Open Letter to NZ Prime Minister: Jacinda Ardern10 April, 2018 Dear Jacinda, I didn’t expect to be here. To be honest, I don’t think any mother expects to join this club that I’ve found myself in. You see, I was just like you once. I was at the top of my career eagerly awaiting my scans to know everything was okay with the miracle I had growing inside of me. I remember that first feeling when she moved and how I’d lie awake at night imagining the fun we’d have together. The family adventures we’d go on, the friends she’d make, answering all those silly questions kids have about life. When I was 6 months pregnant I saw a child screaming and hitting his mother while I was out shopping. The mother spoke calmly and asked if he wanted to leave. I couldn’t believe she didn’t even discipline him for acting like that! I knew I’d never be a bad parent like her, when my child was born. At this stage of my pregnancy, I was just like everyone else. Piper came in to the world unexpectedly with my water breaking on 1/1/11 and before we knew it, she was almost 2 years old. Suddenly, as if someone flipped a switch, she became lost inside herself. She stopped copying words, could no longer grip a spoon, and started crawling instead of walking. It’s a feeling you can’t describe when your gorgeous, perfect child goes from hitting all their milestones to hitting themselves and others. When you try and catch their head before they slam it against a concrete floor while expressing ear piercing screams of pain for hours, for what seems like no reason at all. People stare and make snide comments behind your back assuming you just have a brat as a kid and I'm a bad parent. The close friends you have slowly disappear, and your antenatal group no longer invites you to play dates. Not because they don’t want to, but because your child is constantly unsettled and it’s probably easier for you that way. Your whole life slowly starts to fall to pieces and you’re left wondering how you even got here. The hardest part of motherhood though, was when I officially received Piper’s diagnosis of Autism. We immersed ourselves in education unlearning everything about parenthood we knew. We enrolled in various workshops and met others who were on their own journey through the spectrum. But no one could prepare us for what would happen once our daughter turned 5 years old and we needed to think about where to send her to school. At 5 years old Piper was still in nappies, had violent outbursts, would strip all her clothes off when she became overwhelmed, was a flight risk, couldn’t communicate, and was not only a danger to herself, but other students and teachers as well. We were extremely lucky to receive high ORS (Ongoing Resource Scheme) funding, but people who had never met her only allocated 10 hours of support a week. This was inadequate for Piper and the school, given there are 30 hours in a school week. She couldn’t self-manage the other 20 hours… The school had try and find funds to make up the difference when my daughter first started due to the severity of her needs. We sought a review of our ORS countless times but were denied. Eventually, I was forced to leave the career I worked so hard to achieve. The financial implications to our household has been drastic. With only 10 hours of support for Piper, and no after school or holiday programs in Tauranga for children with special needs, it was impossible for me to continue my career. A million questions go through your head when you find out you’ve moved in to the special needs parent club. You try to figure out how it happened, only to realize it doesn’t matter because you can’t change the past. The only thing you can do, is focus on the future and that is why I’m writing you today. Since April is Autism Awareness month, I wanted to explain what life is like when you become a parent to a child with Autism. Most of all though, I wanted to talk to you, mother to mother so you can put yourself in our shoes, as you eagerly await the birth of your first child. Truth is, there are 65,000 kiwis on the autistic spectrum and more being diagnosed every day, and with estimates being 1 in 4 students need some sort of support in school, the chances of experiencing this first hand, is pretty high. I’ve seen some massive flaws in the system that should be addressed, not just for children with autism but for any child that needs additional support. I understand how impossible it must be to try and splice limited funds in such a way to please every needy group, however ‘children’ were a central focus to your campaign, as they should be for every voting New Zealander. I’m tired of the blame game between a National led Government and a Labour led Government, only to find our pleas for help become a publicity stunt with the children of New Zealand paying the price. We must unite, to bring material change to life in a way that will matter.
