Georgia council on developmental disabilities making a difference magazine



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GEORGIA COUNCIL ON DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES

MAKING A DIFFERENCE MAGAZINE

FALL 2009

WWW.GCDD.ORG

GCDD VIEWPOINT

Health Care Debate Affects Georgians with Disabilities
This has been a very interesting summer. Once again there is an effort to reform the health care system in the United States. Supposedly there is little argument about the need to increase the number of people who have access to health care and to reduce the costs. The question is – how do we do this? From the bitter battles that have taken place across the country and in Georgia it is hard to tell if there is any common ground. Most of us have no idea what is fact and what is fiction.
There has been little said about how health care reform would include access to long term services and supports. Organizations such as the Disability Policy Collaboration and ADAPT have been working to make long term services and supports a part of this conversation. For many people with disabilities reliance on a government funded and operated Medicaid or Medicare system has been a way of life. These programs have been the only way for many individuals and families to get the services and supports they need. Private insurance companies have either refused to pay or had caps that both individuals and families have met very quickly. Is everybody satisfied with these government funded and operated programs? That was an unequivocal NO spoken by many of our readers. Are we satisfied with efforts to “privatize” Medicaid or Medicare through health maintenance organizations or third party administrators? That was probably an even louder NO. We hope that in this edition of Making a Difference magazine that we will answer many of the questions you might have about how health care reform might impact your life.
We will also take a look at issues around housing and employment. Without safe, affordable housing and access to the job market, many individuals will be forced to live at home with their parents and others may remain “locked up” because they have no place else to go. Take a minute and read Mia’s Space (page 28) to see what possibilities exist when we allow individuals to grow up, move into their own homes with supports and go to work to earn a living. We at GCDD are all very proud that Mia

Nobbie now has the keys to her own place.


Finally, we want to welcome Caitlin Childs as the GCDD Organizing Director and Dr. Olivia Garland as the Deputy Commissioner for the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities.
We hope that you will take this time to find out all the information you can about what is proposed in Washington and Georgia. Let us know what you think about health care reform by emailing “Letters To The Editor” at vmsuber@dhr.state.ga.us.


Disability Community Works to Move Health Reform Forward

By Barbara Kornblau, health policy advisor to the American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD) and the Justice for All Action Network; and Andrew Imparato, president and CEO of AAPD


The health reform debate has proven a rallying cry for the disability community across the country. From a visible national presence at town hall meetings to high level negotiations with top White House and administration officials –including the president - the disability community has mobilized to assure that when it comes to health care, “nothing about us, without us.”
A leadership meeting in Boston led to the formation of the Justice for all Action Network

(JFAAN), a working group of leaders in disability self-advocacy – many of whom are leaders of local, state and national disability advocacy groups. JFAAN members have initiated, coordinated and organized a serious of events to promote the health reform issues important to people with disabilities. The various groups represented in JFAAN have served different roles and contributed different expertise. For example, self-advocate members of the broad-based DC-group the Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities put up a Web site focusing on the Community Choice

Act (CCA) and the Community Living Attendant Services and Supports (CLASS) Act. The Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF) focused on health disparities. ADAPT focused its efforts on Community Choice Act (CCA) and the newer provision that would make CCA a state option, which is called the Community First Choice option.
The CCA is a major issue for the disability community. It would end Medicaid’s institutional bias by giving people with disabilities of all ages the choice to live in the community with in-home assistance instead of nursing homes. The disability community came together under the leadership of ADAPT and the National Council on Independent Living to advocate for the inclusion of the CCA in the health reform bills. These efforts culminated in a productive meeting with President Barack Obama’s health reform director, Nancy-Ann DeParle, on August 27.
Many in the disability community met with key staff members in both the House and the Senate to advocate for inclusion of our issues in health reform including the CCA, anti-discrimination provisions, data collection of health information of people with disabilities to improve care, rehabilitation and habilitation services, durable medical equipment, prosthetics and

orthotics, and standards for accessible medical equipment. Several advocacy groups held “hill day” events that mobilized the grassroots to come to Washington. Protests and rallies have been held in cities and communities throughout the country to advocate for the CCA, to show our support for health reform, and to commemorate the anniversaries of the Olmstead v. L.C. decision and the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act.


