Showing posts with label Heumann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heumann. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

 Civil Rights Obituary

Judy Heumann, Disability Rights Advocate, 75

Judy Heumann advocated for the inherent dignity of people with disabilities, campaigning for federal civil rights legislation while organizing sit-ins, marches, and other nonviolent demonstrations. Heumann, who was paralyzed from childhood polio, filed  a lawsuit to become the first New York City public school teacher to use a wheelchair (teaching at a Brooklyn elementary school). 

She was among the nation’s most prominent champions for disability rights, and advocated for disabled people as an official in the Clinton and Obama administrations, as an adviser for the World Bank, and as the first director of the D.C. Department of Disability Services. President Joe Biden described her as “a trailblazer - a rolling warrior - for disability rights in America,” adding that “her courage and fierce advocacy” contributed to the passage of landmark legislation including the Rehabilitation Act, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, and the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990, which outlawed discrimination based on disability. She also wrote an autobiography (reviewed in the Interesting Books section of this issue).

Heumann also ran the San Francisco Center for Independent Living, worked for the U. S. Education Department as assistant secretary of the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, and helped start several disability nonprofits. Heumann was probably most known for her advocacy for the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, an ADA predecessor banning discrimination against disabled people in programs receiving federal funds. When President Richard M. Nixon vetoed an early version of the act, she organized a sit-in on Madison Avenue that stopped traffic in New York City.

After the legislation was voted into law, successive administrations delayed implementing Section 504, the key regulation. So, in early 1977, Heumann - and over 100 disabled protesters, interpreters, and care aides, including activists who were blind or deaf, and others who had development disabilities or used motorized wheelchairs - staged a nearly four-week-long sit-in at a San Francisco federal office building pushing for the regulations to be approved. This 504 Sit-in, as it became known, was a turning point in the disability rights campaign, later called the movement’s Stonewall or Selma, and one of the longest nonviolent occupations of federal property. The HEW secretary signed off on the regulations, a victory to Heumann and her fellow demonstrators. The activists occupied the office building for two more days to celebrate and clean up.

When young, she attend Camp Jened, a summer camp for people with disabilities. The camp, which became the focus of the Oscar-nominated 2020 documentary “Crip Camp,” served as a “playground,” as she put it, for future disability rights movement leaders. 

President Barack Obama appointed her the State Department’s first special adviser for international disability rights. In that role, she pushed for the nation to ratify the Convention on the Rights of Persons With Disabilities, a United Nations treaty that failed to pass the U.S. Senate.

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Read the March 6, 2023 Washington Post article.