Wednesday, December 1, 2021

 

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December 1, 2021

Register today for MCCR's trainings on the following topics - space is limited!

Fair Housing: Know Your Rights​
Public Accommodations: Know Your Rights

​Please note that MCCR is currently conducting all trainings and programs virtually.
To request an accommodation, please contact Spencer Dove at spencer.dove@maryland.gov​​.


Fair Housing Training Image

Fair Housing: Know Your Rights

Wednesday, December 8, 2021
10:00am to 12:00pm
Register at mccr.events/FairHousingDec2021

This workshop will provide basic information on the Fair Housing law in Maryland including issues around disability and sexual harassment.

Please join us for this informative workshop from the Maryland Commission on Civil Rights about the laws under the Fair Housing Act which provide protections that exist for all Marylanders. One of our most fundamental rights is to live peaceably where we choose - where everyone has equal access to neighborhoods of opportunity. Fair housing is the right of all people to buy, sell, or rent residential property, and to live where they wish without discriminatory criteria. Having chosen a place to live, we are guaranteed the right to reside there peacefully, without regard to race, color, religion, sex, familial status, national origin, marital status, source of income, sexual orientation, gender identity or disability. There will be emphasis on current issues such as disability and sexual harassment as it pertains to housing.​


Public Accommodations Training Image

Public Accommodations: Know Your Rights\

Thursday, December 9, 2021
10:00am to 12:00pm
Register at mccr.events/PADec2021

This workshop will provide basic information on the Public Accommodations law in Maryland including definitions and scenarios.


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Monday, November 29, 2021

 

2021 Progress Report: The Impact of COVID-19 on People with Disabilities

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Left half of report cover has photo of a hand touching wheelchair and an American flag mask in the background. Right side is blue with NCD logo and title of the report October 29, 2021.


October 29, 2021

FULL REPORT (PDF)

FULL REPORT (DOC)

SCOPE AND PURPOSE 

On October 29, the National Council on Disability (NCD) released, 2021 Progress Report: The Impact of COVID-19 on People with Disabilities. This report was developed through a cooperative agreement with the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund, in which the Bazelon center was a partner. Download 2021 Progress Report: The Impact of COVID-19 on People with Disabilities here.

This report examines COVID-19’s disproportionate negative impact on people with disabilities in (1) accessing healthcare; (2) accessing direct care support; (3) congregate care settings and transition; (4) education; (5) employment; (6) effective communication; (7) mental health and suicide prevention services; and summarizes the federal and state response to these impacts. The purpose of the report is to document the difference that disability made to one’s experiences and outcomes in the US during the pandemic.

Until very recently, federal and state healthcare data collection practices did not gather basic information about the functional disability status of patients and the public. This left people with disabilities uncounted during and after public health emergencies. Throughout this study, NCD found that this data dearth created barriers in collecting real-time accurate data about the impact of COVID-19 on people with disabilities or the healthcare disparities they experienced during the pandemic. This study makes recommendations to policy makers on ways to improve data collection on people with disabilities and their experiences that will allow for a nuanced look at how disability creates a unique difference to health disparities.

KEY FINDINGS

NCD found that COVID-19 exacted a steep toll on certain populations of people with disabilities, and the events that unfolded during the pandemic, including measures to mitigate the spread, posed unique problems and barriers to people with disabilities in each of the report’s seven areas of focus. Key findings include:

  • People with intellectual or developmental disabilities, and medically fragile and technology dependent individuals, faced a high risk of being triaged out of COVID-19 treatment when hospital beds, supplies, and personnel were scarce; were denied the use of their personal ventilator devices after admission to a hospital; and at times, were denied the assistance of critical support persons during hospital stays. Informal and formal Crisis Standards of Care (CSC), pronouncements that guided the provision of scare healthcare resources in surge situations, targeted people with certain disabilities for denial of care.
  • Limited opportunities to transition out of congregate settings to community-based settings, to mitigate the risk of contracting the virus, revealed continuing weaknesses and lack of sufficient Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS).
  • The growing shortage of direct care workers in existence prior to the pandemic became worse during the pandemic. Many such workers, who are women of color earning less than a living wage and lacking health benefits, left their positions for fear of contracting and spreading the virus, leaving people with disabilities and their caregivers without aid and some at risk of losing their independence or being institutionalized.
  • People with disabilities and chronic conditions who were at particularly high risk of infection with, or severe consequences from the virus, were not recognized as a priority population by many states when vaccines received emergency use authorization.
  • Students with disabilities were cut off from needed in-person special education services and supports and were given last or no priority when schools attempted to preserve educational opportunity. Some students under the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Indian Education faced an especially challenging combination of Internet barriers on Indian and rural lands.
  • People with disabilities have historically been underrepresented in the workforce even in robust economic times and the pandemic exacerbated this long-standing problem.
  • Deaf, Hard of Hearing, Deaf-Blind, and Blind persons faced a profound communication gulf as masks became commonplace, making lipreading impossible and sign language harder.
  • Both youth and adults who had mental health disabilities that predated the beginning of the pandemic experienced measurable deterioration over its course, made worse by a preexisting shortage of community treatment options, effective peer support, and suicide prevention support.

Click here to read the recommendations regarding healthcare, congregate care facilities, education, employment, effective communication, and mental health and suicide prevention.

*****

Source: Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law, "The Monthly Briefing: November 2021."


Tuesday, November 16, 2021

 

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November 16, 2021 

Native American Heritage Month Flyer with Hyperlinked Registration URL

Combating Discriminatory Practices Targeting Native Americans

Monday, November 22, 2021
12:00pm to 2:00pm
Register at mccr.events/NAHeritage2021

Did you know that nearly one in three Native Americans report that they have personally experienced anti-Native discrimination in the workplace or when interacting with police, and that 39% of Native Americans report that they are routinely subjected to insensitive or offensive comments specifically about their race or ethnicity?

Join the Maryland Commission on Civil Rights for a virtual presentation by Native American Activist Howie Echo-Hawk on historic and current issues of discrimination and violence facing Native Americans.

You can find more information on our speaker, Howie Echo-Hawk, by clicking here.

Don't Forget About MCCR's Upcoming Events and Trainings!

Employment Discrimination Training Image with Hyperlink to MCCR Events Page

Learn more about MCCR's trainings on the following topics - space is limited!

  • Fair Housing: Know Your Rights​
  • Employment Discrimination Basics​
  • Public Accommodations and Maryland Law: The Basics

​Please note that MCCR is currently conducting all trainings and programs virtually.

Victim of Discrimination?

File a Complaint3

Training & Partnerships

Education and Outreach button

HOME      ABOUT MCCR      SERVICES      PUBLICATIONS      EVENTS      PRESS      CONTACT US

Tuesday, November 9, 2021

 

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November 9, 2021 

Native American Heritage Month Flyer with Hyperlinked Registration URL

Combating Discriminatory Practices Targeting Native Americans

Monday, November 22, 2021
12:00pm to 2:00pm
Register at mccr.events/NAHeritage2021

Did you know that nearly one in three Native Americans report that they have personally experienced anti-Native discrimination in the workplace or when interacting with police, and that 39% of Native Americans report that they are routinely subjected to insensitive or offensive comments specifically about their race or ethnicity?

Join the Maryland Commission on Civil Rights for a virtual presentation by Native American Activist Howie Echo-Hawk on historic and current issues of discrimination and violence facing Native Americans.

You can find more information on our speaker, Howie Echo-Hawk, by clicking here.

Don't Forget About MCCR's Upcoming Events and Trainings!

Employment Discrimination Training Image with Hyperlink to MCCR Events Page

Learn more about MCCR's trainings on the following topics - space is limited!

  • Fair Housing: Know Your Rights​
  • Employment Discrimination Basics​
  • Public Accommodations and Maryland Law: The Basics

​Please note that MCCR is currently conducting all trainings and programs virtually.

Victim of Discrimination?

File a Complaint3

Training & Partnerships

Education and Outreach button

HOME      ABOUT MCCR      SERVICES      PUBLICATIONS      EVENTS      PRESS      CONTACT US