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Домашня сторінка / Альбоми / Baltimore - Washington DC, Spring 1995 34
- ADAPT (918)
Along the side of a wet street in front of a hedge and at least 20 foot tall stone wall is a line of ADAPT protesters most in rain ponchos. At the top of the wall is a row of cars parked nose in to a fence at the top of the wall. Behind them is a large government type building. A few people are on the upper level looking down at the ADAPT crowd below. - ADAPT (919)
PHOTO: Several ADAPT members, including Frank Krall in the turquoise sleeveless shirt, try to force open some brass and glass doors, while people on the inside try to hold them shut. People in wheelchairs are sitting ready to go in once the doors are opened. - ADAPT (920)
PHOTO: In a long, barren congressional hallway people in wheelchairs wearing ADAPT shirts, line the walls. Other ADAPTers, including George Wolf on his cane, walk and stand between them. - ADAPT (921)
THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1995 USA TODAY SILVER SPRING-About 100 American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today protesters, many in wheelchairs, blocked Route 29 for several hours. They want 25% of Medicare dollars to go to home care. MAY 18, 1995 METROPOLITAN TIMES SILVER SPRING [Headline] Wheelchair protest blocks Route 29 Thirty wheelchair-bound protesters were arrested for blocking traffic on a major Montgomery County thorough-fare in a four-hour demonstration. Members of a grass-roots organization of disabled people said they want to force Manor Care, one of the nation's largest nursing home operators, out of business. The group blocked traffic in both directions on Route 29 and Lockwood Drive between White Oak and Four Corners. On Tuesday, members of the group, Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today, demonstrated outside the home of House Speaker Newt Gingrich because they say he reneged on a promise to introduce legislation that would help dis-abled Americans live more in-dependently. THE WASHINGTON POST MAY 18,1995 [Headline] Disabled Protesters Are Arrested After Blockading Building Nearly 100 protesters in wheelchairs were arrested yesterday after blockading the Silver Spring headquarters of Man-or Care Inc., the nation's fourth-largest owner and open-tor of nursing homes, police said. As many as 250 protesters gathered about 11 a.m. outside the Manor Care offices on Coles-vile Road and demanded a meet-ing with company Chairman Stewart Bainum Jr. Leaders of the group asked Bainum to sign a letter urging Congress to divert 25 percent of current Medicaid funding of nursing home care to home health care, a Manor Care spokeswoman said. When the company officials refused to sign the letter, the protesters—members of the group Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today—blocked off all entrances to the building for about four hours, refusing to allow anyone to enter or leave. Diane Cook, a Manor Care spokeswoman, said the company agrees with "many of their points." But she characterized the protest as a "publicity issue" that did not interrupt the company's operation. After blocking off parts of New Hampshire Avenue and Colesville Road for several hours to protect the demonstrators, Montgomery County police be-gan making arrests shortly before 4 p.m. - ADAPT (922)
On a rainy misty day, more than 25 ADAPT members sit in a line across a big street blocking the road. Someone is holding the ADAPT flag with the stars arranged as the access symbol. Paratransit vans are parked on the side behind them and another road goes climbs at an angle behind the group. Big downtown city buildings are in the background. - ADAPT (923)
May 17, 1995 [Image] PHOTO by AP/Wide World Press: A dozen or more ADAPT people in wheelchairs sit in front of a door. There is a railing in the middle of the group and up against the door are wo police officers. Kevin Ervin of West Virginia ADAPT is sitting on the left side of the photo behind the railing wearing dark sunglasses next to the standing person with the wild hair. Someone [maybe Mary Johnson of the Disability Rag] is on a phone next to the door. Above that persons's head is a poster taped to the wall that reads "Shame on Newt." [Image caption] Budget Cuts Protest- U.S. Capitol police officers guard the front door as disabled activists and other demonstrators gather outside the apartment building of House Speaker Newt Gingrich of Georgie Tuesday to protest Medicare and budget cuts. - ADAPT (924)
A big group of ADAPT folks are gathered around the edge of an open paved area. Most all are looking to their right at something that is out of the camera range. Three people are in the open area, one person in a manual chair is semi hidden by a man with a cane [possibly George Wolf] standing looking at the crowd. Another man [Mark Johnson] in a motorized wheelchair is rolling away from the other two. Behind the crowd there are trees. - ADAPT (925)
ADAPT people are sitting in front of some trees with ADAPT posters in them. At the back a woman standing is wearing a Piss On Pity Tshirt and above her head the sign reads "Free Our People" and another reads "CASA not [something]." In front of here is ___ from Georgia in a manual chair. In front of him is Robert Reuter with his arms up in the air signing. Ernest Taylor is sitting on a metal bar behind him, and behind Earnest a little girl of about 5 years [Daniel Holdsworth?] has her arms up holding some flowers. In front of Earnest is a man in a wheelchair with dark glasses, and beside him is Gayle Halfner. In front of her at the bottom of the picture is Ellen Parker and beside her is Karen Tamley. - ADAPT (926)
Working with the Governors and with consumers and advocacy groups, we have made a number of key regulatory changes over the past two years that demonstrate our strong views about offering incentives for states to expand community based care. Despite grave threats of erosion of the fundamental structure of the Medicare and Medicaid programs, we continue to pursue ways to encourage this movement. The Department of Health and Human Services is also pursuing an ambitious research and demonstration agenda to find imaginative, new ways to maximize consumer choice and self determination. Many of the elements of this research agenda will have the immediate result of helping many people receive the supports they need. We will, for example, look at new ways to help consumers hire, train and manage their attendants, at alternative providers, and experiment with offering consumers cash instead of services. I take great pride in being part of an Administration that promotes these basic principles. am pleased that we have made so much headway in moving toward their realization, although I recognize that we still have much work to do. I continue to appreciate the opportunity to work with the disability community as WC work toward our common goals. - ADAPT (927)
[This page continues the article from image 935. Please see image 935 for full text.] - ADAPT (928)
[Image] [Image caption] Capitol sit-in. Members of American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today (ADAPT) are arrested during a sit-in at the Capitol yesterday to dramatize their objection to nursing homes. The activist group earlier in the day demonstrated outside the Department of Health and Human Services for their cause. They want 25 percent of the country's Medicaid funds cut from the budget and put towards at-home care for people with disabilities. - ADAPT (929)
[This page continues the article from image 934. Full text is available there for easier reading]. - ADAPT (930)
[This page continues the article from image 934. Please refer to 934 for full text] - ADAPT (931)
[This page continues the article from image 934. Please refer back to 934 for full text.] - ADAPT (932)
[This page continues the article from image 934. Full text is available there for easier reading].