“Only a Labour Government can deliver the resources that schools and parents are crying out for and we plan to invest an additional $4B in education”
http://www.labour.org.nz/labour_s_positive_education_plan “I say there are clear signs of a government that has its priorities all wrong. Labour will redirect funding to frontline staff working directly with schools and children. Every child in New Zealand deserves to get the support they need so that they can succeed in education. They aren’t getting it under National, they will get it under Labour.” http://www.labour.org.nz/parata_in_denial_over_special_education_crisis “Re-carving the same size pie amongst a growing number of needy kids will simply result in more going hungry. It’s time the National government woke up to the damage their underfunding is doing to kids’ lives and futures.” http://www.labour.org.nz/slash_and_burn_of_special_education_support "Our goal is to uncap the ORS funding and make sure that every child in our schooling system has a right to learning support that they need and that schools are supported properly, and that those who work in our schools as teacher aides are supported and funded properly and actually have pay equity within the system they are working in." https://www.newsroom.co.nz/2017/09/06/46460/labour-would-restructure-work-and-income#
If Schools have a legal obligation to create a truly inclusive education system, what funding model is required to achieve the dream?
As a business consultant, I learned that the school my daughter attends is under huge financial duress due to the current model. It is a Decile 2 School, with a role of 390 students from over 12 different cultural backgrounds and experiences a wide range of socio-economic disparity. It also has arguably one of the highest number (24) of ORS funded special education students in the country in a mainstreamed school, in addition to High Health, RTLB and special education and behavioral support requirements etc. The school’s success in assisting their ORS funded students, (to which they refer to as their ‘treasures’ because they have added so much joy to their school) is actually sinking them! With their deficit this year totaling $-118,482.26. They follow their legal obligation of providing an inclusive education to all children, never closing their doors to a child with special needs, while other schools find ways to manage these high need, ‘expensive’ children by expelling them for disruptive behavior, forcing many parents out of work and in to homeschooling. I'd like to talk to you about the numbers: It’s my understanding a school receives $18.47 per hour before the deduction of GST, holiday pay, sick leave and ACC leaving $15.90 as the actual per hour cost allocated (less than the new minimum wage). Although the funding rate hasn’t changed in many years, Teacher Aide rates increase every year widening the funding gap between what schools receive to pay for teacher aides, and what they need to pay in teacher aide salaries. Many schools top up the funding gap by using their Operational Grant, or even fund-raising via their parent support groups, but that still isn’t enough to cover the deficit at my daughter’s school. The average teacher aide wage at my daughters’ school is $19.47 per hour due to the specialist skills some students require, leaving an average deficit of $-3.57 per hour, per student. Paid over 45 weeks of the year, including holidays for their large team of Teacher Aides. This means the school will have the deficit of $-118,482.26 to meet their commitments for their students who require additional support over and above the allocated funding this year. This school has truly become victims of their own success, with my daughter proudly one of their success stories. In the two years she has been supported by this school, the change has been drastic. My once angry, non-verbal child no longer takes her clothes off in public, and can be found each morning on the school radio, or singing songs at assembly. She is obsessed with Maori culture and participates in Kapa Haka and has most recently joined the schools singing group. The school participates in RDA (Riding for the Disabled) and she can be found at the top of their website demonstrating her sweet and loving nature, and is an example of how drastically a child can improve when fully supported by an inclusive education system. As much as my daughter learns from the other students, they also learn from her and understand that we are all different, but all special in our own ways. Since this school is so successful at polishing its treasures so their individual brilliance can shine, they are now attracting more and more children who require learning support. Parents have heard about this school and have started to move into the school zone so that their special needs children can attend. In some cases, they only bring their ORS children which increases the financial burden even further. Solution I know there probably isn't a golden bullet to solve this, but if we continue to do the same things and expect a different result, then we are mad. I would love to see a task-force established that includes representatives from finance, principal's from especially affected schools such as the one mentioned above, teacher aides and a couple of parents like myself. As a business consultant, I’m used to looking for new models to solve old problems and I’d be willing to work with you and others to get the job done! Please let me know when it would be convenient to meet with you so we can truly start to work together and make the difference that was at the heart of your campaign. I look forward to hearing from you. Yours Sincerely, Erika Harvey (Piper’s Mum)
42 Comments
4/9/2018 06:09:07 pm
Erika
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Terri steyn
4/9/2018 06:13:57 pm
Erika my beautiful friend. What an inspiration you are!
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Doug Lawrence
4/9/2018 07:13:53 pm
This is a true test of your Prime Minister Character. Thank you for your inspirational open letter. If your Prime Minister should personally take on this matter as her personal goal - she will have a long political career. If not, she's just another politician. Best of luck Erika and Piper!
