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entitled 'Workforce Investment Act: Labor Has Taken Several Actions to 
Facilitate Access to One-Stops for Persons with Disabilities, but These 
Efforts May Not Be Sufficient' which was released on December 14, 2004.

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Report to Congressional Requesters:

United States Government Accountability Office:

GAO:

December 2004:

WORKFORCE INVESTMENT ACT:

Labor Has Taken Several Actions to Facilitate Access to One-Stops for 
Persons with Disabilities, but These Efforts May Not Be Sufficient:

GAO-05-54:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-05-54, a report to congressional requesters: 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The Workforce Investment Act (WIA) of 1998 includes provisions intended 
to ensure that people with disabilities have equal opportunity to 
participate in and benefit from the programs and activities offered 
through one-stop career centers (one-stops). But little is known, and 
questions have been raised, about how well this system is working for 
persons with disabilities. This report examines (1) what the Department 
of Labor (Labor), states, and the one-stops have done to facilitate 
comprehensive access to the WIA one-stop system; (2) the various 
relationships that the one-stops have established with disability-
related agencies to provide services to persons with disabilities; (3) 
what Labor has done to ensure that the one-stops are meeting the 
comprehensive access requirements, and the factors that have affected 
efforts to ensure compliance; and (4) what is known about the 
employment outcomes of persons with disabilities who use the one-stop 
system.

What GAO Found:

Labor has awarded grants to facilitate comprehensive access, which is 
defined in this report as providing people with disabilities the equal 
opportunity to participate in and benefit from the programs, 
activities, and/or employment offered by the WIA one-stop system. 
States and local areas have used these grants for a range of efforts, 
including increasing staff capacity to provide services to persons with 
disabilities. During our site visits to 18 local areas and one-stops, 
we found that officials at most sites were working to implement 
architectural access requirements. Moreover, local areas and one-stops 
varied in the degree to which they had addressed other areas of 
comprehensive access. For example, a few sites had only begun to 
acquire assistive technology devices; other sites had assistive 
technology and had trained some or all of their staff in how to use it.

One-stops have established various relationships to provide services to 
persons with disabilities. The structure of the one-stops’ 
relationships with state vocational rehabilitation (VR) programs 
varied, as did the extent to which they have formed relationships with 
disability-related service providers other than VR. A few local areas 
and one-stops primarily formed relationships with VR, while others had 
also formed relationships with community-based disability 
organizations.

Although Labor has taken several actions to ensure comprehensive access 
to one-stops, these efforts may not be sufficient. Labor’s Employment 
and Training Administration (ETA), Civil Rights Center (CRC), and 
Office of Disability Employment Policy (ODEP) have issued guidance and 
assistance on the regulatory requirements. CRC also has conducted on-
site reviews at local areas and one-stops in two large metropolitan 
areas in two states. In both areas, CRC identified instances of 
noncompliance with these requirements. Reviews in two other states will 
be completed during fiscal year 2005, but Labor has not developed a 
long-range plan for how it will carry out its oversight and enforcement 
responsibilities beyond 2005. To date, CRC’s monitoring and enforcement 
efforts account for less than 2 percent of the total number of local 
areas and one-stops nationwide. The CRC Director stated that she had 
not yet determined whether CRC would conduct additional on-site 
reviews.

The information that Labor publishes on employment outcomes for people 
with disabilities is limited for a variety of reasons. Disclosure about 
disability status is voluntary, thus the information about employment 
outcomes may be misleading. The collection of information on the 
employment outcomes of WIA participants is limited to those who are 
registered for services, and one-stops are not required to register 
customers who participate in self-service or informational activities. 
The performance measurement system may result in customers being denied 
services because local areas may be reluctant to provide WIA-funded 
services to job seekers who may be less likely to find employment. 

What GAO Recommends:

GAO recommends that Labor develop and implement a long-term plan for 
ensuring that the one-stops comply with the comprehensive access 
requirements. In developing such a plan, Labor should use the expertise 
of staff from CRC, ETA, and ODEP. Labor generally agreed with our 
recommendation and said that even more could be done to ensure 
comprehensive access within the one-stop system.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-54.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Sigurd Nilsen at (202) 
512-7215 or nilsens@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents:

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

Labor, Local Areas, and One-Stops Have Made Various Efforts and Degrees 
of Progress in Facilitating Access:

One-Stops and Disability Agencies Have Established Various 
Relationships to Serve Persons with Disabilities:

Labor Has Taken Actions to Ensure That One-Stops Comply with Access 
Requirements, but These Efforts May Not Be Sufficient:

Information on Employment Outcomes Is Limited:

Conclusions:

Recommendation:

Agency Comments:

Appendix I: Comments from the Department of Labor:

Appendix II: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO's Related Products:

Tables:

Table 1: WIA's Mandatory One-Stop Partner Programs and Related Federal 
Agencies:

Table 2: Work Incentive Grants: 2000, 2002, 2003, and 2004:

Table 3: Selected Types of Auxiliary Aids and Services:

Table 4: Co-location Status of VR Staff in the One-Stops We Visited:

Figure:

Figure 1: GAO Site Visits to Local Areas and One-Stop Centers:

Abbreviations:

ADAAG: Americans with Disabilities Act Accessibility Guidelines for 
Buildings and Facilities: 

CRC: Civil Rights Center: 

ETA: Employment and Training Administration: 

EO: equal opportunity: 

HUD: Department of Housing and Urban Development: 

JTPA: Job Training Partnership Act: 

MOA: Methods of Administration: 

ODEP: Office of Disability Employment Policy: 

SSA: Social Security Administration: 

TDD: telecommunications device for the deaf: 

TTY: text telephone: 

UFAS: Uniform Federal Accessibility Standards: 

VR: Vocational Rehabilitation: 

WIA: Workforce Investment Act: 

WIG: Work Incentive Grant:

United States Government Accountability Office:

Washington, DC 20548:

December 14, 2004:

The Honorable Judd Gregg, Chairman: 
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: 
United States Senate:

The Honorable Edward M. Kennedy: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: 
United States Senate:

The Honorable Tom Harkin: 
United States Senate:

The ability to engage in productive employment is the cornerstone of 
the American workforce system, and the programs and services provided 
through the Workforce Investment Act (WIA) of 1998 are intended for 
persons with and without disabilities. WIA unifies previously 
fragmented employment and training programs and creates a more 
comprehensive workforce investment system by bringing together over $15 
billion of federally funded programs into a single service delivery 
system--the one-stop center system. WIA requires about 17 programs to 
provide services through the one-stop system, including the Department 
of Education's Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) program, which provides 
services to eligible individuals with disabilities. The Department of 
Labor (Labor) is responsible for providing general leadership and 
guidance to the one-stop system. Within Labor, the Civil Rights Center 
(CRC) and the Employment and Training Administration (ETA) each have a 
role in ensuring that people with disabilities can participate in and 
benefit from the programs and services provided through the one-stop 
system. Additionally, Labor's Office of Disability Employment Policy 
(ODEP) has a role in increasing employment opportunities for people 
with disabilities.

Section 188 of WIA, among other things, prohibits discrimination on the 
basis of disability with respect to the programs funded or otherwise 
financially assisted under WIA. Labor's regulations implementing WIA 
Section 188 include specific provisions intended to ensure that persons 
with mobility, mental health, hearing, vision, speech, cognitive, or 
other impairments have equal opportunity to participate in or be 
employed by the programs and activities offered through the one-stop 
system. These regulations encompass provisions that oblige recipients 
of WIA financial assistance to take positive actions to provide people 
with disabilities the equal opportunity to participate in and benefit 
from the programs, activities, and/or employment offered by the one-
stop system. For the purpose of this report, we use the term 
comprehensive access when referring to these requirements. These 
requirements include actions such as providing architectural access, 
program accessibility, reasonable accommodations or modifications, 
service delivery in integrated settings, and effective communication. 
Labor's regulations also include provisions prohibiting covered 
recipients of federal financial assistance from taking discriminatory 
actions that exclude people with disabilities from participating in the 
programs, activities, or employment offered by the one-stop career 
center system, and provisions requiring recipients to establish the 
administrative structure that CRC views as necessary in order to ensure 
nondiscrimination and equal opportunity for members of all groups 
protected by Section 188 of WIA.

Despite the requirements contained in these provisions, little is known 
about how well the one-stop system is working for people with 
disabilities. As a result, you asked us to examine (1) what Labor, 
states, and the one-stop centers have done to facilitate comprehensive 
access to the WIA one-stop system; (2) the various relationships that 
the one-stop centers have established with disability-related agencies 
to provide services to persons with disabilities; (3) what Labor has 
done to ensure that the one-stop centers are meeting the comprehensive 
access requirements, and the factors that have affected efforts to 
ensure compliance; and (4) what is known about the employment outcomes 
of persons with disabilities who use the one-stop system.

To address these issues, we interviewed officials at Labor, and we 
conducted document reviews of Labor's Work Incentive Grants (WIG) and 
the Disability Program Navigator (Navigator) grants.[Footnote 1] The 
Work Incentive Grants are designed to enhance the employment and career 
advancement of people with disabilities. The Navigator grants are 
intended to increase employment and self-sufficiency of people with 
disabilities. We used information obtained from these grants to help 
select which states, local areas, and full-service one-stop career 
centers (one-stops) to visit. We selected these states on the basis of 
geographical dispersion, as well as whether they received one or more 
types of grants, if any. We conducted site visits to six states--
California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Mexico, and 
Tennessee. We visited three local workforce investment areas (local 
areas) and associated one-stop centers in each of these states. After 
discussions with WIA officials within the six states, we selected the 
local areas and one-stop centers to obtain both urban and suburban 
centers and, where possible, one-stop centers in small towns or rural 
areas. Figure 1 shows the 18 locations we visited. At the local 
workforce investment area and one-stop centers, we interviewed WIA 
officials, one-stop staff, and officials from organizations 
representing people with disabilities about issues and practices for 
providing programs, services, and activities to individuals with 
disabilities. Additionally, we reviewed relevant documents from Labor, 
as well as the WIA statute and regulations and other relevant statutory 
and regulatory provisions.

Figure 1: GAO Site Visits to Local Areas and One-Stop Centers:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

While WIA and its implementing regulations require that persons with 
disabilities can use the one-stop facilities and participate in and 
benefit from the system's programs, activities, and services, we did 
not assess the extent to which the approximately 1,900 one-stops, 
located in about 600 local areas nationwide, meet the comprehensive 
access requirements. Determining whether a particular site meets 
architectural access standards is fairly straightforward, but this is 
not the case with determining whether other comprehensive access 
requirements have been met. While many of the elements of these 
requirements, such as provision of assistive technology devices, are 
described in existing regulations, the regulations allow one-stops to 
use a variety of methods to meet the requirements. Because there is no 
one list of methods that covers all paths to comprehensive 
accessibility, it is a complex and resource-intensive task to determine 
whether the comprehensive access requirements have been met. 
Determining whether a single one-stop center is in compliance with 
these requirements requires both on-site observations of the facility 
and its equipment, as well as extensive document reviews and interviews 
with one-stop staff. Determining whether one-stops are in compliance 
with comprehensive access requirements on a nationwide basis was beyond 
the scope of this study.

We conducted our work between September 2003 and October 2004 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.

Results in Brief:

Labor has awarded grants to facilitate comprehensive access to 
employment and training programs for persons with disabilities, and 
local areas and one-stop centers have also made numerous efforts, as 
well as various degrees of progress, in facilitating comprehensive 
access to their programs and services. Specifically, Labor's Employment 
and Training Administration has awarded states and local entities over 
100 grants totaling $80 million for disability-related activities, such 
as enhancing comprehensive access to the one-stops. States and local 
areas have used these grants for a range of efforts, including 
assessing one-stop architectural accessibility, acquiring assistive 
technology devices, and increasing staff capacity to provide services 
to persons with disabilities. During our site visits to 18 local areas 
and their one-stops, we found that officials in most sites were working 
to implement architectural access requirements. Some of these officials 
told us that they had made at least some changes to improve 
architectural access. For example, some changes included installing 
signage and electric door openers. However, we found that the local 
areas and one-stops we visited varied in the degree to which they had 
addressed other comprehensive access concerns. For example, a few sites 
had only begun to acquire assistive technology devices, while other 
sites had assistive technology devices and had trained some or all of 
their staff in how to use them.

One-stops, VR, and other disability-related agencies in the community 
have established various relationships to provide services to persons 
with disabilities. From our site visits, we found that the structure of 
the one-stop centers' relationships with VR varied, particularly in 
terms of whether co-location was occurring. While most of the one-stops 
we visited had VR staff on-site at least part of the time, four of the 
sites we visited had no on-site VR staff. Officials from the sites at 
which full-or part-time co-location of VR staff was taking place said 
that co-location was beneficial because, among other reasons, it helped 
the one-stop staff provide faster and less fragmented services to 
persons with disabilities. For those locations at which VR was not on-
site, officials told us that there were a variety of reasons for this, 
such as a lack of space in the one-stop. The one-stop centers we 
visited also varied in terms of the extent to which they formed 
relationships with disability-related service providers other than VR. 
In a few cases, local areas and one-stops primarily formed 
relationships with VR. However, other local areas and one-stops we 
visited had also formed relationships with one or more disability-
related organizations in the community, such as independent living 
centers, mental health agencies, and cognitive/developmental 
disability agencies. Officials from local areas and their one-stops, as 
well as those from VR and community disability agencies, cited a range 
of benefits to being able to refer their customers to one another for 
services, when it was appropriate to do so. For example, some local 
area and one-stop officials said the one-stop's relationship with VR 
allowed the two agencies to combine their resources to maximize the 
services they can provide to their customers.

