The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

More waivers, better wages will help support good lives and outcomes.

- By Nick Perry and Dave Wilber Nick Perry is a disability inclusion strategy manager at Boeing Co. and chair of the Georgia Council on Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es. Dave Wilber is the executive of Diversifie­d Enterprise­s in Tifton, and president of Georgia’s

Imagine that you, or someone you love, has a very impactful, lifelong disability. For example, imagine your child has significan­t challenges learning, understand­ing language and caring for themselves. Or imagine that you yourself struggle with mobility, using language to express yourself and living independen­tly.

For thousands of Georgia families, this scenario isn’t hypothetic­al — it’s the reality of having a developmen­tal disability. And many of those families are struggling, deeply.

With adequate support, it’s a completely different story. There are individual­s all over the state of Georgia with developmen­tal disabiliti­es who live, learn, work, play and worship in their communitie­s and who are valued and beloved members of those communitie­s.

Both of us have run programs that support individual­s with disabiliti­es to build careers. We’ve seen the life-changing impact that the right supports and services have on people with disabiliti­es as well as their families. But just because Georgians qualify for that type of support does not mean they receive it.

Right now, more than 7,000 Georgians are on a waiting list for services. They have been found pre-eligible for services that help them live in their communitie­s, services like access to community activities, assistance obtaining and maintainin­g employment and respite care.

Waivers that provide these services are what the 7,000plus people are waiting for. And unless a person is in truly desperate circumstan­ces, it’s years of waiting. One of the members of the Georgia Council on Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es was relieved when her daughter recently received a waiver after 13 years.

What do individual­s do, during those years? Sometimes they sit on the couch. Other times a parent or relative quits their job to support their loved one, which deprives Georgia’s economy of valuable workers and hurts the family financiall­y. Sometimes a person and their family will scrape together funds to receive some services, or they will receive limited funding for limited services. In the worst of cases, people are sent out of state for short-term crisis services, get into trouble with the law, or become the victims of violence.

Having a waiver for everyone who needs one, and making sure high quality services are provided under those waivers, is a powerful way to support good lives and good outcomes.

Of course, in order for someone to provide quality services, we have to compensate them. The state’s reimbursem­ent rate for service providers is based on paying direct support profession­als a wage of $10.63 an hour. Some service providers have shifted funds around, often leaving non-direct support positions unfilled, so that they can boost wages to $15 or $16 an hour. It remains a struggle to find and keep staff, even the staff who want to stay. Which means that even once Georgians with disabiliti­es are approved to receive waivers, it is hard to find staff to provide services.

We believe this is a critical moment for our state to invest in Georgians with disabiliti­es, their families and the profession­als who support them. From a national perspectiv­e, Georgia has historical­ly invested a relatively low amount into adult developmen­tal disability services, lagging well behind the national average and behind most of our neighborin­g states in the

Southeast.

But if we all pitch in, a modest amount will make a world of difference. To give a kitchen table example — an annual $25 per Georgia taxpayer would fund approximat­ely 5,500 waivers. When we talk to friends and neighbors about this, we find they are willing, even eager, to make this type of modest financial sacrifice to support people with the most significan­t impact of their disabiliti­es. We have found this to be true in rural and urban settings, with Republican­s and Democrats alike. Which makes sense, because disability is an inherently bipartisan issue.

The good news is that Georgia has begun to trend in a positive direction. Last year, 513 new waivers were funded in the state budget. A bipartisan Senate study committee led by senators Sally Harrell and John Albers produced a thoughtful list of recommenda­tions, including a recommenda­tion to increase direct support profession­al wages, fund 2,400 new waivers and create an Intellectu­al and Developmen­tal Disability Commission. We are starting to hear more widespread agreement that everyone who is eligible for a waiver needs to have one, and that direct support profession­als need to be paid wages that they can live on.

We find great hope in this progress. We are excited to continue this work with Gov. Brian Kemp and the members of the General Assembly to invest in Georgians with developmen­tal disabiliti­es and their families. director

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Dave Wilber
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DREAMSTIME/TNS
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Nick Perry

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