• Menu
  • Skip to right header navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Metropolitan Center for Independent Living

Removing Barriers, Promoting Choices

  • About
    • About MCIL
    • Board of Directors
    • Leadership
    • Employment Opportunities
    • Independent Living Philosophy
    • Strategic Plan
    • Success Stories
    • Donors
  • Services
    • Services Overview
    • ADA Minnesota
    • Disability Hub MN
    • Case Management
    • Home Modification and Ramps
    • Independent Living and Vocational Rehabilitation Services (IL/VR)
    • Individual Advocacy
    • PCA College Service Corps
    • Transitional Services and Nursing Home Relocation (NHR)
    • Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA)
    • Youth Transition Services
  • News
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • About
    • About MCIL
    • Board of Directors
    • Leadership
    • Employment Opportunities
    • Independent Living Philosophy
    • Strategic Plan
    • Success Stories
    • Donors
  • Services
    • Services Overview
    • ADA Minnesota
    • Disability Hub MN
    • Case Management
    • Home Modification and Ramps
    • Independent Living and Vocational Rehabilitation Services (IL/VR)
    • Individual Advocacy
    • PCA College Service Corps
    • Transitional Services and Nursing Home Relocation (NHR)
    • Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA)
    • Youth Transition Services
  • News
  • Contact
  • Donate

Learn more about our services

You are here: Home / Archives for 2023

Archives for 2023

Jesse Bethke Gomez Position on Physician Assisted Suicide

In my healthcare career in service to people with apparent, and non-apparent disabilities and to
older adults, I am deeply concerned about why legislation to legalize physician-assisted suicide in
Minnesota is especially harmful to people with disabilities and also to older adults. The proposed
bill would exacerbate many complex problems in healthcare, and would result in the devaluation
of people with disabilities and older adults.

Physician-assisted suicide is opposed by the National Council on Independent Living, the National
Council on Disability and the American Medical Association. In my role as Executive Director of
Metropolitan Center for Independent Living, we provide services to people with apparent and nonapparent
disabilities in advancing independent living. I join these national organizations and the
Minnesota Alliance for Ethical Healthcare in opposition to this harmful legislation that has the
potential to place in great risk people with disabilities and older adults.

As a former president for 17 years of a Rule 29 mental health clinic a licensed Rule 43 outpatient
treatment center for children, families and individuals, and a licensed day center for older adults, I
know that today, we face a severe mental health crisis for children, families and adults. The
current level of need for mental health services surpasses the behavioral health sector’s ability to
meet this demand throughout Minnesota. Legalizing physician-assisted suicide would make it a
“standard of care” requiring providers to provide both life-saving and life-ending medical advice.
Let’s stop for a moment and think about what that means especially for individuals with the nonapparent
disability of severity, chronicity and acuity of an ongoing mental health diagnosis. Any
individual with any level of a mental health diagnosis should not have to be placed in potential
jeopardy by a physician in which the option is life or death; The proposed physician assisted
suicide law would create such a reality. This potentially leads to the devaluation of people over
time.

The devaluation of those who are at-risk is underscored by a 2019 National Council on Disability
report that stated legalization of physician-assisted suicide perpetuates the “historical and
continued devaluation of the lives of people with disabilities by the medical community, legislators,
researchers, and even health economists” by promoting “unequal access to medical care,
including life-saving care.” The report goes on to say where physician-assisted suicide laws have
been enacted there is a suicide contagion such that, “In Oregon, government reports show a
statistical correlation between assisted suicide under the Oregon law and an increase in other
suicides.” Is this what we want in Minnesota?

For Minnesota, let’s make sure we understand the dire consequences of physician assisted
suicide laws. Physician assisted suicide could potentially create a rise in other suicides in
Minnesota. This would be especially concerning during a time in which the demand for services,
are greater than our ability to meet the acuity, severity and chronicity of that demand. Physician
Assisted Suicide legislation poses too many unintended consequences at a time our state’s
mental health service providers are in crisis in meeting current demand for services.

Furthermore, to highlight the unequal access to care for people with disabilities and older adults, I
point to federal laws, and related state services and benefits, that require asset limitations of
$2,000 for individuals and $3,000 for couples in order to receive those services and benefits.
Those monetary restrictions have been fixed at those same dollar amounts since 1983 – 40 years
of the exact same dollar amounts as fixed asset requirements. As a Nation and for Minnesota we
should not have laws with these fixed assets frozen in time for 40 years. People with disabilities
and older adults already see their care options severely reduced due to these severe asset
limitations. When real healthcare is expensive for people with disabilities and physician-assisted
suicide is cheap how will life-saving care be denied or rationed to those most in need? I would
rather see us as a Nation and as a State of Minnesota, eliminate the $2,000 individual and $3,000
couple asset limitations and include an adjusted cost of living for all on these benefits and
services and to require a cost-of-living adjustment annually, not just for some services but for all
benefits and services for people with disabilities and older adults.