As a community, through our many activities in Washington and across the country, we influenced the White House and the Hill to see the disability community as an important constituency. This resulted in many conference calls with White House health policy makers, and the White House’s creation of a policy document “How Health Insurance Reform Helps People With Disabilities” which can be found at www.WhiteHouse.gov.
We encourage Georgians to use the time that is left in this session of Congress to reach out to your members of the House and Senate and make sure they know how health reform will affect you. Now is the time to make our voices heard.
AROUND GCDD

Childs Announced as Organizing Director

The Georgia Council on Developmental Disabilities welcomes their latest organizing director, Caitlin Childs. “Caitlin comes to us as an experienced disability advocate,” stated Eric Jacobson, executive director of GCDD. “I look forward to the enhancements she will bring to our work, and expect to see great things from her in the future.”

Childs has over 10 years of social justice community organizing experience in the Atlanta area, and was a member of GCDD’s first Organizing Institute in 2007-’08. In her new role as organizing director, she will continue to build and implement the Real Communities Initiative.

“I believe very strongly in the power of community organizing,” Childs stated. “I look forward to working with disability advocates around the state to utilize community organizing strategies in their work.” Childs continued to emphasize her passion for coalition building, and in working across identity lines to build inclusive and welcoming communities.

“My experience with the Organizing Institute are among the most powerful in my years as an activist,” she said. “I gained and strengthened many skills, and was able to become more connected to disability communities. I look forward to using those skills as a part of GCDD.”

GCDD Joins Advocates Urging Positive Behavior Supports in Schools

The Georgia Advocacy Office (GAO), in collaboration with The Georgia Council on Developmental Disabilities, the Center for Leadership in Disability at Georgia State University, and the Institute on Human Development and Disability urge the Georgia State Board of Education to promulgate a rule that protects all Georgia students from restraint and seclusion, and encourages the proactive use of Positive Behavior Supports in schools.

The GAO acknowledges the Department of Education for heeding the call of advocates to regulate the dangerous practice of restraint and seclusion by preparing for rule initiation either in the late fall or early spring.

For information about this collaboration, please contact jholland@thegao.org. GCDD’s quarterly meeting will include an opportunity for the community to learn more about this issue and give public comment on Thursday, October 15, 2009 at 5:30 p.m. at the Pilot International Foundation located at 102 Preston Ct. in Macon.


Make a Difference … Become an Advisory Member!

GCDD is now accepting applications from individuals with development disabilities to serve as advisory members of the Council. Applications are being accepted through December 1, 2009.

After serving a two-year term as an advisory member, GCDD may recommend them to the Governor for appointing to the Council as openings become available. Advisory members participate in many of the same activities, including attending all Council and committee meetings.

For more information and to submit an application, visit www.GCDD.org or mail to 2 Peachtree Street NW, Atlanta, GA 30303.



Correction In the Summer 2009 issue of Making a Difference, Rie Kennedy-Lizotte of the National

Association of State Directors of Developmental Disabilities Services was erroneously quoted in the article “Can Georgia Finish What They Started?” The quote read “In 1977, we had approximately 160 million residents with intellectual or developmental disabilities living in large institutions of over 50 residents. By 2007, that number was down to just over 36 million.” The quote should have read 160 thousand and 36 thousand. Additionally, Oregon was inadvertently left out as a state that has less than 25 people to move to community homes.

We are pleased to report that Oregon is expecting that their last state institution should be closed in the near future.
NEWS
Easy Living Home Program Has Closed
Effective October 1, the Georgia Easy Living Home program is no longer in existence. Eric Jacobson, one of the founding members of the program and executive director of the Georgia Council on Developmental Disabilities, explained. “A considerable amount of time and money has been spent recruiting and educating builders to design and build new homes with a few basic accessibility features,” he said. Accessibility features include a zero-step entry, wide interior doorways and a complete living space on the first floor.

