Safety and dignity are the goal that families think about every day and rarely write down explicitly. The system has historically been bad at this — there is a long history of people with developmental disabilities being warehoused, mistreated, or simply ignored. California’s Lanterman Act exists in large part to prevent that. But protections only work if families know how to use them.
What safety actually means
Safety is not the absence of risk. It is the presence of:
- A real relationship with at least one trusted person who would notice if something changed.
- A way to communicate distress. That can be words, signs, AAC devices, behavior, or a known check-in routine.
- A plan for what happens when something goes wrong. Who calls whom? Who knows the medical history? Who has the legal authority to act?
- Staff who are trained, supervised, and held to account. This is the part that most often falls down.
What dignity actually means
Dignity is harder to measure but easier to feel. Does your loved one get to:
- Choose what they wear, eat, and do?
- Say no, including to staff?
- Have privacy for things that should be private?
- Be addressed in age-appropriate language and tone?
- Have a say in who supports them?
If the honest answer to any of these is “not really,” the IPP needs work.
How the funding supports this
- Supported Living Services (SLS) is the primary funding for the people who support your loved one in their home. The provider you pick is the most important safety decision you will make. Tour. Ask. Talk to other families.
- In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) includes a category called protective supervision — paid hours specifically for keeping a person safe from harm. Many San Diego families do not know to ask for it.
- The Self-Determination Program (SDP) lets you choose the people who will be in your loved one’s daily life, rather than accepting whoever a vendor sends. This is a quiet but important safety lever.
When something has gone wrong
If something feels off — staff turnover, money mismanagement, an injury that does not add up, a change in mood, a story that does not fit — there are real places to call.
- The San Diego Regional Center (SDRC) complaint line for service-coordinator and vendor concerns.
- The Office of Clients’ Rights Advocacy (OCRA) — free, statewide, on your side. Their San Diego attorneys handle Lanterman Act rights cases.
- Adult Protective Services at the County of San Diego Health and Human Services Agency for suspected abuse or neglect.
- 9-1-1 for emergencies.
- Disability Rights California for systemic issues.
What to put in the IPP
“Maintain personal safety and dignity in all environments. Include a quarterly check-in between [name] and a non-staff trusted person, and an annual review of supports for choice and autonomy.” Specific. Auditable. Fundable.