Public Hearing - June 3, 2021
1 BEFORE THE NEW YORK STATE
SENATE STANDING COMMITTEE ON DISABILITIES
2 ----------------------------------------------------
3 NEW YORK STATE FORUM
4 A ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
5 TO EVALUATE THE STATE'S RESPONSE TO COVID-19
AT RESIDENTIAL FACILITIES FOR DEVELOPMENTALLY AND
6 INTELLECTUALLY DISABLED INDIVIDUALS
7 ----------------------------------------------------
8
9 Virtual Roundtable via Zoom
10 June 3, 2021
Time: 1:00 p.m.
11
12
PRESIDING:
13
Senator John W. Mannion
14 Chairman
Senate Standing Committee on Disabilities
15
16 PRESENT:
17 Senator Michael Martucci (RM)
18 Senator Simcha Felder
19 Senator Roxanne J.Persaud
20
21
22
23
24
25
2
1
SPEAKERS: PAGE QUESTIONS
2
Dr. Theodore Kastner 17 31
3 Commissioner
Office for People with
4 Developmental Disabilities (OPWDD)
5 REPORTING & TRANSPARENCY:
6 Marco Damiani 58 65
CEO
7 AHRC New York City
8 Alyssa Galea 61 65
Staff Attorney
9 Disability Rights New York (DRNY)
10 Erik Geyser 63 65
CEO
11 Arc New York
12 PROGRAM FLEXIBILITY & NEW MODELS OF CARE:
13 BJ Stasio 70 93
President
14 Self-Advocacy Association of
New York State (SAANY)
15
Yvette Watts 72 93
16 Executive Director
New York Association of Emerging &
17 Multicultural Providers, Incorporated
18 Jim Moran 74 93
CEO
19 Care Design New York
20 Michael Seereiter 79 93
President and CEO
21 New York Alliance for Inclusion
and Innovation
22
Rhonda Frederick 86 93
23 CEO
People, Inc.
24
25
3
1
SPEAKERS (cont): PAGE QUESTIONS
2
Kathy Bunce 89 93
3 Steering Committee Member
State-Wide Family Advocacy Network
4 of New York, and
Co-Chair
5 DDAWNY Family Committee
6 Karen Nagy 91 93
Steering Committee, Communications
7 Eastern New York Developmental
Disabilities Advocates
8
PERSONAL PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT:
9
Randi DiAntonio 96
10 Vice President
Public Employees Federation
11
Cynthia Borozny 100
12 CFO
Arc New York
13
Margaret Raustiala 102
14 Steering Committee Member
State-Wide Family Advocacy Network
15 of New York
16 Tom McAlvanah 105
President
17 New York Disability Advocates, and
InterAgency Council of
18 Developmental Disabilities
19 Alyssa Galea 109
Staff Attorney
20 Disability Rights New York
21 STAFFING & TESTING:
22 Joshua Terry 116
Legislative Director
23 CSCA Local 1000
24 Marco Damiani 118
CEO
25 AHRC New York City
4
1
SPEAKERS (cont): PAGE QUESTIONS
2
Rachelle Kivanoski 120
3 Steering Committee
NYC FAIR
4
Michael Seereiter 123
5 President and CEO
New York Alliance for Inclusion
6 and Innovation
7 Jim Moran 127
CEO
8 Care Design New York
9 Julie Keegan 128
PADD Director
10 Disability Rights New York
11 Randi DiAntonio 131
Vice President
12 Public Employees Federation
13 Peter Zummo 134
Executive Council
14 New York Alliance for the
Developmentally Disabled
15
VISITATION:
16
BJ Stasio 140 150
17 President
Self-Advocacy Association of
18 New York State (SAANY)
19 Peter Zummo 142 150
Executive Council
20 New York Alliance for the
Developmentally Disabled
21
Susan Constantino 144 150
22 President and CEO
CP Unlimited
23
Margaret Raustiala 147 150
24 Steering Committee Member
State-Wide Family Advocacy Network
25 of New York
5
1
SPEAKERS (cont): PAGE QUESTIONS
2
VACCINATION:
3
Susan Constantino 153
4 President and CEO
CP Unlimited
5
Yvette Watts 156
6 Executive Director
New York Association of Emerging &
7 Multicultural Providers, Incorporated
8 FISCAL IMPACT & OTHER CHALLENGES:
9 Kathy Bunce 160
Steering Committee Member
10 State-Wide Family Advocacy Network
of New York
11 Co-chair
DDAWNY Family Committee
12
Karen Nagy 163
13 Steering Committee, Communications
Eastern New York Developmental
14 Disabilities Advocates
15 Tom McAlvanah 166
President
16 New York Disability Advocates, and
InterAgency Council of
17 Developmental Disabilities
18 Gail Hamlin 170
Executive Council
19 New York Alliance for the
Developmentally Disabled
20
21 --oOo--
22
23
24
25
6
1 SENATOR MANNION: Good afternoon.
2 I'm John Mannion, Senator, and Chair of the
3 Senate Standing Committee on Disabilities.
4 It is 1:00 p.m. on Thursday, June 3rd, and
5 I'm convening the New York State Senate Roundtable
6 to Evaluate the State's Response to COVID-19 at
7 Residential Facilities for Developmentally and
8 Intellectually Disabled Individuals.
9 I'm joined by my ranking member,
10 Senator Michael Martucci.
11 And we also have been joined by
12 representatives of Senate staff, including
13 Senator Brooks, Senator Reichlin-Melnick,
14 Senator Kaminsky, Senator Gallivan, Senator Mattera,
15 and Senator Breslin.
16 I'd like to thank all my colleagues on the
17 committee for moving so many important bills this
18 legislative session.
19 We'll be speaking about some of those bills
20 today because they relate directly to OPWDD's
21 pandemic response.
22 When I was named Disabilities Committee
23 Chair, I said I wanted to be a champion for this
24 community.
25 This roundtable is the most significant
7
1 action the committee has taken in its short history,
2 and it continues the Legislature's renewed focus and
3 commitment to the IDD community, our -- and their
4 families.
5 The committee takes its oversight
6 responsibility extremely seriously.
7 I view our mandate today as getting answers
8 for families and individuals.
9 Our support for IDD New Yorkers takes many
10 forms.
11 I should include that we are joined by
12 committee member Senator Simcha Felder.
13 During the budget negotiations, the
14 Legislature completely rejected the Governor's cuts
15 to OPWDD services.
16 We secured a cost-of-living adjustment for
17 the IDD workforce, the first one in over 10 years.
18 And I was proud to sponsor a vaccine clinic in
19 Onondaga County where we administered single-dose
20 Johnson & Johnson shots to over 200 IDD New Yorkers
21 and their caregivers.
22 We also recently announced funding for
23 Special Olympics unified sports programs, and were
24 able to deliver good news to a north Syracuse
25 family, that one of the members will be going to
8
1 Disney World for the 2022 Special Olympics U.S.
2 games in Orlando, Florida.
3 The work that we do is real, and the results
4 are real. Our commitment is unwavering.
5 Today we are joined by family advocates,
6 self-advocates, providers, and other stakeholders,
7 including DSP representatives. They come from every
8 corner of New York, and I believe they have the
9 greatest insight and perspective, including their
10 personal experience with OPWDD's COVID-19 policies
11 and actions.
12 Thank you to all of our panelists for your
13 continued advocacy, and for taking time out of your
14 day to explain your experiences to the Senate and to
15 your fellow New Yorkers.
16 Every effort was made to ensure our panelists
17 are representative of OPWDD's service community.
18 Due to the format and time considerations, we
19 cannot accommodate all parties that wish to speak in
20 person today.
21 We have received written statements from the
22 Public Employees Federation, Michael Carey,
23 Jim Moran, Nick Cappoletti, Russell Snaith, and
24 Susan Hamovitch, that have disseminated to every
25 member of the New York State Senate.
9
1 All materials related to this roundtable will
2 be posted on the Senate website.
3 We are also grateful to OPWDD for agreeing on
4 the importance of having this conversation. That
5 agreement is evidenced by the participation of OPWDD
6 Commissioner, Dr. Theodore Kastner.
7 Dr. Kastner is familiar to many of us.
8 His appearance before the committee today
9 lends additional credibility to our work, and I look
10 forward to hearing his insights in just a moment or
11 two.
12 The Commissioner will be our first speaker,
13 and will appear solo to allow for an extended
14 conversation with senators.
15 The Commissioner will be leaving after our
16 initial question-and-answer section, and then we
17 will begin our panel portion of the program.
18 I will first say what I hope this exercise
19 today is not; that it is not a forum to score
20 political points, nor would it be a forum for unruly
21 or disrespectful behavior, and it's not a forum to
22 spread misinformation of any kind.
23 We are going to -- what we are going to do is
24 begin to set the record straight, and make sure that
25 the waters are clear.
10
1 As the moderator, I expect all participants
2 to be professional, adhere to time limits, and help
3 uphold the decorum of this proceeding.
4 I believe today is an important step towards
5 a fully transparent and public accounting of OPWDD's
6 COVID-19 response.
7 In addition to the facts that will be entered
8 into the public record today, the Senate and
9 Assembly have passed Senate Bill 6294, which is my
10 legislation, mandating that OPWDD to produce a
11 public report, evaluating its COVID response.
12 I want to memorialize the agency's challenges
13 and its successes so that we have the information we
14 need to strengthen its response to future public
15 health emergencies.
16 I'd also like to mention Senate Bill 6295,
17 that is my bill, mandating OPWDD purchase and
18 provide PPE for all DSPs, residents, and other
19 staff during declared health emergencies.
20 Make no mistake, the information ascertained
21 today will be used to influence future public policy
22 and future funding priorities.
23 Today's format will be an official New York
24 State Senate roundtable. I believe strongly that
25 this is the perfect format for this conversation.
11
1 All participants, from the Commissioner on
2 down, are all here willingly and are eager to
3 discuss today's topics.
4 Those topics will be almost entirely related
5 to the pandemic response; however, we will take
6 advantage of this opportunity to delve into some of
7 the systemic issues that are plaguing the field.
8 Today we will be very thorough. I believe it
9 will be extremely worthwhile. And I believe this is
10 in the very best spirit of good government and
11 legislative oversight.
12 However, I will also remind everyone that
13 this body has additional investigatory tools and
14 resources it can use to compel information and
15 testimony.
16 Let's begin with an overview of our topics
17 today, which are: Reporting and transparency.
18 Program flexibility and new models of care.
19 Personal protective equipment. Staffing (video and
20 audio lost) and testing. Visitation. Vaccination.
21 Fiscal impact and other challenges.
22 Each panelist will have two minutes to speak,
23 followed by a question-and-answer portion.
24 I would like now to offer ranking member of
25 the committee, Senator Martucci, up to five minutes
12
1 for his opening remarks.
2 Thank you.
3 Please go ahead, Senator Martucci.
4 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Thank you, Chairman.
5 I appreciate the opportunity to be here and
6 express my views on these matters that, I think
7 we're all in agreement, are so important to our
8 state and to our IDD community.
9 I also appreciate your friendship and
10 partnership on these important issues that impact
11 our most vulnerable citizens.
12 Chairman, you have always been -- approached
13 this the same way I have, which is in a bipartisan
14 manner.
15 I certainly appreciate that, and I think we
16 made a good team for that reason.
17 We're not here for politics, I agree with
18 you, Mr. Chairman, but to get to the truth, and to
19 be a voice for families who have lost loved ones due
20 to the misguided policies of the administration.
21 I feel it's incumbent on us to get some
22 answers and not be distracted.
23 Regardless what our governor says, all the
24 lives lost in nursing homes in our OPWDD facilities
25 matter.
13
1 And how and why they died is a legitimate
2 issue for us as a Legislature to examine, but is the
3 key issue that we need to be examining.
4 I am disappointed that we're here at
5 roundtable today rather than a hearing, where we
6 could have, if necessary, issued subpoenas to
7 witnesses, and for documents.
8 I'm disappointed that it took us this long to
9 have a public forum, but I'm certainly glad that we
10 are finally here.
11 But I'm most disappointed and, frankly,
12 pretty mad, that we're not focusing the efforts of
13 this forum on only two things: The deadly OPWDD
14 order of April 10, 2020, and the staffing crisis
15 that's crippling our facilities and exhausting our
16 hard-working providers.
17 The other issues in our discussion, and this
18 list is surely important, and I'm concerned about
19 them too, but what I see the widening list of topics
20 to be is a way to water down the real discussion on
21 what we should be having, and for that I'm very
22 disappointed.
23 With regard to the April 10th order, here are
24 the key questions that I have today, which should
25 come as no surprise:
14
1 1. Why did Commissioner Kastner issue the
2 April 10th order that required the readmission or
3 admission of COVID-certified residents to these
4 facilities?
5 2. Why has the department refused to even,
6 up until today, which is June 3, 2021, when we know
7 of the awful impact of this, orders of this nature,
8 refused to rescind it, considering that there was a
9 459 percent increase in the deaths at group homes in
10 April of 2020 compared to April of 2019.
11 Individuals in these homes were three times
12 more likely to be infected and to die from COVID
13 than in the general population.
14 And, 3. What communications did
15 Commissioner Kastner and his department have with
16 Governor Cuomo, the Governor's senior aides,
17 Commissioner Zucker, or anyone else in the
18 administration about this order in question?
19 Why has the Commissioner utterly refused to
20 provide those communications to me or to this
21 committee?
22 Basically, it comes down to the simple
23 questions of:
24 What did the department know, and when did
25 they know it?
15
1 And most importantly, what role did
2 Governor Cuomo, who we now know covered up the
3 deaths of nearly 15,000 elderly people in nursing
4 homes, play in this decision-making?
5 I made attempts to collect this information.
6 And after writing OPWDD and its commissioner
7 directly months ago, requesting this information,
8 I received only a partial response.
9 Conspicuously missing from this response were
10 correspondence with the Governor's office that
11 I requested with respect to this April 10, 2020,
12 order.
13 When I publicly criticized OPWDD for failing
14 to reply completely to my inquiry, the response was,
15 quote: OPWDD is proud of the significant efforts
16 New York has made to ensure the safety of people
17 with developmental disabilities during the pandemic,
18 and strongly disagrees with the misrepresentations
19 and false narratives being perpetuated by certain
20 politicians for apparent political purposes.
21 I know that this response was referring to
22 me.
23 And what all New Yorkers now know is that the
24 same narrative, which was sold to us for months
25 about deaths in nursing homes, was a lie.
16
1 That's why we're desperately looking for
2 answers today.
3 On the staffing crisis, the Chair and I both
4 wrote Dr. Kastner in strong opposition to cuts to
5 the voluntary residential program.
6 These have not been delayed or rescinded
7 despite the massive infusion of cash in our budget.
8 And not only should these cuts be rescinded, but
9 I believe they imperil the ability of the
10 department.
11 It's also important that we use these funds,
12 the Home & Community-Based Services' federal medical
13 assistance money that's been allocated in the recent
14 COVID relief bill, to address just this.
15 Simply put, we don't need to make these cuts,
16 and our overworked staff cannot handle any more
17 reductions.
18 I thank the members for being here today, and
19 all the organizations who will speak.
20 I deeply appreciate the work you do on behalf
21 of the DDID community.
22 What I'm here to tell you is that you are the
23 true heroes. And I'm proud to be an advocate for
24 you, and most importantly for those that you care
25 for.
17
1 Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
2 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you,
3 Senator Martucci, and I understand your concerns.
4 I believe that today we are going to hit on
5 the things that are truly the priorities here. And
6 I don't believe that we're looking at anything
7 related to a whitewash.
8 And with that, I will say that I'm looking
9 forward to begin with our first panelist, which is
10 Commissioner Kastner.
11 Thank you for being here, Commissioner.
12 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: Well, thank you.
13 Good afternoon, Senator/Chairman Mannion,
14 Ranking Member Martucci, and other distinguished
15 members of the Senate Committee on Disabilities.
16 I am Ted Kastner, Commissioner of the
17 New York State Office for People with Developmental
18 Disabilities.
19 Thank you for the opportunity to talk about
20 OPWDD's response to the COVID-19 public health
21 emergency.
22 From the beginning, OPWDD has been an
23 integral part of the state's groundbreaking response
24 to the COVID pandemic.
25 OPWDD's first positive case was reported on
18
1 March 11, and our second on March 13, 2020.
2 The scope of the challenges we would face hit
3 home almost immediately, leaving no doubt that we
4 were facing a widespread health crisis and needed to
5 transition immediately from containment to
6 mitigation strategies.
7 OPWDD and its providers, in response to
8 COVID, demonstrated no limits in our commitment,
9 ingenuity, and flexibility.
10 Our Office of Emergency Management was
11 activated during the week of March 9th to coordinate
12 our case finding, tracking, data analytics,
13 PPE distribution, and other critical tasks on a
14 24/7 basis.
15 On March 13, OPWDD redeployed internal
16 affairs investigators to New York City to launch a
17 process that would be later recognized as contact
18 tracing and identification. Nearly 100 of OPWDD's
19 internal affairs personnel were in the field.
20 Simultaneously, we identified the need to
21 understand the extent of the pandemic and guide our
22 deployment of resources.
23 By March 16, OPWDD's incident management
24 application was reprogrammed into an effective
25 COVID-reporting system.
19
1 This was later expanded to include mandatory
2 reporting of all infections and deaths of
3 individuals through a 24-hour hotline, enabling
4 real-time data to inform the immediate deployment of
5 resources throughout the state.
6 As the pandemic progressed, we were
7 simultaneously operating multiple initiatives.
8 We closely coordinated with the
9 New York State Office of Emergency Management and
10 their control centers.
11 In early March 2020, OPWDD created an
12 internal process for tracking all of COVID-related
13 tasks and assignments. The leadership met multiple
14 times per day to implement hundreds of internal
15 processes to improve our performance.
16 OPWDD's legal team promulgated guidance
17 documents, under the authority of the Governor's
18 executive orders, that mandated the reporting of
19 COVID testing results, and created requirements for
20 quarantine and isolation measures, and implemented
21 immediate containment measures.
22 OPWDD has since developed over 100 guidance
23 documents to assist providers in addressing the
24 public health emergency, and temporarily eliminated
25 or modified dozens of state and federal regulations
20
1 or rules, granting providers the greatest
2 flexibility possible while maintaining the health
3 and safety of staff and clients.
4 Since the very start, communication has been
5 a primary goal.
6 OPWDD sought to keep stakeholders as informed
7 as possible despite the rapidly changing landscape,
8 by bringing them together to assess and coordinate
9 our needs, plans, and activities.
10 By the end of the second week of March 2020,
11 we were meeting with representatives of our
12 provider, family, and self-advocacy communities,
13 sometimes multiple times a day, in order to keep
14 lines of communication as open as possible.
15 Those meetings continue to this day, now
16 biweekly, so that we continue to gather feedback,
17 disseminate information regarding data related to
18 individual and staff infections and deaths, and to
19 respond directly to questions.
20 We've responded to thousands of requests for
21 information from people we support, their families,
22 elected officials, and the media.
23 In addition, OPWDD launched a new website in
24 April 2020 that is designed to be easier for
25 individuals and families to navigate, and began
21
1 building an improved distribution list to help OPWDD
2 better communicate with all stakeholders.
3 The new website now contains an extensive
4 section with information and plain-language
5 resources for families, as well as guidance for
6 providers.
7 Finally, in April 2021, we began publishing
8 COVID-19-related data on our website. The data is
9 updated daily.
10 While Governor Cuomo was coordinating with
11 other governors in our region, I was in contact with
12 other state leaders in the field of intellectual and
13 developmental disabilities, particularly in
14 New Jersey and Connecticut.
15 We recognized the need to close day programs
16 early on as they were a major source of the
17 potential spread of the virus.
18 So on March 18, 2020, we took the
19 unprecedented action of closing all certified day
20 programs, sending 55,000 individuals back to their
21 homes.
22 The following week, on March 24, 2020, we
23 reluctantly imposed restrictions on community
24 outings from and visitation to group homes in order
25 to help ensure the safety of the approximately
22
1 35,000 vulnerable individuals living in certified
2 group homes, as well as their families, and the tens
3 of thousands of staff members working in those
4 homes.
5 Every effort has been made to separate
6 individuals who were either infected or presumed to
7 be infected with COVID from those who were not
8 infected.
9 When hospitalization is not medically
10 necessary, care in the home is provided as safely as
11 possible.
12 Residential providers must comply with
13 comprehensive guidance about how to clean and
14 disinfect, how to separate infected individuals from
15 those who are not infected, and what other types of
16 precautions are required by the CDC and the
17 New York State Department of Health.
18 Individuals with known or suspected COVID-19
19 are placed in single-person rooms with a dedicated
20 bathroom, or cohorted with others who are infected.
