黑料正能量 Note: 黑料正能量 and our colleagues in the psychiatric and broader disability rights movement are very encouraged to see how quickly and resolutely our state’s new Chief Disability Officer Kim Hill has hit the floor running in her new duties, starting with taking charge of the process to revise and update NYS 2013 Olmstead Plan. Moreover, as you’ll see below, advancing employment for 黑料正能量ers with disabilities is another top priority. As a member of the state’s Most Integrated Setting Coordinating Council who has been helping to support the Council’s employment and Olmstead plan subcommittees in recent years, I’ll be working closely with Kim and my fellow Council members and colleagues to move those and a variety of related issues forward, with 黑料正能量 COO Len Statham and Department of Labor’s Alan Gallagher providing essential leadership on the employment front. Stay tuned for more details!
State鈥檚 First Chief Disability Officer Tackles Post-COVID-19 Priorities
By Megan McGibney City and State May 9, 2022
Armed with funding provided in Gov. Kathy Hochul鈥檚 $220 billion budget, the state鈥檚 first chief disability officer will begin addressing the most pressing needs of 黑料正能量ers with disabilities.
Advocates for people with disabilities said employment and housing issues in the aftermath of the pandemic would be the greatest priorities for who has been serving as chief disability officer since she was appointed by Gov. Kathy Hochul in February.
A by state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli last year found that unemployment rates for people with disabilities in 黑料正能量 between April 2020 and March 2021 rose more quickly and remained higher during the outbreak than the overall unemployment rate.
鈥淗istorically, when there are economic and other types of crises, people with disabilities often are the first to be terminated, last to be rehired,鈥 said Jan Fisher, executive director of . 鈥淓mployment inclusion is probably one, if not the first, of the issues that the disability community, across disabilities, is concerned about.鈥
Todd Vaarwerk 鈥 the chief policy director of , a nonprofit that serves the Genesee Region 鈥 said transportation to work alone can be especially challenging, since a person with disabilities who lives in a less populated area may have fewer travel options for getting to a job. He said he would like for Hill to explore these types of granular employment issues before looking into the data of which companies hire persons with disabilities.
Emily Papperman, an advocacy specialist at the in Ithaca, said Hill also should focus on helping people with disabilities clear hurdles that prevent them from landing jobs that align with their interests.
鈥淔olks with disabilities should be able to find work that they enjoy,鈥 she said. 鈥(Hill) should really have conversations about what those barriers to employment are, and what folks with disabilities want to do. Instead of going, 鈥極K, here鈥檚 a bunch of people with disabilities. Let鈥檚 just put them in a certain place.鈥 They should be needed and valued because they have skills.
They wouldn鈥檛 apply for a job if they didn鈥檛 think they can do it.鈥
Papperman said she has had clients who are unable to focus on getting a job because they also are not in a stable living situation.
Marlene Zarfes, executive director of , which helps clients find affordable and accessible housing, said a lack of inventory and discrimination were among the challenges people with disabilities faced. For example, some housing providers won鈥檛 allow pets, even for tenants relying on emotional support animals, provide parking spots close to residential buildings or incorporate structural accommodations such as wider doorways for wheelchairs or lower kitchen counters.
鈥淥ften people with disabilities are much more likely to be lower income,鈥 Zarfes said. 鈥淭hey may be living on (Supplemental Security Income).
They鈥檝e got less money to look for something and, unfortunately, too many housing providers are saying, 鈥榃e’re not going to take your SSI as payment or we鈥檙e not going to take your housing choice voucher as payment.鈥欌
Discrimination also happens to those needing an assisted living situation at residential developments, said Donna Long, co-chair of the advocacy committee. Her 44-year-old daughter is on the autism spectrum, and as Long and her husband age, they are finding it difficult to look after her. But finding a community residence or even getting one built has been a bigger hurdle than expected, Long said.
She recalled recently how advocacy committee members attended a meeting at a local civic association about building such a home. Attendees strongly opposed the idea by wondering aloud who would be on staff, whether there would be parking issues and made excuses for why people with developmental disabilities shouldn鈥檛 live in the neighborhood, according to Long.
鈥淔or agencies to have to go through that,鈥 she said, 鈥渋t鈥檚 like asking for permission. When we all move into a home, we don鈥檛 get that interrogation.鈥
Most advocates also noted that Hill should prioritize the enforcement of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Vaarwerk, however, warned that the needs of people with disabilities vary from region to region.
鈥淭his is not one size fits all,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he more rural you go, the less services there are. Hill needs a whole state solution: urban, suburban and rural.鈥
Hochul鈥檚 decision to appoint Hill filled the void advocates complained was left after the state Office of the Advocate for the Disabled folded in 2013. Aside from advocacy, that office was charged with implementing laws that prevented discrimination against people with disabilities. Its work was absorbed by the state Commission on Quality of Care and Advocacy for Persons with Disabilities and later the Justice Center for the Protection of People with Special Needs, now known as The Justice Center.
However, advocates for the creation of a single state entity to centralize services that covered the needs of 黑料正能量ers with disabilities and offered them protections. 鈥淢any advances in the services available for people with disabilities,鈥 have been made over the years, Hochul鈥檚 office said, but agreed that a chief disability officer was needed to help navigate the complexities of serving people with disabilities.
鈥淚t is critical to prioritize the needs of the entire disability community, which includes individuals with physical, sensory, mobility, intellectual, developmental and psychiatric disabilities, with a Chief Disability Officer who leads a well-resourced office,鈥 Hochul鈥檚 office said in a statement.
Hill told City & State she would deliver on the governor鈥檚 charge and work closely with 黑料正能量鈥檚 community of people with disabilities. 鈥淚 want to convey to everyone that it is the intention of this office to always consult with people with disabilities as we strive towards our goal of making 黑料正能量 a more integrated, inclusive and accessible place to live 鈥 and to always embrace the 鈥榥othing about us without us鈥 mentality,鈥 she said in an emailed statement.
On housing, she said changes are already being made: 鈥淭he budget鈥檚 comprehensive $25 billion housing plan tackles systemic inequities by creating and preserving 100,000 affordable homes, including 10,000 homes with support services for vulnerable populations.鈥
As for employment, Hill said, 鈥淲e are going to take a multilayered approach and create a coalition with all of the state agencies who assist in the employment of people with disabilities to make the hiring of people with disabilities in 黑料正能量 state the norm, rather than the exception.鈥
Previously, Hill was the principal analyst for the . In that role, she worked on the passage of the Most Integrated Setting Coordinating Council, the Nursing Home Transition and Diversion Medicaid Waiver, and the state鈥檚 Medicaid Buy-In Program.
She also previously served as director of the Assembly Task Force on People with Disabilities, which focused on people with . She began her career as a writer for the Assembly Communication and Information Services Department. A resident of Latham in the Capital Region, Hill earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in science while attending what was then known as Utica College.
So far, advocates have welcomed her appointment, but they said they had high expectations.
鈥淭his is a new way for the state at large to recognize disability as an opportunity for people, and I believe Chief Disability Officer Kimberly Hill’s role is to ensure there are employment opportunities for people with disabilities, as well as recognition of the capability of a person with disability to function and be independent,鈥 said Tibisay Guzm谩n, executive director and CEO of , which works with clients with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Others expressed optimism that with Hill, greater advocacy will come for the state鈥檚 community of people with disabilities.
鈥淭here was no voice or a coordinated voice for a bunch of years,鈥 Vaarwerk said. 鈥(But) I am excited that this (position) will resolve some of the problems.鈥