Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Voices of Disabilities: Miles for Smiles a Sunny Success
Voices of Disabilities: Miles for Smiles a Sunny Success: On one of the nicest days so far this spring, more than 200 people, many of them Macomb-Oakland Regional Center staff members and their ...
Miles for Smiles a Sunny Success
On one of
the nicest days so far this spring, more than 200 people, many of them
Macomb-Oakland Regional Center staff members and their families, walked or ran
in a 5K race to raise money for dental care for people with disabilities.
The event
was held at the 1,276-acre Independence Oaks County Park in Oakland County near
Clarkston on Saturday, May 10.
The 5K or
3.1-mile trek began at 10 a.m. Kody Coulter of Lapeer finished first in the 5k
run in 18:07 minutes; Matt Springer was second and Joe Lasceski was third.
The top
finisher in the women’s group was Eva Chmielewski, 15, of Columbiaville in a
time of 22:10 minutes. Sommer Schons was second and Morgan Turk, both of Lapeer,
was third.
It was the
third annual MORC Miles for Smiles race. Last year, some $1,200 was raised in
raffle ticket sales alone and $6,500 was donated for dental care.
Preliminary
figures show some $8,100 was raised to help defray the costs of dental care to
those whom MORC serves, said Jennifer Lasceski, a Human Resources Generalist.
Final totals were not immediately available.
“To all the runners, walkers,
volunteers, consumers and staff -- we can’t thank you enough!” Kerri
Pfaffenberger wrote on MORC’s Facebook page. “Today was wonderful. Everything
went smooth and the weather was great.”
The raffle baskets were a huge
success again, raising about $2,000 in ticket sales alone. Raffle items
included gift certificates for chiropractic services, concert tickets, a wine
basket and gift certificates for area restaurants.
“It was so
heart-warming to see so many join us to help provide brighter smiles for those
served by MORC,” said Futures Foundation Executive Director Teri Donaldson, who
participated in the race and was a member of the race committee.
Other
committee members included Lasceski, Pfaffenberger, Bonnie Mazzei, Alicia
Bianchette, and Megan Behnke.
“I thought
it was an awesome event and it was a great turnout for a great cause,” said
Bianchette, a supports coordinator at Clinton Township.
“It was
enjoyable to be walking my dogs, Mo and Joe, in the company of co-workers on a
gorgeous day in a beautiful park,” said Jane Guy, who works in the Health
Information Management Department.
Staff
members who sold tickets at the Auburn Hills Office included clerks Jane Corbin
and Carol Rowland, receptionist Joyce Gracey, support coordinator Bonnie
Mazzei, and Pfaffenberger of Speech Therapy Services.
Sellers of
the $30 tickets at the Clinton Township office were Human Resources Generalist
Jennifer Lasceski and Donaldson.
Kristina
Jankowsky of the Waiver Program, Kevin Cox and Vlad Cara of the Maintenance
Department were among the volunteers who were stationed along the route to help
guide the walkers/runners to the finish line.
Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence/advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center. He can be reached at 586-263-8950.
Friday, May 2, 2014
Restore cuts to programs for people with disabilities
Michigan residents need to make our lawmakers and Gov. Rick
Snyder aware that budget miscalculations and cuts are likely to leave many
thousands of people with mental illness and disabilities with reduced services
essential for their survival.
More than $100 million of statewide general fund support for
the state’s 46 Community Mental Health Authorities was cut, the CMH board
projects. Among the hardest hit were the CMHs in Oakland and Macomb counties.
The funds were to be replaced by the “Healthy Michigan” revenue, but the
program didn’t kick in quick enough to bridge the shortfall.
The Legislature delayed implementation of Healthy Michigan,
a program passed last August by lawmakers to enroll more than 300,000 Michigan
residents in Medicaid, from Jan. 1 to April 1, resulting in less federal money
to serve those with mental illness and disabilities.
“Unfortunately, the promise to do ‘no harm’ has been
broken,” said Michael Vizena, executive director of the Michigan Association of
Community Mental Health Boards. “Errors were made, and savings were withdrawn
before sufficient Healthy Michigan revenue was available to replace lost
revenue.”
John Kinch, executive director of the Macomb County
Community Mental Health Authority, said, “It is important to continue to draw
community and legislator attention to the seriousness of the current general
fund reductions and impact on our consumers.”
The general fund reductions have placed us in a “difficult
financial services situation,” he said.
The Oakland County Community Mental Health Authority
anticipates its expenditures for fiscal year 2014 will exceed funding by $22
million, a spokeswoman said. Large deficits are projected for 2014-15.
The general fund payments to the state’s community health
agencies also were cut to $13.9 million in May and will continue to be reduced
to $4.3 million each month through September. Under this reality, there is no
way to provide needed services to the 260,000 who currently receive them.
In addition, some mental health executives say many
individuals served through entities that provide services from OCCMHA funds will
not qualify for the Healthy Michigan plan, leaving individuals with limited services.
