• National Disability Radio: Alden’s AuDHD Journey
    Nov 14 2025
    Alden Blevins, the newest host of National Disability Radio, has a personal journey with autism and ADHD that has shaped her perspective on disability rights and advocacy. Alden was misdiagnosed with anxiety and depression as a child, and did not receive the correct diagnosis of autism and ADHD until her late 20s. Alden describes her experience navigating the workplace and healthcare systems as an autistic individual, emphasizing the challenges of “passing” as neurotypical and the importance of self-accommodating. We also discuss the evolving public perception and representation of autism, noting that while awareness has increased, the diversity of the autistic experience is often overlooked. When it comes to policy and advocacy, Alden highlights the need for greater autistic representation and input, as the perspectives of those with high support needs or who use augmentative communication are often left out of importangt onversations To recharge and find joy, the PodSquad turns to their interests, particularly music and pop culture, which play an important role in ever important their self-advocate self-care regime. To view or download the full transcript, click here. Michelle Bishop: How could we not talk about Taylor getting engaged and dropping a new album? Stephanie Flynt McEben: Yes. Oh my gosh. Michelle Bishop: Taylor, she understood the assignment and she was like, “The world needs me to bring them joy right now.” Stephanie Flynt McEben: Yes. Alden Blevins: Oh, absolutely. I’ve been totally enjoying some good escapism by entering into the Taylor verse, and that’s been helpful for my mental health as of late, so. Michelle Bishop: Maybe we should do our podcast. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Welcome to National Disability Radio. Alden Blevins: Let’s go ahead and do that. So I’m the newbie here in the mix today. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Yay. Alden Blevins: Yes. But I will welcome everybody to National Disability Radio and introduce myself and say that I am Alden Blevins. I am a new addition to the NDRN team. I started last year around November. Before that, I happened to work at the Virginia Protection and Advocacy organization, disAbility Law Center of Virginia for two years. So I have learned a lot from the PNAs in the disability community, and I’m super stoked to be here today. Michelle Bishop: Love it. Welcome. Alden Blevins: Yeah. Michelle Bishop: Stephanie, were you going to introduce yourself? Stephanie Flynt McEben: I was just going to say, Alden, we are super excited to have you as a producer and host. So yeah, we are super excited to have you with us on our pod squad team. But yeah, I’m Stephanie Flynt McEben and I am NDRN’s public policy analyst and I guess it’s one third now, one third of your podcast hosts. Michelle Bishop: One third, one third. I’m Michelle Bishop. I’m the manager for voter access and engagement, and I usually have to introduce myself first every single episode, so looking- Alden Blevins: Oh, wow. I didn’t mean to steal your thunder. I just wanted us to get into the mix. Michelle Bishop: And I know you’ve got hella professional experience, but also one of the things we highlight on National Disability Radio is also the lived experience of having a disability and why that is also as important and as valid and useful as the professional experience and data and that sort of thing. Alden Blevins: Absolutely. So I have my own experience with disabilities. I identify, as the kids say, AuDHD, meaning I both have autism and ADHD, and that has shaped so much about how I moved through the world. Other than that, some more lived experience I have is that I started my career out working in public education, which just happened to teach me a lot about the systems and the barriers that everyday people face. And in addition to my own lived experience with disability, my mom is also a power chair user. Sometimes she uses a walker. She uses various mobility aids. She’s had a disability for most of my life growing up, so while I bring my own perspective, I’ve also got a lot of experience with a different type of disability through my experiences growing up with my mom. Michelle Bishop: I’m sorry, did you call it AuDHD? I’ve never heard that before. That’s amazing. Alden Blevins: Yes. AuDHD. A-U-D-H-D. Michelle Bishop: Yes. I love it, I love it. We’re already learning new things. This episode is about you as our new pro host. So back us all the way up. Let’s let our listeners get to know you a little bit. Can you talk about your journey to joining NDRN? Alden Blevins: Yeah, absolutely. So like I mentioned, I did start out working in public education and from there I moved into nonprofit work first with the National Alliance on Mental Illness of Virginia. And then again with the Virginia PNA, the disAbility Law Center of Virginia. I feel like each step to getting to NCRN has been a new layer of experiencing how disability rights touches every ...
