Ind. parents told drop disabled kids at shelters

rockin'robin

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INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana's budget crunch has become so severe that some state workers have suggested leaving severely disabled people at homeless shelters if they can't be cared for at home, parents and advocates said.

They said workers at Indiana's Bureau of Developmental Disabilities Services have told parents that's one option they have when families can no longer care for children at home and haven't received Medicaid waivers that pay for services that support disabled people living independently.

Marcus Barlow, a spokesman for the Family and Social Services Administration, the umbrella agency that includes the bureau, said suggesting homeless shelters is not the agency's policy and workers who did so would be disciplined.

However, Becky Holladay of Battle Ground, Ind., said that's exactly what happened to her when she called to ask about the waiver she's seeking for her 22-year-old son, Cameron Dunn, who has epilepsy, autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Holladay, a school nurse, said she and her husband would go bankrupt trying to pay for services themselves, so Cameron spends most days sitting in his stepfather's truck while he works as a municipal employee.

"It's heart-wrenching as a parent to watch it. We are people and they are people," Holladay said, referring to her son and others with disabilities. "They have lives that are worth something."

There have been no confirmed cases of families dumping severely disabled people at homeless shelters because Indiana wouldn't provide the care needed.

But some families have been on waiting lists for waivers for 10 years. The lists contained more than 20,000 names last month, and one advocacy group predicted they will only grow longer because Gov. Mitch Daniels ordered budget cuts that have eliminated 2,000 waiver slots since July.

Budget cuts also have resulted in the state moving foster children with disabilities to a lower cost program that doesn't provide services for special needs and eliminating a grocery benefit for hundreds of developmentally disabled adults.

Kim Dodson, associate executive director of The Arc of Indiana, said her group has received reports of state workers in several of BDDS's eight regional offices telling families to take disabled adults to homeless shelters. She speculated that the suggestion resulted from frustration among BDDS staff as families become more outspoken about the effects of state cuts.

"It is something we are hearing from all over the state, that families are being told this is an alternative for them," Dodson said. "A homeless shelter would never be able to serve these people."

State lawmakers said they also have received reports from several people who were told they could always abandon their adult children at homeless shelters.

Rep. Suzanne Crouch, R-Evansville, said she found it "deplorable that people are being told to go to a homeless shelter."

Leaders of several agencies serving homeless people across Indiana could not be reached for comment after business hours Wednesday.

Some parents said homeless shelters have also been suggested — or threatened — as an option by private care providers.

Daunna Minnich of Bloomington said Indiana Department of Education funding for residential treatment for her 18-year-old daughter, Sabrina, is due to run out Sunday. She said officials at Damar Services Inc. of Indianapolis told her during a meeting that unless she took Sabrina home with her, the agency would drop the teen off at a homeless shelter.

Sabrina, who's bipolar and has anxiety attacks, has attempted suicide, run away during home visits and threatened her older sister, Minnich said. Bringing Sabrina home isn't a viable option, but the two group home placements BDDS offered weren't appropriate, she said.

"I don't want to see the state of Indiana hasten her demise by putting her in a one-size-fits-all solution that will drive her to desperate acts," Minnich said.

Jim Dalton, Damar's chief operating officer, said he could not comment directly on any specific case but his nonprofit would never leave a client at a homeless shelter — even though it is caring for some for free after they got too old for school-funded services and haven't yet been granted Medicaid waivers.

"We're talking about youth that absolutely require services, and no one is willing to fund them anymore," Dalton said.

Ind. parents told drop disabled kids at shelters - Yahoo! News
 
tough. no money, no service. dump them at shelters.

how's that for cutting on spending!
 
That you would say something like that, Netrox, sounds about par for you.....
 
Why not? It's the Republican's way of life!

Arnold did that and now CA's issuing IOU's and many end up homeless.

If you insist on cutting spending, you'll see more teachers and police on unemployment line.
 
On the other hand, maybe the workers may have thought " Oh by being sent to a homeless shelter, the kid will be bumped up for first in line for services"
BUT that isn't a great idea.....most homeless shelters do not have staff that can deal with people with severe disabilties.
Honestly, maybe we did the wrong thing when we closed the public mental insistutions and the state insistutions for people who are intellectucally disabled.
Maybe we should bring them back, but reform them, so that ID and MI people have somewhere to go/live/be treated/work.
And yeah, I'm with you netrox. The VERY same people complaing about higher taxes are the ones who are complaing about services and stuff.
 
Don't they have a special homes for those special need adults, being 22 is not a kid? We have couple homes for those special need adults around here. I don't get it.
 
I would imagine waiting list for group homes are very long like it is over here.

But it's truly a shame that families cannot afford to look after their special needs kids after not getting the help or waiver as they needed.
 
what really sucks is that the USA can give billions of $$ in aid to other countries every year but can not assist it's own citizens?? a lot of this aid is actually military aid to countries like Israel. politics win out over our own citizens.
 
what really sucks is that the USA can give billions of $$ in aid to other countries every year but can not assist it's own citizens?? a lot of this aid is actually military aid to countries like Israel. politics win out over our own citizens.

Yes, I agree with you.
 
+2. I have a friend, she has a son who is 18 years old, on a lot of medication for bipolar and other things. He's twice her size, and when he gets angry, he knocks holes in the wall and breaks and tears things down. I've actually seen her trying to restrain him. Impossible! She gets no help for this. A long waiting list.
 
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