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- Chronology of ADAPT Actions 2
[This is the second page of the chronological list of ADAPT actions] 2009 - April Washington DC; September Atlanta 2010 - April Washington DC; September Washington DC 2011 - Spring Washington DC; September Washington DC – My Medicaid Matters 2012 - Spring Washington DC; October Harrisburg, PA 2013 - April Washington DC; September Washington DC 2014 - Spring Washington DC; September Little Rock 2015 - Spring Washington DC; Fall Salt Lake City 2016 - Spring Washington DC; Fall Boston 2017 - Spring Washington DC; Fall Washington DC 2018 - Spring Washington DC; November Denver, CO - Chronology of ADAPT Actions 1
Chronology of ADAPT Actions: 1974 - Atlantis started 1983 - October National ADAPT started in Denver at APTA Convention 1984 - McDonalds campaign; October Washington DC 1st national action 1985 - February San Diego; April San Antonio – 1st regional action; October Los Angeles, Long Beach 1986 - May Cincinnati; October Detroit 1987 - April Phoenix; Fall San Francisco (trolley cars) 1988 - Spring St Louis; Fall Montreal 1989 - Spring Reno/Sparks; September Atlanta 1990 - March Washington DC: Wheels of Justice (Crawl, Rotunda) 1990 – Summer Denver meeting re: new focus; Fall Atlanta 1991 - Spring Baltimore (Social Security); Fall Orlando 1992 - Spring Chicago; Fall San Francisco 1993 - Spring Washington DC; Fall Nashville (Opryland) 1994 - Spring Washington DC (Bridge to Freedom); Fall Las Vegas 1995 - Spring Washington DC; Fall Lansing, MI 1996 - Spring Houston; Fall Atlanta 1997 - Spring Washington DC; Fall Washington DC 1998 - May Memphis; Fall Washington DC 1999 - May DC; July St Louis, NGA Regional; October Columbus 2000 - January ANA – Freedom Day; June Washington DC; October Washington DC 2001 - May Washington DC; October San Francisco, Laguna Honda 2002 - May Washington DC; October New Orleans – Virtual Action 2003 - May Washington DC; September Free Our People March – Philadelphia to DC 2004 - July Seattle; Fall Washington DC 2005 - March Washington DC; September Washington DC 2006 - Spring Nashville – Testimony; September Washington DC 2007 - April Washington DC; September Chicago 2008 - April Washington DC – 25th Anniversary; September Washington DC – DUH City - ADAPT (999)
CREATIVE LOAFING November 14, 1996 DISABLED ISSUES ADAPT rolls out After five days of conferences, rallies and protests, hundreds of disabled activists headed for home following adjournment of the fall convention of ADAPT (American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today). The Atlanta meeting was particularly productive, say organizers, who secured written commitments from House Speaker Newt Gingrich and President Bill Clinton to press for greater access to home and community-based care for the disabled. The organization, which has been campaigning to increase funding for such programs and steer policy-makers away from nursing home-oriented strategies, even secured a commitment from Georgia Nursing Home Association (GNHA) President Fred Watkins to support a moratorium on new nursing home construction in Georgia. But the concessions did not come easily. More than 400 activists occupied the Clinton-Gore headquarters on election eve, and 86 were arrested — then released — by Atlanta police. The following day, hundreds of demonstrators in wheelchairs blockaded Memorial Drive in front of the GNHA offices, then filled the lobby of the downtown Marriott Marquis, where members of the American Health Care Association (AHCA) were staying during their convention. They sought an audience with AHCA President Paul Wilging, but were unsuccessful; 120 demonstrators were jailed, but a municipal judge released them upon condition they refrain from any more disturbances. "AHCA is becoming less relevant, now that we have legislative measures in the works,” says Atlanta ADAPT member Mark Johnson. "We've definitely got some things to follow up on. We have a committed time-frame for action in Washington, and if things don't get done, we'll escalate again." —- Greg Land - ADAPT (998)
PHOTO: Shel Trapp, wearing his leather jacket and cap, sitting on a stone bench up against a monument type piece of stone. There is another monument in the background and grass in between. He is looking down at the ground. - ADAPT (997)
