Richard Pimentel

Richard Keith Pimentel (born 1947 or 1948 in Portland, Oregon)[1][2][3] is a disability rights advocate, trainer, and speaker who was a strong advocate for the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act. He developed training materials aimed to help employers integrate persons with disabilities into the workplace. His life story is recounted in the film Music Within.[4] He is a senior partner of Milt Wright & Associates, Inc.[5]

Personal life

Pimentel's mother was mentally ill, his father died in Richard's childhood, he temporarily stayed in a local orphanage, and was mainly raised by his grandmother. He graduated from Jefferson High School in Portland, Oregon, then enlisted in the U.S. Army, was deployed to Vietnam, and returned 1970 almost completely deaf. He enrolled in a vocational rehabilitation program for veterans but, based on his deafness, the Veterans Administration declined his application to help him become a professional speaker. With support by the university's Speech and Hearing Department's professor and College Bowl founder Ben Padrow, Pimentel finally received a veteran rehabilitation grant to enroll at Portland State University.[4][6][7][8]

Pimentel claims that, when visiting a pancake house with his disabled friend Art Honeyman (1940-2008)[9] in 1974, he had been arrested and found guilty of breaking the ugly law.[6] Susan M. Schweik, Professor of English and co-director of the Disability Studies Program at the University of California, Berkeley, stated that Pimentel's "historical account of ugly law is fictitious." She continues: "His autobiographical account may be legendary as well. I have been unable to verify Pimentel and Honeyman’s arrest for violating the ugly law."[10]

From 1992 until 2002 Pimentel was married to the actress Geri Jewell, the first person with a disability in a regular role on a prime time series, as well as the first actor with cerebral palsy featured on a TV series. The couple separated in 1999. In her 2011 book I'm Walking as Straight as I Can, Geri also wrote about her marriage and relationship to Richard Pimentel.[11]

Career

Starting as a sociology class project at the university, Pimentel developed a training program for supervisors on disability issues to see if that would increase job placements of disabled people.[4]

In 1981, he authored the disability attitude training Tilting at Windmills Training Program (Windmills) to help employers hire more people with disabilities.[12]

Since then he trained tens of thousands of workers, supervisors, managers, and representatives of US government agencies and Fortune 500 companies[4] on disability awareness and sensitivity, disability management, return-to-work models for injured and recently disabled employees.[12]

Commissioned by the President’s Committee on Employment of Persons with Disabilities, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), and the National Institute of Health (NIH), Pimentel co-authored AIDS in the Workplace in 1988. This attitudinal training program aimed to reduce congressional resistance to AIDS being covered by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).[10][12]

Shortly after the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was signed into law in 1990, the chair of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission publically thanked Pimentel for educating employers on disability issues.[4]

Beginning in 1997, Pimentel developed training material and acted as keynote speaker for the Marriott Foundation for People with Disabilities. The foundation's Bridges program helped placing 1,200 young people with disabilities into employment each year.[12][13]

Pimentel started in 2008 with designing and implementing a training program for the employers of disabled veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan focusing on PTSD and traumatic brain injuries.[2][4][12]

Also in 2008, the Portland State University awarded Richard Pimentel an Honorary Doctorate in Humanities.

According to Milt Wright & Associates' website, Pimentel has been the Chairperson of VACOR, the Department of Veterans Affairs' Civilian Advisory Committee for Rehabilitation.[5][10]

Movie Music Within

Warner Brothers released in 2007 the full-length motion picture Music Within of Richard’s life story, starring Ron Livingston as Richard Pimentel and Michael Sheen as Art Honeyman.[3][4][9][14]

Publications

Richard Pimentel has authored the following:[15]

Pimentel has co-authored the following:[16]

References

  1. The Boston Globe: 'Music Within' strikes familiar notes. October 26, 2007
  2. 1 2 Australian Government Comcare: Speech by Richard Pimentel at the Comcare National Conference 2011
  3. 1 2 USA today: Disabled war veteran's activism forges onto film. November 5, 2007
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Portland State Magazine, Lisa Loving: Pushing for Fairness. May 19, 2008
  5. 1 2 Milt Wright & Associates: Dr. Richard Pimentel
  6. 1 2 Milt Wright & Associates, Inc.,: Dr Richard Pimentel: Life Story, as Portrayed in the Movie 'Music Within' (last visited December 3, 2016)
  7. ABC: Disability and work: Richard Pimental. September 22, 2011
  8. Veterans Rights Advocates: Dr. Richard Pimentel
  9. 1 2 Mental Health Association of Portland: In Memorium: Art Honeyman. December 10, 2008
  10. 1 2 3 Schweik, Susan M.: Kicked to the Curb: Ugly Law Then and Now, 2011. In: Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review Amicus, Voulme 46, pages 1-16
  11. Geri Jewell et al.: I'm Walking as Straight as I Can. Transcending Disability in Hollywood and Beyond, 2011. ISBN 9781554909759
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 http://www.miltwright.com/_richard_pimentel/Richard_Pimentel-history.pdf
  13. Dallas Business Journal: Program for children with disabilities expands in Texas. November 17, 2005.
  14. IMdB: Music Within (2007)
  15. http://damonbrooks.com/richard-pimentel/
  16. Library of Congress Online Catalog: Richard Pimentel

External links

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