Hospital Visitation Guidance

With the uptick in Covid-19 cases and the upcoming flu season, ENYDDA wanted to make sure all of our members had access to the current OPWDD guidelines regarding visitation during the hospitalization of any one with developmental disabilities. Below is the link to OPWDD’s guidance that was issued on 6/7/21 and remains in effect currently.

OPWDD Announces Federal Approval

OPWDD Announces Federal Approval of New Changes to Appendix K
November 18, 2021

Essential Investments In Direct Support Workforce Coming Soon

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

The Office for People With Developmental Disabilities (OPWDD) is pleased to announce federal approval of new changes to the OPWDD Appendix K which will allow for essential investments in the direct support workforce of our service providers. OPWDD is making these needed investments to help immediately address the workforce shortage our service system currently faces.

The new investments include:

COVID-19 Workforce Performance Incentives

Workforce Longevity and Retention Bonuses

COVID-19 Vaccination Incentive Payments

The Appendix K is a set of changes applied to the OPWDD Comprehensive Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) Waiver to address COVID-19. Federal approval is an important step in providing the workforce investments included in the NYS American Rescue Plan Act Spending Plan and will allow OPWDD to begin distribution of financial resources to provide relief to Direct Support Professionals and Family Care providers.

OPWDD will begin implementing these provisions immediately by providing additional information to provider agencies and fiscal intermediaries (for the incentives and bonuses to be distributed to self-directed staff).  OPWDD will ask providers to complete a survey about their DSP workforce so that appropriate Workforce Performance and Vaccination incentives can be calculated. We will also ask providers to complete an attestation that the funds will be used as intended for DSPs and Family Care providers. Longevity Bonus payments will begin to be paid out following the return of a completed attestation; the Retention Bonus payment will be paid later this state fiscal year. Providers are being asked to work quickly to return the necessary information to OPWDD. We expect to be able to release the Incentive Payments in early 2022 provided that we have all the necessary information to do so.

An informational webinar will be held following the Thanksgiving holiday to help inform people further about the payment process. Details will follow next week.

Thank you for your continued advocacy.  We look forward to making these and other important investments in Direct Support Professionals to help resolve the current workforce shortage.

Sincerely,

Kerri E. Neifeld
Acting Commissioner

At this time, these disbursements are only available to family care providers and direct support workers who are employed by voluntary service providers, including staff who deliver services under the self-direction program. Discussions are ongoing regarding state employed direct support workers.

Letter to Commissioner Neifeld

November 14, 2021
Dear Commissioner Neifeld,
ENYDDA is an independent, all-volunteer organization of parents, families and self-advocates for intellectually and/or developmentally disabled individuals from across the Capitol Region. Our families and their loved ones represent the full spectrum of those with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD), from those who are largely independent and self-sufficient, to the profoundly disabled requiring full care 24/7, and everyone in between, encompassing myriad diverse conditions, causes, complexities and care. Our sole mission is to educate and inform policy makers, the media and the public on issues impacting our loved ones. ENYDDA receives no government or service-provider money; its activities are entirely self-supported.
We would like to extend an enthusiastic welcome to you, our new commissioner. As you undertake this awesome responsibility, we want to take the opportunity to share some thoughts with you.
As you well know from your time in chamber, the system is challenged as never before. Some of the issues that we know you will have to deal with are:
 Managed Care – ENYDDA does not support the transition of Long Term Services and Supports (LTSS) to managed care regardless of whether or not the Managed Care Organizations are provider led. However, even those who support managed care must recognize that we have to stabilize the system before we impose a change that will require all providers to invest their time and resources into navigating a new managed care system rather than invest in providing services.
 The Workforce Crisis – ENYDDA and our fellow advocacy groups are grateful that the need to invest in the workforce is recognized. We support the use of eFMAP funds to increase wages and we are pleased to see the that a continued investment is being discussed in the legislature. Still, money alone won’t solve the workforce crisis. There is already a tsunami of unmet and under met needs and demographics assure us that these needs will only grow for the foreseeable future. We must innovate. We must use the workforce more effectively and efficiently.
 High Needs Individuals – Serving those with the highest needs remains an extraordinary challenge. Efforts to modify residential reimbursement rates that are based on acuity must continue to move forward. There are many reasons why NYS has failed in these efforts. For the last ten years little has been done in this and so many other areas as the promise to solve all problems with managed care ruled the day. We need to understand how to better serve those with high needs.

