Lawmakers Question State Medicaid Officials About Budget Cuts

Lawmakers had the opportunity to ask questions of state health leaders about the state’s IDD Waiver program. during a meeting of the Joint Health Committee.

Lawmakers asked questions of state health leaders about the state’s Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) Waiver program Monday. It allows people with disabilities to live outside hospitals and institutions by connecting people with disabilities with resources like home health care workers and financial support.

After a more than $10 million decrease in the line item in the state’s budget for the IDD waiver program, advocates and providers alike have been sounding the alarm.

In 2023, the previous West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR), Bureau for Medical Services contracted with Myers and Staffer, an actuary firm, to conduct a “rates” study of the Aged and Disabled Waiver, and Personal Care Services programs.

The study recommended a $6.5 million rate increase for the IDD waiver program to hire and retain direct care professionals.

Cynthia Persily, secretary of the West Virginia Department of Human Services, gave a presentation on the state’s Medicaid waiver program during a meeting of the Joint Health Committee on Monday.

The committee, led by Del. Amy Summers, R-Taylor, requested that Persily present documentation of Medicaid expenditures from the past two years, itemized by state allocation and federal match funding.

During her presentation, Persily said there have been a lot of changes during those two budget years, including changes to the federal match rate for state dollars.

“Please note that this crosses two state budget years, as well as two federal budget years,” Persily said. “As well as many changes in the federal match rate for state dollars and Medicaid, as well as a number of changes in enrollment during the unwind from the public health emergency and change to the supplemental match that occurred during that time.”

Persily said the line items for requested or authorized services are much greater than the actual services billed and reimbursed.

“There are many reasons for this, including services not being used by providers or clients during the pandemic,” Persily said. “Those years that we are looking at include the pandemic, obviously, there was a lack of services in some cases being provided for instant day programs, in home services and others may have been cut back.”

Persily testified that before the pandemic, the then-DHHR was “good at balancing” the amount of appropriation with authorized services and reimbursing services.

“During the pandemic, there were many reasons that funds were not spent as noted,” Persily said.

Before and during the pandemic, Persily testified that the previous DHHR administration would use leftover funds to fund what she called “pressing costs.”

“What is important to note is that leftover funds in the past were used in previous DHHR administrations and especially during the pandemic, to fund other pressing costs across the one DHHR, including contract nursing services at state hospitals and nursing homes, as well as COVID testing through the Bureau for Public Health, Medicaid contracts services that rose during the increased enrollment during the pandemic, self-funding of legislative mandates and appropriations and others,” Persily said.

According to Persily, this was common practice in the department before it was split into three separate departments by an act of the legislature last year.

“Through line iteming the Medicaid and waiver budgets, these between department transfers will no longer take place,” Persily said. “In addition, we have very little authority to move funds across categories within that department. So that practice will lead to enhanced transparency on where funds are spent.”

In a statement published on March 12, Sen. Eric Tarr, R-Putnam, chair of Senate Finance said his committee broke down much, but not all of Human Services in subsections and restricted the ability to transfer funds outside of those subsections in the Fiscal Year 2025 state budget.

On the final day of the regular session, Tarr amended budget cuts for individuals with disabilities into the final budget, he said, in an effort to increase transparency on the state health department’s spending.

In 2023, the IDD Waiver budget line item was $108,541,736. In this year’s budget, the IDD Waiver program was allotted $97,687,562 — a decrease of more than $10.8 million.

That budget action has since spurred action from families, individuals and advocates for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, including a rally at the capitol on Sunday afternoon.

Advocates and families cite concerns about an already struggling system. IDD service providers like EnCircle, whose CEO, Ray Ratke, also testified Monday, are struggling to stay afloat.

“We’re currently serving 27 individuals and that has been primarily a result and really only a result of the difficulties we have in staffing group homes,” Ratke said.

EnCircle took over seven Stonebrook group homes in Martinsburg in 2020. Ratke said they were excited to expand from Virginia to West Virginia.

“In Virginia, we operate schools for kids with special needs, and we operate treatment foster care,” Ratke said. “And we were looking forward to the possibility of opening schools here in West Virginia and moving into foster care as well.”

Ratke said 14 of those 27 West Virginia individuals EnCircle serves don’t have anywhere else to go or a family that is willing or able to take them in.

