Sunday, July 20, 2008

Schwarzenegger Sabotages Shriver's Plan

Money, money, money, remember?

This couple validates the globalist scheme as well, readers.


A Kennedy "liberal" and a Nazi together?


"California budget cuts threaten Shriver agenda; She launched campaign for disabled residents" by Nancy Vogel, Los Angeles Times | July 19, 2008

LOS ANGELES - California first lady Maria Shriver set an ambitious agenda in 2007 to dispel a common misperception that people who are physically or mentally impaired cannot hold jobs: Launch a campaign to find employment for 20,000 Californians with developmental disabilities. Shine a spotlight on companies that have enjoyed success hiring people with disabilities. Use her clout to attract other employers to the cause.

But with the start date four months away, Shriver's husband has potentially made her task more difficult. Faced with a $15.2 billion state deficit, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is proposing to cut roughly $7 million from the very state programs that his wife planned to rely on as the backbone for her cause - the state-supported, nonprofit agencies that not only find jobs for developmentally disabled adults, but also coach them at work until they have mastered the duties they must perform.

The reduction, key leaders in these organizations said, will prevent them from taking on more work helping those with autism, mental retardation, cerebral palsy, and other disabilities. The inconsistency between California's first couple is not lost on these social service advocates.

"What the first lady wants to do, we're all for," said Will Sanford, interim executive director of the California Disability Services Association, which represents 110 organizations that use a combination of state, private, and charity funds to provide various services to people with developmental disabilities. "We just don't know how to make it happen given the flip side, which is taking money out of the system that is designed to make it happen."

Patty Enger, the chief financial officer for a nonprofit group that serves people with developmental disabilities in Santa Barbara, Ventura, and Los Angeles counties, said the governor's proposed budget cut would cost her group, PathPoint, more than a dozen positions for staff that now work to arrange jobs and coach people with intellectual disabilities.

Enger called Shriver's plan "a wonderful idea that would take tons of planning and lots of time to come to fruition, which we don't have because they're cutting us right now."

Shriver spokesman Daniel Zingale said he "would never suggest" that the first lady's initiative is a substitute for programs facing cuts, but the state's cash-strapped budget is no reason to stop searching for ambitious goals.

"In the toughest of time you can't just become immersed in the cuts or the struggle to stay afloat," Zingale said.

Though Shriver and Schwarzenegger are often politically polarized - she's a Democrat, he's Republican, she backs Barack Obama for president, he has endorsed John McCain - they share a history of using their celebrity status to help people with disabilities live fuller lives.

Shriver's mother, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, founded the Special Olympics and Schwarzenegger has served as its spokesman. Shriver's brother Anthony created Best Buddies, an international nonprofit that promotes student acceptance of people with developmental disabilities. To help children understand and embrace people with mental retardation, Maria Shriver wrote a book called "What's Wrong With Timmy?"

There are an estimated 90,000 people with cognitive disabilities of working age in California, with an unemployment rate of over 70 percent. Under a 1969 law known as the Lanterman Act, these Californians are guaranteed certain civil rights and services to help them become independent, productive members of the community.

Schwarzenegger's proposed budget would roll back the hourly rate paid to nonprofit groups such as Enger's from $34.27 to $30.82. That rate covers the wages of a job coach, as well as mileage, administration, insurance, job development, and other costs.

Schwarzenegger's proposed rate cut would wipe out nearly half of the increase he and the Legislature had given the program in 2006. Before that 2006 increase, program funding had been largely stagnant for 20 years, and the number of available jobs for people with developmental disabilities through those programs had dropped from 12,000 to 9,000.

Zingale said budget reductions are unavoidable given California's dire financial situation.

"The governor does not like having to make these cuts," said Zingale, "but he understands that living within our means is essential to stabilizing programs we all value like this one."

Shriver's staff said despite the cuts, they will move forward, working with companies such as Walgreens and CarMax that already employ people with developmental disabilities to teach others how to make the arrangements work.

"We'll create a whole bunch of new opportunities," said Zingale.

Nonprofit officials said they welcome the high-level help. But people with developmental disabilities generally need steady one-on-one assistance until they master the routines of a job. The proposed budget cuts will limit the number of job coaches available, regardless of how many new job opportunities open, Sanford said.

"Once you sort of break the barriers down with employers, you can become successful," he said. "But it's very intense at the start."

Senate and Assembly committees have approved Schwarzenegger's proposed budget cuts, but that could change in a final budget, which the governor is still negotiating with legislative leaders."

Why focus on this group of unemployeds when there are so many in America?

And who is paying for all this?

Taxpayers again?


Look, I think everyone should have a fulfilling life, but that's not what the paper and the elites are about, folks!!!