News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday,
July 25, 2003
|
Contact:
HHS Press Office
(202) 690-6343
|
STATEMENT BY TOMMY G. THOMPSON
Secretary of Health and Human Services
Regarding the 13th Anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act
Only 13 years after it was signed into law, it
is difficult to imagine our country without the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA). The ADA has transformed us, and it continues to transform us.
Attitudes have already changed dramatically, barriers of all kinds are in the
process of coming down, and opportunities are opening. ADA has helped all Americans to better understand our world
through the experience and needs of others.
The ADA also reminds us how much remains to be done. Eventually,
every one of us will be touched closely by issues of illness or disability --
whether for ourselves or for family, friends or fellow workers. We must
respond in ways that benefit not only those with disabilities, but our whole
community.
With the leadership of President Bush and his New
Freedom Initiative, the Department of Health and Human Services gives
high priority to improving our nation's response to disability -- in our many
programs that support direct services, as well as our medical research that
can help prevent or ameliorate disability, and especially in policies that
can shape the options available to disabled individuals and their families.
In particular, the President wants to encourage
inclusion and community-based living for Americans with disabilities. We must
avoid and reverse policies that have inadvertently led to excessive reliance
on institutional care. And we must create more opportunities to provide care
in the home and community as an alternative.
In his New Freedom Initiative, the
President has recognized the need for a comprehensive approach to removing
barriers. That's why he called on HHS and other government agencies to
prepare a broad-scale review of the steps that need to be taken. I was
pleased to deliver that report to him last year, and I am pleased today to
report that we are making progress on those goals.
Likewise, the President called for a new
assessment of our nation's system for helping people with mental illness.
Just this week, the President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health
delivered its report, pointing the way toward fundamental overhaul of that
system. I am committed to move forward productively toward the vision of this
report. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration will
deliver initial action recommendations to me quickly.
The President's budget this year includes a
dramatic proposal to support community living for those with disabilities. It
envisions more than $2.5 billion in multi-year Medicaid demonstrations that
would give the states significant new support and incentives to enable people
in institutions the choice to receive services in their own homes and communities.
The purpose is to promote a better balance, so that good institutional care
is available when needed, but community-based care alternatives are equally
available. The President's proposal also includes important new projects to
develop our system of respite care. We have conveyed legislation to Congress
to authorize these projects, and we will be working with key members of
Congress over the coming weeks to achieve enactment as quickly as possible.
Our efforts are continuing in many other areas
as well. For example:
Our Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has provided $125 million to
states in the past two years to support development of home and
community-based care. Another $40 million is being provided this year for
these "Real Choice Systems Change" grants. CMS is also working with
states to help them use the flexibility already available in the Medicaid
program to support community care. In addition, the agency is supporting
state efforts to improve the recruitment, training and retention of
community-based direct service workers.
CMS and the
Administration on Aging are also developing new information and assistance
resources in the community. Their "Aging and Disability Resource Center" grants will provide for
"one-stop shopping" information and entry points to the long-term
support system in a community. Likewise, together with the Health Resources
and Services Administration, CMS will support Family-to-Family Health Care
Information and Education Centers to help families navigate the
long-term support options available for their children.
Our new Office on Disability is helping me oversee
the coordination, development and implementation of programs and special
initiatives within HHS that impact people with disabilities. In creating this
office last year, we recognized the importance and cross-cutting nature of
these issues, and the extent to which they touch virtually every HHS
operating division.
Our Office
for Civil Rights (OCR) is also playing an important part pursuant to the Supreme
Court's Olmstead decision. With the Department of Justice, OCR has put in
place a new alternative dispute resolution program to help achieve Olmstead's
goals in the most rapid and productive manner possible, when problems are
identified.
The Department of Health and Human Services is resolved to
support the President in his New Freedom Initiative. I commend all
those who are carrying out this work in HHS, in the states and in communities
throughout America. On the
13th anniversary of Americans with Disabilities Act, I renew the commitment
of our Department to making ADA a fully
realized dream.
###
|