Archive for » July 1st, 2012«

State budget blocks funds for prisons, mental health facilities

By JASON KEYSER
Associted Press

July 1, 2012 5:20PM

FILE – In this June 1, 2012 file photo, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn speaks with reporters in his office at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield, Ill. The state Senate sent seven key budget bills and a technical measure allowing spending for fiscal 2013 to the Democratic governor’s desk Friday morning June 29, 2012. Aides to Quinn won’t say when he will act on the plan. But the government won’t shut down if it’s not done by Sunday _ the start of the state’s new financial year. Operations continue uninterrupted in the short term. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)


CHICAGO — Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn signed a $33.7 billion state budget Saturday that blocks the spending of millions of dollars the Legislature had allocated for prisons and mental health facilities that he is intent on shutting down to reduce costs.

The action sets the stage for another fight between the governor and lawmakers later this fall on how to spend the $57 million Quinn blocked. The governor made it clear he would like to redirect at least some of that money to the state agency in charge of caring for neglected and abused children.

The budget adopted by the General Assembly in May cut funds for the Department of Children and Family Services by $50 million, Quinn said. But to restore some of that by redirecting the prison funds, the governor will have to get lawmakers to go along.

“I think the cuts that I’ve made … should be considered for reallocation when the General Assembly comes back in the late part of November and into December,” Quinn told reporters in Chicago after signing the budget. “I think it’s important that we put a priority on children, especially abused and neglected children in Illinois.”

The governor’s plan to close prisons has generated opposition from unions representing prison staff and from Republican and Democratic lawmakers representing those areas. Quinn argues facilities like the “supermax” Tamms prison — which is half-empty and where the cost of housing inmates in isolation is three times higher than at other prisons — are too expensive to keep open when the budget is strained.

Opponents are worried about the jobs that will be lost and about the impact of moving prisoners to other facilities in Illinois’ already badly overcrowded prison network.

“It’s wrong to whipsaw taxpayers between safe prisons and safe kids. That’s a false choice,” said Anders Lindall, a spokesman for the largest union of state workers in Illinois, the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees Council 31.

“Rather than threatening irresponsible cuts to the state’s overcrowded and understaffed correctional system as the price of preventing disastrous reductions to child welfare, the governor should make clear to the General Assembly that its … cut to DCFS staff is unworkable and must be restored,” Lindall said.

Quinn’s plan also would close a prison in Dwight as well as halfway houses and two juvenile detention centers in Joliet and Murphysboro. In total, 57 state facilities would be closed or consolidated, including mental health and developmental disability centers.

That would save $82 million in the 2013 fiscal year, the governor’s office said.

In the case of Tamms, in southern Illinois, the governor offered Friday to sell the 14-year-old facility to the federal government, holding out the prospect that it could stay in operation. Its closure would mean about 300 layoffs in a part of the state hit hard by economic turmoil. Quinn’s administration maintains that with Department of Corrections attrition, jobs at other facilities should be available to everyone if they’re willing to relocate.

More than 1,000 correctional workers could get pink slips with the additional shutdowns.

In his remarks Saturday, Quinn acknowledged the cost in terms of jobs, but said, “We cannot just see state government putting facilities in places as an employment program.”

At his news conference, the governor did not highlight any other changes from the budget blueprint approved by the General Assembly.

It cuts education funding by $200 million and child welfare spending by $85 million. Overall, the budget reduces discretionary spending by $1.4 billion from the previous fiscal year. Republicans had sought even deeper reductions.

The budget also allocates $1.3 billion to pay down the state’s huge backlog in overdue bills.

Quinn has already signed legislation that saves more than $2 billion in Medicaid health care spending for the poor with $1.6 billion in cuts and millions more from a cigarette tax increase.

In one major setback for the governor, the General Assembly failed to adopt a plan during the spring legislative session to address the growing $83 billion in unfunded liability for the pensions of public sector employees — the state’s most pressing financial issue.

Since then, top Illinois lawmakers have failed to make any visible headway in negotiations on pension reform, and both parties have accused the other of seeking to stall the issue until after the November elections.

Quinn said Saturday that both sides must quickly press ahead on the issue. Otherwise, he said, core services such as education and public safety will suffer, as more money goes toward pensions. He noted that $5.3 billion of the new budget alone is going to the cost of public pensions.

