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        05-28-03: Mental health funding hinges
        on state budget  | 
       
      
        By TIMOTHY COX 
        The Daily Standard 
             
            VAN WERT - Local mental health and alcohol and drug addiction treatment
        providers in Mercer, Van Wert and Paulding counties are facing stagnant revenue through
        the local funding network for the fourth straight year. 
            That is the best-case scenario for the upcoming fiscal year that begins
        July 1, Tri County Alcohol, Drug Addiction & Mental Health Services Director Keith
        Turvy told board members meeting Tuesday. Exact funding amounts will not be determined
        until the the state budget is sorted out for the next biennium that also begins July 1, he
        said. 
            Board members approved contracts with area service providers but the
        numbers remain tentative. 
            "It's deja' vu," Turvy said. "We're doing the same thing
        we were doing with the budget a year ago."  
            Board members approved a $5.1 million budget that calls for a $57,000
        deficit to be covered by a cash reserve that also was tapped this year. The stagnant state
        revenue is affecting the availability of services to Tri County residents, Turvy and the
        director of a local agency said.  
            Tentative mental health service contracts were approved Tuesday for
        Foundations ($721,213), Westwood Behavioral Health Center in Van Wert ($758,296), Paulding
        County Mental Health Center in Paulding ($321,047) and Gateway Outreach Center in Celina
        ($254,251). Westwood also received a $198,394 contract for alcohol and drug treatment and
        The Turning Point in Paulding received a $133,961 contract for the same thing.  
            Employee health care and wage expenses have risen annually, but local
        agencies likely will get the same amount of state funding through Tri County that they
        received in 2001, Turvy said. 
            "That is chewing into services dollars," Turvy said. 
            Brian Engle, director of Foundations Behavioral Health Center in
        Celina, said that agency officials have been able to offset some of the rising costs by
        securing other grant money, but also said the demand for services "continues to go
        through the roof." 
            Case loads at Foundations have risen from 550 to 760 in the past eight
        years, Engle said. Agency officials see an average of 60-65 new cases per month, he said,
        while 35-40 was a more typical number a few years ago. The rising caseloads and stagnant
        income has resulted in new clients waiting two weeks or more for their first contact with
        a counselor, he said. 
            "That's a long time to wait when you've made a major decision like
        that to make that call," Engle said. 
            Foundations officials also are trying to maximize Medicaid funding to
        serve the most people. 
            "We're really milking the Medicaid cow as much as we can,"
        through loosened Medicaid eligibility guidelines, Engle said. 
            But Medicaid's uncontrolled growth threaten the integrity of the
        community mental health network, Turvy said. 
            "If the entitlement runs on, it will become a Medicaid-only system
        with the resurrection of state institutional hospitals," Turvy said. "The
        community safety net is beginning to unravel." 
            Turvy praised the board and the professional service providers for
        their ability to withstand years of no financial growth. 
            A budget reserve account the board established several years ago has
        been key to navigating the fiscal problems of the past couple of years. If state funding
        comes through as expected, the board will drain the account by another $57,000 in the next
        budget year, reducing the fiscal cushion to about $300,000. 
            Fiscal Officer Sandy Goodwin said state officials have indicated they
        expect to keep mental health and drug and alcohol addiction money frozen in the next
        budget. If they unexpectedly cut the available funding, though, the effects would ripple
        through the local system, Tri County officials said. 
            A 5 percent cut in funding, for example, would zap $125,000 from the
        Tri County budget reserve if Tri County officials decided to keep provider contracts
        frozen at current levels. 
            "We're very fortunate we have that reserve account," Turvy
        said. | 
       
      
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