Long Term Care Services of Ventura County, Inc. Ombudsman Program
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Category Archives: Sacramento

CaElderAbuse Plan to exclude felons as California caregivers halted

This is unbelievable.  Why would we put at jeopardy this very vulnerable population living behind closed doors.   Sylvia

Read more here…

Posted in California, Sacramento.


From the Committee for an Independent State Ombudsman Office

Hello Everyone,

On Tuesday the Assembly Committee on Aging and Long Term Care held an oversight hearing on the long term care Ombudsman Program in CA.  The Ombudsman Programs were represented by Joe Rodrigues, State Long Term Care Ombudsman and three local ombudsman coordinators. Creating an independent State Ombudsman Office – moving the Ombudsman office out of state govt. – was added as the last item on the agenda.

I was unable to attend due to prior scheduling issues, but  I did send a letter on behalf of the Committee for an Independent State Office (CISO) and we were represented admirably by a member of our committee, Linda Robinson, Santa Cruz County Ombudsman Coordinator.  Below is a link to California Watch which picked up on the hearing, interviewed Linda, and attached a copy of our letter to their article.

We are committed to continue working toward a truly independent state office that can speak up and for residents in long term care.

http://californiawatch.org/watchblog/local-987-elder-care-ombudsmen-revolt-call-4-independent-leader

Sylvia Taylor-Stein

Executive Director

Long Term Care Services of Ventura County, Inc.,

Posted in Legislation, Sacramento.


Funds sought for local ombudsman programs

By Sylvia Taylor Stein

If you are an elderly person living in a nursing home it is quite possible you are one of the 60 percent who have outlived their family and friends or have no family or friends who ever visit. You most likely have no one who will speak up for you, check on you, and look out for you. You need a watchdog.

The organization that serves as the watchdog for almost 8,500 seniors in 234 nursing homes and assisted living facilities in Ventura County is the Long Term Care Services of Ventura County, Inc., Ombudsman Program.

For almost 30 years, this program made up of a small staff and volunteers, has continually worked on behalf of elderly residents in long-term care to help ensure their care and quality of life.

Since 2008, when Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed $3.8 million in funding for the local ombudsman programs throughout California, services to residents have been in jeopardy.

Last year, a portion of the lost funding was restored by using existing penalties paid by nursing homes cited for providing deficient care. A recent audit of that account, however, reveals funds were overstated and the account is almost insolvent. In the current budget crisis, there are no general funds that can be tapped.

The lifeline that could rescue this vitally important program is 6-year-old legislation, Assembly Bill 1629, which is currently undergoing much- needed reform.

In 2004, the Legislature passed AB1629 to increase MediCal rates paid to nursing homes, with the intent the extra funding would improve quality of care through increased staffing and wages. Many advocates objected to this bill because there was no accountability to ensure the funds would be used as intended.

Six years later, three significant studies show that despite receiving almost $1 billion in additional funding, nursing home residents are worse off than ever.

California legislators are now enacting reforms to AB1629 as part of the state budget process. Under consideration are changes that would create accountability measures, cut out wasteful and inappropriate expenses and generate savings.

Advocates are urging legislators to utilize a portion of the savings from these reforms — $3.8 million — to fund local long-term care ombudsman programs statewide.

“Annual MediCal spending on nursing homes is about $4 billion. Out of a $4 billion budget, California should be able to find at least $4 million to get the ombudsman program back on its feet,” said Michael Connors of California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform.

A nursing home resident said it best, “All my family is gone. My only visitor is my ombudsman. He helps me so much; he speaks up for me. I don’t know what I would do without him.”

We urge California legislators to “speak up” for nursing home residents as well. A very small investment in the local ombudsman programs in California can help ensure that the state’s colossal investment in nursing-home care will result in better care and quality of life for all residents in all nursing homes.

Make permanent funding of the local ombudsman programs an essential reform of AB1629.

Go to link below if you would like to comment to the Ventura County Star article.

http://www.vcstar.com/news/2010/jul/06/funds-sought-for-local-ombudsman-programs/

Link to “Complaints Up Against County Care Facilities”

http://www.vcstar.com/news/2010/jul/03/complaints-up-against-county-care-facilities-law/?print=1
………………………………………………….

Sylvia Taylor-Stein

Executive Director

Long Term Care Services of Ventura County, Inc.,

www.ombudsmanventura.org

a 501 (c) 3 non profit organization

Posted in AB 1629, Legislation, Nursing Home, Sacramento, Ventura County.