“But for basically everybody we serve, they consider the home their home, and it’s not an institution, it is a home,” Ratke said.

According to Ratke, in Martinsburg, people can drive a few minutes into another state or down the street to a gas station and make more money than working as a direct care worker.

In 2020, EnCircle’s starting salary was about $9 per hour. They increased that starting salary to $13 per hour thanks to the American Rescue Plan (ARPA) funding.

According to Persily, beginning in 2021 and continuing through 2023, ARPA dollars were approved by Gov. Jim Justice to be used to provide a 50 percent increase in rates to waiver programs with the understanding that 85 percent of those increases were to be passed on directly to the direct care workforce by the businesses that accepted those funds.

“Organizations who received these funds attested their agreement to this requirement,” Persily said. “They were also notified that they had until March 31 of 2025 to utilize these funds for direct care workers and other costs, carrying them through fiscal year 2024 And the majority of fiscal year 2025.”

Ratke said he was hopeful that wage increase due to ARPA funding would help attract and retain workers

“We continue to be competing with Sheetz and Target and fast-food providers,” Ratke said. “And all of those are worthwhile businesses but that’s who we’re competing with in terms of salaries.”

Persily said the total increased reimbursement that was provided to waiver providers totaled nearly $390 million.

The Bureau for Medical Services announced Friday that they would begin audits of these providers to ensure that funds were spent appropriately and that funds will be spent by March 31, 2025.

Ratke said EnCircle is facing a loss of more than a million dollars on the six group homes they operate in West Virginia.

“We’re going to lose $1.2 million,” Ratke said. “When I say we’re not alone, we hear of other providers who are in the same or similar position we had and have reserves as being 136-year-old organization, we have reserves that we can bring to bear and shore up and pay staff, but we can’t sustain that long term.”

Commissioner of the Bureau for Medical Services, Cindy Beane, also testified to the Joint Committee on Health. She said that in 2020, the waiver waitlist was cleared of more than 1,100 individuals. However, the COVID-19 pandemic also hit around this time, and in-home services were often refused.

“At this time you had individuals and families say ‘I don’t necessarily want additional workers to come into my home’,” Beane said. “We had our day program shut. So of course our spending went down dramatically. Our spend is now retrieving and coming back up to where it should be in right-sizing.”

Beane testified that the department expects to add 90 slots to the program.

“What we will do at the end of 2024 is evaluate again to see if we can have additional slots in the program within our budget,” Beane said.

Beane also testified that while she agrees there needs to be a rate increase for direct care workers, she noted there has been a 50 percent rate increase for two consecutive years.

“We ask providers, we tell providers, you can extend this money through March of 2025,” Beane said. “Some providers have done that, some providers did not.”

She said that is one of the reasons for her department’s upcoming audit of those funds.

Tarr asked Persily and Beane why money allocated for the IDD waiver program was being used for COVID testing and contract nurse wages.

“Why would you keep the request the same for an IDD waiver rather than saying, we need less for IDD waiver, and we need more for contract nursing instead of shifting the funds to contract nursing rather than appropriate it directly?” he said.

Tarr pointed out that in previous years the department spent less than was appropriated. Persily answered that they plan a year in advance with plans to improve services or wait times.

“We’re looking at expenditures for the previous year, we’re looking at expenditures that year to date, but we are also looking at plans to reduce the waitlist plans to perhaps in the future be able to impact rates,” Persily said.

Tarr said that as chair of the finance committee, he would like to see more transparency in what is being asked of the legislature.

“So that when we spend $1 by appropriation, we know where it’s going,” Tarr said. “And it goes to the intended recipient, rather than having the bureaucracy rearrange the dollars after the legislature appropriated them.”

Persily answered that often, approved services might not be available, or a person will not receive IDD Waiver services while on vacation or during a hospital stay. 

“All of those things play into why services that are authorized are always going to be higher than services that are actually received,” Persily said. “And people are estimating what services they believe, based on a, a plan of care that has been developed, they’re estimating the amount of services that people need.”

