- 语言Afrikaans Argentina AzÉrbaycanca
á¥áá áá£áá Äesky Ãslenska
áá¶áá¶ááááá à¤à¥à¤à¤à¤£à¥ বাà¦à¦²à¦¾
தமிழ௠à²à²¨à³à²¨à²¡ ภาษาà¹à¸à¸¢
ä¸æ (ç¹é«) ä¸æ (é¦æ¸¯) Bahasa Indonesia
Brasil Brezhoneg CatalÃ
ç®ä½ä¸æ Dansk Deutsch
Dhivehi English English
English Español Esperanto
Estonian Finnish Français
Français Gaeilge Galego
Hrvatski Italiano Îλληνικά
íêµì´ LatvieÅ¡u Lëtzebuergesch
Lietuviu Magyar Malay
Nederlands Norwegian nynorsk Norwegian
Polski Português RomânÄ
Slovenšcina Slovensky Srpski
Svenska Türkçe Tiếng Viá»t
Ù¾Ø§Ø±Ø³Û æ¥æ¬èª ÐÑлгаÑÑки
ÐакедонÑки Ðонгол Ð ÑÑÑкий
СÑпÑки УкÑаÑнÑÑка ×¢×ר×ת
اÙعربÙØ© اÙعربÙØ©
主页 / 相册 1903
- ADAPT (829)
- ADAPT (830)
The Tuesday meeting, however, never materialized and angry ADAPT members stormed the hotel in protest. The 97 members who were arrested were charged with criminal trespassing. They are to appear in court at the Metropolitan Davidson County Detention Facility on Harding Place today. Opryland Hotel officials, trying to avoid further violent protests, contacted ADAPT leaders Wednesday morning "to see if there wasn't any way to do something that was more positive than what happened Tuesday night," ADAPT co-founder Bob Audberger said. Tom Adkinson, an Opryland spokesman, said the meeting was called "to accommodate" the ADAPT protesters. "We really have tried to be accommodating all week," he said. "We want to create a good event rather than anything else. I think the staging of this event is a positive sign." Protest organizers say they were not displeased that the association chose Nashville for this year's gathering. Tennessee is home to four of the nation's largest nursing home chains, and the state provides in-home health care service for only about 400 people. [Subheading] A question of freedom ADAPT says many disabled people leave Tennessee for states with more in-home services. Their only other choice: Join the 33,000 patients in Tennessee nursing homes. LaTonya Reeves, who is blind and has cerebral palsy, says she left her family and home in Memphis for Denver so she can live independently. An attendant visits her apartment every day. "I miss my family, but I don't miss worrying about losing my freedom," Reeves says. I'd rather die than go to a nursing home. At Wednesday's rally at the hotel where the 350 ADAPT members stayed during their Nashville visit, protesters passed around a microphone to tell of their triumphs. They described how they faked injuries to distract police while their friends barged into the hotel. Some said their abandoned their wheelchairs and proudly crawled toward the association's meeting room. It was the 22nd arrest for Coleman, a diminutive woman of 39 who suffers from a degenerative muscle disease. She makes no apologies for her organization's brashness. "We fought for years to change things through normal channels without success," she says. "Older people and disabled people should not be stuck away in warehouses to die. This is a civil rights issue, and it's time to take it to the streets." - ADAPT (831)
ADAPT organizers aimed this week's protests not a the Opryland Hotel, but at the hotel's guests--the American Health Care Association, which was holding its annual convention here. As the nation's nursing home industry lobby, the association is ADAPT's archenemy. ADAPT is demanding that the United States provide more health care for disabled people in their own homes by redirecting more than $5 billion in Medicaid funds from nursing homes. The activist group says 1.7 million institutionalized citizens could live independently at home if these services were offered. What's more, the group says it would cost less-- $8000 a year for each patient receiving in-home care compared to $30,000 for nursing-home care. The nursing home industry opposes ADAPT and makes millions of dollars in political contributions to ensure its voice is heard in Washington. ADAPT claims profit is the motive for the industry's opposition. ADAPT demonstrators have laid siege to the previous two association conventions. In 1992 at San Francisco, more than 100 ADAPT members were arrested, and 75 went to jail in 1991 at the convention at Orlando, Fla. ADAPT members have been in Nashville since Sunday to protest and try to meet with the American Health Care Association, which is having its annual convention at the Opryland Hotel. The group is demanding that 25 percent of all Medicaid dollars be diverted from nursing homes to home health care. ADAPT protesters demonstrated Sunday at the entrance to the Opryland Hotel before being told they'd be able to meet with AHCA officials Tuesday. - ADAPT (832)
[This page continues the article from image 846. Please refer back to image 846 for the full text]. - ADAPT (833)
[Headline] ADAPT's good cause deserves calm debate There is a tremendous difference between getting attention and getting results. Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today, or ADAPT, received plenty of attention last week. Whether that attention translates to results will depend in large part on whether the group focuses in the future more on its message than on its manner. ADAPT's message is that this nation's health care system is skewed too heavily toward nursing home care. It argues that many people with disabilities who could live independently at home are forced into nursing homes because home health care isn't adequately funded. It specifically asks that 25% of the nation's Medic-aid money be funneled into home health care instead of nursing homes. ADAPT's basic premise is sound. While its demand for a particular figure of 25% of Medicaid money is debatable, there is little debate that a new focus on in-home-care, not just for people with disabilities but for many other people who have long-term illnesses, would stretch health care dollars and increase quality of life. But last week, ADAPT's manner over-shadowed its message. ADAPT brought its crusade to Nash-vile last week because the American Health Care Association, a lobbying group for the nursing home industry, was holding a convention at the Opryland Hotel. On Sunday, an ADAPT demonstration blocked the entrance to the Opryland Hotel for nearly two hours. On Monday, ADAPT members lined the halls of the state Capitol, demanding to meet with Gov. Ned McWherter, who was in Germany. [Subheading] Group should make its pitch to government! On Tuesday, when a meeting between ADAPT and AHCA didn't come off as scheduled, ADAPT members attempted to storm Opryland Hotel. Ninety-seven of them were arrested for trespassing. The real pity is that ADAPT can and should be making a serious contribution to this nation's health care debate. Per-aps its members sincerely believed that the only way they could draw attention to their cause was through protest. But even then, they were protesting to the wrong people. AHCA and ADAPT are both advocacy groups. ADAPT shouldn't be taking its case to AIWA. It should be making its pitch to Congress, the Clinton administration and state legislatures. But in order for ADAPT to achieve results, government officials need to view . ADAPT as a serious, responsible advocacy group. ADAPT's cause is too just, too necessary, and too immediate to be lost in a confusing shouting match. People can hear ADAPT's message much more clearly when its members talk, not shout. - ADAPT (834)
THE TENNESSEAN LOCAL NEWS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1993 B Briefs 2B Deaths 5B Weather 6B [Headline] With ADAPT protest over, Opryland to drop legal fight By KIRK LOGGINS Staff Writer Opryland USA officials say they will not pursue legal action against a group of disabled-rights activists, now that the group has ended pro-tests aimed at a nursing home convention at the Opryland Hotel. "This cost our company and Nashville a considerable amount, to be the unfortunate site of some-body else's dispute," ,Opryland spokesman Tom Adkinson said yesterday. But, Adkinson said, "That's something that we will just have to absorb." Fifty-two people pleaded no contest yesterday to charges that they committed criminal trespass during a demonstration at the hotel Tuesday. Davidson County prosecutors agreed to give the protesters suspended 30-day jail terms, on condition that they not stage any more group actions at Opryland. Forty-one of the protesters approached a makeshift judge's bench yesterday in wheelchairs. Some had difficulty speaking, and many had assistance in signing court documents. Attorney Vance Cramb, sitting as a special General Sessions Court judge, fined each protester $50, plus court costs averaging $138, but suspended most of the fines and court costs at the request of the protesters' attorney, Christine Freeman. Most protesters said, in response to questions from Freeman, that their only income is government assistance. Aides to District Attorney General Tory Johnson agreed yesterday to retire trespassing charges against 44 other protesters who were arrested at the hotel Tuesday but have since returned to their homes in other cities. Court personnel arranged a hearing yesterday in the gymnasium at Correction Corporation of America's Metro Detention Facility near Harding Place, where the protesters were taken after their arrests. All protesters arrested Tuesday were processed and released by early Wednesday, but they were ordered to return to court yesterday. The protests were organized by American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today, called ADAPT, which has demonstrated at earlier conventions of the American Health Care Association, a national nursing home group that was meeting at Opryland Hotel. Diane Coleman, a Tennessee ADAPT organizer, said yesterday that the group's four days of protests here succeeded in focusing attention on the need for more public funding for in-home health-care services as an alternative to nursing home care. "For one thing, we have a meet-ing scheduled with Governor Mc-Wherter on Oct. II to talk about attendant services in Tennessee," Coleman said. "That holds the potential for significant progress." - ADAPT (835)
