can't even say most of the time--often
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    there have been many really great initatives over
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    the years but we've always had to maintain
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    a relentless battle to not
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    let anything slip, to not lose
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    any sort of momentum towards accessibility,
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    if we look away for a minute
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    our rights will be swept away from us,
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    and I can certainly talk about
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    the very present day
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    and what I have to say about where
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    we are today is not great
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    and so I do want to take a little more time
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    to call out the significant progress;
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    in so many aspects of daily life
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    in which we can
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    call out failures of ADA compliance,
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    enforcement of the law but it is oftentimes
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    in comparison to the examples of where
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    it's working, so when transportation
  • 24:07 - 24:14
    is not accessible, we're calling it out
  • 24:14 - 24:20
    because we know the good and
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    promising practices that have been in place
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    for transportation accessiblity
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    make the failures so much more egregious
  • 24:35 - 24:43
    in housing, in employment, in the kinds of
  • 24:43 - 24:49
    assistive devices that are available,
  • 24:49 - 24:56
    the universal design of places and things
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    all of that points to the examples of where we
  • 25:09 - 25:13
    are getting it right and in stark contrast
  • 25:13 - 25:18
    the areas where we egregiously getting it wrong
  • 25:18 - 25:34
    and I half to say that just very recently I have
  • 25:34 - 25:38
    led my organization's involvement in
  • 25:38 - 25:44
    a petition to US Dept of Health and Human
  • 25:44 - 25:49
    Services demanding that people with
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    disabilities be immediately relocated
  • 25:54 - 25:58
    out of nursing homes and other congregate
  • 25:58 - 26:04
    settings due to the horific
  • 26:04 - 26:10
    circumstances in those congregate
  • 26:10 - 26:14
    settings due to covid-19
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    and the failure to provide appropriate protections
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    for people with disabilities
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    in institutional settings
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    the ADA back in 1990
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    very clearly gave people with disabilityes
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    significant rights, and
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    even when challenged in 1999 the Olmstead case,
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    which was a Georgia case, and two women
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    who.. Lois and Elaine, Lois Curtiss
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    an incredible woman I had the
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    pleasure of being with on a number
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    of occasions, the two of them
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    demanded that they had a right to live in
  • 27:36 - 27:37
    the most integrated setting
  • 27:37 - 27:40
    appropriate to their needs,
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    and the decision, the case went
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    all the way to the Supreme Court
  • 27:48 - 27:55
    and I was among those who
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    slept outside the Supreme Court on the night
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    before their case was heard
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    and I was among
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    the folks who celebrated out in front of
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    the Supreme Court the day that desishon came
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    down in favor of Lois and Elaine's right,
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    and the rights of 1000s,10s of 1000's,
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    millions of people with Disabilityes
  • 28:24 - 28:29
    to live in the most integrated setting
  • 28:29 - 28:31
    appropriate to their needs.
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    Givin we are 21 years after that decision,
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    yesterday the American Civil Liberties Union
  • 28:43 - 28:48
    submitted a petition and the World Institute
  • 28:48 - 28:50
    on Disability joined a number of other
  • 28:50 - 28:57
    disability organizations in bringing that petition
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    demanding that people with disabilities
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    be immediately be relocated
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    out of these congregate settings
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    10s of 1000's of people have died in
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    the last 100 days, the genocide
  • 29:20 - 29:24
    of people with disabilities because of
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    the failures of implementation of that
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    Olmstead decision and the failures of our
  • 29:34 - 29:40
    government to provide the kind of supports
  • 29:40 - 29:42
    and services that enable
  • 29:42 - 29:45
    people with disabilities
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    to live safely and with the support they
  • 29:49 - 29:51
    need in place in the community
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    and, very infuriatingly our continued
  • 30:01 - 30:05
    persistent calls for
  • 30:05 - 30:09
    people with disabilities to be
  • 30:09 - 30:13
    adequately served in these..
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    in disasters have been ignored,
  • 30:18 - 30:23
    and the bottom line has been again over the
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    last 100 days 10s of 1000's of people with
  • 30:29 - 30:31
    disabilities have died. And when I was
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    called on, saying that those were
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    people with disabilities I have had
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    conversations with a number of senior
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    government officials who, like, why are
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    you saying people with disabilities?