Instead of using all of the projected $1.3 billion surplus
to fix roads and other things why not use $100 million to restore cuts of
service to those with disabilities? We’re supposed to be a compassionate
society so let’s show it by taking care of the most vulnerable people in society.
Jerry Wolffe is the
“Voices of Disabilities” columnist and a rights advocate. He can be reached at
(586) 263-8950.
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Pontiac non-profit hires specialist to help those who are deaf
Oakland Family Services of Pontiac is establishing a new deaf
specialist staff position, funded by Oakland County Community Mental Health Authority,
it was announced Wednesday. Social worker Kathleen Mitchell has been hired by
the private, non-profit, human services
agency to assume
the role of deaf specialist. Born deaf, with two deaf parents, Mitchell learned
to communicate using sign language. “Deaf individuals should have direct access
to culturally linguistically appropriate service providers who are skilled in
American Sign Language,” said Mitchell, who will provide outpatient therapy to
those who are deaf.
Special writer
Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence and advocate-at-large at the
Macomb-Oakland Center. He can be reached at 586 263-8950.
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
PIHPs to receive $26.9 million in Health Michigan payments today (4.30)
The Michigan Department of Community Health Tuesday notified Prepaid Inpatient Health Plans they will be receiving an
electronic funds transfer payment on Wednesday, April 30, for new Healthy Michigan members
who have enrolled in the first three weeks of April.
"We are pleased to
announce this payment brings the total state General Fund and Healthy Michigan
payments in April to PIHPs and Community Mental Health Authorities to a statewide total of $26.9 million and exceeds
the March state General Fund and Adult Benefits Waiver payment total of
$26.6 million," the MDCH said in a statement.
The payment is a full retro-eligibility payment and covers
the newly eligible Healthy Michigan members enrolled after the Adult Benefits
Waiver auto-enrollments for the full month of April, the MDCH said. The payment ensures
maximum April capitation is received for the month in which members
enroll. The remaining April members enrolled in the final week of April
will also be reimbursed for the entire month of April and will be paid in
mid-May, the department said.
The first retro payment represents the number of persons
who enrolled in Healthy Michigan during the first three weeks of April in each
region and is being transmitted in advance of final April enrollment to help
alleviate concerns with cash flow during this time of transition.
"We will
continue to monitor enrollment and assess the need for retroactive payments on
a monthly basis through the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 2014," the statement said.
The additional payment is an estimate and will
need to be reconciled with eligibility and payment files in the future, according to the MDCH.
It is expected that PIHPs will expedite cash flow related to these
retro payments consistent with regional and CMH agreements regarding regular
payments.
Friday, April 25, 2014
Officials: Snyder’s miscalculation puts services to disabled at risk
Services provided to thousands of Michigan residents with
mental illness and other disabilities are in danger of being lost because of
budget errors made by Gov. Rick Snyder, the association that represents
Community Mental Health Boards says.
“Unfortunately, the promise to do ‘no harm’ has been
broken,” said Michael Vizena, executive director of the Michigan Association of
Community Mental Health Boards. “Errors were made, and savings were withdrawn
before sufficient ‘Healthy Michigan’ revenue was available to replace the lost
revenue,” he said.
Healthy Michigan is a public health insurance plan for the
46 Community Mental Health Boards across the state. It is an expansion of
Medicaid to provide physical and behavioral health care insurance coverage to
nearly 500,000 Michigan citizens.
Unfortunately, more than $100 million of statewide CMH
general fund support was reduced and placed into state savings as a result of
the Healthy Michigan Plan being implemented April 1, the board said. This
occurred before sufficient replacement funds were available from Healthy
Michigan, causing projected shortfalls for 2014-2015.
OCCMHA anticipates that its
expenditures for fiscal year 2014 will exceed funding provided by state and
federal government by $22 million, a spokeswoman said Friday. The Authority
passes on funding from state and federal core service providers.
These include Macomb-Oakland Regional Center, which provides
services for more than 5,000 people with disabilities from its offices in
Clinton Township and Auburn Hills; Community Network Services of Farmington
Hills and Waterford; Training & Treatment Innovations of Oxford, Troy and
Sterling Heights; Easter Seals Michigan which has offices in Auburn Hills and
Community Living Services-Oakland of Ferndale.
Errors were made in the calculation of anticipated total
savings as a result of increased Medicaid funds flowing into the state for
Healthy Michigan, the board said.
“As a result, thousands of people across the state are
receiving notices from their local Community Mental Health center that funding
is no longer available to continue,” the Board added in a press release.
In addition, some mental health executives say many
individuals served by the CMH system will not qualify for the Healthy Michigan
plan.
The CMH board is projecting a full-year General Fund gap of
$60 million based on full enrollment for the Healthy Michigan plan. The state
recently added $25 million for Fiscal Year 2014 but the general fund gap still
exists during the 12 to 18 month ramp-up period which ends in September 2015.
