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Center for the Study of Social Policy:
Mark Friedman: 6/28/94
"The
Cosmology of Financing"
or
Financing Reform of Family
and Children's Services
An Approach to the Systematic
Consideration
of Financing Options
Click here to see the Financing Self Assessment Questionnaire
that goes with the Cosmology.
This paper was supported by grants from the Annie E. Casey Foundation and the
Foundation Consortium. This paper was also supported in part by the
Improved Outcomes for Children Project, which is funded by the New America
School Development Corporation, the Lily Endowment, the Carnegie
Corporation, the Danforth Foundation and the Pew Charitable Trusts.
INTRODUCTION
There is a broad and growing consensus that the current systems of services for
families and children must change and that it is both imperative and possible to
better support families and achieve positive outcomes for families and children.
This is one in a series of papers intended to assist states, counties, cities
and communities in advancing that process of change. It is designed to help
jurisdictions build a financial strategy to support a reform agenda for families
and children by identifying several ways in which funds can be made available to
pay for new, improved or transformed services and supports for families and
children. This paper will be most useful to those who have already begun the
work of developing a reform agenda and have begun thinking about the requisite
fiscal and political strategies to put that agenda in place.
States and localities throughout the country are engaged in a variety of efforts
to improve the way they administer, finance and deliver services to vulnerable
families and children in order that more children grow up in stable, nurturing
families and become healthy, productive adults. Many of these reform efforts
share the following principles including:
Services and supports should be rooted in the community, easily accessible
to families, and delivered in a manner that respects cultural and community
differences;
Services and supports should be focused on the whole family, with
professionals working in partnership with families to identify their strengths
and needs as well as to secure assistance;
Services and supports should be established as part of a comprehensive array
of community services rather than narrowly drawn as discrete, isolated
services;
Services and supports should be offered to families early in order to avoid
crises or at least lessen their intensity; and
There should be agreement on the desired outcomes to be achieved for children
and families and on the ways that progress will be measured.
Although these principles are enunciated by many state and local reform
efforts today, different jurisdictions have chosen different programmatic entry
points for change. Some states such as Missouri and Maryland are emphasizing the
needs of children in the deepest parts of the service system - those in
out-of-home care and especially out-of-state care. Reforms are being advanced to
move these children back into families in their home communities. Iowa is
similarly addressing children who would previously have been placed in
out-of-home care through their "decategorization" initiative in which
out-of-home funds are pooled and used to support children closer to home. Other
jurisdictions are starting with early identification of high risk populations
and trying to bring together new, improved services to head off negative
outcomes for children. The New Futures initiative in five cities is an example
of this type of reform effort which seeks to reduce dropout and teen pregnancy
rates in disadvantaged communities. The Healthy Start Program in California is
supporting cross system partnerships at the school and school district level to
meet the needs of low-income children, youth, and their families through
school-linked services. Still other jurisdictions have chosen to launch
neighborhood-based prevention programs targeted on residents in low-income
communities. Vermont's Success by Six initiative and Kentucky's Family Resource
Centers located in or near schools are examples of this type of reform venture.
Regardless of the specific programmatic agenda chosen, all of these initiatives
involve readjusting relationships between local, state, and federal governments.
Localities find themselves working much more closely with their state
counterparts who in turn must often develop new partnerships with the federal
government. The financing strategies that are developed to support the site's
programmatic agenda also involve shifts among the various levels of government
and between governmental agencies, as will be shown later in this paper.
In all cases, states and localities are seeking new funding sources to help
support their programmatic reform initiatives. Especially in times of tight
budgets, most jurisdictions have few if any new dollars to invest in systemwide
reform. This means they must create political and financial strategies that use
current and future resources in new ways and that maximize all available sources
of revenue. This paper explores some of the major financing strategies that
states and localities can use as they restructure the ways services are
delivered to needy children and families.
Several essential points should be kept in mind as states and localities embark
on major human service reform efforts. First is the central principle of all
good financial planning, that programs drive financing, not the
other way around. Financial strategies must be used to support improved outcomes
for families and children. And financing strategies which cannot be adequately
adapted to program ends should not be used, even if they happen to generate more
money than other approaches.
