New Olmstead Consent Decree Coordinator To Guide Court-Ordered ADA Compliance in RI

By Gina Macris

Rhode Island is looking for someone to coordinate its compliance with a 2014 federal civil rights agreement affecting adults with developmental disabilities – for the sixth time in as many years.

The state created the position of Consent Decree Coordinator at the insistence of an independent court monitor who wanted someone with the clout to break through the “silos” of three departments of state government and hammer out an integrated response to the compliance steps in the agreement.

Since the spring of 2019, the position has been filled by Brian Gosselin, the Deputy Secretary of the Executive Office of Health and Human Services and its former Chief Strategy Officer.

Brian Gosselin

Brian Gosselin

His tenure has been marked by controversy that has included a dispute – or misunderstanding, as Gosselin put it- over the independence of a community organization which was settled only by a letter from the U.S. Department of Justice.

Members of the community organization, the Employment First Task Force, have more recently described Gosselin’s consent decree work as “invisible.”

Now the state is under a court-ordered timeline to implement sweeping changes and it has decided to seek an independent contractor, reporting to Claire Richards, Governor Gina Raimondo’s Executive Counsel, to become the consent decree coordinator.

Louis DiPalma

Louis DiPalma

The move won kudos from State Sen. Louis DiPalma, D-Middletown, the General Assembly’s most prominent watchdog on services for adults with developmental disabilities.

“I applaud the state, specifically Governor Raimondo, for elevating the position, by having the CDC (consent decree coordinator) report directly to her office, independent of any state agency,” DiPalma said in a statement.

However, Kerri White, Director of Public Affairs for EOHHS, said that the new consent decree coordinator will not be the first to report to the Governor’s Executive Counsel.

“The new Consent Decree Coordinator will continue to work with the established EOHHS, BHDDH, DHS and RIDE team but will have an avenue of escalation through the Governor’s Executive Counsel in order to maintain the compliance momentum achieved through the previous Consent Decree Coordinator,” White said in a statement.

She referred to the agencies involved in the state’s combined consent decree response, including the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH), the Department of Human Services (DHS), and the Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE), as well as the Executive Office of Health and Human Services, which supervisory authority over BHDDH and DHS.

White said both Gosselin and the first coordinator, Andrew McQuaide, have reported to Claire Richards.

Midway through McQuaide’s tenure, his position in the bureaucratic heirarchy was lowered, when he was transferred to BHDDH. Three successive coordinators, Mary Madden, Dianne Curran, and Tina Spears, all worked from EOHHS.

Madden, who succeeded McQuaide, and Curran, who followed Madden, both had “substantial interaction” with Claire Richards, White said. Spears succeeded Curran. Gosselin, who by that time had twice served as interim coordinator, took over from Spears.

The appointment of Gosselin as coordinator in 2019 sparked criticism in the community, most notably from DiPalma, who said the choice of a salaried employee with loyalties to the state posed a conflict of interest.

“If you’re working for the state, I don’t know how you work for the 4,000 people” the consent decree seeks to protect, DiPalma said.

At the time, an EOHHS spokesman said Gosselin would bring “stability” to the coordinator’s job, and the state’s principal lawyer for the consent decree case said it was immaterial, legally, whether the consent decree coordinator was a state employee or an independent contractor.

DiPalma agreed that stability was critical but said “no rationale has been given for why we have had five coordinators in the last five years.”

Later in 2019, members of the Employment First Task Force, a community-based advisory organization created by the consent decree as a bridge between the public and government, told the DOJ about a disagreement with Gosselin.

They said Gosselin had attempted to curb the group’s contacts with the DOJ unless a particular outreach attempt had state approval. The matter escalated, until the DOJ sent a letter to the state’s lawyers that clearly underscored the independence of the Task Force.

DOJ lawyers said they hoped the situation was indeed a misunderstanding, as asserted by the state. The letter went on to say that members of the Task Force are “independent stakeholders with a role in the successful implementation of the consent decree.”

“Indeed, any limitation on open communication would undermine the intended autonomy of the Task Force,” the DOJ letter said.

Until a few days ago, Nov. 17, it was not clear that the state was, in fact, looking for a new consent decree coordinator to succeed Gosselin.

Earlier in November, a BHDDH spokesman said that the state had not advertised for a consent decree coordinator but had sent out a posting to state-contracted temporary staffing agencies for “temporary project management support” to “help organize our pathway to 2024”. That is the year the consent decree is scheduled to expire, assuming full compliance is achieved. The opening was advertised from Oct. 19 to Nov. 9, a BHDDH spokesman said.

“The State recognizes and appreciates Brian Gosselin’s great work on the consent decree and the many other projects that he oversees in his role as Deputy Secretary & Chief Operating Officer for the Executive Office of Health and Human Services,” said the BHDDH spokesman, Randal Edgar.