“The governor and the Legislature must restore the full year
of the necessary general fund support for FY15 so that further and permanent
reductions are not necessary,” Vizena said. “These funds must be restored as
part of the FY15 budget process that will occur over the next six weeks.
Community Mental Health centers and the individuals they serve need to know
that resources will be there, in order to prevent a further erosion of
services.”
Jerry Wolffe is the
writer-in-resident and advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center.
He can be reached at 586 263-8950.
Thursday, April 17, 2014
Suicide prevention forum scheduled
WATERFORD – A youth suicide prevention forum was planned
from 8:30 a.m. to noon on April 30 at the Oakland Schools Summit Campus at 2214
Mall Drive East, Room 126 in Waterford.
Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence and advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center.
The forum is to let the community know about resources to
try and reduce the occurrence of suicide. Presenters will teach attendees about
resources for schools and healthcare providers. Toolkits for parents or schools
and information on mental health first aid training also will be given to those
attending the session.
Go to www.oakgov.com/health
by the end of April 23 to register for the forum.Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence and advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center.
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Public offered free mental health first aid training
Box: To register for training, visit https://www.positivelivingsupport.org/training/register or
call (586) 263-8748.
Mental Health First Aid experts will be training throughout
the state, including in Oakland, Macomb, and Wayne counties.
The sessions are to help increase literacy and reduce stigma
regarding mental health problems and mental illness, said Ed Kiefer, a senior
training consultant with the Center for Positive Living Supports in Clinton
Township.
The center arranged for the training of members of the
public after Gov. Rick Snyder declared May 18 to May 24 as “Michigan
Mental Health First Aid Week.”
The free training for up to 40 will be from 8:30 a.m. to 5
p.m., May 20, at the Auburn Hills campus of the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center
at 1270 Doris Ave.
Mental health first aid is defined as the help offered to a
person developing a mental health problem or experiencing a mental health
crisis. The first aid is given until appropriate treatment and support are
received or until the crisis is resolved.
“… when someone we know is experiencing a major mental
health problem we may be unsure of what to do,” Kiefer said. “We may choose to
do nothing, disassociate, or communicate fear to others all of which further
stigmatize the individual, their family, and our community”, said Kiefer, who
also does Culture of Gentleness training, a philosophy based on building trust
between a caregiver and person with a disability or mental illness so physical
or chemical restraints aren’t needed.
Nearly one-in-five Americans develop a mental disorder in
any one year, according to the Center
for Behavioral Health Statistics and Quality. Kiefer added,
“Mental health problems are common and unfortunately understanding how to
provide initial help is not.”
Those with mental illness “could be someone very close to
you,” said Kiefer. “As a Mental Health First-Aider we are conduits to care” in
that those trained in the field can guide someone to the proper physicians or
treatment programs.
The Michigan Mental Health First Aid Week will be supported
with radio spots and a phone bank for people to call, according to Snyder’s
office. The statewide goal is to train 1,500 people during the course of this
week.
Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence and
advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center. He can be reached at
586 263-8950.
Friday, April 11, 2014
Brown out as executive director at OCCMHA
AUBURN
HILLS – The Board of Directors of the Oakland County Community Mental Health
Authority has failed to renew the contract for Executive Director Jeffrey L.
Brown and appointed Chief Financial
Officer Willie Brooks as the interim executive director until a replacement is
found.
The
board voted unanimously not to renew the contract of Brown, who has been in the
post since 2006.
The
decision to name Brooks as interim director and replace Brown was “mutually
agreed upon by OCCMHA Board Chair Malkia Newman; Deputy Executive Director
Kathleen Kovach and Brooks,” according to a press release Friday.
“After
careful consideration, Oakland County Community Mental Health Authority’s Board
of Directors unanimously decided to discontinue its employment contract with
Mr. Brown,” said Newman.
“As
the Board moves forward in its search for a new leader whose qualifications
match OCCMHA’s vision for the future, we want to assure those individuals whom
we serve, including people with a developmental disability, mental health
illness, substance use disorder, and children with serious emotional
disturbance, that they will continue to receive uninterrupted, quality services
from our core provider agencies. As always, their well-being is first on our
list of priorities.”
Brooks
and Kovach are working closely with OCCMHA’s leadership team to ensure that the
organization continues to fulfill its administrative obligations of passing on
state and federal funding to its network providers and the people it serves
during this time of transition.
- Special writer Jerry Wolffe
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Public offered free mental health first aid training
In response to a declaration by the governor, mental health
experts in Oakland and Macomb counties will train up to 40 people to increase
their ability to help them become more aware and learn to help those showing
signs of mental illness.
Gov. Rick Snyder declared May 18 to May 24 as “Michigan Mental Health First Aid Week,” said Ed Kiefer, a senior training consultant with the Center for Positive Living Supports on the campus of Macomb-Oakland Regional Center, Inc., in Clinton Township.
Box: To register for training, visit https://www.positivelivingsupport.org/training/register
Gov. Rick Snyder declared May 18 to May 24 as “Michigan Mental Health First Aid Week,” said Ed Kiefer, a senior training consultant with the Center for Positive Living Supports on the campus of Macomb-Oakland Regional Center, Inc., in Clinton Township.
