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இல்லம் / ஆல்பங்கள் 730
உருவாக்கிய தேதி / 2013 / வாரம் 29
- ADAPT (1021)
Photograph only Cluster of ADAPT activists. Cassie James and Spitfire, sitting on the ground, confer with woman who is bending over. Stephanie Thomas in wheelchair faces away. - ADAPT (904)
DISCLOSURE 7 JULY-AUGUST 1995 [Image] Man in ADAPT T-shirt [Jim Glozier] walks in line of protesters mostly in wheelchairs. With his left hand he is driving a little boy's [Kyle Glozier] motorized wheelchair. Kyle is wearing a bandana headband and in front of him is a small briefcase sized box [a communication device] attached to his wheelchair. Jim and Kyle are looking ahead with determined expressions. Several others are visible behind them. [Image caption] Kyle Glozier, right, and his father Jim were part of the ADAPT, Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today, march through Washington, D C. as part of the group's national action In May. [Headline] Health-care industry, Newt, Shalala forced to ADAPT or perish The national action of the Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today can easily be summarized. As they have for several years, the hundreds-strong national organization of the disabled went to Washington to pursue their goal of more federal support for home care and other programs instead of massive subsidy of the nursing home business. Here's how ADAPT leaders summarized it: Newt saw. Newt ran. Newt slept in a hotel. Donna Shalala, secretary of Health and Human Services, saw (Monday). Donna Shalala came (Wednesday). Donna Shalala was impressed. Donna Shalala wrote a letter supporting ADAPT's Community Attendant Services Act. The Health Care Finance Administration Director saw. HCFA met with more than 30 local ADAPT groups and plans to learn more. HCFA came. HCFA is beginning to understand. Manor Care corporation saw. Manor Care heard the issues and the demands. Manor Care locked their doors. Manor Care learned what nursing home life is like--Welcome to the nursing home, you can't get out! ADAPT's lawyer is working on the tickets given to 110 arrestees. The 700 leaders at the ADAPT conference made progress on their goal of a new law to provide a community-based alternative-to nursing homes and institutions for people with developmental dis-abilities. Called CASA, the Community Attendant Services Act, the law they propose would redirect the huge federal subsidies to the nursing home industry toward community-based alternatives that treat people with dignity. Newt Gingrich's landlords at 110 Maryland Ave., N.E. must be getting tired of seeing activists of every stripe trample their lawn. Just weeks after NPA visited the building on the last Sunday in April, ADAPT showed up twice in two days , barring entrance to the building for most of one day. Although they won't meet with Newt until September, Shalala did come to the conference, where she read a statement of support for the organization's goals. "I want to take this opportunity to reaffirm our support for the principles of emphasizing home- and community-based services and offering consumers the maximum amount of choice, control, and flexibility in how those services are organized and delivered," Shalala told the four hundred people gathered at the conference. Maybe the best summary came from Norbert Holmblad, who wrote in the group's magazine, Incitement: "This is the first time I completely crossed the line on something this large and important....I'm sure they won't forget or easily forget the messages that our pathetic, ragtag, but very powerful group made." - ADAPT (1482)
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Rally End of the Road [image] [image caption] Making a point: Bob Kafka, head of the disability group ADAPT, takes part in a rally in Washington Wednesday. He was with a group that traveled from the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia to support the Medicaid Community Attendant Service and Supports Act currently in Congress. - ADAPT (1489)
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On the Line [Headline] Free Our People from Nursing Homes [image] [image caption] Linda Anthony demonstrates in front of Union Station, Washington, D.C. Photo copyright Tom Olin More than 200 people with disabilities marched along with their advocates from Philadelphia to Washington, D.C., from September 4-17. The protesters traveled the 144 miles to demand support for legislation to liberate disabled and older people from nursing homes by providing in-home support services. Marchers want Congress to pass the Medicaid Community Attendant Services and Supports Act, which requires Medicaid to pay for such aid. The bill was first introduced in 1997 by Representative Newt Gingrich. [image] [image cation] copyright Tim Wheat. Adam Nielsen leads the protesters as they cross into Delaware on day two of the march. November 2003 [two images] [image caption] copyright Tom Olin. Gabriel Siegel waves the ADAPT flag in Baltimore - ADAPT (1482)
- ADAPT (1481)
Weather Today: Heavy rain, wind High: 69 degrees 100 percent chance of rain Tomorrow: Partly cloudy High: 70 degrees 10 percent chance of rain The Pitt News www.pittnews.com Pit preapres for its first road game at Toledo...page 18 Friday, September 19, 2003 One of America's great student newspapers-since 1906 [Headline] Rally for disabilities [image] [image caption] Free our people march and rally gets a little help from Pitt students. Pitt's School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences Student Advisory Board traveled to Washington, D.C. Wednesday for what members described as "the largest gathering of disability rights activists since the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990." Image courtesy of Tamara Mills