01/02/2026
December at DPC: Holding the Work Through December
As we wrap up December, we want to pause and reflect on the work we moved forward together this month. December is often quieter on the surface, but behind the scenes it was full of relationship-building, advocacy, community connection, and laying the groundwork for what comes next.
~ Community Support and Giving
Earlier this month, we shared our Giving Tuesday post as an open invitation. An invitation not just to donate, but to learn more about who we are, what we do, and why disability-led work matters. Support from our community makes it possible for DPC to keep showing up. It sustains advocacy led by disabled people, strengthens community organizing, and allows us to respond when policy moves quickly and our voices are needed most.
Donations help ensure that disabled perspectives are not an afterthought, but are centered in the rooms where decisions are being made.
If you are new to DPC, or have been following our work and are considering supporting it, we invite you to donate here: https://www.dpcma.org/donate
On December 30, we also released our 2025 Impact Report, which reflects what that collective support makes possible. From legislative advocacy to training, education, and community building, it tells the story of a year shaped by shared effort and lived experience. We encourage you to take a moment to explore it and see the impact our community has made together.
View our impact report here: tinyurl.com/DPCImpactReport-2025
~ Advocacy Updates
Wheelchair Repair Reform continued to move forward this month as we deepened conversations and built momentum. We have a meeting scheduled with the Chair of House Ways and Means to speak directly about the urgency of the wheelchair repair bills and the real impact that repair delays have on disabled people’s daily lives. We also connected with Senate leadership and the Attorney General’s office, further strengthening support as we work to move these bills across the finish line.
Parenting Bill S.1164
The parenting bill was regrettably sent to study this session. While this outcome is deeply disappointing, it does not diminish the importance of this legislation or the need it addresses. DPC remains committed to this work and to the disabled parents and families who have shared their stories with us. We will continue advocating for this bill and preparing for future legislative sessions.
~ Ongoing Legislative Work
Much of our advocacy happens outside of public view. Throughout December, we continued following up with committees where several of our priority bills are currently sitting, including affordable accessible housing AHVP S.1004/H.1481, the Health Care Anti-Discrimination (HCAD) bill H.1360/S.869, and hearing aid coverage H.3946.
Advocacy at this stage is about staying present and persistent. It means continuing to check in, keep pressure on, and make sure disabled people remain part of the conversation, not an afterthought.
In addition to these priorities, we are also continuing to follow and support service animal-related legislation as it moves through the process.
~Training and Consulting
In December, DPC’s Director of Training and Consulting, Ellysheva, presented at the National Dental Therapy Conference in Sacramento, California. The conference was hosted by Community Catalyst, the American Dental Therapy Association, and the California Oral Health Equity Coalition.
The session, Care That Fits: Meeting the Oral Health Needs of Disabled Patients, centered disabled lived experience in conversations about oral health care access. The presentation was developed collaboratively and included videos from community members sharing their real experiences navigating dental care.
Community Catalyst reached out directly to DPC to ensure disabled perspectives were represented in this space.
This work reflects DPC’s broader approach to training and consulting. Too often, disability is missing from inclusion conversations, or reduced to minimum legal requirements. We believe disabled people deserve more than compliance. Through disability-focused training, workplace inclusion consulting, and technical assistance, DPC supports professionals and organizations in rethinking their practices and spaces in ways that meaningfully include disabled people and lived experience.
To learn more about DPC’s disability-focused training and consulting work, visit disabilitydei.org.
~ Community Organizing
Throughout December, we continued hosting both Unstuck and HALT community calls. Unstuck brings together wheelchair users and allies to identify barriers, share lived experience, and build solutions together. The group is preparing to launch the first phase of its education and awareness campaign in the New Year, and we are excited to see this work take shape. Unstuck meets bi-weekly on Mondays from 11am to 12pm ET. Sign up here: tinyurl.com/DPC-Unstuck
~Staying Connected
To stay up to date on advocacy, community calls, and ways to get involved, we encourage you to subscribe to our newsletter: tinyurl.com/DPC-Newsletter
We have also been sharing more regularly on social media, highlighting disability history, policy updates, and lived experience. If a post resonates with you, we invite you to engage, comment, or re-share. We want to hear directly from our community about what matters most.
As we close out the year, we want to thank everyone who showed up, supported, shared, donated, or stayed engaged in whatever way they could. This work is collective, and we are grateful to be doing it alongside you.
Onward into the New Year!