(LIBERTYVILLE) – State legislative candidates are
meeting with hundreds of health care employees and
family members from north suburban Illinois to discuss
the $110 million budget reduction in Medicaid funding
for Illinois nursing home residents. This candidate
forum is taking place on Wednesday, October 23rd
at 6:00 p.m at Winchester House, 1125 N. Milwaukee
Avenue in Libertyville
Speaking at this candidate forum will be Lisa Madigan,
Democratic candidate for Attorney General; Henry Peritt,
U.S. Congress, 10th District; Senator Terry
Link, D-30, Vernon Hills; Senate candidate Susan
Garrett, D-29, Highland Park; Senate candidate Charles
Fitzgerald, R-30, Lake Bluff; Representative candidate
Nancy Shepherdson, D-51, Deer Park; and Representative
candidate Kathleen Ryg, D-59, of Vernon Hills.
The candidates will sign a large "Commitment to
Care" pledge banner calling for a restoration of
Medicaid funding cut to Illinois nursing home residents.
So far, over 170 state legislative candidates have
signed a pledge vowing to restore Medicaid funding
during the next legislative session. In addition, all of
the forum participants will discuss the future of
nursing home care in Illinois.
The state legislature ‘s $110 million budget
reduction in Medicaid funding became effective July 1st
of this year. Over two-thirds of the total state nursing
home population receives Medicaid. This Medicaid cut
will impact the quality of care provided to over 50,000
Illinois citizens.
As 79 percent of all nursing home costs are
labor-related, the $110 million cut to Medicaid will
inevitably lead to thousands of nursing home staff
losing their jobs, as Illinois nursing homes struggle to
stay afloat. The Medicaid cut is the equivalent of 5,500
caregiver salaries. With fewer staff to provide care,
the health and well-being of the state’s nursing home
residents are at risk.
Illinois is one of the ten largest economies in the
country. Yet, with this cut to Medicaid, Illinois now
ranks as 49th lowest in the nation for
funding to nursing home residents, 27 percent below the
national average.
"State legislators must recognize that a
priority of government is help those citizens who cannot
help themselves," said Terrence Sullivan, executive
director of the Illinois Council on Long Term Care.
"This candidate forum will provide staff, family
and community members the opportunity to speak about the
importance of fair funding for nursing home
residents."
Nursing home employees are taking care of more
complex and needy patients than ten years ago. With more
technology and more staff, the cost of caring for
nursing home residents has risen in the past nine years
twice as fast as what the state pays through Medicaid.
In those nine years, costs of caring for residents have
risen 61 percent while Medicaid rates have gone up only
31 percent. That kind of cost pressure affects jobs,
wages, benefits and care for residents.
"The state budget should not be balanced on the
backs of the frail and elderly nursing home residents of
Illinois," said Ronald Walski, President of the
Service Employees International Union, Local 4.
"These nursing home residents represent our mothers
and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers, people who
have worked all of their lives to build our families,
our neighborhoods and our country. The state has the
moral obligation to make good on its social promise to
take care of these individuals. By cutting $110 million
to Medicaid, the state is turning its back on its most
frail and vulnerable citizens."
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The "Commitment to Care" coalition includes
the Illinois Council on Long Term Care; Life Services
Network; Illinois Health Care Association; County
Nursing Home Association of Illinois; Illinois Nursing
Home Administrators Association; Greater Illinois
Alzheimer’s Association; Service Employees
International Union, Local 4; and the Catholic
Conference of Illinois.