Individualized Program Plan (IPP) Planning Guide

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This pub tells you about regional center services. Individualized Program Plans or IPPs list the regional center services you need to live how you want. This pub tells you about IPPs. It gives you an IPP planner to help you get ready for an IPP meeting. It tells you what to do if you do not agree with a regional center decision.

A Booklet for People Who Use Services From Regional Centers

The Lanterman Act

In California, people with developmental disabilities have the right to services that help them be a part of their communities and the law says people who use Regional Centers have the right to make decisions about the services and supports they need, including but not limited to:

Who Can Receive Services Under the Lanterman Act?

There are three groups of people who can get services under the Lanterman Act:

  1. People who meet the Lanterman Act’s definition of developmental disability in the Lanterman Act, including people with a substantial disability because of their cerebral palsy, epilepsy, autism, intellectual disability, and other conditions closely related to intellectual disability or that require similar treatment.
  2. People who are at high risk of having a child with a developmental disability.
  3. Babies and children under age 3 who are at high risk of becoming developmentally disabled.

What is an Individual Program Plan (IPP)?

An IPP is an action plan that talks about the assistance you need to live the way you want.

An IPP identifies your goals, services, and supports so you can be more independent and participate in the community.

An IPP is a written agreement and contract between you and the Regional Center. It is written in a way you can understand.

Timeline for an IPP

The law says people must have an IPP meeting at least once every 3 years. Some people have an IPP done each year. You can ask for an IPP meeting at any time. Call your Regional Center service coordinator to schedule the IPP meeting.

After you ask for an IPP meeting, it must happen within 30 days.

If a final decision cannot be reached on any issue(s), you can schedule another meeting within 15 days or file an appeal.

If the regional center says “NO” to any new service request, the laws say that you must get a written notice of the denial within 5 days in your preferred language.

If the Regional Center says it wants to change or end a service you are already getting, and you disagree, it must give you a written notice in your preferred language 30 days before the change or cut-off. The notice must include an appeal form that you can fill out if you choose to appeal.

Why Your IPP Meeting is Important

Your IPP meeting is the only time your IPP can be officially talked about and written up. If your Regional Center calls you about changing your services, tell them you want to talk about it at an IPP meeting.

Your Rights at an IPP Meeting

The Regional Center and agencies that provide services to you, like group homes or programs, must allow you to make your own decisions.

They must give you important information that you need to make decisions in a way that you can understand.

Who is Part of the IPP Team?

What to do Before the IPP Meeting

The IPP Meeting Planner at the end of this booklet can help you plan for your meeting.

What to Do At Your IPP Meeting

If the person who can approve services in your IPP is not at your meeting, the Regional Center must set up another IPP meeting within 15 days. The Regional Center staff member who approves services must attend.

Right to Services and Supports in Your IPP

The Lanterman Act says your services and supports should help you be independent, a productive member of your community, and live in places where you are safe and healthy.

Here are some (but not all) of the services and supports the Regional Center can help you find and get.

Remember! It’s OK to ask for things you need that aren’t on this list.

Write the services and supports you need in your IPP with the help of your IPP team.

For more details on how to get services through your IPP, including sample letters and planners, see http://www.disabilityrightsca.org/pubs/506301SuppI.pdf

The Self-Determination Program

Another way to receive services paid for by the Regional Center is the Self-Determination Program. The Self-Determination Program will let you have more control over choosing your services and supports. You will get a specific budget each year to purchase the services and supports that you need to make your plan work better for you. You may choose your services and pick which providers deliver those services. You are responsible for staying within your budget. You do not need to join the Self-Determination Program - it is your choice.

What To Do if No One is Listening to You

You should have a say in the services and support you get. If people don’t listen to you, tell someone. Tell a friend, relative, your service coordinator, your clients’ rights advocate, or someone at your local State Council on Developmental Disabilities (SCDD) Regional Office. For a list of your local SCDD Regional (Area Board) Offices, see http://www.disabilityrightsca.org/pubs/506301SuppAA.pdf

Your IPP is a Contract

The law says the Regional Center must follow certain rules when writing your IPP.

You and the Regional Center must agree and sign the IPP before the services can start or continue.

Your Rights When Signing the IPP

You have the right to review and think about your IPP before signing an agreement.

Your services cannot start until you and the Regional Center agree on what is in your IPP. When you sign your IPP, you are saying that you agree with what is in your IPP.

If you don’t agree with everything that is in your IPP, you don’t have to sign it. BUT, you can agree to part of it. Write down what you agree with and what you don’t agree with.

If you only agree to part of your IPP, ask your service coordinator to write it out, like this:

I agree to these parts of my IPP -

Please start/continue the services that I agree to right away.

I do not agree to these parts of my IPP -

Once you do this, the services that you and the Regional Center agreed on can start.

Your Copy of the IPP

Your Rights if You Disagree with the IPP

If the Regional Center says “NO” to services or supports you want, they must send a letter within 5 days telling you why they said “No,” and how you can appeal.

If you disagree with the Regional Center about services you want or need, you have a right to appeal their decision. If the Regional Center delays or takes too long to make a decision, insist on a decision. You can also treat the delay as denial and file an appeal.

Appealing

Appealing is not easy, but it is your right to challenge the Regional Center’s decision. We will not go into detail about appealing in this guide. To learn about appeals and complaints, see Rights Under the Lanterman Act, chapter 12 at http://www.disabilityrightsca.org/pubs/506301Ch12.pdf

To learn how to do an appeal and hearing, see Regional Center Hearing Packet at http://www.disabilityrightsca.org/pubs/548401.pdf

Remember, It’s Your Life

The Regional Center is there to help you get the life you want. Learn how to speak up for yourself. Join a self-advocacy group or get self-advocacy training.

The law says you have the right to make choices about your life and to get the services and supports you need to be a member of your community. When you don’t agree with a decision that will affect your life, speak up.

Get Help With Your Appeal

Talk to your SCDD Regional (Area Board) Office, family, friends, circle of support, or Self-Advocacy group for support.

Each Regional Center has a Clients’ Rights Advocate. Ask the Regional Center who they are and get their phone number. The Clients’ Rights Advocate can support you.

The Office of Clients’ Rights Advocacy can be reached at this number:

You can call Disability Rights California: 1-800-776-5746

For more information and publications go to www.disabilityrightsca.org

IPP Meeting Planner

This worksheet can help you plan for your IPP Meeting. Use it to help you think about what you want in the future.

A Place to Live

Where do you want to live?

What services do you need to help you live where you want?

A Place to Work or Attend School

Where do you want to work or go to school?

What kind of work or school do you want to do?

What services do you need to help with working or going to school?

Having Fun

What do you want to do in your free time?

What services do you need to assist you to do the things you want to do?

Medical and Health

What medical or health services do you need?

What other support do you need to access medical or health services?

Other Things

What other things do you want assistance with?

What other services do you need assistance with?