Labor has taken several actions to ensure comprehensive access to one-
stops by persons with disabilities, but these efforts may not be 
sufficient. For instance, Labor has not only funded grants, it has also 
provided training in ways to facilitate comprehensive access in the 
one-stop centers. Further, within Labor, CRC, along with ETA and ODEP, 
has provided guidance and assistance to one-stops on accommodations and 
other comprehensive access requirements. In addition, CRC has 
responsibility for interpreting, monitoring, and enforcing WIA's 
statutory and regulatory nondiscrimination, comprehensive access, and 
administrative provisions. One key method Labor uses to ensure 
adherence to these provisions has been to require that each state's 
governor sign a plan, known as the Methods of Administration (MOA), 
that describes the policies, procedures, and systems that each state 
has established to ensure adherence with WIA's statutory and regulatory 
requirements. In addition, in 2003, CRC completed its first phase of 
on-site reviews at local workforce areas and one-stops in two large 
metropolitan areas in two states, Miami/Dade County, Florida, and New 
York City, New York. In both metropolitan areas it reviewed, CRC 
identified instances of noncompliance with WIA's comprehensive access 
and other requirements, including the existence of barriers limiting 
services to persons with disabilities. On the basis of its findings, 
CRC required the two states to provide it with written responses of the 
corrective actions they planned to make. Further, in May 2004, the CRC 
Director requested that all states complete, for themselves and their 
largest local area, a self-assessment tool to assess compliance with 
the requirements of WIA Section 188 and its implementing regulations. 
CRC anticipates using the information provided by the on-site reviews 
and self-assessments to identify exemplary practices as well as areas 
needing improvement. Although Labor has taken actions to address the 
comprehensive access and other requirements for persons with 
disabilities, these efforts may not be sufficient to ensure one-stop 
system compliance. For instance, although CRC plans to complete on-site 
reviews in two other large metropolitan areas in two states during 
fiscal year 2005, it has not developed a long-range plan that describes 
how it will carry out its oversight and enforcement responsibilities 
beyond 2005. Currently, the CRC reviews that have been completed, or 
are in process, represent less than 2 percent of the local areas and 
one-stop centers nationwide. At the time of our review, the CRC 
Director said that she had not yet determined whether CRC would conduct 
additional on-site reviews.

Information about the employment outcomes of persons with disabilities 
is limited by the extent to which disability data are collected and 
overall data collection methods under WIA. Although Labor publishes 
some information on employment outcomes for people with disabilities in 
areas such as job placement, employment retention, earnings change, and 
skill attainment for the WIA-funded programs, this information is 
limited for several reasons. One reason is that the information Labor 
publishes on the employment outcomes of persons with disabilities is 
limited to the subpopulation of persons with disabilities who disclose 
their disability status, and therefore the employment outcomes may be 
misleading for the total population of persons with disabilities 
receiving services through WIA. Labor has issued guidance stating that 
one-stops must inquire about disability status from job seekers upon 
registration for services. Such inquiries must be asked of all job 
seekers, but an individual's decision to disclose his or her disability 
status must be completely voluntary. Further, the collection of 
employment outcome information on WIA participants, including 
information on individuals with disabilities, is limited to those 
individuals who are registered for services. Current law does not 
require that one-stops register job seekers who receive services that 
are self-service and informational in nature, and thus they are not 
included in the performance measures. Finally, the performance 
measurement system developed under WIA may result in the denial of 
services to some customers because performance levels are tied to 
incentives and sanctions depending on whether states meet these levels. 
Consequently, local areas may be reluctant to provide WIA-funded 
services to job seekers, including persons with disabilities, in 
situations in which the persons may be unlikely to find employment or 
experience an increase in earnings when placed in jobs. In a prior 
report, we recommended that Labor develop a systematic method to 
account for different populations and local economic conditions when 
negotiating performance levels.[Footnote 2] Labor agreed with the 
importance of taking economic conditions and characteristics of the 
population into account when setting performance expectations and has 
commissioned a study to address this issue.

To improve comprehensive access for persons with disabilities to the 
one-stop system, we recommend that Labor develop and implement a long-
term plan for ensuring that the one-stop system complies with the 
comprehensive access requirements for persons with disabilities. In 
developing such a strategy, Labor should utilize the expertise of CRC, 
ETA, and ODEP staff. In commenting on the draft of this report, Labor 
generally agreed with our recommendation and said that even more could 
be done to ensure comprehensive access within the one-stop system.

Background:

The Workforce Investment Act of 1998 requires states and localities to 
bring together about 17 federally funded employment and training 
services into a single system--the one-stop system. Funded through four 
federal agencies, these programs, also known as the mandatory partner 
programs (or more simply, mandatory partners),[Footnote 3] are to 
provide services through a statewide network of one-stop career 
centers. (See table 1.)

Table 1: WIA's Mandatory One-Stop Partner Programs and Related Federal 
Agencies:

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: WIA Adult.

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: WIA Dislocated Worker.

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: WIA Youth.

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Employment Service (Wagner-Peyser).

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Trade Adjustment Assistance 
Programs.

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Veterans' Employment and Training 
Programs.

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Unemployment Insurance.

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Job Corps.

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Welfare-to-Work Grant-Funded 
Programs.

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Senior Community Service Employment 
Program.

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Employment and Training for Migrant 
and Seasonal Farm Workers.

Federal Agency: Department of Labor[A]; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Employment and Training for Native 
Americans.

Federal Agency: Department of Education; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Vocational Rehabilitation Program.

Federal Agency: Department of Education; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Adult Education and Literacy.

Federal Agency: Department of Education; 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: Vocational Education (Perkins Act).

Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services; 
Mandatory One- Stop Partner Program: Community Services Block Grant.

Federal Agency: Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD); 
Mandatory One-Stop Partner Program: HUD-administered Employment and 
Training. 

Source: GAO-04-657.

[A] Labor's Employment and Training Administration (ETA), in 
collaboration with the partner programs, provides general leadership 
and guidance to the one-stop system.

[End of table]

Three of these 17 programs, which were created and funded by Title I of 
WIA to provide services to adults, dislocated workers, and youth, 
replace those previously funded under the Job Training Partnership Act 
(JTPA). The Department of Labor distributes funds for these three 
programs to the states, and the states in turn distribute funds to 
designated local areas within the states based on formulas prescribed 
by WIA. WIA also established performance measures that states and 
localities must track in order to demonstrate the programs' 
effectiveness. The performance measures primarily focus on entered 
employment rates, employment retention rates, earnings changes, and 
credential rates.[Footnote 4]

WIA programs provide for three levels of services for adults and 
dislocated workers: core, intensive, and training. Core services 
include basic services such as job search and labor market information. 
These activities may be self-service or may require some staff 
assistance. Intensive services include such activities as comprehensive 
assessment and case management, which require greater staff 
involvement. Training services include such activities as occupational 
skills training or on-the-job training.

WIA requires the establishment of workforce investment boards at the 
state level and in local areas. The state boards are responsible for a 
number of functions, including the development and improvement of the 
statewide workforce investment system and the designation of local 
areas. The state board assists in the preparation of the state plan and 
the annual report, both of which are submitted to the Secretary of 
Labor. The local workforce investment board sets policy for the local 
area, and its specific duties include developing a comprehensive 5-year 
local plan and selecting one-stop operators.

WIA contains a number of provisions to ensure that individuals with 
disabilities are adequately served. The most important of these 
provisions is Section 188, which prohibits any program or activity 
funded or otherwise financially assisted in whole or part under WIA 
from discriminating on the basis of disability as well as race, color, 
religion, sex, national origin, age, or political affiliation or 
belief.[Footnote 5]

To help states and local areas implement the Section 188 provisions, 
the Department of Labor issued interim final regulations in November 
1999.[Footnote 6] These regulations, which have the force of law, 
describe requirements for the recipients of financial assistance under 
WIA Title I, and for programs and activities operated by the one-stop 
partners as part of the one-stop system.[Footnote 7] The regulations 
also identify how recipients will be held accountable for ensuring 
nondiscrimination and equal opportunity for individuals with 
disabilities.

The WIA Section 188 regulations contain certain provisions that 
prohibit recipients of WIA financial assistance from taking certain 
discriminatory actions. For example, recipients must not:

* provide significant assistance to a person or entity that 
discriminates in providing any aid, benefits, services, or training to 
registrants, applicants, or participants;

* make a selection for the site or location of a facility that has a 
discriminatory effect; or:

* impose or apply eligibility criteria that screen out or tend to 
screen out individuals with disabilities, unless such criteria are 
necessary for the provision of the aid, benefit, service, training, 
program, or activity being offered.

Further, WIA Section 188 regulations contain provisions that oblige 
recipients to take certain positive actions to provide comprehensive 
access to WIA programs and services. For example, these regulations 
require some recipients of WIA financial assistance--those who are in 
facilities or parts of facilities that are constructed or altered on 
their behalf--to make those facilities architecturally accessible. In 
contrast, recipients of WIA financial assistance who are in unaltered 
existing facilities are not necessarily required to make those 
facilities architecturally accessible, but are subject to other 
requirements for accessibility, known as program access, which specify 
that a recipient must operate each service, program, or activity so 
that it, when viewed in its entirety, is readily accessible to and 
usable by individuals with disabilities. Recipients of WIA financial 
assistance do not have to make each of their existing facilities or 
every part of an existing facility accessible to and usable by 
individuals with disabilities, and can satisfy the accessibility 
requirements for existing facilities by redesigning equipment, 
reassigning services to accessible buildings, assigning aides to 
beneficiaries, and providing home visits, among other options.

As part of providing comprehensive access, WIA Section 188 regulations 
require recipients of WIA financial assistance to take a number of 
additional actions when administering their programs or activities. 
Under these provisions, recipients must:

* take steps to ensure that communications with individuals with 
disabilities are as effective as communications with others, including 
providing appropriate auxiliary aids and services where necessary;

* provide reasonable accommodation to qualified individuals with 
disabilities who are applicants, registrants, or eligible applicants/
registrants for, or participants in, employees of, or applicants for, 
employment with their programs and activities, unless providing the 
accommodation would cause undue hardship;[Footnote 8]

* make reasonable modifications in policies, practices, or procedures, 
unless making the modifications would fundamentally alter the nature of 
the service, program, or activity;

* provide the most integrated setting appropriate to the needs of 
qualified individuals with disabilities; and:

* take appropriate steps, such as advertising and marketing, to ensure 
that they are providing universal access to their WIA financially 
assisted programs and activities.

The regulations also require recipients of WIA financial assistance to 
establish an administrative structure so that they ensure compliance 
with WIA's nondiscrimination and equal opportunity provisions. Each 
recipient, except small recipients[Footnote 9] and service providers, 
must designate an equal opportunity (EO) officer who is responsible for 
ensuring that the recipient complies with Section 188 regulations. EO 
officers' responsibilities include:

* monitoring and investigating activities by recipients of WIA 
financial assistance to ensure that they do not violate WIA Section 188 
regulations,

* reviewing written policies to ensure that those policies are 
nondiscriminatory, and:

* developing and publishing the recipient's procedures for processing 
discrimination complaints.

Recipients of WIA financial assistance must also provide written 
notification that they do not discriminate on the basis of disability 
or on other prohibited bases. This notification must be placed 
prominently in the facility and distributed through other means. In 
addition, recipients of WIA financial assistance must collect and 
maintain data necessary to allow Labor to determine whether the 
recipient is complying with Section 188 of WIA and the implementing 
regulations. The Director of Labor's Civil Rights Center determines 
which data are necessary.

Under WIA Section 188 regulations, the governor of each state is 
responsible for, among other things:

* oversight of all WIA financially assisted state programs,

* ensuring compliance with WIA Section 188 and its implementing 
regulations, and:

* negotiating with recipients to secure voluntary compliance when 
noncompliance is found.

Moreover, both the Governor and the recipient of WIA financial 
assistance are liable for all violations of Section 188 unless the 
Governor has, among other things, established, signed, and adhered to 
an MOA.[Footnote 10] The MOA must be in writing and describe how the 
state programs and recipients of WIA financial assistance have 
satisfied the requirements of certain regulatory provisions, including 
those regarding people with disabilities.

In addition, the Director of Labor's CRC has oversight responsibilities 
under the Section 188 regulations, which include:

* conducting compliance reviews,

* reviewing the activities of a governor, including the adequacy of the 
MOA, and:

* investigating and resolving complaints alleging violations of Section 
188.

