Showing posts with label Intentional Communities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Intentional Communities. Show all posts

Monday, July 10, 2023

Michigan: New Housing Community for adults with I/DD in Washtenaw County

Meeting tonight, 7/10/23: "Did you know a NEW housing community for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities is being built in Washtenaw County?" 

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From Kerry at Many Hands LC <kerry@manyhandslc.org>

A Place for Living & Learning for the Disability Community! 

Monday July 10 from 6:30-7:30 at WISD’s Teaching and Learning Center, 1819 South Wagner Rd., Ann Arbor.

We are looking forward to seeing you tomorrow, Monday July 10 from 6:30-7:30 at WISD’s Teaching and Learning Center, 1819 South Wagner Rd., Ann Arbor.
In person is best, if time allows we will be going to the land in Dexter.

Zoom link: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/86964357976?pwd=RnZpQmJveWN6NmhoZG9zb3FtVjkwZz09 Passcode995254

Did you know a NEW housing community for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities is being built in Washtenaw County?

Many Hands Lifesharing Community envisions adults with developmental disabilities, their families and caregivers living full, healthy and meaningful lives connected to others.

We are creating an amazing place to live and learn, regardless of ability!

A UNIQUE IMPACT ON OUR COMMUNITY:

In addition to providing residents and their caregivers with a wonderful place to live,
the larger disability community will be welcomed onto campus to help fill a large gap in need for on-going learning and leisure activities.

SOME OF THE PLANS AND PROGRESS YOU’LL HEAR ABOUT on JULY 10:

The 85 scenic acres under contract on Baker Road on the outskirts of Dexter, and An Angel donor has committed almost 2 million dollars to purchase the land!

  • Plans underway for a fully accessible, sustainable community with family-style homes for residents and caregivers
  • Quality of Life, Lifelong Learning and Community Connectedness...through walking trails, a craft house, gymnasium, performing arts center and a cafe (that will welcome the public!)
  • The organic regenerative farm (with animals!) for meaningful resident activities, and engagement opportunities for the greater community

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We hope you’ll join us!
Monday, July 10 @ 6:30pm
WISD’s Teaching and Learning Center
1819 South Wagner Rd., Ann Arbor, MI  48103
Vogel Rooms A & B

__________________________________________________________________

Kerry Kafafian
Board Chair for Many Hands Lifesharing Community
734-355-0991
Kerry@ManyHandsLC.org
www.ManyHandsLC.org

Tuesday, June 25, 2019

Together For Choice

June 25th, 2019 

Together For Choice (TFC) is an advocacy organization based in Chicago but with members from all over the country. According to its Website,

"Together for Choice was organized by providers and families across the country seeking to enhance the right of individuals with developmental disabilities to choose where to live and how to spend their days. We stand for the proposition that individuals with developmental disabilities should have the same rights as everyone else to decide where to live, work, recreate and receive services."

CHOICE...to live a life worth living

TFC held a conference in the Fall of 2018 at Misericordia, a facility in Chicago operated by the Sisters of Mercy under the auspices of the Catholic Arch Diocese of Chicago. It is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit corporation that is funded partly with public funds, including Medicaid, from the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the Department of Children and Family Services and the Illinois State Board of Education in addition to funds raised through private donations.

Misericordia serves 600 people with moderate to profound disabilities, on and off campus. If you are in Chicago and have a chance to visit, it is a fine example of the variety of good quality residential and work programs that are possible for people with I/DD.

The 2018 conference hosted a wide array of speakers. You can listen and watch videos of the speakers here.

To make sense of the acronyms used in regard to people with disabilities, here is a helpful glossary from the TFC blog:


ADA = Americans with Disabilities Act

A federal law enacted in 1990 that protects people with disabilities from discrimination.

ASD = Autism Spectrum Disorder

A developmental disability affecting communication, behavior, and social interaction. ASD has wide variation in type and severity of symptoms experienced.

AT = Assistive technology

Any item, piece of equipment, software program, or product system used to increase, maintain, or improve the functional capabilities of people with I/DD. Can be a low-technology item (e.g., communication board with fuzzy felt) or involve special computers and software.

CMS = Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

Part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that oversees federal Medicare and Medicaid policy and states’ implementation.

DSP = Direct Support Professional

A professional who supports with people with disabilities accomplish activities of daily living.

FLSA = Fair Labor Standards Act

The law that establishes minimum wage, overtime pay, record-keeping, and standards for child labor, which pertains to full-time and part-time workers in federal, state, and local governments as well as the private sector. The 14(c) provision of the FLSA offers a certificate to employers to hire people with disabilities and pay them in proportion to their level or productivity.

HCBS = Home- and Community-Based Services

Services funded by Medicaid to provide people with I/DD, physical disabilities, and/or mental illness supports in community-integrated settings.

HHS = (U.S. Department of) Health and Human Services

The cabinet-level department that oversees social service programs including many I/DD services. The Secretary of HHS is appointed by the president and confirmed by the senate.

I/DD = Intellectual and developmental disabilities

An umbrella term describing disabilities that affect cognitive, physical, and/or emotional development. Diagnoses of I/DD are always present before age 18 and are often present from birth.

ICF/IID = Intermediate Care Facility for Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities

A residential setting funded by state Medicaid entitlements (separate from HCBS). ICF/IDDs are larger settings than typical homes and typically support people with higher support needs.

IDEA = Individuals with Disabilities Education Act

A law that allows for a free and appropriate public education to eligible children with I/DD and ensures special education and associated services to those children.

PCP = Person-centered planning

An approach to engaging with people with I/DD to help them identify their strengths and use that information to design the best plan with appropriate supports for a successful and fulfilling life.

