8:10am–#Bridgeport CT– An alert police officer witnessed a yellow box truck hit a car and attempt to flee on Kossuth and Putnam Street. The truck did pull over when the officer pulled him over.
GOV. MALLOY ANNOUNCES $9 MILLION IN NURSING HOME ‘REBALANCING’ GRANTS
Initiative Promotes Freedom of Choice In Long-Term Care System
(HARTFORD, CT) – Governor Dannel P. Malloy today announced that his administration is awarding $9 million in first-time funding to help Connecticut’s nursing home industry diversify services to meet the changing needs of older adults and other citizens with disabilities.
The grants are part of the state’s Strategic Plan to Rebalance Long-Term Services and Supports, a ground-breaking initiative to expand long-term service options for people who can live safely in the community instead of an institution.
“Simply put, many people are looking for greater choice about where and how they receive care,” Governor Malloy said. “Our initiative promotes freedom of choice in the long-term care system by expanding the options available to our aging adults and other adults with disabilities.”
Part of the strategy involves helping skilled nursing facilities adapt to the growing demand for community-based services and supports. In the first of three projected rounds of funding to help nursing homes diversify service delivery models, seven proposals were selected through a competitive procurement process:
- Southington Care Center (Central Connecticut Senior Health Services) – maximum award: $2,051,148. The proposal aims to increase capacity to deliver and promote community services by building a single point of entry for central Connecticut residents, including a 24-hour hotline and a tool kit for community services; expand choice and improve health outcomes by expanding geriatric care management and creating a person-centered education and engagement program; and raising awareness about community long-term services and supports by developing a comprehensive marketing strategy targeted to hospitals.
- Mary Wade Home, Inc. (New Haven) – maximum award: up to $2,001,730, including up to $200,000 in pre-development funds and $1 million in capital funds. The proposal establishes a home-maker companion agency to increase supply of direct-care workers in New Haven, expand person-centered educational opportunities and establish community navigators to assist people with connecting to local community supports.
- Litchfield Woods Healthcare Center (Torrington) – maximum award: $2,269,103. The proposal aims to expand infrastructure to support hospice services in the northwest corner and to open a home-health agency satellite.
- Miller Memorial Community, Inc. (Meriden) – maximum award: $1,338,110. The proposal aims to introduce a new service delivery model that will improve continuity of care and help community members avoid nursing home placement, reduce length of stay in the nursing home and reduce hospitalizations post discharge.
- Hebrew Home and Hospital, Inc. (West Hartford) – maximum award: $1,072,220. The proposal includes diversifying a wing of the nursing home to a transitional living wing which provides additional services and supports the transition of people back to the community.
- Hughes Health and Rehabilitation, Inc. (West Hartford). Maximum award: $197,420. The proposal includes funding for a community assessment to explore the need for establishment of adult family homes and a transitional living wing.
- Jewish Home for the Elderly of Fairfield County, Inc. (Fairfield)
Maximum award: $81,260. The proposal includes the development of a protocol for affordable, community-based living in an adult family living home as an option so that seniors can remain in or return to the community from a nursing home.
The initial request for proposals was issued by the Department of Social Services, in conjunction with the Departments of Housing and Public Health. The next request for proposals is anticipated to be issued this summer, with expected funding of up to $25 million available. Federal and state Medicaid funding, as well as state bond funds, support the initiative.
“This new funding will help nursing homes expand the services they provide to better meet the changing long-term care needs of Connecticut’s elderly and citizens with disabilities,” said Office of Policy and Management Undersecretary Anne Foley. “With this funding, we are encouraging the industry to develop a continuum of services that will help Connecticut residents remain a part of the community whenever possible.”
Department of Social Services Commissioner Roderick L. Bremby said, “One of the noteworthy factors in this process is our success in building the first state/federal partnership with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to support nursing home diversification. This is critical, since HUD underwrites mortgages for 59 of the approximately 230 nursing facilities in Connecticut. Nursing facilities wishing to diversify business models must get support from underwriters to use the building for a purpose other than the traditional nursing home model.”
Department of Housing Commissioner Evonne M. Klein said, “Connecticut’s aging residents need as many care and living solutions as possible. The Governor’s strategic plan and this funding are important steps to address the long-term needs of this population. With the number of long-term care recipients only growing, we need to focus our energy on options that increase the number of people who can receive care in their homes, which will reduce costs for everyone and improve the quality of life for many.”
Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Jewel Mullen said, “This initiative fosters new care models which will allow people entering the long term care system to remain in their own home and enhance their quality of life. Most of the proposals chosen for this initiative can be implemented without changes to current regulations. DPH looks forward to working with health care providers and other state agencies to support these resident-centered care delivery models that ultimately will lead to better patient safety and reduced health care costs.”
Connecticut’s Strategic Plan to Rebalance Long-Term Services and Supports, released by Governor Malloy last year, includes the nation’s first town-by-town projection of a state’s long-term care needs and strategies to meet those needs (www.ct.gov/dss/rebal
). These data provide the framework for rebalancing initiatives, including funding for skilled nursing facility diversification.
Even with Medicaid continuing to fund more than $1.6 billion in institutional care alone in Connecticut, the trend of nursing facilities seeing less demand for their services has been increasing in Connecticut and elsewhere. A total of 35 skilled nursing facilities have closed since January 2001 as resident censuses declined across the state.
The strategic rebalancing initiative includes a coordinated approach to reducing institutionalized beds where projections indicate that they will not be needed, and ensuring that nursing facilities diversify their services to participate in prevailing home- and community-based care trends.
