| Last June Gov. George 
            Ryan and the Department of Human Services announced a decision to 
            close the 125-year-old facility completely, after citing issues of 
            abuse and neglect and concern for the safety of its residents. On July 1, Logan 
            County Circuit Judge Donald Behle ruled that the Illinois Health 
            Facilities Planning Board must issue a permit before the Lincoln 
            facility could be closed. By law the board must hold a public 
            hearing before making a decision, if such a hearing is requested.
               
             [Photo by Bob Frank]
 [LDC resident and father beneath the pressured 
            gaze of Gov. George Ryan (note face in background)]
 
            Members of the Health Facilities 
            Planning Board do not attend the public hearings, but a hearing 
            officer and a court reporter will be present, according to Jena 
            Welliever, spokesperson for the Illinois Department of Public 
            Health. 
            A transcript of the testimony given at 
            the hearing as well as written testimony will be compiled and 
            included in a report that will go to all board members, she said. 
            The board, which includes 15 members 
            from both the Chicago area and downstate, is tentatively scheduled 
            to meet on Aug. 15. The board is an independent group appointed by 
            the governor, and the Department of Public Health provides its 
            staff. 
            Along with the transcript of the 
            testimony, the board will also receive a report from the Department 
            of Public Health, a copy of all written material received by DPH up 
            to 20 days before the board meeting, and a copy of the application 
            for the permit and any supplemental information the applicant has 
            provided. 
            The Department of Public Health’s 
            report is a written comparison of the application and public hearing 
            material with the review criteria from the Illinois Administrative 
            Code, which the board uses in its evaluation of projects. 
            In the case of a discontinuation 
            hearing, such as the hearing to close LDC, the DPH’s evaluation is 
            based upon five criteria, according to Mike Copelin, supervisor of 
            project review. 
              
      
         [to top of second column in
this article]
             | 
            
         
            These criteria are, first, that the 
            reasons for the discontinuation are valid; second, that the 
            discontinuation will not adversely affect services needed by the 
            planning area; and third, that the discontinuation project will not 
            have an adverse effect on the health delivery system by creating 
            demand for services that cannot be met by existing area facilities. 
            Fourth, the discontinuation project 
            must be in the public interest and not cause area residents 
            unnecessary hardship by limiting access to needed services. It must 
            consider the effect of the proposed discontinuation on the ability 
            of low-income people, racial and ethnic minorities, women, 
            handicapped people, the elderly and other under-served groups to 
            obtain needed health care. 
            Fifth, the applicant must state the use 
            to which the physical plant and equipment will be put once 
            discontinuation takes place. 
            The board will announce its decision 
            after its Aug. 15 meeting, unless the applicant, the Department of 
            Human Services, asks to defer the decision, Copelin said. 
            According to the statute that created 
            the planning board, its function is to reverse trends of increasing 
            health care costs and also guarantee access to quality health care 
            to the general public. 
            The statute also says all interested 
            people attending a public hearing shall be given "reasonable 
            opportunity to present their views or arguments in writing or 
            verbally." Judge Behle also 
            issued a temporary restraining order that blocked the state from 
            moving any residents who did not want to leave LDC. However, 
            state-appointed representatives had already approved the movement of 
            51 residents who are wards of the state. They were allowed to be 
            transferred from the Lincoln facility after being notified of the 
            court order and given a chance to reconsider their decisions, Behle 
            said. According to Kathleen 
            Muniz, assistant associate director of the Office of Developmental 
            Disabilities, 40 of those residents have already been moved from LDC 
            and 10 more are scheduled to leave today. "When all is said and 
            done, we will have moved 50 people," she said. Because of the 
            temporary restraining order, the other 190 residents will stay at 
            the Lincoln facility at least until the IHFPB decides whether it 
            should be closed, she said.  All but one of the 50 
            residents went to other state-operated facilities. One was placed in 
            a community home. The rest went to facilities in Jacksonville, 
            Tinley Park, Park Forest, Dwight, Kankakee and Centralia, according 
            to Muniz. She said there are no plans to lay 
            off any more LDC staff members at this time. [Joan
Crabb] |