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May 2, 2008

Indiana Scraps State Hospital Privatization

Source: AFSCME Works Onlin Xtras, February 22, 2008

When it became clear it would cost taxpayers too much, plans to outsource the jobs at three state hospitals where employees are represented by AFSCME Council 62 were formally dropped last month.

AFSCME has said for years that all privatization efforts are costly to taxpayers. Two years ago, when Council 62 members first learned of the plans to privatize state hospitals in Richmond, Evansville and Madison, the direct care employees held rallies, put up signs and drummed up community support to defeat the proposal.

March 25, 2008

Rosewood brings mental anguish for those still there

Source: by Jaime Malarkey, The Examiner (MD), March 25, 2008


...... This residence hall is the "worst" at the Rosewood Center, the state-run center for the developmentally disabled in Owings Mills, Facilities Director Robert Day says on a recent tour. Day is approaching his final days on the job. After years of reports of abuse and neglect -- from razor blades on the lawn to residents taking the wrong prescriptions to violent assaults -- the center is slated for closure in 16 months.

Rosewood's remaining 156 residents will move to group homes in the community, a decision advocates for the developmentally disabled call long overdue.

...... Employees, who have been directed by three different facility managers in the past year, said the center took a turn for the worse when the state began court-ordering criminals, including murderers, to Rosewood, but didn't provide training in how to handle violent patients.

...... "State employees have always been providing quality care," said Barry Chapman, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 422, a union that represents Rosewood employees. "But the state has not given this facility the resources to function."


March 24, 2008

Pa. scraps mental-health privatization

Source: Associated Press (PA), 03.21.08, 12:52 PM ET

The state has decided not to privatize and merge its mental-health services for inmates after negotiating an alternative plan with unions that opposed the idea.

...... The Pennsylvania State Corrections Officers Association, which represents about 220 security employees in the forensic units, was among the unions that resisted the plan. Union officials feared the move would lead to the privatization of state prisons and said it would compromise public safety.

February 26, 2008

ERB Ruling On Mental Health Stay Request

Source: AFSCME Local 3694, Josephine County, OR, Feb 22, 2008


This is an update on ERB Unfair Labor Practice ruling. To review, the Employment Relations Board (ERB) ruled in October that the Josephine County Board of Commissioners (Ellis, Riddle, and Raffenburg) illegally privatized Mental Health in 2006 and committed an Unfair Labor Practice in the process. This ruling only spoke to why the BCC chose to privatize the programs, not if there were other valid reasons for privatizing. ERB ruled the violations of the law were "egregious" and "flagrant."

The ERB Order included a half dozen main components, including back due compensation to employees as well as returning the programs to the County.


Oregon Employment Relations Board Case UP-26-06

February 4, 2008

State keeps control of hospital Audio / Finances shelve privatization of Richmond State Hospital

Source: BY PAM THARP, Palladium Item (IN), February 2, 2008


A plan to privatize the operation of Richmond State Hospital has been shelved for financial reasons, the secretary of the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration said Friday.

The state hospital, which employs 600 people and cares for 300 patients from across the state, will remain open as a state-operated facility, Mitch Roob said. No employees will lose their jobs, he said.

...... FSSA could have looked to for-profit companies to manage the hospital, but Roob said that's been tried in other states and doesn't work well in mental health care.

January 24, 2008

JoCo NEGOTIATIONS CONTINUE

Source: OREGON AFSCME e-lert #1, Jan. 11, 2008

You'll recall that last fall, the union won a major Unfair Labor Practice award against Josephine County. The Oregon Employment Relations Board found that the county had privatized over 100 mental health workers in retaliation for Local 3694's four-day strike in early 2006. The vast majority of Local 3694's bargaining team and strike activists worked in JoCo Mental Health.


ERB's order (.pdf) said the county had to rehire all those employees, make them whole for any lost wages and benefits, reimburse Council 75 for lost union dues and pay a $1,000 civil penalty. The last item doesn't sound like much until you understand $1,000 is the maximum fine the law allows ERB to issue. Overall, the penalty was -- and is -- a very big deal.

