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Inicio / Álbums / Las Vegas, fall 1994 26
The Las Vegas action was pivotal. Local unions supported our efforts while AHCA tried court orders to stop us. ADAPT marched on their hotel and the convention center next door. We blocked the intersection of Riviera and Paradise with a rally and a wheelchair on a cross and we returned to Convention Center despite a court order for us to stay away. The point was to keep fresh in their minds the thousands of people who do not wish to be locked away in their nursing homes.
- ADAPT (881)
[Headline] Protesters stick Metro with expense Bob Shemeligian LAS VEGAS SUN [Image] PHOTO by Benjamin Rusnak/Special to the Sun: A line of protesters span a broad street with palm trees on one side and large white buildings on the other. You can see signs for the Sahara and Cesar's Palace. The protesters, mostly in wheelchairs, have their fists raised and two have posters that read "Don't make me leave my home" and "my life is not for sale." Wynelle Carson, Kirstin ___ and Laura ____ are the three women on the right side of the line. Behind the protesters you can see a cluster of police officers. Two other PHOTOS by Benjamin Rusnak/Special to the Sun: One is the head of a man [AHCA's Willging] and the other is of the back of a manual wheelchair with a pink poster taped on it that reads "Are You Next?" Down the street a little from the wheelchair is a large group of police officers walking toward the wheelchair. Caption reads: Dr. Paul Willging, left, -executive vice president of AHCA, speaks Wednesday. Metro officers arrest ADAPT protesters while the sign on Billy "the Kid" Montalbo's [sic, should be Montalvo] wheelchair asks who will be next to have to move into a nursing home. Ironically, Montalbo [sic] was next to be arrested. One hundred thousand dollars. That's what Metro Police Lt. Fruge estimates it will the taxpayers for police officers to curtail illegal actions of disabled demonstrators who were protesting this week against nursing homes. At the latest protest Wednesday afternoon, nearly 300 members of American Disabled Attendant Program Today, in wheelchairs, blocked Paradise Road at Riviera Boulevard for three hours. The demonstrators staged protest in front of the Las Vegas Hilton, where more than 4,000 representatives of American Health Care Association, a nursing home group, are staying this week. The association, which represents 11,000 nursing homes and rehabilitation centers, is conducting its annual convention at the Las Vegas Convention Center. [Article continues] Metro officers arrested 108 demonstrators and transported them to a temporary detention center for processing. They were charged with unlawful assembly, a misdemeanor. In addition, 72 demonstrators were cited at the scene. Fruge estimated that over- [text cuts off] -strations and to charter six vehicles with wheelchair lifts to transport demonstrators who have been placed under arrest will top $100,000. "We try to be as fiscally responsible as possible, but we're in a Catch-22," Fruge said. "We cannot strip the field of demonstrations and be able to respond to emergency and trouble calls every day of the week, every hour of the day." Fruge said the department doesn't have contingency funds to cover the costs of policing the demonstrations. Questions about funding, he said, are "going to have to be decided by the city, county and the Metro Police Fiscal Affairs Committee." Police officials were happy about one thing Wednesday: There were no reported injuries or violent incidents at the protest. "I know we left a wake of frustrated motorists in our path, but what else could we have done?" Fruge asked. A few Metro officers suffered bruised shins during protests Tuesday. Some law officers, including federal ones, have said ADAPT members sharpen parts of their wheelchairs to inflict injuries. But Carolyn Long, ADAPT's Dallas organizer, said the group subscribes to nonviolent protest and that members do not sharpen parts of their wheelchairs. She said members do not intentionally throw themselves from their chairs. At the Las Vegas Hilton, ADAPT members taped to poles several signs stating "Fort Hilton." "We've renamed the hotel 'Fort Hilton,' " said Mike Auberger, founder of the Denver-based disabled rights group. "This is an appropriate place to hold our protest. AHCA can't travel through, and it's no different than the plight of a disabled person who is confined to a nursing home." Quinn Brisben, an ADAPT member from Chicago, said he walks with difficulty every day, and so he decided to help make it more difficult for AHCA members to walk on the day of the protest. "They make it inconvenient for us and we're making it inconvenient for them," he said. Brisben also has a bone to pick with the Las Vegas community "Las Vegas has absolutely no public benches, which afford people who walk with difficulty, as I do, a place to rest." ADAPT wants Congress to redirect 25 percent of $23 billion in nursing home funds to home care for the