Maher Center Disputes RI's Adverse Licensing Action In Formal Announcement of Appeal

By Gina Macris

The James L. Maher Center in Newport, RI., is “extremely disappointed” with “unsubstantiated conclusions” that it abandoned a young woman with developmental disabilities in its care at Newport Hospital last May, according to William Maraziti, the agency’s executive director.  

In a statement released Nov. 10, the agency says it has filed a formal appeal of an adverse licensing action taken by the RI Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals. 

After a four-month inquiry, BHDDH investigators recommended in September that the department’s “licensing unit issue a conditional license to the James L. Maher Center,” according to their September report. 

By early October, licensing officials had followed through, according to a spokeswoman for the Executive Office of Health and Human Services. 

At the time, Jennifer Wood, the Deputy Secretary for Health and Human Services said that even though the case involved the experience of just one client, the investigation raises “systemic issues” about the quality of care and respect for human rights.

The findings demonstrated that the Maher Center is “not reliably following the rules and regulations” of the Division of Developmental Disabilities, Wood said. She said a conditional license, good for six months, is the equivalent of a probationary license.

But the Maher Center says that the “flawed investigation resulted in the downgrading to ‘conditional status’ the state license on one of the Maher Center’s 11 group homes.” 

“Recent media reports wrongly implied that the action was taken against the Maher Center’s agency license, which is the Center’s authority to provide services as a developmental disability organization,” the statement said. 

“By availing itself of the appeal process, the Maher Center intends to remove this unjust blemish on its 63-year record,” the statement continued. 

“We have never abandoned any of our participants – and certainly didn’t in this circumstance,” Maraziti said, calling the investigators’ report “inflammatory” and its allegations “without merit.”   

A spokeswoman for Wood confirmed in October that the Maher Center had begun the appeal process. 

The first step in the process is a meeting with investigators to determine if differences can be resolved, and the next step is a request for a hearing before an EOHHS hearing officer, according to the spokeswoman. 

The agency’s statement offered no details about the formal appeal, and through a spokesman, Maher Center officials declined to answer questions.   

 

RI BHDDH Corrects Contact Info For Next Week's Forum on SIS

The Rhode Island Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals has issued issued a corrected email address for those who wish to sign up for the public forum Thursday, Nov. 17, on the Supports Intensity Scale, the assessment used to set individual budgets for adults receiving developmental disability services. The BHDDH statement follows: 

Our apologies that the RSVP email address in our newsletter inviting you to the SIS-A Training was incorrect. The correct RSVP email address is BHDDH.AskDD@bhddh.ri.gov. 

Reminder --
We are holding an informational session with an AAIDD representative to help individuals and families prepare for this change and to answer questions. Details on this training are available below. Additional trainings will be planned for families and providers.

What: SIS-A Training and Information Session

When: Thursday, November 17, 2016 – 4:30 - 6:30pm

Where:  Arnold Conference Center, Eleanor Slater Hospital Regan Building, 111 Howard Avenue, Cranston, RI 02920

RVSP:  Please email BHDDH.AskDD@bhddh.ri.gov. We hope to see you there. 

More information about the SIS-A is available on the AAIDD website. For additional questions, email BHDDH.AskDD@bhddh.ri.gov 

Public Information Session Nov. 17 on New Individual Assessment of DD Support Needs

By Gina Macris

This article has been updated

A representative of the national organization which created the Supports Intensity Scale (SIS), the individual assessment used to assign Medicaid funding to adults with developmental disabilities in Rhode Island, will help explain a new version of the questionnaire at a public information and training session Thursday, Nov. 17.

The American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD), which created the SIS used in Rhode Island since 2011, released a new version in 2015 that the organization says is better designed to capture the needs of adults with developmental disabilities.

A spokeswoman for the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) said that the new version, called the SIS-A, is being put into use this month in individual reassessments.  

The SIS, rather than focusing on an individual’s handicaps, was designed to determine how much support a person needs to function successfully in the various activities of daily living. It was not designed as a funding tool, but many states, including Rhode Island, use the SIS to determine individual budgets for support services.

The administration of the SIS in Rhode Island ranks high on the list of parental complaints, judging from comments made at public forums earlier this year.

The Nov. 17 forum will be from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.  in the Arnold Conference Center of the Regan Building at Eleanor Slater Hospital, 111 Howard Ave., Cranston.

BHDDH officials ask that participants RSVP by emailing BHDDH.AskDD@bhddh.ri.gov

More information about the SIS-A is available on the AAIDD website. For additional questions, email BHDDH.AskDD@bhddh.ri.gov

The SIS also will be on the agenda of a general public forum on adult developmental disability services, tomorrow, Wednesday, Nov. 9, from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Cherry Hill Manor Nursing and Rehab Center, 2 Cherry Hill Rd., Johnston.

Jane Gallivan, a consultant to the Executive Office of Human Services, explained in some detail the rationale for moving to the SIS-A during an interview in late September. To read that entire article, click here.

 

Toward a Smoother Transition: RI Will Decide Early, By Age 17, Who Will Qualify for Adult DD Services

By Gina Macris

(This article has been updated.) 

For some Rhode Islanders with developmental disabilities, the shift between high school and the adult world has been likened to falling off a cliff.

Now, changes are underway to lay the groundwork for a smoother transition from high school to adult living, the latest being a new policy that the state will accept applications from individuals aged 16 and will determine their eligibility by the time they turn 17.

But it remains to be seen how far the state gets in delivering on its promise to a federal court to find jobs for every eligible young adult who can and wants to work by next June 30.  

One potential problem is that, despite small raises recently granted to direct care workers, their employers still may not be able to hire the staff necessary to add new clients. 

New, slightly higher reimbursement rates to private service providers reflect the raises but do not address continuing shortfalls in overhead costs borne by employers, according to a spokeswoman for some two dozen agencies.

For years, private providers have had trouble recruiting and retaining competent staff. A new employment incentive program, with a few exceptions, requires agencies to use existing funding to train workers, if necessary, and make job placements before collecting one-time bonuses. 

According to evidence presented in U.S. District Court last April, young adults with developmental disabilities have been dismissed abruptly from high school on their 21st birthdays and have tended to sit at home for weeks or months because adult services were not in place.

Rhode Island law says individuals with developmental disabilities are eligible for adult services at age 18, although decisions on eligibility often have been made a few months before the young people turned 21.

With many agencies declining to accept new clients, families found it difficult and time-consuming to arrange services.

When services finally were pulled together, they often fell short of participants’ and families’ expectations, according to what U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell heard in April.

Since the April hearing, the General Assembly has enacted a law sponsored by the Senate Finance Committee chairman, Daniel DaPonte, that requires school districts to keep those 21-year-olds in class until the end of the academic year.

More recently, the Executive Office of Human Services (EOHHS) has updated plans to better identify, enroll, and serve young adults eligible for developmental disability services provided by the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) and the Office of Rehabilitation Services (ORS). Those plans include the new “eligibility determination by 17” policy.

In a dramatic departure from past practice, parents of youngsters who are likely to be eligible will be encouraged to apply for adult services when their sons and daughters turn 16.

Consent Decree Drives Change

The changes respond to requirements of a 2014 federal consent decree which aims to move adults with developmental disabilities out of sheltered workshops and segregated day programs that violate the Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court.

In 1999, the high court found that services for individuals with disabilities must be provided in the least restrictive environment that is therapeutically appropriate, with that environment presumed to be the community.

During the latest judicial review of the consent decree in September, an independent court monitor, Charles Moseley, noted that since the consent decree went into effect in April, 2014, the state has failed to meet targets for placing young adults in regular jobs in the community, with the necessary supports. 

By July 1, 2016, the state was required to have placed all young adults who have left high school during the 2013-2014 academic year or later. At the time, 151 people were reported to be eligible, but the state’s total number of placements was 29.

Rather than hold a contempt hearing against the state, Judge McConnell has deferred to Moseley, who said was confident he could work with state officials to meet the employment goals.

Complicating the issue, the number of young adults in question has risen since July from 151 to 259. The Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE) has updated its count of individuals with developmental disabilities who left school during the 2015-2016 school year and will continue to do so through June 30, 2017.

RIDE also has promised to expand the categories of individuals whose names it reports to BHDDH to more accurately reflect the total population of young people likely protected by the consent decree, according to Moseley’s most recent report to Judge McConnell Nov. 1.

Since the consent decree went into effect in 2014, RIDE has reported to BHDDH only the names of those with developmental disabilities who turn 21 and leave school.

Going forward, its count will include all those between the ages of 14 and 21 who have developmental disabilities, autism, or multiple disabilities that can be expected to restrict their ability to function independently as adults. The monitor wants RIDE to identify all those students by Nov. 15.

In the meantime, BHDDH, ORS, and RIDE will work together to notify all affected families of their protected status under terms of the consent decree and give them information about applying for services. (Click here for eligibility criteria in state law.) 

General Assembly Increased DD Budget

To shore up the state’s ability to provide services once adults are found eligible, the General Assembly has approved an hourly wage increase of 36 cents for direct care workers – a total of $5 million – and allocated another $6.8 million to foster supported employment.

In addition RI Senate leaders have said they want to raise the current average wage of front line workers from $11.18 to $15 an hour over five years.

But the state still faces continuing consent decree deadlines for placing adults with developmental disabilities in jobs, including about 50 former sheltered workshop employees by Jan. 1, as well as a yet-to-be–determined number of eligible young adults by June 30.  

The new $6.8 million supported employment program expects to begin disbursing funds in mid-November, according to an EOHHS document attached to Moseley’s latest filing with the court.

The program requires providers to have specially-trained employment teams in place to quality for the program and begin receiving a series of one-time bonuses. The bonuses reward the certification of employment specialists, job placements, and job retention for six months with totals that vary from about $3,500 to $15,750 per person, depending on the client’s age and the complexity of the disability.

The recent wage increases

The recent wage increases cover payroll–related taxes but do not add to the state’s reimbursement to private agencies for other aspects of employee overhead costs-taxes. Nor do the raises increase the pay of front-line supervisors or mid-level managers, according to Donna Martin., executive director of the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island, an association of 26 agencies.

Martin says the state allows agencies  35 percent of direct care workers’ salaries for such overhead costs, but CPNRI data “shows actual employee-related expense is in excess of 60 percent.”

Last spring, she told the General Assembly that her membership operates at an average loss of $5,500 a year for each employee.

do not change state’s reimbursement to private agencies for employer-related taxes and other costs, according to Donna Martin, executive director of the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island, an association of 26 agencies.

