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            "We have heard that Governor 
            Blagojevich is considering opening up 40 beds in one of the 
            buildings and bringing back some residents," state Sen. Larry Bomke, 
            R-Springfield, told the Lincoln Daily News on Tuesday. He 
            said officials are considering the move because of overcrowding at 
            other state facilities. 
            Bomke, who supported keeping LDC open 
            last year when former Gov. George Ryan and the Department of Human 
            Services succeeded in closing it, said he had been in touch with 
            Gov. Blagojevich's office, asking the new governor to meet with him 
            and other officials to talk about reopening LDC. The other state 
            officials who represent Logan County, Sen. Bill Brady of Bloomington 
            and state Reps. Bill Mitchell of Forsythe and Rich Brauer of 
            Petersburg, also supported keeping LDC operating.  
              
      
       
            Bomke said he had not yet met with the 
            new governor but applauded him for considering keeping his promise 
            to reopen LDC. "It is refreshing to have the new governor live up to 
            his campaign commitment," Bomke said. 
            "These buildings are in pristine 
            condition," he added. "It makes much more sense to reopen them 
            rather than build new facilities." 
            Bomke said he had heard that it was 
            going to cost $2 million to reopen a building to house 40 residents, 
            and he thought that figure was too high. He said he had been in 
            touch with former state Sen. Robert Madigan of Lincoln, and Madigan 
            was going to talk to people "more familiar with this type of thing 
            and get a more realistic cost." 
            Madigan, who was recently appointed 
            legislative liaison for the Lincoln/Logan Chamber of Commerce, also 
            confirmed that the new governor had sent a team to Lincoln to look 
            at reopening a building.    [to top of second column in
this article] | 
       
            "On behalf of the chamber of commerce, 
            we're encouraged by the fact that the new administration is looking 
            at reopening LDC," he said. 
            However, Reginald Marsh, spokesman for 
            the Department of Human Services, which oversees the state-operated 
            facilities for the developmentally disabled, said his office does 
            not know of any plans to reopen part of LDC.  
            "We have not been approached by the 
            governor's office yet, but that may change," he said. Gov. 
            Blagojevich has appointed a new director for DHS, Carol J. Adams of 
            Chicago. She will replace present director Linda Renee Baker on Feb. 
            18, Marsh said. 
            Members of the local chapter of the 
            American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, who 
            represent most of the former LDC employees, said they, too, have 
            heard that other state facilities are now overcrowded. When Gov. 
            Ryan closed LDC, some of LDC's 375 residents went into community 
            homes, but many more were transferred to other large state 
            facilities. 
            Local 425 president Don Todd said he 
            has also talked to at least half a dozen parents who want their 
            loved ones to come back to LDC. The LDC parents' association was one 
            of the strongest supporters of keeping the facility open. 
            Todd said he would estimate that if 40 
            residents return, the facility would need roughly 100 employees. 
            Former LDC employees who are still without work would be the first 
            to be called back.  There are 
            about 200 former LDC employees in the area who are unemployed or 
            underemployed, AFSCME officials said, and many would be happy for 
            the chance to come back to work for LDC. 
            [Joan Crabb] 
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            On that date, the last 435 workers who 
            belonged to the American Federation of State, County and Municipal 
            Employees said goodbye to their workplace. They had already said 
            goodbye, often tearfully, to the residents they had served for so 
            many years.  
            The previous April, 32 AFSCME employees 
            had been laid off, bringing the number to 467 who no longer had jobs 
            working for LDC.  
            So where are they now? 
            Two of these former employees, Kim 
            Dennison and Charles Sanders, are working at the union office in 
            Keokuk Village on Chicago Street. They have been hired by the 
            Illinois AFL-CIO as peer outreach counselors to help unemployed 
            union members look for jobs, deal with insurance and retirement 
            technicalities, sign up for unemployment compensation, and offer 
            whatever other assistance they can. With the help of former Local 
            425 president Don Todd and consultant Dan Senters, Dennison and 
            Sanders have compiled some numbers. 
              
             [Photos by Joan Crabb]
 [Peer 
            counselor Kim Dennison, center, pulls up job listings on the 
            computer to help former LDC employees Kim Morris, left, and Bob 
            Benedict.]
 
