April 2002 Newsletter
Volume 1, Number 4
Outreach Contract Awarded to Breakthrough Club
We are pleased to announce that Breakthrough Club in Wichita has been selected
to provide Working Healthy outreach services across the state. Working in collaboration
with SRS and the University of Kansas, Breakthrough Club will make presentations
to potential Working Healthy participants and other interested parties. These
meetings will explain the benefits of the program to potential participants,
acquaint employers with this new resource, and inform service providers (agencies
and individuals who render employment or other services to potential Working
Healthy participants) about this key benefit for their consumers. In addition
to presentations, Breakthrough Club will visit major community employers to
update them about this new employee resource and discuss tax incentives to hiring
persons who have a disability. Breakthrough Club in conjunction with KU will
design all printed materials used in the outreach initiative.
As many of you know, Working Healthy is a new program that allows Kansans who
have a disability to return to the workforce and purchase their Medicaid Coverage!
Working Healthy will help many Kansans who have a disability enter the workforce
at their maximum capacity. The program uses a formula, based on income, to determine
the monthly premiums and there are no spenddowns. Individuals can earn up to
300% of federal poverty level and still be eligible to participate. In addition,
participants are allowed greater personal savings both through traditional means
as well as through Individual Development Accounts (IDAs). The program will
begin July 1st. Very soon, Working Healthy will be spread throughout the state
of Kansas. Details about this Outreach initiative will be posted on the Working
Healthy web site. For more information, contact Paul Jasinski, at the Breakthrough
Club, (316) 269-2534.
New Director of Working Healthy Hired
Congratulations to Mary Ellen O'Brien Wright, who has assumed the position of
the
Director of Working Healthy. Mary Ellen is filling the position of the late
Howard Moses. She has been part of the Working Healthy staff for the past four
months and has 22 years of experience working with people with a variety of
disabilities in a number of settings. The position of Benefits Specialist Team
Leader vacated by Mary Ellen has been advertised, and it is expected that a
replacement will be hired in May. You can contact Mary Ellen by phone at (785)
296-5217 or by E-mailing, meow@srskansas.org.
Recent Happenings
Over the past few months, staff have continued to spread the word about Working
Healthy to consumers, employers, social service workers, legislators and the
general public.
- In February, Sharon Johnson made presentations to two consumer-run organizations
at Wyandotte County Community Supports and Johnson County
Community Mental Health Center.
- February 11th - Working Healthy was represented at Public Health Day at the
capital.
Jean Hall and Sharon Johnson shared information and answered questions about
the program.
- March 14th - Disability Day at the Capital sponsored by SILCK, provided Working
Healthy with space to disseminate project information and brochures.
- April 2nd - Sharon Johnson presented Working Healthy program information at
the 2nd Annual Kans-Trans Transition Conference in Wichita. This statewide conference
addresses issues of transition for all Kansas children served by public agencies.
It is a collaboration of SRS, KSDE, JJA and other state agencies to ensure that
Kansas children transition to positive adult roles and become contributing citizens
of our state.
- April 8th & 9th - Working Healthy co-sponsored the Kansas Conference on
Social Welfare in Lawrence. We were proud to welcome Bryon McDonald, Project
and Policy
Development Manager of the World Institute on Disability, as our featured speaker
for the Working Healthy portion of the conference. Staff presented sessions
on the philosophy and background of TW-WIIA and Working Healthy and on the implementation
of the program for SRS frontline staff.
Upcoming Events
- Statewide implementation training for SRS staff begins April 22nd in Topeka
- Advisory Council meeting in Topeka on May 10th
- Throughout May, Working Healthy staff will be traveling to the 11 Area SRS
Offices to provide information to direct service staff in Centers for Independent
Living, Community Mental Health Centers, Community Developmental Disability
Organizations and any other organizations who provide direct services to people
with disabilities. For more information on these presentations in your area
contact Mary Ellen O_Brien Wright at meow@srskansas.org or (785) 296-5217.
- JULY 1st - WORKING HEALTHY START DATE!!
Five Benefits Specialists Across the State
Currently five Benefits Specialists are being hired in Area SRS Offices across
Kansas. The Benefits Specialists will be able to provide consumers with the
information they need on the program and assist them in making the best possible
decisions regarding their health care coverage.
This map (map explained below) shows the area offices and counties covered by
the Specialist in each area. There are plans to hire more Benefits Specialists
as Working Healthy enrollment grows in upcoming years. Please contact the office
in your area in order to connect with a specialist.
