by Julia Endicott | Oct 26, 2023 | Press Releases
CONTACT: Julia Endicott
207-626-2774
jendicott@drme.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 26, 2023
Augusta – Disability Rights Maine is horrified and deeply saddened by the shootings in Lewiston yesterday evening. Our hearts are with the Lewiston/Auburn community, the Maine Deaf Community and all impacted by the unfathomable acts of violence that took place at Just In Time Recreation Center and Schemengees Bar and Grille.
Much information remains unknown at this time and we anticipate more answers to yesterday’s events in the coming days. As this develops, we are concerned about any narrative that focuses on mental illness as the cause of such violence. Across the world, more than 790 million people live with a diagnosed mental health disorder. Yet, we only see this level of pervasive violence occur in the United States, where the number of guns owned by civilians outnumbers our total population.[1] This is a societal problem where hate is allowed to flourish and inaction is far too often the response.
In 2020, DRM signed onto a joint statement from the Coalition for Smart Safety. As this statement recognizes, more often, people with psychiatric labels are victims, rather than perpetrators of violence. Simply put, placing blame on people with mental illness will not solve our country’s gun violence problem. Rather, it makes people with mental health disabilities the scapegoat while failing to implement effective policy changes.
Mass violence is a public health crisis.
To dispel myths about mental illness and gun violence, we encourage you to access the following resources:
DRM also wants to share additional resources for those who may wish to seek support in navigating the trauma and grief of mass violence:
- Maine Crisis Line: 1-888-568-1112 (Voice) or 711 (Maine Relay)
- National Crisis Line: call or text 988
- NAMI Maine Helpline: 1-800-464-5767 (Press 1)
Disability Rights Maine is Maine’s Protection & Advocacy organization. Our mission is to advance justice and equality by enforcing rights and expanding opportunities for people with disabilities in Maine.
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Disability Rights Maine is Maine’s Protection & Advocacy organization. Our mission is to advance justice and equality by enforcing rights and expanding opportunities for people with disabilities in Maine.
[1] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-05-25/how-many-guns-in-the-us-buying-spree-bolsters-lead-as-most-armed-country?leadSource=uverify%20wall
by Julia Endicott | Jun 20, 2023 | Health Equity, Press Releases
CONTACT: Jennifer Battis
207-626-2774
jbattis@drme.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 20, 2023
Disability Rights Maine Releases Report on Health Care Access for Mainers with Disabilities
AUGUSTA – Today, Disability Rights Maine (DRM) released a report entitled “I Don’t Get the Care I Need”: Equitable Access to Health Care for Mainers with Disabilities. This report follows a first of its kind assessment in Maine to obtain data about access to health care directly from people with disabilities.
DRM has long recognized the inequities faced by disabled people in accessing quality health care and then with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, we witnessed utter disregard for the health care needs, and even the lives, of our community. “We knew it was time for us to try to create change by doing something in addition to taking on individual case after individual case,” said Kim Moody, DRM Executive Director.
Through this assessment, DRM heard from hundreds of individuals about their own experiences trying to access necessary health care. Many individuals highlighted situations where a lack of effective communication and mutual respect shaped poor experiences. As one respondent noted, “Providers make incorrect assumptions about my disability and my capabilities. They often treat me in an infantilizing way.” But when the opposite occurs, it can make a world of difference. “To be seen a whole person by a provider is a major advantage,” commented another participant.
The assessment identified five priority areas with corresponding recommendations for systemic change and public policy reform: 1. Data Collection; 2. Provider Education; 3. Structural and Systemic Barriers to Care; 4. Communication; 5. Physical Spaces.
“This report, the first of its kind in the state of Maine, provides crucial information needed to implement policy- and systems-level changes that will directly impact the lives of people with disabilities and their ability to access quality health care. We hope that statewide policymakers and health care organizations will join us in driving change to ensure that everyone in Maine has the same opportunities to attain good health and well-being,” stated DRM Health Equity Project Coordinator Jennifer Battis.
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DRM is Maine’s Protection & Advocacy organization. Our mission is to advance justice and equality by enforcing rights and expanding opportunities for people with disabilities in Maine.
by Julia Endicott | Jun 23, 2022 | Children's Advocacy, Press Releases
The investigation adds to years of evidence that Maine is institutionalizing children with disabilities, instead of providing necessary supports in the community
PORTLAND — An investigation into Maine’s children’s behavioral health system by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) finds statewide failures that create a significant risk of segregating and institutionalizing children with disabilities, in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
The Department of Justice issued its findings on the 23rd anniversary of the landmark Supreme Court decision Olmstead v. L.C., which found that unnecessarily segregating people with disabilities into institutional settings violates the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Yet, the DOJ investigation concluded that “Maine unnecessarily segregates children with mental health and/or developmental disabilities, in psychiatric hospitals, residential treatment facilities, and a state-operated juvenile detention facility.”
In the findings letter, DOJ concluded that:
- “Maine’s community-based behavioral health system fails to provide sufficient services. As a result, hundreds of children are unnecessarily segregated in institutions each year, while other children are at serious risk of entering institutions.”
- “Children are unable to access behavioral health services in their homes and communities—services that are part of an existing array of programs that the State advertises to families through its Medicaid program (MaineCare), but does not make available in a meaningful or timely manner.”
- “Maine children with behavioral health needs are eligible and appropriate for the range of community-based services the State offers, but either remain in segregated settings or are at serious risk of institutionalization.”