As part of its oversight responsibility, CRC, with assistance from ETA 
and ODEP, issued a compliance checklist on July 25, 2003, to ensure 
nondiscrimination and equal opportunity to persons with disabilities 
participating in WIA programs and activities. This checklist, 
officially known as the WIA Section 188 Disability Checklist,[Footnote 
11] identifies the regulations implementing Section 188 of WIA, 
including portions of the regulations implementing Section 504 of the 
Rehabilitation Act, and covers requirements applicable to local area 
grant recipients regarding the operation of their programs and 
activities. The checklist is based on the elements required by the MOA 
and includes lists of questions for each element of the MOA. For some 
of the elements, the questions are followed by examples of concrete 
actions that can be taken to ensure compliance with Section 188 
requirements. The appendix to the Checklist also includes additional 
examples of policies, procedures, and other steps that local area grant 
recipients can take to ensure compliance with Section 188.

Labor, Local Areas, and One-Stops Have Made Various Efforts and Degrees 
of Progress in Facilitating Access:

Labor has awarded grants to facilitate comprehensive access to 
employment and training programs for persons with disabilities, and 
local areas and one-stop centers have also made numerous efforts, as 
well as various degrees of progress, in facilitating comprehensive 
access to their programs and services. Specifically, ETA has awarded 
over 100 grants to states and local entities for disability-related 
activities, such as enhancing comprehensive access to the one-stops. 
States and local areas have used these grants for a range of efforts, 
including assessing one-stop architectural accessibility, acquiring 
assistive technology devices, and increasing staff capacity to provide 
services to persons with disabilities.

Federal Grants Have Provided Funding to Facilitate One-Stop 
Accessibility:

Between 2000 and 2004, ETA awarded state and local entities a total of 
approximately $65 million in competitive Work Incentive Grants in order 
to enhance one-stops' capacity to provide programs and services to 
persons with disabilities, which included improving one-stop 
accessibility. ETA awarded 113 grants in four rounds between 2000 and 
2004. (See table 2.)

Table 2: Work Incentive Grants: 2000, 2002, 2003, and 2004:

Work Incentive Grants: First round (2000); 
Total number of grants awarded: 23; 
Total amount of grants awarded[A]: $20 million; 
States in which grants were awarded[B]: Alaska, California, Florida, 
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, 
Michigan, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, 
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Washington.

Work Incentive Grants: Second round (2002); 
Total number of grants awarded: 23; 
Total amount of grants awarded[A]: $20 million; 
States in which grants were awarded[B]: California, Colorado, 
Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, 
Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, 
Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Washington, West 
Virginia, Wisconsin.

Work Incentive Grants: Third round (2003); 
Total number of grants awarded: 42; 
Total amount of grants awarded[A]: $17 million; 
States in which grants were awarded[B]: Arizona, Arkansas, California, 
DC, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, 
Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, 
Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, 
West Virginia.

Work Incentive Grants: Fourth round (2004); 
Total number of grants awarded: 25; 
Total amount of grants awarded[A]: $8 million; 
States in which grants were awarded[B]: Alabama, Arkansas, California, 
Connecticut, Florida, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Missouri, 
Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas, 
Virginia, Washington.

Total; 
Total number of grants awarded: 113[C]; 
Total amount of grants awarded[A]: $65 million.

Source: GAO analysis of Labor's Work Incentive Grant information.

[A] The Work Incentive Grants are funded through Labor's annual 
appropriation.

[B] Grants could either be statewide in scope, meaning that they 
covered all local areas throughout the state, or local, meaning that 
they covered a designated region within a state (such as a specific 
local area). Although we are classifying grants by their state 
affiliation, this does not necessarily indicate that all local areas 
throughout the state benefited from the funds.

[C] In the first and second rounds, only one grant was awarded within 
each state that received a grant. In the third and fourth rounds, more 
than one grant was awarded within some states.

[End of table]

On the basis of its experience administering the first two rounds of 
grants, ETA has targeted its specific grant objectives--and, therefore, 
its resources--to meet the emerging needs that states, local areas, and 
one-stops have identified in providing programs and services to persons 
with disabilities. ETA's objectives for the early rounds of grants were 
relatively broad, and as a result, grantees were permitted to use the 
funds to undertake a range of activities, including:

* assessing one-stops' architectural accessibility;

* acquiring assistive technology devices;

* conducting outreach to the disability community;

* linking and coordinating with community disability-related agencies, 
such as community mental health agencies and independent living 
centers;

* training existing one-stop staff on disability issues; and:

* making available staff who have the experience, knowledge, and skills 
necessary to address a broad range of disability-related issues.

By the third round of grants, in 2003, ETA had begun to focus its 
priorities more narrowly--though not exclusively--on increasing the 
capacity of one-stop staff to provide services to persons with 
disabilities. According to the third round grant notice, previous 
grantees had found that building staff capacity was successful in 
improving overall service delivery in their one-stops. ETA officials 
said that although they believe that building staff capacity will 
enhance one-stops' progress toward making their services available to 
persons with disabilities, they recognize that some one-stops may also 
still need to address other issues, such as meeting the architectural 
access requirements. In addition to targeting their grant objectives, 
ETA officials said they plan to change the process by which they award 
grants. ETA used a competitive process to award all four rounds of 
grants, and as a result, according to ETA officials, some states or 
local areas that needed grants may not have received them.[Footnote 12] 
ETA officials said they plan to use a different process in the future, 
which would allow them to target funding toward specific areas, such as 
states that did not receive grants in the first four rounds and/or 
states where they would like to intensify current grant activities.

ETA, in conjunction with the Social Security Administration (SSA), 
which administers employment support programs for its disability 
beneficiaries, has provided approximately $24 million to fund a 
demonstration project focused on the establishment and training of one-
stop Disability Program Navigators.[Footnote 13] The Navigators' role 
is to address the needs of persons with disabilities seeking to use the 
one-stop system. Since July 2003, Navigator grants have been awarded in 
a total of 17 states.[Footnote 14] At the time of our review, this 
initiative had led to 221 Disability Program Navigators working in or 
with one-stops in those states. As designed by ETA and SSA, in 
collaboration with ODEP, Navigators are to provide expertise and serve 
as a resource to one-stops as well as persons with disabilities. ETA 
and SSA expected that Navigators would, in part, carry out many of the 
same types of accessibility-related activities that were funded under 
the initial Work Incentive Grants. The third and fourth rounds of the 
Work Incentive Grants have led to the hiring of staff who can perform 
functions similar to those of a Navigator. At the time of our review, 
122 Navigator-like staff had been established through the Work 
Incentive Grants. Eleven of the sites we visited had either Disability 
Program Navigators or Work Incentive Grant Navigators. Some of the 
Navigators we interviewed told us they had the following job 
responsibilities:

* providing disability-related staff training;

* helping staff locate resources for specific persons with 
disabilities, such as accommodations or services in the community;

* developing relationships with disability-related service providers, 
such as VR and other community agencies; and:

* helping to ensure the accessibility of the one-stop, such as by 
conducting accessibility assessments or developing accessibility 
plans.

Local Areas and One-Stops Have Made Efforts to Facilitate Access to the 
One-Stops' Services, but Progress Has Varied:

During our site visits, we found that local areas and one-stop centers 
had made various efforts and degrees of progress in facilitating 
comprehensive access to the one-stops' programs and services. 
Specifically, we found the following:

Architectural access. Our site visits showed that most local area and 
one-stop officials were working to implement architectural access 
standards, which are required by the WIA Section 188 regulations. 
Nearly all of the sites we visited had undergone at least one 
architectural accessibility assessment within the last few years, and 
the assessments were typically conducted by VR or other disability-
related agencies. Our review of these assessments showed that there 
were often considerable differences in the degree of architectural 
access that the locations had achieved. For example, some of the sites 
had either no or few problems with regard to architectural access. 
Other locations had a number of access-related problems, including 
those related to parking, ramps, and doors, as well as restrooms and 
signage. Some officials at these locations told us they had made at 
least some changes to improve architectural access. For example, some 
changes included:

* adding or changing accessible parking spaces to meet requirements;

* installing signage or changing existing signage to meet requirements;

* building a new exterior ramp because the existing one did not meet 
architectural access requirements; and:

* installing electric door openers.[Footnote 15]

Auxiliary aids and services. Many of the one-stops we visited had 
acquired auxiliary aids and services, such as assistive technology and 
materials in alternate formats, which the WIA Section 188 regulations 
require that one-stops provide to persons with disabilities when 
necessary. Auxiliary aids and services include a range of devices, 
equipment, and services that provide effective communication for 
persons with various types of impairments. According to ETA, the 
auxiliary aids and services requirement covers any method of 
communication, including verbal, written, computer-based, or telephone 
communications. Assistive technology refers to products or equipment 
that can be used to help people with disabilities perform their major 
life functions. Some types of assistive technology can be used to make 
existing information technology, including computers and telephones, 
available to persons with disabilities. Alternate formats can, for 
instance, make written or visual materials available to persons with 
visual impairments or make oral information available to persons with 
hearing impairments. Table 3 describes selected types of auxiliary aids 
and services that were available in some of the one-stops we visited.

Table 3: Selected Types of Auxiliary Aids and Services:

Type: Screen reading software; 
Purpose: Software programs that present text as speech; 
Examples of impairments for which the aid or service may be beneficial: 
* Visual impairments; 
* Cognitive impairments.

Type: Screen magnification software; 
Purpose: Software that can increase the size of characters on a 
computer screen; 
Examples of impairments for which the aid or service may be beneficial: 
* Visual impairments.

Type: Closed-circuit television/video magnifier; 
Purpose: Electronically magnifies printed text and displays it on a 
monitor; 
Examples of impairments for which the aid or service may be beneficial: 
* Visual impairments.

Type: Speech recognition software; 
Purpose: Software programs that allow users to give commands and enter 
information using speech rather than a mouse or keyboard; 
Examples of impairments for which the aid or service may be beneficial: 
* Visual impairments; 
* Mobility impairments; 
* Cognitive impairments.

Type: Large-screen computer monitors; 
Purpose: Increases character size in proportion to computer monitor 
dimensions; 
Examples of impairments for which the aid or service may be beneficial: 
* Visual impairments.

Type: Trackball mouse; 
Purpose: An alternative to a standard mouse, this mouse has movable 
balls on top of a base that can be used to move the cursor on screen; 
Examples of impairments for which the aid or service may be beneficial: 
* Mobility impairments.

Type: Alternative keyboards; 
Purpose: Those with larger or smaller than standard keys or keyboards, 
alternative key configurations, keyboards for use with one hand, and 
others; 
Examples of impairments for which the aid or service may be beneficial: 
* Mobility impairments.

Type: TTY (text telephone)/TDD (telecommunications device for the 
deaf); 
Purpose: Device that lets people with hearing or speech impairments use 
the telephone to communicate, by allowing them to type messages back 
and forth to one another instead of talking and listening; 
Examples of impairments for which the aid or service may be beneficial: 
* Hearing impairments; 
* Speech impairments.

Type: Other assistive listening devices; 
Purpose: Devices that amplify sound in specific listening situations 
(e.g., watching television, using the telephone), while also reducing 
the effects of background noise; 
Examples of impairments for which the aid or service may be beneficial: 
* Hearing impairments; 
* Cognitive impairments.

Type: Alternate formats; 
Purpose: Presenting print or visual materials in Braille or large 
print, on audiotape, or on compact disk Presenting spoken information 
in writing; 
Examples of impairments for which the aid or service may be beneficial: 
* Visual impairments; 
* Cognitive impairments; 
* Hearing impairments; 
* Cognitive impairments. 

Source: GAO summary of information collected through site visits and 
from access guides.

[End of table]

At the time of our site visits, a few one-stops had either recently 
installed assistive technology for the first time or were still in the 
process of acquiring it. However, other sites had assistive technology, 
and some or all of the staff had already received training in how to 
use it. Some of these sites offered a range of devices, which could 
assist many types of impairments. Given the wide variety of devices 
available, some local areas and one-stops targeted their resources, at 
least initially, toward items that might be used frequently. For 
example, one local area--working with an agency that had assistive 
technology expertise--collected data on the types of impairments that 
were most prevalent among potential customers and then used these data 
to determine which devices to purchase first. In addition, a couple of 
officials said that their one-stops had some materials, such as basic 
orientation materials, routinely available in Braille or large-print 
formats. Some officials told us that they did not have any of their 
materials routinely available in alternate formats, although they would 
provide these to customers upon request. In some cases, officials said 
that they could rapidly provide customers with certain types of 
alternate formats, such as Braille, large print, computer diskette, or 
compact disk, through the use of their assistive technology or 
computers.

Reasonable accommodations. Some officials and staff we interviewed said 
they try to make reasonable accommodations for persons with 
disabilities. Reasonable accommodations, which are required by the WIA 
Section 188 regulations, enable persons with disabilities to receive 
aid, benefits, services, or training equal to that provided to persons 
without disabilities. For example, a number of officials and staff 
mentioned that although they did not have a qualified American Sign 
Language interpreter on-site at their one-stops, they have obtained an 
interpreter upon a customer's request.[Footnote 16] However, during our 
site visits, we also found that local area and one-stops' policies and 
procedures for providing reasonable accommodations varied. For example, 
officials from a few local areas and one-stops said they referred to 
their state workforce agency's or their local government's policies for 
guidance on this issue. A few officials said that they had developed 
their own local accommodation policies or procedures, or planned to do 
so. For example, one local area developed written policies and 
procedures that provided information on how customers should request an 
accommodation, which staff could assist in providing a reasonable 
accommodation, and which staff were responsible for determining if the 
one-stop is able to provide the accommodation. In addition, some 
officials told us that when they have received accommodation requests, 
they have not maintained records on the types of accommodations 
requested or whether the one-stop provided these accommodations. 
However, in at least one of the local areas we visited, the local equal 
opportunity officer--who addressed all accommodation requests--said 
that he maintained records on this information.

