McKee: RI DD Services Need $510.6 Million

By Gina Macris

RI Governor’s FY 25 Budget Proposal-

In a budget plan largely driven by the federal court, Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee has proposed $510.6 million in overall developmental disabilities spending for the fiscal year beginning July 1, about $41.5 million more than the General Assembly enacted for the current fiscal year.

Roughly 55 percent, about $283.4 million, of the proposed developmental disabilities budget would be reimbursed by the the federal-state Medicaid program.

At the same time, McKee seeks to close a projected deficit of $28.3 million in the current budget of $469.1 million as the state tries to integrate adults with developmental disabilities into their communities to comply with a 2014 consent decree with the Department of Justice (DOJ).

Much of the shortfall reflects upward cost adjustments made by the Caseload Estimating Conference (CEC), a budget-planning panel which meets twice a year, advising the governor in November and the General Assembly in May.

McKee also would add $2.9 million to the current budget, and $1.1 million in the next one, for “conflict-free case management,” not only to adhere to Medicaid regulations but to comply with the consent decree. Almost all that funding would come from the federal government.

State social workers from the Division of Disabilities will be assigned to check in monthly with those receiving services and their families to determine if their needs are being met, according to a BHDDH spokesman.

It is not clear whether – or how - this arrangement meets the expectations of an independent court monitor overseeing the consent decree changes. The monitor, A. Anthony Antosh, hasn’t issued a report since last August. Antosh has called for “independent facilitators” to help each individual develop a purposeful program of services and to keep track of how the plan works out.

Developmental disabilities programs account for more than $7 out of every $10 spent at the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH), which would get a total of $706.3 million in McKee’s proposal. McKee’s proposed budget for all state spending in the new fiscal year is nearly $13.7 billion.

The latest proposal represents nearly a third more funding for developmental disabilities than the $339.3 million the General Assembly approved just three years ago, in the spring of 2021.

Much of the investment, in recent years, has been used to hike wages for caregivers and their supervisors, for education and training, and for the development of innovative approaches to supporting adults with developmental disabilities.

In three steps since July, 2021, the state has raised the pay for direct care workers by about 49 percent, from $13.18 an hour to a minimum of $20 an hour, in keeping with orders from Chief Judge John J. McConnell of the U.S. District Court, who has been monitoring the state’s efforts to meet the requirements of the consent decree since 2016.

McConnell found that, apart from the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, historically depressed wages had led to an exodus of workers that prevented the state from offering employment and other services in the community as promised in a 2014 consent decree.

Beginning last July, the $20 minimum hourly rate for workers has been wrapped into a new reimbursement system for private agencies intended to accurately evaluate the needs of individuals, allow them bigger spending limits to get employment and other supports, and to implement administrative changes promoting integration in the community.

The ultimate impact of higher funding on the lives of adults with developmental disabilities remains to be seen. A decade after the state adopted an “Employment First” policy as part of the consent decree, the governor’s figures say that 24.8 percent of the population protected by the consent decree is working in the community, far short of the target 73 percent.

In November, BHDDH told the CEC that private service providers still don’t have the number of workers they need to offer employment-related services and community-based supports for all who want them. A BHDDH report called the shortage “critical.”

 Still, the state’s eye-opening investment in historically underfunded services during the last few years has begun to show results. While a big staff shortage remains, private agencies are beginning to see improvement in their ability to attract new workers.

The recent pay hikes, along with support from a statewide workforce initiative, helped private providers add 274 direct support staff between January and September of 2023, BHDDH officials reported in November.

McKee’s proposal for Fiscal Year 2025, which begins this July, includes nearly $462.4 million in reimbursements to the three dozen private agencies, or subcontractors, who serve as the backbone of the service system the state relies on to carry out the requirements of the 2014 consent decree.

These reimbursements also cover the cost of one-person programs managed by so-called “self-directed” individuals or families. The number of self-directed programs has grown to more than a quarter of the caseload of about 4,000 persons, in part because of the staff shortage at private agencies. Individuals and families, however, report the same kinds of problems finding qualified caregivers as the agencies, especially when it comes to securing employment-related services.

A separate line in the budget would allocate $15.6 million for other costs related to private services, according to a spokesman for the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH).

These expenses include the salaries of state social workers and administrators assigned to clients of the private providers, as well as human resources support, building maintenance, information technology support, and contracts for electronic records and for education and training provided by the Sherlock Center at Rhode Island College, the spokesman said.

The state also maintains its own network of group homes, which McKee would fund with $32.6 million in the next fiscal year.

All together, these budget categories add up to nearly $510.6 million.

