|
Skip to make comment
|
Send to a friend
NZCPR
Guest Forum
Opinion piece by Karl du Fresne
11 July 2010
The Road
to Hell…
In
a column in The Dominion Post in February 2008, I wrote
that a law change requiring intellectually disabled workers to
be paid the legal minimum wage was a triumph of human rights
ideology over common sense. My column attracted a response
from Ruth Dyson, then the Minister for Disability Issues, who
told me in an email that in fact it was a triumph of fairness
and common sense over ideology.
I
remained unconvinced, and two years later decided to take a
closer look at what had happened following the Labour-led
government’s repeal of the Disabled Persons Employment
Promotion (DPEP) Act in November 2007, which in turn led to
the closure of 76 IHC sheltered workshops. What I learned,
from speaking to parents of intellectually disabled persons
and people working in the disability sector, confirmed my
initial impressions. If anything, things were worse than I
imagined.
In
an article published in the latest issue of The Listener,
I report that intellectually handicapped people who previously
gained a sense of fulfilment and camaraderie from going to
work each day in IHC sheltered workshops now spend much of
their time in empty, purposeless non-activities
euphemistically labelled “community participation”. This
often consists of walks, going shopping or going to the pool
– none of which is any substitute, parents say, for the work
they used to do.
I
spoke to parents of disabled adults all over New Zealand who
felt betrayed and angry over the changes imposed in 2007. I
use the word “betrayed” because the law change was
enthusiastically supported by IHC – the very organisation
those parents looked to for support. And although the
government and IHC insisted there was widespread consultation
beforehand, the parents I interviewed, many of them
long-standing members of IHC, refute that. One said parents
were shellshocked by the announcement that IHC’s sheltered
workshops were to close. Another had heard only rumours before
the changes were announced and said she suspected that the
people consulted were a vocal group of the
“higher-achieving” disabled who didn’t speak for those
with intellectual disabilities.
One
mother told me that her fit and active adult daughter, who had
previously worked in an IHC team doing outdoor jobs that
provided a constructive outlet for her energy, had suffered
behavioural problems since IHC terminated her job and was now
subject to a court order. A man who ran an intellectually
disabled crew that did lawnmowing, firewood and garden work
says his former crew members, deprived of the stimulation of
daily work and thrown back into the company of people who were
more seriously impaired, have regressed since IHC pulled the
plug on their employment. There are hundreds of similar
stories.
So
what’s going on here?
How come IHC, an organisation supposedly committed to
the wellbeing of the intellectually disabled, was party to a
law change that seems to have greatly disadvantaged many of
the very people it purports to help? The answer, as I write in
my Listener article, is that IHC has been captured by a
rights-based ideology that politicised the treatment of the
disabled. In the process, it has distanced itself (in fact
alienated itself might be more accurate) from many parents
with intellectually handicapped children – the very people
who have traditionally been its most loyal and supportive
members. The depth of feeling against the IHC that I
encountered, both from parents and IHC caregivers (though the
latter wouldn’t dare be identified for fear of
repercussions), was striking. The impression I got was of an
organisation out of touch with its grassroots. In fact a
secondary thread in my article touches on the dangers that
arise when former voluntary charities such as IHC morph into
large, politicised bureaucracies that depend on the government
for funding (as IHC does, receiving more than $200 million a
year from the state).
As
one parent pointed out to me, a conflict of interest occurs
when the organisation charged with lobbying the government on
behalf of the intellectually disabled is also beholden to the
government for money. The pressure to fall into line with
government policy – in fact, to effectively become a de
facto arm of government – is obviously formidable.
