This hearing was held on June 16, 2010, 10:00 a.m. in Olympia, Washington. ASW Professional Advisory Board (PAB) member Dr. Glen Tripp, Director of Developmental Services at
Mary Bridge Children's Hospital spoke on perspectives from providers, and former PAB member Diana Stadden provided compelling testimony with her perspective as a parent.
Other speakers:
Wendy Stone, Director of the Autism Center at the University of Washington discussed early identification, intervention and outreach,
Dr. Charles Cowan, Medical Director, Seattle Children's Autism Center, spoke on autism in Washington State and unmet needs.
Maria Nardella, Children with Special Health Care Needs Manager,
Washington Dept. of Health, provided background information on autism with task force findings, data and analysis.
Dawn Sidell of Northwest Autism Center also described her own experience and perspective as a parent.
Watch the video of the hearing:
(Alternative: Paste this url into your browser address bar: http://www.tvw.org/media/mediaplayer.cfm?EvId=2010060078)
Committee meeting documents
are available at http://www.leg.wa.gov/House/Committees/HS/
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In 2005, the Legislature created the Caring for Washington Individuals with Autism Task Force. The task force has examined practices in Washington and other states and made recommendations regarding the growing concerns and increased rate of autism diagnoses. In 2006, the task force found that change was needed in Washington’s infrastructure, treatment, training, and funding, and it prepared a report which contained several recommendations to effect the necessary changes.
The work session will examine the current strategies and best practices for diagnosing and providing services for persons with autism and their families and will look at how other states have addressed autism and its increased rate of diagnoses.
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The House cut-off date is 2/23/10 for policy committees, and 2/25/10 for fiscal committees.
Senate policy committee deadline is 2/26/10 and their fiscal committee deadline is 3/1/10.
March 5th is the last day for bills to get passed in either chamber.
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February 9, 2010
By Kris Brott
I am the sister of developmentally disabled (dd) 63-year-old twin brothers who reside at Rainier School. I also volunteer once per month there as a DJ and have a dance for any residents that can/would like to participate. Some of the comments on Rosette Royale’s story for the Olympia Newswire, “Parents, Elected Officials Seek Ways to Save Residential Care Facility”, deny some very important realities about the ongoing need for residential health centers (RHCs) in Washington state.
http://www.olympianews.org/2010/02/09/op-ed-preserve-states-residential-habilitation-centers/
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February 9, 2010
by Andrea Kadlec, Director of Community Relations, Disability Rights Washington
As a single mother of two teenage daughters, both with disabilities, and someone with a journalism degree who has worked in the disability rights field for 10 years, I am continually disappointed by both media coverage and state leadership in regards to “saving” Washington State’s residential habilitation centers (RHC).
http://www.olympianews.org/2010/02/09/op-ed-time-to-close-residential-habilitation-centers/
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By Michelle Dupler, Herald staff writer
OLYMPIA -- About two dozen Tri-Citians with developmental disabilities sat in an unused legislative hearing room Wednesday, laughing and munching on pizza and loaded baked potatoes. They cheered when members of the Washington State Potato Commission told them their spuds came from Burbank, and showered longtime friend and ally Sen. Jerome Delvin, R-Richland, with hugs. But the trip was more than a party for this group of advocates from The Arc of Tri-Cities. They also wanted to tell lawmakers what it means to have developmental disabilities and why state money for their programs is so important. At the top of their wish list was for the Legislature to consider closing the state's institutions and allow people to live and get services in their own communities.
http://www.tri-cityherald.com/kennewick_pasco_richland/story/897236.html
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Posted by Jim Brunner
Washington's budget shortfall grew by about $96 million Wednesday morning as lawmakers received the latest forecast of caseloads and enrollment costs for schools, health care and services for the poor and disabled. The new figure was reported to the Washington State Caseload Forecast Council, a group that tries to objectively measure future state expenses that lawmakers can use in writing the budget. It means state lawmakers now face roughly a $2.7 billion budget shortfall, instead of $2.6 billion.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politicsnorthwest/2011033892_state_budget_gap_estimate_grow.html
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That’s the thrust of today’s announcement of the February revenue forecast by the state’s top economic forecaster, Arun Raha.
