News
"Rocking the Cradle: Ensuring the Rights of Parents with Disabilities and their Children"
By ADA Wisconsin Partnership, 2012-09-27
The following information is forwarded to you by the Great Lakes ADA Center (www.adagreatlakes.org) for your information:
NCD Issues Groundbreaking Report "Rocking the Cradle: Ensuring the Rights of Parents with Disabilities and Their Children"
WASHINGTON, DC -- On Thursday, September 27, the National Council on Disability (NCD), an independent federal agency, released Rocking the Cradle: Ensuring the Rights of Parents with Disabilities and Their Children -- a groundbreaking policy study, infused with real life stories of parents with disabilities, to provide a comprehensive overview of factors that support and obstruct Americans with all kinds of disabilities from exercising their fundamental right to begin and maintain families.
Twenty-two years after passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act with an increasing number of people with disabilities taking advantage of increased protections to receive an education and go to work, parents with disabilities continue to be the only distinct community that have to fight to retains and sometimes gain custody of their own children without cause, said NCD Council Member, Ari Neeman. Currently, the U.S. legal system is not protecting the rights of parents with disabilities and their children. Two-thirds of state child welfare laws allow courts to determine a parent is unfit solely on the basis of a parents disability. In fact, every state allows disability as a consideration when determining the best interest of a child in family or dependency court. Whether actions are taken at the state or federal levelas an amendment or a new lawthe need to correct this unfair bias could not be more urgent or clear.
About the report: Rocking the Cradle: Ensuring the Rights of Parents with Disabilities and Their Children explores the pervasive prejudices faced by parents with disabilities by exposing the disparate treatment often encountered by parents with disabilities and their children within court and service systems and offers draft model state and federal statutory language to correct the discrimination faced by parents with disabilities in the United States.
Key findings:
Estimates indicate 6.1 million children in the U.S. have parents with disabilities Nearly 1 in 10, almost 10% of the population.
Parents with disabilities are the only community of Americans who must struggle to retain custody of their children.
Removal rates of parents with psychiatric disabilities is as high as 70 80 % Removal rates of parents with intellectual disabilities is as high as 80% Extremely high removal rates and loss of parental rights for parents with sensory or physical disabilities.
Parents with disabilities are more likely to lose custody of their children after divorce.
Prospective parents with disabilities have more difficulty when it comes to accessing reproductive health care such assisted reproductive technologies.
Prospective parents with disabilities face significant barriers to adopting children.
In the face of numerous obstacles, hope remains with several programs that show promise, long-term sustainable impact and potential for replication. With more funding, model programs currently serving American parents with disabilities could easily grow and develop nationwide to better serve this often overlooked population.
NCD thanks Through the Looking Glass, the NIDRR-funded National Center for Parents with Disabilities and Their Families, for their valuable assistance in writing sections of this report. Their insight and guidance during the research and drafting of Rocking the Cradle was instrumental in its development and completion.
Web version of this news release is available at:
http://www.ncd.gov/newsroom/09272012
Full report is available on NCD's website at:
http://www.ncd.gov/publications/2012/Sep272012/
For more information contact:
Lawrence Carter-Long, Public Affairs Specialist National Council on Disability
Email: LCarterLong@ncd.gov
Phone: 202-272-2004
NCD on the web: http://www.ncd.gov
On Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NCDgov On Twitter: http://twitter.com/NatCounDis
Connect | Share | Learn | http://sdsnetworkwi.org/
Sept. 20, 2012
Election Day Is Quickly Approaching!
State and federal elections are taking place on Tuesday, Nov. 6th. Are you ready to vote? Have you already decided who to vote for? Do you know where your polling place is? Are you registered? Between now and election day, we'll be posting information and resources to help you be ready to vote.
Get Involved Online!
- Question of the Week: What issues will affect your vote for President in November? Health care? Jobs & the Economy? Public Benefits? Something else? Participate in this quick & easy poll and tell us what issues you care about!
- Discussion: What are your questions about voting? Are you wondering if your polling site is accessible? How to vote absentee? Whether you're registered? Post your questions in this discussion and we'll find resources that answer your questions.
Check Out New Opportunities
- Wisconsin Self-Determination Conference:Have you registered yet for the Self-Determination Conference? It's the biggest event of the year for everyone who wants to be charge of his or her life. A limited number of scholarships are available for people with disabilities, so apply now (deadline: Oct. 1st)
- National Forum on Disability Issues: Hear what presidential candidates have to say about issues that matter to people with disabilities. Register Now! (no cost) for this online forum.
- Telling Your Story- This app for iPad helps you put together your story to share it with local, state and federal elected leaders to let them know about issues that affect you.
- Take Your Legislator to Work Day: People with disabilities work in many different jobs in their communities. Find out how you can invite your local and state legislator to come to your workplace.
What's New?
Find out the latest news and resources on the SDS Network:
- Key Questions for State and Federal Candidates
- Toolkit: Managed Care: Doing It Right; Applying the Independent Living Philosophy"
- Six Principles to Modernize Health Care Infrastructure
- The Affordable Care Act's Impact on Citizens with Disabilities
- The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film (October)
Welcome New Members
Stop by to welcome our newest members.
- She's a free-lance PATH facilitator(If you don't know what PATH is, feel free to ask her!)
- She's aparent of a talented young woman
- She helps youth and families makecommunity connections
- She's a new member from Delaware.
- She's aPacker fan to the bone and a tireless advocate
Upcoming Events
Here's a sample of upcoming eventslisted on the SDS Network:
- National Forum on Disability Issues, Sept. 28th. Register Now (no cost)
- 2012 Wisconsin Self-Determination Conference, Oct. 29-31. Register now!
- And many more!
Post your event on the SDS Network and it can be included in future Network News emails to members! Questions? Contact Deb Wisniewski at scgwis@gmail.com
Thanks to the sponsors of the SDS Network!Welcome to one of our new sponsors, the ADA Wisconsin Partnership.
Six Principles Necessary to Modernize Our Health Care Infrastructure
By InControl Wisconsin, 2012-09-20
In 2009, the National Advisory Board released a report, Declaration for Independence:A Call to Transform Long Term Services for Seniors and People with Disabilities.It included six principles necessary to modernize our health care infrastructure. These are still relevant today:
1. Enhance Self-care through improved coordination
- Transform Americas health care system from one that focuses on episodic illnesses to one that assists individuals in self-managing their whole health, with the support of providers and communities.
- Encourage the fundamental and financial investment in physicians to serve as the medical home for patients.
2. Encourage community integration and involvement
- Coordinate support services, housing, and transportation so people are able to participate in the social, economic, educational, and recreational activities available through community living.
- Promote data integration, continuity, and coordination of services through the use of health information exchange.
3. Expand accessibility of Services and Supports
- Retool programs and regulations to enable people to access the services they need to live independently without creating financial hardship for the family.
4. Uphold personal preference
- Leverage the success of long term service models that promote personal strengths and preferences and preserve dignity of participants.
5. Empower people to participate in the economic Mainstream
- Encourage the employment of people with disabilities and seniors by removing disincentives for people to work and redefine antiquated descriptions of disability.
6. Invest in improved technology
- Invest resources in the continued development of technology that improves individuals ability to self-monitor chronic health conditions and live independently.
Toolkit: “Managed Care: Doing It Right; Applying the Independent Living Philosophy"
By InControl Wisconsin, 2012-09-20
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (Friday, Sept. 14, 2012) Amerigroup Corporations (NYSE: AGP) National Advisory Board (NAB) announced the launch of a new, innovative toolkit in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday night. Consisting of 38 different resources, the collection of tools is designed to inform legislators, advocates and consumers on how to apply independent living philosophies to health care.
The toolkit, Managed Care: Doing It Right; Applying the Independent Living Philosophy, is an advancement of the NABs 2009 report "Declaration for Independence: A Call to Transform Health and Long-Term Services for Seniors and People with Disabilities" and is built upon the NABs Six Principles to Modernize the Health Infrastructure.
