At 20th anniversary of Americans with Disabilities Act, further laws
are being proposed
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[July 26, 2010]
WASHINGTON -- Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa,
held a series of events this weekend and will again today (Monday)
to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the enactment of the
Americans with Disabilities Act -- landmark legislation that has
been referred to as the "Emancipation Proclamation for people with
disabilities." The ADA is a signature achievement for Harkin, who
authored the bill and was its chief sponsor in the Senate.
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"Before the
ADA, life was very different for folks in Iowa and
across the country with disabilities, and discrimination was both
commonplace and accepted," Harkin said. "On this 20th anniversary of
the ADA, we recognize that people with disabilities -- like all
people -- have unique abilities, talents and aptitudes. And America
is better, fairer and richer when we make full use of those gifts."
In hearings on the legislation 20 years ago, disabled individuals
related stories of having to crawl on their hands and knees to go up
a flight of stairs, of not being able to ride on a bus because there
wasn’t a lift, and not being able to cross the street in a
wheelchair because there were no curb cuts. The ADA literally
transformed the American landscape by installing ramps, lifts, curb
cuts, widening doorways, installing closed captioning and giving
millions of Americans the ability to work and participate in their
communities.
In honor of the anniversary, the Justice Department announced
that it will publish four new Americans with Disabilities Act
proposals addressing the accessibility of websites, the provision of
captioning and video description in movies shown in theaters,
accessible equipment and furniture, and the ability of 911 centers
to take text and video calls from individuals with disabilities. The
proposals are in the form of advance notices of proposed
rule-making, or ANPRMs, which provide information on these ADA
issues and ask questions seeking comments and information from the
public. The four notices will be published in the Federal Register
today.
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"We are working hard to ensure that the ADA keeps up with
technological advances that were unimaginable 20 years ago," said
Attorney General Holder. "Just as these quantum leaps can help all
of us, they can also set us back -- if regulations are not updated
or compliance codes become too confusing to implement. To avoid
this, the department will soon publish four advanced notices of
proposed rule-making regarding accessibility requirements for
websites, movies, equipment and furniture, and 911 call-taking
technologies."
[U.S. Department of Justice; Sen.
Tom Harkin]
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