The Atlanta Constitution, Local News Wednesday, Nov. 6 1996 c5 Disabled block DeKalb demand in-home care by Michael Weiss, Staff Writer Fresh off a pair of protests that led to promises from President Clinton and U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, about 100 members of a disabled advocacy group spent part of Election Day sitting in the street," blocking evening traffic at a busy DeKalb County intersection. Members of Americans with Disabilities for Attendant Programs Today (ADAPT), in town for a five-day conference on disabilities and human rights, first arrived at the corner of Memorial Drive and Covington Highway about 3:30 p.m., DeKalb police said. They were still in the street when the polls closed at 7 p.m., police said. The sit-in was ADAPT’s third protest in three days. On Monday, police broke up a 500-person sit-in at Clinton's Georgia campaign headquarters downtown, arresting 86 demonstrators and charging them with trespassing. They were released later Monday. Demonstrators were calling for the president to support programs that would provide in-home care for people with disabilities instead of forcing them into nursing homes. After he was notified by telephone of the protest, Clinton promised that, if re-elected, he would meet with representatives of ADAPT next year to discuss the issue, said ADAPT spokesman Mark Johnson. “Maybe he’s finally going to make good on his 4-year-old promise," said Johnson, of Atlanta. “We sure hope this isn't more political rhetoric.” On Sunday, ADAPT members paraded into Centennial Olympic Park to demand better funding for in-home care. Thirty of the protesters met that day with Gingrich (R-Ga.), who pledged to introduce legislation that would guarantee home-and-community-based services. - ADAPT (996)
PHOTO: Linda Anthony in a purple ADAPT shirt and cap with a loudspeaker in her lap. She is rolling her manual chair forward with a policeman walking behind her. The photo is slightly out of focus implying motion. - ADAPT (995)
The Augusta Chronicle, Thurs. November 7, 1996 Advocacy group members arrested ATLANTA - Police arrested 109 members of an advocacy group for the disabled Wednesday for trespassing at a hotel where a nursing home conference was under way. It was the second time this week that members of Americans with Disabilities for Attendant Programs Today were arrested in Atlanta on criminal trespass charges. About 250 protesters blocked the entrance of the Atlanta Marriott Marquis, where the American Health Care Association, which lobbies for nursing and care homes, was holding a conference. The group has held a series of protests this week in Atlanta, where it is holding its annual convention through Thursday. The group wants the government to redirect federal money to help provide in-home care for people with disabilities instead of forcing them into nursing homes. — Compiled by Jennifer Miller - ADAPT (994)
In a room with white walls devoid of pictures and with a couple of large plants, a group of five police officers sit on a couch and two chairs around a coffee table. Two of the officers are using their radios. The others are sitting, semi-relaxed. - ADAPT (993)
This is a photo of a hallway packed with people. It's shot over the heads and back of ADAPT folks facing away down the hall. Facing toward them, and the camera are Bob Kafka with two Atlanta police officers behind him. All are smiling broadly. - ADAPT (992)
HEALTH CARE [Headline] Options to Nursing Homes [Subheading] Urgency for Change Driven by Soaring Medicaid Spending by Tom Barry Have you ever known an elderly person who actually looked forward to going into a nursing home?" asks James Ledbetter, director of the Georgia Health Policy Center at Georgia State University. He believes there must be viable alternatives to nursing homes, and predicts that there soon will be. More home health services, foster care homes, assisted living facilities and other alternatives to a nursing home are all attracting new attention. Driving the urgency of the process are soaring Medicaid costs. Medicaid pays the bill for 85% of all nursing home patients in Georgia but provides little funding for less expensive community-based services. “Our payment mechanism in Georgia has caused a very good network of nursing homes to be built," says Ledbetter, "but we must figure out a way to provide incentives for...other levels of service." Ledbetter, whose nonpartisan think tank will soon propose revisions in state Medicaid law, sees a vastly different world for tomorrow's elderly. As managed care has come to hospitals, so too will it be coming to nursing homes, as the state seeks the most appropriate care at the least expense. Skilled-care, high-cost nursing homes should be the facilities of last —- not first — resort, Ledbetter believes, if Medicaid expenditures are to be restrained. He envisions separate facilities for Alzheimer patients, foster homes for the elderly and more personal care homes than exist today. So-called "respite centers” would be available to put up a home care patient temporarily, while relatives take a vacation or just have a night out. A web of home health, homemaker and nutrition services would allow more and more elderly to remain in their own home or with relatives. At the very least, they would be able to stay in their community. [Pulled quote] "Have you ever known an elderly person who actually looked forward to going into a nursing home?” [Boxed