RI Governor Seeks Tens of Millions More For DD To Expand Community Services

By Gina Macris

This article has been updated

Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee has more than doubled the hike he is seeking from the General Assembly for developmental disabilities services in the next fiscal year. The overall funding increase is intended to expand opportunities for people to participate in community activities and increase the direct care workforce by offering higher pay.

A consultant for the state alluded to the funding hike during an April 27 hearing before Chief Judge John J. McConnell Jr. of the U.S. District Court, who heard a progress report on the state’s implementation of a 2014 consent decree intended to integrate adults with developmental disabilities in their communities. The amount of the increase was not mentioned in court but appears in updated documents on the website of the state budget office.

McKee originally earmarked $30.8 million to raise the minimum wage for direct care workers from $18 to $20 an hour to comply with a court order. The raises were to be part of a $385 million spending limit for private developmental disabilities services for the fiscal year beginning July 1.

On April 17, the state budget office raised the set-aside for raises to $75 million, including about $33.9 million in state revenue and about $25.8 million from federal funds in the federal-state Medicaid program. The budget amendmentes the new total for the private developmental disabilities system to $429.5 million.

The dramatic hike in funding anticipates a significant policy change that will allow private service providers to bill at higher rates on the assumption that all activities will involve supports in the community and will require more intensive staffing than center-based care.

Maintaining a regular gym schedule, attending an art or dance class, meeting a someone for coffee or going shopping are all activities most people take for granted, but those with developmental disabilities often need help with transportation and other supports to make these things happen.

The shift to 100 percent community-based services would eliminate the practice of budgeting for 40 percent of each client’s time in a day care center, which requires less intensive staffing but doesn’t offer people individualized or purposeful choices. A group cooking class, for example, may not succeed in teaching skills enabling participants to cook more independently at home.

The so-called “60-40” split between community and center-based care has been criticized by an independent court monitor overseeing the consent decree, who said the state must do everything it can to promote integration in the community to fully comply with the agreement.

The state’s consultant in a court-ordered rate review of Rhode Island’s developmental disabilities system explained the change in approach to daytime services during the April 27 hearing before Judge McConnell.

Stephen Pawlowski, managing director of the Burns and Associates Division of Health Management Associates, (HMA-Burns), said those who want center-based care may still choose it.

The recommendations of the HMA-Burns rate review, as well as the money to go with them, will need General Assembly approval before they go into effect July 1.

Feds Want Results

During the hearing, the independent monitor, A. Anthony Antosh, and a Justice Department lawyer, Amy Romero, applauded the administrative efforts of the state in recent months.

At the same time, they warned that full compliance with the consent decree will depend on results – more adults with developmental disabilities holding jobs and more community connections. And the deadline for full compliance is only 14 months away, June 30, 2024.

Romero, an Assistant U.S. Attorney in Rhode Island, previously raised concerns about the state meeting the 2024 deadline.

In the latest hearing, she commended the state for its efforts in the rate review process, but she also said the state must bring a sense of urgency to the push for more employment – one of the chief goals of the consent decree.

In frequent meetings with adults with developmental disabilities, she said, “meeting somebody with a job is the exception.”

“There are a lot of people out there who want to work and are not working,” she said. “It’s a missed opportunity with the employers themselves.”

The rate review would make employment-related supports available to everyone as an add-on to individual basic budgets.

Under the current rules, employment-related supports come at the expense of something else in the basic budgets. As a result, the number of overall service hours are reduced, because services like job development and job coaching cost more than other categories of support.

Since the consent decree was signed in 2014, the General Assembly has periodically earmarked separate funding for pilot employment programs in the developmental disabilities budget that don’t require individuals to give up service hours. The most recent one ended a year ago, shortly after the chief of employment services in the Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD) departed.

A new employment chief will start work May 8, according to a spokesman for the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH).

Some adults with developmental disabilities have been able get around the restrictions of the basic budgets if they have a service provider who gets funding for job supports from the Department of Labor and Training, or if they can get help from the Office of Rehabilitation Services.

And some high school students with developmental disabilities have gone from internships to real jobs as they move on to adult developmental disability services, although they have been the exceptions.

A spokesman for the Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE) told the monitor, Antosh, that the agency is helping school districts plan revisions to transition services to put a greater emphasis on job-seeking.

Assessment Issues Remain

During the hearing, Antosh brought up another piece of unfinished business that poses a challenge for the state; figuring out how to apply the new rate structure so that everyone approved for services gets the supports they need.

The shift to community-based day services, by itself, will not achieve that goal, because of the way the assessment of individual needs is currently linked to funding.

Antosh said he continues to hear from families who are concerned about the accuracy of the assessment in its existing form.

The algorithm – or mathematical formula – used to turn the scores from the assessment into individual funding “needs to change,” he said. The assessment itself was not designed as a funding tool, but the developer, the American Association of Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD), still allows many states to use it that way.

After Rhode Island began its rate review in early 2022, AAIDD announced it would spend the next year overhauling the assessment, called the Supports Intensity Scale (SIS).

The second edition of the SIS was not released until mid-March of this year, and the state won’t begin to use the revised assessment until June. After that, a sample of 600 assessments will be needed before officials can do the math in a systematic way to assign budgets.

With each assessment taking two to three hours per person, the process of collecting 600 sets of scores is expected to take about six months.