"These tools will empower individuals to make a difference in securing the future of independent living," said Amerigroup Chairman and Chief Executive Officer James G. Carlson. I appreciate the leadership of the National Advisory Board in promoting greater accessibility to services and supports for seniors and people with disabilities.
Recently celebrating its fifth anniversary, the NAB is a distinguished group of advocates and experts in the fields of disability and aging. The resources cover a wide range of information regarding legislation, methodology and policy recommendations on how Medicaid and Medicare members may live healthier and more independent lives.
We are hopeful this resource will encourage and inform individuals to influence public policy as it relates to health care and services," statedLex Frieden, convener of the NAB. "Our goal is to initiate change in this nation, so individuals will be able to live not only independently, but actively in their communities."
This initial presentation marks the first of several events as the NAB embarks on a national tour to raise awareness among policymakers, advocates and the research community.
See a copy of the report "Declaration for Independence".
Disability rights activists celebrated the U.S. Supreme Courts decision eliminating the constitutional challenges to the landmark Affordable Care Act health care law. The law, which makes health care more accessible and affordable for millions of Americans, has a particularly significant impact on Americans with disabilities as a result of a number of provisions of the law, including the elimination of barriers to providing coverage for preexisting conditions, expanded access to medical equipment and services, and increased options for where individuals can receive services, including in their homes.
Other benefits of the law, as outlined by the Department of Health and Human Services, include an expanded Medicaid program, greater access to preventive services and the ability of individuals to stay on their parents plans until age 26, thereby making it easier for people with disabilities or chronic conditions to get insurance.
Furthermore, as ADAPT noted in a release following the decision, the law furthers the promise of the 1999 U.S. Supreme Court Olmstead decision, which gives people with disabilities the right to receive long-term care supports in the most integrated setting in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. One potential downside of the decision is that the ruling eliminated the federal governments authority to penalize states for choosing not to expand Medicaid, including provisions encouraging states to provide community services as an alternative to institutional services.
Governors of several states, for both political and financial reasons, have already indicated they will not expand their programs to increase coverage as the law allows. As one ADAPT official explained, it is important to put pressure on states to take advantage of these opportunities and not bend to the potential fiscal pressures. This is one of the great civil rights fights of our time: to ultimately see all people with disabilities live integrated in the community, not locked away in segregated settings." The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities released an analysis of the impact of health care reform on individual state budgets, which includes talking points for advocacy efforts to encourage states to embrace the opportunity.
"Telling Your Story"is a tool that persons with disabilities, family members, and other advocates can use to compose and practice the personal story they'll present to elected public officials or other policymakers at all levels of government when seeking policy changes or increasing awareness about disability issues. The app guides users through the steps, from introducing yourself to identifying the specific issue to the best methods for presenting a compelling personal story. After entering the text of their story, an audio recording feature allows the user to rehearse their story. Users can also select and preview a photo they may wish to include.
You can view the app in the iTunes Store athttp://itunes.apple.com/us/app/telling-your-story/id541403749.
Welcome! In my integrated, intentional, community-building efforts, I often find that videos are more compelling, more effective than any other form of communication. Rather than fill the video section of this site, I'll use this blog to share short descriptions of, and links to some of the best disABILITY related videos (and some text articles) from around the world. Many thanks to those who have shared their favorites with me, and please consider adding your discoveries!
Here are a few new entries (August, 2012). For those who were lucky enough to catch the Sprout Film Festival in Duluth, MN, you'll recognize this one... I have Anthony Di Salvo's blessing to post here and elsewhere. It's entitled, "One Question." Enjoy!
