To celebrate the achievements of women with disabilities, the Disabled Women Make History blog series is based on interviews with passionate, determined, and talented women with paralysis.
Join us monthly as we celebrate these women and acknowledge the complexities, struggles, and accomplishments of women with disabilities.
“Helping disabled people to gain the information they need to live their best lives is the reason I get up every morning.”
Jessica Hunt on disability rights, empowering others through access to information, and paving her own path as a lawyer in D.C.
“Disability rights is all about community integration. If you ensure that a business or a building or a swimming pool is accessible to people with disabilities, you are ensuring that our communities are welcoming to everyone regardless of any other characteristic,” says Jessica Hunt, a Kentucky native and attorney who oversees the ADA Information Line, a toll-free resource operated by the U.S. Department of Justice that anyone can call to get information and resources about the Americans with Disabilities Act. “Accessibility promotes universal design, which promotes aging in place. If we want to create inclusive communities with all races, ages, and socioeconomic backgrounds, putting accessibility first makes that inclusion possible.”
“My brother’s special education teacher nominated me for a presidential task force on employment of adults with disabilities,” Jessica explained. “I became the youth advisory chair and after multiple trips to Washington DC, I realized that in order to make change for the disability community, I needed to move to the place where laws and policies were made.”
With that, Jessica decided to move to Washington, D.C. where she worked as an employment specialist at the Pentagon. After a few years working at the Pentagon, Jessica was offered the position of Attorney-Advisor for the D.C. Office of Disability Rights, where she was responsible for ensuring the city’s ADA compliance in employment, programs and services, and emergency preparedness. As the only attorney for the agency, Jessica had to know many different areas of law and be comfortable with working independently.
Jessica’s ten years at the D.C. Office of Disability Rights prepared her for her current job as the Supervisory Accessibility Specialist for the United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division’s ADA Information Line. In this role, Jessica supervises the 1-800 number that anyone can call to learn their rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act and other disability-related laws. Specifically, Jessica helps to ensure that the Department of Justice provides accurate and complete information to individuals who call who may have a complaint against their State or local government, a business, or university or college.
“The impact of having a disabled person in this role is that I can combine my knowledge of the law with my personal experience living with a disability. Every person may bring empathy to their job, but I can contribute to a greater understanding of the obligations and requirements of disability rights law nationwide,” Jessica thoughtfully explained. “Also, being part of the Disability Community allows me to anticipate the types of issues that might be important to the Department when we are looking for areas of interest or hot button topics to investigate.”
Jessica has come a long way from being a small-town Kentucky girl who did not know any other people with disabilities outside of her hometown. She did not have any mentors with disabilities, but she credits her mom with helping her learn about advocacy.