10/24/2012

Elementary students learn politics through mock election


LAKE CHARLES, LA (KPLC) - Students, faculty, staff and the public participated in early voting on Wednesday, but their votes only count in Ralph Wilson Elementary's mock election.

The mock polls opened at 9 a.m. Wednesday and closed at 11:30 a.m. Voters were only voting on the president, selecting between President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney.

The students have been learning about the branches of government in their Social Studies classes, and the mock election let them experience politics first hand.

This is the sixth year the school has held a mock election.

The results will not be released until Nov. 1.

'Super 30' students can now study at Tokyo University!



PATNA, INDIA: The highly acclaimed 'Super 30' educational programme which trains students from economically backward sections for the IIT-JEE, today entered into an agreement with University of Tokyo which would sponsor study of its students in Japan.

The pact was reached here during a meeting between Anand Kumar, the founder of Super 30, and Yoshino Hiroshi, Director, The University of Tokyo.

As per the tie-up, the University of Tokyo would sponsor study of at least one student of Super 30.

The sponsorship will start with admission of Indian students from October 2013, Yoshino told .

"University of Tokyo is reaching an understanding with the Patna-based mathematical group (Super 30) because of its remarkable performance of training economically poor students to qualify in top institutions like IIT," he said.

Yoshino said the Japanese government broadcast corporation (NHK) ran a programme on Super 30 under the heading "Indian shock" to highlight the success of the mathematical club.

The Tokyo University director said the engagement with Super 30 was part of Japanese government programme "Global 30" to increase flow of Indian students there.

"Presently, out of 1.4 lakh foreign students annually coming to Japan, India's contribution is only 600. Japan wishes to increase (its) number of foreign students to three lakh by 2020 which can be achieved by raising flow of students from India, particularly in the field of science and technology," he said.

Kumar said the offer from Tokyo university was encouraging.

"This will open avenues for our students in the foreign country," he said.

'Super 30' is an initiative of mathematician Anand Kumar in Bihar which trains 30 poor students every year for IIT-JEE out of which a majority have so far succeeded in the test.

-  timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Energy drink deaths: experts want action


A spate of deaths in the United States linked to a highly caffeinated energy drink will be studied as part of a transtasman review. Two nutrition experts want the review hastened, with one calling energy drinks "dangerous stuff".

The US Food and Drug Administration has started an inquiry into the safety of Monster Energy drinks after receiving reports of five deaths.

Ministers responsible for transtasman food and beverage regulation last year launched a full review of the policy guideline on caffeine, including the amount of caffeine in energy drinks.

The transtasman Food Regulation Standing Committee (FRSC) Caffeine Working Group is looking at global developments in caffeinated products and regulatory approaches being taken in other countries.

Monster and other energy drinks including Red Bull, Mother, and Demon all contain the maximum 32mg caffeine per 100ml which is concidered safe but it is known that excessive caffeine can lead to irritability, anxiety, dizziness, tremors, and insomnia.


Kerry Tyack, executive director of the NZ Juice and Beverage Association, said while the US fatalities had been tragic, it was unfair to criticise drink manufacturers.

"These are drinks designed for adults, not children. These are also drinks that should not be taken in excess.

"The average energy drink contains 80mg of caffeine - that's about a cup of coffee - and obviously children should be nowhere near these drinks. People need to read the labels and abide by what the regulations say."

Manchester United, Barca stage comebacks


Barcelona and Manchester United erased early deficits to stay perfect in the Champions League group stage on Tuesday, but Chelsea slipped to the first loss of its title defense to jeopardize its qualification hopes.

Jordi Alba’s goal four minutes into second-half stoppage time snatched a 2-1 victory for Barcelona over Celtic, their 100th Champions League win, keeping the competition favorites top of Group G after three games.

United’s comeback was even more impressive, recovering from two goals down to beat Braga 3-2 at Old Trafford thanks to two goals by Javier Hernandez.

Chelsea lost 2-1 at Shakhtar Donetsk to fall three points behind the Ukrainian side in Group E. Juventus couldn’t capitalize on Chelsea’s slip-up, however, surprisingly drawing 1-1 at Danish minnow FC Nordsjaelland.

Dutch children could have three or more parents


AFP - Dutch kids may soon be able to have three or more mothers or fathers after the government said it was seeking to enshrine parenting rights for the Netherlands' 25,000 children in gay families.

"The justice ministry is going to investigate and see what the possibilities are for recognising three parents or more per family," ministry spokesman Wiebe Alkema told AFP on Wednesday.

The left-wing Green party, but also the Liberal VVD and the Labour PvdA parties that won last month's parliamentary election, requested the report with a view to amending a lesbian parenting bill currently before parliament.

The Netherlands was the first country to legalise gay marriage in 2001 and when a gay or lesbian couple has a child, another parent is by biological necessity involved.

But, said Green MP Liesbeth van Tongeren, it is also essential to recognise the rights of non-biological parents, including step-parents.

"Currently parenthood in the eyes of the law is almost always the consequence of biological parenthood," her party said in a statement, stressing that "this does not represent the diversity of families in the Netherlands."

"Often enough, the father of a child with lesbian parents also plays a role in the life of the child," she said.

"How a family lives is more important than the biological lineage," Van Tongeren added. "The bill should take into account what's best for all concerned."

There is currently no legal recognition in the Netherlands for a child's step-parents or for sperm donors who would like to be involved in the life of their child.

Junior justice minister Fred Teveen noted in parliament however that there were potentially many practical objections to changing the law and that he would await the report's conclusions.

Official statistics say that by the end of 2010, 14,813 homosexual couples were married in the Netherlands, where around a million of the country's 16.7 million inhabitants are homosexual, according to gay rights group COC.

Back from the dead: Ghost celebrates Champions League goal


Porto’s James Rodriguez celebrates his goal
against PSG in the Champions League
A strange figure has been spotted on a photo from FC Porto’s clash against Paris Saint-Germain in the UEFA Champions League on October 3.
With a week until Halloween, many believe that a ghost was among the Porto fans celebrating the game’s only goal scored by James Rodriguez late in the second half.
It was the Colombian footballer himself, who spotted the paranormal activity in the picture, and posted it on Facebook.
There’s now a rumor the ghost follows Rodriguez to every game he plays for Porto or the national team.
The AP’s photographer, who made the original shot, claims that the image hasn’t been retouched or underwent any other changes.

A strange figure in the stands at Porto’s Champions League clash against PSG on October 3. 

Bolt to turn to football after Rio 2016

Usain Bolt (AFP)

The world’s fastest man, Usain Bolt, says he’s thinking of quitting athletics after competing at the Rio 2016 Olympics to become a professional footballer.
"I would love to play," Bolt told Sports.ndtv.com. "I've played football. I've played charity matches. Something I really want to try.”
The Jamaican isn’t worried by the fact that he’ll be 30 in 2016 – and it’s the age when footballers are already considered veterans, with some of them even leaving the sport.
"And after Rio, I'll just retire and just try and see if I'm any good in soccer, but I think I'd be pretty good because I play with my friends,” he said. “I've played charity matches in Jamaica. I think I'm pretty good."
The 100m world record holder (9.58 seconds)is known as great Manchester United fan and many times said that it’s the club he wants to play for.
Bolt has already won six Olympic gold medals after topping the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay in Beijing 2008 and London 2012.
He was planning to battle for even more silverware at the next Summer Games, but is most likely to give up the idea of competing in an extra discipline in Rio de Janeiro.
The sprinter’s coach, Glen Mills, believes the long jump would put too much pressure on Bolt’s knees… which he will probably need to play football in the English Premier League.

Heaven Help Us: Another “Harvard brain scientist” finds faith and tells the world.

By  - slate.com


Newsweek is dead. The 80-year-old magazine will cease publication at the end of the year, a teary-eyed Tina Brown said last Thursday. Before we sink too deeply into grief, let's all remember what lies beyond these earthly, stapled pages. Newsweek may have passed away, its paper turned to dust, but the Newsweek spirit carries on, not as matter or material, but in a state of pure electron flux, a ghostly form that rides the WiFi waves around us. Its words will rise off the printing press and be transformed into an energy that's everywhere at once, but also nowhere. The magazine will become an online angel—a Web-based publication that penetrates our minds with truth and light. In death, it will be reborn and find everlasting life. …

Sorry, I'm getting all mixed up. I've been having a little trouble focusing since I read Newsweek's cover story from Oct. 15—the one with a picture of a hand reaching up into the clouds and a headline promising that "Heaven Is Real." It's a personal account of meeting God, excerpted from a memoir published this week, called Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon's Journey Into the Afterlife. A neurosurgeon? More than that! The author, Eben Alexander III, makes a point of saying that he's a skeptic and a scientist, a skeptical scientist who happens to have spent some time (did he mention?) at a little school in Boston called Harvard University. This science-minded Harvard skeptic never thought he'd find the truth of Jesus Christ. But the facts are just the facts: Alexander has been graced with the divine, and he'll share that grace with us. He's become a neuro-prophet.