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    and you know, these were old people with
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    underlying conditions living in nursing
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    homes and in long term care facilities.
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    Well you don't go to a nursing home
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    because you're old, you go to a nursing
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    home because you have a disability and the
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    supports and services you need to stay in
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    the community have not been given to you.
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    And the vast majority, some would say, all of
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    those deaths in congregate settings are
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    people with disabilities, most of them
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    black and brown and people living in
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    poverty. And the failures of Americans
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    with Disabilities Act, the Olmstead
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    decision, and our government's
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    will to monitor and enforce this law
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    and the rehabilitation act have a
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    devastating impact on where we are today.
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    And the death of many of our siblings.
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    Without any end in sight.
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    Thank you Marcie, Ok. So next on to the
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    future, with the work that you've been
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    doing you've seen a lot of progress
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    and barriers. If you could pick one thing
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    to change or that needs to occur to have
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    access and equality--I know that's hard
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    --one thing to have equality and access
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    present in the lives of people with
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    disabilities what would that be?
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    The one thing that must happen:
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    people with disabilities have civil rights
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    protections by law and the one thing
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    that must happen
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    is that their rights are monitored and
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    enforced without exception. Following
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    the law is not enough, we need universal
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    design to be the standard we need
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    accessibility and accommodation
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    to be readily available but we must have
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    monitoring and enforcement. Every
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    federal dollar is supposed to be spent in
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    compliance with the rehabilitation act
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    and between the Rehab Act and the ADA
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    they require, their should be, no
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    rue for those people with civil rights
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    protections to be repeatedly denied
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    and unable to fully participate
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    in home and community life. Monitoring
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    and enforcement must be the floor
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    I have a ceiling but enforcing
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    these civil rights laws is absolutely
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    the floor. Thank you. What can we do?
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    What can we as community members
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    take right now? So what we can do right
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    now is, you know, one of my favorite
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    sayings, "never give up, never give in"
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    another of my favorites, "nothing about us
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    without us" we as disability community
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    leaders need to stick together, we need to
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    center our work around people who are
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    multiply marginalized, excluded
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    we need to be sure that we are not wasting
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    our time with infighting and with
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    a kind of divisive childish behavior that
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    some folks are still stuck in engaging in
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    we absolutely must reach a hand forward
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    reach a hand back stick together
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    and continue relentlessly to work
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    towards the realization of the goal
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    that the ADA was written around and so
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    many of our siblings have fought so very
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    hard for. We've lost a bunch of those
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    hardworking visionary leaders; many of them
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    have been lost in recent years, some of them
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    have been lost along the way, we have an
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    incredible legacy to care for, we have
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    huge opportunities to work towards
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    technology has the potential for leveling
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    the playing field if in fact people have
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    real access and the World Institute on
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    Disability and our commitment to
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    work in partnership with other
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    disability lead organizations and
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    our allies to make communities
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    stronger, more resilient for the whole
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    community because when we get it right
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    for people with disabilities I think
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    the whole community not only benefits
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    but is stronger for our leadership, our
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    contributions, our expertise in
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    what it takes to make daily life work for
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    everybody. Excellent, thank you.
Title:
Marcie Roth
Video Language:
English
Team:
ABILITY Magazine
Duration:
38:10
Henry Knudson published English subtitles for Marcie Roth Dec 1, 2022, 6:38 PM
Henry Knudson edited English subtitles for Marcie Roth Dec 1, 2022, 6:38 PM
Henry Knudson edited English subtitles for Marcie Roth Dec 1, 2022, 3:02 PM
Isaiah Githuka published English subtitles for Marcie Roth Apr 16, 2022, 12:56 AM
Isaiah Githuka edited English subtitles for Marcie Roth Apr 16, 2022, 12:56 AM
Page Turner published English subtitles for Marcie Roth Jan 16, 2022, 10:03 PM
Page Turner edited English subtitles for Marcie Roth Jan 16, 2022, 10:03 PM
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