site.btaFunding Needed for Personal Assistance Is Being Estimated - Ombusdman
Sofia, June 15 (BTA) - Financial estimates are being made to determine  the cost of the Personal Assistance Bill, National Ombudsman Maya  Manolova and representatives of protesting mothers of disabled children  told journalists Friday. They took part in meetings with Labour and  Social Policy Minister Bisser Petkov and experts from his ministry,  aimed at discussing the Personal Assistance Bill proposed by Manolova  and the People with Disabilities Bill drafted by the Labour Ministry  together with representatives of people with disabilities.   
 
 The meetings will continue until Tuesday, when a sitting of the National  Council for Integration of People with Disabilities will be held. 
 
 The Labour Ministry does not have data on the needs of the various  groups of people with disabilities who require personal assistance, and  this makes the estimates of the financing needed approximate, Manolova  said. These people total 80,000 at present, or 77,000 when  institutionalized persons are excluded. According to the mothers of  disabled children, the people with the most serious disabilities - those  who receive a social pension and cannot work - total 10,000. 
 
 The easiest thing to do is estimate an average sum and hours of care per  person, but this is not the purpose of the Personal Assistance Bill and  not what the mothers of disabled children want, because while one  person needs constant assistance, another needs several hours, Manolova  went on to say. The bill envisages a maximum aid of one and a half  minimum wages.
 
 The Labour Ministry is also working on a Social Services Bill at the  moment, Manolova recalled, adding that it is unclear how such  legislation can be drafted when it is not known what the disabled  persons' needs are.
 
 The protesting mothers said that at present, the social assessment is  conducted over the phone, without a meeting in person. According to  them, everywhere in Europe there is a methodology for social assessment  and the Labour Ministry has only to introduce it to make things work.  They also said that their tent camps will not be removed until the  Personal Assistance Bill is adopted. 
 
 Kapka Panayotova, head of the Centre for Independent Living and member  of the working group tasked with drafting the People with Disabilities  Bill, told reporters that the Labour Minister should receive publicly  the Prime Minister's support for the bill. What is needed is a political  decision to guarantee the disabled persons' social inclusion, not  cosmetic amendments to the law currently in force, she argued. The  people with disabilities want this policy to be carried out not by the  Social Assistance Agency but by a disabilities agency to which any  disabled person in need of social assistance could turn.
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