You own a business, maybe a restaurant. You've got a lot to worry about. You have to make sure the food is safe and tastes good, that the place is clean and appealing, that workers are friendly and paid according to a hundred Labor Department and IRS rules.
On top of that, there are rules you might have no idea about. The bathroom sinks must be a specified height. So must the doorknobs and mirrors. You must have rails. And if these things aren't right — say, if your mirror is just one inch too high — you could be sued for thousands of dollars.
And be careful. If you fail to let a customer bring a large snake, which he calls his "service animal," into your restaurant, you could be in trouble.
All of this is because of the well-intentioned Americans With Disabilities Act, which President George H.W. Bush signed 20 years ago.
The ADA was popular with Republicans and Democrats. It passed both houses of Congress with overwhelming majorities, 377 to 28 in the House and 91 to 6 in the Senate.
What does it do? The ADA prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities, requiring businesses to provide the disabled "equal access" and to make "reasonable accommodation" for employees. Tax credits and deductions are available for special equipment (talking computers, for instance) and modifying buildings to comply with the accessibility mandate.
The ADA was supposed to help more disabled people find jobs. But did it?
Strangely, no. An MIT study found that employment of disabled men ages 21 to 58 declined after the ADA went into effect. Same for women ages 21 to 39.
How could employment among the disabled have declined?
Because the law turns "protected" people into potential lawsuits. Most ADA litigation occurs when an employee is fired, so the safest way to avoid those costs is not to hire the disabled in the first place.
Walter Olson, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and author of the Overlawyered.com blog, says that the law was unnecessary. Many "hire the handicapped" programs existed before the ADA passed. Sadly, now most have been quietly discontinued, probably because of the threat of legal consequences if an employee doesn't work out.
Under the ADA, Olson notes, fairness does not mean treating disabled people the same as non-disabled people. Rather it means accommodating them. In other words, the law requires that people be treated unequally.
The law has also unleashed a landslide of lawsuits by "professional litigants" who file a hundred suits at a time. Disabled people visit businesses to look for violations, but instead of simply asking that a violation be corrected, they partner with lawyers who (legally) extort settlement money from the businesses.
Some disabled people have benefited from changes effected by the ADA, but the costs are rarely accounted for. If a small business has to lay off an employee to afford the added expense of accommodating the disabled, is that a good thing — especially if, say, customers in wheelchairs are rare? Extra-wide bathroom stalls that reduce the overall number of toilets are only some of the unaccounted-for costs of the ADA. And since ADA modification requirements are triggered by renovation, the law could actually discourage businesses from making needed renovations as a way of avoiding the expense.
A few disabled people speak up against the law. Greg Perry, author of "Disabling America: The Unintended Consequences of the Government's Protection of the Handicapped," says that because the disabled now represent an added expense to businesses, many resent them.
Finally, the ADA has led to some truly bizarre results. Exxon gave ship captain Joseph Hazelwood a job after he completed alcohol rehab. Hazelwood then drank too much and let the Exxon Valdez run aground in Alaska. Exxon was sued for allowing it to happen. So Exxon prohibited employees who have had a drug or drinking problem from holding safety-sensitive jobs. The result? You guessed it — employees with a history of alcohol abuse sued under the ADA, demanding their "right" to those jobs. The federal government (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission) supported the employees. Courts are still trying to sort it out.
More money for the parasites.
John Stossel is host of "Stossel" on the Fox Business Network. He's the author of "Give Me a Break" and of "Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity." To find out more about John Stossel, visit his site at <a href="http://www.johnstossel.com" <http://www.johnstossel.com>>johnstossel.com</a>. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
I recall a project I was involved with in the early nineties that involved renovations to a 5 story walkup that had no elevator. The bldg had been converted from a convent to a girl's dormitory. In doing so, there was no designated smoking area (required by law at the time) and was court-ordered to provide to provide same with daily fines incurred. I proposed renovations to the basement to offset this. In doing so, I was required to update the fixtures in the adjoining bathroom. When I went to the city to apply for the permits, I was informed that the bathroom had to be modified to comply with the new ADA guidelines. The walls of the bathroom were two feet thick and there was no way I could comply without tearing out massive bearing walls.
Thinking on my feet I asked the inspector if a bathroom is required by law--- His reply, "Yes, the county health department requires a bathroom on every occupied floor of a bldg. It is not the city's responsibility to enforce this law." With that I left and modified the plans to reflect the bathroom as merely a janitor's closet. When I returned, the same inspector questioned me saying that without a bathroom, the project would not be in compliance with county codes. I responded that this issue isn't the city's responsibility to enforce. The man got his supervisor and they both grilled me on this issue of non-compliance... I realized they had no jurisdiction to enforce county codes. Within a week, I was given permits for the project. I did the required fixtue replacements to the bathroom anyway.
