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$40K minimum teacher salary bill passes out of committee

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SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WICS/WRSP) — The $40,000 minimum teacher salary bill, House Bill 2078, has passed out of committee on Wednesday.

Currently the state school code sets the minimum salary for Illinois teachers at $10,000 a year for those with a bachelor’s degree and $11,000 for those with a master’s degree.

Illinois is also facing a teacher shortage and last year, more than 1,500 positions went unfilled and more than 2,000 went unfilled the year before, according to the Illinois Education Association.

Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Collinsville, is the bill’s sponsor, which passed out of the House Elementary and Secondary Education Committee on a 5-2 vote.

Sen. Andy Manar, D-Bunker Hill, is the sponsor of Senate Bill 10, which is on its third reading in the Illinois Senate.

Both versions of the bill would increase the minimum teacher salary in a five-year span, giving districts time to plan financially for the change.

The bill is now headed to the House floor.

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via KHQA

March 6, 2019 at 10:00PM

State Rep. Didech hosts ‘Donuts with Dan’ March 2

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State Rep. Daniel Didech of Buffalo Grove will host his inaugural "Donuts with Dan" at 10 a.m. Saturday, March 2, at the Garden Berry Café, 906 Route 45, in Vernon Hills.

Residents are invited to have coffee and discuss state and local issues with Didech. The freshman legislator represents the 59th District, which includes all or parts of Lincolnshire, Buffalo Grove, Wheeling, Vernon Hills and Mundelein.

Sonali Patil, board president of Vernon Hills-based Hawthorn Elementary School District 73, will be Didech’s special guest.

The event is free, open the public, and will feature complimentary coffee and pastries.

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via Daily Herald

February 25, 2019 at 10:04PM

More, better funding for mental health services proposed

http://bit.ly/2IpIvsq

SPRINGFIELD – An Illinois advocacy group is pushing legislation it says would bring $50 million in new money to state mental health services over the next four years.

According to the Illinois Coalition for Better Mental Health Care, more than 2.5 million Illinoisans have a mental health condition.

But the state ranks only 38th in the nation for mental health investment, while 82 of its 102 counties are designated as mental health professional shortage areas by the federal government.

Two lawmakers, Rep. Deb Conroy (D-Villa Park) and Sen. Heather Steans (D-Chicago), are sponsoring legislation – House Bill 2486 and Senate Bill 1673 – that would ramp up state mental health funding and change the funding structure to incentivize good results over flat service fees.

“Thousands of Illinois families … are victims of our mental health crisis,” Conroy, who heads the House Mental Health Committee, said Monday in a news release. “By creating a multiyear solution to reinvest and restructure our mental health programs with targeted, federally matched dollars, we can provide renewed hope to the millions affected.”

Most of the services targeted by the bills are Medicaid services, for which the federal government matches funding.

“The phase-in of rates that would enable growth of [mental health services] would happen slowly over a four-year period,” said Heather O’Donnell, who drafted the legislation and is vice president at Chicago-based mental health group Thresholds.

In year one, Illinois would provide $3.4 million of new funding, to be matched by the federal government. In year two, $5.7 million; in year three, $10.7 million; and in year four, $13 million.

After four years, O’Donnell said, the state would pay no more than $13 million in additional mental health funding in any given year, while the total new funding for state mental health services would reach more than $50 million with federal matching.

The state would also have to cover startup costs in years three and four, and bring additional funding to components of the bill that are not matched with federal funds.

So, although this federal matching would provide a much-needed funding boost, it is not clear where the new state money would come from.

“Preferably it would be new revenue,” O’Donnell said. “Some of it could come from the legalization of cannabis, but we are not specifying revenue sources [in the bills].”

Conroy agreed, saying “we’re all hoping for new revenue,” particularly from internet gambling and legalized marijuana.

“I know there is a commitment that some of the revenue from cannabis will go to mental health and addiction services, so that’s on the table,” Conroy said without discussing specifics. “And I do believe the commitment [to mental health and addiction] is there from the governor. He’s made it clear that’s a priority for him.”

Without specific funding plans, the bills more or less just lay groundwork for the new funding and changed payment methods.

Those changed payment methods deal with how mental health providers get money for the services they provide.

Currently, nearly all Medicaid contracts with mental health providers in Illinois are fee-for-service – the providers provide the service, and get reimbursed a specified fee.

The bills claim that this structure “allows for no innovation” in providing better services, because there is no reward for better outcomes and efficiency.

If passed, the bills would create a working group of providers, managed care organizations and state health workers, to figure out a set of metrics to “bring the regulatory structure in line with modern health care,” O’Donnell said.

These metrics would drive a new “pay-for-performance” structure, which providers could opt into each year, or opt out of after two years if they don’t like it.

Both bills await further assignments to committee.

010-Inoreader Saves,01-All No Sub,02-Pol,06-RK Email 11,15-Health,19-Legal,24-ILGA,26-Delivered,25-Working,RK Client,HL,HL New,RKPRS HL

via Effingham Daily News

February 18, 2019 at 07:42PM

More, better funding for mental health services proposed

http://bit.ly/2IpIvsq

SPRINGFIELD – An Illinois advocacy group is pushing legislation it says would bring $50 million in new money to state mental health services over the next four years.

According to the Illinois Coalition for Better Mental Health Care, more than 2.5 million Illinoisans have a mental health condition.

But the state ranks only 38th in the nation for mental health investment, while 82 of its 102 counties are designated as mental health professional shortage areas by the federal government.

Two lawmakers, Rep. Deb Conroy (D-Villa Park) and Sen. Heather Steans (D-Chicago), are sponsoring legislation – House Bill 2486 and Senate Bill 1673 – that would ramp up state mental health funding and change the funding structure to incentivize good results over flat service fees.

“Thousands of Illinois families … are victims of our mental health crisis,” Conroy, who heads the House Mental Health Committee, said Monday in a news release. “By creating a multiyear solution to reinvest and restructure our mental health programs with targeted, federally matched dollars, we can provide renewed hope to the millions affected.”

Most of the services targeted by the bills are Medicaid services, for which the federal government matches funding.

“The phase-in of rates that would enable growth of [mental health services] would happen slowly over a four-year period,” said Heather O’Donnell, who drafted the legislation and is vice president at Chicago-based mental health group Thresholds.

In year one, Illinois would provide $3.4 million of new funding, to be matched by the federal government. In year two, $5.7 million; in year three, $10.7 million; and in year four, $13 million.

After four years, O’Donnell said, the state would pay no more than $13 million in additional mental health funding in any given year, while the total new funding for state mental health services would reach more than $50 million with federal matching.

The state would also have to cover startup costs in years three and four, and bring additional funding to components of the bill that are not matched with federal funds.

So, although this federal matching would provide a much-needed funding boost, it is not clear where the new state money would come from.

“Preferably it would be new revenue,” O’Donnell said. “Some of it could come from the legalization of cannabis, but we are not specifying revenue sources [in the bills].”

Conroy agreed, saying “we’re all hoping for new revenue,” particularly from internet gambling and legalized marijuana.

“I know there is a commitment that some of the revenue from cannabis will go to mental health and addiction services, so that’s on the table,” Conroy said without discussing specifics. “And I do believe the commitment [to mental health and addiction] is there from the governor. He’s made it clear that’s a priority for him.”

Without specific funding plans, the bills more or less just lay groundwork for the new funding and changed payment methods.

Those changed payment methods deal with how mental health providers get money for the services they provide.

Currently, nearly all Medicaid contracts with mental health providers in Illinois are fee-for-service – the providers provide the service, and get reimbursed a specified fee.

The bills claim that this structure “allows for no innovation” in providing better services, because there is no reward for better outcomes and efficiency.

If passed, the bills would create a working group of providers, managed care organizations and state health workers, to figure out a set of metrics to “bring the regulatory structure in line with modern health care,” O’Donnell said.

