BHDDH Seeks $18 Hourly Pay For RI DD Workers; $119M In DD ARPA Funding

By Gina Macris

Rhode Island’s developmental disabilities agency seeks to raise the pay of direct care workers to $18 an hour beginning July 1, 2022, a 14 percent hike over the current hourly rate of $15.75.

The raise would be covered by a $44.5 million increase in federal-state Medicaid funding for the privately operated developmental disability service system, according to a budget request submitted to Governor Dan McKee for Fiscal Year 2023 by the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH).

Within an overall agency budget of $585.9 million, representing a 12 percent increase, the Division of Developmental Disabilities would get nearly $380 million. That sum would cover both the privately-operated system of services and a state-run network of group homes. Private providers would get a total of about $352 million in federal-state Medicaid funding, about $44.5 million more than the current budget of $307.9 million. The budget for the state-run group homes would remain relatively flat, at about $28 million.

In an Oct. 1 budget letter to the governor, BHDDH Director Richard Charest wrote, “The Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD) continues its commitment in complying with the terms of the 2014 federal consent decree and providing integrated employment and day services.”

On Oct. 1, BHDDH was facing the prospect of a contempt hearing in U.S. District Court that was to start today, Oct. 18, over continued failure to comply with the 2014 civil rights agreement. But at the same time, the department was negotiating with an independent court monitor to reach a settlement that would avoid hefty fines proposed by the U.S. Department of Justice. On Oct. 13, five days before the hearing was to start,Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. canceled it without explanation. Any settlement has yet to be announced.

The pace of job placements required by the consent decree has slowed, from 78 percent of the target number spelled out in the agreement for January 1, 2019 to 67 percent of the target for January 1, 2021. A lack of services in general, and employment-related support in particular, has been attributed to an acute shortage of direct care workers.

For years, all sectors of the human services have been affected by a workforce shortage, which has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. But only programs serving people with developmental disabilities operate with federal oversight in Rhode Island. Chief Judge John J. McConnell Jr. of the U.S. District Court has ordered Rhode Island to raise direct care worker wages to $20 an hour by 2024 to attract new staff.

In its budget request, BHDDH is also asking for a one-time investment of $119.3 million in federal coronavirus relief funds from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) for the developmental disabilities system. That figure represents more than 10 percent of of the $1.13 billion in ARPA funding available to Rhode Island, the only state in New England which has not yet spent any of its allocation.

The $119.3 million total includes capital expenses of nearly $74.5 million for repair and construction of residential and therapeutic facilities and about $44.9 for operational and program changes over the next few years. All the money would be spent by the end of 2025. The proposal acknowledges chronic underfunding of the developmental disabilities system.

The investments are intended to shore up existing services and facilities to achieve a “more holistic, individualized, and community-based system of supports” to comply not only with the consent decree but with the separate Medicaid Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) Final Rule, which requires integration for all Medicaid and Medicare-funded services, including residential programs.

Both the consent decree and the HCBS Final Rule draw their authority from the Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, which has ruled that people with disabilities have the right to receive services in the least restrictive environment that is therapeutically appropriate.

The portion of the ARPA request aimed at programmatic and operational changes assumes that there will be a shift from the current fee-for-service reimbursement method for private providers to a “value-based” reimbursement model, although that change has yet to be defined. BHDDH is expected to award a contract in the next two weeks for a consultant’s study to examine rates and methods of reimbursement. The successful bidder would have six months to complete the work.

Within the $44.9 million ARPA request for operations and programs, BHDDH is seeking:

• $25 million for supported employment services, including efforts to bring more services to “BIPOC communities,” a reference to Black and Indigenous peoples and other people of color.

• $17,350,000 to help private providers arrange more integrated housing options, staff training, assistance in tracking the providers’ own performance according to certain measures, and technologies for shifting from fee-for-service to “alternative based payment models.” This segment of the request assumes each of 34 service providers in Rhode Island will get $500,000. It also would pay for a contractor to manage the program.

• $1,150,000 for a community-based mental health intervention response team for people who have both intellectual or developmental disabilities and behavioral issues that put them at risk of hospitalization. Plans for the model program, called START (Systemic, Therapeutic, Assessment, Resource, Treatment) have already been developed. It has been identified as a best practice by the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine.

• $1 million for information and education for service recipients for and their families to ensure better access to services, particularly for people of color, who have been underrepresented in the service caseload.

The $75 million in capital investments would include:

• $60,350,000 in repairs to state-owned provider facilities. Deferred maintenance in group homes “is a drain on state and provider resources (and) a barrier to individuals aging in place,” the proposal said. The condition of some facilities is “not conducive to making individuals feel safe and valued in their homes and part of the larger community,” it said.