“The crying need to have pension reform is now,” he said. “We just simply cannot afford this. The squeeze is on.”


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Scottish independence: Clash over non-Scots donations

Blair JenkinsMr Jenkins made his comments on the Sunday Politics Scotland programme

The head of the official campaign for Scottish independence has challenged the pro-Union camp over their acceptance of donations from people living outside Scotland.

Blair Jenkins was named chief executive of the Yes Scotland campaign last week.

He said the campaign would not accept donations of more than £500 from anyone not registered to vote in Scotland.

The pro-Union Better Together campaign said it would “absolutely” accept donations from elsewhere in the UK.

The launch of Yes Scotland was largely funded by £1m donations that were made to the SNP – which is playing a leading role in the campaign – from the late Scottish poet Edwin Morgan and Euromillions lottery winners Chris and Colin Weir.

But Mr Jenkins, a former head of news at BBC Scotland, said he was “absolutely determined” the vast majority of money spent by Yes Scotland would be raised directly by the campaign itself, and that it would be self-financed ahead of the referendum in 2014.

Donation rules

He told the BBC’s Sunday Politics Scotland programme: “There is evidence to suggest that most people in Scotland do feel quite strongly that the referendum campaign should be determined by the people who live in Scotland and who are going to make this decision.

“So what we said was we will not accept donations above £500 from anyone who was not a voter, who is not on the electoral register in Scotland, and I think that is a very important thing in terms of making sure that it is the people who are taking the decision in Scotland who are contributing to the campaign.

“I hope the No campaign will be as transparent about their funding, and who is backing them, as we intend to be.”

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

We will not accept foreign donations but we do not regard the rest of the UK as foreign donations”

End Quote
Richard Baker MSP
Better Together

His comments came after the SNP repeated its call for the anti-independence campaign to agree to voluntary donation rules ahead of the referendum.

The party released details of a YouGov opinion poll which suggested 53% of people in Scotland believed referendum donations should be controlled in this way, compared to 27% who disagree.

SNP campaign director Angus Robertson said that, until the anti-independence campaign agrees to voluntary rules on transparency, accusations would remain that it is being “flooded with money from outside Scotland”.

Mr Robertson said: “The No campaign is a Tory-led campaign – the last thing that people in Scotland want is for it to also be a Westminster Tory-funded campaign.”

Foreign donations

Scottish Labour MSP Richard Baker, one of the directors of Better Together, said the campaign would “absolutely” accept donations from elsewhere in the UK.

Speaking on the Sunday Politics Scotland programme he said: “What we said was that at the moment, because the SNP haven’t put forward the referendum bill yet, there are no rules yet governing donations.

“We have said that despite that, we will voluntarily abide by the appropriate legislation which is the Parties, Elections and Referendums Act, and that means we will not be accepting foreign donations, and will also be publishing on our website all donations above £7,500.

“So when Blair Jenkins talked about transparency in donations I am happy to agree with him on that and we will maintain the same level of transparency in terms our donations as well.”

He added: “We will not accept foreign donations but we do not regard the rest of the UK as foreign donations. We are fighting to keep the UK together and 800,000 Scots live and work in the rest of the UK.”


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London 2012 Olympics: Charities who lost funding to pay for the Games ‘won’t …

Channel 4’s Dispatches programme will tomorrow (Mon) show how ministers
originally pledged the cash would be returned to charities at the close of
this year’s games

In 2007 the Government diverted £675 million of lottery revenues to help pay
for the Olympics, around £425 million of which should have been distributed
by the Big Lottery Fund.

In June that year, following criticism of the arrangement, the then Olympics
Minister, Tessa Jowell, told the House of Commons that the Government had
agreed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Mayor of London, designed in
part to reimburse the Big Lottery Fund for lost revenues, by using the
proceeds from selling Olympics assets.

At the time she said this would: “Give lottery distributors real confidence
that the additional funding necessary for a successful Olympic and
Paralympic Games will be re-paid — providing them and the whole country with
a further 2012 dividend.”

The charities said their understanding was that the cash would returned
shortly after the Games came to an end.

But in response to a Parliamentary Question the Government said the money will
not be available for repayment for at least another decade.