Integrated settings. During our site visits, we found variation in 
viewpoints regarding the practice of automatically referring persons 
with disabilities to VR for services.[Footnote 17] Even though agencies 
such as VR could provide services to persons with disabilities, the WIA 
Section 188 regulations require that one-stops allow persons with 
disabilities the opportunity to receive services in the most integrated 
setting appropriate to meet their needs. An integrated setting is one 
that enables persons with disabilities to interact with persons without 
disabilities. Although a referral to VR may be appropriate for some 
individuals, automatically referring all persons with disabilities to 
VR does not allow for the opportunity to receive services along with 
persons without disabilities. Moreover, an automatic referral to VR 
does not provide customers with an individualized assessment of their 
abilities and needs.

Some local area and one-stop officials we interviewed acknowledged that 
automatic referrals to VR did occur in the past. However, a number of 
officials and staff understood that this practice is not appropriate, 
or said that it is not currently occurring in their one-stops. Some of 
these officials and staff said that services for persons with 
disabilities are determined on a case-by-case basis and that unless 
these individuals want or indicate that they need VR services, they are 
not referred to VR. Some WIA officials, as well as a few VR officials 
and others who have provided staff training on disability issues, 
explained that one-stop staff have been trained not to automatically 
refer persons with disabilities to VR. For example, staff were trained 
not to stereotype persons with disabilities or assume that they need VR 
services, or were trained to provide these customers with a choice 
regarding which services they use.

However, during our site visits, officials in two local areas told us 
that they currently found it preferable or necessary to automatically 
refer persons with disabilities to VR. Officials from one local area 
stated that while a disability-related agency advised them that one-
stop staff should not be automatically referring persons with 
disabilities to VR, they took exception to this guidance. The local 
area officials explained that it would be irresponsible of them not to 
fully utilize the expertise of the only mandatory disability partner in 
the WIA system. Officials from another local area said that although 
their long-term goal is to train one-stop staff to work directly with 
persons with disabilities, they believe that their one-stop staff are 
currently referring these customers to VR. Additionally, some WIA, VR, 
and disability-related agency officials also expressed concerns that 
trying to meet performance standards could provide an incentive for 
one-stops to automatically refer persons with disabilities to VR, only 
serve those with the least severe disabilities, or not serve them at 
all. Some officials explained that it is sometimes more difficult for 
persons with disabilities, particularly those with more severe 
disabilities, to find and retain jobs, and that it is often more costly 
for the one-stop to serve these individuals.

Marketing and outreach. Some officials and staff we interviewed cited a 
variety of reasons why marketing the one-stops' services and conducting 
outreach to persons with disabilities, which are activities required by 
the WIA Section 188 regulations, may be important. One of the reasons 
cited was that many individuals in the community, including those with 
disabilities, were still not aware of the types of programs and 
services that one-stops offer. For example, a one-stop official said 
that one-stops are often thought of as an employment service, without 
recognition that they can offer participants education, referrals to 
disability-related agencies for services, and other assistance. Some 
WIA officials and disability-related agency representatives also said 
that even when the disability community knows what the one-stops offer, 
the one-stops often have to overcome the belief that one-stops do not 
want to, or are not capable of, providing services to persons with 
disabilities. For example, the disability community may believe that 
the one-stops do not have assistive technology or provide other 
assistance to persons with disabilities. Additionally, some officials 
also stated that they believe that persons with disabilities are still 
more likely to seek services from disability-related organizations than 
from one-stops.

Some of the officials from local areas and one-stops that had engaged 
in marketing and outreach efforts said they had used one or more 
community-based disability organizations in their efforts. For example, 
local areas or one-stops sometimes approached independent living 
centers, agencies that serve individuals with specific types of 
disabilities, or other organizations to inform them about the one-
stops' services and their accessible technology. Some officials also 
said they used brochures, television or radio ads, billboards, or other 
means to market their services to persons with disabilities. Other 
local area and one-stop officials told us about the specialized 
techniques they used, such as holding a yearly job fair for persons 
with disabilities, which provides attendees with information about one-
stop services.

Officials in a few local areas and one-stops, however, stated that they 
were hesitant to market their services to persons with disabilities. 
For example, one local area official was not confident about the 
ability of some one-stop staff to handle disability issues and, as a 
result, did not want to market what the one-stops in the area could not 
provide. An official in another local area expressed a similar 
viewpoint with regard to the lack of marketing around an assistive 
technology device that had not been used. The official stated that the 
local area had not advertised the device because he did not believe the 
one-stops in that area were fully capable of providing services to 
persons with disabilities.

Staff training. Although the WIA Section 188 regulations do not 
specifically require that one-stop staff, other than the equal 
opportunity officer and his or her staff, receive training on 
disability, the WIA Section 188 Checklist includes training as one 
example of how one-stops can ensure compliance with WIA's comprehensive 
access requirements. One-stop staff in the majority of the local areas 
we visited had received some disability-related information and 
training, but the range of topics covered varied across sites. For 
example, officials in at least one local area told us that they were 
still focusing on providing staff with disability awareness training, 
while officials, staff, and staff training providers in other locations 
described a wider range of training topics, such as:

* disability awareness or sensitivity training;[Footnote 18]

* types of services that VR provides, and the agency's eligibility 
rules and criteria;

* types of disability-related agencies in the community, as well as who 
they serve, the types of services they offer, and their contact 
information;

* how to identify certain disabilities, including hidden disabilities 
such as mental illness or learning disabilities; and:

* WIA Section 188 training.

We also found that a few local areas and one-stops created 
comprehensive training programs or targeted their training to 
identified staff needs. For example, one local area created an 
extensive disability-training program that provides online and in-class 
training on a range of relevant disability-related issues and discusses 
these issues in the context of particular disabilities. This training 
program has been made available on a statewide basis. Also, in one 
state, staff at the three one-stops we visited had undergone, or were 
scheduled to undergo, an assessment of their training needs. These 
assessments were then going to be used to develop training plans for 
each of these one-stops.

Some officials and staff stated that the available disability-related 
staff training was beneficial and provided positive outcomes. For 
example, some officials and staff said that the available training made 
staff more comfortable interacting with, and providing services to, 
persons with disabilities and helped them learn about the range of 
disability-related services that VR and other agencies in the community 
offer. However, other officials and staff expressed some concerns about 
the available training. For example, a few of these officials and staff 
said that they would like training on specific disability-related 
topics to be available, and in at least one case, local area and one-
stop officials had concerns about how well their limited training 
prepared staff for providing services to persons with disabilities. 
Additionally, some of the officials, staff, and staff training 
providers we interviewed said that their training efforts were affected 
by high staff turnover and the prospect of staff forgetting the 
information learned in training if it is not used very often. Some 
officials, staff, and staff training providers said that offering 
ongoing training was important for these reasons or that they would 
like ongoing training to be available in their one-stops.

One-Stops and Disability Agencies Have Established Various 
Relationships to Serve Persons with Disabilities:

One-stops, VR, and other disability-related agencies in the community 
have formed various relationships to provide services to persons with 
disabilities. From our site visits, we found that the structure of the 
one-stops' relationships with VR varied, particularly in terms of 
whether co-location was occurring. While most of the one-stops we 
visited had VR staff on-site at least part of the time, four of the 
sites we visited had no on-site VR staff. Table 4 shows the co-location 
status of VR staff at the one-stops we visited.

Table 4: Co-location Status of VR Staff in the One-Stops We Visited:

Co-location status of VR staff: One or more VR staff on-site on a full-
time basis; 
Number of sites: 5.

Co-location status of VR staff: One or more VR staff on-site on a part-
time basis; 
Number of sites: 9.

Co-location status of VR staff: No VR staff on-site; 
Number of sites: 4.

Source: GAO site visits.

[End of table]

Officials from the sites at which full-or part-time co-location of VR 
staff was taking place said that co-location was beneficial for a 
variety of reasons. For example, some WIA and VR officials said that 
co-location itself helped the one-stop staff provide faster and less 
fragmented services to persons with disabilities because, when the one-
stop staff made referrals to VR, they did not have to send customers 
off-site. A few officials also stated that co-location facilitated 
information sharing and helped build relationships between the staff in 
the two agencies. The reasons for VR staff not being on-site also 
varied, and included a lack of space in the one-stop, the inability of 
VR to break its lease at an existing local office, and lack of an 
interface between the one-stops' and VR's computer systems.

The one-stops we visited also varied in terms of the extent to which 
they formed relationships with disability-related service providers 
other than VR. Although VR has extensive expertise in providing 
services to persons with disabilities, other disability agencies in the 
community also have expertise and resources that can benefit one-stops. 
At the time of our site visits, a few local areas and one-stops were 
relying primarily on VR and had not formed working relationships with 
any other disability agencies. However, other local areas and one-stops 
we visited had formed relationships with one or more disability-related 
organizations in the community, such as independent living centers, 
mental health agencies, and cognitive/developmental disability 
agencies.[Footnote 19] In at least one instance, a local area formed 
relationships with agencies that focus on particular impairments. This 
local area conducted a needs analysis and found that relationships with 
organizations that provide services to persons with psychiatric 
impairments, learning disabilities, and substance abuse issues were 
lacking. As a result, the local area conducted outreach to these types 
of organizations in order to initiate relationships with them.

Officials from local areas and their one-stops, as well as those from 
VR and community disability agencies, cited a range of benefits to 
being able to refer their customers to one another for services, when 
it was appropriate to do so. For example, some WIA and VR officials 
said the one-stop's relationship with VR allowed the two agencies to 
combine their resources to maximize the services they can provide to 
their customers. For example, for co-enrolled customers, one agency 
might pay for school tuition while another pays for books. Some local 
area and one-stop officials also said that referring customers to VR 
and other community disability agencies is beneficial because those 
agencies have the ability and funding to provide certain services that 
the one-stops cannot. In addition, officials in some local areas and 
one-stops said that VR and other community agencies' willingness to 
conduct staff training, provide one-stop accessibility assessments, or 
participate in one-stop access committees was beneficial.

VR and community disability agencies also cited a number of benefits to 
referring their customers to the one-stops, including access to the 
one-stops' career resource centers' computers and telephones, their 
workshop or training classes (such as those for computer skills, 
interview skills, and résumé-writing), and a range of job listings and 
employer connections broader than their own. VR officials also cited 
other benefits. For example, when a VR customer is faced with delayed 
services because VR is waiting for documents substantiating the 
customer's disability, the one-stops can provide other services in the 
interim. Additionally, VR officials told us they find it useful to 
refer individuals who did not qualify for services through VR, whether 
because of limited funding[Footnote 20] or other reason, to the one-
stop for services.

Labor Has Taken Actions to Ensure That One-Stops Comply with Access 
Requirements, but These Efforts May Not Be Sufficient:

Labor has taken several actions to ensure that persons with 
disabilities have comprehensive access to one-stops, including 
training, monitoring, and enforcement activities, but these efforts may 
not be sufficient. For example, Labor has not only funded grants, it 
has also provided training in ways to facilitate comprehensive 
accessibility in the one-stop centers. Specifically, within Labor, ETA 
and ODEP, along with SSA, provided Disability Program Navigator 
training in November 2003 in which successful approaches to ensuring 
comprehensive access to one-stops were discussed. Additional Disability 
Program Navigator training was provided in November 2004. Further, CRC, 
with assistance from ETA and ODEP has provided written guidance and 
assistance to one-stops on accommodations and other ways to improve 
comprehensive access for persons with disabilities. Also within Labor, 
CRC conducts national equal opportunity training annually. Its August 
2004 training included topics such as new EO officer orientation, 
implementing an MOA, ensuring compliance with WIA Section 188, testing 
and assessment tools for improving services to persons with 
disabilities, and train-the-trainer EO training.

In addition to providing training, CRC is the entity responsible for 
interpreting, monitoring, and enforcing WIA Section 188 regulations 
regarding programs receiving financial assistance from Labor, including 
the applicable comprehensive access and administrative regulatory 
requirements for one-stop centers. One key method Labor uses to ensure 
compliance with these regulations has been to require that each state's 
governor establish and sign an MOA, which describes and contains 
supporting documentation of the policies, procedures, and systems that 
each state has established to ensure compliance. By signing the MOA, 
and submitting it to CRC, the governor agrees to adhere to its 
provisions. CRC provides guidance on preparing the MOA, reviews the 
adequacy of each state MOA submitted, and approves those MOAs that meet 
its standards. Currently, all governors have submitted MOAs that have 
been approved by CRC. After initial approval, states are to notify CRC 
of any updates to their MOAs, and every 2 years Labor requires states 
to review them and the manner in which they have been implemented, and 
determine whether their MOAs continue to be effective in ensuring 
compliance with the requirements of WIA Section 188 and its 
implementing regulations.

