Obama Aide Kareem Dale's Goal: Leveling Field for
All
By John Williams
Kareem Dale is a special assistant to the president of the
United States for disability policy. Dale, who is partially blind, coordinates
the administration's efforts to ensure that people with disabilities (PWDs) are
on a level playing field with all Americans.
Dale, originally from Chicago, previously served as the
national disability director for the Obama for America campaign. He also served
on the arts policy committee and the disability policy committee for
then-Senator Obama. Dale graduated from the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign with a bachelor's degree in advertising in May 1995. He
received his JD/MBA in May 1999 from the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, graduating cum laude.
He recently submitted to an exclusive interview with
Independence Today.
Q: What are your responsibilities?
A: I work in both the Domestic Policy Council and Office
of Public Engagement at the White House. I coordinate the administration's work
on disability policy and outreach. Q: How often do you meet with leaders of the
disability community to hear their concerns?
A: I meet frequently with disability leaders, grassroots
advocates, family members of people with disabilities, and ordinary Americans
to discuss issues related to people with disabilities.
Q: The unemployment rate among people in the disability
community is above 13%. What is the administration doing to bring down this
number?
A: One of the president's top priorities is continuing to
improve the economy and get people back to work, and that includes people with
disabilities. From the Recovery(American Recovery and Reinvestment)Act and many
other initiatives, the president has made strong investments in areas that are
helping people with disabilities get back to work. As one example, the recovery
plan included over $500 million for vocational rehabilitation services.
Additionally, the president signed an executive order to make the federal
government a model employer for people with disabilities. These initiatives
will help college students with disabilities as well as well-established
professionals.
Q: What is the administration doing to encourage students
with disabilities to graduate from high school and go on to college?
A: The president is committed to ensuring that more
Americans go on to an institution of higher education. As he has said, his goal
is to, by the end of the decade, have the highest proportion of college
graduates in the world.
Q: How often do you meet with the president to discuss
disability issues? Do you find he is receptive to these issues?
A: The president is very committed to disability issues.
Q: What would you consider the administration's major
accomplishment in dealing with disability issues?
A: There are many major accomplishments. Three of the
biggest thus far include signing the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Persons
with Disabilities, issuing the disability employment executive order, and
signing the 21st Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act.
Q: What are its shortcomings in dealing with disability
issues?
A: People with disabilities still are underrepresented in
the workforce, and still too many are not graduating at the same rate as those
without disabilities. As an administration, we continue to strive for
improvement in these areas every day.
Q: Many poor people with disabilities receiving Medicaid
are scared to death that they will either be denied medical care or see a
reduction in medical services. What can the administration do to alleviate
these fears?
A: As the president discussed during recent remarks, he
remains committed to Medicaid services. Moreover, the Affordable Care Act will
permit many Americans, including those with disabilities, to obtain health
coverage.
Q: Assistive technology access is important to improving
the lives of people with disabilities. Is the administration doing anything to
guarantee that people with disabilities have access to assistive technology? If
so, what?
A: The administration is committed to accessible
technology. The president signed the 21st Century Communications and Video
Accessibility Act in 2010. The CIO (chief information officer) and CAO (chief
administrative officeralso issued a memorandum in July 2010 to better ensure
that the federal government is compliant under Section 508 (an amendment of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 that requires agencies to give disabled employees
and members of the public access to information that is comparable to that
available to others). And we continue to address these important issues.
Q: Who is the highest-ranking person in this
administration with a disability, and is this person given the opportunity to
be visible?
A: We have many high-ranking persons with disabilities in
the White House and throughout the administration, including myself, Chris
Griffin (deputy director of the Office of Personnel Management), Secretary (of
Veterans Affairs) Eric Shinseki, and many others.
Q: Do you consider yourself to be a role model for
disabled people to emulate?
A: I believe in reaching back and helping others. If I can
be helpful to a young person with or without a disability, I certainly strive
to do that. Q: What assistive technologies do you use to do your job?
A: I have a BrailleNote PK, talking caller ID on my work
phone, Window-Eyes on my computer and Mobile Speak for my work smartphone.
Q: Is there a personal goal that you want to achieve on
behalf of people with disabilities before January 20, 2013 (the day the
presidents four-year term ends)? What is it?
A: We have many goals as an administration. We will
continue to focus on education and employment for people with disabilities. We
also are continuing to work on ratification of the U.N. Convention on the
Rights of Persons with Disabilities. And we continue to strive to ensure that
people with disabilities have equal access to emergency services during
disasters.
Q: What are some White House initiatives being done to
assist disabled veterans get employed?
A: I would point you to Office of Personnel Management and
Veterans Administration. Both have excellent programs in place.
John Williams can be reached at
iwilliams@atechnews.com. His website is www.atechnews.com. |