Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Help Make Voting Accessible

 NIST Seeks Public Comment on Recommendations for Promoting Access to Voting for People with Disabilities

October 27, 2021

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) requests public comments on the Draft of Promoting Access to Voting: Recommendations for Addressing Barriers to Private and Independent Voting for People with Disabilities. Under Executive Order 14019 on Promoting Access to Voting, NIST is directed to identify barriers to private and independent voting for people with disabilities, make recommendations to remove these barriers, and evaluate the steps needed to ensure that the online Federal Voter Registration Form is accessible to people with disabilities. The Draft is available in the Federal Register

The Draft was developed by NIST using information collected through the Request for Information that was published in the Federal Register on June 16, 2021, reviews of reports, papers and other literature, and engagement with stakeholder organizations and election officials. NIST is seeking comment on the Draft from persons with disabilities, disability advocacy groups, assistive technology vendors and professionals, non-partisan voting promotion groups, voting technology vendors, election officials, and other stakeholders. 

Public comments must be received by 5:00 pm ET on November 22, 2021. Comments may be submitted at www.regulations.gov under NIST-2021-0005-0001 or by email at pva-eo@list.nist.gov. Complete instructions for comment submission can be found in the Federal Register notice. For questions about this request for public comment, contact Kevin Mangold, NIST, by phone at 1-301-975-5628 or email Kevin.Mangold@nist.gov. Users of telecommunication devices for the deaf, or a text telephone, may call the Federal Relay Service at 1-800-877-8339.

Memphis Library


Monday, October 11, 2021

International Day of the Girl

 Friends,

Today is International Day of the Girl. It’s a day to celebrate our strides towards equity and re-commit our focus, so we can continue to elevate our programs and partnerships as, together, we lift up all girls, everywhere, to reach their potential.

For Nike, focusing on play isn’t anything new. We’re doubling down on the future of play for kids across the company. But in the last few years, we’ve deepened our focus on girls, establishing programs and targets geared at moving further, even faster. The simple reality is that girls experience complex cultural, social and economic barriers to play and sport. And as a result, they lack the support of caring, trained coaches who look like them, and access to the right product to play.

To meet these challenges head on, over the past two years we’ve donated 75,000 Nike sports bras and 3,000 Nike Pro Hijabs through our community and business partners to girls around the world, so they have what they need to successfully, and confidently, participate in sport. To enhance the experience for girls, we’ve also built tools for caring adults to guide conversations, and fit cards for girls so they can determine for themselves how these products should feel, and fit, to support their sport journey. And in the spirit of open-source innovation, we’re sharing our sports bra and hijab playbooks ­– with everyone. 

We’ve also developed specific tools for how caring adults can step up and learn how to coach girls. The Coaching Girls Guide – another tool free to anyone, created in partnership with We Coach (now the Center for Healing and Justice Through Sport), with additional support from Youth Sport Trust in Europe, the Middle East and Africa – equips coaches with tools to connect with girls to help make sport fun. 

For IDOTG, our Kids team has re-imagined the guide and brought it front-and-center for the empowering adults in kids’ lives. On @NikeWomen Instagram, our new film puts girls at the center to answer questions as only kids can and make spirited statements about what play and sport looks like for them ­– and what they need from us to keep showing up as they play bold, brave and new. 

All around the world, in the key cities and employee backyards where we partner with nonprofit organizations to create active, inclusive communities, we’re upping the ante for girls so they’re getting the same opportunities to play – and stay playing – for a lifetime. More than 135 partners spanning six continents have our support, and investment, for the on-the-ground programming necessary to level the playing field. 

We hope you’ll celebrate with us: 

Because when it comes to getting more girls connected to the power of play and sport, the ball is in all our courts – today, on IDOTG, and the 364 days in between. My sincere thanks for teaming up with us to make sure we keep that ball, and all girls, moving. 

Forward,
Caitlin Morris

Vice President of Social & Community Impact, NIKE, Inc.
@Cmorris_nike #MadeToPlay

Woman using a wheelchair


 

Thursday, October 7, 2021

 

Disability Rights, Care Workers To Hold 24-Hour Vigil at the U.S. Capitol To Hold the Line on Care Funding

As negotiations around the biggest jobs plan since the New Deal stall, care advocates from across the country will hold a 24-hour vigil outside the U.S. Capitol to urge elected leaders to hold the line on caregiving funding in the Build Back Better plan.

People with disabilities, direct care workers, older adults, and caregivers will share the steep health and financial costs that families pay as a result of poverty wages paid to care workers and long waitlists for home and community-based services (HCBS). Advocates traveling from states hard hit by COVID-19—including Tennessee, Texas and Kansas—will continuously read stories collected from thousands of impacted individuals—disproportionately people of color— across the country who aren’t able to travel to D.C. in part because they don’t have the paid leave, child care or long-term services that enable them to do so. Overwhelming majorities of people across the country want Congress to invest in long-term care and support the Build Back Better’s plan to do so.

WHAT:

A 24-hour vigil in front of the Capitol during which advocates will continuously read stories of those struggling to access home and community based services and to make enough money to care for themselves and their families. The vigil will culminate in a closing ceremony with advocates delivering boxes of printed out stories to members of Congress.

The event is co-hosted by ACLU, ADAPT, The Arc of the United States, Autistic Self Advocacy Network, AAPD, Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law, Be A Hero, Care Can’t Wait Coalition, Caring Across Generations, Little Lobbyists, Justice in Aging, National Council on Independent Living, National Domestic Workers Alliance, National Council on Aging, National Health Law Program, and SEIU.

