Advanced
Composition
7th Hour
Assumption:
A person with mental retardation cannot be trained to perform a job as well as
an employee without a disability.
Fact: Over two thirds of Pizza Hut
employees have mental retardation. The average turnover rate (the rate at which
workers quit) of these employees is a modest twenty percent compared to a one
hundred and fifty percent turnover of employees without disabilities.
It is this kind of thinking that limits
the ability of people with disabilities
to find employment more than any other factor. In an E-Mail on Thursday, November 7, 1996,
Barbara Sommer, Disabilities Employment
Coordinator for the Oklahoma Employment
Security Commission, stated, "The most significant barrier to employment
for [people with disabilities] truly is attitude." One way to show the
effects of discrimination of people with
disabilities in the workplace is to show ways people with disabilities are discriminated
against and to show what is being done to stop this raping of the human heart.
Got a weight
problem? Sure, there are a lot of diets you could try, but why not exercise
your right as a victim and strike back at discriminatory employers? You might
not lose any weight ,but at least you can get the job you deserve. This is
possible because of the courts and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
wants to extend protections under the 1973 Rehabilitation Act and the Americans
with Disabilities Act to obese people. In December of 1993 a Federal Appeals
Court ruled unanimously to uphold an order that required the state of Rhode
Island to pay $100,000 in damages to a 320-lb. woman for not hiring her and
then ordered that she be hired as an attendant at a mental retardation
facility. The EEOC said, "It is not necessary that a condition be
involuntary or immutable to be covered." In September of 1993,
California's Supreme Court ruled that a health-food store owner could not
reject a job applicant if her fatness were the result of a faulty metabolism or
a psychological systemic problem, but could if it were the person's fault.
Pregnancy is usually considered a natural
occurrence that all people accept, but from 1965 to 1978 AT&T forced
pregnant women to take unpaid maternity leaves, awarded those employees less
seniority than others on disability, and gave them no guarantee that they could
return to their jobs or equivalent positions. Georgetown University Law
Professor Wendy Williams, the major proponent of equal treatment, maintains
that since "pregnancy leads to a physical inability to work, it should be
treated as any other temporary physical disability." Laws that give
pregnant women specific privileges, she and others argue, imply unequal status
and are likely to prove detrimental to women in the long run. Do these women
not deserve to be not separate, not special, but just equal?
By now you may be wondering, "What is
being done to stop this from happening?". On July 26, a major new law, the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), went into effect for companies with
twenty five or more employees--which means that 87% of U.S. wage earners will
be covered. The law, which bans discrimination against those who are blind,
deaf, mentally retarded, HIV positive, physically impaired, or have cancer or epilepsy,
is designed to help more than ten million Americans move into the mainstream of
the working world. "This is the 20th century Emancipation Proclamation for
people with disabilities," says Iowa Senator Tom Harkin, the law's chief
sponsor. Under the act, employers are forbidden to discriminate in hiring,
promotions, and firing. They are also asked to offer "reasonable
accommodations"--things like a ramp for a wheelchair or a sound amplifier
on a phone--to people with
disabilities.. Says Bobby Silverstein of the Senate Subcommittee on
Disability Policy: "Companies are sending human-resources employees to
seminars and sensitivity training, reading manuals and meeting with
disabilities-rights advocates."
So in this world of political correctness,
people can not even treat someone who has an extra bulge in one place or
another as an equal. Laws are helping, but as Mrs. Sommer says, "The most
significant barrier to [people with disabilities] is truly attitude." even
though "Attitude would appear to be one of the easiest barriers to remove
because it costs so little to change."
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