E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014
Transcription
E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014
E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 estimated a 15 to 20 percent growth in the homeless population coinciding with increases in domestic violence and post-traumatic stress disorder among military combat veterans. “Incrementalism doesn't work,” he said. “I'm about disrupting the entire way you do it and starting it from scratch.” Throughout a roughly two-hour discussion, Marbut cited statistics to argue drastic change does work. He said similar programs in other places have reduced homeless populations by at least 80 percent, and reduced jail populations by 25 percent. Jail stays cost $100 a night, he said, while Pinellas Safe Harbor costs $13 a night. In San Antonio, he said, the program pulled 1,000 people off the streets permanently in the first two years, cut jail stays by 700 people per night and reduced homeless emergency-room visits to four a day, down from 24. The program is more effective than jail, he said, because it is so intensive. It provides mental health and substance abuse treatment, job training and placement, family reunification and help with basic but forgotten life skills. For the first 10 days, new residents just get lots of sleep and hydration, two things that are taken for granted but hard to come by living on the street. “If you feed people in parks, or on a street, or drive your car up and give 14 meals out the back of your car, all you're doing is growing homelessness,” he said. “If you want to dramatically change how the Daytona Beach area deals with the homeless, align your feeding with all the holistic services. And the only place people should ever be fed is when you're in a 24/7 program that's holistic that deals with all the issues.” (Daytona Beach News-Journal, 1/10/14) Volusia Officials Get 'Tough Love' On Dealing With Homeless As Robert Marbut drove through Daytona Beach on Friday, he saw and heard what he has grown accustomed to seeing and hearing: Homeless people gathered at the public library, in the park, around a bus stop or in line for food. And then community leaders explaining how this scenery has persisted despite everyone's effort to fix it. “All the things I've heard today, I've heard everywhere I go. I literally have not heard anything new here,” Marbut said to a room full of government officials, homeless advocates and others concerned about Volusia County's visible homeless problem. “If I leave the room and I have not offended you ... I have not done my job,” he added. “If you want to keep getting the same result you have, keep doing the same thing you're doing.” Marbut, a former San Antonio city councilman, college professor and homelessness consultant, once labeled “Dr. Tough Love,” visited Daytona to lead a discussion on Volusia Safe Harbor, a proposed 24/7 homeless facility that mirrors several other “transition” programs launched across the country. Momentum for the program has been building in Volusia, which recently sent a team of county officials to tour another Marbut consulting project, Pinellas Safe Harbor in Clearwater. Daytona Beach city commissioners sat in the front row to hear Marbut on Friday. Two Volusia County Council members attended, along with various elected officials from other cities. The room was full. Marbut's model depends on turning a fragmented homeless-service system into a centralized one that pulls people off the street for good. It's not designed for entire homeless families, but individuals who routinely get arrested for minor offenses and clog the local justice system. Circuit Judge Belle Schumann, who started the campaign for a Safe Harbor system here, reported that 50 people in Volusia County account for more than 6,100 arrests costing more than $12 million. Volusia Safe Harbor's costs, and who will pay for them, are still unknown. Schumann estimated the facility would cost $1.5 million to build out near the Volusia County Branch Jail. Volusia County Councilwoman Joyce Cusack, county community assistance director Dona DeMarsh Butler and Daytona Beach Housing Authority Executive Director Anthony Woods all had budget questions. The answers aren't all clear yet. But Marbut said ideally the cost would be split in 25 percent shares among the county, the cities, the business and tourism community and faith-based or nonprofit organizations. Hospital districts also could contribute out of the money saved when homeless people make fewer emergency-room visits. He said without a new program, Volusia's homeless population won't just stagnate but worsen. Marbut New Behavioral Health Facility Accredited By The Joint Commission Alzheimer’s Community Care is now accredited in behavioral health care by the Joint Commission after going through a rigorous five-day evaluation process that began Nov. 18. With the first phase of accreditation completed, Alzheimer’s Community Care is moving on to disease-specific certification in the care of families living with neurocognitive disorders. Once accreditation has been achieved, the organization is eligible to apply for diseasespecific certification. During this phase, Alzheimer’s Community Care will work with its Community Care Services Standing Committee to develop a specialized work group of professionals with expertise in defining outcomes and in the collection, analysis and interpretation of the data necessary to show the impacts of those outcomes on patients, families and the community. Alzheimer’s Community Care operates care centers in Palm Beach, Martin and St. Lucie counties. (TC Palm, 1/10/14) 1 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 http://www.tcpalm.com/news/2014/jan/10/newbehavioral-health-facility-accredited-by-the/ http://www.gainesville.com/article/20140112/OPINI ON01/140119952/1017?p=all&tc=pgall#gsc.tab=0 Editorial: Winning The War Guest: How To Achieve Better Mental Health Care For Lower Costs In Obamacare Fifty years after President Lyndon B. Johnson declared "war on poverty," it's nice to see Republicans move beyond just criticizing government to offering ideas to address the issue. But so far, it's hard to believe that they're truly interested in identifying the most effective ways to reduce suffering and help the poor improve their lives. Instead, the chief concern of national Republicans speaking out on the issue seems to be countering a renewed Democratic focus on poverty and income inequality. U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida was particularly disingenuous in a speech last week. He criticized Democrats for "stale proposals" like raising the minimum wage, but himself recycled the conservative notion that poor Americans would thrive if only Washington gave more authority to the states. That's a laughable notion in his home state, where the Republicancontrolled Legislature has showed indifference to the plight of our most vulnerable residents. Recent examples include state lawmakers failing to expand Medicaid or an alternative plan to cover more than 750,000 uninsured residents. The state has also left the jobless mired in an unemployment insurance system riddled with problems delivering benefits. States from Florida through the South to Texas, where the loudest cries are heard about taking power from Washington, also have some of the most dismal records on poverty. The federal government hasn't won the war on poverty, but programs such as Social Security and food stamps have improved the lives of countless Americans. While the poverty rate has increased slightly since the Johnson administration, a study last month by Columbia University researchers found a 40 percent reduction in poverty since that time when factoring in social programs and more accurately accounting for expenses. There's no doubt that fraud occurs in government programs, but those instances and the impact of welfare on the deficit are too often exaggerated in a push to shrink government. Five decades after Johnson's speech led to new social programs, it's appropriate and necessary to reevaluate their effectiveness and make changes. New ideas are worth exploring, such as Rubio's proposal to replace the earned income tax credit with a federal wage enhancement. It would be easier to have a serious debate of those issues if conservatives would acknowledge that government has actually improved the lives of the poor, even if doesn't offer all the solutions. On the 50th anniversary of Johnson's speech, there's more to celebrate about efforts to end poverty than deride. (Gainesville Sun, 1/12/14) With the implementation of the Affordable Care Act in 2014, states have an unprecedented opportunity to improve the health of millions of Americans by integrating physical care with mental health care. The challenge is creating systems of care in which doctors and specialists collaborate effectively to realize this goal. How do we achieve, as the Institute for Health Care Improvement recommends, the triple aim of more satisfied patients, better health outcomes and lower costs? The state of Washington is a leader in this regard and has the potential to serve as a model for the rest of the country. From more than 20 years of research, much of it done in Washington state, we have found that integrating mental health and medical care works. The federal passage of the Affordable Care Act, which took effect on Jan. 1, triggered the final implementation of the 2008 Mental Health Parity Act, which requires insurers to cover treatment of, say, depression just as they would cover a splint for a broken leg. The expansion of Medicaid eligibility in Washington state could further extend access to 328,000 new people. Many more may now have access to mental-health care. If we act now, we could help millions of people with mental illness get the care they deserve. Twenty-five percent of Americans will experience a mental health problem over a lifetime. The problem often goes untreated, and may lead to hardships with employment, family and social relationships, and physical health. Most people have had a friend or family member experience these problems, and know of the suffering and difficulty of obtaining effective treatment. Currently only one in five adults living with a mental-health or substance-use problem sees a mental health specialist. Only half of all mentalhealth problems are accurately diagnosed in primary care, and only half of those referred will actually see a specialist. Many of the 39 counties in Washington state don’t have a single licensed mental-health professional. This shortage is particularly acute in rural areas. But even in our cities, too many people who desperately need help for mental health problems are not receiving the treatment they need. They wind up boarded in hospital emergency rooms awaiting placement for treatment. Evidence shows that collaborative-care programs work and would help avert some of these crises. In this approach, a mental health-care manager and a designated psychiatric consultant work at a primary-care doctor’s practice to care for patients with common problems such as depression and anxiety. These programs cannot solve all mental-health needs, but 2 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 increasing access before patient problems escalate is an important step in the right direction. More than 80 studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of collaborative care programs. Millions of individuals have both mental and physical health problems. People afflicted with serious depression, anxiety or other mental health problems usually take better care of themselves under the collaborative-care model. They are more likely to follow medical and mental health treatment advice. This often results in improved overall health. People with one or more chronic illnesses, such as diabetes and heart disease, have twofold higher rates of common mental illness such as major depression. Individuals with more severe mental illnesses, such as bipolar disorder or schizophrenia, die 10 to 25 years earlier than those without mental disorders — and not from their mental illness. These individuals often succumb to poorly treated medical conditions. Programs providing both physical and mental health care in the same setting can help both of these populations live longer, more rewarding lives. Washington state has offered a collaborative care program for behavioral health problems to lowincome and safety-net populations for the past five years through the Mental Health Integration Program. The program was originally supported in 2008 in King and Pierce counties to serve unemployed patients receiving short-term disability and expanded to more than 140 community health clinics statewide in 2010, reaching vulnerable populations in even the most remote parts of the state. Tax-levy dollars in King County fund care for other high-risk populations, including the uninsured, military veterans and their family members, mothers of infants and young children and older adults. Since its inception, the Mental Health Integration Program has served more than 35,000 patients and has improved care while reducing costs. The service is also associated with lower rates of police arrest and homelessness. A pay-for-performance component was introduced in 2010 to reward clinics that achieve high quality indicators, such as reducing the time it takes for a patient with depression to improve. This innovation has substantially improved health outcomes. Integration has obvious benefits, and Washington state’s Mental Health Integration Program is a great example. The program has achieved the triple aim of better access to care and better health outcomes at a lower cost. Still, there is no denying that reaching these goals will require a major change in practice. Health-care organizations as well as medical and mental-health providers need to see the value in integrated services and continue to learn how to collaborate effectively. Regulators need to remove barriers that make it difficult to provide integrated services. Government agencies and insurance companies have to create payment mechanisms and financial incentives for providers. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee recently released a vision statement calling for integration that can help move us in this direction. Our state sent an ambitious State Innovation Plan to the federal government. This plan further challenges us to move toward this goal. Much work remains to be done. It’s imperative that we grasp opportunities to innovate and implement integrated care programs that meet our patients where they are. Wayne Katon and Jürgen Unützer are professors of psychiatry at the University of Washington School of Medicine. (The Seattle Times, 1/11/14) http://seattletimes.com/html/opinion/2022642957_ waynekatonjurgenunutzeropedmentalhealthparity12 xml.html Defendants With Disorders Imagine you are a police officer who sees a suspected drug seller, in an area where neither the neighbors nor law enforcement feel safe. You attempt to stop the man but he runs away. You catch him but he defies orders and escapes. You send out the police dog to seize the suspect -- who then runs off again... and again, and again, incurring one dog bite after another. After a lot more effort the suspect (who has a long history of drug arrests) is finally captured, treated for the bites and taken to jail. Fortunately, the officer is OK. Months later -- after an expensive trip through the court system -- it is determined that the case cannot go to trial. Why? Because the defendant suffers from longstanding mental "retardation or autism." He doesn't fit criteria for involuntary commitment, but he's deemed incompetent to stand trial. Experts aren't sure treatment will ever get him to a level at which a trial could proceed. The above scenario mirrors a Sarasota incident involving a man who has continued to have risky run-ins with the police. But many communities face similar struggles as they try to navigate the shoals between law enforcement and offenders with disabilities. These are cases -whether involving mental illness or developmental problems -- that don't fit a standard approach to policing. They are vulnerable to misunderstanding, which can elevate risk for everyone on the scene. If an arrest does occur, the courts and social-service system may lack resources to deal with the individual. If he lands back on the street with little after-care, a downward spiral can accelerate. It is important to sensitize communities to this issue, ensuring that they have the necessary tools, training and social services to deal with it safely and humanely. 