No additional wage increases are planned for the fiscal year beginning July 1, except for those who provide in-home services to adults with developmental disabilities and were included in a comprehensive Medicaid rate review conducted by the Office of the Health Insurance Commissioner (OHIC). For the in-home workers, the governor’s budget seeks about $844,000. The final OHIC report, issued last September, said that the developmental disabilities workforce will be part of the next rate review in two years.

New Relief Funding Welcome, But Forum Says Caregivers Still Undervalued

By Gina Macris

In the last week, both Rhode Island and Massachusetts have taken steps to slow the exodus of workers from the community-based human service agencies the states depend on for critical mental health and social services.

The problem is that, through the federal-state Medicaid program, states set rates for human services workers in the private sector far below the salaries they pay state employees to do comparable work. The pay for private-sector human services jobs also lags behind he starting wages at major employers such as Amazon and Costco.

The two states are taking a variety of actions to raise pay and make the jobs more competitive, but a panel of human service executives from Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island says one-time infusions of cash do not address the core issue.

Massachusetts Governor Charles Baker is poised to sign a bill that passed both houses of the Massachusetts legislature last week giving $30 million in coronavirus relief funding to human service agencies to stabilize the workforce and provide college loan relief to workers.

In Rhode Island, the governor and the leadership of the House and Senate agreed Dec. 6 to use nearly $50 million in relief funds to re-open early intervention programs to new referrals and shore up staffing for agencies caring for children removed from their homes, child-care providers, and pediatric primary care medical practices.

The General Assembly also promised to tap $57.4 million in enhanced Medicaid reimbursements to support workers in home and community-based services, as long as the federal government approves that use for the money.

“It’s a step in the right direction,” said Tina Spears, executive director of the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island (CPNRI), of the announcement by Governor Dan McKee, House Speaker Joseph Shekarchi, and Senate President Dominick Ruggerio.

As she spoke, she was helping to lead a tri-state virtual public forum on the plight of nonprofit human service organizations – and how to stabilize them.

The forum described a regional slice of a national problem which threatens the quality of life essential to a thriving economy, the speakers agreed.

Community-based human service organizations, which provide a wide array of services, are the “connective tissue of the economy,” said Rhode Island Rep. Liana Cassar, speaking to more than 200 people in Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island who were listening or watching the two-hour presentation.

In the long run, one-time fixes, like coronavirus relief funds, will not address a system that has been long undervalued, Cassar said.

The pandemic did not create the problem, all agreed. Instead, it served as an accelerator.

Massachusetts State Senator Cindy Friedman said legislators were “blown away” by the statistics provided by non-profit human service agencies during State House testimony.

Massachusetts benchmarks the wages of employees in community-based human service organizations to a median of $16.79 an hour, said Michael Weekes, CEO of the Providers’ Council, a trade association of more than 220 community agencies that serve all types of people in need.

That median wage lags behind even starting wages at several large employers. Costco starts at $17 an hour and Amazon hires at a minimum of $18 an hour in Massachusetts, Weekes said.

“We just can’t compete,” he said. State employees in the human services make an average of $1,274 a week, but those in the private sector doing similar work get an average of $548 a week – a gap of more than 100 percent, Weekes said.

And whatever Connecticut and Massachusetts are paying for health and human services, Rhode Island is below that, said State Sen. Louis DiPalma. Rhode Islanders seeking better pay live within minutes of the Massachusetts and Connecticut borders, he said.

“We are treading water and taking on water,” said Spears, the director of CPNRI. The low salaries in human services have impacted the quality of life for a disproportionate number of minorities and women. They are essential workers, just like firefighters, police, and teachers, and should be treated that way, she said.

The consequences of the workforce shortage have become dire:

In Rhode Island, all nine early intervention programs for infants and toddlers with developmental delays were closed to new applicants programs at the end of November – a situation that is expected to soon be reversed soon with Governor Dan McKee’s release of $3.6 million in coronavirus relief funds from the CARES Act. That was part of the relief package announced Monday, Dec. 6.

In Connecticut, State Rep. Catherine Abercrombie said she had been hearing that a lack of mental health workers is an underlying issue in the three-day closure of one high school that had received threats of violence. Hamden High School, closed last Friday and again Monday and Tuesday. It reopened Wednesday with heighten security, and school officials planned to beef up mental health services, according to local news reports.

Diane Gould, CEO of Advocates, a large human services provider west of Boston, connected school violence and suicide risks to children’s mental health concerns.

The number of children who have attempted suicide increased “significantly” over the summer, she said. In August, her organization saw four children aged 11 to 17 who had tried to kill themselves.

“As many as 50 percent of the kids we’re seeing have aggression, suicidal thoughts, and anxiety,” she said, and there has been a 46 percent increase in calls to Advocates’ information and referral line since the pandemic struck in 2020, she said.

