“Under the changes, New York State will reduce the number of [Medicaid] brokers, known as fiscal intermediaries… [which] will help rein in spending and improve oversight under the largely unregulated middleman industry.”
What will the consumer directed care updates do?
Move from 700 unregulated middlemen agencies passing Medicaid dollars to consumers to 1 principal fiscal intermediary (FI) and 4 regional partners. This will save up to $1 billion in taxpayer dollars lost in inefficient administration of the program. Eligibility and ability to hire the personal assistant of your choice will not change.
Create a statewide network of 30 proven New York agencies who serve as facilitators. These are agencies focused on providing services for people with disabilities, in-language/culturally competent care, and rural care to ensure coverage across the state.
What is now possible with this streamlined system?
New York can create a sophisticated statewide registry of caregivers, allowing consumers and caregivers to be matched based on a range of criteria including specialized care, language, location, estimated transit time and more. The registry could also provide independently verified data for voluntary training
Caregiver rights can be protected by allowing consumer direct care providers to join a union. This will ensure quality standards are maintained for caregivers around wages, benefits, schedules, voluntary training and more. Caregivers experience high rates of wage theft - by coming together in a union, caregivers will be able to advocate for their needs. And caregivers and consumers together can build a powerful organization to advocate for consumer-directed care.
New York’s reformed CDPAP can include a robust Pre-Service Orientation program to train consumers and caregivers on the laws and obligations within consumer directed care, including minimum wage and overtime law, workers compensation, employment paperwork, Electronic Visit Verification, sexual harassment prevention, and more.
What Will Be The Impact?
Ensures The Future of Consumer Directed Care
Allows spending from excess administrative costs and profit to be redirected consumer services and wages.
Easier to administer for government
Supports program sustainability for the long term
Higher Quality Care
Easier to Consumers to Find Specialized Care (skills, language, location)
More Hours of Care
Voluntary Training/Certification opportunities for caregivers
Increases Efficiency
Easier to Match Consumers with Caregivers
Faster Approvals for Caregivers
Faster Payments
Easier to Implement Improvements
Stronger Oversight
Reduced wage theft and other violations of caregivers’ rights
Easier to advocate for improvements to system
Easier for caregivers to resolve issues with pay
Wage, overtime, workers’ compensation support
Medicaid Dollars Re-directed Towards Consumer Care
End to Exorbitant Executive Salaries
Reduced admin costs by ending use of 700 unregulated middleman agencies