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Ericka I am a mum with a boy on the spectrum and we are having issues aswell with funding and with being in main stream is a must and my son almost needs a full time teacher aide but because of criteria me and the school cannot get more only the 10hrs and that's not enough so I just want to say thank you for speaking up I wouldn't have known where to start
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 03:39:40 pm
Hi Gina,
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Ally Attwell
4/10/2018 12:21:17 am
Well said!! I hope she takes you up on your offer x
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4/10/2018 12:49:32 am
Hi Erika - I endorse everything you have said here. Our future is in all our children and they all need to be treated as equally as possible. My experience over the past nearly 30 years, is if that does not happen, children give up on school and end up in our justice system and by then it is almost too late for them.
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 03:46:58 pm
Thank you so much for your comments Katherine. I agree, it's time to see a major shift within education. This was their campaign platform... I hope they haven't forgotten about the $4B they planned to introduce in to education if elected. (Fingers Crossed)
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Kia King
4/10/2018 12:56:16 am
Pretty powerful stuff. Well done! I hope you get a reply.
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 03:45:10 pm
Thank you! I hope so too but so far I'm only being passed around to various Government bodies. We'll see and I'll keep hoping for a personal response from the Prime Minister.
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Jo Dickey
4/10/2018 01:12:16 am
Erika, you've expressed your concerns in such an articulate and well reasoned way, even though at times your heart must've been breaking. How lovely that Piper is a success story. Hopefully Jacinta will hear your story and be moved to act. You're smart, brave and offer solutions too. Be persistent and don't give up!
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 03:43:50 pm
I hope we can make some traction. Sadly for the government, I'm quite stubborn so I don't give up very easily.Thank you so much Jo!
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Mary Hand
4/10/2018 03:33:11 am
Well said, my hope is that Jacinda will personally shake our edycation system up to a degree where all children are being enabled to learn. At the moment we are far from achieving this sadly
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 03:45:49 pm
I hope so too! Thank you so much for commenting!!
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Danni
5/3/2019 01:55:56 pm
We all hoped, sadly resources have been scaled back further in the last 12months! People like RTLB /RT LIT now have targets to be done with kids in 10weeks not 30. You have to be at least 2years behind to get any help then you may get 5hours.
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Rachel rowland
4/10/2018 05:40:41 am
love love love the way you have written this letter couldn't have worded it better myself our three children also go to the same amazing school as piper, one child Jessica is acc funded the other sam is dhb so, Jess is fully funded where sam is not he is ors funded and only gets 17 it's funded hours where Jess gets 34 hours funded by acc, it is just not fair and this really does need to be addressed would love to know how you get on with a reply as we could always go to parliament and leave our kiddies there for the day to see how they would cope just thought.
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 03:49:38 pm
Thanks Rachel. Perhaps if we do that they will understand what a few hours is like in our lives and multiply that by forever. It seems backwards that schools have legal obligations to follow inclusion and health and safety - yet the funding model isn't there to support this.
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Danni
5/3/2019 01:59:40 pm
The disparity between ACC & Ministry funding is ATROCIOUS and the Bain of most disabled people. If you have a disability by birth or illness you fight ministry for EVERYTHING get bare min 2nd crap equipment and wait forever. Vs disbility via accident/injury you are well provided for and e ceptionally well funded with all thing..
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Kath McHardy
4/10/2018 05:18:55 pm
Hi Erika,
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Karen spencer
4/19/2018 02:34:58 am
Sooo agree Kath- the so called ' system ' has long been broken!! I was a teacher aide at a Hamilton high school and the criteria for funding has been raised so high that not many students receive the orrs funding. It is criminal and heart breaking for every parent who have to battle this ludicrous system. I agree whole heartedly that there must be something done to help these kids who deserve this much required help in their education. We are their voices- so speak up on their behalf!!!!
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 03:52:27 pm
Thank you for your comments Kath. It is so sad that your story is one I've heard hundreds of times since writing this letter. It has really lit a fire inside me to try and raise this to the public. I dont believe most people know this is happening within our education system unless they're a parent of a child who has diverse needs - or a school who has to find the funding to support them. It is incredibly frustrating and our children are almost punished for improving instead of supported. Its absolutely bizarre.
