Showing posts sorted by relevance for query heumann. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query heumann. Sort by date Show all posts

Collaboration-Cooperation

My hero, Judy Heumann turns 75 on Dec 18th. Happy Birthday Judy!!


Back in 2019 I had the opportunity to interview the legendary disability civil rights activist, Judy Heumann, for UC Berkeley's "The Daily Californian". 

What an amazing conversation it was too. I prepared for the interview by reading up everything on her online, including the 466 pages of oral interviews archives of the Disability Rights Movement in UC Berkeley's Bancroft Library. 

Of course with any newspaper article, there is a word limit, so any writeup goes through multiple rounds of edits and reorganization of material and focusing on just a few things, so a lot of the conversation ends up getting left out. But Judy had so much advise for us disabled folks. So here is my longer early uncut/unedited draft of our conversation (with a lot of her original quotes) so we can continue to learn from her.

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Collaboration-Cooperation: A conversation with Judy Heumann


When I entered UC Berkeley as one of the first two non speaking autistics, I knew that Berkeley had been a key city in the Disability Rights Movement (DRM), though I was a little fuzzy about the details. Growing up, you are only exposed to a little slice of your world of disability and the issues surrounding your specific disability. I had of course heard of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), as it had dominated much of my school years. Though at times flawed in its implementation, IDEA was this wonderful law that gave children with disabilities like me the legal right to a free and appropriate education in the public school system in the least restrictive environment. Prior to its 1975 precursor, The Education for All Handicapped Children Act, children like me were denied the right to schooling. But I did not know a lot more, for I do not remember disability history being highlighted in any of my high school history textbooks. 

It was my Disability Studies classes here on campus that opened my eyes to the rich history of the efforts made to ensure civil rights for this often marginalized and overlooked minority. Over the summer, I also had the opportunity to attend the Autistic Self Advocacy Network’s (ASAN) campus inclusion leadership program to learn more about autistic identity and disability justice. It led me to wonder -  if I as a disabled person knew so little, how then could others without a disability know about the issues surrounding disability and become our allies in the struggle for our civil rights.

It was therefore a privilege to interview UC Berkeley alumna Judy Heumann, a lifelong civil rights advocate for people with disabilities and a leader in the DRM. It was a pleasure discussing these issues with her as it not only improved my own knowledge but also make me think and kept me on my toes, as she would at times turn the questions back on me, and ask me for my thoughts.

Any introduction to Huemann cannot do justice to her accomplishments. An incomplete list follows. Heumann became a wheelchair user due to childhood polio, and has challenged the system at every turn from a young age. She had been denied access to her school as she was considered a fire hazard. She sued and won the right to a teaching license from the New York Board of Education. She was involved in the United Nations Convention of the Rights of People with Disabilities and in the passing of important disability legislations in the US like IDEA, Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. She has worked in key roles for the Clinton and Obama administrations, the World Bank and is a senior fellow at the Ford Foundation. 

 Closer to home, she helped set up the first Center for Independent Living (CIL), here in Berkeley and served as its Deputy Director from 1975-82. She co-founded the World Institute of Disability (WID) in 1983 in Oakland with a focus on policy issues. 

Most famously Heumann led 150 people with disabilities in the “504 sit-in”, the longest sit-in in US history, lasting 28 days, at the San Francisco federal building housing the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), memorialized in Drunk History. The list just goes on.

We started the conversation on when disability rights “solidified” into an actual movement. According to Heumann, the movement had started in the late 1940s itself but just became more prominent after World War II. But in terms of impact, given the CDC numbers of 56 million people with disabilities and 1 billion worldwide, Heumann feels the movement has far from solidified, is still emerging and very much in a developmental period.


Heumann confirmed what I’d heard mentioned or implied in my Disability Studies classes on campus that Berkeley’s DRM history tended to be chauvinistic. “Many women in the movement are not getting the credit they should,” both in Berkeley and nationally, said Heumann. She attributed it in part to the way the women’s movement itself had been evolving, with the women’s movement itself not appropriately represented by women with disabilities. But she felt the situation has changed in the last 30-40 years with disabled women taking on more positions of prominence. 

She drew attention to some women with disabilities in leadership positions that came to her mind at both national and international levels. At the national level were the late Martha Bristo , Rebecca Cokley, Maria Town, Katherine Perez, Sandy Ho, Haben Girma, and Julia Bascom. At the International level were Rosangela Berman Bieler, Ola Abu Alghaib, and Yetnebersh Nigussie. She was quick to point out that her list was both small and incomplete as there were so many people at this point.

We then discussed what had changed between the DRM in its earlier days and now. She pointed out though the DRM had been around for fifty to sixty years, initially cross-disability groups worked separately. She attributed one of the big changes to the “recognition we needed to be able to come together [cross-disability] on important pieces of legislation started in the late sixties, seventies and resulted in many things including our ability to get the ADA passed,” It was the realization that they were not going to get the support of elected bodies like state legislature and the congress unless they came together. A larger group also meant more sophistication and the ability to have a wider agenda like the “inclusion of disability related issues outside of the disability community,” said Heumann. 


