Monday, December 29, 2014

PHA News: General Meeting Coming Up Jan. 10 - and New Gazette Available

The next general membership meeting of the Parent Hospital Association is coming up on Saturday, January 10th, from 10 a.m. to noon, in Wagner at Sonoma Developmental Center. There will be a presentation about the community placement plan, and at least one regional center will be in attendance.

Note the new meeting location! We've switched from McDougall Hall to Wagner because McDougall is being closed. See this post for a map to the new location.

Also, the latest issue of The Eldridge Gazette -- the PHA newsletter -- is available. If you're on the mailing list, you might already have received your copy. You can also download a copy here or from the Resources page of the website.

* * Happy New Year to All Our Friends and Supporters * *
Valley Oak #4 by Philip Bouchard on flicker.com
(Creative Commons License)


Tuesday, December 16, 2014

PHA Meeting Location Changes in the New Year

Some housekeeping and maintenance issues at Sonoma Developmental Center have resulted in the closing of McDougall Hall -- where the Parent Hospital Association holds its regular General Membership meetings. Therefore, beginning with the January 10, 2015 meeting, the location of the PHA membership meeting will switch to Wagner.

Even if you're not familiar with Wagner, it should be relatively simple to locate. Follow Sonoma, the main road across the front of the Old Administration Building, north to the other end from where McDougall is situated. Turn left where Sonoma T's with Laurel and Wagner will be on your right. (see map below)

Beginning January 2015, PHA membership meetings will be held in Wagner, on the SDC campus.
See building on right marked "PHA" in blue. The previous meeting location was McDougall (left).


We hope to see many of you in January -- and many more at our annual Legislative Meeting on March 14, 2015. If you forget the new meeting room location or have difficulty finding Wagner, there will be reminders posted on site to assist.

And thanks to SDC administrators for offering a choice of alternatives and assisting with the change-over!

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Tree Lighting Ceremony at SDC Rescheduled

The annual Tree Lighting Ceremony at Sonoma Developmental Center, originally scheduled for Thursday, Dec. 11th, has been postponed to Thursday, Dec. 18th, because of expected severe weather. Same time, same place -- check here for details.

Stay tuned for more possible updates!


Monday, December 8, 2014

Next Developmental Services Task Force Meeting Set for Dec. 16th

The next Developmental Services Task Force meeting is scheduled for 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesday, December 16, 2014. Consider attending -- or sending your comments beforehand to Secretary Dooley -- and sharing our concerns over:
  1. The recent Sonoma Developmental Center ICF survey appears to have not had the well being of SDC residents as the focus. Is there another agenda driving surveyors?
  2. Recommendations for medical health clinic both north and south not yet realized but regional centers are moving people out of SDC at increased rates.
  3. Dental issues and durable medical equipment remain issues of concern.
  4. The community lacks transparency and oversight. It's good when services work but poor when crises in mental or physical health occur.
  5. Medication management and mental health issues remain major issues of concern.
  6. And finally -- your own issues for your loved one!
The likely location for the meeting is the following:
California Department of Health Care Services
1700 K Street, First Floor Conference Room
Sacramento, CA 95814
If you can not attend in person, it is possible to join the meeting by phone at 1-888-204-5784; participant passcode  597147#.  Please confirm with Jim Suennen at 916-651-8056 and let him know if you would like to attend in person or with the conference call option.

From Message to Task Force members from Secretary Dooley:

Thank you for your continued involvement in the process to strengthen services in the community. We have had a lot of thoughtful discussion in our last two meetings and it is our goal to keep the momentum going. In looking over the meeting notes and reflecting on our discussions, we would like to convene four general workgroups on the following topics:

o   Rates/Rate Structure
o   Caseload Ratios/Regional Center Operations
o   Medical & Mental Health Services & Supports
o   Housing & Employment

Many of you have expressed that there is an urgency to examine rates. We agree that this is a foundational issue and we would like to have our first workgroup meeting on rates for Tuesday, December 16, 2014 from 10:00 am – 4:00 pm. During this first meeting we would like to set some parameters for our work on rates and give a thorough overview of the current rate system and the CMS Home and Community Based Services regulations to provide a foundation for work in this area.

In January we would like to come together to begin the work of the Caseload Ratios/ Regional Center Operations Workgroup. In February we can return to the Rates Workgroup, and then in March return to the Regional Center Workgroup.

...

Please find attached a summary of our last Developmental Services Task Force meeting for your review. Thank you again for your continued participation in this process, especially during the holiday season.

Diana S. Dooley, Secretary
California Health and Human Services Agency

Attachment: DEVELOPMENTAL SERVICES TASK FORCE: STRENGTHENING THE COMMUNITY SYSTEM, October 8, 2014

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Holiday Tree Lighting Ceremony at Sonoma Developmental Center

Update - 12/9/2014: Event has been rescheduled to Thursday, December 18th -- same time, same place, but a week later -- due to the weather forecast. Stay tuned for more possible updates!

---

Join everyone in the Sonoma Developmental Center family in celebrating the holidays this year at the annual Holiday Tree Lighting Ceremony, scheduled for Wednesday, December 11th, from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. There will holiday fun -- and CAROLING! Come and vote for your favorite tree. And, new this year, there will be a "Community Tree" that everyone can decorate together at the ceremony.

photo credit: Laura Favrow on flickr.com (Creative Commons license)

Just when the days seem darkest and the weather is oh so dreary, the holidays add sparkle and cheer!

---

Meet at Harney Circle. If it rains, the event moves inside to the gym. DRESS WARMLY!

Monday, November 24, 2014

Holiday Craft Fair at Sonoma Developmental Center

The holiday season is here -- and that means it's time for the annual craft fair at Sonoma Developmental Center. This year's Faire is set for Wednesday and Thursday of next week, December 3rd and 4th, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., in the Gymnasium on the SDC campus.

Craft vendors will be selling gifts, food, ornaments -- and more! (There will even be on-the-spot jewelry repair available.) What a great chance to do some of your holiday shopping.

There will also be a warm meal served ($5.00) from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. -- Chili (vegetarian available), cornbread and a drink -- so why not plan to come by for lunch?

Questions? Need more info? Call 707-938-6713.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

SDC Rumor Has It - NOT

A Message from Sonoma Developmental Center
Executive Director, Karen A. Faria... 


I want staff to know the facts so we all can focus on the great work we do.

