Gibbons holds back on proposed cuts for seniors, disabled
Betty Pone helps client Jan Moore decorate a decoration for New Years Eve at the Nevada Adult Day Healthcare Center Monday, December 29, 2009.
Friday, Feb. 19, 2010 | 4:26 p.m.
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After state officials were bombarded by complaints that Gov. Jim Gibbons' proposed budget cuts of programs for seniors and other vulnerable Nevadans were too draconian, Gibbons announced today that he was rescinding some of those measures.
Gibbons said he was able to make these adjustments thanks to a reduction in how much the state must pay the federal government for prescription drugs Nevadans receive that are paid for by Medicare, but were previously funded by the state’s Medicaid program. This change will save the state $16.3 million.
The governor that his plan to balance the state budget will protect medically fragile Nevadans, the mentally ill and developmentally disabled, while still responsibly cutting state spending.
Among the changes, Gibbons decided to reinstate adult day health care coverage in Medicaid. He also decided to continue covering adult dentures, which were originally proposed for elimination.
“I was simply not comfortable eliminating adult day health care because of the tremendous impact it would have on the 388 families that rely on this service,” Gibbons said. “We were only able to identify alternative services for about half of these people, and leaving them with nowhere to turn was not an acceptable option.”
Continuing adult day health care will also likely prevent many of these individuals from ending up in nursing homes, which ultimately would have cost the state more money.
Nevada Adult Day Healthcare Centers, which operates three facilities in Las Vegas, was among the service providers that had received a Feb. 12 letter indicating that Medicaid reimbursement for those services would end on March 16, pending final approval at a public hearing. The letters were sent by Charles Duarte, administrator of the state Division of Health Care Financing and Policy.
This morning, prior to the governor's announcement that the program would be spared, some clients and family members affiliated with Nevada Adult Day Healthcare Centers expressed their disappointment with Gibbons and the disruption to their lives that they were facing.
At those centers, they receive physical therapy and medication and have their vital signs checked regularly, services that would be difficult for them to receive if they stayed at home.
Among the distraught clients was Josephine Leu, a 60-year-old stroke victim who uses a wheelchair.
"I'd ask the governor if he wants to be the governor of the only state that forgets about its elderly and disabled," she said. "I've visited nursing homes and I don't want to be in one."
Ruth Green, 86, said she would be sitting at home with nothing to do if the Medicaid benefit took away her ability to attend the healthcare center five days a week.
A diabetic who uses a walker, Green said: "What I like about this place is that they see after me. If I was at home, I would just be sitting down, maybe laying in bed. I would not feel good."
Green's daughter, Deloris Brooks, said that she probably would have had to quit her job as an office manager and care for her mother full time had the Medicaid benefit been eliminated.
"That would be a hardship because my husband and I are upside down on our mortgage and we're trying to do a loan modification," Brooks said. "Adult day care has given my mother a new life. I don't know what I would do without it."
The governor also said he came to the realization that the decision to continue coverage of dentures made sense.
“Proper nutrition is essential for seniors to continue living independently, and without dentures its likely people’s health would deteriorate rapidly,” Gibbons said.
Among the other major changes to the governor’s budget proposal was re-establishing some housing assistance for Nevadans with developmental disabilities and those suffering from mental illness. Under Gibbons’ revised proposal, the state Division of Mental Health and Developmental Services will be able to maintain existing housing supports for the developmentally disabled while adding 120 placements in Southern Nevada and 64 placements in Northern Nevada.
On the mental health side, the change will allow the division to add 85 residential support placements in southern Nevada, which is the area of greatest need.
“These were recommendations made by the Department of Health and Human Services to reach a budget cut target,” Gibbons said. “Unfortunately to meet that target, we had to look at cutting services to those who are most vulnerable. We need to maintain these services.”
Other changes include reinstating funds for transitional rehabilitation services for people with brain injuries and community corrections services for juveniles that keep them out of institutions.
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No surprise - he changed his mind. Those in politices do this quite a bit and Gibbon's is probably more concerned with the senior citizen vote than he is the "teacher vote".
