This report examines occurrences of institutionalization of people with disabilities, as well as threats of institutionalization that were thwarted, in 2017 and 2018, including during Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, Maria, Florence, and Michael, and the California wildfires. This report:
- Examines how, when, and why people with disabilities were institutionalized during and after recent disasters.
- Examines the systemic issues that continue to cause institutionalization of persons with disabilities.
- Discusses the grave short- and-long-term physical, mental, and financial consequences that institutionalization wreaks.
- Provides recommendations and promising practices that would enable federal agencies to eliminate institutionalization of persons with disabilities during future disasters.
The National Council on Disability finds that people with disabilities are frequently institutionalized during and after disasters due to conflicting federal guidance and a lack of compliance with federal law.
Moreover, recipients of federal funds do not have training for how to comply with federal requirements to provide equal access to emergency and disaster-related programs and services when using federal dollars, nor do they have the cultural competence to interact with people with disabilities and often adhere to stereotypes and myths about disability that result in institutional placement. As a result of unnecessary institutionalizations, people with disabilities often go unaccounted for, families are separated from loved ones, working individuals with disabilities often become unemployed, and students with disabilities are often excluded from returning to school with their peers.