The future is exciting-frightening-and demanding! As social and eco-
nomic change accelerates at an ever-increasing rate, we look with awe
and wonder at the way in which unanticipated events impact on our lives
and change the way we live. We are also frightened about how well we
will adapt to the demands of a world that may be structured quite
differently from the familiar environment of today. If we are to handle
our own futures with some degree of skill and adap- tiveness, we need to
begin planning today for the dawn of the next century. Otherwise, we may
find that events have overrun our capacity to cope. Those of us in the
social and helping sectors of the economy have a responsibility for the
future welfare of persons who are less able to look out for their own
needs or to protect themselves from the vagaries of economic
fluctuations or major dislocations in the social fabric of the land. The
President's Committee on Mental Retardation is proud of its deci- sion
to look at the year 2000 and its impact on the mentally retarded. Our
goals were straightforward-to understand how unfolding events can affect
the lives of the mentally retarded, for good or ill, a generation from
now.