Transcript Document

Journey to Independent Living:
Achieving Equality through Direct Payments
AT Board member’s perspective
Máiríde Woods, writer, researcher, AT Board member
Was a parent of a daughter with a disability
Involved in parents’ organisations and with St
Michael’s House
Ex Citizens Information Board – Advocacy Section
Ideas about Equality
Principles of dignity, respect & as much autonomy as
possible
> managing your own care package
Equality and diversity –
on AT’s Board
---------------------------Who should be on a Board?
People who think like us?
Accountants? Solicitors? Other
specialists? Just people with
disabilities? Other minorities?
AT’s board has a variety of
members who are committed to
choice & independence for
people with disabilities.
Boards:
engine and/or brakes?
Ordered Finances
Oversight
Keeping to commitments
Corporate governance
Encouragement
Responsibility
More meetings…
Reports
More reports…
Grant applications
Hard truths & priorities
Meetings
Reminder of life being the art of the possible…
Getting new concepts
to work
Enthusiasm for greater independence
Demonstrating benefits through enabling
efficient management of direct payments
Managing direct payments gives the person with disabilities an active role in
decisions about priorities within his own company
Individual choices can be catered for – e.g. more PA time for pigeon-fancying,
less for cleaning
Person with disabilities becomes a sub-manager rather than a recipient
Role model effect is considerable in changing perceptions
Opportunity to learn in respectful dealings with funders.
Designing models of independent living is a learning experience &
one where people need sensitive support.
As a support organisation, AT is building greater competence &
efficiency in people with disabilities who have started to run their
own services, having formed their own small companies.
AT demonstrates the power of peer support services that are
respectful of the person’s moves towards independent living &
which use natural supports (family, friends).
Services need to be simplified -complexity excludes!
Walking the walk
Lots of policy documents wax
lyrical about:
• direct payments
• participation on an equal
basis
• consultation with people
with disabilities
• control & choice
• changing role of service
provider
• variety of service provision
requires change
…of person with disabilities &
of funding bodies
..competence, hard work &
judgment on part of person
managing own service.
trust & professionalism from
funder (HSE)
personal support, advice &
mentoring from Support body
(AT)
high governance standards
from Board
By going out & doing it, you are showing that it can be done!
Those who do not learn from clichés are destined to repeat them…