“Realtors says they are desperate for Easy Living type homes, but builders are saying that there is no market demand,” said Pat Puckett, director of Georgia’s Independent Living Council and head of the Statewide Independent Living Council. “I found it most confusing that these two business sectors had such different viewpoints.”

Advocates for the program argue that accessible features have a negligible cost. What’s more, they open up the market to people of all ages and abilities. “With the graying of America, it makes no sense to build homes with steps at every entry,” Puckett argued.

Jacobson agreed. “It is saddening to have to close the program…but after a decade of effort, there are fewer than one thousand certified homes in Georgia, in spite of the phenomenal building boom of the recent past.”

Despite this disheartening news, there is some good to have come from this. The concept of the Easy Living Home program has spread to several other states in the nation, and it’s been noted that this shift in thinking about the accessibility of homes will only benefit the future of America.

“An article from the Journal of the American Planning Association demonstrated that 25 percent to 60 percent of all houses built in 2000 will have a resident with severe long term mobility impairment over the lifetime of the house,” explained Eleanor Smith, a nationally recognized advocate on the issue of accessibility with new home construction. “That’s simply astounding.”



The Long Road Home:

Perspectives on Olmstead Ten Years Later
Marking the tenth anniversary of the United States Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Olmstead v. L.C., local attorneys and Lois Curtis will participate in the Georgia State University College of Law’s annual one-day symposium. Curtis is one of the original co-plaintiffs of the historic case, which originated in the heart of Atlanta. Topics will include the history of the Olmstead Initiative, the current state of the initiatives and what the future holds, as well as new applications outside of community-based services that the Olmstead Initiative could spur.

United States District Court Judge Marvin Shoob, who ruled on the original summary judgment motion, will speak at the luncheon. The line-up is full of guest speakers, including Susan Stefan, a staff attorney at the Center for Public Representation in Massachusetts; David Ferleger, a specialist in disability law; Steven J. Schwartz, the executive director of the Center for Public Representation; and Jessica Howell, assistant director of the Georgia State University

Center for Leadership in Disability.

The symposium will be on October 23 from 8 AM to 5 PM at the law offices of Sutherland Asbill & Brennan at 999 Peachtree Street, NE. Attendance is $30, including lunch. For more information, contact Toni Pastori with Atlanta Legal Aid at 404.377.0705.



United Nations One Step Closer to Global Accessibility
Americans living with disabilities were excited to learn of President Barack Obama’s recent signing of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, sponsored by the United Nations.

The Convention was to address the world’s largest minority – according to the World Health Organization, 10 percent of the total world population experiences various forms of disabilities.

The purpose of the Convention is to “promote, protect and ensure the full and equal enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms by all persons with disabilities, and to promote respect for their inherent dignity.” There’s an optional protocol available for signatories and ratifications as well.

According to WhiteHouse.gov, Obama’s signing – and the ratification of – the Convention is just one step in a series of four goals designed to promote equality for all Americans, including:

• Provide Americans with disabilities the educational opportunities needed for success

• End discrimination and promote equal opportunity

• Increase the employment rate of workers with disabilities

• Support independent, community-based living


To date, there are 142 signatures to the Convention including President Obama’s – out of the 142, there have been 65 ratifications of the Convention.

“Once the country has signed, it is obligated to adjust its legislation on what the convention says – unless their legislation is even better than the convention,” explained Alex Leblois. Leblois is the executive director of G3ict (Global Initiative for Inclusive ICTs.)\

“This is a universal ADA, if you will,” Leblois further explained. “The treaty has had an incredible success – it’s amazing to have so many signatures in just two years.”

According to Leblois, the convention now must go through the United States Senate, handled by the committee on foreign relations, which is chaired by John Kerry.