John Penrose MP, the Olympics minister, stated: “The development of the
Olympic park is a long-term programme, with land sales due to take place
over a period of 25 years. Given the timescale of the development programme
and its dependence on market performance, we cannot be certain about the
timing, but the current estimate from the Olympic Park Legacy Company is
that the distributors should start to receive payments in the mid-2020s.”

The Department for Culture and Media said it was always the case that the
repayments would depend on the money raised by the long-term development of
the Olympic Park.

A DCMS spokesman said: “We have been clear right from the outset that the
payments can only be achieved over the longer term, given the 25 year
timescale of the Olympic Park development programme and its dependence on
market performance.”

* Dispatches: Cashing in on the Games, is on Channel
4
, on Monday, July 2, at 8pm.


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Rollerblading campaigner arrives in N.B.

CODY, Wyoming (Reuters) – A head-on collision in northwestern Wyoming on Saturday killed three older Boy Scouts, a toddler and a man, authorities said. The crash occurred on Highway 120, less than 20 miles south of the town of Meeteetse. It appears a Honda Element SUV with the man, who was in his 50s, and the three Boy Scouts veered into the opposite lane and struck an oncoming recreational vehicle, said Wyoming Highway Patrol Captain Len Declercq. The four were killed, along with a 3-year-old boy …


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Mental health needs high for indigenous

Mental health services for Aboriginal people in custody need to be developed urgently, according to a study that found most Queensland indigenous inmates suffered from a mental illness.

The Queensland Forensic Mental Health Services study of 419 indigenous men and women from six high-security prisons found that about 73 per cent of men and 86 per cent of women had a mental health disorder.

Women were more likely than men to report suffering from an anxiety, depressive or psychotic disorder, the study found.

Half the women suffered anxiety, about a third suffered depressive disorders and 23 per cent had a psychotic disorder.

This compared with 20 per cent of men with anxiety, 11 per cent with depression and eight per cent with a psychotic disorder.

The most common anxiety disorder among men and women was post-traumatic stress and the most prevalent depression disorder was major depression.

Most men and women – 66 per cent and 69 per cent respectively – had a substance misuse disorder, usually alcohol or cannabis dependence.

“These findings highlight a critical mental health need for these individuals, both in custody and during the transition back to their communities,” the report in the Medical Journal of Australia said.

“There remains an urgent need to develop and resource culturally capable mental health services for indigenous Australians in custody.”

Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists president Maria Tomasic said there was a shortage of culturally appropriate mental health services for indigenous people in rural and remote regions and in prisons.

Dr Tomasic said indigenous people experienced significantly higher rates of health problems and mental illness than other Australians.

“With such high rates of indigenous representation in prisons, indigenous mental health is a priority,” she said.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are 14 times more likely to be jailed than non-indigenous Australians, the report said.

Meanwhile, in a letter published in the MJA, Heart Foundation clinical issues director Robert Grenfell said hospitals needed to improve care of indigenous people experiencing symptoms of heart attack.

He said Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were less likely to receive the diagnostic tests and treatments they need and were therefore more likely to die of heart attack in hospital.


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Online Donations Help Reunite Filer Family with Newborn – Twin Falls Times

FILER • Michelle Roberts always dreamed of having children one day. So when she discovered she was pregnant with twins, she imagined how wonderful it would feel to leave the hospital with two bundles of joy.

Roberts has yet to experience that happiness.

The 30-year-old gave birth to a girl and a boy on April 12. Roberts and fiance Wayne Walrath named them Lucie and Jackson.

Lucie was born healthy, but her brother was diagnosed with hypoplasic left heart syndrome. It’s a rare congenital heart defect in which the left ventricle of the heart is severely underdeveloped.

Even before the birth, Roberts prepared herself for the fight ahead.

She started going into labor with 19 weeks left in her pregnancy. Doctors performed an emergency cerclage, stitching the cervix to hold it closed. The day of that procedure, she learned of her son’s heart defect. She was told Jackson could die in three days even with surgery, she said.

Roberts and Walrath cried the whole way home and were scared of the possibility of bringing a child into the world only to watch him die.

They didn’t buy Jackson a crib or clothes. It would be too much to bear if they lost him and had to put those things away.

“I’ll never forget the words ‘We have another wrinkle; there is something wrong with your little boys heart,’” Roberts wrote on a website her sister Christine Alonso set up seeking to raise money for the family. The fundraising helps cover travel costs and mounting bills at home in Filer.