[Headline] Activists at Opryland shrug off court order By Glenn Henderson and Jeff Wilkinson Banner Staff Writers Disabled activists who have disrupted operations at the Opryland Hotel and the state Capitol are threatening to take their civil disobedience to the Grand Ole Opry tonight during the star-studded Country Music Awards. A decision on whether to try to disrupt the nationally televised CMA show (7 p.m. on WTVF-Channel 5) will be made later today, said Mike Auberger, co-director of Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today. Opryland officials said the CMA show will go on protest or no protest. ADAPT this week has been picketing the 44th annual American Health Care Association convention being held at the Opryland Hotel. The group is demanding that 25 percent of all Medicaid dollars be diverted from nursing homes to home health care. Auberger said that disrupting the televised CMA show would bring national attention to the group's cause. "It would be a good format to raise the issue," he said. Auberger added that the public protests are necessary to offset the power and money of nursing home lobbyists. "The industry is so powerful," he said. "It comes down to the fact that dollars are more important than people." An Opryland spokesman said park officials are not worried about possible disruptions at tonight's CMA Awards. "The show will go on smoothly no matter what," Tom Adkinson said today. "They (ADAPT members) are under a restraining order issued last night to stay off of our property. "We have no concern about the conduct of the show." Auberger said the restraining order will have no effect on his group's decision: "We have to get our message across." Adkinson would not comment on security arrangements but expressed frustration with the demonstrations. "This whole situation is both reprehensible and unnecessary," he said. "We at Opryland have tried to be accommodating . . . and, frankly, Opryland and Nashville are being victimized in this whole situation. "We don't have a dog in this fight; we're just caught in the middle." On Tuesday, a melee broke out at the Opryland Hotel when a scheduled meeting between ADAPT and members of the American Health Care Association [text cuts off here] Please see ARRESTS, page A-2 - ADAPT (836)
[This page continues the article from image 827. Please refer back to 837 for the full text.] - ADAPT (837)
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE THE TENNESSEAN THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1993 [Headline] ADAPT negotiators accept help on issues from trio of music legends By BRAD SCHMITT, MARK IPPOLITO and TIMOTHY CORNELL Staff Writers They said they couldn't say what the acronym ADAPT stands for. But three Grand Ole Opry stars, with kind words, handshakes and hugs, last night defused the disabled-rights group's plans to try to disrupt what is arguably Nashville's most important night of the year. Porter Wagoner, Whisperin' Bill Anderson and William Lee Golden brought a close to intense day-long negotiations between ADAPT and Opryland officials trying to head off any trouble during the nationally televised Country Music Association Awards show. An army of Opryland security and Metro police stood by in the event the negotiations failed. Opryland Hotel put chains across entrance roads, ready to block vans carrying protesters. Chain-link fences went up on sidewalks, though they remained open. [Image] [Image caption] Paulette Paterson of Chicago chants at the ADAPT rally. Behind her, country entertainers William Lee Golden, Porter Wagoner and Bill Anderson appear in support of the rally participants. Rex Perry • Staff The three entertainers showed at a 6 p.m. meeting across from the Opryland Hotel with about 150 protesters, mostly in wheelchairs, from ADAPT, Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today. A day after the protesters stormed the Opryland Hotel, knocking down a front door, the stars said they would try to help ADAPT push its platform of diverting 25% of Medicaid dollars for nursing homes to home health care. "We're proud and honored to be here with you," Wagoner told the group. A day after Opryland security un-successfully tried to herd protesters off hotel property, Opry stars signed autographs and posed for pictures with them. "I believe what they said was genuine," said ADAPT's Mike Auberger. The group had considered interfering with the CMA Awards show for attention, said Auberger. But after meeting with officials from Gaylord Entertainment Co., Opryland's owner, the group agreed to a press conference with the stars behind the Ramada Inn, across from Opryland Hotel. "We are not here to take away people's fun. We're here to make a point," said Diane Coleman, a Tennessee ADAPT organizer, who uses ‘a wheelchair. "Our opponent is the nursing home industry, not country music fans." ADAPT came to Nashville because the American Health Care Association, made up mostly of nursing home operators, was having its convention at Opryland Hotel. Yesterday's peace was shaky, though. When some groups of protesters entered the hotel afterward as "tourists," security personnel called out on hand-held radios how many entered at one time and where they were going. "We got two WCs [wheelchairs] and a walker, and they're headed to the presidential ballrooms," a radio crackled after one group entered. But the white limousines and