text] [Headline] NURSING HOME FACTS: The elderly (65-and older) population will double in eight states -— seven Western states and Georgia -- by year 2020. Georgia's elderly will increase from 695,000 to 1.4 million Over the same period, the number Georgians 85 and over will increase from 245,000 to 735,000. Medicaid pays for 85% of all nursing home care in Georgia, the fourth highest rate in the United States and roughly twice the national average, mainly because of the relatively low eligibility standard. Current standard tor Medicaid long-term care eligibility: $1,410 a month income and assets of $2,000 or less (excluding residence); New federal legislation criminalizes the transfer of assets to quality; Previously people could become eligible for Medicaid three years after signing over assets. Residents 65 and over comprise 12.2% of Medicaid recipients yet receive 27.2% of payments. By contrast, those 0 to 20 years of age make up 58.9% of Medicaid recipients and receive 32.5% of funds. Sixty percent of Georgians have or have had a close relative in a nursing home. Average annual cost of a nursing home in Georgia: $26,000 a year ($30,000 in metro Atlanta area), up from $19,000 a decade ago. Rate is 10th lowest in nation, but 73% of Georgians surveyed say they can't afford it. Approximately 40,000 people live in Georgia's 367 nursing homes. Age breakdown in 1990 Census 89.3% over age 65; 10.4% ages 25 to 64; and 0.3% under 25. Women made up 75% of nursing home population age 65 and over. Forty-tour percent of state residents say they could not care tor a loved one who required 24-hour assistance. Occupancy rate in Georgia nursing homes: 95%. The lifetime risk of going to a nursing home for a woman age 65 is 52%; tor men: 30%. Almost 84% of nursing home residents do not have a spouse, versus 45% tor elderly living at home. Sources: Georgia Nursing Home Association. Georgia Health Policy Center. State Department of Medical Assistance. "My hope is that all people who need long-term care, not just the elderly but also the disabled, will have more options, while encouraging people to be as independent as possible," says Ledbetter, former commissioner of the state Department of Human Resources. In Georgia, as elsewhere, the rite of aging is now frighteningly expensive. When the elderly become unable to care for themselves, or for family members to take care of, the nursing home is usually the only viable option. The decision can be wrenching, both emotionally and financially. With the cost of nursing homes averaging $25,000 to $30,000 a year, the elderly person typically exhausts personal assets in short measure and goes on Medicaid. In Georgia, it's been easy to qualify, with the maximum monthly gross income set at a relatively high level ($1,410 today). Never mind that the elderly person may not have needed a nursing home's round-the-clock care, but only someone to help her — or in much fewer cases, him — get dressed or eat or administer an insulin shot. (Women comprise three-fourths of nursing home residents age 65 and over.) Georgia now has more nursing home beds per capita than any state in the Southeast except Tennessee. Recent audits have shown that 40% of the nursing home residents don't need the high-end care they receive - and that is frequently to put Medicaid monies into less expensive services and pay a capitated rate per patient, in contrast to existing fee-for-service formulas. Fine-tuning the present system remains an option, Ledbetter says, but adds that experts believe managed care is the "most efficient” way to go. Georgia spends roughly one-fourth of its S3 billion Medicaid budget on nursing homes, and demographic changes are increasing pressure on it. A growing haven for retirees, Georgia is the only state east of the Mississippi whose elderly population is expected to double by the year 2020. With geriatric managed care on the rise nationally, the Georgia Health Policy Center is studying how it works in such states as Arizona and Oregon. Ledbetter says whatever system is eventually put in place here, strong government oversight will be needed. (ln 1994-95, 100 of 341 nursing homes in Georgia were deemed unfit to take on additional patients.) The state Department of Medical Assistance, which administers Medicaid, could Even act as the managed care organization itself, as opposed to private organizations competing for the market. Already several firms have shown interest in Georgia. Managed care horror stories abound, Ledbetter acknowledges. "But managed care does just what it's designed to do," he says. "And it would be a mistake to design a system that doesn't improve the quality of care.” Becky Kurtz, state ombudsman for long-term care, expresses concern that managed care firms would “limit the kind of choices people have. We wouldn’t want care to be rationed in a way detrimental to the individual." Kurtz doubts that