January 14, 2008

State orders autopsy of developmentally disabled man

Source: By CHERYL WITTENAUER, Associated Press (MO), January 10, 2008

State officials have ordered an autopsy into the sudden death this week of a developmentally disabled man at a St. Louis-area group home.

Bob Bax, spokesman for the Missouri Department of Mental Health, said 47-year-old Jessie Thompson was found dead in his room Tuesday night.

........ Thompson was moved in August from the state-run Bellefontaine Habilitation Center in St. Louis County.

Under Gov. Matt Blunt, the state has been trying to close or reduce the Bellefontaine center, citing a belief that clients would be safer in private homes.

State: Private company to run children's facility

Source: By SUSAN M. COVER, Blethen Maine News Service (ME), January 12, 2008


AUGUSTA -- Most of the state jobs that the governor's supplemental budget would eliminate come from a facility in Bangor that would be taken over by a private company, state officials said Friday.

The Elizabeth Levinson Center, which opened in 1971, serves children who are severely mentally disabled by providing them with residential and medical services.

After a company takes over the operation, 43 state jobs would be eliminated, said Brenda Harvey, commissioner of the state Department of Health and Human Services.

December 18, 2007

Rally held in opposition to Bellefontaine plan

Source: Maria Hickey, KWMU, December 17, 2007

A group of parents and employees held a rally Monday opposing plans for privatization at the Bellefontaine Habilitation Center.

The Missouri Department of Mental Health announced in August it would seek private vendors to take on 120 of the residents at private, community-based programs.

But many employees and parents are unhappy with the plan.

Ex-center workers sue

Source: By Niki Kelly, The Journal Gazette (IN), December 18, 2007 6:00 a.m.


Several former employees of the Fort Wayne State Developmental Center filed a class-action lawsuit in Marion Superior Court, seeking monetary damages as the result of an improper privatization process.

...... The lawsuit claims that many employees lost the benefits associated with state employment, and that the contract with Liberty should be declared void.

"The Daniels administration flagrantly violated the law," said David Warrick, executive director of AFSCME, the union representing the employees.

August 23, 2007

State says poor care preceded teen's hanging at county facility

Source: Michael Zeigler, Democrat & Chronicle (NY), August 23, 2007

A state commission has concluded that a private company gave inadequate mental health treatment to a teenager who hanged himself in Monroe County Jail.

A report by the state Commission of Correction stopped short of saying that Correctional Medical Services Inc. of St. Louis, which contracts with the county to provide medical care to jail inmates, was responsible for the death of 16-year-old Javon Leggett on Aug. 29, 2004.

July 27, 2007

Youth Hospital Faulted For Abuse / District Begins To Monitor Care

Source: By Jenna Johnson, Washington Post, Thursday, July 26, 2007

Children at Riverside Hospital in Northwest Washington are at risk from "serious and persistent abuse and neglect," according to a report from an advocacy group, leading city mental health officials to start weekly visits to monitor conditions.

The psychiatric hospital for youths up to age 21 stopped accepting new long-term patients last week.

....... There have been previous allegations of abuse at the private, for-profit hospital, including one into the death in December of a teenage resident. In 1997, federal regulators threatened to cut Riverside, which opened in 1995, from the Medicaid program.

July 17, 2007

Ind. Decisions - Court of Appeals rules on closing of Fort Wayne Disabilities Center; finds associational standing

Source: Indiana Law Blog, Monday, July 16, 2007


Anita Stuller, et al v. Mitchell Daniels, Jr., et al, a 27-page opinion (.pdf), involves the now-closed Fort Wayne Disability Center. The plaintiffs, an employee of the Center, and AFSCME, the labor union representing various employees of the Center, filed a Verified Complaint Seeking Emergency Preliminary Injunction and Permanent Injunction, seeking preliminary injunctive relief preventing the FSSA from transitioning the Center’s operation from the State to a private contractor without first complying with the public bidding procedures promulgated in I.C. § 5-23 et seq. The trial court denied the request for preliminary injunction.

July 3, 2007

Workers Save Group Homes in St. Louis County

Source: Stepping Up (.pdf), AFSCME Minnesota Council 5, May/June 2007, page 3

A chronic biter who's forced to wear a mask lives in St. Louis County and AFSCME members take care of him.

That's what elected officials discovered after the state gave notice of the closure of five group homes for the developmentally disabled in St. Louis County, effective June 30, 2007

...... JoAnn [Holton] asked elected officials a disturbing question: "Who's going to take care of the biter? His family doesn't want him. And private vendors cherry-pick the easiest consumers; they don't pick the biters."

May 3, 2007

State hospital may go private

Source: By Angie Welling, Deseret Morning News (UT), May 3, 2007

A handful of state lawmakers toured the Utah State Hospital Wednesday on the heels of a legislative proposal to shift responsibility for the nearly 400-bed mental institution to a private company.

......... Human Services Executive Director Lisa-Michele Church has frequently spoken out against privatization, cautioning lawmakers to go slowly on the matter....... Wednesday, Church said she can see only two reasons to privatize the hospital: to improve quality or reduce costs. The facility tour, she said, should show that the state is providing the highest quality care for patients.

March 19, 2007

Controversial state-run care center to stay open

Source: By Joe Mahr, ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH (MO), 03/14/2007


Reversing course, Missouri Gov. Matt Blunt now wants to keep open a state-run center for mentally retarded and developmentally disabled residents. But he wants to reduce its caseload and privatize much of its staff. Blunt's latest plan for the Bellefontaine Habilitation Center was met with a lukewarm response from residents' relatives, who say the state is still shirking its duty to care for their loved ones.

…… A parents' group at the center and the union representing workers fought the plan to close the facility, arguing that the past problems of abuse had been adequately addressed.

February 22, 2007

Geo Signs Florida Contract

Source: The Associated Press (FL), Feb. 21, 2007, 1:58PM


BOCA RATON, Fla. — Geo Group Inc., which runs prisons and residential treatment centers, said Wednesday it signed a five-year contract with Florida to run a mental-health facility.

The contract with the state's Department of Children and Families covers the management and operation of the 175-bed Treasure Coast Forensic Treatment Center, starting April 1. The deal is expected to generate $14.5 million in revenue in 2007 and $21 million in 2008, Geo said.

January 25, 2007

540 to be laid off at Fort Wayne State Developmental Center

Source: Ryan Lengerich, Bradenton Herald (IN), Thu, Jan. 25, 2007

Liberty of Indiana Corp., the private company contracted to operate the Fort Wayne State Developmental Center, officially notified the state it will lay off 540 employees through June 30 when the state closes the center. ....... The state turned over the developmental center operation to Liberty in January 2006 for an 18-month period, so the layoffs do not come as a surprise to employees.

December 21, 2006

Report: Officials altered records in probe

Source: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (TX), Thu, Dec. 21, 2006


Officials changed documents, pressured witnesses and delayed an inquiry into whether the state health department inappropriately used lobbyists to push legislation last year, a state investigative report shows.

The report by the inspector general's office of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission said the delay gave potential targets of the investigation time to obscure the paper trail so investigators could not determine whether the Department of State Health Services did anything wrong, the Austin American-Statesman reported.

But the report concluded that three mental health advocacy groups improperly used state grant money to lobby for a bill that the health department favored. The bill, which failed, would have privatized state mental health services.

November 29, 2006

Group home operator has had run-ins with the state

Source: Tracy Swartz, News-Leader (MO), November 28, 2006


Joplin River of Life Ministries, which operates the Anderson Guest House and other local care centers, has a history of rocky leadership and deficiencies in state inspections. The group's founder, Robert Joseph DuPont Jr., was sentenced to federal prison in 2003 for his part in a Medicaid fraud scheme. As the owner of a Joplin home health care facility, DuPont directed patients to handpicked doctors who falsely certified that the patients required residential health services, federal authorities said.


Related article from the News-Leader: Operation's founder led fraud scheme

November 17, 2006

CMH directors may trim 21 jobs

Source: THE FLINT JOURNAL (MI), Thursday, November 16, 2006

The Genesee County Community Mental Health Board of Directors could eliminate 21 jobs, which would wipe out one of two employee teams that reach out to hard-to-serve people with mental illness. ……. Russell said CMH clients won't be forgotten if a nine-person, in-house team is eliminated. The clients simply will be served by a contracted organization, such as others that already work with the agency

....... Russell said the job cuts, which would include closing a CMH cafeteria and eliminating internal mail delivery and maintenance positions, would allow the county to provide additional services with the savings.