AB 2555 Status and Next Steps

Dear Friends,

The email below is from our funding team leader. Not really encouraging news from our hearing yesterday on  AB2555, but we have a lot of support and hope that we can continue to move this forward.

Thank you all so much for your many support letters.  They do make such a difference in these tight situations.

We are deeply appreciative.
Sylvia

Ombudsman Funding Committee

……………………………………………………………………………..

Hello All,

AB 2555 hit a speed bump at today’s Assembly Appropriations Committee hearing, where it was sent to the Suspense file. Nonetheless, we are very hopeful that it will move forward in a timely fashion due to the tremendous support for the bill.

Mike Feuer made a strong, passionate presentation, stressing that the ombudsman program helps save lives but cannot do so without funding. He advised the committee of the dire consequences if the funding is allowed to run out at the end of June and called for timely action on the bill. Although AB 2555 was sent to the Suspense file, the committee chair, Felipe Fuentes, seemed open to the possibility of taking action before May 27 when bills on the Suspense file are scheduled to be taken up.

Tippy Irwin did a great job as lead witness and was joined by about a dozen supporters and co-sponsors. Co-author Jim Nielsen and Assembly Member Calderon made strong statements in support of the bill and the urgency of its passage. The Department of Finance didn’t have any comments or concerns about the bill and the opponents didn’t speak at the hearing.

We are consulting with Arianna Smith of Mike Feuer’s office about the best way to keep the bill moving forward as quickly as possible and will keep you posted on how you can help.

In the meantime, please continue to urge legislators to support the bill. Please inform legislators in your area about the value of the ombudsman program and the urgency of passing AB 2555 in a timely manner. Please encourage legislators to sign on as co-authors of AB 2555 if they haven’t already done so and express thanks to those who are supporting the bill. Favorable media attention would also be very helpful.

Many thanks to all of you for the great support. Special thanks to the Alzheimer’s Association for making AB 2555 one of its top priorities for its advocacy day today. We are thrilled that 130 of its wonderful advocates worked the Capitol today to promote the bill.

A related item of interest: California Watch published an interesting article today on the pending audit and DPH’s failure to collect nursing home fines. See below. Additional information is posted on the California Watch website.

http://californiawatch.org/watchblog/why-state-only-collecting-one-third-nursing-home-fines

Why is state only collecting one-third of nursing home fines?

April 21, 2010 | Christina Jewett

California lawmakers have called for an audit exploring why state regulators are collecting only about one-third of the fines they have levied against nursing homes in recent years.

A legislative committee unanimously approved the audit in February. It is expected to look at how the funds that were collected have been spent in light of laws that say the money should be used to protect the health of residents in nursing homes.

“The whole point of having citation accounts and the penalty system is to deter nursing homes from doing anything but provide the highest quality care to residents,” said Mike Feuer, D-Los Angeles, one of 10 lawmakers who signed a letter calling for the audit. “If the fines coming in are less than a third of (those) issued, it leaves one to wonder if the state is being as effective as it could be in protecting nursing home residents.”

The Department of Public Health has levied fines in recent years after workers hit patients, stole from them or left them languishing in dirty diapers.

Records released to California Watch under the Public Records Act show that the state’s fine collections are falling behind. In 2005, authorities had collected 60 percent of the fines they levied, about $1.8 of $3 million.

However, by 2008, authorities collected a smaller portion of the fines, about $1.5 million of $5 million that had been assessed, or less than 30 percent.

In contrast, the same state department, the Department of Public Health, has collected nearly 80 percent of the fines it levies against hospitals that fail to report preventable errors, records show.

Kathleen Billingsley, deputy director of the Department of Public Health Center for Healthcare Quality, said in an interview that her office has hired 95 inspectors since 2006 who complete the inspections and have issued a rising number of citations.

Billingsley said nursing homes have the right to appeal fines and do not have to pay until the process is completed in administrative and state courts. When nursing homes are faced with a final fine amount, the department is equipped to force many nursing homes to pay, she said.

The department can garnish a nursing home’s Medi-Cal payments to collect unpaid fines, leverage it holds over 75 percent of the state’s nursing homes that accept low-income patients.

The state, however, writes off unpaid fines if a facility goes bankrupt, changes ownership or does not accept patients through the Medi-Cal program, a spokesman said.

While the appeal process delays fine collections, there are other reasons nursing homes don’t pay the full amount. In 2007, records show, half of the $4 million in nursing home fines issued were categorized as “allowable adjustments.” That means homes may have qualified for a 35 percent discount allowed under law for homes that pay promptly.