Last spring, she told the General Assembly that her membership operates at an average loss of $5,500 for each employee.

Because many agencies are not expanding their staff or accepting new clients, the parents of newly-eligible young adults increasingly are turning to so-called “self-directed” services, which allow them to design customized programs for their sons and daughters, a time-consuming process. The parents are responsible for organizing a program within their budget and choosing and supervising workers. A fiscal intermediary pays the bills.

BHDDH is encouraging these “self-directed” providers, as well as the established agencies, to apply for the one-time supported employment bonuses.  

The next opportunity for consumers and families to speak to state officials about the consent decree and developmental disability services in general is Wednesday, Nov.9 from 4 to 6 p.m at the Cherry Hill Manor Nursing and Rehab Center, 2 Cherry Hill Rd., Johnston.  

Judge McConnell has scheduled his next review of the consent decree for January 27 in U.S. District Court, Providence.

(The original version of this article inaccurately stated that recent raises to direct care workers did not include an increase for any aspect of employer-related costs.)  

 

Public Forum on DD Services in RI Scheduled For Nov. 9 at Cherry Hill Manor in Johnston

By Gina Macris

Rhode Island officials will explain continuing changes in the state's developmental disability service system during a public forum Wednesday, Nov. 9, from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Cherry Hill Manor Nursing and Rehab Center, 2 Cherry Hill Road, Johnston.

The meeting will include updates on the search for a director of the Division of Developmental Disabilities as well as details of efforts to implement provisions of a federal consent decree calling on the state to end segregated daytime services that violate the Americans with Disabilities Act.

In addition, state officials will describe technical assistance the state receives from the National Association of State Directors of Developmental Disabilities Services (NASDDDS). The state has asked the organization for guidance in implementing a shift to community-based services, with an emphasis on supported employment, as required by the consent decree.

The application process for adult developmental disability services and the assessment used to assign individual funding to those found eligible also will be reviewed, according to an announcement from the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH).

Individuals who need interpreter services for the hearing impaired or need other accommodations for the meeting are asked to call Emily Limoges at 401.462.3405 or email her at Emily.Limoges@bhddh.ri.gov before Monday, November 7th.

Consumers and their families will have an opportunity to ask questions at the meeting.  The forum, the third to be held this year, represents part of the state's promise to the U.S. District Court, the U.S. Department of Justice, and an independent court monitor to improve communications with the public about the consent decree. BHDDH officials also will give an overview of the department's recently-revamped website at the meeting.

In the meantime, the Division of Developmental Disabilities has released contact information for those who wish to call or email the division directly concerning service-related issues.  

RI Senate Leaders Launch Drive to Raise DD Workers' Pay to $15 in Next Five Years

By Gina Macris

DiPalma outlines Plan for $15 hourly wage in five years

DiPalma outlines Plan for $15 hourly wage in five years

Rhode Island Senate leaders have announced a five-year drive to lift wages of caregivers for adults with developmental disabilities to $15 an hour, with the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee saying Oct. 28 that the existing labor force is “so tenuous it is on the verge of collapse.” 

At a press conference in Warwick, Sen. Louis DiPalma, D-Middletown, the architect of the plan, said it would start with an additional $6.8 million in Medicaid funding – half of it state revenue- in the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2017. 

The plan also calls for legislation that would commit the state to additional wage increases in each of the following four fiscal years, although the total cost has yet to be determined, DiPalma said. 

The General Assembly added $5 million in Medicaid funding to the current budget late in the 2016 legislative session, under pressure from Governor Gina Raimondo and from a federal court order reinforcing a consent decree mandating integration of individuals with developmental disabilities. 

The U.S. Department of Justice and an independent court monitor had expressed concern that low salaries prevented service agencies from attracting workers with the necessary skills to implement the consent decree. 

The $5 million added to the current budget – including $2.5 million in state funds - raises the average worker’s hourly wage by 36 cents, from $10.82 to $11.18, according to DiPalma. The $6.8 million in the next budget would add another 76 cents, for a new average hourly rate of $11.94, he said. 

Similar yearly hikes would be needed during the following four years to reach $15 an hour, DiPalma said, although the increments do not have to be evenly divided as long as the state reaches the goal by July 1, 2021, the start of the 2022 fiscal year. 

He plans to introduce legislation in the next session of the General Assembly calling for raises over multiple years. 

The effort has the support of the Senate President, Teresa Paiva Weed, and the Senate Finance Committee Chairman, Daniel DaPonte. DiPalma is first vice-chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.

 Late Friday, David Ortiz, press secretary to Governor Raimondo, said that while the current budget gave workers their first raise in several years, “we must do more to stay competitive with neighboring states. “ 

“The Governor looks forward to partnering with Senator DiPalma and Senate President Paiva Weed to continue to invest in better outcomes for families and help ensure all of our workers can make it in Rhode Island,” Ortiz said. 

Massachusetts has agreed to pay personal care attendants a minimum of $15 an hour by 2018.  Enacted in 2015, it was the first such state-wide agreement in the nation. 

New York recently adopted legislation spelling out a multi-year plan to phase in a $15 minimum wage for all workers, with different schedules for various regions of the state. 

In a statement in Warwick Friday, DaPonte said that DiPalma’s plan “addresses an important part of the wage inequity problem, and helps improve outcomes for the individuals they serve. 

“At the same time, we need to continue to review the methodology for compensating all those direct care workers who serve our children, homebound elderly, and individuals with disabilities through other types of provider agencies,” he said. 

During the press conference at West Bay Residential Services on Knight Street, DaPonte talked about a constituent who approached him at his son’s soccer game and complained that his recently-widowed, elderly mother was not receiving the 20 hours of home care to which she was entitled. 

The constituent wanted DaPonte to introduce legislation to require home health aides to show up on the job. 

But DaPonte said he told the man that the workers were so poorly paid the agencies “can’t find people to show up.” 

“Now we’re at the point where the system is so tenuous it’s on the verge of collapse,” he told an audience of about 50 that filled a conference room at the headquarters of the agency, which specializes in support for individuals with significant physical limitations.  

Data shows Pay Inequities, Particularly for Women

DiPalma’s plan emerged from a four-month long study that showed stark inequities in the pay of direct care workers since the General Assembly cut a total of $26 million from the developmental disability budget in the fiscal year that began July 1, 2011. 

With that sweeping action, workers saw double-digit pay cuts, to an average of $10.65 an hour, according to DiPalma’s data. At the time, the minimum wage was $3.25 lower, or $7.40 an hour. 

Since then, however, the state’s minimum wage has increased 30 percent, to $9.60 an hour, while the average pay of direct care workers has remained stagnant. 

In the fiscal year which ended June 30, Rhode Island’s direct care workers made an hourly average of $10.82 an hour, while those doing comparable work in Massachusetts were paid $13.02,  and those in Connecticut made $12.19, according to statistics from the U.S. Department of Labor. 

The figures pertain to employees of private agencies providing direct care. In Rhode Island, a parallel, state-run system pays its entry-level workers $17.15 an hour, for an annual salary of $35,668. These workers also get thestate employee benefits package, according to DiPalma’s statistics.  

With longevity, the average direct care worker in the state system makes $42,278 a year, he said. 

DiPalma also presented the results of a 2015 survey of direct care workers conducted in 2015 by the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island, an association made up of most of some three dozen private agencies in Rhode Island that serve about 4000 adults with developmental disabilities. 

With 1,439 responses, the survey found that:

  •  More than half the workers were female heads of households
  • · Many received food stamps and other government assistance geared toward low-income workers
  • ·87 percent worked fulltime
  • ·41 percent worked more than one job to make ends meet
  • · 62 percent said they want to leave the developmental disabilities field because of the low pay 

The turnover among employees of private agencies is 33 percent a year, three times the turnover rate of 11 percent in the parallel state-run system, according to DiPalma’s study. 

Higher wages would mean greater stability and improved performance in the workforce, DiPalma said. 

Picking up where DiPalma left off, the director of the Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College said research shows those two factors correlate with a better quality of life for the recipients of support services. 

Anthony Antosh said a better quality of life is measured by improved health and safety, more interpersonal relationships and greater self-determination among individuals with developmental disabilities. 

Jim Petrone works his communication board

Jim Petrone works his communication board

Jim Petrone, who receives support from West Bay Residential Services, used a communication board to tell the audience that he could not have made it through a health crisis in 2015 without the support of his staff and family. 

“Now I have a second chance at life,” he said. 

 

Diane Scott, who has worked at West Bay Residential Services for 26 years, reminded the audience that those who provide direct care come to learn the most intimate details about a person’s life. 

“Imagine,” she said, “if staff showered you or bathed you.” 

“No sooner do you decide to trust these staff than they continue to leave. Regulars work extra hours to compensate for yet another staff vacancy,” Scott said. 

Antosh said direct care workers should be treated not as short-term custodial staff but as professionals, who are on a career ladder, and who provide comprehensive support to people with very complex needs.  

THREE-STATE COMPARISON OF MINIMUM WAGE AND HOURLY RATE FOR ATTENDANTS

dsp wage comparison.jpg

CHART COURTESY OF RI SENATE 

RI Clears Backlog in Applications For Adult Developmental Disability Services

By Gina Macris 

(This article has been updated.)

Rhode Island’s Division of Developmental Disabilities has cleared a backlog of more than 200 applications for adult services, and eligibility workers are now adhering to a 30-day timeline for screening applications, in accordance with a schedule submitted to the U.S. District Court. 

In the spring of this year, the U.S. Department of Justice and an independent court monitor in a federal consent decree case expressed concern that extensive delays in reviewing applications for adult developmental disability services has prevented teenagers and young adults from receiving supports to which they are entitled, in violation of the Americans With Disabilities Act. The backlog had persisted for years.

Over the summer, in response to an order issued by Judge John J. McConnell, Jr., officials of the Executive Office of Human Services(EOHHS) took the lead in streamlining the screening process for applications. 

Jennifer Wood, Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services, promised the backlog would be cleared by Sept. 30. 

On that date, all 224 applications that had been pending for at least the previous two months had been cleared by the developmental disabilities eligibility unit, part of the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH),  according to a spokeswoman for the Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS). 

Of the 224 applicants who had been waiting for a decision on Aug.1, 106 were found eligible, 31 were deemed ineligible, and the remaining individuals were notified they either needed to submit additional information or schedule a face-to-face evaluation, according to the EOHHS spokeswoman, Sophie O’Connell. 

