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Quinn's 'bold' plan for care of developmentally disabled

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Opponents say it's not that easy: Some people simply can't live in such settings and need the structure that they've come to know at a state institution, whether that be because of severe mental disabilities, behavior problems or particularly fragile medical conditions.

"These people aren't all cut from one cloth — each has specific needs," said Rita Burke, president of the Illinois League of Advocates for the Developmentally Disabled, an umbrella organization for parents whose children live in state facilities.

"Now, the governor's office says it is doing person-centered planning, but their person-centered planning has a predetermined outcome, and that is that everyone is appropriate to live in the community. How is that objective when they know before they even look at your son, daughter, brother or sister, where they are supposed to go?"

Burke points to her 42-year-old son, Brian Burke, who lives at the Choate Developmental Center south of Carbondale. She said he was expelled from four private care facilities before he found a stable home there. Rita Burke worries what would happen if Quinn decides to close Choate, saying parents are concerned that the state is placing people wherever a provider is willing to take them, regardless of staff training and qualifications.

"In state-operated development centers, we have people who have dedicated their lives, their professions, to serving these types of individuals," Burke said. "In the community, that is not what we have. We have direct-care staff who in many cases make minimum wage and have a high turnover rate. We expect that many people aren't going to do well in community settings because they are just not being offered the same level of care."

Indeed, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 31, which represents state workers, said one example of poor care came just days after a woman who uses a wheelchair was transferred from the Jacksonville center to a group home outside St. Louis.

While the woman was being moved, she fell off a lift and broke her leg. An inspector general's report for the Department of Human Services determined that staff members at the group home were negligent, but the agency sent more residents to live there. State officials call the matter an isolated incident, adding that inspectors have since visited the facility to see what measures have been put in place to prevent a repeat of the situation.

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