Indicator: 67 - Employment Rates of the Disabled

Why This Is Important
This is an important indicator because a strong economy requires
the contributions that we ALL have to offer. If a class of people
is under-represented in the labor force, the economy is missing
out on valuable skills, abilities, and assets of some of our people.
This indicator does not consider people whose disabilities actually
prevent them from being able to work, but only those who are in
the labor force. For these purposes, someone with a disability is
defined as having a work limitation of some sort, including having
been out of work for six of the previous twelve months due to disability.
Although this indicator focuses on people with disabilities who
are in the labor force, there is a significant number of people
with disabilities who are not in the labor force, and many who have
dropped out of the labor force because of the difficulties they
face in gaining meaningful and rewarding employment.

Where We Stand
In 2000, 42% of non-institutionalized people with disabilities
in Maine were employed. In the same demographic group in the United
States, only 32.8% were employed in that year.
Data Sources and Context
The data comes from the Maine Economic Growth Council's Measures
of Growth 2002, prepared by the Maine Development Foundation.
The Foundation analyzed data from the U.S. Census Bureau's Current
Population Survey, 1981-2000, based on a report by Cornell University's
Rehabilitation Research and Training Center for Economic Research
on Employment Policy for People with Disabilities, 2001. Measures
of Growth 2002 is available on-line at http://www.mdf.org.
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