Spirit of the ADA Campaign Agenda
A. Pass a national health care reform bill that eliminates preexisting condition exclusions, addresses the institutional bias in the Medicaid program by passing the Community First Choice Option, does not limit or deny services based on disability or “quality of life” judgments, and includes a benefits package that contains coverage for habilitative and rehabilitative services, durable medical equipment and assistive technology devices and services so that people with disabilities can participate fully in the lives of their communities.
C. End the institutional bias in Medicaid by passing the Community Choice Act (S 683/HR 1670) and working with the Obama Administration to enforce the Olmstead v. L.C. Supreme Court decision by directing the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Justice to use monitoring, administrative sanctions and litigation, as needed, to hold States accountable for ensuring people can choose to receive services in the most integrated setting.
E. Phase out (and ultimately eliminate) Section 14(c) of the Fair Labor Standards Act, which permits the payment of subminimum wage to workers with disabilities, and implement a multifaceted approach to achieve the goal of creating new competitive employment opportunities for workers earning subminimum wage. The phase out should prioritize creating new competitive employment opportunities for youth transitioning from school, and should include incentives for employers and community rehabilitation programs; expanding customized, supported, and self-employment, paid community service, job restructuring and other flex arrangements. Implementation of this policy shift must occur over time, with the shortest timeframe possible without diminishing employment opportunities for the 424,000 workers currently earning subminimum wage and those waiting for employment services.
F. Create a bipartisan Congressional Task Force on Human Genetic Technologies and Disability Rights.
A. Amend the Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act to establish and fund self advocate-led peer support and advocacy organizations in every state.
B. Engage with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) to ensure that at least 20% of a state's Mental Health Block Grant money will be devoted to the developing and sustaining of consumer-run statewide organizations which ensure the voice of consumers in state mental health planning and policy formulation.
C. Engage with Secretaries Sebelius, Shinseki, and Duncan, and Commissioner Astrue to ensure that advisory groups to the following agencies be required to include at least two persons with disabilities from each of the major disability areas as the authentic, national voice of people with disabilities: SAMHSA, Social Security Administration, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, National Institute of Mental Health, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research at the U.S. Department of Education.
D. Reauthorize the Workforce Investment Act with changes including provisions improving employment services for underserved populations, such as adults on the autism spectrum and people with chemical and electrical sensitivities, and that further embraces consumer control over our lives and consumer control over our programs and services.
A. Pass the Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act of 2009 (HR 734/S. 841).
B. Pass the 21st Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act (HR 3101).
C. Protect and enforce accessibility requirements in the Help America Vote Act so that every American can vote privately and independently and so that poll workers have the training they need to implement this important law.
May I suggest another piece to add to your agenda? I think the 14th amendment of the US Constitution needs to be amended to include equal rights of "persons with disabilities", not just gender and race. If this were to happen, some of the above agenda items might be covered by this broader law. It would also help take the age limits off of some of the autism, cerebral palsy, and Down's Syndrome therapy legislation that is being passed around the country. If you agree with this, please feel free to contact me at my e-mail address: specialneedsadvocate@yahoo.com
Posted by: Lorinda | February 24, 2010 at 03:56 PM
I see that nothing is being done about the interference that most cell phones cause in hearing aids, worn by people who don't even use a cell phone. I can't even go out in public, without encountering people carrying cell phones, that cause my hearing aid to buzz very loudly. And the sounds through my aid become so distorted that I can't understand what people are saying to me.
Obviously, the ADA is not intended to help people who must rely on a hearing aid, to be able to communicate. This problem has been known for many years, by the FCC, cell phone, and hearing aid industries. Yet, nothing has been done to remedy this deplorable situation. Obviously, the ADA is a joke, and the joke is on people who think it is there to protect us. It's nothing more then smoke and mirrors, to fool the disabled into thinking that they have rights. We don't!
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