Skip to main content

Making the Movement Visible


Interview with Tom Olin

In celebration of the 35th Anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, legendary disability rights photographer Tom Olin joins Stephen David Simon, Executive Director of the City of Los Angeles Department on Disability, for a conversation honoring the legacy of the ADA and the movement that brought it to life.

For more than four decades, Tom Olin has used his camera to document the disability rights movement—from grassroots actions to defining moments like the Capitol Crawl. In this powerful exchange, Tom shares how photography can elevate voices, illuminate injustice, and advance Equity through Access by capturing the strength, solidarity, and impact of disabled communities.

Transcript

Alternative formats are available upon request. Please contact 213-202-2764 (Voice), Dial 711 for CA Relay, or email DOD.Contact@lacity.org.

Video Description: A Zoom video interview is displayed in a three-person grid format. In the top left corner is Stephen David Simon, a bald man wearing glasses, a dark suit jacket, and a light blue shirt. His virtual background includes the City of Los Angeles seal and text that reads: “Stephen David Simon, Executive Director and General Manager, City of Los Angeles Department on Disability, Pronouns: He, Him, His.” Below his name, his Zoom display name reads: “Stephen David Simon (He/him).”

In the top right corner is an American Sign Language (ASL) interpreter named Alexis, a light-skinned woman with short brown hair, wearing a dark gray shirt, signing in ASL against a solid blue background.

In the bottom center is Tom Olin, an older white man with glasses, wearing a baseball cap and a yellow T-shirt that reads “MY MEDICAID MATTERS” in bold black letters. Behind him is one of his black-and-white photos featuring a person with a disability getting arrested at a protest.

The timestamp from the Zoom recording is placed in the bottom right corner.


Black and white photo of President George H.W. Bush seated at a wooden desk outside, signing the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) into law on July 26, 1990.  The image is credited to photographer Tom Olin, whose watermark appears in the bottom right corner.
A powerful moment from the Capitol Crawl shows two disability rights activists climbing the steps of the U.S. Capitol using only their hands and legs, protesting the lack of accessible entrances in 1990.
A large group of disability rights activists, most using wheelchairs, line up across a city street holding signs, including one that reads “Redirect 25%.” An adapted American flag with the disability access symbol in the stars flies overhead.
Justin Dart Jr., wearing his signature cowboy hat and seated in a wheelchair, speaks into a microphone at a rally. Behind him, a crowd of disabled activists cheer and applaud, many wearing ADAPT T-shirts.
A man stands among a crowd during a disability rights protest, holding a sign that reads “Disabled and Proud.” People around him carry additional protest signs, and a person in a wheelchair is partially visible behind him.
Two disability rights activists, one using a wheelchair and the other using a scooter, hold hands triumphantly in front of the U.S. Capitol. An American flag with a circle of stars waves behind them, symbolizing unity and progress.
A young child with blonde hair and a walker smiles at the camera during a protest. Next to her, someone holds a poster that says “We Will Ride” from the Lowman Special Education Center, demanding accessible transportation.