Professor presents Disability report in
Washington.
Despite accounting for many ethnic, age and gender groups, the U.S.
Census Bureau's data on the current population fail to include
statistics regarding the disabled population, according to researchers
at Cornell University.
Professor Andrew Houtenville and fellow researchers at Cornell are
seeking to alleviate this absence with the second annual Disability
Status Report for 2006, presented recently in Washington, D.C., to an
audience of about 50 Capitol Hill staffers, disability-related agencies,
the media and advocacy groups. Houtenville is the director of
Cornell's Rehabilitation Research and Training Center on
Disability.
Houtenville, who is a professor of industrial and labor relations,
and three others were principal investigators on the report, funded by
the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research. The
report provides an overview of the key demographic and economic
statistics of the disabled population from 2006. The investigators
generated these statistics using data from the American Community
Survey, "a U.S. Census Bureau survey designed to replace the
decennial census long form."
By the U.S. Census Bureau
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