The first step for Al was to organize parents to pool their concerns and resources. PLAN was the vehicle.
One of PLAN's earliest breakthroughs was its shift from the question most parents came in with–"What will happen when I die?"–to distilling their insights about what makes a good life now and later. That refocus helped PLAN to synthesize what families were telling them and sort out the role various programs and services should have in the lives of relatives with disabilities. The answers, which shape PLAN's work, are relationships, home, choice, contribution, and (sufficient) wealth.
The need for estate planning remained, and Al has addressed it within the design of PLAN. While PLAN itself does no financial planning, it gives seminars to lawyers and financial planners on disability law, better preparing them to serve families with disabled relatives. And while PLAN does not receive a fee for referring parents to those lawyers and financial planners, it does charge a fee for the training, a win-win for all parties. Parents receive more informed advice, lawyers and financial planners tap a new customer base, and PLAN generates revenue. From the beginning, Al has been committed to being independent from government funding in order to press for change without fear of consequences and to avoid entanglement in the insecurity of government funds and all the conditions that are required to access them. PLAN does not require tithing from its members, but 60 percent of its operating budget currently comes from parents. Its self-reliance has forced it to be entrepreneurial–a challenge that Al sees as the hardest part for new groups who adopt PLAN's approach. He has built savvy bridges with business, gathering support from money to media coverage that reaches audiences PLAN's newsletter never could. For its part, PLAN offers corporations membership for their employees who have disabled family members as part of employee assistance programs. It also links businesses and professionals with the substantial market in the disability community–for products, legal services, and insurance.
Examination of a "good life" leads directly to the question of how to get there. Since relationships are central, PLAN developed its own strategy for forming what it calls Personal Networks. The networks were inspired by the "Joshua Committee" that began in Ontario in 1980 to break down the walls (hence the Joshua reference) between Judith Snow, who was then living in a wheelchair in an institution, and a full and active life in her community. PLAN contracts with facilitators with broad community connections to find people who share interests with the disabled person. The Personal Networks usually number about 10 people including some family members, who commit to be part of the disabled person's community for her lifetime, with PLAN's support when necessary as a guarantee. The networks have changed people's lives: a disabled person takes a first camping trip or enjoys walks or baseball games or just sitting with companions. One man grooms the horses of his network member. The impact extends to the nondisabled members of the network, who typically resist being labelled "volunteers," though they do volunteer their time.Some barriers require policy and institutional change. The most fundamental shift to date has been about guardianship, and Al's role in that legislative reform is suggestive of how he might approach the other obstacles he has already identified. In February 2000, British Colombia proclaimed laws that expand the legal definition of capability beyond intellect to include factors like an ability to show "feelings of approval and disapproval," or "demonstrate choice and preference," and to recognize trusting relationships as an alternative to guardianship. It opens critical new possibilities for people with disabilities. While an individual with intellectual disabilities could not, under this legislation, designate PLAN to act on her behalf, the law in effect gives legal status to members of Personal Networks whom she asks to act as her representative. No other jurisdiction that uses British Common Law has taken this step to legitimize relationships as an alternative to guardianship, though others are looking at it.
Al was one of the leaders throughout the long struggle to secure the legal change. He developed the proposal to fund it and was one of three people who formed the coalition to support it that included parents of sons and daughters with disabilities, people with HIV/AIDS whose partners often had no legal status to support their decisions, seniors who want their relationships of trust to be acknowledged without having to go to court to prove them, and even members of the Alzheimer's Society, who generally favor more rather than less legal protection.
PLAN's commitment to choice as a quality of a good life is directly related to its concept of citizenship and the limitations posed to it by guardianship for disabled persons. Al believes that citizenship will be the next focus for the disability movement, and he invites coalitions, groups, and individuals interested in constructing the definition of a citizen to join in the conversation in a new PLAN initiative, Philia, a Dialogue on Citizenship (www.philia.ca).
Al is also pursuing a shift from government block funding of agencies to funding on an individualized basis to families and disabled persons, thus increasing freedom of choice. If PLAN achieves this goal, will be creating new territory that people will be exploring for decades. Encouragement of policies and funding that would support home equity and co-op housing for disabled citizens is another part of PLAN's agenda, as are reforms in tax and trust regulations. Al wants the tax system to acknowledge the financial support families regularly offer their relatives with disabilities. He would like disabilities benefits moved from welfare departments, with their indelible stamp of dependency, to the pension apparatus of government. Further, in light of the demographics, Al anticipates a catalytic role for PLAN in an overdue conversation between policymakers for disabled persons and senior citizens.
PLAN is an idea whose time is now. In early 2002, its membership included more than 100 individuals and their families as full, lifetime members, each with a personal network that PLAN is committed to sustain for their lifetime. PLAN supports over 4,500 families in B.C. with advice and information. There are seven affiliated groups across Canada, one in the U.S., and conversations have begun with parent groups in Australia and the UK. Al receives many requests from groups both in B.C. and internationally to share the PLAN approach and travels frequently to spread the work and coach burgeoning groups.PLAN has defined the critical elements that it requires for others who want to use its name and approach. Replicas must maintain the core commitments to relationship, citizenship, self-sufficiency (independence from government funding), and family direction. Bylaws require parents to constitute more than 50 percent of each board of directors.
Two areas figure prominently in Al's vision of future impact and his own role in it. First, he sees enormous potential for parents to be economically empowered to negotiate with the federal service system by combining their financial resources. He envisions an investment pool combining the trust funds that a sizeable coalition of parents have set up for their children. A conservative estimate is that there are 5,000 such families in B.C. alone with a cumulative trust wealth in excess of $500 million. The pool would allow sharing of wealth with poorer families and allow the family lobby to approach policymakers, not on bended knee but as a partner with purchasing power. PLAN will not be a recipient of the funds but an advisor to trust and fund managers.
Second, Al sees PLAN as a prototype for other nonprofits in the future. On one hand, it offers a vibrant organizational example with its diversified funding, the social audit it has instituted to be sure it stays in line with its values, and its actively groomed leadership; it has seen two smooth transitions and has three-deep responsibility in most programs. On the other hand, it has programs that are applicable to interest groups outside the disability community. PLAN has been working with the aboriginal community, senior caregivers, and the brain-injured community; it has been asked to assist the mental health community; and the authors of a book to assist women with high-risk pregnancies have asked Al's permission to model their book after his two publications about PLAN's approach.