Thursday, September 30, 2010

Is Florida hostile toward the disabled?

Every week there is another incident of government employees – teachers police and others abusing handicapped people in Florida.  Here is the latest story:  http://jacksonville.com/news/crime/2010-09-29/story/former-flagler-cop-pleads-not-contest-abuse-disabled-charge

Seriously, as an adult with autism, I am understand the best way to defuse hairy public situations is to carry a card explaining the challenges I face and how the people around me and law enforcement officials can deescalate and defuse the situation. 

From prior news reports about Florida police, schools and hospitals, it is clear that there is a zero tolerance policy for people with disabilities.  We have seen school officials ignore bullying complaints, allow abusive teachers to continue on their jobs, Doctors who over medicate – even to the point of death by overdose – disabled children have their faculty duties reassigned, police shoot disabled and mentally challenged people in the face, all in 2010.  The notion of giving a police officer a card that says I have autism and here is how to deescalate the situation and resolve it with civility is really not going to work.

This is beyond a trend this is an epidemic that the state elected officials have refused to deal with.  The comments I get tend to be “we cannot comment on an ongoing investigation.”  To hide behind each incident as isolated and unique give tacit approval to the hostile environment towards disability that exists in the state of Florida.

Elected officials in Florida need to learn that respecting the disabled is more than providing reserved blue parking spaces for seniors and added local revenue through parking violations on the folk who park there without a permit.  It is acceptance and working to integrate people with disabilities into society.


©2010 Dan Homan

Monday, September 27, 2010

That’s why they call it insurance

I don’t mind politicians saying things that they really do not mean, that can happen in the course of conversation.  What I do mind however, is politicians who initiated the moment say things that clearly demonstrate their inability to understand the issues and the big picture.  Take this example:  http://www.care2.com/causes/politics/blog/angle-no-one-needs-autism/.

At issue here are not overrule political views or philosophy, a but what needs to be recognized is that share and Engel clearly displayed a lack of understanding of several issues.  As a politician with political aspirations for the U.S. Senate and particularly addressing a crowd of people in the tes party movement who do not want Federal government involvement in local issues, she made a reference to the Federal government changing and overriding state law.

She also indicated that she has no concept of insurance.  The last I checked to the definition of insurance was the contract with the company that would indemnify you against unexpected and unplanned for costs.  For her to say quote I’d don’t plan on becoming pregnant, so I do not need for pregnancy insurance, is a clear indication that she has no grasp of the concept of insurance.  The republicans stand against abortion?  If so then shouldn’t it be a law that every unplanned pregnancy or planned pregnancy be covered under insurance so that the cost of having the baby is not prohibitive?

Take it a step farther no one plans on having cancer, but if that tragedy should strike, insurance should be there to cover the contingency.  I also take exception to her comments about autism.  Autism is a genetic condition, people are born with it.  It is not planned for, and people don’t really want it.  I  myself am used to it, and live with it, but I would not necessarily want to be this way if I had a second bite at the apple.  It is nice that she lives in a state where coverage for treatment and remediation is available and required by law.  So many other states do not require coverage for autism treatment.  If anything problem in our society is that people with autism cannot get the appropriate treatment that they need.  As an adult who was diagnosed with autism at age 53 I resent the fact that treatments available for numerous lifestyle conditions are not available if the underlying diagnosis is autism.

What we have in this country that is called Health Insurance is so far from being true insurance that perhaps it is time to get back to the basics.  Routine medical expenses such as vaccinations, routine Health Care, while care, well baby care, annual checkups, and even gym memberships and up being covered, while treatment for excessive and catastrophic Health Care treatment is not.  When did we redefine insurance?

I do not like the Federal government’s approach to Health Care reform.  I think that any politician who shares this lady’s views provides just as poor of an alternative.  She should be accountable for her words and clarified their position be kosher use just plateau wrong if, if and should not be elected if she’s going to exclude people with permanent disabilities from treatment coverage through private insurance.

©2010 Dan Homan

Sunday, September 19, 2010

This Type of Thing in Florida is Getting so Old

Here we go again.  A handicapped girl is bullied on a school bus.  The father goes through proper channels, complains to the school district, the school district employees (read government representatives) do not do anything.  The father takes matters into his own hands and although he had no physical contact with anyone – he was arrested.  See the story here:  http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/39232388/ns/today-parenting/

Is it me or am I the only one that sees the “open season” attitude towards the disabled in the Florida education system?  This is a trend, no, it is a pandemic.  People need to be fired – school staff, school board members, the state superintendent, and the Governor who appointed him.  This trend is so disturbing, a physically and mentally challenged student shot in the face by University of Florida police, a State University professor in Miami who fatally over prescribes anti depressants to a pre teen autistic boy without punishment, three special ed teachers in a Florida school district charged with abusing handicapped students, and now this.  This is not a coincidence, this is an attitude problem in government.  Forget impeachment, elected officials who allow this to go on should be incarcerated.

It is horrible that a man busted onto a school bus like that.  It is worse that he felt he had to because the school officials failed to act.  The real crime is that a father is arrested for defending his disabled child’s honor, and everyone else gets a pass, from the buss driver to the matron, the do nothing school officials.

Of course I have a few obligatory questions:

Why were the police called on the father, but not on the bullies?

Why was this video released and not the one of the bullies? 

Why didn’t any of the adults speak English?

Why isn’t any one speaking up?

This father was wrong in his behavior, but, it seems he only acted when the school district did nothing.  In my book that makes him a hero.

©2010 Dan Homan

Saturday, September 18, 2010

What Really Matters

Here is my take on a tragic story that hits close to home.  A well known celebrity from my city - Ocala, FL has made the news once again, regarding the tragic death of his autistic son.  Read the story here http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1312123/I-saw-REALLY-happened-night-John-Travoltas-teenage-son-Jett-died.html?ito=feeds-newsxml

At issue was a paper John Travolta signed waving certian treatment.  The problem here is that regardless of your thoughts about John Travolta, as a parent he had the right to choose the treatment he thought best.  This is the problem with the provax vs. novax debate.  It does not matter if you agree with Jenny McCarthy or not, the fact is that as a mother she has the right to choose the treatment her children receive.  I am not saying her antivax campign is not over the top, but, if you want vaccinatons you have the right to choose without the personal attacks.  At the end of the day right or wrong she is a concerned mom making the treatment choices foir her children herself.  Lest you forget, the medical profession had basically dropped the ball on autism, giving little or no help, direction or guidance on treatment.  Insurance companies do not pay for OT, PT or speech therapy, or anything that could help remediate symptoms, I don't think she is right in her conclusions, but I do echo her concerns regarding doctors and autism.

Regardless of your thoughts on autism, cause vs. cure, vax vs. novax, or remedial treatment, we need start with the basic mutual respect for other's ability to choose their own treatment, without imposing your ways on them.  If the autistic community wants respect we need to show it to each other first.


©2010 Dan Homan

Set up for Failure

What is wrong with this picture?


Here is a young man clearly identified as autistic, working with a school resource officer and eventually police which leas to charges of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.  The judge is praised in the comments section for having the common sense to conditionally drop the charges.

First let me say that I am not excusing inappropriate behavior, but anyone who has autism has had to deal with melt downs and some of us do better than others.  That being said there are several questions that beg asking.  Here are my questions:

First - if he has been under the care of public schools all his life, and they have a mandate to care for children with autism until they reach age 21, why at 19 wasn't he taught the skills to manage his meltdowns?

Why didn't the school official recognize what was happening and defuse the situation?

Absent defusing the situation, why was it escalated to the point of police being called?

Autism Speaks quotes a statistic of 1 in 110.  Why weren't the police trained to defuse the situation rather than escalate the problem to the point of arrest?

Why does the news report make it sound like the judge is doing him a favor by dropping the charges?

The fact is that employer background checks reveal more than convictions, they also report arrests.  This means that because the system let him down, that a handicapped individual is now facing greater challenges in finding employment in a difficult economy.

Why is this, and why weren't these questions asked publicly?

Autism - the stigma continues.

©2010 Dan Homan

  

Meet the New Neighbors

Look at this article:  http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/article/20100917/NEWS01/9170333/LaGrange-residents-question-planned-home-for-autistic

When you look at the community attitude toward adults with autism living independently in society, is it any wonder why they don't just bring back asylums?  Oh, I forgot, if they don't want group homes, they definately don't want asylums in their neighborhood.

I guess it is OK for adults with autism to live anywhere except next to anybody who doesn't want them there.

©2010 Dan Homan

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Enough Already, I am buying a Cane

I read the following article with amazement:  http://www.illinoistimes.com/Springfield/article-7735-dog-fight-ends-with-hall-pass.html

This story is an example of the inexcusable hoops people with Autism have to jump through to obtain the basic "reasonable accommodation" required by the Americans with Disabilities Act.  Here state law required school compliance to allow service dogs, but "The School District" chose not to allow it, and forced the family to court, and once the family won the case, "The School District" appealed, forcing more legal drama.

