Smaller Funding Cuts

 

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Mental health cuts smaller than anticipated

By TAMARIA L. LIDDELL
The Eagle-Gazette Staff

LANCASTER -- The Fairfield County Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services Board was able to salvage some funding in the last seconds of finalizing budget cuts.

Instead of eliminating the initial projection of $412,000 from its budget, the agency only will eliminate $321,244 to balance its budget for fiscal year 2005, which begins July 1, 2004.

"This is based on preliminary breaking information we just received this week," said Orman Hall, executive director of the ADAMH Board.

The new projections could stick, but the board won't know for sure until after the Ohio Legislature meets, Hall said.

"It's a very rare year where we know what our state allocations are going to be (ahead of time)," he said. "We have to prepare in advance. There could be more (savings) or more reductions after that time."

In addition, the board now has $33,241 in unallocated funding -- the result of a regional program, Alternatives For Teens, being eliminated.

"Instead of maintaining it, we're closing it and moving those funds to our board," he said. "We will keep that funding at the board level until we determine what our real Medicaid growth is going to be in the next year and how we need to handle our detox situation."

Hall also announced that the court diversion program, services currently being administered by Mid Ohio Psychological Services Inc., will remain at that agency. A jail-based program will, however, be moved from Mid-Ohio to New Horizons Youth and Family Center.

At the last meeting, Janet Galligan, executive director of the Fairfield Mental Health Consumer Group, asked the board if a proposed cut of $22,500 be brought down to $15,000.

The latest projection enabled the board to honor this request.

"We're really relieved," Galligan said. "That (savings) will allow us to provide more hours of respite care and move forward with training for our Listen Line and Peer Support. We wouldn't be able to do that if that $7,500 had been cut."

Reductions to other contracting agencies, including The Lighthouse, The Recovery Center, Mid-Ohio and New Horizons, will remain the same.

Marc Grodner, executive director of The Recovery Center, said because of these cuts his agency will not be able to fill a vacancy for a treatment counselor.

"For us, this is another series of adjustments we've been making and we're to deal with this year," Grodner said. "Any additional cuts will seriously compromise our ability to deliver the most basic drug and alcohol services required to fulfill our mission."

The agency has gone from 26 to 19 employees within the last two years through attrition, Grodner said.

"That's almost a 25 percent reduction on our workforce," he said. "We're restructuring services to squeeze every ounce of efficiency we can out of our staff, but the bottom line is we're delivering less services and serving less people."

Originally published Wednesday, May 26, 2004