"Who lives in a nursing home? She is over 60 with disabilities. Who is paid to provide long-term care? She works for minimum wages with no benefits. Who performs this work unpaid? She is young she cares for her mother, her father, an older family member. Or she is old herself and cares for a spouse, a sibling, a child, perhaps still for a parent. One of these women will be you."
Stephanie Thomas, a National Organizer with ADAPT, uses a wheelchair.
"The Americans with Disabilities Act is a crucial victory for the Deaf community and has been essential to my success in a hearing college. But passing the law is not enough. We need to educate the hearing world about its responsibilities and people with disabilities about their own rights."
Mel Whalen is a young feminist and Deaf activist at Smith College
NOW takes action to bring women with disabilities into full participation in our society.
"As we work to overcome everyday obstacles, women with disabilities become effective advocates. Simply to survive we must develop creative strategies. The feminist movement benefits from building bridges with disabled women. We bring valuable, non-traditional skills to organize for disability rights, women's rights and human rights."
Kathy Martinez, Director, International Division, World Institute on Disability, is blind.
YOU CAN CREATE CHANGE
All women women with disabilities, women of color, lesbians, poor women, old women, young women share the dream of full equality, economic and personal independence, educational and employment options, justice in the courts, unrestricted access to information, reproductive freedom, full participation in our society.
Women with disabilities face multiple forms of discrimination, making it even harder to achieve their goals. They are disproportionately affected by unequal wages, unemployment, poverty, sexual and physical abuse, and lack of insurance and benefits.
To solve these problems, we must push for universal health care, Medicaid and Medicare funding and accessible medical services. The Americans with Disabilities Act needs enforcement and funding to work.
We must educate doctors, teachers, judges, police officers and others who may be ill prepared to serve women with disabilities. We should demand more research on disabilities that strike women in greater numbers and health conditions that women with disabilities develop; and we need to press for industry-independent studies on complications related to breast implants. We must also raise awareness about invisible disabilities, such as chemical sensitivities and cognitive, developmental, mental or learning disabilities.
If you care about these issues, it's time to become active in the movement to secure equal rights. Become a NOW member. Contact your local chapter and join or start a disability rights task force. You can make a difference. Do it NOW.
"We can't get on the bus. We can't get into restaurants. We can't use most sidewalks. We are denied employment and custody of our children. We are put away in nursing homes and other institutions. Most people with disabilities are women; our issues are women's issues."
Josie Byzek, a Civil Rights Specialist with the Pennsylvania Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities, has arthritis and is a survivor of depression.
"I joined NOW to be part of a group that advocates for reproductive rights, gender and racial equality, and sexual orientation freedom. Being accepted as a blind person was never questioned."
Barbara Mattson is a member of NOW's Disability Rights Committee and founder of Print Handicapped Services.
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