  1. There is no legislation to close SDC.
  2. There are no layoffs at SDC and none are planned.
  3. There is no slowdown in hiring at SDC. If we have vacant positions we will attempt to fill them.
  4. There are no shortages of retirements and other separations from SDC, so hiring will continue.
  5. There is no end to the amount of overtime being used, so we may consider consolidating a home to better implement the staffing allocation we have.
  6. The budget is tight, but there will be no impact to hiring.
  7. Yes, there is a new crisis home being planned and should open sometime next year.

If you have questions about the future of SDC, send your email questions to Jorge Fernandez at jorge.fernandez@sonoma.dds.ca.gov .

Aggressive Deinstitutionalization - Causing More Harm Than Good

"Aggressive deinstitutionalization has caused more harm than good -- people with mental illness now make up a good part of the population in this nation's prisons and jails and on the streets. There is a lot at stake for past and present proponents of community integration -- not least, the risk of losing future funding. But, as the author points out, where is our concern for the individual in this debate? While wholesale institutionalization was never the right answer, nor is the current lack of access to necessary supports."
At the most recent general membership meeting of the Parent Hospital Association, attendees were fortunate to hear a presentation from a very knowledgeable and passionate advocate for disability rights, Tamie Hopp. Hopp is the Director of Government Relations and Advocacy for VOR and spoke about the history and future of deinstitutionalization of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD).

Watch for your copy of the next Gazette for a transcript of Hopp's remarks at the meeting. They will be included in the minutes. In the meantime, for more information about the trends surrounding institutional-based supports and access -- and the impacts on those needing services both in institutional settings and in the community -- there is the following article available, also by Tamie Hopp.

Tamie Hopp (VOR.net)
People as Pendulums: Institutions and People with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, by Tamie Hopp. (pdf file) You can also read it online on the NonProfit Quarterly website at the following link: People as Pendulums (July 16, 2014).

See also:
North Bay Regional Center Moving Ahead with Community Placement of SDC Resident, on the PHA blog (Oct. 7, 2014)

Saturday, November 8, 2014

In the Press: Fears for future of Sonoma Developmental Center

The following post also appears on today's online edition of The Sonoma Index-Tribune. (It was printed in the paper's Nov. 7, 2014 edition.) It was written by PHA member, and former board member, Paul Ferrario. You can find it on the SIT website at Valley Forum: Fears for future of Sonoma Developmental Center.

by Paul Ferrario

Generations of Sonoma Valley residents have been dedicated employees who have performed excellent work at Sonoma Developmental Center (SDC) yet because of one bad-apple employee, and the indifference of legislators, SDC’s future seems bleak. With every SDC resident that gets spirited out of the facility, Arnold Drive inches closer to becoming a 4-lane highway. The land may not be sold to developers right away, but legislators at all levels are likely seduced by the promise of a billons in a one-time infusion to the state, and promise of hundreds of thousands of dollars annually in property taxes.

Our system of checks and balances has collapsed. Since the infamous “Taser” incident, a task force, heavily stacked with anti SDC members has put forth not a plan, but a depiction of a plan that SDC would serve five behaviorally challenged individuals, while the collection of irreplaceable services and expertise is lost forever. As the election nears almost everyone agrees that special interests control Sacramento, but few realize how “various administrative agencies get involved with the legislative process this co-mingling of duties (has been a concern), but with the drafting of bills, it (is) a blatant disregard of our constitutional rights.” (Excerpted from Emily Rooney, President of the Agricultural Council of California, in her article: State Legislature Shirks U.S. Constitution in Development of Groundwater Bills (Blue Diamond Growers -Almond Facts; page 30; September/October 2014).

The state’s own Dept. of Developmental Services (DDS) has recently used the Trailer Bill mechanism to escalate aggressive de-population of SDC despite the verified human cost of doing so. Currently, SDC residents appropriately residing at the center for decades are being removed and placed in the self-regulated care home system, run by non-profit agencies that contract with the state. The Trailer Bill mechanism enabled the legislation to pass without public knowledge or hearings.

The human cost was verified almost 20 years ago by UC Riverside comparative mortality research that passed scientific peer-review and was published. Far higher mortality, due to abuse and neglect, was revealed in the care home industry compared to the state centers. The press devoted over 18 months of coverage to the issue. Shockingly, later it was later revealed that during that period the DDS had suppressed its own mortality study of 20 deaths within care homes, 16 of which were deemed to be caused by abuse or neglect.

There was an opportunity for reform. Yet when then State Senator Mike Thompson held a hearing the UC researcher was given short shrift. The Senator was skeptical about the research findings from the start, voicing his opinion in the lead newspaper’s editorials. His position matched the anti-developmental center ideology openly promoted by his legislative consultant.

Thus, then and now, citizens of our state -parents and families whose disabled loved ones live at SDC and other centers rank fourth behind the interests of the non-profit industry, a state agency and a legislative consultant. Yet now when Congressman Thompson desires to remain in office he courts the votes of these parents and families. It would be refreshing for him to hold the DDS accountable for its “co-mingling of duties.” Valley residents should raise a cry about the “Trailer Bill” trick and the legislative indifference to the mortality rate.

In the Press: Time to end war over the Sonoma Developmental Center

The following post by PHA President Kathleen Miller was originally published in today's Press Democrat. You can find it on that paper's website at Close to Home: Time to end war over the Sonoma Developmental Center.

Kathleen Miller and her son Dan, who is a resident at Sonoma Developmental Center,
take a walk on the SDC campus. (photo credit: Press Democrat)

by Kathleen Miller

Last week, I participated in the long-standing tradition of Halloween at Sonoma Developmental Center and the grand Halloween parade.

It is a fun day of events, and it gives me the opportunity to see old friends who still work at the center. The residents love it and also enjoy the afternoon carnival of fun and activities as well.
Following the parade, I took my son out to lunch. While at one of the local restaurants, I ran into a former SDC employee who now works for a community day program provider. Her clients were eating there also, and we enjoyed a brief minute to chat. I reminded her that it was parade day at Sonoma Developmental Center. She had always been an enthusiastic participant during her years working at the center, and we both agreed what fun it would be if her community clients could join with SDC residents and participate in the parade.

