 |
DeKalb County, Illinois
|
Minutes of the
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH BOARD
September 16, 2002
|
Board Members Present: Norm Gilbert, Patricia Terry, Bob Krogman,
Mary Petruchius, Maureen Russell , Sue Franz, and Denny Sands
Board Members Absent: Regina Parker and Opal Zitka
Other Persons Present: Staff: Jerry Lane and Sue Halbrader, Jack
Bennett
The Community Mental Health Board meeting was called to order at 7:35 p.m. by
President Maureen Russell
AGENDA
The agenda was approved
INTRODUCTIONS
Board members introduced themselves to Jack Bennett, Ben Gordon Center.
MINUTES
Mr. Gilbert moved to approve the July minutes seconded by Ms. Franz. On a
voice vote, the motion carried unanimously.
CORRESPONDENCE AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Mr. Lane announced that Jim Graves’ retirement from Ben Gordon Center
is final. There will be a reception on Friday, September 27, from 5 until
8 p.m., with a brief ceremony scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Michael Flora, who
replaces Jim at BGC, comes from Ohio, a state with one of the strongest
community-based systems. He intends to become active in funding issues.
- The Board discussed which of several options they could do to honor
Graves, as he had been the Executive Director of the Mental Health Board
before taking on management of Ben Gordon Center. Several ideas including
a plaque, a statement of appreciation from the Board, a gift certificate
were put forward. The Board President will meet with staff to determine
what will be done.
- Mr. Krogman moved that the Board set a limit of $100 for whatever
means is determined to honor Mr. Graves; second by Ms. Franz. On a
unanimous roll call vote the motion was passed.
-
- Mr. Lane announced the CACDC’s fund raising All-You-Can-Eat Rib Dinner
will be held at the Knights of Columbus Hall on Thursday, September 19.
Order forms were available for anyone interested in having a very nice
dinner and donating to the consumer group.
- Mr. Lane distributed DCPSafe brochures for interested people to sign up
for the 13th Annual DCPSafe Banquet, which will be held on
Thursday, October 17, from 8:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., when a luncheon will
be served. Mr. Jim Dedera will be the guest speaker. Nominating forms for
the DeKalb County Peace Prize were distributed to Board members.
- Mr. Lane was pleased to announce that "bed hold" has been
restored to DD agencies. Grant funding which was to be replaced by
Purchase of Care contracts, will endure one more year.
- Mr. Michael Flora, the new Executive Director of the Ben Gordon Center,
is tentatively expected to attend the next meeting of the DeKalb County
Community Mental Health Board to be held on October 21, 2002.
- Mr. Lane distributed several reports to Board members:
- Mr. Robert Putz’ NAMI Conference Report
- The list of the Assistant Directors yearly objectives and record of
work responsibilities over the past few months
- The State Association’s Salary Survey
- Report on indoor air quality at BGC, showing no problems
- Mr. Lane discussed the needs of communities that straddle county lines
between DeKalb County and Kane and Kendall Counties. Jerry Murphy,
Executive Director of Mental Health/Mental Retardation Services, Inc., a
consortium of six township Mental Health Boards in South Kane County,
contacted Mr. Lane to set up an appointment with him and the two
respective Health Departments, perhaps to venture cooperatively toward
establishing points of service to handle the Health and Mental Health
needs of citizens in those areas. The meeting is tentatively planned for
early October.
- Mr. Lane announced the death of Dan Didier, retired Executive Director
of the St. Clair Community Mental Health Board.
- Mr. Lane distributed copies of the County Budget for 2003 for the Board’s
perusal. The levy rate will yield $1,506,000 in revenue for the Mental
Health Board, which appears to be about $10,000 less than requested.
However, the actual difference is $2,000, due to revenue projections based
on a CPI of 1.6% and projected new construction figure of 2.6%, which
turned out to be a little off.
- Mr. Lane commented on the state budget, which stands at $600M in unpaid
bills and $200M in the bank. The budget projections last year were overly
optimistic, based on a belief that the economy would turn around. Instead,
August revenues are down from August revenues of two years ago. If the
situation does not change, Illinois will be $1.2B in the red, which means
serious cuts for all agencies.