Mercedes-Benz sedans driving in were greeted by waving Opryland security and suit-wearing maintenance managers. They were told to wave, several said, to show Opryland is a friendly place. Opryland spokesman Tom Adkinson said company officials tried all week to negotiate with ADAPT, even offering the group a demonstration site: "We've never allowed demonstrations on our property, but we offered it this time." Coleman defended ADAPT's tactics: "I guess it's like any other civil rights movement. When you've tried all the meetings and the phone calls, then there's nothing left but to take it to the streets." [Subheading] What other stars said Kathy Mattea: "We live in a world where there's a lot of need. There's so many people out there trying to do something, to get things done on behalf of so many great causes that sometimes it's just overwhelming. It's overwhelming how much we don't take care of each other." Joe Diffie: "I think any kind of violence is not the right way to go about things. I hope that doesn't happen; I hope they don't disrupt the show for our sakes and for their sakes, too. I think it would bring more embarrassment to them than anything else. If I knew more about it, I'm sure I'd be sympathetic to their cause, as would most people." Radney Foster: "I'm glad those people can exercise their right to protest. I don't know enough about the issues. As far as access for the disabled, I have two friends who live in wheelchairs. I'm all for it." - ADAPT (838)
[Headline] Country stars soothe ADAPT activists [Subheading] Trip a success, group believes By Rob Moritz Banner Stan Writer [Image] Banner photos by Laura Embry: A man [William Lee Golden] with below shoulder length gray hair and a long gray beard and mustache in a black suit, hugs a woman [Anita Cameron] in a green ADAPT jacket, headband and hat. Both are smiling. They are in a parking to and behind and slightly out of focus you can see lots of other ADAPT folks, a camera people, and others milling around. Caption reads: William Lee Golden (left) hugs ADAPT protester Anita Cameron of Philadelphia after the country artist met with the group. Three noted country artists"sympathize" with the goals of disabled activists who have protested in Nashville this week, including a violent disturbance at the Opryland Hotel. "We are here to try to help and help you every way we can. We want to bring attention to your cause and your fight," Grand Ole Opry member Porter Wagoner told about 150 members of the American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today (ADAPT) on Wednesday. "These people need to be heard. We hope we can bring people's attention to it," Wagoner said. Wagoner, Bill Anderson and William Lee Golden met with the protesters in a parking lot on Music Valley Drive across from the Opryland Hotel. The meeting occurred about an hour before the nationally televised Country Music Association Awards. The meeting was Nashville disabled fear backlash arranged by Opryland officials who feared that ADAPT might stage a disruptive protest at the CMA event. The group threatened such an action after 97 protesters were arrested Tuesday for trespassing at the hotel. ADAPT members have been in Nashville since Sunday to protest and try to meet with the American Health Care Association, which is having its annual convention at the Opryland Hotel. The group is demanding that 25 percent of all Medicaid dollars be diverted from nursing homes to home health care. ADAPT protesters demonstrated Sunday at the entrance to the Opryland Hotel before being told they'd be able to meet with [ Please see PROTEST, page B-3] (unavailable at this time) [Headline] Nashville disabled fear backlash By Glenn Henderson Banner Staff Writer [Image] Photo 2: A curved line of people in wheelchairs and sitting on the ground curves from a woman in a wheelchair [Paulette Patterson] who is raising her fist and yelling. Behind her stands a main in a black suit with long gray hair and bear [William Lee Golden] and another man in working type clothes [Porter Wagoner]. Both are holding black and pink ADAPT shirts rolled up in their hands. They are outside in a parking lot. [Image caption] ADAPT's Paulette Patterson cheers the group on. Golden and Porter Wagoner (right) look on. Disabled activists who converged on Nashville to loudly promote their cause have left local disabled residents holding the bag, they claim. "They're going to leave Nashville, leaving the ones of us who live here to deal with the backlash," Mary McDonald says of the protesters who disrupted operations at the state Capitol and the Opryland Hotel this week. McDonald, 43, who has multiple sclerosis, uses a wheelchair. She's not the only member of the local community of disabled people who disagrees with the tactics of American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today (ADAPT). Rick Slaughter, a 31-year-old man whose legs, in his words, "don't work," says the group has gone too far. Slaughter volunteered when Metro police needed someone to teach them the proper way to subdue a disabled person. "These, people come into town and stir things up and then leave town," Slaughter