Second, no single financing approach will serve to support an ambitious
agenda for change. Financing packages should be developed by drawing
from the widest possible array of resources. Many individuals or organizations
are stuck on one approach to financing (usually the one that involves asking for
more state or local general funds). Yet there are many alternatives. Financing
is an art not a science, and creativity is the order of the day. In the end,
more general funds may be necessary to support system changes, but these will
only be forthcoming and deserved if states first make the best use of existing
resources and use other approaches at their disposal.
Finally, this technical assistance guide for considering financing options is a
work in progress, not a finished set of answers. It is not possible to describe
all financing strategies or options in a single document. This paper cannot, in
its current form, fully present or justify the examples used to illustrate
financing strategies. In some cases there are small libraries devoted to these
program approaches. And the circumstances of federal, state, and local funding
are constantly changing. The paper is set up in the form of a four part check
list of financing strategies, with examples of how such strategies can be
applied to finance a program reform agenda. We think the four part framework
(Redeployment, Refinancing, Revenue Raising, and Restructuring) presented here
is one which can provide a home for new approaches and new opportunities as they
develop.
Return to "Contents"
I. REDEPLOYMENT:
USING THE MONEY WE ALREADY HAVE
Redeployment means using the monetary and non-monetary resources already
available in the service system. Redeployment should always be the financing
option of first choice for two reasons. First, the use of existing
resources for new purposes involves changing the way we do business, the essence
of reform itself. The second reason has to do with accountability. Before
asking for new funds - and new funds may be necessary for any ambitious agenda -
there is a programmatic and political imperative to make the best use of
existing resources.
Redeployment applies not just to state and local general funds, but also
to the large array of capped federal fund sources which are used to finance
health, education, and social services (including such diverse fund sources as
the Social Services Block Grant, Maternal and Child Health funds, and Chapter I
funds).
There are at least four different forms of redeployment to consider:
Return to "Contents"
A. Investment Based
Redeployment
This is redeployment based on the concept of return on investment common to all
business financing. In the world of human services, investment based
redeployment depends on an understanding of the cause and effect relationship
between a service intervention (investment) and some future reduction in the
demand for service and cost of entitlement spending (return). If properly
structured, investment based redeployment can pay for itself in combined cost
savings and cost avoidance over a period of one or more fiscal years.
Under this approach, investments in prevention measures are financed by using
the prevention savings generated in other parts of the budget, most importantly
entitlement line items. For example, investments in routine preventive health
care for low income families have been financed in part from reduced use of
emergency and in patient care. Employment training and transitional wage
supplementation have been financed from reduced or avoided AFDC costs. In some
few cases, these kinds of transfers can be accomplished in a single budget year.
In most cases, savings take longer to accrue and a multi-year approach is
required. Unfortunately, multi-year investment financing is uncommon in most
public budgeting systems, outside of capital budgets (e.g., bonds for bridge
construction secured with toll revenue). And multi-year investment based
redeployment requires strong executive and legislative leadership support, and a
working partnership between those with program responsibility and those with
financial responsibility.
Investment based redeployment also requires agreement on the baseline forecasts
of entitlement expenditures which will occur without change in policy. (Such
forecasts are sometimes known as "cost of failure" analyses, or
"cost of bad outcome" analyses.) A baseline forecast is necessary so
that parties to the investment can quantify the benefits of prevention
investments and agree on how cost savings and cost avoidance will be calculated
and credited. Baseline forecasts allow the consideration of expected increases
in cost, and the potential redeployment of funds which are, or will be,
dedicated to cover those costs. For example, funds included in a proposed
(balanced) budget to cover foster care caseload increases, can be considered a
source of investment funds for measures which might prevent or diminish the
expected caseload growth. For some program components, such as AFDC or Foster
Care caseloads, baseline forecasts for one or two fiscal years may be produced
as part of the annual budget process. Forecasting, however, is a complex and
often controversial process, and forecasts are rarely produced for more than a
handful of programs. Forecasting requires a good base of historical information,
and an understanding of the controllable and uncontrollable factors which
influence future cost. The best forecasting processes involve building consensus
among stakeholders (i.e., executive and legislative budget offices) about high,
medium, and low estimates. An investment of time in such consensus building can
sometimes serve to shift the discussion from short term stop-gap measures to
longer term solutions.
Finally, investment based redeployment requires a base of research or experience
which links investments to savings. Reliable research on cost/benefit
relationships is rare, but should be among the highest priorities for
researchers in the human services field as well as those, in the public and
private sectors, who fund research.
