The Post

Ministers taken to court

- Catherine Hutton of RNZ

Government ministers are being taken to court over the way the country’s most vulnerable citizens and their parents who care for them are treated.

An independen­t disability advocate has filed papers asking the Employment Court to decide if people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es have the mental capacity to be employers. The Government is promising to change this, but advocate Jane Carrigan doesn’t want to wait and is going to court.

The case centres on Auckland mother Christine Fleming, who has cared for her son, Justin, for the past 38 years. Justin suffers from Williams Syndrome, a developmen­tal disorder, which makes him incapable of looking after himself.

The level of support she provides includes dressing, showering, managing his finances, taking care of his medical needs and arranging his social outings.

Her life revolves around Justin and his needs. The days are planned around his activities and how he’s feeling. But the minute he doesn’t look right, or shows signs of being unwell, everything stops.

If Fleming doesn’t read those signs and manage them, the results can be disastrous. ‘‘He gets overloaded exceedingl­y easily, even when he’s feeling well and good. If he is not 100 per cent he is off, so he then is grumpy, he’s overreacti­ve to any stimuli outside, so you get, if you’re lucky it’s just mumbling and grumbling, when it gets even more overloaded it gets to yelling and swearing,’’ she said.

In order to get funding, Fleming has to be an employee of her disabled son, a relationsh­ip the Ministry of Health has already admitted is a mere fiction.

Independen­t disability advocate Jane Carrigan said for too long the ministers and their ministries have indulged in what she calls tricky and technical conduct, by creating sham employment relationsh­ips.

And in doing so, the ministers had removed themselves from their responsibi­lities under the New Zealand Public Health and

Disability Act, she said. ‘‘This allows the ministry to step back in the very cynical name of choice and control and say to people with disabiliti­es – the majority of whom I might add have an intellectu­al disability – ‘well there you go, you’re the employer, you have the choice to employ who you want, the control to manage how your employment relationsh­ip works’.’’

Carrigan said that was ludicrous. ‘‘The so-called employer is usually lying in bed with nappies on and has no capacity to manage the employment relationsh­ip intellectu­ally.’’ Carrigan said if there was an employment relationsh­ip it was between the carer and the Ministry of Health and she wanted the court to say so.

The minister for disability, Carmel Sepuloni, and the associate health minister, Jenny Salesa, who is responsibl­e for disability, declined to comment, saying the case was before the courts.

The Ministry of Health said it was preparing advice on how to change the nature of the employment relationsh­ip, which it would send to ministers next month. – RNZ

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