It is unclear whether IDD or other waiver line items will be reconsidered during the rumored upcoming special session.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

Navigating ‘Climate Anxiety’ And Officials Talk IDD Waiver On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, uncertainty about the future amidst a changing climate has given rise in recent years to a phenomenon known as “climate anxiety.” Ahead of Earth Day Monday, Chris Schulz spoke with Amy Parsons-White, sustainability manager for Marshall University, to discuss this mental health issue and potential solutions.

On this West Virginia Morning, uncertainty about the future amidst a changing climate has given rise in recent years to a phenomenon known as “climate anxiety.” Ahead of Earth Day Monday, Chris Schulz spoke with Amy Parsons-White, sustainability manager for Marshall University, to discuss this mental health issue and potential solutions.

Also, in this show, lawmakers had the opportunity to ask questions of state health leaders about the state’s IDD Waiver program. Emily Rice has more.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Chris Schulz produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

W.Va. Grapples With IDD Waiver Program

In the final hours of the 2024 regular legislative session, lawmakers passed a budget that cut funding for IDD waivers.

The IDD Waiver Program

By connecting people with disabilities with resources like home health care workers and financial support, the Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) Waiver program allows people with disabilities to live outside hospitals and institutions.

Department of Human Services (DHS) Secretary Christina Mullins testified before the Joint Standing Committee on Health and Human Resources on Dec. 12, 2023 about the status of the IDD program. 

Alongside her, Robert Hansen, special assistant for IDD at DHS, also testified about the program, stating West Virginia has approximately 33,000 individuals in the state who have a mental, intellectual or developmental disability.

“Six thousand of these individuals are currently being served by the IDD waiver program,” Hansen said. “And then we also have 530 individuals who are on the waitlist to enter that program. And today we have approximately 73 individuals who are IDD who are in our two state hospitals.”

Hansen also told the joint committee that workforce shortages place a burden on the IDD system.

“There’s also a lack of specialists that can work effectively with people with IDD, and that includes individuals that are trained in positive behavior support, and then people who are trained in applied behavior analysis,” Hansen said. “These are individuals that can work with patients, clients who are identifying and having serious issues and could be a support and for the direct service staff and helping to develop active treatment plans to address the behavioral issues that may be becoming more and more of a concern.”

Mullins testified that not only are workforce shortages the biggest challenge DHS faces but that those workers need development training.

“We’d like to increase the availability of training for all levels of staff,” Mullins said. “This training should include coaching and mentoring to ensure that select placement can be achieved. It’s not enough just to train, we have to also mentor.”

During the last 10 months, Mullins and Hansen have provided sworn testimony to various committees of the legislature that depict a crisis among the workforce of the IDD program largely due to low wages that cause operating losses at the state psychiatric hospitals.

Budget Cuts

In the final hours of the 2024 regular state legislative session, West Virginia lawmakers passed a budget that cut funding for IDD waivers.

In 2023, the IDD Waiver budget line item was $108,541,736. In this year’s budget, the IDD Waiver program was allotted $97,687,562 — a decrease of more than $10.8 million.

Senate Finance Chairman Eric Tarr amended the cuts into the budget on the last day of the session. He said the decrease in funds for individuals with disabilities was an effort to increase transparency on the state health department’s spending following last year’s split of the Department of Health and Human Resources into three departments.

In a statement published on March 12, Tarr explained that his committee broke down much, but not all of Human Services in subsections and restricted the ability to transfer funds outside of those subsections.

“Ultimately, we increased the aggregate level of appropriation to Health, Human Services, and Health Facilities (what would have been DHHR) by about $9 million this year,” Tarr wrote. “However, this included a $100,000,000 improvement to contract nursing. This necessary improvement (which was needed to keep the state-owned hospitals open) required reductions in other areas.”

Tarr said during this process of breaking the department up, the Legislature found out that appropriations they made to medical services in previous years had been redirected to contract nursing in facilities. 

“In other words, it became clear where money was being redirected relative to the Department’s appropriation request,” Tarr wrote. “The previous secretary was using a soft target request to fund mismanagement of contracts, which now exposed, is being corrected.”

Tarr said a subsection was created in the budget this year for waiver programs. He said his committee fully funded Title XIX, the Aged and Disabled Waiver, but cut all other line items, including the IDD Waiver, by 10 percent.

