Guest guest Posted March 10, 2003 Report Share Posted March 10, 2003 The way many people with disabilities are treated is criminal, but the fact remains that many are criminalized by the same system that does not protect them from harm. The latest example of shaming the disabled is from the Liberal Government in British Columbia, Canada. At present, the B.C. government is having all people on disability to fill out a 23-page re-assessment form in order to become eligible-again-for disability. The way the re-assessment works is that those who do not complete the form will have their disability payments reduced or completely cut off. Those who manage to complete the form will be declared " healthy and employable " since surely if they can complete the task of filling out this very complicated 23 page form they must be employable is the attitude of the government. A Vancouver paper reported BC Social Services Minister Murray Coell says, " We're bringing a new era of dignity and hope to almost 10,000 people who will become officially employable, " Coell said tearfully. " And they will soon enjoy the self-respect of looking for a job and the self-esteem building freedom from shame of government hand-outs that so many of us take for granted. " I think it is just a matter of government once again stepping in to shame the disabled and the poor so as to garner good publicity and reduce their bottom line at great human cost. Coell's statement says to the people of B.C. that people on disability ought to be ashamed to take benefits, and implies that those who do may or are faking it to receive money. So in effect, it is the government that is shaming people on disability. I know what it's like to walk into one of those offices and admit that I can no longer function under the " norms " of society. I dodged admitting disability because of the shame factor for years and frankly, I suspect I made myself sicker by doing so. When I finally admitted that I was disabled, and that I needed help, I went into a welfare office here in Ontario, crying my eyes out, eyes cast down to hide the growing anger and disappointment at how I was now being treated. It's not easy to get over, that look, that look of " Your standing here you must be lying. " That look that I get from many people who have never known illness in their lives or expect because you look all right for 1 day, 1 hour, 1 minute in their presence that you must be a phony. What they don't see is the hours it takes to get to that moment, to that level of functioning. I've never met anyone with a disability who didn't want to get to a place in their lives where they could contribute to society. Disability and illness leave you with a sense of worthlessness and the only way to dig your self out from that feeling is to find something you can do to help others. Shaming the disabled will have no other effect than to compound this feeling of worthlessness and to delay and prevent recovery. It is the same shaming that goes into homelessness. How many times have you heard a working person mutter under their breath after passing a homeless person on the street, " Get a job. " The judgment is swift, with an air of permanence. Those words so easy to say, but how easy is it for someone who has housing, food in their stomach, and education to get a job these days? So how much harder would it be if you don't know where your next meal is coming from, you have no phone or address, you're dirty and unkempt because it is hard to access a shower and a place to clean your clothes and you have no resume? The implication of criminality, laziness, or dishonesty is not only morally wrong; I think it is also economically wrong. The fact of the matter is that disability is a fact of life that many people who are healthy and strong do not want to think about or deal with. If they are forced to think about it, they will have to realize that it could happen to them too, and people don't want to think about it. Labeling people with disabilities as liars or criminals is easier because then a healthy person can look at a person with a disability and say, " See, they're not really sick. Nothing is really wrong with them. So it won't happen to me. " Unfortunately, it does happen. People with disabilities have the highest rate of unemployment and as you know I support the re-employment and entrepreneurship by people with disabilities. There's a lot of stress involved in illness and disability, and when the system only makes it more stressful, people will get sicker, it will lower their self-esteem being treated as though they are criminals, and in the end people with disabilities will not be more employed, nor will they have higher self esteem. It will cost more in hospital stays, medications, and doctor visits. What the government will have is a statistic that says " This many people are healthier and employable because of us " and what they won't say is the social and economical cost of their policy. People with disabilities and illness can in many cases do some sort of work. But there are things that have to happen first. The first is time for recovery and acceptance of what is happening to them. This takes time. The second is finding a stable environment to begin from. This requires financial stability. The third is support from the system itself, family and friends. But for some who have not yet experienced disability or illness it is easier to judge in ignorance than to help with compassion. Pinning a label on someone " disabled " or " employable " does not make that person automatically fit that label. There are people with disabilities who are employed. Just because they are employable does not mean they are not disabled. It means they have found ways to adapt to their lifestyle and disability and found a form of employment or business that under those conditions. Most cannot do this without compassion, understanding, and financial help. That's why the 23-page re-eligibility is a waste of time and mostly money. Money would be better spent in support of people with disabilities adapting to their new conditions and finding employment and entrepreneurship support. In the end the pay off would be more people with disabilities working and paying taxes. A new label of " healthy and employable " will not do this. Instead it will push many people with disabilities into further crisis that will only set back their chances of recovery and adaptation. You want to help people with disabilities get back to work, or start a business? Help them find some financial stability, then help them help themselves into a situation where they can earn their own keep. Except, help with the attitude of compassion instead of ignorant judgment! Martell The Disabled Entrepreneur http://www.disabledentrepreneur.com sign up for our FREE newsletter http://www.disabledentrepreneur.com/cgi-bin/mojo.cgi " Helping people with disabilities become successful entrepreneurs " Free financial education for people with disabilities. © 2003 The Disabled Entrepreneur. All rights reserved. Reprints are appreciated and must include byline, contact information and copyright. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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