The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State system for people with disabiliti­es in crisis, panel told

Parents, providers call for more funding to prevent a collapse.

- By Katherine Landergan katherine.landergan@ajc.com

Homes that care for Georgians with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es are closing down. Agencies that serve this vulnerable population can’t retain staff members. And thousands of residents with disabiliti­es are still vying for services, some of whom have been waiting for years.

For nearly four hours Wednesday, speaker after speaker delivered a dire message to a Senate study committee on people with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es: the state’s system for serving these people is in crisis, and without more funding the conditions will only worsen.

“I definitely feel the urgency,” said Senator Sally Harrell. “We are absolutely in an emergency situation.”

According to comments the committee heard, more than 7,000 people are still on a waitlist to receive a waiver in exchange for services that would allow them to leave institutio­ns or remain in their homes. But the state has only funded a fraction of the waivers that are needed. On top of that, changes in the job market have led to a severe shortage of caregivers, who are exiting the profession for better wages in the retail and fast-food sectors. This means that even people who have a waiver are unable to get the services they need right now.

John Zoller knows the issue firsthand. His 35-year-old daughter, Katie, is one of the lucky ones who has a waiver. But since the pandemic started, he’s been unable to find the around-the-clock care that his daughter is entitled to, given the limitation­s on how much these caregiving staff are paid.

Zoller said he’s lost in-home caregivers to Amazon distributi­on sites, and fast food places like Quiznos

and Mcdonalds.

Zoller pointed out that a restaurant “can raise the price of a burrito” in order to pay people a better wage. “I can’t. If no one shows up to work, I can’t provide services to my daughter.”

The meeting, held in the state Capitol, was the first of several committee sessions that will examine the services for people with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es in Georgia.

The crisis is not isolated to Georgia. Nationally, the number of caregivers serving people with disabiliti­es has dropped dramatical­ly in the last few years. The U.S. Department of Labor Statistics estimates that the field has shed some several hundred thousand jobs since the early days of the pandemic.

Diane Wilush, president and CEO of United Cerebral of Georgia and South Carolina, said that due to the mass exodus of workers, the system is being held together by a “shoestring of dedicated intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es providers.”

Georgia officials have taken some steps to address the issue in recent months. The state has supported a temporary boost in pay for care providers, and is funding an expansion of a waiver program that is a

key way that people with disabiliti­es can get support. In total, about 13,000 people with disabiliti­es have waivers that pay for care in their homes or for them to live outside of an institutio­nal setting.

The state added 513 new waivers to the list July 1. So far, 31 people are on their way to getting waivers, according to the Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es.

But, the new waivers will only help a fraction of those who are on the sidelines waiting for help. In all, there’s still a waitlist of about 7,100 people who are seeking waivers.

The state is also pursuing an ongoing study that will determine whether they need to boost pay for what are known as “direct service profession­als,” who serve people with disabiliti­es. The results of that study are expected to be released early in 2023.

But advocates, providers and parents with kids who are disabled told the committee they don’t need a study to confirm what they already know: that the workers who support people with disabiliti­es are leaving for better paying jobs. Direct support profession­als can make as little as $10.63 an hour, and are exiting the profession for positions in the retail and restaurant industries.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Thousands of Georgia residents with disabiliti­es are on a waitlist to receive a waiver in exchange for services that would allow them to leave institutio­ns or remain in their homes.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Thousands of Georgia residents with disabiliti­es are on a waitlist to receive a waiver in exchange for services that would allow them to leave institutio­ns or remain in their homes.

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