By Usha Rai
The private sector also needs to
adopt a corporate disability policy for inclusion of the differently abled in
the workforce.
There are an estimated 3,000 NGOs or
civil society organisations working with people with various disabilities in
the country. There is, however, no clarity on the number of differently abled —
estimates vary from 2.19 per cent of the population (Census 2001) to World Bank
and WHO figures of 10 per cent of the population in developing countries. This
is a huge human resource whose potential needs to be tapped. With a broad
spectrum of disabilities, this is also a sector that needs a lot of monetary
and moral support to make them equal partners in development.
However, the new Companies Act seems
to have left out disabilities from the mandatory 2 per cent CSR spending of
corporation whose net worth is over Rs 500 crore, or those making a profit of
over Rs 5 crore a year. It could, however, merely be a listing omission,
because marginalised groups have been included.
The National Trust for Disabilities
is lobbying for the inclusion of disabilities as a separate category. Though
the government has been steadily increasing its budget for disabilities, since
it is a state subject, the responsibility of caring for this segment lies with
the states. The brunt of caring, nurturing and promoting those with disabilities
lies with civil society. Since disability is not a standalone issue but a
multi-sectoral, cross-cutting one, hopefully it will be possible to access CSR
even before its inclusion as a separate entity.
As Poonam Natrajan, who heads the
National Trust, points out, people with disabilities need the same resources as
non-disabled people, in terms of schooling, livelihood or residential
facilities. They need reasonable accommodation and specific supports. They also
need a barrier-free environment. Above all, they need a ramping up of
attitudes. People need to include disabled people in all institutions. The
accommodations and specific supports may cost a bit, but they are reasonable
amounts. So, supporting people with disabilities is more about attitude than
money.
One problem is that most NGOs work
for specific disabilities. This leads to a kind of a specialisation, perhaps
even a ghettoisation. Of late, organisations for disabled persons that work
across disabilities have been coming up. However, even here, intellectual and
development disabilities, as well as other neurological disabilities and mental
illnesses, get left out.
The bigger problem is getting CSR
support for the challenged in rural areas, where a sizeable population lives,
often cutoff from schooling, health and other facilities available in urban
centres. In these areas, they have little to no access to government
programmes. Most of the funding comes from foreign donors, unless there is a
company adjacent to a rural area. Most work in rural areas focuses on
education, water and sanitation. It is important that such programmes be
inclusive, responsive and sensitive to the needs of persons with disabilities.
Corporations involved with
disabilities per se include ITC, Infosys, Mphasis, Ashok Leyland, Lemon Tree
Hotels, Engineers India Limited, ONGC, SAIL, Ascendas and Wipro. CII and FICCI
also have included disability in CSR. The Amar Jyoti Charitable Trust in Delhi,
which has been running an integrated school for the able and challenged since
1981, gets sporadic support for various events.
Getting jobs for the differently
abled has been a major challenge despite the 3 per cent reservation mandated by
the 1995 Persons with Disabilities Act in identified government jobs. The
reservation is never fulfilled. Recently, the Supreme Court ruled that the 3
per cent reservation has to be earmarked across Group A, B, C and D posts in
entities established by or owned and controlled by Central, state governments
and local authorities. In three months, vacancies have to be computed and posts
for disabled identified.
As far as the private sector is
concerned, the act suggested incentives to ensure that persons with
disabilities comprised at least 5 per cent of the workforce. Subsequently, the
Centre announced an incentive policy, but it is not clear how many corporations
took up the government’s offer. However, recently, the minister for social
justice and empowerment, Kumari Selja, wrote to the minister of corporate
affairs, Sachin Pilot, to ask the private sector to adopt a corporate
disability policy for the inclusion of the differently abled in their
workforce. It’s heartening to hear of several differently abled people getting
jobs due to their excellence and hard work. Employing such people cannot be
claimed as CSR. Companies such as Infosys, Mphasis, Vinyas Innovative
Technologies Pvt Ltd and IBM are equal opportunity employers and have employed
many people with disabilities. The list is growing, but not fast enough.
(The writer, a veteran
journalist formerly with ‘The Indian Express’, writes on development issues)
(Article First Published in INDIAN EXPRESS, 15 October 2013)
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