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Report: Disabled parents face bias, loss of kids

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Millions of Americans with disabilities have gained innumerable rights and opportunities since Congress passed landmark legislation on their behalf in 1990. And yet advocates say barriers and bias still abound when it comes to one basic human right: to be a parent.

A Kansas City, Mo., couple had their daughter taken into custody by the state two days after her birth because both parents were blind. A Chicago mother, because she is quadriplegic, endured an 18-month legal battle to keep custody of her young son. A California woman paid an advance fee to an adoption agency, then was told she might be unfit to adopt because she has cerebral palsy.

Such cases are found nationwide, according to a new report by the National Council on Disability, an independent federal agency. The 445-page document is viewed by the disability-rights community as by far the most comprehensive ever on the topic – simultaneously an encyclopedic accounting of the status quo and an emotional plea for change.

“Parents with disabilities continue to be the only distinct community that has to fight to retain – and sometimes gain – custody of their own children,” said autism-rights activist Ari Ne’eman, a member of the council.

The U.S. legal system is not adequately protecting the rights of parents with disabilities, the report says, citing child welfare laws in most states allowing courts to determine that a parent is unfit on the basis of a disability. Terminating parental rights on such grounds “clearly violates” the intent of the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act, the report contends.

Child-welfare experts, responding to the report, said they shared its goals of expanding supports for disabled parents and striving to keep their families together. But they said removal of children from their parents are sometimes necessary.

In Arlington Heights, Jenn Thomas, a 36-year-old mom who has cerebral palsy, says her 8-year-old twins occasionally complain about having to do a few extra chores around the house to help her. Her daughter, Abigail, nods and smiles upon hearing this, but says for the most part, their lives are “kind of normal.”

Sometimes, they ride on the chair with her – especially son, Noah, because he, like his father, D.J., is a “little person,” the term used by the family and others for someone genetically predisposed to having unusually short stature.

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