On Oct. 14, there were 35 pending applications, O’Connell said, and eligibility workers are now adhering to the 30-day time limit for screening applications, in keeping with a work plan submitted to the court over the summer. 

Individuals with intellectual or developmental disabilities are eligible for adult services funded by BHDDH at the age of 18, according to state law.                                                         

EOHHS released the following details about the timeline for deciding eligibility: 

• When the eligibility unit receives an application, it sends a letter of confirmation to the family/applicant, stating that it will be reviewed within 30 days. The timeline for decision making is shared with the applicant as well as contact information for any questions. 

• All applications are screened and reviewed within 30 days. Either they are decided in that period or held for additional information. 

• All applicants whose applications are held for additional information will be sent a letter identifying what information is needed. The applicants and their families will have 60 days to submit missing information. 

• If the additional information is not submitted within 60 days, the application will be withdrawn and the individual can reapply. 

O’Connell said the withdrawal will prevent incomplete applications from sitting for extended periods of time, in some cases years, waiting for documentation, as had been the case in some instances in the past. 

 (The original version of this article said in error that 137 applications had been approved.) 

 

 

 

RI Puts Maher Center in Newport on Probation; Agency Files Appeal to Regain Full DD License

Steven and Jo-Ann DiBiasio's Daughter Plays the  Piano at Home in Cranston                                                 &…

Steven and Jo-Ann DiBiasio's Daughter Plays the  Piano at Home in Cranston                                                                                                                          Photo by Anne Peters 

By Gina Macris

She was so excited about the prospect of attending a carnival on Easton’s Beach in Newport that she could not sleep, but hers was no ordinary insomnia.

The young woman, in the care of the James L. Maher Center of Newport, a developmental disability service agency, has a complex array of challenges on the autism spectrum and a rare chromosomal disorder.

Taken together, they give her a propensity for getting “stuck” on a single idea, unable to shift gears unless someone intervenes with a distraction in a light-hearted way. If her fixation goes uninterrupted, she can dissolve into a swirl of frustration, fear and anger.

That’s exactly what happened early on the morning of May 3. Police dispatched a cruiser to the group home where she lived, at 228 Carroll Ave., for a report of an “out of control 24-year-old female.”

She was taken away in the back of the police car to the emergency room of Newport Hospital. The Maher Center abandoned her there, “effectively leaving her homeless,” according to a recently concluded investigation by Rhode Island’s developmental disability agency.

As a result of 16 adverse findings connected with the woman’s care, the Rhode Island Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) recently downgraded the Maher Center’s license to “conditional,” putting the agency under heightened oversight for a six-month probationary period, according to Jennifer Wood. The decision was conveyed to the agency in a letter dated Sept. 14. 

Jennifer Wood, Rhode Island’s Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services, says BHDDH will conduct another evaluation in six months to determine whether the full license should be restored, continued for another six-month probationary period, or terminated.

William Maraziti, CEO of the Maher Center, said by telephone that the agency disagrees with most of the findings in the BHDDH investigation but declined substantive comment.

The Maher Center, which serves about 300 families in Newport and Bristol Counties, has appealed the decision. The state’s heightened monitoring of the agency will continue during the appeal, according to a spokeswoman for Wood.

May 3 marked the sixth time in the previous nine months that the young woman had been taken to the hospital for behavioral issues.

After the third hospitalization, at the end of October, 2015, the Maher Center gave notice that it wanted to terminate services. However, the agency had an obligation to work with the client indefinitely until a new provider could be found, according to state regulations. 

The woman, now 25, is the daughter of Steven and Jo-Ann DiBiasio of Cranston. She is one of three girls the couple originally took in as foster children and later adopted. The DiBiasios asked that their daughter not be identified by name to protect her privacy. 

 DiBiasio       Photo by Anne Peters  

 DiBiasio       Photo by Anne Peters  

In what Steven DiBiasio describes as the “tsunami” that occurred May 3, he and his wife learned that police had taken their daughter to the emergency room during a surprise call from a hospital official, who had been trying to reach the group home and had dialed their Cranston telephone number by accident.

He said he and his wife dropped everything and drove to Newport. DiBiasio said he learned that no one from the group home had accompanied his daughter to the hospital. Later, he said, he received a call from a Maher Center employee, who said the group home would not take his daughter back.

Nor did she have the favorite things that brought her comfort, including a Minnie Mouse doll she asked for repeatedly while the family waited at the hospital for a 2 p.m. appointment with the young woman’s psychiatrist, DiBiasio said.

Before the family left Newport that day, DiBiasio said he picked up his daughter's Minnie Mouse and a few of her other belongings at the Maher Center’s administrative offices on Hillside Avenue.

He said he saw her bags on the floor in an office and picked them up. but a Maher Center employee also grabbed them. Maraziti, the Maher Center executive director, came out of his office and asked the employee to let go, according to DiBiasio. 

Maraziti also called police to report an assault by the “parent of former client,” but police brought no charges, according to the police report.

The DiBiasios took her home to Cranston, where she has lived ever since. The first night she was home, she slept in her parents’ bed, clinging to her mother, something she had never done.

After she returned to Cranston, her daughter was aggressive, a tendancy that was not apparent before she went to live in the Newport group home in the summer of 2014, Jo-Ann DiBiasio said. 

Chronic sleep deprivation has once again become a way of life for the DiBiasios, both of whom have health problems that make it difficult for them to keep up physically with a young adult who needs constant supervision.

Jo-Ann DiBiasio Photo by Anne Peters

Jo-Ann DiBiasio Photo by Anne Peters

 For the first two months, the young woman received no developmental disability services.  Jo-Ann DiBiasio took an unpaid leave from her job during that time to make up for the lack of support and to put extra effort into behavior management techniques to decrease her daughter’s anxiety and anger.

In July, the young woman started getting daytime support services from a new agency, DiBiasio said, but there are no residential prospects on the horizon. 

 The investigatory arm of BHDDH started looking into the case the day after the woman’s parents took her home from Newport Hospital, when the quality improvement unit received a complaint of a human rights violation.

The investigators’ report was signed by Eileen Marino,  Associate Administrator of the Office of Quality Improvement.

The findings demonstrated that the Maher Center is “not reliably following the rules and regulations” of the Division of Developmental Disabilities, Wood said.

Even though the case involves the experience of just one client, the investigation raises “systemic issues” about the quality of care and respect for human rights, Wood said.

Another woman who lives at the same group home told BHDDH investigators that staff “put her down,” that an employee yelled at her in front of housemates, and that no action was taken when she told the house manager about the incident.

In the case of the DiBiasios’ daughter, the investigators found that the group home staff failed to follow proper de-escalation techniques spelled out in a 14-page behavioral support plan – a script of strategies intended to help the young woman keep herself on an even emotional keel.

The staff also failed to follow proper procedures for administering medication on an "as needed" basis, according to the findings.

If the behavioral and medication procedures had been followed, the investigators concluded, the ensuing incident might have been avoided.

According to the BHDDH findings, the staff of the group home simply told the young woman to go back to bed when she became agitated in the middle of the night.

In the next few hours, she was given an anti-depressant and she also was restrained, according to the BHDDH report. It said the group home staff called 911 at 7:37 a.m. The findings did not say whether or not the restraint was warranted, but investigators did say it was not properly recorded. 

The investigators found numerous violations of state regulations, some of them procedural, such as:

•       The Maher Center failed to provide the reason for its decision to cut off services to the young woman.

•       The agency failed to provide the young woman and family with information about their right to appeal the decision.

•       The Maher Center failed to work with the client and family to keep services going on an ad-hoc basis until a new provider could be found, so that there would be no interruption of services.

 •      The Maher Center failed to respond to an investigator's request for a copy of its policy regarding situations in which clients are taken to the hospital. 

The DiBiasios’ struggle to find 24-hour support for their daughter played out during a long-running fiscal drought in developmental disability services that continues today, despite an $11-million-increase in the current budget for daytime programs.  

 In July, 2012, the young woman marked her 21st birthday and the end of high school special education.  She experienced a “tremendous drop” in the frequency and variety of activities through adult services available from BHDDH and she became severely depressed, Steven DiBiasio said.

Six months later, in December, she dialed 911 herself and ended up at Butler Hospital.

All her caregivers at the time concurred that she needed 24-hour care, according to DiBiasio.

In March, 2013, officials identified the Carroll Avenue home in Newport, located just a few steps from the fabled Ocean Drive. But it was more than a year and a half, on Aug. 1, 2014, before the young woman was able to move in.

In all that time not one other agency operating group homes in Rhode Island offered to take the DiBiasios’ daughter. 

Some providers are known for their expertise in autism, but almost all agencies in Rhode Island have closed their doors to new clients, saying they operate at a loss for each staff member they must hire.

The issue of the providers' capacity to take on new clients surfaced briefly, without reference to any particular family, at a recent statewide meeting of community-based organizations focused on developmental disability services. 

Donna Martin, executive director of the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island , said “a lot of organizations are saying they don’t have the capacity to provide community-based services.”

“A lot of people are conflicted”  between a desire to serve the needs of the newcomers and “the commitment to people they’ve had for many years,” she said.

CPNRI has 23 member agencies which serve about 3500 individuals, most of the adult population with developmental disabilities in Rhode Island.

Before their daughter went to live in the group home at 228 Carroll Ave., the DiBiasios said, they were told the Maher Center planned to develop an expertise in serving individuals with autism, and that their daughter would be the first client in that new program.

While the young woman had been waiting to move to Newport, her parents took her out frequently to movies, bowling, restaurants, and other activities which she enjoyed.With support, she became a volunteer “play partner” at the children’s play and exploration area of Roger Williams Park Zoo, Steven DiBiasio said.

The DiBiasios said they told the Maher Center that they wanted the visits to the zoo to continue, along with other community-based daytime activities.

When they were told that transportation from Newport to the zoo in Providence might be an issue, Steven DiBiasio donated a 2004 Toyota Corolla to the Maher Center so that the transportation barrier would be removed.  BHDDH has ordered the car to be returned to the DiBiasios.

Both Jo-Ann and Steven DiBiasio said they fervently wanted the placement to work.

228 Carroll Ave., Newport                                                Photo By Brian C. Jones 

228 Carroll Ave., Newport                                                Photo By Brian C. Jones 

Within six months after their daughter moved to Newport, the DiBiasios say, they were informed that the Maher Center had abandoned plans for the autism program.

