Title: Louisiana DSP Workforce Development Initiative
1Louisiana DSP Workforce Development Initiative
- Sharon Delvisco
- LSUHSC-HDC Adolescent and Adult Services
Development Program - Michelle Vicks
- Louisiana DSP Framework Development Team
- Philip G. Wilson, Ph.D.
- LSUHSC-HDC Adolescent and Adult Services
Development Program - ADD Commissioners Forum
- Improving the Quality of Life Meeting the
Challenges through Innovation Thursday, February
20, 2003 1045 am to 1200 pm
2LA The state we are in
- DSP wages rank last in the nation
- Few DSP covered by health insurance
- Basic training for DSP
- Includes medical, safety and legal issues
- Does NOT include person centered focus,
individualized supports, and building community
connections - No career ladder for DSP
- Annual 40 hour training licensing requirement
often not relevant - Training does not result in pay changes or job
responsibility changes
3Facts about Wages
- LSUHSC-HDC surveyed 60 community based service
providers, employing 4237 DSPs (2001) - 75 of providers reported significant turnover
within two weeks of hire date - Average entry level wage was 5.56 per hour
- 42 of agencies surveyed reported highest wage
paid to DSP as 7.00 - 7 of DSP purchased health insurance benefits if
offered from employer - More than ½ of the DSP work more than one job
4Other Factors Contributing to High Turnover Rates
- Workforce not clearly defined
- Workforce not empowered, united, or positively
perceived - Lack of quality training opportunities
- Lack of career ladders
5Workforce not Clearly Defined
- Different funding streams with numerous job
titles used by community based service providers
and funding entities - Can not study workforce issues
- Turnover rates, job satisfaction, stability of
workforce, health insurance coverage,
competency/training, geographic availability of
DSP
6Defining the Work Force
- A direct support professional
- Supports people to lead self directed lives,
contribute to their communities, and encourages
attitudes and behaviors that enhance community
inclusion - Supports may be provided at home, work, school,
church, and other community places
7Workforce not Empowered
- Not represented as a stakeholder group in
policy-making - Low self-esteem poor moral
- Dont recognize selves as a professional group
- Workforce not united or positively perceived
8Impact of High Turnover
- Providers
- Additional recruitment and training costs
- Changes providing daily support into providing
triage support - Lack of quality services
- Family/Consumer
- Stranger anxiety
- Trust
- Relationship building
- Knowing how to support the individual
- Reliability dependability
- Lives disrupted
9Workforce Development Initiatives 1999 - 2000
- LSUHSC-HDC establishes DSP Coalition
- LA Partnership for Excellence
- Delgado and HDC receive HRSA grant to develop and
implement DSP college curriculum to improve lives
of people with disabilities - HDC conducts focus groups statewide to gather
info from consumers, family members, DSP,
providers, etc. about what DSP need to know
10ACT 1147 LA Disability Services and Supports
System 2001
- Legislation forming the Disability Services and
Supports System (DSSS) Consumer Task Force - DSSS submits Real Choices Systems Change proposal
to Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services
(CMS) including Workforce Development Component - Response to Federal Olmstead requirements
- Charged with implementation of reforms to the
long-term care system - 17 organizations represented in membership
11DSSS Workforce Development Committee
Recommendations
- 1st Year Recommendations
- Establish Workforce Database
- Establish Competency Based DSP Curriculum
- Train the workforce using the competency based
curriculum - Recommend a career ladder framework
- Conduct outreach and training to raise
consumer/family awareness of proposed DSP
credentialing system - Enhance the self determination, knowledge, and
responsibilities related to DSP - Host a Statewide DSP Summit
12Workforce Development Initiatives 2001
- LSUHSC-HDC in collaboration with Delgado
Community College (DCC) publishes statewide DSP
newsletter - DSP Coalition surveys community based providers
about DSP wages and benefits - Governors proclamation declares first Louisiana
DSP Day of Appreciation - LA PCMR Next Generation Leadership Group
- AAMR DSP Special Interest Group recognizes
Regional Representatives - LSUHSC-HDC solicits feedback from employers of
DSP curriculum completers
13Workforce Development Initiatives 2001
- LA DSP Coalition establishes www.la-dsp.org
website - 7 graduates from DSP DCC Letter of Completion
Program - DSSS Consumer Task Force establishes staffing
committee for Workforce Development - DSP wages increased for developmental centers
(only) - DSP Framework Development Team established
14Workforce Development Initiatives 2002
- Governors proclamation declares 2nd Louisiana
DSP Day of Appreciation - 32 Delgado Graduates May 2002