- Ms. Russell attended the DeKalb County comprehensive Youth Services
Committee meeting and brought some items of interest to the Board:
A conference will be held for first responders in Rockford
A juvenile learning/mentoring program for at-risk youth
In addition, the social workers at DCFS in DeKalb County, which once
employed seven case workers, is now reduced to three. This is a situation
that strikes home, indicating the serious consequences of budget
reductions.
- Ms. Russell reported on services offered by Rosecrance in Rockford,
which now has homes for recovery. In addition, October is National
Recovery Month as well as Domestic Violence Awareness Month.
FINANCE REPORTS
Mr. Gilbert moved acceptance of the August office claims as
submitted; seconded by Mr. Krogman. On a roll call vote the motion passed
unanimously.
Mr. Gilbert moved acceptance of the August agency claims as submitted;
seconded by Mrs. Terry. On a roll call vote the motion passed unanimously.
Mr. Gilbert moved acceptance of the September office claims as
corrected; seconded by Mrs. Franz. On a roll call vote the motion passed
unanimously.
Mr. Gilbert moved acceptance of the September agency claims as submitted;
seconded by Mrs. Franz. On a roll call vote the motion passed
unanimously
COMMUNITY INPUT
Mr. Bennett acknowledged Jim Graves’ skill in administration, and expressed
his hope that the new Executive Director of BGC will bring additional good
things to our community.
COMMITTEE REPORTS
The Fire & Rescue teams in DeKalb County are being trained in
October, thanks to the groundwork done by Denny Sands. The northern part of
the county is scheduled for October 8, and the south county firefighters
will have a training on October 28. There will be two to three hours on
issues of dealing with persons with mental illness and on handling the
psychological and emotional issues of bystanders.
Under the heading "Special Projects" is Crisis Training,
offered through Kishwaukee College this fall in five Thursday evening
classes to be held at Youth Service Bureau. The cost is $5 registration for
each person attending. The Crisis Training will provide continuing education
units and visibility for the County’s Crisis Teams.
The DeKalb County Training Consortium will hold its first training session on
October 29, 2002, at the Kishwaukee College Conference Center, from 8:00 a.m.
until 12:30 p.m.
The objective is to consolidate existing training and offer in-community
conferences, workshops and training at a cost saving to local agency
personnel. This training is priced reasonably at $10 for each agency
registering. This training is about websites, their ability to offer
agencies exposure, communication and economy. The Surgeon General’s Report
stated that practitioners need training, the one area that is often
neglected due to shrinking budgets.
OLD BUSINESS
VAC purchased a new bus, last year’s model, that Board approved in
July. An updated list of needs to complete the necessary customizing to
accommodate our clients was received. A service manual and a second
wheelchair station are needed, bringing the total cost of the vehicle to
$34,459.80 (out of the $40,000 allotted by the Board). The additional cost
comes to $1,352 to completely outfit the bus.
Mr. Lane presented more information from Ben Gordon Center regarding
funding their staff training for Dynamic Awareness Management on October 14,
2002. Family Service Agency is sending all their executives, Elderly Care
Services and Safe Passage executives have also been invited to attend (as
well as the MH Board staff). BGC was able to find funding for this training
from other sources, and has sent the request to our Board for $750.
Mr. Krogman moved to approve $750, seconded by Mr. Sands. The motion
passed unanimously.
Insurance Grants to agencies will be distributed in October, as we were
unable to get the amount into the September agency claims. Bob Pritchard,
Ray Bockman and Gary Hanson called Mr. Lane to question him about the Board’s
large expenditure. Since the County itself is wrestling with large increases
in insurance rates, Board members should be aware that the perception of
spending such a seemingly large amount to subsidize agencies may raise
questions. The rationale for assisting agencies with a one-time-only payment
is to assure that service delivery personnel are not laid off, thereby
reducing services to citizens of DeKalb County seems to answer this
question. In not-for-profit agencies, approximately 80% of the budget goes
for salaries.
NEW BUSINESS
Information on the proposals for Ben Gordon Center three remodeling and
repair projects: BGC sent three bids on building a back wall in the
emergency and admissions area, one bid on replacing a section of the roof
(shingles) and one quote on door openers for the front doors.
Mr. Krogman moved to delay a decision on the roof repair and the door
openers and to authorize the building of the back wall in the Emergency
area; seconded by Mr. Sands.
