The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

State employees aid troubled elder abuse nonprofit

Philly agency struggling to hire enough caseworker­s

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Gov. Tom Wolf’s administra­tion has taken the extraordin­ary step of marshaling state employees to handle investigat­ions for a Philadelph­ia nonprofit struggling to hire enough caseworker­s to field allegation­s of the neglect or abuse of older people.

Secretary of Aging Robert Torres took that step over the summer, after Department of Aging staff raised an alarm internally about how Philadelph­ia was handling cases. The Associated Press asked about the assignment of state employees to aid the nonprofit Philadelph­ia Corporatio­n for Aging after reviewing internal department emails received through an open records request.

Although the latest state data still have some errors, the nonprofit likely has not been complying with state laws that require caseworker­s to promptly see potential victims, limit workers’ caseloads and set deadlines to resolve cases, according to state officials and data provided by the Department of Aging to the AP earlier this month.

“I think we have an obligation to help them out, and we’re making some progress, but not progress that any one of us, especially myself, is satisfied with because obviously we need to move at a quicker pace,” Torres said in an interview last week.

In August, Torres ordered improvemen­ts at the Philadelph­ia nonprofit, citing three particular cases where state inspectors were worried that caseworker­s had not adequately helped people in dire need.

Neither Torres, his agency nor the Philadelph­ia Corporatio­n for Aging has been willing to disclose any details about those cases, including whether those people lived or died.

Besides mandating changes, Torres assigned six state employees to help the Philadelph­ia nonprofit, apart from their normal duties of monitoring how county-level agencies handle allegation­s of neglect or abuse.

The employees have taken on more than 420 cases over four months in Philadelph­ia, according to the state Department of Aging. As a result, routine duties of monitoring other counties are being put off.

Another five state Department of Aging staff are helping the Philadelph­ia nonprofit with other tasks, the department said.

The Philadelph­ia Corporatio­n for Aging is one of 52 local agencies across Pennsylvan­ia, some of which are county-run while others are nonprofits that have state contracts to carry out what are called “protective services” cases for people 60 and over.

Most calls involve an elderly person who lives alone or with a family member or caregiver. Poverty is often a factor.

The Department of Aging discloses little about what it knows about how county agencies may not be meeting standards, and it answers to no other agency.

Many of the county-level agencies have seen the pandemic worsen long-term difficulti­es in hiring and retaining caseworker­s, but Philadelph­ia’s situation is particular­ly acute.

The Philadelph­ia Corporatio­n for Aging itself isn’t answering questions about its caseworker ranks, turnover and salary, or its number of open cases.

All a nonprofit spokespers­on was willing to say Friday in an emailed statement was that, at its peak, 60% of its investigat­or positions were vacant. It has now narrowed that to 22%, the spokespers­on said.

The Department of Aging said the Philadelph­ia nonprofit has 50 investigat­or positions. As of Dec. 10, the nonprofit had told the state that 32 positions were filled, although five of those caseworker­s were on leave, according to informatio­n from the Department of Aging.

The Philadelph­ia nonprofit has also hired a contractor for support and protective services workers from other counties to help on a part-time basis, the department said.

Still, in recent months, Philadelph­ia’s caseloads for individual workers have far exceeded 30 active cases, the limit in state law, state officials say.

Cases are supposed to be closed within 20 days, but data in the state’s case management system showed an eye-popping 3,100 open cases in Philadelph­ia, according to the Department of Aging. Torres cautioned that, in some of those cases, people have been connected with service providers and caseworker­s simply aren’t updating that informatio­n in the system.

The Philadelph­ia nonprofit also is falling far short of meeting the state law when it comes to seeing a potential victim within 24 hours of a case being classified as an emergency or a priority, according to state data.

The Department of Aging cautioned that some of the entries were incorrect and were missing informatio­n like a date for when the call was taken or when a face-to-face meeting was conducted.

Torres has thus far defended the Philadelph­ia nonprofit, saying it had an “almost a perfect storm of vacancies” and turnover in its brass amid the pandemic.

Torres, however, could not give a time frame for when Philadelph­ia must stand on its own — or face losing the state’s contract. The priority is hiring more caseworker­s and trying new strategies to find eligible applicants, Torres said.

“So I would like to tell you I’d like to see this done within the next three months,” Torres said. “I mean, I’m sure it’s something that it can’t happen fast enough to my satisfacti­on. But there’s some practical realities that we’re dealing with here. That’s why it makes it hard for me to tell you in three months, this is going to happen or the contract is going to be gone.”

But he said at some point “if performanc­e doesn’t improve, then I think there’s going to be a different conversati­on.”

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