Connections - 03.26.26
America’s History of Demanding Better for People With I/DD
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For decades, families were told the most compassionate choice for a child with an intellectual disability was placement in a state institution.
Before 1975, more than one million children with disabilities were excluded from U.S. public schools, and millions more received little meaningful education. Many were labeled “uneducable.”
In July 1990, President George H.W. Bush signed the Americans with Disabilities Act into law, declaring that the “shameful walls of exclusion” must come down.
Two women with intellectual and mental health disabilities were kept in a Georgia psychiatric institution even after professionals determined they were ready for community placement.
Rosa Marcellino was nine years old when her family began advocating to remove the term “mental retardation” from federal law.
The call to demand better has always focused on improving the lives of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.