Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Springfield Mayoral Race: The Disability Vote

Today is Election Day, and it is not just in Chicago. The Springfield mayoral primary is also today, February 22. There are eight candidates running for the four ballot positions for the general election on April 5. Though there are some front-runners, as in Chicago, the race is still wide open. Since four names will appear on the ballot, a mere plurality of the vote is all one candidate needs to become Springfield's next Mayor.

Several disability rights groups and service providers put together a questionnaire regarding disability issues pertinent to the Springfield area. Each candidate received a copy of the questionnaire and a deadline to return it. Unfortunately, only three candidates returned the form. With only four questions, it would seem all the candidates could have found the time to fill out and return the questionnaire. Yet, to their credit, Mike Houston, Sheila Stocks-Smith, and Michael Farmer answered all the questions and returned the questionnaire in a timely manner. The five other candidates—Mike Coffey, Jr., Frank Kunz, William McCarty, John Thomas, and Mario Ingoglia—did not return the form and, therefore, provided no insight on their views regarding the disability community in the Springfield area.

While some people may not receive this information before voting in the primary, it is still very important to get these responses to the public and media alike. On March 26, at the First Presbyterian Church in Springfield, the same groups that supported the questionnaire will host a mayoral forum for the four candidates who won the primary and are on the ballot for the general election. As the time approaches, I will resend this information, if appropriate, along with any other information regarding disability issues put forth by the candidates.

I want to acknowledge Pete Roberts, the Executive Director of the Springfield Center for Independent Living (SCIL) for doing all the legwork for this activity. He and his staff made sure that all the candidates received the questionnaire and instructions on how to fill it out and where to send it. Pete deserves much of the credit for making sure this venture came together.

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Springfield Americans with Disabilities Vote


The following Mayoral Candidates did not respond to this questionnaire:
Mario Ingoglia, William D. McCarty, Frank Kunz, Mike Coffey, Jr., John G. Thomas.


1. Since 1985 Springfield has had a Disabilities Commission. Citizens with disabilities have been disappointed that the Commission has not been effective in addressing the concerns of citizens with disabilities and working with the city council to address and resolve such concerns.

As Mayor, what would you do to strengthen the Commission and hold it accountable?


Mike Houston:

I served as Mayor from 1979 to 1987 and proudly established the Disabilities Commission. Now decades later, although progress has been made, there still is a long way to go to meet the needs of the disability community. I would commit to attending your meetings as I am available or having an assistant from my office attend on a regular basis. My priority is to have open communications with the members of the Commission. I would solicit your suggestions for appointments to the Commission and maintain a full complement of ten appointees. Given the charge of the Disabilities Commission, I would request the Commission to prepare an annual report outlining the progress that is being made on making municipal facilities accessible. While the Commission deals with both public and private facilities, the City of Springfield needs to set an example for other governmental and private organizations.

Sheila Stocks-Smith:

I agree that Committees and Councils may not be functioning to their highest potential. If we seek citizen input through this venue, we need to make sure those recommendations are heard and acted upon. My administration will review all city boards and commissions and restructure as necessary, not only to ensure concrete outcomes, but to ensure diverse perspectives are represented across all boards and commissions.

Michael J. Farmer:

First, I would review the recent activities of the Commission and speak with each member of that Commission. If there is a need to an appoint individual(s) to the Commission who may enhance the awareness and help address the concerns expressed by citizens with disabilities, then this definitely should occur. I would review the Commission’s Transition Plan and work with the appointed city liaison to report specific concerns and any recommendations to resolve those concerns. Obviously, the city and the Commission will seek the advice of the Springfield Center for Independent Living (SCIL) to assist in an adequate and affordable resolution of identified concerns. As Mayor, I would request that all identified concerns and actions taken be shared with me on a regular basis to ensure the city acts upon the resolved concerns. It should be noted that the Office of Planning and Economic Development works closely with SCIL and utilized Community Development Block Grant funds for several ADA related projects.


2. Springfield has never designated a full-time Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Coordinator, who would be responsible on a daily basis for assuring that the city is in compliance with all appropriate provisions of the ADA including the Transition Plan.

Would you commit to appointing a full-time ADA Coordinator?


Mike Houston:

No, I would not make commitment. Given the city’s financial condition I do not see the possibility of adding such a position. We need to assess how the time of the current part-time ADA Coordinator is being used to determine if it can be used more effectively and if it is adequate.

Sheila Stocks-Smith:

I believe that my administration will provide the end result wanted by Springfieldians with Disabilities. However, I cannot promise a full-time ADA Coordinator until I review all positions within city government in light of the city’s fiscal problems.

Michael J. Farmer:

First, I believe a full-time ADA Coordinator would enhance our city’s ability to work with persons with disabilities and add to their overall quality of life. However, because of the current budget situation, the appointment of a full-time ADA Coordinator is unfortunately not feasible. That said, I see no reason why a current city employee(s) cannot increase his/her participation with the Commission and the SCIL to increase his/her awareness of the ADA and ADAA. If increased communication and awareness of ADA and ADAA requirements occur within the city and city council on a regular basis, the need for a full-time ADA Coordinator may not be necessary. The city could then spend more time focusing on the resolution of current and future concerns of citizens with disabilities.


3. In December 2010 the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics released disability employment statistics showing the percentage of people with disabilities in the labor force was 21.0. The percentage of people with no disability in the labor force is 69.6. The unemployment rate for those with disabilities is 14.3 percent compared to 8.9 percent for people with no disability (see www.disability.gov).

As Mayor, what will you do to ensure that, when promoting diversity in the city workforce, persons with disabilities are recognized as a desirable and viable minority resource and recruited and hired as such?


Mike Houston:

The City Code Chapter 36, Section 36.02 and Rules of the Springfield Civil Service Commission Rule 1.8 both contain the following language, “…or disability unrelated to the person’s ability to perform the duties of a particular position except where a bona fide occupational qualifications exist.” The City Code stipulates that persons referred to above are to be considered for city employment and they would be. I intend to hire people based on their qualifications and experience and would consider individuals with disabilities. Women, minorities, and people with disabilities will be encouraged to apply for positions.

Sheila Stocks-Smith:

The city’s workforce needs to reflect the people it serves. Diversity includes race, gender, disabilities, but also ability level, religion, age, sexual orientation, geography, ideology and more. Springfield is best served through inclusive policies and practices and I will model these standards by ensuring diversity among my staff and department directors. Achieving a diverse workforce will be a consideration in all new hires; efforts to promote city employment to underrepresented populations will be ongoing. In addition, my career has been spent working on community and educational issues, and I will also work to assure that people with disabilities also receive the workforce training they need to compete for the job sectors we will be fighting to grow.

Michael J. Farmer:

This question again speaks to the issue of awareness within the city workforce and the general population. As Mayor, I will see that the Commission’s Transition Plan is shared with the appropriate members of the city workforce to ensure that persons with disabilities are recognized as a viable resource for the city and businesses. While promoting diversity in the city workforce is important, the Mayor is in a unique position to promote hiring persons with disabilities with the Springfield business community. Organizations such as SCIL, SPARC, Hope School and UCP can assist in that effort as the identified business needs emerge, e.g. accommodation recommendations, janitorial services, shredding services.


4. Given the complexity of disability issues and the apparent lack of understanding among city employees and council members, would you, as Springfield Mayor, support the implementation of disability awareness/sensitivity training for all city employees and council members?


Mike Houston:

Absolutely, I would support the inclusion of disability issues as part of the existing orientation program. While I am not familiar with the specifics of the employee orientation or ongoing diversity awareness/sensitivity training, I believe it should include disabilities issues.

Sheila Stocks-Smith:

My administration will review employee training and ensure that awareness and sensitivity toward people with disabilities is included.

Michael J. Farmer:

Yes, I would definitely support and require the continuation of disability awareness/sensitivity training for all city employees. I would request that the council members participate in this training as well. It is important to note that all city employees were required to participate in sensitivity training last year, which included disability awareness. However, there may still be a need to review the information provided to city employees on disability awareness and offer more detailed information as recommended by the Disability Commission and/or SCIL. As Mayor, all new employees and newly promoted employees will be required to attend disability awareness/sensitivity training as part of their overall employee orientation. On a regular basis, the city workforce will be required to attend this training so current information on disability legislation, such as Rosa’s Law, awareness and best practices can be shared as persons with intellectual or cognitive disabilities or mental health challenges are integrated into the city and/or business community workforce.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Death by a Thousand Cuts

(What follows is a series of action alerts from CCDI, Illinois Works for the Future, and payourbills.illinois.gov, as well as fact sheets concerning Senate Bill 3 (SB 3) and what impact human services cuts would have on the disability community in Illinois. As usual, I offer a brief commentary before the alerts and description of cuts. Many of you may have already seen these alerts and responded to them. My goal is to reach others who have not had that opportunity and remind everyone that one phone call or one email is only the beginning and not the end of our efforts.)

Unfortunately, most of us have played this game before. Most of us have fought this battle either last year or some other time in the past. The problem, of course, is that the war never seems to end, and some of us get battle fatigue. No, this is definitely not the first time we have been down this road. We know we have months of work ahead of us, and we cannot begin to pull back now.

If anything I just said seems confusing, you only need to start paying attention to the Illinois state budget process. The Governor will lay out his proposed budget for the next fiscal year on Wednesday, February 16, during his budget address before the General Assembly. The first thing to remember is that this is merely a proposed budget and not the end result on which legislators will vote in May. We have much more gnashing of teeth before we reach that point. That said, many disability rights advocates are upset with several of the Governor's proposals.

Every year, regardless of administration, political party, constituencies, or makeup of the legislature, there seems to be a clarion call for budget cuts. Legislators and the Governor's office rush to find ways to slash "unnecessary" spending from the state's budget. This year is no different and, in fact, offers extra political pressure to make those kinds of cuts. Typically, the most drastic cuts come from human and social services, since legislators feel those are the easiest areas to cut. The constituencies usually receiving these services are the state's "most vulnerable" populations, which are defined as seniors, people with disabilities, single parents, and individuals living in poverty. Are these groups the "most vulnerable" people living in Illinois? That point is debatable, but the fact that most legislators feel that these citizens have no political voice is far more telling than if they were cutting benefits for union members.