Just days after his birth in Boise, Jackson was on a flight with three nurses headed for Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital in San Francisco.

Jackson is expected to be there until August when he is 4 months old to undergo the second of four major operations. The third is planned when he is 3 years old, and the last step is a heart transplant.

Roberts and Lucie have been by Jackson’s side the entire time. Walrath stays behind in Idaho to work to pay the bills and keep their medical insurance. Walrath hoped to be by his family’s side on Father’s Day, but they didn’t have enough money.

That’s what influenced Alonso to start fundraising so the family could be reunited, if only for a while. By June 25 the site raised $2,700, so Walrath was able to fly to San Francisco in June.

“It feels really good. I’m glad to be with my family and lucky to be where we are,” Walrath said by telephone. “It’s something you don’t expect to be a part of.”

The money donated online is directly deposited into Walrath’s PayPal account and was responsible for his weeklong trip.

It was important for him to be with his fiance and children because Jackson was having a gastric tube surgically inserted into his stomach.

“It’s pretty significant for him,” Roberts said.

Though Jackson’s health is improving, he has episodes of bradycardia or a low heart rate that is keeping him from returning home. He may need a pacemaker, so mother and twins may be in the hospital for at least another two or three months, Roberts said.

For now, the family takes pleasure in being together and being thankful for Lucie’s health.

“Lucie’s totally laid-back and I seriously don’t know what I’d do right now if she wasn’t,” Roberts said. “Jackson does everything at his own pace. He’s very alert and focused on people. He’s a little fussy and he loves to be held, he loves to cuddle.”

Roberts said Jackson and Lucie like to nap together and hang out in his hospital crib.

“I love my babies so much,” Roberts said. “Jackson and Lucie now have their own cribs waiting at home for them. We have two of everything.”


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Local Churches and Charities Help Victims of Colorado Fires

Amid the destruction of the Waldo Canyon fire in central Colorado, local churches and charity organizations have quickly mobilized to meet the needs of neighbors fleeing the fire.

New Life Church in Colorado Springs has been a hub of disaster relief activities since the fire started roaring down mountain ranges to within a few miles of the city’s limits earlier this week.

“We don’t wish for these kinds of tragedies, but in these kinds of times this is the church’s finest hour,” New Life pastor Brady Boyd explained to reporters. “This is when the church can be the church. Our people from across the city are responding.”

New Life members, like many other local organizations, moved to action as the fire rushed closer. “They took people in their homes. They took food down to the food banks. There were people that were moving horses, livestock out of danger, they’ve volunteered all that,” Brady said.

Four semi-trailers full of food and basic provisions have arrived at New Life. As many evacuations have yet to be lifted, the church has also set up a housing network to help victims of the fire connect with others willing to open their homes to evacuated families.

Three Catholic Charities affiliates near Denver and Colorado Springs have sent financial donations, relief supplies, and food to shelters near the blaze. Samaritan’s Purse has coordinated disaster relief teams near other fires, offering basic necessities to evacuees and starting the clean-up process with families who lost everything to the blazes.

As Heritage’s Jennifer Marshall and James Carafano have explained, part of what makes churches and local faith-based organizations invaluable to disaster relief efforts is their intimate knowledge of the lives and needs of their communities. In addition to the social services provided year round by charities, local community organizations’ situational awareness and physical proximity allows them to swiftly meet their neighbors’ needs.

The integral position of local churches and faith-based organizations should reaffirm the importance of these institutions for the health of civil society. However, increasing government overreach and disregard for the groups’ religious freedom to continue helping others in accordance with their faith—the same faith that motivates them to serve in the first place—threatens these invaluable institutions.

Ironically, while faith-based charities were helping victims of Colorado’s fires this week, the Supreme Court upheld Obamacare, which would force such religious organizations to violate their beliefs by providing life-ending services in insurance plans. Policymakers and all Americans should be vigilant to protect the integral work of faith-based groups by respecting and defending their religious freedom.


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Mental health needs high for indigenous



Mental health services for Aboriginal people in custody need to be developed urgently, according to a study that found most Queensland indigenous inmates suffered from a mental illness.


THE Queensland Forensic Mental Health Services study of 419 indigenous men and women from six high-security prisons found that about 73 per cent of men and 86 per cent of women had a mental health disorder.