3 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 Complex Challenges the court system. (A mental-health court diversion program exists, but it is currently limited to minor misdemeanor cases). Local officials and boards -such as Sarasota County's Human Services Advisory Council, Criminal Justice Commission and the city's Independent Police Advisory Panel -- could bring more focus and attention to this issue. What's needed is an initiative by the overall community -federal, state and local -- to weave a safety net of housing, education and support services that will enable affected individuals to reach for a better life. (Sarasota Herald Tribune, 1/12/14) More police departments, including Sarasota's, are getting specialized training for interactions with the mentally impaired. Sarasota also is in the process of hiring a licensed clinical social worker. Both steps should help police meet this complex challenge. Disabilities cover a whole spectrum and are not always readily apparent. Officers on the scene must quickly and accurately size up each situation, evaluate the risk, and carry out a response that balances public safety needs and civil rights. That's a tough call, especially if a suspect is resisting or panicking. It is all too easy to see how tension could escalate. Cognitive problems and severe mental illness can impair a person's judgment and communication skills. This can thwart compliance with law enforcement and sometimes inflame emergency situations. Some national organizations consider this such a source of concern that they have issued recommendations -- including proposals that agencies get training and have a written policy on dealing with mentally impaired individuals. (Over half of Sarasota police have received this training, according to the department.) Other recommendations include the use of calming tactics. Enlisting an individual's family or a crisisintervention specialist can help, too. http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20140112/OPI NION/301129995/0/API?p=all&tc=pgall#gsc.tab=0 New Law Means More Foster Parents Needed On the morning of his 18th birthday last year, Deon Richards had to pack up all his worldly belongings in plastic garbage bags and move out of his South Florida foster home. Though the state gave him a monthly stipend as long as he stayed in high school, Richards had no idea how to go about paying rent on his new apartment. He didn't know how to get the utilities turned on. He didn't have a car, bank account or identification card. "It kind of sucked," said Richards, who now lives in Orlando. "On the one hand, when you're 18, you're anxious to leave. But you don't really know what it's like out there." But under a new state law that took effect Jan. 1, Richards and hundreds of others like him are now able to stay in — or return to — the foster-care system through age 21. The only requirement: They must be working toward a high-school diploma, college degree or job-training certificate. It's good news for those in the foster-care system, but it also means there is a need for more families to open their homes. "Turning 18 should be a milestone to celebrate," said Bill D'Aiuto, who leads the central region of the Florida Department of Children and Families. "But for some young adults in foster care, this birthday can bring strong mixed emotions. We want [them] to know that they are still part of a family at 18, rather than feel the entire weight of making it on their own." The bill, sponsored by state Sen. Nancy Detert, R-Venice, passed after testimony from dozens of foster teens with stories similar to Richards'. When it took effect, he immediately opted back into the system — while state child-welfare workers launched a campaign to recruit more foster parents. "Right now there's a need for foster homes for all ages, said Glen Casel, president and CEO of Community Based Care of Central Florida, the nonprofit agency that contracts with the state to manage foster care and adoptions for Orange, Osceola and Seminole counties. "A lot of our kids are now going to stay Potential for Tragedy Several reports on this subject emphasize how difficult it can be for police to recognize and adapt to special-needs individuals. It sometimes leads to tragedy, such as a Maryland case last year in which a young man being restrained by theater security guards died of asphyxiation. Last September, the U.S. Department of Justice announced that The Arc will receive funding to develop "a national center on justice and intellectual and developmental disabilities." (The Arc advocates for people with diagnoses that include Down syndrome, autism, cerebral palsy, fetal alcohol spectrum disorders and others.) According to The Arc, "The goal of this project is to create a national clearinghouse for research, information, evaluation, training and technical assistance for justice and disability professionals and other advocates ... " The Arc noted that people with intellectual disabilities "are overrepresented in the nation's criminal justice system -- both as victims and offenders." Smoothing interactions between police and the mentally impaired is important. But the larger concern is how to improve the long-term outcome after the confrontation is over. That's an issue for the whole community, not police. If the disabled individual does not have family or supportive services, it's a recipe for a vicious circle of recidivism and decline. Alternatives are needed that don't send a person bouncing helplessly through jail and 4 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 with us past age 18, so this is going to be a real challenge." About 200 foster kids throughout the 12-county Central Florida region — from Hardee to Marion to Brevard — will turn 18 this year. Childwelfare officials don't know how many will choose to stay in foster care, but the agencies won't get any additional money to pay for their care. Casel estimates the expense will run about $2 million a year for his organization alone. In Orlando, both Covenant House and the BETA Center, charities that help teens in crisis, are working to increase their capacity. But Casel said about 100 new individual foster homes are needed this year, too. "We've made a commitment to do everything we can for the kids — and then we'll figure out how to pay for it," Casel said. For Richards, that meant bringing him into the nonprofit Faine House near Orlando after he came close to sleeping on the streets, a common danger for former foster kids. According to the Children's Home Society, a third end up homeless within the first three years, and a quarter of the males end up in jail or prison. "I'd never had money before, and in foster care you don't really have any nice things, so I just splurged," Richards admitted. "I bought a nice phone and some furniture — because I didn't have any — and I got some nice clothes. I was still in high school, but I started missing classes." The truancy led the state to cut his stipend, which meant he could no longer pay his rent. Ultimately, he pawned his newly acquired possessions, buckled down at school and got another apartment, though he often went without food or such basics as toothpaste or laundry soap. "When I heard about the new law, I jumped," said Richards, who is now studying to take his GED and hopes to attend college to become a physical therapist. "This is a great opportunity for kids that are aging out of the system, and this place is great. They teach you basically like they're your parents." (Orlando Sentinel, 1/11/14) Dade and Monroe counties. In December, the Health Foundation announced awards of as much as $7.5 million over the next six years for the city of Miami Gardens and for the Little Havana neighborhood to identify and support programs that engage residents in their own healthcare, such as nutrition and exercise, and that build partnerships with physicians and clinics that emphasize preventive care. The program, called the Healthy Community Partnerships Initiative, will be unlike any other in the Health Foundation’s 20-year history, said Loreen Chant, vice chair of the board and president of Johnson & Wales University’s North Miami campus. Chant said the program calls for the Health Foundation to work with Miami Gardens city officials and representatives of ConnectFamilias, a nonprofit agency leading the Little Havana effort, to identify and prioritize each community’s healthcare needs. “What Little Havana decides will be important in terms of a priority area may look very different from what the city of Miami Gardens is going to identify,’’ she said. Health Foundation will help residents of those communities identify existing programs or create new ones that address their most pressing healthcare needs, Chant said. The foundation also will provide administrative and technical support, such as vetting proposals and groups that apply for grants, and developing metrics to evaluate success. “So Health Foundation doesn’t simply give funding out, and leave an organization to itself to figure out how to be successful with the grants they receive,’’ she said. Collaboration among residents and other stakeholders in a community is a central tenet of the Health Foundation’s work, whether it’s partnering with area primary-care physicians to increase access to preventive medicine, or working with local schools to teach children and their parents about nutrition, said Richard Laviña, board chairman and regional president of HSBC Bank. “The basic role of the foundation is healthcare-related sustainable social investment. That’s the way I view it,’’ he said. “It doesn’t work if everybody isn’t involved.’’ Since its inception in 1993, the Health Foundation has awarded more than $104 million in grants to 330 organizations to support community health programs in South Florida. The foundation was created 20 years ago as a successor to the Cedars Foundation, which raised donations for community health programs through the former Cedars Medical Center, now University of Miami Hospital. In 1993, the Cedars Foundation formed a partnership with private hospital companies Columbia/HCA to manage and co-own the medical center. The foundation changed its name to the current iteration, and focused on funding community nonprofit health programs. In 2001, the Health Foundation sold its minority interest in Cedars Healthcare Group, which owned the medical center, http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/os-fosterparents-wanted-new-law-20140111,0,7472329.story Health Foundation Of South Florida Invests In Partnerships For Healthy Communities Traditional healthcare policy long has emphasized the role of physicians, hospitals and other clinical providers in ensuring good public health. Now a South Florida nonprofit is making a multimilliondollar investment in Little Havana and Miami Gardens that may improve the health of residents through non-clinical factors, such as personal behavior and social and economic opportunities. “Health occurs literally every place you walk and sit in your day,’’ said Steven Marcus, president of the Health Foundation of South Florida, a nonprofit that funds public health initiatives in Broward, Miami- 5 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 and divested itself of ownership in healthcare facilities. Since then, the group’s leadership has focused the Health Foundation’s efforts on specific areas, including primary care, behavioral health, preventive health and programs that promote good nutrition and regular physical activity — funding priorities that receive about 80 percent of grants. The Health Foundation also funds strategic initiatives that can take two to seven years, including programs to promote healthy aging, school fitness and nursing through scholarships. “You just can’t address health problems in one population or one ethnic group,’’ Marcus said. “You have to apply different methods and different approaches to different populations.’’ (Miami Herald, 1/11/14) committee to gauge health care workforce needs and recommend changes in Florida law. The committee has focused most on Florida regulations for advanced practice nurses, the most restrictive in the nation. "Florida is really behind the curve on addressing the workforce issues; many other states throughout the nation have made some of the changes that were suggested here today with tremendous success for many years," Rep. Jose Oliva, R-Miami Lakes, said Friday after a committee meeting. Nurses with post-graduate training want to prescribe controlled substances, sign death certificates and practice independently from medical doctors. The Florida Medical Association, a powerful advocacy organization for doctors, has fought against proposals to give these professionals more duties outside of a physician's supervision. Telemedicine — the emerging practice of using technology and the Internet to facilitate virtual doctor-patient visits — is also a field where other states have outpaced Florida. Some Florida hospitals and doctors, especially in rural areas and certain specialties, are using telemedicine for evaluations and checkups. Right now, a state Board of Medicine rule requires face-to-face meetings in order for a doctor visit to be reimbursed except in some instances where drugs are being prescribed. Proposals in the House and the Senate would require insurers to pay for services regardless of whether they are provided in-person or via services like Skype. Lawmakers will also discuss whether telemedicine should be reimbursed at the same rate as face-to-face visits. And, of course, there are the perennial requests for more health care spending. The state increased funding for medical residency slots to $80 million last year, but hospitals say more is needed. The Florida Medical Association is also lobbying for a loan forgiveness program to encourage new doctors to go into primary care instead of more lucrative specialties. "We come out of school with an incredible amount of debt, and it would be easy to be a radiologist and get that debt paid off faster but we really want to be family doctors," said Dr. Bob Raspa, the Jacksonville-based board chairman of the Florida Academy of Family Physicians. Even with all of these new topics, many old ones will still need attention, such as Medicaid funding for hospitals and ongoing implementation of the Affordable Care Act. For example, the federal government provided 100 percent of the funding for states to boost reimbursement rates for Medicaid doctors through the end of 2014. If states want to keep those higher rates in 2015 and beyond, they will have to shoulder at least some of the cost. The Florida Medical Association estimates Florida's share to be $150 million a year, money that would have to be reflected in the 2014-15 budget crafted during the 2014 session. The president of the South Florida Hospital and Healthcare Association believes http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/01/11/3863639/ health-foundation-of-southflorida.html#storylink=cpy As Focus Shifts To New Health Care Issues, Florida Democrats Say Medicaid Expansion Still A Priority Florida's 2013 legislative session practically started and ended with Medicaid expansion at the center of debate, with House Republicans blocking a plan to use federal dollars to reduce the number of uninsured Floridians. This year, House Republicans pledge to tackle issues that have long lingered on the back burner, such as providing more independence for highly trained nurses, increasing the number of medical students who go into primary care and regulating virtual doctor visits. But even as the focus shifts from Medicaid expansion, Democrats say it remains a top priority. "I don't think they'll have it in their agenda, but it's on our agenda," said House Minority Leader Perry Thurston, D-Fort Lauderdale. "So we will be talking about it. And if they want to pretend it's a big elephant in the room that's not really there, then it's up to them." Sen. Joe Negron, a Stuart Republican, disagrees. He crafted the plan that House Republicans rejected to use $51 billion in federal funding to purchase private insurance for poor Floridians. The House and the Senate had the same goals but after "spirited, full and fair debate" were unable to reach an agreement, Negron said. "I don't know how productive it would be to simply film the same movie over again," he said. " … I think the fact there are so many other health care issues is an indication that the Legislature has moved on to other issues where we can make progress." Proponents of Medicaid expansion are working behind the scenes to come up with an alternative that House Republicans will allow, but it's a steep, uphill battle. Meanwhile, all sides agree these other topics deserve attention. House Speaker Will Weatherford created a special 6 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 that all of those topics are worthy of discussion, but not at the expense of Medicaid expansion. "We haven't given up on it," said Linda Quick. Health care groups have started engaging the business community to make the economic case for reducing the number of uninsured Floridians. Florida is not only rejecting billions of federal dollars, they argue, but is also allowing businesses with low-wage, fulltime workers to shoulder the health insurance costs while stifling the creation of tens of thousands of jobs the federal funding would have created. Nothing is more important than providing health care for the 764,000 Floridians who make too much to qualify for Medicaid under current standards but not enough to qualify for subsidies to buy insurance on the federal health exchange, Quick said. The nurse practitioner and telemedicine conversations are worth having, she said, but amount to small peanuts in the grand scheme of things. "I don't see them as controversial or hotly contested," she said, "so I would like to think that (legislators) could come to some consensus on those issues relatively early in session and then do the work that will be required to craft an expansion option that everyone could agree to." (Tampa Bay Times, 1/12/14) Homelessness, Inc., 2-1-1 Broward, Nova Southeastern University and Hands on Broward are joining forces to assist in the Homeless PIT Count Survey, which will take place on Tuesday, Jan.21, through Thursday, Jan. 23. All volunteers will require a short training session, and you can decide which day you'd like to attend (from January 13 – 17). The more people experiencing homeless that are surveyed during the PIT count, the more funding Broward County receives to help these individuals get back on their feet and provide for themselves. The data collected from each survey supplies non-profit organizations with the information they need to determine who needs services and what type of services. The results and turnaround from the survey are immediate: housing placement — the first step in creating selfsufficiency and independence — will begin before Jan. 30. The PIT survey coincides with BSO's commitment to the Homeless Management Information System (HMIS). We have dedicated $350,000 of Law Enforcement Trust Funds to HMIS, as well as time, resources and training to educate our deputies. HMIS is an integral part of how law enforcement and non-profits now communicate and share information to better assist those who are experiencing homelessness. When a deputy interacts with an individual experiencing homelessness, HMIS is a crucial tool in directing that person to the proper care. We've found that arresting the homeless doesn't address the issues of homelessness; if anything, it adds to the problems that the individuals are facing. The PIT survey and HMIS are critical steps in reaching the goal of ending all homelessness by 2020, but we cannot reach this goal without the involvement and dedication of volunteers. By volunteering for the PIT survey, you are helping our community get one step closer to ending the cycle of homelessness. BSO deputies and civilian employees will be volunteering during the PIT count not only to survey, but also to offer food, water, clothing and other necessities. The deputies assisting are CIT (Crisis Intervention Team) trained, which means they learn how to gain a trusting relationship with the homeless, especially those with mental illnesses. When we all work together, we can truly make a difference and help these individuals to rebuild and reclaim their lives. As Sheriff, I believe that homeless people aren't problem people; they are people with problems, problems that can be corrected with help, understanding and guidance from our community. By volunteering, you can be part of the solution. A person in need today can become the person you turn to tomorrow. Scott Israel is sheriff of Broward County. (South Florida Sun-Sentinel, 1/13/14) http://www.tampabay.com/news/health/as-focusshifts-to-new-health-care-issues-florida-democratssay-medicaid/2160716 Scott Israel: Homeless Count Survey Will Help Quality Of Life For Many Homelessness is a nationwide crisis that affects Broward County. Through my experiences in law enforcement, I have found that many people are just one paycheck away from being homeless. Anybody can become homeless, but it is not a permanent condition. When we see someone on the street asking for money, our initial reaction is to offer help, but giving a person spare change doesn't result in aiding that person off of the streets. Every year, the county participates in the Homeless PointIn-Time (PIT) Count Survey, which is the first step in improving the quality of life for these individuals. Through the efforts of the PIT survey, people experiencing homelessness have a better chance of receiving meals, housing, job opportunities and treatment for substance abuse and/or mental illness. This year, the PIT survey is conducted over three days to maximize the potential of reaching everyone. However, volunteers are still needed to administer the survey in all communities. If you've often thought about volunteering but didn't know where to start, I encourage you to get involved in this important event. This year, the Broward County Homeless Initiative Partnership, the Broward Regional Health Planning Council, Inc., the Broward Sheriff’s Office, the TaskForce Fore Ending 7 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/opinion/fl-sicolhomeless-oped0113-20140113,0,2392598.story race with plenty of promise, winning endorsements from a group of House GOP women eager to expand their ranks. But some Republicans believe her campaign has fizzled, with the candidate scoring low in recent polls. Mark Bircher, a little-known Iraq War veteran, has struggled to raise money. And then there’s Sink, one of Florida’s most prominent Democratic figures, gliding to her party’s nomination. While the Republicans spent the holiday season flailing at each other, Sink — who had the primary field to herself — has so far been unscathed. “You have a superior candidate with Alex Sink, and she is raising a lot of money, she is getting a lot of support. And you have two subpar candidates in Peters and Jolly,” said Mike Fasano, a popular former Republican state senator from nearby Pasco County. “The candidates that should have run did not run, so we’re stuck with Peters and Jolly.” Tom Slade, a lobbyist and former Florida Republican Party chairman, said: “Alex Sink is going to be hard to beat. She is so well-known. … It’s not going to be an easy race for Republicans to win. I hope I’m wrong.” One of the biggest concerns for the eventual GOP nominee is money. While Republicans have been emptying their bank accounts in the primary, Sink has been stocking her reserves with more than $1 million in donations. And Sink will be able to count on a flood of outside cash, with groups like the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, EMILY’s List and House Majority PAC primed to spend big bucks to prop her up. She’s also received an endorsement from the National Realtors Association, a group that often doles out large sums in congressional races. GOP groups sound a lot less enthused about getting involved. One strategist for a prominent Republican group said he was “disinclined” to plow cash into the race. Another operative with a GOP organization said, “Jolly is the clear underdog in this race for obvious reasons.” But at a time when the national environment favors Republicans, many Democrats aren’t convinced Sink is a sure thing. In mid-December, a national Democratic group commissioned a poll that projected the pool of special election voters would be mostly white, Republican and older — a potentially ominous sign for the party. And many Democrats simply don’t buy the idea that Republican groups won’t spend on their nominee’s behalf in a race as high profile as this one. When that happens, they say, the race is bound to tighten. “National Republicans and outside groups aren’t hesitating to take a page from Rick Scott’s false playbook against Alex Sink and are poised to spend millions of dollars spreading lies against her,” said Emily Bittner, a DCCC spokeswoman. Sink did not respond to a request for comment. Republicans are swimming against the district’s demographic trends, which have shifted from solid red to purple in recent years as Alex Sink Rises To Top In Florida Special Election Republicans have slugged it out while Sink runs unopposed in her primary. It’s been framed as the clearest barometer of the public’s mood heading into this year’s midterms: a special election battle for a 50-50 congressional district in the famously 50-50 state of Florida. But upon closer inspection, the race for Florida’s 13th Congressional District, occupied by Republican Bill Young for more than four decades until his death in October, is not quite the bellwether it’s being portrayed as. More than a dozen operatives and officials from both parties interviewed by POLITICO were almost unanimous that Democrat Alex Sink, her party’s 2010 nominee for Florida governor, has emerged as the unambiguous favorite in the race. The primary, in which Sink has run unopposed as a group of Republicans have slugged it out, is on Tuesday. The general election is on March 11. Democrats need to gain 17 seats to win the House majority in November. An early win in Florida would give the party ammunition to argue they‘re in for a better year than political handicappers expect. A loss, on the other hand, would be widely seen as a serious blow: On Thursday, political analyst Stu Rothenberg penned a piece in Roll Call titled, “The Race Democrats Can’t Afford to Lose.” Republicans admit they are increasingly alarmed about the prospect of losing the St. Petersburg-area district. Democrats, after enduring a heartbreaking loss in a 2013 South Carolina special election they thought was theirs, are carefully managing expectations but can smell victory. Among Republicans there is unhappiness with the candidates in Tuesday’s GOP primary and disappointment that many of the party’s best and brightest who long had been thought of as successors to Young didn’t run. David Jolly, who’s seen as the favorite to get the GOP nod, is a Washington lobbyist — a profession that leaves him vulnerable to being portrayed as a hired gun and insider. State Rep. Kathleen Peters began the 8 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 more young voters arrived. Barack Obama narrowly won the district in the past two presidential elections. Jolly, in a telephone interview last week, acknowledged he would enter the general election as the underdog. But he expressed confidence that he would erode Sink’s standing, particularly by casting her as an avowed supporter of Obamacare. Polls show that the newly implemented health care law is unpopular throughout Florida. “Listen, we knew we were going to be outspent. No question,” he said. “But we’re going to win this race on the issues.” “I promise you,” he added, “in the coming weeks, I will close the gap with Alex Sink.” Not all Republicans, however, think painting Sink — who served as Florida’s chief financial officer before narrowly losing to now-Gov. Rick Scott — as a leftwing lackey of President Barack Obama is going to work. “She is popular. She is not perceived as a liberal,” said Fred Piccolo, a Republican consultant in the state and a former congressional chief of staff. Republicans are “going to hang Obamacare around her neck — and rightfully so — but she’s not a liberal.” Other concerns are cropping up for Republicans. This month, the Tampa Bay Times published an article revealing that Young had kept a secret second family for more than two decades. In the 1980s, the paper reported, Young deserted his wife and three children to wed his 26-year-old secretary, Beverly. Young had been a revered figure in Florida politics, known for securing federal funds for the state’s defense industry, but some Republicans worry that the piece could take some luster off his name as the special election approaches. Republicans will also have to find a way to deal with Lucas Overby, a Libertarian candidate whose presence on the general election ballot could siphon GOP votes. If there’s one major question surrounding Sink’s candidacy, it’s her skills as a candidate and whether she’s prone to campaign trail mistakes. In a 2010 debate with Scott, she came under fire after she was caught checking notes on a cellphone — a violation of debate rules. “I’m not sure she wins at the end of the day,” said Mac Stipanovich, a Republican lobbyist in the state and former top adviser to onetime Gov. Jeb Bush. “She’s anti-charisma. She’s not a very good campaigner.” (Politico, 1/12/14) average 41 minutes before receiving care in an emergency room, according to the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services. UF Health Jacksonville, formerly Shands Jacksonville, has the fifth-longest wait