Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2000-02-14-Speech-1-090"

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"In welcoming the cross-sectoral approach embodied in the new EQUAL initiative, it is crucial that the programme addresses the distinct forms of discrimination which militate against disabled people in particular: physical barriers in the workplace affecting those with limited mobility, visual information systems which exclude blind workers, working systems which effectively close the door on people with learning difficulties or with mental health problems. Organisations of disabled people and disabled people’s non-disabled representatives must have a proper interest at every stage of decision-making. That is why this Parliament has put forward paragraphs 10 and 15 of the resolution, to ensure that Member States cannot ignore any one target group. Disabled people have too often been left off the list. Because disabled people do not form one homogenous group – for example many deaf people see themselves as a linguistic minority denied respect for their own language and culture – it is necessary as stated in paragraph 9 to enable some partnerships to be defined which are specific to a particular disability or other group. EQUAL remains crucial also to regions like my own, in the east of England, outside the principal funds of Objective I. We have had an extra incentive to take up Community initiative funding and an excellent record in response. Former ADAPT projects range from the CORE project, which has developed new supply chains for the car industry in Bedfordshire, to projects to raise standards in small businesses in Hertfordshire in Essex. We have seen the NOW project helping 70 women to return to work in Suffolk, many of whom were able to come and share the results of their experience directly with us at the European Parliament in Brussels. EQUAL remains important to us because it is precisely in relatively more prosperous regions that lower-skilled jobs are being shed, which can be an important first destination for those discriminated against in the labour market. Finally, a word on INTERREG. It really is quite nonsensical that partnerships set up in 1994 are being rolled over now to the exclusion of new inter-regional links. During this period the ports of Great Yarmouth and Harwich on the Essex-Suffolk-Norfolk coast have launched significant new transportation and economic links with partners in the Netherlands. I urge Parliament to support our Amendment No 2, which would ensure flexibility so as to include new areas, particularly on maritime borders."@en1
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