Women were more likely than men to report suffering from an anxiety, depressive or psychotic disorder, the study found.

Half the women suffered anxiety, about a third suffered depressive disorders and 23 per cent had a psychotic disorder.

This compared with 20 per cent of men with anxiety, 11 per cent with depression and eight per cent with a psychotic disorder.

The most common anxiety disorder among men and women was post-traumatic stress and the most prevalent depression disorder was major depression.

Most men and women – 66 per cent and 69 per cent respectively – had a substance misuse disorder, usually alcohol or cannabis dependence.

“These findings highlight a critical mental health need for these individuals, both in custody and during the transition back to their communities,” the report in the Medical Journal of Australia said.

“There remains an urgent need to develop and resource culturally capable mental health services for indigenous Australians in custody.”

Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists president Maria Tomasic said there was a shortage of culturally appropriate mental health services for indigenous people in rural and remote regions and in prisons.

Dr Tomasic said indigenous people experienced significantly higher rates of health problems and mental illness than other Australians.

“With such high rates of indigenous representation in prisons, indigenous mental health is a priority,” she said.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are 14 times more likely to be jailed than non-indigenous Australians, the report said.

Meanwhile, in a letter published in the MJA, Heart Foundation clinical issues director Robert Grenfell said hospitals needed to improve care of indigenous people experiencing symptoms of heart attack.

He said Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were less likely to receive the diagnostic tests and treatments they need and were therefore more likely to die of heart attack in hospital.


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People with mental illness need and deserve parity of coverage

Having health insurance in Michigan doesn’t help much if you’re a family dealing with mental illness. In fact, it can actually hurt — because mental health services offered by Medicaid or local Community Mental Health agencies sometimes are broader and more effective than those offered through private insurance.

Michigan law allows insurance companies, in effect, to discriminate against mentally ill people and their families by not requiring insurance to cover treatment for mental illnesses, such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, in the same way insurance covers treatment for other medical needs.

Nearly 2 million privately insured Michigan residents — those who are insured through small businesses not covered by federal parity laws — lack adequate coverage for mental health treatment. They go without needed services or pay $2,000 or $3,000 a month or more for needed mental health treatments such as therapy, psychiatric visits and hospital stays. Psychiatric medications alone can cost more than $1,000 a month.
Related:
• Read Jeff Gerritt’s ongoing Criminal Negligence series on mental health and the justice system.

You’ll meet a few of these folks today, including Paula Eifler, who took out a second mortgage to pay for her son’s mental health treatment, and Coleen Wilsdon, who eventually had to file for bankruptcy. For others, inadequate treatment has led to costly jail or prison sentences and hospital stays.

The state took a small step forward this year when legislators approved bills that would require insurers to cover autism treatment. But the autism-treatment law is barely a start when mental illness affects far more people.

Legislators need to finish the job by approving a comprehensive plan for behavioral health coverage, as proposed in Senate Bill 50. Despite the fears of business interests, broader coverage would raise overall insurance premiums by less than 1% — and the payback far exceeds the cost as fewer people end up behind bars or in need of public services.

Neither the state nor its residents can afford discriminatory insurance policies that continue to punish mentally ill people and their families.


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Donate to the Westborough Food Pantry

The Westborough Food Pantry is located at 9 East Main St., Westborough, in the back of Forbes Community House. Since its beginning, it has been the goal of the Pantry to treat our clients with dignity and respect, while fulfilling the requirements of our partner agencies. We try to offer a well-rounded array of foods for their weekly selection and offer, as well, some basic non-food items such as paper products and personal care products on a rotation basis.

The Food Pantry is open for business on Thursdays, 9:30-11:30 a.m. and 7-8 p.m.; clients can choose to come either time, as it best fits into their family’s lifestyle. You must arrive 15 minutes before closing. Where there are quantity limitations, those limits are posted clearly on the shelves or on the refrigerators. Please do not donate out of date, rusty, badly dented or opened products. They cannot be distributed. If a food product is not appropriate to serve to your family, it is not appropriate to serve to a needy family. Our focus is strictly food and personal products; we cannot accept clothes, toys, books, sports equipment, pet food, or medicinal supplements. We do not have the capacity to store and distribute these items.

Donations will be accepted during hours of operation. Otherwise food may be dropped of at the Fire Department at 42 Milk St. or at any house of worship in Westborough.


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