In ruling criticized as biased, DDS denies family’s request to place son at the Wrentham Center
As had been expected, Department of Developmental Services (DDS) Commissioner Jane Ryder last week upheld the denial of a request by a couple to place their intellectually disabled son at the Wrentham Developmental Center.
Ryder upheld a recommended decision by DDS Hearing Officer William O’Connell, who had previously denied a request by the couple to submit a COFAR blog post in rebuttal to a DDS closing brief in the case.
The COFAR post claims, among other things, that federal law gives individuals a right to care in an Intermediate Care Facility (ICF) such as the Wrentham Center.
The couple, who have asked that their names not be used, have sought the Wrentham placement as part of an appeal of their son’s Individual Support Plan (ISP). They contend the DDS-funded corporate provider that operates their son’s group home and day habilitation program does not provide services their son needs, such as nursing, speech and occupational therapy; and they note that these services are provided at Wrentham.
O’Connell’s 24-page recommended decision denying the couple’s appeal was dated July 20. The couple maintain that the language and reasoning in O’Connell’s decision confirms that he held a bias against them and in favor of DDS.
Son had been abused at day hab program and is facing eviction from group home
The couple also stated in their appeal that their son had been sexually and physically abused in his day hab facility. They further stated that the provider sought last September to evict their son from the group home after he had a toileting accident on the group home’s outside deck.
The eviction is currently on hold based on the couple’s objection to it under DDS regulations.
The couple said they are considering an appeal of O’Connell’s decision in state Superior Court. They said their hope is that a win in court would establish a precedent for other families seeking to place their loved ones with intellectual and developmental disabilities at either Wrentham or the Hogan Regional Center, the two remaining congregate ICFs in Massachusetts.
In ruling against the couple, O’Connell cited the testimony of two DDS regional directors during a hearing on the couple’s appeal in April. O’Connell stated that based on that testimony, he concluded that “the assessments and/or goals used to develop (the son’s) ISP…form a more than adequate basis for service planning for (the son), including his needs and treatments.”
O’Connell also stated in his decision that the son’s current services are “the ‘least restrictive’ to meet (his) current needs.”
O’Connell’s decision, however, largely did not address the couple’s contention that the actual services their son has received in his group home are inadequate.
Also, as COFAR pointed out in the blog post, which O’Connell would not allow to be submitted, “a statement that a community-based setting is necessarily less restrictive than an ICF is an ideological position that ignores the evidence.”
Hearing officer appeared to have a bias against the family
The couple further noted to us that the regional directors whose testimony was cited by O’Connell are bureaucrats who are largely unfamiliar with the day-to-day care of the son. Yet, the couple said, O’Connell clearly placed all of his credence in the directors’ testimony and not in their own testimony.
In his final decision, O’Connell used the term “credible” or “credibly” to describe the testimony of the two DDS regional directors at least 14 times, while repeatedly stating that the couple had “not met the burden of proof” and had not provided “probative evidence” to support their request that their son be placed at Wrentham. He didn’t explain why their evidence wasn’t probative.
The mother also told us that during the April hearing, O’Connell had expressed repeated impatience with her, telling her to “get to the point…” She said he never interrupted the DDS attorney.
O’Connell had also stated in his previous ruling that the COFAR Blog post was “not probative” as a reason for refusing to consider COFAR’s rebuttal to the DDS closing brief. The blog post would have required him to address several points including:
- That the federal Medicaid statute does provide a right and choice to individuals and their families to ICF care.
- That care at Wrentham and Hogan is not necessarily more restrictive than in provider-run group homes.
- That the couple’s son’s care in the community-based system has not been successful for the past 13 years, as the DDS closing brief stated, and O’Connell repeated.
- That DDS’s policy for many years of blocking new admissions to both Wrentham and Hogan is likely to result in the eventual closure of both of these vitally important backstops of care for some of the state’s most vulnerable residents.