Comment: #1
Posted by: J Thomas
Thu Sep 2, 2010 6:44 AM
I have MS. Do you have any idea how absolutely degrading it is to pull my wheel chair up to the door of the local CVS and have to sit there and wait for someone to come along and open the door for me so I can enter the store? Do you have any idea how difficult it is to roll a wheel chair up the steep climb of a short ramp when you don't have the strength to pick up a simple EIGHT POUND gallon of milk? And I was diagnosed in 1989 and worked until 1995, as a Vice President of Human Resources for more than 500 employees, when it just was not possible to work any longer. A challenge, Mr. Stossel: put yourself in a manual wheelchair and make you way through your life for 24 hours. Then come back and tell me why the ADA is such a bad idea. You have no concept of that which you speak!
Megyn hit the nail right on the head. In 1989 I was to appear in Social Security hearing. It was hard being just newly handicapped from an auto accident from being hit head on by a drunk driver. Now let's add how I had to get to the floor of Social Security Court. It was through the jail elevator. That's right. It was very demeaning on top of everything else.
Our church has been struggling for years with ADA for years. Now, because our church platform is not "accessible to the handicapped, no one but our pastor is allowed to be on the platform. We cannot have choir or other special programs integral to our services because of this injunction.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Susan Magario
Thu Sep 2, 2010 11:50 AM
Ms Magario: It's not your church, it's God's church. You make excuses that are invalid. I would think all of God's people would be welcome to worship in God's house through prayer at the alter or praise in the choir. The modifications would cost less than think if the people really cared enough to inquire. You may be excluding those who need these opportunities the most.
I read this article with great interest. As much as I agree with the fact that many things aren't addressed, I have to disagree with the core of your article.
I volunteer with the Arizona Bridge to Independent Living, and have been a Disability Advocate since 2003. The Reader's Digest ran a similar article several years ago. In fact, the RD article focused on a restaurant that had a toilet that was one inch closer to the wall than the ADA said it should be. The court wasted months, and nearly ran the restaurant into bankruptcy before the judge finally dismissed the charges. The sad thing was that those who sued were 2 lawyers, on their own without representing a client, and they were not disabled.
The US Justice Department has ruled that these measurements should be considered "Reasonable Accommodation" or "Realistically Achievable." In new construction, these measurements have to be included in at least one restroom, but not all. There has to be at least one entrance with a ramp or elevator. There has to be a given ratio of parking spaces. The entrances has to have measurements in compliance to the building, the inner rooms, and the restrooms have to be in compliance.
I live next door to a hospital that has no handicapped restrooms. How is this possible when the ADA is more than 15 years old?
And as far as your assertions that employment is down, sorry. That's incorrect. Employment among people with disabilities has been on the increase. Yes, it's down now, but so is employment everywhere else, except misdirected journalists and lawyers.
You stated that small businesses were already accommodating the disabled, but then you state "because the disabled now represent an added expense to businesses, many resent them." Which is it? You are contradicting yourself in your article.
You said "If you fail to let a customer bring a large snake, which he calls his "service animal," into your restaurant, you could be in trouble." You're being an alarmist. No state allows snakes as service animals. All states allow dogs as service animals. One state has allowed a miniature horse as a service animal as a test case.
People who sue on these issues are parasites. People like you make this possible. You minimize the importance of the ADA. When you take these things so lightly, you encourage these roaches to come out and look for ways to take advantage of others.
The ADA is not about making people unequal. You have it so wrong. The ADA is about making access equal. If you live for a month in a wheelchair you will realize that we are unequal in that regard. The people HAVE disabilities, the are NOT disabilities. When you learn that you might begin to understand.
Comment: #6
Posted by: David Johnson
Thu Sep 2, 2010 12:17 PM
Re: David Johnson
did you read "or other animals"?
From http://www.ada.gov/qasrvc.htm
"...
Q: What is a service animal?
A: The ADA defines a service animal as any guide dog, signal dog, or other animal individually trained to provide assistance to an individual with a disability. If they meet this definition, animals are considered service animals under the ADA regardless of whether they have been licensed or certified by a state or local government.
Service animals perform some of the functions and tasks that the individual with a disability cannot perform for him or herself. Guide dogs are one type of service animal, used by some individuals who are blind. This is the type of service animal with which most people are familiar. But there are service animals that assist persons with other kinds of disabilities in their day-to-day activities. Some examples include:
_ Alerting persons with hearing impairments to sounds.
_ Pulling wheelchairs or carrying and picking up things for persons with mobility impairments.
