Massachusetts Federal Maximization Scheme in Child Welfare
Massachusetts Federal Maximization Scheme in Child Welfare
Money'
DSS follows the money; makes an extra $90 million per year
Massachusetts News
By Edward G. Oliver
This means that the decision as to whether to remove a child from his parents is often a
factor of whether the DSS can get more federal money, according to many experts.
It is reported that the Department is making an extra $90 million a year by this method.
The practice of hiring of private consulting firms to advise and manage child welfare (and
other agencies) is one that is used nationwide by state governments, sometimes on a no-
risk, contingency basis. This means that the federal money that is supposed to be helping
children is being siphoned off by consulting firms and the children are paying the price.
And Massachusetts is a leader in the practice. The task force of accountants that arrive
from the consultants re- engineer how the agencies are run, right down to training, policy,
forms, and other areas to serve the overriding purpose of obtaining more money from the
federal government.
When asked by Massachusetts News if she knew that DSS was using one of the revenue
maximization firms, State Rep. Marie Parente, Chair of the Legislative Committee on
Foster Care replied:
"Yes, Andersen Consulting. In fact that was one of my big complaints. I thought it
should have been looked into.
"When I was on the Governor's 'Blue Ribbon Commission' in 1993, Andersen Consulting
volunteered their services and they kept saying it was management and maximizing
revenue and they could do it; they're in the business. In the end they got a three million
dollar contract and I think they still hold it today. I objected. I thought it was unethical
and I thought there were state workers at the time doing that work and we never needed
Andersen. We have a fine revenue collection department in DSS. Andersen carved out a
niche for themselves and I think they still have the contract."
A spokesman from Andersen Consulting, Meg Travis, tells Massachusetts News that at
one point they had three contracts with DSS and the last one ended in December of 1997.
DSS spokesman David Van Dam confirms they used Andersen until late 1997; and when
asked, he said DSS now uses another consulting firm called PCG (Public Consulting
Group) but when asked what services they perform, he did not specify what they do. He
says the work Andersen did that was related to the Commission was completed by
Andersen. Attempts to get further information from PCG in time for this article were
unsuccessful.
When asked if the recommendations for reform from the Blue Ribbon Commission were
acted on, Rep. Parente answered that DSS implemented those parts of the Commission
"Report" that Andersen liked which increased the federal revenue. She said, "What they
did was the parts that Andersen liked, you know, the money part, the federal
reimbursement. But my special committee filed a minority report because I thought they
focused on the wrong thing."
A look into the Committee's "Final Report" reveals the "money part" Parente speaks
about where it states: "DSS should undertake an immediate revenue maximization
effort." And it continued that DSS should be sure that the money stays in its hands and
does not go to the state. "A retained revenue account should be established to ensure that
funds brought in through the revenue maximization effort are retained and used by
DSS."
Andersen reported to the Commission that enhanced revenues held the potential of
claiming up to $40 to $70 million extra dollars per year.
The "Final Report" also reveals that DSS was sticking its toe into the "revenue
maximization waters" nineteen months prior, when DSS conducted an analysis on the
"potential for enhancing federal reimbursements from Medicaid and other entitlement
programs" even as it had "enhanced its federal reimbursements significantly over the last
few years through the use of a consultant on a contingent contract."
This concept of maximizing federal revenue is beginning to cause trouble in many other
states as well. In California, plaintiffs sued Health and Human Services and Contra Costa
County for allowing children classified as disabled to languish for years in foster care
while the county seized and misappropriated their personal SSI and other federal
benefits.
The Texas Comptroller's Report uses -- who else but -- Massachusetts as a shining
example of how revenue maximization should be done by confirming that Andersen's
recommendations were put into effect. "For example" says the Texas Report,
"Massachusetts raised its percentage of children's eligible cases for reimbursement from
23 percent of all children receiving services in 1993 to nearly 65 percent in 1996.
Massachusetts also changed how it accounts for its essential program costs so that the
state could claim full instead of partial reimbursement. Massachusetts received $58
million more in federal funds in the first year, $64 million in the second, and expects net
additional revenues in the third year to reach from $88 million to $90 million.
Massachusetts also considers clients who are eligible for Medicaid and are either abused
and neglected, or at risk of being abused and neglected, to be eligible for Medicaid case
management services through the child protective serices agency."
The big question that arises out of the quest to maximize federal dollars is, do financial
consultants hired to advise and train DSS to maximize revenue also compose or influence
guidelines for social workers on "what to look for" and who is potentially "at risk" to
assist in determining who gets taken out of the home? Do they design risk assessment
models for caseworkers to use on home visits which serve to provide interesting details
that perhaps raise a flag to supervisors about a child's potential federal funding eligibility
status? For example, a minority child is automatically considered "special needs" and
therefore eligible for Medicaid. Broadly defined "disabled" children are also very
profitable. The foster child population is in fact heavily weighted in those categories now
and those parents are least able to fight their removal.
