HELENA -- July 26, 2020, marks the 30th anniversary of the passage of the American's with Disabilities Act, something Joel Peden said has been a great way to increase inclusivity in Helena's community for those with disabilities.
"We've come a long ways in 30 years. A long, long ways in 30 years," said Peden.
Peden is the Advocacy Coordinator for the Montana Independent Living Project, a non-profit organization that helps those with disabilities navigate a widely changing landscape. Across the last 30 years, the ADA has provided a road map on how to increase inclusivity, not just in Helena but across the country.
"It gives us a blueprint to be able to share with people as we're doing advocacy," said Peden. "What we find is that, it's not that people don't care about access and disabilities, it's just not relevant to their life at that point in time."
Though the ADA is meant to level the playing field and create inclusivity for those with disabilities, Peden said able-bodied individuals benefit from the passage of the act as well, without even realizing it.
"Curb cuts for instance. They're meant for somebody with a mobility issue that use a walker or a wheelchair," said Peden. "But I've never seen a mom pushing a stroller who gets to a corner with a curb cut and says, 'That's for wheelchairs, I can't push my stroller down there,' and walks to the middle of the block and bumps off the curb. She benefits from that."
Though the ADA provides a road map to create inclusivity, Peden hopes people take it a step further by normalizing disabilities.
"I kind of compare it to somebody wearing a pair of glasses. As a society, we don't look at somebody wearing a pair of glasses as having a disability, but if you take away their glasses or their contacts or their reading glasses, they may not be able to drive," said Peden. "Nobody walks up to somebody who has a pair of glasses on and says, 'It's so amazing that even though you have to wear glasses, that you have a job, or you own a house, or you have a family or you drive a car,' So, to me, the ultimate goal of the ADA, is to make it so that every disability is viewed as someone wearing a pair of glasses."