Guest guest Posted December 22, 2010 Report Share Posted December 22, 2010 Please do contact Tony at the Arc of Illinois to express your thoughts. Ellen Ellen Garber Bronfeld egskb@... Arc and Fining Our Way to Quality The Arc of Illinois December 22, 2010 Leaders in The Arc: We met once again with the Governor's staff to discuss safeguards in ICFDD's and Child Care Institutions. These meetings are hard for me to participate in because they are about trying to make institutions more accountable. I appreciate that the Governor and his team want to raise the bar but trying to fix a broken system is not the way. Rather we need to rebalance and shift to home and community based supports. This panel is talking about imposing a new fine system for ICFDDs and Child Care Institutions those fines will probably find their way into the community system. Im not convinced we are going to fine our way to quality. I would very much like to hear your thoughts on this topic. Send me your ideas. Story from the Chicago follows. Tony auski The Arc of Illinois 815-464-1832 State nursing-home panel weighs safeguards for disabled kids Quinn's task force considers raising fines, limiting admissions to troubled facilities By S. Hopkins and Sam Roe, Tribune reporters 11:07 PM CST, December 21, 2010Stepping up their push to increase safeguards for children with disabilities, state officials and local advocates on Tuesday discussed increasing fines and limiting admissions for facilities that repeatedly neglect residents with developmental issues. " You would start regulating yourself if you knew that no more business was going to come in the door until you cleaned up your act, " said Eileen Durkin, president and CEO of Neumann Family Services. The panel assembled by Gov. Pat Quinn is preparing legislation after a Tribune investigation that documented a series of violations and deaths over 10 years at a North Side nursing facility. Gelder, Quinn's senior health policy adviser, is leading the effort and said legislation is expected as early as March. Facilities for people with disabilities were left out of sweeping nursing-home reforms the legislature passed this year. The panel is reviewing those laws to determine how they could apply to such homes. It's also considering new ideas, such as limiting admissions at troubled facilities and raising fines when facility employees mislead state investigators. On Tuesday, the Tribune reported that facilities caring for people with disabilities have escaped serious penalties despite the deaths of children on their watch. " There's got to be, to me, a sort of two-way punishment, " said Durkin, whose organization provides programs to disabled people. " One is a pretty hefty fine, and the other is until all the things are cured you can't bring more people into the facility. " The panel is considering adding a new penalty in cases where a facility is found to have caused a death, which state officials and advocates said also would provide valuable information to the public. " From the public's perspective, in terms of where you want your child, for example, identifying deaths is a very big deal, " said Meltzer, executive director of Illinois Citizens for Better Care. But Bibo of the Center for Developmental Disabilities Advocacy and Community Supports, which represents facilities for people with disabilities, said that although fines might need to be raised, state officials haven't taken advantage of current enforcement measures. " The department has not used the tools at its disposal, " Bibo said. State officials disputed that and said the state needs strong authority to ensure that homes fulfill their responsibilities. " We want to raise the bar, " Gelder said. " We have a double approach that we hope will give the nursing home owners the message that they've got to run facilities that meet our standards and will give the state the enforcement mechanism and the penalties to make sure that they do. " jahopkins@... sroe@... Copyright 2010, Chicago Tribune www.chicagotribune.com/health/ct-met-disabled-kids-meeting-20101221,0,2135115.st\ ory chicagotribune.com Please click here to be removed from our list. If you still receive emails from us in the future, please ensure it was not forwarded from another party or sent to an email address that is different than the one asked to be removed. DO NOT REPLY TO THIS EMAIL. Or write us at: The Arc of Illinois 20901 S. LaGrange Rd. #209 fort, IL 60423 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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