An innocent notation of these "trip wires" by a caseworker may have serious implications
for the child.
Thoma provides numerous examples of creative, some call fraudulent techniques which
consulting firms perform for state agencies. He cites a recent study issued by the Office
of the Inspector General of Health and Human Services, "Review of Rising Costs in the
Emergency Assistance Program" as lamenting states are cooking the books to claim
federal funds by "lengthening eligibility periods, defining emergencies broadly, and
setting high income limits for determining eligibility…thereby maximizing federal
revenue. The [Emergency Assistance] expenditures are escalating at a rapid pace due
mainly to three types of costs, juvenile justice, foster care, and child welfare services."
The prospectus from the consulting firm Maximus Inc. warns investors, "To avoid
experiencing higher than anticipated demands for federal funds, federal government
officials on occasion advise state and local authorities not to engage private consultants to
advise on maximizing revenues."
Approximately 10,000 children per year are taken from families in Massachusetts and
placed into foster care according to DSS spokesman David Van Dam.
Rep. Parente describes for Massachusetts News the important role federal dollars play in
decision making about those children at DSS. "I remember Congresswoman Schroeder,"
recalls Parente. "She said her greatest fear about federal funding for DSS is that every
time they decided to put more money into a different facet of DSS, then DSS focused the
attention on that. It is that way across the country. If they thought that children should
stay with families and that was their big thing that year, all kids stayed with their families
because then the state would get a lot of money. If the focus of the federal government
and funds change to adoption, then everybody would get adopted."
Is it really possible that decisions affecting the well-being of children who cross paths
with the Department of Social Services are being made with emphasis on what will bring
in the greatest amount of federal revenue, rather than what's best for the child?
There are indeed monetary inducements for DSS to take children from their parents.
Federal funding, such as Title IV-E of the Social Security Act, reward the placement of
children into the foster care system. Services that focus on family preservation -- cases
where no child is placed into the system -- are not as lucrative.
As Conna Craig of the Boston-based "Institute for Children" wrote in 1995, "The
problem with foster care is not the level of government spending, it is the structure of that
spending…As more children enter the system, so does the tax money to support them in
substitute care….As one foster child put it: 'Everywhere I go, somebody gets money to
keep me from having a mom and dad.' "
The number of foster children in the mid to late seventies numbered a half million in the
United States. In 1982, a low of 262,000 was recorded, a reduction by almost half.
Thoma credits a short-lived requirement passed by Congress with helping to reduce those
numbers so dramatically. "In 1980," Thoma writes, "Congress passed the Adoption
Assistance and Child Welfare Act, or Public Law 96-272. The Act included a provision
that "reasonable efforts" be made to prevent placement in foster care. The reasonable
effort requirement was implemented, in part, because the Congress determined that a
large number of children were being unnecessarily removed from their homes."
The "reasonable efforts" requirement however, lacked enforcement from the Dept. of
Health and Human Services. State agencies soon saw it as a paper tiger and returned to
routine foster placements which shot past the half million mark, where it hovers today.
Still, in order for DSS to get paid for the foster child, a judge is supposed to be convinced
that reasonable efforts were made to keep the child at home. Critics, such as the Cape
Cod-based, parent support group "Justice for Families," charge that this legal proceeding
takes place in a secret, rubber stamp session with nobody else present "to rebut, object, or
verify the truth" except a DSS attorney and a judge. The group claims the judge routinely
signs off on a little known federal form called a 29-c which is the ticket for federal funds.
They charge DSS is guilty of defrauding the federal government -- not to mention
traumatizing children and their families. Signed 29-c forms obtained by the parents' rights
advocates appear to provide evidence that children are placed into foster care no matter
what the form says when the judge signs off on it. At times it is blank.
In a report issued by the parents' group titled "Findings and Suggestions on DSS
Reform," they charge, "By seizing children illegally, in violation of Title IV-E
requirements via the filing of false and fraudulent documents in secrecy through the
courts to obtain federal funding, D.S.S. is defrauding the federal government with
deliberate intent."
This was foreseen by The Finance Committee of Congress in 1980 when it stated: "The
Committee is aware of allegations that the judicial determination requirement can
become a mere pro forma exercise in paper shuffling to obtain federal funding. While this
could occur in some instances, the Committee is unwilling to accept as a general
proposition that judiciaries of the States would so lightly treat a responsibility placed
upon them by federal statute for the protection of children."
Now, a new bonus is promised to states who can put kids into the adoption phase in a
year or so. Like circus lions leaping to the crack of a whip, states are reordering their
priorities by passing adoption laws that will bring them into compliance with federal
requirements.
As Thoma observes, "The Congress failed to ask one crucial question when it passed the
legislation; Why are so many children in the foster care system to begin with?"
Tomorrow: Cape families hold candlelight vigil to call attention to plight of children held by the DSS