 Expanding Residential Opportunities – We are not going to solve our current and future residential needs unless we expand the choices of services and supports. We must try and retry other models of residential supports to increase residential choices and services.
 Self-Direction – With over 20,000 consumers using self-directed services, we must take a hard look at the weaknesses in our current self-direction model. Until we can answer the question – ‘How does my child’s self-directed program continue after I’m gone?’, self-direction is a temporary solution for many.
The above is only a short sampling of the issues that you will face. What is the future of State Services? What should be the future of IBR? How can OPWDD work more effectively with other agencies? How can services be better coordinated between OPWDD and SED? How does OPWDD empower providers to be more efficient and effective? What is the appropriate role for the CCOs? And on, and on, and on…….
So we’d like to offer a few words of encouragement and advice.
 Be Our Champion – The individuals and families that OPWDD serves will be your greatest source of support if you are ours. In chamber, you had to balance the needs of the many populations you served against the aims and objectives of the governor’s office. At OPWDD you need to be our voice competing with all of the other well-deserving interests.
 Be Transparent – The complexities of OPWDD are extraordinary and it’s understandable that you would want to keep your head down, roll up your sleeves and get to work. But the uncertainty we face is exacerbated by the black box that is CAS; the changing service authorization; the introduction of utilization review; the unseen algorithm. We know we are facing difficult times and we want to be part of the solution but it’s hard to help when you’re kept in the dark.
 Have High Expectations – NYS used to be a leader in providing services to those with I/DD and can be again.
 Let Us Help You – In spite of the long history of committees, panels, work-groups, public hearings and comment periods, family and self-advocates often feel that they are merely used as window dressing. You are awash in a sea of experts, both internal and external, with established institutions and agendas whose voices are amplified by paid lobbyists and P.R. firms. We understand that the diversity of opinions and approaches that you will find the in advocacy community can be frustrating, but we are in transformational times, and our families and self-advocates are here to help.
Yours respectfully,
ENYDDA Steering Committee
The Eastern New York Developmental Disabilities Advocates (ENYDDA, or “any day”) is an independent, nonpartisan, all-volunteer organization of parents, families and developmentally disabled individuals in the greater Capitol Region and eastern upstate New York. Our mission is to educate and inform policy makers, the media and the public on issues impacting our disabled children and loved ones. ENYDDA receives no government or service provider money; its activities are entirely self-supported.

Message from New Acting Commissioner Kerri Neifeld

Message From New Acting Commissioner Kerri Neifeld

Today is my first day serving as Acting Commissioner of OPWDD. I want to take a moment to introduce myself and to thank you for welcoming me into this role. I have received many warm wishes since being nominated by Governor Kathy Hochul. Although I already know many family members, self-advocates, service providers and advocacy organizations through my prior work in the Governor’s office, there are many people I have yet to meet and know. I look forward to making my way across the state to meet and talk to as many of you as possible. I especially look forward to meeting the people that OPWDD supports and their families, as well as the Direct Support Professionals (DSP) who are the backbone of our system.

I am truly honored and humbled to be serving as your Acting Commissioner and I want you to know that as of today, day one, I plan to focus my full attention and energy on addressing the most pressing issue facing our service system right now – the growing workforce challenges. These challenges were significant before the pandemic and have steadily worsened since the onset of COVID-19. I know many people OPWDD supports, and their families, live in fear of losing the supports that you rely on every day, while others have already had to give up necessary and vital services. And I know that many of our DSPs work hard, day in and day out, but may feel undervalued and unappreciated. I am committed to working closely with the OPWDD stakeholder community to find solutions to this issue, so that the people OPWDD serves can access the supports and services they need and our DSPs can continue to do the work they love.  

