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John Kasich Responds to #PwDsVote 2016 Campaign Questionnaire

Gov. John Kasich answers RespectAbility Fellow James Trout's question on employment for people with disabilities.
Gov. John Kasich answers RespectAbility Fellow James Trout’s question on employment for people with disabilities.

Washington, Feb. 5 – RespectAbility, a nonprofit organization working to empower people with disabilities to achieve the American dream, has asked all of the presidential candidates on both sides of the aisle to fill out a questionnaire on disability issues affecting people with disabilities (PwDs). While Gov. John Kasich is still finishing all of the responses, his campaign responded with a letter addressing several important topics including employment for people with disabilities, the prioritization of home and community-based services, Autism and expanding access to health care.

The campaign says this letter is “a placeholder summary of Gov. Kasich’s efforts to support people with disabilities” while they finish the full questionnaire after the New Hampshire primary. We are presenting the campaign’s full letter below:

Dear Ms. Laszlo Mizrahi,

Thank you for your outreach and your interest in Kasich for America. Disability issues do matter and I would like to share with you Governor John Kasich’s commitment to these issues in Ohio and the effort he will make as President of the United States. Consider some of the ways Gov. Kasich’s leadership has helped to improve the lives of people with disabilities in Ohio:

Employment for People with Disabilities: With his Employment First initiative, John Kasich switched the focus from workshops to real jobs with real wages for Ohioans with developmental disabilities. Major employers across the state are signing up and families who never thought their loved ones would hold a job or live on their own are seeing lives transformed.

Ohio has worked to improve the education, training,and employment opportunities and outcomes for adults based on their abilities, not their disabilities. Ohio has created an online tool OhioMeansJobs to help Ohioans plan and find a career. This tool not only includes a portal designed for people disabilities, it also has a toolkit to help employers hire people with disabilities.

Gov. Kasich provided additional resources to Opportunities for Ohioans with Disabilities, the agency partnering with Ohioans with disabilities, to achieve quality employment and independence. By hiring additional counselors, Ohio released 17,000 people from a wait list for immediate support and assistance to get them ready for and find employment.

Prioritizing Home and Community-based Services: When Gov. Kasich took office, Ohio was spending more of its Medicaid budget on high-cost nursing homes and other institutions than all but five states. Recognizing that for many people, their families’ homes or small-group settings are far more supportive and preferred, the Kasich Administration worked to “rebalance” Medicaid long-term care spending toward less expensive, less restrictive home and community-based services. The ultimate goal is for seniors and people with disabilities to live in their own home, instead of a higher-cost nursing home.

Coverage for Autism: In an unprecedented statement of support for families with autistic children, Gov. Kasich included coverage for the treatment of autism in state employees’ health plans and state regulated insurance plans.

Expanding Access to Health Care: It is also important to mention John Kasich’s efforts to expand access to health care, including treatment for mental illness and addiction, to low-income individuals, including veterans. As part of this effort, he has also worked to improve its quality and enact conservative reforms that incentivize patient-centered care, not volume. John Kasich’s combination of caring and good stewardship of taxpayers’ dollar is making Ohio a national leader in keeping people healthy in a high-quality, affordable way.

Gov. Kasich has worked collaboratively with the disability community in Ohio – individuals with disabilities, family members, providers, county boards and other advocates, all bonded by the shared passion to improve the lives of those with disabilities and their families.

These priorities and the way they are being implemented, show the kinds of reforms and priorities Gov. Kasich would value as President. Thank you for the opportunity to share these important reforms with you. We look forward to continuing the work to improve the lives of people of all abilities so that we all can meet our full potential.

Thanks,

Chris Whistler
Policy Director
Kasich for America


RespectAbility has asked all the presidential candidates on both sides of the aisle to complete the same questionnaire. As of Friday, Feb. 5, we have received responses from Jeb Bush, Ben Carson, Chris Christie, Hillary Clinton, John Kasich and Bernie Sanders. We will share responses from additional campaigns as we receive them. In addition, several candidates do have information on their websites including Jeb BushHillary Clinton, John Kasich and Bernie Sanders.

The RespectAbility Report is a nonpartisan political commentary on the 2016 U.S. elections with a focus on disability issues. The RespectAbility Report has covered all of the Democratic and Republican candidates and coverage can be found at http://therespectabilityreport.org/.The RespectAbility Report is nonpartisan and does not endorse candidates.

Published in2016 Candidate QuestionnaireJohn KasichRepublicans

19 Comments

  1. Snerdguy Snerdguy

    I live in Ohio and work with the disabled and I have serious doubts that Governor Kasich has even the slightest clue about the problems that the disabled in this state are facing. We have problems with care providing businesses that are cashing in while providing the lowest quality of care they can. We don’t even have mandatory drug testing for employees who provide direct care to the disabled. Our state board of developmental disabilities is always preaching about empowering the disabled. But, it just seems to be a ruse for doing little to protect them from negligent providers and others who would chose to take advantage of them.

    Ohio’s government seems to treat their disabled more like a burden than human beings and while they create lots of acronyms and catch phrases, the conditions for this disabled aren’t improving much. Kasich doesn’t want to be bothered. He’s wants to be President.

    • Pamela Rambo Pamela Rambo

      He is a liar. Most of the individuals who live in Developmental Centers are there because they are extremely low functioning and are not capable of working in the community or living on their own. He wants us to believe that all developmentally diaabled are living like caged animals. Thats NOT true. Kasich totally refused to visit the centers to see for himself the lives he is destroying. Then vetoed a bill congress sent to him that xould have kept the centers open.

    • Bob Bossard Bob Bossard

      Sneed guy, you are absolutely correct on everything you have said about Kasich in regards to people with disabilities. The one thing no one has mentioned is , I believe it was last year that Kasich gave back to companies 1 MILLION instead of investing that into us. We are look as a burden and he has cut benefits for us just to get by in life. Ohio is the worst state to work in because it’s for the employer, not the employees. I hope he experiences this before his time expires in life. I been struggling and fighting this MVA since 12/24/2008. I pray for the injured people like myself, because it’s a horrible way to live.

      Sincerely,
      Bob Bossard

  2. […] of the questions, and have significantly different views on the issues. Dr. Ben Carson and Gov. John Kasich filled out parts of the questionnaire, and also have significantly different views. Despite […]

  3. Eleanor Eleanor

    Congrats to you Gov. Kasech I hope you win from now on and beat Trump. I am praying for you

  4. […] In an attempt to possibly correct his callous record on disability in the past, Trump’s use of Crowley’s story may have further illustrated his perspective on outdated views on disability. He never addressed the community directly during his campaign and would often instead refer to people with disabilities as receivers of his (questionable) charity donations as opposed to contributing members of society. He also never presented a plan for disability rights on his campaign website or responded to a campaign questionnaire from the political disability rights organization RespectAbility, despite other Republican candidates such as John Kasich doing their due diligence. […]

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