
Civil rights and social inclusion for persons with
developmental disabilities
Charlie Lakin’s explanation of his work at the
University of Minnesota is straightforward yet poetic. “Our work is
whatever we think will be helpful in bringing about change to benefit
people with disabilities. One of the things we want to show people is
that we’re in the midst of a relentless, slow-moving river of change
that responsible people will want to be a part of.” Lakin is
senior research associate and director of the
Rehabilitation Research and Training Center in Community Living (RTC).
The center is part of the Institute on
Community Integration (ICI) in the College of Education and Human
Development.
“The statistics we gather, the evaluations we conduct,
the training we do, the support we provide to self-advocacy, the
self-determination that we promote, the resources we identify, the
innovations in service delivery that we help develop and/or describe for
others—all the things we do are about helping people see what they can
do to promote the full citizenship and inclusion of people with
disabilities” Lakin says. “Minnesota is a wonderful laboratory for our
work because Minnesotans have a strong sense of justice, believe in
equality and have been at the forefront of innovations in bringing
people out of institutions and into homes and valued roles in the
mainstream of community life for many, many years, Lakin observes.
How Lakin’s research in community integration works
Lakin works with ICI and community colleagues on issues
related to community inclusion of people with disabilities on the
national, state and local levels. He investigates the effects of public
policies and resources and how they are used, and might be better used,
to improve the lives of persons with disabilities. He works with
federal and state agencies to evaluate innovations and demonstrations of
alternative approaches to funding, delivering and/or monitoring
services. His projects focus on issues such as housing and
residential supports, recruiting, retaining, training and supervising
direct support professionals, access to health services, community
crisis response programs, integrated leisure and recreation,
self-advocacy and self-determination and a wide range of other topics
ranging from the federal Medicaid programs to skills training for
outdoor adventure. The practical nature of the work of Lakin and
his RTC colleagues is reflected in the 36,000 participant hours of
training and technical assistance and the more than 200,000 visitors to
their websites during the past year.
How the research has been used
Thirty-five years ago Minnesota was one of the first
states to embark on a movement to de-institutionalize persons with
developmental disabilities. The goal was initially to move as many
people as possible out state institutions, to prevent as many people as
possible from ever entering them and to develop alternative education,
housing, personal care, social, medical, psychological, employment and
other needed services in the community. No one then believed that
this movement would lead to the closure of all state institutions, but
just last year Minnesota celebrated that very outcome.
“The last step of closing the institutions would not
have happened without continuous development of the community’s capacity
to accommodate people with severe intellectual, physical and behavioral
challenges,” Lakin says. Parents played an enormous role in creating
these changes through groups like the Arc (formerly the Association for
Retarded Citizens). The justice of that movement caused
professionals such as Lakin to join them to advocate for services, then
for more services, then for better services. The issue became not
whether people with developmental disabilities had a right to full
citizenship, but how that right could be best honored and made most
beneficial. They worked together to bring in federal dollars to
support community integration and to develop programs, support networks,
volunteer groups, and training for those working with persons with
disabilities. All the work had one purpose—to support persons with
developmental disabilities to live as valued, integrated, and supported
members of their communities.
“Why does social change come?” Lakin asks. “It comes
because there is a perception that such change is just and fair, that it
is what decent, responsible people should support. If there is a
theme to our work over the years that has made a difference, I think it
is in helping people understand the remarkable things being accomplished
by people who are motivated by a commitment to justice and a sense that
they can make the world better. We have had the opportunity to
describe, sometimes in complicated statistics and sometimes in simple
stories, what people are doing and how it has made a difference.
When other people see it, they want to be part of it too.”
Lakin is probably best known for his research and
evaluation of federal and state policies and programs. He
dismisses that anyone’s contributions to changes in such areas can be
quantified, but he is quick to turn to the statistics he and his
colleagues have compiled for federal agencies for over twenty years to
show the effects of the concerted efforts of many. He notes for
example that in 1982 total federal and state Medicaid long-term care
expenditures for persons with developmental disabilities were 3.6
billion dollars and reached 141,000 people, 76% of whom lived in state
institutions. Eighteen years later in 2000, those same programs
provided 19.6 billion dollars to serve 407,000 people, 11% of whom lived
in state institutions.
What others say about Lakin’s work
“Dr. Lakin’s work is widely recognized as the backbone
of our nation’s commitment to community living and improved quality of
life for the three to four million Americans who have the most severe,
lifelong disabilities,” says Sue Swenson, Commissioner for
Administration on Developmental Disabilities, U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services. “His contributions are quiet, elegantly simple,
pervasive, persistent, fact-based and value-driven, and of enormous
practical value to policymakers across the country and around the world.
Charlie Lakin is a national treasure.”
Steve Larson, director of community supports for
Minnesotans with disabilities in the Minnesota Department of Human
Services, says Lakin “is recognized nationally as a leader in advocating
for the development of community services as an alternative to
institutional placements.”
The executive director of ARC Minnesota, Robert J.
Brick, describes Lakin as being “in the forefront in the movement to
give persons with disabilities and their families more control over the
services affecting them. This self-determination approach is starting to
be incorporated in many of Minnesota’s services affecting people with
disabilities.” July 2001
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