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As Chris said, the train has left the station.  I would add that money and our financial status as a nation will have the train leaving the depot in fairly short order.  In talking with others following our time in DC, I am struck that it will be self advocates and families that must take the message of life in community forward.  They must express what they need.  Supporting individuals with ID/DD in long term community setting takes a very focused workforce. 
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As Chris said, the train has left the station.  I would add that money and our financial status as a nation will have the train leaving the depot in fairly short order.  In talking with others following our time in DC, I am struck that it will be self advocates and families that must take the message of life in community forward.  They must express what they need.  Supporting individuals with ID/DD in long term community setting takes a very focused workforce. 
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The intent of the survey is to find employees of organizations that provide direct health care services to individuals (both acute and long-term services). The survey asks about experiences with leadership transitions and employee engagement during the transition period.

The survey is online at: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/NF3KCGK
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When articles like the recent New York Times, At State-Run Homes, Abuse and Impunity, are published, the impact does not remain a local or state matter as the scope of a frontpage article in the Sunday Times reaches across the globe. Rather, it serves as a wake-up call to all service providers that support people with disabilities to take inventory on their practices and strive to do better. Like so many past exposes, from Dorothea Dix’s of Poor Houses in the 1840s to Geraldo Rivera’s of Willowbrook in the 1970s, reminds us again of society’s failure to adequately protect fellow citizens who by virtue of disability require its support. Just as Ms. Dix’s work led to the creation of state institutions and Mr. Rivera’s to the deinstitutionalization of such, the most recent expose will undoubtedly prompt calls for systemic reforms. Those, like the reforms of the past, will undoubtedly fail for the simple reason that they tend to focus on systems, and not the person, either the person who requires support or the individual who directly provides it. [more]


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As I  envision the future, I am reminded that just a mere 40 years ago, most people with intellectual and other developmental disabilities who couldn’t live independently or with their families were confined to public institutions. Litigation, new funding streams, and a growing chorus of voices from parents, professionals, and self advocates demanding change transformed that system of care. Yet, I doubt that the leaders of that transformation clearly envisioned, back then, where we would be today, any better than we can precisely envision where we will be in the next several decades. [more]


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