PROTECTION & ADVOCACY

Oklahoma Disability Law Center, Inc.  

December, 2001

IN THIS ISSUE:

 

v     U.S. Supreme Court Update

 

v     Airline Security and Disability Rights (JFA)

With US DOT Fact Sheet

 

v     EEOC Update:  EEOC Issues Guidance on Health Inquiries for Employer Evacuation Plans

 

v     Housing Update:  NCD Evaluates HUD’s Enforcement

 

v     Report on Voting Accessibility (JFA)

 

v     Nation’s First Mental Health Court: Annual Progress Reports

 

v     Million Dollar Verdict in Settlegoode Case Sends “Shock Waves” Throughout Special Ed Community

 

 

 

 

US Supreme Court Update

 

On October 29, 2001, the United States Supreme Court granted certiorari in cases with issues of (1) Affirmative defense under the Americans with Disabilities Act; and

(2) Waiver of Eleventh Amendment state sovereign immunity.

 

(1)  Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Echezabal, Case No. 00-1406
Court below:  226 F.3d 1063 (9th Cir. 5/23/00)
Full Text: http://laws.findlaw.com/9th/9855551.html
The issue in the American's with Disabilities Act case is whether the affirmative defense of "direct threat" is available to an employer on ground that an employee endangers his own health. Eschezabal worked for a subcontractor at a Chevron oil refinery.  Chevron twice rejected his application to work directly for them out of concern for his health after negative mandatory physicals.  Chevron then directed the subcontractor to remove Eschezabal from the job for health reasons.  The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, using plain language analysis, held that the affirmative defense was limited to only employers who reject applications of those presenting a direct threat to the health or safety of others.  It reasoned that the statutes plain language, clear  legislative intent and case precedent all prohibit a paternalistic reading of the "direct threat" defense. 

 

(2) Lapides v. Board of Regents, University System of Georgia, Case No. 01-298
Court below:  251 F.3d 1372 (11th Cir. 5/24/01)
Full text: http://laws.findlaw.com/11th/0014984opn.html

The issue in this sovereign immunity case is whether a state attorney general may waive a state's Eleventh Amendment immunities by removing a state citizen's suit to federal court. A student accused Lapides of sexual harassment, but failed to provide any evidence in support of the accusation.  Kennesaw State University, Lapides's employer, declined to take action against him based upon the student's accusation.  Nevertheless, Lapides alleged that other faculty members disseminated defamatory letters about him and the sexual harassment accusation.  Lapides claimed that the alleged letters interfered with his potential for promotion at Kennesaw State University.  He sought damages in a Georgia Superior Court under the Georgia Tort Claims Act and 42 U.S.C. s1983.  The Georgia Attorney General removed the suit to federal district court and moved for dismissal under the Eleventh Amendment.  The district court denied the motion for dismissal after  finding that the State of Georgia waived its sovereign
immunity by removing the suit to federal court.  The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit reversed, holding that the state did not waive sovereign immunity by removal of the case to federal court.  It determined that a state may waive sovereign immunity only by statute or judicial interpretation, and that the Georgia Constitution precluded waiver through judicial interpretation. 

 

 

During the week of November 5, 2001, the United States Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the case of Toyota Motor Mfg., Kentucky v. Williams, Case No. 00-1089;
Court below:  United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit
Full text: http://laws.findlaw.com/6th/00a0223p.html
The issue in this case is whether an individual's inability to perform a limited number of tasks associated with a specific job is a "disability" within the meaning of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990.

