Times Standard (Eureka)

If budget reflects our values, we must protect most vulnerable

- By Jim Frazier Assemblyma­n Jim Frazier is a Democrat who represents Assembly District 11, in Solano, Contra Costa and Sacramento counties, Jim.Frazier@asm. ca.gov.

In his May Budget Revise, Gov. Gavin Newsom reduced his initial $222 billion January budget to $203 billion. The reduction is a testament to the economic havoc wrought by COVID-19.

The administra­tion’s revised budget would cut $500 million to Medicaid-funded intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es services unless Congress passes additional aid to states, and that federal legislatio­n specifical­ly allocates further federal Medicaid funds to California. These cuts would devastate the more than 350,000 California­ns with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es and their families.

For two decades, California has underfunde­d the developmen­tal disability system. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, a state rate study identified a funding gap of more than $1.4 billion for disability programs. The COVID-19 public health crisis has made this problem worse, significan­tly increasing the cost of safely delivering services to those with developmen­tal disabiliti­es.

Newsom has said that budgets represent a statement of our values. I agree. As the Newsom administra­tion and the Legislatur­e enter the final stretch of budget negotiatio­ns, our state leaders must make a commitment to protect vital support services for those population­s who need them most but cannot advocate for themselves.

Protecting individual­s with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es is personal. I chair the Select Committee on Intellectu­al and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es, where we work diligently to shine a light on the population of people with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es, one of the most underserve­d groups in California.

The administra­tion’s proposed cuts threaten the stability of Medicaid-funded provider services that keep people with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es safe and healthy during normal times, made all the more important during the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, California­ns with developmen­tal disabiliti­es are at higher risk for COVID-19 infection and complicati­ons. Maintainin­g the essential safety net of services, equipped to meet their unique needs, should be a priority for state funding during this public health crisis.

Before COVID-19, many children and adults with disabiliti­es were on waitlists for services and housing. More than 28,000 programs have closed during the last decade. All too frequently, the staff providing essential services are paid poverty-level wages.

The Legislatur­e’s approved budget maintains critical funding for health and human service programs, including programs targeted toward people with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es — infants, those in independen­t living, senior citizens and others. It also focuses on using state reserves to minimize these cuts.

In the big picture, $500 million represents a rounding error in a $200-billion state budget; however, for the infants, children, seniors and their families, large funding cuts represent quality of life changes and, in some circumstan­ces, life or death.

With the health and economic impacts of the pandemic, we must do everything we can to take care of society’s most vulnerable. I urge you to support the Legislatur­e’s budget and our approach to protecting the most vulnerable California­ns.

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