“Our team structure will remain in place and our key points of contact for the Court Monitor and the Community will remain unchanged,” he said.

“The State team values all of the stakeholder partnerships and recognizes the need for responsiveness to stakeholder concerns,” Edgar said.

The project management job description appeared to be very similar, if not identical, to that of the consent decree coordinator.

After requests for clarification from Developmental Disability News, White, the EOHHS spokeswoman, said that to eliminate any confusion, the state planned to re-post the position with the title of Consent Decree Coordinator.

“Since we are using a staffing agency to hire the Coordinator, we were limited to a prescribed list of job titles from the third-party staffing search agency. We understand this has caused confusion,” White said in an email.

White said the staffing agency that provides the successful candidate will pay the new consent decree coordinator and then bill the state. The budget for the consent decree coordinator is $100,000 a year. That allocation has not been used since Gosselin was appointed consent decree coordinator. Gosselin makes $146,655 as deputy secretary of EOHHS, according to state payroll data.

He will remain in the coordinator’s post during the transition, White said.



Views Differ On Role of State Coordinator In RI Olmstead Consent Decree Case

By Gina Macris

The Rhode Island General Assembly’s leading advocate for individuals with developmental disabilities says there’s an inherent conflict in a state employee also serving as state coordinator of the multi-agency efforts to comply with a 2014 civil rights consent decree.

“If you’re working for the state, I don’t know how you work for the 4,000 people” the consent decree seeks to protect, said state Sen. Louis DiPalma, D-Middletown, who also chairs a special legislative commission studying Project Sustainability, the state’s fee-for-service reimbursement system for private providers of developmental disability services.

But the principal lawyer for the state in the consent decree case says that legally, it’s immaterial whether the consent decree coordinator is a state employee or an independent contractor. For many reasons, a state employee is the best choice at this stage of compliance, Marc DeSisto, the lawyer, said in a statement.

From 2016 until earlier this year, the consent decree coordinator, a position required by the agreement, was an independent contractor. The most recent contractor, Tina Spears, left the post in April. She was succeeded by Brian Gosselin, the Chief Strategy Officer for the Executive Office of Human Services (EOHHS.) Gosselin also continues to do his salaried job.

“The consent decree coordinator is a critical role in ensuring compliance with the consent decree and court orders. The responsibility includes coordinating across all state agencies,” DiPalma said in a recent telephone interview. “I don’t know how that’s done on a part time basis” by someone who also has another job.

Since the post was established in 2015 there have been five consent decree coordinators, including Gosselin, who has served as the interim coordinator twice.

In a statement, DeSisto said “the state as a whole is responsible for compliance, not a single coordinator.”

There is no legal impediment to a state employee serving as the coordinator, nor is there a requirement concerning the number of hours a week the coordinator must spend to fulfill those duties, DiSisto said.

“Over time and in recognition of the progress and evolving dynamics concerning compliance, we have refined the role of the coordinator to drive and coordinate the state’s ongoing compliance efforts,” he said.

An EOHHS spokesman said Gosselin was appointed because of his familiarity with the consent decree and because he would bring stability to the leadership of compliance efforts as the consent decree enters the second half of its 10-year span.

“The state cannot afford to have further turnover in the coordinator role,” David Levesque, the EOHHS spokesman said in an email, “especially during a time while there is going to be (a) Court Monitor transition.” Charles Moseley, the original monitor, has retired, and a new one has not yet been selected.

“A state employee is more likely to remain in this position than an independent contractor,” DeSisto said.

DiPalma agrees that “it’s critical that we have stability in that (coordinator’s) position, but no rationale has been given for why we have had five coordinators in the last five years. Without that information, I don’t know that the coordinator we have now is going to last any longer,” he said. He said his comments did not reflect any judgment of Gosselin.

Levesque, the EOHHS spokesman, said, “EOHHS is fortunate to be able to tap someone of Brian’s skill set and experience, particularly his intimate knowledge of the consent decree process in Rhode Island.”

He and DeSisto each said that the U.S. Department of Justice and Moseley, then the monitor, agreed to Gosselin’s appointment.

Gosselin will continue to be paid $117,482 a year as chief strategy officer, Levesque said, and has a team of staffers to support him in that role.

The independent contractors in the job, Mary Madden, Dianne Curran, and Spears, each made $100,000 a year.

Madden’s and Curran’s contracts said they each had the “full authority” of the Governor and the Secretary of EOHHS to oversee and coordinate compliance efforts in all state agencies

Beginning in December, 2018, changes in Spears’ job description and her contract suggest that her role might have become more circumscribed.

In December, the job description was amended to require the coordinator to make “weekly written reports to management team and EOHHS leadership team detailing coordination progress, achievements, challenges and upcoming milestones.”

