Home
Special Features
Q/A Helplines
Suppliers Guide
Letters
News Update
Motability
Forum
Shopmobility
Links
Holidays
Contact Us
Disability Equality Duty
Minister explains the law
HE Disability Equality Duty is part of the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA). It came into effect in December and requires public sector organisations to promote equal opportunities for disabled people.This means everyone working in hospitals, schools, in the police and local councils will be required by law to consider how their work affects disabled people and to take action to tackle any inequality. Mobility Today editor Clive Frusher asked Anne McGuire, Minister for Disabled People, to explain.
Why has it been brought in?
When you need to see a doctor, visit your local library or access any sort of service, you have a right to expect it to be delivered in ways that are appropriate to your needs.After all, the core value of a public service is that all citizens should benefit. Yet for many disabled people this doesn’t happen and there’s a lot still to be done to successfully challenge this sort of inequality.
The DDA has already ensured that disabled people have individual rights, but institutionalised discrimination remains a key barrier. For example, an employer’s attitude towards disability could mean that a disabled person is unable to get a job with career prospects.
The Disability Equality Duty will tackle this sort of inequality by getting organisations to look
Anne McGuirecritically at the way they work and the services they provide.
Who does itaffect?
Everyone working in the public sector, including nurses and teachers, will have a duty to promote equality for disabled people.Organisations must lead by example and take responsibility for making change happen.
What do people needto do?
There are four key elements to the duty, which require public authorities to carry out their functions with 'due regard' to the need to:
eliminate
unlawful
disability discrimination and
disability-related harassment;
promote equality of
opportunity for disabled people, taking steps to
take
account of disabled people's
disabilities;
promote positive attitudes;
and
encourage disabled people
to take part in public life.
In order to show how they will do this, significant public sector organisations, including the police, had to produce a disability equality scheme setting out how they would implement the duty.
Can you
give me a
real example?
Firstly, it is important to
remember the phrase
'due regard' here, as it
recognises that the duty is not
the only thing to consider. For
example, while an employer
should only fill positions
with appropriately qualified
candidates, they will have a
duty to encourage disabled
people to participate in public
life.
So, they should consider what steps might make the recruitment process accessible to disabled candidates. They will need to think about whether to advertise the post where disabled people will see it and how they can encourage them to apply.
The duty extends beyond the recruitment process. Promoting positive attitudes among staff towards their disabled colleagues will help to make organisations places where disabled people want to come and work.
This must go further than just eliminating discrimination - the duty is about actively promoting positive attitudes towards disabled
promote positive attitudes;
and
encourage disabled people
to take part in public life.In order to show how they will do this, significant public sector organisations, including the police, had to produce a disability equality scheme setting out how they would implement the duty.
Can you
give me a
real example?
Firstly, it is important to
remember the phrase
'due regard' here, as it
recognises that the duty is not
the only thing to consider. For
example, while an employer
should only fill positions
with appropriately qualified
candidates, they will have a
duty to encourage disabled
people to participate in public
life.So, they should consider what steps might make the recruitment process accessible to disabled candidates. They will need to think about whether to advertise the post where disabled people will see it and how they can encourage them to apply.
The duty extends beyond the recruitment process. Promoting positive attitudes among staff towards their disabled colleagues will help to make organisations places where disabled people want to come and work.
This must go further than just eliminating discrimination - the duty is about actively promoting positive attitudes towards disabled
people, for example, by providing
disability equality training.
What happens if an
organisation doesn't
comply?
There will be a legal duty
on public authorities and
there will be penalties for noncompliance.
Public sector
organisations
that fail to
apply the
duty properly
may face
legal action
and failure
to publish
an adequate
disability
equality scheme could result
in enforcement action by the
Disability Rights Commission.
What difference will
it make?
For the first time
everyone, from nurses
on the front line to ministers
making policies, will have to
take responsibility for rooting
out any institutional disabilityrelated
discrimination that
exists in their practices and
procedures.
The Disability Equality Duty is not just about getting people to put ramps at the entrances to buildings and producing leaflets in alternative formats on request, although these things are often necessary.
Promoting equality for disabled employees and encouraging disabled people to apply for jobs are just two examples of how public sector organisations can help to promote equality.
It's about getting people to consider the needs of disabled people from the start as they plan, deliver and monitor their services.
What happens if an
organisation doesn't
comply?
There will be a legal duty
on public authorities and
there will be penalties for noncompliance.
Public sector
organisations
that fail to
apply the
duty properly
may face
legal action
and failure
to publish
an adequate
disability
equality scheme could result
in enforcement action by the
Disability Rights Commission.
What difference will
it make?
For the first time
everyone, from nurses
on the front line to ministers
making policies, will have to
take responsibility for rooting
out any institutional disabilityrelated
discrimination that
exists in their practices and
procedures.The Disability Equality Duty is not just about getting people to put ramps at the entrances to buildings and producing leaflets in alternative formats on request, although these things are often necessary.
Promoting equality for disabled employees and encouraging disabled people to apply for jobs are just two examples of how public sector organisations can help to promote equality.
It's about getting people to consider the needs of disabled people from the start as they plan, deliver and monitor their services.



