Online Disability Community, iCan, Seeks to Narrow Digital Divide, July 9, Chicago
6 July 2000
Online Disability Community, iCan, Seeks to Narrow Digital Divide, July 9, ChicagoCHICAGO - The Internet is the most significant equalizer ever, and iCan, the leading disability community, this week launches a major effort to raise awareness, narrow the digital divide and create opportunity for people of all abilities. With the support of General Motors Corporation, Kmart and Microsoft Diversity Recruiting, iCan and its Founder and CEO Heidi Van Arnem kicked off a summer long effort to bring awareness to the 10th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act. "These three giant corporations represent a growing awareness that there is great opportunity to reach the 85 percent of people with disabilities who are not online yet -- and whose lives stand to be enhanced by connecting to the Internet," Van Arnem said. Van Arnem, recently named one of the Top 25 Women on the Web, is uniquely qualified to speak for and about the disability community. Van Arnem, a quadriplegic since being shot at age 16, knows well what people with disabilities need and want. "Disabilities disappear with advancements in technology," Van Arnem said. Opportunities such as home-based employment, shopping and educational instruction offer independence, opportunity and relief from isolation. iCan seeks to bring the information, products, services and resources to the disability community. The ADA represents 10 years of progress, but there is much more to be done. Seventy percent of people with disabilities remain unemployed, yet the majority wants to work. "The 'Digital Divide' -- the divide between those with access to new technologies and those without -- is a leading issue for people with disabilities," Van Arnem says. Van Arnem cites these statistics from recent studies: * 85 percent of people with disabilities are not online. * Of those people with disabilities who are online, 48 percent say the Internet has significantly improved their quality of life, compared with 27 percent of those people without disabilities. * Computer users with disabilities reported spending twice the hours online and e-mailing as others did. Van Arnem and iCan intend to highlight the need for continued awareness, in the effort to improve accessibility standards and to connect more people to the technology that will enhance their lives. iCan is poised to be the news and information leader of the Spirit of ADA Torch Relay from June 11 through Aug. 7, 2000. iCan News Service will distribute coverage -- free of charge -- to non-profits, influential media outlets and, of course, "On the Road with iCan" partners. "This is not a story about iCan," Van Arnem says. "It is about the millions of people with disabilities, their accomplishments and their aspirations." Here's a schedule of events for Sunday, July 9, in Chicago: * 12:30 p.m.: Chicago Spirit of the ADA Torch Relay Celebration kicks off a torch ceremony at Wrigley Field before the Cubs-White Sox Cross Town Classic. Remarks about the Americans with Disabilities Act and presentation of the torch on the field will be included. * The celebration then continues in Jackson Park with speakers and live entertainment.