Fair
64°
St. Charles, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Petition supports services for disabled adults

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

GENEVA – When Chris Morris of Geneva thinks of her two developmentally disabled daughters, she considers how a near total lack of housing support affects their lives.

“Haley is 21, and Caroline is 18,” Morris said. “There is just a lack of funding for adults with disabilities in Illinois, and specifically in Kane County. Funding from the state level is declining and inadequate. So it’s important for us in Kane County to try to secure additional funding locally for Kane residents. It goes back to taking care of your own in your own community.”

Morris and other advocates are collecting 20,000 signatures to put a referendum on the April 9 consolidated election ballot. Voters would be asked to support a 0.1 percent property tax levy increase for housing and other services for developmentally disabled adults. The deadline to file a ballot referendum is Jan. 7.

Supporters say it would cost the owner of a house valued at $182,000 – the median home market value in Kane County, according to the assessor – an additional $55 a year. The levy would raise an estimated $13 million a year, said Patrick Flaherty, the vice chairman of the board of directors for the Association for Individual
Development.

Flaherty said the agency’s board decided to pursue the petition drive because of the crisis in funding those with disabilities face for housing, transportation, jobs, job training and respite for families that take care of disabled people. Reductions in state and federal support and a growing population in need of help have created the crisis, he said.

“We have about 10,000 people in Kane County who need lifetime care that could be at Marklund or group homes, which we operate,” Flaherty said. “Another 10,000 need less intensive care, but nonetheless, need care with basic life services. We have almost 17,000 in special education in Kane County, and half of those will need services in the community once they graduate from school at age 21.”

Group homes placed within local communities are ideal, he said, because it keeps people with disabilities within neighborhoods, increases their independence and competence, and relieves their aging parents.

Previous Page|1||

Reader Poll

Have you ever witnessed a tornado?

Yes
No