At least 150 people
came to the Knights of Columbus Hall in Lincoln Monday morning, many
of them to ask the planning board to deny the request of the
Illinois Department of Human Services for a permit to close the
embattled facility for the developmentally disabled.
Support came from at
least 20 parents and guardians of LDC residents, as well as from LDC
employees, citizens of the Lincoln community, and state senators and
representatives.
The few dissenting
speakers represented two organizations dedicated to placing the
developmentally disabled in community settings: the Illinois Council
on Developmental Disabilities, a state organization whose leadership
is appointed by the governor, and Equip for Equality, a nonprofit
group designated by the governor to administer funds for the
developmentally disabled.
Also among the
speakers were two present residents of LDC, one to ask that he be
taken out of LDC and placed in a group home and the other to ask the
planning board not to let Gov. George Ryan close the facility.
The testimony given
yesterday, which lasted from 9 a.m. until late in the afternoon,
will be transcribed and given to the planning board along with other
documentation about closing LDC. That includes a report from the
Department of Public Health, which provides staff for the board, a
copy of all written material received by DPH up to 20 days before
the next planning board meeting, and a copy of the application for
the permit and any other information DHS wishes to submit.
[Photos by Bob Frank]
The 15 members of the
planning board, who are from all over the state, did not attend the
hearing but were represented by hearing officer Frank Urso, an
attorney with the Illinois Department of Public Health.
The board is
scheduled to meet on Aug. 15 and to announce its decision on the
permit soon after. However, without intervention by the Illinois
Supreme Court, there may be few residents left at LDC by that date.
In June Gov. George
Ryan, citing continued allegations of abuse and neglect at LDC,
announced that he was closing the facility completely as of Sept. 1.
The union that represents most of the LDC workers, the American
Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees; Sen. Larry
Bomke of Springfield; and parents Norlan and Eleanor Newmister filed
suit in Logan County Circuit Court for a temporary injunction to
prevent moves of residents until a permit is received by the Health
Facilities Planning Board.
Although the
injunction was granted, the state appealed, and last week the 4th
District Appellate Court, in a 2-1 ruling, dissolved the injunction.
AFSCME and the other plaintiffs announced that they were taking the
case to the Illinois Supreme Court and asked for a stay to keep the
state from moving any more residents.
At present there are
about 190 residents at LDC, and unless the Supreme Court grants the
stay the state can continue to move the remaining residents, said
AFSCME public relations officer Anne Irving. She said she would not
expect the state to grant the stay until later this week.
Testimony given
before the board’s representative emphasized the quality of care
given to LDC residents and the satisfaction parents and guardians
feel with the placement of their family members at LDC.
Another theme, voiced
by members of the Lincoln Parents Association and LDC employees, was
that the Lincoln facility has been targeted for closure by officials
in DHS.
Sen. Larry Bomke,
R-Springfield, said that for the past nine months he has been
issuing a challenge over local radio stations encouraging anyone who
has had a negative experience at LDC to call him. He got his first
negative call only recently. Sen. Claude Stone, R-Morton, said of
the 100 letters he has received about LDC, all were positive.
Bomke also noted that
LDC had received national recognition as a model institution not
only for the state but also for the nation in 1997. Problems began
in 1999, when a well-liked director, Martin Downs, was replaced by
Gwen Thornton, a warden from the Department of Corrections, he said.
He also pointed out
that although LDC has been charged with abuse and neglect, a study
by the State Journal-Register newspaper showed it rated only fifth
in such incidents.
"The irony is that
many of the residents of LDC are being moved to facilities with
higher incidents of abuse and neglect," he said.
State Rep. Bill
Mitchell, R-Forsyth, said it was the intent of the legislature to
keep LDC open and that both the Republican and Democratic
gubernatorial candidates have indicated their intention to keep it
open.
"There is no method
to this madness," said state Rep. Jonathan Wright, R-Hartsburg,
speaking of the way DHS is managing LDC.
The closure is not
being done consistently nor with any overriding policy, he said. One
example is that DHS decided to send twin brothers who had lived
together for years at LDC to separate facilities.
He called it
"unconscionable" for employees to be mandated to put in more than
1,000 hours of overtime a week and be forced to care for people they
were not trained to deal with.
The move of residents
from Coty Cottage, set up for the medically fragile, to Bowen,
"where medically necessary machines were plugged into an outlet
strip like you use for your computer," was also without sense or
logic, Wright said.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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Lincoln Mayor Beth
Davis called it "abuse and neglect on our governor’s part to close
LDC," noting that just two years ago it was one of the best
facilities and five years ago a national leader in care of the
developmentally disabled.
