[Ohio-Talk] Disabled Parents Say Differences Are being Used Against Them in Family Courts
Eric Duffy
peduffy63 at gmail.com
Mon Mar 28 15:34:19 UTC 2022
Disabled parents say their differences are being used against them in family courts Kara Ayers was shopping for clothes with her children when a conversation with a store employee took a turn. "The lady at the checkout asked me how I had my daughter," Ayers said. "I didnt understand at first. The clerk explained. She asked whether "I had her vaginally or a c-section. I was like, 'Who says vaginally at the Kohls checkout?' Ayers, who uses a wheelchair, was stunned but not surprised. Strangers routinely ask her all kinds of inappropriate questions about her marriage and her parenting. Still, she considers herself lucky. The Cincinnati doctor has heard much worse through her work as co-founder of the Disabled Parenting Project and associate director of the University of Cincinnati's Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities . Ayers has worked on several cases where courts took children from their disabled parents or denied them equal custody. One case involved a mom with a visual impairment who was questioned about her ability to safely mix baby formula. "There's ready made formula where you dont have to mix it," Ayers said. "That is a classic example of where we jumped to getting children's services involved, instead of providing a simple support of premade formula. Judges and social workers don't always understand what it means to be a parent on the Autism spectrum, use a wheelchair, be Deaf or visually impaired. Mental and physical disabilities are the only characteristics in state child welfare policies that can be grounds for removal of children, according to a 2017 parental disability report from the University of Minnesota. Everything else, such as addiction, abuse and neglect, are behaviors. This can "contribute to discriminatory practices in child welfare," according to the report, "as it can lead those involved in the system to believe that parental disabilities lead to abuse, rather than focusing on how to appropriately provide services. That's why Ayers and others are advocating for Senate Bill 202 . A bipartisan piece of legislation to prohibit courts and child placing entities from "using a persons disability as a reason to deny or limit that persons care for a minor. "We need a law like this because our current Ohio code is explicitly discriminatory towards parents with disabilities," Ayers said. Sen. Bob Hackett, R-London, agreed. He's co-sponsoring SB 202 with Sen. Nickie Antonio, D-Lakewood. The bill, and its companion in the Ohio House were HB 352 (, would require courts to demonstrate how a person's disability harms their children. And it would put the burden on the "party asserting the detrimental impact to show that impact by clear and convincing evidence. Steps that could have saved Hackett a small fortune in legal fees. His son is Type 1 diabetic, and his son's ex-wife used that illness to petition for full custody of their child during their divorce. A Kentucky judge agreed, citing her fears about a low blood sugar episode happening while Hackett's son had their child. "He couldnt be with his daughter alone overnight," Hackett said. He helped his son overturn that decision by paying to bring in experts and attorneys. "When I read the bill," Hackett said. "I thought about how my son was discriminated against because he was a Type 1 diabetic. Not everyone in Ohio's disability community is on board with SB 202 and HB 352 as they currently stand. Even Ayers has some concerns about the language. Ohio Center for Autism and Low Incidence Policy Director Teresa Kobalt had reservations about how some lawmakers want to evaluate people with persistent mental illness. "There is already existing code that you can factor in health status," Kobalt said. "Theres this myth that disability specific behavior is different than health. She worries that creating a separate system for evaluating parental mental health would "further stereotypes of people with mental illness. "In general, people are supportive of this bill if it is about not allowing discrimination and providing reasonable accommodations," Kobalt said. "But I think concerns come up that were adding something different for people with disabilities. And Ayers wanted the onus to understand and secure accommodations such as premixed formula to be on the statenot the parents. She described a case where social services were called to visit a new mother in the hospital who was legally blind. She asked a nurse for assistance getting to the restroom, and the caseworker questioned whether she could use any bathroom unassisted. "That sticks with me as something that makes me so angry," Ayers said. "She had just given birth 12 hours ago. To have someone judge that. We dont see vulnerability in women with disabilities. Both Ayers and Kobalt said Ohio should train its case workers and family court judges on reasonable modifications. A 2014 study funded by a grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Development found that parents with cognitive disabilities can usually be taught any parenting skills they're missing, and low IQ's aren't predictors of neglect. "I understand their frustration," Antonio said. "Most of the time I share their frustration. But getting all interested parties to agree on every detail in a piece of legislation is next to impossible. "To me, getting this bill passed at this stage of the game is an incredible improvement over what we have right now, which is nothing," Antonio said. Similar legislation failed to pass during the last General Assembly, and Antonio hopes to get this version across the finish line before this session ends in December. "Its not my disability that has been detrimental to my kids," Ayers said. "Its our societys disbelief about my disability. Anna Staver is a reporter for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other affiliated news organizations across Ohio.
Eric
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