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The Disability Services
Advisory Committee (DSAC) is comprised of community agency,
statewide association, state operated facility and
individual representatives advocating for their constituents
in the Illinois DD system.
1.
DRAFT RECOMMENDATIONS OF
THE DSAC DD COMMITTEE, December 14, 2007
Person-Centered Planning
- The State should strengthen
opportunities for individuals in community settings by
the addition of the Individual Service Option in a new
Adult Developmental Disabilities Home & Community Based
Waiver.
- Individualized budgeting should be
developed so person-centered services can be supplied to
individuals, including those who may have exceptional
behavioral or medical needs, in the setting of an
individual’s informed choice.
- Re-shape developmental training as
a "service definition," making it more person-directed.
Developmental training should continue as individual
programming that is a collection of individually chosen
services that can be provided in the setting of the
person's choice, which may or may not be a traditional
developmental training setting.
- The State must focus on
infrastructure improvements that will maximize
opportunities for people to choose living arrangements,
supports and services that maximize their independence
and their involvement in community living by
implementing several initiatives, including: enacting
crisis prevention and intervention programs and other
supports necessary for true community involvement,
developing of the capacity of the local service network
to respond appropriately to the needs and desires of
individuals and taking action through leadership to
change policies so that new capacity development is in
concert with expressed need according to the PUNS
database. This recommendation would require new funding,
including expansion of the State's Medicaid waiver
program, to develop crisis management teams, enhance
existing provider capacity and development of new
provider capacity.
Quality
Assurance
- The State should provide funding
so that all individuals receiving services through the
Division of Developmental Disabilities can have access
to Individual Service and Support Advocacy (ISSA)
services. Currently this support is only available to
individuals enrolled in the Waiver.
- Review and analyze the State’s
quality assurance or management capacity to develop a
cohesive statewide quality assurance policy; enhance the
overall developmental disability service system to be
responsive to the people it supports and the State and
federal government which funds those supports.
- Quality Assurance must be clearly
defined, have measurable standards that are uniformly
applied across all service settings and be financially
supported by the Governor's office and the legislature.
- Provide funding of $8 million to
the Division of Developmental Disabilities to implement
a statewide, person-centered Information Technology
Management System to track services, supports,
individuals’ satisfaction with services and individual
goals.
- Provide funding to the Division of
Developmental Disabilities to implement an electronic
health record system.
CODB/Reimbursement
- The State should provide the
Division of Developmental Disabilities with a five
percent Cost of Doing Business (CODB) FY2009 budget
increase ($57.5 million) for community providers.
- The Department of Human Services
must work in unison with the General Assembly,
consumers, community partners, and trade associations to
develop and fund uniform reimbursement methodologies and
payment rates that reflect the cost of providing
services and supports – including fair wages and
benefits; recognize individual needs and levels of
functioning; consider geographic differentials; allow
for required staffing ratios, and pay for unfunded
mandates. This methodology would include consistent
accountability standards and would require that all
human service providers submit cost reports to the State
which are consistent across the entire service delivery
system. Once developed, the quality of services and
supports must be maintained by a statute that requires
yearly trend factors be built into the rates and
reimbursements.
Workforce
- The State should include
sufficient funding in the FY 2009 Division of
Developmental Disabilities budget for a $1.50 per hour
market adjustment for entry level direct care staff up
to and including Qualified Mental Retardation
Professionals (QMRP’s) and Qualified Mental Health
Professionals (QMHP’s) in his FY09 budget for the
Department of Human Services to reflect increases in the
minimum wage. The Governor proposed, and the General
Assembly passed, increases to Illinois’ minimum wage
over four years (2007 – 2010) from $5.75 to
$8.25. Additionally, Congress passed and the President
signed legislation that would increase the federal
minimum wage over three years (2007 – 2009) from $5.85
to $7.25. While necessary to provide a living wage, the
increases should not and cannot negatively impact the
ability to attract and retain qualified direct support
personnel.
- Provide $4.5 million in funding to
the Division of Development disabilities to provide
mandated training for direct care workers in CILAs. The
Division currently pays for these trainings with dollars
budgeted for other programs. In addition, the Division
will recognize and provide funding for training modified
for the State of Illinois offered through the College of
Direct Support, which includes training for both Direct
Support Professionals and Supervisors and
- Provide $4.6 million in funding to
support the nursing recommendations of the CILA Nurses
Work Group.
PUNS
- A system and procedure should be
established whereby all people listed in the emergency
category in the Division of Developmental Disabilities
Prioritization of Urgency of Need for Service Survey
(PUNS) lists be provided needed services immediately,
but not longer than 30 days, that people listed in the
critical category needing certain supports and services
be provided services within 90 days and that those
listed in the planning category be provided services
according to an agreed upon plan. This recommendation is
related to the PUNS information developed by the
Division of Developmental Disabilities but could also
apply to PUNS information being developed by the
Division of Mental Health and Division of Rehabilitation
Services. $74 million in funding would be required to
provide services to all people listed in the emergency
category and an additional $200 million would be
required to provide service to all people listed in the
critical category.
- All individuals receiving services
from the Division of Developmental Disabilities,
regardless of setting, should have the opportunity and
choice to enroll and indicate their needs in the
Prioritization of Urgency of Need for Service Survey
(PUNS).
- Broaden awareness of the PUNS
systems for school personnel, people with developmental
disabilities and family members. Awareness for the
latter groups should be focused beyond general awareness
to include how an assessment is conducted, by whom, and
who should be involved in the process. In addition,
develop capacity for and a deeper analysis of the PUNS
data to assist in the State’s development of supports,
budgeting, and planning efforts.
- Individuals should automatically
be registered on the PUNS in the school system. In
addition, accompanying transition planning would
standardize both eligibility determination and
documentation.
Other
- The Division of Developmental
Disabilities should reinvest 100 percent of the funding
it receives from the hospital tax money into the
developmental disabilities service system to provide
services to individuals with developmental disabilities
who are not currently served by the State and to develop
new supports and services, including new CILA, new adult
home-based services, new enrollment in the home- and
community-based children’s waiver and the statewide
crises project.
- The Division of Developmental
Disabilities should continue to be a part of the
hospital tax program if the program is continued beyond
FY 2008.
- Currently, Illinois has a policy
of "unconditional" discharge from State Operated
Developmental Centers (SODCs) for individuals who
attempt community placement, which does not guarantee as
safety net that individuals may need on a temporary or
long term basis. The State should change this policy so
that individuals have the choice to return to the SODC
from which he or she was discharged if a community
placement fails.
- The State should immediately
release the crisis intervention RFP and undertake an
evaluation of the initiative’s implementation.
- Revise State policies to disallow
development of new large congregate care facilities.
In addition to the above
recommendations, the Developmental Disability Subgroup
supports the sufficient funding of SODCs so that individuals
who choose to remain in SODCs are provided with quality
services in a safe environment.
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