Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Background check system delays elder care hiring

- By Don Thompson

Intensive care nurse Meynard Villa was on the verge of losing his family’s $150,000 investment in his new senior care home because he couldn’t hire workers while grappling with a glitchy state system designed to automate criminal background checks.

The California Department of Social Services’ new portal is supposed to help home and community care providers, foster care families and even nannies and baby-sitters who apply for clearance under the state’s background check system.

But only 38% of California’s nearly 60,000 licensed facilities are using the Guardian tool since it went live in January, while the rest find workaround­s or remain frustrated. The department had promised that the $788,650 portal “will ensure background checks are completed faster and more efficientl­y, while making the process easier for applicants and agencies.”

Villa said he lost two clients for his six-bed home in the Los Angeles-area city of Arcadia because he couldn’t hire the employees to care for them.

“This problem is really annoying and really disappoint­ing, because at the same time you’re trying to create a business, you’re trying to create jobs, you’re trying to help people,” Villa said.

A frustratin­g tool

The self-service tool is supposed to allow employers and employees to plug in prospectiv­e hires’ identifyin­g informatio­n to run background checks through criminal and child abuse databases; seek exemptions for minor or outdated problems that shouldn’t bar their hiring; and add or remove employees associated with their agency.

Instead, frustrated employers said they couldn’t log on, couldn’t get answers through Guardian about why the portal wasn’t working, and couldn’t get help from equally stumped state workers. Employees could complete separate fingerprin­t checks, but then those couldn’t be linked to the proper employees’ files.

“If I’m trying to hire an employee, I can’t check whether they’re in the system or not,” said Ara Postaldjia­n, who owns the Redell Pines care home in Monrovia, northeast of Los Angeles.

He was unable to hire six employees as recently as late March because he couldn’t complete their background checks through Guardian.

Two others he vetted the old way, by calling the Department of Social Services and reading their names and Social Security numbers aloud — the kind of hands-on process that Guardian was supposed to replace. State workers were able to log in to a database to clear those two employees but couldn’t give him definitive answers on whether the other six were safe to hire.

Navigating Guardian is nearly a full-time job for one employee recruiter at home care provider Home Instead, said human resources manager Vera Davidson, who is based in Pasadena for the Omaha, Nebraska-based national provider.

Communicat­ions from Guardian are “little to none” and state staffers also are stumped, she said, “so by the time we get any sort of answer to any of our questions, it’s things that we troublesho­oted ourselves already, like months ago.”

A turnaround?

But turnaround time for processing background checks has dropped from weeks to days, mainly because of “things we figured out kind of on our own,” Davidson said.

Department of Social Services spokesman Scott Murray said in a statement that the new portal is quickly processing and clearing most applicatio­ns it receives while the agency “is actively working with our vendor to resolve some early technical issues ... so that all applicatio­ns can be processed in a timely manner.”

The California Assisted Living Associatio­n has seen Guardian improve since January, President and CEO Sally Michael said.

That wasn’t Villa’s experience. It took weeks of interventi­on from a state senator’s staff before he got access to the portal.

“After investing more than $150,000 of my family’s hard-earned money into my company, we are in danger of going bankrupt without ever caring for one resident, due entirely to the high levels of ineptitude and bureaucrac­y,” Villa wrote to local, state and federal officials in February.

Desperate, Villa turned to his county supervisor, congresswo­man and state Sen. Susan Rubio. Four weeks after contacting Rubio’s office, he received a call from the department and was able to log in to Guardian in mid-March. But he said he’s still experienci­ng delays.

It’s the latest in a pattern of troubled state IT systems in recent years. During the pandemic, California’s troubled unemployme­nt agency database has been overwhelme­d and seen a data glitch that backlogged nearly 300,000 coronaviru­s records and cost the state’s top health official her job last summer.

The state auditor said in January that the 16-year, nearly $1 billion Financial Informatio­n System for California project had missed four straight deadlines to standardiz­e the state’s accounting systems amid ballooning costs.

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? ICU nurse Meynard Villa in his start-up senior care home in Arcadia on Thursday. Villa was on the verge of losing his family’s $150,000 investment in his new senior care home because he couldn’t hire workers while grappling with a glitchy state system.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ICU nurse Meynard Villa in his start-up senior care home in Arcadia on Thursday. Villa was on the verge of losing his family’s $150,000 investment in his new senior care home because he couldn’t hire workers while grappling with a glitchy state system.

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