She shook her head and shared that it was frowned upon for those in her program to in any way participate at SDC events. I didn’t have to ask why. It is an old battle that continues today.
As long as I have been aware of developmental centers and community services outside of the centers, I have also been aware of the friction between them. Care providers tell their clients horror stories about what life is like inside developmental centers. They bring them to legislative hearings to urge for closure even if these same clients have never set foot inside of a developmental center.
I personally have been called names and subjected to unflattering comments for my support of developmental centers. However, also true is the fact that those of us who rely on the services inside the developmental centers are quick to seize upon, and repeat, negative stories of the abuse and poor care that happens in community settings. It is an acrimonious relationship that has lasted for decades. Sadly this acrimony continues today.

The Parent Hospital Association, an organization that represents the residents, families and friends of Sonoma Developmental Center, tried to push legislation that would have allowed residents living in alternative community settings to come to the health and dental clinics at the center. This was important because many of those services, services that SDC residents take for granted, are not always available to those living in community care. The legislation went nowhere. Some providers of community care saw it as either a threat to them or as an attempt to shore up Sonoma Developmental Center.

Both sides have some basis for their concerns. Individuals with developmental disabilities are too often subjected to abuse and neglect. Bad things have happened in developmental centers. Bad things have happened in community care. However, most folks who go into working with these challenging populations do so for the right reasons and try to provide those they work with good care. More important, this battle between developmental centers staff, families and friends and community providers serves no one. The clients are the losers. The system remains entrenched in old battles instead of both sides working together to provide a seamless system of care that meets the needs of all regional center clients.

Currently, there is a process underway to “transform” the Sonoma Developmental Center and the remaining developmental centers. To be clear, I do not welcome the change. Most families of center residents simply want to be left alone, but since that does not appear likely, I have turned my attention to community care and the gaps in that system.

Today, we need to work with all parties to create a seamless system that serves all of the developmentally disabled populations, including those that regional centers struggle with. We need to find ways to use the Sonoma Developmental Center infrastructure to create something special, a system that can fill the gaps in care that exist in today’s system. We need a system that cannot only help the center’s residents but those in community setting where services are not working.
The old voices are back. They want closure. They want nothing to do with those of us with ties to developmental centers. However, more and more I am hearing new voices. They are asking why not and what the new services at the Sonoma Developmental Center can include.

These new voices either know nothing about the old battle lines or want to rise above them. It is my hope that together we will be those who decide the future of Sonoma Developmental Center and of the system of care going into the future.

Friday, November 7, 2014

National Disability Advocate to Speak on History and Future of Deinstitutionalization

Tamie Hopp from VOR
Tamie Hopp, a national advocate for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, will speak on the history and future of deinstitutionalization at the Parent Hospital Association (PHA) meeting at Sonoma Developmental Center (SDC) in Eldridge on Saturday, November 8, beginning at 10:00 a.m. PHA general membership meetings are held in McDougall Hall and are open to the interested public.

Hopp is the Director of Government Relations and Advocacy for VOR, a national nonprofit organization that advocates for high quality care and human rights for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. She has been involved in disability advocacy for 19 years.

SDC is a state-operated home for 430 of some of California’s most profound disabled citizens. According to the state’s website, approximately one thousand acres of land, lakes, and various structures encompass the Sonoma Developmental Center campus, including a residential campground, store/cafeteria, post office, petting farm, sports fields, swimming pool, plant nursery, and picnic areas.

Homes like Sonoma are threatened across the country, says Hopp.

“Deinstitutionalization – the closure of specialized homes like Sonoma - has been pursued in earnest for decades,” said Hopp. “While early efforts were well-placed, helping thousands of inappropriately placed individuals secure more appropriate housing and services, the pendulum has continued to swing, placing very fragile people at grave risk.”

Hopp will provide an overview of the history of deinstitutionalization, its status currently, and what role family advocates can play in the future of their loved ones’ care.

“There is no silver bullet to stop closings,” said Hopp. “I would be doing families a disservice if I promised success. However, what I can tell them is that states cannot, legally or morally, stop providing necessary services to eligible citizens. Federal law clearly recognizes the right to individual and family choice according to need.”

Proponents of closure argue that people with developmental disabilities are always served better in small settings. VOR’s members see things differently.

“Tragedies following forced deinstitutionalization are widespread and well-documented,” said Hopp. “Without question, deinstitutionalization has failed many people.”

“For 31 years, VOR has advocated that families are the most effective voice for their disabled loved ones,” Hopp said. “They know best. It is critical that families be on the frontlines educating legislators and state officials about the unparalleled, comprehensive and highly specialized care their loved ones receive.”

---

About VOR: VOR is a national organization that advocates for high quality care and human rights for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Standing up for long-term care facilities and community disability programs, VOR is dedicated to maintaining individual family choice for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. For more information about VOR, including information about our programs and a press kit, please visit http://vor.net/about-vor.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

PHA News: General Meeting This Saturday, Nov. 8 - and New Gazette Available

Fall Leaves by VancityAllie on flickr
(Creative Commons license)
The next general membership meeting of the Parent Hospital Association is coming up this Saturday, November 8th, from 10 a.m. to noon, in McDougall Hall at Sonoma Developmental Center. The guest speaker will be Tamie Hopp, who is part of VOR, the organization that is made up of families and others who support state-run facilities like our own Sonoma Developmental Center. She will give a national perspective and share the latest on the new CMS regulations and how they affect us.

Also, as most of you are aware there is another Task Force called by Secretary Dooley. The focus of this Task Force is on community services. Information will be shared about how the work of the latest Task Force impacts Sonoma Developmental Center -- there is much work to be done in order to protect SDC residents.

Please plan to join us on Saturday!

And...if you have not yet seen a copy, the latest issue of The Eldridge Gazette is available for download (pdf file).

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Raising Stephanie: SDC Parent Publishes Memoir of Parenting Her Disabled Daughter

Mark your calendars now for a special event coming up in December. Erin Thompson will be reading from her new book, Only a Stone's Throw, beginning at 7 p.m. on Saturday, December 13th, at Book Passage in Corte Madera. It is her memoir of raising her daughter Stephanie, who now lives on Johnson "B" at Sonoma Developmental Center.

Only a Stone's Throw chronicles the lows and highs of parenting the author's eldest daughter to adulthood after she was mentally disabled as a newborn. It's an honest tale of love and strength when life deals out surprises with unexpected results.

Erin O'Donoghue Thompson,
author of Only a Stone's Throw
Thompson started writing at the age of seventeen. She was the editor of her high school newspaper but put her literary aspirations aside to raise a family. Once her eight children were on their own she did a ten year stint as a travel consultant, taking groups to China, photographic safaris to Africa, and groups of women on shopping tours to Hong Kong. In 2007 she was diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. This was a wake-up call to “do it now” whatever your dream may be. Her's was to write a book about the struggles of raising Stephanie, her disabled daughter.

The Book Passage is located just off 101 at 51 Tamal Vista Blvd in Corte Madera (94925). There is no charge to attend the reading. For up-to-date information on the event, visit Left Coast Writers®: Erin O’Donoghue Thompson - Only a Stone's Throw on the Book Passage website.

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

North Bay Regional Center Moving Ahead with Community Placement of SDC Residents

North Bay Regional Center's latest Community Placement Plan (CPP) includes homes specifically for current residents of Sonoma Developmental Center. Plans for these homes were made without input from the Sonoma Coalition, or reference to the recent PHA Friends and Family Questionnaire.

In its report to its board on October 1st, the North Bay Regional Center presented the following summary of the CPP, and progress to date: NORTH BAY REGIONAL CENTER, Community Placement Plan, Development-Overview October 2014.

For more insight on the level of care priorities and needs of SDC residents as reported by their family members and advocates, you can access the results of the PHA questionnaire here on the blog at Results in on Sonoma Developmental Center Friends and Family Questionnaire.

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Second Meeting of Newly Reconvened Developmental Centers Task Force Scheduled for October 8

State Capitol Building,
Sacramento, Calif.
The “Developmental Services Task Force” – formerly the “Future of the Developmental Centers Task Force” – will hold its second meeting from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, October 8th, at the California Department of Health Care Services building in Sacramento. A conference phone line is also available (see below) for anyone who is not able to attend in person. The meetings of the task force are open to the public – and public comment will be taken both at the meeting and over the phone at the end of the meeting. The meeting will be chaired by California Health and Human Services Agency Secretary Diana Dooley.

The task force, with its new focus to identify ways to strengthen the community-based services and supports for people with developmental disabilities, held its first meeting with its new mission on July 24th. Issues to be examined by the task force, according to Secretary Dooley’s original July 3, 2014 press release, will include community rates, the impact of new State and federal laws and regulations, and staffing levels at Regional Centers.


A series of just completed regional stakeholder meetings in Fresno, Los Angeles and Sacramento was conducted by the Department of Developmental Services, headed by Director Santi Rogers to receive input from stakeholders on implementation of several of the recommendations by the original “Future of the Developmental Centers Task Force”.
 


MEETING INFORMATION

WHAT: Developmental Services Task Force

WHEN: October 8, 2014 – Wednesday

TIME: 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
LOCATION:
California Department of Health Care Services
1700 K Street, First Floor Conference Room
Sacramento, CA 95814


CONFERENCE CALL LINE: 1-800-779-8389
PASSCODE (Verbally given to conference call operator):  DS TASK FORCE.

FOR MORE INFORMATION: Jim Suennen, Associate Secretary, External Affairs, California Health and Human Services Agency at 916-651-8056 or email Jim.Suennen@chhs.ca.gov


More information about the original Task Force, including audio recordings of past meetings, is also available on the Health and Human Services website at www.chhs.ca.gov/Pages/DCsTaskForce.aspx.

---

source: CDCAN / CA Disability Community Action Network

Friday, September 26, 2014

Results in on Sonoma Developmental Center Friends and Family Questionnaire

Earlier this year the Parent Hospital Association (PHA) board formulated a questionnaire designed to collect information that will help smooth the changes ahead for residents of Sonoma Developmental Center (SDC). The questionnaire was included in two issues of The Eldridge Gazette, made available for download here on the web site, and distributed at member meetings.

Response was very good with over 100 completed questionnaires returned for analysis. Results were presented at the most recent general membership meeting, and that presentation is now available for review and reference as a pdf document here: PHA 2014 Questionnaire Results.

Thank you to all our members who provided such valuable and useful information. This will greatly help in representing the needs of SDC residents to legislators and bureaucrats in Sacramento, community services providers, and others planning and implementing changes for California's developmentally disabled residents.

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Comments Open on New Draft Statewide Transition Plan

There is an opportunity to provide your comments and input on the new CMS regulations and the State's mandated implementation of those changes.

The California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) has released a draft Statewide Transition Plan (STP) as required by new Federal regulations. These new regulations, effective March 17, 2014, establish requirements for settings eligible for Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services funding.

The draft Statewide Transition Plan, and information on providing input required to finalize the plan, is available on the DHCS website at: http://www.dhcs.ca.gov/services/ltc/Pages/HCBSStatewideTransitionPlan.aspx

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

SDC Performing Arts Company Presents "Happy Days"

Tuesday, Wednesday, Happy Days! Thursday, Friday, Happy Days! Saturday, what a day! Rocking all week with you!!

The latest production from Sonoma Developmental Center's Performing Arts Company is now in full swing and you are invited to join in the fun!

HAPPY DAYS
Presented by
SDC's Performing Arts Company

September 23rd, 24th, 30th and October 1st
7:00 pm at the Gymnasium

Limited seating available...so get your free tickets today!!!

***

For tickets or more information, please call or email JJ Fernandez at
(707) 938-6643 or jorge.fernandez [at] sonoma.dds.ca.gov


Wednesday, September 3, 2014

PHA Member Updates: Latest Gazette and Upcoming Meeting

A new issue of The Eldridge Gazette is now available. If you are on the snail mail or email list you have already received your copy. If not, you can download a copy here: July/August 2014 Gazette. Many back issues are also available for download. Check the Resources page here on the blog or on the main Parent Hospital Association web site.

The next General Membership Meeting is coming up on Saturday, September 13, 2014. As always we will meet from 10 a.m. to noon, in McDougall Hall on the SDC campus. This month's agenda includes a presentation from the administration on the latest results and developments from the survey. We will also get a report on the responses received so far from the Friends and Family SDC Questionnaire. If you're unable to attend, watch for the next Gazette -- minutes from the meeting will be included.

Welcome back from summer everyone! Doesn't it seem like fall already?

Hands, by Bunches and Bits {Karina}
(Creative Commons License)



Monday, September 1, 2014

Woman's Death at Community Home for Disabled Raises More Concerns

The Contra Costa Times reported over the weekend on a troubling death of a young woman at a community home for developmentally disabled people in Livermore.

