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The Memphis Center for Independent Living Journal

 



DAY TWENTY-FOUR: Demonstration at Tennessee Governor's Office Reaches for a Record.

Sit-in has a long history in the disability rights movement.

Sepia pencil drawing of Justin Dart by Sher Stewart.(NASHVILLE, July 13, 2005) The sit-in at Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen's office is stretching into a fourth week. Sit-ins have been used before in the civil rights movement for people with disabilities some of the more high-profile sit-ins are listed below:

1935
The League for the Physically Handicapped (New York City) was formed to protest discrimination by the Works Progress Administration (WPA). Three hundred League members were denied WPA jobs. The Home Relief Bureau of New York City stamped all applications with “PH” which stood for physically handicapped. Members of the League held a sit-in at the Home Relief Bureau for nine days and held a weekend sit-in at the WPA headquarters. These actions eventually led to the creation of 1500 jobs in New York City.

1972
Disabled in Action demonstrated in New York City protesting Nixon’s veto of the Rehabilitation Act. Led by Judy Heumann, eighty activists staged a sit-in on Madison Avenue (about 4 hours). A flood of letters and protest calls were made.

1977
A group of disabled people takes over the San Francisco offices of the Health, Education, and Welfare Department to protest Secretary Joseph Califano's refusal to sign meaningful regulations for Section 504. No one expected to live there for almost a month, but they did. The action became the longest sit-in of a federal building to date. The historic demonstrations were successful and the 504 regulations were finally signed. 

Demonstration at the state building in Memphis1978
Disability rights activism in Denver stage a sit-in demonstration, blocking several Denver Regional Transit Authority buses, to protest the complete inaccessibility of that city’s mass transit system. The demonstration is organized by the Atlantis Community and is the first action in what will be a yearlong civil disobedience campaign to force the Denver Transit Authority to purchase wheelchair lift-equipped buses.

1998
National ADAPT activists take-over then Tennessee Governor Don Sundquist's Memphis office. Filling the office with a hundred protestors overnight, the city and county Mayors make statements of support for more home and community-based services and less institutional services.

2002
Colorado ADAPT vigil. From July 5 -18 about 20 Colorado ADAPT activists camped out in front of the Colorado Medicaid office to protest changes to the home-health rules. Negotiations with the demonstrators actually resulted in millions of dollars of state Medicaid savings.

2003
Kansas ADAPT sets up a tent city for about a week demanding home and community-based services are not cut in the state budget. Legislative votes shift while the city elects a mayor and prepares for a long stay. Kansas does not approve the cuts.

- Tim Wheat

MCIL Journal Index 2005

Follow the TennCare Sit-in

Date Name
12/31/2005 MCIL and System Advocacy in 2005
12/19/2005 Breaking TennCare to Fix It.
12/7/2005 Tennessee Citizens Against AIDS Demands Full Funding of Global AIDS Fund.
11/24/2005 Bredespin Administration denies withholding information.
11/17/2005 My First National ADAPT ACTION! By Louis Patrick.
11/4/2005 MCIL's Annual Holiday Open House and Silent Auction.
10/31/2005 Women and Seniors: Have You Taken Lipitor?
10/28/2005 Salt Lake City to get accessible taxicabs.
10/22/2005 MCIL: 20 years of kicking ass.
10/7/2005 Letter to Bredesen Shows Disenrollment Unnecessary.
9/29/2005 How Gonzales v. Oregon impacts people with disabilities.
9/27/2005 "Hey Bredesen We Want Medicine," Greets Tennessee Governor at $1000 a Plate Fund Raiser.
9/21/2005 ADAPT Accentuates the Weeks Message, Makes Demands on the NGA.
9/20/2005 The Disability Community will not be overlooked, or left behind.
9/19/2005 Angry Activists Arrested on Capitol Hill.
9/18/2005 Don't Target People with Disabilities.
8/22/2005 Safety Net is a Sham.
8/15/2005 Bredespin: Saving TennCare.
8/2/2005 Bredespin.
7/30/2005 Tennessee Needs Money Follows the Person.
7/26/2005 MCIL Timeline of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
7/23/2005 Six lies of Governor Bredesen, Part Two.
7/22/2005 Six lies of Governor Bredesen, Part One.
7/17/2005 Bredesen’s Plan Costly to Tennessee.
7/8/2005 Bredesen’s Drug Cap Violates the ADA.
7/4/2005 An Authentic American Demonstration.
6/21/2005 Activists Takeover Gov. Bredesen's Office.
6/18/2005 Concern over the governors statement.
6/16/2005 Governor Bredesen Issues Life Sentences to Vent Users.
6/8/2005 SCLC joins the struggle to secure TennCare.
5/25/2005 Center City Commission Can't Commit to Civil Rights.
5/18/2005 City's New Gazebo: A Symbol of Segregation.
5/15/2005 Section 8 Voucher Proposal Closes the Door on People with Disabilities.
5/2/2005 MEMPHIS - Rally in Support of TennCare.
4/25/2005 ADAPT Challenges Democrats to End Medicaid Institutional Bias.
4/19/2005 Changes coming to your Center for Independent Living?.
4/11/2005 Spring Spaghetti Supper Supreme.
4/5/2005 2ND Annual Free Yo Momma Day!
3/28/2005 ADAPT takes over Charlotte Avenue in downtown Nashville.
3/23/2005 Facts About Long Term Care in Tennessee
3/19/2005 USDOJ: Memphis Builders and Designers Settle Discrimination Lawsuit.
3/13/2005 State Policy Unjustly Institutionalizes Thousands
3/11/2005 The Money Follows the Person bill has been introduced by Senator Tom Harkin
3/2/2005 Anatomy of an ADAPT Action By Tim Wheat
3/1/2005 NOTICE TO POTENTIAL AGGRIEVED PERSONS
2/21/2005 YOUR VOICE IS IMPORTANT!
2/20/2005 Medicaid: A Time to Act by Mike Leavitt, Secretary of HHS
2/12/2005 Home is Where the Heart Is!
2/8/2005 Opposition to MiCASSA
1/31/2005 TENNCARE CHANGES
1/22/2005 Your State: Institutional versus Community expenditures.
1/11/2005 Call the Governor Today!
1/5/2005 Not Dead Yet Challenges Movie Critics, Eastwood

 


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