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Sixth Circuit Upholds Disabled Girl's Use of Miniature Horse

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has ruled that an Ohio woman can pursue a claim that Blue Ash, Ohio, discriminated against her disabled daughter by banning her from keeping a miniature horse as a service animal, The Wall Street Journal's Jacob Gershman reports. Ingrid Anderson claims the city's ban on people keeping farm animals within municipal limits violates the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Fair Housing Act. Anderson further argues the city should make a reasonable accommodation to allow her family to keep the miniature hourse.

People with Disabilities Fight Wisconsin Budget Changes

People with disabilities are fighting Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker's proposed changes to long-term managed care in the state's budget, The Marshfield News-Herald's Liz Welter reports. They are concerned that changes to managed care would trade a community-centered system with a state-wide approach run by out-of-state insurance companies. They also are concerned that the autonomy the current system gives them to direct how some of their care is carried out would be eliminated.

No ID. No Utilities. Now A Man’s Dead. This is What Happened in the Court Case

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Mon, 03/16/2015 - 23:14

J. Jean Johnson was delivered into this world by a Mississippi midwife, and he never did have a birth certificate or photo ID.

All he had was a social security card and his identification card from his job as a city garbageman. But that was not enough for Memphis Light, Gas & Water, which denied Johnson electricity, heat and air conditioning because he did not have state-issued photo identification. In August 2011, Johnson, an illiterate man with intellectual disabilities, died of heat stroke when the internal temperature of his apartment reached 93.2 degrees.

Even though Johnson’s niece and coworker both testified that he was unable to care for himself without help and that he often became frustrated when communicating with others, U.S. District Judge S. Thomas Anderson ruled that the time period for Johnson’s wife and sister to bring claims against the utility company had expired.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit recently reversed the judge, ruling that a jury should decide if Johnson was of “unsound mind” and if his intellectual capacity tolled the time period in which his relatives can sue the utility.

Circuit Judge Jane B. Stranch noted that the test for whether a person’s unsound mind will pause, or toll, a statute of limitations is “‘whether a person could know or understand his or her legal rights sufficiently well to manage his or her personal affairs.’”

“The deposition excerpts and affidavits read together plausibly show Johnson to have been an individual with extremely limited intellectual abilities who lacked the capacity to ‘carry out legal functions,”’ Stranch said. “He was able to function somewhat independently only with the regular assistance of family, friends, and co-workers. The record suggests that Johnson, poor and apparently disconnected from social services, was as dependent on such informal networks as a comparably disabled middle-class individual might be dependent on an assisted living facility or a court-appointed guardian.” 

An even more heart-wrenching aspect of the case is that there was an exception to the ID policy that probably should have applied to Johnson.

When Johnson tried to get utilities in 2010 at the age of 65, the utility company had an exception to the requirement that customers show valid government-issued ID— if people were in their sixth decade or older. “But MLGW did not train employees regarding how to advise customers who did not possess the necessary photo identification, nor did it train employees on how to deal with customers who were illiterate,” Stranch noted.

NYC Settles Disaster Preparedness Lawsuit for People with Disabilities

New York City has reached a settlement to provide better "evacuation and sheltering" for people with disabilities during disasters, according to the New York Law Journal. The lawsuit was filed after Hurricane Irene and then was punctuated by Superstorm Sandy. Judge Jesse Furman found the city liable for violating the American with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act and the New York City Human Rights law. The parties settled instead of going to trial over remedies.

NYC Settles Disaster Preparedness Lawsuit for People with Disabilities

New York City has reached a settlement to provide better "evacuation and sheltering" for people with disabilities during disasters, according to the New York Law Journal. The lawsuit was filed after Hurricane Irene and then was punctuated by Superstorm Sandy. Judge Jesse Furman found the city liable for violating the American with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act and the New York City Human Rights law. The parties settled instead of going to trial over remedies.

Read more: http://www.newyorklawjournal.com/id=1202672056170/City-Settles-Litigatio...

US Should Ratify UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

The U.S. Senate has not ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, including a vote in December 2012 that failed by five votes, The Interdependent reports. The convention was modeled after the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act. The Senate likely will consider the convention again this year, The Interdependent further reports.

"Both U.S. Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power and Secretary [of State John] Kerry have argued that the treaty’s benefits occur not through changing any U.S. laws or even spending U.S. resources, but rather by encouraging other countries to follow U.S. leadership in terms of the ADA—legislation that is widely recognized as among the world’s highest standards for protecting the rights of the disabled," The Interdependent also notes.

New York Found Liable For Discriminating Against People with Disabilities During Hurricane Sandy

A federal judge has ruled that people with disabilities were discriminated against by New York City during Superstorm Sandy. The New York Law Journal reports that "Southern District Judge Jesse Furman ruled Thursday that the city violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act and the New York City Human Rights Law in how it plans to respond to severe storms and power outages." While the judge said the discrimination against people with disabilities in getting them evacuated and housed during the storm and its aftermath was not intentional, "more needs to be done to meet the needs of the disabled in the future, especially in the evacuation of people stuck in high-rise buildings after a storm," the NYLJ further reports.

Russia: Man With Disabilities Detained Indefinitely For Protest; Photojournalist, Greenpeace Activists Denied Bail

The Washington Post has a piece that begins: "Courts from Moscow to Murmansk sent out a broad and uncompromising message Tuesday: Russian authorities will not tolerate protest, not from the weak or the powerful, not on land or at sea." A photojournalist and Greenpeace activists detained after a protest of Arctic drilling were denied bail in one case. In another case, a man with disabilities was confined to indefinite psychiatric treatment after being arrested at a protest when Vladimir Putin was inaugurated.

Profound Piece Looks At Parents Who Seeks to Sterilize Their Children With Disabilities

The Atlantic has a profound piece on Australian parents seeking to have their daughters with disabilities sterilized.

On one side, removing women's uteruses can ensure that they will not have children they can't care for and can improve their health in some situations. As one parent whose 31-year-old daughter has the mentality of a three-year-old described it to the magazine, "The hardest part for Sophie’s Sydney-based parents was managing her periods. 'She has an older sister and a younger sister and we tried to get her to use pads, but it just didn’t work,' said Merren Carter, Sophie’s mother."

On the other side, sterilization raises the specter of eugenics. As The Atlantic reported: "One woman’s father, who believed that she should not have children, told her she was going to the hospital to have her tonsils taken out. 'I did not have a sore throat afterwards,' she told the [Australian Senate] committee. It was only when she was trying to have kids with a long-term partner that she had realized what happened. Her partner eventually left her because he wanted children."

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