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The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed deep-rooted structural inequalities in the U.S. Immense, historic, and racialized inequity in health and health care and the near-invisible “essential workers” who make everyone’s daily lives possible.
Who is “essential?” Who is invisible? What rights do people have to safety and dignity in the workplace? Who is considered expendable?
These issues are not new for people with disabilities, who have fought for access to employment and other civil and human rights for more than half a century.
The Vermont Center for Independent Living (VCIL) has issued a new report—Working with Disability: Toward a truly inclusive Vermont labor force—with data, history, and personal stories of Vermonters with disabilities. The report shines a light on the achievements and potential of people with disabilities as workers, the barriers and challenges they face, the widespread benefits of an inclusive workplace, and the policies necessary to make Vermont a state where everyone can work productively.
Its main points are:
The report, the first in a series, was a joint effort of VCIL and the Vermont Developmental Disabilities Council, the Vermont Division for Vocational Rehabilitation, the Vermont Division for the Blind and Visually Impaired, and the Statewide Independent Living Council with support from The Fountain Fund and the Larry Mandell Fund for Racial, Social, and Economic Equity. Public Assets Institute did the research, analysis, writing, and design.
Alternate non-graphic format version
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