    Show More Show Less
    Less than 1 minute
  • National Disability Radio: And Then There Were 2
    Sep 10 2025
    Jack is going off to law school. So the gang sits down to reminisce on his time at NDRN, share a few stories from behind the scenes, and hear a joke from Stephanie that gets a good laugh out of us. Full transcript available at: https://www.ndrn.org/resource/ndr-august25/ Jack Rosen: Like we have any sort of agenda for today, so just sort of going to get what I get. Turn that into a podcast, I guess. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Sure. Michelle Bishop: And that’s different from any other episode because… Jack Rosen: It’s not, it genuinely, I guess is not, I suppose at some point we’d have a guest and questions we thought we should ask them. Michelle Bishop: Oh. Stephanie Flynt McEben: I’m the guest and I have the questions. I don’t know. Jack Rosen: I’m pretty sure you’re not the guest. Michelle Bishop: It’s fine. Stephanie Flynt McEben: I’m pretty sure Jack is the guest. Jack Rosen: I’m sort of the guest. Stephanie Flynt McEben: What? Michelle Bishop: Wait what? Stephanie Flynt McEben: This episode is for Jack, isn’t it? Jack Rosen: It would be very funny if we just made it the Stephanie episode, even though we’ve done like two of those. Stephanie Flynt McEben: No. That would make me feel like such a bad chicken nugget. Jack Rosen: Even though we’ve already done- Stephanie Flynt McEben: This is all about you. Michelle Bishop: We already did a Stephanie wedding episode. Jack Rosen: We did a whole one about you getting married. Stephanie Flynt McEben: We’ve already done a bunch of episodes about me doing chicken-nuggety things like, come on. Michelle Bishop: Oh, that reminds me. My mom wants to hear about the legally blind Uber driver. Stephanie Flynt McEben: I forgot that I slipped that into an episode. Michelle Bishop: Yeah, she’s still listening and she has some follow-up questions. Stephanie Flynt McEben: I love this. Michelle Bishop: Well pack might have to address that at some point. Jack Rosen: Well, Stephanie, do you want to address it? I mean, let’s give the people what they want, I guess. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Yeah, I guess we can give the people what they want. Michelle Bishop: Yeah, we have one listener, so we should probably follow up on that for her. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Yeah, no, that makes sense. And Carol, thank you so much for being a dedicated, loyal listener to this wonderful podcast. So I will give a slighter Cliff Notes version just so it doesn’t take up the whole hour. So I am waiting for a car outside of, I can’t remember which Metro stop it was, but I had to go get something, and so I just figured I’d take an Uber home from the Metro because that particular Metro was a lot easier to get a car and it would only be a 20-minute ride. Okay, fine. This is what I’ll do. And so I get out of the Metro station, I’m trying to find my driver or whatever, yada, yada, and I can’t even remember his name. Maybe we should just call him Bob for anonymity. I am bad at saying that too. But yeah, so Bob pulls up in some sort of Toyota of some sort and I get in the car and we start driving and I noticed that I’m hearing a lot more horns, but I’m just not thinking about it because it’s rush hour DC traffic. And then we started, he was like, “You know, I’ll be honest with you, I’m legally blind. I can only see out of one eye.” And I was like, “Oh, okay.” And I’m just trying to think of some of the things that he said, but he said different things that were essentially low vision, blind hacks or what have you. I’m trying to remember the specific hacks, but honestly, when he said, “I’m legally blind,” I was kind of like, “Huh, Jesus, take the wheel. Please get me home safe.” So it was a wild ride. No, that was not an intended pun but we can make it a pun. Jack Rosen: So you’re saying he might’ve had limited vision in the one eye? Stephanie Flynt McEben: Yeah, potentially. But, he said that he was only legally blind, he was legally blind or totally blind out of one eye, and then he could see out of the other eye just fine. Jack Rosen: You don’t sound convinced he could see just fine out of the other eye. Stephanie Flynt McEben: I’m not. I don’t want to say it. Jack has to say it. Jack Rosen: I don’t want to say it. Michelle, kick us off as always. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Yeah, Michelle, you do that. Yeah. Michelle Bishop: Why is it always me? Okay. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Because you’re such a good public speaker and I’m really sad right now. Jack Rosen: We’re already dealing with enough change. I don’t want to deal with more. Could you please kick us off? Michelle Bishop: On this very special episode of National Disability Radio, we say goodbye to our pro-host extraordinaire, Jack Rosen, who is leaving NDRN to go to law school. Yay, Jack. We need an applause. We’ve never had an applause. Can we- Stephanie Flynt McEben: I know I keep saying that. Oh my gosh. But seriously, Jack, we’re going to miss you so,...