There are many other challenges facing our system today, such as increases in the number of people seeking services, the steadily growing cost of providing services, and the increasing complexity of individual support needs. Additionally, the old model for serving people is no longer working for everyone and we need to bring new and innovative ways to support and serve people into being. I know that staff at all levels are battle-weary after 18+ months of the pandemic. These are truly difficult times, but we can and will address these and all other challenges by working together.

Governor Hochul has committed to restoring faith in government. To that end, I am committed to building OPWDD’s relationships with the people we support, their families, providers, advocates and our state and legislative leaders. I know OPWDD cannot solve these issues alone and that we must work together as a community. We must step forward and think creatively to forge a new path in the wake of COVID’s damaging effects on our system. We can do more, we can do better – and I know we will.

Despite the challenges that we face as a community, I feel hopeful for the future of our system. I pledge to work tirelessly alongside you to turn adversity into opportunity. I am confident that together, we will continue to provide quality supports and services and restore New York as a national leader in supporting people with developmental disabilities as they pursue their life goals and aspirations.

In the days and months ahead, I will be engaging with as many of you as I can to hear about your lives, challenges and hopes for the future, and to partner with you to find solutions to the problems we face. I look forward to working with all of you.

Best regards,

Kerri E. Neifeld

Acting Commissioner

.

A Letter to Senator Stewart-Cousins and Assemblyman Heastie

March 10, 2021
Senator Andrea Stewart-Cousins Assemblyman Carl Heastie
President Pro Tempore and Speaker
Majority Leader New York State Assembly
New York State Senate
Senator Stewart-Cousins and Assemblyman Heastie,
As members of the organizations listed above, groups of families and concerned individual advocates, we are closely
following the current New York State budget process on behalf of those with Intellectual and Developmental
Disabilities. Some of us provided testimony at the Joint Legislative Budget Hearing on Mental Hygiene and held a
Virtual Town Hall for families and individuals on the impacts of the Governor’s Budget proposals. We continue to
advocate for the roll back of the cuts and underfunding in the Budget for programs run by OPWDD (Office for People
with Developmental Disabilities) that, if not addressed, will result in the continued loss of services for those with
IDD, some of the most vulnerable in our population.
We strongly urge you, as our legislative leaders, to restore funding for OPWDD in the Governor’s IDD Budget. The
focus of IDD advocates across the State is as follows. One involves OPWDD sharing in the increase in Medicaid funds
the state is currently receiving and the other calls for the reinstatement of the COLA.
First, the state has received a Pandemic enhanced FMAP (Federal Medicaid Assistance Percentages) match which
based on OPWDD spending is estimated to be over $252 million. Yet the Not-for-Profit providers have received zero
dollars from this FMAP increase. This inequity needs to be addressed. These FMAP Funds could eliminate the cuts
to OPWDD’s supports and services that began during the last year. Additionally, the additional FMAP increase for
HCBS (Home and Community Based Services) in the current federal stimulus legislation should be spent on
OPWDD’s HCBS programs as intended by Congress.
Second, now is the time to address the continued deferral in the Budget of the statutory COLA for all OPWDD
service sectors. This COLA could begin to address the continued pressure on service providers which has been
exacerbated by years of underfunding, the unreimbursed expenditure on PPE costs and the costs incurred to keep
vital programs up and running.
We appreciate the complexity and difficulty of addressing all of the state’s needs. As you evaluate the Governor’s
budget for OPWDD, please recognize that these proposals will protect the services and supports on which people
with IDD depend. We urge you to act on these proposals.


Thank you for your service on behalf of all New Yorkers,

Elly Rufer on behalf of Self-Advocates and Family Groups Representing individuals with Intellectual and
Developmental Disabilities across New York State
cc: Senator John Mannion,
Senator Liz Kreuger
Senator Robert Ortt
Senator Gustavo Rivera
Assembly Member Thomas Abinanti
Assembly Member Helene Weinstein
Assembly Member Aileen Gunther
Assembly Member. Richard Gottfried