 

On November 8, 2001, the United States Supreme Court granted certiorari in the Oklahoma case of Bd. of Ed. of Independent School Dist. No. 92 of Pottawatomie County v. Earls, Case No. 01-332

Court below:  242 F.3d 1264 (10th Cir. 3/21/01)

Full text: http://laws.findlaw.com/10th/006128.html
The issue in this search and seizure case is whether a school's mandatory urinalysis drug test is "reasonable" under the Fourth Amendment. In 1988, the
Tecumseh Public School District adopted the Student Activities Drug Testing Policy that required drug testing of students who participated in any extracurricular activity.  These activities range from athletics to Future Farmers of America.  Students from Tecumseh High School challenge the constitutionality of the policy as a condition to participate in those activities.  The students however do not challenge the statute as it applies to athletes.  The court below held that the policy violated the Fourth Amendment.  The court found the nature and the immediacy of the District's concern and their solution to drug test all
students who participate in extracurricular activities does not outweigh the student's right to be searched illegally without reasonable suspicion.

 

On Tuesday, November 27, 2001, the United States Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the Oklahoma case of Owasso Independent Sch. Dist. v. Falvo, Case No. 00-1073
Court below: United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit
Full text: http://laws.findlaw.com/10th/995130.html
The issue in this case is whether the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), which requires educational institutions to preserve the confidentiality of "education records," prohibits public school teachers from using their students to exchange and grade each other's homework, quizzes, or tests.  Falvo's children are enrolled in schools in the
Owasso School District (District).  Falvo contends that the use of peer grading in the district, where students exchange papers, grade them, and announce their grades outloud or tell the teacher their scores in private, embarrasses her children.  The District denied Falvo's request to enact a uniform policy banning peer grading, requiring all teachers either to grade their
student's papers, or allow students to grade their own papers.  Falvo filed suit in federal court, seeking, among other things, an order enjoining the district from using peer grading.  Falvo alleged that the peer grading practices violate the Fourteenth Amendment and FERPA.  The
district court denied the injunction.  The Tenth Circuit affirmed on the 14th Amendment privacy claim but reversed on the FERPA claim.  It determined that peer-evaluated grades constitute an "educational record" under the plain text of the statute because a student grading another student's paper is acting for an education agency, which violates FERPA.  On appeal, the district argues that the plain language of FERPA shows that the term "educational records" does not include the grades on routine homework assignments, quizzes and tests, and to find that it does
will needlessly burden sound educational practices.

 

 

"Airline Security & Disability Rights"
from Justice for All


The Department of Transportation has issued the following
fact sheet to address concerns about airport security for
passengers with disabilities. The basic premise is that
passengers with disabilities should still expect
nondiscriminatory treatment as required by the Air Carrier
Access Act (ACAA), but a thorough security screening does
not violate the ACAA.

If you encounter a violation at an airport (or at any time
from buying your ticket to leaving an airport,) your first
request should be to talk with a Complaints Resolution
Official (CRO) for the airline - each airline must
provide a CRO and they are entitled to act on behalf of the
airline in ACAA cases. If the problem is not resolved to
your satisfaction, you may file a complaint as explained in
the attached document. If you have any questions
or need more information on the ACAA, please contact
Maureen McCloskey at PVA at 202-416-7696.

Thanks to the Consortium of Citizens with Disabilities
(CCD) for sharing this information.

Jonathan Young, JFA Moderator

---

U.S. Department of Transportation
Fact Sheet

"Steps Taken to Ensure New Security Requirements Preserve
and Respect the Civil Rights of People with Disabilities"

The Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA) and the Department of
Transportation's implementing rules prohibit discriminatory
treatment of persons with disabilities in air
transportation. Since the terrorist hijackings and tragic
events of September 11, the Federal Aviation Administration
(FAA) has issued directives to strengthen security measures
at airline checkpoints and passenger screening locations.
In securing our national air transportation system, where
much of FAA's efforts have been directed to date, steps
were also taken to ensure that the new security procedures
preserve and respect the civil rights of passengers with
disabilities. This Fact Sheet provides information about
the accessibility requirements in air travel in light of
strengthened security measures by providing a few examples
of the types of accommodations and services that must be
provided to passengers with disabilities. The examples
listed below are not all-inclusive and are simply meant to
provide answers to frequently asked questions since
September 11 concerning the air travel of people with
disabilities.