disabled. Sam Ackerman, a Chicago resident who volunteers his time to attend to the needs of disabled people in wheelchairs, said the issue behind the protest is dignity. "For me, this is part of the human rights struggle across the planet," Ackerman said. Diana Webster of Austin, Texas, asked, "I don't understand why AHCA doesn't let people with disabilities live in their own homes." Standing in front of the Hilton watching the protest was Paul Willging, AHCA executive vice president. Willging said AHCA does not prevent disabled people from living at home. Regarding the ADAPT charge that many disabled people across the nation are being cared for in nursing homes against their will. Willging said: "We would call that statement a lie. Federal and state laws are fairly explicit. You can't hold a person in a nursing home against his will." Winging said AHCA has been trying to negotiate with ADAPT to prevent the demonstrations, but the negotiations broke down Monday when ADAPT officials refused to budge on their demand that AHCA support a resolution calling for the redirection of 25 percent of nursing home funds to home care. "I think the leaders of ADAPT are doing a disservice to the disabled," Winging said. "Instead of being here, pushing a cause that's not achievable, we could be together in Congress lobbying for adequate funds to support long-term care (at home and in nursing homes)." But Auberger, as he was being arrested, shouted that Willging is being unrealistic when he talks about lobbying Congress: for more money for long-tern care. And Cassie James, a 38-year old ADAPT member who is forced to straddle a wheelchair facing downward because of scoliosis, said she understands why AHCA doesn't want to support ADAPT's resolution to voluntarily give up 25 percent of nursing home funds. [Headline] Groups agree on problem, not solution By Bob Shemeligian LAS VEGAS SUN Ironically, the American Health Care Association and the disabled rights group demonstrating at the AHCA convention here say they support the same thing: more funding for home care for the disabled. But it is the means to achieve this goal that AHCA and American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today do not agree on. ADAPT wants Congress to redirect 25 percent of $23 billion in nursing home funds to home care for the disabled. Activists argue that more than 1.6 million disabled Americans are being cared for in nursing homes against their will, and that this shift in funding is more practical and more humane. But officials of AHCA, a trade organization representing nursing homes and rehabilitation centers, argue that most nursing homes don't have enough money as it is to make ends meet. "We believe it's wrong to take money from one needy group and give it to another," Dave Kyllo, spokesman for AHCA, said this week. "We believe the resources are available to take care of the needs of the elderly and the disabled." Kyllo and Paul Winging, AHCA executive vice president, said AHCA supports national health-care reform, and so should members of ADAPT. But ADAPT members charge it's unrealistic to expect Congress to come up with more money for long-term health care. "We know and they (AHCA) know that new tax dollars to support health care is not going to happen," said Mike Auberger ADAPT national organizer. Auberger also said the profit margin it the majority of nursing homes in the nation increased by at least 10 percent from 1994 to 1993. ADAPT members say it's more cost-efficient and more dignified to care foi the disabled in their homes. They point out that trained attendants rather than more expensive nurses, car assist the disabled with many of the thing those who are not handicapped take foi granted. "If we stay at home, and receive visit: from attendants, they help us with feeding dressing and toilet," said Bob Kafka, as ADAPT member who lives in Houston. VOL 45 / NO. 109 LAS VEGAS SUN P.M. STREET THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1994 / 50 CENTS - ADAPT (886)
ADAPT protesters stand in a parking lot, several are pulled up to the police barricades in the foreground and above their heads the ADAPT flag with the stars arranged as a wheelchair flies overhead. Brian Shea is holding a poster that reads "AHCA can't beat ADAPT's full house." - ADAPT (883)
