Giving Compass' Take:
- Barbara Rodriguez and Nadra Nittle spotlight the concerns of families of kids with disabilities about federal budget cuts impacting their educational opportunities and medical care.
- What steps can donors take to support equitable access to education and medical care for all children?
- Learn more about key disability issues and how you can help.
- Search our Guide to Good for nonprofits focused on disability in your area.
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Jolene Baxter’s daughter, Marlee, has overcome immense challenges in her first eight years of life. Marlee, who was born with a heart defect, has undergone four open-heart surgeries — suffering a stroke after the third. The stroke affected Marlee’s cognitive abilities — she’s in the second grade, but she cannot read yet. A mainstream class with neurotypical students felt overwhelming, so Marlee mostly attends classes with kids who also have disabilities. Her care includes physical, occupational and speech therapies, explaining her and other families of kids with disabilities' concerns about federal budget cuts.
For years, Baxter has relied on Medicaid to cover Marlee’s medical expenses while advocating for her daughter’s right to an equal education. Medicaid — which covers therapies, surgeries and medication for Marlee — and disability protections under the Department of Education have been a critical safety net for Baxter, a single mom in Oklahoma City. Now Baxter fears that proposed cuts to Medicaid and those already underway at the Department of Education, which President Donald Trump has effectively gutted, will have a disastrous impact on her daughter.
As the Trump administration overhauls federal agencies with budget cuts, layoffs and inexperienced leadership, parents of children with complex medical needs and disabilities told The 19th they are navigating uncertainty over how the federal government plans to maintain key pillars of their kids’ lives.
Baxter, who fostered and, later, adopted Marlee, fought to give her life-saving medical treatment when the child was an infant. Since Marlee was both an abandoned child and is Kiowa, the officials overseeing her welfare weren’t invested in getting her the care she needed to survive, Baxter believes. Cuts to Medicaid would be yet another obstacle for the Baxters to overcome. Just getting Marlee enrolled in local public schools that tried to turn her away was a battle, Baxter said. Now, like many families of kids with disabilities, the mom is gravely concerned that her daughter will be left behind due to the restructuring of the Department of Education.
Read the full article about how federal cuts will impact kids with disabilities by Barbara Rodriguez and Nadra Nittle at The 19th.