 |
DeKalb County, Illinois
|
Minutes of the
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH BOARD
July 16, 2001
|
Board Members Present: Mary Petruchius, Norm Gilbert, Bob Krogman, Denny
Sands, Opal Zitka, Pat Terry and Sue Franz
Board Members Absent: Regina Parker, and Maureen Russell
Other Persons Present: Staff: Jerry Lane and Sue Halbrader
Guest Speakers: Deborah Frueh and Karen Skate (?name)
The Community Mental Health Board meeting was called to
order at 7:50 p.m. by President Mary Petruchius
The Community Mental Health Board meeting was called to order at 7:38
p.m. by President Mary Petruchius
AGENDA
There were no changes or additions to the agenda.
INTRODUCTIONS
Mr. Bob Putz from the Consumer Advocacy Council of DeKalb County and new
member Pat Terry were present. Informal introductions were made around the
table.
MINUTES
Mr. Gilbert moved to approve the April minutes; Seconded by Mr. Krogman.
The motion carried unanimously.
CORRESPONDENCE AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
C Mr. Lane welcomed Pat Terry as a member of the Board. He said
although the office had not received the paperwork as of this date, he was
present at the last County Board meeting and heard her nomination accepted.
Ms. Petruchius stated that she had received the papers.
C Mr. Lane announced that his status has been changed to that of
Grandfather, with the birth of his first granddaughter, Abigail Grace
Covert, at 8:24 p.m. Sunday, September 23, 200, to his oldest daughter and
son-in-law.
C Mr. Lane mentioned that Board members may wish to express their
opinions on redistricting to their state senators and representatives, since
remapping the districts is now in progress.
C Mr. Lane reported that Ben Gordon Center continues to have
difficulty staffing crisis hotline volunteers. They are looking into a new
method of handling calls. More information will be shared later.
C Mr. Lane said a mental health center in the northwest region has
produced statistics showing that BGC’s workforce has the least turnover of
any area MH agency and that DeKalb County has the lowest number of
admissions to Singer Center in Rockford. Although we have expressed concerns
about staff turnover and wait lists, BGC must be doing something right.
C Mr. Lane stated that social services look bleak at all levels,
local to national. The Governor stated further budget reductions will be
necessary in lieu of terrorist attacks even though government funding is
less than adequate, and private donations are down. United Way announced
that they cut donations across the board by 30%. Bleak as the scene appears,
we will have a better perspective in December.
C Mr. Lane announced that he received a letter from Jim Graves at
BGC about the lack of transportation outside of the city of DeKalb, none on
weekends and none during very late or early hours. He will follow up, as the
Board grants funds specifically for covering those hours.
C Mrs. Franz circulated a pamphlet from ARC (Association of
Retarded Citizens) regarding what to do if you are stopped by a police
officer or arrested.
C Mr. Sands said he heard Mr. Lane’s outstanding address to the
County Board last week, talking about the World Trade Center disaster and
the county crisis teams.
C Mr. Lane further explained that the county crisis teams are on
stand-by, and two members were contacted by NOVA, asking if they could
participate in debriefings when the body recovery is completed. This office
is keeping in touch with local fire departments and other emergency response
personnel. At this time people are still in response mode and will stay that
way until the initial work is completed. Meanwhile, the staff is considering
holding a community forum for information and an opportunity to express
people’s feelings.
FINANCE REPORTS
Mrs. Zitka moved to acceptance the August agency claims as submitted,
seconded by Mr. Gilbert. On a roll call vote, the motion passed unanimously.
Mrs. Zitka moved acceptance of the August office claims as submitted,
seconded by Mrs. Franz. On a roll call vote, the motion passed unanimously.
Mrs. Zitka moved to acceptance the September agency claims as submitted,
seconded by Mr. Gilbert. On a roll call vote, the motion passed unanimously.
Mrs. Zitka moved acceptance of the August office claims as submitted,
seconded by Mrs. Franz. On a roll call vote, the motion passed unanimously.
Mr. Lane reported that the recommended budget was sent to the County
Board without any reported problems. It is expected to be passed as
submitted next month.
Mr. Lane distributed copies of the annual report, reminding Board members
that it reflects the condition of about a year and a half ago when it is
published. The Mental Health Board is in the black, with 86% of our funds
going to support agencies. Based on experience of demand in the system and
federal studies we are doing well in meeting the mental health needs of
county residents. The Mental Health Board is one of the top four funding
sources for county mental health programs.
COMMUNITY INPUT
Mr. Robert Putz, President of the Consumer Advocacy Council of DeKalb
County, reported on the NAMI Convention held in Washington, D.C. on July 11,
2001. NAMI is the National Association of the Mentally Ill. Mr. Putz and
Nina Segata attended the three day conference and returned with a thirteen
page report on the various presentations they covered in behalf of the local
group. The presentations covered subjects from medical reports on brain
structure (stress can alter the hypocampus and depression can change
serotonin receptors) to recovery programs to parity, new treatments and the
role of educators in the ways in which persons with mental illness come to
terms with their conditions.
COMMITTEE REPORTS
None
OLD BUSINESS
With the addition of Patricia Terry, the newest member of the Board, all
positions on the Board are now filled. Ms. Petruchius asked members to
review the committee structure and decide whether or not to retain or change
it, and to determine one’s own area of interest so that committee
structure may be discussed next month.
Mr. Lane circulated outlines of suggested police and emergency response
personnel training to Board members. Staff is planning a training program
for police officers and one for fire fighters, in addition to facilitating
establishment of a DeKalb County Protocol modeled on Kane County’s. The
Protocol addresses systemic needs within the county, bringing together all
the agencies and organizations that would have anything to do with persons
with mental illness; the training is for law enforcement, county wide,
having to do with how to treat persons with mental illness. Denny Sands
reserved space at the NIU Law School for January 4th and 7th,
2002, (a Friday and a Monday) for training, which police chiefs will make
mandatory.
Mr. Lane asked the Board if they would approve circulating the tentative
program outline among fire fighters and emergency personnel. The Board
approved unanimously.
As for the DeKalb County Protocol, we want to schedule a forum including
Kane County people who will be able to attend, as well as numerous prominent
people within the judicial system of DeKalb County. Scheduling this meeting
for late February or early March means we must begin to promote it very
soon.
Mr. Lane reported that Board staff has met with Chris Gough of the Family
Service Agency and Jerry Smith of the DeKalb County Foundation to discuss
establishing a joint training consortium. Sponsoring high quality training
and workshops locally will save the costs of travel, food and lodging out of
town and make sharing the expense of nationally known presenters within
reach for everyone. This is another way in which the Board may be able to
stretch tax dollars to do the most good for the greatest number. Another
meeting is scheduled within the week to finalize luncheon meeting plans for
October to pursue this idea.
New Business
The performance evaluation forms that were inadvertently omitted from the
packet that was mailed was distributed to members. Ms. Petruchius asked that
the forms be returned to her no later than one week prior to our October
Board meeting.
Mr. Lane requested that the Board move on buying two new computer systems
for the office as the existing equipment is wearing out; the high end
estimate on the purchase is $6,000.
Mr. Krogman moved that the proposed amount requested be approved;
second by Mrs. Franz. On a voice vote the motion passed unanimously.
Mr. Lane distributed a written account and verbally reported on the
Agency Executive meeting held on Friday, July 13th. All executive
directors of all funded agencies attended, except for Carolyn Beard, who was
out of town. Several compelling reasons prompted the staff to call the
meeting, including the sorry state of the Illinois budget which gives
community mental health 2% for the next fiscal year, to begin in the last
quarter; in fact amounting to ½ of 1% for FY2002. In addition, United Way
has cut grants 30% across the board. With these reduced revenue streams, the
increase of regulation (and the expense involved with certification) the
proliferation of tax caps and the greatly increased fixed costs, all
community based social service agencies are facing what may be their
greatest challenge. Services are shrinking, inevitably, as agencies find it
impossible to fill empty positions. Our purpose in meeting was to discuss
our common problems and explore solutions that will benefit all, such as
shared training expenses. We emphasized that we must stick together,
locally, statewide and nationally, to stand for government support of social
services. This is a non-partisan issue. We find allies in many places,
including the Catholic Conference of Illinois, standing behind increasing
funding for social services. We are interested in establishing as much
solidarity as possible within our funded agencies as well as from the
outside. This has been an on-going problem for at least forty years. There
has been a long, downhill slide from the time in the 1940's when Illinois
was a leader in treatment of mental illness and other social services.
After some discussion, the Board agreed to cancel the August meeting by
consensus.
Mrs. Russell moved to go into Executive session to consider compensation
for the Assistant Director, second by Mr. Gilbert.
Mr. Gilbert moved and Mr. Sands seconded a motion to increase the
assistant director’s salary by 6.0% This reflects a 3.0% cost of living
and a 3.0% merit increase. Motion passed unanimously on a roll call vote.
Mr. Gilbert moved and Mrs. Zitka seconded a motion to exit the Executive
Session. The motion passed unanimously.
The motion to adjourn was made by Mr. Sands, second by Mr. Gilbert. The
meeting adjourned at 9:15 p.m.
_________________________________
Opal Zitka
Secretary/Treasurer
| Home | Return
to top | Subject Index | Return
to minutes |
|