Senate Abandons Mothers on Mother’s Day

Who:  National ADAPT

What:  Mother’s Day Recognition of Community Attendants and HCBS recipients 

When: Sunday, May 8, 2022

Where: Spirit of Justice Park starting at 2PM 

For More information: 

Nina Bakoyiannis   646-709-2510   ninabakoyiannis@gmail.com Cathy Cranston       512-650-6543   flacacata@aol.comwww.nationaladapt.org

Washington, D.C.  National ADAPT will hold a rally south of the US Capitol to celebrate mothers that are Community Attendants and mothers with disabilities.  

Mother’s Day is a day to honor and show appreciation to our mothers. The Senate has abandoned our mothers who are attendants to their child or family member, mothers with disabilities who receive attendant services, moms assisting moms, and all mothers who are attendants receiving the inadequate wages that make it difficult for them to support themselves and their families.  This is how Congressional leadership “honors thy mother”.

National ADAPT and numerous attendant and disability rights advocacy groups have worked furiously to advocate for the $15 base wage, for funding for HCBS and affordable accessible integrated housing. The Congressional leadership has received hours of personal testimony, hearings, voluminous fliers, petitions, reports and countless Congressional visits, all coming together to stress the urgency of the necessary funding for HCBS and housing for people with disabilities and the community attendants that assist them.  Thus far, the Senate has refused to make these issues a priority.  “Such a lack of support by the Senate on the importance of the jobs we do,” said Carrie Warner, 30-year attendant in the community “such disrespect.” The Senate must make these issues a priority. Our lives depend on it.

It’s an Unhappy Mother’s Day for Community Attendants that do not get benefits; days off, not even on the day we “celebrate” them.

The Senate has also abandoned our mothers who are stuck in nursing homes, and who do not want to be in nursing homes but rather their own homes but cannot get the services they need to support them there. The bias toward institutionalization remains in Medicaid, despite decades of calls for change. States must provide institutional (including nursing homes) services while community services remain optional. With the growing shortage of attendants due to low wages and no benefits, this bias will grow even stronger. And the attendants who remain faithful to this noble profession despite the lack of pay and benefits grow older and needing supports themselves.

ADAPT Hosts Vaccine Round 4

With the help of Austin Public Health, APH, ADAPT held another round of COVID boosters and vaccines at our office the week of April 18th! APH, who have most helpful in ensuring people with disabilities and community attendants have access to vaccines and boosters, generously came out and jabbed us all. (Amerigroup and VaxAustin helped the time before as well.) Together we have made multiple vaccines and boosters available to hundreds of Austin folks with disabilities and community attendants, and this time APH gave away $100 gift certificates to boot! Below are some shots of us getting shots.

Disability Issues in May 7 Election

This election has one state disability issue, namely a constitutional amendment to increase the property tax exemption for people with disabilities and older Texans. To see the details visit the League of Women Voters Vote 411 They share pros and cons to each issue on the ballot.

Austin also has a proposition officially decriminalizing possession of small amounts of marijuana which many people with disabilities use to help with pain, seizures, spasms and other side effects of their disabilities. This same proposition oddly also addresses ending no knock warrants, which could effect people with psychiatric disabilities, among others.

Early voting has already started and ends Tuesday May 3rd. Election day is May 7. Don’t let voter suppression stop you from using your right to vote. If your vote doesn’t matter why are they trying to limit you using it? Rev Up Texas is fighting for your voting rights in the court room, you need to fight in the voting booth!

Disability Rights Texas Voting Rights Hotline 888-796-8683 will take your calls about any problems you may have. Hopefully you won’t need them.

5 ADAPTers Banned from Governor’s Reception Room. PACT & ADAPT vow to continue their call for action!

Having received no replies to our letter to Governor Abbot regarding attendant wages and the HHSC Commissioner’s total lack of a plan to deal with the problem of no attendants, PACT/ADAPT took action. We brought a copy of the letter over to the Governor’s Capitol Office. They did not know how to get ahold of him and bizarrely they were unable to call his scheduler. (That office really needs to upgrade it’s interoffice communications.) We said we’d wait and wait we did. Julie looked very official sitting at the Governor’s signing desk, maybe if she runs and wins the Governorship someone will do something about this crisis! But at the end of the day Capitol police were dispatched to escort us out. Those that still waited were given a paper banning them from the unreceptive Reception room for a year. What a blow! But of course we are still strong in our resolve to get this problem dealt with.

