Olmstead Publications
Housing
Long-Term Care
Olmstead
Personal Assistance
Services/Home and Community-Based Services
ABCs of Nursing
Home Transition - Implementing Olmstead: An Orientation Manual
for NEW Transition Facilitators Word Version
| ABCs of Nursing Home Transition PDF Version
Olmstead
and Community: A Three Course Self Study Series on Community Integration
for Persons with Disabilities
Olmstead
and Community: Implementing the New Freedom Initiative
Housing
"A Home of Your Own Guide:
A Resource for Housing Educators and Counselors to Assist People
with Disabilities," National Home of Your Own
Alliance and Fannie Mae, 2000. This guide provides details as to
the process of moving into a home of their own for people with disabilities.
The sections detail the different considerations one needs to make
with the acquisition of a home such as: advantages and disadvantages
of owning a home, a personalized planning process for every phase
of the home purchasing process, advice on shopping for a home such
as making offers and negotiating the purchase price and different
contingencies people may wish to include in the sales contract,
the process of obtaining a mortgage, closing or settlement process
and what should be done prior to closing, and a glimpse of life
as a homeowner. There is also a set of worksheets to assist throughout
the home-buying process.
"HomeChoice Homeownership
for People With Disabilities." Printed in November 2000,
this 4- page document discusses the HomeChoice Mortgage loan. The
HomeChoice Mortgage Loan is designed to meet the mortgage underwriting
needs of low-and moderate-income people who have disabilities or
who may have family members with disabilities living with them.
The HomeChoice mortgage loan offers flexibility in loan to value
ratios, down payment sources, qualifying ratios and the establishment
of credit. For more information about Fannie Mae, one can peruse
their information on line at www.fanniemae.com or by calling the
Consumer Resource Center at 1-800-7FANNIE (1-800-732-6643). To obtain
HomeChoice information, call the Fannie Mae Consumer Resource Center
for the phone number of the account team in the Fannie Mae regional
office closest to you.
"Mortgage Products and Initiatives
for People with Special Needs," Packet from Fannie Mae.
It contains: Housing Finance Agencies Offer Fannie Mae's HomeChoice
Product Creating Homeownership Opportunities for People with Disabilities.
Printed in September 2000, this one page notice provides background
on HomeChoice. This Fannie Mae mortgage product enables housing
finance agencies to offer conventional financing to people who have
disabilities or have family members with disabilities. The loans
are available through Housing Finance Agencies' bonds programs in
partnership with Fannie-Mae approved coalitions and seller-services.
This piece details some of the qualifications necessary for the
HomeChoice mortgage loan. For additional information about HomeChoice
and how your agency can use this mortgage product and to outreach
to the disabled community, contact Stephen Allen with Fannie Mae
at 202-752-4810.
Long-Term
Care
Kane, R.A., O'Connor, C.M., and Baker, M.O. "Delegation
of Nursing Activities: Implications for Patterns of Long-Term Care."
Washington: American Association of Retired Persons, 1995.
Olmstead
Disability Advocacy
in a Post-Olmstead Environment, 2001 Olmstead Training Manual.
ILRU, 2323 S. Shepherd, Suite 1000, Houston, Texas 77019, ilru@ilru.org.
How
to Influence Policy-Makers and the Policy-Making Process - Tips
for Disability Policy Change Agents
ILRU Bookshelf Series by Bobby Silverstein
Rosenbaum, S. "Olmstead v
L.C.: Implications for Family Caregivers", Policy Brief
8. Family Caregiver Alliance, National Center on Caregiving, Oct.
2001.
Personal Assistance Services/Home
and Community-Based Services
Wagner, D.L., Nadash, P., and Sabatino, C. "Autonomy
or Abandonment: Changing Perspectives on Delegation."
National Institute on Consumer-Directed Long-Term Services, National
Council on the Aging, 1997.
"Consumer
Choice and Control: Personal Attendant Services and Supports in
America", Report of the National Blue Ribbon Panel on Personal
Assistance Services. Dautel, Pamela and Frieden, Lex. August 1999.
Houston, Texas. ILRU, 2323 S. Shepherd, Suite 1000, ilru@ilru.org.
"Personal Assistance Services for People
with Disabilities." King, Martha and Wright,
Barbara. National Conference of State Legislatures. State Legislative
Report: January 1999, Volume 24, Number 2. Contact the National
Conference of State Legislators: 1560 Broadway, Suite 700, Denver,
Colorado 80202-5140. Phone: 303-830-2054 (Book Order Number) 303-830-2200
(Main telephone number). This report summarizes personal assistance
services that have been crucial to the development of state initiatives
to support the rights of people with disabilities to live in the
community. Background information on demographics and considerations
for legislators, service delivery, recruitment and training issues,
funding sources, and proposed federal legislation is included in
the summary. Appendix A shows state examples of personal assistance
services. The first part looks at the "Cash and Counseling"
Demonstration Projects in Arkansas, Florida, New Jersey and New
York. The second part provides other innovative methods underway
in California, Kansas and Oregon. Appendix B is the HCFA letter
to State Medicaid Directors of July 1998. Appendix C has a listing
of other resources.
"State of the States of Publicly Funded
Personal Assistance Services." Data from the 1999-2000
WID national survey. This document summarizes some findings from
our 1999 "State of the States of PAS" national survey.
In this survey we conducted telephone interviews with representatives
of programs that fund services which fall under our liberal definition
of PAS. World Institute on Disability, 510 16th Street ·
Oakland, California 94612, (510) 763-4100 Voice (510) 763-4109 Fax.
"The Choice is Yours
"
University of Maryland Video Project. Arkansas Independent Choices.
1998.
"The Last Minority." The
Arkansas Governor's Developmental Disabilities Planning Council.
AETV, 1993.
"What is a Personal Assistant?",
Connecticut Association of Personal Assistants, P. O. Box 316, Manchester,
CT, info@ctapa.org, http://www.ctapa.org
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