|
Jenkins, Yoder Send Letter Defending The Rights Of Americans With Psychiatric Disabilities March 1, 2016
WASHINGTON, D.C.– On Monday, Congresswoman Lynn Jenkins (KS-02) and Congressman Kevin Yoder (KS-03) sent a letter to the House Energy and Commerce Committee addressing the proposed limitations to the Protection and Advocacy for Individuals with Mental Illness (PAIMI) program contained within H.R. 2646, the Helping Families In Mental Health Crisis Act. “I have long believed it is critical for Congress to address mental health reform. With some mild revisions, I believe H.R. 2646 can be an excellent vehicle to accomplish our goal of providing reforms that will empower patients and help our communities better understand mental health issues and disorders,” said Congresswoman Lynn Jenkins. “However, in its current form, H.R. 2646 would impact the ability of the PAIMI program to perform some of its most critical functions – hindering the aid being given to those in need. The PAIMI program has been a life-saver in Kansas and I will continue to do everything in my power to stop it from being dismantled.” "I'm pleased that Congressman Murphy and the Committee are willing to work with us to preserve the PAIMI program, important to many in Kansas,” said Congressman Kevin Yoder. “Any reforms to our mental health system, while necessary, must preserve the ability to provide critical assistance to those in need and I will continue to fight alongside Congresswoman Jenkins to prevent it from being eroded." The full text of the letter is below:
The Honorable Fred Upton The Honorable Frank Pallone, Jr.
The Honorable Tim Murphy The Honorable Eddie Bernice Johnson
Dear Chairman Upton, Ranking Member Pallone, Congressman Murphy, and Congresswoman Johnson: As the House Energy and Commerce Committee has noted, Congress must address the problems with our nation’s current mental health system. Yet, it must also ensure that legislation ultimately passed by this House does not reduce the protections of Americans with psychiatric disabilities. We write to you today to ask that as House Energy and Commerce Committee considers The Helping Families In Mental Health Crisis Act (H.R. 2646) that the provisions limiting the work of the Protection and Advocacy for Individuals with Mental Illness (PAIMI) program be removed. Since being signed into law by President Reagan in 1986, the PAIMI program has provided needed advocacy to keep individuals with psychiatric disabilities free from abuse and neglect as well as protect the important rights of this population. The PAIMI program protects and ensures these rights on a variety of issues, including access to life-saving community mental health services, employment and housing discrimination, lack of or inappropriate medical treatment, failure to provide educational or transportation services, and protection of disability rights granted in federal law, like the Americans with Disabilities Act. The PAIMI program has served over 350,000 Americans with complex individual disability rights advocacy, provided hundreds of thousands of Americans information and referrals, trained millions, completed thousands of death investigations, and benefited hundreds of millions of Americans through its various forms of systemic advocacy. The PAIMI program should be strengthened, not diminished. Unfortunately, as currently written, H.R. 2646 diminishes this program in the following key areas. First, the language of H.R. 2646, as it currently stands, limits the PAIMI program to exclusively doing abuse and neglect work. This would prevent the PAIMI program from helping Americans with mental illness with any other advocacy or rights issues. These limitations will disproportionately harm our military heroes who return home with emotional battle scars. Second, the language that is currently included in the bill virtually gives caregivers ultimate veto power to continue to abuse, neglect, or financially exploit an individual with a psychiatric disability. In 2014, Nancy Jensen, a survivor of the Kaufman House, testified in front of the House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee. Nancy spoke about how the Kaufmans “treated us worse than dogs. I was forced to be naked, to sleep on the filthy floor, and to use a bucket for a toilet.” Nancy credits the PAIMI program because it “shut down the Kaufman House, freed my friends and helped us get justice.” The PAIMI program would not have been able to help her if the PAIMI provisions in H.R. 2646 had been law at the time. Additionally, the following national organizations oppose H.R. 2646 because it includes the PAIMI provisions: ARC of the United States, National Down Syndrome Congress, Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities, National Association of Councils on Developmental Disabilities, National Disability Rights Network, American Foundation for the Blind, National Council on Independent Living and the American Bar Association. While we support the need for federal legislation to move forward and address concerns in the mental health system, the changes to the PAIMI program currently contained in H.R. 2646 are a step backwards. We ask removal of these provisions limiting the PAIMI program. Thank you for your consideration of our request.
Sincerely,
_________________ _________________
Lynn Jenkins, CPA Kevin Yoder |