These metrics would drive a new “pay-for-performance” structure, which providers could opt into each year, or opt out of after two years if they don’t like it.

Both bills await further assignments to committee.

010-Inoreader Saves,01-All No Sub,02-Pol,06-RK Email 11,15-Health,19-Legal,24-ILGA,26-Delivered,25-Working,RK Client,HL,HL New,RKPRS HL

via Effingham Daily News

February 18, 2019 at 07:42PM

PHOTO: Lance Yednock visits IVCC

http://bit.ly/2UUT6Nh

76th District State Rep. Lance Yednock met with students, staff and faculty and toured Illinois Valley Community College Tuesday. It was his first visit to campus since being sworn in Jan. 9. Yednock (standing) met with (from left) Student Government Association representatives Xavier Braboy, Julia Browning and Teresa Sajuan and IV Leader reporter Brittany Marx. “Community colleges are where I see the future going,” Yednock said. “It’s where the next generation of workers will be trained.” The 76th includes La Salle, Bureau, Putnam and Livingston counties.
76th District State Rep. Lance Yednock met with students, staff and faculty and toured Illinois Valley Community College Tuesday. It was his first visit to campus since being sworn in Jan. 9. Yednock (standing) met with (from left) Student Government Association representatives Xavier Braboy, Julia Browning and Teresa Sajuan and IV Leader reporter Brittany Marx. “Community colleges are where I see the future going,” Yednock said. “It’s where the next generation of workers will be trained.” The 76th includes La Salle, Bureau, Putnam and Livingston counties.

76th District State Rep. Lance Yednock met with students, staff and faculty and toured Illinois Valley Community College Tuesday. It was his first visit to campus since being sworn in Jan. 9. Yednock (standing) met with (from left) Student Government Association representatives Xavier Braboy, Julia Browning and Teresa Sajuan and IV Leader reporter Brittany Marx. “Community colleges are where I see the future going,” Yednock said. “It’s where the next generation of workers will be trained.” The 76th includes La Salle, Bureau, Putnam and Livingston counties.

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via | The Times

February 13, 2019 at 07:03AM

Bill would require faster reporting of opioid dispensing

http://bit.ly/2t62Kku

Pharmacies in Illinois would have less time to report dispensing opioid medications and other controlled substances under a bill making its way through the General Assembly.

The House Human Services Committee on Wednesday advanced a bill that would require pharmacies to file those reports by the end of the business day on which controlled substances are dispensed. Current law gives them until the end of the following business day.

“It ensures that medical providers have a complete picture of what their patients are taking so that they’re not over-prescribing opioids to patients who misuse or, actually, frequently then sell the fraudulent medication,” Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, the bill’s sponsor, told the committee during testimony.

She said the bill is an attempt to prevent what she called “doctor shopping.” Under current law, she said, people trying to obtain illicit doses can visit multiple doctors over a 48-hour period and receive multiple prescriptions before any of those prescriptions are reported.

In an interview after the hearing, Stuart said the nation’s opioid epidemic has affected nearly every community, including her home community of Edwardsville.

“Some areas in my district and the surrounding area have really been hit hard, so I’ve been just talking to folks, trying to approach it from every angle that we can and look at every way we can stop this,” she said.

Although the bill passed out of the committee unanimously, some members suggested it might need technical amendments to define what constitutes a business day, and how that would apply to pharmacies that are open 24 hours a day.

E-ISVMA All,15-Health,01-All No Sub,17-Energy,02-Pol,19-Legal,24-ILGA,010-Inoreader Saves,16-Econ,25-Working,26-Delivered,RKPRS HL,HL,HL New

via Effingham Daily News

February 6, 2019 at 10:28PM

Bill would require faster reporting of opioid dispensing

http://bit.ly/2t62Kku

Pharmacies in Illinois would have less time to report dispensing opioid medications and other controlled substances under a bill making its way through the General Assembly.