“The department can now transfer between waivers, but can no longer transfer to or from other sections,” Tarr wrote. “So, in short, there was a $100 million improvement to health facilities that resulted in a collective reduction of about $91 million to Human Services and Health Services.”

Mike Folio, legal director for Disability Rights West Virginia, said the budget cut not only affects those on waivers but loses federal matching dollars.

“With a budget cut of $11 million when you factor in the match through Medicaid, it’s roughly $33 million. What that translates into is diminished services,” Folio said.

Folio said the IDD waiver program was created decades ago by Congress to provide a lifeline to those individuals who are disabled and keep them from being committed to a psychiatric hospital.

Not only are outcomes better when an individual is able to be treated in a community-based program, but according to Folio, it is a cost-saving measure.

He said the cost to place someone at Sharpe Hospital is roughly $990 per day, per person. To place someone in a community program costs approximately $390 per day.

“They failed to do the required financial analysis to determine the impact of cutting the IDD waiver budget,” Folio said. “Had they done this and had they actually looked at the cost differential between institutional costs compared to community integration, they would realize that they would save $600 a day, get better outcomes, and actually comply with the law,” Folio said. “Certain members of the Legislature ignored those three accepted realities, and instead slashed the equivalent of $33 million out of the budget for individuals with developmental disabilities.”

During a press briefing, Gov. Jim Justice said he will call a special session for lawmakers to make adjustments to the health and human services budget.

“We have hundreds of thousands of people in West Virginia that are going to be affected — can you imagine, can you imagine the good work that we did and now we could possibly hurt those folks?” Justice said.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

The Growing Need For Foster Families On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, in the latest installment of our occasional series “Now What? A Series On Parenting,” Chris Schulz speaks with Terri Lynn Durnal of the National Youth Advocate Program about the unique experience of fostering children – and the need for foster parents in the state.

On this West Virginia Morning, from grandfamilies to kin networks and everything in between, families come in all shapes and sizes in West Virginia, and there is a growing need for one particular type.

In the latest installment of our occasional series “Now What? A Series On Parenting,” Chris Schulz speaks with Terri Lynn Durnal of the National Youth Advocate Program about the unique experience of fostering children – and the need for foster parents in the state.

Also, in this show, in the final hours of the 2024 regular state legislative session, lawmakers passed a budget that cut funding for IDD waivers. Emily Rice has more.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Chris Schulz produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Legislators Respond To Justice Budget Blowback

Lawmakers are responding to Gov. Jim Justice’s recent statement that the lack of health and human services funding in the recently passed budget is “a dog’s mess.”

Lawmakers are responding to Gov. Jim Justice’s recent statement that the lack of health and human services funding in the recently passed budget is “a dog’s mess.” 

Even though Justice signed the nearly $5 billion budget bill, he said in a Thursday media briefing that he blames the gaps in health care and human services allocations on legislative leaders not listening to experts and setting their own agendas.

He’s considering calling the House and Senate back for an April special session to rework the budget. Some of the issues involved are childcare, disability and foster care initiatives not addressed. 

Del. John Williams, D-Monongalia, and a House Finance Committee member, said he’s concerned that the fear of a $465 million federal claw back on the use of COVID-19 emergency education funding may be a smokescreen for mismanaged revenue collections and tax cuts.   

“With inflation, in reality, we know that a flat budget is not a flat budget,” Williams said. “You’re seeing essentially reductions every year, and so we need to do a better job of investing in our people.”

Several lawmakers say the passed budget was simply a starting place.

House Health and Human Resources Committee Chair Amy Summers, R-Taylor, is also a House Finance Committee member. She said she pushed for the health care and human services allocations, and continues to seek further support for those with intellectual and developmental disabilities. 

“I have requested that the Finance committees really look into the waiver programs, maybe a deep dive from the Department of Human Services,” Summers said. “Sen. Tarr has a different idea about those programs than perhaps what the House does. So we need to understand that better, and find ways that we can ensure we’re taking care of our most vulnerable people.” 

Summers said the state is also waiting on a federal follow-through to enhance child day center funding.

“We’re waiting on the federal government to tell us if they’re going to start providing enrollment versus attendance,” Summers said. ”If that comes from the federal government, then part of those monies will probably come from them as well. But we do realize how important childcare is to get people back in the workforce. So it’s something that we are interested in looking deeper into.”

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