At the bottom line, the layman's version of investment based redeployment is
based on the simple question: "If we are going to spend all this money
anyway, can't we do better?" As a general rule, it should be possible to
create an investment based redeployment strategy which finances prevention of any
expensive entitlement service.
Some important examples of investment based redeployment include:
1. Out-of-Home Care Entitlements
Out-of-home care for children is one of the largest entitlement expenditures of
state and local government. The full cost of such care averages over $10,000 per
year per child, and can exceed $100,000 for children in the most expensive forms
of care. Total government expenditures for out-of-home care costs exceed $3
billion per year, and involve all major child serving systems, including Child
Welfare (CW), Juvenile Justice (JJ), Public Health (PH), Mental Health (MH) and
Education (ED). There are at least two investment based redeployment strategies
which utilize savings in the out-of-home care budget:
a. Preventing out-of-home care and reducing length of stay. Services
which prevent or lessen stays in out-of-home care can produce savings in the
cost baseline for out-of-home care. If services are targeted to children who
would otherwise enter care, or who are already in care, it may be possible to
save (or avoid) out-of-home care costs in excess of service cost. It is
important to note that such services can be difficult and costly to implement,
and require careful planning and oversight. There is also some controversy over
the extent to which various program models actually save or avoid cost. And
efforts to reduce entry into foster care must not serve to diminish the clear
first priority given to child safety. Nevertheless, some jurisdictions such as
Prince George's County, Maryland and Michigan have implemented programs based on
established service models that have helped change the pattern of caseload
growth. At least three out-of-home care redeployment approaches can be
considered:
Family Preservation Services: services designed to prevent unnecessary
foster care, group home or other out-of-home care placement.
Reunification Services: services designed to return children safely to
their homes.
Post Adoption Services: services designed to preserve high-risk adoptions
and prevent return to out-of-home care as a result of disrupted adoptions.
b. Stepping Down Levels of Care. It is not uncommon for children to be
placed in more expensive care (e.g., residential treatment, emergency
facilities) for longer periods than necessary. The causes for this phenomenon
are complex, but a major factor is often the lack of available community-based
alternatives. Development of less expensive community-based care can sometimes
be financed by systematic efforts to "step down" levels of placement
where this is appropriate for individual children. Out-of-home care funds can be
used to finance the start-up and continuing costs of newer forms of care. In
some cases this form of financing can be applied on a child by child basis using
a "wrap around" approach to tailor an individual plan of care for a
child with funds currently devoted to his or her care. Implementing these
changes requires the system-wide commitment of those involved in the placement
system, including judges, front-line workers, and private agencies. And careful
planning is required to assure that newly vacated beds are not simply refilled.
As discussed in Section II below, Medicaid funding can sometimes be used to help
finance the therapeutic components of services in the placement continuum.
At least three step down approaches can be considered:
Out-of-state to in-state: Where children are placed in expensive out-of-
state facilities, it may be possible to return children to less expensive, newly
developed or specially tailored in-state care.
Institutional care to therapeutic foster care: Therapeutic foster care
can be used to replace or shorten stays in more expensive institutional care.
Group care to supported family foster care: Neighborhood based family
foster care, connected to services which support the foster family and meet the
special needs of the child, may be used to replace or shorten stays in more
expensive group care.
2. Health Care Entitlements
The health care system provides some of the best examples of the relationship
between preventive and remedial costs. Using high cost entitlement expenditures
as the signal of redeployment potential, it may be possible to disaggregate
publicly supported health costs, build strategies which reduce the need for each
high cost component of care, and redeploy saved and avoided costs to fund
preventive services. Approaches which are often cited to illustrate this
strategy include:
Prenatal care and teen pregnancy prevention: It may be possible to shift
saved or avoided health care funds for intensive care for premature births to
targeted low birth weight prevention efforts and teen pregnancy prevention.
Immunization: The cost associated with treating preventable illness could
be shifted to support expanded immunization efforts. Since the benefits of
immunizations take several years to materialize, this may require some form of
multi-year bridge financing. (See the discussion of loans and bond financing in
Section IV below.)
The following idea illustrates the possibility of a more experimental
approach to investment based redeployment.
