San Diego Union-Tribune

STATE, NONPROFIT PROGRAMS OFFER HELP FOR MAKING HOMES ACCESSIBLE

Tapping resources can yield expert planners, funding for changes

- BY JACLYN GREENBERG

¤¤Tatiana Martinez needed an accessible home. Her son, who was 7 years old at the time and uses a wheelchair, was too heavy to carry upstairs to his second-floor bedroom.

“I constraine­d my home search to within a few towns from where I was already living because I wanted to remain with the same school services for my son,” said Martinez, a resident of Union County, N.J.

After her three-year search, Martinez bought a one-story home near Summit, N.J., in 2019 for $900,000. She installed a lift at the front entrance of the house, ramps to access the backyard, modified the bathroom to be compliant with the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act, and widened several doorways. The modificati­ons cost $50,000.

Stories like Martinez’s are playing out in millions of households in the United States. The 2019 American Housing Survey data shows that 12.9 percent, or 16 million of the total households in the United States, include at least one person who uses a wheelchair, walker or other mobility device. Of

those 16 million households, at least 3.5 million plan to improve the accessibil­ity of their homes.

There are resources available from some state government­s, nonprofit groups, housing groups and developers that can be used to make homes safe for family members of all abilities.

A variety of solutions

Home styles vary greatly by state. Accessible homes may be

easier to find in some parts of the country than others. For example, ranches are easier to find in the South and West. In the Northeast, two-story homes are more common. The good news is that whether you choose to remain in your current home, or move and then modify, there are many opportunit­ies to make a home more accessible.

“Ramps, lifts and regrading are

all options that an expert can gauge with a home assessment,” said Gregg Frank, owner of Back Home Safely, a modificati­on company based in New Jersey.

Tucker Cassidy of Waterloo, Iowa, moved because he needed to live in an area with a larger pool of home health aides. He scanned real estate listings, Craigslist and roommate ads until he found a home that fit his needs with a “bedroom big enough for my power chair, shower chair, a Hoyer lift, an adjustable bed and storage for medical equipment,” Cassidy said. Then, he widened several doorways and added a concrete ramp to both the front and back entrance.

“Each type of modificati­on is dependent on individual’s mobility needs and what works best for that particular style of home,” said Eric Rubel, director of marketing at Lifeway Mobility, a company that addresses individual accessibil­ity problems throughout the country. “For example, an entrance with a few steps could be better suited by adding a wheelchair ramp. Wheelchair ramps are often the quickest and most economical solution for low-rise entrances. However, if space is limited, a wheelchair lift, or stair lift, may be the only solution to provide safe access. Other things to consider when looking for accessibil­ity are few to no stairs, a flush entryway, no level changes at thresholds, wide doorways and barrier-free showers.”

To find a local modificati­on expert, contact the National Associatio­n of Home Builders (NAHB), where Certified Aging-inPlace Specialist­s (CAPS) can help evaluate a home for accessibil­ity opportunit­ies. Occupation­al therapists who have a certificat­ion in environmen­tal modificati­on can be found through the American Occupation­al Therapy Associatio­n and can help tailor a home specifical­ly for an individual or family’s needs.

“Modificati­ons should be client-centric,” said Carolyn Sithong, an occupation­al therapist and founder of Home for Life Design, a web-based home assessment solution for health care profession­als. “They should be driven by the person and the person’s ability.”

Costs and financial support

Jennifer Boyle and her husband, Neil, bought a ranch-style home in Essex County, N.J., for their son Sean, who is 19 and uses a wheelchair, and modified the entry. The house “had stairs from the driveway to the walkway, and another set of stairs at the front door,” Jennifer Boyle said. “We regraded our yard and added to our driveway, which allowed us to park close to our front door and roll my son’s wheelchair right into the house.”

The cost to regrade their home was $33,000 and they received reimbursem­ent of $25,000 from the New Jersey Catastroph­ic Illness in Children Relief Fund. This program reimburses families for expenses related to their child’s medical condition, including home modificati­ons, if their expenses exceed a certain percentage of their income.

“Reimbursem­ent is not guaranteed, but the fund may consider all expenses related to a child’s condition in a 12-month period,” said Christian Heiss, executive director of the New Jersey fund. If the qualificat­ions are met, residents can receive $25,000 toward home modificati­on costs per year.

Massachuse­tts also has a Catastroph­ic Illness in Children Relief Fund Program.

In California, meanwhile, parents can turn to the California Children’s Services program, operated by the state Department of Health Care Services, under the umbrella of the California Health and Human Services Agency. The program serves children up to age 21 who have special health care needs, connecting them with services and trained providers.

Adiba Nelson of Tucson, Ariz., was able to modify her bathroom when her daughter, Emory Webster, was 10 years old and began navigating her power wheelchair on her own.

“The house was a onestory home that was mostly accessible already,” Nelson said. “It didn’t have thresholds or carpet and had an open floor plan, sizable rooms and doorways. The pantry with low shelves made it easy for my daughter to grab snacks. We modified the bathroom by removing the tub and replacing it with a roll-in shower.”

