A Message from
Acting Administrator and Assistant Secretary for Aging Alison Barkoff
February 2, 2021
by
Alison Barkoff, Acting Administrator and Assistant Secretary for Aging
I am humbled and thrilled to have joined ACL on Inauguration
Day as Principal Deputy Administrator and to serve as Acting Administrator
and Assistant Secretary for Aging. I want to take this opportunity to
introduce myself to ACL’s stakeholders and share some of the critical
priorities where we have already begun focusing our work.
ACL’s mission – supporting opportunities for community living
and inclusion for all – has been my life’s mission. When my brother
Evan was born with an intellectual disability more than 40 years ago, my
parents rejected doctors’ recommendations to place him in an institution.
Our family joined with other families and self-advocates to develop
community services and supports and pass civil rights laws to ensure people
with disabilities have the same opportunities as people without
disabilities. Today, Evan lives independently with supports, works at a job
in the community where he is a valued co-worker, and advocates for
disability rights in his own state and nationwide.
Fighting alongside Evan for him to be included, and seeing him
thrive in the community, led me to become a civil rights lawyer. I have
spent my entire career working in legal and policy advocacy, both inside
and outside government, to create a world where every person – regardless
of type or level of disability or age – has the opportunity to live and
fully participate as a valued member of their community.
It is an honor to join ACL to help lead the agency that serves
as the federal focal point for community living and inclusion.
ACL’s mission has always been important. But with COVID-19,
our work has become literally a matter of life and death. What we do
together has never been more urgent. It is our responsibility to make sure
that the needs of older adults and people with disabilities are considered
in the federal pandemic response. Our role has been, and will continue to
be, crucial in:
- vaccine allocation and
administration;
- protecting the lives of
people with disabilities and older adults who live in congregate
settings that put them at high risk;
- ensuring that older adults
and people with disabilities are not discriminated against in getting
lifesaving care;
- advocating for the needs of
the workforce – including volunteers and families – who provides
services and supports;
- helping people remain
safely in, and transition back to, the community; and
- supporting our networks,
which have not only innovated and persevered to continue providing
critical services to millions of people, but also have found ways to
expand services to meet the increased needs created by the pandemic.
And that’s just a partial list! Clearly COVID-19 will be
a critical focus for ACL and our programs for the foreseeable future.
I next want to share a few of the other priorities that also
will be threaded throughout our work:
Stakeholder Engagement: Working with our
networks and stakeholders is a top priority for me. As public servants, we
work for the people. We cannot represent the interests of the disability
and aging communities unless we regularly and actively engage with them to
learn about their priorities and concerns.
Building Equity: We will build a focus on
equity into all we do. Older adults and people with disabilities from
underrepresented and underserved communities must be at the table,
informing our work. Together we can begin to address the long-standing
barriers faced by people with disabilities and older adults, especially
people from communities of color and others who are multiply marginalized.
I am thrilled that Reyma McCoy
McDeid, who is nationally known for her work to address systemic
disparities, has joined ACL as the Commissioner of the Administration on
Disabilities to help lead our efforts to address equity.
One ACL: The disability and aging
communities have a larger voice, more influence and ultimately are more
successful advocates when we work together to advance shared interests. We
already are collaborating on a range of priorities – from the recent
reauthorization of Money Follows the Person and the HCBS Spousal Impoverishment
Protections, to COVID-19 relief advocacy, to supporting family caregivers
and strengthening the direct care workforce. At ACL, we are committed to
finding every opportunity to join forces on the issues that affect both
older adults and people with disabilities. At the same time, our work will
continue to recognize that there are distinct programs and unique needs and
issues for the two populations. We will continue to advocate on behalf of
the two groups individually, as well.
Interagency Collaboration: Community
inclusion is a cross-cutting endeavor. It involves access to services and
supports, protecting rights and preventing abuse, housing, transportation,
employment, and more. For the federal government, that means “disability”
and “aging” can’t be siloed in one agency or even one department. We must
work with our federal partners within HHS, as well as with the Departments
of Justice, Housing and Urban Development, Labor, Veterans Affairs,
Education, and others. A priority for ACL will be strengthening those
collaborations so we can support and align community living policies,
programs, and research across the government.
We have come a long way, and community living is increasingly
the expectation, not the exception. However, we all know there is still a
long way to go to achieve our vision, in which all people, regardless of
age or disability, live with dignity, make their own choices, and
participate fully in society. I am honored to be working alongside the
exceptionally dedicated professionals and self-advocates throughout our
networks, across the government, and within ACL to make that vision a
reality.
Alison Barkoff was sworn in as ACL’s Principal Deputy
Administrator on January 20, 2021, and currently serves as ACL’s Acting
Administrator and Assistant Secretary for Aging.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment