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Parent Emeritus
Need advice for homeless daughter
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<blockquote data-quote="BusynMember" data-source="post: 740606" data-attributes="member: 1550"><p>I started at 14 for my sons future services and got legal guardianship. Recently he was doing so well we went to court to get the guardianship dropped. But you may be able to apply for that. My son can do math and read and graduated high school on time and I still got it. As long as your daughter is with you, you can attend her appointments. She may be glad to hear that there could very well be help for her. If you get guardisnship you sign everything. My son never fought me. He even agreed to guardisnship and was given a payee by the courts. This was all done through services though, not me. We had help. It really advanced my son with his adulting. Autism can make life difficult even if you are not a dummy.</p><p></p><p>My sons SSI and our low rentals where we live helped him get immeciate housing. Look around. A disabled person is deemed more needy so hopefully she can get SSI.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BusynMember, post: 740606, member: 1550"] I started at 14 for my sons future services and got legal guardianship. Recently he was doing so well we went to court to get the guardianship dropped. But you may be able to apply for that. My son can do math and read and graduated high school on time and I still got it. As long as your daughter is with you, you can attend her appointments. She may be glad to hear that there could very well be help for her. If you get guardisnship you sign everything. My son never fought me. He even agreed to guardisnship and was given a payee by the courts. This was all done through services though, not me. We had help. It really advanced my son with his adulting. Autism can make life difficult even if you are not a dummy. My sons SSI and our low rentals where we live helped him get immeciate housing. Look around. A disabled person is deemed more needy so hopefully she can get SSI. [/QUOTE]
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Need advice for homeless daughter
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