| Many of them are also 
            afraid. Some families have spent years trying to find the proper 
            placement for a developmentally disabled family member, experiencing 
            failure after failure until that family member came to LDC. Others 
            are elderly parents who want desperately to see a child they love 
            safely and happily settled while they are still able. 
             Donna Hogan feeds her daughter, Angela, who is 
            confined to a wheelchair and does not speak or see well. [Photo by Bob Frank] Moving their loved 
            ones from LDC will be a traumatic experience, they say. The 
            developmentally disabled need a predictable routine and become upset 
            when that routine is disrupted. They fear a move will bring back 
            behavior problems that have been latent and that the transition to a 
            new place, new caregivers and a new routine will be long and 
            difficult. Marlene Gregory of 
            Bloomington can predict the trauma her 39-year-old stepson Brian 
            will have settling into another institution. "I am afraid he will 
            regress. He is bipolar and has aggressive behavior cycles. Medicine 
            takes the top off the high and the bottom off the low, but he still 
            has difficult moods," she said. When he first came to 
            Lincoln, he had serious problems. He had been in a living center in 
            Bloomington that could no longer manage him and sent him to a 
            hospital psychiatric ward. He was then sent to a mental health 
            facility in Springfield, which recommended he come to LDC. "You can’t believe 
            how bad it was when we brought him to Lincoln. He didn’t want to be 
            there; he was in restraints. These people have done wonders."  Even after he had 
            adjusted to living at LDC, simply moving him from one living area to 
            another brought on difficult behavior. "He was on suicide watch and 
            had to have one-to-one supervision for three days." Marlene does not want 
            to see either her husband, Ronald, or her stepson have to experience 
            that adjustment process again. "Ronald is 66 years old and has heart 
            problems. I’m not saying Brian couldn’t adjust, but I don’t want to 
            see him go through what he went through the first year he was here. 
            The people he works with at LDC know his moods and their cycles. I 
            can’t say enough good things about the people who care for him 
            here."  Many parents and 
            guardians fear more than just the move from a familiar place; what 
            keeps them awake nights is concern that a new placement won’t be the 
            right one.     
             One group has 
            received letters from LDC saying their child or sibling has been 
            recommended for community placement. Some families have had negative 
            experiences with such placement in the past. Community placement 
            in most cases today means group homes, usually CILAs (Community 
            Integrated Living Arrangements). Lincoln has five of these scattered 
            throughout the community, and two more are in the works. CILAs 
            usually house eight residents and are staffed 24 hours a day or 
            whenever any resident is present. CILAs have trained 
            staff members and nurses on call 24 hours a day, but they do not 
            have the funding to offer the array of services that a 
            state-operated facility such as LDC has, said Chris Patton, in 
            charge of CILAs for Residential Developers, an Alan G. Ryle company. 
            The company operates two CILAs in Lincoln and is building two more. In contrast, LDC has 
            doctors, nurses, psychologists, physical therapists, a pharmacist, 
            an X-ray technician, an audiologist and a speech specialist on staff 
            and available every Monday through Friday. Licensed practical nurses 
            are on duty on both day shifts in each living unit to give 
            medication and do treatments. Although CILAs are 
            privately owned and operated, they are supervised by DHS, the agency 
            that is in charge of state-operated facilities such as LDC, and must 
            meet a number of national and state regulations, Patton said. Frank and Sheri 
            Ciastko of Decatur have tried a group home and found it didn’t work. 
            They call their son Peter’s experience a dismal failure. "Our son has behavior 
            issues. The experiment failed because the staff was inadequate, as 
            was staff training. There was constant turnover of staff, some there 
            no longer than a month. The only way to let Peter stay was that he 
            be on large amounts of medicine," his father said. "The medicine turned 
            him into a shuffling, drooling zombie. He looked like an old man." At LDC Peter was 
            weaned off the medication and now takes none, according to his 
            father. "LDC is one of the 
            very best things that has happened to Peter. Peter is a 
            higher-functioning individual, but his behavior disorder makes it 
            difficult for him to function without a strong structure and a 
            well-trained staff to deal with him. He did not have that in group 
            homes but has it at LDC. "Group homes are a 
            good idea for those who can function in them, but our experience is 
            they don’t have the staffing to provide the kind of services we get 
            at LDC," Ciastko said. Patton concedes that 
            at present group homes cannot meet the needs of everyone. "CILAs 
            have to screen prospective clients. There are people we can’t 
            service because the state doesn’t provide the funding," he says. JoAnn Ribelin of 
            Champaign is guardian for her sister, age 61. She, too, received a 
            letter saying her sister had been recommended for a group home. "We tried a group 
            home for a year. It was my idea. Most residents there were highly 
            functional, but my sister was not. Everyone with a behavior problem 
            got a diagnosis of bipolar so they could administer psychotropic 
            drugs. I don’t entirely disagree with drug therapy if it is 
            warranted, but my sister was on five different psychotropic drugs," 
            Ribelin said. "I said no more 
            drugs. They said they would have to put her in a nursing home. I 
            said I would appeal the decision, and they sent her to Lincoln. "Within two months 
            she was off all drugs. They don’t even give her sleeping pills. If 
            she doesn’t sleep at night, the staff let her sit up with them until 
            she gets sleepy." Ribelin thinks the 
            drugs may have done permanent harm because her sister is losing her 
            communication skills and is now incontinent.    
        
