June 22nd is primary day for plenty of important races across New York City — including the race for the next mayor. We combed through the platforms of all the contenders to see how they spoke about young people with disabilities, if at all, and how their policies would serve this population. Read on to see what each candidate had to say.


Alt: A photograph of Eric Adams smiling and look off to the side of the camera. Source: Krystalb97, via Wikimedia Commons

Alt: A photograph of Eric Adams smiling and look off to the side of the camera. Source: Krystalb97, via Wikimedia Commons

Eric Adams

says he will…

  • Conduct a full audit of students who have not received their education and therapies, and develop a program to provide make-up services.

  • Ensure that all new school construction is fully accessible.

  • Mandate universal dyslexia screening, as well as push for better screening for learning disabilities and mental health issues.

(Source)


Alt: A photograph of Art Chang smiling and staring straight into the camera. Source: Art Chang, via Twitter

Alt: A photograph of Art Chang smiling and staring straight into the camera. Source: Art Chang, via Twitter

Art Chang

says he will…

  • Provide free Universal Childcare in every neighborhood, and ensure that disabled children have their needs met in these facilities.

  • Expand the number of District 75 schools in each borough, to ensure fully-funded education to students with special needs.

  • Expand CUNY to support lifelong learning and workforce development, and make CUNY tuition-free.

  • Institute a user-friendly online system to manage student IEPs.

  • Ensure ADA-compliant access to all school facilities.

(Source)


Alt: A photograph of Shaun Donovan speaking at a public forum. Source: Sammy Mayo, Jr., via HUD

Alt: A photograph of Shaun Donovan speaking at a public forum. Source: Sammy Mayo, Jr., via HUD

Shaun Donovan

says he will…

  • Provide New York City’s students with disabilities access to research-based, tested programs that meet their needs in inclusive environments, by learning from and expanding existing programs like ASD Nest and Horizon.

  • Address racial disparities in special education screening and tackle unfair disciplinary practices that disproportionately impact students of color and students with disabilities.

(Source)


Alt: A graphic of Aaron Foldenauer smiling at the camera against a blue and red background. Source: Aaron Foldenauer, via Twitter

Alt: A graphic of Aaron Foldenauer smiling at the camera against a blue and red background. Source: Aaron Foldenauer, via Twitter

Aaron Foldenauer

says he will…

  • Support all special educators to develop collaborations with learning programs so as to help meet the increased demands of special education.

(Source)


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Alt: A photograph of Kathryn Garcia holding a microphone and speaking at an event. Source: Sachyn Mital, via Wikimedia Commons

Kathryn Garcia

says she will…

  • Empower parents of children with disabilities, particularly students of color, double down on evidence-based programs to meet their needs, and expand access to service providers so that families don’t have to travel beyond their neighborhood for the services they need.

(Source)


Alt: A photograph of Fernando Mateo looking at the camera. Source: Fernando Mateo, via Wikimedia Commons

Alt: A photograph of Fernando Mateo looking at the camera. Source: Fernando Mateo, via Wikimedia Commons


Fernando Mateo

does not mention young people with disabilities in his platform.


Alt: A photograph of Ray McGuire smiling with his arms folded and looking at the camera. Source: Sammyg1016, via Wikimedia Commons

Alt: A photograph of Ray McGuire smiling with his arms folded and looking at the camera. Source: Sammyg1016, via Wikimedia Commons

Ray McGuire

says he will…

  • Ensure that programs outside of school hours are accessible to children with disabilities and other special needs.

  • Build on existing reading programs by ensuring there is a dedicated reading coach for every elementary school, who will focus on early intervention for kids with additional support needs and provide training on best-practices in reading and special needs instruction.

(Source)


Alt: A press photo of Dianne Morales smiling at the camera. Source: Dianne Morales, press kit

Alt: A press photo of Dianne Morales smiling at the camera. Source: Dianne Morales, press kit

Dianne Morales

says she will…

  • Provide universal after-school programs that are accessible to students with disabilities, in foster care, with limited financial means, and more.

