In this editorial piece published in The News and Observer on Thursday, July 31, 2008, Barton Cutter discussing the potential crisis for those needing personal care assistance. While the demand for personal care assistance in creasing dramatically each year, there is much concern as the value for these jobs diminishes creating high turn over, unqualified workers and a shortage of direct support professionals.
Published in Ability Magazine, January 2005. “One summer evening in
Tucson,
Arizona, I was on my way home from the university after staying late to finish an assignment. It was about
and the sun was almost at rest behind the
TucsonMountains. When I was about half way to my destination, I noticed a figure standing on the corner about a block away. As I got closer, I saw a man in his early twenties looking to rather scruffy as though he had not showered in several days. He was, at best, an imitation relic left over from the sixties era in need of a fix. As I came within his range, he asked me if I had any and loose change. I said that I had no money and kept going. He was persistent, however, and at the point where I was closest to him, he took several steps to approach me with a clearly malicious intent. “
Published in March of 2007 by Woodward Communication for Easter Seals UCP North Carolina, “The Youth Leaders in Action curriculum aims to provide high school age youth with disabilities with important advocacy skills through group discussion and interactive experiences…. The curriculum is intended to guide a facilitator in leading youth in learning about advocacy. As the needs of youth vary, facilitators are encouraged to adapt and supplement the material to meaningfully support youth to develop their advocacy skills. The curriculum was designed by Easter Seals UCP North Carolina’s Youth Leaders in Action, a grant project funded by the North Carolina Council on Developmental Disabilities.”
Published in 2005 by Woodward Communication for the North Carolina Council on Developmental Disabilities, this booklet provides information on People First Language for youth ages 13 through 19.
Published in March of 2006 by Woodward Communication for the North Carolina Council on Developmental Disabilities, “This booklet is designed to help families understand what happens when an individual with an intellectual disability turns 18.* It includes sections on rights and responsibilities, guardianship and other alternatives, terminology and resources. The information in this booklet is based on this state’s guardianship law (found in Chapter 35A of the North Carolina General Statutes), other state and federal laws, and the commonly accepted interpretations of these laws.”