It is time for this political mindset to end. People with disabilities, seniors, and individuals with low incomes have voices and advocates. We are not silent, and we are not pleased when we see our benefits reduced or taken completely from us before any other state agency or program is ever considered. We want what we have earned or been promised. This is not asking for handouts from the state government. This is reaping the rewards for decades of work or receiving opportunities to become productive members of society. Whether the fact is acknowledged or not, these "most vulnerable" populations continue to vote, continue to voice their opinions, and continue to make their presence felt in the state capitol.

I understand how easy it is to lose that "fire in the belly." It seems we end up fighting these battles every year. We all get tired, especially when we hear that, yet again, we are the targets of cuts by the state government and, in many cases, the federal government as well. Just when we think we dodged a barrage of draconian cuts to our very quality of life, we find ourselves squarely in the crosshairs again. It almost seems we are in perpetual movement just to avoid the government ax.

Yet, in many ways, that is the nature of advocacy. That is not to say disability rights advocates always find themselves seeking hiding places and fearing government cuts. However, it does mean this is a constant struggle, and just when we feel that we have won a major battle, another one rises over the horizon. Advocates are not weak at heart, and we definitely do not fall under the rubric of vulnerable. We fight these constant battles because we believe our vision of society is just and fair. We fight because we want independence and equality. We fight because no one else will and, sometimes, because no one else can. You cannot present yourself as a voice for the "most vulnerable" in our society, unless you can relate to the struggles they face. Advocates do that every day, and we will continue to do that, regardless of how many times we feel outnumbered or overwhelmed.

This is only the beginning of the Illinois political season. At times, it will seem like a carnival or circus. At other times, it will seem like an arena full of menacing lions. Yet, in the end, it is simply people arguing their case against other people who feel equally justified in their perspective. The point is we can never lose sight that this is not an all-out war, and not everyone is against us. We all must be smart in picking our battles and making sure we are unified in our approach. We have the numbers, and we are on the right side of the argument. We only need to stand together and make our case loudly and consistently.

Cutting the budget to the Department of Human Services (DHS) by as much as $250 million is wrong on many levels. We saw this same scenario last year, when Home Services in the Division of Rehabilitation Services (DRS) faced service parameters and hourly cuts and the Division of Mental Health (DMH) experienced horrendous cuts to services. People suffered because of these cuts, and, yet, Illinois still found itself with a record deficit. Do we really need to reenact the same play again? It seems the ending remains the same.

However, unlike most years, the General Assembly finds itself with answers it usually lacks. In this session, there is a chance to pass SB 3. This borrowing bill would let the state pay its debts immediately and prevent vendors and providers from taking unnecessary bankruptcy because of backlogs of unpaid state bills. It would create jobs, and it would not cause the government to go bankrupt itself when paying back the loan. The information about this bill is located further down in this post. Still, it seems quite clear that when there is an alternative to slashing programs desperately needed by people across the state, our legislators should take that opportunity and make it a reality. Is this what they call a "no-brainer?" I think it is about as close as we can get.

Read the alerts below. If necessary, read them again. Call the numbers, and send the emails. If necessary, do it again. Make our voices heard. Let's put the automatic reaction of cutting social services in the backs of legislators' minds. Let's be proactive instead of reactive. Let's all take a deep breath and dive into advocacy again.

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Support Senate Bill 3 (Pay Our Bills) Fact Sheet

To stabilize the budget and grow jobs, Illinois must pay its bills, while continuing to improve education, health care, human services, and public safety.

The increased revenues passed by the General Assembly and signed into law this month are only one half of the package. We also need Senate Bill 3 to alleviate current burdens on state vendors, health care organizations, and social service organizations.

Debt restructuring is similar to consolidating credit card or loans. Senate Bill 3 allows us to pay our bills in a lump sum and save money, while we also have dedicated revenue streams to pay it back:

• The lender will pay all of Illinois bills now;

• Illinois will repay the lender over a period of 14 years;

• Repayment will come from the 0.5% of the revenue increase specifically set aside for
   this plan.

This is not ‘new borrowing.' This is a strategic restructuring to pay down debts already owed by the State of Illinois.

Why Restructure Our Existing Debt?

Pay Invoices Now ‐ Illinois takes (on average) six months to pay an invoice owed to a vendor, and eight months for group insurance repayment. Debt restructuring would allow service providers to be paid now, rather than in 2012.

Save 50,000 Jobs Annually – By failing to pay its bills, Illinois is costing itself jobs. Because of late payments, vendors, schools, and social service agencies are having trouble-making payroll, are laying off employees, and even closing their doors. By failing to pay its bills, Illinois is costing itself about 50,000 jobs annually (as well as their payroll taxes).

$8.7 Billion into the Economy – Debt restructuring would cause an $8.7 billion influx of funds into Illinois’ economy. This translates into jobs, as well as increased state and local revenues through payroll and sales taxes.

Save Money with Prompt Payment – Illinois is forced to pay penalties on late payments to vendors. In addition, Illinois’ failure to pay its bills has caused vendors to cancel contracts, force contract re‐negotiation at higher prices, or bid high to offset late payments. Prompt payment would encourage competitive bidding, saving millions annually.

Bolster Our Business Reputation ‐ Illinois’ fiscal woes have resulted in a bad reputation in the business community. Our continued failure to meet our obligations makes Illinois a risky prospect for business relocation/startup, especially a company that might do business with the State of Illinois.

Bond Ratings – Bond rating agencies have applauded our move to raise revenues, but rating agencies like Moody’s have called for a debt restructuring plan before they would upgrade our bond rating. Better bond ratings means Illinois can find lower interest rates, saving us hundreds of millions in higher interest costs.

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***HOME SERVICES CUTS ACTION ALERT***

The Illinois Governor’s office is reportedly considering $250 million in budget cuts to the Department of Human Services (DHS). This means they are looking at cuts to all services offered by DHS, INCLUDING HOME SERVICES. They are thinking about limiting the number of hours of home services people receive, so the state can save money.

YOU can take action TODAY. Many people with disabilities depend on home services to be able to live at home in their communities. We must speak up now and let the Governor’s office know we care about home services. They have not yet made a final decision, so now is the time to speak up!

Below are phone numbers and emails you can use to get in touch with the Governor’s office. When you call or write, tell them your name, where you live, your connection to the disability community, and why home services should not be cut. Make sure they know that home services SAVE the state money!

Please contact:

Governor Quinn, (217) 782-0244 (Springfield) or (312) 814-2121 (Chicago), or email him at http://www2.illinois.gov/gov/Pages/ContacttheGovernor.aspx

David Vaught, Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), (217) 782-4520 or gomb@illinois.gov

OMB’s Health Care and Human Services division, (217) 782-3105

DHS Secretary Michelle Saddler, (312) 793-1547 (Chicago) or (217) 557-1601 (Springfield), or michelle.saddler@illinois.gov (Please remember that Michelle really wants to know people’s personal home services stories so writing her with your story is a very good idea---she can best advocate for us if she has good stories from our people.)

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CALL/EMAIL YOUR STATE LEGISLATORS TODAY!

SUPPORT SB 3

The Illinois legislature is currently considering SB 3, which is a bill to restructure Illinois’ debt. The state government put out the following fact sheet on SB 3 with the details: https://www2.illinois.gov/gov/payourbills/Documents/Fact%20Sheet.pdf. The bill would pay outstanding debts to state vendors and take advantage of the recent tax increase. It is very important to let our state legislators know that we want the    to support SB 3—especially Republican leadership.

Take action and support every person with a disability in the state of Illinois who uses community-based services. This bill matters to every CIL, every clinic, and every provider that uses state funds to keep people with disabilities in the community.

TAKE ACTION

Once more, please pick up your phone today to make a call, or use your computer to send an email. The sooner, the better as this bill is in motion.

Please contact your own state senator and state representative (see http://www.elections.il.gov/districtlocator/districtofficialsearchbyaddress.aspx to look them up) or go to http://www.ccdionline.org/ and click on "legislative action center.” Also, please contact some of the Republican leaders in the list below. They are key to passing SB 3.

The message is simple: SAVE ILLINOIS SOCIAL SERVICES BY SIGNING ON TO SB 3!

Key Senate Republican Leaders:

Senator Christine Radogno: (217) 782-9407, (630) 243-0800, cradogno@sbcglobal.net

Senator Dale Righter: (217) 782-6674, (217) 235-6033, http://www.dalerighter.com/

Senator J. Bradley Burzynski: (217) 782-1977, (815) 895-6318, senatorbrad@frontier.com

Senator John O. Jones: (217) 782-0471, (618) 242-9511, http://jones.senategop.org/

Senator David Luechtefeld: (217) 782-8137, (618) 243-9014, http://www.luechtefeld.senategop.org/

Senator Dave Syverson: (217) 782-5413, (815) 987-7555, info@senatordavesyverson.com

Senator Matt Murphy: (217) 782-4471, (847) 776-1490, SenatorMattMurphy@gmail.com

Senator Dale Risinger: (217) 782-1942, (309) 693-4921, senatorrisinger@yahoo.com

Key House Republican Leaders:

Representative Tom Cross: (217) 782-1331, (815) 254-0000 tom@tomcross.com

Representative David Leitch: (217) 782-8108, (309) 690-7373, davidleitch@ameritech.net

Representative Tim Schmitz: (217) 782-5457, (630) 845-9590, info@timschmitz.org

Representative Mark Beaubien: (217) 782-1517, (847) 487-5252, strepbeaubien@sbcglobal.net

Representative Dan Brady: (217) 782-1118, (309) 662-1100, dan@rep-danbrady.com

Representative Jim Durkin: (217) 782-0494, (708) 352-7700, jimd@ilga.gov

Representative Renee Kosel: (217) 782-0424, (708) 479-4200, rkosel@ilga.gov

Representative Ron Stephens: (217) 782-6401, ron@repstephens.com

Representative JoAnn Osmond: (217) 782-8151, (847) 838-6200 http://joannosmond.com/

Representative Jim Watson: (217) 782-1840, (217) 243-6221, jimwatson@localnetco.com

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DRASTIC CUTS ARE IMMINENT

Governor Quinn is threatening cuts to work supports and other services for our state’s most vulnerable families. While cuts to other departments are also on the table, right now the Department of Human Services is planning to:

1. Reduce employment and training services for TANF recipients by cutting contracts by 10%

2. Eliminate assistance for the poorest children who live with non-relative legal guardians

3. Eliminate the TANF work and training exemption for single moms caring for children under age one

4. Eliminate Transitional assistance for non-employable single adults.

5. Repeal reforms that improved access to assistance for struggling families, including the repeal of HB 1800 and the “no wrong door” policy.

Because the current budget includes artificially low appropriations (allotment) levels, the rate of current spending means that the state will run out and Governor does not have the authority to spend more. While there are efforts to pass a supplemental appropriations bill that would authorize more spending, we cannot depend on its passage.

Right now, we must work with other advocates to stop the Governor’s attempts to make these cuts. What you can do now:

1) Contact the Governor’s office (217/782-0244 or 312/814-2121) and call your legislators. Demand they take these cuts off the table—instead they must find solutions that cause no further harm to hard-working families, children, seniors, people with disabilities, or to the economic recovery of our state.

2) Attend the Senate Committee on Humans Services Hearing on Tuesday, February 15th, and voice your opposition and explain the devastating impact more cuts to human services would have on the families and communities you serve. The hearing is currently scheduled for 10:45 in Room 400 of the Capitol Building in Springfield.

We are working with fellow advocates to try to stop these cuts stemming from the Governor’s office and crafting additional strategies to respond to these harmful budget proposals. We will keep you informed about further actions you can take.

Paying the State’s Debt

The state still owes $6 billion dollars to providers around the state who have already delivered essential services and remain burdened with these unpaid bills. Passage of Senate Bill 3 would restructure the state’s debt so it can finally make good on its obligation to its vendors. If you wish to learn more about SB 3, click here for a fact sheet prepared by Voices for Illinois Children. We will keep you posted about the progress of the bill.

FY 2012 State Budget

In the midst of dealing with proposed cuts to and unpaid bills from the current budget, the Governor will propose next year’s budget on February 16th. It will continue to be vitally important that lawmakers understand the need to continued investment in the social structures that keeps our economy going, including the very services at risk for cuts now. We will be monitoring the budget proposal and appropriations process as decisions are being made, and will keep you posted on opportunities for you to weigh in. The Governor’s proposed FY2012 budget will be posted on the Office of Management and Budget’s website, along with information on current and previous budgets.

Questions? Contact Jennifer Becker Mouhcine at Illinois Works for the Future at 312-252-0460 ext 301.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Reforming Medicaid (Testimony to House Special Committee on Medicaid Reform)

(This is the testimony I almost gave before the House Special Committee on Medicaid Reform on Monday, January 3. However, it turned out this last hearing of the committee focused on allowing the Auditor General to present testimony on the All Kids Program, which receives its funding from Medicaid. Anne Scheetz from the Illinois Single-Payer Coalition and I were the only other two people at the hearing to testify. Unfortunately, according to co-chair Barbara Flynn-Currie, the committee was running out of time for oral testimony and only wanted our written versions. It was disappointing but not completely unexpected, especially since the Auditor General also testified at the first hearing of the Senate Special Committee on Medicaid Reform. Therefore, each committee received the same information.

I based much of my testimony on draft legislation attached to e-mail from Tony Paulauski with The Arc of Illinois. Though the final version of the legislation likely will look somewhat different from what I read, I believe it is a good blueprint for what will receive a vote in each of the special committees. It appears, though nothing is certain, the Senate will begin the process of moving a Medicaid reform bill out of that community first and then onto the Senate floor. Of course, this is only speculation now, and we will all know much more in the next two days. In the interim, I thought I would post my testimony so someone could read it. Even though I am quite sure all the members of the committee already have digested it thoroughly, I thought it would not hurt to give them another medium by which they could access the testimony. No one needs to fear, however, as there will be no pop quiz following.)


House Special Committee on Medicaid Reform Testimony

As a disability rights advocate, I have been following closely both the House and Senate Special Committees on Medicaid Reform. It is a daunting task and one that cannot be taken lightly. Further, I have had the opportunity to read the draft language for the Combined HFS Medicaid Reform Bill. Though it is not light reading, it is important for everyone involved in Medicaid reform to understand how both committees intend to move forward on legislation regarding this issue. Without equivocation, I can tell you that these recommendations will face resistance from state agencies and bureaucracies, providers, insurance companies, and, indeed, advocates from all across the spectrum of Medicaid reform. That resistance is not to say that all these recommendations are wrong or ill planned. However, it is to say that by encompassing so many ideas into one piece of legislation, members of these committees and the General Assembly will face the need to revisit some of these recommendations and react accordingly. As the federal government implements sweeping health-care reform, the Medicaid system in Illinois becomes a much more fluid entity that requires proper management on all levels for success as measured by satisfaction and good health outcomes for its recipients.

The proposed legislation seemed to cover four main themes. They included long-term care rebalancing, fraud prevention and eligibility verification, improving information technology throughout Illinois' different state agencies, and managed care. I do not pretend to be an expert in any of these areas, let alone all of them. However, I fully believe it is important to discuss, at least in a cursory manner, the intent behind the committees' recommended changes to the Medicaid system. It is in the public's best interest to provide the most transparency available in legislation of this scope and importance. We would fall short as advocates if this were not one of our primary objectives in lending our voice to Medicaid reform.

No one wants to see fraud in any state agency or system. The unfortunate fact is that fraud always exists on every level of government and private business. That does not mean it cannot be limited and the individuals responsible for it made to account for their actions. Yet, in our rush to reform a system that primarily affects the poorest and most potentially vulnerable in our society, we must not overlook how these efforts will change people's lives drastically. Expanding fraud prevention and improving or tightening eligibility verification not only will save the state a somewhat significant pot of money and satisfy many who believe these are the most important reforms, it will also create a possible atmosphere of fear among many Medicaid recipients who have never allowed fraud to cross their minds. It is imperative for this committee and the General Assembly in totality to ensure that the agencies responsible for implementing these new proposals tread lightly among individuals who may not understand why these changes include them, when they are not part of the problem. The responsibility lies with the Departments of Health Care and Family Services and Human Services to explain why there are different eligibility standards and if those standards affect individuals and families in the present and in the future. This is the only fair thing to do, and in doing so, it would ease tension and make it much easier to transition into these reforms.

Improving information technology is needed on many levels in state government and not just in reforming Medicaid. It is long overdue, and many of the recommendations made by these committees cannot take place until the system currently running these programs improves exponentially. The state of Illinois can no longer afford to live in the technological dark ages and expect forward thinking ideas to fall into place. If agencies cannot "speak" with one another via appropriate and fast acting computer networks, all these meeting and discussions have been an exercise in futility. Yet, every committee member needs to understand that this kind of move into 21st-century technology comes with a cost. If you update technology to improve agency efficiency and, ultimately, reform Medicaid, you must not do it "on the cheap." These services are too vital to too many people, and they affect the lives of people in every political district in the state. Proposing these ideas and not fully funding them is worse than no reform at all. It is in Illinois' best interest to provide the initial outlay of funds that will ensure a seamless transition from an antiquated system to one that is already in use in many states across the nation. Moreover, a transition of this type is very much in the best interest of those receiving services

Long-term care rebalancing—removing barriers to community living for people with disabilities of all ages—is a unique phrase and one that has the potential to serve Illinois well. Yet, before we take great strides into the future, we need to remember the past in its stark reality. When considering spending for small community living opportunities for people with disabilities, Illinois still ranks 51st in the nation and 47th nationwide in funding community services. However, Illinois remains fifth in the country on spending for state operated developmental centers (SODCs). This dichotomy cannot last, particularly if the state truly wants to eliminate its deficit and follow the national mass trend toward community-based services.

Though it is gratifying to read proposed legislation that promotes a pathway for Illinois to move away from its institutional bias, these are currently simple proposals that require political will to implement. I hope when faced with resistance from unions, unfortunately misinformed family members, and other special-interest groups, these recommendations live to see the light of day. It is no longer a matter of what advocates consider fair and just. Living independently within the community is a right guaranteed by the US Supreme Court in the Olmstead decision and a reality facing Illinois based on recent court decisions that force the state to move away from institutionalization.

Yet, again, as with updating technological standards, Illinois must face the reality that funding community services is necessary to create an environment conducive to long-term care rebalancing. The current infrastructure for community services is lacking at best. Illinois ranks near the bottom of the country in terms of affordable and accessible housing. There is an overwhelming need to build more residences that can act as group homes, CILAs, and, most preferentially, independent residences for people who leave institutions and nursing homes. If the initial investment is made by the state, it will create new jobs immediately and in the future, as workers from institutions and nursing homes transition into the workforce of community services. The jobs created by reinforcing community-based infrastructure would bolster a sagging economy and increase the tax base in the state. Contrary to union complaints, their members can continue doing the same kind of work in a much more residential setting, as opposed to an institution, without the risk of falling into poverty. However, the most important signal shown by this type of action is Illinois' actual commitment to deinstitutionalization.

Finally, it seems that true Medicaid reform, as put forth by both communities, hinges in large part on managed care. Though this style of health care delivery system and its impact on people with disabilities has been discussed in Illinois for more than a year, the plan for its implementation seems already in place. It is a bold premise to have fifty percent of Illinois Medicaid recipients on some form of managed care by January 1, 2015, as discussed in the Combined HFS Medicaid Reform Bill. That time line coincides quite conveniently with the end date of a managed care pilot program, which begins this month in several northern Illinois counties. It seems difficult to understand how the state and HFS can adequately have time to review how a pilot program like this succeeded or failed when there is already a law stating that more than 1 million Medicaid recipients are to receive managed care, regardless of the pilot program's outcomes.

Legislation of this magnitude requires careful consideration at each step. If people with disabilities are going to take part in a pilot program, which purports to measure the effectiveness of managed care for acute health and possibly long-term care, it only makes sense that the program needs to receive adequate evaluation before it goes statewide. Managed care has yet to show its effectiveness in providing long-term care needs for people with disabilities. Why should members of the disability community in Illinois bear the brunt of experimentation before adequate analysis determines whether this system actually provides the care intended and absolutely needed for individuals with disabilities? Even if managed care is successful in the pilot program, showing the state both tremendous health outcomes and significant monetary savings, there remains a need to guarantee this type of program will work throughout Illinois before legislation mandates that it moves in that direction.

