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Who's
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Memo to the World June 28, 2000 -- Jefferson City, Missouri Memo It happened, and I was there. At 10:45 am on June 28, 2000, Governor Mel Carnahan signed eleven state appropriation bills for fiscal year 2001's $17 billion budget. Buried in the bills directing funding for highways and prisons, schools and bridges, state parks and economic development was the emancipation proclamation we had been working for -- a passport to freedom for people whose long-term care services are funded by Medicaid. House Bill 1111, thanks to the work of Rep. Quincy Troupe and Senator Joe Maxwell, contained language allowing consumer choice in the use of the long-term care dollars. Here are those amazing "follow the person" words: "Provided that an individual eligible for or receiving nursing home care must be given the opportunity to have those Medicaid dollars follow them to the community and choose the personal care option in the community that best meets the individual's needs. This includes the Consumer Directed Medicaid State Plan Amendment that is administered by the Department of Vocational Rehabilitation and the Department of Education. It further provides that individuals eligible for the Medicaid Personal Care Option must be allowed to choose, from among all the options, that option which best meets their need; and also be allowed to have their Medicaid funds follow them to whichever option they choose." [The follow-the-person language does not apply only to people forced to live in nursing homes. It's for everyone recieving the Medicaid long-term care funding.]
Missouri is the first -- but not by any means the
last -- to emancipate all of its citizens with disabilities.
Few of the 150 people
crammed -- standing room only -- into the Governor's oval office understood
the importance of that last bill. Kay Arnold did. Early at 4:30 am that
day, weary workers at Kay's nursing home struggled with the change in
their routine. They were busy getting the 50-something-year-old woman
ready to catch the 5:30 a.m. bus to Jefferson City - -she was going to
see the Governor. Kay would attend the 9 a.m. bill signing. There were speeches aplenty as
the governor signed bills in numerical order. HB 1101 - Public Debt. HB
1102 - Elementary and Secondary Education. HB 1103 - Higher Education.
One by one, state departments received the okay and their marching orders
for FY 2001 spending. The budget bills were being signed just in the nick
of time, with the new state year starting on July 1. Speech-giver after
speech-giver thanked the Governor for his leadership as he signed his
final budget. Finally HB 1111 - Social Services,
the very lowest priority in MO government spending -- services for the
poor, elderly and children without health insurance, Medicaid, child support
enforcement, and that much maligned "old" idea, welfare -- was up for
signature. Kay Arnold's physical therapist raced to push her chair through
the crowd to the edge of the table. Kay would sit beside the Governor
for the signing. After all the politicians and state department folks
did their speechifying, Kay jumped in. Her soft voice was so low that
the governor asked her to repeat her words. "Thank you Governor," she said.
"Now I can go home." Most bureaucrats and cynical staffers
in the room, so wise and all-knowing, were sure she meant that now she
could get out of that crowded room. One mumbled under his breath, "Yeah,
we can all leave." But as Governor Carnahan leaned over and asked to hear
Kay repeat her thanks, I do believe he at least got it. As she spoke those
words again, it was magic -- one of those crystal-clear moments I'll always
remember. The thirty-five advocates in the room, and the governor himself,
could taste freedom in the air. A moment later, Governor Carnahan
handed Kay a signed copy of the bill
with his signature pen. To most, this was only a nice souvenir of an everyday
occasion in Missouri's capital. But that bill held the keys to Kay's own
freedom. She knew that now she would be going to HER home, a real home,
at last. We hope, and we will work to see,
more states follow Missouri into Olmstead territory. There are, today,
53,576 more Americans, once imprisoned for the crime of having a disability,
who are now free to choose where they live. These formerly disposable
Americans will take their rightful place in our land. And Kay Arnold will
be among them. Welcome to freedom, all of you. With you by our sides,
we will at last make America's promise of freedom come true for us all,
coast to coast. |