Lavielle: Local School Districts Should be Allowed to Set Their Own Calendars
HARTFORD – In Wednesday’s Education Committee meeting, State Representative Gail Lavielle (R-143) introduced legislation that would have eliminated the requirement for school districts to adopt uniform regional school calendars. Her proposal, which she raised in an amendment to a related bill, did not pass after much discussion by the committee.
The adoption of uniform regional school calendars, which would take local control away from Boards of Education, was mandated by the state in legislation passed in 2013. Rep. Lavielle’s amendment would have made adopting uniform regional school calendars optional, preserving local control over education.
“I am very disappointed that the majority of the Education Committee’s members refused to take into account the very strong objections expressed by school districts throughout our district and Western Connecticut to the mandate for uniform regional school calendars,” said Rep. Lavielle. “School districts have always been able to collaborate to adopt regional school calendars if they wanted to, so why should they now be required to do it?
“Many educators, administrators, and Board of Education members in our part of the state strongly oppose this idea for several reasons, including professional development imperatives and local customs and preferences, and many have also said that the potential for savings on transportation is negligible. The mandate for regional school calendars is just one more indication of the one-size-fits-all view of education that is so prevalent in the General Assembly. School districts and the families they serve should have more control over their destiny.”
Trumbull News: Man claims to be utility worker to read meter
1:33pm–#Trumbull CT–A Meadow Ridge resident called police because a man in an umarked vehicle asked to read their meter. The man had no identification and was smartly refused entry into the home. Police are on the way to investigate. All utility workers will have identification.
Phone scams continue
#Bridgeport CT– Police have received two call this morning for phone scams. The caller says their family member was being held hostage and would only be released if money is wired to them. In both cases the person called the relative to find they are safe and sound.
GOV. MALLOY URGES LEGISLATURE TO APPROVE $25 MILLION TO HELP SHORELINE RESIDENTS PREPARE FOR FUTURE SEVERE WEATHER AND FLOODING
(EAST HAVEN, CT) – Governor Dannel P. Malloy is urging the Connecticut General Assembly to adopt legislation he introduced that will provide an authorization of up to $25 million to support the launch of the Shoreline Resiliency Fund – a low-interest loan program the Governor created late last year
that will help residents who are subject to coastal flooding elevate their homes and flood-proof their businesses.
While start-up costs to administer the program were approved in January
, the fund cannot begin helping residents and businesses until it receives financing.
“The frequency of severe weather has been increasing, putting homes and businesses near Connecticut’s historic and valued shoreline at risk,” said Governor Malloy, who made the announcement at an event at East Haven’s Cosey Beach, a neighborhood that suffered a significant amount of damage from recent severe weather. “The Shoreline Resiliency Fund will help residents whose homes and businesses are subject to coastal flooding take a proactive role in preparing for the next storm.”
As proposed by Governor Malloy, the Shoreline Resiliency Fund will provide loans of up to $300,000 for 10 years with no principal or interest for one year. Funds can be used to elevate or flood-proof primary and secondary single homes, one to four unit owner-occupied rentals, and businesses. There is no income cap for applicants.
To be eligible, homeowners and business owners’ structures must be subject to coastal flooding and located in either Zone VE or Coastal Zone AE, as defined by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the National Flood Insurance Program.
“The program is a smart, forward-thinking approach that will help fill the funding gaps left by the many federal disaster recovery programs already available to help homeowners,” said Evonne Klein, Commissioner of the Department of Housing, which administers the Shoreline Resiliency Fund. “With Governor Malloy’s leadership, we’re assisting homeowners and businesses to recover from the devastation of recent major storms, but we’re also supporting measures to fortify properties against such widespread damage in the future.”
Flood-proofing is any combination of structural and non-structural additions, changes, or adjustments to structures which reduce or eliminate flood damage to real estate or improved real property, water and sanitary facilities, structures and their contents. Flood-proofing includes, but is not limited to, ensuring:
- Walls are watertight (substantially impermeable to the passage of water)
- Structural components can resist hydrostatic and hydrodynamic loads and effects of buoyancy
- Utilities are protected from flood damage
“The recovery and repair effort continues for many families in East Haven and elsewhere along Connecticut’s shoreline,” said State Senator Len Fasano (R-Durham, East Haven, North Haven, Wallingford). “This program provides an affordable way for qualified homeowners and businesses to elevate their properties, protecting them from drastic insurance premium increases and helping to protect them from future catastrophic weather events.”
“The Shoreline Resiliency Fund is the type of aggressive action we need to protect our residents and address the threats associated with extreme weather,” said State Representative Roland Lemar (D-East Haven, New Haven).
Fairfield News: Boat causing traffic
11:19am–#Fairfield CT– A boat which fell off the hitch is causing traffic on Black Rock Turnpike by Penny’s Diner, after striking a car.
Bridgeport News: 1 in custody firearm recovered after shots fired
12:35am–#Bridgeport CT–Within minutes of hearing shots fired in the area of the Greene Homes on Highland Avenue police have one in custody and one weapon recovered at building 5.
Trumbull News: Funny Money Received
10:40pm–#Bridgeport CT– The Sunoco gas station near town hall called police that they received a counterfeit one hundred dollar bill from a car with New York licence plate. They did not get the plate number.
Bridgeport News: Teens jump Papa Johns Deliveryman
9:46pm– #Bridgeport CT–A Papa John deliverman was jumped by 6-7 kids on bicycles. Quick work by police net juvenile arrests. The incident occurred in the 1100 block of Iranistan Avenue.
