NEW MINISTER FOR WELFARE MINISTER OF MALAYSIA

NEW MINISTER FOR WELFARE MINISTER OF MALAYSIA
Badan Latihan dan Hidup Berdikari Malaysia (ILTC) pada 23hb Mac 2016 menyerahkan memorandum kepada ahli-ahli parlimen mendesak supaya golongan orang kurang upaya (OKU) dikecualikan daripada cukai barangan dan perkhidmatan (GST).

Disabled Members Protest

Disabled Members Protest
Disabled Members Protest at JPJ Wangsa Maju

ILTC Malaysia members staged a protest outside JPJ Wangsamaju KL.

ILTC Malaysia members staged a protest outside JPJ Wangsamaju KL.
Disabled group’s protest disabled drivers required to produce doc's medical report.

Thursday, 12 September 2013

Dire need for helpers

Wheel Power

Thursday September 12, 2013

Dire need for helpers

Illegal foreign workers can perhaps be trained to work as personal care assistants for the disabled.

LAST week’s announcement by Putrajaya that some illegal foreign workers may be legalised instead of being deported, caught my attention.
This change of heart by the Government apparently came about after the authorities realised there is a need for some of these immigrants after their employers made a special appeal for them.
After reading about it in the newspapers, a thought came to me: what about getting them – and local workers, too – to work as Personal Care Assistants (PCA) for the disabled?
PCAs are specially trained workers who offer home care and support services for the disabled or chronically ill. Unlike regular caregivers of the disabled who often comprise family members and close friends, PCAs are paid by the Government to help disabled persons with their daily activities.
The target group of PCAs are people with profound disabilities who are paralysed from the neck down.
PCAs help with daily activities such as giving disabled persons a bath, helping them to eat, preparing meals and cleaning their homes. They are also trained to provide basic rehabilitation assistance for individuals who have had surgery or who have been ill.
PCAs also offer their services to patients with physical impairments in private homes or nursing care facilities. They do not require a high level of healthcare knowledge or training. However, it is advantageous that they have a high level of manual dexterity and good communication skills.
The range of services PCAs can offer is limitless. They include helping a person to get out of bed, bathe, dress and groom himself.
Other services include checking a patient’s pulse rate, temperature and respiration rate, and helping him to carry out simple exercises prescribed by a healthcare expert.
Disabled patients also need assistance in taking their medication, dressing wounds daily and getting in and out of wheelchairs.
PCAs may work exclusively with one client, or have a number of clients in a nursing home. The demand for PCA services is expected to rise sharply in the near future as we move into an ageing society.
Disabled activist Chong Tuck Meng, 51, a tetraplegic, strongly feels that Malaysia should start looking into making PCAs available for the handicapped.
“I need help to sit up in bed everyday. I need to be turned every four hours to avoid pressure sores.”
Chong describes his daily struggles as a nightmare. He has to cope without the help of his ageing mother and his wife who needs to work to support him.
“I often wake up in the morning, amazed that I am still alive,” says Chong. He adds that no disabled person deserves to go through this.
“I have to find friends who are willing and have the time to take me out. Sometimes, out of desperation, I have to turn to illegal immigrants for personal assistance.”
Chong says it is high time the Government addressed the much needed role of PCAs in the country, “otherwise growing older with disability is a virtual death sentence for the disabled”. He feels it is timely to raise this issue in the upcoming Budget 2014.
Chong knows a number of tetraplegics in the country who are in urgent need of PCAs.
“One of them is a third year university student who became paralysed after an accident. The son of a chicken rice seller, the family’s hopes were dashed when he became disabled. They tried getting maids but many ran away, leaving him without help at home. He slipped into depression.”
Another of Chong’s pals became disabled as a teenager. His family couldn’t afford a maid. Although his 60-year-old mother did everything she could, including going out to work to support the family, his pal finally succumbed to pressure sore infections which are preventable.

