Most
Americans with disabilities 'striving to work,' survey finds Published June 02,
2015.
More
than two-thirds of American adults with disabilities are "striving to
work," according to a national employment survey being released just
before the landmark legislation protecting their rights turns 25. In contrast
to census data on how many people with disabilities hold jobs, the survey being
released Wednesday by the Kessler Foundation goes further by exploring the
experience of finding and keeping a job. It also provides a snapshot of not
just the obstacles people with disabilities face but how often they overcome
them. "There has been some work in previous surveys that looked at
barriers but never asking the question, have they overcome the barriers? There
was always this sense of doom and gloom," said Andrew Houtenville,
director of research at the University of New Hampshire Institute of
Disability. The UNH Survey Center conducted the survey for the Kessler
Foundation, a West Orange, New Jersey-based nonprofit that funds research and
initiatives aimed at improving the lives of people with neurological
disabilities. Among the 3,000 people interviewed, fewer than 6 percent had
never worked. Just under 43 percent were currently working, 9 percent were
looking for work and 17 percent had worked since the onset of their disability.
Researchers combine the last three figures into the category of "striving
to work," and point to other findings they said demonstrate that people
with disabilities want to be productive members of the workforce. Those who are
currently employed work an average of 35.5 hours per week, more than half work
more than 40 hours per week and more than 40 percent said they want to work
more hours. "It's a way of describing how active people with disabilities
are in the labor market. It's not just about sitting back and taking benefits,"
Houtenville said. The most oft-cited obstacles to gaining employment were a
lack of education or training, employers who assumed applicants couldn't do the
job and a lack of transportation. But 42 percent of those who mentioned
transportation said they overcame that obstacle. Once on the job, the top three
barriers were getting less pay than others in similar jobs, difficult attitudes
from supervisors and difficult attitudes from co-workers. More than half
reported overcoming difficulties with co-workers, however. Laurie McCray, whose
25-year-old son has Down syndrome and works four part-time jobs, credits his
success to her unrelenting efforts to make him part of his community from an
early age. "If you segregate your child when they're young, they will not
likely have successful employment in the community as adults," she said.
"You have to have your antennas up looking for possibilities. My antennas
are always up. Kessler Foundation President Rodger DeRose said he hopes the
results will lead to the development of more targeted strategies and programs.
And he hopes it will lead Congress to take a fresh look at the federal
disability benefits program, which he believes is outdated and serves as a
disincentive for people to work. He said great strides have been made since the
1990 passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act, which prohibits
discrimination against people with disabilities in jobs, schools,
transportation and other areas of public life. But gaps remain in employment
opportunities, DeRose said, which results in income disparity. "If you
look 10 years into the future, as baby boomers have gone out of the job force
... people with disabilities are going to be a population that will finally be
recognized as a workforce that can make the transition into the workplace and
be successful in overcoming barriers," he said. "This workforce - the
disability community - and business have not made the connection yet. The
telephone survey of 3,013 people with disabilities nationwide was conducted
between October 2014 and April 2015 and had a sampling margin of error of plus
or minus 2 percentage points.
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