- Ngôn ngữAfrikaans 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©
Trang chủ / Đề mục / Washington DC, Spring 2001 27
Ngày gởi hình / 2020 / Tháng Mười Một
- ADAPT (1329)
ADAPT FREE OUR PEOPLE ADAPTers, What a surprise that action was. Text book action for how the people united will never be defeated. Three days of action did exactly what we wanted done: laid a great foundation for the new administration. Health and Human Services, HHS; Housing and Urban Development, HUD, and the White House gang all got a taste of ADAPT, and were more willing to negotiate than it seemed they would be! Even the American Health Care Association, ARCA, agreed to come to the table. Our message was heard as far off as Aruba! And it was definitely heard by the new Bush Administration. The meetings with HHS and MICA are arranged. United action overcame resistance in both cases. The Executive Order on implementing Olmstead is out almost exactly on schedule and is stronger than many of us thought it would be. That would never have happened if not for our little home visit. HUD Secretary Martinez met with us and agreed to ongoing meetings, though it is clear work is needed in this department! There can be no question direct action works. Sure we don't win all in the first round, but advances are moving us forward at a smart pace. It is hard to remember an action where we worked better together, and that is no easy claim to make as we have had some beautiful actions! [Subheading] Now is the time to prepare for this fall's action in San Francisco October 20-25. We will need each and every one of us all there as we tackle the largest nursing home in the galaxy: Laguna Honda! Despite a big outcry from the local disability community, despite the Supreme Court's Olmstead decision, despite this being the 21st Century, local movers and shakers have decided to sink hundreds of millions of dollars into rebuilding this monstrosity of a nursing home. We must join together and head west to FREE OUR PEOPLE!!! This will be ADAPT's 35th National Action. Don't miss it. We need you there. - ADAPT (1327)
[handwritten note] 5/16 I will [illegible] for a meeting with Sec. Martinez in the next 60 days with ADAPT representation. Dan Murphy - ADAPT (1330)
[Headline] Activists press prez on disabled rights No one wants to go to a nursing home to die. Most people plan to live in their own homes, regardless of what happens to their physical or mental abilities. But if they can't, a nursing home may be the only option, especially for those on Medicaid or Medicare, which fund long-term institutional care but cover little if any home health care. There can be a better way. This week, five Missoulians, members of a grassroots organization called ADAPT, will be in Washington, D.C., to lobby for the rights of disabled Americans and dismantle the system of long-term, institutionalized care that no one likes. Bob Liston is one of the ADAPT activists hoping to get the attention of President Bush. In 1999, the U.S. Supreme Court declared in the decision of Olmstead v. L.C. that unnecessarily institutionalizing people with disabilities was a form of discrimination. The court also ruled that disabled people could choose to receive long-term care in their homes, in their own communities. Early in the Bush administration, the new president promised to sign an executive order implementing the Supreme Court decision. But Bush has not signed the order, nor has he included any funding in his budget to help states comply with the court's decision. Nearly every state is working to implement Olmstead, says Liston, but few have the staff or the money to do so. Montana is no exception. There are 120 people in Montana's two institutions for the disabled—in Boulder and Glendive and there are another 160 developmentally disabled Montanans in nursing homes around the state, he says. Montana taxpayers spend $120,000 a year for each institutionalized person at Boulder, and nursing home care runs about $35,000 per person Liston says ADAPT believes that money could be better spent on personal attendants or home health care. "The services you get shouldn't be based on where you live," he says. "The money should follow the individual, not the [nursing home] bed." Implementing Olmstead nation-wide would cost about $70 million to start. "The money we're talking about is really nickels and dimes, and we think the money is there," Liston says. And it's money that would pay for the things most of us take for granted, like rent, he notes. It would also pay the salaries of the people hired to care for the disabled in their own homes. "People who provide personal assistance should be able to get paid more to help someone in life-and-death matters that someone who is ffipping burgers," as Liston puts it. ADAPT activists hope to meet with Bush and convince him to sign the order putting Olmstead into effect, thereby "affording all Americans the same civil rights." Carlotta Grandstaff - ADAPT (1332)
This page continues the article from Image 1335. Full text is available on 1335 for easier reading. - ADAPT (1341)
- ADAPT (1335)
