Week 14 Update

  1. HHS announces plan to build a registry of autistic people. This week, the HHS announced plans to use private health data, from medical records down to wearable smart tech, to create a government registry of autistic people. The announcement sparked privacy concerns and comparisons to the 1939 registry for disabled children as part of T4, a program for the mass murder of 300K+ disabled people across occupied Europe.

    Several state-level autism databases already exist for research and resource purposes, as do other condition-specific registries; however, participation in those is voluntary.
    Limited reporting Friday stated that due to public outcry, the NIH is walking back registry plans and investing in other unspecified research, but nothing official from RFK yet (as of late Friday, 4/25).

    Update: as of 4/26, reports of an emailed statement from an unnamed HHS official are here. The email states that there will be no “registry” and instead researchers will draw from limited data sets.
  2. Actual autism-related research defunded. In last week’s diatribe against autistic people, RFK Jr. had vowed to find the cause of autism by September. NIH later moved back the timeline. However, other grants for longstanding autism research have been cut, including:

    National Science Foundation grants featuring the words “accessibility” and “inclusion,” like one for the Frist Center for Autism and Innovation, which included work by autistic scholars.

    The federal government’s Autism Research Program (ARP) omitted from 2025 appropriations.

    Other NIH grants and programs continue to be delayed and cut as remaining employees parse through unfinished projects after many workers have been laid off.
  3. RFK Jr. expands eugenic hit list, says disabilities are, “bankrupting our nation.” RFK’s quote: “Neurological disorders–ADD, ADHD, speech delay, language delay, tics, Tourette’s syndrome, narcolepsy, ASD ….All these are injuries I never heard of when I was a kid… There was $0 spent in this country treating chronic disease when my uncle was President. Today it’s $1.8 T annually. It’s bankrupting our nation….juvenile diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, Crohn’s disease, were just unknown when I was a kid.”

    RFK also said the diagnosis uptick endangers the nation because fewer qualify for military service.

    Most conditions listed were discovered at the turn of the 20th century or before. However, disabled people were often institutionalized or lobotomized, decreasing their visibility, (especially in rich people circles like RFK’s).

    Disabled people “draining society” is a eugenic talking point, and The word “injury” to describe disability and autism is also an antivax dog whistle.

    His press conference was supposed to be about banning synthetic food dyes, which he did not do.
  4. DOGE already has access to sensitive HHS data. While autistic people and allies rightfully sounded the alarm on the invasion of privacy that a national autism registry could bring, DOGE already has access to at least 19 of HHS’s systems, some of which contain sensitive information, and typically require specific specialized training before use.

    Some of the systems are: Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS, CALM), CMS’s Integrated Data Repository Cloud (contains patient info), several grant processing and personnel management systems, the Unaccompanied Alien Children portal, and accounting and payment systems across HHS, NIH, and CDC.
  5. Supreme Court to hear case that could gut ADA/504 protections. Next week, SCOTUS will hear arguments related to the case A.J.T. vs. Osseo Area Schools. The case examines whether a disabled person must prove a party acted, “in bad faith or gross misjudgment” to claim their rights were violated.

    The case, about accommodations for a disabled student, was originally narrow in scope and focused in K-12 ed, but the most recent brief makes clear the intent will be to apply the interpretation to the ADA and Rehabilitation Act more broadly.

    Having to prove malicious intent in order to access basic accommodations will further gut the ADA/504 in an already hostile DOJ oversight. Does this building not have a ramp? Well, as long as they aren’t doing it to be mean! *shrug*…..
  6. Executive Order, “Reinstating Common Sense Discipline in Schools” From the order: “The Federal Government will no longer tolerate known risks to children’s safety and well-being in the classroom that result from the application of school discipline based on discriminatory and unlawful ‘equity’ ideology.”

    The White House seeks to roll back trauma-informed and anti-racist educational practices currently in place to address disparities in the biased application of disciplinary policy (e.g. children of color getting punished more frequently and harshly for the same behavior as white children.)

    The removal of equitable discipline practices will be dangerous for children of color, disabled children, and especially those at the intersection of those identities.
  7. Deaf and Disability Studies programs shutter while Gallaudet begins layoffs.
    Across the country, deaf education TOD programs, and deaf/ disability cultural programs are being shut down. The deaf ed programs have likely lost funding due to cuts at the Dept of Ed’s Office of Special Education, while cultural “area” studies have been targeted by a variety of Trump’s anti-DEIA orders.

    Deaf Education programs cut: University of Minnesota–Duluth, Utah State University. Deaf ed at Columbia University Teacher’s College has also been defunded through the Trump takeover there.

    Deaf Studies: University of Maryland–College Park, University of Montevallo, University of Nebraska, Ithaca College.

    Disability Studies: University of Toledo

    ASL Interpreting Programs: Columbia College–Chicago, University of Texas–Houston

    Gallaudet also announced layoffs on the executive team and comms office, while others took pay cuts. Gallaudet Pres. Cordano continues to downplay growing concerns about the future of the university without its DoED liaison.
  8. Texas v. Becerra lawsuit continues. Despite recent “clarifications” from HHS about the how mention of gender dysphoria in Final Rule’s preamble is not legally binding, involved parties have not revoked their original filing, which explicitly asks for 504 to be declared unconstitutional (p 37-42).
  9. 504 protects disabled people’s rights in all spaces that receive federal funding, and would have major implications in conjunction with rescinding of ADA guidance, the uncertain future of DoEd, and a separate suit going before SCOTUS next week.
  10. A stay has been issued, and parties are now required to update every other month, with the next due June 21st.
  11. The FBI arrests a sitting judge, Attorney General Bondi threatens more. The FBI arrested WI judge Hannah Dugan on charges of obstruction. They say Dugan allowed an immigrant to use a side door typically only for the jury, in order to avoid detainment by ICE.

    US Attorney General Pam Bondi promised that Dugan’s arrest is just the beginning. “We are sending a very strong message today: If you are harboring a fugitive, we don’t care who you are, if you are helping hide one, if you are giving a TdA member guns, anyone who is illegally in this country, we will come after you and we will prosecute you. We will find you.”

    The judge was not giving anyone a gun. The immigrant in question had been at the courthouse due to a misdemeanor.

    The arrest is a marked turn in the disintegration of Constitutional rule, ushering in an era of ideological-based arrests.
  12. Do not comply in advance (good news). Judges issued a series of blows to Trump’s anti-DEIA agenda within the K-12 sector, with two judges blocking, and one postponing the implementation of various anti-equity policies within public school settings, calling them too vague, and unconstitutional.

    The number of school districts and states standing up to the administration on this issue continues to grow, and under forceful pushback, the administration typically folds (see: Harvard). The federal government has never had control over individual states’ or districts’ curriculum choices.
  13. Action: Share this info. Disability is often lost in mainstream coverage.

    Call your Representative and continue to make noise about the HHS’s eugenic rhetoric and practices.

    Call your Senator and tell them to take meaningful action against illegal deportations and ideological-based arrests.

    Contact your school board and state’s education officials, and tell them not to comply with baseless anti-DEI directives. Tell your universities you value deaf and disability studies programs!

    If your state is involved, contact your Attorney General and ask them to withdraw from Texas v. Beccera. Tell them you stand in solidarity with disabled people, and trans folks.

    Consider how to move toward creative acts of mutual aid, and protest, including offline materials. Make flyers! Call out misinformation. Warn your neighbors in the presence of ICE. If able, donate or volunteer with your local food pantry or library.