October 5th last day to register to vote in Nov 3rd Election

September 22 was national voter registration day and Rev Up held a live online event to share information on registering and voting. Below is a link to the edited version of the REV UP Texas Natl Voter Registration Day event. (The link is also on the REV UP Texas website.) Click this link to see the event which is about 30 mins.  

REVUP Texas: What You Need to Know to Vote

Remember October 5th is the last day to Register you want to vote on Nov 3rd.

People went to jail and even died for your right to vote, so use it.  If you aren’t already registered, step one is to register, and you can do that easily via Register2Vote.org Go to the site, fill out the form, they send you a registration card that is properly addressed and filled in.  All you have to do is sign it and drop the postage paid form in the mail. Do it soon because time is running out.  

Rev Up Texas website has information for voters with disabilities, including an accessible video interview with US Senate candidate MJ Hegar. Incumbent candidate Cornyn has been asked numerous times for an interview and if he ever responds they will post his interview as well (if you are a Cornyn supporter you can help by giving him a nudge, cause he has ignored all requests so far.)  They have lots of great videos on the site and tons of good information.  Check it out!!!  Questions?  You can contact them at: revuptx@gmail.com 512-431-4085

Monday October 5, 2020   is the deadline to register in Texas.

Early in person voting starts 10/13/20 and goes until 10/30/20.  To find a location near you the Secretary of State has a site VoteTexas.gov that will tell you where to vote closer to the election day.

Or go to your county clerk’s or election website. If you’re not from one of the places listed below just googling your county’s name elections should take you to the right place: 

Austin/Travis County       El Paso  

Houston/Harris County       Dallas

Fort Worth & Arlington     San Antonio 

Hildalgo County            Corpus Christi

Many of these sites will let you check if you are still registered, see a sample ballot and much more.  The Texas League of Women Voters also has tons of good information on races, voting, and much more including info for voters with disabilities! 

This year, 2020, is the 100th anniversary of women winning the right to vote.

ADAPT/PACT Participates in Celebration of Medicare’s 55th Birthday and Promotion of Medicaid Expansion in Medi-Caravan

Rear window of van with colorful writing that says Expand Medicaid and Medicare. Below is a bumper sticker that reads Honor thy mother, father, grandma, grandpa keep them out of nursing homes and the o of homes is the ADAPT free our people logo

photo by Cathy Cranston

 

ADAPT/PACT joined Texas Alliance for Retired Americans, Texans for Bernie 2020, Del Valle Community Coalition on the morning of July 30th to celebrate Medicare’s 55th birthday and to promote Medicaid expansion in Texas.

Thirty individuals and twenty-five vehicles attended the caravan. We all enjoyed decorating our vehicles to prepare for the caravan as we social distanced with our donned mask.

We drove from Huston-Tillotson University to the Governor’s Mansion then to the Capitol to send a message to Governor Abbott that Texans want Medicaid expansion.

Texas has the highest rate of uninsured adults and children in the country and this was our chance to advocate for all-inclusive HealthCare that covers everyone. We all had a great time honking loud and proud as we drove past the Governor’s Mansion and the Capitol several times. Upon finishing we returned to Huston-Tillotson and called it a day.

  

Healthcare For All!

Shout Out to Donors of PPE/Masks for Community Attendants 

multiracial crowd of various people wearing face masks

Personal Attendant Coalition of Texas (PACT), ADAPT of Texas (Austin), Desert ADAPT (El Paso) and Gulf Coast ADAPT (Houston) want to  thank the following individuals and organizations for their continued support in assisting us in obtaining PPE for our community:

Centene Corporation/Superior – Wade Rakes

Tabitha Taylor with the City of Austin

Austin Council Member Ann Kitchen – Ken Craig

Austin Council Member Kathie Tovo – Nici Huff

Austin Emergency Supply Foundation – Nashid Braswell

Amerigroup Healthplan – Stacy Barnett

Congresswoman Veronica Escobar – Susie Byrd

Committee of 100 – Justin Ho and Nyx He

We have sent the masks to community attendants that serve people with disabilities across all populations. We have (so far) mailed out approximately 5200 masks since April until now. 207 individuals have received the masks.