PCPID = President’s Committee for People with Intellectual Disabilities

A committee appointed by the President to advise the White House and HHS on issues related to I/DD.

QIDP = Qualified Intellectual Disabilities Professional

A license offered through state human services departments for case management staff supporting people with I/DD

VR = Vocational rehabilitation

Services offered to people with I/DD to enable them to obtain the skills and resources needed to find and keep employment.

WOTC = Work Opportunity Tax Credit

A federal tax credit available to employers that hire individuals from certain groups who have consistently faced significant barriers to employment, including people with I/DD.

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

A "Home Grown Community" in Washtenaw County, Michigan

This is a note from Kerry Kafafian, about a new organization that intends to build a Home Grown Community (HGC) in Washtenaw County. 

Home Grown Community (HGC) has accomplished a lot over the last few months. The organization has:
  • Incorporated in the State of Michigan as a Nonprofit Corporation.
  • Named a Board of Directors.
  • Visited other housing communities including Benjamin's Hope and St. Louis Center and will visit Bitter Sweet Farms this summer
  • Finished a Business plan with a construction and operating budget 
  • Applied to the IRS for 501(c) 3 tax exempt status  
  • Built strong connections with several IDD groups and service providers and law makers
  • The Web site will go live soon 
Home Grown Community (HGC) is inspired by Camphill and Innisfree Villages, as a voluntary community with adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities. HCG is dedicated to providing a Lifesharing home and learning environment in an atmosphere of beauty warmth, and respectfulness. All community members are valued, and all are encouraged to explore and contribute to a meaningful and challenging life.

Our location will be on the outskirts of a town in Washtenaw County, MI. Roughly 100 acres will hold a farm, Community Center, Craft House, 6-10 homes with about 10 bedrooms each (4 for Residents and 6 for Coworkers) and there will be a cafe/coffee shop along the main road.

For a great example of an over 30 year old lifesharing community see Innisfree Village

Here are some good Videos to view and share with others: 

Benjamin's Hope in Holland, Michigan

Innisfree Village in Crozet, Virginia

Camphill Village, New York

Thursday, May 16, 2019

Michigan’s mental health system is failing many with severe autism

I have two adult sons with profound intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) as well as friends who have severely autistic family members. What these disabled populations have in common is that they are difficult and expensive to serve, no matter where they live. Finding appropriate services and residential settings is a relentless and frustrating task for most families, especially when choices are deliberately limited to encourage a one-size-fits-all mentality that promotes the idea that everyone can be fully integrated into "the community".

These stories about severely autistic children and adults have many parallels in the world of severe and profound IDD.

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“Falling through the cracks” is a phrase that is frequently used to describe what happens to people with severe autism when they move from school to adult life without the safety net of services provided by the educational system. This also describes what happens to autistic children, many of whom have intellectual and other developmental disabilities, whose problems are too much for the educational system to handle. They are shunted into a world of psychiatric services that were never designed or intended to help people with IDD. 

Below are summaries and excerpts from two stories featured on Stateside, a Michigan Radio show that covers state and local issues, including struggles with the Michigan Mental Health system. To get the full emotional impact of these stories, listen to the interviews with family members and others on the Stateside Website. 


By SARAH CWIEK, 2/18/19.

“A danger to themselves or others. That’s the threshold set by Michigan law to put someone in a psychiatric hospital….”


Damiean Odisho has severe autism and is described by his father Douglas as “…a big guy with the mind of a child.” Damiean’s parents have had to call the police to protect themselves from outbursts by Damiean that ended up in physical assault or the threat of physical assault. Damiean has autism and “a host of other psychiatric and special needs diagnoses…He’s on ten different medications.”

The police department in Warren, MI, where the Odishos live, know that Damiean is autistic and has issues with aggression. In the past, under similar circumstances, they have transported him to an emergency room while his mother Malinda petitions Macomb County Community Mental Health to admit him for psychiatric hospitalization. This time, however, the police transported him to the county Juvenile Justice Center, where Damiean was booked and charged with resisting arrest. He was obviously not capable of understanding his offense or controlling his overwhelming impulses, so the court released him to his parents and instructed them to return to the emergency room where they should again request psychiatric hospitalization. That request was inevitably turned down as it had been in the past, at which point the cycle begins again.

Quoted in the article is Sarah Mohluddin, the clinical director of an autism program at the University of Michigan: “I think it’s important for people to understand just how common aggression is in autism…But children who have these concerns with aggression have limited access to outpatient providers, and even more limited access to inpatient hospitalization and psychiatric beds. And there are very few psychiatric emergency centers that really know what to do in terms of assessing these children when they are in a psychiatric emergency.”

David Pankotai, the CEO of Macomb County Community Mental Health, had this to say: “Sometimes a hospital might look at a child who’s on the autism spectrum, and think that the issues are more related to environment and behavior as opposed to a psychiatric condition.”

The experts and the people responsible for providing services seem to admit that we have a lousy system of taking care of children and adults with severe autism who may injure themselves or others; they lament that sometimes there is nothing they can do about it.

Damiean turned 17 this year and his parents biggest fear is that he will end up the adult prison system, like so many adults with mental illness. His mother is left with this thought: “He’s going to have this disability for life. And we just work around it the best that we can.”

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To find help for her disabled daughter, Michigan mother had to leave the state
By STATESIDE STAFF, 2/19/19

This story is about a 19-year-old young woman with severe autism who has dangerously aggressive and self-injurious behaviors. In this case, the mother found a program that worked for her daughter, but it was in another state and now she is faced with bringing her adult daughter back with no prospects of finding a suitable residential setting for her in Michigan.

From the article:

Jackie [the daughter] has a severe form of autism.

