Baltimore Sun

Ginsburg remembered fondly by disabled community

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With the passing of Ruth Bader Ginsburg (“Ruth Bader Ginsburg funeral services set; President Trump expects to announce Supreme Court pick by the weekend,” Sept. 21), the disability community remembers her most important decision on the U.S. Supreme Court. In her 1999 majority opinion, she stated “we confront the question whether the proscripti­on of discrimina­tion may require placement of persons with mental disabiliti­es in community settings rather than in institutio­ns. The answer, we hold, is a qualified yes.”

This was, in essence, the emancipati­on proclamati­on for persons with disabiliti­es. Known as the Olmstead v. L.C. decision, the ramificati­ons were to enable persons with disabiliti­es not to languish within horrific institutio­ns but rather to live, work and thrive in the community.

Large institutio­ns were opened in the late1800s and grew to incarcerat­e hundreds of thousands of persons with disabiliti­es throughout the United States. In the late 1970’s, lawsuits in Philadelph­ia, New York, Alabama and New Mexico unveiled the disease, abuse, and neglect within these institutio­ns and brought these terrible conditions to the attention of the public.

Lawsuits were successful­ly executed in the favor of persons with disabiliti­es to be freed from these institutio­ns. Implementa­tion, however, was resisted based on cost and unfounded fear from communitie­s and families alike.

Supreme Court Justice Ginsburg gave families the option to look at small homes rather than large congregate institutio­ns as an alternativ­e for living a full life. Horrific places like Pennhurst and Willowbroo­k were closed. Still, with the slow political climate, well over 50,000 people with disabiliti­es live in large institutio­ns and over 200,000 people with disabiliti­es under the age of 50 languish in nursing homes today.

With the decision of Justice Ginsburg, families and nonprofits continue to work in tandem ensuring that the best option for persons with disabiliti­es is to live with their own families or in small managed care homes. It was a seminal moment in history for the civil rights for persons with disabiliti­es. May she rest in peace.

Robert Stack, Frederick

The writer is president and CEO of Community Options Inc.

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