[tabi] Re: Fw: article in the Tampa Bay Times on DBS

  • From: "Allison and Chip Orange" <acorange@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <tabi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 12 Nov 2012 17:43:50 -0500

What a great article Robert! Thank you so much for posting it here.  You
know that many of us aren't really involved in the advocacy groups, and so
having you and others post things here is sometimes the only way we have of
following important issues.

 

As long as Florida allows this type of service, being provided by dozens of
separate organizations (each of which has its own hiring procedures and
operating standards), we're never going to be able to control it; we're
never going to be able to assure any sort of standardization of service
quality across the state.  It's an open door to nepotism and self-enrichment
at what are obviously staggering rates of compensation.  And all of it is
hidden behind the moral shield of "non-profit corporations", a term which
immediately calms the public and reassures them; causing them to believe
that this is all being done by people who are just volunteering their time
to help the poor blind people in any way that they can.

 

Someone may ask "aren't there CRPs who are providing the tax payers with
quality service at an economical price"?  Who don't just have any hiring
procedures and any salaries they like (because they aren't subject to the
standards developed for those who take the public monies)?

 

I think the answer is "how would we know"?  Every single case is different,
and it appears that none of them are being watched closely enough for us to
know.  Some of them seem to be practicing what I've just heard called
"vulture capitalism": enriching themselves (and their friends) by billing
the state, and also collecting from gifts and donations from the public, for
the same services (of often dubious quality).

 

Government may not be perfect, but one thing it's concentrated on is laws
and policies against these very abuses: salaries aren't allowed to go to
stratospheric levels, and hiring practices are always open to examination by
the public.  Service quality levels, if not sufficient, can usually be
brought to the attention  of those hire in government, who often can do
something about it (unlike the current situation).

 

I'm not sure what we can do about the current situation; but this article is
a great aid in helping take the first important step: convincing the blind
consumers of Florida that there really is a significant problem which needs
addressing.

 

Chip Orange

 

 

 

 

 

 

From: tabi-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:tabi-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Easy Talk
Sent: Monday, November 12, 2012 4:21 PM
To: tabi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [tabi] Fw: article in the Tampa Bay Times on DBS

 

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From:  <mailto:Easytalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Easy Talk 

To:  <mailto:fcb-l@xxxxxxx> fcb-l@xxxxxxx 

Sent: Monday, November 12, 2012 4:19 PM

Subject: article in the Tampa Bay Times on DBS

 

TALLAHASSEE - Looking for a lesson in how government outsourcing is working
in Florida?
Try this: Organizations that win business with the little-known state
Division of
Blind Services can bill taxpayers $58 an hour for travel time to meet with a
blind
person. The same organizations can charge taxpayers $2,000 or more to place
one phone
call.
If the deal sounds good for the groups that win the no-bid state contracts,
it's
because it is.
Why? Because the private third-party vendors largely dictate the terms and
receive
little oversight, former Division of Blind Services employees say.
The state agency with a $52 million budget has largely privatized its
support programs
as a way to save money and better serve a group of 11,000 Floridians in
need, state
officials say.
But the results are mixed, at best.
Employee complaints about the Division of Blind Services have spawned at
least three
government investigations and four whistle-blower lawsuits, all alleging
waste on
some scale.
Blind Services director Joyce Hildreth, who worked at a group that received
state
contracts before joining the state agency in 2008, defends the division.
Under her
leadership, she says, the division has repaired fragmented relationships
with vendors
while implementing stricter penalties for nonperforming providers. Hildreth,
65,
earns $119,000.
"My expectation of both (the vendors) and the division staff is that they
will work
together to the benefit of the client," she said.
The record, however, isn't so clear-cut.
* * *
An annual summer meeting between the state and 16 Division of Blind Services
providers
offers a window into the uneven influence the groups have over an agency
that is
supposed to oversee them.
Their joint mission is to line up ways to help blind Floridians manage their
disability
from infancy to old age. The division and its outsourced vendors train blind
people
for everyday tasks from using a cane to pouring water without spilling. The
division
also operates a program to help blind people find jobs.
At the meeting, state workers and the vendors appear to be business
partners, according
to several current and former employees who have attended. But the vendors
decide
the performance criteria and penalties.
"I tried to get (the vendors) to suggest how we could get a mechanism in
place so
we don't feed their coffers and have poor service," said Jerry Edwards, a
former
contract manager who was fired in 2010 after he criticized the "lack of
meat" in
the contracts. "The attitude, from Joyce and from (the vendors) of not
wanting to
go there, was a real problem."
Signs of waste are everywhere, former employees Edwards, Julius Kimmie,
Robert Irons
and Mary Ellen Ottman said in separate interviews.
Although the law requires state workers to monitor all 16 providers through
yearly
unscheduled visits, the state only visited one vendor last year, documents
show.
Hildreth said the agency monitors the vendors by phone.
Loosely written contracts also allow vendors to make big money by taking
advantage
of loopholes, the former employees say.
A provider, for example, is paid from about $2,000 to $9,000 per month for
each person
it plans to serve. The state pays the money no matter how - or how many
times - a
provider helps a client.
So whether a provider makes 10 in-house visits, or just one phone call, the
money
comes in all the same.
During the 2012 legislative session the division asked for and received more
than
$540,000 in additional money to provide care for 201 blind babies on a state
waiting
list. But the vendors already received funding from nonprofit groups to
cover the
expenses associated with 172 of the same babies, documents show.
What's more, the state pays vendors based on their plans for service,
documenting
only time spent and making no attempt to measure results.
"The (vendors) call all the shots," said Ottman, a former employee who tried
to raise
red flags about the contracts to state officials. She quit in September.
* * *
Hildreth says the state actually underpays vendors, which have to raise
money from
outside sources to cover their costs.
The biggest vendors, all nonprofits, include LightHouse of Central Florida,
Tampa
LightHouse for the Blind, LightHouse of Pinellas and Miami LightHouse for
the Blind.
Top employees make upward of $200,000 per year, according to Internal
Revenue Service
documents.
Representatives for the vendors say they're interested in helping blind
people, not
making money.
"Everyone has to remember this is about providing services to people who
need it,"
said Colleen Castille, a lobbyist for the vendor trade group, the Florida
Association
of Agencies Serving the Blind.
Gov. Rick Scott, who has sought to privatize government services at an
accelerated
pace since taking office, has talked about strengthening contract
transparency and
uniformity.
But state officials have done little to address contracting complaints.
The state's chief financial officer, Jeff Atwater, has audited three of the
Division
of Blind Services' contracts and found them deficient, said spokeswoman Anna
Alexopoulos,
citing "significant issues in the management."
Yet Atwater, whose agency signs the contract checks, only has the authority
to question
the prices after the contracts are implemented. He can't void contracts,
even if
they are bad.
"If state agencies opt not to make critical changes to contracts post-audit,
taxpayers
will be on the losing end," Alexopoulos said.
A May report for the agency's inspector general, which does independent
government
investigations, criticized Hildreth for inappropriately managing contracts
and punishing
workers. Hildreth says those criticisms are unsubstantiated, both in
interviews and
with her staff.
In the state's complicated management structure, the division is overseen by
the
Department of Education.
Former Education Commissioner Gerard Robinson, who resigned in August, said
he spoke
with Hildreth about complaints from employees, but not about the division's
contracting
procedures. State officials know they need to address contracts, he said.
The question
is how.
State contracts are "a problem across the board, this isn't just Blind
Services"
Robinson said.
Pam Stewart, the interim education commissioner who replaced Robinson,
largely agreed.
"We do take seriously the need to look at all of our contracts and make sure
we're
getting the best return on our investment," she said. "We are already moving
in that
direction."
Former state employees see it differently.
"I contacted lawyers, my senator, the NAACP, Fox News and the FBI," Kimmie
said.
"But what I found out is ... nobody is listening."
Brittany Alana Davis can be reached at (850) 323-0353 or bdavis@
tampabay.com.
[Last modified: Nov 12, 2012 07:06 AM]
Copyright 2012 Tampa Bay Times

<<attachment: winmail.dat>>

Other related posts: