A federal judge in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. has tossed out of court a lawsuit
filed three years ago by the U.S. Department of Justice that claimed
Florida health administrators had acted with “deliberate indifference to
the suffering” of children with disabilities who were being warehoused
in nursing homes for lack of more appropriate accommodations with family
members or in the community.
U.S. District Judge William J. Zloch never tackled the substantive
dispute between federal civil rights lawyers and state health
regulators. Rather, Zloch concluded the Justice Department lacked
“standing” to sue the state. Zloch’s order said that, when Congress
passed the landmark Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990, it did not
grant the Justice Department authority to sue states or other “public
entities” that it believes are violating the legislation.
Zloch’s order effectively guts a years-long effort by the DOJ and
Florida civil rights attorneys to remove children with severe
disabilities from nursing homes, where advocates claimed — and a good
bit of the state’s own inspections showed — youngsters were being
segregated with little access to education, socialization or family.
Zloch neutered a similar lawsuit filed in 2012 by a Miami civil rights
attorney when he declined to certify that children in nursing homes
represented a “class.”
In an email, a publicist for the Tallahassee lawyers who represented
Florida health regulators said Florida was the only state that “refused”
to settle a civil rights suit claiming children with disabilities in
institutions were being discriminated against. “A handful of states have
settled such suits,” the statement said.
Matthew Dietz, the Miami lawyer whose suit prompted the DOJ to
intervene, said in an email that Zloch’s order had “eviscerated 26 years
of federal enforcement” of laws designed to end discrimination against
people with disabilities by states or municipalities. He said hundreds
of youngsters with disabilities now will either die, or grow up, in
nursing homes along with frail elders.
“This renders the rights of these
kids with disabilities a sham.”
In his order, Zloch said that the intent of the ADA was to “provide a
clear and comprehensive national mandate for the elimination of
discrimination against individuals with disabilities.”
But, the judge added, the portion of the law pertaining to other
governments never explicitly granted the Justice Department the
authority to sue other governments. Without such a mandate, Zloch wrote,
the DOJ overstepped its bounds when it sued the Florida Agency for
Health Care Administration, and other departments.
Zloch dismissed a host of arguments from the Justice Department,
including its contention that affirming the DOJ’s lack of authority to
sue states and municipalities will leave such governments free to openly
discriminate. “Not so,” Zloch wrote. Private parties still may sue
governments, making each of them a “private attorney general,” Zloch
wrote.
Full Article & Source:
Judge Blocks Effort To Remove Kids From Nursing Homes
2 comments:
And who continues to suffer? The kids and young adults.
The law isn't about what's right and what's wrong. It's all about legal maneuvering. What's right doesn't even register anymore.
Those poor kids....
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