Showing posts with label social model of disability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social model of disability. Show all posts

Sunday, March 5, 2023

The Personal Care Crisis Continues: How a Lack of Funding for Home and Community Services Reinforces Larger Problem Within The Disability Community

To all my regular readers I want to say welcome back and thank you for your continued support. To anyone reading this blog for the first time welcome, please make yourself comfortable and grab a seat or a parking space for your wheelchair and a beverage and enjoy what is to come.

In January 2014 I wrote a blog entitled “Aide Care System; The Hurtful Loop Holes” I have included the link to this blog at the bottom of this piece. That piece discussed a crucial problem when it comes to aide care that people with disabilities still face in 2023, however one area it did not cover in great detail was the lack of funding for aide care waivers. The waiver goes by different names depending on the state you live in. I currently live in Florida. Here the waiver is known as the Home and Community-Based Services Waiver. The waiver in theory like all the other waivers started out with good intentions but to be quite honest good intentions don’t pay the bills. In my previous blog on the subject, I talked about federalizing the home healthcare system, however, even if that were to happen there would still be a funding issue. Don’t believe me? Let me explain. 

Right now, I am honored to be a first/second-year fellow with FL-SAND (Florida Self-Advocates Network’D). Thanks to my involvement with the fellowship I have the opportunity to go to Tallahassee on March 13th and 14th for what is known as Developmental Disabilities Awareness Day. This annual event allows those with disabilities to meet with elected officials at the capitol and discuss crucial issues that impact people with disabilities in Florida. FL-SAND and its primary supporter the Florida Developmental Disabilities Council (FDDC) are once again encouraging legislators to put more funding into the Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waiver or as it’s known in the disability community the iBudget waiver. The need for the waiver to be funded is not a new concept nor is it exclusive to Florida. There are two questions some of you may be asking: where is the money going to come from? However, perhaps the more eye-opening question/comment I have honestly heard from people is, “Shouldn’t people with disabilities be happy that they are alive or slowly improving like they are, I mean they have the ADA or the Americans with Disabilities Act?” 

The above comment which was actually made to me several weeks ago shows that there is still a fundamental problem that needs to be addressed. It is my opinion that programs such as the iBudget Waiver receive such little funding and attention not only because we are several trillion dollars in debt but perhaps more importantly because of the way society, for the most part anyway, still has a 19th-century view of disability. That being said the only way we are going to increase funding for such vital programs is to continue to work to give people with disabilities a proper seat at society’s table. Yes, we have such documents as the ADA, but I argue that a piece of paper or law is not enough, however, let me give you one other piece of evidence that reinforces the argument above. 

In order to further prove that people with disabilities still occupy a literal seat at the back of society’s bus, one only has to look at the amount that personal care workers are paid. The pay does not equal the work required and it shows that the disability community is being marginalized to make a profit. My night aide during the week only gets paid $14 an hour. Last time I checked the minimum wage for personal care workers was supposed to be $15 an hour. I am curious to know what the agency charges. It would be safe to assume that they charge a whole lot more than $14 an hour. If I was guessing I would put the figure in the high 30s. I plan on investigating the issue further, and thanks to my fellowship I know the perfect place to start my investigation. I plan on contacting the Agency for Persons with Disabilities (APD) in Florida to see why the state mandate that was passed on July 1st of last year mandating a minimum wage of $15 an hour for all Direct Service Providers (DSPs). The first question I will ask is, “is there a reason agencies aren’t being forced to comply with the mandate?” Depending on the answer I receive I will follow up by asking them “if agencies have not complied are they given a grace period in order to comply? If so what happens if they do not comply by the end of said grace period?”

In closing, I know this is one of my longer posts, however, I feel the issue still needs a great deal of attention. While I agree with my fellow self-advocates that change is necessary, as I have argued throughout this piece the funding crisis highlights a less talked about issue. Whichever side of the debate you fall on there is no argument that this cannot be solved overnight. It will take the voices of the voiceless continuing to fight, in order to make the greatest change. 