In addition, the way the second edition of the SIS is scored is substantially different than the first edition, said Pawlowski of HMA-Burns.

Heather Mincey, Assistant Director of DDD, said that going forward, the SIS will not be the only measure used to determine support needs.

The second edition of the SIS will come with supplemental questions to capture exceptional needs like behavioral and medical issues.

But Mincey said there will be an additional set of supplemental questions, as well as an interview with individuals and their families to determine if there is any support need the assessment missed.

Independent facilitators will work with the assessment results to help individuals and families plan a program of supports, and then the funding will be assigned.

Currently, the funding is assigned directly from the SIS scores, and services are planned to fit the budgets.

Antosh has said the existing approach does not allow for the individualization necessary to comply with the consent decree.

The individual facilitators, proposed by Antosh, would be trained in a “person-centered” approach that incorporates short-term and long-term goals into a purposeful program of services built around the preferences and needs of the individual involved.

The person-cantered approach is considered a “best practice” in developmental disabilities that preserves people’s right to lead regular lives in their communities in compliance with the Olmstead decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, which gives the consent decree its legal authority. The Olmstead decision reinforced the Integration Mandate of the Americans With Disabilities Act.

The facilitators for person-centered planning have not yet been hired.

Mincey said the state is working with the Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College to develop a job description for the facilitators. They would not be state employees.

Governor’s Budget Amendments

In separate budget amendments on April 17, the Governor asked the General Assembly for additional funding to pay for the technology needed for them to do their jobs.

It calls for an information technology contract totaling $250,00 for so-called “conflict-free case management” to be implemented by the facilitators. All but $25,000 would be federal funds.

Antosh also asked Mincey what the state is doing to improve communication with families, who will have to absorb a considerable breadth of new information to take advantage of new opportunities in developmental disability services.

She highlighted the eight new positions being added to the staff of the Division of Developmental Disabilities who will focus on communication and training. All but one position has been filled, according to a BHDDH spokesman, Two have begun work, he added later.

Those new positions will cost $203,275 for the first full year, taking into account federal Medicaid reimbursements and savings from staff turnover in other positions, according to the governor’s original budget proposal.

The April 27 hearing serviced as an interim progress report as the state bears down on a court-ordered July 1 deadline to implement rate hikes and other administrative changes.

Antosh said he plans to write an evaluation of the state’s progress about mid-July. Judge McConnell said he will hold the next consent decree hearing about August 1. The exact date, later published by the court, is Tuesday, August 1 at 10 a.m, with public access available remotely.

The current developmental disabilities budget is $383.4 million, including nearly $352.9 million for the privately-run system and nearly $30.6 million for the state’-run group home network, which is not involved in the consent decree.

The governor’s revised budget for the current fiscal year would pare overall developmental disabilities spending to $377.3 million by June 30, including about $348.5 million for the private system and about $28.3 million for the state group homes, called Rhode Island Community Living and Supports (RICLAS.)

For Fiscal 2024, the total federal-state Medicaid funding would be $461.8 million for the private and state-run systems, according to the amended budget proposal. That total includes about $429.5 million for the private system and about $32.4 million for the state-run system.

Related content:

McKee’s original budget proposal is covered in an article here.

Pawlowski presented a PowerPoint on updated “rate and payments options” to the court that has been released by the state. Read it here.


Insurmountable Deadline?

By Gina Macris

An independent federal court monitor says there is “minimal likelihood” Rhode Island will achieve ultimate compliance with a long-running civil rights consent decree in 2024 unless all court-ordered changes to the developmental disabilities system are implemented by July 1 – three months from now.

The monitor, A. Anthony Antosh, submitted a status report on the case to Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. of the U.S. District Court in advance of a public hearing April 27.

He said many changes are needed in the developmental disabilities system to increase employment and participation in community activities in keeping with the Integration Mandate of the Americans with Disabilities Act. In the end, these new experiences in the workplace and in the community will change lives, Antosh said.

A. Anthony Antosh

The state Director of the Division of Developmental Disabilities, Kevin Savage, expressed confidence in a recent virtual public forum that the state will meet the deadline for full compliance on June 30, 2024 but gave few details.

With less than 15 months remaining in the term of the consent decree, the monitor spelled out the ways the state is still in the “messy middle” of change, with few measurable results so far.

For example, in the year between October, 2021, and October, 2022, a total of 16 persons with developmental disabilities got jobs, bringing the total number of employment placements to 984 during the life of the consent decree, or 68 percent of the compliance target - 1456.

In addition, interviews conducted with 25 adults eligible for developmental disability services indicated that the consent decree, signed in 2014, has not yet impacted the lives of most people it is intended to protect. Only about 30 percent of those interviewed had a knowledge or understanding of the consent decree, Antosh said.

“This is not really surprising, given that BHDDH does not do direct communication with all individuals / families on a routine basis,” he said. Improving communication must become a priority, particularly in light of numerous changes that must be implemented during the next year.

Antosh said additional interviews will be conducted to monitor the effect of the consent decree on individuals receiving services. For the state to reach full compliance, at least two thirds those interviewed must report they have a “community-based life, achievement of personal goals, and satisfaction.”

The April 27 hearing will allow the court to clarify its position on details of implementation just before state budget talks shift into high gear in May for spending in the next fiscal year. The General Assembly is expected to consider hefty increases in funding and changes to the way developmental disabilities services are delivered in accordance with a rate review by an outside consultant.