Incitement Incitement Incitement Volume 17 No, 2 A Publication of ADAPT Summer 2001 [headline] ADAPT Ensures Promises Kept The Spring action was perhaps the text book example of the power of direct action and how the people united never be defeated. Three days of action accomplished what we set out to do: laying a foundation for the new Administration. Health and Human Services, HHS; Housing and Urban Development, HUD, and the White House gang all got a taste of ADAPT, and came to see negotiation is the way to go! Even the American Health Care Association, AHCA, agreed to come to the table. Our message was heard as far off as Aruba And it was definitely heard by the new Bush Administration. The meetings with HHS, HUD and AHCA were demanded and arranged. United action overcame resistance in all cases. The Executive Order on implementing Olmstead is out and is stronger than many of us thought it would be. That would never have happened if not for our little home visits! There can be no question direct action works. Sure we don't win all in the first round, but advances are moving us forward at a smart pace. It is hard to re-member an action where ADAPT worked better together, and that is no easy claim to make as we have had some beautiful actions! [subheading] "INSURANCE" ADAPT STYLE As Monday morning broke, ADAPT's troops gathered in the drive-way of our hotel. Working with patience and determination, each team worked to get all down and ready to roll for our first day of actions with the new Administration. Eight years of [boxed text] ADAPT/Incitement 1339 Lamar SQ DR #101. Austin TX 78704 (512) 442-0252 V/TTY (512) 442-0522 FAX Incitement is produced from the offices of Topeka Independent Living Resource Center (T1LRC). Articles, letters, compositions, displays and photos are encouraged. Please contact Tessa Goupil for deadlines for submission of materials. The Editor reserves the right to edit or omit any material that is submitted. For more information, contact Tessa Goupil at T1LRC or. Stephanie Thomas at ADAPT. Topeka Independent Living Resource Center, Inc. 501 SW Jackson St., Suite 100 Topeka, KS 66603-3300 (785) 233-4572 V/TTY (785) 233-1815 TTY (785) 233-1561 FAX [text continues] work on the Clinton Administration had eventually yielded some great results. But this was a whole new ball game. And it was time to test the new playing field. ADAPT had sent repeated letters to the Bush Administration requesting meetings to see where they stood and what they were planning to free people with disabilities from institutions. But our letters had gone unanswered, except for some vague, last minute calls trying to divert us. It was time to get serious. A team of 20 folks left early to meet with staff from the Health and Human Services Administration, HRS. No one in HIS employ seemed able to schedule a Incitement meeting with the new Secretary Tommy Thompson, so these 20 were going to schedule that meeting and get a sense of the department's new leadership. But that was not the whole plan. Too often we have been jerked around and patted on the head. Our eight Clinton years had taught us: tithe slips by too fast to waste it. Instead insurance would be provided, in the form of 480 other interested • individuals who headed over to HHS 20 minutes after the first group to just wait and see what happened. Upon arrival we arranged ourselves around the building, not blocking, not chanting, just waiting. Being neighborly you might say. Inside the meeting however, the yellow sticky notes began to be delivered to the HHS officials heading up the meeting. Discussion progressed, but when the 141-IS folks claimed to be unable to set up a meeting with their boss Secretary Thompson, word was sent down the insurance group. Our ADAPT folks were in good hands at least, and the crowd below moved in toward the building and began chanting. [Subheading] "HELLO GENEVA?" "The invitation they sent us for this meeting said we would schedule a meeting with the Secretary" Wisconsin ADAPT Organizer Steve Verriden said, "and then [image] [image caption] photo by Tim Wheat [text continues] we got stonewalled Seven of the 20 of us were formerly warehoused in nursing homes, and took the stonewalling very personally, as did the rest of us." Inside the HHS folks were getting huffy and stomped out of the meeting room, but our 20 folks refused to leave. Having come for one thing, we were not leaving till we got it. As word came down about the standoff, those outside chanting moved in to block the doors. The discipline of the group was great. Step by step pressure mounted. Quickly the HI IS folks realized the time for games had passed, and lo and behold, they returned to the meeting, full of lectures and recriminations, but with a commitment for a meeting. Thompson had confirmed it from Geneva, Switzerland. Outside we released the doors and our inside team came down to join us. It was before noon and we had accomplished our first goal. A quick recap and we were on our way. A lengthy march through the streets took us to target number two, AHCA, the American Health Care Association lobbyist for the nursing home industry. This lovely little group still held over 2 million of our people captive for their profit making value and ADAPT had a few items to discuss with them. Before we even arrived the doors were locked and the lights turned out on the first floor. But ADAPT is not that easily 9 fooled. Again we surrounded the building. [subheading] OUR HOMES, NOT NURSING HOMES It seems the police had not known ADAPT was conking to town. By the time we got to AHCA however, they had found out we were there. In fact they were escorting us, uninvited. So when AHCA finally allowed our negotiators inside and said they/ were going to call the police if we did not :i-co away; we were able to say, go ahead, here's their business card. That took a little wind out of the AHCA's sails, and it was quickly agreed that their new CEO Dr. Chip Roadman would meet with ADAPT before July 15. With a solid days work under our belts, we headed back to recharge for to-morrow! [subheading] BUSH'S DISABILITY 100 DAY REPORT CARD: F One thing that seems consistent about the Bush. Administration is that they were unable to respond. to keep up with, their paperwork in a timely fashion. Back in February, President Bush had created a little media event, coincidentally on the same day as Ashcroft was being nominated, where he invited a bunch of folk from the disability community on up to his new house, the White House, for a little get together (can you say photo op?) to announce his "New Freedom Initiative." This initiative included plans for efforts in several areas for people with disabilities, one of which was regarding the Olmstead decision. At the February First event Bush committed to publishing, on that day, an Executive Order to implement this Supreme Court decision. Well here it was four months later and no Order in sight. Bupkis! Zippo! Ziltch! Nada! Not good enough. After all, while Governor of Texas Bush had been one of only seven states which stood staunchly in opposition to the disability rights position the Supreme Court eventually supported in [image] [no image caption] [text continues] this case. So Tuesday brought ADAPT across town again„ police escort in tow, to see a man about his word. We were expecting law and order crack down, with a 2 minute stay on the sidewalk and then off to who knew where for how long... Much to our surprise we lined up along the White House fence, covering the entire facade. We took out our Presidential 100 day report card and shared it with the crowds. "The ADAPT Report Card had to give the President Failing grades on disability issues for his first 100 days" said. UT ADAPT Organizer Barb Toomer. "It's been over 100 days since he committed to issue the Olmstead Executive Order. Without the Order and some funding to help the states achieve the swift implementation he wrote about, President Bush's New Freedom Initiative remains a NO Freedom Initiative." It was hot and it looked to be a long day. But within a half an hour the Director of President's Policy Council John Bridgeland came out and agreed to set up a meeting with 20 representatives of ADAPT that very afternoon. 480 more of us waited outside, again in the "insurance role," as the meeting was set up, and finally the 20 were brought inside. [Subheading] WEST WING EAT YOUR HEART OUT! The group was ushered in and then in smaller groups was taken upstairs. Somehow Mike Auberger and Chauncey Bailey of Denver and Delaware respectively, were left to find their own way through the long empty corridors. With few options available they knocked on doors and began opening them. Bailey, waiting to get out of a nursing home, still wore his sign "Nursing homes = Jail." Suddenly they found themselves alone in Vice President Cheney's office. They could have taken the name plate from his desk, but instead left him Bailey's sign and continued on their search., eventually joining up with the rest of the group. Crammed in a tiny office with Presidential staffers the group quickly got an apology and a commitment that the Executive Order would be out within 30, days. Though the staffers tried to get away with the old and tired, "my word is my bond," ADAPT's representatives were not satisfied until the Special Assistant to the President for Justice Policy Diane Schacht came outside and announced the commitment to the whole 500. It had been a long and fruitful day. [Subheading] WE HUFFED AND WE PUFFED... The third day brought the final piece of the picture into focus. With the antics of CCD (Consortium of Citizens with Disabilities) the Department of Housing and Urban Development, HUD, had found an excuse to grind to a halt on the housing vouchers to help folks transition out of nursing homes. They had been steadily backsliding on this since the 2001 budget. Letters for a meeting with Secretary Mel Martinez had gone ignored by the Secretary, even despite the efforts of some of his staff to call them to his attention. So Wednesday ADAPT went down to set up a meeting, the only way Washington seems to understand, with a show of power! We took a back route, and despite [image] [image caption] photo by Tim Wheat [text continues] our seemingly ever present escorts, we surrounded the building blocking all en-trances till they agreed to negotiate. We held them firm, and even managed, eventually, to get a group into the lobby and block some of their elevators. HUD, as ever slow to learn, dragged their heels, but in the end agreed to meet with our people in the cafeteria. Negotiations ensued and after an hour of negotiations between 6 ADAPT representatives and about 30 HUD staffers, Daniel Murphy, the Secretary's Chief of Staff announced to the crowd in front of their building that Secretary Martinez would meet with ADAPT within 30 days. [image] [no image caption] It was a solid three days work. We had gone in planning to lay some ground work, and to let the new administration know we were not about to fade away, or let our brothers and sisters fade away. The urgency of the call to FREE OUR PEOPLE has only grown stronger. The Bush administration seemed actually quicker to meet than previous administrations. Of course a meeting is only a meeting, and we must see what comes out of them, but the disciplined commitment of the ADAPTers from around the nation is obviously not something that wilt be turned around. And if meetings come to nothing we will be back for another round. For a first round however, it was victory for all concerned. [boxed text] S. 1298 New Bill Number for MiCASSA Senators Harkin, Kennedy, Clinton, Widen and Specter are the cosponsors. The bill contains all the old parts of Mi.CASSA plus a pilot project to improve services for people eligible for both Medic-aid and Medicare. The new bill has a 5 year phase in during which time the states can get an enhanced match, in other words a higher percent of federal Medic-aid dollars, if they provide Community Attendant Services and Supports; at the end of 5 years all states must provide Community Attendant Services and Supports. - ADAPT (1334)
