Groups Want Federal Autism Dollars Reallocated
By Michelle Diament
April 11, 2014
With the nations primary autism legislation set to expire soon, some disability advocates are pressing for major changes in the federal governments approach to the developmental disorder.
In a letter this week to key members of Congress, 18 national organizations are asking for a greater emphasis on services and the needs of adults with autism when lawmakers reauthorize legislation known as the Combating Autism Act.
Congress should make common-sense changes that will ensure that federal funds are better used to benefit the community that this legislation is designed to serve, wrote the Autistic Self Advocacy Network, the Autism Society of America, the American Association of People with Disabilities, TASH, the National Disability Rights Network and other groups in the letter.
snip* The groups also said theyd like the law renamed to remove the negative connotation they see in the word combating and want to see changes at the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee, a federal advisory panel comprised of government officials and members of the autism community. Specifically, in the letter advocates told lawmakers that the IACC should include greater representation from people with autism and the committee ought to be reorganized to address more than medical research.
Autistic people do not like being excluded from a conversation that at the end of the day is about us, said Ari Neeman, president of the Autistic Self Advocacy Network. (The Combating Autism Act) really needs to be about supporting autistic people.
http://www.disabilityscoop.com/2014/04/11/groups-autism-reallocated/19276/