Programs and What We Do
Independent Living
This is NRCIL's core funding and main program. It is the reason the Center
exists. The listed objectives may vary from year to year in response to the
varying needs of the community, but the following is representative of our
services:
Conduct activities that will assist individuals in being involved in the
community and advocating on behalf of themselves and their peers.
Identify disability issues during the year and involve staff and volunteers in
motivating members of the community to actively pursue the issues.
Provide assistance and advocacy to public entities on understanding rights and
responsibilities under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and other
Federal and State laws.
Provide assistance to interested individuals on understanding their rights and
responsibilities under the ADA and other Federal and State laws.
Assist people in developing support groups upon request.
Offer core independent living services dependent upon adequate funding and
community demand. These can include but are not limited to advocacy, peer
counseling, information and referral, benefits advisement, independent living
skills, housing assistance and voter registration.
Our target service area is Jefferson, Lewis and Northern Oswego Counties, but we
will respond to requests for services from individuals living in Southern St.
Lawrence County, Northern Oswego County and other rural locations in Northern
and Central New York.
More detailed information on the Independent Living Program is available here.
AIDS In Prison Program
The goal of this program is that prisoners, after release, have information
about and access to services in their home communities regarding their
disability. Formal and informal feedback from prisoners and prison staff is
reviewed by NRCIL's Executive Director, Program Director and AIDS in Prison
Program staff assess outcomes, identify gaps and develop new objectives.
The Corrections Support Coordinator, (CSC), works directly with the medical and
other staff at each correctional facility. Medical staff contact each inmate who
has been tested HIV+ to determine if they wish to receive NRCIL services.
Prisoners who sign a HIV Release of Information have an intake meeting with the
CSC and depending on their interest will be referred to a NRCIL support group or
when available one-on-one advocacy with the CSC. Department of Corrections
medical records will be individually reviewed with participating prisoners
approximately once per month to discuss treatment diagnosis and help prisoners
understand health, immune system and medications.
The Corrections Transition Planner, (CTP), provides comprehensive discharge
planning services that directly link pre-releasees who are HIV+ with services
upon return to their home communities. Working individually with inmates with
HIV the CTP ensures that releasees are linked with entitlements, case managers,
medical services and other support services relevant to individual situations.
Releasees who participate in NRCIL's program have access to enhanced personal
skills to manage their health, service and personal care, access to appropriate
services in their home community, introduction to lifestyle changes and enhanced
quality of life.
Two HIV Educators joined NRCIL staff in fall 1997 to initiate comprehensive AIDS
education in five State Correctional Facilities. The program includes education
to the general prison population, focus groups, and inmate peer training of
trainers.
More detailed information on the AIDS in Prison Program is available here.
Family Support Services
Family Support Services is an element of the community-based system of care for families of children with disabilities. Family Support Services at NRCIL consists of an array of formal and informal services with an emphasis on self-determination and family control. In this program, families work together to achieve a non-discriminating and embracing community for their children with disabilities. Family Support emphasizes full parent participation in service planning and evaluation of services in the child’s own home and community whenever possible. NRCIL advocates for flexibility and responsiveness from the formal service system. Family centered planning allows families to choose the services and goals which best meet their individual family needs. The components of this program combine to assist and empower families to reach these goals.
Included in supports are:
More detailed information on the Family Support Services Program is available here.
Individual Support Services
The purpose of supports is to assist individuals with developmental disabilities
living on their own to preclude inappropriate out-of-home placement and to
preserve and enhance a family's ability to provide in-home care to their family
members with a developmental disability. Funding is intended to complement, not
supplant, other support and assistance programs. In addition, the initiative is
an effort to give individuals and families more choice and flexibility in the
selection of supports, build on natural support networks and community
resources, and recognize that individuals and families are best able to identify
their own capacities and needs. NRCIL currently has one ISS grant which is
managed in the Watertown office.