Raha says revenues should go up by about $31.5 million over the remaining 16 months of the 2009-11 biennium, which ends in June 2011. But when tax-refund implications are factored in for the state Supreme Court’s ruling last year in the Dot Foods case involving out-of-state wholesalers, the net loss to the state is $118 million, according to the governor’s Office of Financial Management. Gov. Gregoire has proposed $1.7 billion in cuts to help bridge the gap and is relying on fund transfers and about $435 million in new federal Medicaid funding to cover the rest. But she also says she wants upward of $780 million in new revenues (minus the federal aid).
http://www.theolympian.com/politicsblog/story/1135407.html
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Posted By C.R. Roberts on February 12, 2010
There’s good news today – small, but good – from the state’s Economic and Revenue Forecast Council. The national and state economic recovery progressed “largely as we expected in November,” the council said in a release this morning. “As a result, our revision to the forecast for the current biennium is a relatively minor $31.5 million increase in the revenue forecast.” Output has grown for two consecutive quarters, the council said, and that includes a 5.7 percent surge in the fourth quarter of 2009. "As in November, we expect positive job growth for both the U.S. and Washington beginning in the current quarter.”
http://blog.thenewstribune.com/business/2010/02/12/economic-and-revenue-forecast-council-offers-a-bit-of-good-news/
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BILL LYNE AND DESMOND SKUBI - THE BELLINGHAM HERALD
The consequences of the state's $3.6 billion in cuts last year are severe. Nursing homes have suffered and closed. The list of people waiting for Basic Health plan has grown longer than the list of people who have it. Thousands of teachers have been laid off. Our children sit in overcrowded classrooms. Students with excellent grades, but not enough money, no longer go to college. In Bellingham, hundreds of jobs have been lost, the number of uninsured grow, children learn in overcrowded classrooms, and students at Whatcom Community College and Western Washington University pay more, get less, and take longer to graduate. This year, the Legislature and the governor must close another $2.6 billion dollar deficit, caused by the lingering recession. If they cut deeper into the muscle and bone of health care, education, and services for the elderly and disabled, Washington will not recover for years.
http://www.bellinghamherald.com/291/story/1284630.html
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THE OLYMPIAN | • Published February 12, 2010
Standing between Democrats in the state Legislature and their vote to increase taxes to help close a $2.2 budget shortfall is Initiative 960, passed by voters in November 2007.
That initiative, which requires a two-thirds vote in the House and Senate to raise taxes, was approved by 51.2 percent of the voters. Senate Democrats have taken the first steps toward removing the two-thirds requirement — in effect setting the stage for a tax increase vote later in this legislative session.
http://www.theolympian.com/editorials/story/1134914.html
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Yakima Herald-Republic editorial board
Yakima Herald-Republic
When Senate Democrats realized earlier this week that they had actually voted on the wrong bill to suspend the two-thirds vote needed to raise state taxes, they should have hit the pause button.
Deciding to suspend the tax-limiting measure of Initiative 960 was bad enough. But they were about to erase public notification provisions that require, among other things, a public advisory vote on any tax increase.
http://www.yakima-herald.com/stories/2010/02/11/whoa-voters-backed-i-960-for-a-reason
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On the morning that a coalition of housing and homelessness groups goes to the Capitol campus, some important bills are surviving and others have bit the dust.
One of the more shocking defeats for one economic justice organization was Senate Bill 6648. The bill, which would have made banks and borrowers sit down to renegotiate home loans before foreclosure, lost in an odd turn of events during a night-owl session just hours before the scheduled cutoff.
http://www.olympianews.org/2010/02/12/legislative-round-up-contenders-and-casualties/
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Legislature: Documents detail probe of state senator
The latest round of investigations involving state Sen. Pam Roach has cost the state more than $55,000, according to documents released Wednesday. The Senate Facilities and Operations Committee paid an outside lawyer $23,082 to investigate a complaint against Roach, before issuing a formal reprimand of her last month. It led her fellow Senate Republicans to bar her from their private caucus meetings. The same investigator, Chris Farias of the law firm Stokes Lawrence, billed the state $32,331 to investigate a complaint that Roach filed against Senate Republican Leader Mike Hewitt.
http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/local/story/1065578.html
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by Larry Abramson February 11, 2010
The American Psychiatric Association announced Wednesday that it is proposing to eliminate the diagnosis of Asperger's syndrome from the official diagnostic guide of mental disorders. The revised manual would place kids who are currently said to have Asperger's within an expanded definition of autism. That change might affect how families get special education services in public schools. Currently, parents of children with autism turn to the federal law that guarantees a free public education for students with disabilities. Kids with autism clearly qualify, but for kids with Asperger's, it's much less clear. They are often highly intelligent but have social problems that make it hard for them to thrive in school.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=123577220
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DSHS is expanding online conversation to disabilities and other issues.
Go to http://www1.dshs.wa.gov to sign up.
People First is Washington self-advocacy organization run by and for people with disabilities.
http://www.peoplefirstofwashington.org/legislativeagenda.html