There is a need for oversight with managed care and, indeed, with Medicaid reform in general. People most affected by the changes, particularly those in the disability community, need to have a voice and a strong presence at the table, as their futures are discussed in the same context as creating a better fiscal environment for state government. The General Assembly should appoint an independent review board to discover if these reforms, especially those pertaining to long-term care rebalancing and managed care, are making a lasting and satisfactory difference in the lives of those affected most by these changes. If everyone agrees there is success across the board for these reforms, then moving forward with them into the future is a reasonable and beneficial course for both Medicaid recipients and the state of Illinois. However, if success is still elusive, there should be no doubt or hesitation to revisit these reforms and make the necessary changes that will benefit everyone.

Nothing is set in stone, even as the federal government creates an implementation plan for the Affordable Care Act. All the disability community wants are progressive ideas put forth with deliberate and transparent motives. We want an opportunity to take part in every aspect of this discussion, and we want a guarantee that the state will listen to our voices and not just hear them. As advocates, we will not stop pressing this issue until we feel those in positions of power understand that we organize, speak forcefully, and vote. As a political movement, we exist not in the shadows but in the spotlight. It is time for everyone who would make decisions for us to recognize that truth and the power it wields.

Tyler D. McHaley, M.S., M.A.
President Springfield Area Disability Activists
334 Norwalk Rd.
Springfield, IL 62704
Cell: (217) 899-5015
E-mail: Tyler.Mchaley@gmail.com
www.disabilityactivists.org

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Rush to Reform

(This is my written testimony that I submitted to the Senate Special Committee on Medicaid Reform. I went to the hearing on Monday and hoped I might have a chance to give oral testimony, though I knew the committee had said there were time constraints. Still, I thought that it would be good to hear what the state agencies, particularly the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, and the insurance companies would say about how they envisioned a reformed Medicaid system in Illinois. I also wondered how the committee would engage each witness and state their overall impressions and purpose.

It was refreshing to hear Senator Steans, the committee co-chair along with Senator Righter, say early in the proceedings, albeit jokingly, that the committee was organized as a gesture to Republican to help gain votes for revenue increases in the spring. None of us should be oblivious to the fact that this community, as well as its sister entity in the House are not going to reform Illinois' Medicaid system in one month. Republicans do want a chance to eliminate some of the state's spending in the Medicaid program, and that is not an unreasonable request. The same is true for the other committees in both the House and Senate, which focus on cutting some of the waste out of the Worker's Compensation program. Nonetheless, Illinois politics are a game of give-and-take, and this is but one example of such a compromise.

I will not reiterate many of the points that Bill Gorman, Executive Director of the SILC, or Tony Paulauski, Executive Director of The Arc of Illinois, already stated in earlier emails yesterday. I will just point out my reflections on some of the testimony. I truly believe it is a shame Tony did not have a chance to testify, as his would have been the only testimony from the perspective of advocates. Instead, there was much talk from state agencies about how different types of reforms, such as changing passive redetermination (which is the process by which people receiving Medicaid benefits only need to fill out the proper forms to remain eligible each year) and eliminating wasteful emergency room visits, could save the state Medicaid dollars. Even though some of this is true, there was much more talk about client responsibility.

There is always a need for responsibility among all parties involved in any large government program like Medicaid. However, it seemed some of the senators, especially Senator Righter, wanted somewhat severe consequences for individuals who overused, in his opinion, emergency rooms, for example. I have no doubt there is immense fraud in the Medicaid system, and people misuse it every day. Yet, the vast majority of people who use Medicaid does so correctly and without any intent to defraud the state government. There is not a simple solution that can be painted with broad brush strokes to end fraud and abuse in the program. As one witness from an insurance company stated, "There is no silver bullet." There needs to be serious and diligent consideration of how to suggest and enact reforms, which do not risk the health of everyone receiving Medicaid and committing no fraud. I am not the one to say what that reform should look like, but it is important to get the opinions of advocates throughout the state. Unfortunately, in this first of three hearings by this committee, those voices were left muted.

Perhaps, in another blog post, I will present more ideas or give more reaction to how the committee dealt with the issues presented to it. I will say that for a system that many consider so broken, I have never heard witnesses speak about how well their individual parts of the program are working as I did on Monday. Everyone agreed that reform was necessary, but nearly all the witnesses, from state agencies to insurance companies, declared that their programs were working very well. Further, there plans could make the system that much better. If things are going to be this easy, I see no reason to have any more hearings. It seems that many of the players, especially those that can profit from the Illinois Medicaid system, already have all the answers necessary, and the state just needs to implement them. I hope sarcasm comes through in the written word as much as the intent does during the writing process. To quote some blog somewhere, "I'm not saying, I'm just saying.")


Senate Special Committee on Medicaid Reform Testimony

As a disability rights advocate, I find it laudable and gratifying that the Senate Special Committee on Medicaid Reform is looking for ways to improve Illinois' current system. The need for reform has existed for years, and, unfortunately, too many General Assembly sessions have passed with no attempts at resolution. Like Social Security on the national level, Medicaid reform in Illinois seems a very difficult and daunting task to tackle.

However, as the committee has been given only a month to produce a strategy to change a sweeping and vitally important program in this state, it is essential that every member considers each idea carefully and makes no hasty judgments about what types of reforms the program needs. If the prevailing common wisdom becomes that only cuts to the very core of the Illinois Medicaid system are the answers, we, as advocates, agency directors, and health care experts, will not have provided the answers necessary to "fix" Medicaid. Cutting a program on which so many people depend every day is as nonsensical as wastefully spending on excessive bureaucracy and redundancy in various phases of the program. This is a time for the committee to find the creativity to cut out waste and fraud, while leaving a seamless and more focused program intact.

The national healthcare system is growing exponentially and at an unsustainable rate. There is no debate about that, and the new Affordable Care Act likely will bring change and reform, even if somewhat slowly. However, it is important to remember Illinois' place in the national healthcare picture. According to the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law's online publication "The Shriver Brief," Illinois' Medicaid billings grew slower than the national average, from 2008 to 2009, at 4.2 percent and only 4.4 percent during the last four years. In FY 2010, the projected national average of medical costs was 7.7 percent, while Illinois was only expected to grow by 7.0 percent. Among all states, Illinois ranks 42nd in per Medicaid beneficiary expenditures. The national average is $4,575 per Medicaid beneficiary, and Illinois spends $4,129 per beneficiary. Overall, Illinois effectively minimizes Medicaid cost to the taxpayers and maximizes, for the most part, the federal dollars available. The Illinois Medicaid program spends just $.39 of every one dollar in general taxes. Therefore, it is reasonable to see in some aspect that the state's Medicaid program is performing much better than many reports, analyses, or opinions conclude.

However, there are many ways to streamline Medicaid in Illinois and provide better services for those receiving benefits from the program. First, we must come to the realization that Illinois institutionalizes more people with disabilities than nearly every other state in the nation. Illinois still warehouses thousands of individuals with disabilities in state operated developmental centers (SODCs), nursing homes, and large ICF/DDs. In terms of spending for small community living opportunities for people with disabilities, Illinois is ranked 51st in the nation. Further, Illinois is 47th nationally in funding community services. Yet, this state is fifth in the country on spending for SODCs. The state government spends nearly $170,000 per person every year on hiding away thousands of people with disabilities in state run institutions. Yet, the irony and tragedy of the current system is that providing the home and community-based services for the same people is much closer to $50,000 annually. Even as Howe Developmental Center closed on June 30, 2010, the $30 million in savings, which should have funded more community-based supports and settings, instead, was funneled back to the remaining SODCs.

These facts are illustrative of Illinois' institutional bias toward people with disabilities. Further and worse is the fact that this bias affects how the state government prioritizes taxpayer money. Here is a lion's share of the waste the committee wants to eliminate. Simply by providing more home and community-based services, Illinois can save hundreds of millions of dollars by moving people out of institutions, where they can and want to live as an equal member of the community. A recent study cites Illinois as being worst in the nation in providing housing to people with disabilities, and that is where a paradigm shift can occur. By investing in adequate and accessible housing, Illinois saves money in the Medicaid program and, simultaneously, stimulates the state economy by producing jobs in areas like construction, where so many people have seen employment possibilities disappear.

This committee and Illinois' elected officials have a responsibility to comply with the 1999 Olmstead Supreme Court decision and make it possible for people with disabilities to live in the least restrictive environment possible. These are not arbitrary political choices or philosophical debates we can have concerning moving more individuals with disabilities into the community. It is now US law and the right of every member of the disability community to live where he or she chooses. If Illinois does not change the institutional mindset it has possessed for decades, there is no chance for Medicaid reform in this state. We simply will find ourselves walking in the same circles that have always led us to the same dead ends, which are more spiraling Medicaid costs and the complete lack of sensitivity to not only the choice of the disability community but also the thin legal standing on which Illinois finds itself.

To capture more federal funds and ensure Illinois is spending its Medicaid dollars wisely, the committee and General Assembly must consider two very important and similar issues. First, the state government needs to pursue every dollar that comes from the federal "Money Follows the Person" (MFP) legislation. Centers for independent living across the state are trying to help individuals with disabilities move from institutions and nursing homes into their own homes within the community. Yet, Illinois is lax on providing those funds the MFP program offered to states to transition people from an institutional setting to the community. How can the state government and its overseers in the General Assembly allow such mismanagement to continue? If everyone in the state really wants Medicaid reform, this is an ideal place to start.

Second, the Independent Living Movement stresses consumer choice as its main tenet. People with disabilities deserve the freedom to choose where and how they live in every sense of that word. If government officials truly agree with that sentiment, it is time to examine the possibilities of a self-directed care waiver system through Medicaid. This is a cost-effective program, which keeps people with disabilities living in the community and provides them with the resources necessary to live an independent and productive life. Moreover, this is not a groundbreaking idea. Many other states have implemented such a waiver program with great success, and many advocacy groups in Illinois are putting forth the call for this state to move forward with such a program. In fact, a self-directed care waiver is imperative if Illinois, indeed, intends to move away from its history of institutionalization and into a future of inclusion and equality.

Illinois will see less inefficiency in the Medicaid program by reforming some of its current and proposed programs. The Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS) is moving forward with a Medicaid managed care pilot program in suburban Cook and five other collar counties. Disability rights advocates need to remain involved in the contract negotiation process with the two managed care organizations (MCOs) that won the bids from HFS. However, after the contract is signed, advocates must still actively participate in the entire managed care process as part of an independent oversight committee, which can act as a guardian of the rights of the people involved in the pilot program. It needs to be independent and comprised of providers and healthcare experts as well as advocates. This type of committee can protect against abuses, lack of direction, or simply wrong decisions they could have terribly adverse effects on consumers within this pilot program area. In addition, as managed care likely goes statewide, this oversight committee can provide equal protection against and guidance to the MCOs providing healthcare to people with disabilities throughout the state.

Yet, another area where Medicaid efficiency could increase is in the third phase of this managed care program, which focuses primarily on long-term care needs of seniors and people with disabilities. MCOs have no background in this area and could make what is a sustainable situation far worse. I urge this committee to communicate to HFS that the third phase of this pilot program is untenable for members of the disability community. Without proper education and a proven history of results in providing long-term care needs, the MCOs need to leave this kind of care to the individuals who know how to provide it best. Though this argument may seem as if I am proposing that Illinois gets "stuck with the tab" on the final phase of this managed care program, the truth is just the opposite. By avoiding costly mistakes that MCOs will inevitably make in efforts to provide quality long-term care, eliminating phase three saves Illinois, potentially, millions of dollars and the damage that could result in thousands of lives.

One thing this committee must avoid is the idea that these reforms need to happen overnight and that legislation needs to right every wrong in the Medicaid system. Moreover, the mere notion of Medicaid reform is not a political volleyball that one party can bounce to the other. This program is a matter of life and death to many people and provides them with the resources they need to live healthy and dynamic lives. Political agendas must be off the table when discussing any kind of Medicaid reform. To think that Medicaid recipients do not watch closely what happens to their benefits and, subsequently, their lives is foolishness. People receiving Medicaid vote and understand their vote counts. This is no area in which to try to impose political ideology. Medicaid reform requires conscientious thought, sensible ideas, and realistic goals. If those elements fail to find their way into an overall Medicare reform package, more could be lost than simply taxpayer money. It is up to all of us to ensure that is not the case.

Tyler D. McHaley, M.S., M.A.
President Springfield Area Disability Activists
334 Norwalk Rd.
Springfield, IL 62704
Cell: (217) 899-5015
E-mail: Tyler.Mchaley@gmail.com
www.disabilityactivists.org

Friday, November 19, 2010

A Testimony and a Call to Action from the Arc

(On Tuesday, November 16, I had the opportunity to testify before the Governor's Healthcare Reform Implementation Council. The members of the Council are: Michael Gelder, Chair, Senior Health Policy Advisor, Governor Pat Quinn, Julie Hamos, Vice Chair, Director, Department of Healthcare & Family Services,
Michael McRaith, Vice Chair, Director, Department of Insurance,
Dr. Damon Arnold, Director, Department of Public Health (though Assistant Director Teresa Garate represented the department on this day),
Charles Johnson, Director, Department on Aging,
Grace Hong-Duffin, Acting Secretary, Department of Human Services,
Laura Zaremba, Director, Office of Health Information Technology,
James Sledge, Director, Central Management Services, and
David Vaught, Director, Office of Management & Budget.

According to the Healthcare Reform in Illinois Website, "Governor Pat Quinn signed Executive Order #10-12 on July 29th, 2010, to create the Illinois Health Care Reform Implementation Council. The Council will help the state implement the health care reforms contained in the federal Affordable Care Act (ACA).

Implementation of the ACA will improve the health of residents throughout Illinois by increasing access to health care, reducing treatment disparities, controlling costs, and improving the affordability, quality and effectiveness of health care.

The Council will make recommendations to assist the state to: establish a health insurance exchange and other consumer protection reforms; reform Medicaid; assure high quality care; identify federal grants and other non-governmental funding sources; and foster the widespread adoption of electronic medical records.

The council will submit its first report to Governor Quinn by December 31st, 2010, followed by periodic reports on the implementation of its recommendations."

This particular meeting focused on Medicaid reform and addressing Illinois' Medicaid system, as it moves forward under the new healthcare reform law. The Council wanted people to offer tangible recommendations concerning changing and improving the current Medicaid program in Illinois. I guarantee my testimony broke no new ground, as it focused primarily on oversight of the Medicaid managed care program in Illinois and providing more home and community-based services instead of funneling more money to institutions and nursing homes. However, since many people may not have heard about the hearing nor had a chance to attend, I thought I would provide my written and submitted testimony for you to read, critique, or just delete as you see fit.

After the testimony, I also included something far more important. Tony Paulauski from The Arc of Illinois sent out an appeal for all of us to contact our local legislators, specifically Illinois State House Representatives, about a possible end of year vote on an income tax increase and sales tax expansion. A suggested script and further information is included in Tony's message. I apologize if I am sending you yet another copy of Tony's email. I simply think it is extremely important to spread the word as much as possible.)

The Governor's Healthcare Reform Implementation Council ACA Medicaid Reform Testimony

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is both a great boon and a great strain to state government, particularly for Illinois. As the state faces high unemployment rates and nearly a $14 billion deficit, allowing hundreds of thousands more Illinoisans to receive Medicaid assistance is a great advantage for people with low incomes as well as people with disabilities. The unemployment rate within the disability community in Illinois hovers around seventy percent, and this has been the norm long before our current economic downturn. Combining that fact with higher unemployment among the nondisabled community adds a great deal of stress to an already overburdened healthcare system.

The other, possibly even more daunting situation facing Illinois government is the extraordinarily high institutionalization rate for people with disabilities in the state. Though advocacy efforts have attempted to change this mindset over the years, Illinois still ranks near the bottom of all states in the country in its use of state operated developmental centers (SODCs), nursing homes, and large ICF/DD. Illinois ranks 51st in the nation when it comes to spending for small community living opportunities for people with disabilities. The state ranks 47th nationwide in community services spending but ranks an inglorious fifth in the country on spending for SODCs. Illinois annually throws millions of dollars at state run institutions, spending on average $166,000 per year on each resident, when the cost of providing services for persons living in the community averages closer to $50,000 annually.

Some may ask what these specific figures have to do with the ACA. My response is that when asked what changes Illinois needs to make to improve the quality of long-term care in the state, I believe we should stop throwing good money after bad. The ACA is pushing states in the direction of less reliance on institutionalization and much more emphasis on home and community-based services. Illinois needs that exact kind of change to guarantee the implementation of healthcare reform. For decades, the state has taken the easy road of institutionalization to bypass the difficult decisions that come with integrating people with disabilities into the community. The ACA has done what Illinois legislators and policymakers have ignored far too long, and that is forcing the state's hand into acknowledging what is a higher priority—institutionalizing people with disabilities because that seems the easier solution or working more diligently to allow people the choice of moving into the community.
Choice is truly the central theme of all the questions asked by this Council. The independent living philosophy values individual choice foremost in the lives of people with disabilities. The choice to live in the community is fundamental to an individual's ongoing overall health. The choice of doctors and specialists who provide care to people with disabilities is equally critical in the overarching theme of healthcare reform. As long as Illinois retains the mindset that SODCs provide adequate living arrangements for people with disabilities, the state will not move forward. If Medicaid managed care becomes the norm in Illinois with HMOs potentially putting profits before people, the state will not move forward. There are tangible ways to assure the letter and spirit of the ACA reach fulfillment in this state, and that comes through putting consumer choice ahead of bureaucracy, policy, profit, and especially politics.

No one with knowledge of the situation would say it is reasonable to close all Illinois' SODCs immediately. Transition takes time, but it must begin before it can reach any semblance of fruition. States across the country have eliminated institutions completely by establishing group homes and CILAs in the heart of the community. Before Illinois can take the actions the ACA has put forth for it, regarding more home and community-based services, its elected officials must focus on establishing the necessary community services and supports. Therefore, a tangible change in the approach Illinois takes to long-term care is providing more accessible and affordable housing. You cannot expect people to move out of institutions or even contemplate such a move, if they feel they have nowhere to go once they are "on the outside." A recent study from the University of Colorado showed Illinois ranks worst in the nation when it comes to housing for people with disabilities. A result like this is unacceptable. An effort to change this culture and provide adequate housing would require an initial outlay of several millions of dollars, but it would also create jobs, provide housing, and boost an otherwise sagging Illinois economy. Moreover, studies have shown people who live in the communities as opposed to institutions have better overall health outcomes, including mental health.

There is also a tangible way to guarantee transparency and consumer choice in what increasingly seems like a statewide Medicaid managed care system in the future. First, people with disabilities and seniors must be involved in the contract negotiation process to make their concerns heard and force both the state and HMOs to act in good faith when implementing consumer choice-driven aspects of the contracts. However, advocacy and the presence of advocates must not end when the contracts are signed. There must be an independent oversight committee, comprised of advocates, providers, and other interested and astute individuals, to act as a watchdog over both the state and the HMOs. There are too many examples from numerous other states delineating how Medicaid managed care has worked as a complete failure with HMOs receiving far too much profit and the states providing far too little oversight. Illinois needs to avoid this trap before the system begins. There are examples to which the state can turn to avoid the pitfalls of California, Florida, and Wisconsin. Consumer choice is the key, and providing a consumer voice in the overall process of creating such a vast and uncharted system allows Illinois to show in concrete terms its commitment to better healthcare and better lives for people with disabilities.

These are only two problems and two potential solutions in the Herculean effort of implementing the ACA accurately, completely, and equitably. There is much more than can be discussed in only one hearing. However, it is essential for this Council to understand the fundamental principles behind the ideas that guide people with disabilities and the disability rights movement. Consumer choice, independence, freedom to live where you choose, and access to healthcare not mandated by sometimes unknowing insurance companies only begin to scratch the surface of the many issues people with disabilities find concerning in Illinois' current fiscal and healthcare environments. Yet, even as we bring these concerns before you, we also have hope the ACA will develop into everything the federal government intended it to be. We are now beginning to crack open the door and see what lies behind the term "healthcare reform." Now, we all must act in ways that reach the goals of the ACA and strive for means that go beyond the Act's intent into another area where integration of healthcare meets integration into the community. That is our truest and most important goal.
______________________________________________________________________________

The Arc of Illinois

November 18, 2010

Leaders in The Arc:

I wanted to share with you what Phil and I have been hearings as we talk to legislators and advocates about recent new revenue initiatives.

What follows is a quick draft of a package of materials we will develop for your use when talking to legislators.

You can see the urgency of this opportunity and a very short timeframe.

I know you and others will step up in this time of reduced services and major threats to children and adults with disabilities in Illinois!

Tony Paulauski

The Arc of Illinois

815-464-1832

Tuesday night, Speaker Madigan held a three hour caucus with his House members. Much of the time was spent on new revenue during the fall session. What is being considered is a 2% increase in the income tax, sales tax expansion, and further cuts. The Speaker believes that the Governors proposal does not raise enough revenue.

These increases would be used to pay off the backlog of unpaid bills to providers and would halt any new initiatives for the next two years.

The target for a possible vote would be in early January. The Speaker is calling members back to session right after the first of the New Year, adding four additional days to the legislative calendar. This is highly unusual, but during that period, a simple majority would only be necessary to pass this type of a legislative package so the window of opportunity is very short. To pass the House, 60 votes would be needed, and the Speaker will only call a vote if there are Republicans that will vote for this increase. Last time a vote for new revenue was considered, only 42 House members voted for the increase. In the Senate, 30 votes will be necessary. President Cullerton believes the Senate will support this plan because the Senate already passed a new revenue bill last spring. The Senate President wants this legislation to start in the House.

The Speaker and the President are looking to us to get bipartisan support for a tax increase.

We will need a solid 60 votes in the House for this tax bill and it must be supported by both Republicans and Democrats.

This may be our last opportunity for new revenue in Illinois.

I need you to report back to me which legislators in your area will support this tax increase and which legislators will not. I need to know that there will be a solid 60-vote roll call in the House if we are going to be successful.

Needless to say, we need to activate advocates, staff, and board members to meet with their legislators in their home offices between now and the end of December. We need their commitments.

This vote will be the most important vote for disability services and supports in recent times.


Talking Points for Legislators

Introduce yourself to the legislator and describe your affiliation/organization and its work.

1. Here is how I personally see our state’s fiscal challenges hurting people with disabilities and our community. Have individuals and their families share their stories.

(Briefly describe how budget cuts and funding delays have hurt the public services with which you are most familiar. Cite specific examples of people losing supports, jobs being cut, salaries being slashed, the more specific the example, the better!)

These are just some of the ways in which Illinoisans-children, families, seniors, people with disabilities and many others are suffering.

2. We need to do better we can no longer rely exclusively on massive cuts and long payment delays that:

Hurt disability services, schools, providers of health care and human services and public-sector businesses as well public-sector jobs

Ignore the 21,000 infants, children, and adults on the waiting list

Harm economic recovery by forcing more layoffs in non-profits

Plus, heavy borrowing only digs our budget hole deeper in the long-term

We’ve already begun work on important government reforms, but we’ve done nothing to raise desperately needed new revenues. Illinoisans needs two things to restore our state to balance and responsibility:

Additional revenue to pay-off our bills and more adequately fund vital community services.

Your leadership, to help make it happen.

4. To help put Illinois on more stable fiscal footing, will you support efforts to raise new revenue by increasing the income tax and expanding the sales-tax base to more services, before the next General Assembly convenes in January?

What if these moves were temporary?

Could you support an increase in the new General Assembly’s spring session?

Be sure to thank the legislator for his/her time.

THANK YOU for helping to support a more balanced and responsible solution to Illinois fiscal problems!

Responsible Budget Coalition

Monday, November 1, 2010

Eyes Wide Shut

(I haven't blogged recently, as I've been very busy with everything else surrounding a myriad of advocacy issues. Yet, due to the campaign season, I could not stay quiet. I realized having a blog is like having a bully pulpit, and after seeing enough political swill lately to make me sick, I decided it was time to say something.)

I love politics, and I am sick of it. Do not misunderstand me. I still love nearly everything about it, except the lies, which many would say define politics. Yet, I mean the lies that go beyond the pale and make my blood boil. If you have been at all politically aware the last six months, you know exactly what I mean.

I make no bones about being a self-avowed liberal Democrat. Further, I am not going to pretend that this blog post is going to be completely objective—or even remotely close to objective. I am not writing this in my capacity as president of the Springfield Area Disability Activists but just as a citizen. This is my time to vent and get a few things off my chest.

First, let me say as a disability rights advocate, I have not always been happy with Governor Quinn's policy decisions on disability issues. For instance, Medicaid managed care for long-term care services, such as personal assistants, durable medical equipment, and a litany of other issues, is not a good fit for people with disabilities. This is especially true when a program like this is rushed and not given the complete thought and understanding needed to have a chance of success. The governor's office needed to include advocates at the outset of any discussions of this type.

Deep and almost paralyzing budget cuts put forward by the governor's office could seriously harm people with disabilities in ways we still cannot even begin to measure. Home Services, a program within the Division of Rehabilitation Services, designed to keep people with disabilities living independently in their own homes, now allows only 18 hours per month per outside the home assistance. That means a personal assistant can only accompany someone with a disability to the doctor, to the grocery store, to the laundromat, to church, or simply to the park for a grand total of 40 minutes a day during a 30-day month. Try going to a typical doctor's appointment, shopping for groceries for the week, and making a deposit at the bank in 40 minutes.

You can see I disagree with some of what the governor's office put forth as state regulations or policies for people with disabilities. Yet, I also realize there are people in that office who actually want to do what is in the best interest for people with disabilities in this state. There are people like Michelle Saddler, the Governor's Chief of Staff, Ryan Croke, one of the Governor's Deputy Chiefs of Staff, Jim Parker from the Department of Health and Family Services, and Rob Kilbury, Director of the Division of Rehabilitation Services, who are trying to do the right thing. Even though I do not agree with everything that they do or say because of bureaucracy, I will not minimize their efforts to make a difference or their willingness to listen and, sometimes, make the right changes.

There is absolutely no doubt in my mind things have to change in this state. Those we elect to govern must do just that. I just described I did not like some of the policies coming from the governor's office in the last few months, but no one who pays attention to Illinois politics can lay the blame for our current economic situation or some of the remedies for it squarely at the governor's door. Last May, the General Assembly rushed out of Springfield with a joke of a budget that they sent to Governor Quinn. Our state legislators shirked their responsibility of developing a balanced budget and punted the ball to the governor, essentially saying that they had no idea what to do and wanted no responsibility for the outcome. They dropped the hot potato outside the governor's mansion and made a hasty retreat to the safety of their home districts. That is the truth, which many people neglect to state.

It is easy to blame Quinn for all this mess. In fact, State Senator Bill Brady, his opponent, does it all the time in campaign ads and speeches he gives before angry, hard right wing crowds, hungry for red meat. Brady gives it to them by the plateful and make sure his campaign machine keeps cranking out more sausage to feed the masses. Yet, we are not talking about loaves and fishes here. This is rhetoric from Brady accusing Quinn of wanting to raise taxes on everyone in the state, ship jobs across or out of the country, and spend money the way, well, the U.S. Congress did when George W. Bush was president. It is indeed harsh talk but lacking quite a bit in terms of truthfulness.

Brady seems to assume the overall national recession we are experiencing, though that experience is shared globally, started right here in Illinois. More than that, he would have you believe Quinn started the recession personally. Following the logic of the Brady campaign, Quinn wants to raise taxes, drive us deeper into debt, and make this state the laughingstock of the country, since he would say that is what Democrats do regardless of the economic circumstances.

The problem with that argument is that the most well-known economists and policymakers across the state and throughout the U.S. agree that Illinois cannot continue on its current path without increasing revenues. Yes, that means all of us—citizens and politicians alike—need to close our collective eyes and noses, take a big dose of medicine, and accept an income tax increase. Our elected officials have tried every trick they can muster to avoid raising taxes, even though it is the most rational and efficient means of beginning to eliminate the state's mounting deficit. It does not sit well with most people, and it is not a politically endearing thing to do. No one ever wants to hear about needing to pay more taxes. There will never be a good time to broach the subject, but we have to accept the fact that decades of fiscal mismanagement in this state leave us no other viable option.

However, instead of acknowledging the fact that Illinois needs more revenue, Brady has consistently said he would cut spending 10% across-the-board. Just to drive home that point, Brady's position means every agency, according to the senator, would be chopped by one tenth, if Brady were able to pass a budget like that. He envisions that would save enough money to pay down on the deficit, and he thinks more revenue would come to the state when he creates thousands of private sector jobs, thereby infusing more tax revenue into the state. Aside from the obvious question of how he would create thousands of jobs, there is still the proverbial fly in Brady's ointment.

Without getting into too many numbers, Brady is basing his cuts on a $53 billion Illinois budget. According to  Crain's Chicago Business, which is typically a more fiscally conservative publication, the 10% cuts Brady wants actually need to be based on a budget closer to $30 billion, once you eliminate, among other monies, $14 billion in federal funding for Medicaid. These cuts would have to be much bigger and more extensive because there are federal funds, debt service, special-program trust funds, and other pots of money that are exempt from cuts by the state government, especially the governor. Essentially, that means Brady's 10% across-the-board cuts to all different agencies suddenly become 20% cuts to find the kind of savings to decrease the state's deficit as much as he proposes. That deficit, by the way, according to this article, is much closer to $7 billion than $5 million. Even though Brady will not admit these facts openly, he did say the cuts could exceed 10% and that he never promised such cuts would be easy. Yet, for who would any of these cuts be easy?

Now, I promised myself when I began writing a blog post like this one that I would not go on a tangent of "political speak." I fear I may have done that, but I suppose it comes with the terrain. I began this post by talking about lies and the fact that I found them particularly nauseating in this election cycle. This is absolutely the case, at least, for me. Of course, each side and each party tell lies, and it happens every two years without fail. The attacks get more brutal, the lies become more slanderous, and the issues get lost in all the propaganda. That leaves the voter, which, unfortunately, is usually under-informed, to figure out who is telling lies, who is telling the truth, and how to pick between the two. That is not an easy task, especially when there are movements and groups mingling through the political landscape, trying to distort every Democratic claim, while upholding every Republican one.

One of those movements is the Tea Party, a largely undefined and loosely knit group of people claiming to want all politicians to adhere strictly to the Constitution. It does not consist of grassroots members who are angry with the government and want to vote out all incumbents to stop just short of complete revolution, as they would have you believe. This is merely a shell group for large corporations, both domestic and foreign, to fund with millions of dollars and give the public the appearance of angry citizens, intent on taking their country back. Ironically, though, Tea Party loyalists never say from what they want to save the country, except underground Socialists and Nazis, regulations on banks and Wall Street firms, and big government intrusion into their lives with programs they disdain, such as Medicare, even as they refuse to give up the benefits.

This is the movement pushing the conservative agenda in this midterm election cycle, and some would say the people behind the curtain have spun the message so much that it is now out of control. This is the same movement, which is supporting Brady. This is the same movement, which Brady has embraced. This is the same movement, which many would say—and I am among them—campaigns on fear, anger, hopelessness, and a sense of revolution bordering on violence. Brady has the Tea Party's support, and it has his obligation to govern in a way that perpetuates fear and anger, even if neither side will admit this is the case.

Understand that I am not a lockstep Democrat. I disagree with my party as much as I agree with it. In fact, there are times I get so infuriated by what is happening or not happening in state or national politics that I must turn off the noise box and detach myself for a while. I do not like the idea that, in my opinion, the Illinois House Speaker is far more effective at trying to pass legislation when he has a Republican governor to use as a foil. I do not like that the Democratic Party, when they controlled both branches of state government, could not seem to work together because of infighting and a bit of backstabbing. Yet, even saying that, I believe in the principles of the Democratic Party, and I believe it works for the best interest of working men and women, people with disabilities, and people society has forgotten. I can say honestly and without a doubt that I do not believe those same things about the Republican Party.

I have written what seems like a very rambling blog post. It did not seem very consistent, coherent, or even that useful. If I ever try to write anything, I always try to have it make sense, be as understandable as it can be, and have some foundation in facts and not just my opinion. I cannot say this is my best effort in those regards. Thus, I will not keep writing just to hope for a better outcome. Instead, I will leave you with just a few more thoughts.

When you vote tomorrow, consider the implications that vote will have for the next four or six years, depending on the race. Vote with your head and not your heart. I understand why many people want to support Rich Whitney, the Green Party candidate. Many view it as a protest vote, and I know Mr. Whitney has many progressive ideas. I also know that tomorrow there is no chance he is going to become the next governor of Illinois. As a liberal, I find it very difficult to advise anyone not to throw support behind the most progressive candidate. Still, I also consider myself a pragmatist, and I know our two-party system is not going anywhere anytime soon.

I believe if you want to protest, use your vote to elect someone who might actually hear your protests and act on them. Pat Quinn has been an advocate throughout most of his public life. It is a fact you cannot govern as an advocate, but it also does not mean a person loses his or her fire for change and advocacy simply because he or she is now in a position to govern. I believe in our current governor's ability to affect change, bring different groups together, and act on the principles he has shown in the past, such as integrity, reform, bucking the status quo, and not accepting the word "no" as the only solution.

I believe Brady will move Illinois back into a time more reminiscent of the 1950s than the 2010s. We cannot go there. We do not have time to dig our way back out of that mindset. If the disability community is going to make any strides in the state in the next four years, it is not going to happen with Brady as governor. He will slash programs that are vital to all of us. He will redirect spending to tax cuts for the wealthy and away from social services that are just beginning to see the light of day. We must not turn back.

Vote tomorrow. As Justin Dart said, "Vote as if your life depends on it, because it does." I know we hear that and read that every two years, but this time, the stakes are too high to ignore it. For too many years, Illinois' elected officials and its citizens have stumbled around the state, walking into walls because we would rather look at our feet instead of knowing that our state government is not working for us. Unless we open our eyes, wade through the river of lies, and vote in our best interests, the walls against which we have been perpetually beating our heads will start to close in around us. I hope that tomorrow we open our eyes, decide to move forward, and reload for the most intense advocacy we have ever known. This is not the time for compromise or apathy. This is the time for action, determination, and rekindling the gleam in our eyes for independence and equality. Just vote!

Monday, May 3, 2010

Last Line of Defense

Last Line of Defense

(It has been quite a while since I posted my last blog entry. However, with distractions of many kinds now behind me, I intend to post several new items in the upcoming days. The first of these blogs focuses on what worries many Illinoisans these days, and that is the state budget crisis. Managed care is the next subject I will tackle, paying particular attention to the stakeholders meetings with the Department of Health Care and Family Services. You will also notice the blog's name remains the same. It seems the old adage—“if It ain't broke, don't fix it"—applies here.)

It has been a busy month, especially at the State Capitol of Illinois. During that time, after many hours in committee hearings and numerous phone calls to legislative staff, I knew I needed to write about the experience and inform many of you about what is happening in Springfield. Yet, simply a rote summary of the past few weeks' events was not going to give you a full grasp of our victories and our ongoing battles. I am not going to give you a play-by-play commentary of each event, but I will try to bring some meaning to what otherwise would be simple descriptions.

As I thought about how to do this, I realized a central theme was emerging. It was the notion of participatory democracy. That is not a complex, abstract political science term. It simply refers to citizens becoming involved in how their government on the local, state, and national levels functions and responds to their needs and demands. We often discuss this idea, especially in the context of advocacy. We tell people they should vote and become involved in the election process. We tell people to contact their legislators and members of Congress to make them aware of their constituents' views. We tell people to attend meetings and express their opinions. However, too many times, we exhort people to become involved in the political process without explaining why or how important it is. If we tell people to question authority and not blindly follow or believe what politicians and bureaucrats tell them, how can we expect them to take our advice and act upon what we say without giving them reason to believe us and to trust what they do makes a difference?

Complaining about lack of involvement is not the answer. Neither is discussing this issue on one blog post going to make that much of a difference. Still, doing nothing results in our worst fears coming to life. Years ago, words held immense power, and I believe they still do today. When faced with corruption, inaction, and disinterest by the government that flew in the face of the American Revolution, many people realized the power to change the status quo rested within the hands of the public, those not ensconced in government and politics but those most affected by those institutions. It was during this time of the late 1960s and early 1970s that John Gardner, founder of Common Cause, wrote, “The citizen can bring our political and governmental institutions back to life, make them responsive and accountable, and keep them honest. No one else can.” No matter how mired in skepticism and doubt, that fundamental idea holds true to this day and this time.

On Thursday, April 22, advocates from every corner of the state had the opportunity to speak before the Illinois House Human Services Appropriations Committee, chaired by Representative Sarah Feigenholtz. Panel after panel came forward to testify on the harm the Governor's proposed budget would have on a host of different interest groups. Advocates for children, women, seniors, and immigrants—to name but a few—spoke to the damage their programs would face if the planned budget cuts become reality. As advocates for the disability community waited to speak, we heard other advocates, who were just as passionate, discuss disappearing jobs, radically diminished services, and often the complete inability to maintain operations at any level. They did not attend the hearing to claim their programs were the best in the state or to beg for money. They came before the committee to have their voices heard, to have someone listen to their reasoned arguments, and to make sure those for whom they advocated were not forgotten.

Mental health advocates sounded the alarm regarding cuts to their programs. The Division of Mental Health within the Illinois Department of Human Services (DHS) will see its budget cut by $90 million, if the Governor's proposals become reality. One cannot overstate the devastating impact this lack of funding will have upon individuals with mental illness. Suddenly, instead of community services providing counseling and medication as they currently do, emergency rooms and prisons will take their place, leading to overcrowding and lack of service. People with mental illness, who currently are benefiting from services within the community, eventually, will have less qualified care provided by untrained individuals caught in the middle of the state's human services crisis. Advocates made this point clear to the committee, and several panels, discussing the need for more mental health funding, reinforced the same ideas.

The hours passed, and I could see the tired and glazed looks on the faces of the committee members. Yet, to their credit, they allowed nearly everyone to speak and voice their complaints with which many of the committee members agreed. Even so, I can only imagine how hearing the same story repeatedly stretches the patience and brings forth less empathy. Though I felt for the committee members, I also knew they held the answers, at least, in part, to this budget crisis, which, in reality, in a crisis of conscience. To act surprised at the state's current fiscal catastrophe is to belittle the jobs that representatives and senators were elected to do and the people who elected them to do those jobs. To act as if no solution exists is to demean the intelligence of those of us who know better. Just as state elected officials take an oath to uphold the Illinois State Constitution and serve their constituents, the informed citizen has the obligation to ensure transparency, accountability, and responsibility among their elected representatives. We neglect this duty at our own peril.

After nearly four and a half hours of testimony, the committee called forward the panel to discuss disability issues. Those speaking included: Janet Stover from the Illinois Association for Rehabilitation Facilities (IARF), Don Moss from United Cerebral Palsy of Illinois, Tony Paulauski from the Arc of Illinois, Rod Paterson from the Institute on Public Policy for Persons with Disabilities, Barbara Pritchard from the Campaign for Real Choice in Illinois, Jennifer Thomas from Access Living, and me, representing the Illinois Disability Activists. The latter four of us also are active members of the Community for All Coalition, a collection of cross disability organizations committed to the Disability Rights and Independent Living Movements. We each addressed how people with disabilities would feel, literally and figuratively, the negative impacts of the massive cuts in human services proposed by Governor Quinn's budget.

There was much focus placed on the budget cuts for programs aimed at individuals with developmental disabilities. All non-Medicaid grant programs are eliminated under the Governor's proposal, reducing services to people with developmental disabilities by $28,224,400 and cutting more than 700 jobs. Moreover, this budget proposes an across-the-board 2.5% rate reduction for all community-based programs. Currently, the state's total unpaid bills to providers of residential and day program services equal $4.5 billion. Even though provider should receive payment from the state within 30 days of service, the new budget proposal would implement a one and one half month payment cycle, which, given the tenuous financial situation for some providers, could cause further service reductions or complete agency closures. Overall, these proposed cuts would affect, potentially, 30,000 people annually.

Rod, Barbara, Jennifer, and I also focused on how this proposed budget does not reflect Governor Quinn's supposed commitment to the deinstitutionalization of Illinois. In fact, it reflects a philosophy diametrically opposed to moving away from institutional bias toward a stronger system of community and home-based care. Even as the Howe Developmental Center is scheduled for closure by June 30, 2010, the instances of abuse and death at that facility no longer seem to be the overarching principles behind the Governor's decision on State Operated Developmental Centers (SODCs). Closing Howe saves the state $30 million, and, still, those monies are not being redirected into the community for proper supports and services. In a shift that, for me, lacks fiscal logic and discipline, the state is investing the savings from Howe into the eight remaining SODCs. The budget increases to the other SODCs well exceed the savings achieved by closing Howe, which also seems to lack governing clarity. Several SODCs will also receive as much as $12 million in additional funding from the state. Even more disturbing is the fact that many residents and staff from Howe are being moved to existing SODCs to maintain employment levels and, presumably, resident headcount. Yet, all eight institutions, even those SODCs not receiving additional residents and staff from Howe, benefit from this proposed budget with a 5% increase in funding in a year when the total population of residents in Illinois SODCs will decrease by 3%.