MM REPORT PHOTOS by Alex Reininger: PHOTO 1 (background for the print article) shows two police officers holding back a black wheelchair activist's [George Roberts] motorized wheelchair. Roberts' face is grimacing behind his sunglasses and his arm is clenched on his joystick. His front end is tipped in the air and he has a poster across his legs that reads "Nursing homes = Jail." Behind him to the right is a group of two other police officers holding back in a wheelie another motorized wheelchair near some cars. Behind to the left, disability photographer Tom Olin is raising his camera. PHOTO 2: (inset next to the text) a photograph of a man (Clayton Jones) in a manual wheelchair with his neck kriptonite locked to a door. There are two posters taped to the glass door, above his head. One reads "Cadillac Care? NO! Independence YES!!" The other reads "$30,000/yr in a nursing home vs. $8,000/yr for at-home services." [Image] [Headline] The New Civil Rights [Subheading] The Americans With Disabilities Act has unlocked the door, now it's time to open it By Joseph P. Shapiro Photos by Alon Reininger The California breeze blew exceptionally warm that fall day in 1962 as Ed Roberts, as postpolio quadriplegic, was lifted out of his wheelchair, carried up a mountain of steps, and situated in Room 201 of Cal Hall at the University of California Berkeley. "It was a perfect day, a wonderful day, and exceptional day," says Roberts. "It was the first day of class, the first day of my freedom, and the first day of my life as a self-sufficient person." That same school semester Jame Meredith, escorted to class by U.S. marshals, integrated the University of Mississippi. "We both had to sue to get into school," notes Roberts. "The only difference: I didn't need soldiers - ADAPT (902)
NEWSFRONTS CONTEMPORARY LONG TERM CARE NOVEMBER 1994 [Headline] Disabled Advocates Renew Cries For Home Care Funding at AHCA Show [Image] Behind police barricades a mass of protesters raise their power fists in protest. In the front row a woman in a wheelchair smiles at her fellow protesters. Beside her a man [Gordie Haug] in a scooter looks determined. On his other side another woman in a wheelchair [Sharon Wilkenson] has a poster that reads " Nursing Homes = Jail." Beside her a man standing [Mark Pasquesi] looks down at someone [Spitfire?] who is speaking to him. Mike Oxford stands behind them, hands on hips and many others are there in rows behind them. [Image caption] For the fourth year, ADAPT members used the convention as a forum to air their views. SMARTING FROM THE DEFEAT OF healthcare reform and its promised support for home and community care, about 400 disabled and their attendants greeted conventioneers at the American Health Care Assocition's annual meeting in Las Vegas early last month with renewed cries for spending on home care services. Members of the Denver-based American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today (ADAPT), a loose confederation of people and groups who favor home care services for the disabled, drew attention to their cause with three days of demonstrations. Activities, which started on October 4, included disrupting traffic on a main city thoroughfare. Half a dozen demonstrators also made an end run around police, briefly gaining entry into the convention center's exhibition hall. For those among the 5,000-plus attendees who had to walk through chanting pickets or wait for doorways to be cleared of protesters in order to get to their meetings, it was déjà vu all over again. This was the fourth straight year that ADAPT members used the convention as forum to air its views, which include a demand that 26 percent of the nation's Medicaid budget for nursing facility care be channeled into attendant programs for the disabled. "We want to continue to educate the public that the nation's largest lobbying association for nursing homes helped defeat health-care reform," says James Parker, a member of ADAPT. Overall, the three days of protest were orderly and had minimal impact on the week's events, although police issued 424 arrest warrants and citations to protesters who sought to block attendees from entering the convention center or to block traffic on the corner of Paradise and Riviera Avenues. All of those arrested, though, were released on promises to appear in court. "The demonstrators lived up to what their leaders said coming in, that they would use nonviolent methods. Our hats are off to them for that," says Lt. Carl Fruge of the Las Vegas Police Department. Benefitting from a month and half of preparation for the event, the police department earned praise from both ADAPT and AHCA officials. Preparations included training a special group of officers on dealing with the disabled and briefings from officials in San Francisco who had coped with ADAPT at the AHCA show two years ago. The police also briefed the public on the tactics and traffic tieups expected from demonstrators and lined up special transportation, advisers, and medical staff for the event. In addition, the police dispensed to protesters 1000 "vials of life,"bottles containing stickers and information sheets the disabled can use to inform others of their conditions. "This was the best police force that we have ever dealt with. They understood the problems that people with disabilities have. Police in the past in many cases have created a lot of ten-sion," says Parker. "The police did a wonderful job," agreed Dave Kyllo, AHCA's spokesman. Hoping to defuse the protest, AHCA officials met several times with ADAPT members throughout the year in an attempt to draft a joint resolution:) AHCA representatives and ADAPT members continued to confer at the convention, but the two groups couldn't reach a consensus. Both agree that more funding should