The House Human Services Committee on Wednesday advanced a bill that would require pharmacies to file those reports by the end of the business day on which controlled substances are dispensed. Current law gives them until the end of the following business day.

“It ensures that medical providers have a complete picture of what their patients are taking so that they’re not over-prescribing opioids to patients who misuse or, actually, frequently then sell the fraudulent medication,” Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, the bill’s sponsor, told the committee during testimony.

She said the bill is an attempt to prevent what she called “doctor shopping.” Under current law, she said, people trying to obtain illicit doses can visit multiple doctors over a 48-hour period and receive multiple prescriptions before any of those prescriptions are reported.

In an interview after the hearing, Stuart said the nation’s opioid epidemic has affected nearly every community, including her home community of Edwardsville.

“Some areas in my district and the surrounding area have really been hit hard, so I’ve been just talking to folks, trying to approach it from every angle that we can and look at every way we can stop this,” she said.

Although the bill passed out of the committee unanimously, some members suggested it might need technical amendments to define what constitutes a business day, and how that would apply to pharmacies that are open 24 hours a day.

E-ISVMA All,15-Health,01-All No Sub,17-Energy,02-Pol,19-Legal,24-ILGA,010-Inoreader Saves,16-Econ,25-Working,26-Delivered,RKPRS HL,HL,HL New

via Effingham Daily News

February 6, 2019 at 10:28PM

Bill would require faster reporting of opioid dispensing

http://bit.ly/2t62Kku

Pharmacies in Illinois would have less time to report dispensing opioid medications and other controlled substances under a bill making its way through the General Assembly.

The House Human Services Committee on Wednesday advanced a bill that would require pharmacies to file those reports by the end of the business day on which controlled substances are dispensed. Current law gives them until the end of the following business day.

“It ensures that medical providers have a complete picture of what their patients are taking so that they’re not over-prescribing opioids to patients who misuse or, actually, frequently then sell the fraudulent medication,” Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, the bill’s sponsor, told the committee during testimony.

She said the bill is an attempt to prevent what she called “doctor shopping.” Under current law, she said, people trying to obtain illicit doses can visit multiple doctors over a 48-hour period and receive multiple prescriptions before any of those prescriptions are reported.

In an interview after the hearing, Stuart said the nation’s opioid epidemic has affected nearly every community, including her home community of Edwardsville.

“Some areas in my district and the surrounding area have really been hit hard, so I’ve been just talking to folks, trying to approach it from every angle that we can and look at every way we can stop this,” she said.

Although the bill passed out of the committee unanimously, some members suggested it might need technical amendments to define what constitutes a business day, and how that would apply to pharmacies that are open 24 hours a day.

E-ISVMA All,15-Health,01-All No Sub,17-Energy,02-Pol,19-Legal,24-ILGA,010-Inoreader Saves,16-Econ,25-Working,26-Delivered,RKPRS HL,HL,HL New

via Effingham Daily News

February 6, 2019 at 10:28PM

State Rep. Carol Ammons Wants More State Funding For Illinois Higher Ed

http://bit.ly/2RnTrpM

State Representative Carol Ammons wants to provide more state funding to Illinois universities and colleges. Ammons was recently appointed chair of the state’s Higher Education Committee.

She previously served as the vice-chair of the committee. Ammons spoke with Illinois Public Media about her top priorities for higher ed policy moving forward and how she’d like Illinois colleges and universities to spend any extra state dollars they receive on. She also weighed in on the recent sexual harassment scandals that have erupted at several colleges campuses across the state.  

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity and length. 

What are your top priorities as chair of this committee?

We have a few things that the (University of Illinois) and I have been working on, certainly to get more resources to the students of our university, to get those dollars from the state to help offset and to help lower the tuition — the tuition gap that keeps so many students from attending (the University of) Illinois. We’re going to work on that this session. I believe that the partnership with our new medical center and Carle (Foundation Hospital), there a few things that we need to do legislatively — I can’t speak to what they are at this point — but we’ll continue to work on making that a smooth transition so that the medical school can really grow and get up and running here in Champaign-Urbana. And then we want to look at the systems. We have a few problems with a couple of our systems that will come to the (Higher Education Committee) again this session. Southern Illinois University — they have some arguments between Carbondale and Edwardsville that have kind of been going on for some time. We hope to solve that this session and bring that system back together so that we can work together positively for the students that attend those schools.

