For  Immediate Release

May 3, 2011

Contact: Janine Bertram (503)  915-5247

Contact: Bruce Darling (585) 370-6690

Contact: Marsha  Katz (406) 544-9504

http://www.adapt.org




ADAPT STORMS  CONGRESS AGAIN

DEMANDS PAUL RYAN WITHDRAW SUPPORT FOR MEDICAID  CUTS



Following 91 arrests, ADAPT members from all over the nation  returned to 
Congress to demand that Rep. Paul Ryan, John Boehner and  Michelle Bachmann 
to publicly withdraw their support for Medicaid budget  cuts and Medicaid 
state block grants.



"I think it is  ridiculous that 91 of us have to get arrested to be able to 
talk to our  members of Congress. But Medicaid funding means life and death 
for seniors  and people with disabilities so, if arrests are necessary, we 
will do it  again," said Bruce Darling, an organizer with Rochester, NY. 
ADAPT, who  spent the night jailed.



Under the Ryan Plan, Medicaid programs  would be cut by 35%, which 
translates to a loss of $772 billion in human  services. Additionally, the 
Ryan Plan proposes a system of Medicaid block  grants for states-giving 
states greater ability to make  cuts.



Of the 60 million people counting on Medicaid right now,  8.5 million are 
people with disabilities; 8.8 million are low income, frail,  elderly and 
disabled individuals who rely on Medicaid to plug the gaps in  Medicare 
coverage, such as long term care. Medicaid pays for vital services  to 
assist people with intellectual disabilities to live and work in the  
community rather than be forced into an institution; and screening  
programs to identify and diagnose disabilities for  children.



There is widespread support for services for the people  with disabilities 
and older Americans.  According to a recent  Washington Post-ABC News poll, 
69% of Americans oppose cutting  Medicaid.  These results are consistent 
with a 2010 Harris survey that  found that 89% Americans supported a tax 
increase to assure that people  could receive services in their own homes, 
rather than being forced into  nursing facilities or other institutions.  
The American Association of  Retired Persons (AARP) polls repeatedly find 
that the vast majority of  seniors want to age in their own homes with any 
needed  services.



"Congressman Ryan and his colleagues voted themselves  huge health benefits 
and now they want states to have the flexibility to cut  Medicaid spending 
and the few benefits for people with low incomes," said  Cassie James of 
Philadelphia. ADAPT. "We need flexibility of spending so  people can choose 
the service options they want, and that will ultimately  contain costs. It 
is the institutional bias, the payments to institutions  that are breaking 
the federal bank."



For more information  about ADAPT, visit www.adapt.org 
http://www.adapt.org/ and  http://twitter.com/nationaladapt
FOR MORE INFORMATION on ADAPT visit our  website at http://www.adapt.org/

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