Tag Archives: advocacy

ALERT: MORE CALLS NEEDED!

COALITION OF FAMILIES FOR DIRECT SUPPORT STAFF

IN SERVICES FOR PEOPLE WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES
c/o Margaret Puddington, 562 West End Avenue, 2A, New York, N.Y. 10024,  (212) 799-2042

FAMILIES, DIRECT SUPPORT PROFESSIONALS, EDUCATION STAFF

CALL THE GOVERNOR

AND YOUR LEGISLATORS  

RIGHT AWAY!!!!!

 

Governor Cuomo did not include funding to implement a minimum wage increase for low wage workers in programs for people with developmental disabilities or in school programs in his 30 day amendments.

Therefore, we are launching a second round of calls and letters to legislators and the Governor imploring them to include such funding in the final budget agreement.  

 

Governor Cuomo MUST add funding for his proposed minimum wage increase in his budget amendments.

  • Governor Cuomo has proposed a $15 minimum wage for all. But he failed to include funding to raise the salaries for Direct Support Professionals, Special Education staff, and other low-wage workers in non-profit agencies.  
  • Non-profit providers cannot raise wages without additional funding from the state.  These providers rely exclusively on the state for funding; they have no other sources of revenue (unlike McDonald’s, which can raise its prices or cut profits).   

CALL the Governor, Your Senator and Assemblymember, and SAY:

Governor Cuomo and our legislators MUST PROVIDE FUNDING in the budget for the $15 minimum wage proposal!

 

Non-profit organizations funded by the state provide services to people with developmental disabilities.  But non-profit providers cannot raise wages for their staff without additional state funding. 

Direct support and special education staff are highly trained and bear tremendous responsibility.  They deserve more than the minimum wage.   The state must provide funding for appropriate increases for the staff who work tirelessly caring for people with developmental disabilities.

CONTACT Information: 

  1. Governor (518) 474 -1041 and press 3 to speak to an assistant
  2. Senate switchboard  (518) 455–2800 – and ask for your Senator.  You can find your Senator at http://www.nysenate.gov/   Urge your Senator to call the Governor and tell him to fund his $15 minimum wage.
  3. Assembly switchboard (518) 455-4100 – and ask for your Assemblymember.  You can find your Assemblymember athttp://assembly.state.ny.us/ Urge your Assemblymember to call the Governor and tell him to fund his $15 minimum wage.

 OR

  1. Go to IACNY.org to automatically send emails andfind your local legislators to tell the Governor to fund his minimum wage proposal.  Click Legislative Action, then click Get Involved.
  2. Or send your own letter to:

The Honorable Andrew M. Cuomo
Governor of New York State
NYS State Capitol Building
Albany, NY 12224

 THANK YOU!

 

ALERT: MORE CALLS NEEDED!

GET READY TO RAAALLLYYY!!!

GET READY TO RAAALLLYYY!!!

We support the Governors proposal to raise minimum wage to $15 an hour in NYS

But there is NO MONEY IN HIS PROPOSED BUDGET to pay for it!

We need additional funding to pay workers the increased wages and to raise lower paid staff salaries so they don’t lose ground when the minimum is raised.

Where: Gov. Cuomo’s NYC Office

633 3rd Ave, Manhattan, 40th-41st St.

When: Friday 3/11/16, 11am till 1pm

More details soon. Rallies are being planned all over New York State, this is the one in NYC – more details to come on other regions..

Wini

  • Winifred Schiff
  • Associate Executive Director for Legislative Affairs
  • InterAgency Council of Developmental Disabilities Agencies, Inc.
  • 150 West 30th Street 15th floor New York, NY 10001
o­ 212­645­6360
917­750­1497

 

GOVERNOR CUOMO – LETS HAVE REAL ECONOMIC JUSTICE

SWAN of NYS  Statewide Advocacy Network– NY

Governor Cuomo Let’s Have Real Economic Justice

We are members of the Statewide Advocacy Network of New York SWAN-NY; family members and guardians of people with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. We would like to add our support to the many voices calling for funding the proposed minimum wage increases in the 2016-2017 NYS Budget for the dedicated Direct Support Professionals who work with people with IDD.

As family members we know first hand what Direct Support Professionals are required to do and how important their role is. We also know what happens when they are not there. We are seeing gaps in support now, and we worry for the future. As the movement toward having people with IDD ‘out in the community’ there is a need for more staff, with better training especially for those with more intensive needs. All these factors have led to vacancies with more and more people with no services at all.