After discussion regarding the amount of money to be designated,
Mr. Sands offered a friendly amendment that the amount not exceed $5,411.
On a voice vote the motion was passed with six yes votes and one abstention
(Ms. Russell).
For the information of Board members, a joint venture Request For
Proposal from the State of Illinois is under consideration by several
agencies interested in a cooperative venture into violence prevention. The
Grant is for $50,000 in the first year; each additional year for
three years is for $100,000, for a total of $350,000. DeKalb County has a
good opportunity to win this grant.
The State Association of Mental Health Boards will hold its Fall Retreat
on October 23 and 24 at Eagle Creek Resort Center, Findlay, IL . It begins
at noon on Wednesday and runs until 1:00 p.m. on Thursday. Financing
Issues will be discussed: Acquiring, leveraging and managing money. Board
members interested in attending need to notify staff as soon as possible to
take advantage of the block of non-smoking rooms that have been reserved.
Staff has just returned from Springfield from the Quarterly meeting of
the State Association where a great deal of good information was shared.
Among other things, we learned that local Mental Health Boards were invited
to assist in planning the closure of Zeller Mental Health Center. They
estimated the cost of serving clients in the community at $1.5M. The
State closed Zeller and gave local providers the total of $360,000, less
than 25% of what was needed.
In addition, HIPPA, the Health Insurance Portability Act, Federal
legislation that must be in place by April of next year, requires the
sharing of health records. For the DCCMHB to investigate agencies, we must
be certified as a business associate, due to confidentiality laws.
The present candidates for Governor have both promised to reopen every
facility that Governor George Ryan has closed. They seem to be attempting to
woo AFSCME, the union to which state workers belong. Their concerns and
promises have nothing to do with mental illness in Illinois. Instead, it is
a matter of maintaining patronage jobs and appeasing the state workers. If
the elected candidate follows through with his promise, social services will
continue to be in deep trouble; if he does not follow through, his party may
not survive the legislative elections in two years. Either way, mental
health will not be supported. Projected budget shortfalls presently run at
$1 to $1.5 Billion.
The date for the Spring Conference of the Association of Mental Health
Boards of Illinois is April 8 and 9 in Chicago, again, in conjunction with
the Community Behavioral Health Association Conference.
In the state of Michigan, mental health money is divided between state
operations and communities at 15% to 85%, respectively. In Illinois, 54%
goes to state operations and 46% goes to communities. Even worse, funds for
mental illness in Illinois go to adults and children 85% to 15%. Illinois
has not recaptured federal medicaid funds because they will not put money up
front to do so. The State Association voted on a list of mental health
reforms. The adopted points are:
- Decentralization of management of community mental health in Illinois
- Development of a strategic plan for state operated facilities in
Illinois
- Opposition to unfunded mandates and unnecessary over-regulation of the
community mental health system
- Mobilization of citizens to support adequate funding for community
mental health
- Salary parity between state and community MH professionals
- Increased access to the community MH system for racial and ethnic
minorities as discussed in the Surgeon General’s Report on Mental
Health: Culture, Race and Ethnicity
- Increased involvement of consumers and families at the local level as
partners in the community mental health system
- Opposition to budget-driven policies at the state level that are
counter-therapeutic and harmful to citizens
- Increased focus on services for children and adolescents with the
desired outcome being that they are at home, in school and out of
trouble
- Opposition to inflexible state contracts and grants which do not meet
the needs of communities and result in fragmentation of services at the
local level.
Absent in some of these ideas is determination of which models are most
effective. For example, we cannot have "assertive case management"
without enough case managers.
The Executive Director’s evaluation form in the packets is due
soon. Fill them out and return them to Mrs. Russell as soon as possible. She
will call a committee meeting to discuss matters further. The form itself has
some lines left over from earlier years that are no longer applicable. Staff
will modify the form or find an improved one.
Mrs. Franz moved the Board adjourn into Executive Session to discuss
personnel issues; second by Mr. Krogman. On a unanimous voice vote, the motion
passed.
Ms. Petruchius moved to leave executive session; seconded by Mr. Krogman.
The motion passed on a voice vote.
The meeting was adjourned at 9:40 p.m. by consensus.
.
_____________________
Opal Zitka
Secretary Treasurer
| Home | Return
to top | Subject Index | Return
to minutes |
|