Deaf truck driver awarded $36M by a jury for discrimination

Victor Robinson, who has been deaf his whole life, was awarded over $36 million in damages after a trucking company told him they wouldn't hire him because he was deaf.
Victor Robinson Photos

A deaf man who says a truck driving company told him that they would not hire him because he couldn’t hear won over $36 million in damages by a jury a month ago.

Victor Robinson, who is in his 40s and has lived his whole life deaf, told ABC News that Werner Enterprises trucking company passed him in their commercial driver’s license (CDL) training program, but when he applied for a job in 2016, the company’s Vice President of Safety and Compliance Jamie Hamm, who was Jamie Maus at the time, told him he wouldn’t get the job.

“It was really intense,” Robinson told ABC News through an interpreter. “The person said, ‘We can’t hire you because you can’t hear,’ and hung up [the video call]. And there it was. The end. And I got to the point where I didn’t know what else to do.”

Robinson eventually reached out to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). They reviewed his case and decided to file a lawsuit against Werner.

“That fact has baffled us from the beginning,” Josh Pierson, Robinson’s lawyer, told ABC News. “The fact that Victor and other deaf drivers can complete training school, can get their CDL, even attend training schools owned by Werner but then aren’t allowed to drive for the company, ultimately.”

Read on at https://abcnews.go.com/US/deaf-truck-driver-awarded-36m-jury-discrimination/story?id=103764881&fbclid=IwAR2eruCHHbLJwxreCRUTwpHmkySOK9USjnJ4ARVpjui8kpoJ73do8CIKgPQ

 

Site for Deaf Community Center moves ahead after Planning Commission vote

Map showing where the new Maryland Deaf Community Center would be located.

Frederick’s Deaf community is closer to having a new gathering place, after a vote of the city’s Planning Commission.

The commission voted unanimously to approve a final site plan Monday night for the Maryland Deaf Community Center, planned for North East Street on the eastern side of Frederick.

“It will be the best day of our lives when we get this building,” Marsha Flowers, a member of the Maryland Deaf Community Center’s board, told the commission, through a sign language interpreter.

Read on at https://www.fredericknewspost.com/news/economy_and_business/employment/site-for-deaf-community-center-moves-ahead-after-planning-commission-vote/article_d21ed0d0-1b41-5e21-b06a-11df6e149f7e.html?fbclid=IwAR1_sF5SLnk6BehAW0ztu-pR1SCC5zIHLmwFX3w8GfnS9-D5_YTKZ6D7mJE

 

Delaware Medicaid Updates

Delaware Medicaid co-payments for Adult dental services will be $3 copay starting Dec. 1, 2023.

Important Update for Delaware Medicaid! During the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE), Delaware Medicaid paused Adult Dental Program copayments (copays). Adult Dental Program copay of $3.00 will restart on December 1, 2023 for most members over the age of 21 years. Copays are paid to your dentist.
 
Visit de.gov/medicaidrenewals for more information about Adult Dental copays. TTY users: 711. Español, Kreyòl ayisyen, Tiếng Việt or other languages: 1-866-843-7212.
 
Flyers available in Spanish and French – see link below.