March 24,
2004, Wednesday
For
information contact:
Bob Kafka
512/431-4085
Marsha
Katz 406/544-9504
ADAPT
Holds “Peoples’ Hearings” on MiCASSA, 129 Arrested
Washington,
D.C.---Demanding hearings on the Medicaid Community-based Attendant Services and Supports Act
(MiCASSA; S.971, H.R.2032), and the Money Follows the Person Act (MFPA; S1394), 500 ADAPT activists took over the
Senate Finance Committee Hearing Room
for over 8 hours Tuesday. Ultimately 129 persons were arrested for refusing to
leave after negotiations with Sen. Chuck Grassley broke down when his staff
declined to commit in writing their “promise” to hold hearings.
“I’m still
baffled by their taking offense at our request to have their agreement to hold
hearings in writing,” said Bob Liston, ADAPT Organizer from Montana. “If their
word is good, writing it down shouldn’t be any big deal, especially because it
assures that everyone on both sides has the same understanding and
expectations. Would any of them in their personal lives enter into a contract
that wasn’t in black and white? I doubt it.” “And frankly,” Liston added, “when
we have the administration telling us one thing, and Congress telling us
another, with each of them swearing they’re telling the truth and blaming the
other for inaction, it sure makes it hard for us to know who to trust will keep
their word.”
Both
MiCASSA and MFPA have languished in the Senate Finance Committee because
Finance Chair Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) and ranking Democrat Sen. Max Baucus
(D-MT) have refused to call for hearings despite written requests from the
bills’ co-sponsors, Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA), Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), and Sen.
Gordon Smith (R-OR). However, on Monday, March 22, Sen. Grassley announced an
April 7 hearing on the President’s New Freedom Initiative, about which no
legislation has been introduced. The
April 7 hearing includes no mention of either MiCASSA or MFPA.
“While
Grassley and Baucus are sitting on MiCASSA and MFPA, people we know all over
the country are dying in nursing homes and dying to get out of nursing homes,”
said Barbara Toomer, Utah ADAPT organizer. I just don’t understand how Sen.
Grassley can schedule a hearing on non-existent legislation supposedly related
to the administration’s budget
proposals, and yet won’t schedule hearings on real legislation that’s being
supported by 700 organizations. So, we decided we would go to the Senate
Finance Committee Hearing Room to hold our own hearings…the Peoples’ Hearings
on the need for MiCASSA and MFPA.”
After
spending the morning and early afternoon distributing information on MiCASSA
and MFPA to every member of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, ADAPT
members slowly made their way up the Dirksen Building elevators, packing the
large hearing room and the adjacent hallways. They were quickly joined by
camera crews from NBC, ABC, and CNN, along with at least 50 members of the
Capitol Police Force.
Inside the
hearing room, one by one, people told their stories of unwanted confinement in
nursing homes and institutions, some for many years, robbed of all choice,
dignity and freedom. When the Peoples’
Hearings concluded, chanting and singing started that went on non-stop for 8
hours during the failed negotiations and arrests.
“We’re not
giving on the hearings up by any means,” said Jose Lara of Desert ADAPT in El
Paso, Texas. “We won’t stop until MiCASSA is passed. Sen. Grassley needs to hear from people all over
America that we want hearings on
MiCASSA and MFPA, and that ADAPT must be included in the witness panels to
assure that the voices of people with disabilities who have escaped nursing
homes will be heard.”