
09/15/2025
Why It Matters Monday: Disability and Employment
When disabled people look for work, the hardest part often isn’t the job itself — it’s getting past the ableism baked into the system. Bias shows up in subtle and not-so-subtle ways. A hiring manager might see a wheelchair before they see the skilled, qualified person sitting in it. A deaf applicant might be overlooked because it’s assumed communication will be “too difficult.” Someone with a speech difference might not even be called back, no matter their resume.
But here’s the truth: the problem isn’t disabled workers. The problem is workplaces that haven’t been built with us in mind.
So how do we change that? It starts with shifting how we see each other. A wheelchair just means someone moves differently, not that they can’t lead a team. A deaf colleague may sign, lip read, or use an interpreter — and all of those are simply different ways to communicate.
Accessibility is not about lowering the bar, it’s about clearing the unnecessary hurdles that never should’ve been there in the first place. Accommodations are usually simple: captions on a Zoom call, a flexible schedule for medical appointments, software that works with screen readers. These things don’t just help one person — they create a workplace where everyone feels welcome.
And the most powerful change? Listening. When disabled employees are part of the conversation about policies and practices, workplaces stop guessing what we need and start getting it right.
Employment is more than a paycheck. It’s independence, stability, and dignity. When we remove barriers and biases, workplaces finally become places where disabled people aren’t just present, but fully included.
At DPC, we know this firsthand. Over 80% of our team identifies as disabled, and we are proof that when work is shaped by us and for us, real change happens. That’s what it means for the disability community to lead the charge: nothing about us, without us.
So let’s start the conversation: What’s one workplace barrier you’d remove tomorrow — or one simple accommodation that would make a big difference?