November 15, 2006

State ordered to improve treatment of mentally ill

Source: By Pat Shellenbarger, The Grand Rapids Press (MI), Tuesday, November 14, 2006


Declaring the "days of dead wood in the Department of Corrections are over," U.S. District Judge Richard Enslen ordered (.pdf) state prison officials immediately to improve care of mentally ill inmates and stop using restraints as punishment.

......... Enslen concluded with a warning to Corrections Department officials and Correctional Medical Services (CMS), the for-profit company under contract to care for Michigan's prisoners. Anyone who fails to provide proper care "may be arrested," he wrote, adding: "The days of dead wood in the Department of Corrections are over, as are the days of CMS intentionally delaying referrals and care for craven profit motives."

August 23, 2006

RX for mental health offered in Missouri

Source: By Joe Mahr and Carolyn Tuft, ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH (MO), 08/22/2006

Calling their recommendations "critical" to reforming Missouri's mental health system, a state commission wants to boost caregivers' training, oversight by outsiders, state funding and openness to ensure the safety of thousands of residents receiving care. After an unprecedented, four-month investigation, the Missouri Mental Health Commission released 23 recommendations (.pdf) Tuesday but did not directly address one of the most controversial issues - whether to close a center for mentally retarded residents in north St. Louis County. …. Gov. Matt Blunt has proposed closing the state-run Bellefontaine Habilitation Center. But parents and guardians of Bellefontaine residents have rallied to keep the center open, saying the care for their loved ones is better there.

August 16, 2006

D.C. Cleansed Group Home Death Reports

Source: By Karlyn Barker, Washington Post, Saturday, August 5, 2006; A01

The District government has altered reports concerning deaths of mentally retarded residents of the city's group homes, deleting damaging information before the documents were turned over to court officials and others who review the cases.

August 8, 2006

Advocates want Missouri centers kept open

Source: By FRANK TANKARD, The Kansas City Star (MO), August 7, 2006

......... Blunt has since announced plans to close the Bellefontaine Habilitation Center in St. Louis, where widespread abuse and neglect were reported. The center is one of six large state-run group homes for disabled adults. The closure could force many of its residents into private group homes overseen by the state.

Jean Barrett of Independence was one of several speakers at the hearing who expressed fear that the mentally disabled would not receive adequate care in private group homes if the state closes its habilitation centers and the smaller group homes associated with them.

August 3, 2006

Forum, unions to discuss changes

Source: By WILLIAM K. ALCORN, VINDICATOR (OH), Thursday, August 3, 2006

WARREN — Union leaders who represent nurses and service workers at Forum Health Trumbull Memorial Hospital have been invited to meet with the company Friday to discuss announced changes in the behavioral medicine programs. Last week, Dr. Keith Ghezzi, Forum Health's interim president and chief executive officer, said in the Forum Flash newsletter that the health system would contract with Diamond Healthcare to manage and operate all behavioral medicine programs, effective Oct. 1. …… The announcement produced letters from American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 2026 and 2804 demanding negotiations on the employee issue. The unions say they have successor clauses in their contracts.

August 2, 2006

Employees question psych-care deal / Unions say they will fight outsourcing of jobs.

Source: By WILLIAM K. ALCORN, VINDICATOR (OH), Saturday, July 29, 2006


YOUNGSTOWN — Forum Health psychiatric program employees say they don't know if they will still be working for the hospital system when the management and operation of the behavioral medicine department is farmed out Oct. 1. ….. Tom Connelly, president of American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 2026, and Ray Braham, president of AFSCME Local 2804, both at Trumbull Memorial Hospital, have sent letters to Forum demanding that the employee issue be negotiated. Local 2026 represents registered nurses at TMH, and Local 2804, the hospital's service employees.