“It should be noted that the State essentially agrees with all of the expectations and required actions,” Antosh said, but a lack of capacity has prevented it from moving faster to complete all the required changes.

A decade of chronic underfunding depressed the wages of caregivers and destabilized the developmental disabilities workforce until the state, pressured by the court, increased pay by about 40 percent in the past two years from an average of $13.18 per hour to $19.52. While a workforce recruitment initiative has shown some success in hiring and retention, the number of direct care workers has still not hit pre-pandemic levels, Antosh said.

The consultant for the rate review, the Burns & Associates Division of Health Management Associates (HMA-Burns), has recommended additional rate increases of about 22 percent, which would cost $57 million, according to projections made in January. Based on a court ordered minimum wage of $20 an hour for direct care workers planned for July, HMA-Burns has projected the average hourly pay will be $22.14 in the coming fiscal year.

But the system-wide changes necessary to comply with the consent decree involve a careful orchestration of many moving parts, including professional development and training. Antosh said the state must budget for training separately from the rate structure for direct care workers and others. In the rate review, HMA-Burns included time spent in training activities as part of a mathematical formula for determining hourly rates, but Antosh said that doesn’t cover the cost of the training that will be expected.

While state has been making mostly satisfactory progress in planning activities the last few months, the “ultimate criterion” will be the “quality of implementation,” the monitor said.

Antosh said BHDDH is in the process of hiring eight new staff members in the Division of Developmental Disabilities to help direct implementation efforts and also has received approval to hire a Spanish-speaking social worker. That change, which appears to carve out an exception to union seniority rules, responds to complaints from the Latino community that date back to the inception of the consent decree in 2014.

Some social workers already on staff will be re-assigned to high schools to help teenagers making the transition from special education to the adult service system, Antosh said.

The monitor laid out another major change he said is essential in ensuring that persons with developmental disabilities get individualized programs of services that help them lead regular lives in their communities.

Until now, the state has used a standardized assessment called the Supports Intensity Scale (SIS) for determining individual budgets from a menu of about 20 options, depending on a person’s degree ability to function independently – or lack of it. Programming has been fit into the budgets.

Antosh says planning for individualized services must come ahead of budgeting to ensure a “person-centered” approach in which the needs, preferences and goals of individuals drive the programming.

While the state has already agreed to make employment-related supports available to all by separating these services from core budget options, Antosh said the same must be done for community-based activities.

HMA-Burns recommends that all day programs, including center-based care and community activities, remain part of core budgets assigned by levels, or tiers of support determined through the SIS assessment. Transportation, overnight shared supports, and respite care also would be part of the core budgets, with individuals having the option of shifting funds between categories.

As an example of the trade-off, the rate review cited the hypothetical example of an individual who could choose to receive fewer hours of daytime services to get more transportation.

But the monitor said, in bold type for emphasis, that community-based activities “should NOT be subtracted from core individual budgets.”

“Development and expansion of community-based models for employment and community participation need to be a primary focus for 2023-2024,” he said.

Several factors related to the assessment and planning process will complicate the implementation of a “person-centered” approach:

• The state doesn’t yet have a budget for paying the independent facilitators or case managers

• A revised version of the SIS assessment to be used by facilitators was released by its developer only a month ago, in mid-March.

• The supplemental assessment questions are just now being rolled out in SIS interviews.

• Both the new SIS and the supplemental questions require a ramp-up period to be fully integrated into the assessment process.

In a workflow chart attached to the monitor’s report, the state indicated it plans to have all components in place by July 1.

The hearing will be streamed live before Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. April 27 at 2 p.m. The Zoom meeting ID is 161 975 2551 and the Passcode is 651294. For a link to the court’s Zoom platform and an up-to-the-minute court calendar, click here

Find the latest Monitor’s report here

The monitor included attachments from the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals, the Rhode Island Department of Education, which is responsible for transition services for high school students with developmental disabilities; and a multi-agency report on coordinating funding sources for employment supports.

In addition, The Executive Office of Health and Human Services submitted a report on a pilot program for “conflict-free case management”, which will use the independent facilitators the monitor mentioned, and is required by the is Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for all Medicaid and Medicare recipients, not just those with developmental disabilities.

The HMA-Burns Rate Review Summary

BHDDH Workplans

RIDE Transition Action Plan Status

RIDE Transition Work Plan

BHDDH Communications Plan

Multi-Source Funding For Employment Services

Multi-Source Funding Graphic

Conflict-Free Case Management




Judge Tightens Reins On RI DD Consent Decree Compliance

By Gina Macris

It’s been eight years and eight months since Rhode Island signed an agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice to improve the lives of adults with developmental disabilities by ending their segregation in sheltered workshops and day care centers.

But with 16 months remaining for the state to fully comply with the consent decree, the state’s progress falls far short of the goals, according to the report of an independent court monitor made public Dec. 6.

On that day, U.S. District Court Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. incorporated the monitor’s wide-ranging recommendations into an order outlining some 50 tasks to be completed before June 30, 2024, when the 2014 consent decree expires.

McConnell also scheduled a public hearing on the status of the consent decree for Monday, Dec. 12, at 2 p.m.

Parts of the order will require additional changes to a preliminary review of rates for developmental disability services that was made public in September.

