Family connection is the goal nobody writes down because it feels obvious. But “obvious” is also how it falls apart. Once your loved one moves into their own home, the daily proximity that used to carry the relationship is gone. Family time has to be designed.
What family connection actually requires
- A regular rhythm. A weekly dinner, a monthly outing, a holiday tradition. Whatever the rhythm is, it has to be predictable enough that everyone counts on it.
- Logistical support. Rides to family gatherings, help packing for an overnight, a staff member who knows the family routine and can step back when the family arrives.
- A shared communication channel. Group texts, family group chats, a calendar that shows who is visiting when. Family members who are not the primary caregiver need a way in.
- Money that follows. IHSS and SLS can pay for the staff time that makes family events run smoothly. SDP can be designed around it.
How San Diego families fund this
- In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) can pay a parent, sibling, or other family member as a caregiver in many cases. The county runs IHSS in San Diego through the Health and Human Services Agency. The hours are based on assessed need, not on relationship — but the relationship can absolutely fill the role.
- Supported Living Services (SLS) staff can be told, in writing, that family connection is a priority. The IPP can name “supported visits to family” as a goal; the SLS provider then plans around it.
- The Self-Determination Program (SDP) lets you budget for things traditional services do not pay for cleanly — a monthly family meeting facilitator, a community connector who knows your family’s traditions, even a respite slot that gives the primary caregiver a real break.
On conservatorship and family decisions
When your loved one turns 18, they are legally an adult. For most San Diego families, the right answer is not a Limited Conservatorship — it is Supported Decision-Making, where your loved one keeps their legal rights and you, with them, work out who supports each kind of decision (health, money, housing, social).
Disability Rights California’s San Diego office and the Office of Clients’ Rights Advocacy (OCRA) both publish plain-language guides. Talk to a disability-rights attorney before the 18th birthday, not after, because rolling back a conservatorship later is harder than getting it right the first time.
Building the next-generation team
Family connection is also a long-game question: what happens when the primary caregiver is gone? The families who handle this best start building the team in their loved one’s 20s and 30s — not in their 60s and 70s. The team includes a Special Needs Trust trustee, named successor decision-makers, a sibling or trusted relative who will know the medical and care history, and a paid case manager or service coordinator who will outlast the parent.
The point is not to plan for a worst case. The point is to make sure your loved one’s family — broadly defined — keeps showing up across decades.