News Day 2/13/09: Slashing St. Paul / Home or nursing home / MN Job Watch and more …

Police, fire, libraries, rec centers going down in St. Paul Needing to make up $30-40 million due to state LGA cuts, St. Paul city department heads presented memos outlining possible cuts: laying off 56 firefighters, 67 police officers, and 23 civilian police department employees, closing the Hamline library and cutting other library hours, closing eight rec center buildings (down to 25 from 42 in 2006), turning off half the city’s streetlights, and reducing street sweeping and snow plowing. 54 city employees have applied for early retirement, and 10 have offered to reduce hours or take leaves of absence. The city has about 3,300 employees. Both the Strib and the PiPress have articles detailing the budget cut scenarios. St. Paul officials have scheduled two community conversations to solicit citizen input.

MN Job Watch In a no-win, no-loss scenario that may be a harbinger for public employee contracts during the year, MNSCU’s Inter Faculty Organization agreed to a new contract that freezes all salaries, but keeps benefits intact, reports Brady Gervais on MPR. The contract covers more than 3,000 faculty at the seven state universities.

Twin Cities law firms began cutting staff and attorneys this week, reports David Phelps in the Strib, with Faegre & Benson cutting 27 attorneys and an undisclosed number of other staff. Other firms cutting attorney and non-attorney staff include Merchant & Gould (33), Maslon Edelman Borman & Brand (5), Halleland Lewis Nilan & Johnson (6).

One more reason not to read the Strib And no, I haven’t cancelled my subscription yet. But yesterday’s announcement that Paul Douglas is out, , as David Brauer notes on MinnPost, means the Strib will get weather news for free from WCCO. And it signals a shift from Douglas’s “strong and oft-stated belief in global warming” to Mike Fairbourne’s global warming skepticism and what ‘CCO calls “lifestyle weather.” Those who still want to find Douglas can find him online at his own WeatherNation.

Home or nursing home? “About 25,000 Minnesotans with disabilities get help with dressing, bathing and other tasks,” writes Warren Wolfe in the Strib, with services mostly paid by Medicaid under a program originally conceived as a way to improve care and save money by allowing them to stay in their homes. More than 600 agencies bill the state for personal care attendant (PCA) services delivered by more than 40,000 PCAs. The MN Legislative Auditor reported that state spending on personal care assistance for elderly and disabled Minnesotans grew from $153 milion in 2002 to just over $400 million in 2007, according to an AP story published in the Strib. The auditor called the amount of spending unsustainable, but also said that the Department of Human Services has left the program too open to fraud and abuse. Most services are paid through Medicaid. The report found that some caregivers billed for more than 24 hours per day, and claimed consecutive 24-hour work days. Now DHS proposes to fix the program by eliminating 2,100 people from eligibility and increasing oversight. DHS would also require that people whose care is directed by a “responsible party,” such as people with mental disabilities, must live in the same household as the “responsible party.”

Loren Colman, human services assistant commissioner, characterized the changes as ensuring that resources “are being directed to people who require services, not just to those who like them.” Advocates and disabled persons testifying at a legislative hearing disagreed with her characterization. Anne Henry, a lawyer and advocate with the Minnesota Disability Law Center in Minneapolis, said “If we get too restrictive, we’ll end up paying far more when [former clients] end up in nursing homes, emergency rooms and even jails.”

Day care blues Jean Hopfensperger writes in the Strib that TC day care providers are losing out as parents lose jobs or see pay and hours cut. Some parents are looking for cheaper babysitters on Craigslist, or shifting to non-traditional work shifts, or putting together a patchwork of family members and babysitters. The average cost of full-time daycare for a four-year-old is $9,300 at a child care center and $7,000 in family child care. The waiting list for state child care subsidies has grown from 5,400 in July to 7,500 in December, and Pawlenty’s budget would cut subsidies by $10 million. Day care providers “are hoping they don’t end up in the same unemployment line as their departing clients.”

Luz Maria Frias for St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman announced that his head lobbyist, Luz Maria Frias, will move to head the city’s new Human Rights and Equal Economic Opportunity Department, succinctly called HREEO, reports MinnPost.


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