[nfbmi-talk] Individuals with disabilities blocked from receiving Voc Rehab Assistance to attend college

Christine Boone christineboone2 at gmail.com
Tue Sep 27 15:47:22 UTC 2016


Lydia, thank you for sharing this article. Dr. Kenneth Jernigan observed in the mid-1990's that the vocational rehabilitation program was on the way to outliving its usefulness.  For a while we were truly making inroads in state vocational rehabilitation agencies, as were other disability groups.  Unfortunately this trend has almost completely come to an end and the state rehabilitation agencies are controled by those who have neither the experience nor the desire to assist persons with disabilities in reaching their God-given potential.  Instead they see these jobs as purely a means toward personal advancement and enrichment.  Oklahoma and Michigan have both been plunged into the dark-ages by those who over-see and control the hiring of their executive teams.  Those teams in turn only tie the hands of the competent rehabilitation professionals who truly want to assist eligible individuals to maximize their potential to live the lives they want. 
   .

Boone Christine Sent from my iPhone

On Sep 27, 2016, at 7:52 AM, Lydia Schuck via NFBMI-Talk <nfbmi-talk at nfbnet.org> wrote:

The statements below were posted on a list I subscribe to about Adult Education and Disability.  Lydia


A recent article published in The Hechinger Report highlights a troubling trend faced by many adults with disabilities trying to access state Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) funding for post-secondary education.  Eligible but got Nothing: Hundreds of thousands of People with Disabilities Blocked from College Aid<http://hechingerreport.org/800000-people-disabilities-eligible-help-got-nothing/> shares the stories of several VR clients, and the underlying issues that have kept them from receiving services.

The article notes that, "More than 800,000 people with disabilities found eligible for services received no assistance between 2010 and 2014, according to federal data. More than a dozen states failed to provide services to over 40 percent of those they themselves deemed eligible. This despite $3 billion in tax dollars spent last year by the agencies responsible, known as Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) offices. Created by the Rehabilitation Act three decades ago, VRs are supposed to help people with disabilities become independent.  Delays in service provision were so widespread that, in 2014, Congress mandated that a person with a disability must receive a plan for employment within 90 days of being deemed eligible for assistance. In 20 states, more than one-third of cases stretched past the 90-day limit in 2015. Close to 14,000 cases stretched past a year".

Part of the problem is high VR caseloads carried by those working directly with clients, and responsible for these services. Under WIOA, VR and adult education are now tasked with working jointly to better serve VR clients.  What are the ideas in your state for bridging the historic divide between adult education and VR?  How can we work together to better serve our learners with disabilities?

Please take a minute to share what you are seeing in your state, or thinking may work for your community.  No ideas are too big, or too small!

Best,

Mike Cruse

Disabilities in Adult Education Moderator

michaelcruse74 at gmail.com<mailto:michaelcruse74 at gmail.com>





_______________________________________________
NFBMI-Talk mailing list
NFBMI-Talk at nfbnet.org
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nfbmi-talk_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for NFBMI-Talk:
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nfbmi-talk_nfbnet.org/christineboone2%40gmail.com




More information about the NFBMI-Talk mailing list