“Recognition we needed to be able to come together [cross-disability] on important pieces of legislation ... resulted in many things including our ability to get the ADA passed." 



She also drew attention to my being able to work for the Daily Californian as an excellent example of laws like IDEA and ADA at work. She pointed out that before 1975 at least 1 million disabled children were not allowed in schools. “A very important part of what is slowly happening in the US is students, including students with more significant disabilities are going to school and like you have gotten into Berkeley, a highly prestigious school and I presume you are getting accommodations at school and you are obviously feeling more a part of the school because you are going out for things like writing for the newspaper. So I think that’s slowly what’s changing,” said Heumann.

“A very important part of what is slowly happening in the US is students, including students with more significant disabilities are going to school and like you have gotten into Berkeley, a highly prestigious school ... you are obviously feeling more a part of the school because you are going out for things like writing for the newspaper.”


The other positive thing she highlighted is that a growing number of disabled people are feeling proud of who they were and not hiding their disability and attributed this to the growth of the independent living movement. She added that parents of children with disabilities are also organizing more.

The conversation then turned to the current pressing issues in the DRM. Heumann could not overstress discrimination, which can come through lack of awareness, the ramification being “denying us opportunities.” One barrier is that many who are disabled are not identifying as disabled, so part of the challenge was to help people become stronger and see that discrimination was wrong regardless of who it was impacting in the disabled community. 

“I think when we feel we are being discriminated against, we need to talk about it as such,” said Heumann. People also needed to feel like they are a part of their own community and not stigmatized for being disabled in that community.

“I think when we feel we are being discriminated against, we need to talk about it as such,”


Cross-disability was another issue according to Heumann. The DRM needed to help people across various forms of disabilities to feel they are part of a single movement so that we can better articulate legislative measures needs for the entire community as in the case of employment. 

"Employers need to look at disability like they are looking at other diversity communities"


Heumann would like to see more legislative policy changes so that “employers are looking at disability like they are looking at other diversity communities.” She did not want to hear continual stories of people like her friend, turn down good jobs that they are well qualified for, due to a fear of losing state health benefits and personal attendant services. Heumann underlined that the area of employment needed to be looked at very closely. There is currently a huge disincentive for people with more significant disabilities on Medi-Cal and Social Security benefits from being productively employed.

There is currently a huge disincentive for people with more significant disabilities on Medi-Cal and Social Security benefits from being productively employed.


Heumann felt that much more attention should be paid to poor families who are not able to devote the time and attention needed to obtain services for their children. As a result, those children are being adversely affected and not getting the appropriate services under IDEA.

From the viewpoint of an outsider, Heumann felt a critical issue in the autism arena is to help ensure that people with communication disabilities (whether it is autism or other disability like deafness) get mechanisms and technology in a timely manner with the presumption of competence. “Whatever the cause of the different types of communication, we need to be working with children really really early on and trying different mechanisms that can work,” said Heumann. She pointed to the new non-profit Communication First, of which she is a director, working to advance the civil rights for people with communication disabilities.


“Whatever the cause of the different types of communication, we need to be working with children really really early on and trying different mechanisms that can work,”


In order for “vulnerable populations” to move up to education and employment, Heumann underscored how we need to be working more comprehensively with these populations. This was a concept that was stressed during my week with the ASAN program - that we can help the whole community by supporting the needs of the most vulnerable group amongst us.

Heumann also thought the message being given to families of children with autism at the time of a child’s diagnosis depends on “people’s perceptions of what we are or are not able to do.” So she encourages families to interact more with organizations like ASAN and spend more time with adult autistics so that families have a better understanding of the richness of the community. Autistics need to spend time with other autistics and have available a variety of mentorship programs (ASAN program being an example), but on a regular basis, to get a positive understanding of what is possible.

Heumann laughingly credited her Brooklyn origins to her personal qualities quoting the saying, ”New York City - if you can make it here, you can make it anywhere.” On a more serious note she pointed to fortitude as a personal strength as, “at some point I really had to make a decision as to whether or not I was going to allow discrimination to adversely affect me without fighting for change.“ She added that networking is also important to her as she likes to work with other people and stressed that for networking “it’s important to also have friends from diverse communities.”

“At some point I really had to make a decision as to whether or not I was going to allow discrimination to adversely affect me without fighting for change.“


What Heumann would like to be remembered for is her belief that “we need to be fighting for an end to discrimination for all people [and for] collaboration cooperation.” She explained that change itself may take time, but in the meantime we cannot accept no, and need to be pushing as hard as possible when fighting for our rights. She would also like to be remembered for talking to college students like me and others - a reason she does interviews like the current one is because she enjoys the two way interactive flow where, “you’re getting information from me and I’m getting it from you.”

Change itself may take time, but in the meantime we cannot accept no... We need to be fighting for an end to discrimination for all people and for collaboration- cooperation.”