Wii-hab: Video Games are Becoming the New Trend in Rehabilitation

Twenty-three years after the Nintendo Entertainment System first video game console premiered in the United States, Nintendo Wii has taken the video game industry as well as many American households by storm, and now at Albany Advocacy Resource Center (Albany ARC) the game system is starting to be used as a form of physical and occupational therapy to help improve movement and motor skills.

Consumers at the Albany ARC Adult Day Program are finding recreation and therapeutic opportunities in Nintendo’s Wii. The ease of use of the controllers and the interactivity of the games makes the Wii a unique and rewarding gaming experience for people of all ages and abilities. It benefits balancing, arm movement, eye-hand coordination, range of motion, and much more. It does not discriminate based on mobility and even people in wheelchairs can play some of the games.

Albany Advocacy Resource Center is the leading non-profit provider of services in southwest Georgia for individuals with developmental disabilities, physical disabilities and other special needs. For nearly 46 years, Albany ARC has offered help and hope to children and adults living with disabilities, and to the families who love them. Through therapy, training, education and support services, Albany ARC creates life-changing solutions to help people with disabilities live, learn, work and play. For more information, visit www.AlbanyARC.org.

Don’t Shy Away from the Health Care Debate

By Bill Lewis


Mention the words “health care reform” in a crowd and you’ll probably get 100 different opinions on the subject. As health insurance becomes increasingly competitive, and more find themselves uninsured, reform by the year’s end has become the goal for many.

Health care now takes center stage in a national debate that has many locked in heated arguments. Some advocate a single-payer system, while others think the system should be employer-based. Questions about funding surround each proposal made, and coverage for all is at the forefront of most discussions.

Health care reform takes on an added importance for people with disabilities. What will happen to existing programs? What about home and community-based long term services? What kinds of changes would help strengthen Medicaid and Medicare? These and many other questions are all part of the ongoing debate.

“Health care reform has been an issue in our country for close to a century,” said Shelby Butler, board chair of the Missouri Health Advocacy Alliance. “People need to have the support they need in order to stay healthy and independent.” Butler explained how there are still barriers in place that prevent Americans with disabilities from attaining the services they need, including the practice of many current insurance companies of not electing to insure pre-existing conditions – a clause that disability advocates feel targets them.

Liz Savage of The Arc of the United States and United Cerebral Palsy explained that both the

proposed bills from the House and the Senate include reforms for Medicaid by expanding income eligibility. “The proposed reform would include a new group of people for eligibility – non-elderly, non-pregnant childless adults,” Savage explained. “This is an area that has frustrated people with disabilities in the past, but this new inclusion would expand Medicaid coverage.” Coverage would also be expanded by the proposal to cover individuals with an income of up to 133 percent of the federal poverty levels, which is currently at $14,404.

There is also the worry that, unless changed, the Medicare and Medicaid systems will simply get too large and become unable to support themselves. According to HealthReform.gov, Medicare expenditures in 2008 topped $386 billion dollars, and are currently expected to reach $797 billion by

2018 if this system remains unchanged. Another alternative for Medicare and Medicaid, Marty Ford of The Arc says, is the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports (CLASS) Act. “The CLASS Act involves establishing a long term insurance program. It would be a federal program with a trust fund that people would pay into voluntarily through their payroll.”

The CLASS Act was introduced into both houses of Congress in March 2009. Its stated purpose is “to help individuals with functional impairments and their families pay for services and supports that they need to maximize their functionality and independence and have choices about community participation, education, employment and for other purposes.”

As originally presented, the CLASS Act would create a national voluntary disability insurance program (CLASS program) under which: (1) all employees are automatically enrolled, but are allowed to waive enrollment; (2) payroll deductions pay monthly premiums; and (3) two-tiered benefits are provided, based on the level of disability, to purchase non-medical services and supports that the beneficiary needs to maintain independence.

Ford pointed out that the CLASS Act is designed to meet people’s needs at home rather than a nursing facility with a cash benefit. “We hope people could supplement that through the private market as well,” she said.