    Show More Show Less
    32 mins
  • National Disability Radio: Senator Tom Harkin
    Jul 24 2025
    We wrap up our series on the battle for the passage of the ADA with none other than Senator Tom Harkin. Senator Harkin was the lead sponsor of the ADA in the Senate and has spent his career being a steadfast ally to the disability community. In this interview we talk to him about what that was like, where we need to go from here, and he even stumps us with a bit of disability rights trivia. Full transcript available at: https://www.ndrn.org/resource/ndr-harkin/ Michelle Bishop: Welcome back to another episode of National Disability Radio. This is the final in our series on the anniversary of the ADA. So before we jump into a very special guest that we have for you this episode, I am one of your podcast hosts, Michelle Bishop, the voter access and engagement manager at NDRN. Stephanie Flynt McEben: And I’m Stephanie Flynt McEben, public policy analyst here at NDRN, and another host, or one of our other hosts, for our podcast today. Michelle Bishop: Okay. Clearly taking his side, Stephanie. Clearly taking his side. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Okay. Okay. But Jack has proven that he is worthy of host, Michelle Bishop: Producer and pro host extraordinaire, please introduce yourself. Jack Rosen: Thank you, Stephanie. I appreciate the support. Hi, producer and host, Jack Rosen, here. Really excited about today’s episode. This guest has been at the top of our wish list for a while now, and we are so thrilled to have him on. So I suppose we want to just get into it. Michelle, why don’t you tell the folks that we have on today? Michelle Bishop: We’re really excited today to be talking to the honorable Senator Tom Harkin, who was so instrumental in so much of the early disability rights movement and passage of the ADA. In 1974, Tom Harkin was elected to Congress from Iowa’s 5th Congressional District. In 1984, after serving 10 years in the US House of Representatives, Senator Harkin was elected to the Senate and reelected in 1990, 1996, 2002, and 2008. He retired from the US Senate in January of 2015. I use the term retired loosely. He is still very active in the movement. As a young senator, Tom was tapped by Senator Ted Kennedy to craft legislation to protect the civil rights of millions of Americans with physical and mental disabilities. He knew firsthand about the challenges facing people with disabilities from his late brother Frank, who was deaf from an early age. What emerged from that process would later become his signature legislative achievement, the Americans with Disabilities Act. In September 2009, following the death of Senator Ted Kennedy, Senator Harkin became chairman of the Senate Health Education, Labor and Pensions, or as we know it, HELP Committee. Senator Harkin believed that to serve in this capacity was to carry on the legacy which helped lead to the passage of the Affordable Care Act. In 2015, Senator Harkin and Ruth Harkin establish the Harkin Institute for Public Policy and Citizen Engagement at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa to inform citizens, inspire creative cooperation, and catalyze change on issues of social justice, fairness, and opportunity. The institute works to improve the lives of all Americans by giving policymakers access to high quality information and engaging citizens as active participants in the formation of public policy. Senator Harkin, thank you so much for joining us today. Jack Rosen: So we’re sitting here today with Senator Tom Harkin for our series commemorating the 35th Anniversary of the passage of the ADA. This is Producer Jack Rosen. I am joined by my co-hosts, Michelle Bishop and Stephanie Flynt. And to kick things off, we wanted to ask you, one thing we’ve found when talking to some of the folks who were involved in the passage of the ADA is that they recalled that was quite a fight to get people with HIV, AIDS and mental illness, as well as substance use disorders covered at the time, especially being 1990 and there was a lot of stigmatization of people with HIV, AIDS. Could you talk a little bit about that fight and why it was important for you to make sure those groups were included? Senator Harkin: Well, yes, because we didn’t want to leave any element of a disability group out of the coverage of the bill, want to be comprehensive. You start carving out one group, then there’s somebody else will carve out somebody else and the thing falls apart. The HIV, AIDS thing came up because there was so much misinformation about AIDS and how people got it. And a lot of it, let’s face it, was based on homophobia at that time. And we had some purveyors in the country and in the Senate of that kind of discrimination. Former Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina is predominant among that. And so they tried to do whatever they could to carve out that portion of our populace. Well, we were successful in the Senate in keeping it out, but the House at the last minute added what was called the Chapman Amendment. Chapman was a congressman from ...
