RI Budget Adds $100M To Human Services

By Gina Macris

Rhode Island’s next fiscal year promises to turn a corner in restoring services for children and adults with disabilities with about $100 million in new funding and a new long-term plan to reassess the rates the state pays private service providers.

The House and Senate passed the $13.6 billion budget a week apart, with the Senate vote held June 23. The spending plan needs only the governor’s signature before it goes into effect July 1.

About a third of the funding, $35 million from the federal-state Medicaid program, will add $2.25 an hour to the rate paid direct care workers in the private sector who support adults with developmental disabilities. Their starting pay will increase from $15.75 to $18.

There also will be raises for supervisory personnel, but those figures have not yet been made pubic. A spokesman for the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) said June 24 that the plan for the rollout is to have the raises released to providers July 1 so workers do not have to wait for retroactive checks.

The $35-million fund for wage hikes is part of a total Medicaid allocation of $390.3 million to the Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD) at BHDDH, about $59.4 million more than in the current budget. The total includes $35 million for the raises, another $10 million to help private service providers move toward community-based services, and roughly $30 million for the operation of a separate state-run group home system. About 4,000 individuals are eligible for services from DDD.

Across the human services, the state budget also provides for:

  • $13 million for repair of state-owned group homes

  • $5.5 million in American Rescue Plan Act funding for early intervention services for infants and toddlers with developmental delays

  • $4 million for a rate increase for early intervention providers

  • $22 million toward rate increases for home-based treatment services (HBTS), personal assistance service support (PASS), applied behavioral analysis (ABA), and respite care

  • $1 million enabling adults with developmental disabilities to acquire tablets and cell phones

Separately, the budget requires the health insurance commissioner to hire an outside consultant to conduct a comprehensive review of Medicaid rates paid all private human service providers working for state agencies in time to be incorporated in the state budget July 1, 2024. After that, the rates will be reviewed every two years, according to language in the budget.

The Senate had favored the same approach to rate review for all medical and clinical programs funded by the federal-state Medicaid program, but the House did not go along.

Tina Spears, executive director of the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island, said: “This budget sends a clear message that Rhode Islanders with disabilities, and the people that provide them with services, belong and are valued in our great state.”

She called the health insurance commissioner’s planned rate review a “historic investment” in a long-term plan to address a workforce crisis plaguing community-based supports for children and adults with disabilities and behavioral health conditions.

“The Senate has made the health and human services system a priority this legislative session, and because of the hard work of our legislative leaders, this budget will have an impact on everyday Rhode Islanders,” she said.

BHDDH Seeks $18 Hourly Pay For RI DD Workers; $119M In DD ARPA Funding

By Gina Macris

Rhode Island’s developmental disabilities agency seeks to raise the pay of direct care workers to $18 an hour beginning July 1, 2022, a 14 percent hike over the current hourly rate of $15.75.

The raise would be covered by a $44.5 million increase in federal-state Medicaid funding for the privately operated developmental disability service system, according to a budget request submitted to Governor Dan McKee for Fiscal Year 2023 by the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH).

Within an overall agency budget of $585.9 million, representing a 12 percent increase, the Division of Developmental Disabilities would get nearly $380 million. That sum would cover both the privately-operated system of services and a state-run network of group homes. Private providers would get a total of about $352 million in federal-state Medicaid funding, about $44.5 million more than the current budget of $307.9 million. The budget for the state-run group homes would remain relatively flat, at about $28 million.

In an Oct. 1 budget letter to the governor, BHDDH Director Richard Charest wrote, “The Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD) continues its commitment in complying with the terms of the 2014 federal consent decree and providing integrated employment and day services.”

On Oct. 1, BHDDH was facing the prospect of a contempt hearing in U.S. District Court that was to start today, Oct. 18, over continued failure to comply with the 2014 civil rights agreement. But at the same time, the department was negotiating with an independent court monitor to reach a settlement that would avoid hefty fines proposed by the U.S. Department of Justice. On Oct. 13, five days before the hearing was to start,Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. canceled it without explanation. Any settlement has yet to be announced.

The pace of job placements required by the consent decree has slowed, from 78 percent of the target number spelled out in the agreement for January 1, 2019 to 67 percent of the target for January 1, 2021. A lack of services in general, and employment-related support in particular, has been attributed to an acute shortage of direct care workers.

For years, all sectors of the human services have been affected by a workforce shortage, which has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. But only programs serving people with developmental disabilities operate with federal oversight in Rhode Island. Chief Judge John J. McConnell Jr. of the U.S. District Court has ordered Rhode Island to raise direct care worker wages to $20 an hour by 2024 to attract new staff.

In its budget request, BHDDH is also asking for a one-time investment of $119.3 million in federal coronavirus relief funds from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) for the developmental disabilities system. That figure represents more than 10 percent of of the $1.13 billion in ARPA funding available to Rhode Island, the only state in New England which has not yet spent any of its allocation.

The $119.3 million total includes capital expenses of nearly $74.5 million for repair and construction of residential and therapeutic facilities and about $44.9 for operational and program changes over the next few years. All the money would be spent by the end of 2025. The proposal acknowledges chronic underfunding of the developmental disabilities system.

The investments are intended to shore up existing services and facilities to achieve a “more holistic, individualized, and community-based system of supports” to comply not only with the consent decree but with the separate Medicaid Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) Final Rule, which requires integration for all Medicaid and Medicare-funded services, including residential programs.

Both the consent decree and the HCBS Final Rule draw their authority from the Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, which has ruled that people with disabilities have the right to receive services in the least restrictive environment that is therapeutically appropriate.

The portion of the ARPA request aimed at programmatic and operational changes assumes that there will be a shift from the current fee-for-service reimbursement method for private providers to a “value-based” reimbursement model, although that change has yet to be defined. BHDDH is expected to award a contract in the next two weeks for a consultant’s study to examine rates and methods of reimbursement. The successful bidder would have six months to complete the work.

Within the $44.9 million ARPA request for operations and programs, BHDDH is seeking:

• $25 million for supported employment services, including efforts to bring more services to “BIPOC communities,” a reference to Black and Indigenous peoples and other people of color.

• $17,350,000 to help private providers arrange more integrated housing options, staff training, assistance in tracking the providers’ own performance according to certain measures, and technologies for shifting from fee-for-service to “alternative based payment models.” This segment of the request assumes each of 34 service providers in Rhode Island will get $500,000. It also would pay for a contractor to manage the program.

• $1,150,000 for a community-based mental health intervention response team for people who have both intellectual or developmental disabilities and behavioral issues that put them at risk of hospitalization. Plans for the model program, called START (Systemic, Therapeutic, Assessment, Resource, Treatment) have already been developed. It has been identified as a best practice by the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine.

• $1 million for information and education for service recipients for and their families to ensure better access to services, particularly for people of color, who have been underrepresented in the service caseload.

The $75 million in capital investments would include:

• $60,350,000 in repairs to state-owned provider facilities. Deferred maintenance in group homes “is a drain on state and provider resources (and) a barrier to individuals aging in place,” the proposal said. The condition of some facilities is “not conducive to making individuals feel safe and valued in their homes and part of the larger community,” it said.

• $8,130,000 to build facilities to house 30 young people with developmental disabilities who are making a transition to the adult service system. Currently, these youngsters, particularly those who also have emotional or behavioral issues, languish in facilities for children or in hospitals, creating a backlog in the youth system.

• $6 million for a 24-hour community residential program for people with developmental disabilities being discharged from a hospital or other institution who still need more specialized care than is offered by a regular group home. Such a program would ensure that services are provided in the least restrictive setting as required by HCBS, the proposal said.

Taken together, “these investments will lay the foundation for a DD system that focuses on supporting participants in a way that promotes community integration and development of personal networks and circles of supports,” the proposal said.

It will require a “major shift in thinking and business models” to move from “caretaking” and programs developed by providers to “a focus on what individualized supports people need to be as independent as possible.”

To read the entire BHDDH ARPA proposal for developmental disabilities, click here.


Coalition Seeks $100M To Fix RI Caregiving Crisis

By Gina Macris

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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