Before
I go any further, some background. The DPEP Act, passed in
1960, exempted sheltered workshops run by IHC and other
providers of services for the disabled from having to pay the
legal minimum wage. The act was founded on the assumption that
the disabled were not productive enough to justify being paid
a proper wage. Most parents supported the arrangement because
it provided the intellectually disabled with productive daily
activity in a safe, supportive environment. And though the
sheltered workshop employees were generally paid only a token
amount for their work, parents and caregivers insist that
money is of little meaning to many intellectually disabled
people. As Southland Disability Enterprises manager Ian Beker
put it to me, self-esteem and comradeship are far more
important.
In
the face of a rising clamour for disabled people’s rights,
however, none of that seemed to matter. Labour came to power
in 1999 bent on freeing the disabled from the shackles of
discrimination. Cheered on by disabled activists, it created
an Office of Disability Issues and appointed Dyson as the
first Minister.
As
with many ideologically driven changes, the new approach
involved a redefining of language. According to the Disability
Strategy issued by the Labour government in 2001, “Disability
is not something individuals have. What individuals have are
impairments.” Disability, the strategy said, was what
happened when other people created barriers that prevented the
impaired from enjoying a full life. A similar ideology held
sway at the Human Rights Commission, which proclaimed:
“Disability is seen as a result of how society treats its
citizens.”
Under
this new philosophy, sheltered workshops were seen as
exploiting a vulnerable minority. Green MP Sue Bradford went
further, describing them in Parliament as a form of
“systemic oppression” underpinned by a “paternalistic”
charity model.
The
Disability Strategy was followed by another document called
Pathways to Inclusion, which outlined how the new philosophy
would affect vocational services for the intellectually
handicapped. In it, Dyson said people with disabilities had
told the government they wanted to determine their own futures
and be treated as valued members of society.
The
IHC bureaucracy in Wellington embraced the new rights-based
approach and lobbied in favour of the act’s repeal, as did
trade unions and the Disabled
Persons Assembly, an articulate lobby group which purports to
represent all people with disabilities. IHC’s
director of advocacy, Trish Grant, wrote: “Times have
changed. We now understand that people with intellectual
disabilities have the same needs and aspirations as anyone
else.” The attitudes reflected in the DPEP Act, she wrote,
were discriminatory and contravened the Human Rights Act.
Grant
claimed that IHC had talked to thousands of intellectually
disabled people and their families, “and they have told us
consistently that they want opportunities for real work and
they want real pay for the work they do.” Strangely, none of
the parents I spoke to recalled being consulted. Some of them
suspect the consultation was mainly with the Disabled Persons
Assembly, which they say is dominated by well-educated,
articulate people with physical and sensory rather than
intellectual disabilities.
Under
the new legislation, the automatic exemption from the minimum
wage laws was wiped. In the interests of creating a “fully
inclusive society”, disabled workers were to be granted the
same rights as everyone else, including the right to earn the
minimum wage, join unions and take annual holidays.
Everyone
working in sheltered workshops was to be individually
assessed. Those deemed capable of working in mainstream
employment would be helped to find real jobs on the open
market while those not capable of earning a minimum wage would
be able to apply for an under-rate worker’s permit –
effectively an exemption from the minimum wage law – and be
paid according to their productivity.
One
result of the change was that a new layer of bureaucracy was
imposed on the disability sector in the form of Labour
Department inspectors who must now individually assess each
disabled worker every year. Providers of disability services
say the increased administrative burden has added greatly to
their costs.
But
a much more significant consequence was that IHC, which
operated 70 percent of the country’s sheltered workshops,
decided they were no longer compatible with its vision of a
“fully inclusive” society and closed them all down. Chief
executive Ralph Jones said IHC’s primary role was to support
people with intellectual disabilities, not run business
enterprises for them. Instead, IHC would concentrate on
supporting its service users into “mainstream” employment.
It
wasn’t just a question of IHC’s sheltered workshops no
longer being economically viable, because other providers of
similar services, having obtained the necessary exemptions
from the minimum wage, continue to operate.
