11 minute read
Regional News
Backlog of cases alarms advocates
Minnesota regulators charged with protecting vulnerable adults have been falling behind in their duties. The backlog of pending maltreatment investigations has doubled in the past four years. The agency responsible for looking into complaints has failed to report the problem to the Minnesota Legislature as the law requires. The situations alarms advocates who are demanding change.
The backlog of pending maltreatment investigations grew to 724 cases at the end of 2012, according to figures released by the Department of Human Services (DHS).
Roberta Opheim, a state consumer advocate for people in mental health and developmentally disabled programs, said the growing backlog is troubling.
“If the backlog is doubling, that means they are not doing the investigations they need to get done,” Rep. Tom Huntley, DFL-Duluth, who chairs a committee that oversees the agency’s budget, told the Star Tribune. “That means it’s going to cost more money because you presumably have to hire more investigators to do the job. It’s important to protect the well-being of the people in our care.”
DHS Inspector General Jerry Kerber said the growing backlog does not mean the agency is unable to protect vulnerable adults. He said investigators prioritize cases, taking the most serious allegations first; some cases that may be delayed are less urgent or do not involve an immediate threat to safety, he said. But Kerber also said state officials hear from families of vulnerable adults and others who aren’t getting investigation results. The agency, he said, is meeting its statutory requirements by notifying those involved when investigations stretch on.
DHS is asking state lawmakers to restructure some licensing and monitoring functions in home- and community-based services. ■ (Source: Star Tribune) Families interested in signing up for the monthly
Student videos spotlight disabilities
One by one, students appear in the video they know their entire school will see. While teens tend to shun labels, these students willingly show theirs. Anoka High School students made the videos, in which they spoke openly about their disabilities. The video has helped educate everyone at the school.
“Before the movie, they, like, kids, wouldn’t even talk to me,” said ninth grader Jordan Peschong. “They said, ‘I didn’t even know you had a disability.’” He was injured while in child care years early, and sustained injuries from shaken baby syndrome. He is stressed in crowds and is bothered by loud noises.
Anoka special education teacher Ann Sarazin asked her students if they wanted to make the videos as a way of teaching others about disability. Working with members of the Anoka High School student council, the teens came up with the idea of a Disabilities Week at Anoka, where mainstream peers could learn about a different disability each day, and what it’s like to be a student living with a disability. The video was shown to the entire high school student body and met a very positive response. ■ (Source: KARE 11 News)
Facility is under investigation
A Chisholm assisted living facility is under scrutiny by the Minnesota Department of Health. State officials began an investigation after a developmensoaked chair. Documents related to the case were released in mid-April in the investigation of Hillcrest Terrace of Chisholm.
Reports indicate that the man, who is diabetic, had to be taken to the hospital after he was found unresponsive in his room earlier this year. The man’s care required that his blood sugar levels be monitored daily. But his blood sugar was found to be low, and he had a urinary tract infection. His room at the care facility was filthy and in disarray, with mold present. The room also had a strong smell of enzymatic cleaner, which staff would pour onto the carpet straight from the bottle without diluting. The man has since returned to the facility and been given a new room. ■ (Source: WCCO TV. Star Tribune) Families can try out travel
Travel can be stressful for anyone, but for children with autism, crowded airports and security screenings can be a difficult experience. Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport and Autism Society of Minnesota have launched a new program to help children and families prepare for air travel.
“We were really nervous about how the airport would go, it’s a lot of new things all in the same day,” Matt Nielsen told KARE-11 News. Two of Matt and Melissa’s four children, five-year-old Charlotte and two-year-old Elaine, were diagnosed with autism. The family follows a strict routine to help the children.
The training allows families to see how airport travel would work, without the travel. Families and children can face the sensory issues associated with travel and use that experience on a trip. Volunteers lead the families through every step in the airport process, from security, to finding their way through the crowds, and even practicing the boarding process and finding their seats. The Autism Society says it’s a helpful lesson not only for families, but for airport workers too.
tally disabled man was found unresponsive in a urineairport visits can sign up through the Autism Society of Minnesota’s website, or through Fraser, an autism services provider, at fraser.org ■ (Source: KARE 11 News)
Guilty plea in scooter accident
A Hibbing man has pleaded guilty in the traffic death of a 78-year-old man who was riding his mobility scooter on a road in northern Minnesota. Lyle White pleaded guilty April 23 in Itasca County court to criminal vehicular homicide. Court documents indicate that White drove his pickup over a hill in September 2012. The truck collided with Eugene Paul Zeroth of Princeton, who was riding a scooter.
Under a negotiated plea, White would receive a sentence of more than four years in prison. The prison sentence would be stayed and White would be placed on supervised probation for 10 years, with conditions. Those conditions include White serving a year in jail or six months in jail and a year on electronic home monitoring. Sentencing is set for June 24. ■ (Source: WCCO TV)
Bankruptcy affects Scooter Store outlets
The Scooter Store, a Texas-based company that supplies power wheelchairs and scooters to people with limited mobility, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Last month’s bankruptcy filing in Delaware comes after federal agents raided the company’s South Texas headquarters earlier this year, and amid Congressional scrutiny of whether TV ads by The Scooter Store and a rival company target people who don’t need scooters, leading to hundreds of millions of dollars in unnecessary Medicare spending.