Violence prevention: Violence is increasingly viewed as a priority public
health problem. There is, at best, conflicting evidence on what approaches to
violence prevention work. If successful strategies can be identified, it may be
possible to package saved or avoided violence related costs (including such
things as direct emergency room costs, costs of incarceration, and indirect
savings in public and private insurance costs) and use these savings to support
violence prevention efforts. Return to "Contents"
B. Capitation Based
Redeployment
A second approach to redeployment involves the use of capitation strategies.
Capitation means packaging services (ideally the related elements of prevention
and treatment costs) into a single fixed per person payment for a class of
individuals. This structure creates a fiscal mechanism and a fiscal incentive
which encourages controlling costs and shifting fund use toward preventive
services.
The basic questions to be answered in capitation approaches involve what service
costs to include in the package, how to set rates fairly, and what provider or
service structure to use. There is a growing body of experience with capitation
approaches. The best known include the emerging forms of managed health care,
including health maintenance organizations and other provider networks.
Capitation approaches are also being used for the treatment costs of special
populations, such as children in out-of-state out-of-home care (as in Maryland),
or children in high cost out-of-home placements (as in Arizona, California, New
Mexico, Ohio, and others). These are often implemented within the Medicaid
program in conjunction with one or more refinancing strategies described in
Section II. They typically involve packaging all costs of care for a defined
group of children, with the state agency or provider then given wide flexibility
in crafting a plan of community-based care. Savings from these approaches can be
used for preventive services both for children inside and outside the capitation
plan. Another example of capitated services is the use of a capitation rate for
Medicaid reimbursement of special education ancillary services in the Boston
education system.
Section 1915(a) of the Medicaid program provides a particularly useful tool to
implement capitation models. This section of the Social Security Act provides
states the option to establish capitated contracts for service for specified
populations and designated geographic areas. While rate setting methods and
other components of the contracts may require federal approval, use of 1915(a)
is a state option under Medicaid and does not require a state plan waiver. The
option provides a useful means to test capitation approaches under Medicaid in
one or several jurisdictions before committing to statewide implementation. Return
to "Contents"
C. Cut Based Redeployment
This is the traditional method of moving money - cutting one thing to fund
another. Most often there is little relationship between the program cut and the
program funded. Savings from cuts are often used to fill budget gaps or add to
the funds available for discretionary spending by the Governor or Legislature.
It is, of course, possible to be more deliberate about the business of
identifying cuts and using those funds for new purposes. This more deliberate
process involves setting priorities, reducing low priority expenditures and
using freed funds to support an agenda of program and system change.
Many systems have now been through so many rounds of budget cuts that the choice
of priorities is stark. Where efficiencies or cuts are still possible,
administrators often hoard these actions to offer up in the inevitable next
round. But in spite of these strains, there is broad agreement that money
currently in the human services system is not being used very well, that
inefficiencies do exist and that spending patterns are often out of synch with
current needs. This view applies not just to state and local general funds, but
to the wide array of federal block grants and capped federal funding sources as
well. The Social Services Block Grant (SSBG), for example, has been part of the
Social Security Act for over 20 years, and fund allocation in most states
reflects a 20 year accumulation of budget and political compromise. Members of
the education community will admit privately, if not publicly, that some Chapter
I and Drug Free Schools funding could be put to better use. Many are skeptical
that historical patterns of fund use can be reconsidered, but this should not
deter consideration of new choices.
The most important issue in cut-based redeployment is establishing the set of
principles used to set priorities. One approach is to sort expenditures into
"mandatory" and "non-mandatory" categories and then further
subdivide programs in terms of low, medium, and high impact on life, health, and
safety. Most cut processes quickly focus on the non-mandatory - low
life/health/safety set of services. These are often the prevention expenditures
where increased investments are necessary. A better approach is to look
at the system's use of funds through a very particular lens: How does each
expenditure contribute to achieving the outcomes we want for families and
children? Where does each expenditure fit in our overall strategy to improve
outcomes? Low impact strategies can be cut in favor of those more likely to
succeed. Funding for similar functions across systems can be combined. Waivers
can be obtained for mandated expenditures or service delivery patterns which are
inefficient or unnecessary. Where expenditures are reviewed against common goals
which are articulated and applied to multiple systems of care, it is less likely
that individual agencies will see the process as unfair or unproductive. Funding
pool structures discussed below can provide a framework within which to pursue
this kind of redeployment. Return to "Contents"
D. Material Redeployment
This type of redeployment involves the transfer or reuse of existing positions
or other tangible resources. This approach becomes more important for
administrators closer to the front line, who may not have the discretion to
shift dollars but can shift staff. It is possible, for example, to outstation
workers in schools or other community settings, or combine resources across
systems to create common intake and assessment capacity. These types of changes
may be possible without any new expenditure of funds.
