New Hampshire's Commitment To Community Warrants Tossing Lawsuit,
Judge Says According to the Associated Press, U.S. District Judge Steven McAuliffe found in favor of the state and closed the class action suit. Bonnie Bryson, who has multiple sclerosis, and Claire Shepardson, who has muscular dystrophy, sued the Department of Health and Human Services in late 1999. Their action was intended to get them and others with disabilities out of nursing homes, psychiatric facilities and rehab centers, and into homes in the community. Earlier that year, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that unnecessarily institutionalizing people with disabilities violates their rights under the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act. Since 2001, New Hampshire has increased its budget for the Medicaid community-based waiver program from $6.6 million to about $11.2 million, helping hundreds get off of waiting list and into the community. Both Bryson and Shepardson have gotten out of the nursing homes where they had been housed for years, and are now living in their own homes in the community. Related: --- Reproduced here under special arrangement
with Inclusion Daily Express international disability rights news service. |

