Corporate Infrastructure:
Diversity Initiatives that Promote the Inclusion of Individuals with Disabilities

Lori Golden
Ernst & Young, LLP

Beth Newsom
Kaiser Permanente
People with Disabilities Association


Diversity’s New Frontier
Disabilities in the Workplace

Lori Golden

Inclusiveness Consultant/AccessAbilities Leader
Americas People Team

Ernst & Young, LLP


I Have Two Goals for Today

  1. To help you understand the issues and opportunities employers face around hiring and supporting workers with disabilities

  2. To show you some approaches and a model that’s working well at Ernst & Young


PWD Statistics

People with disabilities (PWD) Are America’s largest and fastest growing minority

Sources: US. Census Bureau, 2000; Department of Labor, 2006


Demographic Trends

Demographic trends are increasing the number of PWD already in our workplaces


An Underleveraged Resource

PWD are an underleveraged resource in the war for talent

Only 20% of PWD over 16 years old are working vs. 67% of the non-disabled. Yet:

Sources: US. Dept of Labor, 2009; Schurm Kruse, Blasi & Blank, 2009;
University of Massachusetts/America’s Strength Foundation, 2005; US. Census 2000


Attitudes and Misconceptions

More PWD aren’t hired because of attitudes / misconceptions

Sources: Job Accommodation Network, 2008; US Department of Labor, 2008


Leveraging the Talents

To leverage the full talents of PWD, businesses need to do four things


Ernst & Young Focus

At Ernst & Young, we do this by focusing on two key areas


Ernst & Young AccessAbilitiesTM

Ernst & Young AccessAbilitiesTM refers to a network and a set of initiatives

Let’s look at the networks….

People Resource Network


Ernst & Young Networks

And more networks….

Abilities Champions

Caregivers Circle


Disabilities Focus

Disabilities focus is part of diversity and inclusiveness


Our Initiatives Focus: Area 1

The first is ensuring safety
AccessAbilities formed an Emergency Evacuation Task Force that


Our Initiatives Focus: Area 2

The second is promoting productivity


Our Initiatives Focus: Area 3

The third focus is promoting career development for PWD


Our Initiatives Focus: Area 4

The fourth focus is educating all our people


Approaches Used to Educate

We use a variety of approaches to educate


Our Materials

Our materials are designed to quickly engage people in a variety of ways


Quick Guides

Quick Guides cover the basics


Video Materials

We use video to teach through storytelling


Posters

We use posters to get people thinking differently


Opportunities In Wider Workplace

We’re helping create opportunities in the wider marketplace as well


Lesson for Employers

So what are the lessons for employers?


Kaiser Permanente People with Disabilities Association

Beth Newsom

Network Leader RFI/RFP Project Coordinator Population and Prevention Services,
KP Colorado People with Disabilities Association Network Leader


Inclusive:

Beth Newsom with Daughter, Lori


Kaiser Permanente Associations

Structure and multi-cultural associations


Kaiser Permanente Associations

People with Disabilities Associations

Varies by region (number of people, role, activities)


Three KPPwD Co-Chairs


Our Association: The “Basics”


Our Association: Our VOICE


History: From There to Here


History: 2005 - 2007

Focus shift to 2 step process: internal education, then collaboration with community


History: 2008 - 2009


What We Do: Internal Education


Rocky Mountain ADA Leadership

Network (membership)


Where’s the end?

Inclusion efforts…


Open Discussion
&
Questions


THANK YOU!


Contact Information

Please Feel Free to Reach Out to Us at Your Discretion

Lori Golden

Ernst & Young,

Email: lori.golden@ey.com

Beth Newsom

Kaiser Permanente

Email: elizabeth.e.newsom@kp.org


Employer Webinar Series

http://sedbtac.org/webinars/


Next Webinar

Corporate Strategy:
Providing Accessibility for Employees and Customers

Thursday March 11, 2010

Register at: /webinars


Education Credits

DUE: February 19, 2010

CEU (0.1)

Approved by the University College at Syracuse University

To earn CEU credit, you must:

CRCC (1.5)

Approved by Commission on Rehabilitation Counselor Certification (CRCC)

To earn CRCC credit, you must:


Disclaimer

The DBTAC: Southeast ADA Center (Southeast DBTAC) is authorized by the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR) to provide information, materials, and technical assistance to individuals and entities that are covered by the Americans with Disabilities Act and its Amendments (ADA) under Grant No. H133A060094. However, you should be aware that NIDRR is not responsible for enforcement of the ADA. For more information or assistance, please contact your regional DBTAC via the National Network of ADA Centers' web site at or by calling 1-800-949-4232 [voice/tty].

The information, materials, and/or technical assistance are intended solely as informal guidance, and are neither a determination of your legal rights or responsibilities under the Act, nor binding on any agency with enforcement responsibility under the ADA. The Burton Blatt Institute at Syracuse University (BBI) does not warrant the accuracy of any information contained herein. Any links to non-BBI information are provided as a courtesy. They are not intended to nor do they constitute an endorsement by the BBI of the linked materials.


Copyright Information

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DBTAC: Southeast ADA Center
Permission is granted for this material to be shared for non-commercial, educational purposes, provided that this copyright statement appears on the reproduced materials and notice is given that the copying is by permission of the authors. To disseminate otherwise or to republish requires written permission from the authors.