Harriet Phyllis Findlay, a longtime advocate for people with disabilities, passed away on July 2.
Findlay was the director of the vocational rehabilitation program at JFK Johnson Rehabilitation Institute in Edison, New Jersey.
She developed the office over a 30-year period and continued to work there until shortly before her death. A memorial took place at the institute on July 20. Findlay passed away at 73 and lived in Metuchen, New Jersey.
Seven thousand athletes from more than 170 countries participated in the 13th annual Special Olympics World Games from June 25th to July 4th in Athens, Greece.
The Special Olympics is the largest sporting event for people with intellectual disabilities, providing programs to more than 3.7 million participants. Three thousand coaches and officials attended the event along with 25,000 volunteers and 40,000 family members.
Photo: Gerard Rich of Team USA jumped 3 meters and 73 centimeters in the M14 preliminary long jump competition and took the gold medal in the M20 finals, jumping 4 meters and 35 centimeters.
Advocates for former inmates with mental illness have won the latest battle in an ongoing dispute with New York City over its provision of re-entry services.
The June 28 decision in the ongoing case of Brad H. v. NYC overturns an earlier decision favoring the City that had dismissed a complaint about the City’s compliance with service requirements based on the date of its filing.
On July 14, leaders of President Barack Obama’s disability policy team held a virtual town hall meeting with the community. The one-hour meeting was streamed live at www.disability.gov and archived for viewing on the website.
The advisors who answered community questions were Kareem Dale, Special Assistant to the President for Disability Policy and Associate Director of the White House Office of Public Engagement; Jeffrey Crowley, Senior Advisor on Disability Policy and Director of the Office of National AIDS Policy at the White House; and Rebecca Cokley, Director of Priority Placement for Public Engagement at the White House Presidential Personnel Office.
The state of Minnesota has shut down many of its services due to the legislature’s failure to reach a budget deal by July 1, closing down programs that serve people with disabilities.
Agencies that have been impacted include the State Services for the Blind (SSB), which cancelled its Radio Talking Book show for the blind. According to a government website, “Locations will be closed and Radio Talking Book will not be on the air. Any services SSB provides or purchases on behalf of customers will be suspended. This includes all services from SSB such as training, equipment purchases and transportation payments.”
Two retired New York City police officers have filed a complaint with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) charging that they have been discriminated against over their use of hearing aids to perform their work.
Attorney Colleen Meenan of Meenan & Associates, LLC, who represents the officers, said the New York Police Department (NYPD) disclosed a policy in January 20009 that officers on the force should have the same hearing capacity they did when they were hired.
At the end of June, billions of dollars of Medicaid funds provided to states by the Obama Administration ran out. The money was provided for two years and totaled $90 billion.
Medicaid provides free or low-cost insurance to people with low incomes, including those with disabilities. The cessation of the funds comes as budget discussions in Washington include possible changes to the program, which is funded by the state and federal governments.
Angelo Binno, a law school applicant in Michigan, has charged the American Bar Association (ABA) with discriminating against people with visual impairments in its reliance on the Law School Admission Test (LSAT).
Binno’s complaint concerns a section of the test that instructs applicants to draw diagrams to solve problems. The LSAT is a required component of the law school admissions process.
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