WHEN: 

Vigil: Wed, Oct 6 at 7 pm to Thurs, Oct 7 at 7 pm

Closing Program: Thurs, Oct 7 from 6-7 pm

WHERE: 

Union Square in front of Capitol Reflecting Pool

The area is bounded by Pennsylvania Avenue, NW; First Street, NW/SW; Maryland Avenue, SW; and Third Street, SW/NW

Live Stream: https://fb.me/e/3WaL3atkg

WHO:

Closing ceremony speakers:

  • Bob Casey, S. Senator representing Pennsylvania
  • Maria Town, President and CEO, AAPD
  • Mike Oxford, National Organizer, ADAPT
  • Nicole Jorwic, Senior Executive Officer of State Advocacy and Public Policy, The Arc
  • April Verrett, President of SEIU, Local 2015

Vigil speakers available for media interviews:

  • Domonique Howell, a Black and disabled advocate from Philadelphia. She is an independent living specialist and co-chair of ADAPT’s housing work group.
  • Latoya Maddox, a Philadelphia-based Black disabled mother who has used home and community-based services for the past 17 years
  • Lydia Nunez, Ombudsman and organizer with Gulf Coast ADAPT in Texas. She is white and disabled and fights for home and community-based services for other people with disabilities and older adults.
  • Josue Rodriguez, a Latino organizer with El Paso ADAPT who uses HCBS for attendant services.
  • Family caregivers and care workers 

VISUALS:

People holding posters and banners featuring portraits of care workers, family caregivers, aging adults and people with disabilities. Miniature houses featuring portraits of care recipients, caregivers and care workers

BACKGROUND:

More than 800,000 people with disabilities are on waiting lists for home and community-based services (HCBS), such as in-home care, meal delivery, transportation services and respite care. The Better Care Better Jobs Act—introduced in the Senate by lead sponsor Sen. Bob Casey and in the House by lead sponsor Rep. Debbie Dingell and supported by over 480 organizations—provides a blueprint for how $400 billion investment in HCBS could support a profoundly undervalued and underpaid workforce and get hundreds of thousands of people off waitlists by helping to:

  • Increase access to HCBS: expanding financial eligibility criteria for HCBS and supports for family caregivers, and adopting programs that help people navigate enrollment and eligibility.
  • Make permanent “Money Follows the Person,” a federal demonstration program that helps aging individuals and people with disabilities transition back to their homes and communities from institutions by providing federal matching funds that incentivizes HCBS in states
  • Support oversight and monitoring of the quality of HCBS
  • Increase HCBS payment rates to promote recruitment and retention of care workers
Allison Donald of ADAPT


Wednesday, October 6, 2021

ADAPT Confronts #BuildBackBetter Holdouts

Disability Activists Confront #BuildBackBetter Holdout Senators 

Who: National ADAPT

What: Confronting Democratic Senators blocking passage of the Build Back Better social infrastructure bill

Where: Outside Hart Senate Office Building at 120 Constitution Ave NE, Washington, DC 20002, Offices of Sen. Kyrsten Sinema and Sen. Joe Manchin

When: Happening Now, Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Why: To demand Sen. Sinema and Sen. Manchin stop blocking passage of the Build Back Better social infrastructure bill, and support full funding of Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS), which keeps people out of institutions. HCBS funding also provides living wages for the attendants who provide essential, often intimate care for older and disabled people. ADAPT is also demanding that both senators support funding for affordable, accessible, integrated housing, because you can’t have HCBS without the “H.”

ADAPT Demands Congress to Immediately Pass the Build Better Act with FULL funding for Home and Community Based Services and Housing Options

ADAPT has been urging Congress to Act of these critical issues for over 30 years. These programs enable people to live outside institutions and in freedom in their communities. Full Funding means the following: 

  1. Expansion of HCBS under Medicaid, Medicare, and the Affordable Care Act as a required service in all states (rather than a waiver-based program) to increase access, quality, uniformity nationwide. 

  2. Increase payment rates in a manner that will guarantee a “living wage” and benefits to attendant care workers employed in home care. 

  3. Expand affordable, accessible housing development and rent subsidy programs targeting low and moderate income people with disabilities, especially people who receive HCBS services. 

  4. Expand access to accessible home modifications programs to enable people to leave or avoid institutional settings thus saving millions of health care dollars. 

These priorities target people with low incomes and do not create new programs. It is time for Congress to keep its promise to ADAPT and Americans to invest in the long term care infrastructure.

NationalADAPT.org @RealNatlADAPT on Twitter & Instagram, ADAPT National on Facebook and TikTok, National ADAPT on YouTube ADAPTnational@gmail.com#DisabledNotDisposable #CareCantWait #BuildBackBetter #HoUSed #ADAPTandSurvive 


ADAPT rally at the Capitol


In-Home Vaccination Program

Tennessee Home Vaccinations

The in-home Covid-19 vaccine program has undergone some changes due to some people having experienced long delays in getting the vaccine. Due to the changes, seniors over the age of 60 are no longer eligible for the program based on age alone.


The key program changes are:


  • Seniors no longer qualify based on age alone. To qualify you must be a Tennessean with a disability over 18 or any family or caregiver in their household.

  • The program is available in 87/95 counties. They don't have home health providers available in the Chattanooga area. However, they're working on it.

  • Rather than the Tennessee Disability Coalition or our partners filling out online forms, everyone is referred to Disability Rights Tennessee's main intake number. They have staff trained and ready to connect folks. 

  • The Disability Rights Tennessee phone number is 1-800-342-1660. Hablamos Español.


No proof of disability or citizenship is needed. Callers’ information will only be used to schedule the vaccine appointment. Information will not be shared for any other reason.


Disability Rights Tennessee phone number is 1-800-342-1660. Hablamos Español.

People using wheelchairs