History
of Independent Living
by Gina McDonald and Mike Oxford
This account of the history of Independent living stems from
a philosophy which states that people with disabilities should
have the same civil rights, options, and control over choices
in their own lives as do people without disabilities.
The history of independent living is closely tied to the civil
rights struggles of the 1950s and 1960s among African Americans.
Basic issues--disgraceful treatment based on bigotry and erroneous
stereotypes in housing, education, transportation, and employment
-- and the strategies and tactics are very similar. This history
and its driving philosophy also have much in common with other
political and social movements of the country in the late 1960s
and early 1970s. There were at least five movements that influenced
the disability rights movement.
Social Movements
The first social movement was deinstitutionalization, an attempt
to move people, primarily those with developmental disabilities,
out of institutions and back into their home communities. This
movement was led by providers and parents of people with developmental
disabilities and was based on the principle of "normalization" developed
by Wolf Wolfensberger, a sociologist from Canada. His theory
was that people with developmental disabilities should live
in the most "normal" setting possible if they were
t o expected to behave "normally." Other changes
occurred in nursing homes where young people with many types
of disabilities were warehoused for lack of "better" alternatives
(Wolfensberger, 1972).
The next movement to influence disability rights was the civil
rights movement. Although people with disabilities were not included
as a protected class under the Civil Rights Act, it was a reality
that people could achieve rights, at least in law, as a c lass.
Watching the courage of Rosa Parks as she defiantly rode in the
front of a public bus, people with disabilities realized the
immediate challenge of even getting on the bus.
The "self-help" movement, which really began in the
1950s with the founding of Alcoholics Anonymous, came into its
own in the 1970s. Many self-help books were published and support
groups flourished. Self-help and peer support are recognized
as key points in independent living philosophy. According to
this tenet, people with similar disabilities are believed to
be more likely to assist and to understand each other than individuals
who do not share experience with similar disability.
Demedicalization was a movement that began to look at more holistic
approaches to health care. There was a move toward "demystification" of
the medical community. Thus, another cornerstone of independent
living philosophy became the shift away from the au thoritarian
medical model to a paradigm of individual empowerment and responsibility
for defining and meeting one's own needs.
Consumerism, the last movement to be described here, was one
in which consumers began to question product reliability and
price. Ralph Nader was the most outspoken advocate for this movement,
and his staff and followers came to be known as "Nader's
Raider s." Perhaps most fundamental to independent living
philosophy today is the idea of control by consumers of goods
and services over the choices and options available to them.
The independent living paradigm, developed by Gerben DeJong
in the late 1970s (DeJong, 1979), proposed a shift from the medical
model to the independent living model. As with the movements
described above, this theory located problems or "deficiencies" in
the society, not the individual. People with disabilities no
longer saw themselves as broken or sick, certainly not in need
of repair. Issues such as social and attitudinal barriers were
the real problems facing people with disabilities. The answers
were to be found in changing and "fixing" society,
not people with disabilities. Most important, decisions must
be made by the individual, not by the medical or rehabilitation
professional.
Using these principles, people began to view themselves as powerful
and self-directed as opposed to passive victims, objects of charity,
cripples, or not whole. Disability began to be seen as a natural,
not uncommon, experience in life, not a tragedy.
ADAPT
Wade Blank began his lifelong struggle in civil rights activism
with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to Selma, Alabama. It was
during this period that he learned about the stark oppression,
which occurred against people considered to be outside the "mainstream" of
our "civilized" society. By 1971, Wade was working
in a nursing facility, Heritage House, trying to improve the
quality of life of some of the younger residents. These efforts,
including taking some of the residents to a Grateful Dead concert,
ultimately failed. Institutional services and living arrangements
were at odds with the pursuit of personal liberties and life
with dignity.
