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Center for Public Representation

A Public Interest Law Firm Dedicated to Serving Individuals with Disabilities for More Than 40 Years

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Advocacy Updates

  • CPR Applauds the US Commission on Civil Rights’ Recommendations to End the Use of Subminimum Wages for People with Disabilities and Expand Opportunities for Competitive Integrated Employment
    September 17, 2020
    Today, the US Commission on Civil Rights (USCCR) released its report regarding Section 14(c) of the Fair Labor Standards Act, which allows people with disabilities to be paid subminimum wages, often pennies on the dollar, in segregated settings where they don’t interact with their nondisabled peers. We commend the Commission for its recommendation to end the use of Section 14(c) and expand access to competitive integrated employment – jobs in the community where people with disabilities work alongside, are paid the same wages, and have the same opportunities as their co-workers without disabilities.
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  • Resolution of Federal Complaint Filed by CPR and Partners Sets National Precedent Against Blanket DNRs, Medical Discrimination on the Basis of Disability During the COVID-19 Pandemic
    August 20, 2020
    Today, amidst rampant spread of COVID-19 infection throughout the country, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Office for Civil Rights (OCR) announced the resolution of a federal complaint filed by CPR and partners against Utah. Today’s resolution sets a national precedent, with OCR building off earlier resolutions of complaints regarding plans in Alabama, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee and weighing in on the discriminatory impact of a number of provisions common in many states’ rationing plans. 
    Read More
  • Call-in day TODAY: Tell your Senators #WhatWeNeed is #HCBS funding!
    August 4, 2020
    Join us today, August 4, for a call-in day to urge the Senate to include funding for home and community-based services (HCBS) in the coronavirus relief bill being negotiated. Even if you’ve called or emailed before, or shared your HCBS story on social media, please contact your Senators again. They need to hear from all of us and they need to hear from us NOW!
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  • Act now to make sure disability priorities are included in the next COVID-19 bill!
    July 27, 2020
    The Senate has released a new coronavirus relief package, the HEALS Act, that fails to address the disability community’s most urgent priorities. We need everyone to take action and push your Senators to include our priorities in the relief package that ultimately passes the Senate, so please contact them now!
    Read More
  • Crisis Standard of Care Plans in COVID-19 Hotspots Arizona and Texas Challenged by CPR and Partners
    July 22, 2020
    CPR, together with a coalition of national and state disability and civil rights advocacy groups, has filed complaints with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office for Civil Rights (OCR) challenging the crisis standard of care plans in Arizona and Texas, two states hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic.
    Read More
  • HCBS Advocacy Coalition, Led by CPR, Opposes Further Delay of the Home and Community Based Settings Rule
    July 14, 2020
    The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a State Medicaid Director letter announcing another delay in the timeline for states to fully implement the Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) Settings Rule, extending the deadline by one year to March 2023. We oppose delaying the March 2022 deadline – still over 20 months away – by another year at this time. The COVID-19 pandemic has laid bare the risks of large congregate settings and made the Rule’s focus on more individualized supports in smaller and non-disability specific settings more important than ever.
    Read More
  • CPR and Coalition of Advocacy Groups and Legislators Demand a Full Pardon for Neli Latson, a Young Black Disabled Man Subjected to a Decade of Unjust Treatment, Racism and Ableism
    July 6, 2020
    Today, a coalition of nearly 50 advocacy groups and state legislators, led by the Center for Public Representation, The Arc of the United States, The Arc of Virginia, and the Autistic Self Advocacy Network, sent a letter calling on Virginia Governor Northam to right a decade of unjust treatment in a criminal justice system infected with systemic racism and ableism faced by Reginald “Neli” Latson, a young Black man with autism and intellectual disability.  The letter demands that Governor Northam grant Mr. Latson a full pardon, commit to continue funding his disability services in Florida where he and his family now reside, and issue a public apology to Mr. Latson and his family.
    Read More
  • Resolution of Federal Complaint Filed by CPR and Partners Sets National Precedent for Policies Regarding the Rationing of Medical Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic
    June 26, 2020
    Today, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Office for Civil Rights (OCR) announced the resolution of a federal complaint filed against Tennessee, one of nearly a dozen complaints filed by CPR, together with a coalition of national disability advocates, challenging states’ plans for rationing medical care during the COVID-19 pandemic as discriminating against people with disabilities.
    Read More
  • CPR and Partners File Complaint Regarding Inaccessibility of COVID-19 TestNebraska Program
    June 17, 2020
    Today, CPR and partners filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) over Nebraska’s ongoing failure to provide access for Nebraskans with disabilities to TestNebraska. The State’s COVID-19 testing program currently requires the ability to access and use the internet and then the ability to drive to a testing site.
    Read More
  • Resolution of Federal Complaint Filed by CPR and Partners Makes Clear Hospital Visitor Policies Nationwide Must Accommodate Patients with Disabilities During COVID-19 Pandemic
    June 9, 2020
    Today, in response to the first federal complaint challenging discriminatory hospital “no-visitor” policies, filed by CPR and partners last month, the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) at the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services announced a resolution making clear that federal law requires hospitals and the state agencies overseeing them to modify policies to ensure patients with disabilities can safely access the in-person supports needed to benefit from medical care during the COVID-19 pandemic.
    Read More
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The documents contained on this page and within this web site do not constitute legal advice. Anyone engaged in legal action should consult with an attorney. Attorneys should make their own independent judgments. Local laws vary and the law may have changed since these documents were written. Litigants should fully research any claims or defenses before making them.

CPR does not offer individual representation.

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CPR’s work is supported in part by grant funds from the Massachusetts Legal Assistance Corporation (MLAC).

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