Press Release – National Community of Practice on Alternatives to Guardianship for Youth Expands to Arizona, California, and Texas!

Center on Youth Voice, Youth Choice Logo

 

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The Center on Youth Voice, Youth Choice (CYVYC) is delighted to announce its selection of three additional State Teams to join its national Community of Practice to promote alternatives to guardianship for youth with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD). Nineteen teams from 15 States and the District of Columbia applied. The quality of the applications was excellent and revealed a deep interest in and commitment to Supported Decision-Making and its importance in the lives of transition-aged youth.

After an extensive selection process, CYVYC has chosen State Teams from Arizona, California, and Texas to join our existing Community of Practice. Each of the State Teams will be co-led by a youth with I/DD who is 14 to 26 years old. The organizations co-leading the efforts of these newly selected State Teams include:

Welcome to the State Teams from Arizona, California, and Texas!

Under a five-year grant from the U.S. Administration on Community Living, CYVYC provides extensive technical assistance to State Teams to promote alternatives to guardianship, so that fewer youth with I/DD have legal guardians. The Community of Practice – now comprised of 11 State Teams – fosters a rich dialogue around best practices, supports long-term change, and centers the voices of youth leaders in its work. The Community of Practice members work together to create lasting systemic reform in their states and support Youth Ambassadors to be leaders for change.

We look forward to collaborating with these new State Teams in advancing the decision-making rights, self-determination, and leadership of youth with I/DD.

Cathy Costanzo, Executive Director  of the Center for Public Representation

“Ensuring this next generation of youth is front and center in all levels of this work is key to the success and lasting impact of this national initiative.”

The CYVYC Community of Practice Selection Committee was comprised of a Youth Ambassador, a member of its Youth Advisory Committee, a representative from its National Coalition, and CYVYC staff, including representatives from the Institute for Community Inclusion, CPR, Self Advocates Becoming Empowered, and the Georgia Advocacy Office.

Contacts:

  • Morgan Whitlatch, Director of Supported Decision-Making Initiatives, Center for Public Representation, mwhitlatch@cpr-ma.org, 202-596-6116
  • Allison Cohen Hall, CYVYC Project Director, Institution for Community Inclusion, hall@umb.edu, 480-677-9677

CPR Renews its Call for National Reforms to Advance Supported Decision-Making

On March 30, 2023, the U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging held a hearing on Guardianship and Alternatives: Protection and Empowerment.  In preparation for that hearing, the Committee sought public input, stories, and recommendations for reform related to guardianship, conservatorship, and other protective arrangements. CPR shared this request throughout the Protection and Advocacy network and the broader community interested in advancing alternatives to guardianship, including Supported Decision-Making.  The Committee ultimately received over 300 statements from 41 states and territories – all of which will be entered into the Congressional record of the hearing.

CPR submitted its own comment and recommendations for promoting Supported Decision-Making and dismantling pipelines to guardianship.  CPR also supported seven Massachusetts Supported Decision-Making pilot participants who wanted to share their stories and submitted their own statements to the Committee.  In addition, CPR led the effort of members of the Consortium of Constituents with Disabilities to submit a joint statement, further highlighting the need for reforms that go beyond improving judicial processes and that divert people from guardianship court systems and towards less-restrictive options.

A picture of the United State Capitol building, a stately white and gray colored building with a dome

UPDATE – Info Session on Feb. 9 – Apply to CYVYC to Advance Alternatives to Guardianship

REMINDER  Apply today!  The Center on Youth Voice, Youth Choice (CYVYC) is seeking applications for more State Teams to join our Community of Practice. If you are part of a team that wants to promote alternatives to guardianship for youth with intellectual or developmental disabilities in your state, read our FAQ and consider applying today. Applications are due by 8 PM ET/5 PT on February 24, 2023.

Want to Learn More?

UPDATE  Want to learn more?  – We are holding an optional informational session.  CYVYC staff and representatives from current State Teams and Youth Ambassadors will be there to answer your questions about the application and this project.  Please join us!

The informational session webinar will have captioning and will be recorded and available for future viewing on the CYVYC website.

 

Final Call for Applications! – Advancing Alternatives to Guardianship for Youth

 

We are excited to announce that the Center on Youth Voice, Youth Choice (CYVYC) is now accepting the final round of applications from State Teams interested in joining its Community of Practice to promote alternatives to guardianship for youth with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) in the United States.