    Show More Show Less
    48 mins
  • National Disability Radio: Jim Dickson
    Jul 17 2025
    On part two of our series commemorating the fight for the passage of the ADA, we have on long time activist Jim Dickson. Jim talks with us about the challenges they faced in getting the ADA passed, what changes he’d still like to see, and surprises us with a fun story about a former guest and friend of the podcast. Full transcript available at: https://www.ndrn.org/resource/ndr-jim-dickson/ Jack Rosen: You know, Michelle, we feel like this part of your life is more mysterious. What was living in St. Louis like? Okay, started that wrong. I’m trying to just get you to give us some St. Louis trivia. Mysterious was the wrong choice of word there. Michelle Bishop: Mysterious? Is it the biscuit? Jack Rosen: I wanted you to talk about the spaghetti and chili. That’s what I’m trying to get to, and I didn’t know how to get there. Michelle Bishop: I don’t know anything about that. I don’t even know what you’re referring to. I do know there’s definitely fish fries every Friday, and it’s always fried catfish with a side of spaghetti, if that’s what you’re thinking of. And we invented toasted ravioli, and most things that matter, like ice cream cones were invented at the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis. And there’s St. Louis-style pizza, but it doesn’t have mozzarella on it. It has Provel cheese, which is I’m pretty sure only exists in St. Louis. And pretty much everyone has some sort of connection to Nelly or Nelly’s mom. That’s about it. Jack Rosen: You know what? I was thinking of Cincinnati. Michelle Bishop: Gotcha. I gave all that, and you were thinking of something from Cincinnati. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Is Cincinnati famous for its pizza? Michelle Bishop: Is Cincinnati famous for- Stephanie Flynt McEben: For anything? No offense to any Cincinnatians. Michelle Bishop: Shout-out to Disability Rights Ohio. We love you. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Yas. Michelle Bishop: Our bad. Our bad. I was just in Cleveland. It was cool. Do you not know Midwestern cities, Jack? Can you not tell them apart? Is it all the same to you once you get past like Buffalo? Jack Rosen: Well, then there’s Los Angeles on the other side of the country. Michelle Bishop: Hi. Welcome back to National Disability Radio. I’m Michelle Bishop, one of your co-hosts and the voter access and engagement manager at NDRN. Stephanie Flynt McEben: And I’m Stephanie Flynt McEben, public policy analyst, and also one of your hosts for this wonderful podcast here at NDRN. Michelle Bishop: And then we also have a producer, who’s just a producer. Why don’t you tell them hi, our producer? Jack Rosen: Hi, Jack Rosen here, one third of the podcasting team, as you know, a host. Michelle, do you want to tell the people who we have on today? Michelle Bishop: Yes. This is a continuation of our series on the anniversary of the ADA, and allow me first to say, Go ADA. It’s your birthday. Go ADA. It’s your birthday. Okay. I’ve been wanting to get that out since the last episode for the ADA, so thank you for humoring me. So this episode, we have Jim Dickson. He has over 30 years of experience with nonpartisan voter engagement work, particularly in the disability community. He served as the co-chair of the Civic Engagement and Voting Rights Committee for the National Council on Independent Living. He is a former vice president for organizing and civic engagement at AAPD, the American Association of People with Disabilities, where he led AAPD’s Nonpartisan Disability Vote Project, a coalition of 36 national disability organizations, whose mission was to close the political participation gap for people with disabilities, focusing on nonpartisan voter registration, education and get out the vote. He actually played a central role, along with the leadership conference on Civil and Human Rights, in passing the Help America Vote Act of 2002, and he was part of the leadership team, which passed the National Voter Registration Act, which you probably call Motor Voter. He’s the past chair of the board of advisors of the United States Election Assistance Commission, and prior to joining AAPD, where he was for a long time leading this work, Jim organized the campaign to place a statue of President Roosevelt in his wheelchair at the FDR Memorial and the National Mall in Washington, DC. He has a long history of grassroots organizing with multi-issue organizations all over the country. I know definitely in Rhode Island, Connecticut and also in California, so that covers three states Jack has probably heard of. And with the support of the Sierra Club, he organized the first grassroots congressional mobilization for the environmental movement, which resulted in the passage of the first Clean Air Act. So Jim has a long history of civil rights work and grassroots organizing, but if you know him, you probably know him for his leadership with the disability vote work. That’s how I know Jim, who’s actually been a mentor of mine for a ...
