They're disabled - and they're working
Andre Taylor of Sicklerville loves to do dishes.
"I'm a single guy. I don't have many at home," said Taylor, 36, smiling as he wheeled himself around the cafeteria of the Abilities Center of Southern New Jersey in Westville, where he works.
Taylor is among about 220 employees at one of South Jersey's leading providers of jobs, occupational training, and educational services for people who are born disabled or who become so through an accident, illness, or injury.
The center wants to expand, but the state has slashed its contribution toward the operating budget, and fund-raising has been crimped by the recession. The waiting list for jobs has about 50 names, said president and chief executive officer Susan Perron.
Nationally, the unemployment rate for workers with a disability was 16.2 percent in September, compared with 9.2 percent for nondisabled workers, according to the most recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
But that figure, which measures people in the workplace who lost jobs, tells only part of the story, experts say.
The total number of working-age disabled people without jobs nationally exceeds 70 percent, said Bill Ditto, New Jersey's director of disability services. The Garden State has 1.9 million disabled residents of all ages.
In Pennsylvania, about 530,000 working-age individuals receive Social Security disability benefits. In 2008, about 5 percent of them also had a job, said John Miller, vice president of AHEDD, a nonprofit placement agency based in Camp Hill.
"The prevailing attitude in society is that if you're disabled, you're unable to work," Ditto said.
Workers and supervisors at the Abilities Center know that's not true.
"One of the reasons I like working here is that people like coming to work," said Taylor's boss, food-services manager Wendy Ubil of Franklinville. "They're hard workers."
Nationally, about 44 percent of disabled Social Security beneficiaries surveyed recently by Mathematica Policy Research said they wanted to find a job - or a better-paying job - within five years.
"About 90 percent of people with a disability live on or below the federal poverty level," Ditto said. "They're not going to achieve what most people want: home ownership, travel, assets."
Beyond raising their standard of living, the disabled seek the personal satisfaction of working, Perron said.
"When you meet someone for the first time, the first thing you ask is what they do for a living," she said.
Donna Schultz, 54, gets paid by the piece, so she's frustrated if assembly-line work slows at the Abilities Center. Some days, she said, her earnings don't cover bus fare from Gloucester City.
Schultz has worked at the center off and on since a brain injury in the 1980s. A drunken driver hit Schultz's car, killing her toddler daughter. Five days a week, she collates brochures or calendars for a printing plant as others assemble flooring, inflate balls, pack electronics, or prepare food.
In this recession, piecework contracts are harder to find, marketing manager Cindy Cliver said. The center competes with overseas labor, and companies keep work in-house to avert layoffs.
"There's nothing being manufactured locally," she said. "When it's really slow, rumors start about the Abilities Center closing."
Far from closing, the center has raised $600,000 toward a $3,500,000 expansion on its 11 acres, Perron said. Plans include a 20,000-square-foot addition to worker and warehouse space to employ more people.