This experiment in out-of-body consciousness began in fall of 2008, when a case of bacterial meningitis put Alexander in a coma and "shut down" his “entire cortex.” What he means by that is never clear—you might think this state would be synonymous with death, which is sort of what Alexander claims, even though he's now alive and writing books. But it's a waste of time to quibble over details, since according to the author, the fact of his brain's inactivation is the only thing that could possibly explain what happened next. While Alexander was in the coma, and his brain was “totally off-line” he drifted from this world of Harvard neuroscience into a land of pink and puffy clouds, and chanting flocks of angels, and a glowing orb that speaks telepathically, and a blue-eyed lady-friend, and lots and lots of butterflies. You would not believe how many butterflies there are in Heaven.

"I've spent decades as a neurosurgeon at some of the most prestigious medical institutions in our country," Alexander writes, reminding us that he's no sap. "I sympathized deeply with those who wanted to believe that there was a God somewhere out there who loved us unconditionally. In fact, I envied such people the security that those beliefs no doubt provided. But as a scientist, I simply knew better than to believe them myself." He was just like you and me, you see, at least until he fell into a coma—and flew into the sky, and entered the mind of an earthworm, was forced to reconsider all his Harvard science skepticism about the loving Lord above.

Is it even worth rebutting this interpretation? Even before it was published, Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeons Journey Into the Afterlife has reached the Top 10 of the Amazon best-seller list, so we may as well prepare ourselves for the out-of-mind publicity that's sure to follow. For starters, Alexander says it took him "months to come to terms with what happened," as if he'd had to reconstruct the ultra-real experience after his recovery. One might timidly suggest that the story is confabulated—that is to say, his wounded brain filled in the gaps in time with a holy flight of fancy. (Perhaps his experience of "flying" came from memories of skydiving while a student at University of North Carolina?) It also seems at least half-plausible that Alexander's dreamy chit-chat with Jehovah happened in his head, as he was emerging from his coma, and during a time in which the author says he suffered from what's called "ICU psychosis." In the book—which I've had the great displeasure of perusing—he describes waking up to "a strange and exhausting paranoid universe" in which "Internet messages" showed up wherever he looked, and a "grinding, monotonous, anti-melodious chanting" filled his head. "Some of the dreams I had during this period were stunningly and frighteningly vivid," he says.

It was only later on that he worked out the fine points of his astral projection, in part by using a commercial meditation aid called "Hemi-Sync"—a $12 music CD that purports to mimic psychedelics and expand the mind with alternating beats. "Hemi-Sync potentially offered a means of inactivating the filtering function of the physical brain by globally synchronizing my neocortical electrical activity, just as my meningitis might have done, to liberate my out-of-body consciousness," he explains, as only a Harvard neurosurgeon can. Scientists who are a bit more skeptical have described these claims as silly.

Alexander claims to have been waffling on the matter of his faith before the meningitis. But the book reveals that he's always been a devout or at least a searching Christian. Long before he found himself in the "God-soaked and love-filled darkness" of his coma, Alexander took his family to church and made his children pray every night before they went to bed. His story of enlightenment is suffused with the most conventional evangelism: He was lost and now is found; he has "good news" to share with all. According to the memoir, Alexander was abandoned as a baby, spent Christmas as an orphan, and later on became a depressive alcoholic. Then he goes to a meeting in Jerusalem and finds the spot where Jesus ate his final meal, and while he's there (through some celestial stroke of luck), he contracts the deadly bug that will restore his faith and change his life and put him in a coma for a very biblical duration of seven days and seven nights.

Now, by grace of God, he's scheduled to appear on Nightline, Good Morning America, World News Tonight, and Fox & Friends. His book is almost guaranteed to be a huge success, a work of neuro-prophecy that hauls in massive neuro-profits. There's no doubt that Alexander's publisher is looking back with greedy eyes at another publishing sensation from three years ago, by the neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor. That one, called My Stroke of Insight: A Brain Scientist's Personal Journey, was also based on the rather dubious idea that we might draw a deeper understanding of the universe from debilitating brain damage. Bolte Taylor's rise to fame and neuro-guru-status began not with meningitis but with a cerebral hemorrhage, one that taught her how to find nirvana by allowing her "life-force power" to "flow like a great whale gliding through a sea of silent euphoria."