You can read the entire story here: Livermore: A young woman's death and staffing cuts prompt questions over care at home for developmentally disabled

While Sonoma Developmental Center continues to implement improvements and work to meet staffing needs in response to strict state and federal requirements and review, the incident in Livermore serves as a reminder that community homes do not receive the same level of oversight as developmental centers.

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Parent Praises Sonoma Developmental Center Staff and PHA Efforts on Behalf of SDC Residents

Bouquet de fleurs du jardin by Guy Moll
(Creative Commons license)
To the Sonoma Developmental Center and the Parent Hospital Association:

As some of you know, my daughter Ana Cuadrado, was a client at Sonoma Development Center and after a recent battle, she passed away peacefully last month. During my healing process, I want to thank you for giving me the opportunity to write a letter to all of you. 

In this letter, I want to share my sincere and heartfelt gratitude towards the immensely dedicated people that were Ana’s “SDC family” over the past five years. You all were an incredible force for Ana, myself and our family; and words cannot express how much our family appreciates your support and services.

From Cathy Conway, our fantastic caring and professional social worker, to the incredible competent and dedicated medical staff, led by Dr. Pecha and Dr. Mary Christensen in particular, and to the daytime and nighttime staff of Johnson C Unit. All of you were not only doing your jobs, but you went above and beyond, by showing extra compassion and kindness, even developing a special bond with Ana and myself. It takes a special person, with a special heart, to work with such integrity. These are characteristics that are often obscure, and many times missing in the world of health and social care. After so many years of dealing with developmental services, social services, doctors, nurses, and hospital systems; I found that such traits as “empathy” and “compassion” are often overlooked. I can honestly say, that the world of health and social care is a better place because of people like you. Furthermore, the world is a better place with the people like you that dedicate yourselves to working every day at the Sonoma Development Center.



I also would be remiss if I don’t mention the extraordinary work and efforts that the Parent Hospital Association does on behalf of the SDC clients, every day....Every. Single. Day. It takes an enormous amount of energy and dedication to fight against the ugly and powerful machinery of the government bureaucracy that has no room for consideration of the needs and rights of the individual people that make up the “disabled” population of California. All of your hard work does not go unnoticed for the families, and for that, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. I cannot stress enough for the need to continue the support for the above-mentioned HEROES, because without you, the future is very bleak for those who cannot speak for their own rights.

My daughter was, without a doubt, in the best possible place for taking care of her needs, and with the best people taking care of her. As I write this letter, and as I have known all along, I am at peace knowing that I made the right decision when I chose Sonoma Developmental Center for her home. And because Ana was not able to express that enough to let you know how appreciative she was, I am.

Thank you for the years of dedication that you provided to her.  I will forever be a supporter of SDC and PHA.

Warmest regards,
Ana Cuadrado's mother

Monday, August 25, 2014

Series of Regional Workgroup Meetings Planned as DDS Moves Forward on Task Force Recommendations

The California Disability Community Action Network (CDCAN) is reporting that a conference call was held this afternoon to provide more information on the series of regional workgroup meetings scheduled for the coming weeks that have been organized to consider the implementation of the Developmental Centers Task Force recommendations.

The “pre-meeting” conference call was hosted by the Department of Developmental Services (DDS) and was intended to review background information on the topics that will be discussed at the three upcoming regional meetings and help prepare representatives for those meetings. The general public was welcome to listen in on the conference call but will be excluded from the workgroup meetings due to space constraints, according to DDS.

CDCAN provided the following background information on the Workgroup sessions:

Earlier this month, the Department of Developmental Services announced a series of three two-day regional stakeholder workgroup meetings in Fresno, Los Angeles and Sacramento. The purpose of the meetings is to help lay the groundwork for the implementation of the recommendations of the California Health and Human Services Agency Task Force on the Future of Developmental Centers' January 13, 2014 report, "Plan for the Future of Developmental Centers in California.”  (Click on the link to access a copy of the report.)

From those recommendations, the Department of Developmental Services developed several proposals that were introduced with proposed revisions to the Governor's Budget in May and were signed approved by the Legislature and signed into law in June by Governor Brown as part of SB 856 -  the Developmental Services 2014-15 Budget trailer bill.

The Department of Developmental Services, as the next step in that process, has asked invited organizations and individuals to participate in a stakeholder process to provide input on these proposals and for the development of regulations related to these initiatives, in addition to input from the general public.

The series of three, two-day workgroup meetings scheduled in late August and early September is meant to  provide initial input on the following topics:

• New Models of Care for Challenging Behavioral Needs
• Enhanced Behavioral Support Homes
• Community Crisis Homes
• Acute Crisis Units at Sonoma and Fairview Developmental Centers
• Community State Staff Program Expansion
• Developmental Center Resident Transition Planning

The Department of Developmental Services indicated, in its announcement earlier this month about the workgroup stakeholder meetings that “…due to the limited capacity of the state conference rooms, these initial stakeholder workgroup meetings are limited to invited participants. There will be additional opportunities for public comment as the stakeholder process proceeds”.

According to the Department of Developmental Services, the series of three workgroup meetings will include representation from throughout California, including organizations representing consumers and consumer advocates, family members, regional centers, and other stakeholders. To ensure that a wide range of local community perspectives are represented, organizations were asked to appoint a different regional representative to each workgroup location (Fresno, Los Angeles and Sacramento).

The Department of Developmental Services also indicated in its earlier announcement that it was “…strongly committed to working with its stakeholders as it seeks feedback in support of the [Developmental Centers] Task Force Recommendations. No final decisions will be made at these workgroup meetings. They are intended as brainstorming sessions to gather input and ideas, not to confirm final solutions. Stakeholders and the public will have additional opportunities outside of this series of workgroup meetings to weigh in with concerns, questions or ideas.”

