Transcript Document

ONE COLLEGE,
ONE LAW
Disability Services Information Session
Fall Semester 2012
Presented by:
Disability Services Office
Location: B 209
Staff Members:
 Tomma Lee Furst
 Stephanie Giddens
 Kym Kleinsmith
 Lori Corrigan
DS Office Mission: See handout
It’s actually two laws…
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
ADA Amendments Act (ADAAA) of 1990 and 2008
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Both are Civil Rights Laws
Both provide legal protection against discrimination of
people with disabilities
Who must comply? Programs and businesses that
receive federal, state, or local funding
RACC must comply
With the combination of the two laws, all government
funded programs are covered.
Many programs, such as those at RACC, receive
federal, state, and local funding, and are therefore
covered by both laws at one time.
Language of the law
“No otherwise qualified individual with a disability in
the United States…shall, solely by reason of his or her
disability, be excluded from the participation in, be
denied the benefits of, or be subjected to
discrimination under any program or activity receiving
Federal financial assistance….”
Language of the law
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No otherwise qualified (open admission)
individual with a disability (physical or mental
impairment that impacts a daily life activity)
in the United States…shall, solely by reason of his or
her disability, be excluded from the participation in, be
denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination
under any program (credit or non-credit)
or activity (in or out of classroom, anywhere on or off
campus) receiving Federal financial assistance….
Let’s brainstorm about specifics:
In your program, office, class, division, etc.:
 Who has to comply?
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What processes must be accessible?
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Whose responsibility is it to comply?
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Who pays for services like an ASL interpreter?
What does this mean?
RACC and ALL programs, faculty, and staff, whether credit or noncredit, must provide access to:
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All buildings, classrooms, offices, labs, parking, etc.
RACC website, online instruction and online services, Angel, etc.
Placement test
Admission and enrollment
Student services
Faculty instruction
Educational class trips
Classroom materials
Textbooks
Testing
What if we do not comply?
Any student who feels discrimination,
overt or subtle, including a hostile
environment or intimidation, may lodge
an official complaint with the Office of
Civil Rights (OCR).
What is Office of Civil Rights?
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Part of US Dept. of Health and Human Services
Enforce Civil Rights and Health Info Privacy Laws
Our District Office is in Philadelphia
Because the ADA and Rehab Act are Civil Rights laws, the
Office of Civil Rights (OCR) is the body that investigates
complaints.
Their mission as it applies to education: “to ensure equal
access to education and to promote educational excellence
throughout the nation through vigorous enforcement of civil
rights.”
The process of an OCR complaint
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A complaint of discrimination is filed
 If
an educational institution has discriminated against
someone on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex,
disability, or age
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Complaint is evaluated
If valid, timely, etc., investigation begins
OCR is neutral fact finder
Review papers, interviews, site-visit
Send letter of finding to all parties
If non-compliance with law…
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OCR asks for a voluntary resolution agreement
describing specific actions needed to comply with
law
OCR will monitor progress and confirm
implementation
If refusal of voluntary resolution agreement…
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OCR informs recipient it has 30 days to resolve
issues or OCR will find factual and legal
non-compliance
Next, a letter of Impending Enforcement Action
Next, may suspend, terminate or refuse to continue
Federal financial assistance to recipient
May be referred to the Dept. of Justice
Consider specific cases and discuss
Read
case
What was complaint?
Was it discrimination?
If non-compliance, how should the issue
be resolved?
Cases to discuss
Case #1: University of Guam
 Case #2: Lewis and Clark College
 Case #3: Strayer University
 Case #4: Anycollege USA
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Additional Resources
To learn more about the Office of Civil Rights:

This
PowerPoint
presentation
will be
available on
the Disability
Services page
on RACC’s
website.
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http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/office/index.html (general)
http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/index.html
(education specific)
To learn more about the Americans with Disabilities Act:
The US Department of Justice’s ADA Home Page:
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http://www.ada.gov/
Disability rights online news:
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http://www.ada.gov/disabilitynews.htm
Additional Resources
To learn more about compliance with the law in a college
setting:
This
PowerPoint
presentation
will be
available on
the Disability
Services page
on RACC’s
website.
Disability Compliance for Higher Education: Successful
Strategies for Accommodating Students and Staff with
Disabilities. Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
To have specific questions answered at any time:
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Tomma Lee Furst x5069
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Stephanie Giddens x5070
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Kym Kleinsmith x5265
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Lori Corrigan x5081
THANK YOU FOR
LEARNING ABOUT
ONE COLLEGE, ONE LAW
Disability Services, B 209