Clare TD, Violet-Anne Wynne (SF) pens an op-ed highlighting โthe systemic violence which is holding Disabled Peopleโ hostage.
After almost two years of sitting on the Disability Matters Committee โย Iโmย still unaccustomedย to the depravity experienced byย Disabledย People, who are trying to live a fulfilled life, on an equal basis to others, when trying to access services in this country. After being elected, when I found out I would be sitting on the DMC, I was genuinely optimistic โ finally, I thought, an opportunity to inform government policy onย Disabledย People’s human rights.
I wanted to understand why services to support independent living are so rare, so evasive, so hard to access especially in rural regions like West Clare where I live with my family.ย My son isย 9. He was diagnosed with autismย in 2017. So,ย over the course of hisย 4ย yearsย ofย navigating diagnosis โย half, orย 2 of these years have been during lockdownย with zero supports.
Now, countless DMC meetings later, I am acutely aware that my son is not alone. Week in, week out I have witnessed testimonies from resilientย Disabledย People who are at their wits end and burnt out from advocating for what isย theirย human right. People battlingย to get any kind of supports or interventions, lifeย asย one long exercise in advocacy. Why should people have to make securing supports to live a productive live aย lifelongย career in itself? This is true across society in fact, it seems like accessing even the basics such as housing and health is a battle for most these days. But for Disabled People, they are continually expected to prove they have a right to their inherent rights. I feel embarrassed as an Oireachtas member to witness this.
People may have impairmentsย but,ย letโs be clearย are they are โdisabledโ by the State’s denial of necessary supports needed to live a full, meaningful and equal life. If we understand parents need childcare, workers need parental leave, then in the same vein Disabled people need PAS, ISL, speak and language services etc, at the level of need of the individual and on a timely basis.
People who may need access to Personal Assistance Services (PAS) which provides them with an assistant to do whatever they need to do โ instead, are given Home Help. This means the state is institutionalising people in their home,ย depriving peopleย of their liberty. This is in breach of their human rights.
Everyone has the right to live in the community, yet disabled people are relegated to nursing homes. Out of sight, out of mind indeed. Again, depriving people of their liberty, in breach of their human rights. What will it take for Government to take responsibility for their human rights breaches?
People who urgently need specialist therapies for early habitation interventions; are instead offered a few hours in a day-service under a โone-size-fits-allโ response that is not person-centred and is most definitely not designed to empower the individual. The Disability Act 2005 legislated for mainstreaming.ย 16 years on we stillย have segregating practises, contributing to political and societal ableism.
After two years, itโs frustrating to acknowledge, I have more questions than answers than I did before. Questions, that I pose and submit to Minister Rabbitte and Minister OโGorman on a regular basis. I am yet to receive a satisfactory response.
When is the moment of reckoning going to come when we recognise that the โmedical modelโ approach, funding coming through the HSE (not known for its efficiency on a good day), is doing more damage than good to the rights of Disabled People and society at large?
The Disabled Peopleโs movement are demanding rights not charity. The tokenisticย andย dare I say charitable target for transferring young people out of nursing homes in 2022 is quite frankly upsetting, unambitious and degrading to the 1,300 people waiting to reclaim their lives. There needs to be an immediate commitment to close the back door to nursing homes for younger people.
Next year we will celebrate 100 years of Independence for the Republic of Ireland, but we are miles from achieving independent living for Disabled People. The continuation of institutions to accommodate Disabled People as well as other marginalised communities such as asylum seekers is a dark reminder of our legacy as a country โ weโre usedย to, andย desensitisedย to hiding people away.
When will enough be enough? I hope, deeply, that the moment of reckoning is close where we can take an honest look at the systemic violence holding Disabled People hostage; the political and societal ableism limiting them; the institutionalisation of our past haunting us in the present and we this reckoning is harnessed in a genuine political will. We can and must prevent the continued abuse of the human rights of Disabled People.