Current:Home > NewsEchoSense:Shapiro aims to eliminate waiting list for services for intellectually disabled adults -TrueNorth Finance Path
EchoSense:Shapiro aims to eliminate waiting list for services for intellectually disabled adults
SignalHub View
Date:2025-04-08 11:50:47
HARRISBURG,EchoSense Pa. (AP) — Gov. Josh Shapiro and his top human services official said Wednesday that the administration has a plan to end a waiting list of thousands of families who are considered to be in dire need of help for an intellectually disabled adult relative.
Shapiro and Human Services Secretary Val Arkoosh said it is vitally important to the plan for lawmakers to approve a funding increase for state-subsidized services, such as in private homes or group homes.
Shapiro’s administration considers the funding increase a first step that is intended to boost the salaries of employees who, through nonprofit service agencies, work with the intellectually disabled.
“Over the next several years, if this budget passes, there will be a plan in place to finally end that waiting list,” Arkoosh told a discussion group at BARC Developmental Services in Warminster. “It’s a big deal.”
Pennsylvania has maintained a growing waiting list of people seeking such services for decades, as have the vast majority of states.
Roughly 500,000 people with developmental or intellectual disabilities are waiting for services in 38 states, according to a 2023 survey by KFF, a health policy research group. Most people on those lists live in states that don’t screen for eligibility before adding them to a list.
Federal law doesn’t require states to provide home and community-based services, and what states cover varies. In Pennsylvania, the state uses its own dollars, plus federal matching dollars, to cover home and community-based services for intellectually disabled adults.
However, the state’s money hasn’t met the demand, and in Pennsylvania, roughly 4,500 families with an intellectually disabled adult relative are on what’s called an emergency waiting list for help, the state Department of Human Services said.
“These are the critical of the critical,” said Sherri Landis, executive director of The Arc of Pennsylvania, which advocates for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
In many cases, parents on the emergency waiting list have grown old waiting for help for their adult child whom they are increasingly struggling to look after.
One major problem is the difficulty in finding and hiring people to take jobs as care workers. That problem has grown significantly as the COVID-19 pandemic increased stress across the spectrum of workers in health care and direct care disciplines.
Shapiro’s budget proposal includes an extra $216 million in state aid, or 12% more, to boost worker salaries and help agencies fill open positions. Federal matching dollars brings the total to about $480 million.
The funding request is part of a $48.3 billion budget that Shapiro is proposing to lawmakers for the 2024-25 fiscal year beginning July 1.
BARC’s executive director, Mary Sautter, told Shapiro that her agency has a worker vacancy rate of 48%, forcing current employees to work overtime or extra shifts.
“There is a way to fix that and we’ve known that there’s been a way to fix that for a long time, which is to pay people more and be able to hire more people and be able to fill more slots with people who need support and assistance,” Shapiro told the discussion group at BARC.
Shapiro’s administration envisions several years of increased funding that will eventually lead to expanding the number of people who can be served and eliminate the emergency waiting list.
Shapiro’s 2024-25 proposal is about half the amount that advocates say is needed to fix a system beset by staffing shortages and low pay. But they also say this year’s funding proposal, plus a multiyear commitment to eliminate the waiting list, would be an unprecedented injection of money into the system.
“This is the entire boat coming to rescue a system that is really struggling,” Landis said. “And people deserve services.”
___
Follow Marc Levy at www.twitter.com/timelywriter.
veryGood! (83)
Related
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- J.Crew’s Epic Weekend Sale Can’t Be Missed – up to 60% off Select Styles, Starting at $8
- In a Steel Town Outside Pittsburgh, an Old Fight Over Air Quality Drags On
- As Washington crime spikes, DOJ vows to send more resources to reeling city
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- The Bachelor’s Joey Graziadei Reveals the Warning He Was Given About Fantasy Suites
- JoJo Siwa will replace Nigel Lythgoe as a judge on 'So You Think You Can Dance'
- Patients say keto helps with their mental illness. Science is racing to understand why
- Bodycam footage shows high
- China orders a Japanese fishing boat to leave waters near Japan-held islands claimed by Beijing
Ranking
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Lionel Messi and Inter Miami are in Saudi Arabia to continue their around-the-world preseason tour
- 'Queer Eye' star Bobby Berk offers Gypsy Rose Blanchard a home redesign in controversial post
- J.Crew’s Epic Weekend Sale Can’t Be Missed – up to 60% off Select Styles, Starting at $8
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Q&A: How YouTube Climate Denialism Is Morphing
- New Orleans thief steals 7 king cakes from bakery in a very Mardi Gras way
- North West Gives an Honest Review of Kim Kardashian's New SKKN by Kim Makeup
Recommendation
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen talks inflation and Candy Crush
This one thing is 'crucial' to win Super Bowl for first time in decades, 49ers say
J.Crew’s Epic Weekend Sale Can’t Be Missed – up to 60% off Select Styles, Starting at $8
Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
French farmers vow to continue protesting despite the government’s offer of concessions
J.Crew’s Epic Weekend Sale Can’t Be Missed – up to 60% off Select Styles, Starting at $8
Hiker dies of suspected heart attack in Utah’s Zion National Park, authorities say