Federal Judge Presses RI To Raise DD Worker Wages In Wake Of Severe Shortage Of Services

By Gina Macris

The U.S. District Court has put pressure on the state of Rhode Island to increase the pay of front-line workers who support adults with developmental disabilities in the budget beginning July 1, a year earlier than the disability service agency had planned.

Indeed, two human services officials have recommended that privately-employed front-line workers serving adults with developmental disabilities get $15 an hour – a hike of nearly $2 –in light of a new report that the post-pandemic workforce will fall far short of the number needed for complying with a 2014 civil rights decree.

On April 28, the day after hearing about the worker deficit, Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. issued an order saying the rates must be “reasonably comparable” with those paid in the state’s own group home system and in neighboring Massachusetts and Connecticut.

Massachusetts and Connecticut pay $15.75 and $15.78, respectively.

The state pays its own group home workers an average of $18.46 an hour and sets rates for private providers that allow them to pay front-line employees an average of $13.18 – about five dollars less than the workers make in the state-run group homes, according to figures provided to McConnell.

Moreover, the budget now under consideration by the General Assembly assumes the private sector will absorb more than 100 residents of state-run group homes, without any rate increases.

COVID Exacerbated Worker Shortage

A report submitted to the court April 27 indicated private providers simply don’t have the staff to take on any new clients, let alone meet the demands of the 2014 consent decree by the time it expires in 2024.

The report, compiled by the same consultants the state used for a $1.1 million analysis completed last July, started with the premise that a “stable and skilled workforce is a necessary pre-condition” to implementing changes required by the consent decree.

The consultants concluded that at the end of 2020, the privately-operated system had 1,764 direct care workers, only 62 percent of the 2,845 full time employees it needed to ensure that adults with intellectual and developmental challenges have access to jobs and other activities in their communities, as required by the consent decree. That’s a gap of 1,081 full-time positions.

Currently, the system is staffed at 62 percent of the capacity it would have if all positions were filled, said the consultants. Except for those living in group homes, eligible adults at the end of 2020 generally received less than half the services they got before the pandemic. For those living in family homes, the reduction was calculated at 71 percent, according to the consultants.

The consultants previously worked for the New England States Consortium Systems Organization (NESCSO,) a non-profit regional organization under contract to the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospital (BHDDH) to analyze the developmental disabilities system top-to-bottom – but provide no recommendations.

The latest report, presented to McConnell April 27, was commissioned by the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island, (CPNRI), a trade association.

CPNRI seeks an hourly rate of $17.50 an hour for front-line workers and proportional increases for supervisory and other personnel. CPNRI’s executive director, Tina Spears, told McConnell during the court hearing that the proposed $15 hourly rate would only address direct care worker pay.

The pay hike would cost nearly $26.9 million and would require legislative approval in the next two months if the change were to take effect in the budget beginning July 1.

Will The Governor Amend Budget Plan?

During the April 27 court hearing, an independent court monitor in the case, A. Anthony Antosh, said he understood a new budget article is to be drafted in early May.

Neither the office of Gov. Dan McKee nor BHDDH have responded to questions about any top-level support of a $26.9 million expenditure to raise worker pay or how they would fund it.

The Director of the Developmental Disabilities, Kevin Savage, was one of the two officials recommending the $15 hourly wage. The other was Kayleigh Fischer, Director of Budget and Finance at the Executive Office of Health and Human Services.

In January, McConnell raised eyebrows at the State House when he ordered the state to raise direct care wages to $20 an hour by 2024.

Both the House and Senate leadership withdrew their representatives from talks organized by the court monitor about consent decree reforms, which must be up and running by July 1, 2023, a year before consent decree is set to expire.

Instead, legislative spokesmen said at the time, the respective chambers would consider reforms in the context of the budget process.

But with only two months left until the start of the next fiscal year, that process has been silent on developmental disability reform.

McConnell Tightens The Reins

The apparent passivity of the legislative process, combined with the fresh data showing that non-compliance with the consent decree has accelerated during the pandemic, apparently prompted McConnell to tighten the reins in his oversight of the case.

He has been adamant that the state cannot meet the integration requirement at the heart of the consent decree without beginning implementation of a three-year plan in the next budget.

The current system, now ten years old, comes with a reimbursement system built on congregate care – a violation of the Integration Mandate of the Americans With Disabilities Act.

While BHDDH officials had said they wanted to tackle structural reforms first, McConnell’s latest order accepts the position of providers that they cannot get their clients into the community unless they first have an adequately paid, stable workforce.

Roughly one in three workers leave within a year, and one in five jobs goes begging, with the majority of supervisory staff frequently filling in for front-line workers, according to various reports.

McConnell’s latest order says the state must continue to meet in person or by teleconference with providers and at least one representative of families who direct their own programs to address the immediate fiscal and administrative issues in several court orders dating back to last July. The judge wants a progress report by the end of May, he said.

The annual state budget typically is finalized in early June for the next fiscal year, but McConnell said state officials should continue talking with providers and at least one family representative to prepare for the following two fiscal cycles leading up to the deadline for full compliance with the consent decree in 2024.

In addition, McConnell’s order said the developmental disability caseload should be part of the twice-yearly process the governor and the General Assembly use to determine public assistance obligations beginning in November of this year. He said he will continue to look at job turnover and vacancy rates, as well as client participation rates, to determine the effect of the wages on the system.

Governor McKee’s budget proposal would have the developmental disability caseload become part of the twice-yearly meeting, the “Caseload Estimating Conference,” in November, 2022.

The caseload and revenue-estimating conferences in May and November are considered critical tools in budget-planning.