Fritz: ‘Fitting In Is Overrated’



From as young as seven years old, Kevin Fritz knew something was different. 

He had spent the past three months in the hospital, but for someone born with muscular dystrophy, that was not unusual. What was unusual was the reception he received.

“I remember, there were three garbage bags of cards from my first-grade teacher’s class and videos of kids wishing I would get better,” Fritz said via Zoom from his home in Miami. “I kept thinking, ‘Why am I sick and other people not sick? I think that was the first recognition of (being different).”

But the alum of the College of Applied Health Sciences never saw different as a negative.

“I think I’ve always just wanted to be included,” said Fritz, who is now employment counsel at Gusto, an human resources management software company. “I think as I’ve gotten older, I’ve realized that fitting in is very overrated.”

Muscular dystrophy (MD) is a genetic neurological disease that causes muscle weakness and decreased mobility, not just of arms and legs, but vital organs as well. With MD, everyday tasks progressively become extremely difficult to manage without assistance. Given the progression of the disease, many people with MD don’t survive into adulthood, which makes Fritz’s life and career that much more inspiring.

MD made Fritz’s childhood a challenge, but when his health stabilized, he started thinking about college. A Pennsylvania native, Fritz wasn’t sure where Illinois was, but he knew it was ranked among the best schools to accommodate students with disabilities.

He called the Division of Disability Resources and Educational Services (DRES) and spoke with Susann Sears, who is now director of the Beckwith Residential Support Services program for people with severe physical disabilities. After a campus visit, Fritz was sold.

A Community Health major, Fritz set out to make an immediate impact, displaying an inner resolve he is proud of.

“I think that I’ve always had a drive to be just as good as the other person,” Fritz said. “When I was much younger, I used to do a lot of theater. I remember, there was a dance audition for a musical. And the director said, ‘Obviously, Kevin, you don’t need to do this.’ I said, ‘You know what? I’m going to do it.’ And I put like a muscle shirt and a headband and really went all out on it.

“It was really embarrassing but also very empowering.”

Armed with that new skill, Fritz became a student senator and acclimated himself with health care issues that were challenging to people with disabilities. One of Fritz’s internships while at Illinois was working with Lynne Barnes, the then-president at Carle Foundation Hospital. Although Fritz enjoyed working in health care, it was Barnes whose advice took him down a different path.

Barnes encouraged him to apply his “analytical mind” and passion to law school, Fritz said. Barnes introduced him to Carle’s vice president of legal affairs and she said that Fritz would make a good lawyer because he’d “like to fight the issues.”

Fritz’s interest in law was also shaped by his time as a student senator, during which he accepted a job in Washington, D.C., interning for then-Sen. Barack Obama where his work was heavily health-policy related. Another chance meeting again diverted Fritz’s path.

Upon meeting Rep. Jim Langevin (D-RI), who also uses a wheelchair, Fritz saw the possibilities for himself.

“When I met him, my whole world changed because there’s a guy like me 20 years later, with an assistant just like me, wearing a suit that’s like perfectly fit to his disabled person, just like I like to do,” Fritz said. “I only met him that one time, but I realized that it can happen. I could run for Congress. I could have a job. I could be successful.”

Pursuing law came with its challenges, Fritz said, but he knew that he wanted to be on the employer’s side of accommodation and representation for disabilities.

He started in employment law and spent nearly 10 years as working to defend Fortune companies against lawsuits. Not only was Fritz the first wheelchair user at his firm but to this day he is one of the only wheelchair users with a “significant disability” at a top-50 law firm in the United States.

Today, Fritz has a significant position in counseling and litigation at Gusto, playing a role in employee relations and policy review. Although Fritz has had his share of challenges living with MD, he continues to view his condition not as something to heal or fix, but something to thrive with.

“I don’t have time to just sit around and pray that everything will be better for me physically. I have to live the life I was given and make the best of it. You should always be yourself, and that’s exactly enough.” 

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A Journey to Empowerment



Harold Scharper Award recipient Kevin Fritz is flanked by Susann Sears, director of Beckwith Residential Support Services, and Pat Malik, former director of Disability Resources and Educational Services.

Kevin Fritz’s disability made his childhood difficult. People noticed his wheelchair before they noticed him. The severity of his disability made it impossible for him to perform the tasks of daily living for himself, and he was often hospitalized with intense illnesses. Despite all of this, he had a strong will to succeed.

So when his health finally stabilized during high school, his thoughts immediately turned to taking advantage of opportunities. It was the first time he felt empowered in his life.

“That was the first time I truly felt authority or power to do something,” he said. “And I did. I immersed myself in academics. I tried to learn things. I tried to become more articulate, sensitive, ambitious.”

In his junior year, he came across an article in New Mobility magazine that listed the top ten universities for people with disabilities. What intrigued him most about the article were the photos of people in wheelchairs.

“They were doing things, going to classes, wearing clothing that wasn’t from a hospital. It was fascinating,” he said.

The University of Illinois was at the top of the list. Although this Pennsylvania resident wasn’t even sure where Illinois was, he called the Division of Disability Resources and Educational Services (DRES) and spoke with Susann Sears, who now directs the Beckwith Residential Support Services program for people with severe physical disabilities who require personal assistants. She recommended a campus visit.

“She said I could take a tour on a special bus that was accessible and see the place where I would live with other students and get care,” he said. “That was the second time in my life that I felt empowered.”

His father drove him 12 hours for the visit. The ride home was quiet, with Kevin feeling “shell-shocked and elated.” His father broke the silence, saying, “Kevin, if you can get in, you can go.”

At Illinois, Kevin learned how to maximize his quality of life. He credits Susann in particular with igniting a fire in him to push back when people said no. “She fought for me to change what is commonplace,” he said. “I have rights. I’m allowed to be here. I deserve to be here.”

He seized opportunity after opportunity, becoming the first student with a known physical disability to be elected to the Illinois Student Senate, which he also chaired, and to serve as director of the Illini Union Board. A student in Community Health, he served as president of Future Health Care Executives, the largest student organization in the College of Applied Health Sciences, and of the rehabilitation service fraternity Delta Sigma Omicron. He landed coveted internships with then-Senator Barack Obama and with Lynne Barnes, vice president of hospital operations at Carle, who encouraged Kevin to apply his analytical mind and passion to law school.

During his studies at Washington University School of Law, he served as the primary editor of the Washington University Journal of Law & Policy, as a board member of Wiley Rutledge Moot Court, and as executive director of advocacy for the National Association of Law Students with Disabilities. He won several mock trials as well as an Excellence in Oral Advocacy Award. As an associate in the firm Seyfarth Shaw LLP, he counsels clients on a wide range of employment issues. His courtroom experience covers the full spectrum of litigation. He co-chairs the firm’s All Abilities Affinity Group, which focuses on inclusion in the workplace, and speaks extensively on disability and diversity issues throughout Chicago.

Looking back on his days at Illinois, Kevin is grateful for the many opportunities that he had through his affiliations with AHS and DRES. He considers the University of Illinois to be a mechanism that allows people to master their lives, adding that he is very honored and proud to have mastered his own.

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College of Applied Health Sciences
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