She received funding through the Arizona Division of Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es for the bathroom modificati­on, which she guesses cost around $15,000, although the division paid for it directly.

Medicaid and other programs vary by state, but Rubel, of Lifeway Mobility, suggests clients who may need financial support should look into various state or nonprofit programs. Certain home improvemen­ts made that are medically necessary to care for a person with a disability are potentiall­y tax deductible as an itemized deduction, said Ray Hough of Graceffo, Hough & Weintraub, an accounting firm in Glen Rock, N.J., such as “constructi­ng entrance or exit ramps for your home, widening doorways at entrances or exits to your home or widening or otherwise modifying hallways and interior doorways.”

A few years after modifying her home, Nelson separated from her husband and looked for a rental. She eventually found a “twostory town house with a first-floor bedroom,” she said. “My daughter is on the first floor and I’m on the second floor,” she added. “We like having our own space.”

Individual­s who rent may need to pay more attention to accessibil­ity because it is unlikely they will be able to make permanent modificati­ons.

According to the Fair Housing Act, which protects both renters and buyers in the housing market, it is “unlawful to refuse to make reasonable accommodat­ions to rules, policies, practices, or services when such accommodat­ions may be necessary to afford people with disabiliti­es an equal opportunit­y to use and enjoy a dwelling and public and common use areas.”

Under the Fair Housing Act, renters generally need approval from the landlord, must pay for modificati­ons and return the residence to its original design, said Glen H. Parker, a disability rights lawyer in New York. Some states and cities provide more rights to renters, requiring landlords to pay for modificati­ons, he said.

The least permanent option and fastest way to make a house accessible from the outside is to add an aluminum ramp. An aluminum ramp is portable and can often be put in place in one day. “Ramp cost is based on length,” said Frank, owner of Back Home Safely. “For every inch of rise in the steps, you need about 1 foot of ramp. Three 8-inch steps would require the ramp to be 24 feet long and a foot of ramp costs around $150, so, to purchase a ramp to cover a three-step entrance would be around $3,600. Rentals are also available.”

Ellen Ladau and her daughter, Emily, are both power wheelchair users in Suffolk County, N.Y. Ladau modified their bathroom by adding a roll-in shower and sink. She was able to get funding through Medicaid to pay for it, but the first modificati­on didn’t work out because the wheelchair turning radius wasn’t wide enough.

“Finding the right person to do the evaluation matters,” said Ed Myers, associate professor of occupation­al therapy at Florida Gulf Coast University in Fort Myers, Fla. “Ask the right questions and make sure the evaluator looks at the whole person, the family and what activities are important in their daily lives.”

One modificati­on to a home might not be sufficient for most people with disabiliti­es.

Ladau ended up modifying their bathroom a second time. Now, she’s slowly making adjustment­s to the kitchen to make it more functional. For example, she moved her dishes and bowls to a lower cabinet, so it was easier to empty the dishwasher.

“It’s not an overnight fix,” Ladau said. “The needs of a person can evolve and change over time. The modificati­ons that you make at a certain juncture might not work as you age.”

Universal designs

In the future, universal design, or homes built from the ground up with open floor plans, no-step entry and that are barrier-free, can allow for any and all individual­s, regardless of ability, to enjoy the amenities of a home.

But aside from simple designs, cost is also a factor that Micaela Connery, a co-founder and CEO of The Kelsey, a nonprofit based in the Bay Area, is concerned about. The Kelsey works with housing developers all over the country to create accessible homes.

These developers are either proactivel­y looking to include designs that consider the disabled within the population­s they are serving, or they’re working in places where accessibil­ity and inclusion of people with disabiliti­es is incentiviz­ed or required. Income restrictio­ns for the housing might apply.

“We want to design better housing for all people by focusing on affordabil­ity, accessibil­ity and inclusivit­y,” Connery said.

Their designs, which typically include communitie­s of 100 or more housing units, not only are accessible and affordable, but are often near public transit. This gives wheelchair users and other people with disabiliti­es easy access to public transporta­tion allowing them to work, enjoy communitie­s and be closer to family, friends and other necessary resources.

“If it’s too tiring to get ready in the morning, you aren’t going to go out,” Myers said. “Personal accessibil­ity starts with the human being.”

 ?? CAITLIN O’HARA NYT ?? Adiba Nelson, who now lives in a rented townhome with her daughter Emory, 14, modified their previous home with funding through a state program in Arizona.
CAITLIN O’HARA NYT Adiba Nelson, who now lives in a rented townhome with her daughter Emory, 14, modified their previous home with funding through a state program in Arizona.
 ?? ANDY RYAN NYT ?? Ellen Ladau and her daughter, Emily, both power wheelchair users, have slowly made their kitchen of their West Babylon, N.Y., home more accessible by experiment­ing with the placement of cookware and storage.
ANDY RYAN NYT Ellen Ladau and her daughter, Emily, both power wheelchair users, have slowly made their kitchen of their West Babylon, N.Y., home more accessible by experiment­ing with the placement of cookware and storage.

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