21 When necessary, an individual with COVID-19
22 can be moved to a separate cohorted setting, often
23 in a different location or home.
24 Beginning the week of March 23, 2020,
25 providers were authorized to establish temporary
23
1 residences to accommodate quarantine and isolation
2 needs for individuals who could not be safely served
3 in the residence or who lived at home with their
4 families.
5 OPWDD coordinated with our residential
6 providers, day-program providers, and families to
7 allow as many as 100 vacant day-program sites to
8 temporarily house individuals who may have presented
9 a risk of infection.
10 In addition, we created an alternative
11 housing resource through our crisis respite
12 authority.
13 Providers were offered an opportunity to
14 create a short-term COVID-specific residential
15 capacity, using this flexibility, and we developed
16 more than 100 opportunities across the state that
17 could transition individuals if they were unable to
18 be safely supported in the hospital, their group
19 home, or their family home.
20 No individual who was symptomatic or infected
21 with COVID, or who was discharged from a hospital,
22 or voluntarily left their group home, was returned
23 to their home if it was not safe to do so.
24 And I just want to repeat that.
25 No individual who was symptomatic or infected
24
1 with COVID, or who was discharged from a hospital,
2 or voluntarily left their group home, was returned
3 to their home if it was not safe to do so.
4 In late March 2020, OPWDD's clinical and
5 state operations teams revised our training
6 materials, and provided opportunities for remote
7 training of all State-operated and
8 voluntary-operated staff.
9 Based on the revised curriculum, we developed
10 an assessment tool to verify that staff engaged in
11 proper cleaning, hygiene, and infection-control
12 measures.
13 The new tool was shared with every voluntary
14 provider for their internal use.
15 OPWDD then used the tool to survey every one
16 of its 1,025 State-operated group homes by early
17 April 2020.
18 The tool was used by our field inspectors to
19 survey more than 600 residential settings operated
20 by nonprofit providers that we deemed to be high
21 risk due to the presence of COVID.
22 New York State was one of the first states to
23 apply for an Appendix K, the federal approval to
24 allow flexibility in the use of waver funds in
25 response to COVID.
25
1 New York was also one of the first states to
2 use retainer funds to financially support providers
3 during program closures.
4 Retainer funds were made available to
5 day-program providers to retain personnel who would
6 otherwise have been furloughed when day programs
7 were closed.
8 Providers were able to secure up to
9 100 percent of the funding they had previously
10 earned through the provision of services.
11 This staff resource was then able to be
12 deployed by providers to address the needs within
13 residential settings affected by COVID, or to create
14 additional staffing capacity.
15 This was particularly important when agencies
16 were forced to quarantine staff who were exposed to
17 the virus and creating staff shortages.
18 The availability of retainer funds offered
19 voluntary providers the support they needed to
20 sustain revenue, and ensure that staffing levels
21 were appropriate to maintain the health and safety
22 of our individuals.
23 The federal government suspended
24 retainer-fund payments to New York State in mid-July
25 after 90 billing days.
26
1 In August of 2020, OPWDD offered day-program
2 providers additional billing flexibility.
3 Day programs are now provided to bill for a
4 full day of services, which previously lasted the
5 minimum of 4.5 hours, after only 2 hours.
6 Day programs are also permitted to bill for
7 half day of services, which had previously lasted
8 two hours, after only one hour.
9 This flexibility will last until the end of
10 the public health emergency.
11 New York's emergency waver was also modified
12 to create alternatives to center-based day
13 programming.
14 Up to 35,000 individuals were afforded the
15 opportunity to receive habilitative services at
16 their residence through Community Habilitation-R.
17 Individuals living with their families were
18 also able to receive habilitative services and
19 respite using remote technologies.
20 We encouraged providers to expand capacity to
21 deliver day programs without walls.
22 We also temporarily suspended face-to-face
23 visits with care managers, and allowed CCOs to
24 remotely develop care plans.
25 OPWDD partnered with the New York State
27
1 Department of Health to ensure that individuals
2 living in certified residential settings, and their
3 staff, were prioritized for the COVID-19
4 vaccination.
5 As of May 14, 2021, nearly 85 percent of our
6 individuals in certified residential settings are
7 either partially or completely vaccinated.
8 In addition, 30.9 percent of staff working in
9 certified settings have been partially or completely
10 vaccinated.
11 Individuals with intellectual and
12 developmental disabilities not residing in certified
13 residential settings, and their staff, became
14 eligible for vaccination in late February 2021.
15 At the present time, 35 percent of those
16 individuals are either partially or completely
17 vaccinated; in addition, 24.9 percent of staff
18 working in community settings have been partially or
19 completely vaccinated.
20 We are working with our stakeholders to
21 improve vaccination rates.
22 Despite our best efforts, COVID took a toll
23 on the individuals we serve, their families, and
24 staff.
25 As of May 17, 2021, out of 128,000 people
28
1 supported by OPWDD, 10,633 people with developmental
2 disabilities across the state have tested positive
3 for COVID-19, including 7,127 individuals in
4 certified residential settings.
5 In addition, of the more than 100,000 staff
6 supporting these individuals, 15,078 staff across
7 the state have tested positive for COVID-19,
8 including 11,481 staff working in certified
9 residential settings.
10 It is with great sadness that we report that
11 668 people with developmental disabilities,
12 including 577 individuals residing in certified
13 residential settings across the state, have passed
14 away with a positive COVID-19 test.
15 However, as a result of high vaccination
16 rates among our individuals, rates of infection have
17 dramatically decreased across our entire system.
18 We are currently reporting only 10 to
19 20 individuals who are newly positive each week, and
20 mortality has significantly dropped.
21 Now with significantly decreased rates of
22 infection, we are using the opportunity to safely
23 restore and redesign services.
24 Day programs have been allowed to reopen
25 since July 2020, and are asked to submit a safety
29
1 plan to OPWDD, and to post that plan on their
2 website, prior to reopening.
3 Visitation at group homes and community
4 outings are now permitted for individuals in
5 residential settings, but with certain restrictions
6 and documentation in place.
7 We are screening all individuals, all staff,
8 and all visitors in settings every day.
9 Last month we liberalized the use of
10 quarantine in group home settings. Individuals who
11 are vaccinated will no longer be required to be
12 quarantined when they come in contact with staff or
13 individuals who are potentially infected.
14 We are also undertaking outreach efforts to
15 individuals, families, and providers through a
16 series of focus groups, small forums, and
17 discussions, to receive stakeholder input into what
18 the "new normal" should be, and how we can meet
19 service delivery needs in the future.
20 We also look forward to working with
21 legislators to hear your ideas on how we can best
22 meet our needs, going forward.
23 As we move forward, we remain diligent to
24 prevent future outbreaks of COVID-19 among the
25 people we support.
30
1 Since the onset of the pandemic, we have
2 developed a surveillance capacity which allows OPWDD
3 to respond within 24 hours to any known occurrence
4 of COVID. We will build upon that resource as
5 necessary.
6 Our internal affairs staff continue to track
7 cases and make additional case identifications.
8 We deploy our licensing and certification
9 staff to make unannounced visits to high-risk
10 settings.
11 Anticipating the impact of influenza last
12 year, we implemented a strategy to ensure
13 immunization of those individuals and families who
14 require flu shots.
15 In addition, this year we're prepared to
16 renew our COVID-related responses, including proceed
17 of a COVID-19 booster, if needed, as we move into a
18 potential COVID-19 season in the fall of 2021.
19 Before closing, I want to personally
20 recognize the heroic efforts taken by direct support
21 professionals who continuously put the needs of the
22 people they support above their own.
23 Working in a pandemic is frightening,
24 wondering if you will be infected, infect the
25 individuals you support, or bring the infection home
31
1 to your own family.
2 Direct support professionals and their
3 supporting clinicians kept people alive and gave us
4 hope during unprecedented times.
5 We are immeasurably grateful for their
6 commitment and dedication.
7 I would also like to recognize the great work
8 done by many of the leaders in our provider
9 organizations who quickly devised creative solutions
10 to unprecedented problems.
11 Thank you for your time, advocacy for our
12 community, and the opportunity to submit testimony
13 on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the
14 IDD community.
15 And I look forward to taking your questions.
16 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Commissioner,
17 for that information, and for the outline of OPWDD's
18 COVID-19 response.
19 I should mention that we have been joined by
20 Senator Persaud.
21 The next phase of this will be that senators
22 may ask questions of the Commissioner for -- if they
23 are a member of the committee, for five minutes;
24 that includes question and answer. And then
25 three minutes if they are not a member of the
32
1 committee.
2 And at that point, the Commissioner will be
3 excused, and then we will move on to the panelists.
4 So senators must raise their hands by using
5 the "raise hand" feature on Zoom, and I'll call on
6 you when it's your turn.
7 Again, members of the committee would have --
8 the Disabilities Committee would have five minutes,
9 and any senators that are here that are not members
10 of the committee would be three.
11 So I'll start with myself, and then we'll
12 move on to Ranking Member Senator Martucci.
13 Commissioner, can you explain the differences
14 between a nursing home and a certified OPWDD
15 residence, and speak to the differences in the COVID
16 response for these facilities as they may be unique
17 from each other?
18 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: Well, Senator, I'm not
19 responsible for the operation of nursing homes, and
20 I have no particular expertise in the operation of
21 nursing homes, their management.
22 I can generally say that nursing homes are
23 much larger than our OPWDD certified facilities.
24 I can't speak to how nursing homes were
25 engaged in the process of containment or mitigation
33
1 around the COVID infection.
2 I apologize, but that's really outside of the
3 scope of both my professional experience and my role
4 here at OPWDD.
5 SENATOR MANNION: And I think you may have
6 alluded to, in some of your -- although not
7 comparing them to the nursing homes, in your
8 statement you had talked about the nature of these
9 residences.
10 So along those lines, could you explain the
11 role that the Department of Health and stakeholders,
12 such as self-advocates or family advocates and
13 providers, had in either helping to create the
14 regulations and the guidance, or amending the
15 guidance, as it relates to these residential
16 facilities?
17 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: Certainly.
18 Just going back to review the timeline:
19 New York State received approval from the
20 federal government to begin testing for COVID on
21 February 29 of 2020.
22 On March 1st of 2020, New York identified its
23 first positive case, and on March 2nd its second
24 positive case.
25 At the time, New York City had very, very
34
1 limited testing capacity.
2 I believe it was on March 13 that
3 New York State actually achieved 1,000 tests per
4 day, which was an important milestone.
5 By January of 2021, the state was able to
6 perform 325,000 tests per day.
7 But back in early March it was extremely
8 difficult to get our hands around the extent of the
9 infection.
10 You may recall that, on March 10, 2020,
11 New York State implemented a containment zone, one
12 of the first containment zones in the country,
13 around the city of New Rochelle in an effort to
14 contain what was then believed to be a localized
15 infection.
16 Our first case occurred the next day,
17 March 11, and the second case was March 13th.
18 March 13th was really a big day for us. We
19 had a case that was confirmed in the morning, a case
20 that was confirmed around noon, and by the afternoon
21 a third case.
22 We were concerned at that point that
23 individuals who were infected in group home settings
24 were using transportation resources, whether they
25 were public transportation or medical
35
1 transportation, to go to a day program where
2 200 individuals were working. And that after
3 leaving those day programs, they went back to dozens
4 of homes that were supported by up to 12 agencies
5 across Brooklyn and Queens.
6 We met with our stakeholders daily, and
7 through that weekend had numerous phone calls and
8 meetings multiple times per day, to talk about
9 moving quickly from containment to mitigation, and
10 the need to close day programs because they appeared
11 to be the primary vector for transmission.
12 We agreed with our providers that that was
13 the prudent thing to do.
14 At the time, they asked us for a couple of
15 days to alert their stakeholders that this would be
16 coming.
17 We settled on Wednesday, March 18th, as the
18 day we would close our day programs.
19 That was an extremely difficult and bold move
20 on our part.
21 We severed the relationship between day
22 programs and work for 55,000 individuals, but we
23 felt that was the prudent thing to do.
24 A week later, on the 24th, as we continued
25 to be engaged with our stakeholders, we limited
36
1 visitation to certified residential facilities, and
2 we limited outings from those centers.
3 And it was simultaneous with those two steps
4 that we began looking at creating alternative
5 residential capacity, which I've described, and
6 trying to stabilize not just our residential
7 providers, but all of our families and individuals,
8 to ensure that parents who had children living at
9 home who were positive could get the support that
10 they needed, particularly if they themselves were
11 ill with COVID and couldn't care for their loved
12 ones.
13 So we had a rapidly developing process, where
14 we took what we believed to be prudent but rather
15 extraordinary measures to protect our individuals.
16 And by "protection" I mean to prevent transmission.
17 That was the key of all of our effort: If we
18 could stop transmission, we could save lives and
19 keep people healthy.
20 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Commissioner.
21 I may have a couple questions on the backside
22 of this, but in -- I want to make sure that we move
23 on to Senator Martucci for five minutes. And then
24 if any other senators have questions, please use the
25 "raise hand" feature.
37
1 Senator Martucci.
2 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Thank you, Chairman.
3 Hello, Dr. Kastner.
4 So maybe I'm -- I'm just starting maybe with
5 my broadest question.
6 You know, from your perspective, why were
7 infection rates and death rates in your facilities
8 during the height of the pandemic so much higher
9 than the wider population?
10 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: Well, I think, in
11 general, there's two reasons that morbidity and
12 mortality rates would be higher among people with
13 intellectual and developmental disabilities.
14 The first is, our individuals have higher
15 rates of comorbidities, medical conditions, that
16 lead to higher rates of mortality.
17 And they're the same as every other group of
18 individuals; heart disease, pulmonary disease,
19 cancer, diabetes, hypertension.
20 All of those medical conditions increase the
21 risk of having a poor outcome or dying after
22 infection. And our individuals, particularly those
23 in certified settings, have higher rates of those
24 comorbidities.
25 The second is that congregate care setting,
38
1 by their very nature, have higher rates of
2 transmission because there are more people moving
3 through them.
4 In a family's home, the only people moving
5 through are the family members; however, in a
6 congregate setting like a group home, staff are
7 moving through, and there are more staff than family
8 members.
9 So everyone's acknowledged that congregate
10 care settings have higher rates of mortality and
11 morbidity.
12 We personally don't think that it's a
13 reasonable comparison to look at the general
14 population and our high-risk settings, our IRAs.
15 A more useful comparison would be the general
16 population of the state of New York against the
17 general population of people with IDD.
18 And we have been able to document that the
19 rate of transmission to people in the IDD system is
20 lower than the rate of transmission for the
21 New York State general population.
22 We think that's a really, really important
23 benchmark, because it validates all of the work that
24 thousands and thousands of people did to prevent
25 transmission.
39
1 The data shows that individuals with IDD
2 served in our system were safer and had a lower risk
3 than the general population of the state of
4 New York.
5 And I'll walk you through the data if you
6 would like.
7 SENATOR MARTUCCI: No. Thank you, Doctor.
8 I mean, look, unfortunately, almost half of
9 my time is gone, so I'm going to kind of ask this
10 next question as a combination so that you have the
11 opportunity to answer.
12 So you know that I have been very critical of
13 that April 10th order, an order that's still in
14 place today.
15 The Chairman alluded before to the
16 differences between a nursing home setting and the
17 settings that we're discussing here.
18 So I guess my question is simple:
19 This order is eerily similar to the famous
20 March 25th order for nursing homes. The language is
21 almost identical.
22 Could you give us a little perspective in
23 terms of, how this order came to pass, and, you
24 know, who you received this guidance from to craft
25 this order, and sort of, most importantly in my
40
1 mind, why this is still in place today, given all we
2 know about how dangerous the nursing home order was?
3 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: So March 23, 2020, the
4 CDC produced guidance that was disseminated to
5 everyone, around the discharge criteria and the
6 discharge process of individuals infected with
7 COVID.
8 We used that as a starting point in
9 developing the guidance that we then published on
10 April 10th of 2020.
11 At the same time, we recognized that
12 discharging people from the hospital, who had been
13 hospitalized for COVID, would be a challenge.
14 We created an alternative residential
15 capacity to support individuals who could not safely
16 be returned to their group home.
17 So the guidance that we issued gave
18 providers --
19 I'm looking at it right now. I think it's
20 important to look at the document.
21 -- but gave providers the flexibility to
22 determine whether or not they could safely return an
23 individual to their homes.
24 There was no mandate, no requirement, that
25 they be readmitted to a home.
41
1 The res -- I'm quoting: The residents who
2 are symptomatic should only be discharged to a
3 certified residence if there are clinical staff
4 available who are capable of attending to the
5 medical needs of symptomatic residents pursuant to
6 the hospital discharge instruction.
7 There was an out for residential providers.
8 They were not forced to accept individuals
9 back to their homes.
10 We created an alternative residential
11 capacity to support those agencies and those
12 individuals.
13 So I'm just reading from the document.
14 I think we created a flexible document that
15 was able to address the needs of individuals and the
16 provider agencies that supported them.
17 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Commissioner.
18 I am going to move on to Senator Persaud for
19 five minutes.
20 But I would just like to mention I have some
21 follow-up questions, and I think Senator Martucci
22 may as well.
23 So we're going to have -- you know, if
24 everybody's in agreement, and I think we would be,
25 we'll go through, you know, another -- another
42
1 round.
2 Senator Persaud, you have five minutes.
3 Thank you.
4 SENATOR PERSAUD: Thank you, Chair.
5 Commissioner, it's great to see you. Thank
6 you for everything that you're doing.
7 I just have a couple of questions that I'd
8 like answered.
9 During the height of the pandemic, the DSPs
10 at the residences were required to remain in place
11 if there was someone there who contracted COVID.
12 Could you tell us how you handled that,
13 because they were required to do so.
14 And in most cases -- in many cases --
15 I shouldn't say most -- in many cases, they were not
16 compensated for the time, or given supplemental
17 payments for the time, that they were required to
18 stay there.
19 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: Senator, I have to
20 apologize, but I am not aware that we published
21 guidance requiring staff remain on duty if they were
22 positive.
23 That may have been a determination made by
24 individual provider agencies.
25 But I'm not aware-- and I appreciate being
43
1 corrected if I'm wrong -- but I'm not aware that
2 that was a requirement that we imposed on provider
3 agencies.
4 As far as compensation for staff, we have no
5 role in directing the compensation to DSPs by the
6 agencies that employ them. Those are individual
7 conditions that are negotiated within each agency.
8 SENATOR PERSAUD: Okay, so I can be clear:
9 The individual contracted COVID and they were
10 homebound. The staff was required to remain there.
11 So I had staff who were required to stay in
12 place for two weeks at a time, because an individual
13 in the residence had contracted COVID and was in the
14 facility. And so they were required to remain there
15 to take care of that resident, but they weren't
16 compensated for (simultaneous talking;
17 indiscernible) --
18 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: I don't disagree with
19 your premise that staff were required to spend up to
20 two weeks in a home if they were positive.
21 But I would say that that did not occur as a
22 result of a directive or guidance or policy of
23 OPWDD.
24 SENATOR PERSAUD: Okay.
25 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: The agencies created
44
1 their own policies around how they addressed their
2 staffing needs.
3 And I'll take your word for it that this
4 practice did occur, but it did not occur -- I don't
5 believe as a result of policy or guidance or
6 regulation promulgated by OPWDD.
7 SENATOR PERSAUD: Thank you.
8 And in the setting that you have, what -- are
9 you offering any kinds of incentives to staff to
10 become vaccinated?
11 We see the incentives are being offered all
12 across the board.
13 And in this vulnerable population, we want as
14 many staff as possible, as well as the residents, to
15 be vaccinated.
16 Are you offering the staff any kinds of
17 incentives?
18 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: We agree, Senator,
19 that it is really important that as many staff as
20 possible, and as many individuals as possible, be
21 immunized against COVID.
22 We, as you've noted, and others have noted,
23 have access to funding through the American Recovery
24 Plan related to the enhanced federal matching of
25 funds.
45
1 We are currently conducting public forums
2 and -- you know, five public forums across the
3 entire state, and another 35 or so meetings with
4 various constituency groups, to solicit their
5 thoughts about how we should use those enhanced
6 federal funds to support our system.
7 I don't think it's a secret, we have heard
8 recommendations similar to what you are
9 recommending. And we will be looking at if it's
10 possible for us to use enhanced FMAP funding to
11 incentivize DSPs to become vaccinated, or to reward
12 DSPs who have already been vaccinated.
13 So it's something we're looking at right now.
14 But I don't want to get ahead of ourselves
15 because we haven't completed the process of
16 soliciting public input.
17 SENATOR PERSAUD: Okay. Well, thank you for
18 that.
19 My final question: Am I right when you said
20 10 to 20 positive cases per week you are still
21 seeing?
22 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: Yes. Out of about
23 128,000 individuals, we are seeing positives.
24 SENATOR PERSAUD: Are your cases concentrated
25 in one particular area of the state, or is it just
46
1 12 to 20 across the entire state?
2 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: It's across the entire
3 state.
4 I will say that the focus has moved away from
5 our residential programs and into the larger cohort
6 of individuals who are living in the community.
7 This reflects more local conditions.
8 The high rate of vaccination in residential
9 settings, about 85 percent as of two weeks ago, has
10 probably granted immunity to the larger number of
11 individuals living there.
12 So now it's not so much focused on
13 residential; it's more community spread.
14 We're going back to, you know, where we
15 started back in February and early March.
16 SENATOR PERSAUD: Thank you, Commissioner.
17 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: Thank you.
18 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Senator Persaud;
19 and thank you, Commissioner, for those answers.
20 Quick questions here, for myself.
21 You did mention that the rate of transmission
22 was lower than in the general population. And you
23 had -- it seems like you have those numbers.
24 Can you please share the rate of transmission
25 if you have them?
47
1 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: Oh, sure.
2 In the testimony I offered, I said that
3 10,633 of the 128,000 individuals we support have
4 tested positive for COVID. That works out to about
5 8.31 percent of all the individuals with IDD that we
6 support.
7 For the general population, data is widely
8 available.
9 About 1.7 million New Yorkers out of
10 19.45 million New Yorkers have tested positive for
11 COVID. That's about 8.74 percent.
12 In terms of a difference, our rate is about
13 .4 percent lower, and that's about a 5 percent
14 improvement in the rate of transmission for the
15 general population.
16 And I think that's a really important metric
17 because it validates the work and the commitment and
18 the sacrifice made by thousands and thousands of
19 people across the state.
20 Everyone who has worked to support
21 individuals during the COVID pandemic need to know
22 that it worked, it mattered, it was effective, and
23 it saved lives.
24 That's really the takeaway for people.
25 Everyone should feel that they made a
48
1 difference in, collectively, the work that we
2 produced.
3 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you.
4 From one of your statements, and then, also,
5 your original statement, and then a response to a
6 question, you used the phrasing that "no one was
7 returned to a residential facility if it was not
8 safe to do so."
9 By that do you mean that they were
10 COVID-negative and/or asymptomatic?
11 Because I know you had used some of those
12 terms.
13 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: No, by "safely
14 return," what I mean is, what I refer to in the
15 guidance document, that, basically, "discharged only
16 to a certified residence if there are clinical staff
17 available who are capable of attending to the
18 medical needs of symptomatic residents pursuant to
19 hospital discharge instructions."
20 No agency should have taken anyone back if
21 they couldn't safely accommodate their needs in the
22 home.
23 And if they couldn't accommodate their needs
24 in the home, we had two alternative residential
25 options to support them and those individuals.
49
1 That's the best we could do.
2 I think we were very forward-looking in
3 building that capacity, having it in place and
4 available, before we published the advisory on
5 hospital discharges and admissions to certified
6 residential facilities on April 10, 2020.
7 SENATOR MANNION: Okay. Thank you.
8 I will say, and I meant to mention this as my
9 second round of time came, that, anecdotally, I do
10 support exactly what Senator Persaud had said, which
11 is I did hear of situations, as she listed,
12 regarding COVID-positive workforce and having to
13 remain.
14 You had mentioned, of course, tragically,
15 that we lost people within the IDD community to
16 this.
17 I don't know if I missed this, so I do
18 apologize.
19 You had referenced the number of cases within
20 the workforce.
21 Do we know of any deaths, or the number of
22 deaths, of individuals who are a part of this
23 workforce that died and were positive COVID-19 at
24 the time?
25 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: Well, it's certain
50
1 that we've lost individuals from the workforce as a
2 result of COVID infection.
3 I don't have that number specifically.
4 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you.
5 One last thing here.
6 So as far as transmission within the group
7 homes, and it sounded like, from your answer, you
8 know, we may not have rates of actual transmission
9 that occurred with those homes, but do we believe
10 that transmission was occurring in those homes?
11 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: It certainly was
12 occurring, and we actually have data, and
13 I presented that --
14 SENATOR MANNION: Okay.
15 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: -- the number of
16 individuals who were living in homes. That's the
17 numerator. And the denominator is about
18 35,000 individuals.
19 So we can calculate rates for that subgroup,
20 but we also need to recognize that that's a
21 particularly high-risk group in terms of
22 transmission risk.
23 And it's really -- in terms of our evaluating
24 our performance, it really isn't helpful to us look
25 at transmission rates in group homes and compare it
51
1 to transmission rates for the general population.
2 We want to look for apples-to-apples
3 comparisons, general population in New York State,
4 general population IDD, or high-risk congregate care
5 settings for OPWDD and other high-risk congregate
6 care settings.
7 Those comparisons are more helpful to us in
8 understanding the performance of our collective
9 effort.
10 SENATOR MANNION: Okay. Thank you.
11 I appreciate it, Commissioner.
12 Five minutes for Senator Martucci.
13 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Thank you, Chairman.
14 So, Commissioner, I want to just circle back
15 to the last thing that you and I were discussing in
16 the first round of questions.
17 And I'm holding a copy of the order here.
18 And I understand that you were explaining to us that
19 the order has some flexibility.
20 And so I want to read just a paragraph from
21 the first page of the order, where it says, quote:
22 No individual shall be denied readmission or
23 admission to a certified residential facility based
24 solely on a confirmed or suspected diagnosis of
25 COVID-19. Additionally, providers of certified
52
1 residential facilities are prohibited from requiring
2 a hospitalized individual who is determined
3 medically stable to be tested for COVID-19 prior to
4 admission or readmission.
5 So, look, I'm no attorney, but when we're
6 talking about words like "shall" and "prohibited" in
7 this order, how would a certified residential
8 facility see any flexibility in an order that's
9 worded in this manner?
10 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: So I'll [inaudible]
11 the first sentence that you read is an
12 antidiscrimination mandate.
13 We would not allow residential providers to
14 discriminate against individuals based solely on the
15 presence or suspected presence of COVID.
16 We use that phrase for every criteria against
17 which we want to prohibit discrimination.
18 Whether it's the presence of HIV, race,
19 ethnicity, culture, religion, sexual orientation, we
20 do not tolerate discrimination. We don't want to
21 tolerate discrimination against people who might be
22 suspected of having COVID.
23 Now, you skipped a sentence.
24 The sentence you skipped says that "Any
25 denial of admission or readmission must be based on
53
1 the residential provider's inability to provide the
2 level of care required by the prospective individual
3 pursuant to the hospital's discharge instructions,
4 and based on the residential provider's current
5 certification."
6 We gave residential providers an out.
7 They simply had to say "We can't do this. We
8 don't have the staff. We don't have the capacity,"
9 and we would work with them to find an alternative
10 residential setting.
11 Now, the sentence you did read following
12 that, about certified residential providers being
13 prohibited from requiring hospitals to test people
14 for COVID is an issue around who's directing the
15 care in the hospital.
16 Hospitals develop treatment plans. They
17 manage appropriately.
18 When someone is ready to be discharged, they
19 make that recommendation.
20 That does not prohibit a residential provider
21 from obtaining a COVID test for an individual who is
22 under their care.
23 But residential providers can't direct
24 hospital care, and they can't use that as a reason
25 not to accept someone back to the residence.
54
1 But they can come back and tell us, We can't
2 support this individual because we don't have enough
3 staff, we don't have the capacity.
4 And we worked with residential providers to
5 create alternative capacity, and to have individuals
6 be supported outside of the certified homes that
7 didn't have the staff or the resources.
8 There is not a single provider who would say
9 that we told them they had to take someone back,
10 because we never told anyone they had to take
11 someone back if they couldn't do it.
12 We told them, we're here to help you. Here
13 are other resources you can rely upon.
14 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Okay. Thank you,
15 Dr. Kastner.
16 I mean, look, here's what I would tell you:
17 You know, this certainly sounds like a
18 requirement to me, and I think it sounds like a
19 requirement to a lot of people, based on the way it
20 was worded.
21 My last question is this, because I see I've
22 got a little less than two minutes left, is with
23 respect to the temporary residences that you were
24 referring to that were set up, about 100 of them, or
25 approximately 100 of them, around the state.
55
1 I guess my question is -- and I've heard from
2 some providers who were part of setting up some of
3 the residences -- in terms of who was sent to these
4 residences, was that something that was directed by
5 your department, or providers were setting up
6 residences -- these temporary residences for their
7 own folks who could not be cared for in those
8 settings?
9 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: There were two
10 separate residential opportunities that were
11 created.
12 The first, we allowed providers who operated
13 day programs to convert those vacant day program
14 sites to create alternative housing.
15 And in many instances, residential providers
16 were also operating day programs, and they could
17 direct their individuals to those alternative
18 residential settings.
19 We didn't have a lot of oversight in that.
20 We wanted to give them flexibility and the ability
21 to respond in a quick and nimble way.
22 The second option that we created was to
23 support our residential providers, but also to
24 support families who didn't have the capacity to
25 care for either a loved one who was acutely ill, or
56
1 whose parents themselves were infected and couldn't
2 manage the care of their loved ones.
3 So we created about 100 -- 120 beds, using
4 the temporary emergency respite authority that we
5 had, and those we directed people into.
6 But I'd have to say, neither one of those
7 capacities was ever exceeded. Demand never exceeded
8 our capacity.
9 We always had the ability to support people
10 in either one of those residential alternatives
11 throughout the entire pandemic.
12 We had capacity we built, and we didn't use
13 it, and that's great; no problem with that.
14 We wanted to make sure that we could serve
15 everyone that we needed.
16 And, Senator, just to -- I know we're going
17 to run out of time -- I'm happy to meet with you and
18 talk to you more about this. I'm really passionate
19 about it.
20 I want all of our stakeholders to feel that
21 they did what they could do, and it made a
22 difference.
23 And I think I can convince you that we did
24 the very best that we could.
25 So I'm happy to meet with you at some point
57
1 later and continue the discussion.
2 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Well, Dr. Kastner,
3 I certainly thank you for your time today, and
4 I thank you for your willingness to do that.
5 And I will certainly take you up on that
6 offer.
7 Thank you, Chairman.
8 DR. THEODORE KASTNER: Thank you.
9 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you,
10 Senator Martucci.
11 Thank you, Commissioner, for participating
12 today. And we look forward, of course, to
13 continuing these conversations to improve service
14 delivery in the state of New York.
15 We have a long list of panelists, as we tried
16 to be as inclusive as possible.
17 So thank you for joining us today,
18 Commissioner. We appreciate that.
19 I would like to begin the panel-discussion
20 portion of this roundtable.
21 Panelists will have two minutes each to
22 deliver their remarks.
23 Senators will have the opportunity to ask
24 panelists questions for two minutes per panel after
25 all panelists have made their statements.
58
1 I'll call on members who have raised their
2 hand using the "raise hand" function in Zoom.
3 Senators, please direct your questions
4 directly to individual panel members if you can.
5 Our first panamel -- panel -- excuse me -- is
6 reporting and transparency.
7 I'd like to introduce Marco Damiani from AHRC
8 New York City.
9 MARCO DAMIANI: Thank you, Chairman Mannion
10 and Ranking Member Martucci, for the opportunity to
11 provide remarks today.
12 I'm Marco Damiani, CEO of AHRC New York City.
13 We are the largest agency providing OPWDD-funded
14 services in New York State.
15 In the early spring of 2020, a number of
16 metro New York provider agencies formed a data
17 collaborative to track the impact of the
18 coronavirus.
19 At that time, the group served 3800 people
20 with IDD in residential settings in New York City,
21 which represents over 26 percent of all the
22 certified beds in New York City.
23 Our data indicated that infection,
24 hospitalization, and fatality rates for people with
25 IDD greatly exceeded the rate of infection that was
59
1 being experienced by the general New York City
2 population.
3 The rate of infection was about five times
4 the general New York City rate, the rate of
5 hospitalizations was almost three times that of
6 New York City, and the fatality rate was two times
7 the rate in New York City.
8 On April 20, 2020, a research brief by
9 Dalton Stevens and Scott Landes from
10 Syracuse University approximated those trends.
11 We were extremely alarmed by these rapidly
12 emerging trends.
13 The data collaborative was quickly expanded
14 upstate, and then statewide, folded into an
15 unprecedented effort by the New York Disability
16 Advocates.
17 These data provided essential and current
18 information on COVID-19 within and across regions,
19 as well as data that showed potential future trends
20 in infections, hospitalizations, and deaths.
21 It enabled proactive provider response
22 decisions for organizations who had access to the
23 data.
24 These data proved invaluable and, no doubt,
25 enabled people with IDD and staff to be designated
60
1 as Priority 1A for vaccinations.
2 Reports from others have mentioned a lack of
3 transparency in the release of infection and
4 hospitalization and fatality data.
5 OPWDD has given numerous verbal reports to
6 provider associations, which has been very useful,
7 but not as powerful as the public release of robust
8 data.
9 This information would have been particularly
10 helpful in seeing the need for PPE and educational
11 response needs earlier on.
12 Going forward, a move toward more readily
13 available key datasets during urgent or emergent
14 conditions would be very useful for all
15 stakeholders.
16 The upcoming 507 plan process should include
17 key data-sharing commitments that can better inform
18 system transformation characteristics and targeted
19 resources to meet future needs and flexibility.
20 We need even stronger partnerships across
21 providers, families, self-advocates, and government.
22 We want to learn from what we have
23 collectively experienced.
24 Thank you very much for your time.
25 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Mr. Damiani.
61
1 We're moving on, next, I'd like to introduce
2 Alyssa Galea from Disability Rights New York.
3 ALYSSA GALEA, ESQ.: Thank you,
4 Chairman Mannion and Ranking Member Martucci, for
5 the opportunity to speak today.
6 DRNY, along with the New York Civil Liberties
7 Union and New York Lawyers for the Public Interest,
8 conducted a seven-month-long investigation,
9 examining the impact of COVID-19 on people with IDD
10 living in group homes.
11 Many of the issues we identified are on the
12 agenda today, so we're very encouraged that this
13 conversation is being held.
14 But one of the biggest obstacles we
15 encountered in conducting our investigation was a
16 lack of transparency and difficulty obtaining data.
17 We know that OPWDD has collected data on
18 infections and deaths amongst the staff and
19 residents of group homes from the beginning, but did
20 not share it publicly.
21 The requests made under the Freedom of
22 Information Law in the year 2020 were subject to
23 extensive delays.
24 OPWDD had telephone calls with certain
25 stakeholders, but they were exclusive at invitation
62
1 only.
2 And as the protection and advocacy system at
3 DRNY, we were able to get some raw data about
4 resident fatalities from the Justice Center, but
5 this was by no means an option available to the
6 general public.
7 The lack of transparency shuts family as
8 policymakers, provider agencies, and the scientific
9 community out of critical conversations about
10 reducing exposure and continuing outbreaks and
11 preventing deaths.
12 OPWDD only started sharing the infection and
13 fatality data publicly in late April of 2021.
14 And while this is a positive step, there's
15 definitely a limitation on the accountability and
16 ability to make timely changes to policies and
17 practices when data is being shared so far after the
18 fact.
19 What is being released now cannot change the
20 impacts of the decisions that were made last year,
21 but it can and should be used to shape future
22 policies for future public health emergencies.
23 So we feel that it is critical, moving
24 forward, that reporting requirements are put in
25 place to ensure transparency and accountability
63
1 during public health emergencies, as well as that
2 data reporting is timely, and includes comprehensive
3 demographic information, to ensure that the
4 practical and equitable impacts of emergency
5 responses can be monitored as they occur and
6 adjusted appropriately.
7 Thank you.
8 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Ms. Galea.
9 Next I'd like to introduce Erik Geyser from
10 Arc of New York.
11 ERIK GEYSER: (Microphone is muted.)
12 SENATOR MANNION: Mr. Geyser -- yes.
13 ERIK GEYSER: Sorry.
14 Thank you, Chairman Mannion and Ranking
15 Member Martucci, and all the other senators on the
16 committee.
17 I'm Erik Geyser, CEO of the Arc New York, the
18 largest voluntary provider of services for people
19 with IDD in the state.
20 At the outset of the pandemic, our
21 organization recognized the crucial need for
22 real-time data to help us understand the impact of
23 COVID-19 on individuals with IDD and inform our
24 response.
25 We advocated with the State to address this
64
1 need.
2 While we did receive cooperation from OPWDD,
3 the State did not initially have the capacity to
4 collect the necessary data in their existing
5 platform.
6 They had to identify and build a platform on
7 to collect the data.
8 As such, voluntary providers took the
9 initiative to meet the critical need independently.
10 The state of emergency was declared on
11 March 7th, and within weeks the Arc New York was
12 collecting weekly data to assess the impact of the
13 pandemic on the people we support.
14 We quickly collaborated with NYDA to expand
15 the reach of that data collection to hundreds of
16 voluntary providers, including every chapter of the
17 Arc New York.
18 We partnered with Syracuse University on a
19 yearlong project, which included comprehensive data
20 on infections, hospitalizations, deaths, recoveries,
21 quarantines, and vaccinations.
22 Syracuse University published their first
23 study in June, which found that individuals with IDD
24 in residential programs were four times as likely to
25 contract COVID-19, and two times likely to die of
65
1 infection.
2 The information shaped our pandemic response
3 and supported our advocacy efforts.
4 The data collected by New York's voluntary
5 providers helped secure vaccination priority for
6 New Yorkers with IDD, and has been cited to drive
7 policy change at the federal level.
8 We know data is vital in developing informed
9 and effective public policy.
10 In the future, these efforts would be more
11 streamlined, comprehensive, and impactful if they
12 were conducted by the State and shared in real time
13 with providers.
14 In the event of a future crisis, the State
15 must have the resources and infrastructure to
16 immediately undertake field-wide data collection and
17 sharing.
18 Thank you for allowing me to share my
19 comments today.
20 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Mr. Geyser.
21 I'm going to break my own rule here and just
22 open up my questions to anyone here.
23 So I certainly hear loud and clear about the
24 need for data in documents and it being a timely
25 manner.
66
1 I'm going to go a little bit off of that and
2 ask:
3 As different organizations were obtaining
4 this data, were -- did anyone have the ability to
5 engage in consultations on the guidelines developed
6 by the Department of Health or procedures by OPWDD
7 before the enactment of those guidelines, or after
8 those guidelines were in place, to express that some
9 improvements or enhancements might be made to those?
10 So I know it was a little long-winded, but
11 what I will say basically is: Were there -- was
12 there a consultation with either the Department of
13 Health or OPWDD regarding guidelines as we got
14 through this crisis?
15 Anyone can answer.
16 Thank you.
17 ERIK GEYSER: Mr. Chairman, maybe I'll take
18 the question, and I believe you're referencing the
19 discharge guidance, if I'm not mistaken.
20 Is that correct?
21 SENATOR MANNION: That could be.
22 You know, we're talking about a lot of things
23 today, but it could have been in regard to that, or
24 visitations, or whatever.
25 Any part of the guidelines that were in
67
1 place.
2 But, yes, thank you.
3 ERIK GEYSER: Yep.
4 My recollection is that we didn't consult
5 with OPWDD prior to the release of that information.
6 But I should say that OPWDD regularly had
7 stakeholder meetings and consultation, and received
8 feedback from providers post the release of that
9 guidance.
10 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you.
11 If any of the other panelists could provide
12 context on that, that would be appreciated.
13 MARCO DAMIANI: I would agree with what Erik
14 just said.
15 As we're a member of the Arc, and we were
16 routinely given feedback and opportunity to give
17 information to the Arc about what we were
18 experiencing, and also receiving it.
19 We were not engaged prior to any guidance
20 coming out, but had input when guidance did, in
21 fact, come out.
22 ALYSSA GALEA, ESQ.: And I can say, on behalf
23 of Disability Rights New York, we were not consulted
24 before the issuance of any guidance or included in
25 those stakeholder conversations.
68
1 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you. I appreciate
2 that.
3 Senator Martucci.
4 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Thanks, Chairman.
5 So I think, really, mine is more -- less of a
6 question and more of just a highlight.