    Show More Show Less
    31 mins
  • National Disability Radio: Curt Decker
    Jul 10 2025
    To kick off our series highlighting the fight for the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act we have on NDRN’s founder and former Executive Director Curt Decker. Curt tells us about how the disability community came together to make sure no one was left out of the protections of the ADA and warns us about the downsides of helping getting major legislation passed in summertime in DC. Full Transcript available at: https://www.ndrn.org/resource/ndr-curt-decker/ Jack Rosen: I don’t know. I guess someone has to kick it off, right? Michelle Bishop: One of us should definitely be talking. How long have we been recording? Stephanie Flynt McEben: Like four seconds? I don’t know. It’s raining outside, y’all. It’s gross. Michelle Bishop: Are we just sitting here not recording? Jack Rosen: We’re recording. Stephanie Flynt McEben: No, we’re sitting here recording. We’re just not speaking. Michelle Bishop: Sitting here recording nothing? Jack Rosen: I guess- Michelle Bishop: We can’t put out dead air. Jack Rosen: We could. We could do a more experimental- Stephanie Flynt McEben: [inaudible 00:00:24] nothing and it’d be fine. Michelle Bishop: Experimental? Jack Rosen: Yeah, we could do a more experimental type of podcast. Maybe it’s like jazz, where podcasting is about the notes you don’t play. Is that what people say about jazz? Michelle Bishop: Is it? Just roll the opening. Welcome back to National Disability Radio. I am one of your hosts. Michelle Bishop, voter access and engagement manager at NDRN. Stephanie Flynt McEben: And I’m Stephanie Flynt McEben, public policy analyst with NDRN. Michelle Bishop: And our producer who keeps trying to sneaky call himself a host. Jack Rosen: Hi, producer and host. Really bit of everything. The workhorse of the podcast, if you will. Jack Rosen here. How are you doing folks? Michelle Bishop: Not the workhorse of the podcast. Okay. Okay, wait, so this is… We’re kicking off our ADA special? Jack Rosen: Yes. This is the first for our series of interviews with folks who were involved in fighting for passage of the ADA. And for this one, we have on an old friend. Michelle, you want to tell people who we have? Michelle Bishop: So for the very first in our series on the ADA, we actually have a good friend of the podcast, Curt Decker, who is actually the former executive director of NDRN. He actually founded the National Disability Rights Network in 1982 and led the organization for, what, 40 years? Yeah, yeah. About 40 years. Before that, Curt was actually the director of the Maryland Disability Law Center, which is the Maryland PNA. He was also the director of the Help Resource Project for Abused and Neglected Children. And was a VISTA worker prior to being a senior attorney for Baltimore Legal Aid Bureau. So Curt has deep roots in Maryland and the DMV and was our fearless leader for… Stephanie, were you here when… Did you- Stephanie Flynt McEben: I was very briefly. So I started in 2021, and then Curt retired in summer of 2022. Michelle Bishop: Okay, so every single one of us can say that Curt was once upon a time our fearless leader before Marlene Sallo took the helm of NDRN. So in addition to all that, Curt actually was instrumental in the creation and passage of the ADA and was on the White House lawn the day that it was signed. And he’s here today to tell us about that experience. Curt, did you go to Hamilton? Curt Decker: Yes. Michelle Bishop: I did not know that. Curt Decker: Oh yeah. That was so weird about my life. I grew up in Albany, went to Hamilton. I got accepted to Brown, but frankly, Hamilton gave me more money. So I went to Hamilton. Money was an issue. And then I ended up at Cornell for law school and took the New York bar, came down to Baltimore for one year as a legal aid attorney and never went back, and then… Never practiced law in New York, a total waste of time to take the New York bar and they still call me now to… Please, I’m long gone. Anyway. I did a couple things in Baltimore, got hired by Maryland Disability Law Center, [inaudible 00:03:37] it was called something else then. It was the very first iteration of the PNA system when it was only developmental disabilities. And then I helped… You know the story. I helped form the national association with a bunch of other execs around the country because there wasn’t anything. And then started going over to Washington because I was the closest guy there, maybe other than DC, and started representing at NAPAS it was called then, first as a volunteer, then as a paid consultant, then executive director. Michelle Bishop: What did you do when you were actually at the Maryland PNA? Curt Decker: I was executive director. I got hired. I was running a child abuse program for the state of Maryland. I knew people around. I got a call from one of my board members who was involved. She said [inaudible 00:04:23], “This new thing that just created by Congress called ...
    Show More Show Less
    47 mins
  • National Disability Radio: We Finally Did a Sports Episode
    Jun 27 2025
    After three years, Jack has finally gotten Stephanie and Michelle to do an episode about sports. And not just any sport, but golf. In this episode we sit down with Josh Basile, Andrew Mitchell, and Kate Strickland to talk about AdapTee Golf, what it means to reclaim sports as a person with a disability, and how to play the ninth hole at Sligo Creek Golf Course. Learn more about AdapTee Golf at: https://adapteegolf.com/ Learn more about Determined2Heal, Josh’s foundation focused on people with spinal cord injuries at: https://www.determined2heal.org/ Full transcript of this episode available at: https://www.ndrn.org/resource/ndr-june25/ Jack Rosen: So either of you watched the US Open this weekend? Stephanie Flynt McEben: No. Michelle Bishop: I did not. Jack Rosen: Well, that is an anticlimactic way to kick off this one then. For those who are interested in golf, J.J. Spaun won. It was his first major win. He sunk the putt on the last hole to be the only person over or under par at Oakmont. So that was very cool. And our guests on this episode would be interested in that and maybe no one else. Hopefully at least two of our listeners. Michelle Bishop: Jack, you open this episode talking about a golf tournament, you know full and well me and Stephanie don’t know anything about golf. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Where’s the cricket sound? I- Jack Rosen: But I guess you guys are about to learn quite a bit about golf, specifically adaptive golf. Michelle Bishop: That’s cool. We’re going to do the intro to the whole episode where we introduce ourselves or Jack is going like hella rogue today. Stephanie, how do you feel about this? Stephanie Flynt McEben: Yeah, I’m over here like, “Wait a second. We’re not good at” … I do appreciate the confidence in us, though. Michelle Bishop: I … Yeah, [inaudible 00:01:08] the episode. Stephanie Flynt McEben: What else are you going to do? Michelle Bishop: Don’t I kick off the episodes? Stephanie Flynt McEben: But this is probably the cold open. Michelle Bishop: You miss one or two episodes that get recorded when you’re traveling or so sue me that time my car broke down and now Jack’s just in here taking over the whole operation. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Man. Michelle Bishop: Wait, is this a cold open? Stephanie Flynt McEben: I figured it … I don’t know because we know nothing about golf, so I figured that Jack was just like … I don’t know. Michelle Bishop: Why don’t we ever talk before we record an episode? We could put some level of planning into this. I mean, obviously not for this episode, it’s too late now. Well, Jack, I have to say as our pro host extraordinaire that I think this month’s episode, this topic is truly your jam more than me or Stephanie will ever comprehend. So I think you have to tell the people what this episode is about this month. Jack Rosen: I’m excited. I finally did it. I finally got us to do a sports podcast. It has been years in the making and I am so excited that we got to do it for this sport, my favorite one, golf. Today, we have on Andrew Mitchell and Josh Basile and Kate Strickland with AdapTee Golf. They are here today to talk about this innovative, exciting way of playing golf for those who are physically unable to swing a golf club. Josh and Andrew invented it, which is pretty cool, and I am so excited to have them on today. I will let them introduce themselves. Josh, do you want to kick us off? Josh Basile: Absolutely, Jack. And Michelle, it’s so great to be here today. So my journey into paralysis started out two decades ago. I was on a family vacation at the beach in Delaware and turned my back to a wave. Wave picked me up and slammed me head first against the ocean floor. As an 18-year-old, I heard a loud crack and it was my fifth cervical vertebra bursting. And since then, I’ve been paralyzed below my shoulders. I was first on a ventilator, I was able to wean off that, and then was able to go through the different hospital systems and found my way home after about three months of hospitals. And when I did return home, even before my injury, when I was … Actually, the moment after my injury when I was pulled onto the beach, I remember my dad running down to the beach, my friends got him, and he looked at me and I was like, “Dad, what about our tea time tomorrow?” It was something that I was looking forward to all summer long just to be able to play with my dad. And he’s like, “Josh, we’re not going to be able to make this one.” But when I did return home, I always just had a dream of the game of golf and being able to play again, but physically, I couldn’t. So that’s just a little bit about me. Or the other thing I would share is I started a nonprofit and went through the vocational system in my state of Maryland, and ended up going from community college to undergrad to law school, and now I’m a practicing attorney for the last 13 years. So that’s a little bit about ...
