Sen. Bernie Sanders on Friday unveiled a comprehensive plan to safeguard and strengthen the rights of people with disabilities that advocates celebrated as the “most progressive” proposal put forth so far by any 2020 Democratic presidential primary candidate.

“Disability rights will factor into virtually every area of policy-making in a Bernie Sanders administration.”
—Sanders campaign

Recognizing that people with disabilities have long fought to be included and treated equally in the United States, the Sanders plan declares that “it’s time for us to acknowledge that disability rights are civil rights, and that a society that does not center the voices and needs of people with disabilities has yet to fulfill its most basic obligations.”

“As we near the 30th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, we need a president who will champion both protecting and expanding the rights of the tens of millions of Americans with disabilities,” the proposal continues. “Disability rights will factor into virtually every area of policy-making in a Bernie Sanders administration.”

Through both executive action and legislative policy, Sanders would advance disability rights, in part by rolling back attacks from the Trump administration, such as by reversing the “cruel eligibility rule” for the Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) programs. A Sanders administration would work to end wait lists and expand those benefits by “putting a stop to SSI’s draconian asset test and marriage penalty, and raising the SSI benefit level to 125 percent of the poverty level, lifting millions out of poverty.”

Sanders’ sweeping disability plan addresses everything from healthcare, housing, and education to transportation, jobs and wages, and voting rights. As president Sanders, would “create a National Office of Disability Coordination, run by a person with a disability, focused on coordinating and making disability policy to advance the full inclusion of people with disabilities” and work to pass the Disability Integration Act.

The plan “places particular priority on the humanitarian crisis in our country created by the incarceration of people with mental illness.” Sanders would use executive authority to leverage the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark Olmstead decision, which found that unjustifiably segregating of people with disabilities in institutions is illegal, “to ensure states fund the voluntary, community-based mental health services that can save lives and keep people in the community.” He would also pressure states to eliminate waiting lists for home and community-based services.

“Every person with a disability deserves the right to live in their community and have the support they need to thrive,” Sanders said in a statement. “This right must be available to all, free of waiting lists and means tests. It is our moral responsibility to make it happen.”

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