Check-in

+ Air carriers must provide meet and assist service
(e.g., assistance to gate or aircraft) at drop-off points.
The lack of curbside check-in, for certain airlines at some
airports, has not changed the requirement for meet and
assist
service at drop-off points.


Screener checkpoints

+ Individuals assisting passengers with disabilities
are allowed beyond the screener checkpoints. These
individuals may be required to present themselves at the
airlines' check-in desk and receive a "pass" allowing them
to go through the screener checkpoint without a ticket.

+ Ticketed passengers with their own oxygen for use on
the ground are allowed beyond the screener checkpoints with
their oxygen canisters once the canisters have been
thoroughly inspected. If there is a request for oxygen at
the gate for a qualified passenger with a disability,
commercial oxygen providers are allowed beyond the screener
checkpoints with oxygen canisters once the canisters have
been thoroughly inspected. Commercial oxygen providers
may be required to present themselves at the airlines'
check-in desk and receive a "pass" allowing them to go
through the screener checkpoint without a ticket.

+ The limit of one carry-on bag and one personal bag
(e.g., purse or briefcase) for each traveler does not apply
to medical supplies and/or assistive devices. Passengers
with disabilities generally may carry medical equipment,
medications, and assistive devices on board the aircraft.

+ All persons allowed beyond the screener checkpoints
may be searched. This will usually be done through the use
of a hand-held metal detector, whenever possible.
Passengers may also be patted down during security
screenings, and this is even more likely if the passenger
uses a wheelchair and is unable to stand up. Private
screenings remain an option for persons in wheelchairs.

+ Service animals, once inspected to ensure prohibited
items are not concealed, are permitted on board an
aircraft. Any backpack or sidepack that is carried on the
animal will be manually inspected or put through the X-ray
machines. The service animal's halter may also be removed
for inspection.

+ Assistive devices such as walking canes, once
inspected to ensure prohibited items are not concealed, are
permitted on board an aircraft. Assistive devices such as
augmentative communication devices and Braille 'N Speaks
will go through the same sort of security screening process
as used for personal computers.

+ Syringes are permitted on board an aircraft once it
is determined that the person has a documented medical need
for the syringe.

+ Personal wheelchairs and battery-powered scooters may
still be used to reach departure gates after they are
inspected to ensure that they do not present a security
risk. Any backpack or sidepack that is carried on the
wheelchair will be manually inspected or put through the X-
ray machines.

+ Personal wheelchairs will still be allowed to be
stowed on board an aircraft.

+ Air carriers must ensure that qualified individuals
with a disability, including those with vision or hearing
impairments, have timely access to information, such as new
security measures, the carriers provide to other
passengers. For example, on flights to Reagan Washington
National Airport
, persons are verbally warned to use the
restrooms more than a half an hour before arrival since
after that point in time passengers are required to remain
in their seats. Alternative formats are necessary to
ensure that all passengers, especially deaf persons,
understand new security measures such as the one at Reagan
Washington National.

We hope this information is helpful to you. Members of
the public, who feel they have been the subject of
discriminatory actions or treatment by air carriers, may
file a complaint by sending an email, a letter, or a
completed complaint form to the Aviation Consumer
Protection Division (ACPD). ACPD's e-mail address is
airconsumer@ost.dot.gov and its mailing address is:
Aviation Consumer Protection Division, U.S. Department of
Transportation, Room 4107, C-75, Washington, DC 20590.
Complaint forms that consumers may download and/or print
are available at http://www.dot.gov/airconsumer/problems.htm .

Issued on 10/29/01 by the Office of the Assistant General
Counsel for Aviation Enforcement and Proceedings and its
Aviation Consumer Protection Division.


 

EEOC UPDATE:  EEOC Issues Guidance on Health Queries for Evacuation Plans
http://www.eeoc.gov/press/10-31-01.html

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) posted on its web site questions and answers to assist employers who are developing or re-evaluating emergency evacuation procedures.  The guidance is online at:  http://www.eeoc.gov/facts/evacuation.html.

"In light of recent events, many employers are particularly concerned about being able to evacuate individuals who might require assistance because of a medical condition or disability," said EEOC Chair Cari M. Dominguez. "This document is intended to provide answers to questions they may have about the implications of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Rehabilitation Act in developing a comprehensive emergency plan."

The document explains how employers may identify individuals who may require assistance and how much medical information they may obtain. It also explains with whom employers may share information about an employee's medical condition and need for assistance.

"Although employers may ask employees with known disabilities about their need for assistance in the event of an emergency," said EEOC Commissioner Paul Steven Miller, "this document cautions them that they should not assume that all individuals with obvious disabilities will require assistance. Individuals with disabilities are generally in the best position to assess their particular needs."

Housing Update:  NCD Evaluates HUD’s Enforcement

 

NEWS RELEASE

NCD #02-341
November 6, 2001
Contact: Mark S. Quigley
202-272-2004
202-272-2074 TTY
mquigley@ncd.gov


NATIONAL COUNCIL ON DISABILITY EVALUATES HUD'S
ENFORCEMENT OF FAIR HOUSING LAWS

WASHINGTON--The National Council on Disability (NCD) has found that despite legislation from1988 that mandated improving fair housing, fair housing enforcement remains an unfulfilled promise for Americans with disabilities. NCD today released its report, Reconstructing Fair Housing, located online at http://www.ncd.gov/newsroom/publications/fairhousing.html, which evaluates the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) enforcement of the Fair Housing Act and Section 504 of the 1973 Rehabilitation Act to counter discrimination in housing, and HUD's record during the past 12 years in enforcing the rights of people with disabilities under these laws. The report states that:

The past 12 years of civil rights enforcement by HUD have left America, and in particular people with disabilities,
needing more.

In fiscal years 1999 and 2000, people with disabilities became the single largest group to file housing discrimination complaints.

By the late 1990s, HUD's investigations of housing
discrimination complaints took nearly five times as long as
Congress had mandated.

Inadequate funding hampered administrative enforcement of civil rights laws.

"Clearly, HUD's fair housing enforcement system must be
revised," said NCD board member Dave Brown. "Improving HUD's enforcement system obviously requires action by Congress and the Bush administration, but we believe it is
essential that affected and at-risk groups strengthen existing coalitions to ensure positive action and accountability by elected and appointed officials."

Brown stated that people with disabilities, Native
Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans, and African Americans have mutual concerns and shared interests, "because we are all at risk when it comes to being discriminated against."

In addition to urging greater cooperation among affected and at-risk groups, NCD also recommended that:

The Bush Administration improve the enforcement of disability rights laws with input from a new HUD Citizen Advisory Panel.

The Administration, HUD, and Congress ensure that current and future HUD budgets are increased to provide adequate resources for enforcing housing-related civil rights laws.

 

"Report on Voting Accessibility"

by Justice for All

Researchers Doug Kruse, Lisa Schur, Kay Schriner, and Todd
Shields have developed the following report about the
experience of people with disabilities in elections. The authors conclude that "the difference in participation rates between individuals with disabilities and nondisabled individuals... may be narrowing" and that "Americans with disabilities continue to experience and anticipate difficulties in voting."

I'd like to suggest another ramification of the data. As
indicated in the study, people who haven't recently voted
"anticipate" finding voting problems (32.6%) at a much
higher rate than those who actually voted and "experienced"
voting problems (5.8%). We must therefore be vigilant not
only in making voting places more accessible to people with
disabilities (who encounter problems about three times as
much as nondisabled individuals), but also in getting
people with disabilities registered to vote and to the
polls on election day -- where many people who anticipate
problems will be fully able to cast their votes. In the
words of AAPD President and CEO Andy Imparato, "With Rights
Come Responsibility," and that means getting to the polls.

To learn more about AAPD's efforts to make voting places
more accessible and increase voter participation, please
visit http://www.aapd-dc.org and click on "Disability Vote
Project."

