SC,
The ADA law in the US supposedly says that the employers is suppose to offer employment to and individual who is qualified and can do the job with no or reasonable accomidations with disregard to any disability. This is the utopian world.
In the real world, employers see those with disabilities as potential problems and steer away from them if possible. Usually, they can get away with the statement that they found someone who was better qualified (since you cannot see who applied, that statement cannot be proven true or false).
To be honest, the decision to tell a prospective employer is up to you. There are a few places that I could have worked in different departments but they insisted on cashier and so I turned my back on them, without ever telling them anything. Then, there are places that will hire anyone that has a pulse because they cannot raise wages or benefits and as such, cannot get people to work for them.
Sorry to sound so pessemistic but I am just telling what I have seen.
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Louis J Bouchard
Rochester Minnesota
"Only when all those who surround you are different, do you truly belong."
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Fred Tate Little Man Tate