_ Assisting persons with mobility impairments with balance.
I have an invisible disability--brain injury. The ADA is the worst thing to ever come along where we the invisibly disabled are concerned. Before the ADA, I was able to get jobs. Now I am not. I know that employers will not hire anyone who has a disability because of the ADA--as they are afraid of lawsuits. So after many years of looking for work and nothing coming about, even with my college education, I finally gave up on employment altogether. I exist on Social Security Disability, and other forms of government assistance. I thank the ADA for the situation that I have been forced to exist with. I am a disabled person who has been affected negatively by the ADA. Wheelchair ramps, modified restrooms, etc., are great. But what about those of us with INVISIBLE disabilities? Basically we the invisibly disabled, especially when it is due to brain injury are treated like chopped liver.
Be careful about wishing the ADA goes away. This is one minority group anyone can join in an instant. I have been disabled since the early 1950's. I know the improvements in life caused by the various laws and regulations auch as the ADA. In the 1950's and before we were not allowed to go to school or live in the community. The disabled community will not allow this to happen again.
Comment: #9
Posted by: Roy Gash
Sat Sep 4, 2010 12:15 PM
Pretty soon we'll all be forced to break our legs and ride in wheelchairs to be fair to the crippled, and drill holes in our brains to be fair to the people who can't understand why these laws are evil.
Sigh... The laws enable those of us who are disabled to EQUAL access to public places. The law specifically prevents anyone from disclosing a disability or medical condition when applying for a job, unless they choose to do so. Some states offer tax breaks to employers who do hire the disabled. The building regulations are the same for all public buildings, whether disabled patrons or disabled employees enter the public building.
I've been disabled since 1989. At a lot of public places, the doors are not automatic to open or close. So, I have to wait patiently outside the door until someone with a kind heart will open the door and let me in or let me out. If I need the restroom facility, even in most medical buildings, I have to wait outside the door until someone will open it to let me in, or let me out.
Now, whine away... You haven't got a single clue what a disabled person deals with every day just to get through the day. ADA enables us to get through those days just a little easier.
Liberty and equality are the two polestars of the American way. They are not, however, always in harmony. Sometimes one comes only at the expense of the other.
Bringing people with disabilities out of the shadows is surely a good thing, but that does not mean the ADA is a good law. In many particulars its intrusions on liberty simply seem too great. There has got to be a better way.
The problem is that, in the current situation, there is no effective mechanism to test laws like these, to help assure that they reach the best balance. If we want to take liberty seriously, as we do equality, we need to create these mechanisms to protect liberty just as we have been doing for equality.
takinglibertyseriously.net
Most of your complaints about the A.D.A. would appear to be centered around abusive lawsuits. Disabled people are certainly not the only people involved in abusive lawsuits. The same can be said about suits based on race, sex, and age, etc... Instead of focusing on abusive suits involving disabled people, maybe the better goal would be to focus on abusive suits in general. Those are a real culprit for everything from higher business expenses, to higher auto insurance, to skyrocketing health care costs. Tort reform would be a much more equitable solution and stem a much wider list of abuses.
Americans with disabilities comprise 20% of the general population and much more in some states or communities where senior citizens buy property and spend money because of the accommodating weather or terrain. I can't imagine why any business would intentionally leave out 20% of their potential customer base. I patronize stores that are accessible and avoid stores and faciliies that are not. As a working adult with a disability I spend a lot of my money to buy goods and services that make my home, car, job = life more convenient for me. I spend many more dollars to be part of the workplace than any empoyer has ever spend providing an acommodation to me. Get it? I earn, I buy. I have the ability and opprtunity to work; many Americans with disabilities who want to work are excluded because of ignorant stereotypes like the ones you are espousing. An adult with a disability who is not emloymed more than likey disburses a social security or pension benefit: money they use to buy goods and services. What business model weighs a small capital investment against a customer pool of 60,000,000 shoppers?
John,
You really worked hard to put this law in a bad light. You even showed the American public some of your prejudice. I guess I must excuse your stand simply because it is one of ignorance.
You see the ADA is a tool that has been beneficial to all of us who were either born disabled and wanted the opportunity to enjoy the American Dream through our their own labors, or have started to enjoy the American Dream and had that opportunity interupted through acquiring a disability.
This tool when used as it was intended enables the disabled to have access to all ofthe activities that the able bodied take for granted. Most of us want to be contributing critizens of this great nation.
Sir, you have not done your home work. You are a contributing member of Fox Network. You are charged with presenting both sides of this issue. You have failed at this task. I being an avid fan of Fox news am disappointed in your efforts on this issue.
