Blog

DRM’s Leslie Margolis Urges Stronger COVID-19 Response from MSDE

Leslie Seid Margolis, DRM’s Managing Attorney, has joined the ranks of Maryland legislators, teachers, and advocates demanding a stronger response to COVID-19 from Maryland State Superintendent Karen Salmon. A Baltimore Sun article reported on July 29 that the Maryland State Department of Education (MSDE) has failed to provide a concrete plan for supporting schools this fall, instead only offering noncommittal suggestions to local school districts. As Margolis says in the article, suggestions are not enough. Delegate Brooke Lierman, a representative of Baltimore City and an attorney at Brown, Goldstein and Levy, LLP, sums up the situation: Superintendent Salmon “claims to be leading by giving options,” Lierman says in the article, “but really there is just no plan; she belittles the needs that parents have for child care; and she communicates as little information as possible.”

As part of the Maryland Education Coalition, DRM has helped draft several letters voicing these concerns to the Superintendent. DRM is also an appointed member organization of the MSDE’s external stakeholder committee, but the MSDE has provided hardly any information to its stakeholders regarding statewide school plans, and the minimal information provided is often only made accessible at the last minute — too late for meaningful input from stakeholders. DRM continues to urge Salmon and the MSDE to work with its stakeholders to develop a plan that supports students who have difficulty learning online, including students with disabilities, young children, and homeless students.

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DRM’s Megan Rusciano Published in MSBA’s The Elder Law and Disability Rights Extra

Disability Rights Maryland’s (DRM) Attorney Megan Rusciano’s article, “Preserving Your Voice Throughout Your Lifetime: Supported Decision-Making as a Best Practice and Alternative Guardianship,” is featured in the spring 2020 issue of The Elder Law and Disability Rights Extra, published by the Maryland State Bar Association (MSBA). Megan’s article highlights the need for recognition of Supported Decision-Making, a best practice and alternative to guardianship that preserves the civil rights of people with disabilities by promoting their own agency and identity.

We are our choices. In our careers, our relationships, and indeed, our health, the decisions we make define our identity and sense of self. Yet, under guardianship and other substitute decision-making frameworks, people with disabilities are deemed incapable of making these decisions for themselves, too often due to stereotypes and assumptions of their capabilities. Studies show that people who lose this self-determination have poorer life outcomes. Supported Decision-Making offers a different legal path. Drawing upon the fact that we all use people whom we trust to help us make decisions, this framework allows a person to choose their own supporters who can help them make, communicate, and effectuate their decisions. We are all vulnerable to guardianship and the risk of being found incapable of making our own decisions as we age. Supported Decision-Making offers a solution that can bolster a person’s self-determination as opposed to alternative systems that take it away. As we celebrate 30 years of advocacy under the Americans with Disabilities Act and recognize all the work yet to be done, advocacy for Supported Decision-Making provides us an opportunity to ensure that people with disabilities have access to some of their most fundamental rights: their rights to make their own decisions and choices.

You can read Megan’s article below on page 2:

Spring-2020-Newsletter-Elder-Law-Section-MSBA

Reprinted with permission from the Maryland State Bar Association, Inc. from the Elder and Disability Rights Section newsletter, The Elder and Disability Rights Extra, Volume 24 Issue 1, Spring 2020 edition.

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Happy 30th Anniversary to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)!

On the 30th anniversary of the ADA, Disability Rights Maryland (DRM) salutes its community, partners, and friends who were instrumental in forging and implementing this landmark legislation for people with disabilities. DRM is singularly proud of its accomplishments, achieved in collaboration with its partners, in litigation, policy work and advocacy to actualize the principles of the ADA in Maryland which include:

  • Closure of Rosewood, formerly Maryland’s largest institution for people with developmental disabilities, where residents endured illegal and inhumane conditions;
  • Improvement in access to public transportation and quality of transportation services for over 30,000 persons with disabilities;   
  • Significant increase in the availability of home and community-based care and services; 
  • Requirement to have Braille signage and other accessibility modifications in medical centers;
  • Creation of accessible aisles in retail stores to accommodate shoppers using wheelchairs;
  • Requirement for flashing doorbells and smoke detectors to be in housing for persons who are deaf or hard of hearing;
  • Increased access for voters with disabilities to the electoral process and polling places that include accessible voting systems;
  • Inclusion of children and youth with disabilities in daycares and camps;
  • Inclusion of students with disabilities in extra curricular school activities;
  • Litigation resulting in the creation of thousands of units of affordable and accessible housing for people with disabilities.

Though we have come a long way, much work remains to be done. Together, in partnership with you, DRM is committed to creating a world in which people with disabilities are fully included in the workplace, neighborhoods and all aspects of community life.


Photo Credit: ADA National Network (adata.org)

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DRM’s Annual Advocacy Service Survey is Now Open

Every year, Disability Rights Maryland seeks feedback from the disability community, families, partners, and stakeholders about our service plan for the coming year. Please share your thoughts about what legal issues you would like us to address for 2021 by taking our annual Advocacy Service Plan Survey.

Contact our office at 410-727-6352 (ext. 0) to access the survey in alternate formats or to request a paper copy. You can also print the survey and mail it to our office by September 9, 2020.

Click here to take the survey.

Thank you for your feedback!

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RELEASE: Judith Heumann to Present the 2020 Judith Heumann Champion of Justice Award at 2020 Breaking Barriers Awards Gala

BALTIMORE, MD (July 14, 2020) — Disability Rights Maryland (DRM) is honored to welcome Judith Heumann to present the first-ever Judith Heumann Champion of Justice Award at DRM’s 2020 Breaking Barriers Awards Gala this fall. Established to commemorate Heumann’s activism and passion for disability rights and justice, this prestigious award recognizes one outstanding honoree for a lifetime of advocacy for the disability rights movement and all the civil rights movements with which it intersects. Heumann will personally present this year’s award to the 2020 honoree, Wade Henderson, at this year’s virtual gala on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020.

Heumann’s remarkable career spans her entire life. Heumann has helped pass landmark legislation for the disability rights movement, including the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. She served as the Obama Administration’s Special Advisor for International Disability Rights, the World Bank’s first-ever Advisor on Disability and Development, and the Clinton Administration’s Assistant Secretary for the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services. The recent Netflix documentary Crip Camp, produced by Barack and Michelle Obama’s production company, captures the progression of Heumann’s activism from her time at Camp Jened, a summer camp for people with disabilities, to the transformative legislative and regulatory victories that she later achieved. This year’s honoree, Wade Henderson, has exemplified similar leadership. In his two decades as the president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and in his prior time at the American Civil Liberties Union, Wade helped pass key national legislation for disability rights, including the Fair Housing Amendments Act and the ADA Amendments Act of 2008.

The Breaking Barriers Awards Gala is DRM’s signature annual event which honors individuals, law firms, and organizations that have demonstrated exceptional leadership, vision, and achievements in promoting and safeguarding the legal rights of people with disabilities in Maryland.

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