“…She received a state Medicaid waiver for in-home help when she was around four years old. But Sibley [her mother] says the family struggled to find the long-term care her daughter so desperately needed.

“‘It’s very hard to find staff, especially when there are challenging behaviors involved. Most of the people that we had helping us would quit,’ Sibley said.

“After exhausting her options in Michigan, Sibley found the Kennedy Krieger Center in Maryland, a residential facility that specializes in treating severely autistic children. After a year on the waiting list, Jackie was admitted in March 2018. Sibley says that her daughter has received ‘phenomenal’ care there.

“Kennedy Krieger is typically just a three-to-six-month program. Healthcare providers there, knowing there were few options for Jackie back home in Michigan, extended her stay to over a year.” 


That extended stay at Kennedy Krieger with phenomenal care has been costly for Jackie and her family. The family’s private insurance will no longer pay for it and the family must find an alternative in Michigan. To add insult to injury, Michigan now considers Jackie a resident of Maryland and has said that she is no longer eligible for Medicaid in Michigan. That means that she will be denied a Medicaid Waiver that she has qualified for since she was 4 years old until the state agrees to take her back into Michigan’s Medicaid program. No one is paying the bills right now.

Sibley’s advice for Michigan: “Michigan needs to look at having some kind of facility — I think every state does — so that they can house these children that are not just on the spectrum, but severe cases.” 

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Michigan’s obligations to people with developmental disabilities

The excuse that there is nothing appropriate for these children and adults is belied by the experience of numerous families that have found programs that work here and in other states for people with similar disabilities. That there is nothing readily available in Michigan is to some extent caused by decisions the state has made to no longer support a full range of services and residential options for this hard to serve population.

These stories are especially disturbing, because Michigan’s mental health system is obligated, in its agreements with the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), to provide “medically necessary services” to all Medicaid-eligible people with developmental and other disabilities. That includes the social services and supports that allow people to live in community settings as well as the option of an ICF level of care. Most people with severe autism fall into the category of developmental disability and many also have intellectual disabilities.

Most families do not know that under our our state’s system of Medicaid managed care, Michigan does not allow waiting lists for services for people with disabilities who are 
Medicaid-eligible. But tell that to the families who are desperately struggling to find adequate services for their disabled loved ones, and they will tell you a different story of delay and denial. According to Michigan’s Medicaid Provider Manual, the mental health system “..may not deny services based solely on preset limits of the cost, amount, scope, and duration of services. Instead, determination of the need for services shall be conducted on an individualized basis.” 

In other states, Intermediate Care Facilities for Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities (ICFs/IID) are one option for this hard to serve population. These are technically institutions under Medicaid law, but the word “institution” has been used in only a pejorative sense for so long that families react with fear and loathing to the prospect of “institutionalization”. The ARC Michigan, the state’s most influential DD advocacy group, had the goal of closing all institutions for many years. It has also promoted the elimination of all congregate settings (settings serving more that 3 or 4 people with DD together in one place) even while it is evident to most people that community care is grossly underfunded and of some of it of poor quality. The ARC’s Website showed a video on the history of Michigan Institutions that was produced as if it were a horror show with creepy music and newsreels of huge institutions going back as far as 90 years.

The 1980’s brought significant reforms to the system of longterm care for people with IDD, including the introduction of Medicaid waivers for Home and Community-Based Services as a companion and alternative to the highly-regulated ICF program. Our most influential disability advocacy groups nationwide have been working for years to eliminate ICFs/IID, even for very hard to serve populations. In Michigan, they have all but succeeded, although when I have brought this subject up at meetings, I often hear that there are still ICF beds in the state, but they are only whispered about and not mentioned in polite company. At the same time, families desperate for appropriate residential settings in Michigan are left with seeking out other institutional options such as hospitalization in psychiatric facilities or placements in group homes that are often not willing to take on the most severe behavioral problems.

ICFs/IID along with innovative intentional communities, group homes, and other family-initiated projects can provide a safe and non-isolating environment that both protects residents and in some cases gives more freedom to the people living there, than could ever be provided in an apartment in a community unprepared to care for people with severe autism and IDD. 

Here is something to think about: Why is it that so many families report that their children have been helped and accommodated in educational programs, but there is apparently an unwillingness or inability by the adult services system to replicate that success when these same children reach adulthood? 

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More blogposts and articles on this topic:

From Washington State: Because We Care -- Beyond Inclusion 
A series of Blog posts - "Stuck in the Hospital"

Another perspective from the mother of an autistic daughter in California: 

"Falling Through Cracks: When The Safety Net for Young Adults With Autism Spectrum Disorder Fails "
By EVA LOEFFLER, 2/25/19

“People with ASD and ID are hospitalized at a rate six times higher and will likely have longer psychiatric hospital stays than people without ASD. Many will not receive appropriate treatment that is tailored to their unique needs due to lack of understanding, knowledge, and training by mental health professionals. A recent study found that mental health treatments are challenging due to individuals limited communication skills, unique individual challenges, as well as the mental health field’s tendency for diagnostic overshadowing, which is the assumption to contribute behaviors to the developmental diagnosis, not necessarily the mental health diagnosis.” 

by Sue Jennings, EP Magazine, December 2017

Thursday, June 14, 2018

2018 Together for Choice Conference, Chicago, IL



2018 Together for Choice Conference

October 17-19, 2018

6300 N. Ridge Ave. 
Chicago, IL 60660 

Join us to advance the rights of individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities to live, work and thrive in quality communities and settings of their choice!

Registration is now open. See the Together for Choice Conference Page

Please note that this is a busy convention season in Chicago, so reserve your hotel early. We have a limited block of rooms reserved at the Hilton Chicago, which are available on a first-come, first-serve basis. We will provide transportation between the hotel and conference venues on Wednesday, October 17 and Thursday, October 18. We will offer transportation only to the conference at Misericordia Home on Friday, October 19.

