AAIDD/ARC Position Statements

HOUSING
POLICY
STATEMENT
All people with mental retardation
and related developmental disabilities have a right to live in communities
of their choosing and be fully included with people who do not have
disabilities. Children belong with their families. Adults should control
where and with whom they live, with increasing opportunities to rent
or buy their own homes.
ISSUE
Public policy has not kept pace with changes in what people want and
need in housing. Historically, families that had a child with a disability
either had to do without supports at home or place the child in an institution
to get help. Institutions enforce an unnatural, isolated, and regimented
lifestyle that is not appropriate or necessary. They also consume a disproportionate
share of limited public resources.
As people left institutions and their family homes, they were frequently
placed into group homes, often larger than family-sized, owned by provider
agencies or other entities. They still lacked control of where and with
whom they lived. It is now clear that with carefully tailored and individualized
supports and services all people can grow and develop in housing they
control, be it a house, an apartment, or a condominium, no matter how
significant their disabilities.
However, people with disabilities who receive SSI cannot afford housing
because they are among the poorest in the nation. They are, in fact,
the low-income group with the highest level of unmet need for housing
assistance. To add to the problem, Medicaid, the principal source of
funding for services and supports, does not allow for its funds to be
used for housing-related costs. In addition, a serious lack of accessible
and affordable housing throughout the nation limits our constituents'
ability to find a home.
POSITION
Our constituents should be empowered to live in accessible and affordable
housing similar to that of people without disabilities. Necessary individualized
supports and adaptations should be of their choosing and under their
control or the control of their substitute decision-maker.
Community over Institutional Placement
- Large congregate facilities are unnecessary and inappropriate for
our constituents, regardless of type or severity of disability.
- People must receive individualized supports, including housing, as
they leave institutions, as well as their family homes. Public funds
must be shifted from institutions to the community to accommodate these
moves.
The health and safety of people must be safeguarded wherever they live,
including when a facility is closing, and whenever a person is transitioning
from one living environment to another.
Children
- All children need a home with a family that provides an atmosphere
of love, security, and safety.
- Many families need individualized accommodations to enable them to
provide a home for the child with a disability.
Adults
- People with disabilities should no longer be "placed" or
made to fit into a program or facility. Rather, flexible supports
and services must follow the person to the location he or she chooses,
including their family home.
People with disabilities must be empowered with the opportunity to control
their housing by renting or buying their own homes, whether a house,
apartment, or condo. Thus public policies must ensure that they receive
their fair share of all local, state, and national housing resources.
- Individuals with disabilities should live together only when they
freely choose to do so.
- Adults with disabilities should be encouraged and supported to live
lives outside the family homes whenever feasible.
- People should have as much privacy as possible within their homes.

Adopted: The Arc, Congress of Delegates,
2004
AAIDD Board of Directors, 2004