Tuesday, May 12, 2009

New Quality Management Series

The Division of MHDDAD Office of Developmental Disabilities is providing a new Quality Management Series that includes three distinct trainings:


  • Quality Management Used to Make Quality Choices

  • Georgia Quality Management System for Individuals and Families

  • Empowerment Through Your Own Management Plan



This training is the result of a partnership between the Division of Mental Health Developmental Disabilities Addictive Diseases (MHDDAD) and the Delmarva Foundation. The goal of the partnership is to improve the quality of supports for Georgia citizens living with developmental disabilities. The shared vision is to enhance the service delivery system in order to produce results that reflect communicated choices and preferences that matter most to the person.



The Quality Management Series will be presented for persons with developmental disabilities and their families/representatives. The training is taking place throughout Georgia from April through June 2009. This announcement reflects the two training sessions scheduled in Albany (Region 4) on May 12. Announcements will be out soon for the remaining May and June sessions. Details about the individual trainings, the target audience, and how to register are included in the attached announcements. Registration is quick & easy online at www.cviog.uga.edu/training/dhr. The announcements will be posted on the Division’s training website at http://mhddad.dhr.georgia.gov/training.

DD Committee Meeting Announcement

We will have a Developmental Disabilities Committee meeting on Thursday, May 21st from 11:00 – 1:00. It will be held in the conference room of the Region Three Office 100 Crescent Center Parkway Ste. 900 Tucker, GA 30084.



The sole purpose of this meeting will be to solicit input from the DD community. Please distribute this notice widely. We need to hear from parents and guardians about unmet needs, transition issues with the NOW & COMP Waivers that need improvements, etc. This is an open forum – a town-hall format to hear from the DD Community. So, spread the word to help make this a successful input session.



Ray

RJ. (Ray) Brennan

(770) 925-4288

rj.brennan [(at)] comcast [(dot)] net

Governor Signs Legislation to Restructure the Department of Human Resources

Monday, May 4, 2009 Contact: Office of Communications 404-651-7774


ATLANTA – Governor Sonny Perdue today signed House Bill 228, reorganizing the Department of Human Resources (DHR) and the Department of Community Health (DCH) and creating a new Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities. HB 228 was introduced in the House by Rep. Mark Butler and carried in the Senate by Sen. Renee Unterman.

“Signing HB 228 will allow us to deliver greater value for Georgians’ healthcare dollars,” said Governor Perdue. “The legislation reorients our approach to healthcare by shifting the focus from inputs to results.”

The bill will result in three agencies reorganized to provide more focused results – the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities, the Department of Community Health and the Department of Human Services. The Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities will be responsible for all mental health, developmental disability and addictive disease programs currently under DHR. The department will report directly to the Governor, increasing transparency.

The Governor announced that Dr. Frank Shelp will serve as the new agency’s commissioner. Dr. Shelp currently works as the Clinical Director at Georgia Regional Hospital in Savannah. The Governor also appointed Dr. Bill McDonald to serve as Special Advisor to the Governor on Mental Health. Dr. McDonald currently serves as professor of psychiatry at Emory University. He is the chair for late life depression and chief of the Division of Geriatric Psychiatry. Gwen Skinner, who has been an integral part of DHR’s mental health service delivery, will serve as a Deputy Commissioner for the new agency during the transition until her retirement later this year.

DCH will be reorganized to include all the public health and long-term care regulation programs of DHR. This change establishes one lead agency to focus on improving Georgia’s health and streamlines health related activities currently in two separate departments. This agency will be led by current DCH Commissioner Dr. Rhonda Medows.

DHR’s remaining services will be housed under the Department of Human Services. Programs included in this department include Aging, Division of Family and Children Services and Child Support. Commissioner B.J. Walker will head the Agency.

The bill largely resembles the recommendations made by the Health and Human Services Task Force, which convened last year and studied these issues at length. Sen. Renee Unterman, Sen. Jack Hill, Rep. Ben Harbin and Rep. Mark Butler all served on the Health and Human Services Task Force. Rep. Pat Gardner and Sen. Johnny Grant also worked for passage of the bill and joined the Governor at today’s bill signing.

“Today we begin building a new stronger foundation for health and human services in the state of Georgia,” said Rep. Butler. “This foundation is just a beginning, and the real work lies ahead. We must continue to strive and make our public and mental health systems the best and most efficient in the nation. I want to thank the Governor and the leadership of the House and Senate for making this new day a reality.”

“This is a great day for Georgia and the many citizens that receive healthcare services from the state,” said Sen. Renee Unterman. “I am confident that these changes will result in improved care for our state’s most vulnerable residents.”

