News Release
NCD #00-291
May 19, 2000
Contact: Mark S. Quigley
202-272-2004
202-272-2074 TTY
mquigley@ncd.gov
National Council on Disability Convenes Multicultural
Strategy Session
Washington--The National Council on Disability (NCD)
opened its civil rights strategy session, NCD Think Tank 2000, with
an impressive group of civil and human rights leaders, all of whom
unanimously expressed support for expanding alliances to achieve
equality for people with disabilities from diverse cultures. "We
must strive to achieve meaningful equality," said Wade Henderson,
executive director of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights.
"We are all part of the same broad family."
NCD chairperson Marca Bristo challenged the gathering
to commit to "take concrete actions to address the inadequacies
in our public and private institutions so that they can truly meet
the unique needs of all people in this diverse nation." Congressman
Major Owens (D-NY) urged the gathering to become more involved in
government affairs. "We have to become part of this cold cruel world
of American politics, because the people who understand it best,
walk away with all of the resources." Congressional Black Caucus
chairman James Clyburn (D-SC) indicated that many disability issues
are "invisible" unless you live with them daily. Clyburn said he
will work to make disability issues more visible. "You can depend
upon the members of the Congressional Black Caucus to be there with
you on your issues, because we know them in more ways than one."
Acting assistant attorney general Bill Lann Lee noted
that society is generally dismissive of individuals with disabilities
and noted that the discrimination and difficulties faced by people
from diverse cultural backgrounds are "magnified when that individual
has a disability." Milton Little, executive vice president of the
National Urban League, announced his organizations partnership
with NCD in distributing an information awareness brochure, Guide
to Disability Rights Laws. The guide will be available in June and
distributed to Urban League affiliates throughout the nation.
NCD member Audrey McCrimon underscored the inherent
mutual interests and of the human rights, disability rights and
historic civil rights organizations in the strategy session. McCrimon
noted that all of them are concerned about "education, health care,
fair , safe and accessible housing and a fair justice system. We
are all concerned about some of the same things."
Judge Hughey Walker, NCDs second vice chair,
stressed that the objective was to develop an action plan to help
people from diverse cultures with disabilities, not another study.
Walker urged the group to "suspend your own personal agenda and
keep your eyes and ears on the big picture."
NCD is an independent federal agency representing
all people with disabilities, regardless of severity, from all cultural,
racial and ethnic backgrounds. NCD makes recommendations to the
President and Congress on disability policy. For more information,
contact Mark S. Quigley at 202-272-2008 or visit NCDs award-winning
Web site (www.ncd.gov).
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