    Show More Show Less
    Less than 1 minute
  • National Disability Radio: Spilling the Tea on All Things
    May 29 2025
    Congress? The budget? What’s the whole deal there? You asked, we brought someone on who answered! NDRN’s Deputy Executive Director for Public Policy Eric Buehlmann came on the podcast to explain what’s going on with the budget and how it impacts the funding NDRN and the Protection and Advocacy network receives. Full Transcript Available at: https://www.ndrn.org/resource/ndr-may25/ Tell Congress to Protect our Programs: https://secure.everyaction.com/I6avR5LSvUamWdNZNIgMew2 Jack Rosen: And Michelle, do you want to kick us off? Michelle Bishop: Are we recording? I’m totally sending a text message. Okay. Okay, I’m ready. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Well, now we have our whole… Blah. Now we have our cold open. Michelle Bishop: Of course we do work on these. We somehow put out an episode every month. Okay. Wait, wait, wait. Are we doing the opening for the whole episode or are we just getting our conversation with Eric started? Stephanie Flynt McEben: I thought we were doing the conversation with… Wait, I don’t care. Jack Rosen: I guess just with Eric. If we have time at the end, we’ll do an open and close, but here, I think I can- Michelle Bishop: I know, but I don’t know how to frame what this conversation is. It might be- Stephanie Flynt McEben: Like spilling the tea on all things. I don’t know. Jack Rosen: That will be the podcast title, but- Stephanie Flynt McEben: I love that. Michelle Bishop: Thank you. Jack Rosen: Just ask me who our guest is today and I think I can take it from there. Michelle Bishop: Okay, deal. *Intro Music Plays* Jack, tell the people who our guest is this month. Jack Rosen: So today, we have on Eric Buehlmann, NDRN’s director of public policy and Stephanie’s boss. He is here today to… Folks have a lot of questions about what’s going on with our funding. We’ve seen a lot in the news about proposed cuts to various programs that the P&A network supports, and folks within and throughout the network have a lot of questions about what’s going on right now. So we’re bringing in Eric Buehlmann, NDRN’s director of public policy, congressional insider, and expert on all things budgetary. Stephanie Flynt McEben: And fierce leader of the public policy duo here at NDRN, so yeah, Eric, if you want to spill some tea. Eric Buehlmann: Thanks for inviting me on today. So I feel overwhelmed by the introduction in terms of being a congressional expert on the budget, but it is a very confusing and hidden process in a lot of respects, but also very scary because as you all well know, our members, the protection and advocacy and client assistance programs depend on the federal funding to provide the great advocacy work they’re doing. I guess from the beginning, the president is supposed to propose a budget, and we haven’t really seen a full budget yet proposed. We have seen some things leaked which were very devastating to our network in terms of getting rid of what I call the mothership program or defunding the mothership program, the Protection and Advocacy for Developmental and Disabilities program, but also in the same breath, the voting program, and then also severely curtailing the mental illness program, PAMI. So that leaked budget was very scary, but is also one of those steps that most people don’t ever see. It usually takes place the year before, so in this case, this would have taken place in 2024. That kind of discussion between the Office of Management and Budget and the agency, Health and Human Services would have taken place. But because we have a new president that came in, those discussions were taking place earlier in 2025, but that’s also just one step. So the agency does get to push back on any proposal that they get from the Office of Management of Budget, and our understanding is that there was some pushback. We don’t know exactly what that pushback is, but that could mean that there aren’t defunding those programs. It could mean reductions in the amounts of cuts that existed. It could mean anything. Most recently, the president released what’s called a skinny budget, and that is usually what happens when a new administration, a new president comes in, because they haven’t been working on it for the last eight, 10 months. It’s hard to produce a 1,200-page document, 1,200 pages plus that the president’s budget usually is, so you get what’s called a skinny budget, which just has top line numbers. You can see the problems that may exist in those top line numbers with huge reductions in what they released in what’s called discretionary funding. That’s what’s done by Congress, and especially the non-defense side, which is where all our funding is. But you can see by just the sheer fact of a 23% reduction, which is just a massive reduction in that kind of funding, that that probably has a negative impact on our programs, but it doesn’t get down to the detail of those kinds of levels in terms of being able to know what ...