At the beginning of the pandemic, it was very difficult to find PPE for the essential workforce of Community Attendants.  The home care agencies had difficulties in obtaining the masks and gloves as we all were competing with the hospitals and institutions for the PPE. 

While some focus and concern moved to congregate living facilities like nursing homes and group homes, over time, there seemed almost no attention to the people in the community who face similar dangers, just in less public settings. 

We started this project because we found many community attendants were having to reuse their masks multiple times. Some home care agencies have been able to obtain the PPE, while many are still finding it difficult to obtain sufficient amounts of PPE.  

Thanks to the generous donations from our partners PACT and ADAPT of Texas are continuing to assist in minimizing the spread of COVID-19 and keep people with disabilities, seniors and their community attendants safer.Yoda with arms crossed and words saying Appreciate I do, Thank you

YOUR ACTION IS NEEDED FOR HOME & COMMUNITY SERVICES, FOR STOPPING EVV!

ATTENTION: Action Alert!

YOUR ACTION IS NEEDED:
THERE IS NO FUNDING FOR HCBS IN THE HEALS ACT!
OUR SERVICES AND PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES AND SENIORS THAT WANT TO LEAVE THE INSTITUTIONS WILL NOT BE ABLE TO LEAVE WITHOUT
FUNDING FOR HCBS!
——————
Call and/or email Senator Cornyn and Senator Cruz and staff and tell them:

Senator Cruz: Central Texas 512-916-5834; D.C. 202-224-5922
Click the link to email Cruz: https://www.cruz.senate.gov/?p=form&id=16
Joel_Heimbach@cruz.senate.gov
—————–
Senator Cornyn: Austin 512-469-6034; D.C. 202-224-2934
Click the link to email Cornyn: https://www.cornyn.senate.gov/contact

Jeffrey_Last@cornyn.senate.gov
—————-
We need FUNDING in the New Relief bill for:
1. *Home and community-based services (HCBS)
*Tell them your personal story of the importance of HCBS also for our brothers and sisters that are relying on these services in order to get out of the death camps, nursing home and other institutions!

2. Hazard pay for Attendants. Protect Attendants from COVID-19

3. PPE absolutely necessary (mask and gloves) for essential workers, which includes personal attendants in the community

*SUPPORT – – HEROES ACT HR.6800: which supports a greater Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP)

*SUPPORT- – Section 202 of S.3544 that supports additional funding for Home and Community-Based Services and hazard pay for Attendants.

4. *SUPPORT- – S3740 and HR9651 COVID-19 Recovery for Seniors and People with Disabilities Act. Delay the implementation of the Electronic Visit Verification (EVV) requirement for 6 months (after the end of the national public health emergency) in order to eliminate barriers to care in the home and keep people out of congregate settings. We all know that people with disabilities and Seniors are dying in the institutions due to the corona virus. Personal care services workers are already in a crisis shortage. By adding on EVV requirements, personal care service workers refuse to do this work. The law requires location information. WE refuse tracking them by GPS or biometrics.
*Tell them to help our people.
At the top is an attachment of a template of a letter you can email to the Senators as well as the Representatives asking for their support for the delay of EVV.
ADAPT is working with NCIL(National Council on Independent Living). Below is the link to the NCIL Alert from EVV section of website https://ncil.org/about-the-ncil-electronic-visit-verification-task-force/electronic-visit-verification-evv-call-to-action/
Thank you for taking action TODAY! Our lives depend on it!

Free Our People! Community Attendants Equal Independence!

Nancy Crowther Cathy Cranston
ADAPT/PACT ORGANIZERS

ADAPT OF TEXAS SALUTES 30 YEARS OF CIVIL/DISABILITY RIGHTS

A woman stands next to 2 men in wheelchairs in either side of a banner. It reads Access is a civil right, Our homes not nursing homes ADA Americans with Disabilities Act. The two ADAPT logos (no steps, we will ride and Free our People wheelchair person breaking chains overhead. ADAPT of Texas gathered (masked and socially distanced) on the City Hall plaza at 10:30am on Sunday, July 26th, to commemorate the passage of the important civil Rights Bill, the Americans with Disabilities Act, ADA. 