be made available for attendant care services. The question is where that funding will come from. ADAPT wants to channel money to home care from nursing home care; AHCA disagrees. "We think the way to bring about more attendant care services is through compre-hensive healthcare reform," says Kyllo. ADAPT members made it known that the debate will go on. Attendees at the convention's last day were greeted by protesters bedecked, in flowered shirts and leis. Clearly, they were thinking of next year's convention in Hawaii. BY DAVID VACZEK [Image] A mass of protesters on Rivera Blvd cluster around a giant wooden cross with a wheelchair and small coffin hung from it. Behind the group is a very large ADAPT flag with the wheelchair symbol. [Image caption] Protesters sought to block traffic on a main city thoroughfare. - ADAPT (887)
Metro LAS VEGAS SUN 3A a Friday, October 7, 1994 [Image] Woman (Earnestine Taylor) raises her power fist and mouth open in a yell. She is wearing numerous ADAPT power fist buttons. [Image caption] ERNESTINE TAYLOR, above, says she "fought like hell" to get out of nursing homes where she was placed after a stroke Now she lives on her own. [Image] [Image caption] Mike Eakin, right, 32, suffers from muscular dystrophy and lives at home with his parents. He fears ending up in a nursing home. [Headline] ADAPT plans protest at Hawaii convention [Subheading] Disabled rights group to fight for funds By Bob Shemeligian LAS VEGAS SUN This year's American Health Care Association convention in Las Vegas is over, but thoughts of next year's convention -scheduled for Hawaii - is already in the minds of hundreds of disabled demonstrators. "We'll be there (in Hawaii)," said Scott Heinzman of American Disabled for Attendant Program Today (ADAPT), who-like hundreds of other protesters-wore a lei around his neck Thursday afternoon. "ADAPT will be there," Heinzman said at a protest at the Las Vegas Convention Center. "If we have to hold fundraisers all year to pay for our trip, we'll do it." Mike Auberger, founder of the Denver-based disabled rights group, promised that many members of ADAPT will make the trip to Hawaii. "You can put up barricades, and those don't stop us," he said. "You can try for a restraining order, and that doesn't stop us. So 3,000 miles of water isn't going to stop us." Susan White, the mother of a child with a disability, said, "If I have to scrape tin cans off the ground, or auction things off, I'll be there in Hawaii. Sooner or later, AHCA will get the message." The message that ADAPT has been hammering home during several Las Vegas demonstrations is that the group wants AHCA to support a resolution calling for the reallocation of Medicaid funds from nursing homes to home care for the disabled. Officials of AHCA, a trade association representing nursing homes and rehabilitation centers, argue that the demonstrators are barking up the wrong tree. Instead of going after nursing home funds, which are already limited, AHCA officials say, ADAPT should work with MICA and lobby Congress for national health care reform. "We believe additional re-sources need to be made available," said Dave Kyllo, AHCA spokesman. But Auberger contends that it's unrealistic to expect Congress to come up with more money for long-term care, and it's up to the nursing home industry to change. On Thursday afternoon, nearly 300 disabled demonstrators sealed off every access to the Las Vegas Convention Center. "We've symbolically declared the Convention Center to be a nursing home to send a message to AHCA," said ADAPT member Robert Kafka. Metro Police officers physically removed 165 protesters from roadways and from entrances to the Convention Center. And again, for the third day in a row, scores of demonstrators were arrested, charged with unlawful assembly, and processed at a nearby temporary detention facility. But, it seems, nothing that AHCA officials say will change the opinions of the demonstrators - many of whom have spent long years in nursing homes. Claude Holcomb, a 34-year-old demonstrator, who suffers from cerebral palsy, said he spent more than a third of his lire in a nursing home in New Britain, Conn. Speaking to a reporter by pointing to letters on a board one at a time, Holcomb said, "I was in a nursing home for 13 years. I've been out 11 years. I never want to go back." Diane Coleman, who like Holcomb and most of the other demonstrators is confined to a wheelchair, said she lives in Tennessee, a state that is ranked second from the bottom in terms of funding for home care services for the disabled. "In the South, African-Americans had to use separate drinking fountains, separate rest rooms and separate restaurants," Coleman said. "We're forced into separate places to live. It's the ultimate form of segregation." Earlier a Metro Police official estimated the cost to police the demonstrations would top $100,000. Auberger suggested that local officials "go after AHCA" for the money. "The average nursing home makes a net profit of $670,000 a year," Auberger said "They (MICA members) are staying at the (Las Vegas) Hilton, and we're staying four, five, six to a room at the Union Plaza." AHCA officials dispute these figures. They say that the nursing home industry profit margin normally runs at 2 or 3 percent. [Image] ADAPT Marchers head up to the Hilton Hotel. This was AHCA's main hotel. The last person has a sign on the back of their chair that reads "I'd rather be in jail than die in a nursing home." A man, Zak Zakarewsky, walks beside. Caption reads: ADAPT members head for food and gaming at the Las Vegas Hilton after the protests. They had to leave their pickets behind. [Image] ADAPT MEMBERS head for food and gaming at the Las Vegas Hilton after the protests. They had to leave their pickets behind. PHOTOS BY STEVE MARCUS / STAFF - ADAPT (898)
4A LAS VEGAS SUN LAS VEGAS SUN P.M. STREET Wednesday, October 5, 1994 [Headline] AHCA tries to prevent protests By Bill Gang LAS VEGAS SUN Having been besieged by ADAPT at its last three conventions, the American Health Care Association sought a temporary restraining order to limit this year's demonstrations. But District Judge Bill Maupin declined to issue any court orders, stating that Metro Police should have an opportunity to control any illicit activity. Maupin left the door open, however, to a court order if continuing confrontations require more intervention than Metro can muster. AHCA asked the court to prohibit ADAPT "from interfering with AHCA's business or trespassing" at the Las Vegas Convention Center for its 45th annual convention and exposition that ends Thursday. In an affidavit that accompanied the lawsuit, AHCA Chief Financial Officer David Long detailed how the ADAPT disruptions began with 75 protesters at the 1991 convention in Orlando, Fla., grew to 200 at the 1992 San Francisco gathering and reached 250 at the Nashville, Tenn., convention in 1993. Demonstrators, Long stated, "stormed hotel doors in their wheelchairs, occupied and refused to leave private property and blocked entrances." He said AHCA has had trouble negotiating contracts for future conventions and attracting conventioneers because of ADAPT's persistence. The affidavit indicated that 5,000 AHCA members registered for the Las Vegas convention, filling 1,790 of the Hilton's 2,800 rooms. Long added that AHCA spent $85,000 bringing Lee Iacocca and Dan Quayle to speak at the convention and $185,000 for Kenny Rogers to entertain. [Image] Through the bars of a police barricade you see a man [Alfredo Juarez] holding his arms out and giving the thumbs down sign. He is chanting and wearing a T-shirt that reads Personal Attendants Now on an outline of the United States. Behind him you can see more protesters. [Image caption] ALFREDO JUAREZ of El Paso, PHOTOS BY BRAD TALBUTT / STAFF Texas, chants, "Down with the AHCA." [Headline] PROTEST Continued from 1A [This article continues from. Image 885. Please refer back to 885 for full text] [Image] Seen from inside the vehicle, four police officers stand on either side of a person in a scooter-wheelchair backing onto a lift. Two cameramen are filming the scene. [Image caption] POLICE LOAD a protester into a specially equipped CAT bus. [Headline] Federal officers required to curtail demonstration By Rachael Conlin LAS VEGAS SUN Eleven federal police officers are stationed outside the Foley Federal Building this week to provide additional security in the wake of protests by ADAPT. The U.S. Marshals Service requested additional officers after it learned that ADAPT members planned to include the Foley Federal Building as a protest site. Members have been known to sharpen the metal parts of their wheelchairs and ram into police officers, and throw themselves from wheelchairs and then sue. The 11 officers brought in from San Francisco and Los Angeles are part of the U S. Federal Protection Service. There are no federal police officers based permanently in Las Vegas. In 1987, about a dozen San Francisco police officers were injured when demonstrators rammed their wheelchairs into their legs, said District Commander Michael Jentoft of the protection service. "And the group has gotten more militant since then," he added. A few Metro Police officers suffered bruised shins during altercations with activists Tuesday, according to a spokesman. ADAPT was founded in the 1970s and was instrumental in the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act, which requires equal access to disabled people, Jentoft said. - ADAPT (895)
A woman in a manual wheelchair (Julie Farrar) smiles at the small child she holds in her lap. She is holding a red clapper in the shape of a hand. The two have a poster across their laps that reads "My mommy doesn't belong in a nursing home and neither does yours!!" Behind them a woman stands, possibly holding the back of the wheelchair. - ADAPT (888)
PHOTO Tom Olin: A young woman [Julie Farrar] in a manual wheelchair holds a small child in her lap. Farrar is yelling and has a large poster taped across her lap and her child (who is snoozing). The poster reads "Mom and Dad can't have sex in the nursing home." Someone is standing behind them. - ADAPT (882)
