[nfb-talk] FW: [Acbny-l] Blind People Face Lingering Workplace Bias
Eric Calhoun
eric at pmpmail.com
Mon Mar 17 12:57:43 CDT 2008
Original Message:
From: "Don Moore" <donmoore48 at gmail.com>
To: <fcb-l at acb.org>
Subject: [Acbny-l] Blind People Face Lingering Workplace Bias
Date:
Mon, 17 Mar 2008 11:45:08 -0400
Blind People Face Lingering Workplace Bias
BY Associated Press
March 17, 2008
URL: http://www.nysun.com/article/73021
Technology and training have improved to the point that blind people can
adeptly perform a dazzling array of jobs - soon to include the governorship
of New York. The biggest obstacle still in their way, advocates say, is the
negative attitude of many employers.
The most recent available statistics suggest that only about 30% of
working-age blind people have jobs. That figure was calculated more than 10
years ago, but the major groups lobbying on behalf of blind Americans
believe it remains accurate despite numerous technological advances.
"Most people don't know a blind person, so they assume that blind people
are not capable of doing most jobs when in fact that's not true," a
spokesman for the National Federation of the Blind, Chris Danielsen, said.
Exhibit A, for the moment, is the incoming governor, David Paterson.
"Unfortunately we're still living in an age of misperceptions of what
blind people can do," the president of the American Foundation for the
Blind, Carl Augusto, said. "We're hoping that an employer considering
hiring a blind person will say that if David Paterson can be governor and
be legally blind, maybe this applicant who is blind can be a good computer
programmer."
There are an estimated 10 million visually impaired people in the United
States, including about 1.3 million who are legally blind, according to Mr.
Augusto's foundation.
The foundation says legal blindness is generally described as visual
acuity of 20-200 or less in the better eye, with a corrective lens. Mr.
Paterson has enough sight in his right eye to walk unaided, recognize
people at conversational distance, and read if the text is close to his
face.
In theory, those people are covered by the Americans with Disabilities
Act, which among its many provisions requires employers to give fair
consideration and treatment to visually impaired employees and job
applicants. But Mr. Augusto said employers routinely turn down blind
applicants without incurring legal sanction.
"The ADA is a wonderful law, but many employers find a way not to
seriously consider blind people," he said. "They look at themselves and
then say, 'I can't imagine how a blind person can be a computer programmer.
They can't possibly do it.'"
Advocacy groups work persistently to change such attitudes, with employer
education programs and public appearances by successful blind people to
discuss capabilities. One component of such campaigns is to raise awareness
of the technology that helps blind people handle more types of jobs -
including software that reads aloud information on a computer screen.
March 17, 2008 Edition > Section:
_______________________________________________
Acbny-l mailing list
Acbny-l at emissives.com
http://emissives.com/mailman/listinfo/acbny-l_emissives.com
More information about the nfb-talk
mailing list