The Disabled Children’s Partnership

Together with 120 charities and thousands of parents, we are campaigning to make disabled children a priority. We want improvements to disabled children’s education, social care and health funding, and the law.

In this article

What we want

Disabled children and their families should have a right to access the services and support they need to live a good quality of life and have the same opportunities as any other family.  This is an injustice and must change. That why Contact set up and leads the Disabled Children’s Partnership (DCP).

We called on the major political parties to consider disabled children and their families in the general election year.

The key asks of the Manifesto are:

A parent’s view

Linda Taylor Cantrill, from Exmouth, Devon, is mum to seven-year-old twins. Reddington has complex needs including visual and hearing impairment and Teddy is autistic.

She said: “I have come to think of children with special needs like my sons as “throwaway children” because that’s how the system treats them. They are an inconvenience and just figures on spreadsheets – not living, breathing children with potential. Even before lockdown, the entire system that was supposed to support them worked against them. It is so complicated, it’s a full-time job for a parent to fight for their child and slash through the red tape.

“We were abandoned in the pandemic and our children are still paying the cost. The government has a chance now to change this situation for the better and fund support for families who are on their knees.”

What we’ve achieved

The DCP has: 

DCP campaigns

Visit the DCP website for all our latest campaign and research activity.

Who’s in the DCP?

For the full list, visit the DCP’s website.