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Homecare Advocates Urge the California
Legislature: Stand up to Governor
Don't put Californians at Risk; Don't
eliminate 375,000 Jobs
SACRAMENTO, Calif., Jan. 8 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
-- Representatives of more than 450,000
seniors and people with disabilities and
those who care for them today urged the
State Legislature to fight Gov.
Schwarzenegger's mean-spirited and
hypocritical proposal to destroy the In Home
Supportive Services (IHSS) program.
In his 2010-2011 spending plan released
today, the governor proposes to effectively
dismantle IHSS, a nationally recognized
program which helps 450,000 low-income
disabled, senior and blind Californians stay
safely at home and avoid unnecessary,
expensive and unwanted institutionalization.
Eliminating IHSS would cost taxpayers
hundreds of millions of dollars to provide
care for thousands of Californian IHSS
consumers forced into hospitals and nursing
homes, which cost at least five times more
than home care. Worse, many will likely not
be able to find such placement and end up
without the assistance they need to live
safely at home.
In addition, despite his call for "jobs,
jobs, jobs," in his State of the State
address earlier this week, the Governor's
proposal would eliminate more than 375,000
home care jobs, raising California's
unemployment rate to more than 14 percent
and forcing some home care workers to turn
to public benefit programs for food for
their children.
The Governor's 2010-2011 spending plan goes
further than last year's budget proposal,
which proposed throwing more than 400,000
elderly, blind and disabled Californians --
90 percent of all IHSS recipients -- out of
the program. While the Legislature firmly
rejected that plan, it did vote in July for
a proposal from the so-called "Big 5" --
Gov. Schwarzenegger, Senate President pro
Tem Darrell Steinberg, then-Assembly Speaker
Karen Bass, and Republican leaders Senator
Dennis Hollingsworth and Assembly Member
Mike Vilines -- to eliminate or drastically
reduce services for more than 100,000 IHSS
recipients.
In the July budget vote, 20 Democratic State
Senators and 45 Democratic Assembly Members
voted for the IHSS cuts. In addition, 10
Democratic Senators and 12 Democratic
Assembly voted to endorse the Governor's
multi-million-dollar campaign to demonize
home care workers and consumers by alleging
widespread fraud in IHSS, despite the
absence of any proof that widespread fraud
exists in the program.
IHSS supporters today vowed to fight the
Governor's budget cut proposals in the
legislature, where legislators from both
parties have recognized the need to help the
elderly and disabled live independently in
our communities. New Assembly Speaker John
Perez has pledged that the "Big 5" will not
dictate this year's budget.
The 1999 U.S. Supreme Court Olmstead
decision affirmed the responsibility of
states to ensure that people with
disabilities, including seniors and
children, receive care in the most
integrated setting.
This Governor acknowledges that IHSS keeps
people out of more costly and less desirable
out-of-home placement in nursing homes or
other institutions, but seeks to destroy it
anyway.
The following are reactions to the proposed
cuts by IHSS consumers and advocates:
"The seniors I represent paid taxes their
whole lives, believing that when they needed
help they would have it. Even a small amount
of IHSS can keep them safely at home; now
the Governor is breaking their trust. It is
time for all legislators, especially
Democratic lawmakers, to be held
accountable. They must turn down the
Governor's mean-spirited and hypocritical
proposal," said Gary Passmore of the
Congress of California Seniors.
"Last year, legislators were given a
'take-it-or-leave-it' budget dictated by
Senate and Assembly leaders and the
Governor. This year's budget must be debated
and decided in a process which allows all
members of the Legislature, as well as key
stakeholders and policy experts, to observe
and participate," said John Wilkins, an IHSS
consumer in Fresno County.
"This lame-duck Governor complains that we
have no choice but to cut programs like IHSS.
Yet he refuses to even consider ending tax
breaks for wealthy corporations or finding
other ways to help raise revenues to solve
the current budget crisis," said Doug Moore,
Executive Director of UDW, the homecare
providers union.
"Previous cuts in IHSS have been stopped by
courts because they violate provisions of
the Americans with Disabilities Act and
other laws. Yet Schwarzenegger wants to
ignore the law and push ahead with even more
cuts," said Laura Williams, President of
Californians for Disability Rights, Inc., a
statewide membership advocacy organization.
"The Governor says he wants to create jobs,
but devastating cuts to the social safety
net will kill jobs and dim recovery
prospects for tens of thousands of
California families," said Hugh Hallenberg,
from Los Angeles County, an advocate for
seniors and people with disabilities. "The
Governor's threatened elimination of the
In-Home Supportive Services program will put
375,000 people out of work instantly and
increase California's unemployment rate."
"The Governor gives lip-service to policies
like health care for the uninsured, but then
turns around and strips funding for home
care programs, forcing the elderly and
people with disabilities into institutional
care," said Deborah Doctor of Disability
Rights California.
"IHSS is my independence," said Lauren
Steinberg, an IHSS consumer in Berkeley. "My
IHSS provider helps me with daily tasks that
most people take for granted. It enables me
to go to work every day and pay taxes. This
Governor's proposal takes away two jobs: my
home care worker's and my own. I'll have to
go back on benefits; everybody loses."
"It seems that the Governor doesn't realize
that if you cut essential services such as
these, the need doesn't dry up," said Donna
Calame, Executive Director of the San
Francisco IHSS Public Authority. "The
Schwarzenegger administration has never
presented a realistic portrayal of the
outcomes of these cuts; that, in fact, we
are abandoning people to quiet lives of
desperation. The 'lucky' ones will find a
place in nursing homes or go to emergency
rooms at a higher cost to taxpayers."
"I'm a senior citizen and veteran and, yes,
I'm disabled. However I'm able to live
independently at home because of home care,
but enough is enough. I'm tired of hearing
our state leaders say 'every program budget
cut is on the table.' Why is an efficient
program that I rely upon still on the table
when it's been proven repeatedly to be among
the most cost-effective in the country?"
said Herb Meyer, a Korean War veteran,
senior and IHSS consumer from Marin County.
"The public wants a fair and balanced
budget, and that means protecting programs
that give taxpayers the most bang for their
buck."
"While we recognize the dire fiscal
situation of the California state budget, it
is inexcusable for the Governor to sacrifice
the health and welfare of seniors and people
with disabilities and their caregivers with
these devastating budget cut proposals,"
said Lauren Rolfe, Executive Director of the
California Association of Public
Authorities.
"The public knows a lot about IHSS and
supports it by overwhelming majorities in
every survey ever conducted. And why
wouldn't they? It's both more humane and
more cost-efficient than the alternatives,"
said Frances Gracechild, Executive Director
of Resource for Independent Living.
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