NEW YORK – Una cantidad desproporcionada de niñas y niños con discapacidades son víctimas de abuso infantil, pero la legislación para modernizar el proceso para interponer demandas civiles y cargos criminales contra los abusadores, ha quedado estancada en la Legislatura estatal.
Con el Año Nuevo pudiera llegar finalmente la aprobación de la ley que permita que los infantes que sean víctimas de abuso sexual en el Estado de Nueva York cuenten con más tiempo para denunciar y acusar a sus victimarios. Lourdes Rosa-Carrasquillo, directora de defensoría en el Centro por la Independencia de las Personas Discapacitadas Nueva York (Center for Independence of the Disabled New York), explica por qué esta legislación resulta especialmente importante en el caso de personas con discapacidades.
Las niñas y los niños quienes tienen una discapacidad son elegidos en una proporción mucho mayor como víctimas de abuso sexual, y aún así Nueva York tiene unas de las más restrictivas leyes del país para fincar responsabilidades a los ofensores. En las condiciones actuales, deben presentar su caso antes de cumplir los 23 años.
Rosa-Carrasquillo opina que la Ley de Víctimas Infantiles (“Child Victims Act”) extendería significativamente el término para presentar demandas civiles.
“Si se aprueba será de 50 años, lo que tiene sentido porque la mayoría de los pequeños que han sufrido abuso sexual atraviesan después por un largo proceso para superarlo, y se sabe que dura unos 40 años.”
La iniciativa también podría incrementar la edad para presentar cargos criminales, hasta los 28 años. Este proyecto de ley, presentado por primera vez en 2006, fue aprobado por la Asamblea Legislativa pero nunca se ha sometido a votación en el Senado del Estado.
Los Senadores Republicanos quieren que la ley autorice sólo un año para que las víctimas inicien su querella legal por un abuso que pudo haber ocurrido décadas atrás, y proteger la identidad de los abusadores, disposiciones que han sido objetadas por Rosa-Carrasquillo y otros defensores.
“Hay gente que no se identificará con esto ahora sino hasta más adelante, y debe dárseles la oportunidad de volver y decir ‘Esto es lo que sucedió en ese entonces.’”
Una disposición de “re-visión” contenida en la iniciativa de la Asamblea, que busca dar más tiempo para tomar acción legal por un abuso del pasado, fue objetada por los Boy Scouts y la Iglesia Católica, quienes temen que una cantidad ilimitada de demandas pudiera afectar su capacidad de servir a la comunidad.
Las posibilidades son altas para la gente con capacidades diferentes. En promedio, los infantes con discapacidades tienen casi tres veces más riesgo de ser víctimas de abuso sexual. Y Rosa-Carrasquillo puntualiza que algunos enfrentan un riesgo incluso mayor.
“Los pequeños afectados en su salud mental o su capacidad intelectual tienen 4.6 veces más posibilidades de sufrir abuso sexual y de que no se les crea, ya sea porque sufren daño cognitivo o porque la gente piensa que son psicópatas.”
Quienes apoyan la legislación tienen esperanzas de que en enero, cuando los Demócratas tomen control del Senado, la iniciativa finalmente se vuelva ley.
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In Michigan and across the country, nearly 25% of the population encounters challenges in voting and accessing the polls.
The Carter Center and Detroit Disability Power audited 261 polling locations in metro Detroit last election, and found just 16% of them fully accessible.
Dessa Cosma, executive director of the group Detroit Disability Power, said many polling locations do not have accessible parking, a ramp, clear signage, accessible doors or a direct travel path even just to enter the building. Once inside there are further challenges.
"No wheelchair-height voting booth or no functional voter access terminal which is the accessible voting machine that is required by law to be available and usable at all poling locations in the country," Cosma pointed out.
Cosma noted people with disabilities need to be able to engage in democracy. One of the first steps to being able to help them participate is to make sure they can get to a polling place and vote.