- “Families and children in Maine are overwhelmingly open to receiving services in integrated settings. In fact, parents indicated a strong preference that their children receive services at home due to trauma, neglect, and abuse that their children reportedly endured in residential facilities within and outside of Maine.”
The significant deficiencies highlighted by DOJ are the result of years of disinvestment in Maine’s children’s behavioral health system. In response to these deficiencies, a coalition of organizations – Disability Rights Maine, ACLU of Maine, GLBTQ Legal Advocates and Defenders (GLAD) and the Center for Public Representation – have been working together to advocate for concrete and urgent reforms at the state level. The coalition has expressed its serious concerns about the state’s failure to provide critical behavioral health services in children’s homes and communities, and is in active discussions with the state about specific ways Maine can improve and build on its existing services.
The following statements can be attributed as noted:
Carol Garvan, Legal Director, ACLU of Maine
“All children should have the opportunity to lead rich, full lives in their communities. The state must provide critical community-based behavioral health services to make that a reality. Because the state has disinvested in its children’s behavioral health system for years, we are unnecessarily putting children with disabilities into institutions — in prison, in emergency rooms, in psychiatric facilities. This kind of segregation violates the basic right of children with disabilities to be free from discrimination.”
Atlee Reilly, Legal Director, Disability Rights Maine
“Despite years of notice, Maine has not yet come to terms with the scope of the problem it faces, the significant harm being done to a generation of youth and families, and the enormous future costs that will continue to mount unless the longstanding deficiencies in the children’s behavioral health system are addressed with the urgency required. Maine must turn away from expensive and ineffective institutional solutions and toward a system that supports youth in their homes and communities.”
Mary L. Bonauto, Civil Rights Project Director, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD)
“Young people have limitless potential when they receive the care and support they need. Maine’s longstanding failure to provide the full measure of needed mental and behavioral health care services is no secret. As the Department of Justice report states in its Findings Letter of June 22, 2022, this has led to an emphasis on confinement in institutions, including residential facilities, psychiatric hospitals and Long Creek, a juvenile detention facility, rather than with families in homes and communities. This is a solvable crisis, and now is the time to do so.”
Steven Schwartz, Legal Director, Center for Public Representation
“Children and youth thrive when they grow up in their homes, stay in their communities, and remain near their friends and neighbors. Removing them to distant institutions is expensive, unnecessary, and simply harmful. Several other states, including neighboring Massachusetts and Rhode Island, have created a comprehensive system of intensive home-based services that allow children to receive needed treatment while remaining with their families and in their neighborhood schools. Maine needs to do the same.”
BACKGROUND
The state is on notice about the significant failures in its children’s behavioral health system, which primarily serves low-income children who are eligible for MaineCare. An independent assessment of the system in 2018 identified many of the same deficiencies as the DOJ investigation, finding that children’s behavioral health services were not available when needed, or not available at all.
A separate independent assessment of the juvenile justice system in 2020 found that many youth are detained and incarcerated at Long Creek because they couldn’t access appropriate community-based services for their behavioral and mental health needs.
Because of years of disinvestment, conditions on the ground for youth and families have continued to deteriorate. Community-based services — such as access to behavioral health providers in home and at school — are unavailable for many youth when and where they need them. When the state fails to meet children’s mental and behavioral health needs, their situation is more likely to escalate into a crisis. This leads to the unnecessary institutionalization of children in emergency departments, in psychiatric facilities, and in prison.
As a result, Maine youth are separated from their communities and families and sent to institutions far from their homes. Maine youth are stuck in hospitals, emergency departments and crisis units for long periods of time because the services needed to support a safe discharge home are not available. And Maine continues to put children in prison because the state is failing to provide these youth with appropriate community-based services.
Source: ACLU Maine, June 23, 2022
by Julia Endicott | Aug 31, 2021 | Announcements
MDOE confirms that students with disabilities outside of their school districts retain all of their rights under the IDEA, including stay put protections
On November 24, 2021, the Maine Department of Education (MDOE) issued Administrative Letter # 28 clarifying the obligations of Maine schools who receive students with disabilities from a home/sending school district through the IEP process.
DRM has heard from families with students who are left with little to no education when a receiving school decides that they will no longer serve the student – leaving the sending district and the family scrambling. While the sending district maintains the responsibility to provide the student a free appropriate public education (FAPE), it cannot be that the receiving school does not need to follow the IEP process. In response to a systemic complaint filed by DRM, the MDOE issued the Letter which sets out clear requirements for receiving schools, including:
“Special Purpose Private Schools (SPPS) and other out-of-unit entities must ensure compliance with IDEA, utilizing the IEP team process and maintaining “stay put” in the event of a dispute (34 CFR §300.518)” … “the Department has determined that SPPS and other out-of-unit placements are not in compliance with IDEA when they terminate a student’ s placement without going through the IEP process.” And, “Effective immediately, All SAUs must notify the SPPS and out-of-unit placements that in order to continue these placements, they must abide by the federal standard and provide FAPE to eligible students who are placed at SPPS and other out-of-unit placements.”
Often, when schools are seeking to place students outside the District, they seek to reduce the student’s school day or utilize segregated tutoring until a placement is found. This is almost never appropriate.
MDOE Administrative Letter # 28 is available here: https://mainedoenews.net/2021/11/24/administrative-letter-iep-requirements-for-out-of-unit-placements/