private companies will want to get into geriatric managed care in the first place, considering the high cost of caring for the aged. "lt's not a population HMOs are excited about.” Anticipating the trend, Georgia's nursing home industry has begun to diversify. “Many of our nursing homes already operate personal care and assisted living facilities," says Fred Watson, executive director of the Georgia Nursing Home Association. "The more progressive homes are doing lab work and hospice and respite care, especially nursing homes in metropolitan areas." Watson believes the tightly regulated nursing industry must be given the flexibility to adapt while protecting patients who truly need advanced care. Under current law, he notes, nursing homes can't discharge patients against their will, even though they may not require such care. "lf we can save money by caring for a patient in a different way, we should be allowed to do that," he says. To envision a nursing home operator positioned for the 21st century, consider Larry Minnix, president and CEO of Wesley Woods Geriatric Center at Emory University. Over the past several years, Wesley Woods has reduced the number of its long-term care beds while building a network of outreach programs to enable the elderly to continue living in a private home. Wesley Woods operates outpatient clinics specializing in Parkinson's disease, memory disorders and psychiatric problems, including depression, the most common undiagnosed condition among the elderly. The geriatric center has forged relationships with various community groups to provide senior citizens with home health care, meals and transportation. The Wesley Woods campus off Clifton Road also offers assisted living quarters, where the elderly needing only minimal aid can live. "Ten years ago, we served 2,000 people annually," says Minnix. "This year we'll serve 17,000 or 18,000, yet we're downsizing our nursing home program." PHOTO: A man in a button down shirt sits at a table with papers in front of him. His hands are loosely clasped in front of his chest. "Managed care does just what it's designed to do, and it would be a mistake to design a system that didn't improve the quality of care. ” ——James Ledbetter, Director, Georgia Health Policy Center [Image] Drawing of three connected two and three storied buildings on a circular drive with several small trees in the center of the circle. Caption reads: Artist's rendering of Wesley Woods 52-acre continuing care retirement community near Newnan. Wesley Woods is building a continuing care retirement community north of Newnan, which will be among the first of its kind in Georgia. When completed, the S40-50 million, 52-acre community will have apartments, cottages, duplexes and assisted living facilities, as well as the more traditional skilled nursing beds. The elderly enter the community while still active and independent and receive specialized services as they age and become less able. Proposed Medicaid changes may ignite a fight in the General Assembly, where the nursing home industry has wielded disproportionate influence. For years, nursing home operators have said that Medicaid reimbursement rates — which average about $20,000 per patient per year — are too low to offset labor and other operating costs. An inkling of what may lie ahead came this past summer, when operators strongly protested state-imposed limits on Medicaid patient bed days and on money paid for management costs. Among other limits, the DMA announced that Medicaid would not pay more than $100,000 toward the salary of a corporate official. (Large corporations own many of the state's nursing homes.) In Fiscal 1995, under the previous funding formula, salary reimbursement exceeded S 100,000 for 22 executive positions in the nursing home industry, with one corporate official getting $615,713 in salary reimbursement. Those protests may be only the beginning of a protracted, fiercely contested battle if other Medicaid limitations are proposed. Minnix has another view. “Some nursing homes are fighting this, but quietly, many of them are just making plans to change. Everybody's looking at the numbers and recognizes we can't continue to pay the price we're currently paying for health care. "Our country spends more on health care than any country in the world and yet when you look at some of the fundamental indices of health, we're not at the top. We're not getting our money's worth. We can improve quality and raise consumer satisfaction while lowering costs." Presumably, corporate salaries might even be included in any lowering of costs. - ADAPT (991)
[This page continues the article from Image 992. Full text is available 992 for easier reading.] - ADAPT (990)
