Separate Agency Best
Separate Agency Best
Jim Omvig
Separate Agency for the Blind: Best Practice for Success
by James H. Omvig
From the Editor: Ever since Dr. Jernigan went to Iowa in 1958 to transform
the worst agency serving blind people in the country into the best program anywhere,
we have known how important it is for effective rehabilitation of the blind
to be conducted by a separate agency. "Because separate agencies do a better
job" is not a sufficient reason to give legislators being lured by the
siren song of consolidation. Jim Omvig is one of the people whom Dr. Jernigan
first rehabilitated and then trained to assist him to do his work in Iowa. Jim
is a blind attorney who has now been involved in rehabilitation for more than
thirty years. He wrote the following paper for several Arizona legislators some
years ago. It is as relevant and helpful today as it was then.
Background
Every state has some form of vocational rehabilitation and
training program for its blind adults, for which the federal
government pays approximately eighty percent of the cost. The
blind receive these services in one of two ways: either from a
large general rehabilitation agency, which tries to serve people
with all types of disabilities, or from a separate agency for the
blind, which presumably has the requisite expertise and serves
only blind consumers. Then in turn, if a separate program for the
blind is established, it may be either a section or division
within a much larger umbrella agency, or it may be a completely
separate and independent agency, directly accountable to the
governor, the legislature, the blind, and the general citizenry.
It is up to each state to determine which governmental structure
is best suited to meet the particular needs of its blind
citizens.
Congress has recognized that the problems of the blind are
unique and therefore that meaningful services for the blind are
distinctly different from rehabilitation and related services for
people with other disabilities. Accordingly, federal law permits
the states to establish a completely separate, independent agency
for the blind if they wish in order to address these unique needs
in a comprehensive, specialized program. The relevant federal law
is Title 29 USC, Section 701 (a) (1) (A) of the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973, as amended.
Experience has shown that the blind always have the best
possible chance of receiving quality services when such services
are delivered through an independent, separate agency for the
blind. There are numerous reasons for the tremendous success of
these programs. They are outlined in the section below.
Why a Separate, Independent Agency for the Blind?
Rehabilitation of the blind has more in common with
independent living services for the blind, services for the older
blind, orientation and adjustment training for the blind, sight
conservation, and sheltered employment for the blind than it does
with rehabilitation of other disability groups or the socially or
economically disadvantaged. Likewise small business enterprise
programs for the blind have more in common with rehabilitation
services for the blind than they do with other types of small
business programs.
Even so, some argue that the blind should be lumped together
with other disability groups or served through some giant
umbrella agency to achieve integration and coordination of
services. Until you think about it carefully and have certain
facts presented to you, this might sound like pretty good,
logical thinking.
There is, indeed, a need for coordination and integration of
state services for the blind, but terminology should not be
confused with reality. If, for instance, a state has a supervisor
of highway construction, a supervisor of elementary education, a
supervisor of pest control, and a supervisor of health and
welfare, it does not follow that integration and coordination are
achieved by creating a Department of Supervisors and lumping all
of these people and functions together. Nor is any real
integration or coordination achieved by establishing a Department
of Health and Highways. Health is one function, highways another,
and they cannot meaningfully be integrated.
If such a department is established, all that can be
accomplished is to superimpose a costly administrative hierarchy
upon the two departments. They will still remain separate
functions whether they be called departments, divisions,
sections, bureaus, or whatever. In fact the administrative
hierarchy will be detrimental and will only cause inefficiency
and waste in such a situation.
Relating all of this to the blind, fragmentation is
increased rather than helped by putting all of the services for
the blind into a division of a super-department. What is needed
is common sense rather than textbook theory and neatness of
somebody's organizational chart. Sound reasoning tells us that
the various services for the blind complement and supplement one
another and form one unique entity. They are only very slightly
and incidentally related to services for people with other
disabilities or other disadvantaged groups despite the similarity
of terminology.
The people who administer rehabilitation and other services for the blind
should be able to administer the entire package, and they should not be distracted
by other duties. Furthermore, they should not be responsible to people who have
other program interests and who may, therefore, subordinate the needs of programs
for the blind to other interests or pet projects. At the same time the professional
agency for the blind administrator must be responsible to some authority as
a check and balance and a testing ground for his or her judgment. This authority
should be a lay board, preferably one containing a number of blind people themselves—people
who know firsthand what the services are and what they should be to achieve
best results.
In those states where separate, independent agencies exist,
the governor (often with the advice and consent of the Senate)
appoints the members of the lay board. The board hires the
director, and the director then hires other staff and provides
the leadership and day-to-day management of the program.
On the other hand, if the administrator of programs for the
blind is responsible to the head of some super-agency or even
directly to the governor, he or she is really not responsible to
anyone, for these people are not knowledgeable about what is
needed and are likely to be extremely busy with other matters.
Thus an independent department or commission for the blind
administering all state services for the blind is clearly best
suited to meet the requirements for a good program.