7 You know, certainly what I want to say to all
8 of you is I understand your frustration with respect
9 to a lack of information.
10 Even as a legislator it was impossible for me
11 to get information, you know, when I had reached out
12 to the department.
13 I had sent the department a letter back in
14 March, asking for some information, and only parts
15 of that information came back.
16 So I certainly hear loud and clear your
17 charge for us to work cooperatively as a legislature
18 to figure out ways that we can help you get that
19 data as we move forward, as it's certainly useful.
20 But I think, again, the lack of transparency
21 is certainly worth highlighting.
22 And the other thing I would call out is,
23 unfortunately, the department does have an abysmal
24 history, as I've heard, about making information
25 available via FOIL.
69
1 And things shouldn't be that way. It's not
2 the way government should work, and particularly,
3 when you're using this data to inform your decisions
4 in terms of keeping people who you're entrusted with
5 safe.
6 So I want you to know that your comments are
7 certainly not lost on me.
8 And I look forward to working with the
9 Chairman and others on ways that we can make this a
10 whole lot easier for you, moving forward.
11 ERIK GEYSER: Thank you.
12 MARCO DAMIANI: Thank you.
13 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Senator.
14 One last comment, and I of course appreciate
15 the panelists participating today.
16 That's one comment.
17 I appreciate your clear statement that the
18 data needed to be provided in document form and
19 needed to be timely.
20 The only thing I would add to that is that we
21 have had a bill pass the Senate and the Assembly, it
22 was my bill, that the OPWDD provide a detailed
23 report, including that data.
24 Now that is as we, hopefully, are approaching
25 the end here of what we're going through, and we
70
1 understand the importance of that timely
2 information.
3 Let's hope we do not have another public
4 health crisis, but we know that the data needs to be
5 rapid. The State is probably best suited to provide
6 that data, and should be provided to providers in
7 writing and in a timely manner.
8 So I do appreciate everyone's participation
9 today from the panelists.
10 We have, again, a long list of panelists
11 participating.
12 I thank you all for what you have done, and
13 for the research you have done, to make sure that
14 families and individuals know that there are people
15 out there that are fighting for them, that have
16 their best interests at heart.
17 And I appreciate everything that all of you
18 did throughout this very challenging time.
19 So thank you for joining today.
20 Next panel is -- will be program flexibility
21 and new models of care.
22 Our first panelist is BJ Stasio from
23 Self-Advocacy Association of New York State.
24 BJ STASIO: Hello, Senator, and thank you
25 members of the committee, for having me today.
71
1 I'm honored to be here.
2 The comments from SAANY are as follows:
3 During COVID-19 it became necessary to offer
4 alternative services, such as Com Hab remotely, and
5 in people's homes, instead of day programs.
6 It is important to note that this flexibility
7 expanded choice, which is positive, and people liked
8 this option; however, it is also important to note
9 that no service works for all, or will be chosen by
10 everyone.
11 So while SAANY wants to see these flexible
12 services continue, they must not be imposed on
13 someone as an alternative to services they may have
14 preferred prior to COVID-19.
15 People must be able to choose what services
16 they would like, whether it is traditional services
17 or the new options that become available during
18 COVID-19.
19 One important consideration is that the
20 remote services, particularly those offered online,
21 can afford people new opportunities.
22 Not everyone has access to equipment and
23 Internet.
24 Self-advocates within residential services
25 should all have access to Internet services and
72
1 equipment, not simply to receive service options,
2 but also to explore the world; make connections with
3 their friends, family, and broader communities.
4 And I would like to take my last 20 seconds
5 to say thank you to all the DSPs, and give them
6 the wages they deserve for all they have done for
7 all of us.
8 Thank you.
9 SENATOR MARTUCCI: 100 percent.
10 Thank you, Mr. Stasio.
11 Next, I'd like to introduce Yvette Watts from
12 New York Association of Emerging & Multicultural
13 Providers, Incorporated.
14 YVETTE WATTS: Thank you, Senator Manning,
15 and other ranking senators, for this opportunity to
16 speak.
17 As I said, I represent NYAEMP, which is the
18 multicultural providers.
19 We serve -- our agencies serve many of the
20 underserved and culturally diverse communities
21 throughout New York and upstate.
22 And I just want to say that the flexibilities
23 under the Appendix K, which enabled flexibility to
24 the waiver, the Commissioner pointed out many of
25 those flexibilities, which were critical to
73
1 agencies, especially mine, as a lot of these
2 programs were shut down.
3 The Com Hab-R and certified residential
4 settings was essential.
5 Telehealth provisions of servicing units,
6 billing, and flexibilities, all this was essential
7 for small to mid-sized agencies who don't
8 necessarily have the resources or the funds like
9 their larger colleagues.
10 And during the pandemic, it was extremely
11 important because many of them don't have
12 multiservices programs where they could depend on
13 switching things around. Many of them only had day
14 habs.
15 So these services were extremely important
16 for them.
17 I ask, moving forward, that the resources and
18 the data, as mentioned by one of my colleagues, be
19 more ready available so that these kinds of things
20 that occur, should the pandemic reoccur, my agencies
21 can continue to serve the families and the
22 individuals in these underserved communities.
23 It was extremely hard for them at the time,
24 but OPWDD was there to support.
25 But I would say that if resources and data
74
1 were more readily available sooner, I think that
2 would help things as we move forward.
3 Thank you.
4 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Ms. Watts.
5 Next, I would like to introduce Jim Moran
6 from Care Design New York.
7 JIM MORAN: Thank you, Senator.
8 And really want to start by thanking you all
9 for holding this roundtable today; a very important
10 conversation.
11 I'm here to speak on behalf of the seven Care
12 coordination organizations in New York,
13 representing -- supporting approximately
14 110,000 people across the state.
15 Care Design New York specifically operates in
16 30 counties, including the, roughly, 10 counties
17 that were hardest hit by the pandemic during the
18 last spring.
19 And I want to focus my attention on some of
20 that information.
21 While the CCOs predominately provide --
22 really are the backstop mainly for people who live
23 in the general community, which is about
24 75,000 people, there are some 30 some-odd thousand
25 folks that live in residential programs as well that
75
1 we also provide supports to.
2 So the CCOs were a critical part, not only in
3 supporting the 70-some-thousand people living in the
4 community, but also the backstop in helping the
5 residential providers through the challenges, and
6 our members and families, from a communication
7 perspective. And we collected data.
8 And I did want to talk a little bit about the
9 data as I get into what I would say is our
10 recommendations towards -- in terms of innovation
11 around a need for housing, for example.
12 So I'm attaching to my testimony, Senator,
13 some data that we had collected across several
14 CCOs, and particularly those who were hardest hit
15 by the pandemic. That has been attached to the
16 material that I sent you.
17 And I've given you specific data about
18 Care Design New York, and the data that we collected
19 throughout this.
20 So I just want to give you a brief summary of
21 what we learned from the analysis about the
22 infections.
23 Individuals with IDD, especially those in
24 certified congregate settings, were significantly
25 more likely to get infected by COVID-19 than the
76
1 general population.
2 That's kind of contrary to what the
3 Commissioner had said.
4 For example, the statistic that the
5 Commissioner provided shows that there were
6 10,000-some infections against a population of about
7 120 some-odd thousand.
8 But the reality of it was this:
9 Approximately 7200 of those 10,000 lived in
10 group homes. And there are approximately
11 38,000 people living in group homes.
12 So you're talking about an infection rate
13 within the group home community, which I included
14 family care in those numbers, is about
15 18 1/2 percent.
16 So it's not less than 10 percent when you
17 look at the hardest hit.
18 And the focus of this session is about
19 residential programs, so I just want to clarify
20 that.
21 Now, and I agree with the Commissioner on
22 some of the reasons why this -- our population is
23 vulnerable to the infection.
24 The age of the individuals, we have a high
25 number of people who are over the age of 50.
77
1 The underlying health conditions.
2 And, quite honestly, the need for physical
3 contact by staff because of the physical [inaudible]
4 of our individuals.
5 And you had over 15,000 staff also get
6 infected.
7 There were space limitations obviously in the
8 programs. Many homes, individuals, are sharing
9 bedrooms. There's one or two bathrooms, or
10 three bathrooms, that have to be shared.
11 Very difficult to isolate individuals, in all
12 honesty.
13 Despite what the Commissioner said about the
14 availability of emergency capacity, it really did
15 not exist. It took months to get that up and going.
16 And it was through a bureaucratic process that was
17 set up, that agencies had to get prior approval.
18 If agencies had waited to do that, more
19 people would have been impacted by the virus.
20 Agencies were left to do this on their own,
21 and figure out where to move people temporarily in
22 order to isolate people appropriately.
23 So that leads me to the issue of needing to
24 make sure that we have sufficient capacity in the
25 community.
78
1 We had situations firsthand, every CCO has
2 had this situation, where we had people whose family
3 members were impacted by COVID. They were the
4 primary caregiver and they had nowhere to go. We
5 could not get them into one of those opportunities
6 that the Commissioner referred to.
7 And so we were struggling to find locations
8 of where people could go to be healthy and safe.
9 So I beg to differ with some of the
10 statistics that were being mentioned by the
11 Commissioner today.
12 We really need -- out of this, Senator, we
13 really need a plan for developing capacity in the
14 community for people who have nowhere else to go.
15 It's a problem not only from the pandemic
16 perspective, but also on an ongoing basis. We
17 struggle every day to find the appropriate housing
18 for people that are about to become homeless.
19 That capacity is not readily available in the
20 system today.
21 Thank you.
22 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Mr. Moran.
23 I think there's great consensus behind your
24 thoughts regarding housing for sure.
25 And I appreciate you compiling that data, and
79
1 thank you for all the information that you provided.
2 Thank you.
3 Next, I would like to introduce
4 Michael Seereiter from New York Alliance for
5 Inclusion and Innovation.
6 MICHAEL SEEREITER: Thank you, Senator, and
7 good afternoon.
8 Very interesting dialogue today.
9 I really appreciate it being the opportunity
10 to participate.
11 On program flexibility, the residential --
12 alternative residential housing capacities that were
13 discussed have been discussed several times now
14 here, yeah, provided -- you know, COVID-positive
15 individuals, a place to temporarily reside apart
16 from individuals who were COVID-negative, or
17 vice versa.
18 And this was, I think, a really important
19 factor, because it allowed people to remain at or be
20 discharged from the hospital to their -- to either
21 their home or to the emergency respite housing
22 location while they were COVID-positive.
23 It was a significant factor that did help
24 offer alternatives here in this particular sector.
25 The community rehabilitation residential
80
1 program that BJ just mentioned, we're really happy
2 to see that OPWDD is seeking to make this permanent,
3 with some appropriate guardrails in their pending
4 waiver amendment. We think that's appropriate.
5 Likewise, we have the telehealth
6 flexibilities that were offered during the pandemic.
7 It took forever to get them, but finally they were
8 here.
9 We're really glad to see that OPWDD is doing
10 the same with their upcoming waiver amendment as
11 well.
12 And then the day hab retainer day payment
13 program, the Commissioner talked about this, that
14 lasted for 30 days -- excuse me -- 90 days,
15 three consecutive 30-day periods.
16 The enhanced FMAP guidance that just came out
17 from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
18 authorizes states to seek and pursue another three
19 consecutive 30-day periods in the year 2021.
20 So we would encourage thinking about that
21 opportunity, given the fact that we're -- you know,
22 that the latter half -- first half of the year was
23 difficult.
24 Documentation. There was a temporary roll
25 back on certain documentation requirements, allowing
81
1 staff to focus on the care and supports that they
2 provide. And now OPWDD is looking to catch up, but
3 we really need to revisit, and I think hold off on
4 some of that, due to the staffing emergency.
5 As it was said yesterday, every minute spent
6 on documentation is one that you take away from
7 direct service.
8 And then I think, although the general piece
9 of this, which is direct -- you know, we need a
10 greater level of flexibility in this system, which
11 is really only going to be achieved through a system
12 overhaul of regulation and administrative memoranda,
13 and really installing a different philosophy, you
14 know, one that's strength-based, and supports people
15 to make decisions about reasonable and appropriate
16 risks that they can take, and encourages more -- we
17 would encourage more conversation as part -- about
18 this as part of the 507 process.
19 Lastly I would say, you know, new models of
20 care, there are two things that stand out in my mind
21 about what we've learned:
22 Access to and swift use of isolation and
23 quarantine were absolutely key.
24 Individualized rooms and emergency respite
25 capacity were directly responsible for far lower
82
1 rates of infection and death than in other settings
2 where shared rooms were more common.
3 And smaller residences, smaller residence
4 size, is key.
5 We really need to be moving our system -- our
6 services system further along the continuum toward
7 smaller resident sizes, and helping more people live
8 more independently, including in things like
9 noncertified options.
10 But, again, that comes back to a
11 philosophical mind shift, and a philosophical shift
12 of what our system is and how it operates, that we
13 really hope we can be having more conversations
14 about as part of the 507 process.
15 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Mr. Seereiter.
16 I appreciate all that.
17 Next, I'd like to introduce Meri Krassner
18 from NYC FAIR.
19 MERI KRASSNER: Thank you, Senator Mannion,
20 and the members of the committee, for this
21 opportunity to speak.
22 My name is Meri Krassner, and I'm a member of
23 the NYC FAIR Executive Committee.
24 I'm going to say, reiterate, some of the
25 things you've heard already. But I am a parent and
83
1 I speak from a slightly different point of view.
2 We're very appreciative of the flexibility
3 offered by the Appendix K waiver for people in
4 lockdown. Bringing day hab, telehealth, and other
5 services into residences created a sense of
6 normalcy.
7 We are grateful that if you chose to bring
8 your family member home as a safety measure, and to
9 lessen the burden on staff and residences, we are
10 grateful it did not have negative financial
11 consequences for our providers. We need them to
12 survive.
13 Most people have found telehealth as a
14 welcome substitute for many time-consuming and
15 staff-intensive medical visits, but easy access,
16 individual preference, and the ability to engage is
17 critical.
18 We saw how the lack of flexibility left
19 agencies struggling to figure out how to quarantine
20 the sick; and to find staff for these alternative
21 sites when they came online, how to staff
22 residences; and the inability to get individuals
23 exposed to the virus tested in order to isolate
24 those positive as quickly as possible to protect
25 others, and how help hospital personnel take care of
84
1 and serve people with IDD who were hospitalized with
2 COVID.
3 As bad as it was for everyone, our family
4 members with IDD were at greater peril without
5 someone who understood them being there to
6 communicate and advocate for them.
7 After a great deal of statewide advocacy, we
8 did get the right for a staff or a parent to
9 accompany them in the hospital, which was better for
10 everyone, including the doctors and nurses.
11 Going forward from now we need to be cautious
12 when reconsidering the use of virtual services.
13 It's important to recognize that not all people in
14 residences have the Wi-Fi access and the devices
15 necessary to participate. Many people need support
16 to use the technology. Staff may or may not have
17 the ability to aid them effectively. And some
18 people, like my son, do not relate to virtual
19 services at all.
20 Com Hab-R has been extremely beneficial to
21 many group home residences, ensuring some level of
22 structured activities in their day; however, this
23 should not be viewed as a long-range substitute for
24 day hab services unless that is the expressed desire
25 of the individual.
85
1 Providing all services on-site is in direct
2 conflict with the mandate for community inclusion.
3 Our family members want and need to get out into the
4 world and to learn new skills.
5 For those older individuals ready to retire
6 from their day programs, there should be flexibility
7 to develop alternative social activities in the form
8 of Com Hab-R or recreational senior programs.
9 Our greatest worry is that decisions about
10 programming will be more cost-centered than
11 person-centered.
12 During the pandemic we watched staff
13 struggling to do their jobs while being at extreme
14 risk of getting the virus and spreading it to their
15 families and ours. We know how hard and complicated
16 their jobs are because we as family members have
17 done them, and do do them.
18 We know how undervalued DSPs are.
19 One thing we should do is look to them as a
20 source of suggestions about how to deliver supports
21 and services more effectively, as they do that every
22 day.
23 Flexibility would be great for everyone.
24 Burdening DSPs and providers with excessive
25 amounts of documentation does no one any good.
86
1 Agencies and DSPs themselves are a great
2 resource in figuring out the difference between
3 useful and counterproductive regulations.
4 This increases the ability to be innovative,
5 and frees DSPs from excessive documentation so their
6 time can be spent with those that they are tasked
7 with caring for.
8 Thank you very much for listening.
9 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Ms. Krassner;
10 I appreciate it.
11 And, next, I'd like to introduce
12 Rhonda Frederick from People, Inc.
13 RHONDA FREDERICK: Hi. Thank you very much,
14 Senator Mannion.
15 I really appreciate the ability to give this
16 testimony, as well as thanking you as the Chair of
17 the Standing Committee on Disabilities for calling
18 this together.
19 I am from People, Inc., in Buffalo, New York,
20 and I'm going to talk more specifically about the
21 temporary-use respite.
22 My organization opened two such programs.
23 We had two respite homes that were able to be
24 used for this. And we started to use them before
25 OPWDD came in and said that it was something that we
87
1 could do.
2 It wasn't that difficult with OPWDD to set
3 up, but they did not seem to be much of a
4 realization of what it entailed.
5 Yes, we had two homes. Yes, we had bedrooms
6 and bathrooms. We needed to get nurses, LPNs, and
7 direct support professionals to staff 24/7. We had
8 to find full PPE; masks, gloves, gowns --
9 everything.
10 We decided we needed to have a place outside
11 for our staff to change their clothes; to put on
12 scrubs, put on their PPE, and go out.
13 We had to have a place for them to take a
14 break. It couldn't be within the house.
15 We ended up doing two homes because we did
16 one home for people that we knew were positive, and
17 one home for people that were under investigation.
18 We served over 100 people.
19 We opened it up to our own agency, to the
20 community, and to other agencies, and we're really
21 glad we were able to do it; and actually just closed
22 on June 1st.
23 During the time, some of the things that
24 became a little difficult:
25 The billing changed halfway through, how we
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1 would be reimbursed.
2 There was onerous paperwork on who was there,
3 who wasn't.
4 And the selection of people that were
5 eligible to go there was not within our control, not
6 within the control of the other agencies or the
7 hospitals and families. It became very, very
8 difficult.
9 We did -- we had to provide information on
10 burn rate of our PPE.
11 Well, it didn't really matter what we told
12 OPWDD because they could not help us in getting more
13 PPE.
14 So we also gave our staff hazard pay. No
15 idea how we were going to fund that.
16 So when -- in closing, I just want to say it
17 was a wonderful idea.
18 It helped us keep our infection rates very
19 low. We helped the community, but I think we did it
20 mostly on our own.
21 Thank you.
22 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you for that insight,
23 and thank you for the ability to be able to make
24 those necessary changes for the people you serve.
25 Next -- thank you, Ms. Frederick.
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1 Next, I would like to introduce Kathy Bunce,
2 State-Wide Family Advocacy Network of New York.
3 KATHY BUNCE: I want to thank you,
4 Senator Mannion, and members of the Senate Committee
5 on Disabilities, for giving a voice to individuals,
6 families, on this topic, and for your leadership and
7 support for all people with IDD living in
8 New York State.
9 You definitely are our champions.
10 My name is Kathy Bunce. I'm co-chair of the
11 DDAWNY Family Committee. I live in Buffalo
12 New York.
13 My daughter is 25 years old, and she has
14 significant developmental delays and a seizure
15 disorder. She lives at home with my husband and
16 I as an exceptionally social young lady.
17 COVID was very difficult for everyone,
18 especially for people like her who has high needs.
19 I'd like to start with recognition and thanks
20 to all providers and DSPs who worked so hard to keep
21 people safe during the pandemic, and continue to do
22 so every day.
23 They were the definition of "essential," and
24 continue to be.
25 And I want to credit OPWDD for their hard
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1 work.
2 This was all new territory for everyone.
3 Fortunately, Western New York had two
4 distinct advantages: The benefit of learning from
5 other regions who were impacted early and hard, and
6 the nonprofit agency leadership who communicated,
7 collaborated, shared resources with each other and
8 with stakeholders, to meet this challenge.
9 It was beneficial and lives were saved.
10 With the vaccine, we see business reopening,
11 schools reopening, mask requirements removed
12 nationally, yet we wait for guidance from Albany to
13 catch up.
14 Changes were slow throughout, and we still
15 wait for them to address the transportation issue.
16 We witnessed the success of an agile system
17 in education with private schools who resumed last
18 September in our communities. When positive cases
19 emerged they closed for a period of time to keep
20 people safe. They were agile and they were
21 empowered to make those decisions.