Sherry Jennings, a
nurse at LDC, was critical of management, in particular about the
way transfers of residents are being handled.
"The way these people
are being moved is wrong. One man who fought being taken away was
given drugs so he could be moved, also lied to, told he had a
medical appointment. Management says we have to do this," she said.
Other employees were
concerned that the moves were being made too quickly.
"Haste is the order
of the day," said Laura Sandrolini. She said residents are given
less than six weeks to get settled in group homes and that there are
no answers about what will happen to LDC residents who can’t
function in these community settings.
Hasty moves have
caused problems for former residents, said employee Diana Humbert.
Two former LDC residents are now in hospital wards for the
psychotic, one will not eat, one is back at LDC, one is in a nursing
home and two recently died after being placed in nursing homes, she
said.
Linda Schaefer, a
Lutheran deaconess who provides religious services at LDC as a
volunteer, told of a deaf and blind LDC resident who was moved to a
nursing home where no one knew how to communicate with him by sign
language.
"He lived in total
isolation for eight months in the nursing home. He had regressed to
lying naked in a ball on a mat," she said. "Imagine when no one
understands anything you are trying to express. Is this acting in
the best interest of the person being moved?"
Schaefer also said
Lincoln has been regarded as a place of last resort, where people
could be placed when no other facility could take care of them.
Pat Brown,
co-president of the Lincoln Parents Association, said that for some
time there has been a push to downsize or eliminate the state’s role
in the care of the developmentally disabled. DHS has a plan for
specific yearly goals of downsizing, moving people out of
state-operated facilities to less expensive community placement, and
closing LDC would "greatly enhance" that goal, he said.
Removing former
director Martin Downs was "the poorest decision ever made in DHS
history," he added. During the term of Gwen Thornton, morale
deteriorated, and the "much trumpeted" five-man team that replaced
her were "puppets taking cues from DHS," he said.
Eleanor Newmister,
parent of an LDC resident, said the state is trying to move
developmentally disabled people to community settings without making
proper preparations to serve them.
"Why did they not
prepare for this first? Community agencies have said they cannot
help some of these people with behavior challenges," she said.
"LDC has been set up
to fail," said Robert Springer, parent of an LDC resident. "DHS has
not been committed to keeping it open. The alleged failures are more
due to management than to staff."
The new team that
came to LDC in October of 2001 was not trying to get LDC back on
track but to derail it, he said.
"No parent has asked
for closure. DHS should be held responsible, not a committed LDC
staff."
Parents and guardians
who addressed the board’s representative were unanimous in their
pleas to keep LDC open. Many have children who have been in the
Lincoln facility for 30 or 40 years; they are elderly and say they
will not be able to travel to see their children if they are moved
to facilities in northern or southern Illinois.
Many parents said
their children have had negative experiences in community living
settings because these facilities lacked properly trained staff.
They said placement at LDC was the best thing that had ever happened
to their loved ones.
Several family
members said they are in the habit of walking into LDC unannounced
and have never witnessed incidents of abuse and neglect.
"I don’t understand
why this is such a bad place. Why don’t I see it? I’ve been there
over 300 times," said Bill Spahr, whose granddaughter is in LDC.
The few who spoke in
favor of closing Lincoln cited the rights of the disabled to live in
the community and participate in society, as well as negative
experiences living in large facilities.
Gary Lowy of Equip
for Equality said the Supreme Court has mandated that people be in
the community if they can be. He said he was "troubled that DHS
doesn’t have a plan to move more people into the community."
"Every time I come to
Lincoln, residents come up to me and say ‘Get me out of this
place,’" he added.
That statement was
greeted with a few "boos" from the crowd. However, the two Lincoln
police officers who were stationed inside the hall and the two state
troopers stationed outside did not find it necessary to take any
action then or at any other time during the hearing.
Both parents and LDC
employees asked that the 125-year-old facility be kept open but with
new and more dedicated management.
"We were a great
place to work and we could still be great," Jennings said.
"LDC can get back on
track with new leadership and more appropriate standards," Newmister
said.
"It only took two years to tear LDC
down," said AFSMCE Council 31 representative Dennis Corvin-Blackburn.
"We could probably get it back up a lot faster than that."
[Joan
Crabb]
|
The council voted unanimously to accept
a bid put forth by Vulcan Materials, Lincoln, for bituminous asphalt
patch to be used for road repairs. The local company proposed using
CM 16, which costs less, as an alternate to CA15. IDOT approved the
alternative material that was bid at $14,250. The bid was over
$10,000 difference from the next closest bid.