The most ancient form of financing is a form of material redeployment called
bartering. The application of bartering to human services is illustrated by a
case in Chicago where local program directors arranged a trade of day care
services for drug treatment services. Young mothers in the drug treatment
program gained access to day care. And day care parents gained access to drug
treatment. The trade was mutually beneficial, as all good trades are. No money
changed hands. Other trades are of course possible: space for services (as in
Florida's rebuilding of schools destroyed by Hurricane Andrew where space for
community service providers is part of the new building design); equipment for
services; or land for services (as in the case of an agreement exchanging a day
care center for a 99 year lease on Native American land).
Bartering is possible even at the state or federal level. But at the local level
it can be a simple answer to a complex problem. Organizational deals which could
take years to hammer out in budget or legislative processes can be done in
practice with a minimum of bureaucracy. Such actions can also be the first step
to other forms of working together for mutual benefit. In fact, some of the best
forms of collaboration resemble simple markets where organizations bring
resources to the table and trade those resources for the benefit of their
clients and organizations. Return to "Contents"
II.
REFINANCING: FREEING FUNDS FOR REINVESTMENT
By refinancing we mean claiming open ended (i.e., not limited by federal
appropriation) federal funds to pay for services now financed entirely with
state and local funds, freeing those funds for reinvestment. Freed state
and local funds can be rematched with federal funds when used for federally
eligible expenditures.(1) Refinancing efforts
generally make use of the remaining open ended federal titles of the Social
Security Act. The most important of these titles include: Title IV-E Foster
Care; Title IV-A Emergency Assistance and Child Care; Title XIX Medicaid (in
states without voluntary caps adopted as part of waiver programs); Title IV-D
Child Support Enforcement; and Title XVI SSI benefits. In many cases, services
or activities can be funded under more than one Title. It is important to
consider the best mix of federal claiming, and, most importantly, the
claiming approach which best supports service goals.
One of the great dangers of refinancing work is the risk that money produced by
such efforts will not be used to advance the reform agenda for families and
children. Refinancing proceeds usually take the form of state or local general
fund revenue, which can be used for many different purposes, not necessarily
those related to reform. Refinancing work should result in funds available for
reinvestment in improved or expanded family and children's services. Decisions
about reinvestment must be made before work on refinancing begins. Without
some way to protect the freed up money, it is likely that refinancing funds will
return to the general treasury to be used for whatever priorities appear on the
state or local political agenda at the time. The best way to help assure that
the proceeds of refinancing go to good use is to recognize the political nature
of the budget process and use that process effectively. The single best
way to be effective in these processes is to have a compelling vision of change
which attracts political support and makes reinvestment in families and children
a winning political act. In some states and communities, political
leaders have established commitments, by executive order or legislation, to
reinvest funds generated by refinancing. Some of the best examples of formal
reinvestment structures include the trust fund established by legislation in
Colorado for reinvestment of Title IV-A refinancing funds and the community
reinvestment process for federal administrative claims established in North
Dakota. In other states, reinvestment commitments have been established in the
budget process itself (as in Iowa, Maryland, Missouri, and Tennessee), or by
contract (as in the case of school Medicaid contracts in Missouri and New
Mexico).
The second essential refinancing caveat concerns the need for up-front
investment in administrative capacity to assure that federal funds are properly
claimed and not subject to later audit disallowance. Federal program
requirements and claiming procedures can be complex and can create significant
new workload. Some of the anticipated new revenue should be advanced to build
staff and systems capacity to adequately cover this workload. Where direct
service staff are required to perform new administrative work, additional
service positions should be created at least to maintain existing service
capacity. As a rule of thumb, five to ten percent of newly anticipated revenues
should be invested in this kind of infrastructure support.
Following are the major refinancing options under Titles IV-E, IV-A and XIX
which can be used to provide funding for reinvestment in family and children's
services. Return to "Contents"
A. Title
IV-E Foster Care and Subsidized Adoption
Title IV-E is the title of the Social Security Act which provides funding for
foster care and subsidized adoption. Title IV-E provides reimbursement for
foster care maintenance costs (i.e., room and board and related costs) at the
state's Medicaid matching rate, which varies between 50 percent and 80 percent
based on the state's per capita income. Administrative costs are reimbursed by
the Federal government for all states at 50 percent. Training claims are
reimbursed at 75 percent.
There are six basic strategies for increasing IV-E claims:
1) Increase the IV-E eligibility rate. The most important element of IV-E
claiming is the percentage of children in out-of-home care who are IV-E
eligible. Foster care maintenance costs are reimbursed only for eligible
children. And the IV-E eligibility rate is also used to calculate the federal
share of IV-E administrative claims. A description of IV-E eligibility
requirements is beyond the scope of this paper. The most important requirements
specify that the child must have received AFDC (or been eligible to receive
AFDC) at the time of placement or during the preceding six months; and placement
court orders must specify that placement is in the best interest of the child,
and that reasonable efforts have been made to prevent placement. Most states
have made significant progress in improving Title IV-E eligibility rates.
Achievable rates for most states exceed 60 percent. And in high poverty areas,
achievable rates may exceed 75 percent.
2) Increase IV-E administrative claims through better time study coverage,
better claiming definitions, and improved cost allocation methodology. Title
IV-E administration covers a wide range of activities including eligibility
determination, foster home recruitment, child placement and judicial processes,
and case management. In effect, IV-E administration covers all activities in
support of the out-of-home placement system except face-to-face therapy. Time
studies typically find that 80 percent of child welfare worker activities can be
classified as administration under IV-E. Random statistical studies of worker
time are used to capture these costs, and there are there are often ways to
improve the functioning of these systems and the way in which the resultant data
is used to increase the size of the claim.
3) Expand IV-E coverage to the Juvenile Justice and Mental Health system,
including both service and administrative claims. Many children in
out-of-home care in the Juvenile Justice and Mental Health systems are
potentially eligible for Title IV-E. Establishing coverage for these children
involves the same rules and protections required for children in the Child
Welfare system. However, IV-E claims in these systems are limited by
prohibitions on payment for placement in public institutions, secure detention,
and for-profit facilities.
4) Expand coverage of group and residential costs using a blended rate
approach which coordinates rate setting and cost coverage with Medicaid.
Many of the costs of group and residential care are potentially reimbursable
under Title IV-E, Title XIX, or both. It is possible to create a rate structure
which takes advantage of the optimum mix of these funding streams, and increases
net federal reimbursement.
5) Improve use of IV-E training funds (at 75% FFP) through university
based training or direct contracting for training services. Public universities
may use approved overhead and indirect costs as match.
6) Use enhanced matching rate funds for information systems development and
implementation. Seventy-five (75) percent matching funds are available for
three years (Federal Fiscal Years 1994 to 1996) for planning, development and
implementation of child welfare information systems. Subsequent operating costs
will be reimbursed at 50 percent. A number of states are using these funds to
help develop cross agency information systems which can provide the data and
management support needed for family and children's service reform. Return
to "Contents"
B. Medicaid: An Overview
The Title XIX (Medicaid) program provides federal support for states' health and
rehabilitative services for low-income families and individuals. Although Title
XIX is best known as a primary health care program, it actually permits
considerable discretion in the structure and coverage of state programs. Federal
reimbursement is provided for direct service costs at rates which vary by
state from 50 percent to 80 percent based on state per capita income. Administrative
costs (including training) are reimbursed for all states at 50 percent.(2)
One of the most important components of Title XIX is the Early Periodic
Screening Diagnosis and Treatment (EPSDT) program. This program was
significantly strengthened in 1989 when states were required to bring their
screening rates up to 80 percent and provide needed services identified in the
screening process, whether or not such services were otherwise provided to
Medicaid recipients under the state's plan. This change in federal law served to
establish EPSDT as the single most important health entitlement for poor
children and created a powerful framework for covering therapeutic services
provided inside and outside the traditional health system. Medicaid is a complex
program, and it is beyond the scope of this paper to summarize its provisions.
The best source of such information is the Medicaid Source Book published
in January 1993 by the Congressional Research Service.
The following sections outline some of the most important refinancing
applications of Title XIX.
Return to "Contents"
C. Medicaid
in Child Welfare and Juvenile Justice
Many services in child welfare have definable therapeutic components which can
be made eligible for Medicaid reimbursement. In addition, many activities within
the Child Welfare and Juvenile Justice systems qualify as Medicaid
administrative activities. Major options include:
1) Case management claims using Targeted Case Management (as a service) or EPSDT/Administrative
case management as an administrative claim. These are two, generally mutually
exclusive, ways to capture funds for case management activities under Medicaid.