"What One Thing Would You Change About Yourself?"
http://sproutflix.org/content/one-question
Olmstead, A Case for Community Support
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O3mJGtribtA&feature=relmfu
Diversity in Disability Symposium
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5aNePAflvPk
Universal Design for Yoga
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b6tPx4TSh-U
A Nice Day day in the life of a young man with Down syndrome, from Great Britain
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWR1v2ZDoCU
Disability Discrimination disabled vs. enabled adaptive equipment
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPzq3on2qiA&feature=related
Disability Discrimination job interview young woman with Down syndrome
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lN05UfmIAh4&feature=related
Ballet - physical barriers? NOT! From China
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LnLVRQCjh8c
Disability Discrimination we know whats best for you
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NOE0ihJWPW8&feature=related
Schizophrenia discussion with friends
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUtrDkE6Zd0
"Your Brain is a Rainforest" - new thinking about the process of thinking, not stigmatizing
http://www.odemagazine.com/doc/70/Your-brain-is-a-rain-forest/
Mental Health Anti-stigma message: everyone needs friends
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIZ9FmD0o9k&NR=1
The real story on schizophrenia
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4R6jln_eZg
Reflection on Mental Illness music 3 minutes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R98fQ_Z6vAk&NR=1
Disability Discrimination Depression
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILa9ynqYfEs&feature=related
Disability Discrimination Saleswoman on phone visual impairment doesnt deter her in her job
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fvKp7voPkg&NR=1
Inspiration from Australian speaker, Nick Vujicicon disabilities and abilities
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v4uG2kSdd-4
One mans personal campaign for removing barriers
http://news.aol.com/article/disabled-man-sues-businesses-for-a/303037?icid=200100397x1216557106x1201129724
Grassroots Blog online
Local Where I Want to Live video from Ashland/Bayfield, thanks to Deanna at New Horizons
http://solterra.us/Video/NewHorizons/LivingOptionsJuly.html
Dick & Rick Hoyt Team Hoyt
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=flRvsO8m_KI
10 Minutes on Disabilities and Employment
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tDI8zInWprc
Alzheimers/Memory Loss a gentle reminder
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MijRS7myeBY
Change A Mind About Mental Illness - Glenn Close
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WUaXFlANojQ
Dyscalculia
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ms5N1X6CYAM&feature=related
Famous Dyscalculists
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWzCsI180cc&feature=related
Famous Dyslexics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S8SiuPoFWfQ&feature=related
In My Language - examples of language beyond normal by blogger with autism... stay with it for the final message
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JnylM1hI2jc
The Misbehavior of Behaviorists - text file
http://www.sentex.net/~nexus23/naa_aba.html
Folks with disabilities take film and photos! Shooting Beauty, Picture This
http://www.everyonedeservesashot.com/trailer.htm
How it feels to have a stroke biological differences between normal control and abnormal processing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyyjU8fzEYU
Clifford Stoll an agile mind
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gj8IA6xOpSk&NR=1
Blogging on autism - nothing about us without us
http://aspitude.blogspot.com/2009/10/world-autism-interviews-applied.html
Series of young man with Down Syndrome very thought provoking what do you think of this? Laughing at or with?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2U3suqfWRz8&feature=channel
Stuck on an elevator one perspective on service models versus independence models Very funny!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXCuGvsThEw
blind pianist
http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=9xwCG0Ey2Mg
George Carlin on homelessness
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbSRCjG-VLk
Enjoy the small pleasures even when Nikos & Constantin Pilavios and Nikos Filippakis
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=flkFW5E0XcM
Playing for Change - series of related videos, not disABILITY-specific, but building community worldwide
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Us-TVg40ExM
*** END OFLIST (FOR NOW) ***
WI - BPDD Take Your Legislator to Work Campaign: Regional Coordinators Needed
By Beth Moss, 2012-08-17
Help make the campaign a success in your region; stipends available!
In October, the Wisconsin Board for People with Developmental Disabilities (BPDD) will conduct the Take Your Legislator to Work Campaign to raise awareness about the importance of community-integrated employment for people with disabilities. During the campaign, people with disabilities who have community-integrated jobs at a competitive wage invite their legislator to visit them at their workplace. Legislators see firsthand how people with disabilities utilize their talents, enhance their work environment, and ultimately contribute to Wisconsins tax base.
Our goal is for every legislator in Wisconsin to have a visit. Thats where you come in.
To help accomplish this goal, the BPDD is recruiting Regional Coordinators (RC) who know people with disabilities who are working in community-integrated settings for competitive wages and/or have connections to find such people. RCs may also recruit facilitators, help schedule visits, etc.