There are some minor differences between Alexander and Bolte Taylor. For one thing, he's the better stylist. (Perhaps he availed himself of a holy-ghost writer?) For another, his spirituality is tilted more toward Christianity. Though he likes to use a generic, oriental name (Om) for the God he finds inside his head, his story ends at the altar of a church, tears running down his cheeks as he takes communion. Bolte Taylor, for her part, started doing neuroscience to understand why her schizophrenic brother thought that he could talk to Jesus Christ. (Presumably it wasn't because he had meningitis.) Her own sense of the beyond leans away from Western monotheism, and relies instead on a pseudo-secular, tech-inflected mysticism. At the end of her famous TED talk, which has now been viewed almost 10 million times, she breaks down in what must be crocodile tears while promising a universe of connected consciousness, one of compassion and of peace.

But the similarities between their stories, and their public presentations, are far more striking. Like Alexander, Bolte Taylor makes a point of credentialing herself as a Harvard scientist, and a brain specialist to boot. It's this priestly status that makes their nutty stories of enlightenment seem like something more profound—brain-based facts. Bolte Taylor frames her insight in the witless mumbo-jumbo of left-brain/right-brain pseudoscience; Alexander needs the magic of his "inactivated" cortex. Either way, a fuzzy bit of neuroscience is brandished as a notary seal to authenticate some metaphors about quantum physics or other science-y illumination.

If only insight were so easy! As it happens, Bolte Taylor isn't quite a "brain scientist," in the sense of being someone who is actively engaged in research. She has a Ph.D., and did complete a post-doc in a Harvard lab, but she stopped writing research papers early in her career and never took a tenure-track position. She's more a performer and an educator than a scientist, giving public lectures and singing songs about biology with her guitar. That's not to say that public education is not a splendid and important task, but only that it might be wise to study the credentials of those who claim their membership in the holy neuro-priesthood.

The same goes for Alexander, whose long list of scientific publications is almost exclusively devoted to the technique of neurosurgery. In other words, he hasn't spent much time in formal research on the function of the brain, let alone the deeper questions of cognition or higher consciousness. And while he did spent many years working at Harvard hospitals, I'm not sure what that says about his status as a "brain scientist," or if that designation would mean anything at all.

Even if these two were on the faculty of Harvard, or if they'd won the Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine, what platform would they have for expounding on the secrets of the universe? We've now grown so enamored of the brain that the mere mention of the thing eliminates the need for further clarity. The blinding power of neuroscience has been invoked in recent years by marketers and pollsters, by trial lawyers and self-help authors, and now our faith- in brain-based explanation has reached its logical conclusion. It's become its own religion. In the middle of her TED talk, Bolte Taylor hoisted up a hunk of pickled neural tissue and waited for the audience to respond with oohs and aahs. She worked it in her hands like a charismatic preacher would, while the spinal cord dangled like a snake.

''Mahatama Gandhi-Boris Pasternak-Albert Einstein-Pro Bono''



In 1917, although the Peace Prize is is suspended during the First World War, the Red Cross receives an honorary award, the first in a unique hat-trick -1917, 1944, 1963.

But in 1918,Swedish writer Axel Karifeldt becomes the first person to decline an award, refusing the Literature prize on the grounds that too many Swedish writers had already received it -though there had only been two. He is awarded the prize posthumously in 1931.

In 1921, Albert Einstein is awarded the Physics Prize, But Not for his Theory of Relativity.The Nobel Committee is not interested in theoretical Physics, so it awards him the Prize for his studies of the photoelectric effect instead.

The Nobel Prize Ceremony for 1924 is cancelled because of lack of interest. Willern Einthoven -the Medicine winner is off travelling and Wladyslaw Reymont awarded the honor for Literature calls in sick.

On wards to 1944, the The Pro Nazi Prime Minister of Norway Vidkin Quisling tries and fails to take control of the Norwegian Nobel Committee.

In 1962, US Scientist Linus Pauling follows Marie Curie as he becomes only the second two-time Nobel Laureate when he follows up his 1954 Chemistry Prize with a Peace Prize for his campaign to end the open-air testing of nuclear weapons. In 1911, Curie earned a Chemistry Prize to add to her 1903 Physics award.

But in 1964 after winning the Literature Prize for exerting ''far reaching influence on our age''. Jean Paul Sartre turns it down, saying it would compromise his integrity as a writer and thinker.