Acceptance for bid packages two and
three for the new wastewater treatment upgrade was deferred until
the next voting session of the council. City Engineer Mark Mathon
said that there were some unresolved questions that he and the
wastewater treatment plant manager, Grant Eaton of EMC, felt needed
to be answered first.
In other business the council voted to
accept the 2002-2003 fiscal year appropriations budget. The May
1-April 30 budget received 100 percent approval. According to
the budget, net appropriations will be $10,105,109.00, whereas total
revenues will be $10,227,109.00.
City Treasurer Les Plotner provided an
up-to-date report on the city finances, including short-term holding
investments. Currently, short-term savings investments are providing
only 1.5 percent interest on CDs. This is not as good as it has been
in the past and is not good for city finances, he explained.
Plotner also reported that he and Eaton
would be meeting with the Economic Development Council to consider
how the city might supply the $1.3 million requested of them to
support the proposed north-side industrial park project. He said the
city just cannot support it out of the current revenues. "We can’t
just come up with it," he said, adding that "The only thing I know
to do is take it to the people."
This past Friday Gov. George Ryan
signed into law a new Illinois Vehicle Code regarding disabled
parking placards. According to Mayor Beth Davis, Lincoln will be
enforcing that law in an attempt to support people with
disabilities. She sent this letter to Judge Donald Behle
(see below).
The mayor also distributed copies of
the LDC support letter presented at Monday’s Illinois Health
Facilities Planning Board hearing. A
copy follows below.
[Jan
Youngquist]
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Tuesday, July 30
6:00 pm
- Bargain
Night
--All rides take
1 ticket
- Veterans Pass in Review - (Grandstand)
7:30 pm
- Logan County
Queen Pageant
Wednesday, July 31
9:00 am
- Open Horse Show
7:30 pm
- Talent Contest
Thursday, August 1
1:30 pm
- Harness Racing
6:00 pm - closing
- Luehr's
Ideal Rides Ride-A-Thon Night
6:30 pm
- Tractor Pull
Friday, August 2
1:30 pm
- Harness Racing
- Senior Citizens Day
7:30 pm
- 4-H Night-- Calf,
Pig, Chicken & Goat Scrambles
Saturday, August 3
8:00 am
- 3 on 3 Basketball
- Chili Cook-off
1:00 pm - 5:00 pm
- Carnival Opens--"Kids Bargain Afternoon"
1:00 pm
- Kids Day--South end of Fairgrounds,
Special
Events Building
- Harness Racing
7:00 pm
- Country Music
Show--Wade Dooley
Sunday, August 4
1:00 pm
- Harness Racing--Downstate Classic Day
- Luehr's Ideal Rides
Family Day
--All rides take 1 ticket
2:00 pm
- 4-H Livestock Auction
6:00 pm
- Demolition
Derby
To order reserved Box &
Track seats, call 217-732-3311
Illinois' Cleanest &
Finest County Fair |
|
LDC support
letter submitted
to IHFPB by Mayor Beth Davis
[JULY
16, 2002]
Mayor Elizabeth A. Davis’
statement to the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board during
its public hearing at 9 a.m. July 15 at the Knights of Columbus
Hall, Lincoln, regarding Lincoln Developmental Center closure:
Good morning Illinois Health and Facilities Planning Board:
As Mayor of the City of Lincoln,
a lifetime resident of this city, and a former Lincoln
Developmental Center (LDC) employee, I would like you to be
aware of what I am so well aware of. Lincoln Developmental
Center has been an integral, instilled part of our community
all of our lives much more than anyone would believe. LDC has
stood 125 years in our community and I believed it would be
here forever because of the wonderful services it provides to
our meekest fellow human beings. All of us in Lincoln and
Logan County have ties to it in various degrees, and we all
have been affected by LDC —
• the care-giving for the
individuals requiring continuous care,
• the commerce LDC provides to
the city of Lincoln and Logan County,
• the jobs it has provided for
many, many of our citizens, and
• the peace and comfort LDC has
provided for the parents and family members of our LDC
residents.
LDC has always been on the
cutting edge of care-giving for the mentally challenged and
developmentally disabled individuals in the state and the
nation, and many current state-operated facilities within
Illinois have staff who were trained at LDC. Just two short
years ago LDC was recognized as one of the best facilities in
the nation, five years ago it was the first facility in the
nation of its type to be accredited, and now it has come to
this —
• miscommunication,
• misrepresentation,
• decisions made without
first-hand knowledge and understanding of the facts or a
particular resident’s needs or challenges.