This page continues the article from Image 1335. Full text available on 1335 for easier reading. - ADAPT (1342)
- ADAPT (1331)
This page continues the article from Image 1335. Full text is available on 1335 for easier reading. - ADAPT (1333)
This page continues the article from Image 1335. Full text available on 1335 for easier reading. - ADAPT (1343)
THE DENVER POST / NATION Wednesday, May 16, 2001 [Image] [Image caption] Associated Press / J. Scott Applewhite. Nadina LaSpina of New York, foreground, and Barbara Toomer of Salt Lake City were among the 400 who protested Tuesday. [Headline] Disabled protesters meet with Bush aide By The Associated Press WASHINGTON About 400 people with disabilities gathered peacefully outside the White House Tuesday to protest what they called President Bush's failure to push an agenda to protect people like themselves. A White House official joined the group outside the gates on Pennsylvania Avenue and said he would arrange to meet later in the day with 15 representatives of the group ADAPT to talk about the president's plans. "We want to work together," said John Bridgeland, one of Bush's chief domestic policy advisers. "We can have a healthy and good conversation about the issues that are of concern to them." The demonstrators — many in wheelchairs — lined up against the White House gate passing out leaflets describing their concerns and waving placards that said "Civil rights not special rights," "Our homes not nursing homes" and "Disabled rights now." They said the president broke his promise to sign by Feb. 1 an executive order to implement the Supreme Court's Olmstead decision. That decision last year held that states may have to place people with mental disabilities in homelike settings if they can fare just as well there as in state hospitals. "We want to know what (Bush) is going to say," said Michael Auberger, of Denver, an ADAPT co-founder and organizer of Tuesday's demonstration. "There's nothing that we've seen so far other than he supports the Olms-tead decision. What does that mean? It could be funds, it could be lip service." - ADAPT (1328)
JUL 06 2001 2:57PM 5 1 2 4 4 2 0 5 2 2 [left margin illegible] American Health Care Association 1201 L Street, NW, Washington, DC 20005-4014 Main Far 202-842-3860 2nd Main Fax 202-289-4253 Writer's Telephone: Writers &Mail: vronizahca.org May 14, 2001 This letter, written on the 14th day of May, 2001, confirms the verbal agreement made between Alan DeFend, Vice President for Public Affairs, AHCA, and Shona Eakin and Linda Anthony, representing ADAPT, to have a face-to-face meeting with Dr. Chip Roadman, President and CEO of AHCA, before the 15°1 day of July, 2001. This meeting will take place at MICA headquarters, 1201 L Street, NW, Washington, D.C., 20005, at a mutually-agreeable time. Dr. Roadman conveys that he welcomes the opportunity to participate in constructive dialogue with representatives from ADAPT regarding healthcare issues. If this agreement is satisfactory, please sign below: [signed] Alan DeFend, AHCA [signed] Shona Eakin, ADAPT [signed] Linda Anthony, ADAPT [illegible footer] - ADAPT (1345)
[image] (from unidentified newspaper): A man in a motorized wheelchair [Rick James] carries the ADAPT flag on the back of his chair. Someone is holding it out so the stripes form a backdrop behind him. He is bald and has a full white and gray beard, and a leather pouch hanging in front of his ADAPT T-shirt. His hands are somewhat constricted but he holds the joystick on his left one. He is looking sternly off to one side. Off to his left are more ADAPTers. A man in a wheelchair [Reuben Fernandez] is speaking with another man beside him. Across Reuben's knees is a poster that reads Nursing Homes = Prison. Behind Reuben is another man [Reuben Montoya] and behind him is a woman in a red hat and ADAPT shirt. The sky is cloudy and blue. In the very corner of the photo you can see the distinctive cement design of the Health and Human Services Dept. headquarters, and two flags. [image caption] Washington, DC United States: Rick James of Denver, Colorado, protests in front of the Health and Human Services Building 14 May 2001 in Washington, DC. James and hundreds of other disability activists are in town this week to gain meetings with members of the Bush administration. AFP Photo - ADAPT (1346)
PHOTO: The sidewalk in front of a red brick building is full of people in wheelchairs. Most are backed up against the building but there are two small groups in the middle of the sidewalk In the first Steve Verriden of Wisconsin, with his cap on backwards is looking toward the camera. There is a street sign over their heads that reads Left Lane must turn left. People are rolling back and forth in the lane closest to the sidewalk. On the street behind the block being occupied you can see two of ADAPT's vans, one red one tan, either circling the block or parked. In the foreground are two people's heads, possibly Elvia Padilla and Jose Lara. Two white day leader flags are visible. - ADAPT (1349)
PHOTO: A police officer is doing something (lifting up? tieing up?) An older balding man with white and gray hair [Michael Heinrich] while two other police officers look on. All three officers are smiling. In the foreground Mike Eakin is watching out of the corner of his eye and he has a pained expression on his face.