- 21 students register for DCC TCA
- Delgado Community College (DCC) establishes two
year degree with concentration in DSP
15Workforce Development Initiatives 2002
- Delgado established Tech Competency
Area DSP Diploma - State Representative Diane
Winstons bill is ratified which
authorizes study into issues faced by DSP - LA NADSP Survey of DSP
- Draft Position Paper developed The Crisis in
Care for People with Disabilities A System at
the Breaking Point
16NADSP LA Chapter Survey 2002
- Over 600 responses
- Gender
- 83 female 17 male
- Wages
- 42 earn less than 6.00 per hour
- 79 earn less than 7.00 per hour
- Average wage is 5.56 per hour
- Subsidies
- 21 receive food stamps, some providers reported
as high as 40 - 20 receive housing subsidy
- Results compiled by LSUHSC-HDC
17NADSP LA Chapter Survey 2002 (continued)
- Hours Working
- 83 have another job
- 60 work more than 20 hours at second job
- Average number of hours worked is 2535 per week
at second job - 40 have two full time jobs
- 28 of DSP report having a family member with a
disability - Results compiled by LSUHSC-HDC
18DSSS Workforce Development Committee
Recommendations
- 2nd Year Recommendations
- Establish Workforce Database
- Implement Competency Based DSP Training
- Recruit, train and support regional training
teams (i.e.,consisting of family/consumer, DSP,
professionals) - Recruit, train and support regional portfolio
review teams (i.e.,consisting of
family/consumer, DSP, professionals) - Recommend a career ladder framework
- Conduct outreach and training to raise
consumer/family awareness of proposed DSP career
ladder system - Develop strategies to increase DSP pay and
benefits based on establishing a mechanism tying
DSP pay to demonstrated performance of valued
competencies (i.e., via portfolio) - Develop and implement training for supervisors of
DSP and Case Managers
19Workforce Development Initiatives 2003
- DSP Introductory Training Curriculum
- Draft distributed for review
- Competency Based Curriculum
- 10 modules- each with required portfolio entries
demonstrating competency in modules content - Seek sponsor for legislation proposing that
pay/benefit enhancements for DSP be tied to
portfolio demonstrations of valued competencies
(Tier I) - and that additional post-secondary training
(e.g., Community College Technical Competency
Area Diploma) be considered as one means for
establishing an additional pay increase (Tier II)
20Workforce Development Initiatives 2003
- Governors proclamation declaring 3rd Louisiana
DSP Day of Appreciation - Sponsorship (Louisiana Rep. Winston) of DSP
living wage legislation - Additional DSP training initiatives
- Office for Citizens with Developmental
Disabilities regional training - Partnership for Excellence
- AAMR DSP Special Interest Group
- National Alliance of DSP LA Chapter
21Workforce Development Initiatives 2003 (continued)
- CMS Real Choices project (Act 1147) Workforce
Development component - Establish interagency agreement with Bureau of
Community Supports and Services (BCSS- Medicaid
Waiver Division) and the Louisiana Arc to
field-test the competency based curriculum in
selected regions of the state - Establish regional training portfolio review
teams - Implement, evaluate, refine and replicate the
training model - Seek adoption of training model tied to
pay/benefit increases for DSP
22The Future for Workforce Development Initiatives
- Create infrastructure to support
Self-determination - By ensuring consumers of LTC system are able to
make informed choices regarding the competence
and professionalism of workers they choose to
hire - Create Career Ladder to attract high quality
workers to the profession and retain them by
providing opportunities for advancement - Seek parity in pay/benefits between community
based DSP and institutional DSP - Tie pay increases to demonstration of competence
23The Future for Workforce Development Initiatives
(continued)
- Adoption of statewide DSP Code of Ethics
- Ongoing identification of stakeholder valued
topics and development of additional continuing
education opportunities for DSP - Additional stakeholder training markets (e.g.,
Case Managers, Administrators)
24Other Strategies for Improving Recruitment and
Retention
- Non-traditional benefit packages
- Child care assistance
- Low interest home loans
- Rent subsidies
- Transportation
- Low interest car loans
- Tuition Support
- Tuition reimbursement, low interest loans,
grants, forgivable loans
25References
- DSP in LA Facts about Wages, LSU Health
Sciences Center Human Development Center, 2001 - Louisiana Works Labor Market Information, LA
Department of Labor, 2002 - State of the Working America, Economic Policy
Institute, 2001 - Summary and Recommendations, LA State PCMR Direct
Support Professional Interest Group, 2001 - Working Hard, Earning Less, Volume 1 Series 2,
National Priorities Project, 1998 - William Mercer Study, 2001