DATES:
AUGUST 27th and AUGUST 28th

FRESNO (by invitation only)
Hugh Burns State Building

2550 Mariposa Mall, Room 1036

Fresno, CA 93721

SEPTEMBER 3rd and SEPTEMBER 4th
LOS ANGELES (by invitation only)

Junipero Serra Office Building
320 W. 4th Street, Auditorium
Los Angeles, CA 90013


SEPTEMBER 10th and SEPTEMBER 11th
SACRAMENTO (by invitation only)
Department of Health Care Services
1700 K. Street, 1st Floor Conference Room

Sacramento, CA 95811
AGENDA:

To view the agendas for the three regional Workgroup meetings, click on http://www.dds.ca.gov/publicforums/docs/workgroupAgenda.pdf

DDS has outlined talking points for the meetings, including enhanced behavioral support homes, community state staff program expansion, and the acute crisis units proposed at Sonoma Developmental Center and Fairview Developmental Center. You can access that document here: http://www.dds.ca.gov/publicforums/docs/topicPoints.pdf

more BACKGROUND:

You can see a list of stakeholders invited to the Workgroup meetings here: http://www.dds.ca.gov/publicforums/docs/stakeHolderList.pdf

The trailer bill (SB 856) passed earlier this year that contains provisions regarding implementation of the Developmental Center Task Force recommendation can be viewed here: http://www.dds.ca.gov/publicforums/docs/sb856.pdf

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Sonoma Developmental Center's Main Building a Valley Landmark

Main Building at Sonoma
Developmental Center
When the Main Building at Sonoma Developmental Center (the brick building at the top of Harney and directly in front of you as you come in the main entrance) was made a National Historical Landmark in August of 2000, the nomination papers for that designation included some of the history of the Center. As California continues to wrestle with role of developmental centers in the care of the State's developmentally disabled, we thought it was worth a look back and so have reprinted that bit of the Center's history below.

from the nominating papers, and courtesy of the Glen Ellen Historical Society...

The Sonoma Developmental Center (formerly known as the California Home for the Care and Training of Feeble Minded Children, Sonoma State Home, Sonoma State Hospital) was the first of its kind west of the Mississippi. Julia Judah and Frances Bentley were the driving forces behind the founding of the facility. Julia Judah was the wife of Henry Judah, a prominent railroad builder and Frances Bentley was the wife of a Methodist Minister. Both had Developmentally Delayed Children. Other early sponsors and directors included: Bishop Kip, (founder of Grace Cathedral in San Francisco), Leland Stanford, Henry Judah, Washington Bartlett, (then mayor of San Francisco and later Governor of California), Professor Warring Wilkinson, (Principal of the California School for the Deaf, Dumb and Blind), Col. William Harney, Oliver Eldridge and Mrs. Ariel Lathrop.

The facility was founded as a private institution and was first opened at San Jose, later at Sulphur Springs at Vallejo. Soon, outgrowing that site and realizing greater funding was needed the institution was turned over to the State of California and temporarily moved to Alameda and from there to Santa Clara. Again it was evident that more acreage was needed as the population had grown from 20 in 1884 to 108 in 1889. In 1889 funds were appropriated by the state for the purchase of at least 500 acres for the institution. Captain Oliver Eldridge and George Gibbs began the search. They found a beautiful 1670 acre ranch just south of Glen Ellen. The land was owned by Ex Senator William McPherson Hill. The ranch was acquired for $51,000.

Ground was broken for the first buildings and the corner stone laid in 1890. The original structure, (the west wing), consisted of a kitchen, client and employee dining rooms on the ground floor and an assembly hall and dormitory on the second floor. The building included a two story north wing with sleeping quarters for male residents and a two story south wing for female residents. The north/south frontage of the building was a total of 520 feet.

The first residents occupied the building in 1891. By this time there were 148 clients. The move from Santa Clara occurred on November 24, 1891, in a special train provided by the Southern Pacific Railroad. During the first few months the residents had to vacate the building during the day so that workmen could finish the construction.

During the earthquake of 1906 part of the building collapsed. Luckily no one was injured. Following the quake the second floor of the west wing was torn down. Two years later, in 1908, ground was broken for the Main Building. The new building housed administrative offices of the institution as the center grew around it.

The north and south wings were torn down during the 1950's. Only a small portion of the south wing remains. The administrative offices were moved into the Porter Administration Building in 1956. The Main Building was then used as a Professional Education Center and included a professional library. Then in 1970 the building was abandoned.

This remarkable building is the center piece of the nearly 1,000 acres making up the Development Center today. The grounds consist of wooded hills, with lakes and creeks running through it. It is the most beautiful setting for an institution in the state. The Center was, for many years, the largest employer in Sonoma County and at the present is still the third largest. The communities of Glen Ellen and Eldridge cherish the setting and this unique Main Building.

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

State Officials Appeal CDPH Decision to Decertify ICF Units at Sonoma Developmental Center

State officials announced on Monday that they had submitted a formal request on August 8, 2014 for an appeal and full evidentiary hearing on the decisions and findings of the California Deparment of Public Health (CDPH) relating to their enforcement action on July 25th against seven intermediate care units at Sonoma Developmental Center (SDC). That action was the decertification of the intermediate care facility at SDC, which means the loss of $2.5 million per month in federal funding for the Center

That appeal will give the center valuable time to correct problems CDPH found and to bring the facilities fully into compliance, according to Nancy Lungren, assistant director of communications at the Department of Developmental Services (DDS), which oversees Sonoma Developmental Center.

The decertification at SDC would not go into effect for 90 days from the date of the decision by CDPH (July 25th). The appeal gives DDS and the Center an additional 120 days beyond that to correct everything.

from the official press release...

In January 2013 Sonoma removed 4 units from federal participation and entered into a Performance Improvement Plan (PIP) with the CDPH to continue federal funding after extensive discussion with both CDPH and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Under the plan, DDS contracted with outside experts, subject to the approval of CDPH and CMS, to implement improvements at Sonoma. With the assistance of those independent experts, a great deal of progress has been made at Sonoma to come into compliance with the federal requirements.

"Sonoma has made improvements in all aspects of care and services to the men and women residing at Sonoma, including an emphasis on medical, behavioral and training services," said Karen Faria, Executive Director of Sonoma Developmental Center. "We have evaluated all aspects of operations and direct care of the individuals who reside at Sonoma, and will continue to work closely with CDPH and CMS in making improvements in areas as needed.
"Most importantly, we are committed to providing a safe and secure environment for our residents, and one in which they thrive," said Ms. Faria.

Some of the improvements at Sonoma include:
• Expanded opportunities for Sonoma residents to access the community and expand independent skills.
• Improved human resources systems that resulted in the hiring of 321 additional staff resources in both the clinical and administrative operations.
• Developed and implemented an extensive re-training program with a focus on direct care staff in competencies in areas of client protection, abuse reporting, nursing care, behavioral services, active treatment, and the person-centered planning process.
• Augmented the policy development and review process which led to a substantial number of revised and more comprehensive facility policies that guide and direct services and daily operations.
• Restructured the Executive Committee and Governing Body oversight and monitoring process to ensure a comprehensive overview of the Center's operations including facility policy revisions; improved data and trend analysis, and increased systems for staff deployment and training.
• Implemented a system of review (Whole Person Review) processes that ensures ongoing monitoring, oversight and accountability in areas related to resident rights, access and treatment programs to assist and support individuals with behavioral and psychiatric support needs.
---

The letter sent on August 8, 2014 to Mr. John Dexter, Chief, CDPH, Licensing and Certification Program follows:

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

A Closer Look at the SDC Survey

Kathleen Miller,
PHA President
by Kathleen Miller, PHA President

[The following article by PHA President Kathleen Miller ran in the Sonoma Index-Tribune on Tuesday, August 5, 2014. You can access the SIT article online at www.sonomanews.com. It is reposted here in its entirety.]

The Parent Hospital Association (PHA), composed of family and friends of Sonoma Developmental Center residents, looks forward to the annual survey by the Department of Public Health (DPH). It usually allows us to see the outcome of continuing efforts to assist our relatives and friends at Sonoma Developmental Center.

This year was a different experience. What happened? The recent survey resulted in the threatened decertification and loss of federal funding for over half the residents.

Thus far, I have declined requests to comment on this development because I wanted to take the time to review the findings prior to forming any conclusions or making any public comments. Upon reviewing the survey results several things stand out for me.

First, much of the survey results focus on minor issues. Overall, the survey cited a few instances of non-compliance and then repeated them over and over in different sections, making a 207-page survey seem disastrous. There is a great deal of focus on paperwork, and such issues as uneven sidewalks, bees circling a bush and even ants.

There were issues of late reporting that were clarified as the difference between calendar days required by DPH and those required by SDC, understanding that work days were sufficient. There were statements that SDC staff should report potential issues to the local office, even when there is no one there to receive the report.

As a parent, I was concerned about some of the issues. For one example, bowel care can be a major, and potentially life-threatening, concern for residents who use the toilet independently but can’t communicate when things are not working. Even the slightest misstep can make a difference. It appears there were some errors related to tracking, and following up. This strikes me as an area that needs some work.

Second, federal oversight is lacking in community homes. While the federal dollars that go to developmental centers are linked to extensive state and federal oversight, no such federal oversight exists for federal dollars that go to care in community homes, where many SDC residents may eventually be placed. The state is given the responsibility for that oversight.

In many cases, any oversight for community homes is limited or lacking. In fact most, if not all, of the concerns listed in the recent survey would not be even reviewed in community care facilities. Thus, families get frustrated when they hear others, including some legislators, asking, “Why not close the centers and place everyone in the community?” as thoughthese same issues do not exist in community care settings.

Third, who is to blame for SDC loss of federal funding? From my perspective, there is enough blame to go around. I have concerns about a lack of specific, effective training in clients rights, client protection and client outcomes, all of which are critical in maintaining certification. Staff, some of them new, need to be able to articulate these concerns. They also need to step in if they see a resident who is having an issue, instead of backing away in order to avoid trouble, as appears may have happened in a few instances cited in the survey.

I am most concerned that SDC administration played a role in issues associated with the survey. I am heartened by the new Department of Developmental Services (DDS) Administration and look forward to working with Santi Rogers, the new director of DDS, who seems open to the concerns of the Sonoma community and SDC.

I am, however, concerned about the role middle management at DDS has played. They have repeatedly replaced directors at SDC, as if that alone would resolve the complex issues of funding, staffing and other resources beyond the director’s control. DDS needs to look beyond the administration at SDC and look at those responsible for the oversight of the developmental centers. The truth is that SDC is not unique, and shares many of the issues cited with the other developmental centers. It is the focus simply because it was the first to come to the attention of the feds.

Fourth, I am concerned about federal oversight. Federal program officials play a key role, demanding that residents at a large Intermediate Care Facility like SDC meet extremely strict requirements, for which the state receives matching funds. But federal authorities sidestep responsibility if a developmental center client moves to a community group home, for which the state receives federal “waiver money.” There, they leave oversight to the state and play no direct role. The federal agency has created a bifurcated system.

In this recent SDC survey, some of the information cited was inaccurate and overstated. From my reading of the information, there was no preponderance of evidence that there was substantial non-compliance identified throughout the residences. Rather, the feds have seemed to focus on minor issues that do not greatly impact the provision of care. This only seems to highlight the difference in oversight as part of a duel system.

Further, I am very concerned that this “evidence” will be used to argue against the mission of the developmental centers. Comparisons are thrown around, but federal oversight stops at community care providers.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Programs Help Caregivers Reduce Stress, Learn to Cope

Helping Grandmother walk, by Rosie O'Beirne on flickr.com (Creative Commons license)

What happens when the caregivers need care?

An article in this week's New York Times addresses that question -- with hopeful conclusions and advice.
All parents endure stress, but studies show that parents of children with developmental disabilities, like autism, experience depression and anxiety far more often. Struggling to obtain crucial support services, the financial strain of paying for various therapies, the relentless worry over everything from wandering to the future -- all of it can be overwhelming.

"The toll stress-wise is just enormous, and we know that we don't do a really grat job of helping parents cope with it," said Dr. Fred R. Volkmar, the director of Child Study Center at Yale University School of Medicine.

"Having a child that has a disability, it's all-encompassing," he added. "You could see how people would lose themselves."
Fortunately, Doctors have been studying the efficacy of mindfulness techniques in reducing the stress and associated depression and anxiety that may come along with it -- and the results of their study are promising. It turns out, training in simple breathing techniques, cultivating awareness in the moment and learning to curb negative thinking, among other things, goes a long way in improving a caregiver's sense of calm and ability to cope.

Read more about the study here: When the Caregivers Need Healing, by Catherine Saint Louis, in The New York Times (July 29, 2014).


Friday, July 25, 2014

Report In on Sonoma Developmental Center's Efforts for Recertification

Updates:
Sonoma Developmental Center stripped of federal funding, by Derek Moore, in The Press Democrat (July 25, 2014)
Troubled Sonoma Developmental Center loses federal funds, by Isabelle Taft, in the Sacramento Bee (July 25, 2014)


Officials are meeting at Sonoma Developmental Center (SDC) today to discuss the results of the Center's months long effort to make the necessary improvements to regain Federal certification and funding. SDC lost federal funding for a portion of its programs last year amid investigations into reported lapses and problems in patient care. The funding lost amounts to $1.37 million per month and affects 112 residents.

You can read more about this online at Improvement at Sonoma Developmental Center falling short, by Derek Moore, in The Press Democrat (July 24, 2014).

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Can Community Care Answer the Needs of the Developmentally Disabled?

The Sonoma Developmental Center, Sonoma Valley, Calif. (Conner Jay, The Press Democrat)

As Secretary Dooley prepares to reconvene the Task Force considering the future direction of California's remaining developmental centers, questions remain about whether or not community homes and services can meet the needs of all of the state's developmentally disabled citizens.

An article published in the Press Democrat this week highlights some of the questions and concerns: Future of Sonoma Developmental Center on group's agenda, by Derek Moore (July 19, 2014).

For more information about the task force, including agendas and audio recordings of past meetings, visit www.chhs.ca.gov/Pages/DCsTaskForce.

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Recent Sonoma Developmental Center News

I may seem like summer doldrums time but activity continues surrounding California's developmental centers and service for the State's developmentally disabled. The Sonoma Index-Tribune has posted an update on recent developments impacting Sonoma Developmental Center (SDC). You can read it online here: SDC update, by David Bolling (7/8/2014).


Monday, July 7, 2014

Op-Ed: What Happened to You, Governor Brown?

The following open letter to California Governor Jerry Brown was recently circulated among folks in Sonoma Valley concerned about recent moves to limit services to the developmentally disabled and downsize, and possibly close, the State's few remaining developmental centers. The letter has now been posted by The Sonoma County Gazette; you can find it online here: OpEd: Open Letter to Governor Brown - What happened to you? It is re-posted here in its entirety.

Dear Governor Brown,

You must excuse the informal and impolite tone of this letter, but what the hell happened to you?

Where is the man that walked with Chavez and stood up for civil rights? Where is the Jesuit and Zen trained man who met with Mother Teresa and appointed Gary Snyder, and acknowledged that the poorest and most vulnerable among us must be respected and cared for?

Where is the man who spoke for years on KPFA, the only radio station dedicated to free inquiry, human rights and rational, moral thinking?

Where is the man who led meditations and gave dharma talks at Spirit Rock?

Where did that man go, or was it all just a lot of crap and BS?

That the same man could consider closing the regional developmental centers in CA, which house and care for some of our most profoundly ill and incapacitated citizens is incongruous beyond words. Where is the morality behind this? Is this all just to save a few bucks, because that’s relatively what it is, while at the same time promote major projects that will cost hundreds of billions? You would do this on the backs of those patients who are our human responsibility to aid and care for? What manner of man are you? Who are you, truly?

I suggest that before you jettison these people and their families you come to Sonoma’s Developmental Center and spend a day in the presence of these folks and the people who take care of them. I suggest that you hang with them for a time, talk and eat with their caregivers and then decide what you should do for them.

I’ll tell you this though. There’s a contingent in Sonoma comprised of land trust organizations, environmental organizations, political organizations and concerned citizens who will fight every step of the way, as it was done before, to prevent the SDC lands from going to private developers so they can glean more profits. If it takes years, as it did before, I guarantee we will not relent on this.

It should not be necessary to tell you this, you of all people, but it is our collective responsibility and obligation to provide the patient populations at developmental centers the highest and best care we can muster, not shunt them off to insufficient small private care facilities ill equipped to meet their needs. Government can’t run away from this waving a monetary excuse. Are you a governor or an accountant?

And whatever happened to the man that used to be Jerry Brown?


Will Shonbrun, Sonoma

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Find more local Sonoma County news online with The Sonoma County Gazette.


Friday, July 4, 2014

California Health and Human Services Secretary Diana S. Dooley Reconvenes Task Force

California's Health and Human Services Agencey released the following announcement on Thursday, July 3rd:

California Health and Human Services Agency Secretary Diana S. Dooley today announced she will reconvene the Task Force that developed the Plan for the Future of Developmental Centers in California.  The Task Force includes consumers, consumer advocates, regional centers, community service providers, organized labor, families of developmental center residents, members of the Legislature and Department of Developmental Services staff.

Consistent with a recommendation in the Plan and in response to Governor Brown’s message in the recently signed Budget Act, the Task Force will be charged with examining services for the developmentally disabled in the community.  The Task Force will develop recommendations to strengthen the community system in the context of a growing and aging population, resource constraints, availability of community resources to meet the specialized needs of clients, and past reductions to the community system.  Issues to be examined will include community rates, the impact of new State and federal laws and regulations, and staffing levels at Regional Centers.

When the landmark Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Services Act was adopted in 1969 to establish community-based alternatives, California took the first step to develop a robust community system for those with developmental disabilities to live full, integrated lives in their local communities.  Today, California serves approximately 275,000 individuals in the community system with a budget of $4.7 billion.

Secretary Dooley said in reconvening the Task Force, “This diverse group of stakeholders did a remarkable job coming together, setting aside differences, and producing a set of recommendations to chart a course for the future of the Developmental Centers.  I believe this same group can build on that success by examining services in the community.  By working together and resisting the inclination toward either/or thinking, we can focus on appropriate services for people with developmental disabilities, regardless of setting.”

The first meeting of the Task Force will be July 24, 2014.

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Latest PHA Newsletter Available - No General Meeting in July

Summer by Matteo Angelino on flickr.com
(Creative Commons license)
It's officially summer and, after a very busy start to the year for California's developmental centers, PHA has decided to call recess in July. It's time to take a short breather, enjoy the season and our friends and families, and recoup for what will probably be an equally intense close-out of the year.

So...no general membership meeting in July. The next meeting will be 10 a.m., Saturday, September 13th, in McDougall Hall on the SDC campus. More details about the meeting will be posted here on the blog as they become available.

Print copies of the latest Eldridge Gazette will start arriving in mailboxes next week for those members on the snail-mail list. Email newsletters will arrive a bit sooner. If you're not in the mood to wait for either, you can download a copy now: May/June 2014 Eldridge Gazette. Links to this edition and many back issues can also be found on the Resources Page of the main website or by clicking on the Resource tab at the top of this page.

Happy Summer everyone -- and we hope to see you in September!
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