Inside the Reception room Cathy tries to call scheduler when staff refuse. Julie and Ron sit at Governor's signing desk and Keith sits and waits.  Nicky's legs visible behind Cathy.
PACT and ADAPT delivering our message in the Governor’s “Reception” Room.
Nancy Crowther sits in front of the Insurance Building stairs holding the GIANT letter to the Gov. She's wearing her tie-dye PACT shirt and a look of determination.
Nancy and a determined group of PACT/ADAPT folks delivered a copy of a letter to the Governor’s office in the Insurance Building by the Capitol. They made it extra big so it wouldn’t get lost like the other copies he has been sent.

Meanwhile Desert ADAPT & PACT brought the message to the local Health and Human Services Commission, HHSC, office, (the Governor doesn’t even have an office in El Paso) and had them fax our request for a meeting so the Governor’s people would know the request was not just from pointy headed Austin folks.

Of course we will continue to demand the Governor stop ignoring this issue. If you want to help call Cathy or Nancy 512-442-0252, and call or email the Governor’s scheduler 512-463-7210 invite@gov.texas.gov and tell them to meet with PACT& ADAPT!

ADAPT of Texas and Personal Attendant Coalition of Texas  Disability Rights & Community Attendants Roundtable

The UTA Disability Studies Minor, the Pre-Law Center, the Student Access & Resource Center, and the College of Liberal Arts’s Festival of Ideas are proud to present:

ADAPT of Texas and Personal Attendant Coalition of Texas 
Disability Rights & Community Attendants Roundtable

Please join us for this online conversation with national disability rights activists about community attendants’ experiences and the fight for better wages! 

Date: April 6, 12-1 pm via Teams: https://tinyurl.com/ADAPT-PACT-of-Texas (click here to go to the talk)

Presenters: Cathy Cranston, Nancy Crowther, Josue Rodriguez, and Francisca “Kika” Grajeda from Austin and El Paso ADAPT and Personal Attendant Coalition of Texas

Accessibility: ASL and AI CART will be available. Free and open to the public!

For more information about the roundtable or UTA’s Minor in Disability Studies, contact Dr. Sarah Rose at srose@uta.edu or visit http://disabilitystudies.uta.edu or http://facebook.com/UTADisabilityStudiesMinor. If you require a disability-related accommodation to fully participate in this event, please contact Mikila Salazar at mikila.salazar@uta.edu

Raul Zamarripa, another ADAPT Warrior is gone

Raul Zamarripa’s Virtual Memorial

February 17, 2022  3p.m. Mountain/ 2p.m. Pacific/  4p.m.  Central/ 5p.m. Eastern               

Desert ADAPT would like to invite you to join us as we celebrate the life and legacy of Raul Zamarripa.  As we let you all know previously, Raul passed away January 20 after contracting Covid-19.  We would like to for friends and family to come together and share many of the memories that Raul made with each of us.  He made an impact on the lives of many people and would love to honor that as we share stories of the many times we spent with him. 

Raul dedicated more than 24 years of his life to working with ADAPT to Free Our People. His dedication and passion towards fighting for the rights of people with disabilities will be greatly missed. His dedication to educate our community on issues that affect people with disabilities made him a very well-known advocate in our community and across the country. He was a fierce advocate in not only defending people with disabilities but our attendants as well. He leaves a huge void with Desert ADAPT but we are sure that he will join our other Desert ADAPT members who have gone before us and guide us from wherever they are now.  If you have any photos of Raul that you would like to share with us for his memorial, please upload them to this Google Drive folder.  Thank you.

Image 1: Raul in his power wheelchair in a tan Desert ADAPT shirt and hat with an orange flag on his chair.

Memorial virtual de Raúl Zamarripa

17 de febrero de 2022     3p.m. Montaña/ 2p.m. Pacífico/   4p.m. Centro/ 5p.m. Este

Desert ADAPT quisiera invitarlo a unirse a nosotros mientras celebramos la vida y el legado de Raúl Zamarripa. Como les informamos anteriormente, Raúl falleció el 20 de enero después de contraer Covid-19. Nos gustaría que amigos y familiares se reúnan y compartan muchos de los recuerdos que Raúl hizo con cada uno de nosotros. Hizo un impacto en la vida de muchas personas y  nos encantaría honrarlo mientras compartimos historias de los muchos momentos que pasamos con él.

Raúl dedicó más de 24 años de su vida a trabajar con ADAPT para Liberar a Nuestra Gente. Echaremos mucho de menos su dedicación y pasión por luchar por los derechos de las personas con discapacidad. Su dedicación para educar a nuestra comunidad sobre los problemas que afectan a las personas con discapacidades lo convirtió en un defensor muy conocido en nuestra comunidad y en todo el país. Fue un feroz defensor no solo de las personas con discapacidades sino también de nuestros asistentes personales. Deja un gran vacío con Desert ADAPT, pero estamos seguros de que se unirá a nuestros otros miembros de Desert ADAPT que nos han precedido y nos guiarán desde donde sea que estén ahora.  Si tiene fotos de Raúl que le gustaría compartir con nosotros para su memorial, súbalas a esta carpeta de Google Drive. Gracias.