BHDDH authorized funding for two staff members to devote their full attention to the young woman, beginning in October, 2015, but investigators found the Maher Center did not utilize the money. 

Steven DiBiasio said his daughter spent most of her daytime hours in the Maher Center’s day program and the rest of her time at the group home, largely shut off from the sights that had attracted her to Newport in the first place.

DiBiasio said the visits to the zoo were far and few between and eventually stopped, for reasons he was told ranged from“lack of adequately trained staff to the client’s unsafe behavior,” according to a letter of complaint he sent former BHDDH Director Maria Montanaro in late April, about a week before the incident on May 3.

Investigators faulted the Maher Center for failing to provide adequate staffing, “resulting in her inability to access the community,” including the zoo, as outlined in her individual support plan.These plans form the bedrock of supports tailored to individualized state funding.

BHDDH also said the agency failed to adequately communicate with the parents, who are the woman’s guardians.

Over time, the DiBiasios became concerned about the amount of prescribed medication administered to their daughter, particularly in light of her genetic disorder, a duplication of chromosome 15, which can make it difficult for her liver to tolerate too many drugs.

In March, 2016, Jo-Ann DiBiasio wrote the Maher Center nurse, saying that her daughter “is no longer able to talk to me on the phone

the way she had in the past. She is constantly yawning and obsessing” about the things she used to do with her family, the mother wrote.

When she asked her daughter about her day, the young woman replied that she didn’t like the prescription medication she was given on an “as-needed” basis.

The mother asked the nurse for complete information on the times and doses of the medications since December, 2015, when a psychiatrist authorized their use on an as-needed basis.

The agency responded to the email but did not answer the questions, according to investigators.  As a guardian, Jo-Ann DiBiasio has a legal right to her daughter’s medical records.

Today, the young woman takes less medication on a daily basis than she did when she was living at the Maher Center group home, Steven DiBiasio said. In the four months since she moved back into her parents' home, she has had no emergency visits to the hospital, he said.  

For ninety minutes twice each week, accompanied by support staff, she volunteers at a child care center. There have been no incidents, he said.   

On a recent Saturday in Cranston, the DiBiasios’ daughter took a visitor by the hand into her house and offered a seat, as if she were leading a a guided tour. She asked her guest a number of questions about herself and her car, and inspected the newcomer’s car keys.                         

The questions allow her to process information in a way that decreases anxiety, Steven DiBiasio explained.

At the kitchen table, the young woman played with a laminated word-and-picture puzzle that had her distinguish the difference between a question and a statement. 

The laminated poster board was fixed with velcro to receive one punctuation mark or another to complete a particular sentence. It is just one of the materials Jo-Ann DiBiasio has created to help her daughter with communication.

When she needed to move on to something else, her parents and two sisters helped her find a new activity, while one of the family dogs followed and the cat lounged on a high perch, taking it all in.

After a while, the young woman, who has perfect pitch, gave a brief demonstration of her skills on the piano and guitar.

When the talk turned to Newport, she said she still misses the excitement of the City-By-The-Sea.

(An earlier version of this article incorrectly said that DiBiasio retrieved none of his daughter's belongings from the administrative offices of the Maher Center on May 3.) 

Friends of the Disabled to Hold Forum in Newport on DD Services in Rhode Island

By Gina Macris

Friends of the Disabled, organized by Newport County families who have members with intellectual or developmental disabilities, will host a forum on the future of Rhode Island’s disability service system Wednesday, Oct. 5, from 5 to 8 p.m. at the Newport campus of the Community College of RI. 

Candidates for the General Assembly have been invited to attend and address several questions about adult services that are provided by the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH), according to Chris Semonelli of Middletown, co-director of the group.  

Most of the issues of concern to the parents are related to a history of declining funding.  The General Assembly, under pressure from the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. District Court, and Governor Gina Raimondo, added about $11 million to developmental disabilities for the current fiscal year to comply with a federal consent decree requiring community-based employment and day services. 

Wednesday's program will cover current and future options for both daytime and residential services. 

The consent decree does not apply to residential services, although parents have expressed concern about the future availability of group home placements, which have been hard to come by in recent years. 

Since January, BHDDH has been emphasizing shared living arrangements, in which adults with developmental disabilities live in private homes. BHDDH should provide better supports to families providing shared living, according to Jane Gallivan, who until Sept. 30 served as Interim Director of Developmental Disabilities. 

"Listening Session" in RI to Solicit Public Comment on Prospective DD Director and Pressing Issues

By Gina Macris

Rhode Islanders using adult developmental disability services and their families will have a chance to weigh in on the qualities they would most like to see in the state’s next Director of Developmental Disabilities at a “listening session” Wednesday, Oct. 5 at the Rhode Island Public Information Network (RIPIN) in Cranston.

Participants also will be asked to identify high-priority issues the new director should address immediately.

The meeting will be hosted by RIPIN and the state Department of Behavioral Health, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals.

The session will begin at 5 p.m. in the RIPIN offices at 1210 Pontiac Ave., Cranston. There will be reserved seating, because of limited space, according to a RIPIN statement. 

Seats may be reserved by contacting Sharon Kochan at skochan@ripin.org  or 401-270-0101 ext. 172 , according to the statement. 

The public also may send comments by email about the most important qualities in the new director to  BHDDH.askDD@bhddh.ri.gov. The application period for the director's post runs until Oct. 28.

Gallivan's Short Stint in RI Brings Plenty of Change, Starting with Plans for Better DD Assessment

Jane Gallivan   Photo by Anne Peters

Jane Gallivan   Photo by Anne Peters

By Gina Macris

In just the few months she has served as interim director of Rhode Island’s Division of Developmental Disabilities, Jane Gallivan has been instrumental in changing the state’s approach to providing services for individuals with intellectual challenges.

On the most concrete level, she has set plans in motion to adopt an improved version of a controversial assessment – the Supports Intensity Scale (SIS) – to more accurately determine the needs of clients.

With help from the Executive Office of Health and Human Services, Gallivan also has shifted strategies for presenting the division’s budget so that the state Budget Office and the General Assembly better understand what it means to support individuals with developmental disabilities.

The initiatives Gallivan has begun, and the tone she has set, are expected to continue after her role changes Friday, Sept. 30, to that of long-distance consultant.

Gallivan, 68, is taking her 101 year-old mother to Florida for the winter, a commitment she made before Rhode Island officials approached her for short-term help in leading the developmental disabilities division.

She will continue to monitor and guide reforms and will serve on the committee that will screen applicants for the division’s permanent chief.

A former state-level director in Maine and Delaware, Gallivan already has been spreading the word about the director’s job through her nationwide contacts in the field of developmental disabilities.

As she prepared to end her full-time role in Rhode Island, Gallivan shared her perspective on the future of developmental disability services in Rhode Island.

Major Changes Coming to Every State

Gallivan says all state developmental disability service systems are in the midst of a sea change because of sweeping new Medicaid regulations.

The rules say that all services for the elderly and individuals with all types of disabilities must be provided in the least restrictive setting that is therapeutically appropriate, which is presumed to be the community.

After March, 2019, Gallivan said, Medicaid will no longer pay for sheltered workshops or segregated day programs after March, 2019.  Sheltered workshops don’t fit the Medicaid’s definition of “community,” she said.

Federal Medicaid dollars pay for half the cost Rhode Island’s developmental disability services.

The federal consent decree requiring Rhode Island to shift to community-based jobs and activities may put the state ahead of the curve, she said.

Both the consent decree in Rhode Island and the changed Medicaid regulations nationwide get their authority from the 1999 Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, which is in effect a desegregation order for individuals protected by the Americans with Disabilities Act. 

Individuals and families who struggle to find appropriate services may not yet see any change in their lives.

Gallivan says she worries about a caseload ratio that is “way too high” - one social worker to every 205 clients.

Social workers are “really concerned about helping people out,” she said, “but like any other service system, they are often, because of the ratios, dealing more with people in crisis”  or those just entering the system, rather than “supporting the people who are not the squeaky wheel.”

“No one wants to expand state government,” but state government must still “figure out how we’re going to put more resources into case management,” Gallivan said.

A New Way to Assess Service Needs

Since taking the interim director’s job in July, Gallivan has been “looking under the hood,” as she put it, to understand the barriers that need to be removed to allow “people to really get out and enjoy activities in the community, to get better connected, to explore new job options and so forth.”

She’s been searching for hindrances in state regulations, the way programs are funded, and the way clients have been assigned individual funding based on “tiers,” or levels of need.

The Supports Intensity Scale, (SIS) is a lengthy questionnaire used since 2011 to determine the individual level of funding according to “tiers” labeled A through E, with E being the costliest.

In the last few years, the SIS been the single most emotional flashpoint for families, many of whom have complained bitterly not only about results that yield insufficient funding, but that interviewers argued with them or recorded answers different than the ones they gave.

In the next several months, Gallivan said, the state will move to what she hopes will be a more accurate version of the assessment, with additional questions focusing on medical and behavioral needs.

SIS Interviewers will be retrained in the new version by representatives of the organization which developed the SIS, the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD).

Gallivan said training also will be offered to family members and representatives of service provider agencies, who attend the interviews and help answer questions.

The state will monitor the new approach to determine whether it leads to a reduction of a high number of exceptions now granted to the assessment results. 

The exceptions, in which a client may have more funding than warranted by the official level of support, have raised numerous questions in the General Assembly about how the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH) manages its budget. 

Gallivan offered some background on the SIS, which is used in Rhode Island as a basic building block of the developmental disability budget.

On its face, the SIS is a better assessment than some others in use across the country because it frames questions in terms of an individual’s strengths and the supports he or she may need to achieve a particular goal, rather than focusing on deficits, Gallivan said.

But it has its limitations, she readily acknowledged. It is recognized nationwide that the SIS does not address extensive medical needs or behavioral issues, Gallivan said.

“You also have to be sensitive to people who are very independent, but they may get themselves into trouble with the law,” or in some other way, because of their disabilities, she said.  For example, some individuals may appear independent, but if they don’t have the proper support and guidance, they may end up at a homeless shelter, or picked up by police for shoplifting.

The SIS was developed as a tool for planning individualized programs of support, not as a funding mechanism, although many states use it for budgeting, Gallivan said..