            About 110 of the 467 former AFSCME 
            workers have retired, some taking the early retirement option that 
            was offered by the state of Illinois until Dec. 31 last year. 
            Of the 357 left, at least 53 got jobs 
            with the state -- some in other state-operated facilities for the 
            developmentally disabled; some in other capacities with DHS, which 
            operates all the state facilities for the developmentally disabled; 
            and some with different state agencies. The closest state-operated 
            facility is in Jacksonville, and a few have taken jobs there; 
            others, like Carl Twente, have had to move from the area. Twente 
            took a job at Choate, in the town of Anna in southern Illinois. 
            Of the 250 former employees left, 
            Dennison and Sanders said they know of 34 who got full-time jobs 
            working for employers other than the state and another 20 who later 
            got other jobs with the state. 
            That leaves approximately 250 still 
            unemployed. Dennison said at least 31 of those are enrolled in one 
            of two training programs to help them qualify for other jobs. One 
            program is the Workforce Investment Act, better known as WIA, a 
            federal program that helps train people for jobs such as licensed 
            practical nurse, medical assistant and computer technologist. WIA 
            pays up to $3,000 for tuition, books, day care and other expenses. 
            The other option is Upward Mobility, a state program that helps pay 
            for college classes that count toward approved degrees in fields 
            such as psychology, nursing, counseling and human development.
             
              
            
             
            There are still about 219 former LDC 
            employees who haven't found suitable jobs, and most of them have 
            been in the union office at one time or another, Sanders said. He 
            estimates that one-third of them have low-paying jobs, often part 
            time, working in nursing homes, retail sales and food service, 
            including fast-food restaurants. Many are working in Community 
            Integrated Living Arrangements, the group homes for the 
            developmentally disabled located in the area, but these CILAs, 
            besides paying lower wages, almost never offer the health insurance 
            and retirement benefits that LDC provided its employees. 
            For example, one former LDC employee, 
            who was at the lowest level as a technician at LDC, made $11 an hour 
            there and had benefits. She went to work in a CILA, where she 
            started at $7.65 an hour. She is now making $8.25 an hour but still 
            has no benefits, including no health insurance for herself or her 
            child.   [to top of second column in
this article] | 
       
            Health insurance is a major reason the 
            search for a new job is becoming crucial for many former LDC 
            workers. State workers get a six-month extension of their health 
            coverage when they are laid off. Those few laid off in April who 
            didn't get other state jobs have already seen their health benefits 
            disappear, but many more were laid off in August, and their benefits 
            will run out at the end of February. 
            Former state employees do have the 
            option of keeping insurance for another 18 months, if they can 
            afford it. This program, the Combined Omnibus Budget Reconciliation 
            Act, or COBRA, allows state workers who have been laid off to buy 
            insurance that covers pre-existing conditions. Most of the health 
            insurance they could buy otherwise would exclude coverage for a 
            health problem a family member already has. 
            COBRA, however, is expensive. Sanders 
            said the cost for a family of four would run about $580 a month and 
            for just one person, more than $300. 
            For a few former LDC workers, those let 
            go in April, unemployment compensation will also run out soon, the 
            end of January or later, depending on how much vacation or sick time 
            the employee had left when he or she was laid off. These workers got 
            the regular 26 weeks of benefits, plus the 13-week extension granted 
            by President George Bush, for a total of 39 weeks of unemployment 
            compensation. Those let go in August, who also got a 13-week 
            extension, may be collecting unemployment until June or perhaps 
            later. 
            Because of the extension of 
            unemployment and the continued health benefits, former employees say 
            the Lincoln community has not yet felt the full impact of LDC's 
            closure. 
            "It hasn't been six months since most 
            of us were laid off," says Diane Sizemore, a former employee who is 
            still job hunting. "Soon everybody will run out of health insurance. 
            Some will also run out of unemployment benefits or are in low-paying 
            jobs." 
              
             [Charles 
            Sanders, peer counselor, works with Diane Sizemore looking for job 
            listings.]
 
            Sanders agrees that the worst is yet to 
            come. "Unemployment is enough to keep some people afloat, but when 
            they can only get jobs paying $7 a hour, that's not going to be 
            enough," he said. He already knows of three former employees who are 
            in the process of losing their homes. 
            "Expect to see more people lose their 
            homes if they go to the doctor and run up a huge medical bill, or if 
            something happens to their car," said Kim Morris, another former 
            employee. 
            Kim and Diane, along with many others, 
            are still searching for jobs that can give them some of the 
            security, not to mention the satisfaction and the feeling of helping 
            others, that they found at LDC. A ray of 
            hope that some of these unemployed workers might be able to return 
            surfaced this week when an area television station aired the news 
            that Gov. Rod Blagojevich had sent a team to LDC to look at the 
            possibility of reopening a section to house 40 residents. No 
            definite plans have yet been announced, but local AFSCME members and 
            political leaders are heartened by the news. Todd said the former 
            workers who are still unemployed would be the first to be rehired. 
            [Joan Crabb] 
            
            [Click here to read "Job search becoming crucialfor many LDC workers."]
 
      
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