“There has been a terrible convergence of inadequate staffing with a dramatic increase in need,” she said.

Gould and other providers said they have been forced to create waiting lists for critically needed services or have stopped taking new cases.

In Rhode Island, service cuts for adults with developmental disabilities violate a 2014 civil rights consent decree that was supposed to bring them 40 hours a week of supported employment and individualized activities of their choice in their communities.

To keep staff from quitting, some providers described raises, signing bonuses, and other incentives they have given in the last few months – even though they are overspending their budgets.

“It’s a little nervous-making,” said Chris White, CEO of Road to Responsibility, provider of services to adults with developmental disabilities on the South Shore of Boston. “We’re doing this with one-time funds,” he said. “If there are Massachusetts legislators on this call, I hope you are hearing that. We are eating into our reserves.”

Abercrombie, the Connecticut legislator, said “this is a crisis.” The state still has $300 million in coronavirus relief funds to allocate, “and I’m glad we do,” she said.

The non-profit human service sector is a “vital business,” said Cassar of Rhode Island. “Our families depend on it and our economies depend on it,” she said.

“When people say, ’We need to bring well-paying jobs to Rhode Island,” they should be told, ‘We have jobs in Rhode Island. We need to make them well-paying,’” she said.

State senators DiPalma in Rhode Island and Friedman in Massachusetts have sponsored bills to permanently raise the pay of caregivers in the non-profit sector. Friedman’s bill would link salaries to the amount Massachusetts pays state employees for similar work, with a phase-in period of five years.

DiPalma has introduced a bill for several years that would fix minimum pay at at 55 percent above the state’s minimum wage, although he says he considers it a “work in progress.” DiPalma plans to re-introduce a revised measure in January.

Rhode Island will have a court-ordered review of the rates paid to private providers of developmental disability services, many of whom are members of Spears’ organization, CPNRI. A federal judge has ruled that without such a rate review, Rhode Island’s developmental disability system cannot fund the changes necessary to comply with the 2014 consent decree.

But that review will not affect other segments of the non-profit human services.

DiPalma said, “When we, the legislators, value the profession of the front-line workers, we will address the issue. Anything else will be a band-aid.”

DiPalma, the first vice president of Rhode Island’s Senate Finance Committee, acknowledged that solving the crisis is “categorically in the hands of the legislature.”

He said that every day, citizens should be asking their legislators what they are doing for the public. he said.

Meanwhile, Monday’s announcement by McKee, Shekarchi and Ruggerio signals the release of significant coronavirus relief funding in the short term:

• $38.5 million for children, families and social supports; $32 million to small business; $29 million to housing; and $13 million to tourism and hospitality industries; all from a total of $113 million in what McKee calls his “Rhode Island Rebounds” plan, funded by the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA).

• $57.4 million from the enhanced federal Medicaid match, which community-based agencies may use to shore up their workforce through hiring bonuses, raising pay and benefits, shift differentials, and other incentives

The three leaders also announced funding to supplement the human services portion of McKee’s “Rhode Island Rebounds” plan:

• $ 6 million for childcare providers, on top of the $13 million in the original plan. Ruggerio, the Senate president, said, “Childcare is a top priority. We can’t get people back to work if they can’t get childcare.”

• $3.64 million from unspent CARES Act funding for early intervention, in addition to the $5.5 million McKee originally put in Rhode Island Rebounds.

The House Finance Committee is expected to vote next week on the funding. The unusual display of unity among the executive and legislative leadership of state government Monday signals swift passage of the funding measures. (McKee does not need legislative approval to release CARES Act funding.)

Rhode Island is the only New England State that has not spent any ARPA funds, and critics have put increasing pressure on the General Assembly in recent weeks to take action on McKee’s proposal, especially after the start of a waiting list for early intervention services last week.

View the entire public forum on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PLS18en74A8

Coalition Seeks $100M To Fix RI Caregiving Crisis

By Gina Macris

Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee and the leadership of the House and Senate say they are working on solutions to the staffing crisis that has constricted access to healthcare and social services for people of all ages with disabilities or special needs.

McKee made his first move Oct. 7 by proposing a wide-ranging budget amendment that includes $12.5 million in retention bonuses for direct care staff of private providers of services to children in state care, and another $5.5 million to stabilize early intervention services to very young children with developmental disabilities and their families.

Four of nine agencies providing early intervention services have stopped taking new cases, the governor said. One in four families slated for early intervention in 2020 did not complete the program. And since the start of the pandemic, there has been a 30 percent reduction in beds available to the Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF), leaving some children in hospital psychiatric programs where they do not belong, and creating waiting lists for services.

The statement from McKee’s office said the situation has left DCYF in jeopardy of violating Family Court orders on placing children in residential programs consistent with their therapeutic needs.

These targeted increases, totaling $18 million, amount to “the tip of the iceberg” in addressing the labor shortages and service gaps affecting all of the state’s most vulnerable populations, says a spokeswoman for a coalition of 70 human service organizations with about 35,000 to 40,000 employees.

Tina Spears said $100 million is the minimum the state must invest to stabilize the workforce serving children and adults with developmental disabilities, youth and adults with substance abuse and behavioral healthcare needs, those with other mental health issues, and elderly people trying to remain in their own homes. Spears is executive director of the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island, a trade association whose members provide developmental disability services.

A day before McKee released the budget amendment, a spokeswoman for the governor, in response to questions from Developmental Disability News, said that he and his team “absolutely understand there are workforce challenges affecting our health and human service providers, and recognize the need for federal funding to ensure access to services for Rhode Islanders.”

And spokesmen for House Speaker Joseph Shekarchi and Senate President Dominic Ruggiero said, in a joint statement, that the two leaders are “aware of the crisis and working with their colleagues and stakeholders. They are willing to consider solutions.”

McKee’s overall spending plan totals $113 million. It would mark the state’s first use of its $1.1 billion allocation from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA). The governor characterized it as a “down payment” on Rhode Island’s future.

He proposes that $32 million go to small business, $13 million to the tourism and hospitality industry, $29.5 million to affordable housing and $38.5 million to the human services, including early intervention and children in DCYF care, as well as child care providers, and pediatric health care providers.

Rhode Island is the only New England state that has not spent any of its ARPA allocation.

In a letter to General Assembly leaders and the governor last month, the coalition of human service providers referred to other potential sources of additional aid. The organization asked the state to stretch the state’s investment in the human services workforce by using an enhanced federal Medicaid reimbursement rate for home and community services and dipping into a $51-million budget surplus for the fiscal year that ended in June.

“We simply cannot wait to respond to the current crisis until January, particularly when there is funding available today,” said Spears.

The pandemic has exacerbated a pre-existing worker shortage to crisis proportions, threatening the collapse of the privately-run network of services that in many cases, recipients are entitled to by law.

Higher caseloads and stressful conditions “have led to increased turnover, lower morale, and unparalleled levels of burnout among existing staff,” the coalition wrote in a letter to the governor and General Assembly leaders in late September.

The coalition leaders are Spears, Susan A. Storti, President and CEO of the the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Leadership Council of Rhode Island, and Tanja Kubas-Meyer, executive director of the Rhode Island Coalition for Children and Families.

The state of the developmental disabilities system, which is involved in a federal court case, illustrates the challenges faced by all the caregiving organizations across the board.

In January, 2020, two months before COVID-19 struck Rhode Island, the state’s own consultants found that some three dozen private providers of developmental disabilities services were on shaky financial footing because of inadequate funding to attract and retain enough skilled, trained workers.

In April of this year, some of the same consultants, who were no longer working for the state, found that adults with developmental disabilities living with their families experienced about a 72 percent reduction in the duration of support services they had before the pandemic.

Those in shared living and independent living situations had service reductions of 57 and 49 percent, respectively, according to the consultants.

While the General Assembly approved funding effective July 1 which raised the pay of direct care workers and their supervisors about $2 to $3 an hour, it is not known what impact, if any, the increases have had on attracting new staff.

Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island’s own state-run group home system all pay more than the $15 to $15.75 an hour that employees of the private agencies now receive.

An independent court monitor found that the state’s failure to maintain an adequate workforce continues to violate a 2014 consent decree calling for the overhaul of the service system to provide adults with developmental disabilities individualized support services to help them become part of their communities.

With many adults with developmental disabilities sitting at home for much of the week, and only two and a half years remaining in the term of the consent decree, the state’s next steps remain unclear.

Unless Rhode Island can reach an out-of-court agreement with the monitor, the U.S. Department of Justice, and the Chief Judge of the U.S. District Court, the state must defend itself against civil contempt charges in a hearing that begins Oct. 18. If it is found in contempt, the state faces fines of up to $1.5 million a month.

RI House Finance Committee To Air Governor’s New Plan To Raise DD Wages

By Gina Macris

Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee has asked the General Assembly to fund hourly pay rates of $15.75 for frontline workers serving adults with developmental disabilities and $21.99 for supervisory personnel.

The House Finance Committee will hold a public hearing on the proposal Thursday, June 10, at the conclusion of the full session of the House, which is not set at a fixed time but usually occurs sometime after 5 p.m.

The budget amendment aims to offer competitive wages to direct care workers in compliance with a 2014 civil rights consent decree, according to a June 7 memo from Jonathan Womer, Director of the Office of Management and Budget, sent to the chairmen of the House and Senate finance committees.

