Wheelchair athlete lobbies Maryland for integrated athletics
March 12th, 2008
Urges legislators to allow students with disabilities to compete alongside typical peers
From the Baltimore Sun:
Tatyana McFadden, an internationally recognized Paralympic athlete, is lobbying lawmakers in Annapolis to ensure that athletes with disabilities can compete alongside their non-disabled peers.
McFadden, a high school senior who earlier sued for the right to share the track with her classmates in Howard County, told a Senate committee that “no student should have to fight to be accepted in high school.”
McFadden was among those who spoke in favor of a bill that would require schools to allow athletes with disabilities to play wheelchair basketball or tennis, to swim or to otherwise play sports among themselves or side-by-side with able-bodied students.
Sen. Jim Rosapepe, a Prince George’s County Democrat who is sponsoring the legislation, said schools need a statewide approach.
… The State Department of Education opposes the legislation because it would require school systems to pay for additional employees - at an estimated cost of $2.8 million statewide - to ensure that the systems are in compliance.
… McFadden was born with spina bifida. In 2004, she won two medals in track at the Paralympics in Athens, Greece.
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