As a result of the gaps inherent in the original assessment, the state of Oregon developed a number of questions on behavioral and medical support needs that were tried out by other states and ultimately incorporated into a new version of the questionnaire called the SIS-A, Gallivan said.

“Everyone came to the conclusion that these supplemental questions really did add a more robust, accurate assessment,” she said.

AAIDD released the SIS-A in 2015, according to the organization’s website.

Gallivan said arrangements are being made for AAIDD representatives to come to Rhode Island for training in the SIS-A. At the same time, the consultants who developed the formula for turning SIS scores into individual funding levels have been asked to revise that algorithm to correspond to the SIS-A, she said.

Disability Services: a Lifetime Commitment

Meanwhile, Gallivan has tried to set a different tone for presenting the needs of individuals with developmental disabilities to the state Budget Office. 

“I’m not saying that people don’t know” what the Division of Developmental Disabilities does, “but a lot of people really don’t know,” she said with a chuckle.

“So I think it’s really important to paint a picture” of the service system and the people in the middle of it, Gallivan said.

Budget officials should know who the division serves, whether they live with their families or elsewhere, the kinds of services they receive, why the services are important to them and their families, the actual costs of providing those services, and the expected outcomes, Gallivan said.

That’s a different approach than seeing the system as a list of line items, she said.

It’s important for the fiscal arm of state government to understand that “we are the long-term care system,” Gallivan said.

“People think of the elderly as being the long-term care system, but they’re only in there for a few years,” she said.

“We’re talking birth to 100” in developmental disabilities, she said.

Legislators must understand that they can’t take money from individuals with developmental disabilities and give it to someone else, Gallivan said.

“In this system, everyone who comes through the door will have a life-long need for some kind of support because of the nature of their disability,” she said.

It’s not analogous to the mental health system, where funds may be shifted because one person is in recovery and another is not, Gallivan said.

A Focus on Families

In any presentation she makes, Gallivan said, she tries to emphasize the need to support families who have a member with developmental disabilities living at home with them.

Many families want their loved one at home, she said. "Ffrom a bureaucratic perspective, it’s (generally) the safest place they’ll be,” she said, “and the cost of services in the family home will be less than they will be anywhere else.”

“So how can we invest in families and recognize them as caregivers? We talk about people as caregivers of those with Alzheimer's, but we have people who are caregivers of people with developmental disabilities who face a lot of challenges” and have their own need for support, Gallivan said.

She suggested families should have access to more respite care and should be able to get financial support for modifications like wheelchair ramps.

Gallivan also indicated technology might help families keep tabs on their loved ones, although options like bedroom cameras might not be universally welcome in some homes.

The full range of supports for families “need to become a very strong focus,” Gallivan said, “and the type of planning we need to do with families is very different.”

“You need to talk about the whole family and what the family needs are,” she said.  

Families and individuals who advocate for themselves must be part of the conversation, Gallivan said.

 

 

Judge, DOJ Praise RI's Compliance Efforts In DD Case; Contempt Hearing Avoided, For Now

By Gina Macris

The state of Rhode Island has done more in the last six months to comply with a federal consent decree aimed at ending the isolation of adults with developmental disabilities than the previous state administration did in the first two years of the agreement. 

That assessment came from the U.S. Department of Justice Sept. 16 in a conference on the status of the 2014 agreement before U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell, Jr.   

Because of those efforts, McConnell deferred, for now, a request by DOJ lawyer Nicole Kovite Zeitler that he hold contempt proceedings in early October over the state’s failure to hit specific targets in the order McConnell issued last spring to force compliance with the consent decree.

By signing the consent decree in 2014, the state promised, over a ten-year period, to establish a system of community-based, integrated work and leisure activities for individuals with developmental disabilities that would replace sheltered workshops and segregated day programs. The transition is mandated by the Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court.  

While acknowledging the state’s intensive efforts, led by Jennifer Wood, Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services, Zeitler cited two non-compliance issues: the scarcity of young adults with developmental disabilities holding jobs, and the state’s failure to distribute increased reimbursement rates to private service providers by Aug. 1 as the judge had required.  

Wood said rate increases would be implemented Oct. 1. That is the date the computer system will be adjusted to reflect a 36-cent hourly increase, from $11.55 to $11.91, in the average reimbursement rate paid to private service providers.  

Approximately 4000 workers at private agencies will get raises, retroactive to July 1, after their employers start receiving the higher reimbursements. 

Mary Madden, the state’s consent decree coordinator, elaborated on the lack of job placements for young adults. 

Of a total of 151 individuals with intellectual disabilities who left school in the 2013-2014 or 2014-2015 academic years, 99 are receiving adult services, including 79 who are receiving employment-related services and 29 who are actually employed, Madden said. 

She did not have data for the 2015-2016 academic year. 

The employment number is “not where anyone wants it to be,” Madden said.   

Of the 151 identified, 52 individuals are not enrolled for any services. 

Later, Zeitler said the notion that 52 young adults have not been connected with adult services is a serious concern. 

Charles Moseley, the independent monitor in the case, said he wanted to echo both Zeitler’s concerns and her praise of the state’s efforts so far. 

He said he “wrestled with the idea of a show-cause hearing,” a proceeding that might lead to a contempt order, but decided against recommending it, because he believes the state can work with him to plan and provide employment services. 

While McConnell noted that a missed deadline in a judicial order is a serious issue, he deferred to Moseley’s confidence that he can work things out with the state. 

“I tend to be a ‘half-full’ kinda guy,” McConnell said, explaining his decision. 

“Some may call me Pollyanna-ish,” he said, but the compliance effort put forth by the state in the last six months “deserves a compliment and a thanks.”  

McConnell said state government doesn’t move quickly, even with court sanctions hanging over its head, as they were after McConnell issued a 22-point compliance order May 18. 

The fact that the Governor and the General Assembly acted late in the legislative season to add $11 million to the developmental disabilities budget should be acknowledged, McConnell said. He also thanked Health and Human Services Secretary Elizabeth Roberts, Deputy Secretary Wood, and her administrative team. About half a dozen of them attended the hearing.  

“We wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for the Department of Justice,” McConnell continued, praising its “tenacity and advocacy in taking on an incredibly complex task for those who wouldn’t otherwise have a voice.” 

But McConnell said he wasn’t about to unfurl a “Mission Accomplished banner” just yet.  

A report that the monitor filed with the court on the eve of the hearing outlines a plan to put the state on short-term deadlines for developing employment strategies for young adults and making sure all those eligible for services are identified. The employment-related strategies are due Oct. 1. 

 Moseley gave the state until Nov. 15 to identify all young adults who have left school in the last three academic years who are eligible for developmental disability services, but he wants to hear how it will approach that problem by Sept. 30. 

The effort will require cooperation by the state Department of Education, the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals, and the state Office of Rehabilitation Services. 

Moseley has expressed concern that the state is missing those who do not have an intellectual disability but are eligible because of a developmental delay.   Depending on the individual, a young adult on the autism spectrum may fall into the latter category. 

With the average cost of services at about $59,000 a year per person, Moseley’s directive for better identification of eligible young adults has the potential to add significantly to the developmental disabilities budget. 

For example, it would cost an estimated $3 million a year to serve the 52 young adults who have been identified but who are not enrolled in developmental disability services. 

Moseley, meanwhile, reflected on concerns expressed by the DOJ about the need for quality career development planning, a newly-implemented exercise that is intended to drive thoughtful, individualized job searches. 

“Person-centered planning, person-centered thinking, is a challenge that is facing all states. It needs to be done on an ongoing basis,” he said. 

Earlier in the hearing, Deputy Secretary Wood said the new chief employment specialist, Tracey Cunningham, had personally trained more than 200 people in how to write career development plans. 

But Moseley said it’s not a matter of one training. “You have to learn it and live it,” he said. 

Gallivan Tapping National Network of DD Professionals to Spark Interest in RI Job

By Gina Macris

The search for a new director of developmental disability services in Rhode Island is well underway, even though the position has not yet been advertised. 

Jane Gallivan, the interim director, has been drumming up interest in the job through her national network of contacts in the field of developmental disability services.  In an interview Sept. 13, she said she has spoken to several likely candidates. 

One of the reasons Gallivan was recruited for the post on an interim basis was her ability to tap into the leadership network in developmental disability services across the country, according to Jennifer Wood, Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services. 

Gallivan, a longtime director of developmental disabilities in Maine and more recently in Delaware, belongs to the National Association of State Directors of Developmental Disabilities Services (NASDDDS). 

Recent directors have not been required to have any particular expertise in serving adults with intellectual challenges. But that will change with revisions to the job description, which Gallivan said she hopes to complete by the end of the week. 

An ad Gallivan sent Thursday to NASDDDS said Rhode Island is looking for an experienced leader in the field who also has a track record in “affecting and driving change.”

The ad described Rhode Island as “undergoing a significant redesign in the delivery of services to individuals with developmental disabilities and their families,” by focusing on putting individual needs first, boosting employment, and supporting families better.

Gallivan said the NASDDDS notice will reach hundreds of professionals in the field.

She also plans to spread the word through the National Leadership Consortium on Developmental Disabilities at the University of Delaware, best known for training up-and-coming leaders in the field and helping build networks among them. 

Next week, the position will be posted on the state’s employment website and then the process of screening applications will begin, Gallivan said.

Gallivan will serve on the screening committee, along with Jennifer Wood, Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services; Brian Gosselin, Chief Strategy Officer at the Executive Office of Human Services (EOHHS); and Mary Madden. 

Madden, based at EOHHS, coordinates the state’s efforts to comply with a federal consent decree that enforces a 1999 Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court mandating desegregation of developmental disability services nationwide. 

Madden indicated Tuesday during a meeting of a task force empowered by the 2014 consent decree that there may be at least one “listening forum” at which members of the screening committee would hear comments from the public on the characteristics most desired in a new director. 

The public may also write to the screening committee via the following email address: BHDDH.AskDD@bhddh.ri.gov , according to an EOHHS spokeswoman. 

Neither Madden nor Gallivan could offer an official timeline for the appointment of a new director. 

The screening committee will make recommendations to Elizabeth Roberts, Secretary of Health and Human Services; and Rebecca Boss, Interim Director of the Department of Behavioral Health, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals, who will jointly make the selection.  

In the short term, Gallivan will remain a consultant but will step down as interim director at the end of September because of family responsibilities. 

While the Division of Developmental Disabilities awaits a new director, there will be a meeting of a team of administrators “every single morning” to go over issues that need follow-up that day, Gallivan said. 