22 Going forward, perhaps it's time to consider
23 decentralization and a strengthened regional
24 approach to supporting people with IDD.
25 OPWDD leadership in each region are
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1 knowledgeable of the infrastructure available and
2 the unique needs of the people served in their
3 communities. They have strong partnership with the
4 nonprofit agencies and, together, this team should
5 be empowered to make decisions that are appropriate
6 to ensure safety for the people they support.
7 We saw the benefits of communication,
8 collaboration, and shared resources amongst our
9 nonprofit providers in our region.
10 Decisions on care should not be one size fits
11 all, and should not be managed centrally for the
12 entire state. It doesn't work.
13 Thank you for the opportunity.
14 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Ms. Bunce.
15 Last panelist for this topic is Karen Nagy
16 from Eastern New York Developmental Disabilities
17 Advocates.
18 KAREN NAGY: Hi. Thank you, Senator, and
19 thank you committee members.
20 We really appreciate your outstanding
21 advocacy on behalf of families and people with IDD.
22 I represent families in the Capital Region,
23 and speak for the steering committee at ENYDDA.
24 But I'm also a mom. We have a 31-year-old
25 son who is profoundly disabled by autism, and he
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1 receives residential services through a local
2 nonprofit agency.
3 I'm going to adapt my testimony a little bit
4 because I don't want to be redundant. A lot of the
5 things that have been said don't need to be said
6 again.
7 So I'm going to really focus on the staffing
8 issue, because I think that some of the program
9 flexibility really was dependent upon staffing that
10 has been at critically low levels. And, really, the
11 nonprofit industry has experienced staffing issues
12 for the last five to six years since the onset of
13 the minimum wage raise.
14 So, you know, in order to provide flexible
15 programming, you have to have well-trained staff,
16 you have to have -- be able to offer proactive
17 interventions and reactive measures, to meet that
18 individual need, and to respond to any of life's
19 substantial challenges and changes.
20 We recognize that there's been a failure to
21 thrive amongst a wide range of people across the
22 state and country due to this virus, but preexisting
23 direct-care staff shortages challenged that program
24 flexibility during the pandemic. And the pandemic
25 itself exacerbated an ongoing staffing crisis, and
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1 it threatens the safety and stability of our loved
2 ones.
3 So, you know, in closing, I would say we need
4 to understand that the direct care of people with
5 IDD has to be recognized as essential, and has to be
6 socially valued and prioritized, and a worthy
7 profession that supports a living wage in a diverse,
8 primarily female and women of color who take care of
9 our loved ones.
10 Thank you.
11 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Ms. Nagy.
12 And I think there was certainly a lot that
13 all those panelists presented. And I think the
14 acknowledging that part of our -- of one of the
15 crises that this community faces is a good place to
16 go.
17 Senator Martucci for two minutes of
18 questions.
19 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Thank you, Chairman.
20 So first I see, unfortunately, I think
21 Mr. Moran dropped off. But I'll just -- oh, there
22 he is.
23 Perfect.
24 So, really, more of a highlight on your
25 comment than a question -- I'll guess I'll make it
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1 your question.
2 Could you tell me a little about the struggle
3 you had with respect to the bureaucratic process of
4 getting these respite sites set up.
5 And, I'm sorry, I don't have much time,
6 because I also have a quick question, thanks to
7 Ms. Frederick.
8 So if you could kind of fit that in in
9 30 seconds, or a minute, that would be great.
10 JIM MORAN: Yeah, I mean, we had worked with
11 a number of the provider associations, some of whom
12 are on this panel, and on the upcoming panels.
13 We have put together a proposal that kind of
14 went nowhere in terms of to try to create a flexible
15 model for the providers who were in the moment,
16 trying to deal with this, as Rhonda just went
17 through.
18 We were unable to get that. They had set up
19 a more formalized process of approval.
20 And, quite honestly, it wasn't targeted to
21 the areas where the largest pandemic was happening,
22 which is in those 10 downstate counties at the time.
23 Too much time was passing on this. And by
24 the time it got set up, quite honestly, things had
25 already started to calm down.
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1 So it just was -- it was a total bureaucratic
2 process that was put in place in order to move
3 forward with this.
4 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Thank you, Mr. Moran.
5 And then my next question is for
6 Ms. Frederick.
7 First I'll say thank you to People, Inc., for
8 stepping up and establishing those two respite
9 homes.
10 Huge.
11 I've heard stories from providers in my area,
12 the same that you told, about the fact that you were
13 sort of on your own.
14 One of the questions I didn't get to with
15 Commissioner Kastner was, can you just tell us,
16 quickly, a little bit about how people were selected
17 to be eligible to enter these homes.
18 I know you had some frustration around that.
19 RHONDA FREDERICK: It wasn't a real clear
20 process.
21 They would -- their care coordinator, or
22 their family, was to call the local DDRO.
23 The DDRO would -- there was a liaison. They
24 would call our liaison, Can you handle this person?
25 Then it would go back to the DDRO.
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1 To be honest, in a couple of situations, we
2 just had people calling us directly, and we tried to
3 finesse it that way.
4 But it often took a couple of days, which it
5 should have taken a couple of hours.
6 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Understood. Thank you so
7 much.
8 And thank you all for your testimony.
9 I appreciate it.
10 I'll echo the Chairman's comment and say,
11 thank you for being here.
12 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you to all the
13 panelists. I do really appreciate it.
14 And one thing that we hear loud and clear
15 I think across the state, I'm sure Senator Martucci
16 would agree, we hear it about Western New York and
17 eastern New York, and I hear it and see it in
18 Central New York, is that the providers, the
19 advocates, work together to make things work.
20 And that's certainly shown through here with
21 our panelists in this group.
22 So I really appreciate everyone participating
23 today.
24 Our next panel is related to personal
25 protective equipment, and our first panelist is
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1 Randi DiAntonio from PEF (Public Employees
2 Federation).
3 RANDI DiANTONIO: Good afternoon,
4 Senator Mannion, and all the distinguished committee
5 members.
6 First off, I'd like to thank you for holding
7 this roundtable today.
8 I think it's incredibly important for us to
9 review the things that have happened over the last
10 16 months, and what we can do, moving forward, to
11 ensure that some of the mistakes and the issues that
12 we saw are not repeated if we, God forbid, ever have
13 a future public health emergency.
14 I want to say we appreciate, you know, that
15 this was an overwhelming situation for everyone.
16 And like everyone on this call, we want to
17 ensure that you're aware of all the things that went
18 on.
19 So you do have our written testimony.
20 There's a lot of information in there.
21 There's also several letters that I point
22 your attention to, that went from PEF to the OPW
23 Commissioner from the onset, up until early 2021.
24 I'll focus my comments on PPE.
25 So at the beginning, no surprise, there was
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1 no real plan in place to deal with this. It was a
2 scramble. Coordination was very disjointed between
3 central office and the various DDSOs.
4 The comment by Ms. Bunce on the earlier panel
5 about waiting for Albany is something I think all of
6 us in the field experienced.
7 It has been disjointed for quite some time
8 because of the centralization of how decisions are
9 being made. And I do think that that is something
10 we should certainly look at, moving forward.
11 Across the board there were insufficient and
12 inadequate supplies of PPE. Many locations had no
13 masks, no gowns, no eye or face protections.
14 Conservation of PPE lasted for several
15 months.
16 At the very beginning, and up until maybe
17 two or three months into it, people were being given
18 one mask and told to use them for up to five days.
19 They were being hung on bulletin boards to dry out.
20 This obviously undermines the quality of the
21 PPE.
22 Gowns were reused. Several DDSOs were
23 running out of gloves, cleaning supplies.
24 PEF represents the State side of the system,
25 and, you know, we have also been dealing with crisis
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1 staffing issues.
2 PEF ended up buying PPE and supplying PPE to
3 many members and -- to help them stay protected.
4 Over time the agency did begin to provide
5 more masks and other PPE; however, they still have
6 not implemented any N-95 fit testing programs.
7 They are still opposed to our position that
8 N-95 should be utilized, not just for aerosolized
9 procedures, but also when providing up close and
10 personal care.
11 We have had this conversation since the very
12 beginning.
13 There is still no consistent testing process
14 being done.
15 So it is very difficult to assess how
16 accurate the numbers that were provided earlier are
17 when you don't have a very formal testing process in
18 place that is easily accessible to the staff.
19 Basically, at this point, you know, we know
20 that, moving forward, we want to make sure we have
21 all the supplies on hand.
22 The agency needs to be accountable, to have a
23 sufficient PPE supply; to ensure staff are properly
24 trained; fit tested, fit checked, for any
25 interactions with COVID-positive or suspected
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1 individuals.
2 There also needs to be clear procedures for
3 procurement, which has fallen apart over the years
4 because they centralized procurement through the
5 business service center.
6 So I know I'm out of time, so I will limit my
7 response, but thank you so much.
8 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Ms. DiAntonio.
9 Next panelist for this topic is Cyndi Borozny
10 from the Arc of New York.
11 CYNDI BOROZNY: Thank you,
12 Senator Manning [sic], and other committee members.
13 My name is Cynthia Borozny. I am the chief
14 financial officer for the Arc of New York.
15 On the onset of the pandemic, the use of
16 appropriate PPE was quickly identified as a critical
17 factor in mitigating the transmission of COVID-19.
18 However, despite our vulnerable population,
19 we were not granted priority access to PPE through
20 state and local emergency agencies. We were offered
21 no additional resources for procurement of PPE.
22 Our dedicated staff who provide 24-hour
23 close-contact care were not identified as essential
24 workers or provided the same protections other
25 health-care providers were.
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1 The Arc found itself scrambling to create
2 contacts, and purchased PPE from vendors whose costs
3 were rising with the demand. We were forced to
4 develop an independent system for procurement and
5 distribution of PPE, a system which required
6 significant financial and operational resources to
7 sustain.
8 Executive staff and chapter leadership took
9 shifts unloading tractor-trailer trucks full of
10 masks, gowns, gloves, thermometers, and other needed
11 supplies. Our headquarters became an ad hoc PPE
12 warehouse and distribution hub.
13 Our organization had strategic financial
14 reserves which we used to purchase over $4 million
15 in supplies. We were fortunate.
16 I have no idea what smaller providers did to
17 ensure the safety of their staff and the people they
18 support.
19 Thanks to recent policy changes, most of the
20 PPE costs will be reimbursed by FEMA. But that was
21 not a guarantee when we were draining our reserves,
22 and the costs -- the other costs of the pandemic
23 will have repercussions on our field for many years
24 to come.
25 In the future, we need a streamlined system
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1 for PPE procurement, distribution, and adequate
2 funds to cover these costs.
3 We need staff to be recognized as vital
4 frontline health-care workers, and we need to be
5 better prepared and better supported to ensure that
6 the safety of New Yorkers with IDD is required.
7 Thank you for the opportunity to share our
8 experience with you today.
9 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Ms. Borozny.
10 Next, I'd like to introduce
11 Margaret Raustiala -- Raustiala --
12 You can correct me, Margaret. I apologize.
13 -- from State-Wide Family Advocacy Network of
14 New York.
15 MARGARET RAUSTIALA: And what -How do I get
16 on here now?
17 Am I on?
18 SENATOR MANNION: You're on, Margaret.
19 MARGARET RAUSTIALA: Okay. Thank you.
20 Thank you for your leadership. You really
21 hit the ground running; appreciate it. And we
22 appreciate the great job you're doing.
23 Anyway, it was March of 2020, not March of
24 1820; yet with more than 37,000 community-based
25 residential settings, apparently, New York State
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1 neglected to plan for or distribute PPE to the
2 residents and staff who lived and worked in these
3 settings.
4 As a parent, I salute the providers and their
5 associations who, in the face of zero assistance
6 from government, were forced to swing into action
7 and dive into a world where they had no contact or
8 experience.
9 In those early days, when I learned of the
10 dire need for PPE in my son Rico's [ph.] group home,
11 I reached out to a longtime friend who I knew sewed.
12 Please, would she make masks for the
13 residents of Rico's group home?
14 A former nurse, she knew what was required
15 and came through with 30 masks.
16 If this sounds ridiculous, it's because it is
17 ridiculous, and it should never ever happen again.
18 Much of the needed PPE was manufactured in
19 China. The providers had to learn how to make
20 foreign contacts, ensure that the vendors were
21 properly vetted, pay for, and distribute PPE.
22 Of course vendors knew that they were
23 desperate, so the cost of these -- this PPE was
24 exorbitant.
25 My understanding is that the cost of PPE was
104
1 not reimbursed until recently for some, and still
2 not for others.
3 It should be noted, as I think an earlier
4 person mentioned, that under the American Rescue
5 Act, at the increased -- FMAP would be used for --
6 you know, for reimbursing the providers for this
7 PPE.
8 But this is spilt milk.
9 The important thing is it never happens
10 again.
11 When New York State develops its plan for
12 responding to future pandemics, and, unfortunately,
13 the experts assure us that there will be future
14 pandemics, the system of supports and services to
15 individuals with developmental disabilities must be
16 a priority in the same way that hospitals are
17 priority.
18 Future plans must designate DSPs the backbone
19 of our system, and other staff for OPWDD-funded
20 services and programs, to plan accordingly for their
21 need for PPE. And future plans must designate the
22 service recipients of OPWDD-funded programs to be a
23 priority, and plan for PPE.
24 People with developmental disabilities who
25 live in congregate settings got sick with COVID
105
1 three times more often than the general public was
2 from this disease, and three times more often they
3 died.
4 Due to the lack of transparency regarding the
5 number of residents in group homes that became sick
6 with COVID, as well as the number that died from
7 COVID, research to find out the percentage of the
8 higher rate -- what percentage of the higher rate
9 was due to the underlying comorbidities that
10 Dr. Kastner mentioned, and what percentage was due
11 to the lack of PPE early on, the State's slow
12 response to providing guidance on quarantine, and
13 the State's slow response to provide guidance on
14 proper training.
15 New Yorkers with developmental disabilities,
16 and those who care for them, will never again be
17 forgotten and left to fend for themselves.
18 Thank you.
19 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Margaret.
20 I appreciate those strong words.
21 Next, I'd like to introduce Tom McAlvanah
22 from New York Disability Advocates, and InterAgency
23 Council of Developmental Disabilities.
24 TOM McALVANAH: That's great.
25 Thank you, Chair Mannion, and thanks,
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1 Senator Martucci, and all the members of the
2 committee, and thanks to our panelists, and thanks
3 for having us here today.
4 When the pandemic hit, the IDD service system
5 struggled to be recognized as a significant
6 component of the public health system responsible
7 for keeping our particularly vulnerable population
8 safe and out of hospitals.
9 Our residential programs were left to finance
10 the cost of the public health emergency on our own
11 without any financial support from the State to meet
12 the increased cost of PPEs, staff overtime, hazard
13 time, sanitizing, and other equipment and supplies,
14 and other COVID-related expenses.
15 NYDA did a survey that estimated that,
16 between March and October of 2020, not 1820 as
17 Margaret suggested -- we -- our providers spent out
18 $34 million just to help get the supplies needed for
19 their hero DSPs who were on the front lines every
20 day.
21 It -- pretty much, and down in New York City,
22 it took nearly six weeks to get any response.
23 Certainly it took that long, if not longer, to get
24 our DSPs recognized as essential workers. And
25 you'll hear about that some more later.
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1 But for us, we had to commandeer -- as
2 Margaret mentioned, we commandeered orders from
3 China. We worked with a local distributor.
4 IAC member agencies spent, initially, about
5 three-quarters of a million dollars on it.
6 We worked with other NYDA partners later in
7 the year, and we spent well -- millions of dollars
8 to secure our own PPEs.
9 I'm just going to read to you, quickly, a
10 couple of things.
11 One is, that the message from OPWDD, when we
12 were trying to get PPEs, was first to source from
13 a local supplier; which, of course, pay for it on
14 your own.
15 Second was, to reach out to your local
16 county's OEM.
17 And if did you not get a response from the
18 OEM, then inform the incident management unit via an
19 email, with a ticket number we received from OEM,
20 your specific request, the number, and supplies,
21 et cetera.
22 And on April 2nd we received an email from
23 the OEM, that due to the national shortage of PPEs,
24 collection swabs and other medical supplies, DOH and
25 [indiscernible] cannot supply programs, like this
108
1 one particular provider, with these items.
2 It is critical that these supplies be
3 prioritized for our health-care system, in
4 particular for hospitalized patients.
5 I think what this really comes down to is, is
6 that the entrenched bureaucratic processes, the
7 compartmentalization of government, when a crisis
8 hits does not work.
9 We have to, as New York State, remember that
10 we provide 90 percent of the services, the
11 not-for-profit community in this state, and
12 80 percent of the certified services.
13 And I know I'm out of time, I'm wrapping up.
14 What we need, is we need greater financial
15 resources and supplies to help us manage the crisis.
16 When 9/11 happened, when hurricanes "Sandy,"
17 "Irene," and all those other related events, when
18 blackouts happened, we didn't wait for OPWDD.
19 I was an executive director of a residence
20 down in Lower Manhattan that got flooded out.
21 We immediately moved our people to a day
22 program, set up bedrooms, had the staff who they
23 knew there, and actually provided a safe and secure
24 environment.
25 That's what this community does.
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1 That's what our providers do every day; not
2 waiting for a bureaucratic process to try and tell
3 us how we should go about it.
4 We believe in our mission, we believe in the
5 people and families we support, and we will always
6 be there.
7 Thank you, Mr. McAlvanah.
8 Our last panelist for this group is
9 Alyssa Galea from Disability Rights New York.
10 ALYSSA GALEA, ESQ.: Thank you again,
11 Chairman Mannion, and the committee, for the
12 opportunity to speak today.
13 It perhaps goes without saying that I don't
14 think that we can overstate the importance of PPE to
15 group homes. Their shared living spaces, the people
16 who are there are at a greater risk of infection and
17 complications from COVID-19. And the staff working
18 there typically provide extensive hands-on care that
19 makes social distancing physically impossible.
20 Since March of 2020, OPWDD and DOH's guidance
21 has recognized the need for PPE to limit the spread
22 of infection in group homes.
23 We all know that there's been a lot of
24 trouble that group homes have had in getting PPE,
25 and we know that there was a national shortage in
110
1 the early months of the pandemic.
2 But something told to us as a significant
3 issue was the fact that group homes weren't
4 considered a priority, so that [indiscernible]
5 allocations PPE that was available.
6 We had providers reporting to us that they
7 approached offices in their systems, and were told
8 that they were not an essential health-care setting,
9 or because they weren't a nursing home, that their
10 requests were going to be denied or canceled by
11 their local health departments and offices of
12 emergency management, leading, as you've heard, to
13 the providers having to compete in the private
14 market, the higher price, and also sometimes
15 poorer-quality PPE.
16 We really think that the people who live in
17 group homes can't be an after-thought when it comes
18 to policy, planning, and allocating resources.
19 We're talking about PPE here today, but we
20 could really be talking about anything.
21 And people with IDD, and the staff who
22 support them as well, need to be part of the
23 conversation from the beginning at every level of
24 the state and local governments to ensure that
25 they're planned for and protected in future public
111
1 emergencies.
2 You had mentioned a bill to require OPWDD to
3 provide PPE to their providers.
4 And we think, you know, DARNY, we definitely
5 support that. But, you know, it's part of -- we
6 really think it should be passed as part of a larger
7 conversation for all resource allocations and
8 planning.
9 We know this community needs to be at the
10 table from the get-go.
11 Thank you.
12 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you very much.
13 And I agree, the conversation included items
14 related to training and testing. And I don't even
15 know if we're going to get there.
16 But back to Ms. Galea's comment, I will say,
17 yes, there is a bill out there, but we want to do
18 more good than harm.
19 So I'm interested to hear from anyone, as we
20 have a bill, where OPWDD, in a public health crisis,
21 would have to provide PPE for different providers.
22 Is that the right method?
23 I hear contradictory statements about the
24 necessary -- the bureaucracy that we have to go
25 through. And that maybe providers could obtain
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1 these quicker.
2 Although, in a public health crisis, I know
3 that was a tremendous challenge.
4 Would you be supportive of this bill, or, as
5 it relates to PPE, would autonomy be better in
6 trying to secure those?
7 I'm interested to hear from anyone.
8 TOM McALVANAH: I think, certainly,
9 coordination is key.
10 And my apologies not knowing each piece of
11 the bill that you have there.
12 But, clearly, it is a better response than --
13 than -- you know -- you know, we can't -- you'll
14 have to source it somewhere else.
15 We actually need a better response from
16 government when we have a crisis.
