The NUS SWD Campaign is committed to campaigning
and fighting for equal human and civil rights
for all students with disabilities.
The Disability Discrimination Act (DDA)
was passed in 1995 to end the discrimination
that many disabled
people face. It protects disabled people in:
- employment
- access to goods, facilities and services
- the management, buying or renting of land
or property
- education
For education providers, new duties came
into effect in September 2002 under Part IV
of the DDA amended by the Special Educational
Needs and Disability Act (SENDA). These require
schools, colleges, universities, and providers
of adult education and youth services to ensure
that they do not discriminate against disabled
people.
Under Part IV of the DDA amended by the SENDA,
the duty to provide auxiliary aids, through
reasonable adjustment, came into force in
September 2003.
The DDA also allows the Government to set
minimum standards to help disabled people to
use public transport easily.
For the full Act please visit: http://www.leqislation.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts1995/1995050.htm
Please note that the Act has been amended,
not only by SENDA (see below for a link to this)
but also by the Disability Discrimination Act 1995
(Amendment) Regulations 2003, which made extensive
changes to the employment and occupation provisions.
For these regulations, please visit: http://www.legislation.hmso.gov.uk/si/si2003/20031673.htm
For the SENDA please visit: http://www.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts2001/20010010.htm
New laws from December 2006 will place a duty
on public bodies to promote disability equality.
This will affect all public bodies - from local
councils to government departments, from universities
to hospitals.
The Disability Equality Duty will require
the public sector to actively promote disability
equality, and is similar to the duty to promote
race equality under the Race Relations (Amendment)
Act. This is a positive duty which builds in
disability equality at the beginning of the
process, rather than makes adjustments at the end.
It will bring about a shift from a legal framework
which relies on individual disabled people
complaining about discrimination to one in which
the public sector becomes a proactive agent of change.
Disability Discrimination Act Definition of a
disabled person
This can include people with:-
- Sensory impairments
- Learning disabilities
- Mental health impairments where clinically recognised
- Severe disfigurements
- Cancer
- Severe facial disfigurements
- HIV
- Progressive conditions even at an early stage
- Conditions which are characterised by a number of
cumulative effects such as pain or fatigue.
- A past history of impairment even if they have recovered.
You do not have to register as a disabled person
to be protected by the legalisation.
The different parts of the Disability Discrimination
Act
Part 1 – Defines who is protected under the term
disabled person
Part 2 – Applies to employment
Part 3 – Applies to goods and services
Part 4 – Applies to education
Part 5 – Is positive duty and was passed in April 2005
Part 2, 3 & 5 applies to Students' Unions and you need to be aware that Students' Unions can be held accountable in their own right as employers and service providers.
Disability Discrimination Act – who is protected?
A person needs to be:-
- Disabled under the terms of the Disability
Discrimination Act
- A student or someone enquiring about admission
or enrolment.
According to the act you are a disabled person
if you have 'a physical or mental impairment which
has substantial and long-term adverse effect on your
ability to carry out normal day to day activities.
What is Discrimination?
The DDA describes discrimination as "treating a disabled
person less favourably than you would treat someone
without a disability, for a reason relating to his
or her disability" or "failing to make a reasonable
adjustment"
A responsible body must take reasonable steps
to ensure that disabled people or students are not
placed at a 'substantial disadvantage' in comparison
to someone who is not disabled.
How can Students' Unions respond & prepare
for the DDA?
- Remember if a building, a service or a product
is inaccessible do something about it.
- Involve disabled people in leading the campaign.
- Employment policies & practises, including
recruitment, promotion, training policies need
to be audited & reviewed. This applies to executive
positions too.
- Election materials should be made available in
alternative formats. Change your election procedures
to ensure the inclusion of disabled students so they
can vote or stand as candidates.
- Ensure that you offer designated disabled parking.
- Ensure that your unions' standard information
is available in formats other than standard print.
- Gather the opinions of disabled students about
issues that affect them by advertising on notice boards,
your web site or in magazines.
- One way for your Union to meet the requirements of
students with disabilities is to create a SWD post or
group. If you have more than one sabbatical officer it
is also a good idea to ensure that all officers see the
elimination of disability discrimination valuable in
their work.
Why should Students' Unions care and whose
responsibility is it? It is important to remember
that organisations cannot wait until a student with
disabilities wants to use their service, it is an
anticipatory duty. You know that disabled people
attend college/university and want to use your
services so you should be planning now to make
them accessible and not wait for a disabled
person to complain.
The DDA (2005) extends the scope of the 1995 DDA:
- Makes it easier for mental health service#
users, people with cancer, HIV and multiple
sclerosis to claim their rights under the DDA.
- Creates new rights to use public transport
and set an end date for all rail vehicles
to be accessible.
- Tackles institutional discrimination
through a duty to promote disability equality
for the public sector (paralleling the race
equality duty.)
- Extends the DDA to cover most functions
of public authorities (there is presently a
lack of clarity, for example, relating to disabled
prisoners, elections, planning and access to
pavements and highways.)
- Gives disabled tenants and leaseholders a right
to reasonable adjustments and auxiliary aids and
services.
- Gives disabled people (including guests) new
rights in respect of private clubs with over
25 members
- Protects disabled councillors against
discrimination for the first time.
- Covers bodies that award general qualifications
(like GCSEs and A Levels.)
Students with Disabilities are individuals with
hobbies, family, friends, likes, dislikes, problems
and joys. While the disability is an integral part
of who they are, it alone does not define them. Do
not make them into disability heroes or victims. Treat
them as individuals. They are the best judge of what
they can or can not do. Don't make decisions for them
about participating in any activity.
If you would like to get involved in the NUS SWD
Campaign just join the email group by sending an email to swdcampaign@yahoogroups.com
Alternatively go to www.nusonline.co.uk or www.officeronline.co.uk. Or get in contact with Sian
Davies the NUS SWD Officer by emailing
sian.davies@nus.org.uk or telephoning 07967479227.
        
        
     
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