  • Fully fund the school capital plan to eliminate school overcrowding, enable class size reduction, and upgrade all facilities to be mold, asbestos, lead-free and properly ventilated and accessible to students with disabilities.

(Source)


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Alt: A photograph of Paperboy Prince standing in front of a painted sign that says “Paperboy Prince” at the Love Gallery. Source: Fabebk, via Wikimedia Commons

Paperboy Prince

does not mention young people with disabilities in his platform.


Alt: A photograph of Curtis Sliwa wearing a red jacket and beret at the 2012 West Indian Day Parade. Source: Bob Jagendorf, via Flickr

Alt: A photograph of Curtis Sliwa wearing a red jacket and beret at the 2012 West Indian Day Parade. Source: Bob Jagendorf, via Flickr

Curtis Sliwa

does not mention young people with disabilities in his platform.


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Alt: Scott Stringer speaking to a crowd and holding a microphone. Source: Thomas Good / NLN, via Wikimedia Commons

Scott Stringer

says he will…

  • Address chronic shortages in special education, as well as for multilingual students, English Language Learners, and students in the foster care system or otherwise temporarily housed.

(Source)


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Alt: A photo of Joycelyn Taylor with her arms crossed and looking at the camera. Source: Joycelyn Taylor, via Twitter

Joycelyn Taylor

does not mention young people with disabilities in her platform.


3.png

Alt: A photo of Maya Wiley speaking at an event in front of a podium. Source: UN Women/Ryan Brown, via Flickr

Maya Wiley

says she will…

  • Address the current impartial hearing crisis and work to reduce the hearings backlog.

  • Eliminate disparities by race and disability in school discipline, including suspensions.

  • Ensure that the legal rights of students with disabilities are respected and met, and that they are provided with expanded programming.

  • Aim to serve as many children in as integrated settings as possible and break down boundaries between District 75 and the broader school system.

(Source)


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Alt: A photo of Isaac Wright Jr. at an event. Source: Wikimedia Commons


Isaac Wright Jr.

does not mention young people with disabilities in his platform.


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Alt: Andrew Yang speaking at a rally. Source: Gage Skidmore, via Flickr

Andrew Yang

says he will…

  • Establish a DOE public school for students with dyslexia & language-based learning disabilities.

  • Implement a universal dyslexia screening in all pre-K classrooms and extend training to teachers on how to bring students up to reading & speaking proficiency.

  • Ensure that teachers are trained to properly identify disabilities and support students in their individual education.

  • Prioritize students with different learning needs for in-person make-up services in the event of school closings.

(Source)

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AuthorAlex Bazeley

Thanks to your wonderful support, we raised more than $12,000 in the Extreme-A-Thon! Check out a compilation of highlights from the past month as our community broke out of its shell and got creative to raise money for Extreme Kids & Crew.

Thanks to your wonderful support, we raised more than $12,000 in the Extreme-A-Thon! Check out some highlights from a month of our community at its most crea...

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This summer, we teamed up with SEED Impact, an organization which helps nonprofits assess and strengthen their work, to evaluate our summer camp program and the impact it had on the children who participated. Being our first foray into synchronous distance learning and playing, the results were encouraging and will greatly inform our work going forward.

View the 2020 Impact Report.

Alt text: Pictured is the cover of the Summer Camp Impact Report. The cover features a young Black girl at an Extreme Kids program wearing a blue shirt with her hands waving in the air. At the top, white text on a blue background reads “Extreme Kids…

Alt text: Pictured is the cover of the Summer Camp Impact Report. The cover features a young Black girl at an Extreme Kids program wearing a blue shirt with her hands waving in the air. At the top, white text on a blue background reads “Extreme Kids & Crew 2020 Virtual Summer Camp. Analysis & Report by SEED Impact.” At the bottom is the Extreme Kids & Crew logo.

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This discussion on the intersection of anti-Blackness and ableism is hosted by Extreme Kids & Crew, which cultivates welcoming, accessible spaces where kids ...