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Lauren Campbell
4/10/2018 11:56:00 pm
So good Erika! Those hours make all the difference 🖤
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Kellie collingwood
4/11/2018 11:46:55 am
Amazing letter! My James is 12 and ORS funded 16 hours a week. It's not enough! My Sam is 7 and gets no funding at all he is falling through the cracks! Thank you Erika for this letter and being a voice for piper ( she is an amazing young lady a delight to be around) something needs to be done for our treasures.
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Katherine mckeen
4/11/2018 12:13:10 pm
This is such a beautiful and touching story. Personally my children don't have autism but I have a brother who does. I could only imagine how hard it actually would be. Mentally and physically. Big hugs to all the Mama's with autistic children, you guys are all doing a great job. I love the letter written. Very touching.
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 03:56:13 pm
Thank you so much for commenting Katherine. The stories I've been receiving have been heartbreaking. I never realised how many people would respond to this letter and it has really encouraged me to keep going. Thank you xx
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4/12/2018 09:44:06 pm
Thank you for this well articulated analysis of some of the challenges autistic students and their families are facing. Let's be encouraged that this new Labour government wants to hear from you and has initiated an Education Summit. As national manager of Altogether Autism, I was able to nominate 6 people to attend two Ministry of Education hui in May. But are you also aware of our Prime Minister launching a national conversation about education in Aotearoa NZ? Go to conversation.education.govt.nz to complete this survey. If you have any questions contact Dr David Wales, National Director Learning Support, Ministry of Education 04 439 6462. Catherine Trezona national manager Altogether Autism. Kia kaha whānau.
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 03:58:42 pm
Thank you so much Catherine. I did fill our the survey and it is my hope that proper action is taken. I won't give up as I've received hundreds (if not thousands) of emails from people who all have similar stories. It's heartbreaking. Thank you for all you do for those who have Autism. x
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Beatrice sila
4/12/2018 11:03:44 pm
I am a sole parent to 2 beautiful children with Autism Spectrum Disorder, my daughter got ORS funding is in a satellite class and is thriving because she is getting the support she NEEDS. My son on the other hand hasn't got that opportunity, he has just finished his 1st term in mainstream and still hasn't "settled in" at mainstream. He goes to school for 1 hour a day, 5 hours a week because that's all he can manage.
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 04:07:00 pm
Beatrice...Wow! Thank you for sharing your story and I'm so sad to say it seems to be the theme with the letters I've been receiving since publishing this letter. We must keep pushing together and thank you for being so brave and sharing your story. Kia Kaha! <3
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Jules
4/13/2018 02:39:48 pm
Hi Erika
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 04:08:41 pm
Thank you so much Jules! All the best with your move. I believe Teacher Aides have such an important role within schools and I hope they start to be recognised and paid as such. Thank you for commenting!
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Kate
4/13/2018 03:56:31 pm
Hi,
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 04:09:14 pm
Thank you for reading and taking the time to comment. xx Kia Kaha.
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Carol
4/15/2018 12:45:04 am
Thanks for sharing such a personal story and helping us understand. I hope it gets read by many, many people.
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Nick Armstrong
4/23/2018 06:14:46 pm
Hi Erika,
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Erika Harvey
5/14/2018 04:14:25 pm
Thank you for commenting Nick. This is a new side that I wasn't aware of. The impact on our children is devastating and I can only hope that when the budget is released they haven't forgotten about the children of New Zealand. We desperately need education to have a proper shake up. This is not fair. Please keep me posted on your journey. (I've started a facebook page to keep discussions going - fb.com/erikaharveynz if you want to come and join them) Thank you for being brave and sharing your story. My thoughts are with you and your family and I hope that your daughter is able to gain access to the education she deserves. x Kia Kaha.
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Jo
6/28/2018 12:40:40 am
What a wonderfully written letter. Everything I want to say but put beautifully.
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Jamie
7/7/2018 04:56:31 am
What an amazing mum you are! I am a teacher aide at a high school and work with a variety of gorgeous students, there are good days and bad days and no day is the same and I love every minute of it. These students have taught my own children valuable lessons and compassion and for that I am truly grateful. Over the 12 years I have been blessed to watch our students grow and achieve goals.
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Erika & Dan HarveyA blog about our journey through the spectrum with our daughter Piper. Enjoy and feel free to share with others. Archives
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