         "I can’t think of one 
            positive thing about his stay in group homes," said Harriet Byers of 
            Champaign. Her son Mark was in several group homes in Champaign, and 
            it is not an experiment she or her husband, Bill, want to try again. "He has too many 
            medical and behavior problems to function in a group home. He is 
            severely diabetic and has gone into insulin shock because his eating 
            wasn’t properly monitored. He has the mind of a 5-year-old, yet they 
            were trying to teach him to give himself his insulin injections. "He is a non-reader, 
            but they were trying to teach him to ride the bus home from the 
            developmental service center. One rainy night we got a call, asking 
            if we knew where Mark was. He was found in the bus station scared to 
            death. They just had unrealistic plans for him.  "We couldn’t be 
            happier with his care at LDC. The staff members here are as much his 
            family as his father and I are." Angela Scott, 25, has 
            been at LDC since she was 2. She cannot walk and is confined to a 
            wheelchair, does not speak, does not register what she sees, and has 
            severe seizures that could be fatal if not treated promptly. When LDC closure 
            seemed imminent, her parents, Donna and Joe Hogan of Springfield, 
            considered placing her in Jacksonville, another state-operated 
            center for the developmentally disabled. Early this year they 
            visited Jacksonville and met with the director and staff, including 
            a medical doctor. The Jacksonville staff agreed they could not meet 
            Angela’s medical needs and recommended that she stay at Lincoln. Now they are puzzled 
            and upset because they have received a letter telling them Angela is 
            a candidate for community placement.    
            [to top of second column in
this article]
             | 
 "Angela has never 
            been in a group home. She needs a nurse to give her medication and 
            sometimes must see a doctor daily to control her seizures," Donna 
            Hogan said.  Because Angela cannot 
            speak, it is important that she be with staff who know her. She can 
            make a few sounds to indicate what she needs, and those familiar 
            with her understand what each sound indicates. Consistency of care 
            is essential for her, her mother said.  The Hogans are 
            concerned now because a shortage of technicians at LDC (those who 
            work directly with the residents) means that Angela is sometimes 
            cared for by staff who do not know her. After she was moved from 
            Coty Cottage to Bowen, a technician who had been temporarily 
            assigned to Bowen saw her facial expression and thought she was 
            smiling. The "smile" was actually a sign she was having a seizure. The Hogans plan to 
            attend a conference to learn more about community homes, but they do 
            not believe Angela can survive in a group home because of lack of 
            medical staff. Also, Donna is afraid for her daughter’s personal 
            safety because she is so helpless. "If LDC closes, I have no clue where she 
            can go," she said.    
         