If you need assistance reserving a room at a hotel other than the Hilton Chicago or have other conference inquiries, please contact Jonathan Neidorf at jonathann@misericordia.com or (773) 273-4716.

Together for Choice is a national grassroots advocacy organization formally incorporated in 2017 with over 800 members in 47 states. Our mission is to protect and advance the right of individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD) to live, work, and thrive in communities and settings of their choice. We work with national networks, self-advocates, families, and service providers to advance choice, quality, and increased resources for the I/DD population. Since our incorporation, we have been educating the public and governmental officials on the need for Medicaid funding of choice-based housing and employment/developmental training models, as well as increased resources at the federal and state levels to ensure quality services. Our continued focus is to develop policy reform initiatives addressing the myriad of I/DD community needs.

We look forward to seeing you in October!

Together for Choice Team

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Preliminary agenda:

Wednesday, October 17: Opening Reception in Downtown Chicago (venue to be announced)

At our opening reception, you will enjoy a light dinner and cocktails while networking with other advocates of choice for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD). Transportation will be provided to and from this venue for those staying at the Hilton Chicago.

Thursday, October 18

Full Day of Conference Programming at Misericordia Home

​You are invited to a full day of conference programming on Misericordia Home's campus in Chicago. The day's programming will be an opportunity for participants to hear from and engage in lively conversation with like-minded advocates for residential, work, and day programming choice for individuals with I/DD. Topics of discussion will include regulations around Home and Community Based Services (HCBS), as well as the future of specialized wages under Section 14(c) of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).

​We will also offer tours of Misericordia Home's campus, which provides a unique array of services designed to support a broad spectrum of needs.

David Axelrod will be our keynote speaker during lunch. Mr. Axelrod, a 40-year veteran of American politics, is the former Chief Strategist and Senior Advisor to President Barack Obama. He currently serves as the director of the University of Chicago's non-partisan Institute of Politics, as a senior political commentator for CNN, and as the host of The Axe Files, a top-rated podcast jointly produced by CNN and his Institute.

​You will ​have the opportunity to hear from Together for Choice board members, all of whom have worked extensively to improve the lives of individuals with I/DD, both professionally and for their loved ones. They will discuss recent developments in their work and the direction of Together for Choice.

​This session will be followed by a cocktail hour, entertainment by Misericordia's HeartBreakers dance team, and dinner on Misericordia Home's campus with more opportunities for networking. Transportation will be provided from the Hilton Chicago to Misericordia Home in the morning and back after dinner.

​Friday, October 19

Half Day of Conference Programming at Misericordia Home

​Friday’s conference at Misericordia Home will offer an opportunity for presenters and conference attendees to share best practices related to housing models, micro-enterprise work opportunities, and the DSP workforce crisis. A wrap-up discussion will take place at noon followed by lunch. We will offer off-campus tours of Misericordia Home's group homes in the afternoon.

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Facing the Housing Crisis for DD with a Diversity of Solutions

NOS Magazine is a “news and commentary source for thought and analysis about neurodiversity culture and representation”. For the uninitiated, neurodiversity is a controversial approach to disability that includes the belief that autism and other disabilities are a normal variation of human behavior and should be accepted as a social category on a par with gender, ethnicity, and sexual orientation. According to the NOS Website, “NOS stands for ‘Not Otherwise Specified,’ a tongue-in-cheek reference to when a condition does not strictly fit the diagnostic criteria, or is in some way out of the ordinary.”

NOS published an article entitled "Developmental Disability Community Faces a Housing Crisis" by Cal Montgomery on 4/5/18. The author begins by referring to an article published in USA Today, “Don't let my son plunge off the 'disability cliff' when I'm gone” by Michael Bérubé on 4/2/18, where the father of a son with intellectual disabilities describes the common experience of parents of adults with ID working to create a balance so that their son has opportunities to live as independently as possible with the supports he needs to do that: “Our experiences have shown us how much help people with intellectual disabilities need to live independently. That paradox divides the disability community.”

Bérubé also puts in a plug for “intentional communities” that “integrate people people with intellectual disabilities into communities in meaningful ways, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week…We must nourish and support these social arrangements; they are a powerful social good.”

Intentional communities are one solution (certainly not the only one) to the housing crisis that the author ironically rejects, based on the idea that they are too institutional and therefore should be cut off from Home and Community-Based Services funding and forced to apply for Medicaid funding for institutional settings. There is an undercurrent of resentment toward people who can benefit from and want to live in congregate settings (settings serving more than 3 or 4 people with disabilities together) and whose safety and well-being could be jeopardized in “scattered-site housing”, the ideal setting promoted here for everyone who is not in an institution. It seems, according to the NOS article, that HCBS funds belong to those who want and need services restricted to the setting that the HCBS advocates are promoting. It seems that those with more extensive needs who need something different are taking funding they are not entitled to if they choose to live in an intentional community.


In regard to institutions, the NOS article is misleading. It implies that Intermediate Care Facilities for people with Intellectual Disabilities (ICFs/IID) are readily available to people with more severe disabilities who need more controlled environments. In fact, some states have closed all their ICFs, many have severely limited or ended admissions, and others have made it nearly impossible for individuals needing this level of care to access it. These barriers have been put in place with the approval and support of most of the groups now pretending to promote an ICF as an acceptable alternative to community settings. [In the case of the advocates interviewed for the NOS article, that includes ASAN, the ACLU, IPADDUnite!, and ADAPT.]  

Furthermore, the word "institution" is used here only in a pejorative sense that is not shared by individuals and families who have experienced the life-saving services available in these facilities.

