the ada amendments act: implementation and what’s next?
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www.edi.cornell.edu. Employment and Disability Institute. The ADA Amendments Act: Implementation and What’s Next?. A Public Policy Forum December 17, 2008 Cornell University Government Affairs Office Hall of States, Room 333 444 North Capitol Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20001. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Employment and Disability Institute www.edi.cornell.edu
The ADA Amendments Act: Implementation and What’s Next?
A Public Policy Forum
December 17, 2008
Cornell University Government Affairs OfficeHall of States, Room 333444 North Capitol Street, N.W.Washington, DC 20001
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Rehabilitation Research and Training Center on Employment Policy for
Persons with Disabilities
Funded by the U.S. Department of Education National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation
Research (Grant Number H133B040013)
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Collaborating Partners
• Employment and Disability Institute ILR School, Ithaca, NY
• Dept. of Policy Analysis and Management College of Human Ecology, Ithaca, New York
• Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.Princeton, NJ, Washington, DC, and Cambridge, MA
• American Association of People with DisabilitiesWashington, DC
• Rutgers University, School of Management and Labor Relations, Program for Disability Research
New Brunswick, NJ
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Welcome and Introductions• Andrew J. Imparato, American Association of
People with Disabilities
Speakers• Christine M. Griffin, Commissioner, Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission
• Jennifer Mathis, Esq., Deputy Legal Director, Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
• Jenifer Simpson, Sr. Director Telecommunications & Technology Policy, American Association of People with Disabilities
• Day Al-Mohamed, Sr. Legislative and Federal Affairs Officer, American Psychological Association
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Christine M. Griffin, Commissioner, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
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Jennifer Mathis, Esq., Deputy Legal Director, Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
The ADA Amendments Act Summary of Key Provisions
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• The ADAAA provides that the ameliorative effects of mitigating measures should not be considered in determining whether an individual has an impairment that substantially limits a major life activity.
• An exception is made for “ordinary eyeglasses or contact lenses,” which may be taken into account.
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• The ADAAA includes a non-exhaustive list of major life activities, such as seeing, hearing, eating, sleeping, walking, learning and concentrating.
• Major life activities also include the operation of “major bodily functions,” such as the immune system, normal cell growth, and the endocrine system.
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• The ADAAA clarifies that impairments that are episodic or in remission are considered disabilities if the impairment would substantially limit a major life activity when the condition is considered in its active state.
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• The ADAAA rejects the Supreme Court’s interpretation of “substantially limits” by providing a rule of construction stating that the term “substantially limits” shall be interpreted consistently with the findings and purposes of the ADAAA.
• Findings and purposes make clear that Congress intended to apply a less demanding standard than that applied by the courts, and to cover a broad range of individuals.
• A rule of construction provides that the definition of disability shall be construed in favor of broad coverage of individuals, to the maximum extent permitted by the terms of the ADA.
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• The ADAAA provides that an individual can establish coverage under the “regarded as” prong by showing that he or she was subjected to an action prohibited by the ADA based on an actual or perceived impairment, regardless of whether the impairment limits a major life activity.
• Transitory and minor impairments are excluded from this coverage, and employers and other covered entities under the ADA have no duty to provide a reasonable accommodation or modification to individuals who fall solely under the “regarded as” prong.
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Jenifer Simpson, Sr. Director Telecommunications & Technology Police, American Association of People with Disabilities
What’s Next?
Ensuring electronic communications is accessible to and usable by people with disabilities
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Relationship to ADA
EmploymentEducationTitle IV updateAnywhere, anytime
--modernize the Communications Act for people with disabilities
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Proposal for new legislation-Coalition of Organizations for
Accessible Technology (COAT)221 affiliates, 43 states
-The 21st Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act (H.R. 6320)
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Summary of H.R. 6320
Amends and updates existing sections in Communications Act
Title I Communications
Title II Video Programming
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Requires access to phone-type equipment & services used over the Internet.
Add improved accountability & enforcement measures for accessibility, including a clearinghouse & reporting obligations by providers and manufacturers.
Requires telephone products used with the Internet to be hearing aid compatible.
Allows use of Lifeline and Link-up universal service funds (USF) for broadband services.
Allocates up to $10 million/year from USF for phone equipment used by people who are deaf-blind.
Clarifies scope of relay services to include calls between and among people with disabilities
Requires Internet-based service providers to contribute to the Interstate Relay Fund.
Summary of HR 6320 Title I Communications
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Requires decoder circuitry in all video programming devices. Extends closed captioning obligations to television-type video
programming distributed over the Internet: covers programming that would otherwise be covered by the FCC’s captioning rules, not user-generated content.
Requires easy access to TV closed captions via remote control, on-screen menus, audio outputs or assistive technology.
Requires easy access by blind people to television controls and program selection menus.
Restores video description rulesRequires access to televised emergency programming for people
who are blind or have low vision.
Summary of HR 6320Title II Video Programming
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Status and Outlook in 2009
Sponsors
Commerce committees
Telecommunications subcom
Industry
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Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology (COAT)
http://www.coataccess.org
Email [email protected]
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Day Al-Mohamed, Sr. Legislative and Federal Affairs Officer, American Psychological Association
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Plate 8 – In the Madhouse, "The Interior of Bedlam," from A Rake's Progress by William Hogarth, 1763. McCormick Library, Northwestern University.
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Related Cornell Resources• Employment Policy for People with
Disabilities online repository of over 200 related research reports and policy briefs:
http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/edi/• HR Tips (over 35 brochures in English and
Spanish on workplace accommodation):www.hrtips.org • Disability statistics online:www.disabilitystatistics.org