• $8,130,000 to build facilities to house 30 young people with developmental disabilities who are making a transition to the adult service system. Currently, these youngsters, particularly those who also have emotional or behavioral issues, languish in facilities for children or in hospitals, creating a backlog in the youth system.

• $6 million for a 24-hour community residential program for people with developmental disabilities being discharged from a hospital or other institution who still need more specialized care than is offered by a regular group home. Such a program would ensure that services are provided in the least restrictive setting as required by HCBS, the proposal said.

Taken together, “these investments will lay the foundation for a DD system that focuses on supporting participants in a way that promotes community integration and development of personal networks and circles of supports,” the proposal said.

It will require a “major shift in thinking and business models” to move from “caretaking” and programs developed by providers to “a focus on what individualized supports people need to be as independent as possible.”

To read the entire BHDDH ARPA proposal for developmental disabilities, click here.


Court To Hear Plan To Shore Up RI DD Providers

By Gina Macris

A federal court monitor says Rhode Island must release $2 million a month designated for adults with developmental disabilities to keep service providers afloat between December and June.

The money would be used exclusively to recruit and retain new workers and boost the pay of existing staff to a minimum of $20 an hour, as well as cover the cost of personal protective equipment and other expenses related to COVID-19.

A. Anthony Antosh submitted a three-page report outlining the rationale for his plan to the U.S. District Court Nov. 18 and asked the state to tell the court how it will address the recommendations by Nov. 30. Chief Judge John J. McConnell has moved up the deadline, scheduling an on-line hearing on the status of consent decree compliance at 9 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 24.

Antosh said that a rise in coronavirus cases has affected the population with intellectual or developmental disabilities in several ways:

• More people are sick

• Private services providers and families independently managing their loved ones’ programs can’t find staff

• The number and frequency of employment-related services and supports for community activities required by the consent decree has declined

Under the current fee-for-service system, providers are increasingly constrained in their ability to file claims with the state, exacerbating their already-precarious financial condition.

Antosh indicated that the state could release $2 million a month to service providers for the next six months because average monthly spending has decreased by roughly that amount from April through October, when compared with the previous six-month period.

He warned that the consortium hired by the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) to review the system top to bottom concluded that private provider agencies were fiscally “fragile and profoundly undercapitalized” even before the pandemic hit. Now their financial position is even worse, Antosh said.

Private service agencies, which support about 83 percent of the population protected by the consent decree, are using most of their resources to serve adults in group homes, where COVID-19 cases are multiplying, Antosh said. Citing a daily report of new cases provided by BHDDH, he said 28 percent of all positive cases in residents, 35 percent of all positive cases in staff and 21 percent of all hospitalizations have occurred in the past six weeks.

A total of 580 staff and residents in 147 group homes – about half of the 291 congregate care settings in the state – have tested positive since the pandemic began, Antosh said.

Source: A. Anthony Antosh, Court Monitor

Source: A. Anthony Antosh, Court Monitor

Several agencies report they are unable to get staff unless they pay them $30 an hour in COVID-positive group homes and $25 an hour in quarantined homes, where the COVID status is uncertain. Even then, they cannot find enough workers to fill the state staffing requirements, Antosh said.

People with developmental disabilities living in family homes, meanwhile, “are receiving only limited supports related to employment and integrated community and day activities,” the monitor’s report said.

The monitor said the state “has demonstrated good faith in attempting to address the impact of COVID-19” in multiple ways, including:

• Special payments early in the pandemic that allowed providers to bill at pre-COVID rates for two months

• Recent approval of an additional $3 million from the CARES Act to provide up to $1,200 in “payroll support” for existing full time direct care staff or recruitment funds for new staff. That boost is also time-limited, Antosh said.

Despite these and other initiatives, Antosh said, “there is significant concern that, if additional resources are not provided for the remainder of the current fiscal year, providers will be unable to recruit and retain sufficient staff needed to provide the employment and community services required by the Consent Decree.”

Antosh said BHDDH figures show a decrease of $11,444,874 in expenditures for developmental disabilities from April to October, when compared with the previous six-month period, an average of $1,907,479 per month. His plan recommends the state put that money to use by allocating $2 million a month, beginning in December, through the end of the fiscal year June 30, 2021.

As has been the case with other COVID-funding initiatives, providers should submit a proposal and a rationale, Antosh said. He said those who direct their own programs or who live independently or with families also should have access to these funds.