The administrators include Madden, Gosselin, Heather Mincey, administrator of the division; Anne LeClerc, the program improvement chief, and Tracey Cunningham, the chief employment specialist, Gallivan said.

The new director will have the primary responsibility for implementing policy changes driven by the consent decree, which requires that the state move away from sheltered workshops and other segregated programs toward a system of individualized services based in the community. 

The division is part of BHDDH, but in the long run, it’s not clear where the director’s position will fit into the administrative structure. 

EOHHS has taken the lead in shaping efforts to respond to the consent decree. And a spokeswoman acknowledged that the office is considering restructuring BHDDH, which also has jurisdiction over mental and behavioral healthcare and public hospitals. 

Former BHDDH Director Maria Montanaro has said she does not believe all three kinds of services belong in one department. . 

There is no timeline for a search for a new BHDDH director, according to the spokeswoman, Sophie O’Connell. Rather, the new director of developmental disability services is a top priority, she has said. O'Connell declined to elaborate on any restructuring options EOHHS might be considering. Structural changes would have to be approved by the General Assembly.

RI Falls Short on Supports for Young Adults With DD; Court to Hear Consent Decree Status

By Gina Macris

While Rhode Island has made progress in complying with a 2014 federal consent decree, the U.S. Department of Justice and a court monitor say some requirements have not been met, including target numbers for finding jobs for young adults with developmental disabilities.

Of 151 individuals who have left special education programs at age 21 since the 2013-2014 academic year, the state has found supported employment for only 29, according to the monitor, Charles Moseley.

This issue, among others, will get an airing before U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell, Jr., Friday, Sept 16 at 2 p.m.

The state exceeded modest job placement goals for adults with developmental disabilities who had been in segregated day programs and sheltered workshops in violation of the Americans With Disabilities Act, Moseley said in remarks to McConnell submitted Sept. 15.

A total of 57 adults who formerly worked in sheltered workshops have found regular jobs in the community – with support – since the consent decree was signed April 8, 2014. That figure is 7 more than required by the consent decree at this point in the 10-year span of the agreement. 

Among those who had spent their time in segregated day programs, 118 have been placed in jobs in the community, Moseley said. So far, the consent decree requires only 25 supported employment placements from the day program population.

The monitor said state officials have had trouble identifying the total number of young people coming out of high school who are eligible for adult developmental disability services.

Moseley said the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) provides adult services to 101 of 151 young people with intellectual and developmental disabilities who have been identified by the Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE) since the consent decree was signed.  

RIDE’s figures on eligibility don’t tell the whole story, the monitor said.

RIDE’s statistics cover individuals with intellectual and developmental disability as a primary diagnosis, but Moseley said RIDE has not counted others who may also qualify.

Young adults with autism, for example, may be eligible if they have no intellectual disabilities but have developmental problems that prevent them from connecting with other people and communicating what they know and can learn.

Moseley recommended that RIDE have until Nov. 15 to work with BHDDH, the state Office of Rehabilitation Services, and the Executive Office of Health and Human Services to identify all individuals leaving high school who are eligible for adult developmental disability services, saying the total is likely to increase.

He also said he wants RIDE, BHDDH, and ORS to work together to develop a strategy and timeline by Oct. 1 for ensuring employment supports for all young adults who are identified.

Besides dealing with issues particular to young adults, Friday’s hearing is expected to cover various initiatives related to supported employment for all those who come under the purview of the consent decree, according to joint remarks filed by lawyers for the state and the DOJ.

 

RI Officials Correct Figure in Monitor's Report; Say Rate Hike Will Go To DD Service Agencies

By Gina Macris

All the workers who provide direct support services to adults with developmental disabilities in Rhode Island won’t be getting raises to at least $11.55 an hour, as indicated in the most recent report of a federal court monitor in the so-called “sheltered workshop” consent decree case.

The report from the monitor, Charles Moseley, says that the state Department of Behavioral Health, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) “will adjust all rates for Direct Support Professionals to a base rate of $11.55 an hour.”

 In reality, BHDDH will raise the “base rate” the state pays to the private agencies from $11.55 to $11.91 an hour, an increase of 36 cents; the private agencies, in turn, must use that new hourly figure to cover both salary increases and fringe benefits for their employees.

That was the word Sept. 13 from Mary Madden, the state’s consent decree coordinator, and Jennifer Wood, Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services.

Wood also said it is impossible to determine how much of an hourly wage increase each worker will actually receive.  

 Approximately 4,000 workers staff the private agencies serving Rhode Islanders with developmental disabilities under contracts with the state. These direct support workers now make an average of about $10.75 an hour, although starting pay is typically minimum wage, or $9.60 an hour.

Different agencies have different pay scales and different arrays of benefits, Wood said. The General Assembly set aside about $5 million in the current budget for raises to direct support workers and for increased employer costs, but did not specify how much was to go into each category, she said.

One part of an order issued in May by U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell, Jr., required the state to “appropriately increase salaries, benefits, training, and supervision for Direct Support Professionals and Job Coaches” by Aug. 1.

The increases, retroactive to July 1, have not yet gone into effect, but Moseley, the monitor, said the judge’s order had been “provisionally met” because the state had submitted a plan that describes how the increases would be handled.

Before Moseley will sign off completely, he said, he needs more documentation in the plan, as well as confirmation that BHDDH has disbursed the money for the rate increases to developmental disability service agencies.

The issue of pay for workers was one of numerous points covered in Moseley’s report, submitted to McConnell Sept. 9 in anticipation of the judge’s review of the case Sept. 16. The session begins at 2 p.m.

Task Force Commentary on Monitor’s Report

Meanwhile, the monitor’s report also prompted criticism at a meeting of the Employment First Task Force Sept . 13.

Claire Rosenbaum questioned Moseley’s conclusion that the state had met the Judge’s Aug. 1 deadline for making it easier for providers to offer employment-related services to adults with developmental disabilities.

“I haven’t seen anything that offers supported employment services for my daughter, and we’re a month and a half past the implementation date,” Rosenbaum said. She serves on the task force as Adult Supports Coordinator for the Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College.

Nor did her daughter’s counselor at the state Office of Rehabilitation Services (ORS) know anything about career development planning, Rosenbaum said, even though the monitor said ORS, as well as BHDDH, and the Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE) had all implemented training in the process of career development planning by the end of July as required by the judge’s order.

The judge’s order included several mandates related to supported employment, all with an Aug. 1 deadline.

 The requirements included a change in the model for reimbursing provider agencies, and a change in the financial authorizations made to individuals to pay for what Moseley called the “Person Centered Supported Employment Services Program.” 

The current authorization method requires individuals seeking job-related services to trade in time allocated to another category of support.

Madden acknowledged that the model for changing reimbursement to service providers had not yet been put into practice.

“What irks me,” Rosenbaum said, “is this status report says ‘provision met’, when it clearly has not been met.”

The state has said the reimbursement model would change for clients of agencies chosen to participate in a pilot program of performance-based contracts intended to provide the supports necessary to enable individuals with developmental disabilities to find and keep regular jobs.

BHDDH is not yet accepting applicatios for that pilot program, although Moseley said he is satisfied with the state's plan for the program . The state's lawyer will file the detailed plan with the court some time this week, according to Wood. 

In any event, the judge is requiring performance-based contracts for all service providers in the state by Dec. 31. 

Kevin Nerney, the task force chairman, took issue with the term “Person Centered Supported Employment Services Program” to describe what supported employment services are supposed to provide.

Such individualized, employment-related services have not been rolled out to direct support staff at provider agencies, he said. Until employment-related services have been put in place, he said, they should not be elevated with an important-sounding title.

The task force was created by the 2014 federal consent decree, in which the state agreed to correct violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act by moving from segregated sheltered workshops and day programs to supports for community-based employment and activities for adults with developmental disabilities.

The consent decree envisioned the task force as a bridge between state government and the community, although the group is still exploring how its role will play out.  Its next meeting is scheduled for Oct. 11.

 

 

 

 

Despite Missed Deadlines, Consent Decree Monitor Says Rhode Island Moving in the Right Direction

By Gina Macris

Rhode Island has not met all the deadlines so far in shifting toward integrated, community-based services for adults with developmental disabilities as required in a 2014 federal consent decree, according to the independent court monitor in the case.

But because the state has taken important steps in the right direction in the last few months, the monitor, Charles Moseley, says he believes it is appropriate to delay evaluating the state’s performance on the deadlines.

Even one missed deadline gives Moseley the option of asking U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. to conduct a show cause hearing as to why the state should not be held in contempt, according to an order McConnell issued in May.

The order says that the state must comply with every deadline contained in it and in the consent decree from May 18 forward or face possible contempt proceedings and fines. The consent decree contains deadlines running until 2024.

McConnell’s highly prescriptive order came after the state made little progress in complying with the consent decree in the two years since it had been put into effect. The judicial order lit a fire under a team of state administrators led by Jennifer Wood, Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services.

Moseley submitted his latest assessment to McConnell Sept. 9, in anticipation of a status conference on the case Sept. 16. Typically, lawyers for the U.S. Department of Justice also submit statements to the judge before a hearing, but any submissions from the DOJ have not yet surfaced in the case file.

Moseley, meanwhile, said in his report that the state missed job placement deadlines.  The most recent was a July 1 deadline for finding employment for all young adults with developmental disabilities who left high school during the 2015-2016 academic year. That class is estimated at a minimum of 74 individuals, according to the Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE). Many of them would be seeking part-time jobs.  

Eligibility specialists at the state Division of Disabilities have been working intensely to try to eliminate a backlog of applications from more than 200 individuals – most of them young adults – who seek developmental disability services.

In his report, Moseley said the state “is implementing substantive changes across the array of day and employment services furnished to individuals with I/DD (intellectual or developmental disabilities).”

He said continued refinements are needed in the data system that enables him and the DOJ to track compliance, and additional policies and practices must be implemented to expand the availability of high quality integrated and individualized day services.

“While challenges remain,” he said, “the foundational steps taken by the state to address key areas related to funding, administrative oversight, training and documentation” are moving Rhode Island “on a path toward achieving the requirements of the consent decree.”

Among the steps forward, Moseley cited the General Assembly’s approval of slightly more than $11 million in added revenue to increase salaries to underpaid direct service workers and implement performance-based contracts with financial incentives for private providers who help their clients find jobs.  