The
insensitivity with which aspects of the change were handled by
IHC is extraordinary. In one town, intellectually handicapped
people apprehensive about what the new regime might mean were
assured that it would help them get jobs that paid much better
money. This went down very well, I was told, until they asked
what sort of jobs they would be getting. The list included
“restaurant worker”, “library worker” and “pool
attendant” – occupations that a caregiver described as
“spectacularly inappropriate”.
In
Blenheim, parents were astonished when their intellectually
handicapped children, who worked in an IHC-owned garden
centre, were given a jargon-laden memo advising them that they
would become “self advocates” running “micro
enterprises” and would have to set up bank accounts and
negotiate payments with clients. Some of those given the memo
could neither read nor write. (The garden centre,
incidentally, was subsequently bought by a hastily formed
trust after IHC, to the indignation of the local community
which had supported the business for 25 years, announced it
was going to be closed and sold.)
IHC’s
critics concede that many higher-achieving intellectually
disabled people have benefited from the change. They have
found mainstream jobs and are earning better money. But the
repeal of the DPEP Act has not been so kind to the many former
employees of IHC sheltered workshops who are incapable of
“real” work and are now, since the closures, effectively
idle. They have borne the cost of the IHC’s determination to
pursue a rights-based philosophy.
Even
for some who found “real” jobs, the outcomes have not
always been ideal. Maori Party MP Hone Harawira told
Parliament in 2007, when the transition to the new regime was
already well advanced, that some intellectually disabled
employees were teased and bullied in their workplaces.
In Invercargill, parent Marion Miller estimated that 50
percent placed in jobs soon resigned because they couldn’t
handle the pressure.
The
idealistic theory behind the changes was that intellectually
disabled workers would be scattered around the community.
But as one mother said to me, intellectually disabled
people greatly value the camaraderie that comes from being
among their peers with caregivers who understand their needs.
Only the most capable are comfortable working in a
“normal” environment.
Moreover,
as an experienced caregiver explained to me, many
intellectually disabled people need emotional, physical or
behavioural support and some take a daily cocktail of powerful
medications. “If a dose is skipped, changed, lost, muddled
or forgotten, the roll-on effects can be dangerous.” It was
safer and much less hassle, the caregiver said, for an
employer to hire a student or retiree for the same money.
Much
of this, however, seems to have been overlooked by IHC in its
headlong rush into a brave new world where everyone enjoys the
same rights.
There
are parallels here with the mental health reforms of the
1990s, when thousands of people suffering psychiatric illness
were unceremoniously bundled out of institutions – often
disregarding the concerns of their families – on the pretext
that it was their right to live independently in the
community. The result was that mental patients who had
previously had the benefit of a secure environment in which
they were fed, clothed, medicated and given a warm bed were
let loose, effectively to fend for themselves. It was no
coincidence that in the years following
de-institutionalisation, the country was appalled by a spate
of horrendous crimes perpetrated by severely mentally ill who
had previously been under proper supervision.
In
the case of the changes affecting the intellectually disabled,
the sad irony is that the people I wrote about in The Listener
are now much less engaged in their communities than they were
previously. This is the opposite of the effect intended.
Intellectually
disabled people who mowed lawns and gathered
firewood, for example, were out and about in their communities
every day. An intellectually disabled woman who worked in an
IHC business unit that provided ironing services in Taupo
would help do the banking each day and got to know people
along the route. When her parents walked down the street with
her they were amazed at how many people greeted her by name.
Now, in the brave new post DPEP regime, many of these people
are ghetto-ised in day care facilities.
The
irony doesn’t escape George Tyree, who ran an IHC outdoor
work team in Levin. He refers to the government policy so
eagerly embraced by IHC as “pathways to exclusion”. It’s
impossible to escape the conclusion that for many
intellectually disabled people, the “rights” conferred by
the 2007 law change have come at the expense of their quality
of life.
Skip to top |
Skip to make comment |
Send to a friend
Your
Comments:
To comment go to
letters to editor
>>>
Skip to top |
Send to
a friend:
|