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Nursing homes, nonprofits come up short

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Nursing homes, nonprofits come up short
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Nursing homes, nonprofits come up short

By:Keith M. Phaneuf, Journal Inquirer

02/07/2007



HARTFORD - Just two years after averting a major nursing home strike, Gov. M. Jodi Rell is

asking the state's homes to go without a funding increase next fiscal year.



Rell's budget plan for the 2007-09 biennium creates a pool to bolster wages for the lowest-paid

nonprofit social service workers and launches the governor's health insurance expansion

initiative.

It also continues efforts to end federal oversight of the Department of Children and Families and

to reduce a controversial waiting list for residential placements for the mentally retarded.



The state's nearly 160 nursing homes represent one of state government's single-largest

expenses, and will receive more than $1 billion out of this fiscal year's $16.07 billion budget.



Granting the homes an average rate increase of 1 percent would have cost more than $12.3

million.



And with projected costs of maintaining services throughout the budget up $807 million and

current tax revenues growing just $315 million, Rell wrote in her budget message she couldn't

launch new initiatives in education and health care without making hard choices.



"This presents a difficult backdrop in which to propose visionary reforms," the governor wrote.



The nursing homes have fared better under Rell than they did under her predecessor, former

Gov. John G. Rowland.



Still, close to 20 Connecticut nursing homes have declared bankruptcy or been placed under

state oversight since 2003 as state and federal funding failed to keep pace with the rising costs of

patient care.



New England Health Care Employees Union District 1199 threatened to lead workers at 34

Connecticut homes on strike in March 2005, demanding 5 percent annual raises for four years to

correct what leaders called longstanding wage inequities.



The union ultimately settled for raises closer to 4 percent at most homes.



Rell averted that strike threat by securing passage of the 4 percent increase, though industry

leaders warned they would be hard pressed to meet wage demands if future state budgets

returned to flat funding or minimal increases.



The governor's new budget does include $12 million over the biennium to continue "fair rent"

funding for nursing homes, but this has nothing to do with operating expenses.



This program allows nursing homes to qualify for some state reimbursement if they make certain

capital improvements.



To provide new alternatives to nursing homes, Rell's budget does include $9.5 million in new

funds over the biennium to move up to 500 people into a community-care setting over the next

five years, as well as $8.4 million to move mentally ill people out of nursing homes and into

community-based programs.

Nursing homes are not the only segment of the state's human services budget that have long

complained about under-funding.



State government will spend close to $1.5 billion this year hiring nonprofit social service agencies

to care for the retarded and mentally ill, counsel abused children, run drug addiction recovery

programs, and offer job training.



Representatives from both of the state's major nonprofit associations asked in November for a 7

percent funding hike in 2007-08 and 5 percent in 2008-09 - increases of more than $150 million

over two fiscal years.



Like the nursing homes, the nonprofits received their largest funding hike in more than a decade

in 2005, when they got a 4 percent hike. That was followed by a 1.5 percent increase in 2006-07.



But that still wasn't enough to prevent the growth of a major gap between what private social

service workers earn and what comparable state employees make. Nonprofit social service

workers earn about half of what their state counterparts do.



Rell's new spending plan falls far short of the nonprofits' request, offering $32 million in total over

the biennium for new "low wage" pools.



Those funds would be used to help the lowest-paid nonprofit workers achieve a salary equal to

the median level earned by other nonprofits, but not what state employees earn.


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