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1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, Illinois ranks 47th among states for spending | ||||||
3 | commitment for community services for people with intellectual | ||||||
4 | and developmental disabilities (I/DD), according to the 2017 | ||||||
5 | State of the States in Intellectual and Developmental | ||||||
6 | Disabilities report published by the University of Colorado; | ||||||
7 | and
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8 | WHEREAS, The reimbursement rates in Illinois, including | ||||||
9 | rates for the Direct Support Professional (DSP) workforce, are | ||||||
10 | inadequate, forcing many in the DSP workforce to rely on | ||||||
11 | means-tested public assistance despite working full time; and
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12 | WHEREAS, As reported by the national direct care workforce | ||||||
13 | research and advocacy group PHI, the DSP workforce is | ||||||
14 | predominantly women at 86 percent and is racially and | ||||||
15 | ethnically diverse; 59 percent of the DSP workforce consists | ||||||
16 | of people of color, with 30 percent of workers identified as | ||||||
17 | African American, 18 percent identified as Hispanic/Latino, | ||||||
18 | and 7 percent identified as Asian or Pacific Islander; and
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19 | WHEREAS, According to the National Core Indicators Staff | ||||||
20 | Stability Survey, the average turnover rate for the DSP | ||||||
21 | workforce in Illinois is 54.5 percent with an average vacancy | ||||||
22 | rate of 13.7 percent; this is well above the national average; |
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1 | and
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2 | WHEREAS, COVID-19 has made these challenges more | ||||||
3 | substantial as providers risk their health to perform in-home | ||||||
4 | visits and daily care for this vulnerable population; despite | ||||||
5 | a pandemic, the daily support needs for persons with I/DD | ||||||
6 | remain the same; and
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7 | WHEREAS, Since 2011, the State of Illinois has been | ||||||
8 | subject to the Ligas Consent Decree, which mandates dramatic | ||||||
9 | increases to funding for services and supports for persons | ||||||
10 | with I/DD; and
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11 | WHEREAS, In 2015, the Federal Court Monitor found Illinois | ||||||
12 | out of compliance with the Consent Decree, and a federal judge | ||||||
13 | officially found the State out of compliance in 2017; as a | ||||||
14 | result, the Illinois Department of Human Services (DHS) | ||||||
15 | Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD) began to review | ||||||
16 | existing rate methodologies around residential, employment, | ||||||
17 | training, and support services rates; and
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18 | WHEREAS, In 2019, the State contracted with a rate | ||||||
19 | consultant, Guidehouse (formerly Navigant Consulting), to | ||||||
20 | develop potential new rates and rate methodologies using | ||||||
21 | objective, publicly available data sources, standard | ||||||
22 | administrative cost reporting, and provider-reported costs in |
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1 | order to determine the resources necessary to create and | ||||||
2 | maintain access to quality services and supports for persons | ||||||
3 | with I/DD in Illinois; and
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4 | WHEREAS, The recommendations from Guidehouse, detailed in | ||||||
5 | their final report, are designed to identify rates that | ||||||
6 | provide adequate reimbursement for residential and other | ||||||
7 | supporting services in compliance with the State's Ligas | ||||||
8 | consent decree and rates required to keep pace with new | ||||||
9 | minimum and living wage levels being implemented over the next | ||||||
10 | five years in Chicago and across the State; and
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11 | WHEREAS, Implementation of these recommendations requires | ||||||
12 | financial investment that reflects the challenge of addressing | ||||||
13 | historical underfunding of existing services and the need for | ||||||
14 | new funding to respond to rapid growth in wage requirements | ||||||
15 | over the next five years; and
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16 | WHEREAS, According to the Guidehouse Rate Study, Illinois | ||||||
17 | requires a $329 million GRF investment in FY22, outlined in | ||||||
18 | seven priority areas, to keep the system sustainable; and
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19 | WHEREAS, The Governor's FY22 Introduced Budget includes a | ||||||
20 | $77 million dollar investment to partially fund four of seven | ||||||
21 | priorities identified in the rate study that should continue | ||||||
22 | to be funded in the manner in which the appropriation was |
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1 | intended; and
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2 | WHEREAS, The State's I/DD community is very grateful for | ||||||
3 | investments made by the General Assembly in recent years; | ||||||
4 | however, despite these investments, the State has not | ||||||
5 | succeeded in satisfying the requirements of the Consent Decree | ||||||
6 | or kept pace with state-mandated minimum wage increases; | ||||||
7 | therefore, be it
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8 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL | ||||||
9 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we urge the State of | ||||||
10 | Illinois to fully fund the Guidehouse final rate | ||||||
11 | recommendations in FY 22 including the recommended changes to | ||||||
12 | the rate and service structure allowing Illinois to make real | ||||||
13 | progress toward the Division of Developmental Disabilities | ||||||
14 | mission to design and deliver quality outcome-based, | ||||||
15 | person-centered services and supports for individuals who have | ||||||
16 | developmental disabilities and to implement the rate study in | ||||||
17 | whole to maintain the integrity of the methodology behind the | ||||||
18 | rate setting calculations to avoid creating an even more | ||||||
19 | unbalanced system; and be it further
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20 | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be | ||||||
21 | presented to the Governor, all Illinois legislative leaders, | ||||||
22 | and the Illinois Department of Human Services Department of | ||||||
23 | Developmental Disabilities.
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