The recommendations of the monitor, A. Anthony Antosh, provide a snapshot of the current system:

  1. Forty-four percent of those who once toiled in sheltered workshops, and 33 percent of those who spent daytime hours in centers, have found jobs in the community since the consent decree was signed, far below expected levels.

  2. About one third of adults – and more than half of young people moving from high school to adult services – do not participate in community activities. The consent decree promised a 40-hour week filled with work and activities that are purposeful to each of some 4000 persons eligible for services.

 Antosh recommended a way for the state to meet its targets: bring system-wide funding to existing pilot programs that have shown success in employment and integrated community activities – the fruits of some $12 million in “Transformation Grants” made during the past year.

Judge McConnell has given the state until next July to put that funding in place – and to figure out how to fit it into the rate review or find some other way to do it.

The monitor said that “individuals and families report uncertainty and lack of information” about the consent decree, the Employment First policy emphasizing competitive employment for those with disabilities, and community activities.

Families of young people moving from high school to adult services say they generally are “overwhelmed by the process and report not having sufficient information or support,” Antosh said.

The court ordered the state to put a streamlined application for adult services in place and to give every family a consistent point of contact to serve as a guide during the transition. These are two more of the 50 tasks the state must complete in 2023 or 2024 to comply with the consent decree.

Antosh put the state on notice that his final evaluation of the state’s compliance with the consent decree in will include an assessment of its impact on people’s lives. Positive impact will be measured by at least two thirds of a random sample of individuals reporting a “community-based life, achievement of personal goals, and satisfaction” during independent interviews, he said.

In the last few years, Judge McConnell has recognized that a key problem in the implementation of the consent decree has been a lack of front-line staff, who, until mid-2021, were paid an average of $13.18 an hour, too little to attract an adequate workforce.

The General Assembly increased wages from $15.75 to $18 an hour in July, and McConnell has ordered that rate to increase to $20 an hour by 2024.

In recent months, the state has stepped up its recruitment efforts, with 146 new hires reported in September by a recruitment consultant, Antosh said.

McConnell ordered those recruitment efforts to continue, with emphasis on helping individuals and families who direct their own services. The state’s figures indicate this group now makes up about a quarter of all those receiving developmental disability services.

Among other things, the state must explore the possibility of a mechanism to provide health benefits to for those who work on an hourly basis for individual families by July, 2023.

McConnell’s court order also signals that neither he nor Antosh are in agreement with some features of a recent rate review that would update the fee-for-service reimbursement system the state uses to pay private service providers who deliver the actual day-to-day supports to adults with developmental disabilities.

A spokesman for the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) said Dec. 1 that “changes have been made to the recommendations” since they were presented to the public in September on the basis of “public comments, including the Court Monitor’s and those from other stakeholders.”

“These final recommendations are now under review and will be made public after review,” the spokesman said.

The rate review recommendations as they now appear on the health policy webpage of the outside consultant, the Burns & Associates Division of Health Management Associates, (here) cover everything from assessment of need to the allocation of individual budgets and billing requirements, in addition to revisions to dozens of rates that would be used to continue a fee-for-service system called Project Sustainability, introduced in 2011.

The Burns & Associates recommendations would continue requiring service providers to bill in 15-minute units from an extensive menu of rates for services provided during the day, despite recommendations from a study group and the monitor that the detailed –and costly - paperwork should be eliminated.

Now, as part of McConnell’s action Dec. 6, the state has been ordered, in bold type for emphasis, to “simplify the billing process” through the rate review by July, 2023.

McConnell’s order also elevates several other recommendations Antosh has made touching on the rate review, directly or indirectly.

For example, the state has made it clear that it plans to continue using a standardized interview called the Supports Intensity Scale (SIS) to determine individual support needs, with the addition of supplemental questions to capture particular behavioral or medical issues.

Antosh noted that while the state may continue to use the SIS, the court has previously directed it to explore alternate assessment methods. “Now might be the time,” he wrote.

He also said there should be a funding mechanism that allows individuals and families to “identify unique needs and costs” that go beyond the results of any standardized interview and supplemental questions. Nor should Individuals have to file appeals to get the additional funding (as is now the case), he said.

Antosh discussed “person-centeredness,” how the bureaucracy should enable individuals, with the support of families and advocates, to become empowered to take charge of their own lives, setting short-term and long-term goals and realizing them through day-to-day supports.

A key to this empowerment is first making a service plan based on individual needs and then matching funding to that plan, with an independent case manager or facilitator guiding the process, Antosh said.

Currently, individual service plans are designed to fit into a funding formula that has about 20 options, based on an assessment of need. BHDDH, which determines both individual need and funding, has not indicated it wants to change the current approach, except to fund employment supports as an add-on to the basic budget.

On a statewide level, the Executive Office of Human Services has devised a draft plan for independent, or “conflict-free” case management for all Rhode Islanders receiving Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) funded by the federal-state Medicaid program, including adults with developmental disabilities.

The draft plan proposes a flat rate for all HCBS case management that is yet to be disclosed. It is not clear that the plan fits the monitor’s vision of conflict-free case management, but it will have to meet the requirements of the court and the consent decree as it applies to adults with developmental disabilities.

Public Access to Hearing, EOHHS Meetings

The remote-access public hearing on the consent decree begins at 2 p.m. Dec 12 before Judge McConnell. The meeting will be hosted on zoom.gov The Meeting ID is 160 1690998, and the Password is 488765. This information is also on the court’s public access page, here, along for instructions on dialing in to the audio only. Please note that due to an apparent typographical error, the date of the hearing on the public access page is incorrect.

