| Never Give Up: My License to Independence
By Connie Lewis and Nancy Maxson at the Rural
Institute
I wanted to learn to drive and I brought this
up in a meeting of Missoula People First. People First is a self
advocacy organization for people with developmental disabilities.
When I mentioned that I wanted to drive at the meeting, other
People First members said they wanted to learn to drive also.
But there wasn’t anybody to help us study for the written
test.
Finding Resources for Drivers Education
The Montana Developmental Disabilities Planning
and Advisory Council (DDPAC) had some grant money to help people
with disabilities. DDPAC gives grant money to People First of
Montana to pay for advisors for the twelve People First chapters
across the state. The members of Missoula People First voted to
write a grant to DDPAC to get some money so we could learn how
to drive. We needed the grant money to pay a drivers education
teacher. Two other members and I helped our People First advisor,
Nancy Maxson, write the grant. We explained how having drivers
licenses would change our lives. DDPAC liked our proposal and
gave us more than $16,000.00 for our drivers education project.
The first thing that we needed was someone to
teach the drivers education course. We found Ken Walt, a retired
teacher who taught drivers education privately. He met with some
of us and we told him that we wanted to learn how to drive. He
agreed to teach the drivers education course. I was one of the
first people to sign up. The first day of class we told a little
about ourselves. He gave us folders, highlighters, pens, pads,
and drivers education books. We were also given the Montana State
Drivers Manual. We went through the book first and there were
movies we had to watch on safety. We answered the questions the
teacher had when he called on us. We went through the drivers
ed manual answering those questions and highlighted the things
that were the most important. The classes lasted ten weeks. I
studied at home also.
Overcoming Obstacles
I didn’t have any problem studying. About
two weeks after the class ended I thought that I would go to the
drivers bureau and take the written test. I was a little nervous.
I paid my $32.00 and passed my written test. I had to show two
forms of identification. I had missed two questions on the test
and thought that I missed more. I was a little upset until they
said that I passed. The license bureau wouldn’t take my
picture for my license and would not give me my learners permit
until I had my doctor’s permission, because of my disabilities.
Some of the other People First members were afraid
to ask their doctor’s permission. I wasn’t afraid
and I wasn’t going to give up. My doctor said that it was
ok but I didn’t know that the doctor had to sign papers
for the drivers bureau. I thought at the time that the papers
that the doctor had to sign were supposed to come from the doctors
office. I was a little down at the time because I thought I was
getting nowhere. I mentioned to our People First advisor one day
what the problem was and she helped me get the doctor’s
papers that I needed faxed to me. My advisor took me down to the
drivers bureau and I handed the doctor’s papers to them.
Then they took my picture and gave me my learners permit.
I was ready to start driving, but our teacher
had two other jobs, so he didn’t have any time to teach
me. I asked someone that I worked with, Marie Westfall, if she
could teach me how to drive. We asked DDPAC if we could charge
our grant budget so we could pay Marie the money from the grant
that we weren’t paying the teacher. Now we needed a car
with assistive devices, because of my physical disabilities. Marie
called Community Medical Center to see if we could rent their
car with assistive devices. They agreed to rent us their car.
Then we needed to buy temporary insurance so we could use the
hospital’s car. Grant funds from DDPAC paid for the insurance
and the car rental. Arranging all this seemed to take forever,
but I really wanted to drive, so I didn’t give up.
When I drove for the first time, Marie said that
I was a “natural born driver.” I drove a few more
times in the bad weather in Montana. My learners permit was about
to expire so I had to take my driving test. I didn’t pass,
and because my learners permit was about to expire, I had to take
my written test again, but failed that too. It was just not my
day. But I didn’t give up. I studied some more and passed
the written test so I could continue my driving lessons with Marie.
After practicing more with Marie, I took my driving test again
and this time I passed. I was official. It took about six weeks
before I got the real drivers license in the mail, but I had a
temporary one in the mean time.
Purchasing a Vehicle with a PASS Plan
I had my license and I wanted my own car. I started
car shopping. My grandmother told me not to get a small car and
after visiting several car dealers, I decided I wanted a car where
I could sit high up and see better. I also wanted something reliable,
safe, and preferably with four-wheel drive, so I wouldn’t
have to worry about snowy roads or my car breaking down unexpectedly.
Because of my physical disabilities, I wanted an easy-to-reach
gear shift. And I really wanted whatever I bought to be green.
My parents took me shopping several times and we finally decided
that a new Honda CRV would be the best car for me. It was safe,
had good gas mileage, had a dash-mounted gear shift, and would
accommodate my disabilities better than any other vehicle. Now
I just needed the money to pay for it.
My supervisor at work told me that I could expand
my work duties and hours if I had a car and could run errands.
I receive Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) in addition
to my wages. With the help of Marsha Katz and Nancy Maxson at
the Rural Institute, I was able to write a Social Security Plan
for Achieving Self Support (PASS plan) to help me buy a vehicle.
Because my supervisor said my supported employment job could be
expanded if I could run errands, under the PASS system, a vehicle
would move me toward greater self support. In the PASS plan we
wrote, I sheltered all of my SSDI check and my countable wages
from my job in the PASS plan. This made me eligible for Supplemental
Security Income (SSI) and Medicaid. I also contacted Montana Vocational
Rehabilitation and they agreed to pay for the assistive devices
on the vehicle, because the car would help me reach my employment
goal.
Some of the things we had to explain in the PASS
plan were:
• How the vehicle would help me reach my employment goal
and be more self supporting.
• Why a cheaper or used car or rental car wouldn’t
work for me. I had to explain why the Honda CRV was the best accommodation
for my physical and other disabilities.
• How I would use my PASS money to pay for the car, insurance,
and license plates.
• How I could met my monthly living expenses on an SSI check
and my remaining non-countable income.
• That a bank (the Missoula Federal Credit Union) would
give me a loan and that I would use the PASS funds to make the
payments.
• That I would set up a separate bank account for my PASS
money.
I took my PASS plan to my local Social Security
office. They helped me fill out the application for SSI and then
faxed my PASS plan to the Social Security PASS Cadre in Denver,
Colorado. The PASS Cadre only took about a month to approve my
plan. Once they sent me the approval letter, I was able to go
the car dealer and order a new car, straight from the factory.
The Missoula Federal Credit Union approved my loan and helped
me set up the separate account for my PASS money. When the vehicle
arrived, Vocational Rehabilitation arranged to have the assistive
devices installed.
My License to Independence
My Honda CRV is my license to independence. I
use it at work to run errands like picking up catering or office
supplies. I don’t have to wait out in the cold to catch
the bus each morning. I can shop at any grocery story I want,
not just the one that is within walking distance to my home. I
can go to movies or choir practice at church in the evening and
not worry about finding a ride when the buses aren’t going.
The first day I had my car I drove my parents to dinner, instead
of them driving me. When People First wrote the grant to DDPAC
to pay for a drivers education, we said it would change our lives.
It changed mine.
Contact Information
Connie Lewis, Office
Assistant
(406) 243-2458
cjlewis@selway.umt.edu
Nancy Maxson,
Logistics Coordinator and People First Advisor
(406) 243-2458
maxson@ruralinstitute.umt.edu
The Rural Institute
52 Corbin Hall
The University of Montana
Missoula, MT 59812
(406) 243-4730 Fax
(877) 243-2476 Toll Free
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