What I find offensive is that this case was forced by "The School District" and no names of the bigots at the district that drove this family to court to defend their civil rights were provided.  These people clearly lack sensitivity at best, or at worst have poor reading comprehension, colored by their willingness to stigmatize people with disabilities.  No excuses they should be fired, and forced to reimburse the court costs for the family and the school district (taxpayer money that will never be used to teach students) out of their own pockets.

This is one more case of government employees abusing a member of a group that they know has an inability to communicate clearly without hired help.  Shame.


©2010 Dan Homan

Friday, September 3, 2010

Is Autism a Crime?

Look at this article. Sorbara advised jail for aggressive autistic teen, mom claims - CTV News

The disturbing thing is that more and more older teens and adults with autism are being channeled into the criminal justice system.

After closing many of the warehouse mental facilities and repatriating autistic people into society. rather than spend the savings on resources to support the needs of the autistic community, most municipalities have diverted the funds to other areas, leaving adults with autism under the bus.

we need to change this. Autism is not a crime. People with autism should not be criminalized because society no longer wants to help those who can't help themselves.

Is Autism a Crime?

Look at this article. Sorbara advised jail for aggressive autistic teen, mom claims - CTV News

The disturbing thing is that more and more older teens and adults with autism are being channeled into the criminal justice system.

After closing many of the warehouse mental facilities and repatriating autistic people into society. rather than spend the savings on resources to support the needs of the autistic community, most municipalities have diverted the funds to other areas, leaving adults with autism under the bus.

we need to change this. Autism is not a crime. People with autism should not be criminalized because society no longer wants to help those who can't help themselves.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

"Give me the gun Rolf, you'll never be one of them."


This is one of my favorite quotes from The Sound if Music.  Here Captain von Trapp is talking to a nice young man who had become caught up in the Nazi movement in Austria during WWII.  Von Trapp had been recruited by the German Navy (serve or die) and was attempting to flee the country when he was confronted by Rolf in military uniform holding a handgun.  Von Trapp’s comment was to say “these Nazis are wicked and you do not have it in you to pull the trigger, and never will.”

I read an interesting post by Elesia Ashkenazy entitled Is Adaptation Bittersweet?  in which she lays out the difficulty of adjusting your life to be like the NT world around you.  The sad truth is just like Rolf and the Nazis “you’ll never be one of them.”

Last December at age 53 I received a diagnosis of Aspergers Syndrome.  Everything changed.  Once people knew my diagnosis, they tried to force me to change to become like them.  I went from a real quirky guy to a mental patient over night.  I didn’t understand it then, I don’t now, and I most likely never will.

How can a person become marginalized over night?  I did not change, just my diagnosis.  As a result it is like I entered the twilight zone over night.  The Americans with disabilities act did not apply, as almost all my Aspergers symptoms affect my job performance, and performance standards cannot be changed under ADA.  My health insurance does not cover any treatment where autism is the underlying diagnosis.  Doctors treat me like I am suddenly stupid, and insist the only course of treatment for me is to improve my social skills – never mind that I have difficulty with some basic functions of life like opening a jar of jelly, tying my shoes and buttoning my shirt.  Other doctors and therapists refuse to see me at all, or demand full cash up front so they don’t get burned by insurance companies; others don’t even want anything to do with me and don’t have the courage to tell me that my age, diagnosis and insurance status are a problem for them.

I feel like that rather than help me o bring me to a point of treatment, my diagnosis has cut me off from society in some of the ways I was once connected.  I am just as happy being on my own, but, I made a substantial investment of time, money and emotional capital to get where I am, and should not be thrown under the bus.  I have been treated like a first grader told to stand in the corner until I behave (read fix myself) in other I have the handicap, not them. 

When I was in elementary school the psychologist actually spent an hour a week with me teaching me how to beat the snot of any bully that picked on me.  When I did it for the first time I was suspended.  That is when I figured out who the real bullies were and I steered clear of them. 

This is what we have today.  Society has chosen the group least able to articulate their needs and problems and told us how to behave . . . and let us know there is hell to pay if we don’t.  By the way I am not going to drink the cool aid, I know I will never be good enough to escape the labels they put on me.  If you feel you can conform and are willing to take the plunge I say “give me the gun Rolf, you’ll never be one of them.”