Even as she continues to work in other areas, Huemann recently investigated the representation (or lack thereof) of disability in the media culminating in a detailed report. Essentially, she found that disability is being left out of the conversation even as the changing face of media now is all about diversity. She pointed out that we are learning so much more about people of color, sexual orientation and religious issues through the media, but “still only learning a little bit about us, that’s because disabled people are not playing prominent enough roles...The absence of disability in the media continues to result in stigma and discrimination.” In addition there has to be authentic representation, that it, disabled characters have to be played by actors with disabilities and not by non-disabled actors. Equally important is the fact that people with disabilities are adversely affected if they don’t see themselves represented in TV, movies and documentaries. Heumann discusses these issues and more in her new memoir, “Being Heumann: An Unrepentant Memoir of a Disability Rights Activist.”

The conversation then turned closer to home, to her time in Berkeley and the Bay Area. Heumann had needed to do a masters after suing the New York Board of Education for a teaching license and had been accepted into Columbia. Heumann stated that she may not have joined UC Berkeley if Ed Roberts had not reached out initially and sparked her interest. They had not known each other before then. Roberts had been calling to identify emerging leaders and asked if she would be interested in two campus departments - Public Health and City & Regional Planning - that were then recruiting students with disabilities. With the help of the late Prof. Henrick Blum, who later became her faculty advisor, she joined the School of Public Health in 1975.

In the Bancroft Library’s Disability Rights and Independent Movement Oral History Project archives, containing 466 pages of interviews with Heumann- she had stated that “For some reason, in graduate school I didn't feel the same kind of fear around tests.” As a Berkeley student I just had to ask if that was due to being in 'Berkeley.' Heumann laughingly agreed that part of it had to do with being in Berkeley because “it was really very exciting to be able to be around so many disabled people that were fighting for the same thing, you know fighting to strengthen our movement and to remove barriers and it was also easier to socialize because you know Berkeley is much smaller so one could get around this city much easier.” She added that academically, graduate school was also more essays, class participation, discussions and smaller classes focused more narrowly on a field of study which made it easier.


Heumann felt that as more colleges are in compliance with Section 504 and becoming more accessible, life is becoming better for students with disabilities on campuses. This is in sharp contrast to the time when she had her School of Public Health classes in the old Warren Building way off Shattuck Ave. Since that building had inaccessible bathrooms, she would have to come all the way to the Disabled Students Program (DSP) on Bancroft Ave to get somebody to help her go to the bathroom. Then she would have to travel all the way back to Warren to get to class.

Heumann then spoke of her years in Berkeley with the CIL and the WID. Highlights for her was how they were learning to work together with other political organizations and different groups all fighting for equality. She stressed that they were doing work cross-age (from children through seniors), cross-race and cross-disability with organizations like the Asian Health Clinics to what used to be called the Over-Sixties Clinic (Collaboration-Cooperation). She also liked how the CIL was growing with a staff reaching 200 at one point.

This was also the time when they were “learning how to network effectively, establishing goals and timelines about when we want certain things to happen and living up to them,” said Heumann, which proved useful at the time of the 504 sit-ins. Heumann pointed out that much of what she had been saying during the course of this interview was an important part of what happened with 504.

The Rehabilitation Act had been passed in 1973 itself, with Section 504 of the law finally giving voice to the issue of discrimination by stating that any program that received federal funds could not discriminate against anyone with disabilities. Section 504 is widely regarded as the first disability civil rights law in the United States. However. Secretary Joseph Califano was not signing off on the 504 regulations. A law without regulations to enforce its implementation essentially has no teeth. Heumann pointed to the cross-disability organization American Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities (ACCD), of which she was a member, leading the effort to get the regulations out of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW). The disability community had been growing increasingly unhappy with the stalling. ACCD finally issued a deadline ultimatum and followed through with demonstrations and sit-ins at eight HEW regional headquarters all over the country. The 28 day long San Francisco federal building sit-in at by 150 people with disabilities was crucial in swinging the momentum towards signing of the regulations by Califano.

Heumann felt a reason the Bay Area 504 sit-in was so successful was because the CILs played an important role and California had way more CILs before any other state. By 1976, California had eight CILs versus one in Michigan and one in Massachusetts. As a result, “we were able to organize, we were able to work with labor unions we had good relationships with the media and I think all those things resulted in our ability to be successful with the 504 regulations,“ said Heumann.

She would like to remind disabled students and their allies to go online and look at the Power of 504, a video produced by the Defense Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF), Drunk History and her Ted Talk to learn more about 504. For Heumann, the 504 demonstrations underscore the importance of collaboration as they were supported not just by the disability community but by other groups like unions, church groups, farm workers, etc. The 504 regulations helped set the stage for the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act.

I also asked Heumann what advice she would give for the younger generation?
How do they go about “articulating” needs and see opportunities, as civil rights seems such a huge term and a bit overwhelming? 
How could young people get involved to shape the movement? 
How could they build allies amongst the non-disabled population? 
And did she have any advice for both the disabled community and their non-disabled allies?

Heumann started off by telling students that working inter-generationally and cross-disability, “will strengthen our engagement [as] we have different levels of knowledge and expertise.” Its the power of collaboration-cooperation. She also pointed out that a major weakness of the disability movement is that it is not documented enough. Knowing “where we’ve been and where we are [helps us with] where we want to go.” So she advises students to know your history, for knowledge made you better equipped to play a meaningful role. Then, when you come across an opportunity or barrier that affects the community, you will know if its a tech issue or something else. The “where we want to go” part is also an important part of the intergenerational and cross-disability discussion.