The wage increases would cost a total of $26.7 million more in federal-state Medicaid funding than McKee had originally proposed for the privately-run developmental disability service system in the fiscal year beginning July 1 – nearly $7.8 million in additional state revenue, and almost  $19 million in federal reimbursements.  

McKee also would redirect $13 million in Medicaid funding to the wage package, including $9 million in state revenue and $4 million in federal funding. That means the entire wage package would cost a total of $39.7 million, with federal reimbursements accounting for well over half that figure. Entry-level workers in the privately-run system are now paid about $13.18 to $13.40 an hour, according to various providers.

The $13 million re-directed to wages would come from a $15 million “transition and transformation fund” for initiating systemic reforms to help the shift to integrated, community-based services required by the consent decree. McKee’s proposal would leave the innovation fund with $2 million. (A recent report of an independent monitor to the U.S. District Court recently criticized an earlier state plan that would have eliminated the innovation fund, putting all the $15 million into wages.)

In another matter aimed at consent decree compliance, the proposed budget amendment would move up the date for including the caseload of the privately-run system of developmental disabilities in the semi-annual Caseload Estimating Conference used by the executive and legislative branches of state government to plan state budgets.

The amendment would add these caseload numbers to deliberations beginning November, 2021, as ordered by the federal court, instead of November, 2022., as had been originally proposed by the McKee administration. The inclusion of the developmental disabilities caseload is intended to ensure predictable, consistent funding for these entitlement services funded by the Medicaid program, according to the court order.

Because of COVID-19 public health restrictions, the Finance Committee will not take testimony in person. Instead, it has established rules for those who wish to submit written testimony in advance or pre-register to be called on the phone to submit verbal testimony.

According to the agenda for Thursday’s hearing:

“The meeting will be televised live on Capitol Television, which can be seen on Cox Channels 15, and 61, in high definition on Cox Channel 1061, on Full Channel on Channel 15 and on Channel 34 by Verizon subscribers. It will also be live streamed at http://rilegislature.gov/CapTV/Pages/default.aspx

“WRITTEN TESTIMONY: Written testimony is strongly encouraged and may be submitted via HouseFinance@rilegislature.gov   Indicate your name, bill number, and viewpoint (for/against/neither) at top of message. Due to high volume, clerks are not screening this inbox for verbal testimony requests. This inbox is for written testimony only. DEADLINE: Written testimony should be submitted no later than three (3) hours prior to the posted meeting time. Every effort will be made to share written testimony submitted before the deadline with committee members prior to the hearing. Testimony received after deadline will be sent to committee members and posted to the website as soon as possible. For faster processing, it is recommended that testimony is submitted as a PDF file. Testimony will be posted on the General Assembly website, http://www.rilegislature.gov/Special/comdoc/Pages/HFIN.aspx

VERBAL TESTIMONY: Due to the extremely high volume of requests, and in order to accommodate as many constituents as possible, please take note of the revised procedure for verbal testimony:

DEADLINE: Requests for verbal testimony must be submitted via the link, by 4:00 PM on Wednesday, June 9, 2021. For verbal testimony requests, CLICK HERE  

“Verbal testimony accepted on any bill scheduled for "Hearing and/or Consideration" only The committee is unable to designate a specific time that you will be called. In the event you are unavailable when called, witnesses are urged to submit written testimony. Christopher O'Brien Committee Clerk 222-6916 HouseFinance@rilegislature.gov  “

Judge: RI Must Expand DD Budget Or Risk Olmstead Consent Decree Noncompliance

By Gina Macris

Judge McConnell

Judge McConnell

Rhode Island will not be able to meet a 2024 deadline for complying with a 7-year-old civil rights agreement unless it begins allocating money now to attract an adequately-paid, skilled workforce to serve adults with developmental disabilities in their communities.

So says Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. of the U.S. District Court in a nine-page order issued March 16 clarifying what it will take to comply with a 2014 consent decree correcting Rhode Island’s violations of the Integration Mandate of the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA).

Five days ago, on March 11, Governor Daniel McKee submitted a state budget request to the General Assembly that does not propose any rate increase for direct care workers. These workers are employed by the private agencies the state relies on to carry out provisions of the 2014 Olmstead consent decree.

Under the current rates, providers are able to pay front-line workers an average of $13.08 an hour, or $1.58 above the state’s minimum wage of $11.50, McConnell said in the statement, which amounted to a tutorial on the issues affecting compliance.

The $11.50 rate went into effect last October, and McConnell pointed out there are bills pending in the General Assembly for additional raises.

“The functions and responsibilities of staff who provide direct support to adults who have intellectual and developmental disabilities are significantly more challenging than many minimum wage positions,” McConnell said.

