I took an architecture survey class upstairs – cementing my life of writing about design and the built environment.
My wife of 33 years, Heidi Johnson-Wright (B.A. in English, Kent, 1982) lived next door at Prentice Hall. My wife uses a wheelchair for mobility and did then. The seeds of my activism for people with disabilities and all marginalized folks were planted right there – in the sacred ground between Taylor and Prentice, where May 4th observances take place.
My first job was with the Columbus Dispatch (I zeroed in only on central Ohio where my wife was starting law school at Ohio State.) I figured I would work at a large daily newspaper as a reporter for 40-plus years.
I covered growth, planning, urban affairs and when I could get away with it – news, travel and lifestyle stories on people with disabilities, including the landmark passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990.
By 2000, I could see that print journalism would contract severely because of the internet. We wanted a fresh start in Miami. My Kent education prepared me for a life of reinvention as a storyteller.
Everything from thorough researching and sourcing to meeting deadlines and understanding my audience – came from my J-School days. Nothing prepares you to be a quick study – about something you know very little about and in time to write about it authoritatively for a client – than a Kent journalism education
My first position in Miami was as the Senior Urban Policy Advisor to the Chairman of the Miami City Commission. A decade later, I worked in marketing/business development for a series of design firms – including one of the nations’ largest and most award-winning firms.
When I turned 50, I decided to create my own storytelling firm. I advise the dozens of design clients in South Florida, the largest disability non-profit in the U.S. and the largest member organization in America — and its smart growth/land use for real estate research and communications.
I’m still a reporter. Each year, I publish dozens of long-form articles on design for people with disabilities. I often make the cover of Planning, the magazine of the American Planning Association.
I write about Universal Design, complete streets, accessible transit, inclusive parks and other aspects of making the built environment barrier-free. My articles share best practices on design for all and remind elected and appointed officials that the ADA is federal civil rights legislation for people with disabilities — not a zoning/building code that can be waived by variance. Here’s a few of them:
- Equity and Inclusion: Planning, Zoning and other Land-Use Policy Best Practices to Erase Errors of the Past that Perpetuated Bias and Deepened Inequity (On Common Ground)
- When Inclusive ... Isn’t (strongtowns.org)
- Five Ways to Plan for More Accessible Housing (American Planning Association)
- Inclusion, Equity and Accessibility (National Association of Realtors)
I have headlined several planning and design conferences, speaking about Diversity, Equity and Inclusion – through the lens of accessibility for people with disabilities.
My wife, a lifelong public servant who has been an Americans with Disabilities Act coordinator for 20 years and an architecture lecturer for a decade, and I are creating an in-person and online course on Universal Design for undergraduate and graduate architecture/planning/design students.
For a decade, I have blogged daily about urban design and disability issues. I also post daily to Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn, sharing advocacy journalism and my healthy living journey – chronicling 140 pounds of weight loss in the past two years.
My advice to Kent Students: make your passion part of your profession and know that the platform evolves, but storytelling always is valuable.
My wish for editors, architects and all people: get over whatever makes you uncomfortable about disability and start creating a world that is inclusive and accessible to all. The CDC reports that one in four U.S. adults – 61 million Americans – have a disability that impacts major life activities. That means disability is mainstream and normal and should be treated as such.
Follow Steve Wright at http://urbantravelandaccessibility.blogspot.com
Twitter: @stevewright64