Thank you my son was in a car wreck in 07 and has TBI he recieves SSI and Medicaid. He just turned 18 and had no work record, but the little he gets helps a lot.
yea he definitely worried about senior and so does the other republican candidate. so senior do not back down if a republican get in there. they will your chopped legs off. do not trust them
What about the reduction in adult diapers? Nothing is mentioned about them. Reducing them from 300 a month to 186 is unacceptable. I hope this decision includes reaffirming the 300 adult diapers.
It will be a load off my mind. I can tell you that if the state returns to taking responsibility for taking care of their elderly destitute population, we will all be better off. People in Rascal Scooters and the WalMart electric carts deserve to be treated just the same as people without diapers. It's just fairness, people...
He is right we do vote Not only do we vote we vote every election. My vote is not for him he has shown his colors. If it was up to the tea baggers and him they would do away with SS and Medicare.
That someone could even dream this stuff up is unconscienable.
hey gibbons monkey...
you stole my line...
and...
we all know you don't have a single compassionate bone in your body...
you can pretend all you want...
but we know better...
besides...
compassion is very un-republican...
Mr. Gibbons is no fool. He put these cuts out there for his base...the locals of Lander County. He realize that he has to get "some" support from the good folks of Clark and Washoe Counties. Now he will sit back and let the legislature come in and do the dirty work and he will point fingers at them during his campaign events. The dems should've learned this from the last legislative session. This guy has no money (or ideas) for re-election, so he'll use the suffering of the good people of Nevada as campaign fodder. By the way...vouchers to pay teachers was a unique and STUPID idea.
Seniors need 300 diapers a month? What do they do all day just sit and go poop? 180 is still 6 diapers every day that seems adequate to me.
I highly deplore your comment, jlb101. You are not a senior citizen. Too often, we seniors will be riding on a city bus, or on the Senior shuttle here in Henderson, or at WalMart, and being aged, we need to discharge our waste immediately. Sure, we've lost our control, but remember, we're the ones that fought for you in Korea, Vietnam, 2 Iraq's, etc.
We seniors may have lost our internal strength, but we still are proud Americans filled with pride. We've supported our country, now it's your turn to pick up the loads. Have a great day...
Why Nevada will always be so far behind in the world.
NO RESEARCH UNIVERSITIES!!! Yes they cost money but the knowledge gained gets passed down from school to business to jobs. DUH!
Go suck a big one Gibbons! You are clueless about how to grow the economy. First comes brains, then inventions or patents, then business plans, then investment and then employees! Utah and many other states get it- why not Nevaduh?
SALT LAKE CITY -- Much of the research being done at the University of Utah is spun out into newfound companies, resulting in ongoing revenue for the school. For the past two years, the U. has rivaled the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for the number of start-ups it produces. This year, however, the Utes moved into a tie with the research giant, surpassing major players along the way.
Twenty new companies were formed during the 2008 fiscal year, ranking the U. first among other research institutions nationwide.
Now the screwy NutJobs have sunk to doing "diaper jokes" about the elderly. Sick.
Personally I think that the people who complain about the 300 diapers supplied per month need at aleast that many for the crap coming out of their mouths. Remember you will one day be in that position. Not wondering about this at all.
I am 100% behind NOT CUTTING funds for the disabled and the very elderly/infirm.
I will pay higher taxes for them if that is what is required.
This is not something that any lucid society in good conscience can ignore.
Once again to make this crystal clear, I will pay HIGHER taxes for them if that is what is required.
I wonder how much revenue the state can collect if they went after all the people who live here and register their car in another state. I used to work at a local casino in the players club. Do you know how many so called snow birds would register their address out of state but religiously be in the casino daily. Just ride through Boulder City and look at some of the cars parked in the driveways and start counting the money.
Speed,
Nevada has two research universities. University of Nevada, Reno and UNLV. UNR, in fact spends over $30,000 per pupil - which is more than the University of Texas.
Check out the data yourself at the Education Trust.
Comparing the University of Nevada campuses to the one in Austin is like comparing a monkey to King Kong.