Accessibility challenges lead to stories about voters going to the polls and having to turn back because either they could not get in or could not access a ballot. Groups advocating for accessible voting want to spread awareness about how detrimental lack of access is to communities.
Cosma acknowledged the policies are clear voting locations meet the needs of all voters, but enforcing those rules is equally important.
"That is where clerks and other election officials really come in because it's their responsibility to make sure that all the polling locations are meeting the requirements of the law," Cosma asserted. "We're here to help them implement the best practices for making sure their polling locations are accessible and that many of the things that they need to do are not that hard and are certainly not that expensive."
Cosma added simple changes like clearly marked accessible parking, ensuring the accessible door to the building is unlocked even if it's not the primary entrance, making sure every precinct has a wheelchair height voting booth, and all accessible voting machines are maintained, plugged in and turned on.
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A recent report finds only around 31% of New York City public schools are disability accessible.
The report, from Advocates for Children of New York, finds districts with a majority of schools not compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act are in Brooklyn, Queens and The Bronx.
Sarah Part - senior policy analyst with Advocates for Children of New York - said the group is looking for the DOE to invest $1.25 Billion in accessibility upgrades during their next capital plan.
But, she noted that the money will only go so far.
"So, it'll take some of those buildings to full accessibility or to a much higher level of partial accessibility," said Part. "They might not be perfect, as far as ADA compliance, but there'll be a legitimate educational option for a student who has a typical disability or a teacher or a staff member who uses a wheelchair and wants to work there."
In the 2020-2024 capital plan, the city dedicated $750 million for these upgrades. Once that funding ends in 2024, more than one-third of schools will be fully accessible - with only one district having half of all schools accessible.
This proposed funding will help bring an estimated 150 to 200 buildings into complete accessibility by 2029.
While this might be somewhat expensive, Part said this money will make up for the lack of investment taken after the passage of the ADA. She describes other challenges which could come up.
"I know with widespread inflation and construction costs have been rising," said Part. "That makes it more difficult for the school construction authorities to do such projects. Some buildings are quite old, and it's also just like the city's school system is so massive and sprawling, the scale of the problem is just really huge."
Part said she is glad about the progress that's been made already, noting there's still a lot of work that needs to be done.
She said she hopes to see all these school upgrades done in time for the 40th anniversary of the ADA in 2030.
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In Missouri and around the country, people with disabilities are living in institutions who could successfully live in the community with the right support. According to the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act, they may even be victims of discrimination.
Attorney M. Geron Gadd, senior attorney, National Health Law Program, said the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services "revitalizing" enforcement of the ADA and the Olmstead decision shows people are still experiencing this type of discrimination, and they have the right to seek legal recourse.
"For people with a range of disabilities, there is a legal mechanism under federal law that entitles them to be served in their homes and in other community-based settings, rather than essentially being locked away in institutions," Gadd said.
The Supreme Court's 1999 Olmstead decision affirmed the ADA requires people with disabilities to be served in the most integrated setting appropriate for them. The individual, a family member or another concerned person may file a discrimination claim. Gadd pointed out that every state is required to have an advocacy organization to provide legal assistance for people with disabilities. In Missouri, it is the Missouri Protection and Advocacy Services.
Gadd added another important consequence of the Olmstead decision is the clarification that a person does not have to already be institutionalized to file a discrimination claim.
"If you're at risk of an unnecessary institutionalization, then you can take action under the ADA to obtain the services in the most integrated setting appropriate to your needs," Gadd continued.
And she stressed that states claiming they cannot afford community-based services doesn't exempt them from this requirement under the ADA.
When Missourian Diana Willard was young, some told her parents she should be institutionalized when she tested as developmentally disabled. Instead, her family helped her thrive. Willard became a certified nursing assistant, worked full-time for years and served on the Missouri Developmental Disabilities Council. She encouraged parents of children with developmental and intellectual disabilities to not hold them back.
"People with developmental disabilities have the right to live a life to the fullest extent that they can. As they grow up, they need to be allowed to transition into adulthood," Willard said.
Discrimination claims can also be filed with the Office for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
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