The training was funded by a state grant to Treatment
Innovations of Troy. It will be conducted by the Center for Positive Living
from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, May 20, at MORC’s Auburn Hills satellite
office at 1270 Doris Ave.
“Mental health first aid is the help offered a person
developing a mental health problem or experiencing a mental health crisis,”
said Kiefer. The first aid is given until appropriate treatment and support are
received or until the crisis is resolved.
One-in-five Americans develop a mental disorder in any one
year, according to the USA Mental Health First Aid agency.
The most prevalent disorder is anxiety, followed by
substance abuse and depression, the agency says.
“We want to increase literacy and understanding of mental
health problems and illness,” said Kiefer, a MORC trainer first aid program.
“We are conduits to care” in that those trained in the field can guide someone
to the proper physicians or treatment programs.
Those with mental illness, who often unnecessarily suffer
stigma in society, “could be someone very close to you,” said Kiefer.
Latest data from The National Institutes of Health showed
there were 38,364 people who lost their lives to suicide in a single year.
“If someone has a major mental health problem, people don’t
know how to respond to help that person,” said Kiefer, who also uses the
Culture of Gentleness philosophy in which a caregiver or health worker tries to
create a bond of trust and love with the patient.
“Someone can be overtly taking care of things in his or her
life and seemingly doing well but there are signs we should be aware of that
they may be having mental health issues,” he said. These include isolating
oneself, not interacting with friends, showing a general lack of interest and
letting his or her appearance deteriorate.
“We have to try and show that person ‘we are there for you
and not judging you,’” he said. “And we have to let them say whatever they want
and know it’ll be OK.”
The Michigan Mental Health First Aid Week will be supported
with radio spots and a phone bank for people to call, according to Snyder’s
office. The statewide goal is to train 1,500 people.Box: To register for training, visit https://www.positivelivingsupport.org/training/register
Jerry Wolffe is the
writer-in-residence and advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional
Center. He can be reached at 586 263-8950.
Monday, April 7, 2014
Program to help OU medical students to learn to work with disabled
JARC, an organization serving people with disabilities, has
created a special educational program for second-year medical students at the
William Beaumont School of Medicine at Oakland University.
The program will teach the medical students how to properly
interact with those with developmental disabilities.
Approximately 60 students have gone through the program this
year. The students are broken up into groups of 15 and visit JARC corporate
offices in Farmington Hills for one-hour presentations once a month.
Then the students go to tour one of JARC’s homes to learn
how people with disabilities live with around-the-clock care in a community
setting. The students are from the class of Dr. Ernest F. Krug, III, professor
of biomedical science at the medical school at OU.
The overall goal of this program is to teach the medical
students ways to become better doctors in the future. They learn about the history
of developmental and intellectual disabilities, how the two overlap, and most
importantly, how having a disability affects a person’s life.
Eye contact with the person that has a developmental
disability is stressed. Students also are taught effective ways of
communicating with those with disabilities, how to be more inclusive, and how
to deal with someone who is non-verbal and doesn’t want to be touched.
Students are also taught the philosophy of Gentle Teaching
in which a trusting and loving rapport is developed with the person with a
disability and others so the individual feels safe and cared about.
JARC, a nonprofit in Farmington Hills, serves both children
and adults with disabilities in terms of housing, life planning, social
inclusion, education, and recreation.
Jerry Wolffe is the
writer-in-residence and advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional
Central. He can be reached 586 263-8950.Friday, April 4, 2014
Care program set up for those who receive both Medicare, Medicaid
The Michigan Department of Community Health Friday announced that it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for the new MI Health Link demonstration program to integrate care for individuals who are dually eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid.
Through the new MI Health Link program, all services currently covered separately through the Medicare and Medicaid programs will be integrated into a single health care delivery model. This model will feature coordinated care for physical health, long-term care, and behavioral health services and supports. The program will also focus on increasing access to home and community-based services and enhanced quality through performance monitoring. MI Health Link will include the use of person-centered processes and promote enrollee choice in all aspects of the program.
As partners, CMS and MDCH will ensure continuity of care during the transition to the new program for those enrolled. The final agreement outlines the state and federal responsibilities in the roll-out and administration of MI Health Link. Michigan will begin working with CMS and its contractors to develop readiness review protocols and three-way contracts between MDCH, CMS and the integrated care organizations that will administer the program.
"Our primary goal with MI Health Link is to improve quality and access to care for this vulnerable group of people who currently have to navigate two very different systems in Medicare and Medicaid," said James K Haveman, Director of the MDCH. "We appreciate the federal government’s thoughtful consideration of this program and its impact on improving care for Michigan residents."
The MI Health Link demonstration program will operate for three years in four regions of the state. Regions included in the demonstration are: the entire Upper Peninsula; a region in the Southwest part of the state consisting of the following counties: Barry, Berrien, Branch, Calhoun, Cass, Kalamazoo, St. Joseph, and Van Buren; Macomb as a single county region; and Wayne as a single county region.