PHOTO 1 by Jeff Scheid, Review Journal: Two police officers in a group of five lift a small woman [Spitfire] in pink sweatpants and a headband up from the street to her wheelchair. Someone with a camera is filming in the background. Caption reads: Las Vegas police carry away Eileen "Spitfire" Sabel of Philiadelphia, one of 180 protesters cited Wednesday for blocking Paradise Road. PHOTO 2 by Clint Karlsen, Review Journal: A man [John Hoffman] with no legs and only a short arm and finger, in a motorized wheelchair, lifts his arm in front of the ADAPT flag. This is like an American flag with stars arranged as a person in a wheelchair. Two people are holding the flag so it is fully spread out and a woman in a wheelchair is carrying it. Hoffman is wearing an ADAPT or Perish tshirt, goggles and a camo hat. Caption reads: John Hoffman of Austin, Texas, takes part in the demonstration to urge that more money be directed to help disabled people live on their own. [Headline] Disabled-rights group protest blocks Paradise Road travel [Subheading] Police cite 180 people near the convention center while a district judge issues a restraining order. By Jan Greene Review-Journal In a second day of high-profile protesting, a disabled-rights group Wednesday closed down Paradise Road near the Las Vegas Hilton for a few hours, prompting police to cite 180 demonstrators for assembling unlawfully. The protesters, many being arrested for the second time in two days, went along peacefully with Metropolitan Police Department officers specially trained to deal with people in wheelchairs. Meanwhile, a District Court judge granted a temporary restraining order barring the protesters from repeating Tuesday's actions at the Las Vegas Convention Center, where 76 people were cited for trespassing after they stormed the doors of an American Health Care Association meeting. That association, which represents nursing homes, is regularly the target of protests by ADAPT, Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today. ADAPT wants 25 percent of the federal funding that now goes to nursing homes for long-term care of the elderly and disabled to go toward services such as personal attendants that would allow those people to live on their own. The nursing home association agrees there should be more money for home care, but that it shouldn't be shifted from nursing homes. This is the fifth annual confrontation between the two groups, but the first time the health care association has sought a court order restricting the protests. Wednesday's temporary order, signed by District Judge Nancy Becker, is a civil order prohibiting demonstrators from trespassing on the convention center areas being leased by the association, or from banging on doors or obstructing access to the convention. Today is the last day of the meeting. Association Vice President Linda Keegan said the order was obtained to ensure conventioneers' safety and avoid disruption, but allows ADAPT to demonstrate in a special area set aside in the convention center parking lot. Asked how the order could actually be used to stop or punish protesters, Keegan said she wasn't sure. The order says anyone violating it can be found in contempt of court. ADAPT regularly uses tactics that result in their members' citation or arrest to draw attention to their cause, which is to give people the opportunity to live away from nursing homes if they want. In Wednesday's protest, about 250 people, many in wheelchairs, assembled at the intersection of Paradise Road and Riviera Boulevard. Around noon, they moved into the street and blocked it. After about an hour of chanting and noisemaking, the Nevada Highway Patrol gave the word that the assembly was illegal because it was blocking a state thoroughfare. They gave people five minutes to disperse and then Las Vegas police moved in and methodically began arresting people. A total of 180 people were cited. Of those, 72 were cited in the street and 108 were actually arrested and taken to a temporary detention center before being processed and released. The event closed Paradise Road until about 3 p.m. - ADAPT (880)
[Headline] Demonstrations cost taxpayers $100,000 [Subheading] Police ring up overtime patrolling the convention center, where the disabled have held several protests. By Jan Greene Review-Journal 6B Las Vegas Review-Journal/Friday, October 7, 1994 [Image] PHOTO by Jeff Scheld/Review-Journal: A police officer in a tan uniform wearing medical exam gloves and large belt with radio, plastic handcuff-ties, regular hand-cuffs, and other equipment, pushes a man in a manual wheelchair down the street in a long line of single file wheelchairs. Behind them is a long line of cars driving in the opposite direction. [Image caption] A Las Vegas police officer escorts one of about 165 disability rights activists arrested Thursday for blocking entrances to the Las Vegas Convention Center, where the protesters demonstrated against a