In addition, CRC monitors states' compliance with the 
nondiscrimination, comprehensive access, and administrative regulatory 
requirements by conducting on-site technical assistance compliance 
reviews at selected locations. To facilitate the review process, CRC 
conducts a 2-to 3-day training session for state, local workforce 
investment area, and one-stop center staff.[Footnote 21] In 2003, CRC 
completed its first phase of on-site training, technical assistance, 
and compliance reviews in two large metropolitan areas in two states, 
Miami/Dade County, Florida, and New York, New York. According to 
Labor's 2003 Annual Report, CRC focuses its reviews on large 
metropolitan areas so as to maximize the use of its resources. The 
annual report notes that the large labor markets in these areas provide 
the opportunity for gaining a representative picture of the degree of 
compliance with nondiscrimination and equal opportunity laws and 
regulations.

In both metropolitan areas it reviewed, CRC identified instances of 
noncompliance, including the existence of barriers limiting services to 
persons with disabilities. At one of the two metropolitan areas, CRC 
found significant differences between the disability-related 
requirements in WIA Section 188 and its implementing regulations and 
the policies, procedures, and systems that were actually being used. 
For example, CRC found that the local area had developed a service 
delivery system in which customers with disabilities were routinely 
being served by programs or activities that were separate from those 
used to serve customers without disabilities. Officials at the local 
area told CRC such a service delivery system had developed in part 
because there was a general sentiment among disability-related service 
providers that many of their customers did not feel comfortable in the 
one-stops. The WIA Section 188 regulations, however, require that 
services to qualified persons with disabilities be provided in the most 
integrated settings appropriate to the needs of those customers. 
Therefore, as noted in CRC's review, a one-stop center generally should 
not refer customers with disabilities to a separate program or activity 
until after it has conducted an individualized assessment of a 
customer's needs, and determined that the channels used to serve 
customers without disabilities cannot provide equally effective aid, 
benefits, services, or training to persons with disabilities. In 
addition, the ultimate decision whether to accept the referral to a 
separate program or activity must be left up to the customer with a 
disability. If the customer declines to accept the referral, the one-
stop must serve the customer with a disability through the same 
programs or activities used to serve all other customers.

In addition, CRC found that the EO officer at the local area in that 
metropolitan area had not been provided with sufficient staff, other 
resources, or adequate support from top management to carry out his 
duties. As a result, staff at the local workforce investment area and 
one-stops had little understanding of their disability-related or other 
obligations under WIA Section 188 regulations.

At the other metropolitan area reviewed, CRC found that some of the 
policies, procedures, and systems in the state's approved MOA had not 
been fully implemented. For instance, the local workforce investment 
area had developed an intake eligibility form for use by the one-stops 
that included questions concerning whether or not the customer had a 
disability that was or was not a substantial barrier to employment. 
Frontline staff at the one-stop centers told CRC that all customers 
were welcome to use self-service and core services. However, CRC found 
that customers who indicated on the intake form that they had a 
disability could not receive intensive or training services unless they 
provided the one-stop with documentation to support their disability, 
even when disability was not an eligibility criterion to receive such 
services. CRC found that the use of the intake form, combined with the 
requirement that customers provide documentation of their disability, 
unnecessarily screened out people with disabilities from receiving 
intensive and training services, even though Labor's WIA Section 188 
regulations require that the one-stops must not deny any qualified 
person with a disability the opportunity to participate in, or benefit 
from, a WIA-funded program or activity because of that person's 
disability. On the basis of its findings, CRC required the state 
entities responsible for WIA in which the two metropolitan areas were 
located to provide it with written responses of the corrective actions 
they planned to make.

In addition, in May 2004, the CRC Director requested that all states 
complete, for themselves and their largest local area, a self-
assessment tool to assess compliance with the equal opportunity and 
nondiscrimination laws and regulations. The self-assessment tool, which 
provides a structured approach for monitoring compliance, was adapted 
from the WIA Section 188 Disability Checklist. For each state and its 
largest local workforce investment area, the self-assessment tool asks 
whether or not each measure of compliance has been met. For all unmet 
measures, the self-assessment tool asks for a written explanation of 
how and when the measure will be met. At the time of our review, CRC 
was in the process of developing a plan to analyze the qualitative 
responses they would receive from the states. CRC anticipates using the 
information provided by these self-assessments and from its on-site 
reviews to identify exemplary practices as well as areas needing 
improvement.

In addition to the two on-site reviews CRC conducted in 2003, CRC is in 
the process of conducting two additional reviews in two large 
metropolitan areas in two other states, which it plans to complete 
during fiscal year 2005. To date the monitoring and enforcement efforts 
that have been or are being conducted account for less than 2 percent 
of the total number of local areas and one-stops nationwide. Moreover, 
the CRC Director said that she had not yet determined whether CRC would 
conduct additional on-site reviews. Limited staff and competing work 
priorities may hinder CRC's ability to conduct additional reviews. The 
Director noted that CRC has experienced an erosion in the number of 
staff since 1998, and she did not foresee any change to this trend in 
the future. The 44 professional and administrative staff that CRC 
currently has are responsible for not only all issues involving 
discrimination in one-stops and other Labor-funded programs, but also 
for all discrimination issues involving the more than 17,000 employees 
at Labor. Moreover, the Director explained that these staff are also 
responsible for addressing other workload priorities, such as issues to 
improve access to programs and activities for persons who are limited 
in their English proficiency.

Information on Employment Outcomes Is Limited:

Information about the employment outcomes of persons with disabilities 
is limited by the extent to which disability data are collected and the 
overall methods used for collecting data for WIA's performance 
measures. The three WIA-funded programs--Adult, Dislocated Worker, and 
Youth--have performance measures established under WIA that states must 
track and report in order to demonstrate the effectiveness of the 
programs. These performance measures gauge program results in such 
areas as job placement, employment retention, earnings changes, and 
skill attainment. In addition to providing information about all 
participants in the three WIA-funded programs, Labor also publishes 
outcome information about certain subpopulations, including veterans, 
older individuals, and persons with disabilities.

The information Labor publishes on the employment outcomes of persons 
with disabilities, however, is limited for several reasons. One reason 
is that the information is limited to the subpopulation of persons with 
disabilities who disclose their disability status, and therefore the 
employment outcomes may be misleading for the total population of 
persons with disabilities receiving services through WIA. The WIA 
Section 188 regulations require one-stops to collect, maintain, and 
report job seekers' demographic data--including disability status--to 
ensure that discrimination is not occurring. Labor has issued guidance 
stating that one-stops must inquire about disability status from job 
seekers upon registration for services. Such inquiries must be asked of 
all job seekers, but an individual's decision to disclose his or her 
disability status must be completely voluntary. Even though an 
individual declines to indicate his or her disability status, the one-
stop must still provide services to the individual.

Further, the collection of information on employment outcomes, 
including the information on persons with disabilities, is limited to 
those persons who are registered for WIA services. Current law does not 
require job seekers who receive services that are self-service and 
informational in nature to be included in the performance measures. 
Labor's guidance instructs states to register and report on adults and 
dislocated workers who receive core services that require significant 
staff assistance designed to help with job seeking or acquiring 
occupational skills, but states have flexibility in deciding what 
constitutes significant staff assistance.[Footnote 22] We have 
previously reported that most of the one-stop customers who participate 
in self-directed services, and receive only limited staff assistance, 
are estimated to be the largest proportion of job seekers under 
WIA.[Footnote 23] But since they are not registered for services, they 
are excluded from the employment outcome data published by Labor. In 
that report, we also noted that Labor said that it is developing a new 
reporting system that would enable states to report activity and 
outcomes for all WIA participants. According to Labor, tracking all 
one-stop job seekers will enable officials to obtain information about 
who is served, what services are provided, which partner programs 
provided the services, and what outcomes are achieved.[Footnote 24]

Finally, the performance measurement system developed under WIA may 
have a negative effect on the economic outcomes of some people with 
disabilities because the performance levels may provide a disincentive 
to serve certain clients, including those with disabilities. Under WIA, 
performance levels are tied to incentives and sanctions so that states 
can be financially rewarded if they meet them or penalized if they do 
not. As such, local areas may be reluctant to provide WIA-funded 
services to job seekers, including persons with disabilities, who may 
be less likely than others to find employment or experience an increase 
in earnings when they are placed in jobs. To address this issue, we 
recently recommended that the Secretary of Labor develop an adjustment 
model or other systematic method to account for different populations 
and local economic conditions when negotiating performance 
levels.[Footnote 25] In commenting on our recommendation, Labor agreed 
with the importance of taking economic conditions and characteristics 
of the population into account when setting performance expectations 
and had commissioned a study of adjustment models that could better 
take these differences into account.

Conclusions:

The WIA one-stop system's ability to provide comprehensive access to 
its programs, services, and activities can affect whether, and how, 
individuals with disabilities participate in the American workforce. 
Although Labor has developed specific regulations requiring that people 
with disabilities have equal opportunity to participate in and benefit 
from the programs and services offered in the WIA one-stop system, its 
efforts to date may not be sufficient to ensure that result. Five years 
after Labor issued regulations implementing the nondiscrimination and 
equal opportunity provisions of WIA Section 188, the agency has yet to 
develop and implement a long-term plan for ensuring that the one-stop 
system complies with the comprehensive access requirements for persons 
with disabilities. Although CRC, ETA and ODEP have worked together on 
some comprehensive access projects, they have not developed an overall 
plan to conduct the activities necessary to ensure comprehensive access 
to one-stops for all Americans.

Recommendation:

To improve comprehensive access for persons with disabilities to the 
one-stop system, we recommend that Labor develop and implement a long-
term plan for ensuring that the one-stop system complies with the 
comprehensive access requirements for people with disabilities. 
Moreover, in this era of constrained resources, Labor should utilize 
the expertise of CRC, ETA, and ODEP staff in developing such a plan.

Agency Comments:

We provided a draft of this report to the Departments of Labor and 
Education for their review and comments. Education did not have 
comments on our report.

Labor generally agreed with our recommendation and said that even more 
could be done to ensure comprehensive access within the one-stop 
system. Specifically, ETA has pledged to work with ODEP and CRC to 
develop and implement a long-term plan for addressing comprehensive 
access in the one-stop system. ETA also suggested that the development 
of such a long-term plan should include all of the participating 
agencies and programs. Moreover, ODEP stated that the comprehensive 
plan should also address nonspecialized disability supports and 
services, such as transportation.

ODEP and CRC also provided us with some general comments on our report. 
ODEP noted that, in addition to the WIG and Navigator grants, Labor 
supports other efforts to facilitate the inclusion of people with 
disabilities in the one-stop system. Although our report focuses on 
those grants that are most directly related to facilitating 
comprehensive access in the one-stop system, we have added examples of 
some of the types of grants that ODEP has awarded to support 
employment-related initiatives for people with disabilities. In 
addition, CRC asked us to clarify our use of the term comprehensive 
access. CRC expressed some concern that we had included administrative 
requirements in the use of the term comprehensive access. CRC believed 
that administrative requirements should not be included as they are not 
specifically disability-related. We have modified the language in our 
report to clarify that the administrative requirements are not included 
in the term comprehensive access.

ETA, ODEP, and CRC also provided us with technical comments and 
clarifications, which we have incorporated as appropriate. Copies of 
their comments appear in appendix I.

We are sending copies of this report to the Secretary of Labor, the 
Secretary of Education, relevant congressional committees, and others 
who are interested. Copies will also be made available to others upon 
request. The report will be available on GAO's Web site at http://
www.gao.gov.

Please contact me on (202) 512-7215 if you or your staff have any 
questions about this report. Other major contributors to this report 
are listed in appendix II.

Signed by: 

Sigurd R. Nilsen: Director, Education, Workforce and Income Security 
Issues:

[End of section]

Appendix I: Comments from the Department of Labor:

U.S. Department of Labor:

Assistant Secretary for Employment and Training: 
Washington, D.C. 20210:

NOV 23 2004:

Mr. Sigurd R. Nilsen: 
Director:
Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office:
441 G. Street, N.W.: 
Washington, D.C. 20548:

Dear Mr. Nilsen:

The Employment and Training Administration (ETA) is in receipt of the 
draft Government Accountability Office (GAO) report entitled, 
"Workforce Investment Act: Labor Has Taken Several Actions to 
Facilitate Access to One-Stops for Persons with Disabilities, but These 
Efforts May Not Be Sufficient" (GAO-05-54). Since the enactment of the 
Workforce Investment Act (WIA), ETA has worked to ensure that 
individuals with disabilities are provided with access, reasonable 
accommodations, and effective communication in the One-Stop Career 
Center system. While good progress has been made, we acknowledge that 
more work remains to be done.

We support the report's recommendation that the U.S. Department of 
Labor should develop and implement a long-term plan for ensuring that 
the One-Stop Career Center system complies with comprehensive access 
requirements for people with disabilities. In fact, we would argue that 
it does not go far enough. While it is ETA's role to provide policy 
leadership to the One-Stop system, the system is comprised of many 
Federal partner programs which work together to provide a network of 
coordinated workforce services. A comprehensive long-term plan for 
addressing comprehensive service requirements in the One-Stop system 
should be developed by all of the participating agencies and programs. 
ETA will work with the Department of Labor's Civil Rights Center and 
the Office of Disability Employment Policy (ODEP) to develop such a 
plan, and will also include our partners at the U.S. Department of 
Education and the Social Security Administration.

Be assured that efforts to promote integrated and coordinated planning 
are already underway. ETA has taken the lead in establishing a federal 
Inter-Agency Coordinating Forum for People with Disabilities in the 
Workforce. This group has begun meeting regularly under ETA's 
leadership, to examine federal policy guidance for the development of a 
strategic, comprehensive plan to achieve One-Stop accessibility and a 
coordinated approach to promote employment of individuals with 
disabilities.

The Coordinating Forum provides the opportunity for Assistant 
Secretary-level participation in the development of such a plan, and 
includes the Department of Administration, Disability and Income 
Support Programs; the Department of Labor, Veterans" Employment and 
Training Service, ODEP and ETA. This group is just beginning to 
formulate ideas and a strategy; however the result of our efforts will 
be similar to what you are recommending as an outcome.

It is also important to mention the work that is being done at the 
state and local level through our investments in Work Incentive Grants 
and the Disability Program Navigator Initiative which will continue to 
improve the quality of the One-Stop system. These efforts are designed 
to ensure that individuals with disabilities have access to a broad 
range of services and information through One-Stop Career Centers. In 
addition, the Administration's WIA Reauthorization proposal contains 
several provisions that would strengthen the One-Stop system's capacity 
to service individuals with disabilities.

Enclosed are ETA's technical comments on the draft report. If you would 
like additional information, please do not hesitate to call me at (202) 
693-2700.

Sincerely,

Signed by: 

Emily Stover DeRocco:

[End of letter]

U.S. Department of Labor:

November 23, 2004:

Mr. Sigurd R. Nilsen: 
Director:
Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office:
441 G. Street, N.W.: 
Washington, D.C. 20548:

Dear Mr. Nilsen:

Thank you for allowing the U.S. Department of Labor Office of 
Disability Employment Policy (ODEP) an opportunity to comment regarding 
the Government Accountability Office's (GAO) draft report entitled, 
"Workforce Investment Act: Labor Has Taken Several Actions to 
Facilitate Access to One-Stops for Persons with Disabilities, but These 
Efforts May Not Be Sufficient." This letter provides comments, which 
are essentially technical in nature, on recommendations contained in 
the draft report.

As an overall comment, ODEP asserts that by reducing the grant 
activities by ODEP to a vague footnote on page 2, the report does not 
reflect the full range of efforts by DOL to facilitate the inclusion of 
people with disabilities into WIA programs. Specifically, multiple ODEP 
grants are facilitating comprehensive access to One Stops. For 
instance:

* ODEP initiatives are testing and demonstrating innovative methods for 
serving people with disabilities by changing the culture, operating 
philosophy and menu of services in ways that will endure and that will 
enhance the ability of One Stops to better serve all of its clients 
with complex needs, including people with disabilities.

* ODEP will identify and disseminate to the workforce investment system 
the best policies and practices pulled from the activities of the 
grantees. As an example, some grantees are involving One Stops, 
Vocational Rehabilitation agencies, micro-enterprise agencies and 
other small business development resources in new relationships that 
are resulting in permanent policy changes at the respective agencies. 
Grantees are also exploring creative methods for combining funds from 
multiple sources, including leveraging resources and funding from other 
state and local systems to meet the needs of clients in ways that 
promote choice and self-determination. In some locations, the 
activities of ODEP grantees are coordinated with and supplementing 
those of other DOL grant programs and of other federal agencies.

* ODEP is also collaborating with ETA to provide guidance to the One 
Stops on their authority under the WIA to serve people with 
disabilities and how to identify resources other than VR in their 
communities that can expand their capacity to serve them. ODEP provided 
leadership in development of the Section 188 checklist. Additional 
policy documents have been developed and are being reviewed. ODEP is 
also working with ETA to identify successful practices within the One 
Stops across the country for working with people with psychiatric 
disabilities.

ODEP further recommends that two separate paragraphs be inserted on 
page 14 of the report at the section entitled, "Federal Grants Have 
Provided Funding to Facilitate One-Stop Accessibility." Specifically, 
ODEP suggests adding the following language:

Each year, over the last three years, ODEP has awarded 7-10 grants 
designed to demonstrate the use of customized employment strategies for 
persons with disabilities within the context of the One-Stop Center 
system. Currently, ODEP has 31 such customized employment programs 
operating in 19 states, involving over 40 local workforce investment 
boards. These 31 grant programs are building programmatic accessibility 
in local One-Stop Career Centers to be able to effectively serve people 
with multiple challenges to employment. These include individuals on 
SSI or SSDI; people on waiting lists for employment services; young 
people transitioning from special education programs; people in 
sheltered workshops who choose to change to integrated, competitive 
employment; and individuals who are chronically homeless - individuals 
often considered the "hardest to serve." Through ODEP's customized 
employment initiative, the One-Stop Career Centers are changing their 
practices to welcome them as customers, and bringing new partners to 
the One-Stop whose funds and expertise are being leveraged.

Over the last three years, through its youth to work employment 
initiative, ODEP has also funded 31 grants totaling $20.3 million 
designed to improve transition outcomes for youth with disabilities. 
All of these grants had a goal of improving programmatic accessibility 
in local One-Stop Career Centers for youth with disabilities, and a 
number of the projects also focused on improving physical 
accessibility. State and local workforce investment boards were the 
direct recipients of some of this funding. Research indicates that when 
youth, including youth with disabilities, engage in career exploration, 
work-based learning, youth leadership development activities, and have 
access to the other types of supports they need, (e.g., housing, 
transportation, etc) the likelihood of their transitioning successfully 
is greatly increased. Through ODEP's youth to work employment 
initiative, One-Stop Center staff and their partners are working more 
collaboratively to ensure that youth with disabilities have access to 
these opportunities.

ODEP's final recommendation is to include the following language as the 
second and third line of the recommendation on page 32:

This comprehensive plan should address the full range of access issues, 
including reasonable accommodations and effective communication to 
achieve access to non-specialized supports and services, such as 
transportation and assistive technology, through the One-Stop Centers. 
DOL would regularly report on the progress of the plan.

We appreciate having had the opportunity to review and comment on this 
draft report.

Sincerely,

Signed by: 

W. Roy Grizzard, Jr., Ed.: 
Assistant Secretary:

[End of letter]

U.S. Department of Labor:

Office of the Assistant Secretary for Administration and Management 
Washington, D.C. 20210:

NOV 23 2004:

Mr. Sigurd R. Nilsen: 
Director:
Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 
Government Accountability Office:
441 G St., NW: 
Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Nilsen:

Enclosed please find the comments of the Civil Rights Center (CRC), 
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Administration and Management 
(OASAM), U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), regarding the draft report of 
the Government Accountability Office entitled "WORKFORCE INVESTMENT 
ACT: Labor Has Taken Several Actions to Facilitate Access to One-Stops 
for Persons with Disabilities, but These Efforts May Not Be Sufficient" 
(GAO-05-54).

For further information regarding these comments, please contact Denise 
Sudell, Senior Policy Advisor, CRC/OASAM. Ms. Sudell may be reached at 
(202) 693-6554, or by e-mail at sudell.denise@dol.gov.

Sincerely,

Signed by: 

Patrick Pizzella: 
Assistant Secretary for Administration and Management:

Enclosure:

COMMENTS FROM THE CIVIL RIGHTS CENTER, OASAM ON THE DRAFT REPORT OF THE 
GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE REGARDING DOL'S ENFORCEMENT OF THE WIA 
NONDISCRIMINATION REGULATIONS RELATING TO PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES 
(GAO-05-54):

This document contains the comments of the Civil Rights Center (CRC), 
OASAM, on GAO-05-54, the Government Accountability Office's (GAO's) 
draft report regarding DOL's enforcement of the provisions of the 
Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (WIA) and its implementing regulations 
relating to persons with disabilities. Questions or concerns regarding 
these comments may be directed to Senior Policy Advisor Denise Sudell 
at 202-693-6554 or sudell.denise@dol.gov.

SUBSTANTIVE COMMENTS:

General Concerns:

1) Inaccurate use of the term "comprehensive access requirements" In 
our discussions with GAO, we agreed to the use of the term 
"comprehensive access requirements" to refer to positive actions 
(including providing accessibility, reasonable accommodations and 
modifications, and effective communication) that recipients must take 
in order to give persons with disabilities equal opportunity to benefit 
from the programs, activities, and/or employment offered by the One-
Stop system. The draft report, however, also includes within the term 
"comprehensive access requirements" those regulatory provisions that 
require recipients to establish the administrative structure that CRC 
views as necessary in order to ensure nondiscrimination and equal 
opportunity for members of all groups protected by Section 188 of WIA 
In our view, these administrative requirements should not be considered 
"comprehensive access requirements," because they are not specifically 
disability-related. We therefore ask that the definition of the term 
"comprehensive access requirements" be revised to exclude the latter 
category of requirements, and that the remainder of the report be 
revised accordingly.

a) Use of the term "comprehensive access requirements" as a 
replacement for all disability-related requirements: At various points, 
the draft report inaccurately uses the term "comprehensive access 
requirements" in contexts in which it appears that the term is intended 
to encompass all of the disability-related requirements in the WIA 
nondiscrimination regulations. This usage is inconsistent both with our 
discussions with GAO and with the definition of the term on page 2 of 
the main portion of the report. We ask that the report be reviewed to 
identify all such instances and that these instances be revised to 
correct them. Examples:

i) The second sentence in the third paragraph of the summary section 
("What GAO Found") states that various agencies within DOL, including 
CRC, have "issued guidance and assistance on the comprehensive access 
requirements." This statement is slightly inaccurate. These agencies 
have issued guidance and provided assistance regarding the 
nondiscrimination, equal opportunity, and administrative requirements 
of the WIA nondiscrimination regulations, including those requirements 
characterized by the GAO report as "comprehensive access requirements." 
We ask that the sentence be revised to correct it.

ii) Similarly, the fourth sentence of the same paragraph, in 
discussing the findings of CRC's disability compliance reviews of New 
York City and Miami/Dade County, states that "[i]n both instances, CRC 
identified instances of noncompliance with the comprehensive access 
requirements." The same incorrect usage appears in the "Results In 
Brief' section of the draft report, in the paragraph at the bottom of 
page 6. In fact, CRC identified instances of noncompliance with all 
three categories of relevant requirements, including the 
nondiscrimination and administrative requirements as well as the 
"comprehensive access" (or equal opportunity) requirements. We ask that 
the sentence be revised accordingly.

2) Role of Vocational Rehabilitation: We are concerned about the 
report's focus on the Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) program. At 
various points (including in the Letter and in the "Integrated 
Settings" subsection, among other places), the draft report states that 
VR "provides services to individuals with disabilities." We are 
concerned that readers may misinterpret these statements as signifying 
that all individuals with disabilities who are entitled to protection 
from discrimination and to positive actions under WIA Section 188 and 
its implementing regulations are also eligible to receive services 
under VR. Rather, the only individuals with disabilities who are 
eligible for VR services are those persons who have a physical or 
mental impairment that "for such individual constitutes or results in a 
substantial impediment to employment, and [who] can benefit in terms of 
an employment outcome from vocational rehabilitation services ...... 29 
U.S.C. § 705(20)(A). This definition is much narrower than the 
definition of "disability" for purposes of nondiscrimination and equal 
opportunity under WIA Section 188 and the WIA nondiscrimination 
regulations; therefore, many individuals with disabilities who are 
entitled to nondiscrimination and equal opportunity under the latter 
legal provisions are ineligible for services from VR. See 29 CFR 37.4. 
Additionally, we emphasize that under WIA Section 188 and the WIA 
nondiscrimination regulations, One-Stop Centers may not rely on VR (or 
other outside organizations serving persons with disabilities) to 
provide services for individuals with disabilities; rather, such 
individuals must be served alongside individuals without disabilities 
except under very limited circumstances. A clear understanding of these 
points is necessary in order to understand the role, or potential role, 
of VR in the One-Stop system. We ask that these points be clarified in 
the final report, and note that additional changes to the report may be 
necessary as a result.

3) "Funds" vs." financial assistance" At numerous points, the draft 
report inaccurately uses the term "funds," or variations on the term 
(such as "WIA-funded"), where the term "financial assistance" (or a 
variation thereon) should be used. The concept of financial assistance 
under WIA Title I extends well beyond funds, to various types of in-
kind assistance. See 29 CFR 37.4, definitions of "financial assistance" 
and "financial assistance under Title I of WIA." Therefore, the term 
"funds" (or variations thereon) should be used only when referring 
specifically to the use of dollars and cents. For the same reasons, the 
phrase "recipients of WIA funds" should be changed to "recipients of 
WIA Title I financial assistance" or "recipients of WIA financial 
assistance" wherever it appears. Similarly, we are concerned that the 
phrase "funded or assisted" may be misleading, and suggest that it be 
replaced with "funded or financially assisted," or other similar 
specific references to financial assistance.

4) "Methods ofAdministration" At various points (including in the 
abbreviations section and the Results In-Brief section), the draft 
report uses the uncapitalized term "methods of administration." The 
phrase must be capitalized (as "Methods of Administration") to avoid 
confusion with a similar term, with a different meaning, that is used 
in the regulations implementing the Americans with Disabilities Act 
(ADA).

