NCCDD's Highlights & Hot Topics
Listen to the audio version of the North Carolina Council on Developmental Disabilities monthly newsletter, Highlights & Hot Topics.
NCCDD's Highlights & Hot Topics
NCCDD's Highlights & Hot Topics - June 2026
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The June 2026 issue of Highlights and Hot Topics includes a letter from NCCDD’s executive director, an Advocacy and Leadership Awards announcement about nominations, a public policy update, an update on federal special education oversight, and upcoming NCCDD webinars.
Highlights & Hot Topics is the monthly newsletter for the North Carolina Council on Developmental Disabilities. All newsletters are available on the NCCDD website.
This project was supported, in part by grant number 2001NCSCDD-02, from the U.S. Administration for Community Living, Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, D.C. 20201. Grantees undertaking projects with government sponsorship are encouraged to express freely their findings and conclusions. Points of view or opinions do not, therefore, necessarily represent official ACL policy.
June 2026. Highlights and Hot Topics. Letter from Executive Director. This summer we celebrate three critical anniversaries for our country and for the disability rights movement. July fourth is the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of our country. We celebrate our nation's creed, which we have not fully lived out, but which we continue to strive toward. It is our declaration of independence. It was the moral anchor of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. We all have a right to life and liberty. It was sung out to the thousands by Dr. King. One day this nation will live out the true meaning of its creed. We hold these truths to be self evident. We are all created equally. We all have the right to pursuit of happiness. July twenty sixth will be the thirty sixth anniversary of when President George H. W. Bush signed into law our Disability Rights Declaration of Independence, the Americans with Disabilities Act. The very first words of the ADA declare The Congress finds that physical or mental disabilities in no way diminish a person's right to fully participate in all aspects of society. Yet, Congress declared, the continuing existence of unfair and unnecessary discrimination and prejudice denies people with disabilities the opportunity to compete on an equal basis and to pursue those opportunities for which our free society is justifiably famous. Source four two USC one two one zero one A oneA june twenty second was the twenty seventh anniversary of the Olmsted decision. In that decision, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg and a majority of the United States Supreme Court ruled that people with disabilities have the right to live fully in the community rather than in institutions. She found that confining people in institutions discriminated against them. It diminished their everyday life activities, and created a perception that they were incapable or unworthy of participating in community life. In other words, she said people with disabilities are just as worthy, just as deserving of living out our nation's creed. We are all created equally and have the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. So this summer, let's celebrate our nation's creed through our Independence Day, the Olmsted Anniversary, and the anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Right after I drafted the above article, the United States Justice Department, DOJ, issued an opinion stating that it was substantially limiting its interpretation of Olmsted. This opinion is not a court decision and should not be interpreted as one, but the Justice Department has several critical responsibilities related to Olmsted. While the DOJ opinion is very concerning, the anniversaries of the ADA, Olmsted, and our country each remind us that independence and liberty often face obstacles, and we have repeatedly found ways to overcome these obstacles. We will continue to do so. Tally Wells, NCCDD Executive Director. Advocacy and Leadership Award Nominations Open. Do you know someone changing lives in North Carolina's intellectual developmental disabilities community? The North Carolina Council on Development Disabilities is accepting nominations for its 2026 Advocacy and Leadership Awards. These annual honors shine a spotlight on advocates who are breaking barriers, expanding choices, and helping to build a more inclusive North Carolina for people with IDD. You can nominate someone or yourself now through July 15, 2026 for one of the following categories. The North Carolina Leadership Achievement Award recognizes an outstanding North Carolina Self-Advocate whose work has improved the quality of life for people with IDD. Jack B. Hefner Memorial Award recognizes the vision and achievements of North Carolina's families and people with IDD. Helen C. Hawley Riddle Distinguished Service Award recognizes the vision and achievements of professionals within North Carolina's IDD community. Deadline for nominations is July 15, 2026. Learn more and submit your nominations. Meet last year's award recipients. The 2025 Advocacy and Leadership Awards were presented to Laura Newell, North Carolina Leadership Achievement Award, Ray Hemachandra, Jack B. Hefner Memorial Award, Pat Cuell, Helen C. Hawley Riddle Distinguished Service Award. In addition, the Carrie Eker Mountain Mover Award was presented to Lauren Howard and Ladonna Huffaker. Recipients of this award are chosen by the council. Watch NCCDD's video series on YouTube to learn more about last year's awardees and the positive impact they've made for North Carolina's IDD community. Frequently asked questions. Can I nominate myself? Yes, we encourage individuals to self-nominate for an award. What do you look for in nominees to be award winners? Those making nominations must show that the person they are nominated is making an impact in their local community that benefits others with IDD. How are the recipients selected? A selection committee of NCCDD members reviews all applications and carefully considers all information submitted about the candidates. Then they choose a candidate to receive each award. What do the recipients get? The winners are invited to the November Council meeting and can invite up to four guests to the awards ceremony. The award winners will receive a plaque, an opportunity to address the council, and their story will be promoted on the council website, social media pages, and in their hometown newspapers. Public policy update as of june twenty fourth, twenty twenty six. Federal Reconciliation Reconciliation process is what was used to pass HR one, one big beautiful bill, which included significant Medicaid