dignity-disability-rights

DISABILITY RIGHTS AND ACCESIBILITY

A truly free nation is one where every citizen can participate fully — no barriers, no exclusions, no second-class status. Americans with disabilities deserve more than just compliance — they deserve equality, opportunity, and independence. Accessibility isn’t charity; it’s civil rights in action.

THE PROBLEM

  • Despite the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), many public spaces, businesses, and websites remain inaccessible.

  • People with disabilities are twice as likely to live in poverty and face huge gaps in employment.

  • Public transit, housing, and digital systems are still built for the majority, not for everyone.

  • Disabled Americans are often forced into institutional care or lose benefits if they attempt to work or save.

  • Accessibility complaints take years to resolve, and enforcement is inconsistent from state to state.

The law may say “equal access,” but daily life still says “not yet.”

OUR PLAN - FULL ACCESS, FULL LIVES

We will bring the promise of disability rights into the modern era — everywhere, for everyone:

  • Enforce and Expand the ADA — Modernize accessibility standards for 21st-century life, including digital access, autonomous transit, and emerging tech.

  • Fair Wage Guarantee — End subminimum wage exemptions that allow employers to pay disabled workers less than the federal minimum.

  • Employment & Training Programs — Incentivize inclusive hiring, adaptive workplaces, and entrepreneurship among people with disabilities.

  • Universal Design Standards — Require all federally funded construction and technology to meet full-access principles from the ground up.

  • Protect SSI & Medicaid Independence — Remove penalties for work, marriage, or savings that trap people in poverty.

  • Accessible Housing & Transit Investment — Prioritize ramps, elevators, paratransit, and adaptive technology as core infrastructure, not afterthoughts.

  • Digital Accessibility Law — Mandate full compliance for websites, apps, and communication tools under the ADA umbrella.

WHY IT MATTERS

Accessibility isn’t a special accommodation — it’s the foundation of equality.
When society removes barriers, everyone benefits — the student who learns better, the worker who contributes, the veteran who reenters, the elder who stays connected.Freedom without access isn’t freedom at all.

“Accessibility isn’t about disability — it’s about freedom. Build a world where everyone can get through the same door.”

Scroll to Top