(Map content: Region 1 includes the following counties: Cheyenne, Rawlins, Decatur,
Norton, Phillips, Smith, Jewell, Sherman, Thomas, Sheridan , Graham, Rooks,
Osborne, Mitchell, Lincoln, Ellsworth, Russell, Ellis, Trego, Gove, Logan and
Wallace. The region 1 benefits specialist will be housed in the Hays Area SRS
Office, (785) 628-1066. Region 2 includes the following counties: Greeley, Wichita,
Scott, Lane, Ness, Rush, Barton, Hamilton, Kearney, Finney, Gray, Hodgeman,
Pawnee, Edwards, Stafford, Pratt, Kiowa, Ford, Haskell, Grant, Stanton, Morton,
Stevens, Seward, Meade, Clark, Comanche, and Barber. The region 2 benefits specialist
will be housed in the Garden City Area SRS Office, (620) 272-5800. Region 3
includes the following counties: Republic, Cloud, Ottawa, Dickinson, Clay, Washington,
Marshall, Riley, Geary, Wabaunsee, Pottawatomie, Nemaha, Brown, Doniphan, Atchison,
Jackson, Jefferson, Shawnee, Douglas,
Johnson, Wyandotte, and Leavenworth. The region 3 benefits specialist will be
housed in the Lawrence Area SRS Office, (785) 832-3700. Region 4 includes the
following counties: Rice, Reno, Kingman, Sumner, Sedgwick, Butler, Harvey, McPherson,
Marion, Morris, Chas, Lyon and Osage. The region 4 benefits specialist will
be housed in the Emporia Area SRS Office, ((620) 342-2505. Region 5 includes
the following counties: Cowley, Chautauqua, Montgomery, Labette, Cherokee, Elk,
Wilson, Neosho, Crawford, Bourbon, Allen, Woodson, Greenwood, Coffey, Anderson,
Linn, Franklin and Miami. The region 5 benefits specialist will be housed in
the Chanute Area SRS Office, (620) 431-5000.
Legislative Update
The Kansas legislature went into recess Saturday, April 14, with many issues
left unresolved. The full Senate and House will return for a wrap-up session
May 1 that members say they hope will last no longer than two weeks. In the
mean time, a joint House- Senate conference committee is scheduled to meet April
23 to begin drafting the final version of the fiscal 2003 budget.
Some of the major issues affecting Kansans with disabilities that were debated
by both chambers are the Level of Care (LOC) scores for people on the home and
community based (HCBS) waiver programs and the protected income levels (PIL)
for this same group of people. Higher LOCs make it more difficult for people
to qualify for HCBS services. Similarly, people enrolled in these programs are
currently allowed to keep $696 of their monthly income to cover their living
expenses. Some legislators had proposed drastically reducing the PIL to $475
per month. At this point in time, neither chamber's budget plans call for increasing
LOCs or decreasing the PIL, but these issues will still be on the table and
subject to change when the legislature reconvenes.
The Senate Plan
The Senate ended its session with a budget bill that calls for about $305 million
in new spending. The plan does not include any new money for the waiting lists
for the Physical Disability (PD) and Developmental Disability (DD) HCBS waivers.
Thus, waiting lists for these programs may get significantly larger over the
next year. For the PD waiver, level funding would result in more than 1,000
people on the waiting list by the end of next fiscal year.
The revenue package proposed by the Senate tax committee would raise individual
income taxes by about 5 percent for three years, with a set-aside of $10.5 million
to provide tax credits for poor working families. The Senate tax plan also would
increase the state sales tax to 5.2 percent from 4.9 percent, with $34.5 million
in sales tax rebates to low-income families.
Other provisions of the Senate tax proposal would:
- Increase the cigarette tax by 65 cents a pack, taking it to 89 cents.
- Double the wholesale tax on other tobacco products.
- Increase excise taxes on beer, wine and liquor by $18.1 million.
- Re-impose inheritance taxes for distant relatives, such as nieces, nephews
and non-relative heirs.
- Double the fees that corporations and nonprofit groups pay for the right to
do business in Kansas.
Governor Graves had proposed a $364 million tax package that contains many of
these same elements.
The House Plan
Rep. John Edmonds, R-Great Bend, the chairman of the House Taxation Committee,
recently proposed a $266 tax revenue plan. Like the Senate proposal, it includes
increases in the sales tax and excise taxes on cigarettes and tobacco products.
The current House budget would leave a $106 million shortfall -- and that is
if the House sticks to its plan to reduce the state's ending balance requirement
of 7.5 percent to 5 percent. Without that reduction, which frees up more than
$100 million, the shortfall would be $214 million. However, Governor Graves
has expressed reservations about reducing the state's ending balance requirement
because he believes it would worsen the state's cash flow problems.
So, we have until May 1st to let our legislators know about the needs of people
with disabilities and the long-term consequences of some of their budget decisions.
The Working Healthy program is a prime example of a way to increase the productivity
and decrease dependence of people with disabilities.
This newsletter and other Working Healthy program information can be found
online at:
http://das.kucrl.org/medicaid.html
Working Healthy is published quarterly by the KU Department of Health Policy
and Management, in cooperation with the KU Division of Adult Studies and the
Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services.
Additional copies and copies in alternate formats are available upon request
by writing the University of Kansas Department of Health Policy and Management,
c/o Division of Adult Studies, Attn: Noelle, 1122 West Campus Rd.. JRP Hall
Rm. 517, Lawrence, KS 66045, by phone (785) 864-7085, by email: pixie@ukans.edu
KU Research Team
Michael Fox, Principal Investigator
Jean Hall, Project Director
Noelle Kurth, Editor
Erin Rink, Research Assistant
SRS, Division of Health Care Policy
Marianne Deagle, Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary
Mary Ellen O_Brien Wright, Program Director
Sharon Johnson, Deputy Director