            Eleanor and Norlan Newmister of Normal 
            are in their 80s. Their son, Melvin, has been at LDC since 1972. 
            The Newmisters, too, have received a 
            letter saying their son is recommended for community placement. He 
            has a mental age of a little more than 5 years, has seizures, 
            hearing loss and vision problems. 
            According to the letter, an 
            interdisciplinary team evaluated Melvin’s health and behavior 
            profiles and determined that he could live in a group home, but the 
            Norlans say the evaluation is not complete. 
            "It didn’t include all of his health 
            problems, and his behavior profile was not complete or thorough," 
            Eleanor said. "The letter doesn’t reveal how they made the decision 
            or when." 
            Eleanor said she and her husband had 
            requested, in two different handwritten memos to LDC director Peggy 
            Davidsmeyer, to be part of the reviewing process for their son’s 
            placement, but they were not included. 
            The Norlans have always been very 
            involved with their son’s care and with organizations for the 
            developmentally disabled. Melvin stayed at home until he was 18, and 
            the Norlans and other parents started their own school, raising the 
            money to pay teachers.  
            They also worked to set up a home for 
            the developmentally disabled in Bloomington/Normal, were on the 
            board of the Occupational and Developmental Center in Bloomington, 
            served on the MARC and Homes of Hope boards, and were on a statewide 
            advisory council for the developmentally disabled. 
            They are active members of the Lincoln 
            Parents Association, which has been unwavering in its support for 
            keeping LDC open. 
            Since the new management team came to 
            LDC in October, Eleanor says, communication has been very difficult. 
            The five-member team came in after allegations of abuse and neglect 
            caused the Lincoln facility to lose its federal funding for a brief 
            period. The team’s mission, according to a DHS spokesperson, was to 
            correct problems at the Lincoln facility so it would meet health and 
            safety standards. 
            "We wanted to be on a committee to help 
            get LDC back on track, but we were never called to meet on that at 
            all," she said. 
            These parents say they are not 
            convinced that LDC is being closed because, as Gov. George Ryan 
            says, its operation is a threat to the health and safety of its 
            residents. 
            "The governor said we’ve been 
            brainwashed," said Ronald Gregory. "That isn’t true. We’d be the 
            first to go to the governor and ask that our loved ones be moved if 
            we thought they were in jeopardy. 
            "Gov. Ryan needs to come back to LDC 
            and not just spend 20 minutes. He should spend a week here and 
            actually see what goes on with staff and residents." 
            "The governor said he cares about the 
            safety of the residents. Is he saying we, the parents and guardians, 
            don’t care as much as he does? That’s just totally illogical," said 
            Frank Ciastko. 
            "They say we parents don’t know what we 
            are doing. My husband and I have been involved for years. We are 
            educated on this. We have lived for years with this, and we keep up 
            with it," said Eleanor Newmister. 
            Newmister and others believe the LDC 
            closing is really a way to help the state solve its budget problems. 
            "The government wants to get out of the 
            business of caring for the developmentally disabled," she said. 
            "It’s too expensive." 
              
       
            According to Patton, the state pays at 
            least twice as much to maintain a developmentally disabled person in 
            a state-operated facility as in a community home: about $106,000 per 
            person per year for the state facility and from $44,000 to $51,000 
            per person per year for the community home.  
            He also said that with adequate 
            funding, community homes could serve almost all of the 
            developmentally disabled. 
            Small-group homes, where the 
            developmentally disabled live in the community in a family-type 
            setting, are the trend of the future, he added. Illinois is lagging 
            behind other states in closing state-operated congregate living 
            settings and putting residents in community homes. 
            He conceded that there may be more 
            turnover of employees in group homes, because they can afford to pay 
            only $8 or $9 an hour, which is less than employees in a 
            state-operated facility are paid. Still, he believes parents don’t 
            have the full story. Problems can occur in state-operated facilities 
            as well, he said. 
            June Reynolds, nursing services 
            coordinator for the Alan G. Ryle group, believes the standards of 
            care in group homes have gone up steadily over the years. In 1999, 
            for example, DHS mandated 40 hours of classroom training and 80 
            hours of on-the-job training for all direct-care staff members in 
            group homes in Illinois. 
            The Norlans and other parents are 
            unclear about what will happen if their family members are placed in 
            group homes and then have problems. They don’t know if they will be 
            able to get their loved ones back into a state-operated facility and 
            feel they might be forgotten by the Department of Human Services. 
            Kathleen Muniz, assistant associate 
            director of the Office of Developmental Disabilities, says these 
            families will not be deserted. 
            "If someone is having a problem in a 
            CILA, we will first of all offer technical assistance, trying to 
            resolve the problem," she said. 
            She agrees with members of the Alan G. 
            Ryle organization that right now not all of the developmentally 
            disabled are good candidates for community living. 
            "I think definitely there are people at 
            this time that have the level of intensity of need for the services 
            of a state-operated facility," she said. 
            However, she added, "There is no 
            guarantee that every family that believes its member needs a 
            state-operated facility will be placed in one. But we are going to 
            make our best effort to accommodate guardians and family preferences 
            wherever possible. Our priority will be to see that people’s needs 
            are met." 
              
      
       
            The Newmisters believe their son’s 
            needs are being met best at the Lincoln facility that has been his 
            home for 30 years, and they will not consider moving him as long as 
            it is open. If LDC closes, they do not see a clear and easy 
            solution. "We have no 
            idea what we are going to do," Eleanor said. "This is a tremendous 
            responsibility, to make a decision for someone you love so dearly 
            and be afraid it is wrong." [Joan
Crabb] |