Just as this notion of financial “burden” has become more prevalent, it’s not surprising that the
Oregon Department of Health has reported that 52 percent of patients stated their fear of being a
burden to family, friends and caregivers as a primary reason for seeking life-ending medication.
Fear of pain and suffering did not even make the top five. This view of disability and of aging, also
aligns with documented refusals by insurance companies to cover life-saving care, when we need
to disrupt all this as conventional thinking. The real question here is what is our commitment to
one another as a democracy, with regard to the historical gap in the level of benefits, services,
supports and asset limitations endured by people with disabilities and older adults over many
generations?

What is required, instead of physician-assisted suicide, is equity of care - better access to care
and community supports and integration for all. I am in favor of increasing funding, services and
benefits for people with disabilities and older adults. I am also in favor of increasing mental health
funding, services and benefits for children, families and individuals who are in need of them
throughout Minnesota especially in the area of suicide prevention. I am in favor of solving the PCA
worker shortage crisis across Minnesota and throughout the United States of America. It is time to
overcome the indifference to the needs of people with disabilities and older adults, which is at the
root cause of the growing crisis to thousands of people in Minnesota and millions of people across
the United States of America who seek to realize their inalienable rights to independent living.

Physician-assisted suicide legislation is not real healthcare. As we find our way as a society
having endured a once-in-a-lifetime pandemic, too many individuals are already in crisis and too
much is at risk for children, families, individuals, people with disabilities and older adults. If we
have learned anything from this pandemic is that we are at our very best as a society, when we
work together to advance the ability of people to care for one another, and that ought to be our
guiding principle before us as a bridge over indifference in our legislative pursuits for the health,
and well-being for all, along with needed human services and supports for people who rely upon
them for daily living in Minnesota and throughout our Nation.

Jesse Bethke Gomez, MMA is Executive Director of the Metropolitan Center for Independent
Living which is a member of the Minnesota Alliance for Ethical Healthcare.

Community Gathering: Housing and Land Use

Please join MCIL and Metropolitan Council for a community gathering regarding housing and land use. Share your unique perspective and vision for the future. Make a difference for your community!

If you are an adult with a disability, come share your vision for the future. Personal protective equipment, refreshments, and a gift card to say thank you for joining us will be provided.

The event will be held on Wednesday August 23rd from 9:30-11am at 530 Robert Street North, Saint Paul, MN 55101. Space is limited and registration is required.

To register, please contact the MCIL Covid Community Coordinator team at MDH@mcil-mn.org or the CCC Hotline 1-800-409-5594.

Event Flyer (PDF)

Let’s Connect: Public Health Emergency Ending – What happens next?

The public health emergency (PHE) ended May 11, 2023. This means changes for people in their benefits, waivers, caregivers, and access to COVID-19 tests, vaccines, and treatment. The Department of Human Services (DHS) and the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) will talk about these changes and what they mean for people with disabilities. This event is hosted by the Minnesota Consortium of Citizens with Disabilities (MNCCD), the Metropolitan Center for Independent Living (MCIL), and MDH. ASL interpreting and CART will be provided. Registration is free and open to the public.

Please find the CART in a word document format here: 5.31.2023 Let's Connect- CART

Please find the slide deck in a power point format here: Lets Connect 5.31.23 combined final deck

Agenda:

11:30 – 11:40: Welcome & Introductions (Alicia Munson, Arc MN and Rachel Garaghty, MDH)

11:40 – 12:00: Public Health System and the PHE Unwinding (Chris Elvrum, MDH)

12:00 – 12:20: Human Services and the PHE Unwinding (Dr. Nate Chomilo, DHS)

12:20 – 12:30: Legislative Updates (Alicia Munson, Arc MN)

12:30 – 1:00: Q & A from audience

Long Covid, the ADA, and Employment

https://mcil-mn.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/audio-Long-COVID-the-ADA-and-Employment.mp3

Please allow us to share with you the audio file on Long COVID, the ADA, and Employment that can be played in the above audio player.

Presented by Kate Murray and Cindy Tarshish on April 12, 2023.  Please find the PDF containing the slides that can be downloaded in the link below.

Long Covid PDF Slides

Please complete a short survey to help improve and inform future presentations.  Your feedback is valuable!

Survey

 

MCIL invited to White House Convening

MCIL Executive Director Jesse Bethke Gomez to participate in White House Convening

March 1 meeting is themed “Communities in Action: Building a Better Minnesota”

February 24, 2023, ST. PAUL, Minn.:  Metropolitan Center for Independent Living (MCIL) Executive Director, Jesse Bethke Gomez, MMA, has been invited to participate in a White House Convening, Communities in Action: Building a Better Minnesota at The White House on March 1, 2023. The event brings together leaders who are working on community-building efforts to find innovative, long-term solutions that address crucial issues facing communities to create opportunities and improve people’s everyday lives.

Bethke Gomez is attending the Convening at the recommendation of Administration on Disabilities Commissioner Jill Jacobs of the Administration for Community Living, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

MCIL has a well-earned reputation as a catalyst for tackling pressing issues impacting the disability community. The White House Convening provides an extraordinary opportunity for Bethke Gomez to share ways MCIL consistently brings together civic leaders, nonprofit organizations, academic innovators, community advocates, and others in pursuit of its mission of Removing Barriers, Promoting Choices in assisting people with disabilities in the Twin Cities seven-county metro area. With more than 240 employees, PCAs, and a wide range of services, programs, resources, and partnerships, it is among the largest Centers for Independent Living in Minnesota.

“It is an immense honor to be invited to participate in this important forum,” said MCIL Board Chair Beth Fondell. “MCIL and our partners have been working tirelessly to address the critical needs facing the constituency we serve. Being asked to share our insights, ideas, and efforts at this prestigious convening of leaders from across the country is tremendously rewarding. We are grateful for the opportunity to participate in this significant event.”

MCIL is currently working to bring sustainable, scalable solutions to address the expanding crisis within the PCA workforce. As our nation experiences the highest level of unfilled PCA positions in 40 years, and millions of Americans rely on PCAs as part of our overall nation’s healthcare platform, MCIL is leading the charge for meaningful change.

With a generous Community Innovation Grant from the Bush Foundation, and under Bethke Gomez’s leadership, MCIL brought together a team of four Minnesota State faculty and Valerie DeFor, Executive Director of Minnesota State HealthForce Center of Excellence, to develop a curriculum for a certificate program leading to the credential of a Certified PCA as a third voluntary tier in Minnesota’s PCA program. The program focuses on assessing a credit-based education leading to improved pay or career advancement and providing tiered credential options and career ladders for direct care and support professionals, and links to a PCA rate framework for an increased wage differential, based upon competitive workforce factors.

Most recently, MCIL initiated the "Pre-Launch" phase of a PCA College Service Corps pilot program. Diane Drost, a Minnesota disability advocate, along with Barbara Mace and Women Staying Strong, pushed for the need for a PCA College Service Corps for many years. Working with MCIL and HealthForce Minnesota, their collective efforts resulted in a grant to MCIL from The Margaret A. Cargill Foundation Fund at the Saint Paul & Minnesota Foundation. The pilot is managed by MCIL with input from the MCIL PCA College Service Corps Advisory Committee which includes individuals with the University of Minnesota; Minnesota State HealthForce Center of Excellence, Women Staying Strong; GUSU; and the Disability Services Division of the Minnesota Department of Human Services. The program is based on the AmeriCorps model and promises to transform the Direct Care Service industry.

The PCA College Service Corps pilot seeks to recruit 50 college students to receive an honorarium when serving as a paid PCA for a minimum of 10 hours per week over 30 weeks. The PCA Service Corps pilot plans to match the college student with an individual who is assessed at receiving 10 or more hours of PCA assistance per day and who direct their own care through Minnesota’s PCA Program, while also providing mentoring to college students during the 30 weeks. The pilot program sets the stage for college students to achieve success, creates a trained workforce ready to address current and future direct care service needs, and instills a renewed affirmation of the importance of service, dedication, and the hallmark of who we are as a civil society, namely, advancing the ability of people to care for one another.

“Thousands of individual’s dignity, civil rights, and fundamental rights are at stake,” stated Jesse Bethke Gomez, MMA, MCIL Executive Director. “Our nation is seeing a devastating decline in the PCA workforce. People with apparent and non-apparent disabilities and older adults are at the forefront of this crisis. Individuals’ needs are going unmet and, in some instances, with life-threatening consequences We are extremely proud to play a part in developing pioneering programs that will create scalable solutions to address the dire need while favorably impacting the lives of those receiving and providing direct care services. Working together, we need to change the arc of history for the better for all so that lives will be changed, and likely saved, today and for many generations in Minnesota and across our Nation.”

