Centers for Independent Living
						
						Centers for Independent Living (CILs) were federally
							established in 1973 under the Rehabilitation Act. They are
							consumer-controlled, community-based, cross-disability,
							nonresidential private nonprofit agencies that are designed and
							operated within local communities by individuals with
							disabilities. They provide an array of Independent living
							services.
						They provide five core services:
						
							- Information & referral
- Independent living skills training
- Individual and systems advocacy
- Peer counseling
- Transition: transition from nursing homes and other
								institutions to community-based residences; assisting
								individuals to avoid institutional placement; and transition of
								youth with significant disabilities after completion of
								secondary education to postsecondary life.
							Resource Links:
						
						
							- Association of Centers for Independent
									Living in Washington (ACIL-WA): provides a list, contact
								information, and counties served, for each of the CILs serving
								Washington State.
- Washington State Independent Living Council
									(SILC): a governor-appointed board whose purpose is to promote
								independent living for persons with disabilities in Washington
								and to work with the Centers for Independent Living to develop
								capacity and expand their services. In addition, the SILC
								monitors, reviews, and evaluates the State Plan for Independent Living (SPIL).
- National
									Council on Independent Living (NCIL): a national membership
								organization of individuals with disabilities, Centers for
								Independent Living (CILs), Statewide Independent Living Councils
								(SILCs), and other organizations that advocate for the human and
								civil rights of people with disabilities throughout the United
								States.
- Independent
									Living Research Utilization (ILRU): provides research,
								education and consultation in the areas of independent living,
								home and community-based services, and the Americans with
								Disabilities Act to CILs and SCILs.
- Under the Workforce innovation and Opportunity Act of
									2014 (WIOA), functions related to Independent Living Services
								and Centers for Independent Living are being transferred from
								the U.S. Department of Education and the Rehabilitation Services
								Administration, to the U.S.
							
- Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) where the
								Independent Living Administration will be established within the
								Administration
									for Community Living.