CYVYC is a national resource center that was founded in Fall of 2020 through a five-year grant from the Administration on Community Living. CPR currently provides technical assistance to eight State Teams from Georgia, Indiana, Michigan, New Jersey, Oregon, South Carolina, Vermont, and Wisconsin.  Our Community of Practice fosters a rich dialogue around best practices, provides a framework of sustainable change, and centers the voice of youth leaders in its work.  We are seeking to recruit 3 additional State Teams to be part of our Community of Practice and to support Youth Ambassadors in those states to be leaders for change.

Are you part of a team that wants to promote alternatives to guardianship in your state?  If the answer is yes, apply today for CYVYC’s Community of Practice.  For more information, please check out this FAQ sheet with more information on CYVYC and the application process.

Applications due by 5:00 PM PST on February 24, 2023

If you have any questions about the application process or need any accommodations, please contact Morgan Whitlatch, mwhitlatch@cpr-ma.org, 202-596-6116.

CPR Publishes Two Seminal Law Review Articles on Supported Decision-Making

CPR’s national leadership on Supported Decision-Making (SDM) is reflected in two new law review articles: “Supported Decision-Making: Lessons from Pilot Projects,” 72 Syracuse L. Rev. 99 (2022); and “Supported Decision-Making: Potential and Challenges for Older Persons,” 72 Syracuse L. Rev. 165 (2022).

The first article explains how SDM has transformed the lives of many individuals with disabilities who participated in SDM pilot programs, including those led by CPR in Massachusetts and Georgia, and it outlines the key principles necessary for successful replication.

6 people standing in a circle with their arms outstretched and with overlapping hands, signaling teamwork and solidarity

The second article describes how SDM can be used to help older adults retain or regain their legal decision-making rights, and it includes recommendations for how to make SDM more accessible to that population.

Hands of older adults

Both articles were drafted to inform the deliberations at the Fourth National Guardianship Conference, which resulted in key recommendations for promoting SDM.

Calling All Massachusetts SDM Advocates! – Time is Running Out!

The Time is Now!

Please act TODAY in support of S.2848/H.4725, the MA Supported Decision-Making legislation.

Click here to send a letter to your Representative and Senator to ask them to urge their Chair of the House and Senate Ways & Means Committees to pass the SDM bills favorably out of the Committees!

The Massachusetts Advocates for Supported Decision-Making (MASDM) and countless advocates have been working hard to get these important bills passed.  We need your help!  Learn more about these bills and our Call to Action here.

I am 19 years old … Fighting cancer has been one of the hardest journeys of my life … A law would make it easier for people to have supporters with them anywhere they need them … I fully trust my team, but I want to make choices for my own life, and this law would protect that process.

– Jonathan Gardner, East Bridgewater, MA,

Boston Globe Op Ed (June 15, 2022)

Press Release – More State Teams Join National Community of Practice on Alternatives to Guardianship for Youth

Center on Youth Voice Youth Choice

Center on Youth Voice Youth Choice Expands its National Community of Practice of State Teams Advancing Alternatives to Guardianship

May 4, 2022

access pdf of Press Release

The Center on Youth Voice, Youth Choice (CYVYC) is delighted to announce its selection of five additional State Teams to join its national Community of Practice to promote alternatives to guardianship for youth with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD).  Twenty-five teams from 21 States and territories applied.  The quality of the applications was excellent and revealed a deep interest in and commitment to Supported Decision-Making and its importance in the lives of transition-aged youth.

After an extensive selection process, CYVYC has chosen State Teams from Indiana, Michigan, New Jersey, Oregon, and South Carolina to join our existing Community of Practice. Each of the State Teams will be co-led by a youth with I/DD who is 14 to 26 years old.  The organizations co-leading the efforts of these newly selected State Teams include:

Congratulations to the newly selected State Teams from: Indiana, Michigan, New Jersey, Oregon, and South Carolina!

Under a five-year grant from the U.S. Administration on Community Living, CYVYC provides extensive technical assistance to State Teams to promote alternatives to guardianship, so that fewer youth with I/DD have legal guardians. The Community of Practice fosters a rich dialogue around best practices, supports long-term change, and centers the voices of youth leaders in its work. Community of Practice members work together to create lasting systemic reform in their states and support Youth Ambassadors to be leaders for change.

