This is a little lengthy, but please bare with me -- this is incredibly important to me as someone with a physical disability and multiple mental illnesses, who regularly relies on the ADA to be able to function in society. If you need an image description, scroll to the bottom of this.
HR620 is a bill that just passed the House of Representatives and is now heading for the senate, that will essentially gut the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA for short). Under the guise of protecting businesses, HR620 will essentially remove the threat of a lawsuit for businesses not complying with the ADA. Instead of having the right to legal action, disabled people who encounter barriers to accommodations to "write a letter to the business owner", and wait a grand total of 180 days before they can actually take action. No other civil rights laws require a lengthy wait in order to legally object to discrimination. This bill makes it almost comically clear how much the government doesn't view disabled people as actual human beings -- inaccessibility is seen as an inconvenience, and not a danger to our safety and something that further excludes us from society, and lawmakers are vastly more concerned with the rights of "businesses" as a population than actual disabled people.
From a personal standpoint, HR620 stands to take away so many parts of my life. ADA-mandated accommodations are the only reason I am able to attend school, plain and simple. Over the summer, I was able to have my dream job because I could commute to Philadelphia by train, because I knew that accessible seating would be available, and when you use forearm crutches, it's a necessity. When I run errands, travel, or go in public for any reason, I trust that I will be able to find an accessible bathroom. I like to go to coffee shops and cafes with friends to hang out and do schoolwork, and I can because the ADA ensures that I have the right to access these places.
HR620 makes it clear that the government doesn't really think I have a right to be in public, and that that's really just a luxury. This further pushes disabled people like me to stay out of public, to become even more invisible, to let the public convince themselves that we do not really exist, so that the government can continue to make us second-class citizens with impunity.
Now that this bill is heading for the senate, you need to act to help defend this. If you care even the slightest bit about me and other disabled people having rights and getting to live semi-normal lives, you need to help stop this bill. So what can you do? Call your senator -- especially if they are in support of the bill, but even if they're against HR620, you should call to tell them you appreciate their support. If phone calls make you nervous, visit https://5calls.org/issue/americans-with-disabilities-act-ada -- this gives you a script for what to say to your senator, and you can just read off of it and hang up. If in-person protests to HR620 are happening near you, attend them. At disability rights protests, disabled activists endure extreme dehumanization in the form of having our mobility aids removed -- we need abled bodies there to defend our rights. Especially considering how many disabled people who, like me, grapple with fatigue that might prevent them from taking part in protests. Finally -- make noise. Tell the people around you about HR620. Share this post or make your own. The government wants you to forget that disabled people are real human beings who exist -- don't let yourself or the people around you forget.
Thanks for reading this behemoth of a post -- I promise you I wouldn't be making this post if HR620 doesn't really stand to endanger the rights of myself and other disabled people.
If you want to do some more reading: http://www.ndrn.org/…/Overview_of_concerns_on_H.R._620_-_Fe… https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/620 https://www.aclu.org/…/hr-620-myths-and-truths-about-ada-ed…
[Image description: A person holds a handwritten sign, that reads: Because of the Americans With Disabilities Act... I can ride the train to work. I can go out in public with friends and actually access spaces. I can run my own errands. I can *attend college*. #HandsOffMyADA #StopHR620]