time in the state at 78 minutes. The federal government calculates wait times from when patients enter the hospital until they are seen by a qualified medical practitioner. Russ Armistead is the chief executive officer at UF Health, Jacksonville’s level-one trauma center. Armistead attributes the over-an-hour wait time to a disproportionate number of charity and Medicaid patients. Also, parts of the emergency department are out of date with today’s standards, he said. A floor is undergoing renovations at a cost of about $5 million, and another floor needs similar renovations. He said he’s unsure of where the next $5 million will come from as the hospital stands on a shaky financial foundation as many patients at UF Health Jacksonville don’t pay anything and Medicaid pays little. “We are just at razor’s edge with very little financial backup,” he said. The city offsets some of the cost of indigent care with about $26 million in funding. However, the hospital spent about $60 million in free services last year alone, Armistead said. “We [Jacksonville’s emergency hospitals] are one of the places where people come when they don’t have money,” he said. After a Medicaid or indigent care patient has been treated for emergency care, Armistead said it’s almost impossible for the hospital to send them to a nonemergency care facility. As beds are filled with patients who no longer need emergency care, people waiting to see a doctor wait for a bed to empty. “We have a really difficult time getting them out of the hospital because nobody else wants to take them because they don’t have any money, and if they take them, they are responsible for their care,” he said. ProPublica.org, a nonprofit investigative news organization, pulled data from the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services for hospitals across the country and compiled it in a searchable, online database. The information was gathered by the federal government starting in April 2012 and ending March 31, 2013. Lena Groeger, designer and developer of the online database, said the news organization took on the project to generate public discussion about emergency room care. The organization’s headquarters is in Manhattan, N.Y. Because of long wait times at emergency departments there, it was faster for some New Yorkers to travel to New Jersey when a medical emergency struck, she said. Type Jacksonville into the database and it provides a list of nearby hospitals, current drive times, average wait times and the percentage of patients that would “definitely recommend” the hospital. Groeger http://www.politico.com/story/2014/01/floridaspecial-election-alex-sink102079.html#ixzz2qHLzEvYh Jacksonville ER Patients Wait 41 Minutes On Average; UF Health Fifth Highest In State Emergency rooms fill with anxious people waiting to see a doctor for broken bones, bleeding gashes, fevers and chills. In Jacksonville, patients wait on 9 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 warned the database shouldn’t necessarily be used in all cases. Emergency room wait times are averages, and when patients show severe symptoms, they are bumped to the front of the line. “If you are having a heart attack or other lifethreatening emergencies, you shouldn’t use the app,” she said. The database can be found at projects.propublica.org/emergency. assistants. He said this contributes to longer wait times. Baptist Health uses historical data to create a model that it uses to guide staffing levels at its hospitals, he said. But like other hospitals in the area, Roark said Baptist focuses on process efficiencies. “We try to look at all those process efficiencies whereby we can shorten that length of stay thereby we can increase our supply of rooms available so that we can then meet demand as demand changes,” he said. Still, Roark pointed out that wait times are an average and when 30 patients present needing emergency care, all averages can go out the window. “When patients arrive in an unpredictable pattern, it certainly can challenge our resources,” he said. “And it’s what any emergency department struggles with.” Fred Jenkins, Memorial Hospital’s medical director of the emergency room, said administrators have focused on improving wait times. The severity of a patient’s condition can be subtle, he said. “By getting a provider in front of the patient as quickly as possible, there’s a potential for picking up on very serious conditions sooner than later,” Jenkins said. Memorial has the fastest wait time in Jacksonville at 20 minutes. “We constantly work to improve and make that happen,” he said. Eleanor Lynch, Memorial’s senior vice president of operations, said a patient’s symptoms, availability of beds, staffing levels and efficiency of hospital processes typically drive wait times. Amy Riley, Memorial’s director of emergency services, said the hospital drove down its wait times by eliminating waste and changing the culture. She said the culture change wasn’t just in the emergency department but the entire hospital. “Process improvement is something that can yield meaningful results,” Jenkins said. “Our times look dramatically different than they did five years ago.” Michael Aubin, president at Wolfson Children’s Hospital, said children’s fast metabolic systems mean mild symptoms can quickly progress to severe. For instance, flulike symptoms that start with a runny nose can progress to respiratory distress to respiratory failure in a matter of hours. Wolfson’s wait-time information wasn’t on the ProPublica.org database, but Aubin said the emergency room averages 34 minutes. That wait time is achieved by fast tracking the sickest patients and focusing on processes that can be sped up by improving in all other areas of service. By improving other areas in the hospital, patients can be seen faster and others can then use the rooms, Aubin said. Still, the focus is on the quality of care, not the expedience of care, he said. “We don’t want to sacrifice quality for speed,” Aubin said. Darin Roark, administrator for Baptist Clay and the emergency service line for all of Baptist Health’s hospitals, said Baptist Medical Center in Jacksonville has already improved its average wait time from the 54 minutes in March to about 35 now. “We have been working all year to put in some performance improvement initiatives,” he said. “We have been able to substantially reduce that wait time [54 minutes].” Roark said every patient seen in an emergency room at a Baptist hospital is guaranteed to see an actual medical doctor, unlike some of the hospital’s competitors that use nurse practitioners and physician Kyle Sanders, president at St. Vincent’s Medical Center Southside, said both the Riverside and Southside hospitals have focused on improving their wait times by not only performance improvement initiatives, but with a website that lets patients wait at home. WaitathomeER.com allows a patient to see when St. Vincent’s hospitals have an available appointment and gives a time when they should arrive. Sanders said people who use the website wait on average about 15 minutes before seeing a physician. The program has a 90 percent recommend rate, and 51 percent of users sign in with a mobile device. “We want to make sure we eliminate the time that a patient waits to as close to zero as we can,” Sanders said. If something changes the next available appointment time, the patient is sent a notification and a new time they should plan on arriving. “The beauty of it is they can wait at home,” he said. (Florida Times Union, 1/13/14) http://members.jacksonville.com/news/health-andfitness/2014-01-12/story/jacksonville-er-patientswait-41-minutes-average-uf-health Florida ACA Enrollment Surges In December With 140,000 Roughly 140,000 Floridians signed up for the new federal health insurance program last month. That's nearly eight times the 18,000 others who signed up in October and November combined, according to figures released Monday. Of the 158,030 enrollments thus far, about 55 percent were women and 45 percent were men. Roughly 20 percent fell into the crucial 18- to 34-years-old demographic and about 60 percent were between 45 and 64 years old. And 83 percent of those who purchased plans qualified for a tax credit, according to enrollment statistics from the Health and Human Services Department. Florida continues to lead enrollment efforts among the three dozen states relying on the 10 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 federally run marketplace, one of the main tenants of the Affordable Care Act. Florida's 158,030 enrollees compares to 118,532 in Texas. Nationwide, nearly 2.2 million have selected a plan. December figures are much higher than the previous months' enrollment, which was plagued by technical glitches from healthcare.gov. But it was still far less than what officials had originally projected for Florida and nationwide. Federal health officials said during a conference call with the media that they expect the numbers to climb in coming months, with a likely surge closer to the March enrollment deadline. The Obama administration projected 7 million consumers would sign up for coverage during the first year, including about 477,000 in Florida. Young healthy adults are among the most important group targeted by federal health officials' outreach efforts, prized by insurers in the marketplace to offset the costs of paying for older, sicker consumers. Stacy Sylvain a 19-year-old college student in Miami, was one of last month's late sign-ups online. In roughly one hour, the parttime waitress signed up for a plan with a $158 monthly premium with the feds kicking in $48. She has a $2,500 deductible. "Many people have a preconceived notion that young people are healthy and don't need to go to the doctor," said Sylvain who suffered a minor injury when she fell and hit her head during an indoor soccer class in 2012. "Not having to worry about being uninsured and the what-ifs has made an incredible impact on my life." It's unclear what percentage of so-called "young invincibles" the government needs to balance out the risk pool. Federal health officials said Monday the figures suggested an appropriate mix, but noted they're only halfway through the open enrollment period. "We expect that a number of young healthy individuals may wait until the very end to sign up," said Julie Bataille, communications director for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The mid-tier silver plans were the most popular choice among consumers with 60 percent choosing such plans nationally and 57 percent in Florida. Platinum plans were the next most popular choice, accounting for 17 percent in Florida, according to figures from HHS. Monday's enrollment data did not break out demographics by race. Applicants are not required to give that information. But federal health officials said they're planning to ramp up outreach to Hispanics, a disproportionately uninsured group, after they've worked out kinks in the Spanish language website. Some groups have complained of sloppy translations and say CuidadoDeSalud.gov moves more slowly than its English counterpart. Anecdotal evidence suggests Latinos could be lagging their peers because of confusion about subsidies, cumbersome requirements for naturalization documents and fears they could unwittingly identify relatives in the country illegally. An estimated 1.3 million Hispanic Floridians lack health insurance, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit that studies health care issues. That's about one-third of the roughly 3.5 million uninsured people in Florida. The Epilepsy Foundation of Florida, which received a federal grant, has been flooded with Hispanics seeking inperson assistance at its Miami headquarters. But enrollment counselors there said the federal government's website frequently asks for residency and naturalization papers from Hispanic applicants, which can stall the process for weeks if they are mailed in. Yolanda Madrid, a 52-year-old housekeeper living in Miami, hasn't been able to afford health insurance until now. With the help of a counselor, Madrid learned last week that she qualifies for a tax credit. She hasn't signed up for a plan yet and is still narrowing down her choice, which includes one offering no monthly premium and a very low deductible. She initially tried to sign up for a plan through the federal government's Spanish-language hotline, but the operator couldn't find the application they'd helped her fill out before, so she decided to get help in person last week. "Now I have more options to choose from that are affordable so I'm happy," she said. (Gainesville Sun, 1/13/14) http://www.gainesville.com/article/20140113/WIRE/ 140119867/1/rssphotogallery?p=all&tc=pgall#gsc.tab=0 Fla. Gov: Boost Spending To Prevent Child Abuse Reeling from a string of child abuse-related deaths in the last year, Gov. Rick Scott wants to spend millions in order to hire more than 400 additional investigators in the coming year. Scott on Tuesday will outline a proposal to boost the budget of the Department of Children and Families by nearly $32 million. He also wants an $8 million increase for sheriff's departments handling abuse cases. "While DCF has made significant changes to protect children, we still have much to do to protect the most vulnerable among us," Scott said in a statement. "Even one child's death is a death too many." If approved by state legislators during the annual session that starts in March, the funding would reduce the caseloads of child abuse investigators to 10 cases each. Scott's proposal also calls for extra funding to allow for two-person teams to handle cases involving children the most at risk of abuse. DCF has already launched a pilot program with two-person teams in Miami-Dade and Polk counties. The governor's budget proposal also calls for hiring additional state workers to do reviews of ongoing child abuse investigations, as well as reclassifying 50 current positions to higher-paid 11 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 positions. The move comes after the state's child welfare system has come under increased criticism and scrutiny due to a series of deaths in the past year. A report released in November said Florida was failing in its efforts to prevent child abuse deaths because welfare authorities aren't picking up warning signs in families at risk. The report reviewed the deaths of 40 children and concluded that welfare authorities who were involved with the families had overlooked danger signs like drug abuse or domestic violence. Most of the children who died were less than 5 years old. The causes of death include suffocation, drowning and physical abuse. The most common cause was suffocation or asphyxia where most of the parents or caregivers had histories of drug abuse or tested positive for drugs following the child's death. The budget recommendations endorsed by Scott mirror ones already suggested by Interim DCF Secretary Esther Jacobo. "Armed with input from national experts and data to back up our proposals, we are prepared to ensure that these funds will be laser-focused on protecting children who are most at-risk," Jacobo said in a statement. "With Governor Scott's steadfast support of DCF initiatives to improve child safety, I am confident that these strategic investments will be made to keep Florida's children safe." In the wake of recent deaths, Democrats last month called on Scott to shield DCF from any more budget cuts. Scott said last fall he planned to cut spending by $100 million in state agencies in 2014. The Scott administration said Monday that the governor also plans to recommend that funding for state subsidized substance abuse and mental health programs remain at current levels because they also help prevent child abuse. (Palm Beach Post, 1/13/14) also announce that he will steer an additional $8 million to sheriff's offices to investigate child abuse complaints, a turnabout for the governor who recommended a $17 million reduction in the grants to sheriffs for child protective efforts in his 2013-14 budget proposal. The governor’s proposal, which is only a recommendation to the Legislature, includes restoring money for Substance Abuse and Mental Health programs, services that play a vital role in reducing child abuse, the agency said in a statement released to the Herald/Times on Monday. The governor said his “historic increase to DCF funding” will pay for the hiring of 400 additional child protective investigators. The proposal also aims to reduce caseloads for child protective investigators from the current 13.3 cases per investigator to 10, and institute two-person teams in cases involving children under age 4 when the family has a history of domestic violence, substance abuse or mental illness, the statement said. The program would be modeled after a pilot program DCF is currently running using paired investigators for high-risk cases in Miami-Dade and Polk counties. DCF interim Secretary Esther Jacobo said she is confident the proposals “will keep Florida children safe.” “Armed with input from national experts and data to back up our proposals, we are prepared to ensure that these funds will be laser focused on protecting children who are most at-risk,” Jacobo said in the statement. The governor’s recommendation also includes restoring 26 of the 72 quality assurance positions that were cut under former DCF Secretary David Wilkins. Child advocates blame those cuts for contributing to some of the child deaths. Another 50 current investigator positions would be eligible for career advancement under a new “Child Protective Master Practitioner” plan that would reward case workers with the most knowledge and experience. The Casey Family Programs reviewed 40 child deaths last year and concluded that both DCF and community-based care organizations should focus more resources on providing services aimed at stabilizing families to prevent abuse. The governor’s track record in his previous budget requests to the Legislature has been to reduce funding to the child welfare agency. In his first budget proposal in the 2011-12 budget year, for example, the governor recommended reducing funding for DCF by $238 million below its current levels at the time. In 2011-12, Scott recommended increasing the agency budget by $1.7 million over the level approved by lawmakers a year before but, in 2013-14, he recommended reducing the budget again — by $75.7 million — below what lawmakers had approved the year before. (Miami Herald, 1/13/14) http://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/ap/ap/crime/flagov-boost-spending-to-prevent-child-abuse/ncmqf/ Gov. Scott To Propose Increased Funds For Child Protection In an effort to repair his child welfare track record, Gov. Rick Scott will announce Tuesday in Miami that he is steering $31 million in additional money to child protection efforts, a move aimed at reducing caseloads and increasing oversight of vulnerable children in Florida. The announcement comes in the wake of dozens of child deaths from abuse and neglect in the past year, and amid calls for reform of the Department of Children & Families from the non-profit Casey Family Foundation and Democrats in the Legislature. “While DCF has made significant changes to protect children, we still have much to do to protect the most vulnerable among us,’’ the governor said in a statement on Monday. "Even one child death is a death too many." The governor will http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/01/13/3869179/ gov-scott-to-propose-increased.html#storylink=cpy 12 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 and presence is just right.” While touted by MiamiDade Republican activists as a potential Scott running mate, Lopez-Cantera remained for months out of favor with Scott’s chief of staff, Adam Hollingsworth, who also was angling for the lieutenant governor’s job. But Hollingsworth’s star has dimmed since he acknowledged last month that he had falsely claimed a college degree while working for a former employer. Besides, having an Hispanic as his running mate could help Scott with a powerful voting bloc that so far seems cool to the Republican governor. A Quinnipiac University poll in November showed Scott trailing Democrat Charlie Crist, the former Republican governor, by 15 percentage points among Hispanic voters compared to trailing Crist by 7 percentage points among all voters. Scott’s first lieutenant governor, Jennifer Carroll, was the first black to serve in that role. But she was forced out of the administration last March after the revelation of a criminal case against a charity operating internet cafes that she previously consulted for. The Legislature soon after outlawed internet cafes, and many of the leading figures in the investigation have been convicted or pleaded guilty to running a wide-ranging criminal enterprise. Carroll was never charged in the case. Since then, a host of possible replacements have been mentioned — some by the governor’s office, which acknowledged having prepared a short-list. Still, many of those cited by the governor’s office quickly took themselves out of the running. Among them were Orange County schools Superintendent Barbara Jenkins, St. Johns County schools Superintendent Joseph Joyner and Seminole County Sheriff Donald Eslinger. Sen. Tom Lee, R-Brandon, and Hillsborough County Commissioner Sandra Murman have been interviewed by the governor’s representatives, and Sen. John Thrasher, R-St. Augustine, also loomed last fall as a possible choice. Scott, though, showed few signs of being hurried with his choice. Last week, Tallahassee Democratic activist Barbara DeVane filed a lawsuit in the Florida Supreme Court maintaining that Scott is breaking state law by not having a lieutenant governor. (Palm Beach Post, 1/13/14) Scott Expected To Name Miami-Dade Property Appraiser As Lieutenant Governor Tuesday Florida Gov. Rick Scott plans a “major announcement” Tuesday, with all signs pointing to his naming a new lieutenant governor. Scott’s office posted the comment, “Be the first to know who the lieutenant governor will be,” on his official Facebook page Monday evening. The Florida Republican Party quickly tweeted a link to the page. Lopez-Cantera Meanwhile, Scott also has scheduled a Department of Children & Families budget event in Miami — home to Miami-Dade Property Appraiser Carlos Lopez-Cantera, a former state House member seen as a likely choice. Lopez-Cantera, 40, became property appraiser last year after serving eight years in the state House, the last two years as majority leader. Born in Spain, Lopez-Cantera initially rose in influence in the House under former Speaker Marco Rubio, R-West Miami, now a U.S. senator. He’s also been a Scott loyalist, even in a Florida House that at times has tussled with the governor and his priorities. After a rough start with lawmakers, Scott by his second year in office won praise from LopezCantera in 2012 for his tax-cut plans and his leadership. “It’s not too much, not too little. I think it’s just right. Like ‘The Three Bears,’ ” LopezCantera told The Palm Beach Post. “His influence http://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/news/news/stat e-regional-govt-politics/scott-expected-to-namemiami-dade-property-apprais/ncmxB/ Florida's Fiscal Strength Lags Most Other States Report Finds More than four years after the Great Recession officially ended in June 2009, the financial condition of Florida and most other states is improving but it remains far from where it was on several key measures of fiscal health, according to a new report by The Pew Charitable Trusts' Fiscal 50: State 13 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 Trends and Analysis. The report examined tax revenues, employment rates, debt ratios and reserve funds and compared the fiscal health of each of the states. Florida fared worse when it comes to tax collections and employment but better in terms of reserves and debt. According to the report, Florida collects 21 percent less in tax revenues as of June 20, 2013 than it did during its pre-recession peak, giving the state significantly less spending power than it had seven years ago. Only Alaska and Wyoming are further behind in restoring their tax collections to pre-recession levels, the report found, while Arkansas saw the least dip in its tax collections of any other state, followed by Illinois and Minnesota. Florida's employment rate is also among the worst in the nation, the report found. The report measured the number of people ages 2554 in the work force before the recession and again in 2013. It found that the 2007 employment rate in Florida was 81.1 percent and, in 2013, it was 74.8 percent, the third largest drop of any other state, behind only Nevada and New Mexico. Nationally, the average drop was 4.1 percentage points. Meanwhile, Florida's reliance on federal dollars as a share of state personal income continues -- like other states -- to be the highest in history. Federal funds have largely driven growth in total state spending over the past two decades and, despite efforts by Gov. Rick Scott to routinely reject federal funds for numerous spending needs, that pattern is not changed. Federal dollars make up 36.3 percent of all state revenue, up from only 1.6 percent since 1992. But during that time, federal funds have offset a drop in state funds which have decreased by 1.4 percent as a share of the total state budget. The state with the highest share of federal dollars is Mississippi with 48.8 percent -- mostly because of its high federal Medicaid payment rate -- and the lowest is Alaska with 24 percent, which relies on oil revenues for most of its income. The average share of federal dollars as a percent of the state budget is 34.7 percent and only 10 states had less than 40 percent. One area where Florida is stronger than most other states is its pension and retiree health care costs, which are funded at higher rates than most other states. The biggest burden is the state's public debt from bond issuances and other state borrowing, which is $37.1 billion, according to the report. The unfunded pension cost is $26.9 billion and the unfunded retiree health care costs is $4.5 billion. Florida also compares well when it comes to its reserve account. According to the report, the number of days most states could run tapping just its general funds is 29.9 days but Florida, with its $3 billion in reserve, could operate for 43.8 days. (Tampa Bay Times, 1/13/14) http://www.tampabay.com/blogs/the-buzz-floridapolitics/floridas-fiscal-strength-lags-most-otherstates-report-finds/2160815 Feds Target HMA's Ex-CEO The U.S. Department of Justice has signed on to eight false claims lawsuits against Health Management Associates, claiming the Naples-based hospital chain billed for unnecessary patient admissions and paid kickbacks to doctors who referred patients. Former HMA CEO Gary Newsome The government specifically alleges that former HMA executive Gary Newsome personally led the push to pressure emergency department physicians and hospital administrators to increase the number of inpatient admissions, “regardless of medical necessity,” the Department said in a statement. Newsome retired from HMA last year and is now president of a South American mission program for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. While some of the complaints about kickbacks and unnecessary admissions had been public since December 2012, when they were aired by CBS' 60 Minutes, some of the lawsuits remained sealed until last week. HMA has denied wrongdoing all along. On Tuesday, spokeswoman MaryAnn Hodges said in an e-mail that the current management is cooperating with the investigation. She said she could not comment on pending litigation. "HMA associates and physicians who practice at our facilities are focused on providing the highest quality patient care in all of our hospitals," she wrote. The chain owns or leases 23 hospitals in Florida, including some that it bought or leased after the accusations began. They include Bayfront Medical Center in St. Petersburg and Munroe Regional Medical Center in Ocala. Those who may be touched by the wide-ranging investigation include UF Health, which is in a joint venture with HMA in three hospitals. Now, writes Tampa Bay business columnist Robert Trigaux, "What did Bayfront Health step in?" He says the once-independent St. 14 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 Petersburg hospital is now caught up in a mess with a "nose-pinching aroma." The whistle-blower lawsuits allege that HMA broke anti-kickback laws that apply to those who bill Medicare and Medicaid. The Department said Monday that bonuses or contracts were given to physician groups staffing HMA emergency rooms, by providing free office space, staffing or offering direct payments. The Department singles out Primary Care Associates, a practice in Port Charlotte, for its referrals to two Florida HMA hospitals. “Unlawful financial relationships between hospitals and physicians solely to increase referrals are, unfortunately, a common practice that corrupts the health care system,” U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida Wifredo A. Ferrer said in a statement. “The system also suffers a direct financial hit when hospitals fraudulently increase admissions where they are not indicated, solely to benefit hospitals’ bottom line. We will not relent in our efforts to combat these kinds of fraudulent schemes and recover funds for the Medicare program.” The announcement is just the latest in troubles for the community-hospital network, which operates 71 hospitals in 15 states. Just last week, HMA stockholders approved its nearly $4 billion sale to a Tennessee-based chain, Community Health Systems. Janet Goldstein, an attorney for two Florida whistleblowers, told Bloomberg News that the government’s involvement “speaks to the quality of the evidence.” (Health News Florida, 1/14/13) 3. Brooksville Regional Hospital (Health Management Associates), 1,083% 4. Heart of Florida Regional Medical Center (Health Management Associates), 1,058% 5. Oak Hill Hospital (HCA), 1,052% 6. St. Petersburg General (HCA), 1,046% 7. Ft. Walton Beach Medical Center (HCA), 1,043% 8. Lawnwood Regional Medical Center (HCA) 1,001% 9. North Florida Regional Medical Center (HCA) 973% 10. Gulf Coast Medical Center (HCA), 927% As the Northwest Florida Daily News reports, hospitals are criticizing the methodology used by National Nurses United, saying the analysis didn’t take consider all the factors that influence what they charge, including charity care. North Okaloosa Medical Center CEO David Fuller points out that Medicare and other insurance companies pay a negotiated rate. “‘Charge’ in today’s healthcare arena doesn’t really mean anything,” Fuller told the Daily News. National Nurses United says even with negotiations between insurers and hospitals, “ the higher the charges, the greater the ultimate reimbursement that insurers pay.” (Health News Florida, 1/14/14) http://health.wusf.usf.edu/post/nurses-blasthospital-charges Uninsured Patients Lead To $1 Million Loss In December For Jackson Health System http://health.wusf.usf.edu/post/feds-target-hmasex-ceo A surge of uninsured patients in December has led to a nearly $1 million loss for Jackson Health System, according to the latest financial report on Miami-Dade’s public hospital network. While Jackson officials reported more than 6,090 patient admissions at the system’s three hospitals for the last month of 2013 — exceeding the budgeted number of 5,922, and the prior year’s December total of 5,926 — the number included many uninsured or self-paying patients. At Jackson Memorial, the main campus in Miami, about 17 percent of admitted patients in December were uninsured, compared to 13.3 percent in December 2012. At Jackson South, about 19.6 percent of patients were self-pay, exceeding the December 2012 rate of nearly 14 percent. Only Jackson North, where nearly 11 percent of patients admitted in December were uninsured, did the rate of self-pay patients fall below the prior year’s rate, which was 14.6 percent. In a memo to the Public Health Trust that runs Jackson, Chief Executive Carlos Migoya said that despite the December loss of $963,000, the hospital system remains ahead of budget for the financial year ending Sept. 30 by about $600,000. He said the increase in uninsured patients has been Nurses Blast Hospital Charges A nurses' union says some hospitals are charging exorbitant rates, in certain cases more than 10 times more than what they need to cover costs, according to its analysis of Medicare Cost Reports. Florida Orange Park Medical Center tops the list for Florida, the Florida Times-Union reports. The group says Florida has the second highest hospital charges in the nation, with an average charge-to-cost ratio of 555%. The Tampa Bay Business Journal reports six of the 10 most expensive hospitals in the nation are owned by either Health Management Associates and Community Health Systems Inc. Those two chains are expected to merge in the coming months. National Nurses United published this list of what it says are the most expensive charges in Florida (by total charges as a percent of total costs): 1. Orange Park Medical Center (HCA) 1,139% 2. North Okaloosa Medical Center (Community Health Systems, Inc.) 1,137% 15 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 taking place for “a few months.” “A review of our financial assessment processes found no substantial errors,” Migoya wrote in the memo. “This appears to be an actual increase in the number of patients who are uninsured and do not qualify for assistance programs, rather than a flaw in our screening and assistance process.’’ It is unclear how many of Jackson’s patients who were uninsured in December may qualify for subsidized private health plans sold on the Affordable Care Act’s insurance exchanges, or how many of those patients will qualify for Medicaid, the state-federal health program for the poor and disabled. Migoya reported that federallyfunded navigators, who provide in-person counseling to consumers applying for coverage through the exchanges, have helped more than 80 people enroll. Jackson also has developed partnerships with managed-care companies and private-practice physicians, and launched a marketing campaign to attract more insured patients, Migoya said. Miami-Dade voters in November approved an $830 million bond to be repaid with property taxes to finance upgrades for Jackson over the next 10 years, including new buildings and medical equipment, renovated patient rooms, and other improvements — all in an effort to attract more insured patients and position Jackson to better compete against private and nonprofit hospitals for those consumers. The Public Health Trust meets at 9 a.m. Wednesday in the West Wing board room of Jackson Memorial. (Miami Herald, 1/14/14) whose office has supported the program since its inception in 1997. “Without any doubt in my mind, it’s one of the best ones,” Brodsky said. County commissioners are considering how to finance the drug court program in the future. This year’s county budget calls for spending $737,839 on drug court. The total includes $141,460 from a grant, and the balance from the general revenue fund, according to county documents. “At $3,700 per person to be in this program, you can’t hardly beat that,” said Commissioner Vanessa Baugh. (Bradenton Herald, 1/14/14) http://www.bradenton.com/2014/01/14/4936309/m anatee-drug-court-costs-10percent.html#storylink=cpy Plan By Gov. Scott To Restore DCF Money Hailed, But Some Say It’s Only A Start The millions of dollars in new money for DCF announced by Gov. Scott could help offset cuts from past years — and shore up a political liability. http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/01/14/3871087/ uninsured-patients-lead-to-1million.html#storylink=cpy Manatee Drug Court Costs 10 Percent Compared With Jail Florida Gov. Rick Scott on Jan. 14, 2014 in Miami. Those who commit crimes as a result of substance abuse and go through drug court cost Manatee County between $2,500 and $3,700 a year, officials estimate. If they go to jail, it costs $25,915 a year, officials say. At its cheapest, drug court is about 10 percent of the cost of jail, drug court administrator Walt Smith told county commissioners Tuesday. “Drug court is cost-effective, and generally cheaper, compared with other alternatives,” Smith said during a workshop session at County Administrative Center. Due to the specialized drug court’s extensive supervision of those arrested for nonviolent offenses related to substance abuse, criminal behavior can be halted quickly following an arrest, officials said. “There’s a reduction in crime. They’re not out there committing crimes,” Smith said. About 175 people are now under the jurisdiction of drug court, officials said. “Drug court is very effective,” said State Attorney Ed Brodsky, A year’s worth of horror stories about children beaten, shot and starved and drugged to death by their caregivers has taken a toll on the men and women on the front lines of child protection in Florida, who must cope with high case-loads and low pay. And so when Gov. Rick Scott called a news conference Tuesday in Miami to announce an infusion of new money for the Department of Children & Families, Erica Lee, a senior child protective investigator, was eager to attend — and happy with what she heard. “It means more support for us,” Lee said Tuesday morning after Scott made the announcement of an additional $31 million to, among other things, hire additional investigators. “Case-load is important, and they are very high, so of course we want to reduce that case-load, and in order to reduce that we need 16 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 more [investigators.]” Scott’s proposal — which must pass muster with the Legislature — would mean DCF could hire more than 400 additional investigators. The announcement comes at a time when DCF has been under fire over dozens of child deaths due to abuse and neglect in families that were already on the agency’s radar. “This is the right thing to do for our children,” said Scott. “There are vulnerable children all across this state. Adding this funding to DCF, making sure we have more investigators . . .is just historical.” Scott recognized Lee and other child protective investigators who, he said, save children on a daily basis. “Erica goes above and beyond and her energy is contagious,” he said. “She is always available to the families she serves, and ensures they receive the best services for their needs.” The governor’s proposal also includes an additional $8 million to sheriff's offices to investigate child abuse complaints. In some counties, including Broward, responsibility for child abuse investigations has been shifted to the local sheriff’s office. DCF interim Secretary Esther Jacobo, who was present for the news conference, called the move “a historic response to the urgent need in child welfare.” “Your budget proposal is a concrete demonstration of your support and commitment to those doing the job of protecting children,” Jacobo said to Scott. “Thank you for having the faith that we can do this right and for fighting to get the resources so we can do this right.” The state’s dismal record of protecting vulnerable children could become a liability for the governor heading into an election cycle. In the past, Scott has made a practice of cutting child welfare funding. In his first budget in 2011-12, for example, the governor recommended reducing funding for DCF by $238 million. In 201112, Scott recommended increasing the agency budget by $1.7 million over the level approved by lawmakers a year before but, in 2013-14, he recommended reducing the budget again — by $75.7 million — below what lawmakers had approved the year before. After the Herald reported last summer on a cluster of child deaths in South Florida, some involving bungling by the agency, DCF’s secretary stepped down, and Jacobo stepped in as a stopgap replacement. The governor also used the news conference to announce his selection of Miami-Dade Property Appraiser Carlos LopezCantera as his new lieutenant governor, and that announcement quickly overshadowed the one about DCF dollars. Afterward, Jacobo said the more than 400 new positions will include 296 child protective investigators, 61 senior child protectors and0 59 supervisors. The governor’s recommendation also includes restoring 26 of the 72 quality assurance positions that were cut under the governor's previous budget proposals — reductions that child advocates blamed for contributing to some of the child deaths. Currently, there are about 1,084 DCF child protective investigators, not including supervisors. “The thing about our job is we are not in just one place, we are everywhere,” said Lee, the investigator. “We are visiting homes; We are visiting schools; We are going to police stations for police reports; We are interviewing family members; We are talking to doctors; We are getting collateral contacts; We are driving; We are picking up children and going to court. We are doing a lot and it’s hard to do that if you are getting one or two cases a day.” A goal of Tuesday’s proposal, according to Jacobo, is to reduce the case-load from the current 13.3 cases per investigator to 10. She said there also would be some new safeguards, including having two-person teams handle cases involving children under age 4 when the family has a history of domestic violence, substance abuse or mental illness; and the ability to assign employees to do random quality checks on open cases. “If you don’t have the resources you can’t do the job,” she said. “What we have found is it’s not that investigators are not doing their job, it’s when you have a caseload of 20-30 cases, how can you do your job?” Scott’s proposal was called a “welcome first step” by the Florida Coalition for Children, which advocates on behalf of abused and neglected children and the agencies that serve them. “However, what Florida’s community child welfare agencies understand better than anyone in Tallahassee is that with improved identification of children and families in crisis also comes a need for a greater commitment to providing adequate resources for the front-line workers.” “To that end, we look forward to working with the administration and the Legislature to guarantee that we are fully funding all of the services and programs necessary to protect our state’s most vulnerable children,” it said in a statement. Miami-Dade Commission Chairwoman Rebeca Sosa, who was present at the news conference, lauded the proposal. “We have a great responsibility in this country to make sure that children are respected, that children are loved and that children are safe,” she said. (Miami Herald, 1/14/14) http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/01/14/3871117/ plan-by-gov-scott-to-restore-dcf.html#storylink=cpy Scott Carves Out More Cash For Embattled DCF Gov. Rick Scott continued to release aspects of his budget on Tuesday, touring the state and showcasing his proposals for the 2014-2015 fiscal year. The governor highlighted more funding for protecting children and public safety on Tuesday. At the media event in Miami at which he announced Carlos Lopez-Cantera would become lieutenant 17 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 governor, Scott announced that his proposed budget would increase funding to the Department of Children and Families (DCF) by almost $31.9 million while another $8 million would go to sheriffs’ offices that handle child-protection issues. “Today, I’m announcing that in my ‘It’s Your Money Tax Cut Budget’ we will propose an historic increase to DCF funding,” Scott said on Tuesday. “We are committed to increasing funding this year by more than $31 million. This funding will directly support critical services for children by hiring more than 400 new child-protective investigators. We are also investing $8 million to support sheriffs who work in child-protection services. While DCF has made significant changes to protect children, we still have much to do to protect the most vulnerable among us. Even one child's death is a death too many.” Scott is calling for the money to fund more investigators, ensure DCF investigators handle no more than 10 cases each, and create positions to review cases involving the most vulnerable children. The governor is also calling for restoring funding for mental health and substance abuse programs. “Armed with input from national experts and data to back up our proposals, we are prepared to ensure that these funds will be laser focused on protecting children who are most at risk,” said Interim DCF Secretary Esther Jacobo. “With Governor Scott’s steadfast support of DCF initiatives to improve child safety, I am confident that these strategic investments will be made to keep Florida’s children safe.” Scott’s proposal won the applause of some legislative leaders on Tuesday. “I want to thank Governor Scott for making the protection of Florida's children a top priority in his upcoming budget,” said House Speaker Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel. “I appreciate his leadership and look forward to working with him on the issue this session.” Senators sitting on the Appropriations Committee, including Sen. Denise Grimsley, R-Sebring, also praised the proposal. “DCF has opened their doors for full evaluation and scrutiny by working with outside agencies to assess how they can improve their system and prevent even one more child from dying at the hands of abuse or neglect,” Grimsley said. “We know what needs to change, and we know how to make it better. I applaud the governor for backing these improvements with the budget needed to make those changes happen.” Later on Tuesday, Scott hit Orlando to attend the Florida Police Chiefs Association’s conference. There, the governor announced his proposed budget would include $3.2 million to train law enforcement. “Florida’s law enforcement officers deserve to have the tools they need to keep Florida families and communities safe,” Scott said. “Florida’s 43-year low in crime is due in large part to the quality and training of our officers. To continue this trend our officers need the proper training and funding for that training. My proposed budget will help ensure that Floridians remain among the safest they have ever been.” The proposal won the backing of Panama City Chief Philip Thorne, the president of the Florida Police Chiefs Association. “Governor Scott recognizes that trained officers are key to reducing crime in Florida’s communities,” Thorne said. “The funding of the trust fund for additional training classes is important to maintain a high level of training.” (Sunshine State News, 1/15/14) http://www.sunshinestatenews.com/story/rick-scottunveils-child-safety-and-police-training-budget-plans Republican National Committee's Statement On Lt. Gov. Carlos Lopez-Cantera Republican National Committee (RNC) Chairman Reince Priebus and Co-Chairman Sharon Day released the following statement Tuesday on Florida Gov. Rick Scott’s choice of Carlos Lopez-Cantera to fill the vacant position of lieutenant governor: “Carlos Lopez-Cantera will make an outstanding lieutenant governor, and I applaud Governor Rick Scott on his decision,” said Chairman Priebus. “Carlos Lopez-Cantera has exactly the kind of experience Florida needs; he is a proven leader and will be an important voice in our party. “He’s also made history today by becoming Florida’s first Hispanic lieutenant governor. He is one of over 160 Hispanic Republicans in public office who are working diligently to keep government accountable and making sure our country continues to move in the right direction at the local, state and federal levels.” “As a Floridian, I’m proud to call Carlos Lopez-Cantera my new lieutenant governor,” said Co-Chairman Day. “He has an admirable record of public service, a commitment to conservative principles, and the ability to bring people together. I’m confident he will make a great leader in Tallahassee and will be an effective advocate for the Republican Party.” (Sunshine State News, 1/15/14) http://www.sunshinestatenews.com/blog/republican -national-committees-statement-lt-gov-carlos-lopezcantera Smart Choice For No. 2 Give Gov. Rick Scott credit for making a smart and politically savvy decision in selecting Miami-Dade Property Appraiser Carlos Lopez-Cantera to become Florida’s next lieutenant governor. The 40-year-old onetime House majority leader is a seasoned legislator with proven administrative skill. He brings youth, energy and diversity to Mr. Scott’s team and Florida’s Cabinet. Now that Mr. Scott has made the 18 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 choice, we hope Mr. Lopez-Cantera manages to avoid the usual fate of pols that fill the state’s No. 2 position in Tallahassee. Assigned few constitutional duties of any import, they’re stashed away in a back office and generally ignored by other state leaders and the news media, to be seen only at occasional ceremonial events and ribbon-cuttings. Unless, of course, they manage to stumble into a scandal like Mr. Lopez-Cantera’s unwise predecessor, Jennifer Carroll, whose poor judgment made her an embarrassment to Mr. Scott and the state in general. She finally resigned her post in March after the disclosure of her affiliation with a company connected to Internet cafés considered a front for gambling. Unlike Ms. Carroll, a state legislator whom Mr. Scott essentially plucked from political obscurity prior to the 2010 election, Mr. LopezCantera brings significant credentials and years of experience in state government to the job. He can provide good political counsel and effective legislative advice to Mr. Scott — if the governor is willing to listen. Much has been made of the fact that Mr. Lopez-Cantera is the first Hispanic to hold the position since voters reestablished it in 1968. That’s a definite political plus in terms of sending a message about inclusion. But it won’t matter much unless Mr. Lopez-Cantera has some policy input on issues relevant to the state’s fastest growing demographic group. Gov. Scott’s veto last year of a bill that would have allowed access to driver’s licenses for some undocumented immigrants brought to this country as children did not exactly endear him to Hispanics. Putting Mr. Lopez-Cantera on his team won’t count for much on election day if Mr. Scott’s record on Hispanic issues doesn’t improve. More important than ethnicity is that Mr. Lopez-Cantera brings to Tallahassee a South Florida perspective often lacking in the state capital. He understands the particular needs and problems of South Florida, with its huge population, urban dynamics and unique natural environment — not to mention a distinctly different culture. That is where Mr. Lopez-Cantera may have his biggest impact. There is a downside to the governor’s pick of Mr. Lopez-Cantera, of course. Tallahassee’s gain is Miami-Dade County’s loss. During his relatively brief tenure as property appraiser — little more than one year — he made good on a promise to make the office more open to the public and customerfriendly. He made it easier to contest property valuations, allowed homestead exemptions to be filed online and revamped the front office so that the visitors with questions and concerns could speak to staff more readily — among other innovations. Just as important, combating property tax fraud became a major priority in 2013. By deploying police officers from nine local municipalities to bolster investigations into homestead fraud — a scandal of long standing — the county reaped millions of dollars in fines and violations. His successor should continue these smart policies and build on them. (Miami Herald, 1/14/14) http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/01/14/3871037/ smart-choice-for-no-2.html#storylink=cpy Palm Beach County Health District Could Bring In Millions By Selling HMO As the state readies to move all Medicaid recipients into private managed care plans, the Palm Beach County Health Care District’s HMO plan — one that covers 14,000 Medicaid recipients — faces imminent closure. But rather than allowing the plan to simply fade away and have its members shifted into private plans this summer, the district’s newest board member suggested another route – one that could return millions of dollars to taxpayers. Palm Beach investment banker Les Daniels, an appointee of Gov. Rick Scott, told district staff and board members that the 14,000 members in Healthy Palm Beach’s Personal Health Plan Medicaid HMO represented an asset — one that could be sold. Finding it hard to believe, several district staffers just before Christmas met informally with investment bankers from Raymond James to see if this was a viable proposal. “They told us it was maybe a $9 million deal,” said district legal officer Nicholas Romanello. So on Wednesday, the board will take the first steps needed to sell its Medicaid HMO. “We view it as being a real responsible step for two reasons,” Romanello said. “The first is because there is a public asset that can be sold and returned to taxpayers. The other issue is that it benefits the members. It provides members with some certainty and helps provide them with continuity of care.” The district’s chief program officer, Tom Cleare, said keeping the HMO plan open isn’t an option. When discussing this issue two years ago, the district’s board concluded its services could be directed only to residents of Palm Beach County, who pay for those services through their property taxes. But when reforming and privatizing the state Medicaid program, state officials created 11 regional service areas. Palm Beach County is in the state’s region 9, which also includes Martin, St. Lucie, Okeechobee and Indian River counties. Because HMOs taking state Medicaid clients must serve all counties in a region, the Palm Beach County Health Care District was knocked out of that business. Cleare said the district’s HMO is rather specialized, specifically serving families who receive TANF – temporary assistance to needy families – otherwise known as welfare. “That’s basically women and children,” Cleare said. “Eighty percent of our members are children.” Four companies have won state contracts to serve Medicaid beneficiaries in this region. They 19 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 are Molina Healthcare; Sunshine Health – a subsidiary of Centene; the Prestige provider service network; and Humana. It remains to be seen if any of those companies would be interested in bidding. If they aren’t, Cleare said, the program will just sunset, and the clients will be asked to select one of the four plans or the state will assign one to them. If it all goes according to plan, the extra millions could come in handy. The district is saving to replace its Trauma Hawk helicopters. Its annual subsidy to Lakeside Medical Center in Belle Glade is close to that amount every year. And it has had to help the county health department plug multimillion-dollar holes in its budget. But if the district wants the extra money, it’s going to have to work quickly. The state’s timetable for rolling out Medicaid managed care calls for the first letters to beneficiaries to go out to this region on April 1, and the shift to managed care to go live on Aug. 1. Any sale would have to get the blessing of the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration, the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation and the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Gov. Rick Scott offered a staff member’s time to help speed the process along, Romanello said, so he expects support from the agencies. “It will go away in August. So if there is an opportunity to bring value back to the district, I think it makes sense,” Cleare said. “It certainly makes sense to investigate it.” (Palm Beach Post, 1/14/14) the nation,” he said during a meeting of the Senate Criminal Justice Committee. The bill, SB 526, among other things, also adds sentencing enhancers to particularly severe sex crimes. The reform push is being fueled by bipartisan support after the death of Cherish Perrywinkle, a Jacksonville 8-year-old and a scathing series of South Florida Sun-Sentinel stories detailed sexual offenders recommitting crimes after being released from custody. Donald Smith, who had was a registered sex offender, is facing charges in Perrywinkle’s abduction and death. Senate Majority Leader Chris Smith, D-Fort Lauderdale, did express concern over a provision in Bradley’s bill that would remove the ability for certain offenders convicted of sex crimes to receive shorter sentences for good behavior. “That makes it tougher within the prison system,” said Smith, who voted for the bill. Separate legislation looks to strengthen the process to determine if someone convicted of a sex crime should be committed as a “sexually violent predator,” which is someone deemed a high risk to commit another sex crime. Under the current process, a state agency like the Department of Children and Families or Department of Corrections gives notice to a state attorney’s office that someone convicted of a sex crime is set to be released. Details of the case are then turned over to a team of experts, which recommends to the state attorney whether or not the offender meets the criteria to commit them as a violent sexual predator. If the state attorney pursues the case, a judge or jury determines if the person can be committed as a violently sexual predator. Those that are deemed sexually violent predators are “civilly committed” at the Florida Civil Commitment Center in Arcadia. A provision in a bill sponsored by state Sen. Denise Grimsley, R-Sebring, would require offenders held in local detention facilities like county jails to also be referred for review, which is not currently laid out in law. Normally, those offenders are referred back to the state, but not always. There have been cases of offenders that should have been evaluated being held in a county jail for re-sentencing hearings and released by a judge. If released from a county jail, the state does not have the ability to require the evaluation. Other proposals in the handful of reform bills include: increased training requirements for the teams that do sexual predator evaluations, allowing state attorneys to commit someone for confinement even if the team of experts finds no evidence that the person is a sexually violent predator, and expanding the statute of limitations related to some sex crimes on minors. (Florida Times Union, 1/14/14) http://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/news/news/pal m-beach-county-health-district-could-bring-inm/ncnsH/ Lawmakers Move Quickly On Rewrite Of Florida Sexual Predator Laws With a flurry of unanimous votes, the Legislature is quickly pushing forward a multi-pronged overhaul of state sexual predator laws, with the ultimate goal of making those laws “the toughest in the nation.” Both the House and Senate are looking to rewrite a handful of state statutes that deal with issues ranging from how potential sexual predators are evaluated to sentencing guidelines, which would be strengthened under the proposals. A trio of Senate bills passed the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Monday, and another two passed a separate Senate committee Tuesday morning. One piece, sponsored by state Sen. Rob Bradley, R-Fleming Island, looks to significantly increase penalties for committing a host of sexually-related crimes. Among other things, his bill makes a host of “adult-on-minor” sex crimes first-degree felonies punishable by up to life in prison. Currently, the crimes covered are firstdegree felonies punishable by up to 30 years in prison. This bill “ensures that Florida’s criminal penalties for sexual predators are the toughest in http://members.jacksonville.com/news/florida/201401-14/story/lawmakers-move-quickly-rewrite-floridasexual-predator-laws 20 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 governor and lawmakers fashion a budget this year, they also should address some of the state’s longneglected needs. Of particular concern are mental health and substance abuse care. Florida ranks 49th in mental health per capita spending and has cut client services more than $41 million in the past two years. This means gravely troubled individuals are on the street, posing a danger to themselves and society. This means many families can’t get treatment for loved ones. It means more expenses for law enforcement and health care operations. When it comes to mental health and substance abuse, Florida’s safety net is thoroughly shredded. The state spends about what it did in the 1950s on per-person treatment. Consider: The Florida Department of Children and Families estimates only 34 percent of adult mental health need is met in Florida, and just 27 percent of children’s mental health need is met. State law enforcement officials say each year 125,000 people who need mental health care are arrested and booked into jails. About $600 million is spent a year housing mentally ill people in Florida prisons or other facilities. Florida devotes about half of its mental health dollars to institutional care, which may be necessary, but this forsakes the needs of those with manageable conditions who might avoid the need for costly services with proper treatment. The problem is not going to go away. According to the Florida Council for Community Mental Health, about one in five adults experience a mental health disorder in a given year, and one in 10 children live with serious mental or emotional disorders. Adults living with serious mental illness die 25 years earlier than other Americans, often due to treatable medical conditions that are neglected. Many Florida families simply cannot afford the cost of treatment. Yet simply leaving the mentally ill to their own devices is