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| NewsSaturday, August 25, 2007 8:18 PM CDT |
Governor’s budget cuts nixed funds for addiction treatment
BLOOMINGTON — Addiction treatment providers say they are starved for money and people are waiting for help, but one of the governor’s budget cuts on Thursday cut much-needed relief. Among $463 million in state budget cuts announced Thursday, Gov. Rod Blagojevich vetoed $6.6 million for the Department of Human Services for a cost-of-doing-business adjustment for addiction treatment providers. The money would have allowed for a 3 percent increase to cover the increased cost of goods and services. The governor has said he trimmed the money from the $59 billion state budget to help free money to expand a health insurance program for poor people. “This is somebody who said health care is a priority, and we have people in the state of Illinois who are in need of services. If that’s not health care, what is?” said Sara Moscato Howe, CEO of the Illinois Alcoholism and Drug Dependence Association. Moscato Howe said there have been two such increases, one of 2.5 percent and one of 3 percent, since fiscal year 2001. A spokesman with the governor’s Office of Management and Budget didn’t return a call Friday seeking comment. A recent University of Illinois at Chicago survey, which was commissioned by Moscato Howe’s association, indicated the average wait to get into a state-funded addiction treatment center was 32.4 days. About 6,100 people were waiting for treatment and 370 more were waiting for a higher level of treatment, the study showed. “We know that the $6.6 million would have allowed more people to receive assistance,” said state Sen. Bill Brady, R-Bloomington. Bill Brady said it doesn’t appear likely the governor’s budget vetoes will be overridden. Alan Sender, chief operating officer for Chestnut Health Systems, said the General Assembly’s version of the budget would have given more than $300,000 to Chestnut Health Systems’ facilities in McLean, Madison and St. Clair counties. The new money wouldn’t have increased capacity at his company’s facilities, but it would have covered increases in utility and medical costs and deserved raises for employees. “The General Assembly stepped up and recognized the substance abuse field, which has been neglected for a long time,” Sender said. But the governor’s cuts are “sort of a funny way of showing your support for health care,” Sender said. Moscato Howe said treatment centers are struggling to fill positions because pay is too low, and none of the treatment center officials she has talked said they can sustain operations at the current level of funding. State Rep. Dan Brady, R-Bloomington, said the governor’s health care goal is noble, but poorly timed. “While there are some positive points of this budget, this budget was not helpful to our social service agencies or our human service agencies of this state,” Dan Brady said. |
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