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Addressing Barriers to Full Participation for Racially and Ethnically Diverse Populations: Strategies and Lessons Learned
JOANNA CORDRYPLANNING COORDINATORTEXAS COUNCIL FOR DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES (TCDD)
Why Address Barriers?
DD Act
TCDD’s mission statement: “…all people with disabilities…”
Demographics
Disparities and disproportionality exist
2013 Demographics (Percentage)
All Racial/Ethnic Minorities
White, not Hispanic or Latino
Black, African American
Native Hawaiian, Other Pacific Islander
American Indian, Alaska Native
Hispanic, Latino
Two or more races
Asian
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Texas U.S.
More than 50% of U.S.
children under age
5 are Minorities
Disparities and Disproportionality: Examples
African American infants with Down syndrome have a lower survival rate beyond their first year than their white peers
African American and Latino boys with disabilities experience more severe school discipline than other racial and ethnic groups
When one fish is not doing well, you look at the fish.
When most of the fish are not doing well, you look at the water.
About Disparities and Disproportionality
TCDD’s Previous Efforts• Outreach to large organizations
• Training
• Expectations of grantees
• Data & literature review
• One-time events
2011: “Outreach and Development” Grants
• 1 year, $10,000, non-competitive
• Shortened, simplified application for grassroots groups
• Goals chosen by groups that apply
• African American, Latino, Asian, or Native American groups
• Within group work
• 15 grants funded thus far
“Outreach and Development” Grants: Purpose
Support people of racial/ethnic minority backgrounds to: • Improve service systems• Increase access to services and supports • Inform TCDD’s future activities• Address needs they have identified
Groups must be willing to present to Council
Reaching East African Children and Families (REACh)
Example Grant:
REACh Presentation: Accomplishments
Provided direct support to families
Supported 20-30 families who regularly attended monthly meetings Supported 40 families via phone/email and personal contact Raised awareness at community events Held social events for families Translated documents into multiple languages Gained non-profit status
REACh Presentation: ChallengesStigma: Some families were hesitant to join to keep their child’s disability private
Addressed:
Educated community
Held individual meetings, phone calls
Discussed openly at community events
REACh Presentation: ChallengesReligious, Cultural, Political Differences among Ethiopians and Eritreans; Somalis not as willing to join activities.
Addressed: Provided binders to Somali families Reached Somali families through a Somali leader in the organization Educated families individually, and supported them in all areas (school, medical, agency, etc.)
REACh Presentation: Overcoming challenges in the Somali community
Create a separate entity for Somali families Communicate in their native language Have more information translated into Somali Create an appropriate cultural and religious setting for them
Outreach Grants: Representation Project Percentages Expected Based on Percentages
Hispanic
African American
American Indian
Asian
Some Grantees Shared: In their culture…
• People are less likely to ask for help until there is a crisis
• Independence, assertiveness and self-advocacy are not goals
• People with disabilities experience tremendous stigma
• People don’t view disability negatively; people aren’t separated
• “Help seeking” behavior might look different in different cultures
Some Grantees Shared: In their culture…
• People often desire to be around people of the same culture
• “Be mindful that assimilation is not a minority culture goal”
• Lack of trust of people from other cultures is a huge barrier
• Values and goals may not be consistent with DD Councils’ values
113 N FIRST ST MABANK, TX 75147
Apalachicola Band of Creek IndiansPEOPLE OF ONE FIRE
Example Grant:
WHY APPLY FOR TCDD FUNDING?
TO MEET TRIBAL GOALS EVALUATE TRIBAL I&R OUTREACH
ASSESS CONSUMER SATISFACTION AND PRIORITY NEEDS
INCREASE UNDERSTANDING AND FILL KNOWLEDGE GAPS
IMPROVE SERVICES TO CONSUMERS
Presentation: Apalachicola Band of Creek Indians
Why do this OURSELVES?
1. TOO FEW CULTURALLY SENSITIVE OPTIONS
2. UNIQUE NATIVE LEARNING STYLE
3. EXISTING CONSUMER TRUST SAVES TIME
4. CONSUMER ACCEPTANCE OF CHANGE
Presentation: Apalachicola Band of Creek Indians
Outreach and Development Grants
What types of things has TCDD learned?
Unexpected Lessons
• Rural areas may be less open and harder to change• Groups applied from geographic areas not typically reached• Tremendous amounts of volunteer work was unsustainable • Even simplified fiscal management was tremendously difficult• New active advocates did not necessarily emerge• More providers than expected don’t meet linguistic needs
2013: Gulf Coast of TX African American Family Support Conference
• Based on Central TX African American Family Support Conference
• Partnered with founder of CTAAFSC
• Highly involved TCDD staff with ties to community
• Largely focused on health and mental health issues
• Incorporated faith and reached African American clergy
• Learned lesson: requires community support and involvement
2014: Center for Elimination of Disproportionality and Disparities• Office in Health and Human Services Commission
• Created by legislature in response to data from a state agency
• Staff in different regions work with community members
• Services:• Training and technical assistance • Resource center
2015: Culturally Appropriate Family Supports RFP
Previous grantees
Capacity building and supports
Identification of advocates
Self-advocacy information shared
Six submissions (seven interested)
Applicants
Asian American Indian African AmericanHispanic
The Future
• Hold “Undoing Racism” Training• Outreach and Development Grants PLUS• Work with CEDD• Try to promote open conversations• Start and respect where people are, and share our vision• Look at changes needed in TCDD culture, policies, procedures• Promotores de Salud
Lessons Not just “cultural competence” - build relationships Listen; share; don’t require agreement Don’t expect trust Actively look at systems, including your own Be willing to have difficult conversations (and to be wrong) One step at a time – but START
Joanna CordryPlanning CoordinatorTexas Council for Developmental [email protected]