certain to create heavy costs for taxpayers — and heartbreak for families. Scott and lawmakers should see that investing in mental health care treatment will ultimately save money — and lives — and provide more support. (Tampa Tribune, 1/16/15) Editorial: Child Protection: Fully Fund Social Services Gov. Rick Scott says Florida should increase funding for child-protection services. That's an about-face for him but he's right. Let's hope state legislators agree. Last year, deaths from child abuse and neglect surged terribly in Florida. Various factors contributed to the increase, but one — lowered funding for child social services, because of budget cuts fostered by Scott — was especially noticeable. The cuts, combined with other effects of the long recession, had pushed child-welfare caseloads too high, making it harder for the system to carry out its protective mission. In Florida, that system is a decentralized partnership of local, community-based care organizations and law enforcement, overseen by the state Department of Children and Families. The 2013 child deaths brought management shakeups at DCF. The agency's new interim leader, Esther Jacobo, initiated a diagnostic review by the respected Casey Family Programs, which made numerous recommendations — including the addition of caseworkers and staff to treat and investigate cases more comprehensively. LEGISLATIVE SUPPORT Legislators should cooperate with this effort when they pass a budget this year. In announcing his proposed funding increase Tuesday, the Governor's Office said an additional $31 million would "support critical services for children by hiring more than 400 new child-protective investigators. We are also investing $8 million to support sheriffs" conducting child-protection investigations. In another welcome development, the governor's office said Scott "is recommending restoring all nonrecurring funding for substance-abuse and mental health programs. These programs play an integral role in preventing child abuse and supporting healthy families." These are important, overdue steps. For too long, Florida government has been told to stop "throwing money" at the child-welfare system and "do more with less." The limitations — and dangerous results — of that mantra are all too clear. It's time to see childprotection expenditures for what they are: necessary investments in our future. (Lakeland Ledger, 1/16/14) http://tbo.com/list/news-opinion-editorials/invest-inmental-health-care-20140116/ Black Lawmakers Cancel Meeting With Scott; Say It Would Be ‘Fruitless’ http://www.theledger.com/article/20140116/EDIT01 /140119394/1116/COLUMNISTS0603?p=all&tc=pgal l#gsc.tab=0 In the latest sour note of an increasingly testy relationship, Florida’s Legislative Black Caucus abruptly cancelled a meeting Wednesday with Gov. Rick Scott. The caucus chairman, Rep. Alan Williams, D-Tallahassee, said the meeting with Scott would prove a waste of time. “Based on your lack of action on matters of importance to this caucus that we have brought to your attention at prior Invest In Mental Health Care Florida is expected to have a budget surplus of $1 billion or more this year, and Gov. Rick Scott wants to return half of that to the public through tax and fee cuts. Giving citizens such relief will help the economy and household finances. But as the 21 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 meetings, we believe another meeting at this time would be fruitless,” Williams wrote Scott in scrubbing the scheduled lunchtime huddle. Williams went through a list of differences with Scott, including the support by the caucus for expanding Medicaid, making it easier to restore civil rights and the governor’s past vetoes of state spending aimed at black communities. “We believe you can and should do more to ensure that your administration – as well as the various staffing and judicial appointments you make — reflects the racial and ethnic diversity of Florida,” Williams wrote. Scott spokeswoman Jackie Schutz said the governor was “disappointed” by the cancellation. “Gov. Scott believes the best way to serve Floridians is for the Legislature and the governor’s office to work together to find solutions,” she said. The two sides share a troubled history. In his initial meeting with the caucus during his second month in office, Scott told black lawmakers that he could empathize with them since he once lived in public housing. But many of the lawmakers said they were offended by the multimillionaire governor’s apparent perception that his humble beginnings, alone, would be a bridge with Florida’s black community. The last couple of years, Scott has been on the receiving end of stern messages from the caucus. Many members have complained about his policies on voting rights, judicial appointments and funding for historically black universities. Scott’s renewed attempt to rid state voter rolls of potentially ineligible voters has become another flash point with black leaders. Earlier this week, a Florida NAACP leader said Scott’s action was “malicious” and aimed at removing minority voters from the rolls. (Palm Beach Post, 1/15/14) would not have any interaction with the surrounding neighborhood or nearby students was met with skepticism by the city's Planning and Zoning Board, which voted 5-0 on Monday to recommend denial of the project. The City Commission has the final say on the plans, but no date has been set yet for commissioners to consider the proposal. Palm Partners officials tried to assuage concerns, saying the center would not be taking Medicaid patients, court-ordered cases, jail inmates or indigents. Walk-in clients would not be allowed, and no patients would be released into the surrounding area. "These aren't homeless people," said Palm Partners CEO Peter Harrigan, who indicated clients would be coming from around the country. "We get people from the airlines, from the unions." The Broward County School District notified the city that "the proposed project is incompatible with due to potential spillover effects from the proposed establishment." It requested the city ensure the nearby high school wouldn't be negatively impacted. Northeast wasn't the only school on the minds of North Andrews Gardens neighbors, who complained students at Rickards Middle and North Andrews Garden Elementary schools would also be put at risk. "You're having a facility that's deliberately bringing into our neighborhood a potential danger," said Planning Board member Diane Wendt. "They're introducing something into a community surrounded by schools that's inappropriate." The property is owned by Holy Cross Hospital, which purchased it in 2008 and promptly closed the former medical center. Palm Partners has a contract to purchase the 11-acre site if the project is approved. "We would rather have a dilapidated building," resident Tina Chase said. Others were concerned about who might use the center's planned out-patient services, but Harrigan said those services were for patients already admitted who wanted to supplement their 30-to-90-day treatment plans. Resident Mitchell Stollberg was leery of the proposal. "I'm hoping that it's basically like Lindsay Lohans coming down to stay for a while, possibly get some treatment," Stollberg said. (Orlando Sentinel, 1/15/14) http://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/news/news/stat e-regional-govt-politics/black-lawmakers-cancelmeeting-with-scott-say-it-w/ncprt/ Psychiatric Facility Opposed At Former North Ridge Medical Center A vacant hospital could become a psychiatric and behavioral health treatment center, but the plans are raising fears that its patients would pose a danger to students attending nearby schools. Palm Partners LLC wants to give new life to North Ridge Medical Center, which has been shut down for more than five years, by turning the Dixie Highway property into a 300-bed treatment facility that would create up to 300 jobs. The company, which caters to an upscale clientele and those covered by insurance, currently runs a center in Delray Beach. The planned center would deal heavily with people who have drug and alcohol addictions and include detox programs, officials said. But the company's claim that people seeking treatment at the facility http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/state/floakland-north-ridge-mental-health20140115,0,5883239.story Florida Legislators Hear Push For Alternatives To Incarcerating Youths Advocates for juvenile justice reform told state senators Wednesday that more time and money need to be spent on alternatives to incarcerating underage offenders. The Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Criminal and Civil Justice, which oversees policy and funding for the Florida Department of Juvenile Justice, listened to concerns 22 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 about the number of juveniles in state custody and the facilities that keep them. Committee member Sen. Darren Soto, D-Orlando, said the meeting was spurred by reaction to a recent story in the Huffington Post about allegations of abuse and poor oversight against Youth Services Inc., a for-profit prison company that operates roughly 10 percent of the state’s private juvenile detention centers. Wells Todd, a retired social worker from Atlantic Beach, said he has seen budget cuts wipe out programs designed to keep low-level juvenile offenders out of jail. Todd, who is part of the newly formed Jacksonville Juvenile Justice Coalition, said there’s also a lack of qualified people involved in the programs that exist. “We need to revisit these programs that were wiped out because of budget cuts,” Todd said. “The money is there, we need to understand where it should go.” +%28Jacksonville+Local+News+%E2%80%93+Jac ksonville.com+and+The+Florida+Times-Union%29 Promises, Promises … Our Opinion: Gov. Scott Can’t Let The State’s Most Vulnerable Residents Down — Again The state Department of Children & Families needed a huge dose of good news and, this week, the agency got some. Gov. Scott threw his support behind DCF on Tuesday, announcing that he wants to add $31 million to the agency’s budget. That money will let DCF add more than 400 new investigators. After a year of horror stories in which children in the agency’s files were killed by negligent, violent, drunken and abusive caregivers — a word used very loosely, of course — could the governor really propose anything less? n the past, he has, cutting DCF’s budget, which, along with flawed policies, hamstrung its ability to keep kids safe and rehabilitate troubled families. Plus, the tragedy of children dying while under DCF oversight is nothing new, unfortunately. What made 2013 extraordinary was the seemingly unrelenting frequency of the deaths. So the governor has seen the light — and, perhaps, the ballot box it illuminates in November. But the governor can make his good news even better by showing that he actually means it. His $31-million proposal is just the start of what likely will be a long and tortured road to actual funding. The Legislature has to approve it. And for any reluctant lawmakers to vote Yes, the governor has to make it unequivocally clear that he considers it a priority. Let’s face it — we’ve been here before, with little to show for the governor’s stated commitment to making life better for the state’s most vulnerable residents other than the headlines. Two years ago, after the Miami Herald laid out in stomach-churning detail the horrific treatment many elderly and mentally challenged Floridians endured — or succumbed to — at loosely regulated assisted-living facilities, Mr. Scott promised to take action. But in 2012, there was barely a peep out of him when the Legislature met, and reform went nowhere. The governor did, however, appoint a task force to address ALF regulation, one that was top-heavy with industry insiders. Needless to say, the industry remained well cocooned from more-stringent rules. Mr. Scott took a similar tack last year, when he did a 180 and declared that he supported expanding Medicaid coverage for up to 1 million poor and low-income Floridians. This after steadfastly refusing to do so — even though the federal government was picking up the hefty tab. But his support was late, and benign. Lawmakers failed to come up with legislation, and the governor didn’t call a special session. Mr. Scott’s declaration of intent to give DCF $31 million could be the real deal, but he will CALL FOR REFORM David Utter, Florida policy director for the Southern Poverty Law Center, said that 45 percent of the juveniles in state custody in 2012 and 2013 were locked up for committing misdemeanors or violating probation. Instead of paying to jail them, Utter said the state should fund community programs designed to keep them out of trouble. “The worst thing you can do is put a bunch of kids in residential [facilities] surrounded by tougher kids,” Utter said. “We don’t have enough money for communitybased programs that are much more effective and much less expensive and do not destroy our kids.” Juvenile Justice Secretary Wansley Walters spoke to the committee about the department’s detention programs and how it chooses the contractors who run private facilities. She said the department is phasing out large facilities with smaller ones, and that the 2,471 youths who were in state custody at the beginning of this year is about half the number in 2009. In the Jacksonville area, court officials are working to better use its civil citation program, which allows juvenile offenders who committed their first misdemeanor to pay a fine and complete community service instead of being arrested. Advocates of the program say it’s a more effective way to keep low-level offenders out of trouble and it has less of a burden on taxpayers and long-term impact to the offender. More than two-thirds of juveniles in the Jacksonville area who were eligible for the program were not given the chance to participate and were instead arrested, according to DJJ. The number of arrests was higher compared to some other larger judicial circuits in the state. (Florida Times Union, 1/16/14) http://members.jacksonville.com/news/politics/2014 -01-15/story/florida-legislators-hear-pushalternatives-incarceratingyouths?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=fee d&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+JacksonvillecomNews 23 E-Newsletter – State News Florida Council January 20, 2014 have to show a higher level of leadership than he has so far on these issues. Additionally, all the money in the world won’t mean a thing for children and their dysfunctional caregivers if new investigators — and those already on the job — are not properly and thoroughly trained and given the tools to do their jobs efficiently. For instance, the proposed funding would allow DCF to send two investigators to a family’s home, instead of one. But what’s the point if two ill-trained workers end up saying, “Gee, when the drunken mom and her abusive boyfriend promised to be stellar caregivers, how were we to know that they would kill the toddler?” It happened too many times last year. Right now, DCF needs a permanent leader. If Mr. Scott can both secure the funding he says he wants and appoint a progressive agency head with a proven track record on child welfare, then his good news will be great news for Florida’s vulnerable children. (Miami Herald, 1/15/14) http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/01/15/3873079/ promises-promises.html#storylink=cpy 24