Two other changes in the job description called for the coordinator to use a “mutually agreed upon escalation protocol to swiftly address issues of concern” and to use a “state approved communications and engagement plan when representing the state at public events and with stakeholders.”

The coordinator was to have a “designated team member” in each of the three primary agencies responsible for consent decree compliance as a point of contact for responding to “issues and concerns.” And the coordinator was required to include a “management team member” on all email communications related to the three respective agencies. The three agencies are the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals; the Office of Rehabilitation Services (part of the Department of Human Services) and the Rhode Island Department of Education.

At the end of Spears’ one-year contract in January, 2019, it was amended to include the revised job description and extended six months, to June 30, 2019.

Spears, who is now executive director of the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island (CPNRI), a trade association of private service providers, offered her perspective on how the job description changed.

Spears, interviewed in August, said the consent decree coordinator has a unique role in coordinating activities among three separate state agencies to advance compliance with the consent decree, and there is a “natural tug-and-pull kind of dynamic” that can run in several directions.

“There were times when that (tug and pull) became challenging. I’m also the kind of person who’s pretty direct about what I expect and when it becomes challenging I usually address it. So we worked on agreement on how to develop a communications strategy” and a protocol to follow when there was disagreement, she said.

The job at the CPNRI became open when the former director, Donna Martin, announced her departure effective March 1. Spears said the new job was an opportunity to be a leader in systems change “in a way that really elevates our mission, elevates our voice, and elevates our practices.”

Spears, who has parented a child with extensive disabilities and medical issues, has worked at the Rhode Island Parent Information Network as a peer family mentor and government lobbyist. She also has worked as an analyst in the Senate Fiscal Office, where she said she learned about the consent decree and found her calling at the policy level. She left the Senate job to become consent decree coordinator in January, 2018.


Tina Spears, RI Senate Fiscal Aide, Named State's Consent Decree Coordinator

By Gina Macris

Tina Spears              photo courtesy state of RI  

Tina Spears              photo courtesy state of RI  

Tina Spears, a policy analyst in the fiscal office of the Rhode Island Senate, has been named the state’s Consent Decree Coordinator. The coordinator is charged with ensuring cooperation among three departments of state government responsible for reinventing daytime services for teenagers and adults with developmental disabilities to comply with the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA).

Eric Beane, Secretary of Health and Human Services, announced Spears’ appointment Jan. 12, saying in a statement that she is “well-poised to lead this work, given her longstanding advocacy for children and individuals with disabilities.”

Spears, who has parented a child with a disability, “brings a strong personal commitment to the work” in addition to professional expertise in the state budget and the federal-state Medicaid program which funds developmental disability services, Beane said.

“Her connection to the community and passion for ensuring people have the opportunity to live their life to its fullest potential are welcome additions to the work our team does every day to improve developmental disabilities services in Rhode Island,” Beane said.

Prior to her Senate job, she was government relations director of the Rhode Island Parent Information Network for eight years.

Spears, the fourth consent decree coordinator in three years, succeeds Dianne Curran, who served just seven months before stepping down in September. Curran was preceded by Mary Madden, who stayed in the job a year, from 2016 until 2017, and by Andrew McQuaide, the first coordinator.

In the last several months. Brian Gosselin, Chief Strategic Officer for the Executive Office of Health and Human Services, has been filling in as consent decree coordinator.

The state created the coordinator’s position at the insistence of a federal court monitor overseeing implementation of a 2014 consent decree, which maps out what the state must do to correct the overreliance on sheltered workshops and segreated programs that violated the integration mandate of the ADA. The consent decree draws its authority from the Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, which clarified the requirement for integrated services for individuals with disabilities.

 

Dianne Curran, RI Consent Decree Coordinator, To Leave Post Sept. 30, Citing Personal Reasons

By Gina Macris

 

                                                       This article has been updated .

Dianne Curran                        Photo By Anne Peters

Dianne Curran                        Photo By Anne Peters

Dianne Curran will step down Sept. 30 after seven months as Rhode Island’s consent decree coordinator, a post considered critical to success of the state’s 2014 agreement with the U.S Department Of Justice to reform Rhode Island’s programs for persons with developmental disabilities.

 “I am sad to leave such a competent and hard-working team that is committed to improving the lives of individuals with I/DD (intellectual and developmental disabilities),”  Curran said in a statement which cited "personal reasons" for her departure. She did not elaborate.

Curran is the third consent decree coordinator to serve since the agreement was signed in April, 2014. Curran was preceded by Mary Madden, who served from January, 2016, until the end of March of this year, overlapping Curran’s first month on the job. The first consent decree coordinator was Andrew McQuaide.

A spokeswoman for the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) said there is an interim plan to cover the duties of the consent decree coordinator. The spokeswoman, Jenna Mackevich, confirmed Curran's upcoming departure on behalf of the Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS), where Curran reports to Health and Human Services Secretary Eric J. Beane.