I acquired my disability while serving in the Military. I was severely injured in a motorcycle accident. This accident was considered to have happened in the line of duty. I broke my back, all of my ribs, as well as my sternum and right shoulder blade. I rested in a coma for twenty seven days while my bones healed.
Even though the phycisians informed my wife who was eight months pregnant that I was more than likely going to die, or if I did survive my life was over for all intensive purposes. I did come out of the coma. Not only did I survive the coma, I was able to regain enough ability to participate in life once more.
Now it was my responsibility to work hard toward regaining the abiliy to participate in life to the highest degree possible. What I am telling you is that if it were not for the ADA, my effort may not have been enough to open the doors I needed to have open to assure my success.
I was so impressed with the services made available to me through Rehabilitation Services that I decided to use the rest of my life to serve other disabled people in the pusuit of that golden ring, known as the American Dream. To provide this service I had to be educated. To be a Rehabilitation Counselor, you have to earn a Masters Degree in psychology. Now here is where the situation gets a little more difficult.
You see, part of my disablity was severe brain damage, a residual of the twenty seven days coma. The Army told me to go home. They retired me suggesting that done working. I was only twenty four years old. Society was telling me the best that I could do is to be a "parasite".
Well John, let me tell you that I am a strong willed person. You do not tell me what I am capable of. I will show what I can do. With the good Lord's blessing, I went to work in earning my right to serve my fellow man in the manner that I chose too. The ADA played a vital role in my efforts to purue my dream to become a Rehabilitation Counselor.
Now as a Rehabilitation Counselor for the last twenty years, I have witnessed hundreds of these "parasites" in your mind becoming contributing citizens. The ADA benefits all people, the Temporaly Abiled Bodied, as well as my disabled brothers and sisters. If you live long enough you will become one of us, if you are blessed.
Your narrow statistics as well as your insulting manner in which you report these incorrect stats angered me greatly. If you have anything else to contribute to this subject, please be sure you know what you are talking about.
Sincerely,
Thomas A. Applebee
M.S.
I & R Specialist
The Disability Network
Comment: #15
Posted by: Thomas A. Applebee
Wed Sep 15, 2010 12:53 PM
How do we fix the ADA...here's another problem that I found and wrote for aol.
Opinion: When Two 'Rights' Make a Wrong
By Charles Redner
When President George H.W. Bush signed the Americans With Disabilities Act on July 26, 1990, it probably wasn't apparent that the law prohibiting discrimination against some 43 million Americans who have a physical or mental disability would clash with minimum wage laws.
However unintentional, it does.
Jack Scholnick, a Rio Rico, Ariz., resident and father of a daughter born with Down syndrome was angry -- angry enough to begin writing another newspaper op-ed. Jack is a tyrant when it comes to advocacy for the disabled. What had his blood boiling this time was the fact that an Arizona firm didn't want to pay disabled employees minimum wage as prescribed by both federal and state law.
What Jack failed to consider was that the jobs held by these disabled citizens are often more important to them than any wage consideration.
For example, Carman Tilelli, a New Jersey man born with Down syndrome, worked for 28 years as a custodian at the Cherry Hill, N.J., town hall, near his home. Tilelli, officially a part-time employee, never left early. He wanted to work a full day. He even complained to his boss whenever he had to take a vacation with his parents.
Carman loved his job more than anything. Bernard Platt, Cherry Hill township mayor, said, "He never lost a day's work. He was prompt. He was as good an employee as ever worked here." When Tilelli retired for health reasons, at age 51, his life ended as he knew it. For him, it was about the job, not the pay.
When Jack Scholnick learned of this story, he put down his pen.
The MARC Center (www.marccenter.com) in Mesa, Ariz., is a nonprofit that employs 500 workers with disabilities. Randall L. Gray, president and CEO, explained, "What's important here is that we pay people commensurate with their output," not minimum wage.
"Some unions and agencies," he goes on, "say that we're exploiting workers, and that simply is not the case. If we had to pay minimum wages then these jobs wouldn't even be here."
One union official argued that workers are workers, disabled or not.
In 2007, the Arizona state legislature came through and fixed the differing views by passing Arizona HR 2245, protecting employers who pay less than minimum wage in certain training situations.
"Unfortunately, the only way to solve the issue [in the long run] may have to be through litigation," Gray added.
Laws like the ADA and minimum wage serve the greater good, but when they come into conflict, let common sense be the mediator. The Arizona legislators who worked to find an amicable compromise for the benefit of the state's disabled workers deserve a "well done."
Charles Redner is the author of Down But Never Out, a biography of middleweight boxing champion Joey Giardello and his son Carman, born with Down syndrome.
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Comment: #16
Posted by: Charles Redner
Mon Sep 20, 2010 9:32 AM