Maenwhile, at 3 p.m. Monday, EOHHS will host the first of three public comment meetings on the draft plan for conflict-free case management. Advance registration is required for that session and two other meetings, Dec. 14, and 15, both also at 3 p.m. Registration links and other information about conflict-free case management can be found here

Read the Dec. 6 court order here.

Read the EOHHS draft plan on conflict-free case management here.

Consultant Recommends Substantial Hikes To RI DD Rates; Public Comment Invited

By Gina Macris

The average pay of a direct care worker serving Rhode Islanders with developmental disabilities would jump almost four dollars to $22.14 an hour July 1 in a new rate structure recommended by a healthcare consultant to the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH).

The proposed rate structure would make Rhode Island’s direct care workers the highest paid of any developmental disabilities caregivers in 26 states, according to the consultant, the Burns & Associates division of Health Management Associates.

Photo HMA-Burns

Stephen Pawlowski, an HMA-Burns official, presented the preliminary recommendations in video meetings Sept. 28 and Sept. 29. HMA-Burns and BHDDDH will accept public comment until Oct. 24 before finalizing the recommendations.

In compliance with a federal court order, the state has agreed to pay direct care workers a minimum of $20 an hour by 2024. To follow the state fiscal year, which begins in July, the new rate would become effective six months earlier than the court deadline. The $20 minimum means the average hourly pay will be $22.14, Pawlowski said. (see graphic, above)

Preliminary recommendations of the HMA-Burns also include significant increases in many other rates as part of a continued fee-for-service reimbursement structure for private service providers that has been in place for more than a decade.

Service providers, consumers and their families, and even a legislative commission have called for alternatives to fee-for-service reimbursements during the last several years.

Three dozen private agencies form the backbone of Rhode Island’s developmental disabilities system. The state relies on them to meet the requirements of a 2014 civil rights agreement mandating a network of individualized community-based daytime services by June 30, 2024 in accordance with the Integration Mandate of the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA).

DELAY IN PART OF RATE REVIEW

A federal judge set a Dec. 1 deadline for completion of the rate review, but Pawlowski said the portion that deals with individual assessments and individual budgeting cannot be finished until mid-2023.

In August, an independent court monitor said this portion of the rate review should be completed by Oct. 31, underlining his recommendation in bold type in a report to the court.

The process and timeline involving assessments, service plans and developing individual budgets is “one of the most critical aspects of the transition to high quality person-centered practice,“ but the way these elements connect with each other is ‘‘poorly understood,‘‘ said the monitor, A. Anthony Antosh.

‘‘Person-centered practice‘‘ refers to a professional approach that that puts a client’s needs and preferences first in keeping with with the consent decree and the ADA.

Antosh recommended the state do a “comprehensive review“ of its use of the current assessment tool, the Supports Intensity Scale (SIS), citing continued problems with inaccuracies in the results.

The state made it clear a year ago that it will continue using the SIS, but during the recent presentations, the HMA-Burns spokesman , Pawlowski, that the publisher is in the process of revising it.

The second edition of the SIS is expected in January, 2023, he said. It will be incorporated into the new rate structure by mid-year, he said. The graphic below lays out additional details.

REVENUE HIKE FOR PROVIDERS

Overall, the various rate increases would hike revenues for private service providers 20 to 25 percent above current levels, Pawlowski said.

Part of the increase in private agency revenues would come from funding employment-related services, more costly than other types of daytime supports, as a separate add-on allocation.

It remains unclear how much one-on-one time with a direct care worker an individual would get under the proposed new rate model. One-on-one staffing is considered important for community integration.

Pawlowski was asked whether someone choosing one-on-one staff time exclusively would use up their budget allocation faster than someone in a small group. The short answer is “yes,” he said.

Anne LeClerc, a BHDDH official, added quickly that “it depends” on a person’s need and funding level.

On an hourly basis, the rate for one-on-one supports in the community would increase from $37.88 to $65. Not everyone will have a budget big enough to pay for one-on -one staffing for an extended period of time.

One caveat is that one-on-one staffing will be available to all who seek competitive employment in the community, regardless of the size of their individual budgets, BHDDH spokesman said.

Final answers to questions about the availability of one-on-one staffing will be directly linked to the way the new SIS version defines individual need and the funding that results from that definition.

The new system also includes a range of reimbursement rates for group supports in the community involving no more than three people for each worker.

Center-based care will continue, with its own range of reimbursement rates. Centers would be used as gathering places in the morning to prepare for community activities and places for daytime meals and personal care, Pawlowski said.

15-MINUTE BILLING UNITS

During the presentations, Pawlowski said new rate structure will continue 15 minute billing units for daytime services, giving consumers the “flexibility” to “mix and match” their choice of services and service providers.

Private agency providers for years have complained that the administrative cost and time used to bill in 15-minute increments according to staffing ratios detracts from their ability to provide the services themselves.

In one of many court-ordered activities, a cross-section of state officials and community representatives has studied 15-minute billing and found it burdensome, recommending that the 15-minute unit be replaced with one or two rates for community staffing lasting three or four hours at a time.

Pawlowski said the new model would reduce the administrative burden by eliminating the requirement to account for staffing ratios within each 15-minute billing unit.