[Headline] Panel stalls on major fix for Medicaid By Laura Williamson, STAFF WRITER A coalition charged with devising a plan to overhaul Georgia's Medicaid program chose Friday not to recommend any immediate, drastic changes in health care for the poor or nursing home care for the elderly and disabled. After nearly a year of discussion, the Georgia Coalition for Health voted to put more teeth in an existing program that requires patients to get a doctor's permission before getting specialist care or using a hospital emergency room. It's unclear, however, how sharp those teeth will be or how much money the plan could save the state, which faces a potential $400 million budget shortfall in its Medicaid program by 1999. Coalition board members agreed only on the sketchy outlines of a proposal, which they will discuss in further detail at their Nov. 21 meeting. Gov. Zell Miller last year appointed former Department of Human Resources Commissioner James Ledbetter to form the coalition to recommend ways of reforming the state's Medicaid system. The coalition's plan builds on a Medicaid program that allows patients to choose their own doctor but requires them to get that doctor's pen"nissi0n before seeking special care. Medicaid patients in metro Atlanta also currently have the option of joining an HMO, where their choice of a doctor and hospital is limited. The new plan would allow "local communities" — a term the coalition left undefined - to decide what form of managed care they will offer. Communities could offer Medicaid patients an HMO. They could offer a health plan administered by a physician-hospital network. Or they could choose a beefed-up version of the current program that could allow patients to continue to choose their doctors but would scrutinize the amount and type of care those doctors provide. The coalition agreed to ask state Medicaid officials to apply for federal permission to treat more elderly and disabled people in their homes instead of placing them in nursing homes. It will take two years to get that permission, they estimated. After they work out the details of both plans, coalition board members will present their recommendations to the Department of Medical Assistance at a meeting Dec. 4. If DMA accepts the plans, they will be phased in gradually over a two to three year period. The compromise earned the support of physicians and other health care providers as well as patient advocates. They had previously considered three other plans that would have taken effect faster or severely limited a patient's choice of doctor or hospital. Some would also have reduced services to patients or resulted in big cuts to doctors, hospitals and nursing homes. "I think we really need to look at this over time,” said Linda Lowe, a consumer health advocate. “We need to make sure we're really serving the needs of patients." The move into stricter forms of managed care mirrors a move in the private sector, where 20 percent of Georgians are enrolled in managed care plans. - ADAPT (99)
The Denver Post PHOTO by John Prieto, Denver Post: A woman in a wheelchair (Carolyn Finnell) is surrounded four able-bodied persons. One man is kneeling down in front of her to talk with her. Caption reads: Carolyn Fannell (In wheelchair) discusses the protest with RTD executive director L.A. “Klm" Kimball. Boxed Text: "You were talking about a separate and unequal system." -- Protester Wade Blank Threat of Sit-In Over RTD Lift Plans Dissolves By GEORGE LANE, Denver Post Urban Affairs Writer [This story continues on ADAPT 113, but the entire text has been included here for easier reading.] After tense negotiations, Regional Transportation District officials avoided use of police force Thursday night to break up a threatened all-night wheelchair sit-in at RTD headquarters. The protesters want RTD to reconsider a decision not to put wheelchair lifts on new buses — a decision they say broke an agency promise made to them last year. Three district board members promised about 25 disabled persons they would try to call a special meeting to reconsider the anti-lift action. The sit-in was staged in the fifth-floor executive offices of the RTD at 1325 S. Colorado Blvd. by members of the Atlantis Community for the disabled. The promise, contained in a policy statement adopted by the RTD board a year ago, was that 50 percent of the existing bus fleet of more than 600 vehicles would be retrofitted with wheelchair lifts, and all new buses would be ordered with lifts. When the statement was approved, there was a federal regulation demanding that all federally financed transit agencies make transportation modes accessible to the handicapped, and all new buses purchased had to have the lifts. RTD was one of the only transit agencies in the country to take steps toward complying with the regulation. But the regulation was repealed last July. Thursday afternoon, the RTD board voted to save more than $1 million by canceling the order to have the lifts installed on 89 high-capacity, articulated buses expected to be delivered in 1983. Wade