The program will be implemented in two phases, beginning in the Upper Peninsula and the southwest region, followed by Macomb and Wayne counties in the second phase. Eight integrated care organizations were selected by MDCH to manage acute and primary care, pharmacy, dental and long-term supports and services for MI Health Link. Behavioral health services will be provided through the Michigan Prepaid Inpatient Health Plans.
Enrollment activities will begin later in 2014 for the first two regions of the program, the Upper Peninsula and Southwest Michigan. Service provision will start for individuals in these regions choosing to enroll no sooner than January 2015.
(For more information about MI Health Link, visit www.michigan.gov/mdch/0,4612,7-132-2939__2939__2939-259203--,00.html)
Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence and advocate-at-large for the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center. He can be reached at 586 263-8950.
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
I'm a Christian but intolerance toward LGBT community is evil
Why would anyone consciously "chose" to be homosexual and become a minority member of one of the most oppressed and discriminated groups in the nation? Homosexuality is not a choice just as it is not a choice to be born with a disability.
Gays do not have equal civil rights in America. They face daily discrimination in social settings as well as the workplace. While heterosexual couples can share, for example, corporate benefits of one with their wife or husband, such as medical and life insurance and pensions, gay partners cannot in most corporations.
They also don't have the automatic right to inherit the property of a partner without going through expensive and extensive legal activities to set up such provisions. And unless they've also made special arrangements beforehand they cannot go into a hospital room to be with someone they have loved, perhaps for decades, and be with them to hold his or her hand as the partner dies. Where's the agape love or compassion in that?
In America, the DOMA law is a DUMBA law and we, the people, are falling for it our of blind fear and eons of programming, often by religious heretics.
Gays, lesbians, transgender people and those who are bisexual have the right to receive all the same benefits our society gives to those who are heterosexual couples. Maybe, DOMA means Defense of Madness Act.
Certainly we don't need to populate the Earth as heterosexuals do when we already have 7 billion people on this planet with half underfed, undernourished and without adequate shelter.
I know about discrimination, isolation, being bullied and beaten, denied jobs, housing, access to buildings and looked down upon by others as being inferior because I was born with the disability of cerebral palsy in the 1940s and now use a wheelchair which has made my world smaller because most businesses in America are not following the accessibility guidelines in the Americans with Disabilities Act.They aren't doing what's right, I believe, because it costs money to make a door 32 inches wide, fix a restroom so there a turnaround space of five feet, smooth out cracked concrete or put switches for lights and heat within reach. Here we are bowing before the false god of materialism. Businesses are certainly foolish because if a person with a disability can get into a place of public accommodation he or she can spend their money which is good for the business and the person. They also will be good workers because a good job with benefits is economic freedom and the road to being part of the larger society.
At two, doctors wanted to place me in a state institution because "it would be best for all." Dad told the doctor to get screwed and "I'm going to raise Jerry to be normal."
I was denied access to an integrated public education until 1960 when I was 14 and told the principal of Osborn High School in Detroit I would not go into a room that was labeled "handicapped," a derogatory term meaning beggar or cap in hand. I suppose with that elevator key in hand and permission to leave a classroom five minutes before the bell rang for the next class we may have been among the first to be mainstreamed in a regular school.
I heard the other day that five teenagers a day kill themselves because of the personal and social torment they go through because they are gay and not heterosexual. This breaks my heart and society should offer acceptance and comfort so these young people can be comfortable with who and what they are from birth. Again, homosexuality is not a choice.
I would never have chosen to have a disability because we, as well as gays, often are outcasts in society; targets of horrific treatment, suffer great pain from our impairments and have to develop an inner spiritual strength to tolerate those who are bigots.
I was beaten so many times by bullies as a child with a disability that I didn't really trust anyone "normal" until I was able to jump in my car and get away from them. Gays, lesbians, transgender people and those who are bisexual also are beaten, some to the point of death. Homophobia has deep roots in the souls of this nation's people. Some fools think it's like a virus which just shows they are beyond ignorance.
Just as the 54 million people in America with disabilities have won civil rights during the past 40 years through the combined efforts of thousands, eventually the LGBT community also will be able to gain equal rights but it's going to be a hard battle. It must be one of non-violence, rewriting laws, and convincing some powerful fools you have the right to love who you want.
It's hard, however, to erase the image of televangelist Pat Robertson saying gays are going to hell. Robertson made $459 million last year, one report said, and I wonder how much he gave to help the poor, disadvantaged, those who face discrimination such as gays and the disabled.
Preacher Jimmy Swaggart, who lost his televangelist show a while back after being caught with prostitutes, cried and lamented, begged for forgiveness with tears running down his cheeks on TV because "I have sinned." His greater sin, I believe, is preaching against men loving men and women loving women.