“We look forward to welcoming these new State Teams into the fold. At the core of our work is a deep commitment not only to expand this important work to more states, but to do so in a way that ensures the leadership of youth with I/DD is front and center.”

Cathy Costanzo, Executive Director of CPR, which facilitates the CYVYC Community of Practice

The CYVYC Community of Practice Selection Committee was comprised of a Youth Ambassador, a member of its Youth Advisory Committee, a representative from its National Coalition, and CYVYC staff, including representatives from the Institute for Community Inclusion, the Center for Public Representation (CPR), Self Advocates Becoming Empowered, and the Georgia Advocacy Office.  CYVYC plans to solicit applications for a third cohort of State Teams next year.

Contacts:

  • Morgan Whitlatch, Director of Supported Decision-Making Initiatives, Center for Public Representation, mwhitlatch@cpr-ma.org, 202-596-6116
  • Allison Hall, CYVYC Project Director, Institution for Community Inclusion, hall@umb.edu, 480-677-9677

Call for Applications! Center on Youth Voice, Youth Choice

Center for Youth Voice, Youth Choice

We are excited to announce that the Center on Youth Voice, Youth Choice (CYVYC) is now accepting applications from teams interested in participating in our Community of Practice to promote alternatives to guardianship for youth with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) in the United States.

CYVYC is a national resource center that was founded in the Fall of 2020 through a grant from the Administration on Community Living. During the course of this five-year grant, we are supporting State Teams to promote alternatives to guardianship, so that fewer youth with IDD have legal guardians. We are currently seeking to recruit 4 new State Teams to be part of our Community of Practice and to support Youth Ambassadors in those states to be leaders for change.

Are you part of a team that is promoting alternatives to guardianship in your state? If the answer is yes, apply today for CYVYC’s Community of Practice. Our Community of Practice fosters a rich dialogue around best practices, provides a framework for sustainable change, and centers the voices of youth leaders in this work. Community of Practice members work in partnership with us to create lasting systemic change in their states.

CLOSED – This application period closed on February 10, 2022.   

STAY TUNED! – The next Call for Applications will be announced in early 2023.

If you have any questions, please contact Morgan Whitlatch, mwhitlatch@cpr-ma.org, 202-596-6116.

Coalition Testifies at Hearing on SDM Legislation in Massachusetts

Group of five people testifying remotely at the virtual hearing held by the Massachusetts Legislature on the SDM bills
(Left to right, bottom row) Morgan Whitlatch (CPR), Ellen Taverna (The Arc of Massachusetts), Paul Lanzikos (not pictured) (Dignity Alliance Massachusetts). ()Left to right, top row) Anna Krieger (Massachusetts Developmental Disabilities Council), Jennifer Honig (Massachusetts Association for Mental Health)

On November 22, 2021, CPR and a coalition of diverse advocates testified in favor of Supported Decision-Making legislation in MassachusettsS.124 / H.272. To learn more about the bill see the bill fact sheet and our page on the legislation.

CPR testified alongside other members of the Massachusetts Advocates for Supported Decision-Making (MASDM) Coalition, as well as people with disabilities and their supporters who talked about how SDM can transform lives.

Thank you to Representative Paul Tucker and Senator Joan Lovely for your testimony and your leadership on these critical bills.

Group of three people testifying remotely at the virtual hearing held by the Massachusetts Legislature on the SDM bills
(Left to right) Sandra Heller (Massachusetts Developmental Disabilities Council and Supporter in CPR SDM Pilot), Nancy Gardner (Supporter), Jonathan Gardner (Decision-Maker)

“SDM makes me feel involved with my life and choosing how and when I will be getting my treatments. I can let my body and voice guide me with the support of my Mom and Dad. I don’t have many choices when it comes to have Cancer, but at least I can control when and how we do it.” – Jonathan Gardner, 18 years old.

woman testifying remotely at the virtual hearing held by the Massachusetts Legislature on the SDM bills
Malia Windrow-Carlotto (Supporter in CPR/Nonotuck Pilot)

“Cory has flourished since he started using Supported Decision-Making. . . . He is currently living in his own apartment, has traveled the country with friends, and is now working full-time . . . I could not be prouder.”– Malia Windrow-Carlotto, Supporter in SDM Pilot Project (CPR/Nonotuck)