says. "Today, I couldn't help but feel awkward whenever I encountered a stranger. It makes me look bad." They should get what they're after, Slaughter says, but they're going about it the wrong way. "They're making a lot of people in town uneasy-- they're making a mess in Nashville," he says. "If they want to raise Cain, they need to take it to the top. Why don't they go see Hillary?" While McDonald, Slaughter and Mollie Ingram are critical of ADAPT's tactics, they do support its cause in wanting 25 percent of Medicaid money now going to for-profit nursing homes to be diverted to at-home care, or attendant programs. They've chosen the American Health Care Association, currently holding a convention at the Opryland Hotel, as their primary target of protest. AHCA represents most of the nation's nursing homes. "I believe in what they want," McDonald says. "No one wants to live in a nursing home. But I'm very much against the way they're trying to get it." [Please see REACTION, page B-3] (unavailable at this time) - ADAPT (839)
Nashville Banner Wednesday Afternoon, September 29, 1993 Nashville, Tennesse 46 pages, 6 sections TODAY'S NEWS TODAY [Headline] Disabled threaten CMA show [IMAGE 1] Photos by Steve Lowry: Photo 1 - Four uniformed police officers in safety jackets and holding clipboards talk with five people in wheelchairs. Front row is Karen Tamley (left) with pony tail, Stephanie Thomas with bush hair and far right facing the camera head down looking at her communication letter board is Phillis Burkehead. Two men are behind them, one with a head pointer and the other, on the left, in a large manual wheelchair. He is talking with a man [Jim Glozier] kneeling on the ground beside them with his hands handcuffed behind his back. In the background are several plain clothes officers. Photo 2: A man [Bob Kafka] with a beard and mushtasche wearing a fishing hat with an ADAPT patch on the front, holds up his hand and looks out of a window. Caption reads: Metro police officers (above) obtain information from arrested ADAPT protesters during the group's demonstration at the Opryland Hotel. After his arrest, protester Bob Kafka (right) missing picture id uses sign language to communicate with people outside the school buses that were used to transport the demonstrators to jail. Trespassing charges were lodged against 97 protesters. ADAPT's next target: tonight's nationally televised CMA Awards show at the Grand Ole Opry. Banner photos by Steve Lowry - ADAPT (840)
- ADAPT (841)
Incitement [Headline] TENNESSEE ADAPT MEETS WITH GOVERNOR As promised, Governor McWherter met with Tennessee ADAPT November 2nd, in an interesting follow up to the National ADAPT action. The Governor came right out and said he did not like protests, and yet there he was. With him was Health Commissioner White who announced the approval of the first statewide nursing home waiver, for 150 people. (This waiver is also known as the ADAPT waiver, thanks to the statewide ADAPT protest which got the project started.) Fourteen ADAPT representatives from across the state arrived ready for bear. Jerry Adams, using his communication board, began the meeting calling for an end to the institutional bias of support services and support for community based services Each representative introduced themselves and another piece of the problem with the current institutional bias in support services. Tennessee ADAPT had three demands of the Governor: - Establish a State Task Force (50% or more consumers) on home and community based services to make recommendations on expanding these services. - Apply for a Medicaid waiver for residents of developmental centers (state schools). - Contact the National Governors’ Association - requesting that ADAPT be given a chance to address the NGA. McWherter assigned his head legislative staff person as liaison between his office and ADAPT. He agreed to set up the Task Force and ADAPT is now negotiating the details. It was agreed the Task Force will look at the developmental center issue. (Legal suits against these centers for violations of residents civil rights, by the Department of Justice and People First, are close to final decisions and look to be trending toward closure of these warehouses.) Last but by no means least, the Governor agreed to take a resolution to the next Governors’ Association meeting related to long term care. PHOTO by Tom Olin: A large crowd marches down the street with the Capitol building behind them. The march is led by three in wheelchairs, Tim Craven, left and chanting forcefully, Paul Ford, center, and Wynelle Carson are all members of Tennessee ADAPT. Caption reads: Tennessee ADAPT led the Victory March home from the Capitol. Title: Michigan ADAPT Chant We’re the ones Who March and roll We've come today To take control SOUND OFF LISTEN — HEAR US We're the ones Who had no voice We’ve come today To make a choice SOUND OFF LISTEN - HEAR US - ADAPT (842)
[This page continues the article from image 846. Please refer back to image 846 for the full text.] - ADAPT (843)
[This page continues the article from image 846. Please see 846 for the full text for easier reading.]