In several states the pay of direct support staff is considerably higher than minimum wage, he said. Utah, for example, has set its direct care rate at 72 percent above minimum wage.

He drew a straight line connecting low wages, high turnover, and an inability of the provider agencies to find a well-trained, stable workforce capable of providing an array of services that will enable adults with developmental disabilities to live meaningful lives in their communities in accordance with the ADA’s Integration Mandate.

One in five jobs in private agencies are currently vacant, and agencies report an average annual turnover of about 30 percent, according to a survey by an independent court monitor conducted in February. In addition, 80 percent of adults and families who direct their own programs said they had difficulty finding staff, and 68 percent said they had difficulty retaining staff, according to the monitor.

McConnell’s latest statement underlined an order he issued Jan. 6 which requires the state to raise workers’ wages to $20 an hour by 2024 as part of a comprehensive overhaul of services from center-based group care to one-on-one or one-to-two staffing in the community.

He said the state must collaborate with service providers and advocates in the community to develop a three-year budget strategy for compliance with the consent decree and give him monthly progress reports at the end of April, May, and June.

The judge cited a 2020 report of the state’s own consultants that concluded the provider agencies are financially “fragile and profoundly undercapitalized.”

McConnell also felt it necessary to say that the “entirety of the State” is a party to the consent decree, not merely the state agencies identified in the document.

The McKee administration and the leadership of the House and Senate had no immediate comment on McConnell’s order.

The judge reminded the state that the findings of the U.S. Department of Justice in 2014 cited “multiple concerns” about the state’s failure to comply with the Integration mandate.

Among them were:

  • A lack of resources

  • Failure of the state’s rate-setting methodology and reimbursement model to promote integrated supported employment and day services

  • The inflexibility of the state’s reimbursement model.

McKee’s budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1 includes a proposed $15 million “transformation and transition fund,” but it’s not clear exactly what that money will pay for.

There are five committees already working under the supervision of the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals on proposed administrative reforms.

But McConnell has signaled he wants the planning complete by the end of June and the implementation to begin at the start of the new fiscal year in July.

He also noted that the integration mandated by the consent decree are also required by the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services if the state is to continue qualifying for federal Medicaid reimbursement under the Home And Community-Based Services (HCBS) Final Rule. Like the consent decree in Rhode Island, that rule gets its authority from the Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, which in 1999 clarified the Integration Mandate of the ADA.

“Rhode Island is seven years into the Consent Decree,” McConnell said. (The eighth year begins April 9.)

“With three years remaining, there is significant work still to be completed,” he said in conclusion.

Click here to read Judge McConnell’s order of March 16.

Proposed $10M Cut In RI DD Spending Overshadows Reform Plans

By Gina Macris

Thursday’s initial briefing on Governor Daniel McKee’s proposed budget for adults with developmental disabilities highlighted a $15-million set-aside to plan changes in the system, in response to a federal court order enforcing a 2014 civil rights consent decree.

At the same time, the budget legislation submitted to the General Assembly later in the day, on March 11, shows that overall spending on developmental disabilities would be $10 million less than spent this year.

McKee proposes adding $476,573 to the current developmental disabilities allocation for a total of nearly $304.5 million in federal and state Medicaid money and miscellaneous other sources of funding to close out the current fiscal year June 30.

The budget bill for the next fiscal year cuts overall spending on developmental disabilities to $294.4 million. That total includes $5 million in federal funds and $10 million in state revenue earmarked in the budget for the $15-million “transformation and transition fund” to plan reforms to comply with the consent decree.

The spending cut reflects projected savings from phasing out the costly state-run group home system. Residents would be moved to less costly group homes run by private service providers, according to the budget plan.

But the private agencies, who were in a precarious financial position even before the onset of the COVID pandemic a year ago, have been reluctant to take on additional clients in recent years because the amount the state pays does not cover the actual cost of services, according to repeated testimony before House and Senate finance committees, as well as testimony in federal court.

The state’s own consultants, the non-profit New England States Consortium Systems Organization, highlighted the providers’ fiscal problems and the way the demands on them strained capacity as part of an exhaustive 18-month study completed last summer for the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH).

The core long-term problem, exacerbated by COVID-19, is an inability to find workers for jobs that carry a high degree of responsibility but provide an average starting wage of about $13.18 an hour, less than some fast food and retail chains and less than Amazon, according to testimony before Chief Judge John J. McConnell of the U.S. District Court.

McConnell, who enforces compliance with a 2014 civil rights decree requiring the integration of adults with developmental disabilities in their communities, has ordered the state to raise workers’ wages to $20 an hour by 2024 as part of a comprehensive three-year overhaul of the developmental disabilities system.

