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Statement by Justin Dart, Jr.,
Commissioner,
Rehabilitation Services Administration,
to the oversight hearing on the Rehabilitation Services Administration
held by the Select Education Subcommittee of the House Committee
on Education and Labor, November 18, 1987.
Mr. Chairman, my prepared presentation and other materials has been
and will be submitted to you. Beause the issues we address today
involve the fundamental human rights of millions of people with
disabilities, and the basic principles of democracy and good government
of the President, Congress and the Nations, I am going to depart
from politics as usual protocol to make a statement of conscience.
Our agency, our community is confronted by grave challenges, magnificent
opportunities and future decisions. The time has come to rise above
pride and protocol, to face reallity, and to unite in responsible,
democratic action.
During my tenure as Commissioner, RSA has - thanks to the valiant
efforts of our undermanned staff - accomplished much that is positive.
Certainly, OSERS-RSA has, during the past few years, initiated the
very progressive new programs indicated by our great supporter,
Congressman Bartlett, and my distinguished colleague advocate, Assistant
Secretary Madeliene Will.
But Mr. Chairman, based on my experience as Commissioner, and my
personal research in each of the fifty states, and five our our
largest Native American Nations, I must report to you that OSERS-RSA
has been for many years, and is today, afflicted - particularly
in its central office -- by profound problems in areas such as management,
personnel and resource utilization. We are ravaged by disunity and
hostility internally and in our vital relationships with our state
agency and grantee partners, and certain other segments of the disability
community. As I reported to Senator Harkins last month, I believe
that these problems are negatively impacting services to citizens
with disabilities.
Mr. Chairman, I have had almost no effective authority to management
solutions. But that is no acceptable excuse. I took an oath and
I accept a salary as Commissioner of RSA. I apologize to you and
to the nation, that in spite of 14 months of struggle working literally
7 days a week, in spite of 8 months of appeals for serious attention
and definitive action through the regular channels, efforts by my
colleagues and myself to resolve our problems have not been successful.
Faced now with the possibility that paternalistic central control,
non-professional management and policies of hostility will be institutionalized
for years by current revisions of organization and policy, I ask
for your help, and that of the community.
The basic problem here is not simply that Justin Dart is involved
in a trivial turf and personality conflict with Madeleine Will.
Certainly it is not that the President, who campaigned on a platform
of productive independence for all citizens and who endorsed the
very progressive concepts advocated in Toward Independence, is personally
dedicated to dismantling vocational rehabilitation and independent
living.
The problem with our external relations is not, in my view, that
the state vocational rehabilitation agencies oppose supported employment
and other progressive rehabilitation services. My personal research
has convinced me that while the problems of people with very severe
disabilities have only begun to be solved, the great majority of
the rehabilitation profession have - within the constraints of the
law - limited resources and massive public prejudice - have been
effectively dedicated to solutions. They have, along with great
advocacy groups like ARC, NFB, NAD, ACB, UCP, TASH, NAMI, NCIL and
NHIF created a firm foundation from which such solutions can occur.
Our problems are complex. We are confronted by a vast, inflexible
federal system which, like the society it represents, still contains
a significant proportion of individuals who have not yet overcome
obsolete, paternalistic attitudes about disability and, indeed,
about government itself. There is a resistance to any sharing of
their centralized authority with people with disabilities, their
families, advocates and professional service providers, in or out
of the federal service. Good management is too often subordinated
to the protection of power. And, magically, a small but all too
effective minority in the federal service and in the community seem
dedicated to divide and conquer strategy and promoting hostility
among government, advocates and professional service providers.
At issue here are principles squarely endorsed by the President,
the Congress, all the great leaders of our major political parties
and the overwhelming majority of the American people.
- Particpiatory democracy based on true federal-state-community-citizen
partnerships.
- Responsible administration of tax dollars in faithful pursuance
of the law.
- Quality, productivity and independence oriented, professionally
administered public services.
- And, most important, the civil and basic human rights of people
with disabilities to have more than rubber stamp figurehead representation
in government, to liberate themselves finally from the subservient
dependency produced by millennia of prejudice and authoritarian
paternalism, and to participate in the productive mainstream of
society as fully independent, fully equal citizens of the first
class.
The problems of OSERS-RSA must be solved; and with good faith by
all who truly support the independence and equal rights of people
with disabilities, they can be solved, and they can be solved without
asking any party to compromise on any legitimate issue of principle.
Mr. Chairman, I respectfully appeal to you and your colleagues
in Congress, and to all present, for guidance, inspiration, moral
leadership, and if necessary, support for legislative action which
will enable RSA to meet its historic and expanding responsibilities
in the nineties and as we enter the 21st century. Help us, above
all, to overcome hate and hostility, and to unite.
Let us not seek scapegoats, let us seek solutions. We have no irredeemable
enemies, only enemy attitudes.
We stand at a historic crossroads. We are approaching foundational
decisions about the future of rehabilitation and the fundamental
rights of people with disabilities.
We live in the richest nation in the history of mankind. We have
great programs like basic vocational rehabilitation, independent
living, supported employment and rehabilitation engineering. We
have all the
human, technological, economic and political resources necessary
to effect a cultural revolution which will utilize the methods and
products of science for the dignity and quality of human life.
We are responsible to millions of Americans, and because of the
extraordinary influence of our culture, to hundreds of millions
of people with disabilities throughout the world in this and future
generations. We
are responsible to human beings who are forced to exist in conditions
to which we would not subject our pet dogs and cats. We are responsible
to potentially proud, productive people who are jobless, homeless
penniless and hopeless. We are responsible to hundreds of thousands
who die years and decades before their time.
We have no excuse to sacrifice those responsibilities to self-indulgence
and self-destructive hostility.
We have no excuse to fail. We cannot afford to fail.
Like the founders of our independence and our constitutional government,
we must transcend unity with all who love justice to build on the
firm foundation which you in the Congress and others in this room
have laid. We must create a continuum of services, attitudes and
environments which will enable all of our children's children in
every nation to live lives of productivity, dignity and quality
in the mainstream of society.
I will do anything - including, if necessary, playing another role
- to cooperate with you and your colleagues in the Congress, with
the administration, and with my colleagues in the disability community
as we
strive together to fulfill this sacred responsibility.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
This historical statement was made available to ILRU by the National
Statewide Independent Living Council Mailing List Archive. It
can be viewed at http://www.dimenet.com/silc/.
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