New Regulations Afford Additional Protections
to Adult Care Facility Residents with Disabilities, Reports
Pillsbury
NEW
YORK, Feb. 28, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Driven by a
lawsuit brought by Fair Housing Justice Center (FHJC) and two
individual plaintiffs against the New York Department of Health
(DOH) in 2018, the State of New
York has issued new regulations that address decades of
discrimination against people who use wheelchairs. The new state
regulations, announced on February
22, correct provisions that fostered discrimination against
individuals with mobility impairments seeking to live in adult care
facilities. The lawsuit also resulted in an earlier round of
changes to the regulations, but those changes did not fully address
the problems.
New Regulations Afford Additional
Protections to New York State
Adult Care Facility Residents with Disabilities
"Adult care facilities provide much-needed housing for many New
Yorkers, and people with disabilities – including those who use
wheelchairs – must have equal access. Although our lawsuit is still
pending, these amended regulations are a positive step," said
Elizabeth Grossman, Executive
Director/General Counsel for the FHJC. "It's been an arduous
process to end many years of discrimination against people with
mobility impairments, and we are satisfied that this change will
result in more options for more people to live in a facility that
is best suited to their needs."
The litigation that led to New
York's two rounds of regulatory changes—FHJC v.
Cuomo—was brought five years ago in response to the rampant
discrimination against people who use wheelchairs seeking residence
in assisted living and other state-licensed adult care facilities.
Jointly being prosecuted on behalf of plaintiffs by the AARP
Foundation, Mobilization for Justice and Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw
Pittman LLP, the ongoing lawsuit alleges that New York's Department of Health regulations
have discriminated against individuals with mobility impairments in
violation of the Fair Housing Act, the Americans with Disabilities
Act, the Rehabilitation Act, and Section 1557 of the Affordable
Care Act.
The newly promulgated rules explicitly state that these adult
care facilities 1) must individually assess people who use
wheelchairs for residency; 2) must consider requests for reasonable
accommodations from people with disabilities; and 3) can no longer
outright bar individuals with mobility impairments, including
people who use wheelchairs, from residency. While the latest DOH
regulations mark a significant win for FHJC and its constituents,
the case continues as questions about how the State plans to
enforce the new rules to remediate the long-time discriminatory
practices that DOH's rules have fostered remain unanswered.
"We are pleased that the State has adopted the regulatory
changes in response to our lawsuit," said William Rivera, Senior Vice President for AARP
Foundation Litigation. "While we are proud of this outcome, the
State must now implement and enforce the new regulations
effectively so that adult care facilities treat New Yorkers who use
wheelchairs with dignity and respect."
"It has taken years of litigation but we are relieved that DOH
has finally removed regulations used to justify preventing people
who use wheelchairs from accessing assisted living and steering
them into more restrictive nursing homes," said Jota Borgmann, Senior Staff Attorney at
Mobilization for Justice. "We hope that facility operators,
healthcare providers, and consumers and their loved ones all
receive the same clear message: using a wheelchair should not be an
automatic ticket into a nursing home for the rest of your
life."
"We are pleased to see the State finally acknowledge and attempt
to remedy policy inadequacies that have long plagued many
vulnerable New Yorkers," said David
Keyko, the lead Pillsbury partner advising on the firm's pro
bono representation of FHJC. "Having promulgated these clearer,
fairer rules, DOH must now turn its attention to making sure its
regulations are fully applied and appropriately enforced at adult
care facilities across the state."
The mission of the FHJC, a nonprofit civil rights organization,
is to eliminate housing discrimination; promote policies and
programs that foster open, accessible, and inclusive communities;
and strengthen fair housing enforcement in the New York City region. The FHJC serves all
five boroughs of New York City and
the seven surrounding counties of Dutchess, Nassau, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Suffolk, and Westchester.
New York residents in the above
referenced service area that have been denied residency at an
assisted living or other Adult Care Facility because of wheelchair
use or mobility status can file a complaint by calling the
FHJC at 212-400-8201 or filling out its online form found
at
https://www.fairhousingjustice.org/our-work/housing-discrimination-complaints/.
New York residents can also
report discrimination directly to DOH by calling
1-866-893-6772.
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SOURCE Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP