sahoo
06-03-2005, 04:12 PM
I have a daugter who will be 6 in august. Plannning to move to california in 2 months from Indiana. Can some body tell me what services are available .Iam open to any part of california.
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View Full Version : services in california
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sahoo 06-03-2005, 04:12 PM I have a daugter who will be 6 in august. Plannning to move to california in 2 months from Indiana. Can some body tell me what services are available .Iam open to any part of california. Sponsor Jana2676 06-05-2005, 03:32 AM There are regional centers in all parts of the state that handle services for people with disabilities. They can help you get services no matter where you move to. The larger cities have good services, school district programs, medical attention, support groups, etc. What part of CA are you thinking of moving to? We live in a rural area so many services aren't here yet. We travel to a university in Sacramento for medical services relating to autism. We are making progress locally with services, so its very hopefull. My child is a very hugh functioning child, so that makes it easier. If her condition was worse, we talked about moving to a better service area. IBGECKO 06-05-2005, 04:41 PM I live in Los Angeles, and my son has services from both Regional Center and L.A. Unified School District. I'd be more than willing to answer any questions you may have. I do agree, that the larger the city, the deeper the resources. What part of CA are you moving to? sahoo 06-05-2005, 07:18 PM Could you tell me what kind of services regional center and school districts provide.How intensive services are there.My daugter is mistly non verbal and therapists recommend intensive speech and ABA for her. She has sterted to make some progress in her communication.Here services are nil. In Indiana there is autism waiver but at present the waiting period is atleast 7 years.Is there any medicaid/ medi cal system. What does the families do for therapies and medical treatment there. As it is very expensive to do privately. Any help is apprecited . thanks IBGECKO 06-06-2005, 12:42 PM Regional Center will provide the ABA therapy for her. Contact them for an intake session as soon as possible, because it can take months to get through the red tape. Since she is school aged, Regional Center won't provide any speech for her. You'll have to duke it out with your school district over how much speech she gets. Schools tend to be stingy with the speech hours because they don't like to pull the kids out of class for more than an hour a week. If you feel she needs more than they are willing to provide, take her to a private speech therapist, and file for due process. If you are in a large school district, you stand an excellent chance of recovering any out of pocket speech expenses, as well as settling for a non public speech vendor for a set amount of hours at a mediation hearing. sahoo 06-06-2005, 06:34 PM How many hours a week they provide ABA .Also what about O.T. services. My daughter gets 90 minutes a week Speech and 40 minutes a week O.T. Iam strugling with school to get more O.T. as she has lot of sensory needs that hinders with her education.Do you know anybody who has gotten more speech with a non public vendor through school.What is the best area for school and regional center.Thanks IBGECKO 06-07-2005, 12:46 AM How many hours a week they provide ABA .Also what about O.T. services. My daughter gets 90 minutes a week Speech and 40 minutes a week O.T. Iam strugling with school to get more O.T. as she has lot of sensory needs that hinders with her education.Do you know anybody who has gotten more speech with a non public vendor through school. I can't answer how many hours of ABA Regional Center would provide, because my son was diagnosed with HFA/Asperger's when he was 7 and never had ABA. OT services are provided by the school. As with the speech, it will be up to your IEP team to determine how many hours she needs vs. how much pull out time is appropriate. Obviously, the higher functioning the child, the less they are willing to pull them out of class for services. My son has the minimum amount of pullout. He has 1/2 of speech and 1/2 hour of group social skills per week. I gave up OT so he could get the social skills. I do know people who have gotten non public speech, but I can't say that they got more speech through a non public vendor. I just don't know. What is the best area for school and regional center.Thanks I only know about the Los Angeles area, as I've lived here my whole life. Like I said before, L.A. Unified has miles of red tape, but very deep pockets. There are tons of school districts in Southern California, but I've learned how to play LAUSD's game over the years, so I'm sticking with them through high school. As far as Regional Center goes, we live in the north San Fernando Valley, and North Valley Regional Center is one of the best for services, especially if you have a high functioning kid like mine. Bottom line: I have found living in the San Fernando Valley to be very advantageous for getting my son the services he has needed over the past several years. |
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