When police officers approached Suvya Carroll in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda last Monday, her eyes were closed and her hands were raised in prayer. She was among protesters demonstrating against proposed cuts to Medicaid and SNAP benefits.
โI was asking the Lord to just open these peopleโs eyes who are trying to take this away and have them put themselves in our seats as disabled people,โ Carroll says.
Carroll, a disability rights advocate who lives with cerebral palsy and uses a wheelchair, was among three Durham residents arrested during a June 2 Moral Monday demonstration led by Rev. Bishop William Barber II.
Lee Anderson, a music minister at Edenton Street Methodist Church, and Rev. Franklin Golden, who leads Durham Presbyterian Church, were also arrested, as well as Barber and a handful of others.

Officers hesitated before placing zip ties on Carroll’s wristsโthe restraint had different implications than it would for someone who can walk, as it would prevent her from moving her wheelchairโbut proceeded with the arrest.
Before the arrests, Carroll spoke to a large crowd outside the Capitol about how the cuts would personally impact her.
โWhen we have a procedure that needs to be done, how will that be paid for?โ Carroll asked the crowd.
Carroll lives independently with a roommate in Durham. The cuts could force her to choose between meeting basic necessities and depleting her savings. After paying monthly bills, she’s left with around $200 and, like 1.6 million North Carolinians, depends on SNAP benefits to buy groceries.
Sloan Meekโwho is in the band Meek Squad with Carroll and Anderson, lives around the corner from Carroll, and traveled to D.C. with the groupโalso spoke to the crowd. Meek lives with cerebral palsy, blindness, and epilepsy.
โWithout Medicaid support in my home and my community, I will be forced into a nursing home to spend the rest of my life in a hospital bed until I die,โ Meek told the crowd. (About 3 million people in North Carolina rely on Medicaid for health insurance.)

Meek depends on home support from Wendy Lincicome, a direct support professional who has been his friend and caregiver for more than 30 years. They live together in Durhamโs North Street Community, an intentional community for people with and without disabilities.
“We have this great community that offers natural support. Most people don’t have that,โ Lincicome says. โWe are family now, but I do get paid to support him. My whole job is supported by Medicaid.โ
House Republicans have proposed reducing federal funding for Medicaid and SNAP by nearly $1 trillion. Supporters of the proposed cuts claim that the cuts wonโt harm people with disabilities, but the group of Durham advocates say thatโs misleading.ย
While people with disabilities would be exempt from new and expanded work requirements for Medicaid and SNAP, respectively, those requirements only account for a small fraction of cuts to the programs. The remaining cuts would create funding gaps for states, with home and community-based supports for people with disabilities likely among the first services eliminated.
โNorth Carolina is just now opening up the waiting list for Medicaid waiver services that help people in their homes and communities,โ Meek tells the INDY. โAfter waiting over 10 years, most people are finding they now have the funding but can’t find the staffing to help. How will that improve if there are these big cuts?โ
โIt feels like itโs basically people telling us, people with disabilities, that we don’t belong here,โ Carroll says. โThat we are not welcome here. Theyโre trying to shut us away, toโโ
โTo kill you off,โ Lincicome says.
Carroll nods. โThatโs what it feels like.โ

Carroll, Anderson, and Golden spent two and a half hours in detention after being arrested. They were released with citations for crowding, obstructing, or incommodingโa misdemeanor.ย
Carroll says the night before the demonstration, she began crying unexpectedly while walking near the Capitol with friends.
โI was like, โI don’t know where these tears are coming from, but I canโt believe that me and my friends will be here, telling our stories, and being able to speak up for what we need and advocate for what we need,โโ Carroll says. โIt was also my first time going to Washington, D.C. I think that that was another thingโI was like, โMan, this is so cool.โโ
Follow Staff Writer Lena Geller on Bluesky or email [email protected]. Comment on this story at [email protected]


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