Reimbursement tables in the proposed rate structure assume there will be five levels of funding, as there are now.

The funding levels are largely based on a person’s perceived ability or inability to complete the tasks of daily living, with the “tiers” of funding running from A, the lowest funding, to E, the highest.

“SELF-DIRECTED” CONSUMERS

About a quarter of consumers receiving developmental disabilities services do not rely on private agencies but direct their own plans, mostly with help from their families.

They are responsible for hiring direct care staff, but a fiscal intermediary handles payroll and helps them stay on track with their budgets.

Going forward, Pawlowski said, fiscal intermediaries will be limited to payroll services.

Support activities will become part of case management - a service now under review for all health and human service departments governed by the Executive Office of Health and Human Services to ensure that Rhode Island complies with federal case management rules.

The removal of support services from the role of the fiscal intermediaries will result in a slight rate decrease, Pawlowski said.

But some fiscal intermediaries listening to the presentation online said the two functions can’t be easily separated.

RESIDENTIAL OPTIONS TO WIDEN

Reimbursement rates would increase substantially for residential services except for the largest group homes, with six or more residents, where the rate reviewers assumed an economy of scale, Pawlowski said.

A few of the largest group homes would see a slight decline in funding, he said.

Rates for shared living, which Pawlowski said have remained the same since the program started, will get substantial increases. Shared living providers host adults with developmental disabilities in their homes.

For the first time, there will be an enhanced reimbursement rate for hosts who also provide all the day services for the people in their homes.

Established provider agencies that now oversee individual shared living arrangements will be required to make monthly visits to each home, Pawlowski said.

There are two new categories of residential services:

  • Supervised living, a shared service for those who don’t need 24-hour care and live near each other, like residents with separate apartments in the same building who are visited by the same “floating” staffer as needed.

  • Room and board arrangements in which an individual with intellectual and developmental disabilities has a roommate who is not the homeowner.

The proposed reimbursement scale also provides for “remote services” in which a worker can check in electronically and follow-up with an in-person visit if needed.

Recordings of two presentations and a packet of information on the proposed rates and other related materials have been posted to the BHDDH website at https://bhddh.ri.gov/developmental-disabilities/initiatives/rate-and-payment-methodology-review-project/public-review

Written comment from the public will be accepted until Oct. 24 at bsmith@healthmanagement.com

Graphics by HMA-Burns

BHDDH Invites Public Comment On Rate Review

By Gina Macris

Beginning Sept. 28, the public will have a chance to comment on preliminary recommendations of a consultant’s long-awaited review of rates paid Rhode Island’s private providers of developmental disability services.

The court-ordered rate review is expected to address several barriers to the state’s compliance with a 2014 civil rights consent decree. The agreement requires the state to provide individualized services enabling adults with developmental disabilities to integrate with their communities in accordance with the Americans With Disabilities Act.

That goal means that, among other changes, the the state must offer more competitive rates to private service providers to enable them to greatly expand their direct care workforce.

The Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) has announced that its consultant will present its initial recommendations in two online meetings Sept. 28 and 29. The public will have until Oct. 21 to submit comments.

The two online presentations will be facilitated by officials of the Burns & Associates Division of Health Management Associates, (HMA-Burns) the healthcare consultant BHDDH hired to conduct the review. The public may attend both sessions, but each one will have a different focus, with the first including technical details of interest to service providers and the second aimed at consumers, their families, and other interested persons.

A BHDDH spokesman said there will be no pre-registration or meeting passcodes for either of the two events, to be hosted on the Zoom platform.

The schedule:

After Sept. 29, the public will be able to view recordings of the meetings, access rate review materials, and find instructions for submitting comments on the BHDDH website at https://bhddh.ri.gov/developmental-disabilities/initiatives/rateand-payment-methodology-review-project.

The recommendations of the rate review will be finalized after the conclusion of the public comment period.

The rate review was timed to enable the state to use it in formulating the annual budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023.



$2.5 M Unused For Lack of RI DD Jobs Program

CVS Trainee - File Photo

By Gina Macris

This article was updated Sept. 10.

A total of $2.5 million dedicated to helping adults with developmental disabilities find new jobs remains unused because the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH) hasn’t yet decided on a program for spending the money..

 A department spokesman has clarified an earlier statement about the amount of money lacking a spending program.

In addition, the Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD) is still seeking a replacement for the chief employment administrator, who left May 1.

The lack of readily available BHDDH funding dedicated to expanding the number of job placements was disclosed by the Director of Developmental Disabilities at a virtual public forum in August.

The situation represents one factor threatening the promise of a 2014 federal court consent decree to change the lives of people who once spent their days in sheltered workshops or day centers cut off from the rest of the community.

A parallel issue at the top of the list of concerns of an independent monitor is a shortage of skilled workers who assist people with disabilities to find meaningful jobs and expand their activities in the wider community.

The workforce shortage has taken on heightened urgency since the monitor recommended last week that the U.S. District Court accelerate recruitment of workers and possibly impose multi-million dollar fines against the state for noncompliance of the consent decree. (See related article.)

Until a new DDD employment program is adopted, adults with developmental disabilities must either seek state-sponsored employment services funded outside BHDDH or reduce other types of BHDDH service hours to pay for help finding a job.