Monday, 9 September 2013

Disabled folk in Selangor want state to give 100% exemption on assessment taxes


7 September 2013

Community



Disabled folk in Selangor want state to give 100% exemption on assessment taxes

Sungei Way resident Abdul Latiff Hashim, 50, is grateful for the 50% waiver in assessment for the disabled
 DISABLED Selangorians want the state to give a 100% exemption in Budget 2014 for council assessment taxes.

Independent Living and Training Centre president Francis Siva hopes all 12 local councils will approve their request.
“We hope the councillors will convince the state government to allow this as this will make a real difference in the lives of the disabled,’’ he said.
Physically challenged people who own and live in their residences were given a 50% discount on their assessment tax for 2013.
Siva noted that most disabled live on a fixed income and have higher medical bills.
Many also have to work in low-paying jobs like telephone operators.
“Our association will be at the Petaling Jaya City Council’s Disabled Committee meeting next week to urge the council to implement the 100% waiver for assessment”.
“The Malaysian Association for the Blind, Malaysian Parkinson’s Disease Association, Adult Blind Association Selangor, Society for Interpreters of the Deaf, Malaysian Dyslexia Association, and Multiple Sclerosis Society will also be there to support this,” he said.
Malaysian Animal-Assisted Therapy for the Disabled and Elderly Association president Anthony Thanasayan said the 50% discount was a good gesture but it does not go far enough.
“We should be exempted from having to pay just like for passport fees and road tax,” he added.
Resident Abdul Latiff Hashim, who has a muscular condition that renders his left hand weak since birth, said his application for the 50% discount was approved by MBPJ.
“For the 2013 assessment, I paid RM132 instead of RM264. It was a great help as I and another brother Mohd Rashid Ibrahim, 55, who also has a medical problem, depend on our elder brother to support us financially,” said Latiff, 50, who lives in a two-room terrace house in Sungei Way,
Another resident, Khew Sin Kuen who lives in SS3, said with the 50% discount, he only had to pay RM300.
“A disabled person has to make an application on an annual basis for the exemption now. This should not be the case, it should be throughout their life,” he said.
Kenneth Seow Soon Kheng, 37, who lives at SS20, said the state government should consider a 70% waiver. PJ eeputy mayor Puasa Md Taib said the council will listen to the views of the various associations when drawing up next year’s budget.

Motorists who abuse parking bays for the disabled should be fined


Community



7 September 2013
Motorists who abuse parking baysfor the disabled should be fined
Open to misuse: There are parking bays provided for the disabled but these are commonlyabused by able-bodied motorists.—filepicOpen to misuse: There are parking bays provided for the disabled but these are commonlyabused by able-bodied motorists.—filepic
SOME able-bodied motorists are feigning disabilities to park their cars in gazetted disabled parking lots for free.
Petaling Jaya City councillor Anthony S. Thanasayan said they are depriving disabled persons by doing so.
He said that some motorists would pretend to limp upon alighting from their vehicles.
“However, the limp is missing when they are walking back to their car from the bank or shops after doing their errands.
“I witnessed this once when I was in Petaling Jaya New Town.
“When these people are chided, they just smile and drive off,” he added.
Anthony said able-bodied drivers were abusing the parking spaces in Section 52, Gasing Indah and even off Jalan Gasing meant for the physically challenged.
MBPJ enforcement department has issued 35 compound notices to able-bodied motorists in the Gasing Indah neighbourhood from January to the present.
Another 41 compound notices were issued in Damansara Perdana commercial area for the same nature of offence.
Anthony said the public were showing blatant disregard for the city council’s laws.
“Council enforcement officers should issue the maximum compound fines and not entertain any requests for discounts. Tough measures are required as a deterrent,” he said.
Anthony said there was a case where an able-bodied man who occupied a disabled parking bay argued with a disabled motorist, until MBPJ enforcement officers asked the offending driver to re-park or have his car towed away.