[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 108 (Thursday, July 25, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Page S5963]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING MICHAEL WINTER
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, this week Americans are celebrating the
23rd anniversary of the landmark Americans with Disabilities Act. As
chief Senate sponsor of that legislation, I know that we could not have
prevailed without the tireless, passionate, never-give-up advocacy of
disability rights advocates and leaders across America. One of those
outstanding leaders, Michael Winter, cannot be with us to celebrate
this year's anniversary. He passed away earlier this month. But I would
like to take a few minutes today to celebrate the life of this
wonderful person.
Michael was born with a disability, and grew up in Chicago at a far
less enlightened time, when students and other young people with
disabilities were excluded from the mainstream. Michael used a
wheelchair, but he was not the kind of person to take discrimination
sitting down. At an early age, he began to speak up. He discovered the
power of advocacy. He was determined to change the world for people
with disabilities.
In 1969, Michael was enrolled in Southern Illinois University.
Because the school president's wife used a wheelchair, the SIU had made
a commitment 15 years earlier to become one of the first accessible
colleges in the United States. But Michael was not satisfied. He
believed that the university needed to be more inclusive for students
with disabilities. So Michael and other students with disabilities took
over the university president's office and chained a wheelchair to his
desk. They did so to drive home the point that the campus needed to
have accessible transportation for people with disabilities. The
university, to its great credit, made improvements, and Michael had
found a special focus for his advocacy. His passionate and highly
effective advocacy for accessible transportation became a constant
throughout his life.
In addition, Michael was one of the early leaders in the Independent
Living movement. In 1977, after college and attending graduate school,
he went to the fledgling Berkeley Center for Independent Living, where
he completed an internship with Judy Heumann. He ended up staying on as
a staff member for another 4 years. He then directed a Center for
Independent Living in Hawaii before returning to the Berkeley as
director of the Center for Independent Living for 12 years. During that
period, Michael also served as president of the National Council on
Independent Living.
As I said, Michael's special passion was to advocate for more
accessible transportation. Later in his career, he held various
positions at the U.S. Department of Transportation, and was responsible
for helping enforce civil rights with respect to transportation under
the ADA, the Rehabilitation Act, the Civil Rights Act, and other laws.
He also advocated for more accessible transportation internationally.
Marca Bristo, CEO of Access Living in Chicago, recently shared a memory
of Michael Winter, whom she considered a mentor on independent living.
She wrote:
I'll never forget being in Seoul riding the most accessible
subway I've ever been on with my son. Later I asked my host
from Rehabilitation International, Dr. Il Yung Lee, how did
it happen? He said: ``The Convention on the Rights of Persons
with Disabilities and Michael Winter.''
Many Americans got to know Michael in Eric Neudel's award-winning
documentary, ``Lives Worth Living,'' which chronicled the rise of the
disability rights movement in the United States. The documentary
recounts the historic day in 1990 when hundreds of disability rights
advocates crawled and climbed up the steps of the Capitol Building in
Washington to protest the slow progress in passing the Americans with
Disabilities Act. One person who was there recalled the scene as
follows:
A young girl with cerebral palsy, fiercely determined to
reach the top (``I'll take all NIGHT if I have to!''),
inspired the admittedly out-of-shape Michael Winter to follow
close behind. When the activists gathered en masse in the
Capitol rotunda, Winter was approached by a young, able-
bodied woman who was excited by the crowd. Turns out she was
a tour guide, expecting to host a group of ``handicapped''
people on a tour through the capitol. ``I have to tell you
something,'' Winter wryly informed her. ``I don't think these
people are here for a tour.''
Hundreds of disability rights activists are in Washington this week
to celebrate the 23rd anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities
Act. We also celebrate the contributions of leaders like Michael
Winter, who are responsible for America's remarkable progress toward
fulfilling the four great goals of the ADA--equal opportunity, full
participation, independent living, and economic self-sufficiency.
Despite this progress, we know that our journey is far from finished.
We have not yet achieved the full promise of the ADA. But we go forward
inspired by the memory and example of Michael Winter and other
outstanding leaders in this movement.
Thank you, Michael Winter, for a job well done. Thank you for helping
us to create a better, fairer, more inclusive and accessible world for
people with disabilities.
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