Blank, co-administrator of Atlantis, pointed out to board members before the vote was taken that the day the regulation was rescinded, RTD officials said lifting the regulation would have no effect on the district's commitment to serving disabled persons. “A week ago I came to a meeting, and about 10 minutes to four, it was casually mentioned" there would be no lifts on articulated buses, Blank said. "I was dazed... it took a few days to realize that you were talking about a separate and unequal system." Robert Conrad, also an Atlantis administrator, told RTD board members he feels "betrayed" because he has worked closely with RTD on providing service to the handicapped “and all of a sudden you spring this on us." Board member Flodie Anderson explained to the approximately 75 angry persons attending the meeting that RTD intends to use the articulated buses on express routes and other heavy routes. Under that plan, Anderson said, other buses will be freed that will be lift-equipped and able to provide better service to disabled people than is provided now. Board member Edward Cassinis told the group that buses currently equipped with wheelchair lifts are carrying a maximum of 270 wheelchair passengers per week. RTD's “handiride,“ which provides front-door service to disabled passenger, is handling 831 riders per week. When the vote was taken on the action, the outcome was 12-4 against installation of the lifts. Members of the Atlantis Community and several other disabled organizations then gathered ln hallway outside the first-floor meeting room and decided to “resume civil disobedience." The group of about 25, all from Atlantis, then rode the elevators to the fifth floor of the building and began their sit-in shortly after 4 p.m. Motorized wheelchairs were parked in the doorways of the three elevators to make it impossible for them to be used. Shortly after the beginning of the demonstration, Bob West, RTD’s director called for police assistance and paramedics “because we don’t want anybody to get hurt.” The police, however, didn’t arrive for more than an hour and when they did arrive, the negotiating session that would end the sit-in already was in progress in a fifth-floor conference room. During that session, board members Mary Duty, Kathi Williams and Thomas Bastien agreed to try to get their fellow board members to meet again to possibly reconsider the issue. L.A. “Kim” Kimball, RTD’s executive director and general manager, also agreed not to execute the board action until an effort is made to set up the special board meeting. “But I can’t guarantee they will” Kimball added. “We can guarantee that if they don’t, we’ll file suit for breach of promise,” responded Mary Penland, an Atlantis employee. “And we’ll guarantee those articulated buses won’t roll unless they roll over our bodies.” - ADAPT (989)
[This page continues the article from Image 990. Full text available under 990 for easier reading.] - ADAPT (988)
news [Headline] Civil Disability [Subheading] Disabled activists protest nursing home stranglehold by Greg Land For nearly an hour they file from the downtown Radisson Hotel, along Harris Street and into the chilly shade of Centennial Park. Man and woman, young and old they come; some walk, some hobble on walking sticks, but the majority roll — in powered wheelchairs, or in simpler models pushed by companions or self-propelled by their occupants. Some 500 disabled activists from throughout the country and as far away as Great Britain rallied Sunday, kicking off the fall convention for ADAPT (Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today). Their goal: To end the stranglehold that nursing homes and institutions have on funding for the disabled, and to free up Medicaid and other money so that hundreds of thousands of Americans may live — and work — in homes and offices, just like their able-bodied countrymen. "ln the time it took to get here, 20 people died in nursing homes," booms Bob Kafka from his chair, an interpreter for the deaf signing furiously at his side. Two days before the general election, the assemblage is restive: Kafka informs his listeners that a delegation is conferring with House Speaker Newt Gingrich, attempting to pressure the congressman into fulfilling a 1994 pledge to introduce legislation allowing the disabled to choose between institutional care, and home or community-based services. "We've got word the Newtster’s signed something,” says Kafka. "Well, signing’s one thing —- doing’s another!" A cheer goes up from the crowd, who scheduled their election-week convention in Atlanta to coincide with another convention, and one with an entirely different focus: that of the American Health Care Association, which begins its four-day convocation Wednesday, Nov. 6. ADAPT and other disabled-rights organizations have long assailed the nursing home industry in general, and AHCA in particular, as more