With that funding, the state has agreed to raise pay for direct service workers and job coaches to a minimum of $11.55 an hour, an average of 3.1 percent, Moseley said. The workers are still waiting for that increase to kick in. Wood, the Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services, has promised the pay increase, retroactive to July 1, would be processed by Oct. 1.

Moseley said the pay raise plan submitted to him by the state needs to be more specific to ensure that the added funding will be used to “increase salaries, benefits, training and supervision”  as required by McConnell’s May 18 order.                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Summarizing what he describes as other“substantive efforts” to comply with the consent decree, Moseley cited the development of performance-based contracts intended to give providers incentives to help clients find and retain jobs, as well as training for professionals and parents in career development planning that will guide individuals’ job searches.

He said funding for start-up costs – a total of $800,000 – has been distributed to nine private service providerswhich are planning to shift from segregated to community-based programs, and the Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College is working closely with private service agencies  to help them make that change.

In addition, Moseley said, the state has provided heightened technical assistance and hired key staff, including an employment specialist and a program improvement officer, to beef up the leadership at the state Division of Disabilities.

Click here to read the monitor's report. 

Click here to read related article

Rhode Island Considers Reorganizing BHDDH; Finding "Strong" DD Director Is Top Priority

By Gina Macris

The Rhode Island Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals  may undergo restructuring, if it is determined that a different organization of services would better serve the  needs of it clients, a spokeswoman for the Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) confirmed on Friday, Sept. 9  

Asked whether a departmental reorganization is on the table, Sophie O’Connell replied in an email: “No decisions have been made, but we are considering the option to make sure that we are delivering the best quality care and services to some of the most vulnerable people in our state.” 

Before she left in June, former BHDDH Director Maria Montanaro recommended that BHDDH be split up. The Eleanor Slater Hospital should be run by a dedicated board of directors, she said, while mental health and developmental disability services each should have a commissioner under the direct supervision of EOHHS. 

Such sweeping changes would require gubernatorial and legislative approval. On an ad-hoc basis, however, EOHHS has established direct oversight of the Division of Disabilities in recent months, primarily in response to the demands of a federal consent decree. 

O’Connell said there is no timeline for recruiting a permanent BHDDH director while EOHHS and BHDDH work on a plan that would take into account “how we can most effectively blend fragmented program, policy and funding streams to ensure Rhode Islanders are receiving the best possible care and services.”  Rebecca Boss serves as interim director of BHDDH. 

“Secretary (Elizabeth) Roberts as well as the BHDDH and EOHHS management teams are personally committed to ensuring continued progress on the important reforms taking place at BHDDH. This includes the ongoing work to improve services for individuals living with developmental disabilities and to recruit talented DD leadership into the agency,” O’Connell said. 

“Our most pressing concern at the present moment is recruiting a strong leader for the Division of Developmental Disabilities,” she said. 

The developmental disability director’s post is particularly critical as the state tries to comply with the federal consent decree by shifting away from sheltered workshops and segregated day programs toward integrated employment and community-based non-work activities. 

The division has been without a permanent director since July 22 when Charles Williams retired.

Jane Gallivan, who was coaxed out of retirement to serve as interim director of developmental disabilities, will step down at the end of the month because of family responsibilities, according to O’Connell. 

Although Gallivan will remain a consultant – primarily a long-distance one – the state has not announced who will administer developmental disability services in the short term or when a new director might be named. 

 As of Friday, September 9, the post had not been advertised on the state’s employment website. Nor has a search committee been seated.  

In response to repeated inquiries, over the past week, O’Connell said that Gallivan would providemore information Sept. 14 about the search for a director for the division. 

Gallivan, former developmental disabilities director in Maine and Delaware, plans to spend the winter in Florida with her 101-year-old mother, who has been staying on Cape Cod for the summer. 

Federal Court Hearing Sept. 16 Could Test RI's Compliance With DD Consent Decree

By Gina Macris

The status of Rhode Island’s compliance with a federal consent decree mandating integration of adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities is scheduled to go before U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell, Jr., on Sept. 16.

In response to McConnell’s active involvement in the case, which began in January, high-ranking state officials have begun an intense effort to lay the groundwork for compliance with the consent decree, which was signed in April, 2014.

On May 18 of this year, McConnell issued an order that held the state to numerous deadlines in July and August.

Whether the state has made sufficient progress over the summer may become clear during the upcoming review of the case in open court.

Prior to the Sept. 16 court session, the U.S. Department of Justice  and the independent court monitor can be expected to file written reports with the judge on their view of compliance issues, which they’ve done in the past.

They also may ask the judge to impose sanctions on the state if they believe it has not met the requirements of McConnell’s very prescriptive order of May 18.

The DOJ and Charles Moseley, the monitor, have been checking compliance with the consent decree on the basis of files they have selected from a list the state has provided of all individuals who fall under the purview of the agreement, about 3,000 people in all. The individuals are identified by a code that protects their privacy.

The case is extremely complex, with many related steps needed to achieve the long-term goal of the consent decree – to allow persons with disabilities the choice to participate as much as possible in regular employment and community activities. The agreement remains in effect until Jan. 1, 2024.

A July 1 Deadline for Supported Employment

One of those steps, spelled out in the consent decree itself, is a requirement that the state would find supported employment by July 1, 2016,  for all eligible individuals who left high school during the 2015-2016 school year. 

That population is estimated at a minimum of 74 individuals by the Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE). 

In an interview Aug. 18, a state official could not say whether the employment requirement has been met because it does not have employment data as recent as July 1.

For now, the state is getting employment statistics from an “Employment and Day Activity Outcomes Survey” for adults with developmental disabilities that is done on a quarterly basis by the Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College.

The latest survey is a snapshot of what adults with disabilities were doing during their daytime hours in March, according to Jennifer Wood, Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services.

Wood said statistics for July won’t be available until September.

Supports necessary for individuals to access regular employment vary with the needs of the person. They may include transportation, extra training that breaks down the job into small steps, or even a job coach who stays with the employee for the entire work shift. Typically, individuals with intellectual or developmental disabilities employed in the community work part time.

A Pay Raise For Direct Service Workers

During July, the state has submitted numerous documents that could have a bearing on the September court session, which is officially termed a “status conference.” 

Among the state’s filings is a progress report on what Wood has described as the “huge mathematical exercise” of delivering $5 million in pay raises- an average of $600 a year per person before taxes  – to direct service workers and job coaches.

Pay raises have been described as essential to stabilize a workforce of direct service workers who are asked to do demanding jobs for less than they would make at a fast food restaurant. Turnover ranges from about 35 percent to 80 percent annually, according to testimony before the General Assembly earlier this year.

At a recent community forum, Jane Gallivan, the interim Director of Developmental Disabilities, said workers should have checks by Oct. 1 that incorporate retroactive pay going back to the start of the current fiscal year, July 1.

The judge’s order gave the state until Aug. 1 to “appropriately increase salaries, benefits, training and supervision for Direct Support Professionals and Job Coaches.”

Performance-Based Bonus Plan Outlined

Another money issue involves government reimbursement paid to the  agencies themselves.

The state has filed a progress report with the court on plans to use $6.8 million in performance-based bonuses approved by the General Assembly in a two-phase program during the current fiscal year.

The program is initially planned to reward service providers when they place clients in jobs, after the workers have been employed for three months, and again at the six-month mark.  

These incremental bonuses would total an average of $15,750 per person, although the number of incentives and the dollar amounts may be adjusted, Wood has said. 

The state has not yet begun taking applications from providers to participate in the program, according to a spokeswoman for the Executive Office of Health and Human Services.

The incentive program is to be piloted until December with a limited number of private service providers.

The judge’s order required the state to implement the initial phase of the program by Aug. 1, and to turn in evidence that all providers have signed performance-based contracts by Dec. 31.

A Call For A New Reimbursement Model

McConnell also called on the state to implement a new reimbursement model by August 1 that is “sufficiently flexible to allow providers to be reimbursed for services rendered, including, but not limited to career exploration discovery services, vocational situational assessments, work trials, development of job seeker profiles, job search and placement, job training and support, support coordination, and transportation services.”

There is similar language in the consent decree, which specified that providers should be paid for job-related and job counseling work that is “not face-to-face with the client.”

Although performance bonuses will be an added “layer” of payment to service providers in the incentive program,  according to Wood, she has said that the current reimbursement model will remain in place.


“The unit service model is the unit service model,” she said in a recent interview.

For daytime services, this model requires providers to document the time workers spend with clients, face to face, in 15-minute increments. Providers are not paid for time clients are absent for any reason, even though they must staff their programs at the same level, regardless of varying attendance.

The judge’s order says the state must now have a “new service package design” that includes up-front individual financial authorizations for supported employment services.

Wood has said specific authorizations for supported employment services will be awarded to individual clients of providers enrolled in the performance bonus program – an estimated 200 people in all.

Except for that group, clients will continue to have to trade in other types of authorizations, like generic day services, to get employment-related supports, she said.

The State's Other Progress Reports

To comply with other requirements of the court order, the state has submitted:

  • ·An overall project management plan involving the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH), RIDE, and the Office of Rehabilitation Services (ORS) in the state Department of Human Services
  • ·A transition timeline covering services to young people with developmental disabilities aged 14 to 21, including details on which agency and the type of worker who will provide the respective supports. 
  • A comprehensive communications plan, including details on relaying the status of pending applications for adult developmental disability services to applicants and their families.

There are now 224 pending applications for adult services, a slight reduction from a backlog of about 237 reported in mid-May.

As of last Friday, however, eligibility workers had screened all but four of the 224 applications and assigned them to one of three categories; “likely eligible, likely ineligible” or “need further documentation,” Wood said.

This screening process sets the stage for decisions on applications in the first two categories to be made within 30 days, she said, enabling the state to retire the backlog by the end of September.

The screening also enables eligibility workers to promptly notify those who need to submit more information. 

In the past, those who needed to gather additional documentation might not have known it until their cases got to the top of the pile and were reviewed by the eligibility workers – an indefinite time period. 

The initial assessment makes the decision-making process much more efficient, Sophie O’Connell, a spokeswoman for EOHHS, said in a follow-up email.

EOHHS, which has taken over management of the Division of Disabilities at BHDDH since the beginning of the year, has heightened its oversight of the application screening process during the summer and used “data and performance management to keep our efforts on track,” O’Connell continued.

“The team met every day in the morning and the afternoon to set goals, review progress and problem solve as needed” during the screening process, she said.

