Several hundred people descended upon the Statehouse Thursday to celebrate Disability Awareness Day. Disability rights advocates caught the ears of lawmakers during breaks in the tax and budget bills debate.
The annual event was organized by the Vermont Coalition for Disability Rights and Vermont Developmental Disabilities Council.
The advocates used the day to mark the 20th anniversary of the closing of the Brandon Training School, which housed developmentally disabled people in an institutionalized setting, and the subsequent transition to a community-based model of care.
Activists also sought to call attention to what they say is a troubling element in the proposed 2014 budgetโ a reduction of $2.5 million in the Developmental Services division of the Department of Disabilities and Aging (DAIL). They are worried this will result in cuts to services provided to people with developmental disabilities.
Karen Topper of Green Mountain Self-Advocates released the following statement: โThe last thing we need are cuts to developmental services, but this is exactly what Gov. Shumlin’s proposed budget would bring us. When Vermont closed the Brandon Training School in 1993 it made a promise that people with developmental disabilities would lead lives of dignity in the community. We need a budget that honors this promise.โ
Sen. Sally Fox, D-Chittenden, who helped litigate the court case that ultimately closed the Brandon Training School, spoke to advocates at lunchtime. Fox announced to the crowd that the Senate had just passed S.27 โ a bill that revises offensive language that remains in Vermontโs statues โ prompting spirited applause.
Among the changes, the term โmental retardationโ will be purged from state statute. An โinsane personโ will be identified as โany person incapacitated by reason of mental disabilityโ instead of its current definition: an โidiot, non compos, lunatic a distracted person.โ
The billโs stated intent is to โrecognize persons as opposed to their disabilities.โ In other words a โdeaf personโ will now be referred to as a โperson who is deaf.โ
The term โhandicapped personโ will be supplanted by โperson with disability.โ
Fox gave the advocates credit for bringing about the changes. โI congratulate you for that victory.โ
The dayโs events also included speeches from people who had lived at the Training School. Among them was Robert Brace, whose case Fox had helped to settle in 1980.
A woman who was at the school from age 7 to 14 recalled the regimented lifestyle. โI was told what to do every day like what time to go to bed, what time to get up, what time to eat breakfast and finally, what time to go to the bathroom.โ She said the arrangement was humiliating and she felt โlabeled,โ but added โI was one of the lucky ones โฆ some of my friends were not so lucky โฆ I saw a lot of them get abused.โ
