California "Informational Brochure" AB2072

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From: http://www.sacbee.com/2010/08/20/2971133/deaf-activists-oppose-brochure.html:
"
Deaf activists voice objections to bill
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By Susan Ferriss
sferriss@sacbee.com
Published: Friday, Aug. 20, 2010 - 12:00 am | Page 3A
Last Modified: Friday, Aug. 20, 2010 - 8:32 am
It's strong language to accuse a state assemblyman of pushing a "eugenics" bill that could threaten deaf people.

But in an emotionally charged fight, California deaf activists have invoked the word as they battle a bill that could pass the state Legislature within a week.

Tony Mendoza, a Democrat from Artesia, said he has been surprised at how vehement deaf opposition is to his Assembly Bill 2072.

The proposal's intent, he said, is to create a 13-person panel to develop an informational brochure to be given to every deaf newborn's parents. Right now, Mendoza said, the distribution of information is "very haphazard."

Parents have complained to him, he said, that they were not briefed on various options to try to help their child develop speech during the critical years up to age 5.

The brochure would explain a range of options, Mendoza said, including cochlear implants – high-tech devices surgically implanted and also worn outside the ear that allow the brain, with training, to hear degrees of sound.

Mendoza said he realizes that his bill has touched a raw nerve within the deaf culture – a community that rejects deafness as a defect and embraces American Sign Language as a full language best learned starting at infancy.

"There is no cure for deafness. Accept that, please," said Sheri Farinha, chief executive officer of NorCal Services for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing.

Farinha and others say that deaf groups were not consulted during the bill's drafting. And they're upset that the 13-member panel includes only two specific spots for deaf people.

Mendoza said that he has reached out to activists, but he feels "they've chosen not to be at the table."

Farinha and activists with the California Association of the Deaf, which also opposes the bill, said they're suspicious that the bill's real aim is to promote implants.

They object to the inclusion of medical specialists on the panel who they suspect will promote the devices heavily.

They point to a private foundation's brochure for parents of newborns that was considered a possible model for California's own pamphlet. It features implants prominently and includes only three sentences on sign language.

Activists say the emphasis on the importance of trying to get children to hear – by implanting devices – is, for them, an echo of a bitter past.

They're reminded, they say, of a time when followers of eugenics – a discredited movement that favored "improving" humans through selective breeding – advocated against disabled people having children.

Implant manufacturers "exploit grieving parents," Farinha also said, as she spoke through an interpreter.

She thinks implants offer parents "false hope" that their children will hear and speak fluent English and won't need sign language.

She knows frustrated teens, she said, who want to learn sign language late because implants didn't help them communicate as well as they expected.

Licia King, a supporter of Mendoza's bill, has a different story. The Orangevale parent of 6-year-old deaf twin girls said it was a family friend – not health professionals – who first told her about implants.

She said the twins each had their first implant done at age 1, and last year, after years of training in a special school, they exceeded state academic standards in a regular kindergarten.

"It is a miracle," King said. She said that, so far, the girls are very verbal, and one of them is interested in music.

King said she appreciates the concerns of deaf activists who want to protect sign language, but she believes parents have a right to choose.

"I would have been one very angry, angry, angry parent," she said, "had I found this out too late."

Mendoza said he's trying to work on amendments to the bill to reach consensus before it goes to the Senate floor for a vote. The Assembly has approved it.

© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved. "

I haven't seen the language of the bill yet, but I'll get to posting it or the link sometime soon. I'm assuming that it follows on a model from a private source <which probably has some hand in implants>.
 
The Governor just vetoed this bill, more specifically, he returned it without his signature. It would have automatically become law had he let ten days go by but, instead, he returned it without his signature and included his opinion......
 
The Governor just vetoed this bill, more specifically, he returned it without his signature. It would have automatically become law had he let ten days go by but, instead, he returned it without his signature and included his opinion......

Yes, it was a bit of a surprise to see that. Maybe it's for the best though...
 
Yes, it was a bit of a surprise to see that. Maybe it's for the best though...

Yeah, it appears that he saw the make-up of the committee that was formed to produce the brochure for parents was NOT unbiased as the main stakeholders (deaf/related) did not comprise at least 51% of the whole.
 
Arnold said....


Microsoft+Word+-+AB+2072+veto.jpg
 
Wow!! I am glad Governor vetoed this bill!! It is a huge relief for Deaf Community in California. :ty: at Arnold!
 
Interesting...... :hmm:

TX, have you been following this? Been going on for several months....too bad the veto also had the unintended result of throwing out recognition of ASL that was inserted in one of the earlier re-writes(amendments)of this bill.
 
the anti-2072 didn't want it in the first place, even after the change. and the pro-2072 didn't want it after the change (especially the audiologists) . Nobody wanted it so it was meant to be vetoed. I doubt will overturn either because of this.

Lets not get in debate since this over with. Too many people want to leave AD because they think we are being full of "hate".
 
TX, have you been following this? Been going on for several months....too bad the veto also had the unintended result of throwing out recognition of ASL that was inserted in one of the earlier re-writes(amendments)of this bill.

No I haven't except for what I have read here. That is a shame
 
He said that the comittee was overly biased. Why is that being cheered by the Deaf community? They were the ones who wanted a say, and now they don't get it. They said the bill was finally acceptable, and it had their full support, and it got vetoed. Isn't that bad?
 
He said that the comittee was overly biased. Why is that being cheered by the Deaf community? They were the ones who wanted a say, and now they don't get it. They said the bill was finally acceptable, and it had their full support, and it got vetoed. Isn't that bad?

The final make-up of the brochure committee came down to 15 people but only 5 of whom were ASL proponents which soured some about an otherwise okay bill. Then at the 11th hour the audiologists changed their position......pretty transparent there......
 
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