In his decision, O’Connell also repeatedly stated that the couple had rejected all providers of community-based residential services that DDS had identified for them. But he did not acknowledge that the couple said they did so because they believe the community-based system has failed their son and will continue to do so.
ISP hearing process inherently unfair
COFAR has additionally questioned the fairness of the ISP appeal process, under which both the hearing officer is appointed by the DDS commissioner, and the commissioner then makes the final decision whether to uphold the hearing officer’s ruling. COFAR has called for such appeals to be decided by the state’s independent Division of Administrative Law Appeals.
Hearing officer discounted the impact of sexual and physical abuse of couple’s son
In his decision, O’Connell played down the impact of two incidents of sexual and physical abuse of the couple’s son, which the couple said were part of the reason they don’t believe the community-based system is safe or adequate for him. Both incidents had occurred in the bathroom of the day hab facility.
In one case in 2017, a staff member at the day hab program slapped the son on the head, punched him in the back, grabbed his genitals, and was verbally abusive to him over the course of several days.
In a second case in 2015, the son arrived from the day hab facility with a belt tightened so tightly that the parents couldn’t get it off. They said the belt was used to keep their son from going to the bathroom and moving his bowels. Their son has Crohn’s disease and needs to use the bathroom frequently.
According to the couple, their son cried and screamed when they tried to get the belt off. They said he had clear marks and indentations on his stomach which they photographed. In both cases, abuse was substantiated by the DDS investigations unit.
But O’Connell stated in his decision that:
I credit the (couple’s) concerns regarding (their son’s) well-being and safety given these terrible events, but find they were at day supports, not a residential placement, and thus do not have particular probative effect to the (couple’s) current appeal of the ISP and POC (Plan of Care).
O’Connell also stated, in line with the DDS closing brief, that the abuse happened five or more years ago.
But O’Connell didn’t mention that the same provider that runs the son’s day hab program also runs his group home. Also, there was no evidence presented by DDS or the hearing officer that abuse and neglect in the DDS provider system has become less prevalent in the past five years or that the abuse is unlikely to occur again.
Also, abuse in the provider system in general is not restricted to day programs, but occurs in residential settings. If the son were to be admitted to Wrentham, he would attend a day program there, where the abuse rate is likely to be lower than in the provider system.
We have found that abuse overall is lower in the ICFs than in provider run group homes.
Did not address specific services allegedly missing from the community
In a brief that they filed with their original appeal, the couple stated that there is no speech, occupational, recreational, or vocational therapy available to their son in his group home. The group home provider doesn’t provide those services, but Wrentham does.
The couple also stated that their son’s group home and day hab provider have not assigned a nurse to him or provided the name of a nurse to call in case a medical issue arises. They also said there is no nursing listed on his ISP or day hab service plan.
Also, the couple stated that no one at the group home “knows about (their son’s) health status at any given time.” For instance, they said, no member of the staff was aware their son was due for a colonoscopy in June.
The couple also maintained that in most doctors’ offices in the community, there are no accommodations for individuals like their son who have trouble waiting for long periods of time to be seen by the doctor.
O’Connell’s decision largely did not address these specific issues. However, O’Connell did respond to the couple’s contention that their son is not receiving the proper nursing care, writing that “DDS has indicated they will work with (the provider) and any subsequent residential agency to support (the son’s) specific nursing needs.”
The couple maintained to us, however, that saying DDS will “work with” the provider is a tacit admission that the service doesn’t currently exist, and is not an assurance that anything concrete will be done. Those nursing services, however, do exist at Wrentham.
O’Connell also stated that one of the DDS regional directors “credibly testified” that the couple had stated during an informal conference prior to the hearing that the son’s doctor is “excellent.” While that may be the case, the fact remains that the medical staff at Wrentham are highly trained to deal with people with intellectual disabilities, while medical staff in the community are not.
Also, O’Connell stated that the son’s difficulties in waiting at doctors’ officers “are common and easily managed by staff.” The parents disputed this, saying that if that behavior were easily managed, the problem would have been solved long ago.
