DRC – Disability Rights
1330 Broadway,
Tel: 510.267.1200
TTY: 800.719.5798
Toll Free: 800.776.5746
FAX: 510.267.1201
www.disabilityrightsca.org
For Immediate
Release Contacts: Fred Nisen (510) 267-1200
October 1, 2008 Hilary
Sklar (213) 427-8747
Disability
Rights
The purpose of
the hotline is to fix problems on Election Day that are causing
disenfranchisement of individuals with disabilities. We know there are many barriers affecting a
person’s ability to vote such as: limited access to registration materials;
wrong information from providers, conservators, relatives, and facility staff
about the person's right to vote; judges who take away a person's right to vote
when they should not; transportation problems getting to and from the polls;
poll access problems for people living in nursing homes and other residential
facilities; poll access barriers such as very limited or no accessible parking
or curb ramps; doorways and aisles that are too narrow; voting equipment placed
on inaccessible tables or stages; poor disability access trainings for poll
workers; and, poll sites said to be “accessible" when they are not.
Disability
Rights California staff are available to answer voting access questions before
the election. So, if anyone has had
problems voting or anticipates a problem, please contact us as soon as
possible.
Disability
Rights California’s hotline is equipped to receive voice and TDD calls, and
will be staffed from 7 am to 8 pm on November 4th. The toll-free number for voice calls is: 800-776-5746. The toll-free number for TDD calls is: 800-719-5798. Individuals who speak languages other than
English should state their language
and an interpreter will be connected
to the call. Callers who wish to use the
California Relay Service, Speech to Speech Service or Video Relay can dial 711.
Complaints
received by Disability Rights California’s Hotline in the February 5th
Primary and the June 2 local elections showed a pattern emerging with the use
of new voting machines by people with disabilities. In general, due to a lack of training,
cumbersome rules and unfamiliarity with the machines, some poll workers were
not ready to ensure privacy in voting or troubleshoot access issues. For
example, Fred Nisen, a Disability Rights California Attorney in its HAVA
program, had problems accessing his polling place because of poor signage to
the accessible entrance and actual barricades on the accessible route to the
polling place. Then, the machine did not
work properly and the poll workers did not know how to reset it. “It is ironic that, in addition to advocating
for others’ right to vote in an accessible polling place, I have to advocate
for my own right to vote,” says Nisen.
Garnet
Magnus, a Peer and Self Advocacy Coordinator for Disability Rights California,
has been providing information to people who reside in facilities in order to
get out the word that they can vote. There are barriers that individuals
in facilities face that are unique, including: (1) misinformation from
relatives as well as their conservators; (2) lack of awareness of whether the
conservatorship papers took away their right to vote; and (3) failure of
service providers to follow-up with residents who wish to vote either by mail
and/or at poll sites. “People in facilities
are excited about voting but many do not know how to go about it,” said Magnus,
“Many service providers do not have enough staff to devote for education and
technical assistance with ballots, voting guides, and/or registration
materials.”
People
with vision impairments have problems at the polls. Sara Hadsell, an advocate for Disability
Rights California who has a vision impairment, has had several problems trying
to vote. Once, she showed up to her
polling place, where she was informed that they had no large print voting
machines there, and if she wanted to vote that way, she would have to go to
another location a few blocks away, where apparently all those who needed
accommodations were voting. This
information was never in any of the written ballot materials which were sent
out ahead of time. In the past two
elections, they had an accessible machine at the polling place, but when she
went to vote in the morning, nobody knew how to use the machine, and it took
almost an hour while the polling place volunteer found and read the instructions
and figured out how to work it.
In
addition to operating its own hotline, Disability Rights California staff will
be working in collaboration with the Election Protection Coalition to ensure
that individuals with disabilities calling the Election Protection Hotline can
get answers to their disability related questions. The Election Protection Hotline number is:
1-866-OUR-VOTE, and is equipped to handle English and Spanish speaking callers.
About
Disability Rights
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Rights