Difficult-in-order ID

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The inventor's original heavy classification ID

The Schwer-in- ord-Ausweis (or Schwerinordnung -ID ) is an ID card cover issued by the German authorities in various federal states , which is available on request or application in addition to the severely disabled ID card .

Emergence

The idea for the ID card cover came from the then 14-year-old student Hannah from Pinneberg in 2017 , who lives with Down's syndrome and who felt discriminated against by the name of her severely disabled ID card . She published a literary text on this in the autumn 2017 edition of the magazine “KIDS Aktuell” of the Hamburg association KIDS Hamburg e. V. - Down Syndrome Contact and Information Center , which works for people with Down syndrome. In the text, she reinterpreted the existing designation in what she saw as the more positive variant, “Difficult-in-order ID” and presented a photograph of an appropriately labeled ID card that she had created together with a teacher.

After a Twitter user first picked up the young people's idea and their text in a tweet, the idea of ​​changing the name met with a great deal of positive feedback in social networks and subsequently received a great deal of attention. Numerous print and online media, radio and television stations reported on this nationwide.

A disabled boy then applied to the Hamburg pension office for his own difficult-to-order ID . The Hamburg Senator for Social Affairs, Melanie Leonhard , promised him that the difficult-to-order ID would be issued, although she still left open the form in which this should take place. The implementation took place in December 2017 in the form of a printed ID card, which severely disabled people can receive free of charge from the Hamburg pension office.

In January 2018, the Rhineland-Palatinate Minister of Social Affairs, Sabine Bätzing-Lichtenthäler , announced that in Rhineland-Palatinate, too, the badly-in-order ID card can be applied for at the State Office for Social Affairs, Youth and Welfare and will be given immediately free of charge. This is an ID card cover that covers the words “Severely Disabled ID” with the word “Schwerinordnungausweis”.

In Lower Saxony there has been a similar ID card cover since March 2018. The cover can optionally be requested from the Ministry of Social Affairs with the inscription “Schwer-in-ord-Ausweis” or “Meine Teilhabe” and is given out free of charge.

In Berlin, since April 2018, a corresponding cover can be requested informally from the pension office of the State Office for Health and Social Affairs.

In Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Saxony-Anhalt, Schleswig-Holstein and Thuringia, identity card covers with the imprint "Schwer-in-ord-Ausweis" are issued on request.

By January 2019, according to research by the NDR , the social authorities had already issued almost 10,000 ID cards nationwide on request.

description

The “Schwer-in-ord-Ausweis” consists of a plastic cover, which in some federal states can be given free of charge to severely disabled persons upon request or a special request and into which the existing severely handicapped ID card is inserted. Although it is not an official document in this form, nor is it an administrative act , this official measure received a lot of media coverage and became known nationwide.

The actual severely handicapped ID card, the design of which is regulated nationwide by the Severely Handicapped ID Ordinance, will continue to be issued and required in its form and description. In addition, it is not changed by the “difficult-to-order” ID - which is just an ID card cover.

criticism

The Federal Government's Commissioner for the Disabled , Verena Bentele , said in an interview on Spiegel Online in November 2017 : “ Being difficult in order does not need to be particularly emphasized for people with disabilities. It would be better [in her opinion] to rename the document to a certificate of participation or a certificate of inclusion . ”Furthermore, Bentele is of the opinion that“ […] it [would] be better to name facts without evaluating them. ”

Political Consequences

In April 2018, the FDP parliamentary group in the Bundestag applied for the severely handicapped ID card to be renamed the participation ID card, with reference to the discussion about the difficult-to-order ID . The motion was discussed in parliament and referred to the committees for further elaboration. The application was later rejected by the Labor and Social Affairs Committee. Several parties expressed their basic sympathy for the request, but warned that such a name change should not be decided over the heads of those affected.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Hannah Kiesbye: Difficult-in-order ID . In: KIDS Aktuell - magazine on Down syndrome . No. 36 - autumn 2017. KIDS Hamburg e. V. - Contact and Information Center Down Syndrome, Hamburg, p. 16–17 ( online at kidshamburg.de [PDF; 5.8 MB ; accessed on February 6, 2018]).
  2. a b Difficult-in-order ID. News today plus at ZDFinfo . (Not available online.) In: zdf.de . November 22, 2017, archived from the original on January 3, 2018 ; accessed on February 6, 2018 (with video, 2 minutes). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.zdf.de
  3. ^ Marvin Ronsdorf: Marvin Ronsdorf on Twitter. In: twitter.com . October 20, 2017, accessed on February 6, 2018 : “Hannah made her severely handicapped ID card into a difficult-to-order ID and wrote about it. You're great, Hannah! "
  4. ^ Daniel Wüstenberg: Severely disabled? Hard alright! 14-year-old clarifies something . In: Neon . October 25, 2017 ( online at stern.de [accessed February 6, 2018]).
  5. Authority issues "difficult-to-order ID". In: ndr.de . November 15, 2017, accessed on February 6, 2018 (report on a radio broadcast in the series Treffpunkt Hamburg on NDR 90.3 from November 14, 2017).
  6. (ate / dpa ): Instead of the handicapped ID: Child with Down syndrome invents a “difficult-to-order ID”. In: rp-online.de . November 16, 2017, accessed February 6, 2018 .
  7. Dorit Koch: Hamburg: “Schwer-in-ord-Ausweis” should make school nationwide. In: welt.de . December 18, 2017, accessed February 6, 2018 .
  8. ( mz / tis): Great gesture: Rhineland-Palatinate introduces “difficult-in-order” ID card. In: mz-web.de . January 2, 2018, accessed February 6, 2018 .
  9. a b SWR Aktuell Rhineland-Palatinate: New "Document" in Rhineland-Palatinate: Now there is the special order ID card ( memento from January 5, 2018 in the Internet Archive )
  10. Bad-in-order ID causes a sensation. In: dpa . March 6, 2018, accessed on March 23, 2018 (report on the press conference on the presentation of the ID card in Lower Saxony).
  11. Press release from the Berlin Senate Department for Integration, Labor and Social Affairs. April 23, 2018. Retrieved April 23, 2018 .
  12. Difficult-in-order ID card covers are now also available in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. Ministry of Social Affairs, Integration and Equality of the State of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania , June 21, 2018, accessed on September 23, 2018 .
  13. More and more are difficult to order
  14. New ID cover "Difficult in order" for the handicapped ID , eisenachonline.de, accessed on October 10, 2019
  15. Hannah Böhme: Hannah's “Difficult in order” ID is a hit. In: ndr.de. January 26, 2019, accessed January 26, 2019 .
  16. Disabled ID Ordinance (SchwbAwV) - sample 5. In: gesetze-im-internet.de. Retrieved on February 6, 2018 (reference: BGBl. I 2012, 1277).
  17. (ott with dpa ): Instead of "Severely handicapped ID": What do you think of the "Severely in order" ID? In: welt.de . November 16, 2017, accessed February 6, 2018 .
  18. Heike Klovert: Hamburg's “Difficult-in-order ID”: “It could be issued to everyone”. In: Spiegel Online . November 16, 2017, accessed February 6, 2018 .
  19. Consultation of the Bundestag, 28th session in 2018. In: Mediathek des Deutschen Bundestag. April 26, 2018. Retrieved April 29, 2018 .
  20. Claudia Heine: We are at the very beginning. In: The Parliament. April 29, 2018. Retrieved April 29, 2018 .
  21. ^ German Bundestag, parliamentary news: "For the time being no participation certificate". In: Today in the Bundestag. June 27, 2018. Retrieved September 22, 2018 .