trouble: Sketch of Hermoine from Harry Potter with "Bookworms will rule the world (after we finish the background reading)" on it (Default)
trouble ([personal profile] trouble) wrote in [community profile] accessibility_fail2009-06-15 09:04 pm

American-Centric: Election-Access FAIL

Via Feministe, who got it at FRIDA:

PROMISES, PROMISES: Polling places lack access
By KIMBERLY HEFLING

WASHINGTON (AP) — Despite high-profile promises over the past 25 years, many disabled Americans still are unable to fully participate in their democracy.

Advocates say they field complaints from around the country from disabled people who have problems getting into polling places or can't independently and privately cast their votes. T.K. Small, who doesn't have the use of his hands because of a neuromuscular disorder, said a 2002 law mandating access to voting for the disabled feels like a broken promise.


"My right has been completely frustrated," said Small, 44, a New York attorney who finally cast an absentee ballot on Election Day after workers at two separate precincts in his Brooklyn neighborhood were unable to work the voting machines equipped for the disabled.

New data backs up the complaints from voters like Small.

A Government Accountability Office report to be released Wednesday found that in last November's historic election, nearly one-third of polling places failed to accommodate voters in wheelchairs. Twenty-three percent had machines for the disabled that offered less privacy than offered to others — some even positioned in a way that other people could see how they were voting.

The study of 730 polling places in 31 states said improvements have been made since the agency's last similar survey in 2000. But it found that 73 percent of polling places had some sort of impediment, such as narrow doorways or steep curbs, that might impede access to the voting area for people with disabilities. Nearly half of those sites offered curbside voting as an alternative.

"We are a far cry from where we need to be," said Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wis., chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, who requested the report. He said in a statement he would work with the Justice Department, which has jurisdiction to enforce federal election laws, to seek improvements.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., chairman of the Senate Rules Committee that has jurisdiction over federal elections, on Wednesday said the problems with accessibility must end and his committee would look into it.

In 1984, Congress passed a law requiring states to make polling places more accessible to the elderly and disabled. The issue was addressed again in the 1990 Americans With Disabilities Act and in the 2002 Help America Vote Act, and it came with money — hundreds of millions have been given to states to make polling places more accessible.

"When problems arise in the administration of elections, we have a responsibility to fix them," President George W. Bush said at the time. An author of the law, Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., called it "nothing less than the first civil rights legislation of the 21st century."

But seven years later, some local jurisdictions refuse to move polling places, arguing that voters won't know where to vote or that there's no place in the jurisdiction that meets the disability access requirement, said Lee Page, associate advocacy director at Paralyzed Veterans of America.

That leaves disabled voters the option of having the ballot brought out of the polling place to them, being reassigned to a different jurisdiction or voting absentee, Lee said.

"You want to vote with everyone else at your jurisdiction because it's ... part of the community," Page said. "To find barriers in this simple issue is really disheartening, truthfully."

The issue is expected to take on greater prominence as baby boomers age and become less mobile. In last year's election, about 16 percent of voters were 65 and older. By 2040, it is anticipated that 40 percent of all voters will be at least 65.

Today, an estimated 15 percent of Americans have some sort of disability.

Jim Dickson, an advocate at the American Association of People With Disabilities, said there's been an increase in the number of polling places that offer voting machines usable by the disabled. But that doesn't guarantee they're being used, he said.

"This problem of poll workers not wanting voters to use the accessible machine, not knowing how to set the machine up, in our election incident collection, that was the biggest single problem faced by people with disabilities," Dickson said.

Rick Birge, 55, of Dardanelle, Ark., a Vietnam veteran who lost his left leg and right foot in a truck explosion after his military service, said he's benefited from the law change.

In some past elections, Birge said he avoided voting altogether because it was difficult to get in and out. But he said his voting polling place in recent years moved from a courthouse to a civic center, and he had no problems voting in November.

"If people have trouble getting into the building, they'll actually come out and get you here," said Birge, an officer in the veterans group AMVETS. "They've changed a lot of things for people like us."

Curtis Decker, executive director of the National Disability Rights Network, said he hopes the new government findings will bring about additional improvements so that others can witness the changes that Birge has seen.