©2010 Dan Homan

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Why This Blog

What a relief – at age 53 on December 24. 2009 I received a diagnosis of Aspergers Syndrome.  At first this was not too bad!  Typically, Aspergers is considered “a mild form of autism,” or a “high functioning form of autism.”  For me this was a good feeling, I knew I had something bad (autism was bad) but a “mild” case of “high functioning” autism.  Unfortunately, I hear “mild and “high functioning”  meanwhile everyone else heard AUTISM, well, not AUTISM, but they seemed to hear something more like AUTISTIC RETARD THAT IS ALL OF A SUDDEN NOT ABLE TO DO ANY THING OF ANY VALUE AND HAS NO FEELINGS ABOUT ANYTHING . . .

What changed?  I am the same person I always was for the first 53 and one half years of my life.  Quirky Dan that some liked and others tolerated.  My sister-in-law put it most succinctly later that afternoon at a Christmas eve get together at my house:

Sis in law:  So I hear you finally got a diagnosis today . . . what did they say you have.

Me:  Aspergers Syndrome.  Have you ever heard of it.

Sis in law:  Sure, you are autistic, its really great news Rainman, since you always know it all, you will be able to figure out how to fix yourself so you stop acting like a retard.

Her comments were typical of the reactions I get all over, an over bearing attitude that I need to fix my own life myself, wrapped in an overall lack of sympathy and a few pejorative pronouns thrown in for fun.  This is the attitude I have received throughout my search for treatment.  The worst were therapists and other providers, who replaced the pejoratives with gobs of condescension and snark.  Add to this the exclusion from insurance coverage for Occupational or Speech Therapies for adults with any underlying diagnosis of autism and I began to see how hard society makes it to be an adult with autism.  To clarify, I don’t have poor insurance, I have the top of the line plan that the Fortune 500 Company I work for offers through Empire Blue Cross.

The biggest observation I would make is that I have always had to work twice as hard as others to do anything from buttoning my shirt and tying my shoes to routine work functions in a bright and noisy environment.  Now that I know why and vocalize my challenges and the underlying cause, I have seen the way I am treated become suddenly worse.  Instead of help and accommodation, I have more impediments placed in front of me.  I was suddenly stigmatized, and even the basic respect and courtesies I was used to as I was socially stigmatized and placed in a category in the minds of others of folks that can’t think do or speak for themselves.  I can only imagine what people who have lived knowing all their have experienced.

Here are just a few of the concerns I have for the adult autistic population:

  • There are two choices available – either work and compete head to head in the world with no respite or accommodation, or claim total disability and become an unproductive ward of the state on social security.  The downside of failing is far greater than the upside of trying.
  • Because the societal trend is toward drugs (bad) and removing people from institutions (good) there is no middle ground where adults with autism can turn when the pressures of life start to get to them.  The cry today is for parents and care givers to get respite.  The problem is that autism treatment has been relegated to the education system, which due to funding and other issues, throw autistics under the bus when they reach age 21.
  • Because of the trend toward closing institutions and the lack of efficacy of pharmaceutical drugs many autistics turn to self medication.  The irony here is that the same health insurance that throws adult autistics under the bus, welcomes drug and alcohol abusers, provides intensive in patient therapy and continued outpatient therapy with experienced counselors trained in repatriating substance abusers to productive society.
  • The trend is growing to criminalize autism and mental illness by escalating the behavioral issues to the point of criminal behavior – UF home of the Gators and the phrase “Don’t taze me bro” had an incident last March where a department chairman called the campus police 4 times to have a doctoral student brought in for involuntary psychiatric evaluation (Baker Act) in one day.  The chief of the campus police did not think there were sufficient grounds to do this.  While I am not privy to the behind the scene actions, it is not disputed that the next day four officers came to this un armed cripple man’s  campus apartment, found him sitting on the floor in a corner where they proceeded to mace him, taze him and shoot him in the face.  He is still recovering and University police and attorneys are still determining whether or not to charge him with resisting arrest.  Three of the officers were returned to work with praise from Campus Police Chief Stump who praised the officers for “obeying orders.”  She should have at least included some kind words about Lt. Calley.  Although the man he was not autistic, a meltdown could be fatal at UF. One unfortunate incident can close all housing and employment opportunities for life.

Autism has been reduced to a political issue, and in the end the biggest autism charity funds eugenics research and autistics are treated like midway freaks and clowns, and we would rather make snarky videos and blog posts about DSM V and Jenny McCarthy than take a stand on the issues that frame our future.  In the mean time we have given out tacit permission for abuses like those noted above to continue and increase in frequency and severity.

There needs to be a unifying voice in the autism community to keep us focused on the issues that really matter.  That is why I am writing this blog.

©2010 Dan Homan