Knowing “where we’ve been and where we are [helps us with] where we want to go.” 


She underlined that we also should understand the needs of others so that we can speak on each others behalf and call on each other for support. So communication was very important for Heumann who advised seeking out others on college campuses and high schools. She would like to see disability brought into the curricula, not just as a subject of disability studies, but integrated into academic work across the board.

“I know a disability cultural center is going to be happening” on campus, stated Heumann [note: UC Berkeley did get a Disability Cultural Center in 2021]. She added that disabled students should not just limit themselves to disability organizations but also consider joining or working with other cultural centers so that you can learn from each other. “Do not be fearful of speaking up and looking at creating change” said Heumann.

For students in other countries, Heumann advised looking up the growing number of disability organizations in those countries and seeing if you want to work with them. She also added that students should get involved in issues that the previous generation did not have to contend with like the impact of the environment and climate change. 

“Use social media more, reach out, speak to more groups and continue to work collaboratively and invite people in to speak so that we can be learning and talking together” said Heumann.

“Use social media more, reach out, speak to more groups and continue to work collaboratively and invite people in to speak so that we can be learning and talking together”


 

@harisri108 #Redefine_the_Table #autism #belonging

When a President Drops in


Not every day when a President drops in on a Zoom Call and begins with an image description of himself. #CripCampVirtual @BarackObama "This is Barack Obama.And I am joining you from my home in Washington, D.C. I'm sitting at my desk. I'm wearing a denim shirt and behind me is a book case with books and photos of my family and there's a picture of me swimming in Hawaii which is where I was born and my hair is much grayer than it was just a few years ago.

And then President Obama brings on his guest, the only and only Judy Heumann

Absolutely unexpected appearance but absolutely amazing. Read on....

When a President does an Image Description on a Zoom call
Hari Srinivasan 
It's not everyday when a President drops in as a surprise guest on a zoom webinar and begins with an image description of himself. Image Description is an important and much needed accessibility feature for many in the disability community. 
“This is  Barack Obama and I am joining you from my home in Washington, D.C. I'm sitting at my desk. I'm wearing a denim shirt and behind me is a bookcase with books and photos of my family and there's a picture of me swimming in Hawaii which is where I was born and my hair is much grayer than it was just a few years ago.”
The event on May 28, 2020 was the Crip Camp 2020, the official Virtual Experience, a webinar series focusing on community building for activists and advocates in the disability justice space. The virtual crip camp experience is considered almost an extension of the documentary Crip Camp, which in President Obama’s words is the “story of a bunch of teenagers at Camp Janed who left camp thinking they could lead a worldwide movement for disability rights...saying to each other that if we worked together, we can make a difference and create the kind of world that treats us with the dignity and the respect that we deserve and recognize as our talents and our gifts and our power and our ability to achieve extraordinary things” 
And these teenagers did just that with the likes of Judy Heumann who led the longest sit-in US history at the SF federal building in 1977 to get the Section 504 regulations signed. Barack and Michelle Obama were executive producers for the film Crip Camp under their Higher Ground Productions banner. 

President Obama said the movie had been important to both him and Michelle Obama as they had wanted to give a platform to lift new voices that were underrepresented in the media, inspire people to get involved in their communities and pass the torch to the next generation of activists and city leaders. President Obama stressed that every movement begins with ordinary people coming together to make their voices heard. He pointed to the last few months as a testament to the fact that young people are still ready to make a better America and a better world. When people get involved they recognize their own power. 

President Obama had celebrated the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (or ADA) while in office and reminded everyone of the hard work and sacrifice it took as we approach the 30th anniversary of the ADA this year. 

“Most of the problems we face are not going to be solved by any single individual or even any single group. We're going to have to work together. The question is then how do we find those bonds and that sense of common purpose that allows us to really have an impact and make a difference,” said President Obama during the Q&A session that followed. 

He went on to add that the starting point in building allies and movements was to recognize our first identity as that of a human being.  Tapping into this empathy, this commonality of fellow human beings, would be what compels you to regard a fellow human being to be of equal worth as you and make common cause to make sure that person isn't feeling that way. Progress happens when this perspective spreads to the entire nation and is reflected in our values and public policies.

President Obama was quick to acknowledge that being from a majority community he could not possibly understand everything a person with a disability could go through, but he hopes to be a fellow traveler on this planet as we all figure out how to promote more justice and kindness in the way we treat each other.

On the issue of balancing activism work with the practices of self care for longevity, President Obama had some advice. The first was to recognize that we cannot do this alone, we cannot sustain our task unless we develop and maintain relationships of friends outside of work; the people who laugh with us and will support us and pick us up when we are down.  

The second was to recognize that you will not be effective if you are run down. Even if you have greater demands on your time to maintain health it is not a sign of weakness, rather a sign of strength that you recognise what it takes to make you more effective. 

The third thing was while people in the fields of public policy, organizing and social work were not in it for the money, it was important to not be taken advantage of by the organizations you worked for. You are working hard, so you need to be paid a living wage, you need to be able to pay your bills, have health care and be able to take a vacation. 