In addition, the author disparages Misericordia, a large campus-like setting in Chicago that serves 600 people with intellectual and developmental disabilities both on and off the campus in a variety of settings. Misericordia has built a “community of care” over decades responding to the many and changing needs of the people they serve. You need to see it to believe it - I encourage anyone who is in the Chicago area and interested in the services provided to schedule a tour and talk to the residents and their families who fully support Misericordia and its mission. 

The author also puts in a dig at VOR by getting the name wrong and misrepresenting what VOR stands for. I have been a member of VOR for over 15 years.

I sent comments to NOS Magazine to point out inaccuracies and misconceptions in the article. My comments did not make it through the moderation process, so I will publish them here: 

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In response to this article: 

I have two adult sons with profound physical and intellectual disabilities who live in a group home that provides for their extensive needs in a setting with four other adults with similar needs. I have also been a member of VOR for more than 15 years. 

1. Although there is a housing crisis for people with disabilities, Home and Community-based Services (HCBS) can be provided almost anywhere that a person with a disability lives. Nevertheless, CMS has imposed on states and individuals with disabilities the regulation of settings, ie. housing, rather than services. The 2014 HCBS settings rule unnecessarily restricts individual choice and seems to demand full integration into “the community” to justify HCBS funding when the ADA requires integration “appropriate to the needs of the individual”. The most pressing crisis that threatens the system of community care is the low pay and poor working conditions for direct service providers. Raising the pay, improving benefits, and honoring the importance of these service providers is something we can all get behind, rather than spending energy and resources closing programs and dividing the disability community into Us vs. Them. 

2. What is an Institution? In Medicaid law, institutional services cover mainly Intermediate Care Facilities for people with ID (ICFs/IID), nursing facilities, and hospitals for mental diseases. ICFs/IID are an “optional” program under Medicaid that originally was a companion program to HCBS (also optional), allowing states to waive certain requirements for ICFs to pay for community care. Nothing prohibits institutional care for those who need it, so why is CMS trying to restrict funding to settings that resemble an institution, when an actual institution is OK? One other point, although an ICF/IID may be as small as a 4-person group home, not all settings with 4 or more people are “institutions” and there is no justification for using this arbitrary number for defining a setting as being too institutional. 

3. The name of VOR is VOR! The organization was founded in 1983 as “Voice of the Retarded”. As the terms mentally retarded and the word handicapped were used less frequently, the terminology in federal law began to change. Most disability organizations (including VOR) removed the word "Retarded" from their names and from the discussion of issues related to this segment of the DD population. So when you see the acronym VOR, think “Voice of Reason”, to help you identify who we are. Also, check out “About VOR for positions and policy statements. We are often misrepresented by other advocacy groups. If you insist on calling VOR “Voice of the Retarded”, then for the sake of consistency, you must also refer to The ARC as the "Association for Retarded Citizens" and TASH as 'The Association for the Severely Handicapped". 

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See also:



Letter to CMS from over sixty organizations and advocates supporting a full range of options for people with ID/DD

Thursday, February 2, 2017

From the Coalition for Community Choice: Read about the Legal implications of the HCB Settings Rule and Act Now

ACTION ALERT

Greetings Coalition for Community Choice:

As you know, the CCC came to be because we oppose CMS's position on disability-specific settings. Here is an exciting resource with a call-to-action to advance our work: 


REVIEW THIS: To analyze the legal implications of CMS's HCBS Final Rule, several CCC organizations hired Caroline Brown and Phil Peisch at the prestigious Covington & Burling. We are grateful to those who financially made this work possible - particularly, Micki and Lanny Edelsohn and Mark Jackson who initiated this effort and Ashley Kim who ran with it! Please review, use, and share this important legal memo.

ACT NOW: Covington & Burling recently shared their findings with the CMS transition team for the Trump Administration. The transition team would like to know if there are any advocacy groups or not-for-profits that oppose CMS’s current approach to disability-specific housing. Click this link if your organization would like to be listed as an organization that opposes CMS's current approach to disability-specific housing. If you have questions, contact Ashley Kim ASAP. Her contact info is (310) 889-8800 or akim@villadevida.org

In the words of Ashley, “Let's do this!”

Desiree Kameka
National Coordinator, CCC
Madison House Autism Foundation 



Wednesday, January 25, 2017

What the studies DON’T show in the case against intentional communities

Amy Lutz, an autism parent and author, has written an article for her Inspectrum blog in Psychology Today called, “Ideology, Not Data; Studies fail to support the case against intentional communities”. She took exception to a recent blogpost by Ari Ne’eman, the founder of the Autism Self Advocacy Network (ASAN), “...depicting those of us who believe that more choices are better—virtually all the time, but particularly when it comes to residential and vocational options for the intellectually and developmentally disabled—as ‘fringe’ and ‘pro-institution.’” ASAN and other advocacy groups claim that their public opposition to farmsteads, intentional communities, and other larger residential settings is “overwhelmingly” supported by research.

Lutz took the next step in this controversy and read through the research cited by these advocacy organizations. She found that the studies are plagued with methodological flaws and their conclusions are sometimes the opposite of what the advocates would have us believe -- that intentional communities have many benefits over dispersed settings.

Among the many problems with the research is that the worst institutions of the past that housed thousands of people, many of whom had mild impairments, are used as the baseline to compare current settings. She also finds Inconsistency in defining key variables, such as size of the setting, the degree of disability of the individuals involved, and the variety of ways that settings are characterized:

“A final difficulty in assessing the research is the tremendous impact that degree of impairment has on this entire debate. Studies consistently report that residents of residential campuses score lower on IQ and adaptive functioning scales, and engage in more challenging behavior, including aggression and self-injury—factors that likely determined their placement in more restrictive settings in the first place….”