It is then compounded by all the
above factors and confounds all of us who truly know what is
and isn’t going on regarding LDC.
My question to you, Board
Members, is why LDC/Lincoln/Logan County is being targeted so
heavily when LDC’s abuse/neglect record of nine surveyed
Illinois state-operated facilities revealed LDC is ranked #5.
Jacksonville and Ludeman Developmental Centers both were
ranked worse than LDC and yet some of LDC’s residents are
being moved to both of those facilities.
The parents and family members
have only wonderful, respectful comments about LDC and its
staff as they should be the foremost group to be consulted
regarding their children and family members living at LDC. Why
is their voice not being heard? Would you honestly leave one
of your children in a facility if you didn’t feel comfortable
about the treatment, care, or love s/he was receiving? I most
certainly would not. Many of the residents being targeted have
resided in group homes which were highly non-conducive to
their individual, medical, physical, or psychological needs
and have very much met those needs while living at LDC. I
myself, as are many, are concerned with safety and happiness
for the LDC residents. I, along with many others believe if an
individual is able to ride a bicycle, walk, or wheel one’s
wheelchair to a nearby store to purchase something to eat, or
if not, at least have the presence of mind or a personal
caretaker with him/her to understand where s/he is and knows
how to do something independently, I believe that is an
individual who will fare well out in society living in a group
home. But the individuals we have at LDC, for the most part,
are extremely developmentally disabled and so dependent on the
loving staff who take care of them 24 hours per day, there is
not immediate hope of them living independently through means
of a lesser staffed group home. Extreme confusion,
unhappiness, and death are imminent. Having worked at LDC for
almost five years, I thoroughly believe this. Some people and
advocacy groups are making strong judgments regarding this
issue without ever visiting LDC’s residents or consulting the
residents and/or their families for their preference.
Governor George Ryan’s order to
close and transfer LDC’s residents to less safe facilities
like Jacksonville and Ludeman Developmental Center is
unexplainable and very much wrong. LDC’s importance to Lincoln
is compared with that of the Loop to Chicago, and as
Caterpillar is to Peoria. Please don’t allow the Governor to
take our economic stability away from Lincoln/Logan County.
This is going to be devastating — 500 jobs lost at LDC and
another 50 to 60 lost jobs at our two prisons if the
privatization of the commissary and dietary duties is enacted.
There has to be an explanation of why Lincoln, IL has been
targeted so heavily. Board Members: please do not close LDC,
but upgrade our resident and staff numbers significantly —
reinstate LDC to its former residential and staff numbers.
Please take a stand on what is right.
Our city and county residents and
businesses depend on LDC for sustaining its economy. To lose
the facility, especially in these tough economic times, would
be so devastating to us — the loss of many, many higher paying
jobs, loss of commerce, loss of jobs for both husband and wife
teams who are employees of LDC, reduction of students at our
community schools and colleges, loss of businesses, church
hospital/medical facilities, tax revenues, potential revenues
throughout the community, bank loans for LDC employees, and
our consumer goods will be more expensive. It will just be a
downward spiral.
In closing, I have always
believed a society should be measured by how well it takes
care of its weakest, most vulnerable members; and LDC by leaps
and bounds is off the Richter scale as far as the level of
care, love, dedication, and professionalism which its
employees demonstrate 24 hours per day to our residents. I am
confounded by Governor Ryan’s continuing statement that he is
only concerned about the welfare of the residents at LDC. But
the Governor is misunderstanding the point — LDC is a
family and family members take good care of their own. LDC
does have the concern and welfare of its residents as its
utmost priority! Having worked at LDC and been around the
residents of LDC all my life, I know that for a fact. By
threatening to further break up this family, is nothing short
of abuse and neglect on our government’s part.
I’m telling all the LDC staff I
see to keep up their good work because not everyone has the
dedication, courage, and strength to bring daily sunshine to
the lives of our loved ones whom they take care of at LDC 24
hours per day.
Board Members: I respectfully ask
you for your support and compassion in keeping LDC open,
fully-functioning and fully-funded, so once again LDC can move
into state and national accreditation as a cutting-edge
facility.
Thank you.
Mayor Elizabeth A. Davis
City of Lincoln, Illinois
217/735-1612
217/732-2144(TDD)
217/735-1287(FAX)
mayorbethdavis@yahoo.com |
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