[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 103 (Tuesday, July 13, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S5777]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO MARCA BRISTO
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I rise today to honor my dear friend Marca
Bristo and recognize her work as a disability rights activist and the
community-based disability agency, Access Living, that she founded 30
years ago in my home State of Illinois.
Access Living opened its doors in 1980 to ensure that people with
disabilities had equal rights.
Three decades ago, people with disabilities faced a world of
dependency. Even though Congress had enacted important legislation such
as the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 to prevent discrimination and the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act of 1975 to expand learning
opportunities for those with disabilities, people with disabilities
still lacked equal rights. Social prejudice fueled discrimination
against people with disabilities in housing, employment and basic
public accommodations. The concepts of independent living, wheelchair
accessible public transportation and quality jobs were not yet part of
everyday life.
Access Living was founded to insist on independent living options and
higher quality of life for people with disabilities. The agency is
governed and staffed by people with disabilities and operates under a
fundamental belief that people with disabilities must become a
political force if they are to effect social change. Marca Bristo,
Access Living's president and CEO, knows that pride and commitment to
social change is the most effective way to ensure that civil rights are
enforced.
This passion stems from a personal experience. A diving accident at
the Pratt Boulevard Beach pier left Marca partially paralyzed in 1977.
Through this tragedy, she re-imagined her capabilities to work and
thrive from a wheelchair. However, the adjustment was not always easy,
because cultural and even physical barriers stood in her way.
Early in Marca's disability, the city of Chicago lacked curb cuts on
public streets, which made it hard for her to travel up and down city
blocks in her wheelchair. This restriction prevented Marca from
accomplishing basic errands such as a trip to the grocery store or a
pick-up from the dry cleaners and from using public transportation to
commute to work.
Marca and Access Living's vision of equality led to architectural and
attitudinal changes in the city of Chicago and throughout the country.
Years of litigation led the Chicago Transit Authority to add wheelchair
lifts to their mainline buses. The city has also incorporated scrolling
marquees, audible street announcements and thousands of curb cuts to
make transportation feasible for people with disabilities.
Beyond these physical changes, Marca has also worked tirelessly to
break down cultural barriers and integrate people with disabilities
into community life. Access Living's work fosters dignity, pride, and
self-esteem in people with disabilities. With that in place, they can
choose individualized, satisfying lives.
It turns out, I am not the only person who has been impressed by
Marca's leadership and vision for change. She was appointed by
President Clinton to chair the Nation Council on Disability. She was
here, fully engaged in the fight, when Congress wrote the Americans
with Disabilities Act of 1990. She has also served as president of the
National Council on Independent Living and is currently president of
the U.S. International Council on Disabilities--USICD.
But the ADA means only as much as its implementation. We have work to
do eliminating discrimination in employment, public services and public
accommodations in the United States. As the ADA turns 20 in this month,
we recognize the law's and Access Living's work to increase the
visibility of people with disabilities in our country.
We as a Nation should also look to be global leaders in this arena.
Through her work with USICD, I am confident that Marca will continue to
focus the energy, expertise and resources of the U.S. Government and
disability community to improve the lives of people with disabilities
worldwide.
Fair and equal treatment is a cornerstone of our society and
political system. Access Living and Marca Bristo's dedication to ending
discrimination against people with disabilities have improved the lives
of families in Chicago and nationwide.
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