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Employment First

Oregon is proud to be an Employment First state. 

In Oregon, people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD) earn competitive wages and benefits alongside coworkers without disabilities. This means that people have more opportunities to reach their potential and fully participate in their community.

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About Employment First

Oregon’s Employment First policy states that competitive integrated employment is the first and priority option in planning employment services for working-age adults and youth with I/DD. Services should use person-centered practices that identify an individual's talents, skills and interests.

Cooperating agencies include the Oregon Department of Human Services – through the Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) program and the Office of Developmental Disabilities Services (ODDS) – and the Oregon Department of Education (ODE).

Strategic Plan 2024-2025Interagency MOU with ODDS and VRInteragency MOU with ODDS, VR and ODE

As one of the first states to adopt an Employment First Policy​ in 2008, Oregon is a national leader in its commitment to competitive integrated employment for people with I/DD. Before Oregon adopted its Employment First policy, many individuals with I/DD worked in isolated groups at provider sites called sheltered workshops. They were not given opportunities to do jobs beyond what the workshops prescribed and often earned below minimum wage. People were denied employment services for being “too disabled to work.”

In 2012, Disability Rights Oregon, later joined by the United States Department ​of Justice, sued the state in a federal class-action lawsuit. Lane v. Brown sought to end sheltered workshops and expand employment opportunities for people with I/DD.

In April 2013, Governor Kitzhaber issued an Executive Order, later affirmed in Executive Order 15-01, as the next step in Oregon’s ongoing commitment to ​integrated employment for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. He also issued this let​ter to ODHS staff affirming Oregon’s commitment to offering integrated employment services for people with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities.

As a result, Oregon made the first significant steps to implement its Employment First policy and changed the way it helps people with I/DD find and keep jobs. The state also closed all state-funded sheltered workshops and ended the practice of paying people with disabilities less than minimum wage. ODE and the ODHS Office of Developmental Disabilities Services (ODDS) and Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) program worked together to help former workshop employees find community jobs with competitive wages. As a result, the number of Oregonians with I/DD who work in competitive integrated jobs has more than tripled since 2015. In addition, more students with I/DD are accessing pre-employment services to help them prepare for the future.

This achievement could not have happened without Oregon adv​ocates’ efforts to change the status quo and build new systems that support job seekers with disabilities.


Resources

The following information may be helpful to understanding the Employment First initiative and how Oregon fits in with a national Employment First agenda.