Amended in Assembly June 2, 2014

Senate Concurrent ResolutionNo. 120


Introduced by Senator De León

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(Coauthors: Senators Vidak and Walters)

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(Coauthors: Assembly Members Buchanan, Hall, Maienschein, Mansoor, V. Manuel Pérez, Quirk-Silva, and Rodriguez)

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May 14, 2014


Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 120—Relative to Year of the Community.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SCR 120, as amended, De León. Year of the Community: developmental disabilities.

This measure would proclaim the year of 2014 as the “Year of the Community,” and would declare that the Legislature will actively promote the rights of persons with developmental disabilities and their full inclusion into community life.

Fiscal committee: no.

P1    1WHEREAS, Forty-five years ago, the State of California enacted
2the Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Services Act, a bold
3new direction in public-private partnership that fundamentally
4changed and dramatically improved the quality of life for people
5with developmental disabilities and their families and that would
6become a model for the nation; and

7WHEREAS, The vision to enable people with developmental
8disabilities to live full, productive, and satisfying lives as active
9members of their communities was embodied in a statewide
P2    1network of community-based services and supports with regional
2centers playing the role of the coordinating hub; and

3WHEREAS, California’s first pilot regional centers for
4delivering servicesbegin insert and supportsend insert to persons with developmental
5disabilities, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, and San Francisco
6Aid for Retarded Children,begin delete which openedend deletebegin insert were establishedend insert in 1966,
7begin delete markedend deletebegin insert markingend insert the beginning of the regional center system; and

8WHEREAS, By their achievements, the pilot centers proved
9the merit of the regional center concept and led to the introduction
10of Assembly Bill No. 225 in 1969, which enacted the Lanterman
11Mental Retardation Services Act of 1969, which is currently known
12as the Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Services Act
13(hereafter Lanterman Act), and which established the statewide
14system of services for persons with developmental disabilities;
15and

16WHEREAS, The statewide system was designed to be organized
17at the regional level and to produce a dynamic network of local
18services and supports; and

19WHEREAS, The increased availability of servicesbegin insert and supportsend insert
20 in the community precipitated the state’s shift from nearly total
21reliance on large state institutions to a regional service system in
22which more than 99 percent of children and adults with
23developmental disabilities receive all of their needed services and
24supports in the community; and

25WHEREAS, The regional center system was intended to provide
26begin insert individuals with developmental disabilities withend insert services and
27supportsbegin delete to individuals with developmental disabilitiesend delete that are
28innovative and cost effective, that result in growth and
29development, that improve the quality of life, and that support
30inclusion into community life; and

31WHEREAS, During the decades following the passage of the
32Lanterman Act, the service system’s evolution was enabled by
33advances in knowledge and technology and by the increasing
34recognition of the right of people with disabilities to choice and
35full participation in society, including the rights of children to live
36at home with their families; and

37WHEREAS, The 21 regional centers in California continue to
38expand and diversify their services while serving over 265,000
39persons with developmental disabilities and their families; and

P3    1WHEREAS, The service system has grown increasingly
2complex, requirements for service providers have grown in
3sophistication, and expectations for services have become more
4rigorous due to advances in knowledge and technology; and

5WHEREAS, The 45th anniversary of the signing of the
6Lanterman Act is an appropriate time to reaffirm our commitment
7to the act, and renew our investment in the community system;
8 now, therefore, be it

9Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly
10thereof concurring,
That the Legislature hereby proclaims the year
11of 2014 as the “Year of the Community” and the beginning of a
12decade of renewed commitment to both the vision of the Lanterman
13Act and the investments needed to ensure a sustainable future for
14California’s community service system; and be it further

15Resolved, That the Legislature will actively promote the rights
16of people with developmental disabilities and their full inclusion
17into community life in California; and be it further

18Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of
19this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.



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