On July 26th 1990 President George Bush signed the Act into law on the White House lawn. The bill had been written with bipartisan support from Congress. 

Since that day ADAPT of Texas has worked hard through letters, conversations, meetings, educational forums, trainings, lawsuits, protests and even civil disobedience to ensure the promise of that legislation has been fulfilled in our community, state and nation. Similarly we have worked to ensure that people with disabilities are aware of their rights and protections under the law.

There is still work to be done, but ADAPT of Texas took this moment to acknowledge the work and sacrifice of our members, both living and passed, to achieve these goals.

Both the City of Austin and Capital Metro have become leaders in compliance with the ADA because they (sometimes reluctantly, but always in the end positively) worked with ADAPT of Texas and the rest of the disability community toward the goals of the ADA.

The ADA has led to lifts on 100% of our public transit and a vastly improved paratransit system for those who can’t ride mainline buses.  It lead to accessible bus stops, to sidewalks and curb cuts so we are less often forced out into traffic to get around. ADA has allowed us to enter most places like stores, restaurants, churches and veterinary clinics, places the public goes. It has required interpreters for people who are deaf in colleges, hospitals and jails. It has paved the way for more assistive technology and removal of barriers in sidewalks for people with visual disabilities. It has prevented people with cognitive or speech disabilities from being turned away from polling places simply because it was assumed, incorrectly, they didn’t know what they were doing. 

And it has done so much more.  As one of our members Bill Scarborough, put it so well, it has allowed those of us with disabilities: “To Boldly Go Where Everyone Else Has Gone Before.”

In addition, through the Supreme Court‘s Olmstead decision, ADA has affirmed the right of people with disabilities to live in the community instead of being warehoused in nursing homes and other institutions. ADA has helped free thousands of people from nursing homes and other institutions.  ADAPT of Texas and others have gotten people out of nursing facilities and will continue fighting the unnecessary warehousing of people in nursing facilities and other institutions.

Is everything solved?  Of course not. People are still striving to be free in their own homes, businesses and the like still ignore the law and don’t create access for us. People with disabilities run into problems every day. A disabled man at a local hospital was just recently denied care and died because his disabled life was deemed unworthy.

But 30 years ago access was the exception. Community services were a sliver of long term care compared to institutionalization. The needs of people with disabilities were, at best a begrudging after thought. No one would have blinked (except perhaps the family) at lack of treatment to save a disabled life. Many in ADAPT and the disability community at large remember well those days, and shared their memories today.

So ADA and the changes it HAS made must be acknowledged. And that is what we will be doing. 

Although we know the dangers of COVID 19, and many of our people are not able to join us because of this, ADAPT felt this was too important an anniversary to ignore. We hope you will think it is important enough to celebrate as well.

WE WILL RIDE!    ACCESS IS A CIVIL RIGHT!      FREE OUR PEOPLE!                  OUR HOMES NOT NURSING HOMES OR OTHER INSTITUTIONS!  

To see the Capitol Crawl, the Overtaking of the Capitol Rotunda and much more in the battle for ADA visit the ADAPT online MUSEUM


<< 30th Anniversary of the ADA Americans with Disabilities Act          

Signed into law July 26, 1990

Landmark civil rights legislation gives over 40 million Americans access to: 

BUSES  Freedom from nursing homes and other institutions

day care, sidewalks, restaurants, movie theaters, hotels/motels, colleges/universities, schools, gyms, subways, auditoriums, sports venues, drug stores, banks, interpreters, signage, assistive technology, telephone service, parks, courts, tests, employment, television, trains, stores, school buses, theaters, curb cut, grocery stores, doctors offices, libraries 

AND SO MUCH MORE

It’s full promise has yet to be realized, but with all of our help it will.  

Celebrate ADA and keep on working.