The final piece of advice by President Obama was maintaining perspective for, as he points out, change rarely comes quickly. He stressed that you have to work on what is immediate but also have that longer term perspective which will help you be more forgiving of yourself. Change is not a sprint, rather a marathon relay where you will have setbacks, and may even have to compromise at times. We take the baton from people before us, run the best we can with it, and then pass it on to the next person. 

President Obama then brought his own guest to the webinar, Judy Heumann, who he introduced as, “somebody I have admired, who has helped to make unbelievable change …[and] who's resume is too long to list.” 

He went on to ask Heumann to give her perspective on the relationship between social activism and the government passing legislation as she has worked in both areas. President Obama felt both were a continuum though he acknowledged that young people often feel disappointed at the seeming slowness of government. 

For Heumann, the stories told in Crip Camp showcased the great potential which society had not seen or let happen. According to her, people don’t know these stories because the media has not been covering disability appropriately or involving people with disabilities in telling these stories - whether in advertising, children’s books, television shows, documentaries or movies. 

She added that what was valuable about these Crip Camp sessions was that people were speaking to each other and sharing information which can have a powerful impact. She also stressed the importance of collaboration and coalitions, cross-disability, cross-civil-rights and human rights in this process. 

Heumann also underscored the importance of inclusion of people with disabilities in both the private and public sectors. “It was one thing to be able to talk broadly about the types of discrimination we were experiencing but then we needed also to be able to become specialists. We needed to learn how laws were made. How policies are developed. How they're implemented,” said Heumann

She really appreciated that the Obama Administration had seen the importance of inclusion and bringing disabled people into the government.  Both Heumann and Obama expressed their disappointment at the failure of the 113th congress to ratify the Convention of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (or CRPD) during her time in the State Department under the Obama Administration.  Heumann hopes that if a new administration is voted in, one of the first issues that will be worked on is to get the CRPD ratified so that the US can join the other 181 nation signatories. 

As exciting as the presence of the distinguished guests had been, it was time to move on. Part of the Crip Camp experience included fireside chats led by disability Inclusion specialist and Camp director Andraea LaVant, where participants were asked to reflect and journal questions such as, “When did your disability advocacy journey start and how can able-bodied folks be better accomplices in disability advocacy?”

LaVant brought on camp guides Neil Carter and Sarah Blahovec to speak on the topic of civic engagement and your role in this movement. Carter is the founder of Nu View Consulting which has been spearheading political outreach campaigns. Blahovec is a disability advocate and political consultant from Elevate, which focuses on disability civic participation and voting rights.

The guides explained that civic engagement is essentially anything you do to make a difference to the civic life of your community and is valuable whether it happens from the comfort of your home or in public. Civic engagement can happen both inside the system such as by government officials or outside the system such as political campaigns that try to effect change. In order to decide which type of civic engagement to choose, you may have to look to your passion, your skillset, whether you are an introvert or extrovert who likes talking to people and how much free time you have without burning the candle at both ends. 

Carter and Blahovec gave practical examples on how to engage in civic engagement beyond registering to vote and going to vote. Write to or meet your legislators, as legislators are supposed to listen to their constituents, volunteer for community organizations, write an op-ed for your local newspaper or national paper, attend local government meetings such as the city council and school board. 

You could also join a political campaign from the local to national level and get involved in activities like phone banking or join committees. You could share and sign petitions through change.org, or join mutual aid groups to help your community as we have seen during this pandemic. 

An idea that is central to civic engagement is relational organizing - which means talking to your family and friends and getting them to do something. Both camp guides stressed that when it came to civic engagement there are roles for literally anyone. 

You could also run for political office. If you are a first time disabled candidate, there are programs like the Elevate program for training. They advise first timers to get involved in other campaigns to understand how it works as it is a tremendous undertaking. You could even start small like running for your local school council. 

A case study both Carter and Blahovec wanted to highlight in light of the recent protests was Black disabled lives who have endured police brutality. Unfortunately even in discussions of popular stories the fact of them being disabled is not mentioned. 

Carter and Blahovec then spoke of the obstacles to civic engagement. A lack of civility, yelling and lack of reasoned discussion only alienates the public. Lack of access to buildings or awareness leaves many people disillusioned. Then there is informed engagement, for instance some people are inaccurately saying that ADA allows you to not wear masks. Then of course for people with disability, there is a dearth of role models.

There is also a lack of civic and political skills which is tied to our underfunded education system, so children are not learning about what is happening in the country. Which is what makes the non-partisan #CripTheVote movement, so important, so that we can engage in an important and productive discussion about disability issues in the US. The hashtag, which went viral, is used to promote policy ideas and engage with elected officials both at the national and local levels. 

The Camp series which started in June and continues till August, covers a wide range of issues and speakers. Information on how to participate and recordings of previous camp sessions can be found at https://cripcamp.com/officialvirtualexperience/





Co-moderating a Judy Heumann Event








Got to be co-moderator at a webinar conversation for AAC users with the one and only Judy Heumann for AAC users organized by Communication First.


What can I say - she is just too incredible.



My Introduction of Judy Heumann at the Webinar (complete with image description). 


