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Connecting with Disability. Cheryl R. Branker Associate Vice Provost For Equal Opportunity Disability Services Office March 2010. Connecting with Disability. Title I of the ADA of 1990
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Connecting with Disability Cheryl R. Branker Associate Vice Provost For Equal Opportunity Disability Services Office March 2010
Connecting with Disability Title I of the ADA of 1990 states that employment practices cannot discriminate against a qualified individual with a disability. This applies to all aspects of employment, including job advertisements, job applications, job interviews, and post-offer medical examinations.
Connecting with Disability One of the key non-discrimination requirements of Title I is the obligation to provide reasonable accommodation for employees with disabilities.
Connecting with Disability The registration process: (http://www.ncsu.edu/dso/employees/employee_registration_checklist.html) • Step 1Complete the DSO Request for Eligibility Review Form (EEO-009). • Step 2Submit a Documentation of Disability Form (EEO-010). All DSO documentation forms must be mailed or faxed directly from your provider. If your documentation substantiates that you are a person with a disability, you will be registered with the DSO and the ADA Coordinator will contact you to request that you and your supervisor schedule an appointment. • Step 3Schedule an appointment for you and your supervisor to meet with the ADA Coordinator to discuss accommodations. This meeting is required for accommodations to begin. • Step 4Meet with the ADA Coordinator and your supervisor to: - discuss your functional limitations and restrictions - discuss essential job functions - outline the services for which you are eligible - complete and sign an Accommodations Agreement Form (EEO-011)
Connecting with Disability Access and Barriers for Persons with Disabilities Survey Results – Spring 2009 Purpose to ascertain the University’s commitment to persons with disabilities under Section 504 and the ADA by looking at the policies, services, procedures/practices, and programs within each college/department/unit
Connecting with Disability Survey Respondents Fifty-two percent (52% ) of the ninety-eight (98)executive officers, deans, academic department heads and vice provosts responded
Connecting with Disability Survey questions Nine (9) questions classified into five (5) domains: • Efforts that provide/improve access • Efforts that were actual/potential barriers • Marketing materials • Mission statement • Resources needed
Connecting with Disability Key findings of Survey • Access was related to general attitude, specific responses to issues of inaccessibility, deliberate actions to be more inclusive • Barriers were related to limited /no consideration of functional limitations, designing/purchasing processes • Universal symbol of accessibility displayed 25.5% of the time; accommodation statement 45.1%; pictures of persons with disabilities 23.5% of the time
Connecting with Disability Key findings continued • Mission statements contained specific words/phrases 19.6% of the time • Resources needed to help prioritize and specify barriers: identification, technical assistance, financial assistance
Connecting with Disability Survey Conclusions Disability – (medical model) - a “problem” that exists within the person and the goal is to “fix” the person Disability – (socio-political model) – the systemic mismatch between physical & mental attributes of individuals and the present ability of social institutions to accommodate these attributes.
Connecting with Disability Implementation of Survey Recommendations • Formally adopt the guiding principles of Universal Design (UD) • Provide resources and training • Develop policies, services, practices and procedures that reflect the paradigm shift • Develop staff /faculty orientation materials which promote UD • Seek input from persons with disabilities to examine programmatic accessibility
Connecting with Disability Questions ? cheryl_branker@ncsu.edu 513-3768 http://www.ncsu.edu/dso