"We thought we'd turned the corner with the (Help America Vote Act) bill because it has really good language in there about mandating accessible voting, but clearly it's a pretty intractable problem that needs more work and more attention," said Decker, whose organization assists states in complying with the law.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


I don't see anything in the article about Braille or providing information in Sign. I'm not familiar with the American voting system at all (Y'all have machines? We vote paper ballot, with a pencil, and X marks the spot!), so I don't know what that would look like for Blind voters.
amadi: A bouquet of dark purple roses (Default)

[personal profile] amadi 2009-06-16 12:58 am (UTC)(link)
My polling place is entirely inaccessible for voters in wheelchairs. It's in what used to be a Catholic school that's now a daycare center. And inside, the workers have it set up so that there is a gamut to be run in a narrow hallway where they inexplicably set up the sign-in table. And that's the only way in and out, so if there's a line of people waiting people who are done voting can't get out. It's the stupidest (and most unnecessary) setup I've ever seen. I'm thinking about only voting absentee from now on, as is my mother. She has a sight impairment and our new (paperless, proofless, easily hacked) electronic voting machines are hard for her to operate, and our voting people (who've run the precinct for as long as I've been voting which is half my life) seem to think that the law that entitles her to help means that one of them has to help her and that I can't. She doesn't trust them, she trusts me. So yeah, absentee for us now.
hilarytamar: a spray of cherry blossoms (Default)

[personal profile] hilarytamar 2009-06-16 01:17 am (UTC)(link)
I've been a pollworker at several of the last elections. Each time, the same couple, both of them with visual impairments, have come in to vote and right from the time they reach the check-in table they always begin to assert their rights, loudly and clearly. This time around? The woman actually had to say, "We're people, and we want to vote. We're right here: talk to us." I was about to intervene, because christ she shouldn't have to say that, when I heard someone else with a clue take over. One guess whether the machine worked, though.

In general, I've found that the inaccessibility beggars the imagination. An important part of it is the training: none of us get training in how to set up, operate, or fix the accessible machines, just for starters, and it goes from there. Surprisingly, the DC Board of Elections & Ethics used as part of the training what I found to be a remarkably good video on working with voters as disabilities – it was the follow-through that they were lousy on, of course. (Incidentally, they did also recognize that people with disabilities may actually want to be pollworkers themselves, which I found startlingly forward-looking of them.)
codeman38: Osaka from Azumanga Daioh: 'I live in my own little world, but it's OK... they know me here!' (Osaka)

Accessibility meta-fail

[personal profile] codeman38 2009-08-09 12:47 am (UTC)(link)
Funny, I can't find any captioning on that DC Election Board video...
hilarytamar: the Statue of Liberty in a wheelchair (posts--wheelchair Liberty)

Re: Accessibility meta-fail

[personal profile] hilarytamar 2009-08-09 03:17 am (UTC)(link)
Naturally. That would require them to look at their own videos. No, I agree, the video absolutely assumes pollworkers are, as it were, Us-the-Ablebodied and not Them-the-PWDs. What startled me was that it pretty explicitly took as its premise the idea that it was the pollworkers' job to enable voters with disabilities to vote and not the job of the PWDs to adapt themselves to the polling place or to subject themselves to pitying 'help'. Given the rest of the crap, I'm thrilled to see that somebody somewhere in the Board of Elections with enough authority to sign off on the video has the beginnings of a clue. Maybe one of these years they'll even watch the goddamned thing.
pne: A picture of a plush toy, halfway between a duck and a platypus, with a green body and a yellow bill and feet. (Default)

[personal profile] pne 2009-06-16 09:43 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not familiar with the American voting system at all (Y'all have machines? We vote paper ballot, with a pencil, and X marks the spot!), so I don't know what that would look like for Blind voters.

I live in Germany, and I gather that an association for the Blind issues plastic Braille templates for elections.

I've never seen one, but I assume that you somehow put the paper ballot into the plastic template, which has holes over the circles for your X, and the name of the party/candidate written in Braille next to each circle, so you know where to put your X by reading the names and picking the one you want to vote for, then finding the circle hole with your finger and making the mark inside it.