5) "WIA regulations" vs. "WIA nondiscrimination regulations" 
Throughout the report, the term "WIA regulations" is used to refer to 
the regulations, published at 29 CFR part 37, that implement WIA 
Section 188. However, an additional set of "WIA regulations" exists: 
the programmatic regulations promulgated by ETA, which appear at 20 CFR 
part 660 et seq. To avoid confusion between these two sets of 
regulations, we ask that the phrase "WIA nondiscrimination regulations" 
be used to refer to the regulations implementing WIA Section 188.

Specific Comments:

1) Summary section ("What GAO Found'): We have the following comments 
regarding this section, which appears on an un-numbered page at the 
beginning of the report.

a) Use of undefined terminology: In the summary section, the report 
uses broad terminology, such as "comprehensive access," without 
defining the terms that are used. We are concerned that the use of such 
undefined terms may cause readers - particularly readers who rely 
primarily on the summary section - to misunderstand the findings of the 
report. We suggest that either such terms be defined in the summary 
section, or that their use be restricted to the main portion of the 
report.

b) Inaccurate statement regarding self-assessment compliance tools: In 
the third paragraph of the summary section, the fifth sentence ("In 
addition, CRC requested that each state complete a self-assessment 
compliance tool for the state and its largest local area") is placed in 
a context that makes it appear that only the states of New York and 
Florida were asked to complete such self-assessment tools. (The same 
error appears in the "Results In Brief" section, at the top of page 7 
of the draft report.) In fact, all states were required to submit such 
completed tools to CRC. We ask that this sentence be moved, deleted, or 
otherwise corrected.

c) Final sentence of third paragraph: We ask that the final sentence of 
the third paragraph, beginning "The CRC Director said...", be 
deleted.

2) Results In Brief We have the following comments regarding this 
section, which begins on page 5 of the draft report.

a) CRC responsibilities: The fourth sentence of the third paragraph of 
this section states, in pertinent part, that "CRC has responsibility 
for monitoring and enforcing WIA's statutory and regulatory 
nondiscrimination and equal opportunity provisions." This sentence 
appears on page 6 of the draft report. (Similar language appears in the 
first sentence in the second paragraph on page 27 of the draft report.) 
We ask that the term "interpreting" be added to the other two 
responsibilities listed, both on page 6 and on page 27.

b) Final sentence of third paragraph: We ask that the final sentence of 
the third paragraph of this section, beginning "Moreover, the CRC 
Director told us...", be deleted. This sentence appears on page 7 of 
the draft report.

c) Disability data re: registrants: A portion of the fourth paragraph 
of this section, which appears on the bottom half of page 7 of the 
draft report, states, in pertinent part: "[T]he collection of 
information on WIA participants, including information on individuals 
with disabilities, is limited to those individuals who are registered 
for services. Current law does not require that one-stops register job 
seekers that are self-service and informational in nature, and thus 
they are not included in the performance measures." (Similar statements 
appear on page 31 of the draft report, and a paraphrase appears on the 
Summary page.) These statements, in our view, provide an incomplete 
picture of the requirements relating to collection of information about 
customers with disabilities. Although the WIA nondiscrimination 
regulations require collection of disability-related information only 
about those customers who are registered, the definition of 
"registrant" under those regulations encompasses any individual who has 
submitted personal information, such as his or her name, in response to 
a request by the recipient. See 29 CFR 37.4, definitions of 
"registrant" and "applicant," and 20 CFR 663.105(c). It is CRC's 
experience that in practice, many One-Stop Centers require customers to 
provide their names on a sign-in sheet in order to use the self-service 
and informational services offered by the centers, such as the computer 
rooms. Under the WIA nondiscrimination regulations, therefore, such 
centers are required to collect demographic information, including 
disability status, from such customers. See 29 CFR 37.37(b)(2). We ask 
that the report be revised as appropriate to incorporate this 
information.

3) Background: We have the following comments regarding this section of 
the draft report.

a) "Political affiliation or belief': The last full paragraph on page 10 
of the draft report purports to list the bases on which discrimination 
is prohibited under WIA Section 188. In addition to disability, 
according to the report, those bases include "race, color, religion, 
sex, national origin, age, political affiliation or belief" (emphasis 
added). This formulation incorrectly makes it appear that the bases of 
"political affiliation" and "belief" are separate bases. In fact, 
"political affiliation or belief" is one basis. The sentence should be 
revised, in pertinent part, as follows: "...age, or political 
affiliation or belief."

b) "Held accountable" The final sentence in the first paragraph at the 
top of page 11 of the draft report states that the WIA 
nondiscrimination regulations "also identify how recipients will be 
held accountable for ensuring nondiscrimination and equal opportunity 
for individuals with disabilities." We are concerned that this sentence 
appears to imply that recipients will not be "held accountable" for 
violations of the regulatory provisions relating to members of other 
protected groups, or the provisions imposing administrative 
requirements. We ask that the sentence be revised accordingly.

c) "Significant assistance" The first entry in the bullet-point list on 
page 11 of the draft report states that recipients must not provide 
significant assistance to "a person or entity that discriminates on the 
basis of disability." This statement is overbroad. Section 37.7(b) of 
the WIA nondiscrimination regulations prohibits such significant 
assistance to a more limited category of persons or entities: those 
that discriminate "in providing any aid, benefits, services, or 
training to registrants, applicants, or participants."

d) Architectural accessibility requirements: In the last full paragraph 
on page 11, a sentence in the draft report states that recipients "who 
are in facilities or parts of facilities designed, constructed, or 
altered on their behalf" must comply with architectural accessibility 
requirements. This sentence contains two errors.

i) "Designed" The relevant regulatory provision, 29 CFR 32.28, does not 
provide for coverage of facilities that are "designed" on behalf of a 
recipient. The word "designed" must be deleted.

ii) The same sentence omits an important aspect of the requirements 
relating to architectural accessibility. The sentence should be 
revised, in pertinent part, as follows:

"... facilities that are constructed or altered on their behalf after 
they first receive Federal financial assistance."

e) Program accessibility requirements: A later sentence in the same 
paragraph states, in pertinent part, that "[r]ecipients of WIA funds 
[see General Concern 3 above] do not have to make each of their 
existing facilities or every part of an existing facility accessible to 
and usable by individuals with disabilities, and can satisfy the 
accessibility requirements by redesigning equipment, reassigning 
services ...... We ask that this sentence be clarified by adding the 
phrase "for existing facilities" after the word "requirements."

f) Reason for administrative structure: A sentence on page 12 of the 
draft report states that the WIA nondiscrimination regulations require 
recipients to establish an administrative structure "so that they may 
be held accountable for compliance with WIA's nondiscrimination and 
equal opportunity provisions." This statement is inaccurate. The 
administrative requirements are designed primarily to ensure compliance 
with the nondiscrimination and equal opportunity requirements, although 
they (the administrative requirements) do include provisions relating 
to holding recipients accountable for non-compliance. We ask that the 
sentence be revised accordingly.

g) Definition of "small recipient" Footnote 8 on page 12 of the draft 
report defines a small recipient as one that serves a total of 15 
beneficiaries "during a year" and employs fewer than 15 employees on 
any given day "in the year." The use of the unmodified term "year" in 
this definition is inaccurate. The definition of the term in 29 CFR 
37.4 requires that these calculations be made with regard to a "grant 
year" (the latter term is a term of art in the WIA context). We ask 
that the footnote be corrected.

h) Responsibilities of EO officers: The paragraph that begins on the 
bottom of page 12 of the draft report purports to list the 
responsibilities imposed on EO officers by the WIA nondiscrimination 
regulations. We ask that the paragraph be revised to make clear that 
the list provided in the report is not all-inclusive.

i) Responsibilities of CRC Director: Similarly, the material at the 
bottom of the main text on page 13 of the draft report purports to list 
the oversight responsibilities of the CRC Director. We ask that this 
material also be revised to make clear that the list provided in the 
report is not all-inclusive.

4) "Local Areas and One-Stops Have Made Efforts..." We have the 
following comments regarding this section, which begins on page 18 of 
the draft report.

a) "Auxiliary aids and services" We have several comments regarding 
this subsection.

i) Definition of assistive technology: The definition of the term 
"assistive technology" in this subsection of the report is overly 
narrow. The report asserts that the term "refers to products or 
equipment that can be used to make existing information technology, 
including computers and telephones, accessible to persons with 
disabilities." In CRC's interpretation, however, the application of the 
term is not limited to "information technology." Rather, it is a more 
general term that refers to a piece of equipment, a system of products, 
or any other item or group of items that is used to help people with 
disabilities increase, improve, or maintain their functional 
capabilities (in other words, their ability to perform their major life 
activities). To be considered assistive technology, the item or items 
need not have been originally purchased to help people with 
disabilities; items that have been modified or customized for that 
purpose after they were originally acquired also fall into the 
category. Some, but by no means all, assistive technology items are 
related to communication.

ii) Use of term "accessible" At several points, this subsection of the 
report uses the term "accessible" incorrectly. The report states that 
assistive technology can be used to make information technology 
"accessible" to persons with disabilities, and that alternative formats 
can make written or visual materials or oral information "accessible" 
to such persons. However, the term "access" does not apply to 
communications; the WIA nondiscrimination regulations use the term 
"available," rather than "accessible," in this context. For example, 
the regulatory definition of "auxiliary aids and services" refers to 
effective means of making aurally and delivered materials "available" 
to individuals with hearing or visual impairments. See 29 CFR 37.4, 
definition of "auxiliary aids and services," paragraphs (1) and (2). We 
ask that the term "accessible" be replaced by "available" in all such 
instances in this subsection.

iii) Height-adjustable tables: Table 3 on page 19 lists "height-
adjustable tables" as an example of auxiliary aids and services. Such 
tables, however, are not specifically related to communication, and 
therefore do not qualify as auxiliary aids. This example should be 
deleted from Table 3.

b) "Reasonable accommodations" The first sentence in this subsection 
states that the WIA regulations require reasonable accommodations "to 
enable persons with disabilities to receive the same benefits as 
persons without disabilities" (emphasis added). This statement is 
inaccurate. In the context of provision of services, reasonable 
accommodations enable qualified individuals with disabilities "to 
receive aid, benefits, services, or training equal to that provided to 
qualified individuals without disabilities." 29 CFR 37.4, definition of 
"reasonable accommodation," paragraph (1)(ii) (emphasis added). The 
term also applies in the context of application for such aid, benefits, 
services, or training, or in the employment context. We ask that the 
report be corrected accordingly.

c) "Staff training" We have several comments regarding this subsection, 
which begins on page 23 of the draft report.

i) Training requirements: The first sentence of this subsection states, 
in pertinent part, that "the WIA regulations [sic - see General Concern 
5 above] do not specifically require that one-stop staff, other than 
the equal opportunity officer, receive training on disability... ." 
In fact, the WIA nondiscrimination regulations require that training be 
provided to the EO Officer and his/her staff. See 29 CFR 37.25(f), 
37.26(d), 37.54(d)(2)(vi). We ask that the report be corrected 
accordingly.

ii) Final bullet point in list: A list of training topics that have been 
provided to One-Stop staff appears on page 23 of the draft report. The 
final bullet point refers to "WIA Section 188, or other disability-
related training." It appears that something is missing from this 
entry; we ask that the entry be corrected.

5) "Labor Has Taken Actions to Ensure..." We have the following 
comments regarding this section, which begins on page 27 of the draft 
report.

a) CRC responsibilities: The first sentence in the second paragraph on 
page 27 states, in pertinent part, that CRC is responsible for 
monitoring and enforcing the nondiscrimination and equal opportunity 
regulations "regarding programs receiving financial assistance from 
Labor." This statement is incomplete. CRC also has responsibility for 
the regulations that apply to programs and activities that are 
conducted as part of the One-Stop system and operated by One-Stop 
partners, regardless of the source of the financial assistance for such 
programs and activities. See 29 CFR 37.2(a)(2); 37.4 (definition of 
"recipient," material following paragraph (12)); 37.85(c). A similar 
statement appears in the next-to-last sentence in the first paragraph 
on page 30 (CRC's professional and administrative staff are responsible 
for "all issues involving discrimination in one-stops and other Labor-
unded programs") (emphasis added). We ask that these statements be 
revised to correct them.

b) CRC-conducted training: The sentence that begins on the bottom of 
page 27 and continues on page 28 of the draft report states, in 
pertinent part, that CRC "conducts a 2-day training session... ." In 
fact, the training sessions that have been conducted by CRC have ranged 
from two days to three full days, depending on the needs of, and 
facilities available to, the particular local workforce investment area 
in which the training has been conducted.

c) "Finalized for publication" Footnote 20 on page 28 of the draft 
reports states that at the time of GAO's review, CRC "had not yet 
finalized ... for publication" the Reports of Findings resulting from 
its disability compliance reviews of New York City and Miami/Dade 
County.