July 26, 2006

State lines up psychiatrists for prisoners

Source: BY CHARLIE FRAGO, Arkansas Democrat & Gazette, Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Providing psychiatric care to prison inmates will no longer be a state job after the Board of Corrections decided Monday to hire a private medical contractor to staff the position. The move came after two psychiatrists gave notice of their resignation recently, leaving the Department of Correction with just three part-time practitioners for about 13, 500 inmates. ....... Monday’s unanimous vote authorizes an expansion of the department’s $ 43 million contract with Correctional Medical Services Inc. by $ 1, 385, 000. The St. Louis-based company is in the third year of a 10-year contract with the Correction Department to provide medical services to inmates.

July 11, 2006

Private prison company offers to run W.Va. mental hospitals

Source: The Associated Press (WV), Tuesday July 11, 2006

As a way to save money, the state of West Virginia is looking at whether to hire the world's largest private prison company to run its two mental hospitals. The proposal by Florida-based GEO Group, formerly known as The Wackenhut Corp., is not being well received by a union official and at least one legislator, who fear the quality of care might suffer and jobs could be lost.

June 15, 2006

Private facilities are not held accountable

Source: By Carolyn Tuft and Joe Mahr, ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH (MO), Monday, Jun. 12 2006

…… Advocates for the disabled often focus on the mistreatment uncovered in state-run institutions. But it is in private industry - particularly in the housing and care of mentally retarded people - that most complaints and investigations occur, where most injuries are logged, and where most deaths have been blamed on poor care - 14 of the 21 deaths of full-time residents. A Post-Dispatch investigation has found that Missouri's system to catch abuse and neglect at private facilities for mentally retarded residents is in some key ways worse than the state's often criticized practices in policing its own institutions.

The complete 4-day Post-Dispatch series Broken promises, broken lives


May 25, 2006

Group Urges Takeover of D.C. Agency For Disabled

Source: By Petula Dvorak, Washington Post, Thursday, May 25, 2006

An advocacy group filed papers yesterday requesting a court takeover of the D.C. government agency in charge of caring for 2,000 mentally and physically disabled residents, saying that the city's repeated failures are putting vulnerable lives at risk. The Justice Department delivered a separate warning, filing court papers that said the city agency is "in disarray and deteriorating rapidly." The Justice Department cited 14 "preventable and questionable" deaths since January 2003 and urged a judge to hold the District in contempt of court for not meeting promises to improve health care and other services, especially at group homes for mentally retarded wards. ….. Most of the complaints involve care at group homes run by private providers under the city's oversight; there are about 360 such residences.

May 15, 2006

Knox Co. debates privatizing MRDD services

Source: The Columbus Dispatch, Thursday, May 11, 2006 1:20 PM

MOUNT VERNON, Ohio -- Tensions remain high over proposed privatization of adult day services for clients of Knox County's Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities board. At its meeting last night, the board heard from MRDD superintendent Marti Estep who has recommended privatizing New Hope Industries. The workshop-style program provides MRDD adult clients with small-scale manufacturing jobs.

May 12, 2006

A stumble on First Steps? Try cost-cutting in program, but don’t shortchange children needing help.

Source: By Bob Caylor, whose daughter was in First Steps, for the editorial board, Knight Ridder Tribune,
May. 12, 2006

Parents, teachers and children make a better team with service coordinators. By outsourcing the management of its program to help infants and toddlers who are disabled or developmentally delayed, the state has embarked on a risky experiment. The cost of its failure would be children losing precious months or years of intensive help when that help would do the most good. In Allen County, the experiment means that a Muncie company, Achieva Inc., will take over the administration of the state’s First Steps program. In this, as in many other social services, the administration of Gov. Mitch Daniels is trying to save money by privatizing work formerly done by state employees. Hoosiers should be willing to see whether this approach works, but they ought to be cautious and quick to call for improvements if these children younger than 3 aren’t getting the early intervention and therapy they should. ….. The problem: Service coordinators, who oversee the services provided to each child, are expected to take on a much larger caseload – perhaps 80 children per coordinator, instead of 40 or 50, as The News-Sentinel’s Jennifer Boen reported this week.

May 3, 2006

Trapped by Rules, The Mentally Ill Languish in Prison / For Such Felons, Parole Is Rare, Recidivism Is Probable; Lack of State Hospitals

Source: By GARY FIELDS, Wall Street Journal (subscription required), May 3, 2006

........ In recent years, Oklahoma has had a dramatic increase in mentally ill prisoners, in part because it only recently shuttered state-run, mental-health facilities. According to the state, the number of inmates on psychiatric medications more than tripled between 1998 and 2005 to 4,017. The system's budget for such medication climbed even faster, growing from $154,000 a year to more than $2 million, in part because of the growing number of medications available. By comparison, the overall prison population rose 14% to 23,205.