Lutz also addresses the ideology behind the movement to push all adults with DD into smaller dispersed settings that is motivated by the goals of social justice, inclusion, and combatting discrimination, often at the expense of individual needs and choice:

"…While Emerson’s concern [referring to an article by Erik Emerson] for social justice is noble, perhaps he might reconsider sacrificing the right of our most vulnerable citizens to choose where and with whom they live—a right I doubt he would relinquish for himself—to his vision of what an inclusive society looks like. Because if the 'subjective wellbeing' of my son and his peers isn’t important to Emerson, it is vitally important to them, as well as to parents such as myself, friends, providers, professionals and virtually any stranger on the street—who, if asked, would almost certainly agree that happiness is what all of us want, for all our children. Hardly a position to be dismissed as 'fringe.'"


Read the full article and pass it on.


Also by Amy Lutz: “Who Decides Where Autistic Adults Live?

Thursday, January 5, 2017

Michigan : Washtenaw County events and news

The first event coming up this month is sponsored by Intentional Communities of Washtenaw (ICW), a non-profit group that is organized to help provide housing and services to people with DD:

Learn About the New Washtenaw CMH Strategic Plan
Speaker: Trish Cortes, CMH Director
Tuesday, January 10, 2017
7 - 8:30 P.M.
Washtenaw ISD at 1819 South Wagner Rd., Ann Arbor, MI 48103 (Between Liberty and Scio Church Roads)


Washtenaw Community Mental Health is the county agency that funds most Community Living Support (CLS) services for persons with disabilities. This month, the ICW program will provide family members with the latest information about changes at the agency and at the state level that will affect our loved ones. 

Our speaker will be Patricia Cortes, CMH Director. Trish holds a Bachelors degree in Nursing and a Master degree in Community Health Nursing from the University of Michigan. She has held a variety of positions with Washtenaw County since 2000 including Mental Health Nurse,Health Service Supervisor, Program Administrator - Developmental Disabilities, Program, Director of Health Service Innovation, and Director of Community Support and Treatment Services (CSTS) prior to becoming CMH Director. She has established and maintained countless internal and external partnerships in the community. She recently has led the process of developing the CMH Strategic Plan. 

Our monthly meetings are open to the public and offer a great opportunity to learn more about ICW and to meet other families with similar challenges. 

We hope to see you there.

Al Blixt, Board Chair
Intentional Communities of Washtenaw 

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St. Louis Center in Chelsea, MI is a "caring residential community for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities". It is sponsoring a program for special needs families on "Securing the Future":


Securing the Future 
for Special Needs Families 
Protect, Provide and Prosper 

Thursday, February 16, 2017 
7:00 - 9:00 pm 

St. Louis Center 
16195 W. Old US Hwy. 12, Chelsea MI 48118
Family Welcome and Orientation Center 


Many families with special needs children or adults have a difficult time navigating the future for their loved ones, and advanced planning can ensure a positive quality of life for years to come. Our advisors can help special needs families by explaining the ins and outs of saving and investing to ensure long term success. Please join us for an opportunity to ask our distinguished panel about financial investments, special needs trusts, and guardianship issues to obtain the answers you seek while planning for the future. 


Speakers: Dan Johnson, Investment/Financial Advisor, Northwestern Mutual, Southfield, MI.....Joshua R. Fink, Guardianship - Attorney, *Fink & Fink, Pllc*, Ann Arbor, MI;..... Daniel R. Shirey, Special Needs Trusts *Kitch, Drutchas, Wagner, Valitutti & Sherbrook*, Detroit, MI.


Please contact Joe Yekulis, PR Director, at SLC at 734-475-8430 
for more information or to register. 
To learn more about St. Louis Center, visit our website www.stlouiscenter.org 

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The "Village" at St. Louis Center

Groundbreaking Marks New Era for St. Louis Center (9/29/16)

After several years of planning and fundraising, the St. Louis Center finally celebrated a groundbreaking ceremony for St. Louis Guanella Village with about 275 of their closest friends on Thursday, September 29, 2016. The “Village” is considered an “intentional community,” with the construction of four new children’s homes immediately for children with intellectual and developmental disabilities. The “Village” will also include other segments of homes and townhomes for people with I/DD and their families. In spite of the rain soaked evening, supporters came from far and wide to enjoy a fine selection of hors d’oeuvres provided by Food Art, Inc. and speeches from key supporters and local dignitaries. Development Director Peggy Cole was moved that the time had finally arrived to sink shovels into the ground. “We owe this moment to our many supporters who see St. Louis Center as a bright light that is leading the way for others. We have many hard working committee members who share our dream of the St. Louis Guanella Village, and have worked to make this happen.”... 

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For more information on St. Louis Center's Guanella Village see the website:

"New housing built in the Village will guarantee the provision of the full continuum of care for aging people with I/DD and will provide housing and care opportunities for them and their families."



Saturday, December 3, 2016

December 2016: Post Election Update from the Coalition for Community Choice

The latest news from the Coalition for Community Choice: 
  • HCBS Compliance conference call, December 12th or 14th, 2016
  • Disability Housing: What's Happening? What's Challenging? What's Needed?
  • Illinois: Suffering in Secret
  • Self Advocate Supports Intentional Communities on Youtube
  • Plus more on HCBS policy, CMS, Employment, etc.




Thursday, April 7, 2016

Illinois : Proposed bill creates new system for "Continuum of Care" centers



"Molly Bourke's Journey" is about one of the 600 people with developmental disabilities who receives services from Misericordia in Chicago, Illinois.