ADAPT of Texas files HHS/Office of Civil Rights Complaint about the death of Michael Hickson

ADAPT of Texas, a not for profit statewide grassroots disability rights organization filed a complaint, Friday July 24th to Roger Severino, Director of the Department of Health and Human Services/Office of Civil Rights requesting that they:

  1. Investigate St. David South Austin Medical Center’s in regard to the death of Michael Hickson;
  2. Investigate the guardianship process that took decision making about Michael’s care from his spouse;
  3. Investigate the State of Texas for not having any health rationing guidelines and if the Texas 1999 Advanced Directive Act Futile Care section violated Michael Hickson’s civil rights;
  4. Investigate the St David South Austin Medical Center’s committee process that resulted in the doctor’s ability to withdraw supports from Michael Hickson.

“We are filing this complaint because we think Michael’s civil rights were violated” said Nicky Boyt ADAPT of Texas activist. “I do not want what happened to Michael, a person with a disability, to happen to me or other people with disabilities – We are DISABLED NOT DISPOSABLE!”

[The pandemic has gotten so bad in the Valley they have run out of hospital beds, and there are waiting lists for cremations, according to MSNBC. It’s bad all over this state. Wear your mask, 6 feet away, wash your hands!]

COMPLAINT:

Roger Severino, Director Office of Civil Rights

Centralized Case Management Operations

US Department of Health and Human Services

200 Independence Ave S.W.

Room 509 F

HHH Building

Washington, DC 20201

Email: OCRComplaint@HHS.gov

July 24, 2020

Dear Mr. Severino,

ADAPT of Texas is a not-for-profit, statewide, grassroots disability rights organization representing people with disabilities of all ages in Texas.   ADAPT of Texas advocates for the rights of people with disabilities to receive services and supports to live and thrive in the community, and control their own lives.

In your March 28th issuance of Bulletin on Civil Rights Laws and HIPAA Flexibilities that Apply During the COVID-19 Emergency, your second paragraph states:

          “OCR is particularly focused on ensuring that covered entities do not unlawfully discriminate    against people with disabilities when making decisions about their treatment during the COVID-19 health care emergency.”

In light of this, ADAPT of Texas requests an investigation of St David’s South Austin Medical Center’s (contact information listed below) conduct relating to Mr. Michael Hickson, a person with multiple physical and cognitive disabilities, who died at the hospital on June 11, 2020, as the hospital refused to provide him treatment for his COVID 19, because of his disabilities. One of the doctors, in response to Mrs. Hickson asking if the reason they would not treat him was because of his lack of quality of life due to his disabilities, responded yes. 

We request you look at the process that resulted in Travis County Court taking guardianship away from his wife and the rest of his family.

We request you look at the process St David’s utilized in treating Michael Hickson to see if it complied with the Americans with Disabilities Act, and/or Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 or any other relevant civil rights legislation or HHS/OCR guidance. 

We request you investigate the State of Texas’ lack of rationing guidelines and whether this contributes to discrimination against people with disabilities in Texas.  We also request you look at the Futile Care section of the Texas Advanced Directive Act of 1999 to see if it violates the Americans with Disabilities Act, and/or Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 or any other relevant federal and/or state civil rights legislation.

In addition, we also request you look at the process to see if the South Austin Medical Center’s committee, that concurred that supports could be withdrawn from Michael Hickson, had any input from an objective person/organization, knowledgeable about living with a disability, outside of the hospital personnel.  

Yours sincerely,

 

Bob Kafka and the other members of

ADAPT of Texas

1100 South IH 35 Service Road

Austin, TX 78704

512-442-0252

Bob.adapt@sbcglobal.net

 

 

 

MORE ADA!

From Bob: As we celebrate the 30th anniversary of the ADA on July 26th it is good to learn its history. Click here to read an excellent 1992 article by DREDF, Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund on that history.

Also on Saturday July 18th at 4pm eastern tune into KSFR 101.1 Santa Fe, Barrier Free

Lex and Bush, both in wheelchairs, face one another against black background.

