First hour: Dialogue on Disability - The value of respite programs
Second hour: Connections preempted for NPR's coverage of the Senate impeachment trial
As part of Dialogue on Disability Week, we continue our series of conversations about inclusion and disability rights. This hour, we discuss the value of respite programs for caregivers and people with disabilities. Respite programs provide a variety of short-term, temporary services that allow family members to take a break from the day-to-day schedule. Research shows respite programs can improve family stability, but many people who participate in them – or would like to – say the system is difficult to navigate. Our guests discuss their experience with respite programs, and we talk about how to make them more easily accessible for families. In studio:
- Stephanie Woodward, disability rights advocate with DisabilityDetails.com
- Patsy, mother of a teenager who attends Epilepsy-Pralid’s after school respite and recreational respite programs
- Joe Abbott, vice president of operations and COO at Epilepsy-Pralid
- Dayna Wells, community services supervisor at Epilepsy-Pralid
- Tia Guthrie, manager of waiver services at CP Rochester
This story is reported from WXXI’s Inclusion Desk.
Then in our second hour, Connections is preempted for NPR’s continuing coverage of the Senate impeachment trial. You can listen on multiple WXXI platforms:
- Radio/streaming audio: Starting at 1 p.m. - AM 1370/FM 107.5, WXXINews.org, WXXI mobile app
- TV/streaming video: WXXI-WORLD (cable 1275/OTA 21.2), WXXINews.org, WXXI News Facebook page