An article in the Illinois Herald News by Lauren Leone-Cross, 4/2/16, reports on a bill before the Illinois House of Representatives that would create a new licensing system for "Continuum of Care" centers for people with developmental disabilities:

"The bill [HB 6304] would allow the state to apply for a federal waiver under Section 1115 of the Social Security Act, allowing for 'an alternative model' of licensing, reimbursement and quality assurance. Such a waiver allows states to test out experimental and pilot programs that do not necessarily meet federal Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program rules." 

The legislation is being pushed with strong support from the Chicago nonprofit Misericordia, "a 31-acre continuum of care campus that services more than 600 people with a staff of 1,000." Advocates, such as the Centers for Independent Living, who oppose everything but "full community inclusion" are rallying opposition to the bill.

"Sister Rosemary Connelly, [Misericordia's] longtime director, said this alternative care method provides a choice for families of those with severe developmental disabilities.

"'Community-integrated living arrangements are not for everyone, yet it's perceived as the 'right and only way,'" Connelly said.


“'[Opponents] are really denying families the right to choice,' she added."


Federally-funded advocates who oppose the bill, claim that it violates the U.S. Supreme Court's 1999 Olmstead decision that they say mandates full community integration. This is a misinterpretation of Olmstead that is so prevalent among advocacy organizations that promote full inclusion and many government agencies that it can only be described as a purposeful misstatement of the Supreme Court decision.  

Olmstead affirms the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) regulation that says that "a public entity must administer services, programs, and activities in the most integrated, least restrictive setting appropriate to the needs of qualified individuals with disabilities."
[28 C.F.R. § 35.130(d)] [emphasis added]

Neither the ADA nor Olmstead support only community care or only institutional care: 

"[O]ne conclusion seems plain: some disabled individuals can benefit from community placement, and some may not. While all disabled are covered by the ADA, different remedies are recognized by the statute for different degrees of disability." [Brief at VOR et al., as Amici Curiae, in Olmstead v. L.C., at 6 (February 3, 1999)]

Under the Illinois Continuum of Care system proposed by the bill, I wonder if it would be  possible for Intermediate Care Facilities and other institutional and group settings for people with intellectual disabilities to become vital resources for their surrounding communities. This could be done by waiving part of the Home and Community-Based settings rule from CMS that makes it nearly impossible to open these facilities to non-residents living in the community. 

The current policy is to close facilities and release their residents into communities that are often unprepared for them and lack needed specialized services. More often than not, "the community" fails to live up to a utopian vision of community inclusion. 

According to the news article, "under the bill, continuum of care facilities would be required to provide community-integrated living arrangements near their campuses, employment opportunities, training programs and skilled-nursing residential care."  

This blended system with Continuum of Care centers acknowledges the need for a "Continuum of Care" to meet the "Continuum of Needs", especially for people with the most severe developmental and behavioral disabilities.

More on Misericordia...

Sunday, February 28, 2016

New Jersey attorney and parent speaks in defense of campus settings for ID/DD


Lisa Parles Speaking at the 2015 EASI Foundation and Families CCAN Conference

Lisa Parles, is a New Jersey attorney and the parent of a young man with severe autism. On October 15, 2015, speaking at a housing conference in Philadelphia, she gave an eloquent talk in defense of campus settings for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Her son Andrew lives in the Bancroft Lakeside community in Gloucester County, New Jersey.

Lisa Parles’ son went through a regression at the age of 19, something that is not uncommon among teenagers with severe autism and other developmental disabilities. At the time, he lost his ability to speak, had severe self injurious behaviors, and did not sleep for days on end. There are many people like Andrew that most people do not like to talk about, but Parles believes parents need to speak up about their children so that services necessary to help them will be available.

She believes that the campus setting with a full array of services on campus is a clinically superior model for a vast number of individuals affected with developmental disabilities. It provides economy of scale (more resources concentrated in one place serving more people at less cost per person), more flexibility for the individual and staff, on-campus resources for people who cannot leave the area without being harmed or causing harm to others, behavioral and nursing services available when needed, and a greater sense of family and community than is found in many smaller settings.

More from Lisa Parles:

The federal Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) rule assumes measures of “success” that can actually be harmful for some people with severe DD: having access to food whenever one wants, being able to choose a roommate, having the freedom to come and go as one pleases, living at home vs. living in a group setting, to name a few.  Parles responds by saying, “[for] some people.. access to the refrigerator is eating until they die. A key to the house means elopement and [being] hit by something in the street. choosing a roommate is not an option because for my son he can’t have a roommate. When my son doesn’t sleep for two days, he almost can’t have a housemate.”

On the relatively high cost of maintaining someone in a congregate setting compared to another person living at home with one's family, she says, not only is living at home not possible for many with the most severe disabilities, but “Sometimes what it costs is what someone needs. So to say we can do twenty people in a home situation for the price of one in my view its the equivalent of saying we can give out a thousand bandaids or one surgery. When you need the surgery, the number of bandaids don’t count.”

On redefining “success”: “The direction we’re going…who’s getting to define what a community is, who’s getting to define what success is? They’re on the wrong path.”

Friday, February 19, 2016

Madison House Autism Foundation: Tour a community of 40 Neighbors with I/DD

From the Madison House Autism Foundation (MHAF). Follow this link to watch the video and see photographs of this amazing community:

By Desiree Kameka

In 2013, in the middle of a New Jersey suburb, a small apartment building was built to offer a supportive housing options to about 40 residents with intellectual/developmental disabilities (I/DD). Those who live there choose from either a one bedroom or two bedroom unit each with a living room, spacious bathroom, a small kitchenette, cable, internet, and telephone. There is no set schedule for any resident; some residents have jobs in the community, others volunteer with local charities or are working with vocational rehab to access employment opportunities. Residents live the life they want to live and go about their day with self-directed supports as needed.


