| 5.22.2003
Advocates
for the Retarded Take Fight to Save Fernald Center to the Senate and
Present Cost Study Showing that No Savings are Realized When State Facilities
are Closed
[View more photos]
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| State
legislators join members of COFAR to show their support for keeping
Fernald open. |
BOSTON—The
fight to save The Fernald Center and other remaining state facilities
for the mentally retarded from closure moved into a new phase Wednesday
as advocates took their case for the facilities to the state Senate.
In a news conference
in the ornate Senate Reading Room, the Coalition of Families and Advocates
for the Retarded (COFAR) handed lawmakers and aides copies of a newly
published cost study that challenges the widely held view that community-based
care for the retarded is less expensive than institutional care.
The Statehouse event,
which was hosted jointly be COFAR and State Reps. Brad Hill (R-Boxford)
and Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester), was held as the Senate Ways and Means
Committee released its Fiscal Year 2004 budget plan, which contained
language protecting the state facilities from closure. The language,
which was inserted in the Senate budget bill by Sen. Susan Fargo (D-Lincoln),
was similar to that approved by the House last month. It would require
that a cost-benefit analysis be done before the doors to the facilities
could be shut and their residents transferred to other locations. It
also requires that no resident be moved out of Fernald to a community
setting unless and until that resident is guaranteed the equal or better
care and the cost of that care is the same or less than that provided
by the state facility.
Currently, there
are no community residences in Massachusetts that can provide the same
level of care for the severely mentally retarded as is provided at state-of-the
art facilities like The Fernald Center. And, as the study shared with
the Senate makes clear, there is no way to provide that level of care
at a lower cost.
During
Wednesday's news conference, state Rep. Angelo Scaccia (D-Boston) urged
some 40 COFAR volunteers in attendance to keep up their lobbying pressure
at the Statehouse.
"You folks have
been victorious because you have a passion for your family members (who
live in the state facilities)," Scaccia said. "You'll win this one too.
But you have to stay in there. You have to work at it."
The COFAR members
spent the remainder of the afternoon on Wednesday delivering copies
of the cost study on institutional versus community-based care to lawmakers'
offices and talking to the legislators or their aides about supporting
of the facility-protection language in the budget.
During Wednesday's
news conference, several speakers stressed the importance of the cost
study which was published this month in the prestigious journal Mental
Retardation. The review of more than 250 studies done over the past
quarter century concludes that many of those studies, which showed budgetary
savings in community-based care, failed to control for a wide range
of variables. Those variables include geography, staffing levels, and
the severity of the mental retardation of the groups being compared.
Studies that did control more accurately for those variables did not
report savings in the cost of care in the community.
"Year after year,
all we hear is that it's more expensive to keep people in the state
facilities," said Larry Harding, a COFAR board member. "This cost study
punches a hole in that myth."
Mark Booher, a COFAR
member and a licensed psychologist, noted that the literature review
itself had been peer reviewed and had limited its analysis to studies
that had followed strict standards of scholarship.
COFAR President
Thomas Frain said he felt the cost review confirmed his long-held view
that the cost of care rises and falls with the level of disability of
the person in question. "Most retarded people are alone. Elected officials
are what stand between suffering and isolation on the one hand and the
very best care on the other."
Rep. Thomas Stanley
(D-Waltham), who led the effort in the House to insert the facility-protection
language in the budget bill, maintained that the administration has
committed a "rush to judgment" in targeting the state facilities for
closure. Not only have the administration's savings projections in closing
Fernald been cut in half in recent weeks, but the administration has
yet to provide any financial details backing up those projections, Stanley
said. He said he has continued to request those details from the Department
of Mental Retardation.
Rep. Carol Donovan
(D-Reading) told the group that while she believes community-based care
is the best alternative for those whose mental retardation is not severe,
she also believes the majority of the residents of the state facilities
would not be likely to receive adequate service in the community. "I
will do whatever I can to keep these institutions open," she said.
Sen. Tarr thanked
the COFAR volunteers for attending Wednesday's event. "We will have
to make some difficult decisions," he said. "Your being here will make
a difference."
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