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Spotlight on Housing Rights of People with Disabilities Training Clinical Partners in Advocacy. Rebecca Diamond, JD – Housing March 2011. Objectives. Identify key links between appropriate housing and the health of people with disabilities
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Spotlight onHousing Rights of People with DisabilitiesTraining Clinical Partners in Advocacy Rebecca Diamond, JD – Housing March 2011
Objectives • Identify key links between appropriate housing and the health of people with disabilities • Screen patients with disabilities for their ability to use and enjoy their current housing units • Deploy basic advocacy skills in consultation with MLP | Boston, to help disabled people exercise their rights to obtain or keep appropriate housing
Aggravates physical & mental disabilities Overcrowding Mold, Pests, Carpeting, High-Dry Heat Asthma Mobility Disabilities Stairs, narrow doorways, high cabinets, small bathrooms PTSD Common Housing Problems Faced By People with Disabilities: Violent Neighborhood
Important Terms • ISD – Inspectional Services Department: Bostonagency that enforces the sanitary code • PHA – Public Housing Agency: Includes the Boston Housing Authority (BHA) and mobile subsidy voucher administrators (Section 8) • Reasonable Accommodation (RA): Physical changes to dwelling and/or common areas, or flexibility about how rules are applied, so that People with Disabilities can equally access and enjoy their homes. • Housing Search: Free professional search services for people looking for affordable and/or handicap accessible housing
Healthy Housing:Rights & Responsibilities People with Disabilities have specific rights with respect to housing: • To search for and obtain a home without being subjected to discrimination; • To obtain reasonable accommodations including physical changes to housing units or flexibility in the manner in which rules are applied; • To qualify for certain preferences and priorities for accessing affordable housing programs; and • To be eligible for discount rates and shut off protection from utility companies.
Reasonable Accommodation: What is a Disability? • Based upon a mental or physical impairment that substantially limits one or more life activities: • Physical: blindness, cerebral palsy, asthma, sickle cell, deafness • Mental: depression, ADD/ADHD, learning disorders, mental retardation • Life Activities: walking, learning, working, caring for oneself
Wider doorways, lower cabinets Patient in wheelchair Asthma Separate bedroom Emergency Transfer PTSD (witnessed local violence) Separate Bedroom Types of Reasonable Accommodations Behavioral Disorder
Case Example Mrs. A suffers from lupus, which is triggered by stress. Mrs. A’s current apartment is very small and her teenage children share a room and fight often. Mrs. A has complained to the PHA about the size of the unit but the PHA told Mrs. A that teenagers fight and she should just “get over it.” What can you tell this parent about her family’s housing rights?
Advocacy Treatment Plan 1. Patient may have a right to Reasonable Accommodation to separate bedrooms for her sons. 2. Consult with MLP | Boston to complete written reasonable accommodation request.
Reasonable Accommodation: Doctor’s Letter • Complete certification of need form (BHA) or write a letter on official letterhead stating: • The patient is disabled. • The RA is “medically necessary”; • How the current unit exacerbates tenant’s health; i.e., the link between the unit and the health problem
Case Example Mrs. B’s son has spina bifida and has used a wheelchair since he was a child. For years, Mrs. B has carried her son up the 7 steps leading into their apartment, which was obtained through the Section 8 program. Now 13, Mrs. B’s son is the same size as Mrs. B and his wheelchair is much larger and heavier, making it nearly impossible for Mrs. B to carry him up the stairs. Mrs. B has asked her Landlord to install a ramp into their home but he has refused. She has never asked her PHA. What can you tell this parent about reasonable accommodation?
Advocacy Treatment Plan 1. Patient may have a right to Reasonable Accommodation: (a) have a ramp installed, or (b) break her lease and move into a handicapped-accessible unit. 2. Consult with MLPC to draft written request to landlord and doctor’s letter supporting reasonable accommodation request by stating that a ramp is medically necessary and explaining how the failure to provide a ramp is making it difficult for Mrs. B’s son to access his home.
BHA Housing Preferences & Priorities • BHA Priority – Inaccessibility of a critical part of a housing unit • If any member of household is unable to access a critical element AND Landlord is not obligated to make a RA • BHA Preference - Disabled Non-Elderly • Only applies if the head or co-head of household is disabled • BHA Elderly/Disabled Housing Complexes • Head or co-head of household must be disabled or [at least 60 years old (62 for federal housing)
Take-Home Messages • People with disabilities have specific housing rights • It is illegal to discriminate against people with disabilities when making housing available • This is opposite of other discrimination laws requiring equal treatment. Here treatment must be different to achieve an equal result. • People with disabilities have the right to require their landlords to make “reasonable accommodations” to their home even if a certain housing condition does not violate state law. • If your patient encounters housing problems, consult with MLP | Boston for follow-up
MLP | Boston Case Consults Text Pager: (617) 638-5795 • ID#: 6664 • M-F 9:00am- 5:00pm Phone: • BMC: (617)414-7430 • Include: Name of referrer and pager #, child PCP or other provider, clinic name, parent name, child’s name