interested in profits than in people. ‘The industry is totally resistant to alternative care,” says Mark Johnson, an Atlanta-based ADAPT activist. "Some nursing home operators have gotten into other areas — home—health is one of them — but the industry is realizing that its bread and butter, warehousing people in nursing homes, is breaking down.” As budget cutters sharpen their pencils in Washington and throughout the nation, federal programs are being dismantled, and money is shifting back to states. The problem, says Johnson, is that those funds are still aimed at institutions, and there is no guarantee of any greater availability of home and community-based services. ADAPT cites figures showing the average cost for one year of nursing home care tops $30,000 per person; attendant service averages $8,000. Government numbers show that just 14 percent of Medicaid funding goes to home and community-based care. In preparation for this year's AHCA convention and anticipated acts of civil disobedience, World Congress Center officials enlisted the aid of Johnson and other activists to help train 400 police and security officers in the proper procedures to arrest a disabled person. "AHCA doesn't want to see us," says Johnson with a smile, "but we're going to be there. And they're going to notice us. ADAPT has drafted a resolution it hopes to present to AHCA’s board of directors, for a vote by the entire organization. Among other things, the document seeks AHCA’s pledge to adopt policies promoting the “redirection of 25 percent of all current federal and local spending to self-directed, community-based attendant service," as well as directing that 51 percent of all future spending be similarly targeted. AHCA officers have agreed to meet with ADAPT, but neither side is optimistic of finding satisfactory common ground. "We disagree with their approach," says AHCA spokesman David Kyllo. "We think a comprehensive, long-term care policy needs to be created, including attended care. But we don't think taking from one needy group to give to another is a sound policy." He disputes ADAPT’s charges that as many as 1 illion of the 1.7 million American nursing home residents can be adequately, cared for elsewhere. Studies show that more than 90 percent of nursing home patients are over 65, says Kyllo, and that as baby boomers age, that percentage is going to rise. "Nursing homes are not what they were 20 years ago," Kyllo notes. "A lot of our members support the assisted-living industry. We are the assisted-living industry.” Johnson’s heard it all before. PHOTO BY STAWNIAK: In the midst of a tightly paccked crowd of people, most in wheelchairs and most with small flags, a man (George Roberts) in a wheelchair holds a small child (Stephanie) bundled in a blanket. Behind him stands a woman (Jeanette Roberts). Both are wearing sunglasses and ADAPT caps and the man has a sign taped the side of his chair that reads "DOWN with Nursing Homes." Caption reads: George Roberts and his daughter Stephanie, from Denver, Colo. “They invite us in, talk to us, offer us panels and workshops then do nothing,” he says. "We just want them to introduce this resolution; we know they're gonna vote it down. We want a vote for the record." As of Sunday night, the assembled activists have something else for the record. ADAPT activists gave little credence to a bill Gingrich co-sponsored three days before adjournment this year, painting it as a cynical election-year sop. But Sunday night, Gingrich pledged to create a legislative committee, including ADAPT members, to work directly with his office by Thanksgiving, and to draft legislation to be presented next Ianuaxy aimed at offering a choice of care to disabled Americans." Distributing copies of the two-page document, scrawled in the congressman’s own hand and bearing his signature along with that of ADAPT national organizer Michael Auberger, Johnson is cautiously optimistic. "We've got something," he says. "Now we've got to hold him to it." At any rate, Gingrich has managed to dodge a planned takeover of his campaign headquarters on election eve, and Johnson and his colleagues are plotting other strategies. "This doesn't let Dole and the rest of the Republicans off the hook," he says. "And President Clinton — he's done a lot more for us than Dole or Gingrich, but we're talking to him, too. But we want some action, we want a commitment. Or maybe we'll go on over to the Clinton/Gore headquarters.” Sure enough, several hundred activists spent Monday afternoon occupying the headqaurters of the Democratic presidential candidate, with 86 of them eventually being carted away by police. “We didn't get as much [as from Gingrich] says Johnson. "They did promise to convene a meeting with us within the first quarter of 1997, if Clinton's reelected, and there were no charges against the people who were arrested. Now we're off to AHCA ..." The end