cuts. Reconciliation is a special legislative tool that can be used by the Senate for mandatory spending and only requires fifty one votes instead of sixty. Reconciliation two point z passed out of Congress and was signed by the President on june tenth, twenty twenty six. The bill includes nearly seventy million to fund immigration and customs enforcement, ICE, and Border Patrol through 2029. Following the two point zero package, House Republicans and the White House are in discussions for a third reconciliation bill. Reconciliation 3.0 will likely focus on defense spending, entitlement reforms, Medicaid, Medicare, health savings accounts, antifraud measures, and SAVE Act, Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, which would require Americans to provide documentary proof of U.S. citizenship, such as a passport or birth certificate to register to vote in federal elections. While this seems to be moving in the House, the Senate does not appear to be eager to take this on. Budget. The regular budgeting slash appropriations process for fiscal year 2027, October 2026 through September 2027 is continuing. Most activity has been on the House side. All committee markups and approvals have been completed. The committee that NCCDD follows the closest is labor, health and human services and education. We are relieved to see several specific areas related to intellectual or other developmental disabilities maintain flat funding in this bill. Developmental Disability State Councils, Protection and Advocacy, Voting Access for Individuals with Disabilities, UCEDDs, University Centers for Excellence, Independent Living Programs, Assistive Technology Act Programs, Traumatic Brain Injury Programs, NIDILR, Disability and Rehabilitation Research. But there are other areas that affect people with disabilities. Affordable Care Act Marketplace $1 billion cut reduce access to health care. Department of Labor $3.7 billion cut includes cuts to re-entry programs. People with disabilities have benefited from these programs, and cuts to the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, WIOA. Department of Education, 8.1 billion cut includes cuts to Title I, support for low income schools, cuts to federal work study programs, and cuts to the Office of Civil Rights, Protection for Students with Disabilities. Blocks funding for any policies that promote diversity, equity, and inclusion. These were some slight increases to idea and head start, but these come at the expense of other programs like after school programs and professional development. The above are proposed budgets from the House Committee. All committee appropriations bills have to be passed on the House floor. At this writing, two have passed, and the rest of the twelve await floor votes. They are all expected to pass. The Senate has not made as much progress on its budget bills. There seems to be a stalemate with no agreement on the top number for the entire budget. It is very unlikely that they will complete markups on their committee appropriations bill by the August recess. Due to election year legislative calendars and disagreements over top line numbers, Congress will likely need to pass one or more continuing resolutions to prevent a shutdown when the fiscal year begins in October. HR eight four six four Stopping Fraudulent Payments Act. The House voted to pass HR eight four six four Stopping Fraudulent Payments Act on june tenth, twenty twenty six, as part of a broader package of eleven oversight bills aimed at cutting down on government waste and fraudulent federal assistance. This bill is designed to let federal agencies stop suspicious disbursements, such as Medicare or state administered federal programs like Medicaid and SNAP, before the money leaves the Treasury, rather than attempting to get it back after the fact. Advocates are concerned because it creates a broad and subjective authority allowing federal agents or the Secretary of the Treasury to block federal payments to individuals, nonprofit organizations, communities, and states. While this bill suggests the authority is narrowly related to preventing fraud, its language is broad and vague enough for this or any other administration to stop, delay, or condition payments for programs or states it disfavors. The bill is now being transmitted to the Senate, where it must be assigned to a committee, debated, and voted on before it can head to the president's desk to become law. Work requirements. North Carolina and other states have been working on implementing the new work requirement from HR1. On june first, 2026, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services released an interim final rule that details how states should manage exemptions for work requirements for adults aged 19 to 64 created under HR 1. The rule clarifies who is exempt from these work requirements and what Medicaid beneficiaries would have to do to qualify for an exemption. According to the new rule, in order to prove that you are medically frail, a definition that is not typically used in the disability community, you also have to show that your condition significantly impairs your ability to meet work requirements. For 2027, CMS will allow beneficiaries to self-declare that they meet those exemptions. Starting in 2028, people will need to show documentation and proof to keep their benefits, and many people may lose coverage simply because they cannot get a doctor's statement to prove they need the exemption, or they make an administrative mistake in submitting their documentation. This rule will mean that more people will lose access to the health care that they need due to the heightened administrative burden. Many states have been preparing for the implementation of HR one by using their own diagnostic codes to identify people who can claim a medically frail exemption. Now they will have to adopt this new, more restrictive definition of medical frailty, and they are not allowed to add more categories to the list of people who can claim that exemption. Olmstead In nineteen ninety nine, the Supreme Court in Olmstead vs. LC recognized that people with disabilities have a right to live in the world, and states have an obligation to provide services in the community that promotes integration. This ruling is the foundation of disability rights and so integral to the inclusion of people with IDD in their communities. A recent opinion issued by the Department of Justice says that federal law does not explicitly require states to provide community-based care for people with disabilities. The memo asserts that neither Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act nor Section five hundred four of the Rehabilitation Act contains a strict integration mandate that forces states to serve people in a community-based setting instead of in institutions. This interpretation goes against current federal integration policy and signals a shift in enforcement regarding the Olmsted mandate. This opinion is not the same as a court decision. It does not take away the Olmsted ruling or ADA or Section 504, but it is alarming that the federal government may not enforce these laws. The Arc put it this way. This opinion seeks to undermine one of the strongest protections people with disabilities have from being pushed into institutions when they can and want to live in the community. The American Association of People with Disabilities and the Ark of the United States condemn the memo, warning that it encourages states to defund home based services and push vulnerable individuals into institutional care. Here's a link to the statement from the ARC. The Arc.org Department of Education Over a year ago, President Donald Trump announced that he would move special needs programs to HHS as part of a committee to close the education department. We are beginning to see how this may be accomplished. See the article about the Office of Civil Rights and other grants being moved out of the Department of Education. State Legislative Addressing the Budget. North Carolina has not had a budget in place this year as the legislature failed to pass a budget during the previous long session, and this is the main objective during this short session to approve a budget. We heard back in May that Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Berger and House Speaker Destin Hall had come to an agreement on some key issues that will allow the budget process to move forward. The agreements included issues related to taxes and raises for teachers, state employees, and law enforcement officers. Work on the budget has continued since that time. On june seventeenth, House Speaker Destin Hall and Senate Leader Phil Berger met to talk about the budget, indicating that they are close to coming to an agreement. Both expressed that they are hopeful that a budget could be passed by the end of June. Legislative Bills HB thirty four strengthened Medicaid Provider Controls. This bill provides DHHS with the authority to deny or terminate Medicaid providers based on certain actions on a provider's licensing board and clarifies the department's authority to deny or terminate Medicaid providers because of criminal convictions and other activity. This bill also requires that health plans have closed networks for research-based behavioral health treatment, RBBHT, peer support, and community support teams. The intent of this bill is to ensure quality providers of Medicaid services in the state. There has been considerable concern and feedback from provider organizations about the vagueness of certain provisions and the scope of others. Meetings between provider representatives and legislators have led to some adjustments to language and clarification of some sections. The bill has passed the House and is awaiting passage in the Senate. Families and advocates concerned about federal special education oversight changes. The U.S. Department of Education recently announced that some of its responsibilities will move to other federal agencies. Oversight of special education programs, transition services, and vocational rehabilitation will move to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Responsibility for investigating disability related education civil rights complaints will move to the U.S. Department of Justice. Students with disabilities have the right to a free, appropriate public education under the Individuals with Disabilities Act. For decades, the U.S. Department of Education has been responsible for helping ensure schools follow these protections. Wisconsin's DD Council. Wisconsin Board for People with Developmental Disabilities shared its statement and resources with other state DD councils on the potential impact and concerns that these changes might cause. BPDD Executive Director Jenny Price said families, educators, and states benefit from having one agency focused on helping students with disabilities succeed. She expressed concern that moving these responsibilities to agencies with broader missions could make support and oversight more difficult. Also, last year, the U.S. Department of Education reduced staffing in its Office for Civil Rights, including staff who investigate complaints from families about schools. About half of those complaints involve special education. BPDD Board Chair Sidney Bidot said splitting special education responsibilities across multiple agencies may make it harder for families to know where to go for help when a student's rights are not being met. You can read BPDD statement here. NCCDD will continue to monitor the changes and provide updates. Upcoming webinars in July. Policy Education Meeting. Thursday, july ninth, twenty twenty six from ten thirty AM to noon. Learn about important updates about state and federal policies, budget developments, and other issues that affect people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. There will also be time for questions and open discussion. Please note that NCCDD only provides public policy education. The council does not lobby on specific legislation. Register at zoomgov.com. Self-advocate discussion series Celebrate the 36th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, Wednesday, july 15, 2026 from 1 to 2 PM. The Americans with Disabilities Act was signed into law on july twenty sixth, 1990 by President George H.W. Bush. Throughout the year and on the ADA anniversary, july twenty sixth, the ADA National Network recognizes this landmark event and the important work to promote equal opportunity for people with disabilities. Join us to celebrate, share, and learn. Note please register at least one week before the session. Register at zoomgov.com. Learn more about this webinar series at nccd.org. The Council presents Topic ADA thirty sixth anniversary Thursday, july twenty third, twenty twenty six from one to two PM. July twenty sixth, twenty twenty six will mark the thirty sixth anniversary of the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act ADA. The ADA says that employers and places open to the general public must provide reasonable accommodations to people with disabilities. But how does a person with a disability successfully request and secure an accommodation? During this session, hear from people with IDD and other disabilities who have successfully received accommodations. They will share their lived experience and talk about how they did it to help the next person who might need similar access to a job, a building, a service, or an event. Register at zoomgov.com. Learn more about this webinar series at ncccd.org.