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Alcoholism, Addiction, Disability & Discrimination John de Miranda, Executive Director, National Association on Alcohol, Drugs and Disability
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 2 Antidotes to Discrimination Civil rights movement Women’s rights movement Disability rights movement Recovery rights movement
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 3 The Alcohol, Drugs and Disability Connection The legal protections for alcoholics and addicts (active or in recovery) derive exclusively from disability rights legislation. There is no “Americans with Addictions Act.”
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 4 The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 Disability defined: “A physical or mental impairment that constitutes or results in substantial impairment to employment, or that substantially limits one or more major life activities.”
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Copyright Anthony Tusler
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 6 Section 504 “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.”
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 7 Americans with Disabilities Act Disability defined: A person who has A physical or mental impairment that limits one or more major life activity A record of such an impairment Is regarded as having such an impairment
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 8 Major Life Activities: Personal care tasks Speaking Breathing Thinking Learning Working Manual tasks Walking Seeing Hearing
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 9 Recovery Advocacy
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 10 Disability Advocacy
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 11 Relevant Case Law Alaska v. Exxon EEOC v. Exxon Hernandez v. Hughes Aircraft Sys. Co.
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 12
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 13 Trends in the Law and Public Policy When does recovery start? Who is covered (no active illicit drug users)? Loss of SSI benefit for addiction “Correcting” a disability Veltri v. United Parcel Service Morgan v. Wright
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 14 Anti-discrimination Initiatives Join Together / American Bar Association Policy Panel Faces and Voices of Recovery Johnson Institute Recovery Ambassadors Workshops SAMHSA “Know Your Rights” Brochure
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 15 The Alcohol, Drugs and Disability Connection “The alcohol and drug field’s public education efforts have focused on trying to convince policymakers and the public that addiction is a disease. The results of these attempts have been mixed, and the time has come to consider shifting efforts to the disability paradigm.”
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 16 Recovery Rights Movement We are confronting discrimination in health and life insurance, housing, education, employment, and social services and are demanding the privileges and benefits available to other citizens. We are moving beyond our own personal recoveries to become catalysts for social change. The time to define the American recovery movement as a civil rights movement has arrived. William White
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DASA Conference Copyright 2006 NAADD 17 National Association on Alcohol, Drugs and Disability, Inc. 2165 Bunker Hill Drive San Mateo, CA 94402-3801 650.578.8047 TDD 650-631-1821 fax: 650-286-9205 E-mail: solanda@sbcglobal.net www.naadd.org
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