....... Many states, responding to budget pressures and changing ideas about how to treat mental disorders, closed their residential mental institutions. ........ The idea was that community agencies would take over treating and monitoring these patients but in almost all cases they haven't picked up the slack. The number of long-term, non-criminal psychiatric patients housed in Oklahoma's state facilities is about 200, a fraction of the 1,300 they held in the 1980s, according to the state's department of mental health. Griffin Memorial, the remaining state hospital, houses about 162 of those but generally only for two weeks at a time until patients are judged stable enough to be released into the community.

There are private and community facilities where families can pay to have a patient placed, but most are not for the indigent. These organizations are also reluctant to take in people released from prison with mental problems, Dr. Keithley said.

April 24, 2006

Ownership shift hard on workers / Morale nose-dives, exits quicken

Source: By Niki Kelly, The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette (IN), Mon, Apr. 24, 2006

The changeover from state to private control hasn’t been easy at the Fort Wayne State Developmental Center, with more than 150 employees choosing retirement or resignation and some remaining workers looking to unionize. …… Under the planned privatization, all 836 state employees were set to become employees of Liberty of Indiana – the Pennsylvania health care company that took over the center – Jan. 1. ……. For years members of the center staff were represented by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 62, but when Gov. Mitch Daniels took over he took away union bargaining rights for state employees. Now that the workers are in the private sector again, they are free to organize, AFSCME spokesman David Patterson said.

March 27, 2006

State scheming to close center, parents say


Source: By Carolyn Tuft, ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH (MO), 03/26/2006

..... Betty Coll, president of the Mental Retardation Association of Missouri Inc., said at Sunday's news conference that the state was wasting tax dollars not only on the consultants but also through its efforts to shut the place down. State records show that since the state moved 100 of Bellefontaine's 460 residents to private homes, the federal funding that historically had paid most of the bills had dwindled while the center's expenses remained about the same. .... While two residents have died in state-run centers, parents are convinced state-run facilities are safer. They question whether the state can protect residents in hundreds of private homes if it has to hire consultants to solve problems in the seven state centers. Parents point to two state audits in the past five years that showed private providers had hidden abuse and neglect allegations and state officials failed to properly oversee them, thus allowing banned workers to work in the private sector. One private home operating under a banned worker had 11 proven cases of neglect, leading to a death.

March 20, 2006

The troubled Bellefontaine center

Source: Carolyn Tuft, ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH (MO), 03/19/2006

At a time when state officials complain it's too expensive to keep open a St. Louis-area center for the mentally retarded, they are now paying consultants to help run the facility - at rates much higher than those of state workers who do similar work. In deals that have angered the state auditor, the state workers union and some patients' families, the Missouri Department of Mental Health has signed, renewed and extended contracts that would allow charges of up to $12 million with the Columbus Organization for advice and staff for the Bellefontaine Habilitation Center since October 2004.

March 2, 2006

County shelves plan to privatize center

Source: BY NICKLAUS LOVELADY, News-Democrat (IL), Thu, Mar. 02, 2006

EDWARDSVILLE - The Madison County Institutions Committee voted Wednesday to study a new concept that would keep the Sheltered Care Home in Edwardsville operated by the county. The committee decided to shelve a proposal privatizing the mental health housing services under Chestnut Health Systems, because the county faced a huge legal hurdle with shelter care workers. A 1999 contract between the county and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees prohibits the county to sell the home without having to continue paying union workers.

January 27, 2006

Jail Health Care Fails Again; City Fines Company $71,000

Source: By PAUL von ZIELBAUER, New York Times (NY), January 27, 2006

The Tennessee company that provides health care to city inmates failed to meet one-fourth of its contractual performance standards for a third consecutive quarter last year, city records show. The latest review, completed this month, prompted city health officials to withhold $71,000 in payments to the company, the largest quarterly penalty for poor jail care since 2001. In the third quarter of 2005, the company, Prison Health Services, did not meet medical or mental health standards in 10 of 39 areas, including those covering H.I.V. treatment, mental health care and suicide watch, records show.