Hi. I’m Hari Srinivasan. I’ll begin with an image description of myself as that is another important accessibility feature for the disability community at large. Just another illustration of how accommodations come in many shapes and forms depending on your specific disability.


I’m a young college going male in his 20s of Indian American origin and with brown skin. I have short black hair and am wearing a yellow and blue cap with the word cal on the front. I’m wearing a dark blue shirt with the word Berkeley on it. I am sitting at my desk in front of my mac laptop in my room at my home. Behind me on the wall and on my closet door are various college banners and posters with words like University of California, Berkeley, Cal, Golden Bears, or catchy phrases like This is Bear Territory or Bear Den. Enter at your own risk.


We have with us today Judy Heumann, who in President Obama’s words, has helped bring about incredible change in this country and around the world. Judy is also featured in the recent documentary, Crip Camp, produced by the Obamas. During a surprise appearance at one of the virtual crip camps that are now going on, President Obama described the film as the story of a bunch of disabled teens who by getting together, awakened to their power to start a global movement for a world that would treat us with dignity and respect.


What had begun as a personal journey for Judy to overcome the obstacles in early education turned into a civil rights crusade, where she led 150 people with disabilities in the 5 o 4 Sit-in, the longest sit-in in U.S. history, lasting 28 days at the San Francisco federal building.


Can you just imagine?. Till then disability rights were not even thought of as civil rights!.

Section 5 o 4 is widely regarded as the first disability civil rights legislation.


Judy helped set up both the Center for Independent Living in Berkeley as well as the World Institute for Disability which focuses on policy issues.


Judy was also involved in the passing of most of the important disability legislation we know today such as the Americans with Disabilities Act, and United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and Section 5 o 4 of the Rehabilitation Act.


If my generation has a shot of being included in the education system today, it was because of laws like the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act that was set in place by giants like Judy.


Judy has been both an activist and government policy maker, serving kee roles in both the Clinton and Obama Administrations as well as the World Bank. Her social media platform, The Heumann Perspective explores intersectionality in disability rights.


And earlier this year Judy published her long awaited memoir, “Being Heumann, an unrepentant memoir of a disability rights activist.” The book is a must read. What is remarkable is that so much of her story is our story too. For example on page 21 is a line that goes. “I was conscious of feeling dismissed, categorized as unteachable and extraneous to society.” That experience is unfortunately still a reality for many of us A A C users today.


In the movie, Crip Camp too, Judy remarks, “We are being sidelined,” and I remember thinking, that’s still so true. It's deja vu!!.


I will just echo President Obama’s words when he said that Judy’s resume is just too long to list.


I have to add that I am so super proud to attend U C Berkeley, where giants like Judy created disability rights history. Last year I had the privilege of interviewing Judy for the Daily Californian. Not wanting to make an utter fool of myself, I was preparing by reading everything I could about her. There are over 460 pages of just her oral interviews alone in our library’s disability history archives. And a ton of other information online. Wow. I even had my questions looked over by my disabilities studies Professor, Victor Pineda, just to be sure I was not putting my foot in my mouth.


Any conversation or interview with Judy is never one way, she asks you questions right back. So it was a good thing I had done some homework. Along the way I was not quite sure who was interviewing who. I walked away in a daze that day. The final 2200 word article could not quite do justice to the conversation we had that day.


Judy had described fortitude as her personal strength during the interview. OMG, she is very much the Chingona or bad-ass girl that her husband calls her.


How do you manage to pull together this incredible non-stop amount of energy, Judy?.


And isn’t Judy’s virtual zoom background so appropriate and mysterious. She came riding in from the infinity of space. At the end of the call, we will see her ride back into that infinity


We hope to bring you all into this amazing conversation with Judy today. I expect she will have questions for the audience today as well.


====
Icing on the cake.... she remembered me... 💕

And Hari, you are an emerging star.
You are so great with your words, and when you ask me to be -- when you asked me to be interviewed for your article, I was not knowing what was going to happen, and it was a great experience.
Both as a Berkeley graduate, but also as a disability rights leader yourself.
It was great to be able to partake in that discussion.

Recording should be up on the Communication First website soon.




Collaboration Cooperation - An interview with Disability Rights Activist Judy Heumann



As Heumann points out, while change itself may take time, we cannot accept "no" in the meantime and need to be pushing as hard as possible when fighting for our rights. 

It was an honor and privilege to interview UC Berkeley alumna and disability civil rights activist Judy Heumann about the pressing issues of the day and her life of phenomenal work in this field. We could not get to everything of course (there is just too much) so just zoomed in on her Bay Area years. Judy also provided strategies and tips for the current-gen of students and their allies. The key, as she explains in so many different ways, is a phrase I absolutely love - "Collaboration Cooperation."

I was hard-pressed as to what to include (vs leave out) in the 2000 word limit article. She had so much to say.

I am so much in awe because as mentioned in the article, the reason students with "more significant disabilities" (like me) are going to college really is because of the groundbreaking path laid by leaders like Judy in making legislation like IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Ed Act) a reality. She totally and accurately points out that it shows ADA and IDEA at work.

Judy actually asked me during the interview if I felt I benefitted from IDEA and was rather amused at my "yes and no" response. The conflicts over my school district expectations of me did rather mess up my elementary & middle school years (& hence the qualifier).