nursing home trade group. Jeff Scheid/Review-Journal While disabled protesters spent a third day being taken away by police this time for blocking entrances to the Las Vegas Convention Center parking lot on Thursday — officials were tallying the cost to taxpayers of their demonstrations at $100,000. Thursday's protest resulted in about 165 demonstrators being removed and cited for creating a public nuisance by having an unlawful assembly, a misdemeanor. The group, Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today, or ADAPT, has been protesting the annual convention of the American Health Care Association, a nursing home group. ADAPT wants a quarter of the federal funds that go toward nursing homes shifted to independent living arrangements for the disabled. Part of ADAPT's strategy for gaining attention to the cause is appearing at the nursing home group's meetings, making a lot of noise and getting its members arrested. Local taxpayers will pay for that strategy to the tune of about $100,000, according to Las Vegas police Lt Carl Fruge. He said most of that cost is from overtime for officers called in to keep the peace and cite dozens of people in wheelchairs. About half the approximately 120 officers involved were pulled from regular duty elsewhere in the valley. The Metropolitan Police Department also spent taxpayer money to rent specially equipped buses, to get special equipment, to train officers and to have? a helicopter circle overhead for surveillance. The Nevada Highway Patrol also assigned 10 troopers to help divert traffic but didn't incur any overtime because the officers were switched from high-accident risk areas they normally patrol, said trooper Steve Harney. ADAPT organizers said the cost was minimal compared with the money spent on nursing homes, some of whose residents could live more cheaply with some help on their own. National organizer Mike Auberger said people wouldn't question the cost if the group were protesting, for example, the Ku Klux Klan. "We didn't come here because we wanted to raise hell for Las Vegans," Auberger said. "The reason we're here is the AHCA. Let them pay for it." Fruge noted the Culinary union has voluntarily paid the overtime costs for police officers responding to union protests at, for example, the Frontier and MGM Grand hotels. Culinary Secretary-Treasurer Jim Arnold confirmed the union pays those costs to avoid being "a burden on the community." Still, Arnold didn't want to criticize ADAPT. "They've got to do what they feel is right to get their point across," Arnold said. Everyone has a right to demonstrate." Overall, Fruge said the experience has been a good one for Las Vegas police officers, 120 of whom received special training in dealing with the disabled. Similar training will be made a part of the department's police academy curriculum, he said. Also, he said, the Police Department was able to prove it can handle a disturbance at the convention center. "The message is, 'This is a safe place to hold your convention,'" Fruge said. ADAPT leaders were also happy with the week. "Now people in Las Vegas understand the issue," Auberger said. "The value of that is very important." - ADAPT (894)
USA TODAY Wednesday, October 5, 1994 Nevada Las Vegas- 44 protesters in wheelchairs were arrested after attempting to enter the Convention Center where nursing home operators were meeting authorities said. The 200 to 300 disabled protesters say Medicaid funds should go to home attendant care. - ADAPT (892)
Wednesday, October 5, 1994 Las Vegas Review-Journal [Image] A group of about 10 police officers, wearing medical exam gloves and one with a video camera, fill an open glass double doorway. Facing them are two ADAPT protesters in wheelchairs (probably Buddy Homiller and Karen Greebon) with others visable only at the edges of the photo. People are holding the doors open and one of the officers is trying to pull a door shut. Caption reads: Metropolitan Police Department officers try Tuesday to hold back disabled protesters at an entrance to the Las Vegas Convention Center. Seventy six protesters were arrested. No one was injured. Headline: Disabled protesters arrested [Headline] Disabled protesters arrested By Jan Greene Review-Journal [Image] Smaller photo down below headline by Jim Laurie/Review Journal: Woman (Sharon Atkinson) in a motorized wheelchair has a large poster that reads "Nursing Homes = Jails." On either side of her police officers are holding onto her chair. [Image caption] Sharon Atkinson of Denver was one of 76 disabled protesters arrested at the Las Vegas Convention Center for trespassing at the American Health Care Association convention. Demonstrators tried to force their way into the yearly convention of a health trade group. A raucous group of about 250 disabled protesters, many in wheelchairs, marched Tuesday on the Las Vegas Convention Center, where 76 of them were arrested after a contingent tried to force its way into the building. No one was hurt in the confrontation, although one man's wheelchair was broken