17 And I must say that eventually they came
18 through.
19 I neglected my remarks, the Department of
20 Health and Mental Hygiene in New York City
21 eventually came through at the end of April to
22 supply PPEs. But it was through them. It wasn't
23 even through OPWDD.
24 Why DOH has to have the final say in terms of
25 what happens to an OPWDD certified residence is a
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1 little unclear to me.
2 SENATOR MANNION: And to Ms. Borozny, have
3 you already been reimbursed by FEMA for the purchase
4 of the PPE?
5 CYNDI BOROZNY: So we have received about
6 half of our reimbursement, and we still have a few
7 applications that are under review.
8 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you.
9 And, Ms. DiAntonio, you stated that your
10 organization had provided PPE to your members.
11 Are you eligible to receive reimbursement
12 dollars from FEMA as -- as a labor association?
13 RANDI DiANTONIO: I don't know, but it's
14 certainly something our secretary-treasurer would be
15 looking into and be very interested in.
16 I will say that, you know, some of the
17 changes that happen on the procurement side many
18 years ago, I think, influenced how this rolled out.
19 You know, when DDSOs had control over their
20 local procurement, they knew what was needed, they
21 could work with local agencies and within their own
22 system.
23 And now everything goes through a centralized
24 business service center. It takes much longer.
25 They don't -- the types of things we need to order,
114
1 like gloves and medical supplies that we would have
2 normally had on hand, we didn't, because it's been
3 years of flat budgets.
4 And so there's definitely a lot of room for
5 improvement in coordination, and shifting how local
6 authorities are able to maneuver throughout
7 purchasing.
8 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you.
9 Senator Martucci.
10 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Thanks, Chairman.
11 You know, you really covered, I think, all
12 the questions.
13 And, certainly, all I just wanted to say to
14 everyone was, thank you for all that you've done in
15 terms of stepping up in the absence of the
16 department providing leadership when it was needed
17 the most.
18 So, you know, the story I heard from all of
19 you is the story that I've heard from providers in
20 my region, and providers that have reached out to
21 me, which is that -- is what -- it's what Tom talked
22 about, is that this is an industry of folks who
23 don't wait; but, rather, act quickly.
24 And I think your quick actions undoubtedly
25 saved lives.
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1 So thank you for what you did.
2 And, certainly, I could not agree more with
3 respect to the fact that it's so important that we
4 prioritize DSPs as key -- as key, in terms of
5 receiving PPE as we move forward, because you are as
6 critical as it gets.
7 So, again, thank you all for all of your
8 testimony today.
9 And thank you for, like I said, the --
10 lifesaving action that you took in the absence of
11 leadership from the State.
12 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you,
13 Senator Martucci.
14 Thank you to all of the panelists.
15 I think this is probably a good segue into
16 staffing and testing, particularly, as I'm sure we
17 will hear, about establishing DSPs as an
18 occupational code with the Department of Labor,
19 which is absolutely essential.
20 Being mindful of time, I'd just ask that all
21 panelists and chairmen and others try to adhere to
22 the two-minute rule, as we're up to two hours here.
23 I do think that this conversation is a very
24 good one, necessary. And certainly, you know,
25 there's being -- you know, I think we're only
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1 validating what needs to be prioritized, and also
2 seeing areas where we can improve.
3 So our next panel, as I said, is related to
4 staffing and testing, and our first panelist is
5 Joshua Terry from CSCA Local 1000.
6 JOSHUA TERRY: Thank you, Chairman; thank
7 you, Senator Martucci.
8 I hope this is one of the final of these
9 events that we do via Zoom, and not in person.
10 But thanks for having me.
11 I mean, CSCA represents 10,000 direct-support
12 assistants within OPWDD.
13 They showed up every day of this pandemic;
14 they kept coming to work in every part of the state,
15 and they never stopped.
16 So I think we can praise them, and we call
17 them "heroes," but I think our actions are going to
18 speak louder than words in the next few years.
19 Senator Mannion, just to answer one of your
20 questions earlier about deaths in the workforce,
21 we've been able -- we found, sadly, 12 of our
22 members in OPWDD who have passed away from COVID
23 that they contracted on the job; and that's because
24 they kept showing up, they kept taking mass transit
25 to get to work.
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1 And it's really sad.
2 But -- you know, and that may probably is an
3 undercount, just because we don't always know. But
4 that's our number.
5 What I want to talk about is the structural
6 staffing deficit that we have inside of OPWDD.
7 COVID-19 did not cause this structural
8 staffing deficit, but it definitely highlighted our
9 needs.
10 Over the last decade we've had a decreased
11 workforce in OPW of 15 percent.
12 This has caused massive increases in
13 overtime. So just for example, since 2010, the
14 average OPWDD employee works five additional
15 workweeks of overtime every year.
16 I mean, so that's just how short-staffed we
17 are.
18 Due to this staffing deficit and their status
19 as essential workers, OP workers were required to go
20 to work. Even if they had a positive COVID --
21 COVID-19 diagnosis, but were asymptomatic, they had
22 to keep going in.
23 I mean, they -- we are so stretched, that
24 even contracting this virus could not let them miss
25 work if they were healthy in other ways.
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1 We also had members that had to float from --
2 in clusters from home to home, which likely spread
3 the disease into different homes among staff and
4 residents.
5 One thing that I want to bring up, that we
6 did found [sic], when the day habs closed, that
7 freed up about 1,000 of our members to go back into
8 group homes.
9 In those group homes, we have found that
10 overtime was driven down so much because of the
11 influx of staff.
12 So we know that staff -- more staff works,
13 more staff will let us have our overtimes come down.
14 So what we need to work on is a statewide
15 policy, between the State and the voluntary
16 providers, to recruit, train, and retain these
17 workers so that we don't end up in this situation
18 again, because COVID's over, but we still have
19 staffing needs.
20 And I know my time is up, but I'll be glad to
21 talk about this further.
22 SENATOR MANNION: Yes, we agree, Josh,
23 absolutely.
24 Next, returning is Marco Damiani from
25 AHRC New York City.
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1 MARCO DAMIANI: Thank you again, Senators
2 Mannion and Martucci.
3 The IDD workforce is our most valuable asset.
4 The work they did at the onset of the pandemic, and
5 continued to do, is the definition of "essential."
6 Now, Josh just covered a number of staffing
7 considerations, and don't need to repeat them.
8 However, I will add that we must continued to
9 advocate for and achieve a living, not a minimum,
10 wage, as well as a powerful career path, across
11 New York State for the DSP workforce.
12 It's about equity, it's about stronger
13 recruitment and retention, and it's about time.
14 They have done more than enough to earn it.
15 One of the most challenging staffing issues
16 early on was the availability of additional nurses.
17 We haven't heard a lot about this.
18 Group homes are just that: they're homes, not
19 medical facilities.
20 So the immediate need to add nurses to group
21 home staffing was extremely tough.
22 We were able to get some additional nurses
23 through temp agencies at a very high cost, as,
24 virtually, all available nurses were already
25 deployed to hospitals and nursing homes.
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1 More effective staffing models, with the
2 assistance from government, to access these vital
3 professional supports are needed going forward just
4 in case.
5 Routine testing is one of the pillars of
6 pandemic management.
7 When testing finally started to became
8 available more broadly, we immediately applied for
9 and received a limited-lab license just to get
10 access to 2,000 rapid testing kits.
11 Most other organizations can't do this. We
12 were lucky we could do it.
13 Many agencies are bearing very substantial
14 testing costs. FEMA may or may not cover all of
15 these expenses.
16 Rapid testing capacity is critical. We're
17 talking a lot about vaccinations, and that's
18 important. But rapid testing is critical. The
19 technology is there, and readily available. Let's
20 make immediate and full use of it, and be funded for
21 it.
22 Thank you, again.
23 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you.
24 Next, I would like to introduce
25 Rachelle Kivanoski from NYC FAIR.
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1 My apologies, Rachelle, if I missed.
2 RACHELLE KIVANOSKI: No, you were perfect.
3 Thank you.
4 And I want to thank Senator Mannion,
5 Senator Martucci, and all the members of the
6 Disabilities Committee for this opportunity.
7 My name is Rachelle Kivanoski, and I am a
8 member of the executive committee of New York City
9 FAIR, an organization of family advocates.
10 I'm also the mom of a young man who resides
11 in a small certified IRA.
12 My son and I have both witnessed and endured
13 this pandemic firsthand, including a two-week
14 quarantine in his bedroom due to illness of one of
15 his four roommates, and the prolonged lockdowns.
16 We so appreciate the dedicated lifesaving
17 work of our DSPs.
18 We in New York City FAIR understand the
19 challenge of developing nuance policies during the
20 early chaotic days of the onset of the pandemic and
21 lack of available testing.
22 What I would like to focus on today are the
23 decisions made during the early fall that may well
24 have contributed to potentially avoidable infections
25 and deaths during the second wave of the pandemic,
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1 and are still not adequately addressed in the newly
2 revised OPWDD guidelines released on May 17th.
3 There were close to an additional 200 deaths,
4 from December to mid-May, out of the total
5 669 deaths in group homes; once again, at a higher
6 rate than the general population.
7 While the robust rate of vaccination has
8 provided protection to the overwhelming majority of
9 group home residents, significant risk remains as
10 people start to return to other programs where the
11 proportion of vaccinated individuals who reside in
12 the community, and staff vaccination overall,
13 remains below 35 percent.
14 Perhaps the most problematic existing
15 guidance permits staff with known COVID exposure to
16 continue working as long as they are asymptomatic,
17 as Mr. Terry just said.
18 While OPWDD acknowledged the risk of
19 asymptomatic transmission, the guidance clearly
20 underplayed its importance, and relied only on
21 masking, hand hygiene, and the almost impossible
22 standard of social distancing within a residence.
23 The current COVID infection rate is very low,
24 but it undoubtedly underestimates the level of
25 asymptomatic infection in the community at large.
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1 Since asymptomatic people generally are not
2 tested, there is still no mandatory COVID testing
3 for staff or residents even when there is a positive
4 case in a residence or in a program.
5 The "see no evil" approach to infection
6 control continues to put residents and staff at
7 risk.
8 And I would like to echo Mr. Damiani in
9 saying, in-home rapid testing kits are now readily
10 available at a reasonable cost, especially if some
11 of the enhanced FMAT funds are allocated for this
12 purpose, and for providing incentives to staff to
13 get vaccinated.
14 So we would like to recommend mandatory
15 on-site pre-shift testing of all unvaccinated staff
16 in all residential and day program sites.
17 Unvaccinated staff with known COVID exposure
18 should not be permitted to work, and providers
19 should strive to reduce assigning staff to multiple
20 sites.
21 Thank you.
22 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you for your
23 statement, and thank you for your recommendations.
24 Moving on, back to Michael Seereiter from
25 New York Alliance for Inclusion and Innovation.
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1 MICHAEL SEEREITER: Thank you again for the
2 opportunity.
3 On staffing, direct support professionals,
4 it's their dedication, their commitment, and their
5 willingness to put themselves and their families in
6 harm's way to support people with disabilities.
7 They were the most significant factor in why
8 people with IDD were not more significantly impacted
9 by COVID through this crisis.
10 As we heard earlier, DSPs literally moved in
11 and slept on the floors and the couches of those
12 with IDD that they support for weeks on end.
13 And we've hoisted DSPs up on our shoulders
14 and lauded them as heroes; yet their pay is
15 humiliating, and it speaks to a hypocrisy in our
16 society's values and a correlated government
17 prioritization for funding for this work.
18 During the early days of the pandemic, many
19 DSPs said something like, if we aren't respected as
20 a profession and compensated appropriately after
21 this display of commitment, and risking our lives
22 and our families' health and well-being during
23 COVID, I'm done.
24 And now we're seeing that exactly come true
25 with an unprecedented staffing emergency overtaking
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1 us as we speak.
2 We must take immediate short-term and
3 long-term steps to address this emergency now, and
4 for the future.
5 We outlined many of those steps at
6 yesterday's Emergency Workforce Summit, and we now
7 need to take some action.
8 The other significant reason that people with
9 IDD were not more impacted by COVID is the
10 extraordinary measures that provider organizations
11 went to to procure PPE and pay hazard and hero pay,
12 largely without the reimbursement of revenue that we
13 were just discussing.
14 Tom mentioned earlier about the cost the
15 providers incurred for PPE.
16 Additionally, providers paid $130 million in
17 hazard and hero pay from the period of time, from
18 March to November; while at the same time, their
19 revenue went down $327 million.
20 We need to use some of the enhanced FMAT
21 resources to recognize and reimburse for these
22 largely unreimbursed expenses, and to begin paving
23 the way for bringing DSP wages back up.
24 Lastly, I think it's important that we
25 recognize that DSPs are disproportionately Black and
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1 Brown New Yorkers, not dissimilar to other
2 caregiving and human-services sector professions.
3 As Jim Moran said previously, the nature of
4 the work makes people susceptible to infection
5 transmission with a virus like COVID. So it's not
6 hard to surmise how COVID infection and death rates
7 are higher in Black and Brown communities, in part,
8 because -- in part, caused by the jobs that these
9 people have, or had, as the case may be.
10 On testing, access to testing, it was a
11 significant problem early on.
12 It is clearly linked to a significant lack of
13 recognition by New York State; I would say
14 Department of Health, the health system overall,
15 about OPWDD, its system, and direct support
16 professionals as essential workers, as others have
17 noted before.
18 And it took exceptional levels of advocacy
19 from all levels of stakeholders, and OPWDD included,
20 to get IDD services, and others, like behavioral
21 health, recognized as part of the public health
22 system for the purposes of the pandemic management.
23 We can't let that happen ever again; we can
24 never again be left as an after-thought.
25 Thank you.
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1 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Mr. Seereiter.
2 Back to Jim Moran from Care Design New York.
3 JIM MORAN: Thank you, Senator.
4 I'm going to sort of shift away from my
5 testimony, which is really focused on the
6 vaccination and testing of employees. Clearly, it's
7 a critical issue that has been talked about.
8 I wanted to shift to -- really, to a bill
9 that you've now sponsored, Senator, and that is, at
10 the height -- the ultimate slap in the face I see
11 with all of this, during the height of the pandemic,
12 that a budget proposal was put out to cut the rates
13 of the service -- residential service providers; to
14 eliminate hundreds of millions of dollars of funding
15 to the residential providers during the height of a
16 pandemic.
17 And the fact that, you know, well, that's
18 because we've got to make the numbers work.
19 And, you know, as somebody -- as one of the
20 parents said earlier, the State has been
21 cost-centered as opposed to person-centered.
22 And at the height of a pandemic, to think
23 that that -- that -- that really tells you what the
24 feeling is of the value of not only the people that
25 we're blessed to be able to support day in and day
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1 out, but the people who work with those individuals
2 to help them live the best lives possible.
3 I want to get behind your bill, Senator, and
4 really applaud you for taking that on, because the
5 last thing the providers -- service providers need
6 right now is one more cut.
7 Enough is enough.
8 So, thank you.
9 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Mr. Moran.
10 I went out of order a little bit, so
11 I apologize to folks.
12 I will make sure that I catch everybody.
13 But, next, is Julie Keegan from
14 Disability Rights New York.
15 JULIE KEEGAN: Good morning -- or, good
16 afternoon, Senator.
17 I really appreciate the opportunity to be
18 here from Disability Rights New York, the protection
19 and advocacy system for New York State.
20 Much of what I had planned to say is covered
21 in a very comprehensive report that my colleague
22 Alyssa Galea alluded to, which was based on a
23 seven-month study, looking at the treatment of
24 people in group homes in New York during the COVID
25 pandemic, and the State's response.
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1 And that is available on the Disability
2 Rights New York website.
3 But I do want to highlight a few things that
4 have been talked about here, to some extent, but the
5 first is, with regard to staffing, is I want to
6 emphasize also, that these are individuals, the
7 direct support professionals, that are working in
8 these very stressful times, not only getting paid
9 less, but, also, because of the diminished
10 workforce, having to cover extra shifts and working
11 in a short-staffed situation.
12 These folks are disproportionately Black in
13 New York. Only 17.6 percent of the general
14 population is Black. But for direct support
15 professionals, we're looking at 35 to 42 percent.
16 That's very significant.
17 Also, direct service professionals are
18 disproportionately women, and they're people born in
19 other countries.
20 So I think we need to be mindful of that when
21 we're looking at pay equity.
22 And then, also, and I will say it also, there
23 was heroic, absolute heroic, conduct by these
24 individuals during this crisis.
25 And I totally agree with Michael, that more
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1 people would have died had not these folks stepped
2 up and stepped in and stayed for weeks on end to
3 minimize exposure.
4 With regard to testing, what I wanted to say
5 there, is that it's very shocking and disturbing
6 that individuals in group homes are not given the
7 same priority and the same protection as people in
8 other congregate settings.
9 Although testing was not widely available at
10 the outset of the pandemic, this has not been the
11 case for many months.
12 And, indeed, over a year ago, New York State
13 mandated staff testing in congregate settings other
14 than group homes. Beginning on May 15, 2020, staff
15 working in nursing facilities were mandated to be
16 tested two times a week.
17 It's very troubling that people in group
18 homes are not given the same protection as people in
19 nursing homes and other congregate settings.
20 People in group homes require close physical
21 contact with staff and confined spaces just as
22 people with nursing homes do.
23 As Dr. Kastner mentioned today, people in
24 group homes often have comorbid conditions that put
25 them at higher risk of serious illness and death
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1 just like nursing home residents.
2 There is no rational basis for this
3 discriminatory practice.
4 For all of these reasons, the State must
5 require and fund regular testing of staff who have
6 not been vaccinated.
7 We recommend that both direct support
8 professionals and provider agencies be required
9 partners in creating the parameters of a testing
10 mandate.
11 Thank you very much.
12 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you very much,
13 Ms. Keegan.
14 Next is, we're back to Randy DiAntonio from
15 Public Employees Federation.
16 RANDI DiANTONIO: Thank you, Senator Mannion.
17 So I am from the Public Employees Federation,
18 but I've also worked for OPWDD for 23 years as a
19 social worker.
20 And I agree with a lot of what my fellow
21 panelists have said today about the staffing crisis,
22 and that crisis clearly goes across all state
23 agencies, but, in particular, OPWDD has been the
24 hardest hit.
25 My colleague from CSEA mentioned about
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1 15 percent of the workforce has been lost over the
2 last decade.
3 That equates to over 4500 employees.
4 Let me say that again: Over 4,500 employees.
5 OPW had the most overtime of any --
6 25 percent of the 19 million hours worked in
7 overtime during COVID was OPWDD.
8 There's been a systemic effort to shrink the
9 footprint of this agency and the critical levels of
10 care. And we saw it magnified throughout this
11 pandemic.
12 The shortages started to allow the agency to
13 justify a trend of suspending services, closing
14 group homes, because they couldn't staff those
15 settings.
16 Many of our members who are not DSPs, but are
17 habilitation specialists and nurses, were redeployed
18 into the group homes, and were willing to do
19 whatever they could to support their brothers and
20 sisters, you know, doing the frontline work;
21 however, a lot of this increased density in the
22 homes, it increased transmission risks because
23 people were being redeployed from one place to
24 another.
25 We've seen over the last 10 years a loss of
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1 3,000 beds. And that wait continues to increase
2 because of staffing shortages as we speak.
3 Everybody has heard about the nursing
4 shortages. And OPW is significantly impacted by
5 their un -- inability to recruit and retain nurses.
6 We still have not seen hazard pay for our
7 members who have been on the front lines.
8 There is a lot of things going on where
9 short-staffing has increased the risks.
10 And I know I'm running out of time, but
11 I want to address one issue related to the
12 Department of Health guidelines that were issued.
13 These guidelines for returning to work after
14 a positive case allowed agencies to bring people
15 back after a much abbreviated quarantine period if
16 they wore a mask.
17 But, basically, we were bringing back
18 positive people into homes because we didn't have
19 enough staff.
20 And I would just encourage, and I thank the
21 Senate for passing Senate Bill 1765A this week,
22 which would allow -- or, engage the agency in a
23 reporting process on staffing and fills, but this
24 has to be more transparent.
25 We need to know why vacancies aren't filled,
134
1 and why they're not recruiting and retaining staff.
2 And there are reasons for this, and we need
3 to have these conversations.
4 So staffing is a critical need, and we look
5 forward to partnering with all of you as we move
6 forward.
7 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Ms. DiAntonio.
8 Our last panelist for the topic is
9 Peter Zummo from the New York Alliance for the
10 Developmentally Disabled.
11 PETER ZUMMO: Thank you, Senator, for your
12 leadership in this area.
