Late last year, Minnesota
began forming a new network to improve the lives of people with disabilities.
The DHS launched the CAN DO initiative (Collaborative Action Network
Developing Opportunities) with a series of meetings in October and
November, in which more than 500 people from around the state met to
think creatively about how to change our current systems for the better.
At these meetings, participants did more than brainstorm; they developed
action plans to address local priorities, such as employment, transportation,
and transitioning from school to adulthood. The local action plans
are focused on what can be done locally without major legislative changes.
Specific ideas to emerge included:
• Help local employers
and business owners understand the benefits of employing people with
disabilities
• Improve service delivery
through use of assistive technology
• Make sure people with disabilities and families have the information
and assistance they need
• Form coalitions of providers to establish direct-support training
for staff
• Ensure that schools, counties and vocational services begin transition
services early enough for young people with disabilities
• Improve the quality of services
CAN DO differs in many ways from previous initiatives
that have addressed the needs of people with disabilities. First,
CAN DO focuses on turning talk into action. Needed actions are defined—and action plans
are created—at the local level by people who attended the action
conferences and who will actually do the work. In some cases, that
work means connecting with other community members who didn’t
participate but who can contribute to the success of the action plan.
CAN DO is also unique in that
no single individual, organization or governmental entity “owns” the
CAN DO process. Each action team establishes its own goals in line
with its own local expectations.
The CAN DO Action Network is not a one-time thing. Regional action
conferences will be repeated next year. In addition, each action team
will report quarterly on its progress. This on-going communication
will help monitor and motivate effective collaboration across the state.
It is a process that welcomes surprise. Already, action teams have
moved forward in productive and unexpected ways.
Organizers see leadership and participation as critical to CAN DO’s
success. One of the key next steps in the CAN DO process is the work
of expanding the participation of people with disabilities and their
families, both in the existing action teams and during the 2008 conferences.
Steps will also be taken to build leadership capacity for individuals
who took responsibility for action teams.
For more information about
the process and projects, and to find out how you organization can
get involved, please visit the CAN DO project Web pages at www.dhs.state.mn.us/dhs16_139351