But Just Think - before IDEA's 1975 precursor (Education for All Handicapped Children Act) came along (thanks to folks like Judy), most of us would not be allowed in public schools at all.

Without all the accommodations legislated by laws that let me access mainstream education, I could not be studying at Berkeley today.



Disability in Strength

A new mural titled “Disability is Strength, at Oakland Airport honors visionaries who helped 
build the movement for disability rights and independence, and present a vision for a future of full inclusion, rights and justice.The mural features disability rights pioneers Ed Roberts, Judith Heumann and Brad Lomax.

Judy Heumann, one of the great and recently deceased disability rights early advocates once said, "Independent Living isn't doing everything by yourself – it's being in control of how things are done."







Happy Platinum Birthday Judy

Wishing the remarkably bad-ass and quite amazing Judy Heumann a wonderful platinum birthday and many more to come.
(and an early 101th birthday greeting as well)
Short video of my greeting.
 






And make sure to see the longer The Heumann Perspective videos/ podcast tribute for her birthday.
#disabilityrights #disabilitylaw


Hindsight is 2020



This doc is a work in progress as I try to trackback the far -from-ordinary year we've been in. Most of the year ended up being dominated by this microscopic virus which suddenly changed all that we took for granted in the world around us letting us witness both the worst of times and the best of humankind. And if I don't talk about the political landscape - that's intentional. It's too emotion for the mind to handle.

January

Jan 1, 2020 was the dawn of a new decade, a year where this century would leave its teen years and enter into the heady years of the 20s.  I even wrote a poem for 2020 and another one Daily Cal Renaissance Man for the Daily Cal.

I'd been very excited about the courses I was to take in Spring especially Human Happiness. I had heard Professor Dacher Keltner speak during my Golden Bear Orientation and had waited for the opportunity to take this course. I'd even done an interview with him for the Daily Cal (Towards a Life of Meaning). And what a terrific course it turned out to be. I was Back in Wheeler Hall, my fav lecture hall covering topics one does not associate with academics - awe, gratitude, empathy. I was in total awe. Even got a shoutout by Prof Keltner during one lecture which was thrilling.

Discussion sections were in Dwinelle Hall on Thursdays from 5 to 6pm. As I stepped out of Dwinelle Hall after the discussion section, I would be greeted by the music of the Campanile, playing its concert. It was truly Happiness happens at Six. It was going to be another great year.

I was taking a Business Class for the first time at Haas Business School.

I'd finished the CITI training required by the IRB for research with human subjects and joined Prof Harvey's Lab, Rhe Golden Bear Mood and Sleep Research Clinic as an RA. Back also at the RadMad Disability Lab, teaching the Autism Decal and being on the board of SpectrumAtCal.

February

My family and I, all came down with a bad case of the flu early Feb and were quite sick for over one after the other. One has to wonder if we had a version of covid that time itself.

Feb 3, I was invite to join the ASAN board.

My birthday falls in February. I got to both celebrate with the weekender team and also with my family at an SF restaurant. Little did I know that would be my last restaurant outing for the year.
The coronavirus had started making some waves and uneasiness was creeping into the air. At my SpectrumAtCal meetings one of the other board members mentioned how worried she was about her family and the situation in China. But it was still a far away event in the minds of people living here.

March

Mar 5: I presented live at UCSF CME 19th Annual Dev Disabilities Conf. A Growth Mindset - Reimagining Possibilities for Minimally Speaking Autistics . I remember being told to be very careful not to touch anything, shake hands and did not spend a moment longer than necessary at the conference site. 

The coronavirus lockdown "Shelter-At-Home" went into full swing right after. Students were asked to go home and campuses started shutting down. 

April 

Education transitioned to a world of boxed figures on a laptop screen. Students and instructors both struggled to understand this new mode of instruction.

How did I cope? 
Cole (Current President of the student body, Spectrum and Cal) and I worked on interviewing candidates for the AY 20-21 board position including that of President. While I had never actively sought the role of President of Spectrum, I somehow I found myself as its first nonspeaking President for the upcoming year. 

A silver lining: Carbon emissions dropped dramatically across the world. Animals were rediscovering terrain they had been driven out of before. Nature seemed to be coming alive. 

May

May brought the "shelter-at-home" finals exams but no relief with respect to the coronavirus. 
My grades: Still hanging onto that 4.0 GPA. 

June

In the larger world Black Lives Matter movement gathered momentum with the protests against police brutality against Blacks. A memorial at the end of my street to the fallen bears testimony. 

I found myself busy with other things too. I was attending the 13 week Virtual Crip Camp which was such an interesting experience each week. There were even after parties. 


I was in a Stanford Neurodiversity Design Workshop. 

I was part of a Supported Decision Making Focus group. 

I kept writing for the  Daily Cal: Fixed

July 

Jul 17:  I got the chance to co-moderate a conversation with the one and only Judy Heumann on AAC, disability policy, activism, and much more. AAC Users chat with Disability Rights Legend, Judy Heumann 

Articles in the Daily Cal: #1Authentic Representation in Media #2 Superfest Shorts

July 26.  Quite the biggest surprise of my life, I think. I got a mention on President Obama's Instagram, that too on the 30th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act. 