In other cases, an administrative law judge or mediator pares down a fine, a scenario that is becoming increasingly common. Since 2005, the number of cases that nursing homes appeal has doubled, from 110 to more than 220 in 2008, Department of Public Health records show.

Critics of the waning fine fund point to a 2004 law that gave nursing homes a powerful incentive to fight the penalties. That law, AB 1629, overhauled nursing home funding and allows nursing homes to bill the state for legal fees spent fighting citations.

It’s a scenario that Sen. Elaine Alquist, D-Santa Clara, calls a “perverse incentive.” Other advocates call it outrageous and scandalous. “It undermines everything,” Alquist said. “We know that enforcement really needs to improve.”

And even as more nursing home owners are appealing more cases, they are seeing settlement proceedings end with deeper and deeper discounts. Authorities knocked $320,000 in fines down to $20,000 for one Los Angeles County nursing home, according to Department of Public Health data and citation-review-conference records.

Those fines were accumulated after workers turned off an alarm to a ventilator, an action that prevented workers from immediately realizing that a 90-year-old patient was disconnected from her breathing tube and was slipping away, records show.

Workers at the same home were cited 11 more times for continuing to dismiss the ventilator alerts, records show. Those citations each carried a $20,000 fine, but each was dismissed in an appeal hearing.

Lydia Sainz, administrator of Casa Bonita Convalescent Hospital, said the eventual dismissal of the bulk of the fines was the appropriate outcome. She said she felt the state reacted harshly under pressure from the outspoken family of the 90-year-old who died after her ventilator alarm was turned off. And she said the nurses who later dismissed other alarms did so when patients were in no distress.

Sainz said the state’s efforts to penalize the facility were a poor use of public funds. “It’s really sad because it’s hard to work in places like nursing homes and then you get a bad (reputation),” Sainz said. “It’s really hard for the nurses.”

Other observers, commenting generally on the state’s waning rate of fine collections, see the trend as evidence that nursing homes face little accountability if their actions or inactions harm patients.
“As long as facilities know there’s no punitive damage, nothing will change,” said Joan Parks, manager of the nonprofit Ombudsman Services of Northern California.

The Bureau of State Audits report on the nursing home fine fund is expected to evaluate the laws and rules governing the state’s collection of the fines and recommend better ways to go forward.

--

Michael Connors
Advocate
California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform (CANHR)
Tel:  415/974-5171
Fax: 626/796-6256
Email: michael@canhr.org

Visit our web site at http://www.canhr.org

To help support our efforts, please visit:
http://www.canhr.org/help.html

———

Joan S. Parks,
Administrator
Ombudsman & HICAP Services of Northern California
3950 Industrial Blvd. Suite 500

West Sacramento, CA 95691
916/375-3307Fax 916/376-8914
jparks@osnc.net

Posted in AB 2555, California, Legislation, Nursing Home, Sacramento.


Status of Ombudsman Funding – FY2010-2011

Dear Friends of the Ventura County Ombudsman Program

I am posting an email from our funding workgroup leader, and I am asking for your support.  You helped us so much last year to get legislation (AB392)  passed that provided funding for the local ombudsman programs statewide.  This funding made the difference for some of our local ombudsman programs to keep their doors open.

Her letter explains where we are today with our AB 392 funding.  Please see Joan’s letter below and support our efforts to have the source of our funding – the federal citations penalty account audited.