when he was wedged between protesters, convention center security guards and police, each side pushing and pulling on the building's glass doors. That struggle proved to be the most dramatic point in a day of noisy dissent by a group called ADAPT, or Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today. Members travel each year to the site of the annual convention of the American Health Care Association, a nursing home trade group. Protesters chanted "Free our people," and argued that a chunk of the federal Medicaid and Medicare funds that go to nursing homes be shifted to allow people to live on their own. The industry group said it agrees that more money should be spent on independent living for the disabled, but that the funds shouldn't come from what's now spent in nursing homes. Around noon, northbound traffic on Paradise Road was backed up for blocks as one lane was closed to accommodate the protesters, who slowly made their way from the Sahara Hotel parking lot to the convention center. Slowing their progress and forcing them into the street was a curb that had not been cut to accommodate wheelchairs. "This is so irrational," complained protester Marta Russell of Los Angeles. "This is what we face every day." Around 1 p.m., the group gathered in an arranged "First Amendment trespass area" at the convention center, where they yelled, chanted, honked horns and hung a wheelchair on a wooden cross as curious conventioneers looked on. [Image] [Image caption] A demonstrator is hauled away Tuesday during a Vegas Convention Center. No one was reported to have been hurt during the confrontation. Jim Laurie Review-Journal [Headline] Protest Meanwhile, part of the group moved toward an entrance to the convention center, where security guards met them and warned they would be arrested if they continued. They moved forward, with some darting into a door and the rest blockading the entrance. The protesters who went inside were arrested, and the rest were slowly taken into custody by Las Vegas police officers. Protesters in wheelchairs were escorted into special buses, although a few went limp and had to be carried away. The 76 people cited were charged with misdemeanor trespass, with 32 of them agreeing to leave once cited and the rest being taken to a temporary detention center before their release. They face a maximum penalty of $1,000 and six months in jail. Police Lt. Carl Fruge said the arrests were requested by healthcare association officials. The group's lease of the convention center meant it temporarily became their private property, according to convention center officials. Fruge and Don Ahl, security chief for the convention center, said protesters were stopped at the doors to prevent them from entering the building and threatening the safety of those inside. "That's where we drew the line," Fruge said. "The idea was to contain this for public safety." Mike Auherger, a national organizer for ADAPT, called the day a success because it drew heavy media coverage for his cause and nobody got hurt. [Pulled quote] "That's where we drew the line. The idea was to contain this for public safety." -Carl Fruge Las Vegas police He said further protests could occur today or Thursday, depending on whether health care association officials continue to seek a temporary restraining order to stop the protests. Meanwhile, protesters and convention attendees offered starkly different views about the nursing home issue. John Gladstone, 52, lived in a Philadelphia nursing home for 14 years and will never go back. "I know people who have committed suicide because they were confined in a nursing home," he said. "There are deplorable conditions, and no independence. You have to sign in and sign out." Gladstone now lives independently and has an attendant who helps him with household and personal chores he can't do himself When he needs medical care, he goes to the hospital and sees his doctor. But Ted Dehass, the owner of nursing homes in central Ohio, said most people in his homes are elderly or disabled enough to need constant medical care. "I remember seeing people like this in homes years ago, but not anymore," he said. Dehass also argued that if ADAPT wants more money for home care, it should be making its case to state legislators, not nursing home owners. - ADAPT (884)
PHOTO: A mass of ADAPT people in a parking lot with many vans behind them. A line of people is emerging from the group and heading off, single file, to an action. - ADAPT (889)
Two APTA delegates, Herbert and Jerry, one smiling and one with a puzzled look, walk along a sidewalk, with a couple of other delegates hidden behind them. At the edge of the sidewalk a police barrier is strung and behind the barrier a huge crowd of ADAPT members are protesting. The ADAPT flag flies above the crowd. - ADAPT (896)
A line of ADAPT activists in wheelchairs, many in the front being pushed snakes across a large parking lot. Some ADAPT vans are in view. In the front is Tubby ____ and Kim ______, behind them Bobby Simpson and many more.