August

8/13: I presented at the UCSB Disability Studies Initiative Summer Speaker Series. My presentation titled Potential and Possibities through a Disability Justice Lens  can be seen at the link.  

8/27: Just before college reopened I was in a Coronavirus Information Series with the Autism Society of America in a conversation with Chris Banks, President of ASA. College Advocacy and Beyond - Autism Society of America 

I start an internship with NeuroNav. 

Articles in the Daily Cal: #1ADA in Color , #2 Disability Visibility, , 

The fall semester at college was to be all online. To be frank, I was getting quite zoom fatigued already. 

My fifth semester leading the Autism DeCal at UC Berkeley. All remote this time. The classes were to be 2 hours long. So more lecture content was introduced. 

Even before its first formal board meeting, Spectrum at Cal was participating in the Mental Health Week events with 2 events of our own "Autistics Belong, An Intro to Spectrum" and "How to be an ally to Neurodivergents". More zoom meetings of course. 

September

California went through another year of crazy wildfires. Last year we were only affected by the smoke with a blanket of toxic air descending on us form fires up north. This year fires were close to home - a lot of places within the Bay Area evacuated. And with it the toxic air. 

Sep 9: Spectrum at Cal first Board Meeting for the semester. 

I co-authored this section from the Stanford Rebuild Project Anxiety as Comorbidity in Neurodiversity  which I had started towards the end of summer. 

Invited to be part of a Delphi panel by AASPIRE for an AutPROM Toolbox - a set of Patient-Reported Outcome Measures  that can be used to evaluate the effectiveness of services for autistic adults. What I enjoyed about this ex which ran through December was that it ran parallel to my Research Methods course which discussed the theoretical and statistical aspects of scale creation, so it was like seeing theory and real life application unfold at the same time. These are scales you read about in Psychology and I got see and comment on 50 of them. 

DeStigmatizing AutismConversation with Berkeley Seniors on their "Spilling the Cha Podcast" - where Eli and I discuss Spectrum StudentOrg , the Autism Decal and living with Autism.
Articles in the Daily Californian: The Social Dilemma. 

Articles in the NeuroNav Newsletter # Silver Linings & Creative Workarounds #  NeuroNav Launches SDP, # Meet Your Navigator Sabrina KappeThe Making of a Social Impact Organization

October

SpectrumAtCal held its own Black Autistic Lives Matter event.

I presented at the Stanford Neurodiversity Summit. Hari As PossibilityCollege Track.
October is Disability Awareness Month and Daily Cal came out with their first every Disability Special Issue. Quite ironic given that UC Berkeley is considered the birthplace of the disability rights movement. But really it better late than never and I'm so happy I was able to really get this issue off the ground and play a huge role in it besides writing 2 pieces for it. 


Somewhere in between were interesting academic courses, midterms and two projects.

November 

The year seemed to be rushing towards an end even as the turmoil of the political landscape was mentally stressing and endlessly exhausting. 

A busy month with three personal events and a video 

Transitions to Adulthood - ASAN Gala Panel 

Log Kya Kahenge (What will people say!) - Abelism in the South Asian Community
ACL Panel. A cross-group campus event. 

A Video on Why I vote for Disability Rights CA. 

A fever pitch buildup to the Elections. 

Articles in the NeuroNav Newsletter #1 The Importance of Gratitude #2 Love Each Other and wear a Mask

Spectrum at Cal held its acceptance week with a Research Panel and a Policy Panel. 

December

Dec 2: Prof. Victor Pineda said he'd nominated me to be on the Doha Debates show - how can you turn down a request like that. This year Doha Debates with host Nelufar Hedayat, was running a #DearWorldLive series addressing critical issues around the globe. The  Disability Justice Special on Dear World Live  was on Dec 2, UN International Persons with Disability Day. I was the student voice asking questions of the amazing Judy Heumann and Haben Girma 

Doha Debates also asked me for a separate message for World Disability Day. Here is my message on Inclusion and Belonging

Dec 3: The Opportunity of Education - Speaker at Neurodiversity: A Paradigm Shift, Conf by University College, Dublin, Ireland (video not up yet) 

Two Projects due. For my stigma & prejudice class and one to be done all in R for my Statistics Class. 

I'm super proud of all that SpectrumAtCal has been able to accomplish this semester despite it being a remote semester. We also kicked off a new Peer-to-Peer Mentorship program by partnering with WeEmbrace amongst other things. 

Final exams: Yes!! with the 4.0 GPA intact. I love my courses at Cal. 

Dec 22: I play host with guest, ASA CEO, Chris Banks for Autism Society of America's Coronavirus Information Series Year End Recap.

Covid: US/World , Cases 18.3K/77.9 Deaths 323K/1.71M

The elections are over but why still so much uncertainty. 


Mentally it has been a rough year. I have felt that I may have regressed in some areas that are more obvious and in ways I am not quite able to define. 

In a way I'm glad I had a lot of activities and work to mentally occupy my mind, there have been some amazing silver linings for me this year, so I can't say that 2020 has been a total wash.