Limitations on employment supports built into the current developmental disabilities system are part of a comprehensive review now underway of reimbursement rates for private service providers and administrative barriers to integrated services,

The 2014 consent decree anticipated that by 2022 – eight years later – Rhode Island would be scaling up pilot programs of supported employment that would reach some 4,000 people.

But BHDDH has never scaled up. Its first pilot program emphasizing individualized employment supports began in 2016 and underwent several iterations until the final version, the “Person-Centered Employment Performance Program 3.0” ended June 30.

The DDD director announced in February that the program would not be renewed but did not explain the reasons.

At the same time, the director, Kevin Savage, hinted at frustration on the part of the chef administrator for employment services, Tracey Cunningham, saying that she would be “leading the charge” in designing a new supported employment program “if Tracey stays with us, and puts up with us longer.”

But Cunningham, Associate Director for Employment Services since 2016, announced her departure in early April. BHDDH has posted the position twice but has not yet found a replacement for Cunningham.

The BHDDH spokesman could not say why a new supported employment program has not yet been put in place but said the “the DD team is meeting with stakeholders to determine a spending and engagement plan.”

Job Placements Fall Short

In an August 29 report to Chief Judge John J. McConnell, Jr., the independent monitor, A. Anthony Antosh, documented the state’s limited capacity to serve adults with developmental disabilities.

For example, 23 of 31 agencies serving people with developmental disabilities said in a survey they had to turn away clients or stop taking referrals between July and December of 2021 because they did not have the staff to provide services,

By July, 2022, the state had found jobs for only 67 percent of the consumers that it had promised in the consent decree – 981 of 1,457. (The new-job totals span the entire term of the consent decree, whether or not a particular individual is currently working.)

Antosh said that job placement numbers have remained flat throughout 2021 and 2022, increasing by only 17 in a 12-month period.

In general, he described the developmental disabilities system as being in the “messy middle,” borrowing a phrase from Michael Smull, a developmental disabilities expert on system change.

Antosh said elements of the system desired in the future have been defined, and some individuals are beginning to see progress. But he said most still face the restrictions of the current system, “which needs to be funded and maintained while the future is being built.”

Funding will depend on the results of the ongoing program review that is now underway and how the recommendations will be received by the governor and the General Assembly.

Rate Review To Finish Nov. 1

Under court order, BHDDH moved forward with the comprehensive review, hiring Health Management Associates, the parent company of Burns and Associates, earlier this year. Burns and Associates helped the state a decade ago to implement the current system, which the DOJ found violated the Integration Mandate of the Americans With Disabilities Act. (Burns & Associates says the state did not implement its recommendations for that program.)

The DD director, Kevin Savage, said the review will be completed Nov. 1, a month earlier than expected. He told a public forum in August that he plans to schedule another public meeting shortly after the review is completed to gather feedback from the community before the BHDDH budget goes to the Governor, who must present a proposal to the General Assembly in January.

The review is expected to address not only funding issues but controversial administrative features that the monitor says are barriers to a community-based network of services, starting with the eligibility process.

For a decade, BHDDH has used the standardized Supports Intensity Scale (SIS), a lengthy interview process, to determine the intensity of a person’s disability and assign one of five funding levels for services.

Antosh has pushed back against the state’s stated intention to continue using the SIS, saying it needs yet comprehensive review. Despite the re-training of interviewers in 2016, families still report the SIS does not result in the funding necessary for needed services. And they have complained for years that they sometimes felt humiliated and emotionally drained by the SIS interviews.

The state has developed a supplemental questionnaire intended to improve the accuracy of the SIS, but Antosh said very few families report that they have seen it or understand its purpose.

The families of young people applying for adult services for the first time “continue to report being overwhelmed” by the process, which the state has promised to streamline. And families also generally don’t understand how to appeal a funding decision they believe is inadequate for the services their loved one needs, Antosh said. He recommended that intensive training of social caseworkers continue about communicating new policies to families.

Administrative Barriers To Integration

Antosh’s report also outlined the concerns of service providers about some features of the reimbursement rules, including:

• A requirement that they document the time each daytime worker spends with each client in 15-minute increments, a time-consuming and costly process.

• Another rule that dictates staffing ratios for different kinds of activities, which sometimes results in results in group activities in the community instead of individualized experiences.

Antosh reiterated recommendations of a workgroup on administrative barriers that said:

• The ratios should be replaced with reimbursement rates which allow workers to have 1,2, or 3 clients in their care

• Documentation of worker time should be done in three or four-hour units

Antosh said he expects the reviewers will reach conclusions that are similar to the workgroup. He made numerous other detailed recommendations in the 50-page report.

With the consent decree set to expire in 22 months, on June 30, 2024, Antosh said that all of his recommendations must be “fully implemented with urgency,” using boldface for emphasis.

All the state’s reforms eventually must be approved by the Court.

Read the monitor’s August 29 report here.

Read the monitor’s Sept. 1 addendum here.

RI DD Rate Review: "Refresh" Or "New Analysis" of Project Sustainability?

By Gina Macris

Under court order, Rhode Island is conducting a comprehensive review of how it provides services for adults with developmental disabilities – a study that could have a profound effect on the quality of their lives.

Will the rate review go far enough to realize the goal of a 2014 consent decree – a system of services individualized enough to enable persons with developmental disabilities to become integrated in their communities?

In seeking a consultant for the rate review, the state said it wanted to “shift toward a system of community based supports that promote individual self-determination, choice and control.”

