Awakening The Spirit Print E-mail

During the week of June 22nd, Margaret Hoffmann, Community Support Services Director, Service Coordinators Nakeyia Younger and Jason Hocker, and Brian Doyle, Associate Executive Director, traveled to Baldwinsville, a small town outside of Syracuse to work with three of the person’s for whom we provide services in an extraordinary two-day experience in person-centered work: Awakening the Spirit

This immersion conference, sponsored by Onondaga Community Living, was a unique opportunity to work with and learn from Dr. Beth Mount and Executive Director of Onondaga Community Living, Pat Frantangelo, both pioneers in individualized supports.

We, along with other agencies from across the state, discussed and hammered out how to move forward with innovative and individualized services. During the conference, we worked with three individuals – Marsha Koument, Phillip Velonis, and Brenda Berryan, to look deeply into their life histories, the important relationships in their lives, their choices, preferences, dreams, goals, as well as their vulnerabilities and needs. Through these very far reaching discussions and utilizing person centered tools developed by Onondaga Community Living, we learned much more then is ordinarily discovered through the typical ISP process.

Marsha, Phillip and Brenda were refreshingly forthcoming, candid and insightful in speaking about who they really are as persons and what they really want for their lives. Perhaps most importantly we learned a great deal of the gifts they have to offer those around them.

Through a new pilot “Portal” Program introduced by OMRDD, we will now be working with Marsha, Phillip and Brenda, as well as several other people to develop highly individualized plans and supports that will help them move toward their dreams and desires in a deliberate and focused way. Once again, we look to live our Mission: To offer people with intellectual and other developmental disabilities opportunities to live and experience full lives.

 
OMR/DD Commissioner’s Forum Testimony Print E-mail

Recently, OMR/DD’s Commissioner, Diana Jones Ritter announced a series of Public Forums to gather input as she and her staff develop OMRDD’s Statewide Comprehensive Plan for Services for the Period 2009 through 2013.Anumber of family members, service providers, self advocates and other stakeholders presented testimony to the Commissioner. At the June 15th forum, conducted in Kingston, I presented the following testimony.

-Brian Doyle 

Good afternoon.  My name is Brian Doyle, Associate Executive Director for Ulster-Greene ARC.  First, I want to thank Commissioner Jones Ritter for conducting this series of forums and in particular for posing the questions posted in the forum announcement.  Those questions are certainly pertinent to the many challenges and opportunities we face today.  I wish to address my remarks to the question of what steps need to be taken to make the developmental disabilities system more person centered and individualized.

Ulster-Greene ARC provides services and supports to nearly 1,200 individuals within Ulster and Greene Counties. Our 50 year old agency, a chapter of NYSARC, is a provider of a wide range of traditional program models.  Through various evolutions of thought and discussion with various stakeholders, we have recently adopted our new Mission Statement, “To offer people with intellectual and other developmental disabilities opportunities to lead and experience full lives”.  We have embarked, over the past year, on a vigorous effort to direct our energy toward a more person centered approach with self directed services as a centerpiece.  We are aggressively pursuing Consolidated Support Services/Self Determination and engaging in OMRDD’s Portal Pilot, as well as surveying other provider agencies for related best practices throughout the state.  While we will continue to pursue person centeredness through these unique opportunities, we are also committed to challenging ourselves in our more traditional programs so that even in those program models, the dreams and desires of the individuals we serve are at the forefront.

We applaud and are grateful for your commitment toward this more individualized approach, but we must ask for a greater level of consistency in the messages sent to us by OMRDD. 

The Division of Quality Management (DQM) is spearheading the use of National Core Indicators (NCI) as a true measure of quality.  The NCI certainly does speak to all of the meaningful elements of OMRDD’s mission; however, we and other providers, on a daily basis, experience DQM program surveys that speak far more to the minutia of regulatory compliance than to the profound meaning and purpose of our supports and services as they impact people’s lives. 

We certainly recognize the need to satisfy federal regulations and preserve the safety and wellbeing of the individuals for whom we care. However, there is no doubt that the increasingly onerous approach taken in the DQM surveys of certified programs at best distracts our staff from the mission that we and OMRDD share. At worst they run counter to our desire for our staff and programs to take risks as they center their attention on enriching the lives of the people we serve.   

Some examples:  

The ever expanding array of “safeguards” that proliferate in Individual Service Plans create a risk averse climate where individuals and staff are intimidated away from focusing on what the person truly wants for themselves.  

Because survey citations result in plans of corrective action which, virtually every time, we are told, must address “systemic changes”, we put in place a tangle of “to do”, “must do” and “can’t do” lists and checklists, all of which create a labyrinth of belts and suspenders intended to make for some unattainable 100% fail-safe world.  

When we insist that a Residential Manager concentrates on keeping a case of canned goods off the floor of the food pantry we are keeping her from the vital work of supporting people meaningfully in their home, relationships, and their work.

We are therefore asking that OMRDD closely examine the survey process both in tone and substance and seek to re-tool it towards a greater emphasis in those quality indicators reflected in the National Core Indicators.  

Again, I thank you for this opportunity to speak and thank you for the leadership you, and your executive and DDSO staff are providing in these difficult times.

 Respectfully submitted, 

Brian Doyle
Associate Executive Director
Ulster-Greene ARC
471 Albany Avenue
Kingston, NY  12401
(845)331-4300 x218
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New Palmer project was started Print E-mail

Our Palmer location will be getting new expanded facilities for which the groundwork has just started.

 More information coming soon :-)

 
UGARC's pilot industries receives a nearly $400,000 vocational grant Print E-mail

Pilot Industries, a division of Ulster-Greene ARC,  has received a multi-year grant from the NYS Office of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities (OMRDD)  to provide Highly specialized vocational training to people with autism and other intellectual and developmental disabilities who face challenges to employment.  The five year grant, in the amount of nearly $400,000, allows for intensive job training and supports to assure appropriate job placement and success.

Mike Lamoree, Director of Life Services at the not-for-profit Ulster-Greene ARC, said that this grant will help several people who have long-desired to work but could not because of the challenges of their disabilities.  "This grant offers them and us an opportunity to provide individual training and supports that can help them attain and keep employment.  It's all about personal choice and helping people to become more independent."

 

 

 

 
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