Susan Dooha, Executive Director at The Center for Independence of the Disabled, NYC (CIDNY) and Ruth DiRoma of INCLUDEnyc discuss the movement to ensure that all New Yorkers are safe during emergencies. When they filed their first lawsuit against the city in 2011, demanding emergency planning that addresses the universal needs of residents, little did they know how soon the arrival of Hurricane Sandy would put the city to a life and death test. Find out what happened, and what we expect in the future.
Superando más de una barrera
From Customer to Innovator: Why Disabled People Belong in the Technology Field
Nobody Knew What I Could Do: My Fight for Competence, Respect, and Equality
Reframing Disability: Creating Cultural Change and Access Through the Lens of Beauty
A Brooklyn Story: How Lou Ferrigno Changed My Life
Exploring the Sibling Story Through Writing and Film
Disappearing Private Special Education Schools
Access & Activism: Why We Need to Talk about It
The Legacy of Bloomberg & de Blasio on the NYC School System
Before We Knew Autism
Uncharted Territory: Finance, Equity, and Education in the Age of COVID-19
Siblings: In Different Boats, Weathering the Same Storm Together
Student & Family Voice in the Transition IEP
Medical Marijuana in Public Schools
Obtaining High Quality Special Education Services in an Imperfect World
Restorative Justice in Action in NYC Schools
Student Data, Privacy, and the Internet Age
Advocacy, Activism, and the Future
Defining Disability
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West
Voices of Misery Podcast
House of Whimsical Terror
Just Dumb Enough Podcast
Stuff You Should Know
Timcast IRL