In a sermon in September, 2004, Swaggart said: "I’ve never seen a man in my life I wanted to marry. And I’m gonna be blunt and plain; if one ever looks at me like that, I’m gonna kill him and tell God he died." The audience laughed and clapped as God and his angels in Heaven cried.
When he stands before St. Peter at the gates of Heaven, Swaggart will be told to go to hell because you were not a good and faithful servant, but one who spread hate and threw logs on the fire of evil to perpetuate it.
Pitiful, hateful comments as these preachers should never see the light of day and always, always be challenged.
In the New King James version of the Bible Leviticus 20:13 says: "If a man lies with a male as he lies with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination. They shall surely be put to death. Their blood shall be upon them."
However, just before the comments on homosexuality, the Bible in Leviticus 11:9-12, it says: “These you may eat, of all that are in the waters. Everything in the waters that has fins and scales, whether in the seas or in the rivers, you may eat. But anything in the seas or the rivers that has not fins and scales, of the swarming creatures in the waters and of the living creatures that are in the waters, is detestable to you. You shall regard them as detestable; you shall not eat any of their flesh, and you shall detest their carcasses. Everything in the waters that has not fins and scales is detestable to you."
So eating a shrimp or lobster is a detestable sin, according to the Old Testament. So why don't we picket outside of restaurants that serve this type of seafood and punish and ostracize those who commit this detestable sin?
It's a shame. Because of this stupidity, many gay people are turned off to religion at a time when our world needs to draw from their wisdom, courage and strength to make this world one where we will not destroy ourselves and love one another more just as Christ, Buddha, and Muhammad, among other great souls, taught us.
Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence and advocate-at-large for the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center. He can be reached at (586) 263-8950.
Gays do not have equal civil rights in America. They face daily discrimination in social settings as well as the workplace. While heterosexual couples can share, for example, corporate benefits of one with their wife or husband, such as medical and life insurance and pensions, gay partners cannot in most corporations.
They also don't have the automatic right to inherit the property of a partner without going through expensive and extensive legal activities to set up such provisions. And unless they've also made special arrangements beforehand they cannot go into a hospital room to be with someone they have loved, perhaps for decades, and be with them to hold his or her hand as the partner dies. Where's the agape love or compassion in that?
In America, the DOMA law is a DUMBA law and we, the people, are falling for it our of blind fear and eons of programming, often by religious heretics.
Gays, lesbians, transgender people and those who are bisexual have the right to receive all the same benefits our society gives to those who are heterosexual couples. Maybe, DOMA means Defense of Madness Act.
Certainly we don't need to populate the Earth as heterosexuals do when we already have 7 billion people on this planet with half underfed, undernourished and without adequate shelter.
I know about discrimination, isolation, being bullied and beaten, denied jobs, housing, access to buildings and looked down upon by others as being inferior because I was born with the disability of cerebral palsy in the 1940s and now use a wheelchair which has made my world smaller because most businesses in America are not following the accessibility guidelines in the Americans with Disabilities Act.They aren't doing what's right, I believe, because it costs money to make a door 32 inches wide, fix a restroom so there a turnaround space of five feet, smooth out cracked concrete or put switches for lights and heat within reach. Here we are bowing before the false god of materialism. Businesses are certainly foolish because if a person with a disability can get into a place of public accommodation he or she can spend their money which is good for the business and the person. They also will be good workers because a good job with benefits is economic freedom and the road to being part of the larger society.
At two, doctors wanted to place me in a state institution because "it would be best for all." Dad told the doctor to get screwed and "I'm going to raise Jerry to be normal."
I was denied access to an integrated public education until 1960 when I was 14 and told the principal of Osborn High School in Detroit I would not go into a room that was labeled "handicapped," a derogatory term meaning beggar or cap in hand. I suppose with that elevator key in hand and permission to leave a classroom five minutes before the bell rang for the next class we may have been among the first to be mainstreamed in a regular school.
I heard the other day that five teenagers a day kill themselves because of the personal and social torment they go through because they are gay and not heterosexual. This breaks my heart and society should offer acceptance and comfort so these young people can be comfortable with who and what they are from birth. Again, homosexuality is not a choice.
I would never have chosen to have a disability because we, as well as gays, often are outcasts in society; targets of horrific treatment, suffer great pain from our impairments and have to develop an inner spiritual strength to tolerate those who are bigots.
I was beaten so many times by bullies as a child with a disability that I didn't really trust anyone "normal" until I was able to jump in my car and get away from them. Gays, lesbians, transgender people and those who are bisexual also are beaten, some to the point of death. Homophobia has deep roots in the souls of this nation's people. Some fools think it's like a virus which just shows they are beyond ignorance.
Just as the 54 million people in America with disabilities have won civil rights during the past 40 years through the combined efforts of thousands, eventually the LGBT community also will be able to gain equal rights but it's going to be a hard battle. It must be one of non-violence, rewriting laws, and convincing some powerful fools you have the right to love who you want.