Lex Frieden and President George Bush (Senior) years after passage of the ADA. Bush was the President who signed ADA into law.  Frieden headed up the Federal Committee charged with developing the law.

Futures show, hosted by Bob Kafka, you can listen to Lex Frieden give his front row account of the passage of the ADA.  This will also be a podcast on KSFR’s website [and many other terrific interviews are available there too as podcasts!]  Click here

ADA TODAY        ADA TOMORROW       ADA FOREVER

 

 

 

 

 

 

FREE COVID 19 Neighborhood Testing Available!

Austin Public Health wants you to know:

⚠️  Are you experiencing COVID-19 symptoms?
⚠️  Have you been in close contact with someone who tested positive for COVID-19?
⚠️  Are you an older adult or a someone of any age with underlying medical conditions, like an immune-compromised state, obesity, or other chronic disease such as serious health condition?
 
✅  Come by these FREE neighborhood testing locations in areas with highest need!

Southeast Branch – Austin Public Library - 5803 Nuckols Crossing Rd

Given District Park – 3811 E 12th St, Austin, TX 78721

Little Walnut Creek Branch – Austin Public Library – 835 W Rundberg Ln, Austin, TX 78758

Testing hours will be: 
Mondays @ 9am – 1pm
Wednesdays @ 3 – 7pm
Fridays @ 9am – 1pm  
Everyone should enroll online ahead of time for the safety of all at the testing site, but no one will be turned away if they show up needing testing. All personal information is protected, and immigration status is not asked.
 
👉 Sign up online for an appointment: COVID19.AustinTexas.gov.
👉 Need assistance signing up online? Call the Austin Public Health medical hotline: 512-972-5560
(Hotline hours: Mon.- Fri. 8am-6pm and Sat. 9am-1pm)
——————-
 
⚠️  ¿Tiene síntomas de COVID-19?
⚠️  ¿Ha estado en contacto cercano con alguien que dio positivo a una prueba de COVID-19?
⚠️  ¿Es usted un adulto mayor o alguien de cualquier edad con condiciones médicas subyacentes, como un sistema inmunológico comprometido, obesidad u otra enfermedad crónica con condiciones de salud graves?
 
✅  Visite uno de los sitos de pruebas GRATIS que han sido puestos en locaciones de alta necesidad:

Southeast Branch – Austin Public Library - 5803 Nuckols Crossing Rd

Given District Park – 3811 E 12th St, Austin, TX 78721

Little Walnut Creek Branch – Austin Public Library – 835 W Rundberg Ln, Austin, TX 78758

Horario de pruebas será:
Lunes 9am – 1pm
Miércoles 3 – 7pm
Viernes 9am – 1pm  
Todos deben inscribirse en línea con anticipación para la seguridad de todos en el sitio de pruebas, pero nadie será rechazado si aparecen con necesidad de hacerse una prueba. Su información personal será protegida. No se le preguntará su estatus migratorio.
 
👉  Inscríbase en línea para una cita: COVID19.AustinTexas.gov.
👉 ¿Necesita asistencia para inscribirse por internet? Llame a la línea de enfermería de Salud Pública de Austin al 512-972-5560. (Horario de la línea directa: Lunes a viernes de 8am a 6pm y sábados de 9am a 1pm)
Take a Self-Assessment / Llene la Auto-Evaluación

NEXT WEEK IS A BIG VOTING WEEK

Tuesday is of course the run off elections for the primary elections we had so long ago. It’s also the special election here in Travis County to pick who will replace Senator Watson in the Texas Legislature. Who wins in this Texas legislative session will determine who redistricts the districts for Texas in the US Congress. 

But next week is also Disability Voter Registration week. Can you get 5 other people to register?  You can use this Register2vote website to basically register online.  Not sure what that means?  Check it out here.

Here’s a little motivation from our sister organization REV UP.  They have a neat new PSA complete with star power to get you revved up on voting.  

Check out their PSA video here.

They have a new poster for voter registration that you can print or share on social media.  Share the PSA too!

2020 REVUP Issues poster