We thank you so much for standing with us,

Sylvia

Sylvia Taylor-Stein

Executive Director

Long Term Care Services of Ventura County, Inc.,

~~~~~~~~~~~ THE LETTER ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

TO:

Ombudsman Funding Workgroup
Ombudsman Support Network – Co-Sponsors AB392
Ombudsman Coordinators

FROM: Joan Parks & Mike Connors
RE:       Status of Ombudsman Funding – FY2010-2011

DATE:  January 28, 2010

Dear Friends,

We need your immediate help to obtain an audit of the DPH citation penalty accounts in order to ensure that moneys in the accounts are available to help fund the local long term care ombudsman programs.

Before explaining how you can help, here is a very brief update on plans for ombudsman funding legislation this year.

Assembly Member Mike Feuer is considering our request to carry a bill that would replicate AB 392 by seeking a $1.6 million appropriation in FY 10/11 for local ombudsman programs from the citation penalty accounts. He is concerned about the availability of funds in the citation accounts and has been seeking updated information from DPH. We hope to learn his decision soon and to schedule a call with all of you to discuss plans for moving forward.

There are strong signs that the Administration and Department of Public Health will oppose continuation of the AB 392 funding. The money is not in the Governor’s budget. Additionally, DPH wrote key legislative budget officials earlier this month reporting that the federal citation penalty account is virtually bankrupt. The Department’s documentation shows a retroactive $2.6 million offset to this account but doesn’t explain the disappearing funds.

Thus the need for an audit. Fortunately, Mike Feuer and several other legislators wrote the attached letter to the Joint Legislative Audit Committee (JLAC) seeking an audit by the Bureau of State Audits. The Committee is scheduled to consider this request during its next hearing on Wednesday, February 17 at 9:30 am in Room 444 of the Capitol. See attached letter.

This is where we need your help. Before February 17th, please send letters of support for the audit to Assembly Member Alyson Huber, Chair of the Joint Legislative Audit Committee, and copy your letters to the other members of the JLAC, which includes 7 members from the Assembly and 7 members from the Senate. The Committee Roster is listed at: http://www.assembly.ca.gov/acs/newcomframeset.asp?committee=208

We are in competition for other audit requests and must take this opportunity to share our compelling reasons. The letter to Assembly Member Huber can serve as a guide for your letter.

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us. Many thanks for your continued support!

Joan S. Parks, Administrator

Ombudsman & HICAP Services of Northern California3950 Industrial Blvd. Suite 500West Sacramento, CA 95691916/375-3307
Fax 916/376-8914

jparks@osnc.net

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

See below list of email addresses of the Joint Legislative Audit
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Assemblymember.huber@assembly.ca.gov (Alyson Huber – Chair)
Assemblymember.coto@assembly.ca.gov (Joe Coto)
Assemblymember.devore@assembly.ca.gov (Chuck DeVore)
Assemblymember.Evans@assembly.ca.gov (Noreen Evans)
Assemblymember.Garrick@assembly.ca.gov (Martin Garrick)
Assemblymember.Hagman@assembly.ca.gov (Curt Hagman)
Assemblymember.Monning@assembly.ca.gov (William W. Monning)

Thanks to Jackie Lacombe for compiling this list!

Posted in AB392, Budget Proposals, California, Legislation, Sacramento.


Governor Signs AB 392 Emergency Funding Bill For Local Ombudsman

Hello Everyone,

This is wonderful news!!! Thanks to all of you who supported this emergency funding. The Bi-partisan support of this bill put it on the governor’s desk and we are deeply grateful for the team that made this happen.

On a local level I am deeply appreciative of our Board of Supervisors, Assembly Members and Senators, the Ventura Star for supporting this legislation, and all the many friends of the Ombudsman Program. I hope to write a lengthier thank you later.

I do want to get this into your hands right away. Thank you for standing with us.

Sylvia

Read the NEWS RELEASE — Governor Signs Feuer Legislation Restoring Protections For Abused and Neglected Nursing Home Residents (210)

Sylvia Taylor-Stein
Executive Director
Long Term Care Services of Ventura County, Inc.,
2021 Sperry Avenue Suite 35
Ventura, CA 93003
T: 805.656.1986 ext 13
Fax: 805.658.8540
www.ombudsmanventura.org
a 501 (c) 3 non profit organization

Posted in Articles, California, Legislation, Letters of Support, Sacramento, Ventura County.

Tagged with , .


Effects of Budget Cuts to Senior and Aging Programs

DOWNLOAD FACT SHEET
Effects of Budget Cuts to Senior and Aging Programs (318)

Attached is a fact sheet on what we know today about the impact of the State’s budget cuts on aging services. Details are limited at this point on how the cuts will play out. State contacts are saying it will be awhile until specifics are known. We will update you and the fact sheet as additional details become available. Trying to decipher the CA budget is sketchy so the stats in red on the fact sheet are on the conservative side. For example, different sources are saying there will be a third cut to SSI/SSP that will take an individual maximum down to $803 (maximum used to be $907) per month. (Imagine trying to live on $803 per month!)