At a hearing in April, the DOJ presented evidence that some individuals turning 21 were waiting extensive periods of time to receive notice of eligibility for adult services and then had trouble finding programs suited to their needs.

The consent decree requires that community-based services, including supported employment, be in place for individuals with developmental disabilities when they reach the age of 18. 

State law also says that individuals with developmental disabilities are eligible for adult services at age 18, although as a practical matter, it is not uncommon for them to remain in high school until age 21.

Nevertheless, the consent decree anticipates a seamless and individualized transition between school and the adult world.

McConnell will hear the status of consent decree compliance at 2 p.m. Sept. 16 in Courtroom 3 on the second floor of the federal courthouse on Kennedy Plaza in Providence, according to a notice in the case file. 

 

Monitor Gives RI Mostly Passing Grades, Except for Failure to Pay Bills

By Gina Macris

Update: At the close of business July 26, all nine developmental disability service providers owed money for start-up costs in converting from sheltered workshops to supported employment had received payment in full, according to a spokeswoman for the Rhode Island Executive Office of Health and Human Services. A list of the agencies and the amounts appear at the end of this post.

With one exception, the state of Rhode Island largely has met the latest deadlines of a federal court order which spells out how it must lay the groundwork for long overdue compliance with a 2014 consent decree meant to desegregate adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

The state has until Friday, July 29, to pay up to $800,000 in start-up costs, as specified in the consent decree, for nine private service providers converting to community-based services from sheltered workshops, according to the court monitor in the case, Charles Moseley.

If that deadline is not met, Mosely said in a new report to U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell, Jr., the judge should impose fines of $5,000 a day, with an additional $100 per day for each person protected by the consent decree whose employment or integrated day services are delayed or interrupted as a result of the violation.

Those fines, with a maximum of $1 million per year, were set forth in the order McConnell issued May 18.  It is the second time in three months that the state has faced the prospect of fines for failing to pay its bills in relation to implementing the consent decree.

Moseley said he had received assurances from Jennifer Wood,  the Deputy Secretary for Health and Human Services, Jennifer Wood, that the Friday deadline will be met.

The plans for converting sheltered workshop operations to integrated employment services had been approved by the state and the bills for start-up costs had been submitted by the agencies at least three months ago.

The start-up activities are necessary to enable the service providers to meet employment targets in the consent decree. Moseley noted, adding that this point was made during April 8 evidentiary hearing, which McConnell used as the basis for his order, issued May 18.

According to an investigation of the U.S. Department of Justice, the sheltered workshops violate Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act, which says, in effect, that individuals with intellectual or developmental disabilities cannot be relegated to segregated settings simply because they are disabled.

In the 2014 consent decree, the state agreed to change its services to emphasize integrated employment paying minimum wage or higher and other community-based activities over a ten-year period.

Moseley’s most recent status report was submitted to the court last Friday, July 22.

In it, he said that the budget enacted by the General Assembly, a total of $246.2 million for developmental disabilities, will provide sufficient funding to meet requirements of the consent decree during the current fiscal year, which ends June 30, 2017.

The budget is still a little more than $11 million more than Raimondo had originally requested.

Budget provisions specifically related to the consent decree include:  

  • A total of $9.1 million for wage increases and performance-based contracts for providers offering integrated employment supports.
  • Funding for four state (staff) positions focused on consent decree implementation, including chief transformation officer, consent decree coordinator, employment specialist, and program development director.

Although the General Assembly did not approve Raimondo’s request for $5.8 million for a caseload increase, citing flat enrollment, Moseley noted that the legislature left the door open to reconsider if the numbers changed.

The monitor said 125 new cases had been approved during the fiscal year which ended June 30, although most of them were still in high school and were not expected to need a full array of adult services during the coming fiscal year. (According to the state's report, these cases encompassed ages 17 to 24.) 

Mosely did ask the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) to report to him on any individuals protected by the consent decree “whose acceptance into the adult DD system is delayed or deferred due to lack of funding.”

McConnell’s order required the state to develop a management plan for accomplishing consent decree goals and tasks, and while Moseley said the plan met basic criteria, he found it lacking in detail on organizational strategies within BHDDH  and on interagency cooperation.

The lack of specificity is “understandable,” he said, given that three key positions at BHDDH are vacant. They are the department director, the director of the division of developmental disabilities and the chief transformation officer.

Moseley recommended that the state have until December 1 to expand and strengthen the management plan.

Other comments in Moseley’s status report focused on high school students with developmental disabilities who are 14 years and older and of particular concern to federal officials because they are at risk for segregation as adults if they are not afforded transitional services.

He secured a commitment that state employees from BHDDH or from the state Office of Rehabilitation Services in the Department of Human Services would be available to attend all Individual Education Plan meetings for special education students with developmental disabilities who are at least 14 years old.

Moseley noted that BHDDH has developed a protocol for timely communications with individuals having developmental disabilities and their families concerning applications for adult services.

He also recommended that BHDDH develop and distribute a description of the process for determining eligibility that is “clear, easy to access, user-friendly and written in plain language,” including contact information for BHDDH employees who would be able to answer additional questions.

“It is important to note that the eligibility determination process frequently is associated with a great deal of anxiety and concern among individuals with disabilities and their families,” Moseley said.

“By its nature, the process is technical, complicated, and difficult for a lay person to understand. Direct contact with an eligibility determination staff member offers an important opportunity for famelies to learn about the process and have their questions answered,” he said. 

Click here to read the monitor's full report

Service providers that received start-up costs for supported employment, as required by the monitor 

ri executive office of health and human services

ri executive office of health and human services

Task Force Members Say Interviews to Assess DD Needs in RI Apparently Used to Cut Funds

By Gina Macris

Four Rhode Islanders with developmental disabilities who all need nearly constant attention have had their residential funding cut by a total of about $125,000 a year.

The most recent scoring on an extensive questionnaire that is supposed to assess their support needs says they have become much more self-sufficient. Instead of having extensive needs, they now require only moderate supports, according to the results of the questionnaire, the Supports Intensity Scale, or SIS. 

But Tom Kane, the CEO of the agency that runs the men’s group home, says that if he withdraws $125,000 worth of residential staff hours for these men, “someone will get hurt.” 

“It’s not a position these four men should be in, nor should the agency be in this position,” Kane told state officials at a meeting of the Employment First Task Force July 12. 

Professionals acknowledge that, barring a traumatic event, the needs of a person with intellectual or developmental disabilities remain relatively stable over the course of a lifetime. 

Yet one chart prepared in 2015 by a healthcare consulting company under contract with the state shows the level of need changed for 47 percent of clients who had been re-assessed since the Supports Intensity Scale was introduced in 2011. 

For AccessPoint RI, a private service provider, those changes have resulted in a cumulative loss of $970.000 in developmental disability funding, roughly 12 percent of the budget, Kane said. 

If the tool is reliable, the score shouldn’t change dramatically,” Kane said. “Either the tool is not reliable, or you know it was all manipulated” to reduce pressure on state spending, he said.

Jane Gallivan, the interim Director of Developmental Disabilities in the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals, said, “We definitely will take a hard look.”

Claire Rosenbaum, Adult Services Coordinator for the Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College, said she has received numerous reports that social workers conducting the SIS interviews challenge the accuracy of answers family members give to specific questions. 

Or, said Mary Beth Cournoyer, a parent member of the Employment First Task Force, the interviewer does not argue with family members’ answers but merely substitutes other ones.  This becomes apparent, she said, when parents review the completed assessment and see that the ratings on needs differ from the ones they had given. 

Cournoyer said parents need training on what to expect from a SIS questionnaire because the answers they give could have unexpected ramifications.  

For example, parents may say that their sons or daughters can dress themselves, when the reality is much more nuanced. Without someone to put away the out-of-season clothes so they are out of reach, individuals with disabilities may dress inappropriately for the weather, she said. They may be capable of dressing themselves, but may sometimes refuse to do so.

Cournoyer indicated that parents don’t realize they need to completely remove from the picture the supports they and other family members provide naturally before they say whether their sons or daughters can perform a particular task. 

Jennifer Wood, the Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services, said “no topic has come up with more regularity than the SIS. We should have some focus groups.”  

Under order of the U.S. District Court, and to avoid a possible contempt hearing, BHDDH changed its SIS policy July1 –nearly two years after it first agreed to do so -to divorce the assessment of need from funding considerations. 

That new language is intended to resolve a conflict of interest noted by the U.S. Department of Justice in its 2014 findings that the state’s sheltered workshops and segregated day programs violatedthe integration mandate of the Americans With Disabilities Act, The 1999 as spelled out by the  1999 Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court.  

In a subsequent consent decree designed to remedy the ADA violations, the state agreed to change its SIS policy by Sept. 1, 2014. 

The policy then in place said, in part: “Starting January 1, 2013 BHDDH will assign service tiers (funding allocations) based on the results of an individual SIS assessment. 

A year later, the DOJ said in its findings: 

“Our investigation revealed that BHDDH staff maintains primary responsibility for administering the Supports Intensity Scale, and they are also part of the agency that administers the statewide budget for developmental disability services.This is a seeming conflict of interest because the need to keep consumers’ resource allocations within budget may influence staff to administer the SIS in a way that reaches the pre-determined budgetary result.” 

The DOJ  referred to similar warnings from the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, which created the SIS.   

The consent decree prohibits the SIS from being used as a funding mechanism.  

The new state policy, adopted July 1, reads, in part: “All decisions involving SIS tier assignments (levels of need) and any changes to SIS tier assignments are made solely on the basis of individual support needs as indicated by the SIS assessment in a manner that is consistent with individual’s support needs, separate and apart from resource allocation considerations.” 

How the change in policy will play out in practice is not yet clear.

According to a monitor’s report to the court in August, 2015, the state reported making the necessary changes in the administration of the questionnaire, including the re-training of interviewers, but complaints from parents have persisted. 

The disagreements over the SIS have resulted in families filing appeals. Most appeals are granted, according to Charles Williams, who retires as Director of Developmental Disabilities July 22. Data on the number of appeals, successful or otherwise, is not readily available. 

Wood and Gallivan promised members of the Employment First Task Force they would get to the bottom of the issue.                               

The Employment First Task Force, created by the consent decree, consists of members representing community organizations, adults who themselves have disabilities, and parents.   The task force, which holds public meetings, is intended to serve as a bridge between state government and consumers and families. 

The next meeting is August 12 at 2 p.m. at the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island, 110 Jefferson Blvd., Warwick.