The public may observe the court hearing on line by going to the calendar page of the U.S. District Court and entering the date, November 24, and the name of Judge McConnell. To access the calendar click here.

Olmstead Monitor: RI Needs Overhaul Of DD System To Comply With 2014 Agreement

By Gina Macris

During the next three years, Rhode Island must completely restructure its services for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities and increase financial support accordingly to fully comply with a federal civil rights consent decree by the 2024 deadline.

A. Anthony Antosh

A. Anthony Antosh

That is the conclusion of an independent federal court monitor, A. Anthony Antosh, in an Oct. 7 report to Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. of the U.S. District Court.

At McConnell’s direction, Antosh says he’s also working on a dollar figure for the cost of compliance, using an outside $1.1 million analysis of existing services commissioned by the state itself.

The state agreed, under the consent decree in 2014, to end its reliance on sheltered workshops and group day care centers and instead put adults with developmental disabilities in the driver’s seat when choosing a path in life, with an emphasis on regular employment and participation in community activities.

The last sheltered workshop closed in 2018, but many of the other goals of the consent decree have remained elusive, and Judge McConnell has grown impatient with a lack of funding he says is necessary to lay the foundation for compliance by the time federal oversight is scheduled to expire in 2024.

John J. McConnell, Jr.

John J. McConnell, Jr.

“If anybody couldn’t tell, I am obsessed with the issue of funding as essential for us to get there,” McConnell said during a virtual hearing in July.

“If we don’t come up with a way to systemically support the (service) providers, then the whole thing will be meaningless,” McConnell said.

He has said he is prepared to tell the state to “find the money” to comply with the consent decree. State officials who control the purse strings must participate in the redesign of services, the judge has said.

In the most recent monitor’s report, Antosh set the tone for his recommendations by saying that compliance is “not found in a narrow analysis of the benchmarks of the Consent Decree, but is rooted in defining the structural changes that need to occur in order that the goals of the Consent Decree can be achieved.”

In bold print, he highlighted the fact that the outside analysis of the existing system found that most of the private service providers are “fragile and profoundly undercapitalized.”

In a separate report, the state responded to a court order that it address 16 fiscal and administrative barriers to the integration of people with developmental disabilities into their communities as mandated by the consent decree. The summary is the first of six progress reports the state must make to Judge McConnell by next June on its planning effort for long-range reform.

In its report, the state set a deadline of March, 2022 to overhaul its fiscal system. The changes include the elimination of three practices that for years have been identified as problematic by families and providers:

  • staffing ratios that discourage community integration, so that in some cases, one worker must supervise up to five people on an outing, whether or not those people want to be there.

  • documentation of staff time in 15-minute increments, which providers say diverts significant resources that otherwise could be used for direct services.

  • Allocation of a certain percentage of services for segregated facility-based activities.

Alluding to the budget uncertainties caused by the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, the state’s seven-page summary cautions that the planning efforts are “dependent upon the continuation of current state staffing and budgetary levels.”

Monitor’s Budget For Reform Coming “Soon”

McConnell has asked Antosh to analyze current funding and make a dollars-and-cents recommendation for the cost of implementing the needed comprehensive changes.

Antosh said that report will be completed “soon.” He said he has begun that work, relying primarily on data drawn from an 18-month study done by the New England States Consortium Systems Organization (NESCSO) for the state’s disability agency.

The 143-page NESCSO study presented a number of findings and options for change but made no recommendations, at the behest of the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals.

Antosh said there is a need for systemic restructuring of existing services and supports, which are now “essentially based on group activities that occur in a blend of facility and community settings.”

The situation is exacerbated by a difficulty in recruiting and retaining high quality staff and by the COVID-19 pandemic, which in emphasizing the health risks of large gatherings has “reinforced the diminishing value of facility-based group services,” Antosh said.

The pandemic also has led to a setback in the progress made in the area of employment for adults with developmental disabilities. In June, as the state was beginning to reopen, only 31 percent of those who previously held jobs were still actively employed, Antosh said. (Some on furlough have since returned to work.)

Among work crews hired for large scale commercial cleaning or laundry operations and the like, only about half were working, he said.

The statistics underline a need for “new and intensified approaches to job development,” he said. “What is needed is a new model for providing supports that is more individualized, community based, and uses funds and supports from an increased variety of sources,” including the state’s Department of Labor and Training, Antosh said.

Family Hesitation About Integration

While the gears of state government are focused on moving Rhode Island into compliance with the federal government’s mandate of integrating individuals with developmental disabilities into the larger community, more than a third of the families with an adult son or daughter who would benefit say they oppose or are not yet convinced that the push toward employment is worthwhile.