These are facts we presented to the committee, and the members seemed sufficiently surprised. I, however, had reached another level of frustration. Though I admired the committee for taking the extended time to listen to our legitimate concerns, it seemed to me that we simply were reciting numbers to which they surely already had access and knowledge. I was angry, which, I should point out, is never a good frame of mind to have when addressing a committee of this kind. Nonetheless, I needed to express what I felt many had wanted to say during the entire hearing.

I abandoned my prepared remarks and spoke to the committee of responsibility and accountability. I told them that we, as advocates, were only able to do so much, and we, in fact, had done our parts in bringing these issues to the committee's attention. Now, I told them, the burden rests with them to do the right thing and act as the final champions for the causes brought before them. If the members' hearts truly lie with human services, and I believe that is the case, they must act on their beliefs and not pass a budget that carves human services into well-honed portions, which are conveniently served up for unions and other interest groups, regardless of their intent. I felt and told the committee members the time for niceties has long passed, and the current time requires action on their parts. There was no longer any room to quibble over who received the political credit or blame for beginning to correct the state's fiscal mess. As I saw it, the representatives of this committee were our last line of defense against a budget meant to excoriate human services.

On Tuesday, April 27, I testified before the Senate Appropriations 1 Committee. The chair, Senator Donne Trotter, and the other members heard budget requests from a number of smaller state agencies, but their main purpose was to hear the DHS budget request. Michelle Saddler, Secretary of DHS, testified to the proposed budget, as did the directors of the various divisions within DHS. This Senate Committee Hearing was a combination of the two hearings of the House Human Services Appropriations Committee. As opposed to representatives from DHS testifying regarding the budget in a separate hearing from advocates presenting their viewpoints, which the House committee did, the Senate committee heard testimony from both DHS and advocates on the same day. Of course, the only problem with this process is that far fewer advocates had an opportunity to testify and voice their complaints with the proposed budget. Yet, as I have already noted, logic or common sense does not always play a major role in conducting business within the General Assembly.

As Secretary Saddler pointed out to the House committee several weeks ago, she testified to the Senate committee that she did not feel the proposed budget reflected what she wanted for DHS or the many people the agency served. She and her division directors answered a myriad of questions regarding union worker salaries, desired versus necessary line items, and the overall direction the agency was taking in terms of mental health, addiction services, prevention programs, and community based services. I was pleasantly surprised at how much the senators understood about the 1999 US Supreme Court Olmstead decision, which set forth the policy that person with disabilities living in nursing homes or other institutions have the right and choice to live in the "least restrictive environment." Moreover, the legislators realized Illinois was not living up to its promise of ending institutional bias and moving more toward a community and home-based care system. In actuality, of course, Illinois, as a system of interconnecting bureaucracies, is not to blame as much as its elected officials are, and, again, to their credit, the senators understood this basic principle.

When the time came for advocates to testify, as expected, the hearing was reaching the point where the committee had to adjourn to allow members time to get to the Senate floor in time for session. Armed with that knowledge, several of us hurriedly made our way to the front of the hearing room. First, some advocates for children argued their very legitimate need for an increase in funding or, at the very least, no decrease. Then, Senator Trotter called me to the witness table.

I spoke again of the misplaced funding going to SODCs instead of community-based services and supports. Further, I highlighted Governor Quinn's agreement with AFSCME in January not to close another SODC until after June 30, 2011, at the earliest. I told the committee that I found it odd that the union needed to hire more employees at full salaries and full benefits to offset what they stated was an abundance of overtime payments. I have not yet seen any evidence that hiring more staff that are full-time would cost the state less money than paying the occasional union member overtime. Moreover, I disagree with the argument that there is a need to increase the ratio of staff to resident in SODCs higher than the current number, though, on the surface, the argument seems very logical. However, if Brian Kent, a resident of Ann Kiley Developmental Center in 2002 for just 99 days, could be abused and neglected 57 times when under one-on-one care, leading him to die from a ruptured small intestine, why is quality of care not receiving far more attention than staffing levels?

My other major concern for the committee was the idea of service parameters put forth by the Division of Rehabilitation Services (DRS) within DHS. These parameters would limit the hours available to individuals with disabilities using the Home Services Program, which pays for personal assistants to come to a person's home and provide care and assistance in areas ranging from activities of daily living to meal preparation and grocery shopping. To cover the cost of an increase in personal assistant wages as well as partial insurance for some, negotiated by SEIU, the union representing personal assistants, DRS plans to cap the hours allowed for certain activities covered by the Home Services Program. A prime but very sad example I mentioned to the committee was the cap proposed for meal preparation, eating, and cleanup. Under the Governor's budget, a person would receive 30 hours per month for meals, which easily equates to one hour per day for all three meals. If Governor Quinn was truthful when he said he wants people to consider him a human services governor, I certainly hope he did not intend these kinds of services.

The Senate committee was very obliging and refreshingly knowledgeable about many of the issues facing the disability community in Illinois. I only regret these hearings come at the end of the General Assembly’s session. Further, I regret there was not more time given to advocates to state their cases regarding what many consider these draconian cuts to human services. I equally regret more disability rights advocates were not in attendance at the Senate hearing, if only for the optics of support in numbers, for when we pull together, we do present ourselves as a massive front.

I try to be a student of politics and especially political trends. Though it may be difficult to believe, I try to do this with as little cynicism as possible. It was a remarkable moment when the Responsible Budget Coalition, a statewide collection of dozens of different groups calling for an income tax increase to balance the state's budget, amassed a huge number of people at the State Capitol to protest cuts to human services. The Coalition stated the number of people present at the rally was close to 15,000, though other estimates placed the size of the crowd at somewhere between 6,000 and 10,000 people. Regardless of the actual attendance, that kind of gathering showed the entire state that these cuts are dangerous and, potentially, life threatening, while not truly saving the state the kind of money necessary for a truly balanced budget in which sacrifice is shared.

Only the complete ideological purist or the totally uninformed would not think an income tax increase is the first step to solving Illinois' fiscal quagmire. An income tax increase, however, is not the only answer. Nor is it a panacea for the problem of overspending that has occurred for decades under both Democratic and Republican administrations and General Assemblies. Spending cuts are necessary but only if they come in a responsible and humane manner, which does not make social services the easy scapegoat as is nearly always the case. As I stated, shared sacrifice is the only way to proceed in both the areas of spending cuts and tax increases.

Of course, this rhetoric sounds quite palatable, and it may even make sense. Yet, as Illinois citizens already know, what sounds good and what makes sense do not necessarily make good politics. No one should be naïve enough to believe that a tax increase will occur before the November elections. It could be political suicide for Democrats and political hay for Republicans. Though not breaking news, what is likely to happen is that lawmakers will cobble together enough of a budget to keep the state running for six more months. Then, after the elections and during the November veto session, there could be serious discussions of a tax increase. However, that scenario also depends on the outcome of the elections and which party has control of the executive and legislative branches of state government. (Unfortunately, cynicism is never far from my mind.)

Though we face an uncertain future regarding the budget, there are victories to celebrate. HB 5152, more commonly known as "Brian's Law," passed the Illinois Senate by a vote of 54 to 1, after already passing through the Illinois House by a vote of 113 to 0, with one representative voting present. Equip for Equality deserves much of the credit for spearheading this bill through the General Assembly and making sure Brian's legacy was ensured. The new act provides for DHS to establish an independent review board to investigate deaths occurring in SODCs and mental health facilities licensed by DHS or under its jurisdiction. This is the culmination of an eight-year battle by the Kent family, who lost their son, Brian, whom I referenced earlier, to unbelievable abuse and inexplicable neglect. I truly hope, as Mr. and Mrs. Kent have steadfastly believed, that as "Brian's Law" takes effect, abuse like this becomes a memory; and if not, may justice be swift and certain, allowing the Kent family realization that Brian's death was the catalyst for change in this state. You can learn more about the story by watching the news report, "What Happened to Brian?"

On April 29, the Illinois Senate passed HB 5095 by a vote of 55 to 0. The Illinois House passed the bill with a vote of 112 to 0 on March 11. By passing in the Senate, the bill, entitled, "The Pedestrians with Disabilities Safety Act," now only awaits the Governor's signature to become law. The act guarantees that a person with a disability has the same rights as someone without a disability to the full use of streets and public places, to full and equal accommodations to common and public modes of transportation, and to accompaniment by a service or support animal, such as a guide dog. Moreover, pedestrians with disabilities who use a mobility device, a service animal, or white cane have stronger protections against persons who use cars, trucks, or other vehicles to cause injury. Any person violating this act is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor with a minimum of a $500 fine for each violation. The most important part of this legislation, in my opinion, was not simply the added protection for pedestrians with disabilities but also the bipartisanship with which the bill passed. Representative Tom Cross, the Republican leader in the Illinois House, sponsored this bill and carried it to fruition. The Tri-County Area Disability Activists, based in Joliet, also provided major support from both the political and advocacy perspectives, and that advocacy group deserves equal recognition.

There is much more happening than I have time to post on the blog at this time. Nevertheless, I will update the managed care situation as soon as possible, and I hope that will be in the next day or two. Even after the General Assembly adjourns, there will be much more for all of us to do. There likely will only be a temporary budget in place, which means this fight is far from finished. When your legislators return home to their districts, tell them what you think of the work they did. Give them a job performance evaluation. If there is only a temporary budget or if the worst-case scenario happens and the proposed budget cuts become reality, express your frustration and make them understand your perspective. Be civil and respectful, since it is very unlikely your representative or senator actually cast a deciding vote on any type of budget proposals. Yet, it is your right to articulate your viewpoints, even if your legislators disagree. Whoever they are and of whichever party, they still work for you. As a citizen, you have the power of the vote, the pen, and the podium. In other words, speak your mind, write letters, and send emails. You have the right to be heard, and if you do not use that right, we, as a society, are weaker for it.

As I look back, the committees in the House and Senate were not our last line of defense. In reality, we are that line, and we must hold it. John Gardner wrote, “The citizen can bring our political and governmental institutions back to life, make them responsive and accountable, and keep them honest. No one else can.” These are not mere words. This is a call to action.