And on the other hand Mahatama Gandhi, the inspirational advocate of non-violent political resistance never won an award despite being nominated five times.

In 1948, the year in which Gandhi died, no Peace Prize was awarded, on the grounds that ''no suitable living candidate'' ---at the time, the Peace Prize was never awarded posthumously.

Apparently, some member of the Nobel Committee believed that his peaceful protests would degenerate into violence; others feared harming Anglo Norwegian relations.

In 1958, Boris Pasternak the author of Doctor Zhivago was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, but the Soviets condemned the work ''for its non acceptance of the socialist revolution'' and compelled him to refuse it. He was subsequently dismissed from the Soviet Writer's Union. He died two years later. His work remained banned in his homeland until 1988.

In 1973, A year after the US has been condemned worldwide for bombing of Hanoi, the peace Prize goes to Henry Kissenger the US Secretary of State, and Le Duc Tho of North Vietnam for negotiating the Peace accord. Le Duc Tho refused the award on the grounds that Vietnam remained partitioned.

Pro Bono the U2 is a double Nobel nominee.

Many thanks to !WOW!

Good Night & God Bless.

The Best Compliment Can be No Compliment at All for National Disability Awareness Month

When people give compliments to those people that have, or are living with someone that has a disability about what they do every day and how they think they are strong, you might not be giving a lot of advice or praise to those people. A lot of times these remarks mean well by the person saying them, but can be offensive to those receiving them. A lot of times, people will address the other person rather than the person with the disability when the disabled person is more than capable of answering it themselves.

So next time you come in contact with someone or a family that has a handicap or disabled person with them, and you want to say something either say nothing at all or choose to say something that you would normally say to someone without a disability. They are normal; just like everyone else they just do things a bit differently. Life can be tough for them, but it can be for those with other problems as well.

Death Sentence for Man With Intellectual Disability

Although the U.S Supreme Court has ruled that people with intellectual disabilities should not be executed for their crimes, the state of Georgia is moving ahead with plans to execute Warren Hill on July 23rd. Hill was convicted of killing a fellow inmate in prison. He was already serving a life sentence for killing his girlfriend.

Previously a judge had ruled that he has an IQ of around 70 and therefore has an intellectual disability. The Supreme Court has left it up to the states to decide how to determine whether someone has an intellectual disability. Georgia is the only state that puts the burden of proof on the defendant. In other words, Warren Hill must himself prove his disability in order to be exempt from execution.

It makes no sense to expect someone who thinks and functions as a child to be able to figure out how to prove he has a disability. In fact, it is questionable as to whether he himself understands his disability enough to communicate it.

The Huffington Post reports:

In other words, executing a mentally retarded person with an IQ of 69 is like executing someone who functions at the level that a ten year old does. Mentally retarded people are significantly limited in what they are able to do, and in their ability to think ahead. A mentally retarded adult may have trouble driving a car, following directions, participating in hobbies or work of any complexity, or behaving in socially appropriate ways. He or she may have trouble sitting or standing still, or may smile constantly and inappropriately. For most mentally retarded people, limited adaptive skills make ordinary life extremely difficult unless a caring family or social support system exists to provide assistance and structure. Often, those persons facing a sentence of death usually come from extremely deprived conditions and have not received any such support, even if anyone recognized it was needed at all. They commonly come from poverty, are victims of or witnesses to violence in their homes and have few, if any, resources to cope with this lifelong condition. The environment in which they grew up is often riddled with crime, and they are easy prey for more cunning criminals who lead them into criminal activity. A mentally retarded person simply cannot see the world the way most of us are fortunate enough to be able to. For example, Morris Mason, whose IQ was 62-66, was executed in 1985 in Virginia after being convicted of rape and murder. Before his execution, Mason asked one of his legal advisors for advice on what to wear to his own funeral.

Woman Forced Off Plane Due to Her Disability

A woman from India, Jeejah Ghosh, is a teacher who frequently flies by herself. However in February, a pilot of a SpiceJet plane refused to let her stay on his plane, saying that she was unfit to fly. She has cerebral palsy but is very capable in independent living skills.

Ms. Ghosh has filed a lawsuit against the airline and is also working with an advocacy group to make sure that such treatment does not happen again to anyone who has disabilities that do not hinder them from flying. She believes that what happened to her is a violation of disability rights laws in India.