13 Being last means a lot of the good things
14 have said, so I'm justed going to speak as a father
15 and a family member.
16 I have a son, 23 years old, Andrew. He has
17 autism. He's low-functioning and non-verbal. He
18 lives in a certified IRA.
19 Andrew and his three housemates require
20 24-hour care. During COVID, the staffing of his
21 house was reduced to a barebones level because there
22 was no staffing available to fill all the positions.
23 Now that we're on the other side, staffing is
24 still reduced. This has diminished my son's quality
25 of life. For example, he rarely ever gets to leave
135
1 the house because there's never enough staff for him
2 to do so. He only gets to go out when we, me or my
3 wife, take him out.
4 DSPs are, ultimately, what make the house
5 work. Without them there would be no residence for
6 my son.
7 The DSPs that are now working with Andrew all
8 stayed through their jobs through the pandemic.
9 They're dedicated, they care, but they also
10 have to earn a living and pay their bills.
11 OPWDD must provide funding to the agencies
12 that would allow them to pay the DSPs what they
13 deserve for the work they do.
14 Lack of State funding has made a DSP's wage
15 not a living wage.
16 That is no longer acceptable.
17 In addition, OPWDD has instituted cuts to
18 residential rates that will take millions of dollars
19 out of the system at the very time when millions of
20 dollars need to go into the system to provide
21 compensation for the DSPs.
22 It's actually surreal that, coming out of a
23 pandemic, with an ocean of federal dollars coming
24 into New York State, that OPWDD would cut
25 residential rates at this time.
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1 But it's not just residential. Many day habs
2 are also closed, or have not reopened fully, due
3 again to a lack of staff.
4 My son is lucky; he's in his day hab.
5 But I personally know of one person who lives
6 in an IRA, who has not had day hab services since
7 March of 2020 due to staffing problems. His IRA is
8 provided by one agency. His day hab is another
9 agency. He has received no services since March of
10 2020. He sits, watching TV, 15 hours a day -- I'm
11 sorry -- for the last 15 months, he sits, watching
12 TV.
13 It's unacceptable.
14 Proper staffing is essential to make this
15 system work.
16 We cannot let our people down. Our
17 population deserve to be treated with dignity and
18 respect.
19 OPWDD needs to stay, stay the course, and
20 provide the resources necessary to make this system
21 what it should be.
22 Thank you.
23 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Mr. Zummo.
24 Senator Martucci.
25 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Thanks again, Chairman.
137
1 So I guess maybe the first thing I'll start
2 off with is, the Chairman and I, I know wrote a
3 letter together, opposing the cuts to the voluntary
4 residential programs.
5 So I think we certainly share the sentiment
6 that you all have raised with respect to that issue.
7 Certainly, now is not the time to be making cuts to
8 these programs.
9 So we couldn't agree more.
10 My thanks to Randy and Josh for being here.
11 And certainly, your membership, and, really,
12 the DSPs, and other service providers around our
13 state, who, again, [indiscernible] -- some of you
14 have come back from different panels, so you've
15 heard this before -- but have really filled a gap of
16 leadership that this State left, and took absolutely
17 life-saving action to make sure that things weren't
18 even worse than they are now.
19 And, lastly, you know, I only had 10 minutes
20 of questions with the Commissioner, but what was
21 certainly positive that came out of my discussion
22 with him was a willingness for he and I to sit
23 afterward.
24 And I do have tremendous concerns with
25 respect to the abbreviated quarantine period that
138
1 was brought up. I think that that certainly is a --
2 I have tremendous questions about, you know, how
3 that not only affects the safety of our staff, but
4 the folks that live in these facilities.
5 And then, lastly, I couldn't agree more with
6 the importance of testing at this time.
7 I know, Ms. Keegan, you talked about it,
8 and others, how critical that is that this State
9 step up, not only mandate it, but financially
10 support it.
11 So I look forward to continuing that
12 conversation because I too am aware of that
13 information that shows us that, from December to
14 mid-May, our fatalities tipped up by 200.
15 And during that period I was making multiple
16 requests to OPWDD about this data. And for a large
17 portion of that time that data wasn't available.
18 So, unfortunately, it was a grim statistic
19 that confirmed for us that the problem was far from
20 behind us.
21 So you've certainly got my commitment that
22 I'll be following up with the Commissioner on that,
23 even though I did not have an opportunity to ask
24 those questions today.
25 Thank you, Chairman.
139
1 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you.
2 Obviously, many concerning things that are
3 coming up again, including, you know, the
4 COVID-positive patients that were forced to return
5 to work. That is the extreme nature of the
6 workforce crisis I think that we're in.
7 And I can -- will just quickly say, to Randy
8 and Josh also, thank you to your members for,
9 literally, giving their lives to care for others.
10 And my best to their family members as well.
11 For the family advocates that are on here, we
12 can hear it, we can all hear it, you care about the
13 people who care for your family members.
14 I had an aunt who lived in a residential
15 facility.
16 We need to treat these people with dignity,
17 respect, and equity.
18 And I think we're all on the same page there,
19 and we're all going to make sure that we do whatever
20 we can to make sure that they are properly
21 respected, that they have that dignity.
22 And the only way to do that is to properly
23 fund it, and we're all going to push together, as
24 I know Senator Martucci agrees.
25 And the folks that I've had the pleasure of
140
1 meeting, that are across the screen, are going to
2 push with me.
3 So thank you all for participating today.
4 Thank you for your advocacy for the people
5 who do the work.
6 And thank you to the people who did the work,
7 and who represent those.
8 So I appreciate it.
9 Our next panel will be on visitation.
10 Our first panelist will be BJ Stasio from
11 Self-Advocacy Association of New York.
12 BJ STASIO: Thank you for having me back;
13 I appreciate it.
14 And while we're talking about visitation,
15 under certain circumstances during COVID-19, people
16 in certified settings were restricted in terms of
17 visitation to what they had believed as their home.
18 They were also restricted from participating
19 in their community.
20 While the Self-Advocacy Association does not
21 question the intent and importance of preserving
22 health and well-being, even lives, their
23 restrictions raised significant questions among
24 self-advocates about rights.
25 It was very difficult for people to
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1 understand why they could be told they could not
2 have visitors or access to community when their
3 neighbors, who did not receive services, could
4 choose to do these things.
5 We asked OPWDD and New York State to explore
6 these rights-related issues that have come up --
7 come to light in the future, to ensure the
8 strategies to infection-control pandemic management
9 are clearly based on a foundation of individual
10 rights, and that that foundation of any necessary
11 restrictions, should those exist, are communicated
12 clearly in a manner that afford people receiving
13 those services to understand their rights, and the
14 recourse should they not agree with any
15 restrictions, such as easy-read documents, for
16 example, in plain language.
17 And I would like to say, from my previous
18 panel, I support the point that Michael Seereiter
19 made about smaller group homes. And if people wish
20 to live in their own setting, I would like to -- for
21 people to have the option to explore that.
22 Thank you.
23 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you very much,
24 Mr. Stasio.
25
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1 And next we are back to Peter Zummo from the
2 New York Alliance for the Developmentally Disabled.
3 PETER ZUMMO: Thank you again, Senator.
4 Before I discuss the actual visitation issue,
5 I would like to point out the effects of the
6 long-term lockout that my son had to endure, and
7 other residents of the system.
8 The lockdown caused physical, medical, and
9 psychological harm.
10 He -- my son developed aggressive behaviors
11 towards staff. We had to adjust his medication to
12 address the issue. He developed alopecia from the
13 stress he was under.
14 Other residents showed signs of severe
15 regression and depression.
16 I know people that were forced to miss
17 medical appointments because they were under
18 lockdown, including one person whose glaucoma went
19 untreated, and is now blind in one eye.
20 As for visitation, from March to July, my son
21 was a virtual prisoner in his house. He was not
22 permitted to have any visitors, he was not allowed
23 to go anyplace or do anything.
24 His house is not medically fragile. None of
25 the four residents have any comorbidities that would
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1 increase the risk of a poor outcome should they have
2 contacted COVID.
3 I was not allowed to see my son, even though
4 I'm his guardian, and have the legal right and
5 obligation to see him and check on his condition.
6 While such a draconian lockout may have made
7 sense in March and April, to extend the total
8 separation of residents from their families and
9 guardians into July and beyond was excessive and
10 unreasonable.
11 I would like to point out also that the
12 effects of COVID were different from region to
13 region in the state and in the OPWDD system.
14 Treating all the regions alike is not the right way
15 to do it.
16 I also think we need legislation passed that
17 will establish an "essential family or guardian"
18 designation, which I like to call "EFG."
19 The EFG would permit each resident, or her
20 guardian, to designate one person who will be her
21 EFG, and that EFG will be granted access to the
22 house the same as if she was a staff member.
23 This way, if there are future lockdowns, one
24 person from each family, either a guardian or a
25 family member, is designated, and can go into the
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1 house, check on their loved one's conditions, and
2 see that they are okay or if they need anything.
3 I think if a lockdown is necessary in the
4 future, it should be limited in time and scope only
5 to what is medically necessary.
6 Locking out guardians and separating families
7 for months at a time is not in the best interests of
8 the residents.
9 Thank you, Senator.
10 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Mr. Zummo.
11 Next is, I would like to introduce
12 Susan Constantino of CP Unlimited.
13 SUSAN CONSTANTINO: (No audio.)
14 SENATOR MANNION: Susan, you're muted.
15 SUSAN CONSTANTINO: After all this time,
16 wouldn't you think we would know enough to not be
17 muted?
18 Unbelievable.
19 I really started by saying, thank you,
20 Senator Mannion, for everything you've been doing.
21 And for you, Senator Martucci, we -- I have
22 affiliates who speak very highly of you and all of
23 what you've been doing.
24 So thank you very, very much.
25 I come here in a little different fashion,
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1 and so I'm not going to talk about what I had
2 written to talk about.
3 But I would really like to talk to BJ and to
4 Peter and to other parents, because this is a
5 provider, and our providers across the state.
6 This was an extremely difficult time for us
7 too.
8 It goes back to a lot of what's been said
9 throughout all of this hearing.
10 The first part is, that there were no clear
11 guidance that we received from OPWDD.
12 Guidance that's put in place and never taken
13 out of place, guidance that was put in for actually,
14 really, downstate, and went through the whole state,
15 is not appropriate, and we know that.
16 But we also know that, as providers, the
17 people we needed in our homes were our direct
18 support staff. And we knew that we could not
19 control where they were, except when they were with
20 us.
21 We did not have enough PPEs in the beginning,
22 but that changed, and we eventually had enough.
23 But we couldn't control who was really
24 working with our folks.
25 And so the "lockdown," as you call it, and
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1 for us it was, really, we didn't like to think about
2 it that way, but it appeared necessary because our
3 goal was to keep people safe, especially as we saw
4 our individuals go into the hospital or our
5 individuals pass away.
6 So that really was the reason why.
7 But I sat in meetings with OPWDD every week
8 for months and months, and nothing changed. And
9 that was wrong because we needed to have the
10 guidance changed, it needed to be looked at
11 differently.
12 But it goes back to exactly what was said on
13 the last panel: If we would have had the
14 availability or the access of testing, where we
15 could have tested; where we could have tested our
16 staff, where we could have tested, and asked our
17 families to have these rapid tests, only those of us
18 who were lucky enough to have some kind of a
19 relationship with a PPS or with something else where
20 we were able to get the testing, that could have
21 helped.
22 So forgive us as providers that we locked you
23 out. That was not what we really wanted to do, and
24 we needed to really have a better way to do it.
25 But also forgive us for trying to keep people
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1 safe, even though the repercussions, as you had
2 talked about, Peter, were very great.
3 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Ms. Constantino.
4 Our last panelist for the topic is
5 Margaret Raustiala.
6 MARGARET RAUSTIALA: Senator, I'm going to
7 make your job a little difficult because I'm a
8 parent. I represent Long Island Advocacy for the
9 Developmentally Disabled, and I have a very
10 different point of view from the other parent who
11 spoke, and from the Self-Advocate.
12 March of 2020 OPWDD suspended all visitation
13 in certified residences. It was the height of the
14 pandemic, and little was known with certainty about
15 how COVID spread, was transmitted, and how deadly
16 was the disease.
17 Given the range of vulnerabilities of the
18 people who live in certified residences, this
19 seemingly draconian suspension of all visitation, in
20 my humble opinion, was necessary.
21 Many families were understandably upset, but
22 most, most, I believe, recognized the need for
23 precautions.
24 Later, the memo suspending visitation was
25 amended to permit, but not require, providers to
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1 allow visitation outdoors with symptom checks,
2 temperature taken, mask worn, and social distance
3 when possible.
4 At the time of the pandemic, my son Rico was
5 49, and had never gone more than two weeks without
6 visiting my husband and I in our home.
7 Rico would not talk on the phone or use
8 FaceTime, and we were worried that if we went to
9 visit him in the backyard, he would want to hop in
10 the car and would wonder why he couldn't.
11 Consequently, after 49 years, we went
12 5 months, 5 months, before we saw him and could
13 bring him to our home for a visit.
14 Staff took photos and short videos of Rico so
15 that we could see how he was adjusting to his new
16 life.
17 Words cannot express the gratification that
18 I feel. This was a difficult time.
19 Some families were angered by the visitation
20 policy. They believed that if the staff went out in
21 and out of the group home, why not families?
22 At the time, at the beginning of the
23 pandemic, Leanne took the position that, while
24 separation of residence from their loved ones can
25 cause significant stress and anxiety, as one of the
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1 parents pointed out, it was necessary because the
2 staff was needed. It required staff to go in and
3 out. We don't require families to go in and out.
4 So as hard as it was, and as difficult as it
5 was, it was the right thing to do.
6 As more was learned about the transmission of
7 the virus, OPWDD recognized that new strategies were
8 needed, going forward, and to extend the opportunity
9 to visit residents in certified facilitates.
10 Eventually, protocols were in place to permit
11 indoor visits by persons 18 years or older. These
12 included, again, symptom, temperature checks,
13 guidance, as to where in the home the visit could
14 ideally take place, and requirements for
15 mask-wearing, and as someone pointed out, social
16 distancing, which is often very, very difficult, if
17 not impossible, to achieve.
18 Since there was increasing evidence that the
19 transmission of the virus outdoors was difficult,
20 given its airborne nature, many agencies strongly
21 encouraged people to come visit their child in the
22 backyard, weather permitting.
23 The U.S. has now reached a new milestone,
24 with the number of Americans who are fully
25 vaccinated reaching 41.4 percent, as of the CDC
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1 yesterday.
2 It was more -- the CDC has, like, come out
3 with different guidance that's more stringent than
4 the general public, but gives more flexibility.
5 Governor Cuomo recently announced that more
6 than 60 percent of adult residents in New York State
7 have had at least one dose of vaccine, and more than
8 50 percent of the adults are fully vaccinated.
9 In this case, we are pleased that visitation
10 has become much more loosened up, and especially for
11 those individuals where the resident and the person
12 visiting them are both fully vaccinated, and the
13 visitation takes places in the resident's bedroom or
14 in a designated area away from other people.
15 We think that this is a very reasonable step.
16 And we hope that, as time goes on, and more
17 is learned, and, eventually, more and more people
18 are fully vaccinated, that the government will --
19 New York State government will continue to follow
20 science, and make decisions based on the science
21 that the CDC is coming forth with.
22 Thank you.
23 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Margaret.
24 All of that commentary was very powerful, and
25 I can only imagine the range of emotions that your
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1 family members and yourselves felt.
2 Well, just one quick comment, and then a
3 quick question.
4 But, Peter, my comment is, that I think your
5 idea is a fantastic one, and absolutely necessary.
6 And, hopefully, you know, we can -- our
7 office can engage with you to talk a little bit more
8 about that. But your EFG idea is a -- I'm a fan of,
9 and it's absolutely necessary.
10 And, just, if there's any blessings that come
11 out of this, I think that that, making that change,
12 so that we can make sure that we have access to our
13 family members, is important.
14 And I've heard this over the course of almost
15 a year and a half how necessary that is.
16 Peter, you were going to say something,
17 I think?
18 PETER ZUMMO: Yes. Thank you, Senator.
19 I appreciate your support in this. And,
20 NYADD, we're 6,000 people strong throughout
21 New York State. We're -- we'll be happy to work
22 with you and your colleagues, and get this EFG
23 legislation passed.
24 And I think it's a very good thing that is
25 really needed in the system.
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1 Thank you.
2 SENATOR MANNION: And then my last question,
3 and I think some of the family members and advocates
4 alluded to this, but, you know, were there any
5 options --
6 I think, Margaret, you had mentioned this.
7 -- but any options that really were very good
8 options, and, obviously, that was restricted at
9 certain times --
10 You had talked about your -- the backyard
11 visit.
12 -- but that were provided to residents to
13 keep in touch that you found to be, you know, on par
14 with, or close to, in-person interactions?
15 MARGARET RAUSTIALA: As I said, once again,
16 the DSPs came through. They understood, and they
17 would take photographs of Rico, or short videos, and
18 send them to me, on their own. The DSPs really
19 understood that we couldn't see him, and that this
20 was the best thing in our family's case.
21 And to go back to the proposal that was made
22 in terms of one person being permitted to visit,
23 I still think that testing is going to be the key.
24 I mean, we need -- we can't have -- I don't care who
25 you are, we need now with testing, so that the
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1 people we know who are getting together are free of
2 COVID, or have been fully vaccinated and have that
3 Excelsior pass.
4 SENATOR MANNION: I think we agree.
5 Absolutely.
6 Thank you, Margaret.
7 Any other comments from anyone?
8 Thank you again, for the panelists, for
9 sharing your story. And, again, I use the word
10 "powerful," but it was powerful.
11 Thank you, again; I appreciate it.
12 Our next panel is on vaccination, and our
13 first panelist is Susan Constantino from
14 CP Unlimited.
15 SUSAN CONSTANTINO: I'm unmuted this time,
16 I'm happy to say, having thought about it.
17 Well, I really want to thank the people who
18 organized this because they gave me the happy thing
19 to talk about, which is vaccinations.
20 And I would like to talk a little bit about,
21 number one, thanking everyone, the Legislature, as
22 well as, I believe, OPWDD, certainly NYDA, and all
23 of us who advocated, that our individuals who live
24 in certified residential programs were part of the
25 1A grouping, and that we were able to be in the
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1 first group to get them vaccinated.
2 I think it was also important that our staff
3 were in that group, and that made a big difference.
4 Even though we have not been very successful
5 in getting our staff to accept being vaccinated, I
6 do think that having them be in the first group,
7 having it be easier for them to be able to do, and
8 having them be able to observe our individuals
9 receive the vaccine, was really important.
10 And we continue to try to keep encouraging
11 that kind of behavior for them, that they would get
12 vaccinated.
13 I do want to say that OPWDD required a very
14 stringent data collection system on the
15 vaccinations.
16 And in the very beginning, staff who really
17 were -- who did not have the time and were unable to
18 do this, we're really asked to report on
19 vaccinations every single day. And we were -- it
20 was overwhelming.
21 And so we worked with OPWDD, and we were able
22 to -- or, a small group of us work with them in
23 order to get that changed so it became at least
24 weekly.
25 It's redundant. It doesn't really give us
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1 what it needs because it's aggregate. It doesn't
2 give us, like, in which areas are there particular
3 issues about trying to get people vaccinated.
4 But at least it is data that we've got that
5 we can look at.
6 But I think what was most important, and
7 I think it's really important to give credit where
8 it was due, the local health departments, once --
9 during the very beginning of COVID, when they didn't
10 recognize us, they didn't know that the Office of
11 Emergency Management didn't realize they were
12 supposed to support us or help us, but once they
13 learned that, and through the Governor's office, we
14 actually got acquainted with many of them,
15 particularly in New York City, they were magnificent
16 in the vaccination part.
17 They really helped us to find the places
18 where we would go.
19 They helped us to support smaller agencies so
20 that everyone had a place to go.
21 They were -- we could call them and say,
22 "This clinic needs 200 doses on this day," and it
23 would be there.
24 So between the FQHCs and the long-term care
25 pharmacies, and some other OPWDD providers that said
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1 I'll have it in my own place, I think that there was
2 a concerted effort, and it was an effort that
3 succeeded, based on the fact that we have so many
4 folks vaccinated.
5 My only comment -- last comment is just that,
6 now we need to find ways to get our staff
7 vaccinated.
