Plans
Underway to Get Mental Health Consumers Out of Adult Homes
By
Jota Borgmann, Senior
Staff Attorney, MFY Legal Services, Inc.
And
into other, hopefully better, housing options
Many
New York City adult home residents with mental illness are unsure
what opportunities they have to move to community housing. In 2009, a
federal court held that New York’s practice of segregating
thousands of people with mental illness in large adult homes is
discrimination in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
In April 2012, that decision was vacated on appeal on a technical
ground, but the trial court’s finding of discrimination was not
questioned.
Two
important things have happened in the last year. First, in August
2012, the State Office of Mental Health issued a request for
proposals for supported housing providers to create 1,050 housing
units for adult home residents in Brooklyn and Queens. The supporting
housing providers who were awarded contracts include: Jewish Board
of Family and Children's Services, FEGS Health and Human Services,
Institute for Community Living, Transitional Services for New York,
Comunilife, and
Federation of Organizations. Those providers, along with Health Homes
and Managed Long Term Care Plans, should be reaching out to residents
in Brooklyn and Queens adult homes soon and some have already begun.
January
16, 2013, the State Department of Health (DOH) issued new rules about
certain adult homes, which it calls “transitional adult homes.”
Transitional adult homes are adult homes with 80 beds or more where
at least 25% of the residents have a serious mental illness. The new
regulations say that these adult homes cannot admit new residents who
have a serious mental illness. They also require the homes to create
compliance plans. An adult home’s plan must set forth how the home
will reduce the number of residents with a serious mental illness by
placing them in housing in the community. The plan must also identify
how the home will meet the needs of its residents while implementing
the plan, including how it will help residents develop independent
living skills and ensure they have access to mental health services.
The
selected (see
sidebar) adult
homes must come up with compliance plans by May 16, 2013. If a
transitional adult home fails to submit a compliance plan, the DOH
will make a compliance plan for it. The DOH has to review the plans
and decide whether to approve them by August 14, 2013. Once
approved, adult homes must implement the plans over a reasonable
period of time.
If
you live in a transitional adult home and you are a person with a
serious mental illness, the adult home’s compliance plan should
provide you with other housing options. This process could take
several years. Note that the regulation does not require the adult
home to move all residents with serious mental illness, but merely
to reduce the percentage of residents with mental illness below 25%.
Residents
at some adult homes have reported receiving misinformation from
adult home staff about the regulations; for example, they report
that they have been told that homes will soon close or that they
will have to be transferred to a nursing home. No adult homes have
closed as a result of the regulations and the regulations do not
require that residents be moved to a nursing home as part of any
compliance plan.
Note:
Adult home residents in New York City who have questions about
supported housing or the transitional adult home regulations can
call MFY
toll-free
at (877)
417-2427.
Pullout:
“If you live in a transitional adult home and you are a person
with a serious mental illness, the adult home’s compliance plan
should provide you with other housing options.”
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ReplyDeletethank you Kokobee. we publish twice per year, summer and winter editions. we also have volunteer editing and paid sales jobs available if you know anyone who might be interested.
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