Audit reveals Illinois failed to monitor criminal activity in group
homes
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[October 04, 2022]
By Kevin Bessler | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – An Illinois lawmaker
is calling for more accountability of Illinois group homes for those
with developmental disabilities.
They are called CILAs, which stands for Community Integrated Living
Arrangement. State Rep. Charlie Meier, R-Okawville, said a recent audit
shows the Illinois Department of Human Services is failing to monitor
criminal activity in group homes, and some residents are not being cared
for properly.
When the Auditor General released the audit concerning oversight of
CILAs back in July 2018, the audit found weaknesses in the licensing
process for CILAs and the monitoring of CILAs by DHS, resulting in 26
recommendations to DHS to improve CILA oversight. In another state audit
released in July 2020, DHS had not yet fully implemented 19 of the 26
recommendations from the 2018 audit.
“Criminal activity is happening in our group homes and the state is not
following up or even doing anything to help,” Meier said. “This is not
right, something has to be done to better protect the developmentally
disabled.”
The much-publicized patient abuses at the Choate Mental Health and
Developmental Center in rural Anna has been a lightning rod for change.
Dozens of employees over the past decade have been arrested on felony
charges in connection to their work at the facility, while other
employees have been cited for neglecting residents and lying to
investigators.
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Gov. J.B. Pritzker speaks at an event on
Thursday, Sept. 23, 2021. - Courtesy of Facebook
“The question is can we prevent that in the future?” Gov. J.B. Pritzker
said when asked about the report. “And if not, then obviously that’s not
a facility that should remain open.”
Meier and a bipartisan group of lawmakers have introduced House
Resolution 265 that would direct the Auditor General to conduct a
management audit concerning the oversight of the CILA program and the
awarding of competitively-procured grants. The resolution cleared the
House Human Services Committee and awaits action by the House of
Representatives.
“To this day, not all group homes are bad, however, I want them all to
be the safest and best group homes on the planet,” Meier said. "Since
DHS continues to fail at making the safety of our most vulnerable a
priority, my office will begin to work on legislation that will force
the agency to implement the changes necessary to drastically improve the
safety and care for our developmentally disabled in the state of
Illinois.”
According to research, Illinois spends more to operate CILAs relative to
statewide personal income than nearly every state in the nation.
A request for comment from the Illinois Department of Human Services
went unanswered.
Kevin Bessler reports on statewide issues in Illinois for
the Center Square. He has over 30 years of experience in radio news
reporting throughout the Midwest.
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