While the CLASS Act was in committee, Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-GA) offered an amendment that would allow those who participate to use the funds for additional purposes including but not limited to counseling on advanced directives, living wills and powers of attorney. Committee members accepted the amendment unanimously.

According to Savage, the act is in the Senate’s version of the bill. Once the finance committee’s bill is edited down, the two bills are expected to merge and become one bill in which the CLASS Act should be included.

Additionally in early 2009, the Community Choice Act was introduced to the House of Representatives. It’s sponsored by Rep. Danny Davis (D-Ill.) and cosponsored by 116 other representatives and including Sanford Bishop (D-GA2), Henry Johnson (D-GA4), and John Lewis (D-GA5). The CCA was designed to amend Title XIX of the Social Security Act to provide individuals with disabilities and older Americans with equal access to community-based attendant services and supports through state Medicaid coverage.

As of March 23, 2009, the bill has been referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.

Savage, acting as spokesperson for the Disability Policy Collaboration (DPC), said her group has put together six key answers to the question: What do people with intellectual and developmental disabilities most need in health care reform?



1. No Pre-existing Conditions Exclusions

2. No Annual or Lifetime Caps on Coverage

3. Coverage for Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics and Orthotics

4. Increased Medicaid Reimbursement Rates for Primary Care Physicians

5. Improved Home and Community Based Services

6. Reduced Demand for Medicaid Long Term Services and Supports
Medicaid will be strengthened when a national voluntary long-term care insurance program (from the CLASS Act) is implemented and people can receive support without having to use Medicaid.

While advocacy groups are making their voices heard for reform, Savage also points out, “It’s important for people to get in touch with legislators to let them know their constituents support health care reform.”

That’s the message from Isakson’s office as well. A spokesperson for Isakson said that while

Georgians with disabilities can and should contact any and all members of Congress who are dealing with the programs to be included in a health care bill, it’s vitally important to provide information and suggestions to Georgia’s senators and congresspersons specifically.

There are more than the DPC issues, as well. The American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD) adds to the list:

• Address health disparities and accessibility issues that often prevent people with disabilities from receiving quality care in their communities;

• Provide access to health care based on individual health needs and not on income or employment status;

• Limit the burden of out-of-pocket expenses and cost-sharing requirements for participants on a sliding scale based on income, with a commitment to affordability and no work disincentives; and

• Engage people with disabilities as partners in the effort to make our health care system work better.

The AAPD has put its suggestions in the form of a “Petition for Health Care Reform that Meets the Needs of Individuals with Disabilities and Chronic Health Conditions and their Families.”

And there are other pieces of legislation before Congress that could have an impact on people with disabilities in other ways. The act essentially allows people to work and still qualify for Medicaid.

Savage points out other items under discussion. “One thing in the House bill is the issue of quality. The difficulty people with disabilities have accessing quality medical care is that Medicaid reimbursement is pretty low. This bill increases Medicaid reimbursement to Medicare levels, which are higher.

“The first four years are paid for by the federal government with full funding, with 90 percent paid thereafter. That would significantly improve quality,” Savage continued. Savage also talked about provisions for accessibility. “The other issue in both the House Bill and Health, Education,

Labor and Pensions Bill in the Senate is a provision that the U.S. Access Board develop guidelines for technical requirements regarding how medical and diagnostic equipment is used in hospitals and doctors’ offices and how those should be accessible. There are no current guidelines for accessibility.”

The recently released Senate Finance committee health reform proposal does not explicitly include those provisions, along with explicit provisions for rehabilitation. “We’re working hard to make it explicit in the bill,” said Savage. “The final, signed bill must include those provisions in order to improve the quality of life of those living with disabilities. There should be no question as to what’s covered and what isn’t.”

The National Association of State Directors of Developmental Disabilities Services is one of the groups at the forefront of trumpeting the message that people with developmental disabilities have the capacity to contribute to the social and economic wellbeing of their communities and the nation. NASDDDS has put together a list of important factors they feel are vital to include in any reforms being considered.

The ultimate outcome of supports and services should be a “good everyday life”



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