January 18, 2006

Union appeals privatization of developmental center

Source: By Sara Eaton, The Journal Gazette (IN), Wed, Jan. 18, 2006

A state employees union is appealing last month’s ruling that allowed the Jan. 1 takeover at the Fort Wayne State Developmental Center, a union spokesman announced late Tuesday. An employee, Anita Stuller, and her union filed a lawsuit against Gov. Mitch Daniels, Family and Social Services Secretary Mitchel Roob and another state leader in early December. The lawsuit sought to at least temporarily stop the takeover of the center and to force the state to go through a bidding process before giving control to a private company. In May, state officials hired Pennsylvania-based Liberty Healthcare Corp. to manage the center on an 18-month contract. The company took over operations of the center at 4900 St. Joe Center Road on Jan. 1.

December 23, 2005

Judge allows takeover of state center to proceed / Rejects union call to issue injunction

Source: Sara Eaton, The Journal Gazette (IN), Fri, Dec. 23, 2005

The takeover of the Fort Wayne State Developmental Center on Jan. 1 is no longer in jeopardy after an Allen Superior Court judge on Thursday refused to grant a preliminary injunction preventing it. An employee, Anita Stuller, and her union filed a lawsuit against Gov. Mitch Daniels, Family and Social Services Secretary Mitchel Roob and another state leader this month. The lawsuit sought to at least temporarily stop the takeover of the center and to force the state to go through a bidding process before giving control to a private company. In May, state officials hired Pennsylvania-based Liberty Healthcare Corp. to manage the center – a $3 million contract over 18 months. The company is slated to take over operations of the center at 4900 St. Joe Center Road on Jan. 1. …. Judge Nancy Eshcoff Boyer heard arguments from attorneys on both sides this week. She issued a ruling Thursday against Stuller and the union, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 62.


December 9, 2005

Auditor names 'unsatisfactory' group home

Source: James Goodwin, Springfield News-Leader (MO), December 8, 2005

State Auditor Claire McCaskill on Wednesday named a Springfield group home for mentally retarded adults as the facility where "unsatisfactory" living conditions were discovered during a routine audit last month. Among problems reported at the Sagamont facility: soiled items in a shower and the prescription drugs of a former client in an unlocked refrigerator marked "Healthy foods." ..... Gene Barnes, president and CEO of the not-for-profit Arc of the Ozarks, which operates Sagamont, said the facility has settled all concerns.

December 5, 2005

Mental-health reform lagging four years after planned overhaul

Source: Associated Press (NC), Monday, December 5, 2005

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - Four years into a massive overhaul of the state's $2.3 billion mental-health system, there is little proof that treatment has improved and there is growing evidence that the state's complex system of care is worse than ever. ...... Legislation approved in 2001 called for the dismantling of the state's system of locally-run public mental-health agencies and turned the care of people with severe mental illness, substance abuse and developmental disabilities over to private agencies. Money saved by shrinking state hospitals was expected to cover much of the costs of privatization. And care for the more than 358,000 North Carolina residents with mental illness was expected to improve. But since 2001, total admissions to the state hospitals have not dropped as expected, and adult admissions have grown rapidly.

December 1, 2005

4 Deaths in D.C. Group Homes Raise Concerns About Neglect

Source: Karlyn Barker, Washington Post, Tuesday, November 29, 2005; A01

The District government is failing to provide adequate care for mentally and physically disabled residents in its group homes, according to a court monitor who found that a pattern of neglect led to four deaths in the past year. One woman and three men "are dead because they did not receive timely and competent health care," court monitor Elizabeth Jones said in a newly released report. ..... Jones attributed the deaths to serious neglect by two contractors that operate some of the homes and to shoddy oversight by the city, particularly case managers assigned to track the care of individual residents. Two of the people who died were in the same home. ..... In 1999, a series of articles in The Washington Post disclosed 350 documented cases of abuse and neglect, as well as profiteering, in the city's group homes. The series found that none of the 116 deaths that had occurred in the homes since 1993 had been investigated.