In the end, the state’s evaluation committee selected the firm that offered “more a refresh of a prior model than a new analysis,” Health Management Associates, the parent company of Burns & Associates (HMA-Burns). Under an independent corporate structure more than a decade ago, Burns & Associates helped the state create the problematic reimbursement system now in place, called Project Sustainability.

With completion of the study not expected until December, it’s too early to tell what the final recommendations might look like.

But the selection process suggests the state does not want to stray too far from the structure of Project Sustainability.

One of the three finalists for the rate review, Guidehouse Inc., said as much in its proposal:

“Guidehouse assumes in our proposed approach that BHDDH is not looking for an overhaul of those mechanisms now in place.”

While there have been some changes in Project Sustainability, a federal judge has found that that some of its features amount to administrative barriers to the system of individualized, integrated services required by the 2014 consent decree.

Those barriers, which are expected to be addressed in rate review, include

  • A lack of individualized budgeting

  • Exhaustive documentation of staff time with each client that detracts from services and is a costly burden for providers

  • Staffing ratios that make integration in the community challenging

The state scored five bidders in two categories. Before cost could be considered, a four-member committee conducted a technical evaluation, valued at 70 percent of the overall score, which determined how closely the submissions matched objectives of the state’s request for proposals. Three firms, Guidehouse, Milliman and HMA-Burns exceeded the minimum of 60 points to be considered finalists.

HMA-Burns scored 61 points in the technical evaluation, one more than the 60 points necessary to qualify.

The evaluation committee found the HMA-Burns approach was “clearly defined, and the data approach is strong. However the methodology seems more a refresh of a prior model than a new analysis.” The proposal also “has a continuation of ‘buckets’ for funding rather than a robust approach to individual budgeting,” the committee said.

By comparison, the committee said Guidehouse, the top scorer, had an “engaging proposal, well written, visually engaging with good content.” There was also a “wide range of relevant experience, including recent experience assessing self-direction. (families and individuals designing their own service programs.)”

Among other things, the committee noted that Guidehouse had a “good understanding” of supplementary needs assessments that could lead to more accurate budgeting and reduce appeals that have resulted in the award of millions of dollars annually for supplemental services to which adults with developmental disabilities were entitled.

The cost proposals counted for 30 percent of the overall evaluation, but the committee did not score the originals from the three finalists. The original bids were:

  • HMA - $339,680 - 1,516 hours

  • Guidehouse - $499,350 - 2,235 hours

  • Milliman - $1,203,181 - 4,628 hours

In its evaluation memo, the committee expressed concern that the bids reflected too much of a variation in the effort that would be devoted to the project. It did not interview the vendors, a common practice among public purchasing officials.

Instead, the committee asked for a second round of bids for a project that would encompass 3,000 hours, which the committee said would be sufficient to complete the rate review.

The results:

  • HMA- $490,875

  • Guidehouse - $670,290

  • Milliman - $773,4000

After the second round of bidding, HMA-Burns tied with Guidehouse in the overall scoring but remained the lowest bidder. The final decision was made on the basis of cost.

ISBE MEANS A SMALL BUSINESS ENTERPRISE OWNED BY AT LEAST ONE PERSON WHO IS A WOMAN, MINORITY OR HAS A DISABILITY

During two meetings encompassing the evaluation process, the four-member committee awarded a single score in each category for each proposal through a collective group decision, or consensus, rather than individual scoring.

Individual, independent scoring is recommended as a “best practice” by the Center for Procurement Excellence. The Center is a non-profit organization that promotes education and training of pubic procurement officers and excellence in solicitation practices.

Members of the evaluation committee were Kevin Savage, Director of the Division of Developmental Disabilities; Anne LeClerc, Associate Director of Program Performance at BHDDH; Marylin Gaudreau, Data Analyst II at BHDDH, and Ashley Bultman, Senior Economic & Policy Analyst in the Office of Management and Budget at the Department of Administration.

In the end, the second round of bidding narrowed the range between the lowest and highest cost proposals but their relative positions didn’t change. Nor did the evaluation committee gain any additional information about the differing approaches.

In their cover letters with the second bids, both HMA and Guidehouse reiterated that they believed the work could be done in less than 3,000 hours.

Milliman, on the other hand, stated again that it believed the rate review would take more time. In fact, the letter said that if they were chosen, they would have to revise their technical proposal to conform with 3,000 hours’ work.

Gomes, the DOA spokesman, said purchasing rules gave the committee the choice of scoring proposals individually and interviewing the finalists, but he did not say why the committee did not do so.

Asked whether the evaluation process was designed to steer the project to a refresh of Project Sustainability instead of a new analysis of the system, Gomes said: “The goal of a competitive bid is to retain the best services at the most competitive price.”

“The request for proposals process evaluates both the technical aspects of the proposal and the submitted cost,” he said.

“When there is a wide discrepancy in the cost proposals, the Division of Purchases and agency initiating the procurement will provide an estimated level of effort (i.e. number of hours needed to complete the scope of work) and ask the respondents to submit a best-and-final offer.”

He said a “best and final offer process” is described in state Rules and Regulations 220-RICR-30-00-6(D) and state law R.I. Gen. Laws § 37-2-20(b) read in conjunction with state law R.I. Gen. Laws § 37-2-19(d) and (e).