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Georgia’s Disability Voters Guide Released

Senate Candidates Have Yet to Complete #PwDsVote Disability Questionnaire

Washington, Oct. 13 – As voters get ready to head to the polls in Georgia, Respectability is releasing its Georgia Disability Voter Guide for the upcoming presidential and senate elections. Democrat candidate Jim Barksdale is challenging Republican incumbent Johnny Isakson for the senate seat. Unfortunately for the 1,211,831 civilians with a disability living in Georgia, Isakson declined to complete the questionnaire and Barksdale has not yet responded to the #PwDsVote Disability Campaign Questionnaire for Senate and Gubernatorial Candidates for people with disabilities. Twenty-three other candidates for Senate, as well as nine candidates for governor, from both sides of the aisle (19 Democrats, 13 Republicans) have responded so far, showing that disability rights is a nonpartisan issue. The responses also are geographically-diverse, coming from states all around the country, as politicians are paying more and more attention to the disability community. On the presidential level, Democrat Hillary Clinton has completed the questionnaire while Republican Donald Trump has yet to do so.

The #PwDsVote 2016 Campaign Questionnaires were designed by and for people with disabilities (PwDs) and those who love them to know where candidates stand on key issues. RespectAbility is nonpartisan and does not endorse candidates. The questionnaires are purely for educational purposes as voters go to the polls.

According to a new report from Rutgers University, 35.4 million people with disabilities will be eligible to vote in the November 2016 elections, representing close to one-sixth of the total electorate. That’s an increase of nearly 11 percent since 2008.

The presidential questionnaire was created during the primary season and asked all of the presidential candidates to comment on 16 disability questions. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton responded by addressing all of the questions. Despite numerous requests in person and by phone and email, the Trump campaign has not yet filled out the questionnaire. The American Association of People with Disabilities and the National Council on Independent Living also has a nonpartisan presidential questionnaire, which both Clinton and Trump have completed. Libertarian Gary Johnson and Green Party candidate Jill Stein have not filled out either questionnaire.

The down-ballot survey was adapted from the presidential questionnaire to ask gubernatorial candidates 16 questions and senatorial candidates 17 questions. All answers are posted verbatim and in full on The RespectAbility Report, a publication that covers the intersection of disability and politics.

Georgia varies greatly when it comes to the employment of people with and without disabilities. The state’s employment rate for people without disabilities lies at 73.1 percent. Meanwhile, only 29.6 percent of working-age Georgians with disabilities statewide are employed. This election cycle brings with it an opportunity to improve and increase opportunities for competitive, integrated employment for people with disabilities. Voters are looking to know where the candidates stand on important disability issues so that they can help look improve these efforts this coming election.

Georgia Needs to Improve Outcomes for Citizens with Disabilities
There are 678,219 Georgians with disabilities who are between the ages of 18-64. Additionally, there are 40,300 Georgians ages 16-20 with disabilities. More than 167,000 Georgia students have individual education plans (IEPs). However, many Georgians with disabilities have not yet received a disability diagnosis they need, and thus are not yet receiving the school accommodations and supports that they need to succeed. Many students who might need support to succeed academically instead find themselves trapped into a lifetime of poverty or flowing down the school to prison pipeline.

Georgia can greatly improve competitive, integrated employment for people with disabilities. Currently only 29.6 percent of working-age Georgians with disabilities are employed compared to 73.1 percent of those without disabilities. View the rankings of all 50 states and compare.

However, employment rates alone do not tell the whole story of disability employment in Georgia. Indeed, when you consider the staggering 43.5-point gap in the Labor Force Participation Rate between people with and without disabilities, Georgia drops to 38th in the nation. Further, there are more than 40,000 youth with disabilities between age 16 and 20 in Georgia. Each year a quarter of them will age out of school into an uncertain future. Thanks to the upcoming elections and the implementation of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA), Georgia has the chance to invest resources in successful models and implement best practices to expand job opportunities for people with disabilities.