A Sad Statistic

It is sad to realize that children who have intellectual disabilities or mental illnesses are much more frequently abused than are other children. A recent study by the World Health Organization reveals disturbing statistics and information: (as reported by Philstar.com)

Their results, recently published in the medical journal The Lancet, revealed that children with disabilities are 3.7 times more likelyto be the victims of any sort of violence as compared with children with no disabilities.

They are 3.6 times more likely to be victims of physical violence and 2.9 times more likely to be victims of sexual violence.

“Children with disability associated with mental illness or intellectual impairment appear to be among the most vulnerable, with 4.6 times the risk of sexual violence compared with their non-disabled peers,” the WHO said.

Dr. Etienne Krug, director of the WHO’s Department of Violence and Injury Prevention and Disability said that the results showed that “children with disabilities are disproportionately vulnerable to violence, and their needs have been neglected for far too long.”

“We know that specific strategies exist to prevent violence and mitigate its consequences. We now need to determine if these also work for children with disabilities. An agenda needs to be set for action,” Krug said.

The WHO cited stigma, discrimination, ignorance about disability, and lack of social support for those who care for them as among the factors why children with disabilities are at higher risk of violence.

The studies were done in the United States and the United Kingdom. It is quite possible that if they had been done in countries which have more poverty and which do not have as many child abuse laws in place, that the statistics could be even worse.

Children in general may hold back information about abuse because they are afraid and/or have been threatened. But children with intellectual disabilities or mental illnesses may also have difficulties in communicating. Some may be nonverbal or may have limited vocabularies or speech abilities. They also may not be aware that they are being led into a dangerous situation by an adult who offers them candy or toys. Therefore they are all the more vulnerable.

A medical journal, The Lancet, reports on this study:

The results of this systematic review confirm that children with disabilities are more likely to be victims of violence than are their peers who are not disabled. However, the continued scarcity of robust evidence, due to a lack of well designed research studies, poor standards of measurement of disability and violence, and insufficient assessment of whether violence precedes the development of disability, leaves gaps in knowledge that need to be addressed.

It is obvious that more work needs to be done, not only in research, but in finding ways to prevent abuse and to help victims.




Fl. State Accused of ‘Dumping’ Disabled Kids

The Florida health and disabilities administrators have been continuously dumping sick and disabled children, some of which are babies, in different nursing homes that are designed to care for elders that are in violation of the children’s rights. There are hundreds of these children spending their years in hospital like institutions, sometimes growing up in hospital equivalent rooms with little to no education or even socialization. A 22 page letter was written to Attorney General Pam Bondi by the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. Bondi’s office are the ones that are defending the state against any previously lawsuits filed that claim the institutionalization of the children violates the federal law and the children’s civil rights.

The Letter

The 22 page letter was written by the Assistant US Attorney General Thomas E. Perez, is the first attempt by the federal government to weigh in on any of the controversy. Towards the end of the letter, he outlined numerous steps that the state would be able to take to reduce this reliance on the nursing home beds for those frail children. If there is no correction, he went on to state that “the Attorney General may initiate a lawsuit” of his own. A lot of these children remain in these nursing homes for much of their lives, and numerous children have spent a decade or longer institutionalized, the report stated, including some of those children that have entered these facilities since they were infants and toddlers. “Indeed, the state has planned, structured and administered a system of care that has led to the unnecessary segregation and isolation of children, often for many years, in nursing facilities,” the report said.

Federal Americans with Disabilities Act


Under the federal Americans with Disabilities Act, those people that have disabilities or medical conditions have to be housed and then treated in community settings whenever it is possible, not in big institutions that are isolated. Since this law was passed in 1990, those advocated for disabled people and children have used this act to shut down large, squalid institutions and move those disabled and mentally ill people to their new homes or into group homes that are a part of larger sized communities. However, in recent years the state of Florida health administrators have relied on these nursing homes to be home to hundreds of children that could live at home safely with their parents, often at less of an expense to the state, compared to the nursing homes,

In the 22 page letter, Perez stated that the state has cut millions of dollars from programs that are able to support the parents of disabled children, refused more than $40 million in federal dollars that was to help enable some children to be able to stay at home or even return home, and encouraged nursing homes to house children by being able to increase their per diem rates. Such policies as these, states the Justice Department, are not only against federal law, but they hurt the children that are housed in nursing homes that are ill equipped to care for them. The children are often deprived of any sort of education, unable to see their family members, parents, and siblings, have no socialization and often times are forced to sit in front of a television for hours due to the lack of recreational activities offered.