    Show More Show Less
    37 mins
  • National Disability Radio: Should Stephanie Get a Cat?
    Mar 31 2025
    This episode we had on Taylor Easley for Social Work Month. Taylor talks about her experiences earning a social work degree and how social work overlaps with the disability rights movement. Link to full transcript: https://www.ndrn.org/resource/ndr-mar25 Michelle Bishop: I’m not usually the recorder, so God knows. We’ll just start having a conversation and nothing will be recording. Jack, do not put this in the episode. That’s going to be in the episode. All right. Stephanie, do you want to get us started? Stephanie Flynt McEben: Sorry. Apparently Quinn found a cat on the side of the road that looks lonely and now they want to bring it home. Pray for me. Michelle Bishop: That’s your cat now, just so you know. Stephanie Flynt McEben: No. Michelle Bishop: This is how you get a cat. Nobody goes and buys a cat. A cat finds you. That’s how it works. Stephanie Flynt McEben: I know, and Quinn called me and is like, “I need to get it.” My wife, by the way, just for some context, Taylor. I’m like, “No, no, no. I mean, I guess if the cat looks lonely, you can bring the cat, but I don’t know.” I’m like, “Okay.” Michelle Bishop: Oh my gosh. Congratulations on your new cat, Stephanie. Stephanie Flynt McEben: I’m not ready for this. Michelle Bishop: So excited for your growing family. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Nope, nope, nope. Okay, perfect, perfect. Catastrophic. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Oh yeah, Stephanie likes puns. Michelle Bishop: Taylor, if you’re not ready for the bad puns, Stephanie is the queen of bad puns. That’s the other thing you have to know. Taylor Easley: I’m ready for them. Stephanie Flynt McEben: They are puntastic. Wait, are we recording or no? Michelle Bishop: Oh, we’re totally recording. Stephanie Flynt McEben: Oh, schnitzel face. Well, Jack, you’ve got your cold open, don’t you? Stephanie Flynt McEben: Alrighty. Well, Taylor, thank you so, so, so much for being on today’s podcast. Before we get into your experience at the P&A, would love to just hear a little bit more about your background and how you got into this work and what brought forth your passion to this work. Taylor Easley: Yes. First, thank you so much for this opportunity for me to be on the podcast and hear my story. I’m very grateful and humbled. Taylor Easley: My name is Taylor Easley. I have a masters in social work from Virginia Commonwealth University. How I got into this work is that, well, one, I always loved helping people. I used to volunteer at a nursing home when I was in high school, so me helping people isn’t new to me, and when I got into school, I fell in love with social work and I ended up doing multiple internships between undergrad and grad school before working at the P&A of working in the disability community. Some were working in the group home, some were working in a group setting and some have even have been working in policy. Taylor Easley: In my senior year of MSW program, I ended up working at the P&A system and working at Disability Law Center of Virginia and that’s where I really fell in love with disability and disability rights and that’s one of the biggest steps of why I am here today. Stephanie Flynt McEben: That’s amazing. Thank you so, so much for sharing that. And it’s so interesting how so many of us, it’s been a very common theme from this podcast in terms of talking about how individuals with disabilities and without disabilities have just stumbled into this field in a lot of ways by happenstance. So no, thank you so much for sharing. Stephanie Flynt McEben: I know you pointed out your experience at the P&A as an intern. Would love to hear a little bit more experience about that and how that’s propelled you forward in your current career aspirations. Taylor Easley: I started as an MSW intern there at the P&A system, Disability Law Center of Virginia. It was a great experience. I learned a lot. I actually improved in my writing there. I learned what it really meant to really advocate for people with disabilities on a macro level. In social work we have the macro, mezzo, micro, well, I’m saying it wrong. We have three different levels in social work. One is working with clients one-on-one, the other one is working in groups in the community, and the last one, the biggest level, macro, is working in the community at large, but systemic policy level. And that’s what I got to do a lot at the Disability Law Center of Virginia. Taylor Easley: I would write articles. Actually, one of my first articles I wrote was about cerebral palsy. I have cerebral palsy myself, so that was definitely a way to honor people with cerebral palsy, but let them also know about the P&A system in a way. Taylor Easley: I was able to go on monitoring visits and actually be in the community and see how people with disabilities need help. I was on phone calls, I was in different types of meetings that they had and that was all as an intern. I later applied for the ...
    Show More Show Less
    29 mins