As a resident of Mt. Bethel Village, one has the option to attend a day program in the community that can act as a stable support system or a safety net when job or volunteer options cannot fill one’s day. Mt. Bethel Village also includes an art studio, a gym, a library, a pool/ping pong tables, a dining area, and a community room with flat screen TVs and gaming consoles. Other amenities include transportation, an on-site nurse for medical management and referrals, housekeeping and/or laundry services, meal plans as desired, a receptionist, and 24-7 support staff as needed. When I visited Mt. Bethel Village, I had the opportunity to ask many residents why they liked living there. Most said things along the lines of, “I can be independent,” and “I have lots of friends.” Watch the video below to hear what residents think about their choice to move to Mt. Bethel Village. 


Mt. Bethel Village is currently home to about 30 residents with I/DD.  All of them have complete financial support of their family and can privately pay for their supportive housing apartment at a cost of at least $4,200 a month. One of the founders of Mt. Bethel Village used to be a direct support professional at a skilled nursing facility, having seen the dehumanization of people and their struggle to become completely dependant on others, he knew a better way of supportive living was possible. Herb eventually became the President and CEO of a senior assisted living community company.  


Mt. Bethel Village could be for only those who could private pay, but Herb would not allow that to happen. In the spirit of equity, and having a long list of hopeful individuals that could not move to Mt. Bethel Village without state support, they have fought to become an approved agency with the NJ Dept. of Human Services’ Division of Developmental Disabilities, their state Medicaid authority.

At the time of my visit in October 2015, the nine individuals who had been identified as a good fit had been waiting for over 10 months for the green light to move in, three of them are still waiting. While the majority of Mt. Bethel Village residents live in their own one or two bedroom apartment, those who access public funding must live in a three bedroom units. In order for these residents to move in, Mt. Bethel Village used their own funding to remove the walls from existing one and two bedroom units to accommodate the state mandate that three persons must live in an apartment. Considering over 26,000 individuals with I/DD in NJ are living with a family caregiver over the age of 60, and funding for an out-of home placement has only grown by about 3,000 in almost two decades, New Jersey should be doing everything in its power to ensure they will have the housing and supports needed for those who may soon lose their parents and be forcefully institutionalized for lack of options.

Mt. Bethel Village does not operate nor look like a typical apartment building, but more of a college dormitory or assisted living community with much more interaction among neighbors than a typical apartment complex. I can see how this can be confusing for the state to try and put it in an already preconceived settings checkbox, but just because it does not fit any of the current models of housing and may offer different kinds of amenities and built-in supports does not mean it’s institutional. For example, despite having private kitchens in every unit and the transportation with supports to go grocery shopping, most residents rarely decide to cook and prefer to have their meals in communal dining areas. Mt. Bethel Village has two chefs who offer several meal selections, oftentimes featuring at least one person’s favorite meal (the chefs know and request favorite dishes from residents). I had a delicious chicken tortilla soup with shrimp scampi during my visit. On the weekends, while some choose to go out to eat or visit family, others prefer to enjoy the family style dinner at Mt. Bethel. Having a common dining area has been described as a characteristic of an institutional setting by state and federal policymakers, but that seems unfair if residents have the choice and prefer not to plan, prepare, and eat in their apartment. Having a meal plan is a viable option and may improve quality of life for those whom going to the grocery store and planning meals is a stressful event. It offers a social outlet for those who would prefer not to eat alone in their apartment and offers a healthy alternative to the typical microwave dinners that many who don’t like or want to cook use for convenience.

Living in an intentional community provides the space to create a culture of access and neurodiverse leadership. Residents at Mt. Bethel Village have weekly opportunities to sit with the Executive Director, Carolann Garafola, to discuss community concerns and jointly plan solutions. Another fun culture-building initiative came from residents starting to host “Open House” events in their apartment where they create invitations, plan activities around a theme, prepare food and refreshments for their party guests, and of course, clean up after the party is over. Mt. Bethel Village offers a 2 week respite session that would give you the chance to really understand the benefits and considerations of living in an apartment building built specifically to meet the housing and support needs of peers with intellectual / developmental disabilities. Living in such a close-knit and socially stimulating environment may be too much for those who are not social butterflies, but of course one can always retreat into their own apartment as needed. Despite many residents telling me that their move occurred because their parents were sick or had passed away, my conversations with so many residents were full of joy, excitement, and pride in their home and life at Mt. Bethel Village.

All in all, to describe Mt. Bethel Village as institutional, a congregate facility, or isolating just because 40 individuals with I/DD live there is not only inaccurate but a gross disregard for their preferred home choice. When asked what he would change about living at Mt. Bethel Village, the young man in the video did not say, “We need more time in the greater community” or “more neurotypicals to be a better integrated setting.” He declared with enthusiasm that he wanted more friends to move into Mt. Bethel Village!


Recently, someone asked, “Do you support congregate settings?” My response was, “I support as many options as possible for people with disabilities to have choices, therefore it does not matter whether or not I agree with their choice or not – they have the right and dignity to choose.” Our discussion went back and forth and eventually culminated with him adamantly urging that people with disabilities do not want to live together. I have traveled all over the USA and seen countless examples of people with disabilities choosing and happily living in intentional communities among peers. Many of the individuals I’ve met lived on their own and were unsatisfied or even victims of abusive situations. I assumed he was simply unaware of the supportive housing communities I have visited. I asked if he would like to be introduced to self-advocates who have chosen to live as neighbors in intentional communities, and he refused to even give me his contact information to make introductions. His resistance has inspired me to start sharing interviews of residents living in an array of housing options all across the country. Stay tuned for more of these incredible stories!