Minnesota’s Bold Move to Hire More Employees with Disabilities

A snapshot of disability in America:
There’s an estimated 56.7 million disabled citizens.
The national unemployment rate for people with disabilities is more than twice the national average, sitting at 13.3 percent.
Which is why Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton is planning to reform hiring practices with a new executive order that mandates state agencies to begin employing more people with disabilities. Dayton is aiming to raise the percentage of government employees with disabilities from 3.2 percent in 2013 to 7 percent by 2018, the Star Tribune reports.
Dayton has more recently come under fire from disability advocate groups criticizing stalled reforms in helping Minnesota’s disabled population, which includes one in five residents. Such disabilities range in physical and mental issues that can hinder an individual’s ability to perform a major activity.
“It’s a slam dunk, politically,” said Galen Smith, co-facilitator of the Minneapolis chapter of ADAPT, a disability advocate group. “This shows leadership while acknowledging the problem.”
Minnesota has fallen behind neighboring states like Iowa (4.4 percent) and  Wisconsin (5.8 percent) when it comes to disability hires. But under Dayton’s new order, more hiring managers will be required to take training on recruitment and hiring of disabled people while also reporting progress every quarter.
Dayton is not the first leader to address the growing problem. Although the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) prohibits discrimination against anyone with disability, some state agencies stopped tracking recruitment of disability hires, diminishing a law that once was a hiring focus.

“The attitude became, ‘Well, we have the ADA so we don’t have to worry anymore,’ ” said Roberta Opheim, Minnesota’s ombudsman for mental health and developmental disabilities. “That doesn’t affect my department or my division. There just wasn’t a lot of emphasis on inclusive employment.”

But since 2010, President Barack Obama has implored the federal government to hire 100,000 people with disabilities by 2015, and governors in California, Oregon, Florida, Ohio and Delaware have signed similar executive orders as Minnesota’s.
This isn’t Dayton’s first effort to increase services for the state’s disabled population, either. Last year, the governor announced the “Olmstead Plan,” a multi-year outline to expand Minnesota’s services for people living with disabilities or mental illness. But advocates argue the state is moving too slowly to implement new practices, which is why Dayton’s recent order signals a shift toward change.
MORE: This Autistic Professor Uses His Disability to Teach Others Like Him

This State Is Making Sure No Child Is Ever Denied a School Lunch

To deny a child a meal during school lunch is not only humiliating, it’s food that could be the one nutritious meal he or she gets for the day. When news surfaced last month that Utah had dumped school lunches in the trash when students couldn’t pay, Minnesota decided to see if they were also on the same boat. Their troubling survey found that, like Utah, the majority of their own districts would deny a hot meal — or even any meal — to a child who could not pay for it.
According to the Associated Press, about 62,000 low-income children and teens take part in the state’s reduced-price lunch program where a hot, nutritious tray of food costs 40 cents. But if a student cannot pay that 40 cents, they are usually given food like cold cheese sandwiches. In worse cases, they are denied food altogether and, sometimes, little hands are stamped with the words “LUNCH” or “MONEY.”
MORE: When These Kids Couldn’t Afford a Hot School Lunch, This Hero Stepped Up
In response to these findings, lawmakers have pledged to ensure all school children are fed during lunch. State Congressman, Senator Jeff Hayden (D) and Representative Yvonne Selcer (D) proposed a bill called No Child Turned Away that would provide thousands of low-income students with free lunches.
Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton has also proposed $3.5 million in public funds to help schools cover lunch costs for students who can’t afford to pay for a hot meal. “No child in Minnesota should be denied a healthy lunch,” Dayton said in a statement. “We cannot expect our students to succeed on an empty stomach.”