Couple says son did not face discharge due to their actions
In his decision, O’Connell, once again adopting the DDS closing brief position, stated that the couple were notified last September that the son’s provider “was looking to discharge (him) from their residential placement services due to the (couple’s) actions, not due to any issue with (the son) or (the provider’s) ability to serve (the son).”
O’Connell did not say what those actions were that the parents allegedly committed. Moreover, the couple disputed O’Connell’s characterization of the matter. According to the couple’s original appeal brief, the incident that led to the discharge notice started when no staff were available in the residence to let their son inside to use the toilet.
The group home blamed the couple following the son’s accident on the group home deck, claiming they failed to clean up the area and failed to notify the staff about it. The couple dispute that charge, saying they used a sheet in their car to clean up the area and then emailed both provider and DDS officials about it.
The couple said there was one other incident that precipitated the discharge notice having to do with a Facebook post that the mother made that was critical of the staff of the group home. Neither of these incidents, in our view, are sufficient reasons to have issued a notice to evict the son. No details were provided in the hearing officer’s decision about either of those reasons for the discharge notice.
In sum, O’Connell’s decision in this case, in our view, shows exactly why the ISP appeal process is inherently unfair to families and guardians. His decision was entirely supportive of DDS’s position, and was entirely dismissive of the testimony and evidence put forth by the parents.
For the reasons the couple enumerated, we too hope they will win in court should they decide to appeal, and that this case would then set a precedent that might serve to save the Wrentham and Hogan Centers and other state-run residential programs and services from eventual extinction.
No surprise there.
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This decision is no surprise. It would be a shock if this DDS hearing Officer ever went with what the parents know what their son needs. It is time DDS NOT be the ones that decide/pick/choose placements when parents/guardians know what is best for their loved ones. Jane Ryder won’t change a bias hearing officers decision, the system is broken! I can only hope the court system opens the way for MANY that would want Wrentham! Not substandard care individuals continue to be subjected to in so called vendor community setting! It is BULL private vendor are less restrictive why because a house sits in a community, because they drag individuals to stores, there is no real community integration, it is more isolated, much easier to abuse/neglect individuals and they get $$$ for substandard care. The community actually does integrate at wrentham , plus there is more oversight of individuals, safer, medically comprehensive, better care, positives on and on for Wrentham! DDS and the court system needs to recognize we parents/guardians care about our individuals while these DDS employees sit at their desks, make bad decisions then go happily home after all it’s not their loved one being abused, neglected or simply misplaced!
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Perfectly said “Wrentham is viable”. It appears that DDS will force the closure of Wrentham if they don’t let anyone go there, that must be their plan? There needs to be a serious oversight committee. Beacon Hill needs to step to the plate. Email your congressmen, senators, etc. We must add pressure. DDS’s egregious acts must be stopped.
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Parents and siblings only want the best care possible for their loved ones with intellectual and physical disabilities. That care is possible at Wrentham, so why deny a parent the right to have that option? This decision by DDS is cruel and heartbreaking for the parents and son.
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We really do not need the DDS to make placement decisions at all. This could be done by a database. All providers have an admissions procedure. Why do we need to spend money on the DDS making placement decisions for us? This is not money well-spent.
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Great idea Itanzman. Also, there should be rating system for every provider agency because some of them, like the one I dealt with are really terrible. The ratings can come from the pubic and their experiences they had. Sort of like restaurant ratings.
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In the last 12 months has anyone new got into Wrentham? I am interested in having a family member (who is losing a group home placement) be considered for Wrentham. Is anyone available to give our family informal advice if and how we could make this happen? Thanks.
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Contact Dave Kassel. He can give you the contact information of the families seeking admission to Wrentham along with email addresses. There have been admissions when providers request that a hard-to-serve individual be served there instead of their group home. It’s a problem when families request this. Please ask for an email address ASAP because the Wrentham admission seeking group is meeting next Tuesday.
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Sorry, Joan Norman, that meeting is Wednesday, not Tuesday of this coming week.
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