[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 150 (Wednesday, December 10, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6535-S6536]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO MICHAEL GAMEL-McCORMICK
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, as I approach the end of my Senate career,
I cannot help but reflect on the role that my tremendous staff members
have played in advancing my policy goals and, indeed, advancing the
important work the American people over the years. I have been blessed
to have worked with truly remarkable individuals who have worked
tirelessly to promote initiatives that will improve the lives of
ordinary Americans.
Among my own legislative and policy priorities over the years, none
has been greater for me than advancing the rights of persons with
disabilities. I am proud and honored to have been the chief Senate
sponsor of the Americans with Disabilities Act, the last of the great
civil rights laws of the 20th century--one that has correctly been
called the Emancipation Proclamation for persons with disabilities.
That legislation sought, once and for all, to fully enfranchise people
with disabilities and to fully integrate them into the fabric of
American life, guided by four great principles--equal opportunity, full
participation, independent living, and economic sufficiency. Over the
last quarter century, that legislation has resulted in a quantum leap
forward in the civil rights and daily quality of life of millions of
Americans with disabilities.
However, even with that quantum leap forward, much work remains to be
done to advance the rights of people with disabilities both in the
United States and around the world. And over the last several years, no
one has worked harder to advance this unfinished agenda of disabilities
rights than Michael Gamel-McCormick, who served on the Health,
Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee as my lead K-12 staffer
through the markup of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act and
subsequently as a team leader on disability policy.
Throughout his career, Michael has worked to improve the lives of
children
[[Page S6536]]
and other people with disabilities. He came to the HELP Committee from
the University of Delaware, where he was dean of the College of
Education and Human Development and where he had previously served as a
departmental chair and director of the Center for Disability Studies.
Prior to that, Michael served, variously, as director of an early
intervention program in West Virginia, director of children's services
at an urban community services agency, and as a preschool and
kindergarten teacher. Michael also consulted worldwide in helping other
countries to establish their own systems to support persons with
disabilities and to expand early learning opportunities.
Michael's deep experience and knowledge was evident as soon as he
arrived at the HELP Committee. Immediately, Michael became an integral
and trusted member of my staff. His initial work on the committee was
as an education policy advisor, lead staffer on K-12 education, and an
expert on the intersection of education and inequality. His expertise
and leadership were critical in crafting and passing in committee the
Strengthening America's Schools Act. As an education policy adviser,
Michael was also deeply involved in shaping policies to strengthen the
education of children with disabilities.
After serving as a senior education advisor, Michael assumed the role
of my chief disability policy advisor, spearheading a number of
important initiatives, including two important committee reports on
persons with disabilities. The first report, on the continued use of
seclusions and restraints in our schools, exposed the inappropriate and
often dangerous use of physical restraints on and unsupervised
exclusion of many children, especially children with disabilities, in
U.S. schools. That report was accompanied by important legislation to
finally prohibit these outdated and ineffective measures. The second
report, ``Fulfilling the Promise: Overcoming Persistent Barriers to
Economic Self-Sufficiency for People with Disabilities,'' investigated
the barriers that people with disabilities face as they seek to rise
out of poverty and enter the middle class. This report found that
living with a disability is both economically and socially costly, and
that significant barriers--especially logistical barriers and
discrimination--continue to stand in the way of the economic security
of people with disabilities. Specifically, the report said this:
Twenty-four years ago, Congress passed the Americans with
Disabilities Act. We have been successful at meeting many of
the goals of the ADA. We have increased the accessibility of
our buildings, our streets, even our parks, beaches and
recreation areas. And we've made our books and TVs,
telephones and computers more accessible as well. And for
many Americans with disabilities, our workplaces have become
more accessible as well.
But far too few people with disabilities are in the
workforce! The unemployment rate for people with disabilities
is 12.8 percent, more than double the six percent
unemployment rate for people without disabilities. Of the
almost 29 million people with disabilities over 16 years of
age, less than 20 percent participate in the workforce
compared with nearly 70 percent of those without a
disability.
Not content to identify a problem, Michael also seeks to solve them.
His most enduring legacy as my disability policy director will be his
work to promote the employment of persons with disabilities through the
Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, which was signed into law
earlier this year. That law will ensure that young people with
disabilities get the experiences they need to succeed in work settings.
To obtain those experiences, the bill requires State vocational
rehabilitation programs to work hand-in-hand with local secondary
schools. The bill also ensures that employers will have the information
necessary to recruit, hire, and retain people with disabilities.
These efforts will directly address the high unemployment rate among
people with disabilities, smooth the transition of young people with
disabilities into the competitive integrated workforce, and help
employers to support their employees with disabilities. I am especially
proud of these provisions. And I am very grateful to Michael, who
successfully endeavored to enact them in the face of long odds.
I had the good fortune to travel with Michael to China earlier this
year, where we sought to identify opportunities for international
cooperation on disability policy and to work with the Chinese
Government to strengthen its own policies and programs to assist and
empower the millions persons with disabilities in that country. On the
trip, not only was Michael incredibly helpful and knowledgeable, but he
also proved to be a good humored and indefatigable travel partner.
Last and certainly not least, I want to salute Michael's heroic
efforts over the past year to advance the Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities. The CRPD, as it is known in shorthand, is a
United Nation's treaty modeled after our own Americans with
Disabilities Act, with a goal of exporting the same advances enjoyed by
persons with disabilities in the United States to countries around the
world. The United States has always been a city on a hill when it comes
to disability policy, and the CRPD offers an opportunity for us to play
a more robust leadership role in advancing disability rights across the
globe. Unfortunately, despite broad support for the CRPD among business
leaders, faith leaders, and in the disability policy community, the
CRPD ran up against significant and, I might add, spurious opposition
here in the Senate. In fact, after failing to be ratified in the 112th
Congress, the treaty was all but declared dead.
However, at my urging and direction, Michael worked tirelessly to
revive the moribund treaty, reaching out to Republicans, enlisting the
assistance of business interests and activating grassroots networks
around the country in support of the treaty. At the end of the day, the
Senate was still not able to overcome the misinformed objections of a
number of Senators who blocked consideration of the treaty. But
Michael's efforts to resurrect and advance the treaty in the face of
daunting odds were remarkable. Thanks to Michael's work, we came closer
than ever before to passing the CRPD. I certainly haven't given up the
fight to pass the CRPD, and I am grateful to Michael for all that he
did to advance the cause of global disability rights.
It is no exaggeration to say that Michael has enriched the lives of
countless individuals. Because of his work, young children have been
exposed to the rich environments that they need for early learning.
Because of his work, young people with disabilities will receive the
supports and experiences they need to secure gainful employment.
Because of his work, school-aged children will receive developmentally
appropriate discipline and direction rather than the cruelty of
seclusion and physical restraints. And because of his work, countless
individuals with disabilities will work, live, laugh, and flourish in
their communities alongside friends, colleagues, and neighbors.
This is a living legacy that Michael Gamel-McCormick deserves to be
very proud of. I am deeply grateful for his service to the committee,
to the American people, and to me personally. And I wish him great
success in his future endeavors on behalf of people with disabilities
here in America and across the globe.
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