It's hard, however, to erase the image of televangelist Pat Robertson saying gays are going to hell. Robertson made $459 million last year, one report said, and I wonder how much he gave to help the poor, disadvantaged, those who face discrimination such as gays and the disabled.
Preacher Jimmy Swaggart, who lost his televangelist show a while back after being caught with prostitutes, cried and lamented, begged for forgiveness with tears running down his cheeks on TV because "I have sinned." His greater sin, I believe, is preaching against men loving men and women loving women.
In a sermon in September, 2004, Swaggart said: "I’ve never seen a man in my life I wanted to marry. And I’m gonna be blunt and plain; if one ever looks at me like that, I’m gonna kill him and tell God he died." The audience laughed and clapped as God and his angels in Heaven cried.
When he stands before St. Peter at the gates of Heaven, Swaggart will be told to go to hell because you were not a good and faithful servant, but one who spread hate and threw logs on the fire of evil to perpetuate it.
Pitiful, hateful comments as these preachers should never see the light of day and always, always be challenged.
In the New King James version of the Bible Leviticus 20:13 says: "If a man lies with a male as he lies with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination. They shall surely be put to death. Their blood shall be upon them."
However, just before the comments on homosexuality, the Bible in Leviticus 11:9-12, it says: “These you may eat, of all that are in the waters. Everything in the waters that has fins and scales, whether in the seas or in the rivers, you may eat. But anything in the seas or the rivers that has not fins and scales, of the swarming creatures in the waters and of the living creatures that are in the waters, is detestable to you. You shall regard them as detestable; you shall not eat any of their flesh, and you shall detest their carcasses. Everything in the waters that has not fins and scales is detestable to you."
So eating a shrimp or lobster is a detestable sin, according to the Old Testament. So why don't we picket outside of restaurants that serve this type of seafood and punish and ostracize those who commit this detestable sin?
It's a shame. Because of this stupidity, many gay people are turned off to religion at a time when our world needs to draw from their wisdom, courage and strength to make this world one where we will not destroy ourselves and love one another more just as Christ, Buddha, and Muhammad, among other great souls, taught us.
Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence and advocate-at-large for the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center. He can be reached at (586) 263-8950.
Monday, March 31, 2014
Ukrainians visit Oakland, Macomb to learn to better lives of disabled
Doctors, educators and disability advocates from the Ukraine
will spend a day at the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center during a two-week trip
to the Macomb County area to learn the most advanced techniques in helping
those with disabilities live normal lives.
“These visitors will get a real feel to what is possible when they see people with disabilities living in regular homes and neighborhoods,” he said.
Since MORC was founded in the early 1970s, it helped close all 12 state institutions and transition some 13,000 people with disabilities and mental illness to their own homes or apartments with 24/7 care. Finding homes and jobs in the community for those with disabilities continues to this day.
It is believed the results of the visit to Oakland schools and MORC will “contribute to improving quality of life of Ukrainian children with disabilities through increased coordination, advanced effectiveness, developing leadership, and enhanced information management of the Ukrainian rehabilitation system,” Reich said.
The nine-member Ukraine delegation will arrive April 9 and
stay until April 23 and visit Oakland County schools to learn about
“mainstreaming” or having children with disabilities attend neighborhood
schools. The Ukrainians also will visit MORC’s office in Clinton Township on
April 15.
“We plan to take members of the group to see one or two
homes where people with disabilities live with around-the-clock caregivers,”
said Jerry Provencal, the executive director of MORC, which also has offices in
Auburn Hills besides the main campus in Clinton Township.“These visitors will get a real feel to what is possible when they see people with disabilities living in regular homes and neighborhoods,” he said.
Since MORC was founded in the early 1970s, it helped close all 12 state institutions and transition some 13,000 people with disabilities and mental illness to their own homes or apartments with 24/7 care. Finding homes and jobs in the community for those with disabilities continues to this day.
International Visitors Council of Detroit, a nonprofit
organization that works with the U.S. Department of State and U.S. embassies
aboard, will act as a liaison for the Ukrainians and their Detroit-area
counterparts in the fields of disability advocacy, said Marian Reich, Executive
Director of IVC Detroit.
The Ukrainians will learn about modern rehabilitation
methods and technologies developed for children with disabilities, best
practices and progressive approaches to integrate them in communities, provide
equal access to education and jobs, as well as raise awareness of their
challenges, needs and expectations, Reich said Monday.
“We are hoping to improve the lives of those with disabilities
and their families in Ukraine by letting these experts see what we do in
organizations such as MORC,” Reich said.
The Ukrainians also will visit schools in Oakland County to
show them the “best practices in inclusion education,” she said. “We also are
showing them some of the latest technologies that help people with disabilities
better adapt to their challenges.”It is believed the results of the visit to Oakland schools and MORC will “contribute to improving quality of life of Ukrainian children with disabilities through increased coordination, advanced effectiveness, developing leadership, and enhanced information management of the Ukrainian rehabilitation system,” Reich said.
Jerry Wolffe is the
writer-in-residence and advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional
Center. He can be reached at 586 263-8950.