The state budget indirectly controls how much the private providers can pay their workers by setting reimbursement rates for various services, but no money in McKee’s proposal is carved out for a rate increase.

Nor does it appear the McKee administration anticipates the heightened level of spending in the next several years that would support the kind of investment needed to comply with requirements of the consent decree to accommodate clients’ desire to be part of their communities, at work and at play. The consent decree gets its authority from the Integration Mandate of the Americans With Disabilities Act.

McKee’s budget summary anticipates costs for developmental disabilities services will increase 4 percent annually through 2026.

A 4 percent annual increase would come nowhere close to fulfilling the court-ordered hourly wage of $20 an hour which, according to one estimate, would require an budget hike exceeding 45 percent.

The budget summary indicates the state aims to save a net $11.4 million by transferring the operations of the state-run group home system to the privately-run system by October 1.

The state-run system, called Rhode Island Community Living and Supports, (RICLAS) is currently allocated $29.7 million to care for 116 group home residents. The budget summary says transferring RICLAS operations to the private group home system would save $19.2 million in federal-state Medicaid funds in the RICLAS account in the fiscal year beginning July 1.

At the same time, a total of $7.8 million would be added to the private provider system to care for the former RICLAS residents. The budget for the next fiscal year would still leave about $9 million in RICLAS through June 20, 2022. A BHDDH spokesman could not immediately say how long the RICLAS phase-out would take.

The $19.2 million cut in RICLAS would eliminate the equivalent of 50 full-time jobs, mostly from attrition or transfer, the BHDDH spokesman said. RICLAS caregivers are paid a minimum of $18 and receive state employee benefits.

The last time BHDDH announced plans to move large numbers of people in residential care, in 2016, it achieved only a small fraction of the savings the Office of Management and Budget had calculated.

Of 100 persons projected to move from group homes to less costly shared living arrangements in private homes during the first six months of 2016, only 21 made successful matches with families.

Instead of projected savings of $19.3 million, the state recouped a few hundred thousand dollars in that six-month period.

Between March, 2016 and July, 2020, the number of people in shared living arrangements increased from 288 to 399. Since then, the number has decreased to 378, according to BHDDH figures.

The $15-million transformation and transition fund would support a policy and planning effort to carry out reforms required for compliance with the consent decree, according to the budget bill.

BHDDH informed Judge McConnell in February that the changes would take 18 to 24 months to implement, with a target date of December, 2022.

According to the budget language, the fund will be dedicated to:

  • Help providers “strengthen” their operations to “support consumers’ needs for living meaningful lives of their choosing in the community”

  • Allow providers the chance to participate in a performance-based payment model

  • Reduce administrative burdens for providers

  • Invest in “state infrastructure” to implement and manage these initiatives

  • Prepare for a new way of approaching budgeting of the developmental disabilities caseload in the future.

Beyond the language in the budget bill, there were no details immediately available from BHDDH on what the transformation and transition fund will pay for.

$15 M for RI DD Reform Planned In Next Budget

By Gina Macris

Rhode Island Governor Daniel McKee unveiled a budget plan March 11 that includes $15 million for structural reforms to services for adults with developmental disabilities in the next fiscal year.

Overall, McKee’s has proposed an $11.17 billion budget for Fiscal 2022 which promises to resolve a statewide $336 million deficit while protecting those hardest-hit by the pandemic and helping small business. McKee said the budget “protects Rhode Islanders through an unprecedented public health crisis and lays the foundation for a durable recovery.”

At a noontime virtual briefing for reporters, A. Kathryn Power, director of the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals, said $10 million of the developmental disabilities reform effort will come from state revenue and another $5 million will be funded by the federal government.

She said BHDDH wants to create a “stronger provider community that is fiscally sustainable.” The reform efforts will increase opportunities for employment and other services for adults with developmental disabilities, she said.

Chief Judge John J. MCConnell, Jr. of the U.S. District Court has ordered the state to develop a three-year plan for overhauling privately-run services comply with a 21014 consent decree which requires Rhode Island to integrate adults with developmental disabilities in their communities in accordance with the Americans With Disabilities Act.

The developmental disabilities budget contains a separate $4.5 million allocation for “alternative placements” for adults with developmental disabilities who live in a state-run group home system called Rhode Island Community Living and Supports.

A ten-percent increase for shared living caregivers also will be in the budget, as part of another group of expenditures intended to encourage more home and community-based services as an alternative to residential care.

Additional information was not immediately available on budget details affecting those with developmental disabilities.


RI General Assembly Will Handle Court-Related DD Issues DD Issues In Regular Budget Talks

By Gina Macris

The pace of discussions for complying with a court-ordered overhaul of Rhode Island’s developmental disability system is expected to pick up as early as next week, when newly elevated Governor Daniel McKee rolls out his budget proposal for the fiscal year beginning July 1.