8 We need support.
9 We don't have clear guidance on exactly what
10 we can say or what we can't say, and that's not just
11 OPWDD. I think it's everyone now looking at this.
12 But the day that we're able to say that it's
13 required, and that we must -- that staff must be
14 vaccinated will be the day we can all start to feel
15 a little bit more comfortable.
16 Thank you.
17 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Susan.
18 The last panelist for this topic is
19 Yvette Watts from New York Association of Emerging
20 and Multicultural Providers, Incorporated.
21 YVETTE WATTS: Thank you,
22 Senator Manning [sic] for this opportunity to speak
23 again on this very sensitive topic.
24 First I want to thank my colleague
25 Susan Constantino.
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1 She, along with her large agency,
2 demonstrated that networking and shared resources
3 amongst providers is our greatest resource.
4 As she mentioned, in the beginning, there was
5 a disconnect.
6 And we did get into the "A" category, but
7 prior to that there was a lack of communication.
8 I know many of my small and midsize providers
9 were at a loss. And families were contacting them,
10 and they had nowhere -- where to go, what to do,
11 were they even counted in this A1 category.
12 So once Susan connected us with the local
13 DOH, we were able to work along with her to make a
14 lot of those pop-up sites available, and to really
15 find out what needs those agencies had.
16 Thank you so much, Susan. You know, I love
17 following you on any kind of a forum.
18 I just want to say that, right now, the
19 problem that we have, is the hesitancy rate is very
20 high amongst the staff, and especially people of
21 Black and Brown culture. And that has a lot to do
22 with historic cultural concerns, but it also has to
23 do, and I have to say this, I mentioned it
24 yesterday, it's the lack of equity in compensation,
25 the lack of trust.
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1 These individuals do not -- I mean, now I'm
2 talking as a mother of a 36-year-old female with
3 autism.
4 And I hear them say, How can I trust someone
5 that doesn't even care what I do, doesn't even care
6 that can I pay my bills?
7 These individuals -- and then, you know, you
8 talk about the day we will be able to do mandatory
9 testing. Until we build that trust up, that's not
10 going to work, because many of them feel, and they
11 said it to me, that why should I trust someone to
12 vaccinate me when they can't even compensate me or
13 understand that what I do is important? I take care
14 of individuals, but I want to be here. But that
15 I can't -- that I don't feel like an essential
16 worker. I feel like I am being abused.
17 And that's the way they feel.
18 I think that Michael Seereiter, another
19 colleague, he was so eloquent in stating what he
20 feels about the disparagy [ph.] and the lack of
21 equity for our workers.
22 So as I said before, this is a circle of --
23 and once there's a piece that's not connected, if we
24 don't -- we need those individuals, yes, to be
25 vaccinated, but you cannot mandate individuals that
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1 don't even want to work with you anymore.
2 It's very simple.
3 And I think that it's appropriate that we had
4 the forum yesterday, and now we have this forum in
5 which -- the platform in which to talk about what we
6 need to do, moving forward.
7 So thank you, Senator, for this opportunity
8 to speak.
9 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you.
10 Yes, and thank you for sharing.
11 And, you know, I'm almost embarrassed by the
12 questions that I would have asked, because I know
13 the -- you know, this is not about procedure, this
14 is not about logistics. It's a much, much bigger,
15 and more sensitive, picture than that.
16 And I appreciate both of you sharing that
17 information.
18 I don't have any questions because I don't
19 think we're going to have an answer.
20 So we do understand the importance of it, and
21 I do hear resonating as it regards to testing, which
22 has come up -- came up several times.
23 And, of course, we want people to be
24 vaccinated, but we also want them healthy as they're
25 working with others, and we want to help in building
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1 a more trustworthy environment, yes.
2 YVETTE WATTS: Thank you.
3 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you.
4 Our next panel is fiscal impact and other
5 challenges.
6 Our first panelist is Kathy Bunce from
7 State-Wide Family Advocacy Network of New York.
8 KATHY BUNCE: (No audio.)
9 SENATOR MANNION: Kathy, you are muted.
10 KATHY BUNCE: I'm sorry. I should know by
11 now.
12 The COVID shined a very bright light on a
13 very fragile system.
14 For years family stakeholders have been
15 sounding the alarm, and asking for investment in the
16 workforce we desperately need. We have asked
17 repeatedly, the services delivered through OPWDD is
18 fully and fairly funded.
19 I know you've heard those words from us
20 before.
21 The increased minimum wage, along with a
22 decade of -- without a meaningful COLA -- there was
23 a very, very small one, one year -- has nonprofit
24 agencies at a huge disadvantage.
25 And as a parent I can tell you, I know,
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1 shifts are long, pay is low, the work is hard, and
2 overtime is frequent.
3 And then comes COVID, and it was the perfect
4 storm; there were no services.
5 We were told by OPWDD that we may never get
6 back to level of services, and families really were
7 left to fend for themselves.
8 Now, our family, we were lucky. We were
9 healthy. I have a husband who shared in the
10 caregiver responsibilities.
11 And not everyone in the state has that
12 option.
13 Without this workforce we have no future.
14 Without a capacity of caring DSPs, we will be
15 returning to the days of institutionalization
16 because families simply will not live forever.
17 My daughter attends a day program only
18 three days a week because they don't have sufficient
19 staff, but there is not one single staff member
20 working there today that was there pre-COVID.
21 She was given priority because she's still
22 living at home. So my husband will have -- when my
23 husband has to return to work, we're really not sure
24 what we're going to do.
25 Her certified group home is scheduled to open
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1 at the end of the month. The opening date is
2 contingent on finding staff.
3 Families are literally going door to door,
4 handing out flyers, looking for people.
5 That should not be.
6 That should not be.
7 Other families are working shifts in the
8 noncertified homes to cover the care and safety of
9 their loved ones.
10 So in January there were 2300 open positions
11 in our region. Now we have over 3300.
12 We need a sustainable system for our loved
13 ones, going forward.
14 We need to stop these crazy 5-1 cuts.
15 We need to raise the wage because DSPs
16 deserve to make a living wage. 10 years ago their
17 starting pay was 35 percent above minimum wage.
18 There's been minimal investment in the most
19 important workforce infrastructure to so many
20 people; 130,000 people.
21 Now is the time.
22 They should be considered essential workers
23 because they are essential workers. They're
24 essential to my daughter, they're essential to my
25 family, and to every other family member who has
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1 ever had -- had to rely on services, at no fault of
2 their own, by the way.
3 We need to fund the future.
4 We need to use those federal FMAP monies, and
5 we need them to flow very quickly to the nonprofits
6 to stop the bleeding.
7 These nonprofits are in a dangerous fiscal
8 position. They serve 80 percent of the people and
9 simply cannot fail. We simply cannot afford to lose
10 one person from this system at any level.
11 We need immediate action to address the
12 submarket wages, we need proactive planning and
13 forecasting of future need, and we need to have a
14 robust sustainable future for our children.
15 Thank you.
16 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you.
17 Next is Karen Nagy from Eastern New York
18 Developmental Disabilities Advocates.
19 KAREN NAGY: Thank you, Senator, and
20 committee members.
21 I'm following Kathy's lovely testimony, and
22 it occurs to me, over all of these forums, that we
23 keep hammering home the same points.
24 So I'm not going to -- I'm going to adjust
25 again, and I'm not going to hammer home anything
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1 that hasn't already been hammered home.
2 But I can say with unequivocal certainty that
3 our provider, our nonprofit provider, kept our son
4 and everyone else they served safe.
5 And we face an incredible staffing shortage
6 at this moment due to burn-out, and the significant
7 overtime pressures, that have occurred for our
8 remaining staff.
9 So there's really a two-pronged problem here.
10 We have remaining staff that's burnt out, and
11 just exhausted, from all of this care. And then we
12 will have new staff coming in that we will need to
13 train and spend money on.
14 So at a time when people with IDD, and
15 especially like my son with profound autism, who
16 doesn't do well with change, they have experienced
17 significant regression, and they'll be adjusting to
18 reopening full in-person services, environmental
19 stressors.
20 I mean, many of us without disabilities are
21 understanding the differences in our lives that have
22 contributed to stressors that have driven to make
23 different decisions after this pandemic.
24 So, you know, our staff is emotionally
25 drained, burned out. We've lost many of them
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1 already, and we're at risk of losing more.
2 So, essentially, our workforce is in crisis,
3 and it has been in crisis.
4 And it's just -- you know, it's not
5 acceptable that we don't acknowledge that, without
6 it, the system, and all of the administrative costs
7 that support it, are worthless.
8 So, you know, obviously, the additional
9 FMAT dollars have to be -- that have been generated
10 by the federal government are going to have to be
11 used to stabilize the ongoing workforce crisis, or
12 nothing else will matter.
13 We're going to spend a lot of money in
14 training a large percentage of new staff.
15 We're going to spend a lot of money because,
16 every time there's staff turnover, there are,
17 essentially, additional behavioral incidents that
18 have to be addressed, and incidents that have to be,
19 you know, researched, and administrative procedures
20 behind those incidents that have to occur.
21 And the recruitment and retention challenges
22 are going to continue because of the low wages.
23 They're not competitive in any way and they're not
24 commensurate with the difficult work and
25 responsibility that the job entails.
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1 So I will close by saying, finally, you know,
2 homes for individuals with IDD cannot be viewed as
3 beds to fill.
4 They have to be viewed as holistic
5 environments that subort [ph.] the adaptations and
6 the necessary supports that ensure each individual's
7 human right to quality of care.
8 And while we certainly appreciate the delay
9 of the 5-1 cuts that you're hearing about through
10 the pandemic, we strongly oppose them, and they're
11 completely contrary to ensuring the human rights of
12 individuals with IDD, and they're being proposed at
13 a time when the system of care itself is at risk and
14 incredibly vulnerable.
15 So, Senator Mannion, we thank you for
16 sponsoring the legislation that will address this,
17 and we thank you for everything that you have done,
18 you know, on our behalf to date.
19 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Karen.
20 Competitive and commensurate, and
21 I completely agree, and goes way beyond that.
22 Thank you for sharing.
23 Next, we are back to Tom McAlvanah from
24 New York Disability Advocates, and Interagency
25 Council of Developmental Disabilities.
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1 TOM McALVANAH: Thanks again, Senators;
2 appreciate it.
3 Critical services for people with
4 intellectual and developmental disabilities are at
5 risk.
6 While some of the planned cuts have been
7 rolled back, and the first meaningful cost-of-living
8 increase since 2009 was recently passed, people and
9 families are still at risk of losing access to their
10 current levels of services and supports.
11 Why?
12 Well, I think it was mentioned by Kathy that
13 over the past decade, the not-for-profit agencies
14 have been asked to do more with fewer resources.
15 The continued deferral of the statutory COLA
16 for over a decade has significantly deprived
17 providers of vital resources needed to maintain
18 operations.
19 As a result, we don't have a staffing crisis;
20 we have an impending staff disaster.
21 Right now executive directors are about to
22 cover vacant shifts because they don't have enough
23 staff in their residences.
24 One exec told me that he's going to provide
25 direct care because he's got to get his staff on
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1 vacations this summer.
2 Prior to the COVID pandemic, 37 percent of
3 providers reported losing money on their OPWDD
4 services.
5 Cash on hand has been a significant challenge
6 for agencies, where 50 percent of providers had less
7 than 40 days of cash on hand, and one-third had less
8 than 30 days of cash on hand.
9 That's two payrolls.
10 And more than one in three already closed,
11 reduced, or modified programs due to the financial
12 hardship they were under, and that will grow.
13 Of course, folks mentioned the 5-1 cuts, and
14 I won't go too much into it, but this action that
15 will -- is taking place may [indiscernible], or have
16 taken place, will now remove more than $230 million
17 annually from providers already besieged with the
18 losses and added expenses due to the pandemic.
19 Of course, OPWDD claims that residential
20 providers' costs are reduced when their residents
21 are temporarily away from home.
22 We know that not to be true. It doesn't
23 change one bit our fixed costs, and paying the staff
24 is still there.
25 So we know that these cuts come at a
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1 difficult time, and also gives the impossible choice
2 to families to say, take their children home for a
3 visit and cost the residential provider half their
4 daily rate.
5 Where was the 6.2 percent FMAT fund that all
6 Medicaid services throughout this country, including
7 New York State and OPWDD, that they earned, where
8 was 6.2? Where did that money go?
9 The value of the increased income to
10 New York State in the IDD sector, not-for-profit
11 sector only, was over $50 million a quarter.
12 These dollars certainly could have addressed
13 the shortfalls that OPWDD claims necessitated their
14 actions.
15 So, finally, I just want to say that, you
16 know, our not-for-profit provider community carries
17 out the state's moral and legal obligation to
18 provide services and supports to New York's most
19 vulnerable citizens.
20 Why does New York State continue to look to
21 the not-for-profit sector to fix their cash flow
22 needs?
23 This pandemic should not be an opportunity to
24 shrink the service system because there's little
25 desire to put more resources into the sector.
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1 If you look at OPWDD's website, there are
2 39,000 young people under the age of 20 that are
3 provided services.
4 39,000 out of 128.
5 What's the future for them going to be if
6 we're going to continue to shrink the footprint and
7 financial resources that OPWDD is struggling to
8 provide?
9 We need to start investing in this service
10 sector now while we still have a viable one.
11 Thank you.
12 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Tom.
13 I appreciate the numbers, and I think there's
14 certainly, again, consensus and agreement that we
15 are at a breaking point, and we're holding on by a
16 thread.
17 And I appreciate everything that the
18 providers are doing to make sure that we continue to
19 provide the services.
20 Next, I would like to introduce Gail Hamlin
21 from New York Alliance for the Developmentally
22 Disabled.
23 GAIL HAMLIN: Hi, good afternoon.
24 Thank you, Senator Mannion, and committee
25 members, for the opportunity to speak at today's
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1 roundtable.
2 And one of the disadvantages of speaking at
3 the end is everybody has already said so many of the
4 things that were so important, and things that I was
5 going to touch upon. So forgive me if I repeat some
6 of these things.
7 I am on the executive council for regional
8 leads with NYADD.
9 I'm also the legal guardian for my older
10 brother who lives in a group home residence on
11 Long Island.
12 The past 15 months with COVID have certainly
13 been an eye-opener, and it's also been a very big
14 learning experience.
15 So the biggest issue that his agency, and
16 I know others have right now, very much related to
17 5-1 cuts, their therapeutic leave, retainer day, and
18 vacancy adjustment.
19 Obviously, I don't want to get too much into
20 detail about it, but it's impossible to budget for
21 these things because we never know when someone is
22 going to need to go to the hospital. Right?
23 And families want to see their loved ones,
24 they want to bring them home for weekends, these are
25 things that are part of their therapeutic care.
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1 The agency, again, can't budget for it, but
2 they shouldn't be penalized for it as well. Right?
3 Time with family is part of their therapeutic
4 care, and family is part of their essential network.
5 We cannot see more cuts. We need far better
6 funding for this.
7 Another issue, again, everyone's been talking
8 about it, and Karen and Kathy really touched the
9 nail on the head and said it very eloquently, but
10 wages are a huge issue, so I'm going to say it
11 again.
12 But, Commissioner Kastner, his words, he
13 said, quote, he was immeasurably grateful, unquote,
14 for the DSPs, for their dedication to our people's
15 health and well-being.
16 But how can we convert that sentiment into
17 increased pay for the tireless work and efforts for
18 all that the DSPs do?
19 They deserve better pay commensurate with
20 their work.
21 So there can't be employer retention without
22 the pay to go along with it.
23 And I see that my time is up, so I am going
24 to say thank you for your time.
25 Thank you.
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1 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you, Gail.
2 We are not going to have staff available if
3 we don't properly compensate them. And we have to
4 provide the providers with those dollars, and then
5 they can provide people with a decent and living
6 wage and -- for this delicate care that they
7 provide.
8 So, thank you, Gail, for your words.
9 You are our last panelist.
10 Senator Martucci or Senator Persaud, if you
11 have any final thoughts, I certainly would like to
12 give you the opportunity before I have my final
13 words.
14 It's been an important, and good three hours,
15 a necessary three hours, maybe a long three hours.
16 But, regardless, I think important things
17 came out as it related to the pandemic, and what we
18 all also know, which are other crises, particularly
19 one related to workforce that we have to address.
20 Senator Martucci?
21 SENATOR MARTUCCI: Thank you, Chairman.
22 So first I'll start by thanking you again for
23 putting this together.
24 Certainly, you know, it's -- I'm glad that we
25 had this opportunity, and certainly glad that
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1 Dr. Kastner has availed himself in the future.
2 I look forward to continuing conversations with him.
3 And I just want to take this moment for all
4 of you who took the time -- part of the time out of
5 your day to come here and give all of us some really
6 important perspective on issues that certainly are
7 very important to us.
8 You know, again, your perspective is
9 invaluable in terms of shaping -- shaping, you know,
10 our thoughts and our actions as we move forward.
11 So I will just end by saying thank you for
12 your time today.
13 And I continue to look forward to working
14 with Chairman Mannion and the other members of
15 the committee to do all we can for the benefit of
16 IDD New Yorkers.
17 Thanks so much.
18 SENATOR MANNION: Thank you,
19 Senator Martucci.
20 And I thank Senator Felder for his
21 attendance. He had to leave.
22 And, of course, thank you, Senator Persaud,
23 as you were here throughout all of it, you heard all
24 of it. I appreciate that.
25 And if you have any final thoughts, I would
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1 like to make sure that you have that platform.
2 SENATOR PERSAUD: Well, thank you, Chairman.
3 I would just really like to thank you for
4 putting this together.
5 I know we had a struggle last week. And, you
6 know, this was worth it for everyone to reconvene
7 and to hear everything everyone said.
8 You know, Senator Mannion and I had a
9 conversation with the Commissioner about a week ago
10 because of something I was not pleased with.
11 And, you know, we are dedicated to fighting
12 for the IDD population.
13 I have my -- I tell the story all along:
14 I grew up with a friend of ours who was
15 developmentally disabled. And -- but, let me tell
16 you, he was the smartest person amongst all of us.
17 You know, he was a little older than us, but
18 he was the smartest one amongst all of us. And we
19 involved him in everything that we did. He was
20 never excluded, on to today, he has never been
21 excluded from anything.
22 And my mother worked in the industry for
23 nearly 40 years.
24 And now my youngest brother has decided, you
25 know, he left his job he was doing and he's decided
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1 that this is his passion. And so he's currently
2 working on a new home that was just opened on
3 Long Island, and he just loves it.
4 So it's a field that I'm passionate about,
5 and, you know, there's some legislation.
6 While we're on, someone saw it, and they
7 called the office and said, Oh, make sure she signs
8 on to one of Senator Mannion's pieces of
9 legislation.
10 And I said, Don't worry. I will look at it,
11 and then I'll make the decision.
12 So, again, thank you, Senator Mannion, for
13 everything that you're doing.
14 And to all of you advocates, thank you for
15 everything that you are doing.
16 And we're committed to working with you to
17 ensure that the industry gets what they deserve.
18 That's what we're committed to doing.
19 So thank you again, everyone.
20 SENATOR MANNION: 100 percent.
21 You know, the pandemic clearly highlighted
22 the need for the State to invest in the services.
23 Residents went without the services that they
24 needed.
25 Providers across the state had to absorb the
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1 costs.
2 DSPs had to work overtime, many times without
3 hazard pay, without being tested, sometimes being
4 COVID-positive, sometimes without proper protection.
5 And we all know that we can do better; we can
6 do better for the people that provide the service,
7 and we can do better for the people that need the
8 service.
9 This past budget is, hopefully, the first of
10 many steps to show that the IDD community is a
11 priority just as the other senators and providers
12 and advocates said as we met here today.
13 I look forward to continuing the work with
14 stakeholders that were good enough to come today,
15 and the many more advocates that were out there
16 enjoyed us via live stream.
17 This is going to conclude our roundtable of
18 evaluating OPWDD's response to COVID-19 at
19 residential facilities, but we did much more, and
20 we're going to continue to do more.
21 This is one step in the right direction.
22 Thank you to the panelists; the Commissioner;
23 and, of course, my ranking member, Senator Martucci;
24 Senator Persaud for joining me today; and
25 Senator Felder who joined me earlier.
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1 Thank you again, everyone, for taking the
2 time.
3 We will all push together in our fight to
4 make sure, and I'm stealing Senator Persaud's words,
5 that everyone is included in every scenario, and
6 that no one has to be forced to overcome barriers
7 that we can't make sure that they can be overcome.
8 So thank you for joining, everyone, today.
9
10 (Whereupon, the roundtable held before the
11 New York State Senate Standing Committee on
12 Disabilities concluded, and adjourned.)
13
14 --oOo--
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