The Day

Nonprofit agencies claim Lamont has not delivered promised PPE

- By KEITH M. PHANEUF The Connecticu­t Mirror Keith M. Phaneuf is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www. ctmirror.org). Copyright 2020 © The Connecticu­t Mirror. kphaneuf@ctmirror.org

Nonprofit social service agencies have accused Gov. Ned Lamont with failing to deliver personal protective gear he pledged two weeks ago, placing thousands of staff and disabled clients at risk of contractin­g COVID-19.

Since the CT Community Nonprofit Alliance warned April 21 that agencies were approachin­g financial collapse — partly from having to buy personal protective equipment, or PPE, at inflated prices — most “have gotten little or nothing” from state agencies, said Gian-Carl Casa, its president and CEO.

“These are health care profession­als working closely with people who are very vulnerable,” Casa said. “These are front-line people.”

Oak Hill of Hartford, the state’s largest nonprofit social services provider with about 30,000 clients and 1,400 staff, has received 50 masks from the state, said Barry Simon, the organizati­on’s president.

Windsor-based Community Health Resources, which operates methadone clinics and provides 100 group home beds for the mentally ill and drug addicted, has only received enough PPE from the state to cover about 20% of its needs, President and CEO Heather Gates said.

“When we receive PPE it is in dribs and drabs,” she said.

Lamont responded to the complaints Thursday by saying that while it’s premature to consider an across-the-board rate hike for nonprofits they haven’t been forgotten.

“They’re key to everything we’re trying to do,” said the governor, who also must contend with huge state budget deficit projection­s because of the pandemic. And while Connecticu­t can’t afford more money for these agencies now, state officials are urging banks to prioritize nonprofits for emergency federal small business assistance loans.

Connecticu­t spends about $1.4 billion per year contractin­g with community-based, nonprofit agencies to provide the overwhelmi­ng bulk of state-sponsored social services. But funding has grown much more slowly than inflation over the past two decades. And Casa, whose alliance represents about 300 nonprofits, held a news conference on April 21 warning the pandemic had pushed some providers to the brink of collapse.

Many nonprofits receive a significan­t portion of their state funding on a “fee-for-service” basis. Rather than receiving a fixed, quarterly payment that covers all programs, many agencies receive a portion of their funds based on the number of clients served on a daily or other incrementa­l basis.

The pandemic has left many agencies hemorrhagi­ng revenue and furloughin­g staff.

And nearly all are scrambling for PPE, finding far too little and paying far too much for whatever is available.

Oak Hill reported more than $60,000 in PPE expenditur­es after spending $2,500 in the previous fiscal year. Another large nonprofit, Ability Beyond of Bethel — which serves about 3,000 developmen­tally disabled clients in Connecticu­t and New York —reported spending more than $90,000 on protective gear.

Josh Geballe, the governor’s chief operations officer, said two weeks ago that state agencies had just received “significan­t deliveries” of protective equipment and expected to increase contributi­ons to all health care providers shortly.

But Casa said this aid never materializ­ed in any significan­t way.

“We’ve heard from agency after agency ‘it’s on its way, it’s on its way,’” Casa said, adding rarely does the gear actually arrive.

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