Note: I've made some formatting changes from the original
document to make the presentation of statistics more
readable in the text of an email.

Jonathan Young, JFA Moderator

==

FACT SHEET ON VOTER TURNOUT, VOTING DIFFICULTIES, AND
DISABILITY IN THE 2000 ELECTIONS: LAYING A CHALLENGE AT
DEMOCRACY'S DOOR

By:

Douglas Kruse and Lisa Schur, Rutgers University[1]
Kay Schriner and Todd Shields, University of Arkansas[2]


American democracy rests on the participation of the
citizenry in the selection of elected officials. By
choosing their representatives, citizens express their
views about what matters to them and what should be done
about it. Not every American citizen has an equal
opportunity to cast a ballot, however. Many thousands of
voters and potential voters are disenfranchised by barriers
to electoral participation.

These barriers are a threat to the potential of our
democracy to realize its promise of equality and justice
for all. When some voters cannot participate in an equal
footing, all Americans lose. When some citizens are left
out, democracy suffers.

For many disabled citizens, elections represent another
example of society's inaccessibility. This report is
intended to clarify the experiences of people with
disabilities in American electoral politics.

To investigate the relationship between voter turnout,
voting difficulties, and disability, a national random-
household telephone survey of 1,002 American citizens of
voting age was conducted through the Rutgers Center for
Public Interest Polling following the November, 2000
elections. A broad definition of disability was used,
based on questions from the 2000 Census. For more
meaningful comparisons the sample was stratified so that
interviews were conducted with 432 people with disabilities
and 570 people without disabilities. Survey respondents
were asked standard questions about voting, voter
registration, and factors that could help explain turnout
and registration. They were also asked questions
concerning actual or expected difficulties in voting at a
polling place, and views of several voting methods often
used by people with disabilities.

The General Accounting Office released a report on November
14, 2001
finding that only 16% of polling places in 2000
had no potential impediments to access by people with
disabilities. This fact sheet complements the GAO study by
providing individual-level information on the voting
experiences of people with disabilities, with comparisons
of voter turnout, voting difficulties, and views of
curbside voting between people with and without
disabilities.

Voter Turnout

* People with disabilities were on average about 12
percentage points less likely than those without
disabilities to vote, after adjusting for differences in
demographic characteristics (age, sex, race, education, and
marital status). This was an improvement over the 1998
elections, in which people with disabilities were about 20
percentage points less likely than people without
disabilities to vote (based on a similar survey following
the 1998 elections).

* If people with disabilities voted at the same rate as
those without disabilities, there would have been 3.2
million additional voters in 2000, raising the overall
turnout rate by 1.7 percentage points.

Absentee Voting and Voting Difficulties

* People with disabilities were almost twice as likely as
other citizens to vote by absentee ballot. Among those who
voted, 20% used an absentee ballot, compared to 11% of
people without disabilities.

* Citizens with disabilities are more likely than those
without disabilities to have encountered, or expect,
difficulties in voting at a polling place:


Encountered difficulties, if last voted at polling place
since 1990[3]:
Citizens with disabilities: 5.8%
Citizens without disabilities: 2.0%

Would expect difficulties, if haven't voted at polling
place since 1990[4]:

Citizens with disabilities: 32.6%
Citizens without disabilities: 2.4%

* Reported problems with voting among people with
disabilities are split among getting to the polling place,
being able to vote once at the polling place, and general
mobility.

Problems encountered if voted in past 10 years:

Any difficulty in voting at polling place: 5.8%
Getting to polling place: 1.3%
At polling place (getting inside, using
booth/machine, long lines, seeing/understanding ballot):
3.5%
General mobility (walking, standing): 0.9%

Problems expected if haven't voted in past 10 years

Any difficulty in voting at polling place: 32.6%
Getting to polling place: 5.7%
At polling place (getting inside, using
booth/machine, long lines, seeing/understanding ballot):
17.9%
General mobility (walking, standing): 6.3%

* Based on these results, an estimated 1.3 million citizens
with disabilities encountered problems in voting since 1990
during the last time they voted at a polling place, while
an additional 1.7 million citizens who have not voted at a
polling place since 1990 would expect to encounter
problems. Overall 3.0 million citizens with disabilities
either encountered or would expect to encounter
difficulties in voting at a polling place.

