Pea Ridge Times

Waiting list for services may be eliminated

- CECILE BLEDSOE Arkansas Senator Editor’s note: Arkansas Sen. Cecile Bledsoe represents the third district. From Rogers, Sen. Bledsoe is chair of the Senate Health Committee.

LITTLE ROCK — At their first meeting scheduled after Easter, lawmakers will hear an update on new rules and new funding that will eliminate a waiting list for services for people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es.

Officials of the Division of Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es Services are scheduled to present an update on Medicaid waiver services. They will report to legislator­s on new waiver slots that over the next three years will be sufficient to add 3,204 clients who have been on the state waiting list.

The waivers allow clients to remain in their homes, rather than live in an institutio­n. Eligible clients have been diagnosed with autism, cerebral palsy, seizure disorder or epilepsy, Down syndrome and Spina bifida. Also on the eligibilit­y list are people diagnosed before the age of 22 with a significan­t intellectu­al limitation accompanie­d by deficits in their adaptive behavior.

Currently, 5,400 children and adults receive Supportive Living services, which brings support staff to their homes and communitie­s.

The program is called the Community and Employment Supports (CES) waiver. It costs about $300 million a year, with the federal government paying 71.62 percent and state government paying 28.38 percent.

Division officials estimate that after three years, when all the new slots are filled, the annual cost of the program will be $442 million.

During the 2022 fiscal session earlier this year, legislator­s voted to dedicate an additional $37.6 million for the CES waiver program, with the intention of eliminatin­g the current waiting list for services.

Other changes that Division officials will discuss with legislator­s include using more monitoring systems, such as alarms and sensors, which are appropriat­e and safe when the person with disabiliti­es is sleeping.

Another change affects the relatives of people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es. Currently, family members who are not legal guardians can be paid as direct care staff, as long as they meet certain requiremen­ts. The Division will discuss with legislator­s the possibilit­y of adding legal guardians and any “legally responsibl­e person” as care providers.

Another change is in response to workforce shortages caused in part by the covid-19 pandemic. It would increase from four to eight the capacity of group homes.

The changes in rules and waiver programs is on the agenda of the House Children and Youth Permanent Subcommitt­ee of the Aging, Children and Youth, Legislativ­e and Military Affairs Committee, which is scheduled to meet on April 18.

Forestry Caucus

A majority of legislator­s have joined the newly created Forestry Caucus, which will work to pass legislatio­n to expand forestry and promote economic developmen­t. The impetus came from legislator­s representi­ng south Arkansas, the dominant timber-growing area of the state.

In the 2021 session the legislatur­e created the Center for Forest Business at the University of Arkansas at Monticello, within its College of Forestry, Agricultur­e and Natural Resources. Also, the legislatur­e put $841,000 for the center in the state budget for Fiscal Year 2023, which begins on July 1.

In related news, the state Agricultur­e Department and the university at Monticello are offering scholarshi­ps of $4,000 per semester to attract students to the campus’s forestry programs.

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