As I mentioned to Leroy, I was dumped out of hospitals and medical prisons
(euphemistically called nursing homes) myself back in the late 1970s.
Dumping the Disabled
By Leroy F. Moore Jr.
In February of 1945, Blues singer, Blind Willie
Johnson, died of pneumonia, after being denied
hospital treatment, not because he was black, but
because he was blind in Texas. In the 80’s Ronald
Reagan closed mental institutions with no transitional
plan causing a huge population of people living on our
streets across this country. Today many people are
rejected from hospitals and other medical institutions
and some institutions, politicians, police and
individuals are carrying out Reagan’s policies of
dumping people with disabilities in this country and
around the world onto our streets. As an African
American man with a disability, it was hard for me to
read what happen to Blind Willie Johnson, but it is
sad to see that rejecting people from hospitals is
still with us today as I read the recent case of a man
who is a paraplegic and who was dumped on the streets
in L.A. with no wheelchair, clothes or medicine by a
Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center van.
From Japan to Los Angeles, people with
disabilities are being dumped on our streets in record
numbers. “Chinese Gangs Dumping Disabled Children in
Hong Kong, Lawmakers Says, “Disabled Woman Dumped at
Inaccessible Shelter,” “Northwoods police Dumped a
Homeless Man on the Street Corner in St. Louis” and
“Paraplegic Allegedly ‘Dumped’ on Skid Row.” These
latest news headlines tell us that dumping people with
disabilities is nothing new and it continues to happen
from all walks of life from political officers to
police to Japanese gangs to hospitals.
Although President Bush talked about domestic
issues in his state of the Union Address and
Californians voted for Prop 1c, Housing and Emergency
Shelter Trust Fund Act of 2006; the above headlines
continues to fill up newspapers and homeless people
with disabilities continue to be abuse by institutions
and individuals. In the 1990s Californians witnessed
a campaign for force treatment policy toward people
with mental health disabilities now today a paraplegic
homeless man has been dumped on the street by a
Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center van. This is not
the first time this hospital has dumped people who are
homeless and disabled onto the streets. According to
the LA Times Newspaper this practice occurred in 2005
at the same hospital. A disabled San Francisco
journalist, Laure McElroy just wrote an article for
the San Francisco Bay View Newspaper about how an
African American pregnant woman was asked to leave the
New Generation Health Center in the Potrero Hill
neighborhood of San Francisco for no reason. So what
happen to the word, public, in public health?
When I was a teenager I saw New York police
officers placing elderly and homeless people with
mental health disabilities on Greyhound buses with a
one way ticket to California, but when I moved to San
Francisco, I witnessed former Mayor Frank Jordan’s
Matrix Program that cited people who were homeless on
petty charges and had vans that circled downtown San
Francisco letting people back onto our streets because
of a lack of space in near by shelters. Mayor after
Mayor in cities across this country has come into
office with a get tough on the homeless policies from
New York to California. This type of legislative
thinking goes against solutions from local and
national homeless advocates for example The National
Coalition on Homelessness has many campaigns and
legislation proposals like The Bringing America Home
Act (H.R. 4347) and the Health Care Access Resolution.
Both Michael Reinke, acting director of the Indiana
Coalition on Housing and Homeless Issues and Michael
Stoops, the Director of the National Coalition on
Homeless told me that hate crimes are increasing
against people who are homeless because of many
factors including institutional policies and action
that are abusive and creates roadblocks to services,
shelter and medical needs.
During the Christmas holidays last year two
Independent Living Centers held rallies at
California’s shelters bringing attention to a lack of
accessibility in California’s homeless shelters and
also the San Francisco Coalition on Homeless has
kicked off a campaign around improving homeless
shelters. Now if people with disabilities who are
homeless can’t access the homeless shelters because of
a lack of accessibility (which is against local
disability laws and the federal Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1991) and are being thrown out of
hospitals, can we blame institutions for helping to
create an environment that leads to hate, crime and
violence? Although it was stated in a recent LA Times
article that the practice of dumping patients is not
new, the Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center and
many other hospitals have a record of investigating
themselves. I have seen the police investigate
themselves in cases of police brutality and nine times
out of ten it goes nowhere. I hope the city attorney
of Los Angeles, Rocky Delgadillo continues with his
case against several medical facilities on this issue!
In the mean time, please get involved by getting in
touch with the below homeless advocacy agencies.
(1) www.nationalhomeless.org
for a copy of Hate Crime Bill
(2) Jessica Lehman at the Community Resources for
Independent Living
(510) 881-5743
(3) Coalition on Homelessness San Francisco, Jennifer
(415) 346-3740
(4) Los Angeles Homeless Service Coalition
(310) 474-0222
(5) Los Angeles City Attorney, Rocky Delgadillo
(213) 978-8100
(6) Disabled People Outside, Danny McMullan
(510) 688-2342 or
danmcmullan@comcast.net
(7) Western Regional Advocacy Project 415-621-2533