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Rule to require fed contractors to hire more people with disabilities
With a new rule taking effect this week, federal
officials are looking to compel businesses to significantly increase the number
of people with disabilities that they employ.
Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence/advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center. He can be reached at 586 263-8950.
The rule requires most federal contractors to
ensure that people with disabilities account for at least 7 percent of workers
within each job group in their workforce, according to Michelle Diament of disabilityscoop.com.
While officials at the U.S. Department of Labor
say they are not establishing a firm hiring quota for contractors, they do
expect that businesses servicing the government will work toward achieving the
target. Contractors that fail to meet the goal and do not show sufficient
effort toward reaching the 7 percent threshold could lose their contracts under
the new rule.
Disability advocates say the added pressure on
federal contractors will go a long way.
“Federal contractors represent 22 percent of the
American workforce and an aspirational 7 percent hiring goal means the rule
will create real jobs, at all levels of seniority, for Americans with
disabilities,” said Mark Perriello, president and CEO of the American
Association of People with Disabilities.
Perriello said he expects that the government’s
new requirement for contractors will ultimately have a ripple effect throughout
the economy, with the potential to “transform employment opportunities for
people with disabilities.”
Under the rule, businesses with at least 50
employees and $50,000 in federal contracts must take specific steps surrounding
recruitment, training, record keeping and policy dissemination, all designed to
up employment of those with disabilities. Similar steps are already required to
promote inclusion of women and minorities in the workplace.
The changes could mean up to 585,000 jobs for
people with disabilities within the first year alone, the Labor Department said last year when the rule was finalized.
The plan has faced opposition from some
businesses and was challenged in court by the construction industry trade
group, Associated Builders and Contractors. Just last week, however, a judge
with the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia upheld the Labor
Department rules paving the way for them to be implemented on schedule.
Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence/advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center. He can be reached at 586 263-8950.
Monday, March 24, 2014
Microbusinesses show varied talents of those with disabilities
Dozens of entrepreneurs showcased their microbusinesses at
the “Champions for Achievement” event at the Troy Community Center,
demonstrating that people with disabilities would rather work than be jobless.
Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence/advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center. He can be reached at 586 263-8950.
Microbusiness owners set up tables at the center Friday, March 21, to
bring awareness to one of the more recent innovations to earn money for those
with disabilities, who face a 50-percent-plus unemployment rate.
Attorney Charlie Langton from Fox 2 Detroit was emcee at the
event which was sponsored by the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center, Community
Living Services, and the Oakland County Community Mental Health Authority.
“I was very surprised to see so much talent,” Langton said.
“To see what these microbusiness owners do and their positive attitudes is
amazing. It’s hard when you have a disability to make it but these people are a
good example for all of us.”
Joseph Lutzky, the proprietor of Moose’s Lodge and Pet
Services, earns money by walking dogs, cleaning up their waste from yards or
keeping a pet overnight for those who might go on vacation.
“This is my whole life,” said Lutzky, of Ferndale noting he
gets most of his new business from word of mouth or at his Webpage of
mooselodge.wix.com/mooselodge.
Valerie C. Kashubara, 31, of West Bloomfield, has been
selling Avon products since she started her business in 2010. “The time has
gone by so quickly I can hardly believe it.” She likes selling Avon because “I
can do as much or little as I want.” She can be reached at www.youravon.com/valeriekashubara.
Ryan Dupuis, 26, of Royal Oak, owns “Made by Ryan,” a
business in which he sells his paintings. His style was abstract with a great
explosion of coordinated colors on his canvasses. He also makes dog leashes and
collars which range in price from $10 to $20 depending upon size.
Elizabeth Martin, of Beverly Hills, operates “Elegant
Designs” which includes a great variety of pottery such as serving platters to
art work in the shape of rectangles, hearts, and starfish and also makes baby
clothes. Martin works 25 to 30 hours a week creating her products.
Jaideep Hans, 35, of Rochester Hills, displays his artwork
at various venues and opened his “Jay’s Reflections” three years ago. Those who
work with him says he finds art to be a way of calming and refocusing himself.
Ricky Bledsoe, 28, of Warren, owner of DJR Productions LLC
of Warren, entertained the business owners and visitors by using a complex
computer/sound system to play music. “It’s to help make people happy,” Bledsoe
said of his enterprise.
He provides music through DJR to all types of events over
the Internet and can be hired by visiting his Website at http://djrick98.radio12345.com/
Bledsoe, known as “DJ Ricky,” has a huge selection of all types of music since
he has a terabyte of selections on various computer drives. Money he earns he
puts back into the business, he said.
Amie Kupovits of Walled Lake opened “Amie’s Avon” in 2010.
She sells Avon in Macomb and Oakland counties. With tears in her eyes, she said
her business “gives me a whole new life and I really appreciate everything.”Jerry Wolffe is the writer-in-residence/advocate-at-large at the Macomb-Oakland Regional Center. He can be reached at 586 263-8950.
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