MCIL welcomes new members to its Board of Directors

February 17, 2023, ST. PAUL: The Metropolitan Center for Independent Living (MCIL) is pleased to announce that three new members have been appointed to its Board of Directors. The new members join the current eight-member board in providing oversight and strategic guidance to the non-profit organization with the mission of Removing Barriers, Promoting Choices in assisting people with disabilities in the Twin Cities seven-county metro area. With more than 240 employees and PCAs, and a wide range of services, programs, resources, and partnerships, MCIL is among the largest Centers for Independent Living in Minnesota.

New board members are:

Barbara A. Kleist, MEd, JD, FAAIDD. As program director for entrepreneurial and development programs at the University of Minnesota’s Institute on Community Integration focusing on state and federal projects to improve community services for children and adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities and their families. She is a Person-Centered Thinking trainer and trained in ToP participatory facilitation methods. She is also a member of the MN Disability Law Center Advisory Committee, WINGS MN, The Learning Community for Person-Centered Practices (TLCPCP), and chairs the Legal Process and Advocacy Network of the American Association of Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD). As a Minnesota-licensed attorney with 30 years of experience, her commitment to the civil and human rights of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities is grounded in her relationship with her sibling.

Ann E. Motl, Attorney. A product liability associate with Greenberg Traurig, LLP, Ms. Motl leverages her mechanical engineering background in her products liability practice, concentrating on the defense of complex medical devices. Ms. Motl is committed to advancing the profession through leadership and pro bono service, including representing clients in Social Security disability appeals. She founded the Minnesota Disability Bar Association, serving disabled legal professionals, including attorneys, judges, staff, students with disabilities, and nondisabled allies. And she has received numerous awards, including being a Minnesota Lawyer 2022 Diversity and Inclusion Honoree, and was recognized as one of the 2021 Minnesota Lawyer Up & Coming Attorneys.

Rachel A. Wobschall, Ed.D. CFRE. Ms. Wobschall has successfully managed high-performing teams across multiple sectors and is consistently chosen to lead governing boards in nonprofit and public sectors. She brings a proven record of effective executive leadership to her position as the planned and major gift officer at True Friends. Founded in 2013 as a successor to Camp Courage, which was established in 1955, the nonprofit organization provides life-changing experiences that enhance independence and self-esteem for children and adults with disabilities. True Friends programs serve more than 25,000 individuals annually and include camp, respite, retreats, team building, therapy and adaptive riding, and travel. Ms. Wobschall's academic accomplishments include an Ed.D. in Organization Development and Leadership, a Master of International Management, and a B.A. in Political Science, all from the University of St. Thomas. She holds a Certificate of Higher Education Management from Harvard University, is a Certified Fundraising Executive, and is a Policy Fellow at the Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota Rule 114 Alternative Dispute Resolution Training.

“We are thrilled to have and welcome this extraordinary group of professionals join our Board of Directors,” said Beth Fondell, MCIL Board Chair. “They each bring a demonstrated record of advocacy and action in addressing concerns within the disability community. Their diverse experiences and expertise are unified in a shared commitment to creating a more inclusive world where all people can thrive. We look forward to all they will contribute to our mission and continued service.”

“It is an honor to have this accomplished group of individuals contribute their time and expertise as members of the MCIL Board of Directors,” said Jesse Bethke Gomez, MMA, Executive Director of MCIL. “Their knowledge and insights ideally complement our dedicated Board of Directors and will further strengthen our work. I look forward to the journey ahead and what we can accomplish with their guidance as we continue to advance our mission and independent living with the disability communities MCIL assists.”

Primary Sidebar

Archives

  • May 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • February 2024
  • August 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • February 2023
  • July 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • February 2022
  • November 2021
  • July 2021
  • May 2021
  • January 2021
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • July 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • June 2019
  • March 2018
  • January 2018
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • July 2017
  • October 2016
  • June 2016
  • September 2015
  • July 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • July 2013
  • June 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • June 2012

Connect With Us

Footer

Contact Us

Metropolitan Center for Independent Living
530 Robert Street North
St Paul, MN 55101
Voice: 651-646-8342
Email: info@mcil-mn.org

Hours of Operation:
Monday – Friday 8 AM – 4:30 PM
(Services provided at the facility until 3:30 PM)

Facebook logoLinkedIn Logo
Live your most independent life, follow your path!

Copyright © 2025 · Metropolitan Center for Independent Living. All rights reserved.
Accessibility Statement · Privacy Policy · SMS Terms and Conditions · Sitemap
Built by Westwords