BIG EARLY TURNOUT – Poll workers Cheryl Vastola and Irene Ferguson, at left, help early voters cast their ballots this afternoon at Harrigan Centennial Hall. Turnout has been heavy today on the final early voting day before the national election. Close to 1,600 people have cast early ballots so far in Sitka. (Sentinel Photo by James Poulson)
By Sentinel Staff
Scores of Sitkans cast ballots at Harrigan Centennial Hall today, the last day for [ ... ]
By Sentinel Staff
A brown bear that reportedly showed aggressive behavior and “continued lack of fe [ ... ]
By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
Though days are growing short, programming for bike ri [ ... ]
By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
In the annual WhaleFest race Saturday from Whale Park [ ... ]
By Sentinel Staff
In recreational division City League basketball Sunday, Forrester and Grenie [ ... ]
By YERETH ROSEN
Alaska Beacon
The Port of Seward, which serves a coastal Kenai Peninsula town t [ ... ]
By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
Prosecutors in Fairbanks have charged an Alaska Department of Tra [ ... ]
Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
November 1
Parts were reported stolen from [ ... ]
Donald Soukup
Dies at Age 85
Donald R. Soukup, 85, passed away Nov. 1 at Sitka Long Term Care.
An obi [ ... ]
By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
In the second program in a series on Sitka’s child c [ ... ]
By YERETH ROSEN
Alaskan Beacon
Alaskans were charged about $5.78 billion for hospital stays in [ ... ]
By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
A grand jury in Kenai has indicted Alaska state troopers Joseph M [ ... ]
SCT Presents
Live Radio Play
Nov. 8 at PAC
GSAC Sitka Community Theater will present “Radio Adventure [ ... ]
Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
October 31
An officer told people shootin [ ... ]
By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
A search for a hunter missing since Tuesday ended around mid [ ... ]
By Sentinel Staff Sitka WhaleFest has scheduled a series of seminars and events, including a fun ru [ ... ]
By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
In their first wrestling meet of the year at the Sout [ ... ]
By Sentinel Staff
In a master’s division City League basketball game Wednesday evening, Harr [ ... ]
By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
Ahead of next week’s general election, the Alaska Republican Pa [ ... ]
Police Blotter
Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
October 30
At 10:05 a.m. a fa [ ... ]
Benefit Fry Bread
Sale Saturday
A fundraiser for the Moreno family will be held 11 a.m. -2 p.m. Saturd [ ... ]
By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
With the hiring of an aquatics supervisor, the city Parks an [ ... ]
By Sentinel Staff
A search was under way today for a Sitka man overdue on a half-day hunting trip Tue [ ... ]
By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
After months of working to shape ceramic and glass pie [ ... ]
Daily Sitka Sentinel
Home Care Law to Aid Disabled Adults, Elders
By Yereth Rosen
Alaska Beacon
Elders and adults with disabilities will have more opportunities to get care at home or in a home-like setting under a bill that became state law when Gov. Mike Dunleavy signed it on Saturday.
The measure, Senate Bill 57, serves two broad categories of Alaskans who might otherwise have to move into assisted-care facilities: disabled adults, including youths who have aged out of the foster system, and elders.
For disabled adults, the bill authorizes a system of adult host homes serving one or two people, a category into which foster parents’ homes could fit. Foster parents’ licenses would be more seamlessly transitioned to care licenses once the children reach adulthood, under the authorized system.
For elders, the bill authorizes a system through which family members can continue to be paid, through a temporary tweak in the federal Medicaid system, for care services provided at home.
The bill’s dual nature is the product of the legislative process. Senate Bill 57, as originally written, was focused on care for disabled foster children reaching adulthood and other disabled adults, said Tony Newman, acting director of senior and disabilities services for the state Department of Health.
It was combined with another measure, Senate Bill 106, sponsored by Senate Majority Leader Cathy Giessel, R-Anchorage, that authorizes a more permanent system for family members to be paid for care of elders kept at home, he said.
The foster-youth part of the bill got its start years ago, when Dunleavy was in the state Senate, Newman said. At the time, some foster parents of disabled youth described some burdensome “disincentives” to continuing providing normal care received at home once the youth aged out, he said. After the youth turned 18, the foster parents explained at the time, “their foster care license would no longer apply,” and they would have to go through a cumbersome process to get a different type of care license to keep those young adults with disabilities at home, Newman said.
The part of the bill focused on elder care allows for continuation of what was a temporary relaxation of Medicaid rules in response to the now-ended COVID-19 pandemic emergency. The temporary policy allowed for family members to be paid for care of elders living at home.
Pre-COVID, such payments were generally disallowed and frowned upon, Newman said, and they continue to pose some challenges. There are opportunities for abuse and some blurred lines “because it’s less clear when work begins and work ends,” he said. The state itself has a regulation on the books prohibiting payment to family members for care of elders at home, he noted. “The bill will now allow us to do that, however,” he said.
Supporters of the bill said it addresses both family preferences and practical problems. Many elders and adults with disabilities have had difficulty finding caregivers to visit them or spots at assisted-living homes because Alaska has shortages of both health professionals and facilities, supporters said.
“This bill will benefit not only foster children but all adults with disabilities who would prefer to receive services in a smaller, family-type setting,” Dunleavy said in a statement issued Saturday, when he signed the bill.
Giessel also weighed in.
“Alaskans struggling with dementia and other complex medical needs will be able to remain in their familiar home surroundings cared for by family members, who are trained and paid to provide that loving care. This is particularly beneficial for rural Alaskans in locations where home care agencies are not available,” she said in the governor’s news release.
The bill passed the Senate unanimously and the House with only one vote in opposition, Rep. David Eastman, R-Wasilla. Supporters included the state’s long-term care ombudsman and the Governor’s Council on Disabilities and Special Education.
Newman said there are currently about 2,000 Alaskans receiving at-home care through a Medicaid program. Those who would be served by the new systems would likely be a subset of the 2,000, he said.
It will take time to set up the new programs. The Department of Health is seeking public input on how to write the regulations, as well as seeking input from the federal government on what is permissible, Newman said.
Like Alaska, other states are facing scarcities of workers to provide at-home or elder care, Newman said.
“The shortage of caregivers is a national problem,” he said.
--https://alaskabeacon.com/yereth-rosen
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20 YEARS AGO
November 2004
Sitka Tribe of Alaska is having a Traditional Foods Contest. Categories for dishes include best use of herring eggs, best dried seaweed, best half-dried salmon, best contemporary dish using traditional ingredients and most authentic traditional dish. Call Jessica Perkins with questions.
50 YEARS AGO
November 1974
Classified ads, Personal: Tickets of Red aren’t a disgrace, a waitress will get them when she parks out of place. Ratfink.