This statement is inaccurate, and we are concerned that it may be 
misleading: it appears that GAO may have confused the final Reports of 
Findings, which were "finalized" and issued in September 2003, with the 
draft Final Determinations, which were sent to the New York and Florida 
recipients in September 2004. The Reports of Findings, which set forth 
the results of CRC's compliance reviews, were issued pursuant to 29 CFR 
37.64, 37.94, and 37.95. We have provided GAO with copies of each of 
these two Reports of Findings. The relevant States and LWIAs were given 
six months to respond to the Reports. CRC has reviewed the responses 
the States and LWIAs provided; based on those responses, CRC has 
produced draft Final Determinations, pursuant to 29 CFR 37.98 through 
37.100. The draft documents were sent to the respective recipients on 
September 30, 2004. At the time GAO was completing its review, CRC, 
pursuant to 29 CFR 37.100(a), was in separate negotiations with both 
the New York and Florida recipients regarding the findings set forth in 
those draft Final Determinations, in an effort to achieve voluntary 
compliance by each set of recipients. CRC did not provide GAO with 
copies of those draft Final Determinations because the ongoing 
negotiations may result in amendments to the Final Determinations, or 
in issuance of a Conciliation Agreement or a written assurance in lieu 
of a Final Determination. See 29 CFR 37.95(a), (b)(3); 37.96; 37.97; 
37.100(a).

d) Integrated settings: The paragraph that begins on page 28 of the 
draft report contains a description of the circumstances under which a 
One-Stop Center may serve customers with disabilities separate from 
customers without disabilities. We have several comments regarding this 
description.

i) "According to CRC's review" The paragraph states that the 
requirements regarding integrated settings are "[a]ccording to CRC's 
review." In fact, the requirements are for the most part based directly 
on the language of the WIA nondiscrimination regulations. See 29 CFR 
37.7(a)(4), (c), (d).

ii) Order of steps: The description reverses the order in which the 
required steps should be taken; we ask that the description be 
corrected. Those steps, in the correct order, are as follows:

(I) the recipient must determine that in general, the segregation is 
necessary in order to provide customers with disabilities, or customers 
with specific disabilities, with programs or activities that are as 
effective as those provided to customers without disabilities;

(2) the segregated program or activity provided by the recipient must 
in fact be as effective as the programs or activities provided to 
customers without disabilities L;

(3)the recipient must perform an individualized assessment, and 
determine that the segregated program or activity would be appropriate 
for a particular customer with a disability, before referring that 
customer to the segregated program or activity; and:

This requirement is based on case law as well as the regulatory 
language. See, e.g., Lovett v. Chandler, 303 F.3d 1039 (9`h Cir. 2002) 
("the plain language of the [Section 504 and ADA Title II] regulations 
prohibits a state from [excluding persons with disabilities from a 
program] unless it provides them with benefits `as effective as those 
provided to others'").

(4) the ultimate decision whether to participate in the segregated 
program or activity must be left up to the customer. If the customer is 
qualified for, and wishes to participate in, the "regular," non-
segregated programs or activities, he or she must be permitted to do 
so.

e) Statements by CRC Director: Two sentences in the first full 
paragraph on page 30 state, in pertinent part, that "the CRC Director 
said that there were no plans for conducting additional on-site reviews 
beyond the two that are planned for completion in 2005. The Director 
further said that limited staff and competing work priorities may 
hinder CRC's ability to conduct additional reviews." We ask that these 
sentences be corrected, in pertinent part, as follows: "... said that 
she had not yet determined whether CRC will conduct additional on-site 
reviews, and that the determination will be based on the staff and 
resources that are available at the time the determination is made."

6) "Information on Employment Outcomes is Limited" Two sentences in the 
full paragraph on page 31 state, in pertinent part: "[M]ost of the one-
stop customers who participate in self-directed services, and receive 
only limited staff assistance, are estimated to be the largest 
proportion of job seekers under WIA. But since they are not registered 
for services, they are excluded from the employment outcome data 
published by Labor." As noted above in Specific Comment 2(c), 
"Disability data re: registrants," the definition of "registrant" 
under the WIA nondiscrimination regulations encompasses any individual 
who has submitted personal information, such as his or her name, in 
response to a request by the recipient. See 29 CFR 37.4, definitions of 
"registrant" and "applicant," and 20 CFR 663.105(c). It is CRC's 
experience that in practice, many One-Stop Centers require customers to 
provide their names on a sign-in sheet in order to use the self-service 
and informational services offered by the centers, such as the computer 
rooms. Under the WIA nondiscrimination regulations, therefore, such 
centers are already required to collect demographic information, 
including disability status, from such customers. See 29 CFR 
37.37(b)(2). We ask that the report be revised as appropriate to 
incorporate this information.

EDITORIAL COMMENTS:

1) Use of shorthand terms in summary section: We are concerned that 
general readers will find the opening summary of the report difficult 
to understand, because the summary uses shorthand terms (such as "one-
stops") without defining them. We suggest that in the summary, either 
complete terms (such as "One-Stop Career Centers") be used rather than 
shorthand terms, or the shorthand terms be defined.

2) Ambiguity: Various portions of the summary section of the report are 
ambiguous. For example, the third sentence of the second paragraph of 
the summary states, in pertinent part: "In a few cases, local areas and 
one-stops relied primarily on VR ...... Even in the context of the 
paragraph, it is unclear what the cited "local areas and one-stops" 
relied on VR for. We suggest that such ambiguous statements be 
clarified.

3) Abbreviations: In this section, the Job Training Partnership Act is 
abbreviated as "JPTA." The correct acronym is "JTPA."

[End of section]

Appendix II: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Carol Dawn Petersen, Assistant Director (202) 512-7215 Gretta L. 
Goodwin, Senior Economist (202) 512-7215:

Staff Acknowledgments:

William E. Hutchinson and Caterina Pisciotta made significant 
contributions to all phases of this report. In addition, Jessica 
Botsford and Richard Burkard provided legal assistance, and Amy Buck 
assisted in report development.

[End of section]

Related GAO Products:

Workforce Investment Act: States and Local Areas Have Developed 
Strategies to Assess Performance, but Labor Could Do More to Help. GAO-
04-657. Washington, D.C.: June 1, 2004.

Workforce Investment Act: One-Stop Centers Implemented Strategies to 
Strengthen Services and Partnerships, but More Research and Information 
Sharing Is Needed. GAO-03-725. Washington, D.C.: June 18, 2003.

Workforce Investment Act: Exemplary One-Stops Devised Strategies to 
Strengthen Services, but Challenges Remain for Reauthorization. GAO-03-
884T. Washington, D.C.: June 18, 2003.

Workforce Training: Employed Worker Programs Focus on Business Needs, 
but Revised Performance Measures Could Improve Access for Some Workers. 
GAO-03-353. Washington, D.C.: February 14, 2003.

Older Workers: Employment Assistance Focuses on Subsidized Jobs and Job 
Search, but Revised Performance Measures Could Improve Access to Other 
Services. GAO-03-350. Washington, D.C.: January 24, 2003.

Workforce Investment Act: States and Localities Increasingly Coordinate 
Services for TANF Clients, but Better Information Needed on Effective 
Approaches. GAO-02-696. Washington, D.C.: July 3, 2002.

Workforce Investment Act: Improvements Needed in Performance Measures 
to Provide a More Accurate Picture of WIA's Effectiveness. GAO-02-275. 
Washington, D.C.: February 1, 2002.

Voters with Disabilities: Access to Polling Places and Alternative 
Voting Methods. GAO-02-107. Washington, D.C.: October 15, 2001.

Workforce Investment Act: Better Guidance Needed to Address Concerns 
over New Requirements. GAO-02-72. Washington, D.C.: October 4, 2001.

Workforce Investment Act: New Requirements Create Need for More 
Guidance. GAO-02-94T. Washington, D.C.: October 4, 2001.

FOOTNOTES

[1] The WIG and Navigator grants do not represent all of Labor's grants 
for disability-related activities. For example, the Office of 
Disability Employment Policy (ODEP) also provides grants for serving 
customers with disabilities in the WIA one-stop system, including 
grants that focus on providing customized employment strategies to 
create opportunities for individuals with disabilities and improving 
school-to-work transition outcomes for youth with disabilities. 

[2] GAO, Workforce Investment Act: States and Local Areas Have 
Developed Strategies to Assess Performance, but Labor Could Do More to 
Help. GAO-04-657 (Washington, D.C.: June 1, 2004).

[3] Co-location of the mandatory partners at the one-stop center is not 
required. Labor has stated that under WIA, one-stop operations can 
range from coordination, co-location, and integration.

[4] For more information on WIA's performance measures, see GAO-04-657 
and GAO, Workforce Investment Act: Improvements Needed in Performance 
Measures to Provide a More Accurate Picture of WIA's Effectiveness. 
GAO-02-275 (Washington, D.C.: February 1, 2002).

[5] For WIA beneficiaries only, Section 188 also prohibits 
discrimination on the basis of an individual's status as a citizen or 
national of the United States, or as an individual lawfully authorized 
to work in the United States, or on the basis of participation in any 
WIA Title I financially assisted program or activity.

[6] See 64 Fed. Reg. 61692. These regulations are found at 29 CFR Part 
37 and incorporate, by reference, certain portions of the regulations 
implementing Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, 
pertaining to employment practices and employment-related training, 
architectural and program accessibility and reasonable accommodation. 

[7] WIA Section 188 regulations apply to programs and activities that 
are conducted as part of the one-stop system and operated by one-stop 
partners, regardless of the source of the financial assistance for such 
programs and activities. 

[8] In the one-stop context, the term reasonable accommodation can 
include making existing facilities accessible; restructuring a program, 
service, or training, or the way in which it is provided; part-time or 
modified training schedules; making appropriate adjustments or 
modifications to examinations, training materials, or policies; 
acquiring or modifying equipment and devices; and providing qualified 
readers and interpreters, among other possible actions. One-stops and 
other recipients are required to make a requested accommodation unless 
providing it would create an undue hardship for them, which is defined 
as "significant difficulty or expense," when considered in light of a 
list of specified factors. The WIA Section 188 regulations also require 
one-stops to make reasonable modifications to their policies, 
practices, or procedures for persons with disabilities unless making 
the modification would fundamentally alter the nature of the program or 
activity. 

[9] A small recipient is one that serves a total of fewer than 15 
beneficiaries during a grant year and employs fewer than 15 employees 
on any given day in that year.

[10] In order to be exempt from liability for Section 188 violations, 
the governor must also enter into a written contract with the recipient 
outlining the recipient's obligations under Section 188, act with due 
diligence to monitor the recipient's compliance with those provisions, 
and take prompt and appropriate corrective action to affect compliance.

[11] The WIA Section 188 Checklist is located at http://www.dol.gov/
oasam/programs/crc/section188.htm.

[12] Through this competitive process, an ETA technical review panel 
chose grantees by evaluating their applications against specified 
criteria (such as a statement of need). ETA officials explained that 
some applicants, such as those who were less adept at writing 
applications that met technical review standards, may not have received 
grants even though they needed them. 

[13] Of the $24 million in funds, Labor contributed approximately $15 
million and SSA contributed $9 million.

[14] In July 2003, ETA and SSA's Office of Program Development and 
Research awarded Navigator grants to 14 states: Arizona, California, 
Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, 
New York, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Vermont, and Wisconsin. ETA and SSA 
have since awarded Navigator grants to Mississippi, New Mexico, and 
Oregon. All 17 of these states were chosen for this effort because SSA 
has employment support initiatives in these locations.

[15] Electric door openers are not required by either the Uniform 
Federal Accessibility Standards (UFAS) or the Americans with 
Disabilities Act Accessibility Guidelines for Buildings and Facilities 
(ADAAG). However, officials from some sites said that their lack of 
electric doors was an accessibility concern. 

[16] A reasonable accommodation may require making specific structural 
or other modifications, including the provision of auxiliary aids and 
services such as sign language interpreters, telephone amplifiers, or 
alternate formats, to meet the specific needs of a particular customer 
with a disability. Accommodations are generally provided only after an 
individual with a disability requests it, as opposed to being available 
up front.

[17] Individuals with disabilities who are eligible for VR services are 
those persons who have a physical or mental impairment that, for an 
such individual, constitutes or results in a substantial impediment to 
employment, and who can benefit in terms of an employment outcome from 
vocational rehabilitation services. 

[18] Disability awareness or sensitivity training teaches one-stop 
staff, for example, to use people-first language--such as "an 
individual with a disability" as opposed to "the disabled." It may also 
include education on how to interact with persons with disabilities, 
such as asking if an individual needs assistance first rather than 
automatically providing it or speaking directly to a person who is deaf 
instead of speaking to the person's sign language interpreter.

[19] These community-based disability organizations typically did not 
co-locate their staff at the one-stops on either a full-time or a part-
time basis. However, there were some exceptions--such as, for example, 
in cases in which the disability-related agencies were the sole or co-
operators of a one-stop.

[20] In states where VR funding is not sufficient to serve all eligible 
clients, there may be an order of selection in place, whereby VR is 
able to accept only those individuals with the most significant 
disabilities who could benefit from VR services. Of the states we 
visited, only one was not under an order of selection for the general 
disability population.

[21] In addition to CRC staff, presenters at the sessions included 
staff from ETA and ODEP, as well as representatives of the United 
States Access Board, and the Job Accommodation Network.

[22] All youth who receive WIA-financially assisted services are 
required to be registered. 

[23] GAO-04-657.

[24] In addition, on July 16, 2004, Labor published a notice in the 
Federal Register on a proposal to collect additional information on the 
types of impairments that one-stop customers have, including learning 
disabilities, visual, hearing, and speech impairments, and cognitive 
and psychological impairments. Labor believes that collecting 
information on impairment types will facilitate its ability to focus 
on, and evaluate its effectiveness in, servicing people with 
disabilities through the one-stop system. 

[25] GAO-04-657.

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