The pandemic aside, significant numbers of families also express opposition or hesitation about their loved ones’ increased participation in community activities.

For Antosh, who included survey results of families as part of his report, the statistics underscore the need for adolescents to experience work-related and social activities in their communities as part of their education and for families to receive more information about the breadth of available opportunities.

It is perhaps most telling that among families of high school students, who are more likely than their older peers to have had internships and community experiences as part of their education, only 3 percent were opposed to jobs for their sons and daughters and 10 percent said they weren’t sure. Two thirds of families of adolescents said they believed the young people should have jobs as adults. Other parents of high school students – about one in five- said their son or daughter had to deal with other challenges before turning to employment. This is typically the case for those with chronic health problems.

Family survey on employment 2020.jpg
Family survey on community activities (1) 10-7-20.jpg
Source: Monitor’s Report To U.S. District Court 10-7-20

Source: Monitor’s Report To U.S. District Court 10-7-20

The 2014 statewide consent decree draws its authority from the Integration Mandate of the Americans With Disabilities Act, which was reinforced by the Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court. The high court said that states must deliver services to all persons with disabilities in the most integrated setting that is therapeutically appropriate, and it presumed that setting to be the community.

In 2014, the U.S. Department of Justice found that the state violated the Integration Mandate by funneling high school students from segregated educational programs with low expectations to a lifetime of isolation in sheltered workshops and day care programs. In signing the consent decree, the state agreed to correct the violations by 2024. (A preliminary case against the state and the city of Providence in 2013 was merged into the statewide consent decree a year ago after Judge McConnell found the city and its school department had turned around a segregated high school program for students with developmental disabilities, leaving only the state as the defendant.

Antosh outlined several overarching features of successful implementation of the consent decree, including these:

  • Each person will have the supports necessary to enjoy a self-determined, self-directed life based on work and non-work activities in the community.

  • Private provider agencies will have the funding, staffing and other resources they need to meet the support needs of all persons receiving funding through the Division of Developmental Disabilities.

  • Every adolescent and adult with intellectual or developmental disabilities will have the information and guidance they need to navigate a simpler and more efficient system of services.

  • All adolescents and young adults leaving school will have had enough transitional work-related and non-work experiences in the community to make informed choices about jobs and careers, as well as a plan to direct their own programs or sign on with a provider organization.

Antosh recommended that the state develop a three-year budget strategy, beginning July 1, 2021, to “stabilize” developmental disability services and provide sufficient funding to implement the consent decree.

The monitor’s recommendations include a new, formal role for the Department of Labor and Training (DLT), which until now has not been a part of the multi-agency state team responsible for official responses to the court.

Antosh said DLT should immediately join BHDDH, the state Department of Education, the Department of Human Services, and the Executive Office of Health and Human Services in working on consent decree compliance.

DLT also should include all teenagers and adults with developmental disabilities in the workforce initiatives it administers, the monitor said.

By Jan. 1, 2021, the state should create an “Employer Task Force” to promote employment of those with developmental disabilities, Antosh said. The task force would identify relevant workforce trends and advise state officials and provider organizations about ways to reach out to prospective employers and offer employers incentives and support.

By April 1, 2021, the state must identify every possible source of funding that could support the consent decree and describe ways these sources can be “braided” to support the various requirements of the agreement.

As for private providers, the backbone of the service system, Antosh set a deadline of April 30, 2021 for them to develop action plans for the future. There are 36 provider agencies, most of them offering both day and residential services. In their plans, providers should redefine the support area that will be their focus, address consent decree issues, make budget projections and include internal quality improvement programs.

Just as the state has established five workgroups to address fiscal and administrative problems, Antosh recommended the state create additional issue-oriented work groups whose members are drawn from the ranks of state officials and community organizations, like the Employment Force Task Force.

One group would develop strategies to stabilize the workforce by increasing salaries, elevating professionalism through training, and creating a career ladder.

Other groups would address specific plans for:

  • putting individuals at the center of mapping out long range and short-term goals for their future and strategies for achieving them

  • ensuring young people have a smooth transition from high school to adult services,

  • creating new models for providing services and supports for employment and community-based activities.

  • enhancing the use of technology as a support strategy

  • Developing alternative transportation options, including stipends that allow individuals to arrange their own rides

  • Improving outreach to families, including those speak languages other than English and come from diverse cultures.

To read the full monitor’s report, click here. To read the state’s report, click here.

Photos by Anne Peters