McKee was sworn in March 2, replacing Gina Raimondo, who resigned as governor after clearing final hurdles in Washington, DC to become Secretary of Commerce. Raimondo’s office said in mid-January that McKee, then Lt. Governor, would be responsible for submitting the budget proposal to the General Assembly.

It remains unclear to what degree, if at all, the proposed state budget will incorporate additional money for initial steps toward compliance with a federal court order enforcing a 2014 civil rights agreement.

While uncertainty about funding hovers, court-ordered discussions organized by the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) have been underway since last August to develop a path forward for providing services that will encourage integration of adults with developmental disabilities in their communities, in accordance with the 2014 consent decree and the Americans With Disabilities Act.

A recent report to Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. of the U. S. District Court indicates short-term recommendations are taking shape to address some of the 16 points the judge laid out in a reform agenda last summer.

He gave the state until June 30 to develop a three-year implementation plan that will achieve full compliance with the consent decree by 2024.

Representatives of the House and Senate leadership participated in some court-ordered reform talks until McConnell issued an order Jan. 6 which said the three-year plan must include these specifics:

  • a $20 minimum wage for direct care workers by fiscal 2024.

  • Incorporation of the developmental disabilities caseload in the formal process for estimating the state’s public assistance obligations for budget calculations, beginning this year.

On March 3, House Speaker Joseph Shekarchi and Senate President Dominick Ruggerio issued a new statement on how they will handle legislative issues raised by the reform efforts:

“Specific issues will be analyzed and discussed in legislative committees as part of the public hearing process on pending legislation as well as the upcoming state budget.”

The two leaders continued: “The members of the General Assembly care deeply about individuals with developmental disabilities and ensuring a strong continuum of care, and the Senate President and House Speaker believe that we have an obligation as a society to provide strong services and supports for all vulnerable Rhode Islanders.”

The leadership had withdrawn from reform talks out of concern that their representatives’ participation could be perceived as tacit approval of change outside the legislative process, according to separate letters sent to McConnell Feb. 3.

Shekarchi’s and Ruggerio’s statement did not specifically mention the direct care worker wages or making the developmental disabilities numbers part of the twice-yearly Caseload Estimating Conference, the budgeting tool used by the governor and the legislature.

Development of a new approach for determining how to support the individualized plans of the developmentally disabled population is at the heart of the overhaul. The existing fee-for-service system was designed 10 years ago for congregate care, where one or two staff members could oversee as many as ten clients in a day care center or sheltered workshop. The U.S. Department of Justice found that model violated the ADA’s Integration Mandate.

In November, McConnell heard testimony that the current funding ceiling for the private provider system, roughly $268.7 million in federal/state Medicaid money, will not support integrated services, which are much more labor-intensive — and thus, more costly — than congregate care. The cost of correcting the non-compliance could increase the developmental disabilities budget by nearly 50 percent, according to one estimate.

Because of the uncertainty over funding, five workgroups organized by BHDDH are focusing on short-term changes that can ease administrative burdens on providers and make the state bureaucracy more user-friendly for the individuals served and their families, according to a progress report submitted to McConnell at the end of February.

According to the report, BHDDH expects to have detailed information by March 31 on:

  • shifting from quarterly to annual per-person budget authorizations

  • streamlining dozens of private provider billing codes, many of which require documentation of staff time in 15-minute increments for each client served

  • simplifying the process of writing each client’s annual service plan “to reduce repeated questions, frustrations, and errors requiring correction and intervention.”

The report recommends adding a second assessment or new questions or criteria to improve the accuracy of the standardized Supports Intensity Scale-A, (SIS-A) interview, used to determine service needs and funding levels.

Improved assessments would reduce reliance on appeals. Interviewers also need training on cultural differences, it said.

Additional recommendations include:

  • a training program for parents on how to approach the SIS-A, which has been the subject of frequent complaints over the years from parents

  • clarification of the process for appealing funding determinations made as a result of the SIS-A, and developing ways to more quickly resolve appeals

  • consolidation of separate applications for Medicaid and for Medicaid-funded services into one process

  • a request for a waiver from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for Medicaid eligibility redeterminations for persons with developmental disabilities, who have life-long conditions.

The report said long-term revision of the fiscal and reimbursement system will be implemented by December, 2022.

The workgroups developing the recommendations include both state officials and representatives of the community, including individuals who themselves receive services, families, advocates, and service providers.

The groups’ recommendations are reviewed by the appropriate department-level directors and other key officials, according to the report.

Once final recommendations are analyzed and decisions made by the state, a “cohesive workplan” that will be submitted to McConnell on or before June 30 as required by an order the judge issued last July 30, the report said.