Imagen 1: Raúl en su silla de ruedas eléctrica con una camiseta color canela Desert ADAPT y una gorra con una bandera naranja en su silla.

ADAPT activist Heiwa Salovitz is gone

picture of Heiwa
Heiwa. photo: Tom Olin

We are very sorry to tell you that our ADAPT warrior Heiwa has died. He was a passionate and committed person who loved his disability brothers and sisters fiercely. He personified the saying still waters run deep and we will miss him deeply. Heiwa means peace, in case he never told you.

Heiwa’s family had a memorial celebration of Heiwa’s life with ADAPT, on Thursday January 20th at 3:00pm central time.  DUE TO INCREASE IN COVID WE ARE MAKING THIS A ZOOM ONLY EVENT. 

WHEELCHAIR SANTAS BACK IN THE SADDLE

This weekend the Armadillo Christmas Bazaar opened outside for it’s pandemic safe debut. ADAPT’s Wheelchair Santa Clones were there at the gate, collecting donations and signatures on our Support the Build Back Better bill and passing out information on disability rights. Shortened hours and less days were welcome changes for our stalwart crew of Clones — as we ease our way back into “the new normal.”

Want to help collect signatures you can send to our Senators? Click here for a copy of the petition.

picture of two ADAPT holiday banners and our Build Back Better B sign.

The Disability Community’s Recipe for Freedom

Pass Build Back Better

To prepare this you will need $150 billion for Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) sprinkled with $ 150 billion for Affordable, Accessible, Integrated, Housing.  Spread these ingredients throughout the community and allow to settle in.

  1. Once these funds have been infused in the community; they are ready to be used to:
  • Expand HCBS in Medicaid, Medicare and the Affordable Care Act throughout to increase access, quality, and uniformity nationwide.
  • Support the Recruitment and Retention of Community Attendants
  • Increase payment rates in a manner that offers attendants a “living wage.”
  • Expand affordable, accessible, integrated housing development and rent subsidy programs targeting low- and moderate-income people with disabilities, especially people who receive HCBS services.
  • Expand access to accessible home modifications programs to enable people to leave or avoid institutional settings thus saving millions of health care dollars.
  • And to ensure that your recipe is a success, make the program Money Follows the Person permanent.

This recipe will help more people be Home for The Holidays!

QR Code for Home for Holidays Recipe

Building support for BBB

ADAPT took to the streets on November 8th to call for Senator Cornyn’s support for the BBB, Build Back Better, bill currently going through Congress. National ADAPT has gone to Washington DC twice now and is headed there for a third trip to support this important legislation, and ADAPT of Texas members have gone each time. Locally however, we went to Cornyn’s office building and picketed and leafletted over 400 flyers outside. One of the building staff came out to talk with us and arranged a meeting with his staff so three of our members went in to talk with Cornyn’s staff for about 45 minutes asking for his support of the bill.
Build Back Better includes increased funding for community services, it includes:
• making Money Follows the Person permanent (right now it has to be reauthorized again and again),
• better wages for attendants,
• addressing the SUBminimum wage wages many people with disabilities work for,
• increased funding for very affordable housing,
• along with a host of other import human infrastructure.
IF you haven’t already, please contact your US Senators and tell them you want them to support disability supportive legislation like this. Not sure how to get in touch? No problem! Click here.
We will be returning soon to see what progress his staff have made on his support for any of these issues. For more information on the terrific national actions in DC go to:

click here for national ADAPT’s facebook page

click here for National ADAPT’s website (lots of great stuff here!)

and here for the ADAPT of Texas Facebook page

Then on December 9th, with many of our members again joining National ADAPT in DC, ADAPT of Texas returned to picket Senator Cruz’s office when his staff refused to talk with us. Then they marched across downtown back to Senator Cornyn’s office to face another set of cold shoulders; his staff also refused to meet. But the action was not a bust as media came to cover the action (click here to see one story we got) and both offices knew why we were there, leaflets were passed out and our call for their support of Build Back Better was heard across downtown Austin.

Shows the signs for the BBB action in front of ADAPT's giant 10 foot wheelchair.

ADAPT continued the push for BBB in Austin as well as DC!

Bob and Ron display Build Back Better signs
Above: Ron and Bob holding BBB signs for the Austin Action

Left: BBB action signs displayed in front of ADAPT’s newly rebuilt 10 foot wheelchair.