Until the state finds a qualified successor to Curran, an cross-agency Consent Decree Management Team will shoulder the coordinator's duties, according to an EOHHS spokeswoman, who elaborated on the interim plan. The inter-agency team includes various division leaders and legal staff, who meet regularly, said the spokeswoman, Ashley O'Shea.

The position of the consent decree coordinator is very important in ensuring cooperation among state agencies with responsibilities in implementing the agreement, according to an independent federal court monitor, Charles Moseley. Historically, the various agencies of state government have had the reputation of acting as bureaucratic “silos.”

In addition to BHDDH, the Rhode Island Department of Education and the Office of Rehabilitation Services in the Department of Human Services share responsibility for transforming a system of sheltered workshops and adult day care centers into a network of integrated, community-based services, with an emphasis on regular jobs and personal choice, to comply with the ADA.

With Madden’s arrival early in 2016, Moseley successfully pressed the state to move the position of consent decree coordinator out of BHDDH to the EOHHS, which has authority over both ORS and BHDDH.

Curran has a long and varied career as a disability rights lawyer dating back to 1980, both in Rhode Island and Massachusetts. She is a former deputy director at Rhode Island Legal Services and former supervising attorney at what is now the RI Disability Law Center. Working much of the last 20 years in  Massachusetts,  she was deputy general counsel in the Department of Social Services and then held the same position at the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education

This article has been updated to include details of the interim plan for the state to keep up with the duties of the consent decree coordinator while the state searches for a replacement to Dianne Curran.

Jennifer Wood, Leader of RI DD Consent Decree Compliance, To Leave State Government

Photo by Anne Peters

Photo by Anne Peters

By Gina Macris

Jennifer L. Wood, largely responsible for accelerating Rhode Island’s lackluster response to a federal consent decree affecting adults with developmental disabilities, is leaving state government to become director of the Rhode Island Center for Justice.

The non-profit public interest law center works with community groups and the Roger Williams University School of Law to strengthen legal services and advocacy on issues that reflect the most pressing needs of low-income Rhode Islanders, including housing, immigration, and workers’ rights.  

Miriam Weizenbaum, the board chair for the Center for Justice,  announced the appointment Wednesday, May 3, saying that Wood’s legal background in public interest law, combined with her extensive experience in education and health and human servicesin state government, “makes her an ideal leader for the Center for Justice at a time when basic rights are under significant challenge.” 

Wood was deputy secretary and chief legal counsel to Elizabeth Roberts until Roberts resigned in mid-February as head of the Executive Office of Health and Human Services amid fallout from the UHIP fiasco, the botched roll-out of a computerized Medicaid benefits system. Thousands of Rhode Islanders were left without a wide range of benefits, including from food stamps, health coverage, subsidized child care, and even developmental disability services. At the time Roberts left, Wood was demoted to general counsel.

AshleyG. O’Shea, spokeswoman for OHHS, noted in a statement that Wood has devoted two decades of her life to state service and said, “We wish her the best in her new endeavor.” 

In March, the office of the U.S. Attorney in Providence issued a demand for UHIP documents, saying it is investigating the “allegation that false claims and/or payment for services and/or false statements in support of such payments have been submitted to the U.S. government.“

In a statement May 3, Wood indicated that since the November election, she has been considering a change in career to go back to her roots. As a lawyer in the private sector, her work emphasized civil rights and disability rights. She represented inmates at the Rhode Island Training School and special education students, among others who otherwise might have lacked a legal voice.

Wood joined state government in 1998 as chief of staff at the Rhode Island Department of Education, leaving in 2007 to work as Roberts’ second-in-command after the latter was elected Lieutenant Governor. When Governor Gina Raimondo appointed Roberts as Secretary of Health and Human Services in 2015, Wood followed as deputy secretary and chief legal counsel.

At the end of 2015, when U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. signaled that he would personally oversee enforcement of the consent decree affecting daytime services for adults with developmental disabilities, Wood took charge of moving the implementation forward.

At that point, the agreement had brought virtually no change to the lives of adults with developmental disabilities since it was signed in April, 2014. By all accounts, Wood moved the implementation into high gear. 

O’Shea, the OHHS spokeswoman, said Wood is turning over her responsibilities in developmental disabilities to other officials, including Dianne Curran, a lawyer who is consent decree coordinator, and Kerri Zanchi, the new director of developmental disabilities. They are in touch with the federal court monitor and the U.S. Department of Justice weekly, according to O’Shea.

The consent decree requires the state replace sheltered workshops and segregated day programs with community-based supports so that adults with developmental disabilities may seek regular jobs and enjoy non-work activities in a more integrated way. The desegregation of services for everyone with disabilities was ordered by the U.S. Supreme Court in the Olmstead decision of 1999, which re-affirmed Title II of the Americans With Disabilities Act.