We ask an enormous amount from DSPs ranging from accompanying individuals in the community, administering medication at the right times and in the right doses, following eating protocols, assisting in activities of daily living for many different people day after day after day. We also ask that they understand and are responsive to their emotional needs. Direct Support Professionals are trained to deal with challenging behaviors and non-verbal people. Everything they do must be recorded and checked. DSPs are there when we can’t be and they are family when family members are not around. This is not a job for just anyone, it takes dedication and caring.

OPWDD has an understanding that the voluntary agencies will be responsible to hire, train and supervise the support staff. Being a DSP is a job with enormous responsibility and pitiful compensation. We endorse raising the minimum wage but without funding from the state not-for-profit agencies cannot afford this raise. Agencies have few options to meet this requirement, some may have to close certain programs and some may have to go out of business, leaving our family members stranded.

Agencies are already having a problem filling vacancies when other jobs that are so much easier and less stressful pay the same.  The vacancy rate is high and program staffing reflects this. There is a danger that safety will become a serious issue especially for those with more complex needs or challenging behaviors. Constant turnover is unsettling and threatens our family members sense of stability.

Direct Support Professionals deserve much more than they are paid now, and raising the minimum wage is the first step to equitable compensation for the important work they do. We wholeheartedly support this BUT without funding this raise there is a real possibility that both the agencies who employ DSPs and families who use Self Direction will find themselves unable to function at all and our loved ones will be deprived of needed services.

 

SWAN NY

Western New York: DDAWNY Family Committee, Barb Delong
www.ddawnyfamilycommittee.org ddawnyfamilycommittee@gmail.com

Capital Region: ENYDDA, Patrick Curran,
ENYDDA@gmail.com

Hudson Valley Region: GROW, Will Mayerik
www.grow-ny.org,  info@grow-ny.org

New York City: NYC FAIR, Elly Rufer
www.nycfair.orgnycfair@gmail.com

 

PETITION: ADVOCACY IN ACTION: “KEEP THE PROMISE”

Please share with  EVERYONE

ADVOCATE TODAY

NYS Senator Bill Perkins and Assemblyman Robert Rodriguez are  circulating a petition to urge Governor Cuomo to make certain that people with Intellectual and/or Developmental Disabilities and the people who care for them, Direct Support Professionals, get quality service that they require.

Please get signatures on as many petitions as you can!

Download & Print out the attached petition.

REVISED:  Perkins Rodriguez Petition New

Mail petitions ASAP to:

Senator Bill Perkins

Harlem State Office Building

163 West 125th Street

Suite 912

New York, N.Y. 10027

Attn: Phillipe Marius

People with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities: Invisible no more!

Concerned about the many changes to services for people with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, family groups from throughout New York State announce the formation of a new coalition to advocate for their their loved ones.- SWAN-NY.

Please see attached PDF for press release, and suggested article pasted in below (and in attached WORD document).

Yours, 

SWAN of New York State

Invisible no more 
Families across State band together

Parents and family members of individuals with developmental disabilities have come together from across New York State to form a new coalition dedicated to advocating for their loved ones.  “Developmental Disabilities affect the lives of hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers. We might be the largest invisible group in the state.” said Brad Pivar, an Albany parent.  To raise visibility, family advocacy groups from across the state have created SWAN, the Statewide Advocacy Network of NYS for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (www.swannys.org).
Family Advocacy has been vital to the development of services in New York State. The level of care in NYS under OPWDD (Office of People with Developmental Disabilities) has been hailed as a model, nationally and globally. Now, say advocates, there is a quiet transformation aimed at reducing costs regardless of the outcome—and family members have a front-row seat to the negative results.
“We have thousands people who have spent years on the waiting list for housing,” says Barbara Delong, a Buffalo parent and member of DDAWNY Family Committee, “but there is little development of new housing opportunities. And housing isn’t the only issue.  There are waiting lists for all types of services and more people are entering the system every day.”
Advocacy efforts have been going on all across New York State, but there has been little coordination until now.  To change that, parents from four organizations in different parts of the state started a dialogue in September, to figure out how they could all work together.  “We welcome all advocates,” says Jim Karpe, a Queens parent and member of NYC FAIR, “including self-advocates, parents, relatives and friends.  Our aim is to create a vision which people across the state can endorse.”
“Our group has always wanted to connect with other parents around the state,” said Will Mayerik, a Westchester parent and GROW member.  Mr. Mayerik expressed his hope that the network continues to expand.  He added, “We know there are many families across the state who share our concerns.”
For information on SWAN and to have your local group join in, visit the website atwww.swannys.org.  Or, contact one of the four founding groups:  DDAWNY Family Committee in Western New York, ENYDDA in Albany Region, GROW in Westchester and Hudson Valley, and NYC FAIR in New York City.

Announcement of State-wide coalition- final Article on SWAN- final

Article on SWAN- final