On Wednesday, October 14, we welcomed a handful of self-advocates and experts on race and disability to talk about intersectionality, what disability justice looks like, how children can advocate for themselves, and much more. You can watch the whole discussion above, and you can read a transcript of the conversation and learn more about the panelists here.

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What do a sly, sexy, sharply political collection of poems and a graphic novel depicting flat-chested rabbits and elementary school blues have in common? The Felix Awards. This year, Extreme Kids & Crew celebrates Ilya Kaminsky for Deaf Republic and Cece Bell for El Deafo. The Felix Award Committee selected Kaminsky and Bell because their brilliant work is informed by their experience of deafness. Despite--or perhaps because of--their different takes on this experience, both artists illustrate how expansive and unbounded disability art can be.

While we understand that many people in the deaf community do not consider deafness a disability, we at Extreme Kids & Crew believe that disability, very broadly defined, is something we all share. The sooner we accept our own oddities, pains, flaws, gaps, and terrors, the sooner we can access the understanding, insight, community, creativity, humor, and forgiveness these very same things can bring. We celebrate art that brings this to light.

To introduce you to our 2020 Felix Award honorees, the novelist and Extreme Kids parent Emily Schultz has conducted interviews with both of them.  (I can’t recommend Deaf Republic highly enough. If you haven’t yet read it, now would be a good time. We’ll be discussing it at the Extreme Kids zoom book group in June.)

A special thanks to the Felix Awards Committee: Brenda Shaughnessy, Craig Teicher, Jerron Herman, Maysoon Zayid, Rebecca Alson-Milkman, Eliza Factor and Amy Herzog.

Read: Ilya Kaminsky’s Q&A

Read: Cece Bell’s Q&A

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Eliza Factor, Founder of Extreme Kids & Crew. Alt text: Photo portrait of a brunette, white woman in a striped shirt, grinning at the camera.

Eliza Factor, Founder of Extreme Kids & Crew.

Alt text: Photo portrait of a brunette, white woman in a striped shirt, grinning at the camera.

My children are the inspiration behind Extreme Kids & Crew. My son Felix has a grab bag of disabilities, including autism and cerebral palsy. His younger sisters don't. I wanted to create a place outside of our home where we were not the only exceptional family with the whooping kid in the wheelchair, but just another rambunctious, ramshackle family. Through my daughters, I made friends with parents raising neurotypical children, and their company was sustaining and valuable. I yearned for these same sorts of connections with people raising children with disabilities. I knew they existed. I would see them at hospitals, doctors offices, and schools, frazzled like me, caught up in what seemed to be a never-ending treadmill of appointments and bureaucracy. We were all so focused on our particular children's diagnoses, medical treatments, and insurance or lack-of-insurance snafus that there was not the time and space to explore our commonalities, to relax and be with one another.

And so: Extreme Kids & Crew, a not-for-profit arts-movement-play program dedicated to creating space for children with all sorts of disabilities to be who they are, and for families to connect with each other and their children. We are not a therapy center. We are a place where the entire family can play on inventive sensory equipment, make and listen to music and express themselves through the arts.

Extreme Kids & Crew has now been operating for over nine years. We have had nearly thousands of families from every borough of New York City take part. Children with autism, sensory processing disorders, ADHD, down's syndrome, cerebral palsy, spina bifida, epilepsy, and many others, diagnosed and not, have participated in our programming. Families come from every walk of life. What ties us together is the experience of living with and loving a child who is different.

When I started Extreme Kids & Crew. I had not realized how inspired I would be by the other parents and children I would meet, nor was I prepared for the generosity and enthusiasm of musicians and artists and other volunteers who have made our program such a creative powerhouse. I was warned that starting such a program would tax my energies, instead it gave me energy. The friendships that I have made through Extreme Kids & Crew have widened and sweetened my world. I invite you to drop by and experience it for yourself!

Visit Eliza online: https://www.elizafactor.net/strange-beauty/
Read the blog: http://brokenandwoken.blogspot.com/

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