The State Board of Higher Education has asked for a funding increase of 16 percent, and the justification for this is that state universities and colleges are underfunded and want to provide more opportunity for low-income students to attend. Do you support that kind of funding increase?

It’s difficult to say at this point because we’ve just begun to start our budget. We haven’t had team meetings yet as far as what’s available in our revenue streams. I do support an increase for higher education, and I have since I’ve been a member of the General Assembly. We’ve continued to try to increase the resources for MAP grants and other granting programs to help students come to those universities. Will we be able to meet a threshold of 15 percent in a budget? I can’t say at this point, but we will try to do our best to get as high as we can in the budget cycle this term.

It sounds like you do support a funding increase of some sort — maybe not 16 percent. Do you have a feeling or an opinion about how those funds should be used?

If there is an increase, I certainly want to see those funds going to the classrooms, to the students, to the professors to make sure that they can provide the resources that the students need. I also want to see some investment into the retention programs at the university. We have a really big push to bring more Illinois students to Illinois universities and part of that is the retention part for the universities, and we really need to invest money into the student services and into student access points. So if I were able to say that, I would certainly want those higher education institutions to drive that money to those really needed areas of student achievement of student support, of professors support, so that we can really continue to bring great minds to Illinois and not lose great scholarship. Those are really important focal points for me.

And are you concerned about excess spending on state college and university administration?

I am always concerned about that. If we are talking about improving the conditions for people, I believe that it shouldn’t be a pyramid. I think it should be a reverse triangle. We should always invest in those in the most difficult positions. We want to invest in students. We want to invest into faculty and we want to make sure we can invest into resources like student support organizations. Those are really, really important. And of course the institutions will hear that from me as the chair of (the Higher Education Committee), and never believe that we’re not paying them at the top enough.

And state universities, notably UIUC, have been dealing with sexual harassment allegations and investigations. Do you think campus sexual harassment policies need to change so that professors who have been found to exhibit clearly inappropriate behavior don’t just get a slap on the wrist?

Unfortunately, I just have absolutely no information on what the university’s policies are around sexual harassment. I hope that the university is reviewing what their policies are in light of so many allegations that have been taking place because we want to have a fair and equitable system to address these issues as they arise. But I will certainly be seeking to know as we go forward in the Higher Education Committee how the university is reviewing its policies and making the appropriate changes that protect the students as well as the faculty.

And I want to ask you about Discovery Partners Institute. Are you in support of this given that private investment in the venture is still kind of uncertain?

I am supportive of the DPI as it has been presented to us as local representatives. I do believe that the overarching principle of the DPI is to connect and fuse the Urbana-Champaign campus to the Chicago campus and to bring investment into central Illinois as well as into the northern part of the state. I hope that as we’ve talked over the last several meetings that those commitments from the private sector will remain true because the state has offered its commitment and given its resources to DPI, and hopefully within the next several months we can get the deal closed and continue to move on the ability to grow not only our technology industry at research park, but to grow our technology across the board so that we will have more and more access points at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

And, finally, I’m really interested in whether or not you and Gov. Pritzker are generally on the same page when it comes to higher education policy moving forward.

I’ll be meeting with the staff when we get back to Springfield on the objectives and the interests of the new governor. At this point, I’m not totally clear on what their objective is and where they’d like to go. Certainly, I know what mine is. I know what kind of work that we’re trying to do here from Urbana-Champaign, and hopefully those things align. I’ll have a better picture of that once we get back to session.

Follow Lee Gaines on Twitter: @LeeVGaines

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via Illinois Public Media

January 29, 2019 at 07:01AM

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