Title
Celebrating the 33rd Anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act and pledging to create a city where people of all abilities can fully participate.
Body
Whereas the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was preceded by decades of activism by many people and organizations that challenged the barriers that excluded people with disabilities from their communities; and
Whereas the ADA was introduced in the United States Senate in May of 1989 by Senators Tom Harkin, Ted Kennedy, and Dave Durenberger while the disability community mobilized, organizing a multi-layered strategy for passage; and
Whereas in February 1990, after a lengthy floor debate that lasted well into the night, the ADA overwhelmingly passed in the Senate (76-8) with bipartisan support; and
Whereas it would take an additional nine months for the bill to pass in the House of Representatives, having to be heard in four separate committees and seven subcommittees, allowing time for business associations to organize in opposition out of concern for the expense and fear of interminable litigation; and
Whereas disability activists fought amendment after amendment that sought to weaken the bill and ensured that each hearing room was full and that letters poured into Congressional offices; and
Whereas in March, to illustrate the barriers confronting disabled people, more than 60 activists set aside their crutches, wheelchairs, and walkers and began crawling up the 83 stone steps that led to the Capitol, an event which became known as the “Capitol Crawl;” and
Whereas the next day, activists met with House Speaker Tom Foley and other Congressional leaders, and when Speaker Foley refused to commit to a date of passage, activists chained their wheelchairs together inside the Capitol, spurring Capitol Police in riot gear to clear the Rotunda, use chain cutters to sever the chains, and arrest 104 people; and
Whereas after these events, the bill moved more quickly, and on July 12, 1990 the ...
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