RespectAbility, founded in 2013, is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization working to end stigmas and advance opportunities for people with disabilities. It has submitted comments for all 50 state’s drafts of the Unified Plan as required under Section 102 of WIOA. According to the current draft of Georgia’s state plan, there are more than 678,000 Georgians between the ages of 18 to 64 and only 29.6 percent of them are employed. WIOA offers Georgia an opportunity to effectively employ and integrate people with disabilities into Georgia’s workforce.

One of the most important facets of WIOA is that it raises expectations for youth with disabilities and assists states to provide them with the supports they need to ensure success. Indeed, as Georgia’s Baby Boomers retire and your state’s economy evolves, employers are starting to experience increasing talent shortage. Georgians with disabilities are an untapped resource that can be trained to bridge that gap. Indeed, a recent detailed study by the Kessler Foundation and the University of New Hampshire shows the 70 percent of working age people with disabilities are striving for work.

Evidence shows that people with disabilities can provide a wonderful solution to companies and other employers that want to succeed. The diverse skills, greater loyalty and higher retention rates of people with disabilities are already starting to meet employer talent needs in increasing numbers around America. With WIOA, Georgia can benefit from that progress if it truly breaks down silos within government agencies and partners, and lets innovation, based on evidence-based practices, take place.

However, the gap in the labor force participation between people with and without disabilities is still too large around the entire country. This lack of employment for people with disabilities creates poverty, powerlessness, and poor health. Polls and studies show that people with disabilities want the opportunity to have the dignity and independence that jobs provide.

America has 1.2 million youth with disabilities, between the ages of 16 and 20. Each year 300,000 of them age into what should be the workforce, but stigmas and lack of knowledge about the capabilities of people with disabilities means that most do not find employers willing to hire them. Young adults with disabilities in all of these states are hoping to find work. They have high expectations and deserve the opportunity to achieve the American dream. Young people with disabilities may simply need some thoughtful help to transition into the workforce. See data on all 50 states here: State Data.

Fully one-out-of-five people have a disability, and 52 percent of likely voters have a loved one with a disability. Only 34 percent of working-age Americans with disabilities have jobs, despite the fact that the vast majority want to work. More than 11 million working age people with disabilities are now living on government benefits in our country.

RespectAbility President Jennifer Laszlo Mizrahi said, “Our community is looking for jobs so we can achieve the American dream, just like anyone else. It is vital for us to know where the candidates stand on economic, stigma, education, safety, transportation, housing, healthcare, foreign affairs and other issues. The candidates have hugely different ideas about how to deal with the issues. Thus, it’s extremely important to read their full answers so you can understand their vast differences.”

Text: #PwDsVote 2016 Disability Questionnaire: Georgia Voters Guide Jim Barksdale has not submitted his responses yet. Johnny Isakson has not submitted his responses yet.Click on the image to view all of Hillary Clinton's answers to the questionnaire. Donald Trump has yet to submit responses to the questionnaire but click the image to read our coverage of his disability conversations. Image contains text: RespectAbility is nonpartisan and does not endorse candidates. For more information, contact: Jennifer Laszlo Mizrahi: 202-365-0787, jenniferm@respectabilityusa.org Lauren Appelbaum: 202-591-0703, laurena@respectabilityusa.org; www.RespectAbilityUSA.org, www.TheRespectAbilityReport.org

Remember to Vote
Georgia residents can vote for the candidates of their choice either on Election Day or through early voting. Georgians had until Oct. 11, 2016, to register to vote for the general election. Registered Georgians who expect to be prevented from going to their polling place on Election Day may vote early starting Oct. 17 through Nov. 4 at their county’s voting site. Voters can request absentee ballots from their local election authority in person or by fax. More information regarding absentee voting is available at: Georgia Absentee Voting.

Published inRespectAbility Disability Voters' Guide

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