Speakers on MASDM Panels at Hearing

Written Testimony of Other SDM Pilot Participants

 In the past year, I have gone through some major health changes . . ., and I leaned on my SDM Team to help me understand what was happening to me and what the doctors were saying.  [They] helped me through each step.Amanda Benoit, SDM Pilot Participant (written testimony)

. . . I was the first person in Massachusetts to have my guardianship relinquished for the Supported Decision-Making Model.  This moment was very special, because I felt my own freedom for the first time.”Cory Carlotto, SDM Pilot Participant (written testimony)

 My SDM Team has helped me so much in achieving my dreams . . . I was happy to advocate for SDM, because it helps people with disabilities keep their voice and make the final decisions in things with support from a team, if needed.Jimmy Cowell, SDM Pilot Participant (written testimony)

SDM brings people together.  It brings families closer.  Service providers are more involved, more aware of the participant and closer to the family.  But most importantly, the participants grow, have control of their lives and experience love, pride, joy and happiness.

George Fleischner, Nonotuck Resources Associates (written testimony)

My SDM Team helps me grow in my skills, such as with my banking, making health decisions at doctors and dentist appointments, and buying healthy food choices.  My SDM Team is very important to me, and I trust them.

Johnathan Jenkins, SDM Pilot Participant (written testimony)

Please vote yes so that Supported Decision-Making agreements can be put in place for more people to make their own decisions with help just like me.

Craig Kinney, SDM Pilot Participant (written testimony)

Amanda knows who is in her life and who she trusts. She is also capable of making decisions . . . Amanda [gets] moral support from her SDM Team, one-on-one discussions, conversations going over the pros and cons, and getting info on the big picture of the decision.

Sandy Dear-Robinson, Supporter in SDM Pilot (written testimony)

If you support the SDM bill in Massachusetts, see how to make your voice heard!

Advocacy Alert! CPR joins ACLU in filing Amicus Brief in Britney Spears’ conservatorship case

Advocacy Alert! The Center for Public Representation joined the American Civil Liberties Union and a diverse coalition of Supported Decision-Making advocates in filing a request to file an amicus brief in Britney Spears’ conservatorship case.

The amici argue that Ms. Spears the has the right to choose her own attorney, as she has expressed she would like to do. Amici urge the court to provide Ms. Spears with any tools needed to do select her own lawyer — including Supported Decision-Making if she wishes. The amicus brief was filed July 12, 2021 in Los Angeles Superior Court.

Supported decision-making is another option that Ms. Spears may wish to use in selecting her own attorney. With supported decision-making, a person can use supports – including working with trusted advisors, mentors, friends, or professionals, to help them understand, consider, and make their own choices.

BRIEF OF AMICI CURIAE, p. 9, line 23-26

Amici urged the court to take steps to ensure that Ms. Spears can consider and explore the opportunity to learn about and use supported decision-making to select her own attorney, if she chooses.

Supported decision-making is also an example of a “reasonable modification” that a public entity, like this Court, may be required to provide or facilitate under the Americans with Disabilities Act and/or the Rehabilitation Act, in order to ensure that people with disabilities have equal access to the Court’s proceedings and processes.

BRIEF OF AMICI CURIAE, p. 11, line 11-14

The coalition of organizations filing the amicus brief are a broad and diverse group of disability justice, self-advocacy organizations, elder justice, and civil rights organizations.  The coalition members all work to advance Supported Decision-Making as a tool that allows people to retain their rights and exercise choice.

Read the amicus brief here.

Read the ACLU’s statement about the brief here.

For more background, read our statement on Britney Spears’ conservatorship case.

Coalition of organizations filing the amicus brief:

AIDS Legal Referral Panel

American Civil Liberties Union

The Arc of the United States

Autistic Self-Advocacy Network

Burton Blatt Institute

California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform

California Alliance for Retired Americans

Cardozo Bet Tzedek Legal Services

Center for Public Representation

Choice in Aging

Civil Rights Education and Enforcement Center

Coalition for Elderly and Disability Rights

The Coelho Center for Disability Law, Policy and Innovation

Communication FIRST

Disability Rights California

Disability Rights Education & Defense Fund

Disability Rights Legal Center

Disability Voices United

Justice in Aging

Legal Aid at Work

Mental Health Advocacy Services

National Resource Center for Supported Decision-Making

Quality Trust for Individuals with Disabilities

TASH

Interested to learn more about Supported Decision-Making and how it can work?

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