Views About Curbside Voting

Respondents were asked their view of whether "voting a
ballot in an automobile at curbside" is "just as good as
voting in person inside the polling station, or not as
good?" Majorities of people with and without disabilities
feel that it is not as good:

Curbside voting is just as good

Citizens with disabilities: 36.1%
Citizens without disabilities: 36.8%

Curbside voting is not as good

Citizens with disabilities: 54.9%
Citizens without disabilities: 57.8.8%

Further information on the survey methodology and other
results is available from the authors.

Implications of Findings

The research summarized here contains both good news and
bad news. The good news is that "the disability gap" - the
difference in participation rates between individuals with
disabilities and nondisabled individuals - may be
narrowing. In the 2000 presidential election, the gap was
12 percentage points (compared to 20 percentage points in
the 1998 election). This should increase politicians'
attention to the views of people with disabilities.

Unfortunately, Americans with disabilities continue to
experience and anticipate difficulties in voting. Three
million citizens with disabilities have encountered
problems in voting, or would expect to encounter problems.
If impediments were removed and people with disabilities
began voting in the same proportion as other Americans,
fully 3.2 million more people would be casting ballots.
Policymakers must take immediate and effective steps to
remove the barriers to participation for individuals with
disabilities.

These findings lay a challenge at democracy's door. The
stability and responsiveness of any democracy depends on
its ability to fully represent its citizens. America must
find the will to open democracy's door - to all.


[1] School of Management and Labor Relations, 50 Labor
Center Way, New Brunswick, NJ, 08903
dkruse@rci.rutgers.edu, LSchur@rci.rutgers.edu.
[2] Department of Political Science, 432 Old Main,
Fayetteville, AR, 72701, kays@comp.uark.edu,
tshields@comp.uark.edu.
[3] Those who had voted at a polling place since 1990 were
asked, with respect to the last time they voted, "Did you
experience any difficulty in getting to the polling place
or in using the ballot or voting machine?"
[4] Those who had not voted at a polling place since 1990
were asked, "If you wanted to vote in person inside the
polling place, do you think you would experience any
difficulty in getting to the polling place or in using the
ballot or voting machine?"

 



 

 

Nation’s First Mental Health Court:  Broward County, 17th Judicial Circuit, Broward County, Florida

 

First Annual Mental Health Court Progress Report

http://www.co.broward.fl.us/ojss/jsi00500.html

July 1997- June 1998

Second Annual Mental Health Court Progress Report
http://www.co.broward.fl.us/ojss/jsi00600.html
July 1998- June 1999

Third Annual Mental Health Court Progress Report
http://www.co.broward.fl.us/ojss/jsi00700.html
July 1999- June 2000

AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO THE MENTALLY
DISABLED IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
http://www.co.broward.fl.us/ojss/jsi01300.html

A Diversion for Mentally Ill Petty Offenders
http://www.co.broward.fl.us/ojss/jsi01500.html

 

 

“Shock Waves” Throughout Special Education Community by Settlegoode v. Portland Public Schools (Million Dollar Verdict)

 

Many expect that this case will "send shock waves" throughout the special ed community. Pete Wright quotes another person as saying, "Pamella Settlegoode will be known as the trail-blazer who opened doors for teacher advocates who are working in the trenches to help our
children."

The 'story behind the story' includes Pete Wright's analysis of the case and links to the complaint filed in the U.S. District Court in Portland Oregon and the proposed Pre-Trial Order detailing the factual and legal issues of this landmark case."
http://www.wrightslaw.com/info/retaliate.settlegoode.htm



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