For the campaign, the state is divided into 14 regions based on legislative districts. Most regions include two or three Senate districts and six or nine Assembly districts, respectively.
RCs will participate in conference calls with BPDD staff so we can work together to execute an effective and successful campaign in every region. RCs will be paid a stipend of $250 at the conclusion of the campaign.
If you are interested in being a Regional Coordinator, complete and submit a Regional Coordinator Application by noon on Friday, August 24, 2012. Qualified applicants will be selected and assigned to regions immediately, so apply as soon as possible.
More information is available on the BPDD website http://wi-bpdd.org/
If you have questions about coordinating a region, please contact Joshua Ryf at joshua.ryf@wisconsin.gov or (608) 261-7829.
Sprout Films - catalyst for inspiration and respect! AWESOME film fest last weekend in Duluth!
By Martha Oie, 2012-08-06
The US Census Bureau has published some information marking the 22nd Anniversary of the ADA. These statistics are taken from Americans with Disabilities: 2010: http://www.census.gov/prod/2012pubs/p70-131.pdf">www.census.gov/prod/2012pubs/p70-131.pdf
Population Distribution
57 million
Number of people with a disability living in the United States in 2010. They represent 19 percent of the civilian noninstitutionalized population.
By age
8 percent of children under 15 have disabilities.
21 percent of people 15 and older have disabilities.
17 percent of people 21 to 64 have disabilities.
50 percent of adults 65 and older have disabilities.
20%
Percentage of females with a disability, compared with 17 percent of males. (When adjusted for the aging of the population, the disability rate was 18 percent for both males and females).
Specific Disabilities
8 million
Number of people 15 and older who have a hearing difficulty. Among people 65 and older, 4 million have difficulty hearing.
8 million
Number of people 15 and older with a vision difficulty.
31 million
Number of people 15 and older who have difficulty walking or climbing stairs.
4 million
Number of people who used a wheelchair to assist with mobility. This compares with 12 million people who used a cane, crutches or walker.
On the Job
41%
Percentage of people 21 to 64 with a disability who were employed.
28%
Percentage of people 21 to 64 with severe disabilities who were employed. This compares with 71 percent for individuals with nonsevere disabilities.
Income and Poverty
$1,961
Median monthly earnings for people 21 to 64 with a disability, compared with $2,724 for those with no disability.
$1,577
Median monthly earnings for people 21 to 64 with severe disabilities, while those with nonsevere disabilities had median monthly earnings of $2,402.
$2,838
Median monthly earnings for people 21 to 64 with disabilities associated only with communication, including blindness or difficulty seeing, deafness or difficulty hearing, and difficulty having speech understood.
29%
Percentage of people 15 to 64 with severe disabilities who were in poverty, while 18 percent with nonsevere disabilities were in poverty.
Program Participation
59%
Percentage of people 15 to 64 with severe disabilities who receive public assistance. Thirty-three percent receive social security benefits. This compares with 9 percent of adults 15 to 64 with nonsevere disabilities that receive Social Security benefits.
28%
Percentage of adults with severe disabilities who receive food stamp benefits, compared with 8 percent for those with no disability.
11%
Percentage of people 15 to 64 with severe disabilities who receive public housing assistance. This compares with 9 percent of people 65 and older with severe disabilities.
Health Insurance
48%
Percentage of adults 15 to 64 with severe disabilities who receive government health coverage.
40%
Percentage of adults 15 to 64 with severe disabilities who have private health insurance coverage.
23%
Percentage of people with severe disabilities who receive Medicare coverage.
35%
Percentage of people 15 to 64 with severe disabilities who receive Medicaid, while 9 percent have dual coverage, receiving Medicare and Medicaid benefits.
21%
Percentage of people 15 to 64 with severe disabilities who were uninsured, not statistically different from the 21 percent of those with nonsevere disabilities.
Editors note: The preceding data were collected from a variety of sources and may be subject to sampling variability and other sources of error. Facts for Features are customarily released about two months before an observance in order to accommodate magazine production timelines. Questions or comments should be directed to the Census Bureaus Public Information Office: telephone: 301-763-3030; or e-mail: <pio@census.gov>.