Friday, March 27, 2009

UWL Action Alert

Dear GCSS Families and Friends:

Now is the time to act!

We need everyone to contact their Senator.
Please see below very important UWL Action Alert.

Thank you,
Heidi Fernandez
Advocacy@gacommunity.org
404-634-4222 ext 550

NOW IS THE TIME TO ACT! Simply click http://www.unlockthewaitinglists.com/advocate.html

I wanted you to know that the House cut disability services in the FY10 budget. The House cut $5,391,480 of state funds from persons with developmental disabilities who are currently in programs. They also cut $3,368,458 in MRWP services when they become available through attrition. These cuts will mean that thousands of people with disabilities may lose current supports they desperately need!

THE SENATE WILL VOTE MONDAY ON THE BUDGET. PLEASE HELP US RAISE OUR VOICE.

The Unlock the Waiting lists is asking that Georgia’s budget continue to reflect our priority of supporting persons with developmental disabilities in community by holding these disability programs harmless from cuts. We therefore ask that the Senate restore a total of $8.7M back to the FY2010 budget in DHR’s DD program accounts. Remember, once we lose these important funds, they will be very difficult restore.

You can help in two ways.

First, please help us right now, by going to our web site and sending an e-mail, making a phone call, or sending a fax. Simply click http://www.unlockthewaitinglists.com/advocate.html

Second, forward this e-mail on to a family member or a friend. And ask them to respond as a favor to you.

Thank you for all that you do!
Dave Blanchard

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

The Unlock the Waiting List Campaign

During last year’s legislative session, you may remember that the Unlock the Waiting Lists! Campaign opposed the transfer of $27,019,584 in the FY2009 Department of Human Resources budget from Adult Developmental Disabilities (DD) Services. Unlock requested that the House place language in the FY09 DHR budget that requested an audit of these funds so that we could be clear that these funds were being transferred appropriately. A letter of this request can be found on the Unlock website at: http://www.unlockthewaitinglists.com/RequestfromUnlock.pdf

During testimony last year to the appropriate House and Senate committees, the Department of Human Resources (DHR) leadership maintained that this transfer was a correction for a surplus in the DD account and that these funds were originally intended for MH programs. They also stated that these funds were not currently funding DD services and that the transfer would have no affect on current supports. While DHR acknowledged that their ability to account for these dollars was poor, Unlock’s position was that before these monies were moved permanently, an independent audit needed to be conducted to erase any reasonable doubt that these funds were originally intended at any time for DD services. We stated in the February 2008 letter to Representative Butler that Unlock had “more questions than answers” and that we hoped to erase any reasonable doubt through this audit.

Despite our request to wait on the audit, the transfer was made in the FY09 budget. However a a request for the audit was placed by Representatives Harbin and Butler. Their request can be found at: http://www.unlockthewaitinglists.com/Requestofaudit.pdf

The Department of Audit and Accounts report on the transfer of funds was released Oct 2008 and can be found at: http://www.unlockthewaitinglists.com/Auditreport.pdf

The Department of Audits and Accounts’ (DOAA) report found that making a “comprehensive audit of the records supporting the rationale for the transfer [was] impossible.” They further stated that the more recent accounting data is “even in doubt.” The only conclusion the audit reached was that “it appears DHR made a good faith effort to prevent the Adult MH program from exceeding its budget by transferring a projected state fund surplus from the Adult DD program.” In other words a judgment was made that Mental Health needed these funds more than the DD system. We maintain that the question was and remains, “What was the

Legislature’s intended use of these funds when the funds were appropriated?” Unlock believes that with over 6,812 people waiting for developmental disability supports today, it is impossible for these funds to be “surplus.” Instead, it is more likely that these funds represent monies that were either diverted from the Adult DD program before the Office of Developmental Disabilities could direct them to services or they were never made available to the Office of DD to be spent for people with developmental disabilities. It is our opinion that this finding is wholly inadequate and is contrary to the original justification given for the transfer which was that the funding was originally appropriated to Adult MH programs.

Unlock continues to maintain that the root cause for this issue are two under-funded systems. We believe that the decisions made at DHR’s Division for MHDDAD were attempts to respond to the real crisis in the MH system based on their best information. With all respect to these real challenges, we feel that neither system’s unmet needs should be funded at the expense of the other.

The accounting of these funds as well as all other DD funds is an especially important issue as the General Assembly and the Governor discuss a reorganization of the Department of Human Resources. It will be most important that there is a clear accounting of the funds that belong to Adult DD and Adult MH before this restructuring takes place. Unlock supports fully funding MH programs and accepts the premise of the audit that these programs were experiencing a deficit. However, before a new Department of Behavioral Health is created separate from the Department of Human Services it will be important to know where each dollar comes from and the population it was originally designated to serve.