Till next time, your friendly neighborhood super advocate has these final words, “no one will change your life but you, continue fighting fellow advocates and allies!” 


Sunday, June 15, 2014

I don’t want the destiny you have planned for me: I’ll make my own. Thank You!


It's been a long time since I have written, but I recently watched a video that got me thinking. The video is linked below. I have shared it tons of times since I have watched it. In it, the speaker Stella Young brings up an idea of something called inspiration porn.

            She says that the lie that has been perpetrated is more social than physical. I could not agree with her more when I posted the following status "No, I am Not an inspiration for getting my Master's degree and having a disability. No, I am Not an inspiration for getting out of bed every day. Having a disability doesn't make me inspiration, just food for thought." I got a mix back of responses. Some did not understand my point for posting the status, my point being that the inspirational things that I have done should have nothing to do with my disability. My achievements should be based strictly on their merit. They should not have an asterisk by them simply because I have a disability. I haven't achieved much. I have done what you are supposed to do in life, but I get extra credit because I am disabled, and no one expected me to do it. In my experience, the only significant achievement that I have that is out of the ordinary is that I have just completed a book.

            The book, however, is not yet even an achievement because it is not published. I am working on getting it published, but I am not done yet. The fact that I got my Master's degree is not an achievement in my eyes because a master's degree in education is only as useful as the effort you put into it. I do not have a job, nor at this time do I have any prospects. What I do have is 3 degrees that I have not used. Determination to make society understand disability as not something different, not something negative, but rather just another obstacle. Along the way, I will encounter resistance, even from loved ones. Why is this?

            As I said, I have a master's degree in education. For that Master's degree, I was required to take classes on "educating children with special needs."  The language and lexicon taught in these courses indicate the overall problem: Society, with the rare exception, views disability as so unique and rare that they do not know how to handle it. They are preconceived notions of what disabled people can and cannot achieve, how their lives should or should not go. This is even true in the case of my parents. Without getting into too much of the debate we have had recently, I can say that parents often mean well but do more than good. Just because our bodies are "physically disabled or exceptional," as they call it in the education classes, doesn't mean our spirits are. It doesn't mean that we don't have normal drives and determinations. It doesn't mean we don't deserve to make our own decisions. If anything, just because we don't have a disabled spirit, people are confused.

            Common assumptions I hear regarding my physical disability aren't always limited to my mental facilities. Yes, people assume that just because I am physically disabled, I am mentally challenged, but they make other equally hurtful assumptions. For example, I have had many people that I know say that I am crazy for going sky-diving because of my disability. I might be fantastic for wanting to go sky diving, but my physical disability should have nothing to do with it. Why should my disability hold me back from doing anything if I find a way to do it? A more powerful assumption was that we never thought you would live on your own. We are so impressed by what you have done. Why is it impressive? Am I supposed to sit in the basement of Mommy and Daddy's house forever? I guess so. Just because I don't live on my own normally doesn't mean I am incapable of doing it. Yes, I have aides that come in and help, and there are glitches along the way, which most people don't have to face, but I make it work. I was even told by a close family member that they were surprised that I am living independently. They never thought it would happen. I should not be surprised by these comments, and in a way, I am not. I am amazed that it is 2014, and we still have such an archaic view of disabilities.

            I realize that there are differences between generations, and sadly we are only a product of our experiences. That being said, sometimes I feel that in my little corner of the world, even though I know many people with disabilities, I am the only one fighting against the role society has told us we should play. In my estimation, it seems as if other people with disabilities are ok being used as inspirational porn. They don't view their disabilities as a societal obstacle, and maybe that is the problem. We need to stop focusing on the physical disability model and focus on the social model of disability for a real change to occur. Will this ever happen? If I have anything to do about it, I am afraid that I cannot be the only voice in my fight. My circle of influence may be small for now, and I will do what I can to irritate and go against my societal role, but for those who know me, who also have disabilities, it is time for you to join the fight as well. Don't accept someone else's destiny before you make your own.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8K9Gg164Bsw