NOTE: Federally funded grantees (Title III B, C, D, E, V and VII) are not impacted by the State’s budget cuts. However, the demand for these services may increase as a result of the reductions to or elimination of State funded programs.

RECEIVED FROM:
Ventura County Area Agency on Aging
“To Serve. To Guide. To Envision.”
646 County Square Drive, Suite 100
Ventura, CA 93003-9086
Phone: 805-477-7305 – Fax: 805-477-7312
E-mail: Christine.Voth@ventura.org
Website: http://aaa.countyofventura.org

Posted in Articles, Budget Proposals, California, Legislation, Letters of Support, Sacramento, VCAAA, Ventura County.


Senior Center Directors Forum re AB 392

View the handout re AB 392 that was distributed at the Senior Center Directors Forum. Congress Of Caliornia Seniors (222)

Posted in California, Legislation, Letters of Support, Sacramento.


AB 392 Passes Senate Floor

Dear Friends and Fellow Ombudsmen,

As you may know by now, AB 392 passed the Senate, yesterday.  I am in awe of the work that has been accomplished. It has been a true team undertaking and I feel privileged to be a member of the small funding group that has worked so hard since last October to get this rolling,  and very blessed by all of you who stepped up and supported us in all the many ways you did along the way.   It is not over yet, but we have come a long way together and I am very grateful for each and every one of you.


Attached is the press release
prepared by Co-Author, Assembly Member Mike Feuer, for your review.

Best wishes for a great weekend and my sincere thanks for the hundreds of letters of support and everyone who worked on this with us.

Sylvia

Sylvia Taylor-Stein
ExecutiveDirector
Long Term Care Services of Ventura County, Inc.,

2021 Sperry Avenue Suite 35
Ventura, CA 93003

www.ombudsmanventura.org


Posted in Budget Proposals, California, Legislation, Sacramento, Ventura County.

Tagged with , .


Governor’s Budget Proposals Hit Hard on Health and Human Services

The Governor’s recently released May Revise General Fund proposals include more drastic cuts to Medi-Cal, SSI/SSP, IHSS, Development Disability services, and the elimination of entire programs serving children, elders and the disabled. Included among the proposals to address a $24.3 billion deficit for FY 09-10 are:

  • IHSS: Reduce funding for In Home Supportive Services recipients by restricting services only to those recipients with a Functional Index score of 4.0 and above. According to one estimate, about 36,000 consumers out of 462,000 people would continue to receive IHSS services, because all of the domestic and housekeeping activities that allow people to remain at home would be eliminated. Each recipient is given an FI ranking in each of 11 activities of daily living (ADLs). A weighted average of these rankings is calculated to determine the FI score.

Rank 4: Can perform a function, but only with substantial human assistance.

Rank 5: Cannot perform the function, with or without human assistance.

Rank 6: Paramedical Services Needed

  • Eliminate funding for the Caregiver Resource Centers, which provides free and low cost support services to caregivers and an entry point to services in every county in California.
  • Eliminate Adult Day Health Care, sending thousands of consumers to nursing homes
  • Eliminate all state funding for Community Care Licensing – the “oversight” and licensing agency for over 86,000 entities, serving over 1,446,000 consumers, including 7,879 residential care facilities for the elderly, with 168,000+ residents
  • Eliminate the Healthy Families Program, which provides health care for over 900,000 California children
  • Eliminate the Multi Purpose Senior Services (MSSP) program and Community Based Services Programs

The additional proposals would severely reduce or eliminate funding for mental health, developmental disability services, education, state parks, Cal grants, AIDS services, CALWORKS and several state-only Medi-Cal programs – and these are only a portion of the proposed cuts (summaries of the proposed cuts are available in pdf format at www.canhr.org under New Developments).

The Budget Conference Committee held a hearing on the proposed Health and Human Services cuts on May 27 and heard from numerous consumers and advocates. More hearings, not open for public comment, will be held over the next month, as the deadline for the budget is June 30. Meanwhile, state Controller John Chaing is calling on the legislators and the governor to finalize a budget agreement by June 15 to give him time to negotiate loans from Wall Street to cover the state’s operating costs.

If the intent is to turn California into a third world country – this might work. As the Sacramento Bee recently noted in an editorial, the governor’s proposed cuts “would leave California with the least support of its poor of any state in the nation and probably any government in the developed world.”

How can we provide services to the poorest of the poor; to our disabled citizens; to our elders who need care at home – without raising taxes? How can we even pretend to be a civilized state if we are not willing to be our “brothers and sisters keepers?”

While many legislators are aware of the devastating effect these cuts will have on real people, others of them have no idea and will resist increasing taxes until death. It is important to let your voice be heard.

Posted in Articles, Budget Proposals, California, Legislation, Sacramento.

Tagged with .