Taoiseach Simon Harris has expressed his commitment to improving educational services for children with autism, citing personal experience as his driving force. However, some disability activists remain sceptical about his track record and future actions in this regard.
Ann Marie Flanagan, a disability rights campaigner, highlights concerns about Harris’s tenure as Minister for Health, noting a perceived lack of significant progress for people with disabilities during that time. Flanagan emphasises the importance of fully implementing the 2005 Disability Act to streamline access to services without requiring court intervention.
Flanagan advocates for a rights-based approach to support services and employment opportunities for disabled individuals, citing the UK’s Access to Work scheme as a potential model for Ireland. She also calls for the decoupling of the medical card from employment status to alleviate fears of losing essential benefits.
Senator Tom Clonan, however, offers a more optimistic outlook, citing Harris’s swift action in addressing funding disparities for students with disabilities in private colleges. Clonan believes Harris’s personal experience with neurodiversity and his family ties to autism advocacy may inform his approach to disability rights as Taoiseach.
Clonan urges Harris to prioritise ratifying the optional protocol of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, aligning Ireland with international standards. He hopes Harris’s leadership will lead to legislative changes that uphold the fundamental rights of disabled citizens and carers.
Irish Samachar English News
{OR} Kindly click to follow the Irish Samachar News channel on WhatsApp
Comments are closed.