Unlock met with Representative Butler recently to present our concerns regarding the audit. Specifically, we raised our concerns that include:

1. There needs to be a clear strategy to ensure that through the reorganization of the Department of Human Resources, and an accounting of all DD related funds throughout DHR that belong to DD accounts before this restructuring takes place. We ask that at least a Division of Developmental Disabilities be established and that strategies be developed to ensure that regardless of where the Division of DD is placed in the new organizational chart, that the Division maintain authority and be held accountable for monies and programs appropriated for DD services and personnel all the way down to hospitals.

2. Given the lag in state reconciliation of Medicaid, the significant amount of recent new resources, and the large amount of funds involved in this transfer from the DD system, advocates need to be assured that the system will not experience a deficit for those currently being served in the future. This question is especially troublesome given the assessment by the Department and DOAA that the more recent accounting data is “even in doubt.”

3. On page 4, the audit states that with the 2007 transfer of $23.3M, there remains a variance in the adult DD account of +$16.9M. With the additional transfer of $3.7M, this variance is $13.3M. Does this mean that further transfers from DD to MH should be anticipated?

It is also important that Georgia honor our obligations to our citizens by ensuring that community service funds for persons with developmental disabilities be spent on community services only. We look forward to finding a resolution with DHR and stakeholders to this issue. Representative Butler has offered to schedule a public hearing on this issue, with a date to be set in the coming weeks.

Dave Blanchard
The Unlock the Waiting List Campaign

Nuts and bolts of the legislative session

ajc.com > Metro

Nuts and bolts of the legislative session
Wednesday, January 07, 2009

How to contact your legislators:

In person: Look for legislators in the House or Senate chamber or in their offices. Volunteer pages (usually schoolchildren) will carry messages to legislators in the chamber. The public is not allowed on the House or Senate floor. Legislators will often leave the chamber to meet with anyone who summons them via a page, especially if its one of their constituents. Page desks are directly in front of the main doors leading to both chambers. Legislators offices are inside the Capitol and across Mitchell Street in the Coverdell Legislative Office Building. Be prepared to pass through metal detectors.

Online: The General Assembly's home page links to House and Senate members by name and by district. The directory lists the legislators office phone and e-mail. Some legislators also list home address and phone.

The White Book: Has photographs and bios of all 236 legislators. Download a copy from www.legis.state.ga.us (click on picture book at the bottom of the page).

Who are my legislators?
Use the Secretary of States poll locator service to learn your House and Senate districts and who represents you: www.sos.state.ga.us/cgi-bin/Locator.asp.

How to track bills:

In person: Find copies of bills in the House clerks office (Room 309) and the secretary of the Senates office (Room 353). Each has a desk where you can request a bill. Committee hearing notices are posted daily on a bulletin board outside both offices.

House clerks office: 404-656-5015; Secretary of the Senates office: 404-656-5040.

Online: Go to www.legis.state.ga.us and click on the legislation icon under either the House or the Senate, depending on where the bill you are tracking originated. This allows you to view the bill in its entirety, track it through committees and see roll call votes. How to watch the action:
Business begins most days in the House and Senate chambers at 10 a.m., but legislators often arrive before that time. If you want to catch a legislator before the days session, try waiting at the velvet ropes outside the chamber. Each chamber also has a gallery on the fourth floor of the Capitol overlooking the floor. The hallways on the third floor have TV monitors that carry live feeds from the House and Senate. You will have to jockey with the lobbyists crowding the hallways for a good spot. The live video feeds are also available online at www.legis.state.ga.us.

How to follow the money:
At the State Ethics Commissions Web site - ethics.ga.gov - click on report search to see campaign finance disclosures, lobbyist disclosure reports and lawmakers personal finance disclosures. You can also request hard copies at the commissions offices in the James H. Sloppy Floyd Building. Call 404-463-1980 or 1-866-589-7327 for information.

How to speak at hearings:
The real work on bills is done in committees, and thats the place to weigh in on them. Contact committee members by phone, mail or e-mail to make your voice heard. Speaking in person before a committee, though, is one of the most effective ways to reach legislators. The experience can be a little daunting, but legislators sometimes appreciate hearing from the little guy. Most committees have a sign-up sheet for speakers. Try to keep your remarks short and to the point.

Cool stuff to see:
The Georgia Capitol Museum, fourth floor. History of the Capitol and the state.
The Capitol grounds feature more than a dozen monuments, including statues of several former governors, and a replica of the Statue of Liberty.

Find this article at: http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/stories/2009/01/07/georgia_legislature_guide.html