In 1974, Wade founded the Atlantis Community, a model for community-based,
consumer-controlled, independent living. The Atlantis Community
provided personal assistance services primarily under the control
of the consumer within a community setting. The first consumers
of the Atlantis Community were some of the young residents "freed" from
Heritage House by Wade (after he had been fired). Initially,
Wade provided personal assistance services to nine people by
himself for no pay so that these individuals could integrate
into society and live lives of liberty and dignity. In 1978,
Wade and Atlantis realized that access to public transportation
was a necessity if people with disabilities were to live independently
in the community. This was the year that American Disabled for
Accessible Public Transit (ADAPT) was founded.
On July 5-6, 1978, Wade and nineteen disabled activists held
a public transit bus "hostage" on the corner of Broadway
and Colfax in Denver, Colorado. ADAPT eventually mushroomed into
the nation's first grassroots, disability rights, activist organization.
In the spring of 1990, the Secretary of Transportation, Sam
Skinner, finally issued regulations mandating lifts on buses.
These regulations implemented a law passed in 1970-the Urban
Mass Transit Act-which required lifts on new buses. The transit
industry had successfully blocked implementation of this part
of the law for twenty years, until ADAPT changed their minds
and the minds of the nation. In 1990, after passage of the Americans
With Disabilities Act (ADA), ADAPT shifted its vision toward
a national system of community-based personal assistance services
and the end of the apartheid-type system of segregating people
with disabilities by imprisoning them in institutions against
their will. The acronym ADAPT became "American Disabled
for Attendant Programs Today." The fight for a national
policy of attendant services and the end of institutionalization
continues to this day.
Wade Blank died on February 15, 1993, while unsuccessfully attempting
to rescue his son from drowning in the ocean. Wade and Ed Roberts
live on in many hearts and in the continuing struggle for the
rights of people with disabilities.
These lives of these two leaders in the disability rights movement,
Ed Roberts and Wade Blank, provide poignant examples of the modem
history, philosophy, and evolution of independent living in the
United States. To complete this rough sketch of the history of
independent living, a look must be taken at the various pieces
of legislation concerning the rights of people with disabilities,
with a particular emphasis on the original "bible" of
civil rights for people with disabilities, the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973.
Civil Rights Laws
Before turning to the Rehabilitation Act, a chronological listing
and brief description of important federal civil rights laws
affecting people with disabilities is in order.
- 1964
Civil Rights Act: prohibits discrimination on the basis of
race, religion, ethnicity, national origin, and creed --
later, gender
was added as a protected class.
- 1968
Architectural Barriers Act: prohibits architectural barriers
in all federally owned or leased buildings.
- 1970
Urban Mass Transit Act: requires that all new mass transit
vehicles be equipped with wheelchair lifts. As mentioned
earlier, it
was twenty years, primarily because of machinations of
the American Public Transit Association (APTA), before
the p art
of the law requiring wheelchair lifts was implemented.
- 1973
Rehabilitation Act: particularly Title V, Sections 501, 503,
and 504, prohibits discrimination in federal programs and
services and all other programs or services receiving federal
funding.
- 1975
Developmental Disabilities Bill of Rights Act: among other
things, establishes Protection and Advocacy (P & A).
- 1975
Education of All Handicapped Children Act (PL 94-142): requires
free, appropriate public education in the least restrictive
environment possible for children with disabilities. This
law is now called the Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act
(IDEA).
- 1978
Amendments to the Rehabilitation Act: provides for consumer-controlled
centers for independent living.
- 1983
Amendments to the Rehabilitation Act: provides for the Client
Assistance Program (CAP), an advocacy program for consumers
of rehabilitation and independent living services.
- 1985
Mental Illness Bill of Rights Act: requires protection and
advocacy services (P & A) for people with mental illness.
- 1988
Civil Rights Restoration Act: counteracts bad case law by
clarifying Congress' original intention that under the
Rehabilitation
Act, discrimination in ANY program or service that is a
part of an entity receiving federal funding -- not just
the part
which actually and directly receives the funding -- is illegal.
- 1988
Air Carrier Access Act: prohibits discrimination on the basis
of disability in air travel and provides for equal access
to air transportation services.
- 1988
Fair Housing Amendments Act: prohibits discrimination in
housing against people with disabilities and families with
children.
Also provides for architectural accessibility of certain
new housing units, renovation of existing units, and accessibility
modifications at the renter's expense.
- 1990
Americans with Disabilities Act: provides comprehensive civil
rights protection for people with disabilities; closely
modeled after the Civil Rights Act and the Section 504
of Title V of
the Rehabilitation Act and its regulations.
The modern history of civil rights for people with disabilities
is three decades old. An essential piece of this decades-long
process is the story of how the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 was
finally passed and then implemented. It is the story of the first
organized disability rights protest.
The Rehabilitation Act of 1973
In 1972, Congress passed a rehabilitation bill that independent
living activists cheered. President Richard Nixon's veto prevented
this bill from becoming law. During the era of political activity
at the end of the Vietnam War, Nixon's veto was not taken lying
down by disability activists who launched fierce protests across
the country. In New York City, early leader for disability,
fights, Judy Heumann, staged a sit-in on Madison Avenue with
eighty other activists.
Traffic was stopped. After a flood of angry letters and protests,
in September 1973, Congress overrode Nixon's veto and the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973 finally became law. Passage of this pivotal law was
the beginning of the ongoing fight for implementation and revision
of the law according to the vision of independent living advocates
and disability rights activists. Key language in the Rehabilitation
Act, found in Section 504 of Title V, states that:
No otherwise qualified handicapped individual in the United
States shall, solely by reason of his handicap, 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.
Advocates realized that this new law would need regulations
in order to be implemented and enforced. By 1977, Presidents
Nixon and Ford had come and gone. Jimmy Carter had-become president
and had appointed Joseph Califano his Secretary of Health, Education,
and Welfare (HEW). Califano refused to issue regulations and
was given an ultimatum and deadline of April 4, 1977. April 4
went by with no regulations and no word from Califano.
On April 5, demonstrations by people with disabilities took
place in ten cities across the country. By the end of the day,
demonstrations in nine cities were over. In one city, San Francisco,
protesters refused to disband.
Demonstrators, more than 150 people with disabilities, had taken
over the federal office building and refused to leave. They stayed
until May 1. Califano had issued regulations by April 28, but
the protesters stayed until they had reviewed the regulations
and approved of them.
The lesson is a simple one. As Martin Luther King said,
"It is an historical fact that the privileged groups seldom
give up their privileges voluntarily. Individuals may see the
moral light and voluntarily give up their unjust posture, but,
as we are reminded, groups tend to be more immoral than individuals
. We know, through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily
given by the oppressor, it must be demanded by the oppressed."
Leaders in the Independent Living Movement
The history of the independent living movement is not complete
without mention of some other leaders who continue to make
substantial contributions to the movement and to the rights
and empowerment of people with disabilities.
Max Starkloff, Charlie Carr, and Marca Bristo founded the National
Council on Independent Living (NCEL) in 1980. NCEL is one of
the only national organizations that is consumer-controlled and
promotes the rights and empowerment of people with disabilities.
Justin Dart played a prominent role in the fight for passage
of the Americans with Disabilities Act, and is seen by many as
the spiritual leader of the movement today. Lex Frieden is co-founder
of ILRU Program. As director of the National Council on Disability,
he directed preparation of the original ADA legislation and its
introduction in Congress.
Liz Savage and Pat Wright are considered the "mothers of
the ADA." They led the consumer fight for the passage of
the ADA.
There are countless other people who have and continue to make
substantial contributions to the independent living movement.
REFERENCES
DeJong, Gerben. "Independent Living: From Social Movement
to Analytic Paradigm," Archives of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation 60, October 1979.
Wolfensberger, Wolf The Principle of Normalization in Human
Services. Toronto: National Institute on Mental Retardation,
1972.
--
|