Wednesday 30 March 2011

Disabled Children to be refused right to education

Every Disabled Child Matters, campaign group for the rights of disabled children has come across a recent proposal to cut down on the obligations of local authorites to provide services such as:
  • " receive social care support such as short breaks (respite) and childcare;
  • positive activities in the community;
  • equal access to education; and
  • school transport."
These proposals mean that, mere months after David Cameron repeated his promise that things would not get worse for disabled children, children could be denied access to school and their families the essential respite they need to survive with the 24/7 demands of a child with special needs.

The idea is that parents will be given more money to organise care and schooling themselves , "Dr Mary Bousted, the general secretary of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers, warned that government cuts had already led to specialists being made redundant." including vital staff like Speech and Language Therapists and Educational Psychologists who are trained to offer children with special needs the best chance of making the most of their educations and therefore the best possible future prospects.

Acces to education is a human right under Article 26 of the Declaration of Human Rights, and without the legal compulsion that oblidges state schools to accept children with special needs and make any adjustments required to accomodate them this will not be fulfilled. David Cameron is attempting to side step this requirement by making it the parents responsibility to find education for their child (and a little cash to do it with) and if education is not available to start their own 'free schools' to provide this.

So, somehow, whilst coping with the hugely physically and mentally demanding job of caring for a child with special needs - and with no time off, as somehow, you are supposed to organise your own Respite care - despite the fact that facilities that offer this are almost all state run and funded and according to the whim of your local government may or may not exist - and with no wages, experience or in most cases, piles of money to back you up, find an accessible building, hire or buy it, hire staff, carry out complex risk and safety assesments, find other children whose needs are compatible with your child's, get their parents to agree, organise accessible transport, find and apply for grants that might pay for all these things...

It's an impossible task dressed up as the big society.

The result will be children with no access to education.

Families with no access to respite giving up their children to social services in sheer desperation.

This consultation asks what duty local governments should have to provide, and the idea that access to education a fundamental human right, or respite, should be knocked off the list in favour of, say, street cleaning is utter madness.

YOU CAN HELP!

Please, please contact your MP and David Cameron (camerond@parliament.uk Or: privateoffice@no10.x.gsi.gov.uk) and let them know that this WILL NOT improve the lives of disabled children - it will make their lives, and those of their familes that much more difficult.

RT: UK Disabled Children to be denied right to go to school http://tinyurl.com/6jtgr9z #care4carers

Disabled familes losing right to respite http://tinyurl.com/6jtgr9z #care4carers


On May 11th 2011 UK Disabled People's Charity will be spearheading a protest at the houses of parliment to highlight the fact that disabled people are those hardest hit by cuts. Please join us!

Tuesday 29 March 2011

4 nappies a day for incontinent children assesed as needing more?!

Today we found out from a mother of two incontinent girls that despite relentless campaigning by those affected and Prime Minister David Cameron contacting Primary Care Trusts to make it clear that 'Pads (nappies) should be provided in quantities appropriate to the individual’s continence needs. [and that] Arbitrary ceilings are inappropriate’.

Some Primary Care Trusts are still ignoring this directive, and - presumably in an attempt to make cuts - introducing arbitrary limits to the incontinence pad allowance regardless of the patients assessed needs. Only a few days ago parents were blogging about having their allowance cut "It has been decided that, from now on, no child will be issued with more than four pads per day." Behind The Child

Making cuts by taking away the basic needs of some of the most vulnerable people in our society is cowardly and wrong. Let Your MP and David Cameron know PCTs are ignoring him!

Get hold of Maria Miller MP, Minister for Disabled People by email and send your own thoughts on this serious issue:
minister.disabledpeople@dwp.gsi.gov.uk
Write to Andrew Lansley, Minister for Health at:
Rt Hon Andrew Lansley,
House of Commons,
London SW1A 0AA

Please ask David Cameron why his own Primary Care Trusts are ignoring him:
camerond@parliament.uk Or: privateoffice@no10.x.gsi.gov.uk
For a guaranteed response write a letter to either his consitituency address:
10 Bridge Street
Witney Oxon
OX28 1HY
Or at Downing Street:
10 Downing Street,
London,
SW1A 2AA

RT this: Mum of 2 disabled kids hit by PCTs ignoring PMs promise about nappies for disabled http://tinyurl.com/666r663 #care4carers

Please bear with us whilst we try to compile details of which PCTs are affected. If you know which areas are involved, please comment and let us know.

ETA South Gloucester PCT and Devon PCT both confirmed to have 4 nappy per day limits, despite being warned.