It is, of course, possible to have an inefficient
independent agency just as it is possible to have an inefficient
program under any other type of structure, but the odds are much
better for good programs if you have the independent agency
system. This all depends, of course, upon the caliber and
expertise of the people who do the administering. However, if all
other things are equal, an independent commission affords the
best organizational structure. Let me be more specific about what
I have been saying. Even though the same words are sometimes used
when we talk of various service programs, the mere use of such
words is where the similarity ends. For example, rehabilitation
of people using wheelchairs or of the deaf is in no sense the
same process as rehabilitation of the blind. And this is equally
true when discussing a hundred other types of rehabilitation. In
other words, the problems facing blind people are unique. From
this it naturally follows that those who are hired to provide
rehabilitation services for blind people must possess a unique
reservoir of knowledge specifically related to the problems of
blindness, if effective programs are to be carried on. If we are
to be truly effective, we need experts whose training and
experience relate specifically to the problems of blindness. It
is sheer nonsense to expect any human being to be knowledgeable
about and to possess the necessary expertise to deal effectively
with all of the problems of everyone needing various types of
rehabilitation services.
"But," it is sometimes argued, "it is desirable to have the
uniformity of administration found in a large super-agency." This argument
might be made with considerable validity for producing license plates or for
regulatory agencies—licensing, permits, etc. Its validity is much more
doubtful, however, with respect to human-service programs, which for maximum
efficiency must operate on a person-to-person basis. As I have said, neatness
of somebody's organizational chart and uniformity of administrative pattern
must not be permitted to obscure the human element. In fact, there is considerable
evidence that bigness itself is a negative, not a positive factor.
"But," it is further argued, "programs for the blind and
others which sound similar should be merged into large
departments so that they will not function in a vacuum and be too
independent." An interesting point can be made here. The best way
to hide a tree is in a forest. A separate, independent agency for
the blind with a lay board would always operate in the spotlight
of inescapable scrutiny, accountability, and responsibility. If
its programs are not functioning well, the blind can and will
rise in protest, and there can be no possibility of evasion, no
shifting of responsibility, no passing the buck. There is no
hierarchy of administrators, divisions, or bureaucrats to stand
between unhappy blind consumers and the people employed to give
them service.
On the other hand, if you want real independence and lack of
accountability, turn that agency loose in the mazes of
bureaucracy as a tiny segment of a super-agency. In the hide-and-
seek of the intricacies and technicalities and divided
responsibilities within a giant agency, no governor and no
legislator can track it down. In the corridors of bureaucracy the
full-time professional administrator is king, and the layman,
whether governor, legislator, or average citizen just seeking
service, is subject.
Establish a separate, independent agency for the blind with a lay board appointed
by the governor and you have checks and balances and the maximum incentive for
that agency to do a good job. Submerge services for the blind in a large department,
and you give that program a blank check of independence and authority—independence
and authority which it should neither want nor have.
Further, when you place services for the blind in a larger
department of government, this will necessarily divert the
energies and talents of administrators whose training,
experience, and main professional concerns should be strictly
with the blind. Can anyone really doubt what the main
professional concerns of the high-level administrators of a
giant, umbrella agency are? I can assure you that those concerns
have nothing to do with blindness.
We who are blind do not wish to divert the energies or
talents of anybody, nor do we wish the agency for the blind's
energies and talents to be diverted, watered down, or shifted
from the course of giving the best possible service to the blind
of the state. This is probably one of the principal reasons why
many states have separated their services for the blind from
large departments.
"But," as a last-ditch effort, it is argued by the
uninformed, "can't we save a lot of state and federal money if we
just lump together these seemingly related programs? We can avoid
duplication and save a bundle." While this sounds logical and
responsible, the fact is that, where this re-organizing takes
place, the same program administrators and managers are generally
retained, but in addition a new and costly level of
administrators is imposed to supervise the original program
managers. This practice costs more, not less.
Finally, several years ago an independent study (The Mallas
Report) was made of service delivery systems to determine which
type was best suited to provide quality rehabilitation and
related services for the blind. The study concluded that the
separate, independent agency with a lay board appointed by the
governor is best. In an interview the researcher said, "Where
reorganization of services for the blind has taken place on the
basis of the economy-of-scale principle, its proponents have sold
the legislature and the Governor on statements such as, `This
will be more efficient and economical. It will let us get more
mileage out of every tax dollar.' As a matter of fact, in every
state where such a reorganization has taken place, the prestige
and level of operation of the agencies serving the blind have
been downgraded." This study also makes another revealing
finding. "In general programs for the blind which fall under
rehabilitation departments and umbrella agencies have the least
effectiveness in developing and utilizing necessary financial
resources."
In conclusion, we who are blind want the opportunity to receive services aimed
at returning us to the mainstream of life. We want to be taxpayers, not tax
users. The separate, independent agency for the blind offers us the best chance
for meaningful programs. We are willing to work, and work hard, but we will
also dare to dream in order to develop and protect our separate programs.
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