The Scooter Store has shed hundreds of jobs in recent months, with its workforce dwindling from about 2,400 down to about 300. The company’s bankruptcy filing cited changes in health care laws and government investigations as financial burdens. It listed assets between $1 million and $10 million, and liabilities between $50 million and $100 million.
Call to Minnesota outlets of The Scooter Store found disconnected numbers or messages stating that stores were operating with limited staff and not taking new orders. ■ (Source: Associated Press, Access Press staff)
History note - from p. 2 System by Theodore Wirth and City of Parks by David C. Smith.
The group Minnesota Community Sings is trying to bring those days back, with an event May 18 in Minneapolis. Information about that event is on this month’s Accessible Fun page. ■
Information for this article came from Minnesota Community Sings.
The History Note is a monthly column sponsored by the Minnesota
Governor’s Council on Developmental Disabilities, www.mncdd.org and www.partnersinpolicymaking.com
PEOPLE & PLACES
Retired St. Peter Regional Treatment Center employee Martin Larson and maintenance supervisor Pat Kennedy labor to open the time capsule. Photos courtesy of Minnesota DHS
Employees, clients and retirees gathered at the St. Peter Regional Treatment Center’s Tomlinson Gym recently to open, with some effort and a cloud of dust, a time capsule. The time capsule was uncovered during a remodeling project. Items inside dated from the 1950s and early 1960s. The time capsule was inside the wall of Schantz Hall, which was completed in 1961 and opened in 1962. The building is named for Dr. Sam Schantz, a former medical superintendent.
“There was a plaque on the wall so we knew it was in there somewhere,” said Jamie Fromm, a supervisor with the Minnesota Sex Offender Program, which operates in the building where the time capsule was found. “But they wouldn’t let me take
St. Peter Treatment Center time capsule opened after more than 50 years
down a wall just to find it. Ever since the remodeling started, I’ve been excited to get it out and see what’s inside.”
Maintenance Supervisor Pat Kennedy and retiree Martin Larson pried open the time capsule lid on April 4. Larson, who retired from the St. Peter facility in 1981, pulled out a stack of papers and a set of keys. Included were several pictures, a copy of the patient newspaper from 1961, a civil service salary plan (1959-1961), a hospital Christmas card and a budget presentation to the 1961 Minnesota Legislature, along with numerous other mementoes.
Larson began working at the facility on Easter Monday 1950, according to the St. Peter Herald newspaper. He worked as a security guard and carpenter at St. Peter and in St. Paul as the public welfare’s representative at the state architect’s office
Louie McGee is no ordinary sixth-grader. McGee, a student at Highland Catholic School in St. Paul, was honored April 10 with an engraved silver medallion to recognize his selection as one of Minnesota’s top two 2013 youth volunteers for The Prudential Spirit of Community Awards program.
The award was presented at an all-school Mass and assembly. Highland Catholic is the parish school for Lumen Christi Catholic Community in St. Paul.
McGee, who is blind, was honored for leading a team that has raised more than $40,000 over the past six years. McGee and his team participate in an annual fundraising walk to fight diseases that cause blindness.
Not only did McGee receive a medal, he also received $1,000 and an all-expensepaid trip in early May to Washington, D.C. There he joined 101 other top honorees from across the country for several days of national recognition events. During the trip, ten young people were to be named America’s top youth volunteers for 2013.
The Prudential Spirit of Community Awards, conducted by Prudential Financial in partnership with the National Association of Secondary School Principals, represents the United States’ largest youth recognition program based exclusively on volunteer community service. All middle and high schools in the U.S., along with all Girl Scout councils, county 4-H organizations, Red Cross chapters, YMCAs and affiliates of HandsOn Network, are eligible to select a student or member for a local Prudential Spirit of Community Award last November. Each state has two honorees, one in middle school and one in high school. Also feted are a select number of Distinguished Finalists from each state and the District of Columbia. In selecting the winners, criteria are looked at including personal initiative, effort, impact and personal growth. ■ and a consultant in planning the new security hospital. He retired in 1981.
Larson has written two books about the state hospital. He told those at the time capsule opening that Schantz Hall was the first of three treatment buildings built in the 1960s.
Attendees at the opening crowded around the time capsule to get a closer look and share memories. Many recognized the names of those mentioned in the uncovered materials. Some also talked about what might go into the next time capsule.
“It’s fun to think that in 50 years another group of people could be right here opening up a time capsule we’ve buried,” Fromm said. “I hope we can do as well as the people who put this one together.”
The St. Peter Herald has a gallery of pictures online of the time capsule opening, at http:// tinyurl.com/ch3o9yd
State programs for persons with disabilities have operated at the St. Peter Regional Treatment Center since 1866. At that time state lawmakers approved the building of a state hospital for the insane, hoping to reduce the growing amount of mentally ill people in jails throughout the state. They first had to find an area willing to deed 20 acres of land for the hospital.
While many communities were reluctant to consider being the home to the hospital, St. Peter leaders bought a 210-acre farm for $7,000 and lent it to the state. The first patient checked in December 6, 1866. In 1911, the St. Peter Hospital for the Insane officially opened. It became the Minnesota Security Hospital and later parts of the larger St. Peter Regional Treat-
Sixth grader wins national award
ment Center. ■
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