For states with FFP rates above 60 percent (28 states), the higher reimbursement
rate under the service claim approach may offset the relatively easier
implementation requirements for administrative claims, which are reimbursed at
50 percent.
2) Continuum of Care claims: It is possible to use EPSDT or the Rehabilitation
option under Title XIX to claim for costs of the therapeutic components of care
across the community-based care and out-of-home care service continuum,
including:
a) Home and community-based services including such services as day treatment
and respite care services,
b) Therapeutic foster care,
c) Non-secure group care, and
d) Residential treatment. Return to "Contents"
D.
Medicaid in Health, Mental Health, Mental Retardation, and Developmental
Disability Services
These are the service systems in which Medicaid claiming strategies have been
most thoroughly developed by the states. In many cases, state and local
governments have used existing Medicaid service definitions and claiming
procedures to generate federal claims for traditional health services provided
in these systems. Federal waivers for home and community-based care have been
widely used for other services necessary to prevent institutionalization or
allow return to less expensive home and community care. Administrative claims
have, generally been less well developed in these service areas, and represent
an untapped refinancing potential in many states. Under Medicaid administration,
it is possible to claim for a wide range of health related activities including
outreach, public education, case management, and coordination functions in
addition to normal administrative overhead. Random time studies can be used to
capture these costs, at both the state and local level, in the same way that
such processes are used in the Child Welfare system.
Medicaid claiming potential should be reviewed in the following service areas:
1) Public health services, including services provided in public health clinics
and through other direct and contract public health programs.
2) Mental health services, including both direct and contract services, and the
costs of out-of-home care for Medicaid eligible clients in non-institutional
settings.
3) Mental Retardation and Developmental Disability services, including such
services as respite care, and the costs of out-of-home care in non-institutional
settings.
4) Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) Part H services for
infants and toddlers, including services identified in the Individualized Family
Service Plans for Medicaid eligible children. Return to
"Contents"
E. Medicaid in the Schools
Medicaid can be used to refinance some existing costs of the education system,
and provide significant new resources for reinvestment in family and children's
services. Significant claims are possible for therapeutic services provided by
schools to Medicaid eligible children. Claims are also possible for EPSDT
services and administrative activities when schools become partners in the EPSDT
program. There are a wide range of approaches to setting up Medicaid claiming
for schools. The best approaches use service definitions which are tailored to
school settings (under EPSDT or the Rehabilitation option), use capitated
approaches wherever possible, and generate full cost reimbursement. There are
four primary areas for Medicaid claiming. The first three involve services
provided to Medicaid eligible children. The last covers administrative
activities in support of the EPSDT program.
1) Special Education Individualized Education Plan (IEP) related services. This
includes the most common of IEP services (such as occupational therapy, physical
therapy, and speech therapy) as well as the less common services (psychological
services, social work, transition services, etc.) Plans developed under an EPSDT
umbrella may allow any medically necessary service to be claimed.
2) EPSDT screening services. Schools can directly perform full or partial
screens or serve as sites for such screenings.
3) Other School based health services (such as health clinic services) or
services targeted to special populations (such as day treatment services or
services for pregnant and parenting teens).
4) EPSDT Administration. A wide range of health education and support activities
can be claimed as Medicaid administration using a time study to capture costs.
Activities include outreach, case planning and coordination and health
education. Return to "Contents"
III. RAISING
REVENUE: GENERATING NEW FUNDING TO SUPPORT FAMILIES AND CHILDREN
The refinancing section above presents a very particular kind of revenue raising
strategy: the use of open-ended federal revenue to free up existing state and
local funds. This is only one of many revenue strategies which may be harnessed
to support a reform agenda. Revenue strategies range from the traditional,
though always dangerous, use of taxes to the non-traditional and still
experimental use of bond authority for human services capital investment. In
addition to some of the major revenue approaches discussed below, the
grantsmanship marketplace provides thousands of smaller public and private
sources of funding for worthy and not so worthy ideas. The following sections
present three broad sets of revenue strategies which should be considered as
part of any effort to develop a comprehensive program and financial plan. Return
to "Contents"
A. New Federal Funding
We have already discussed new uses of existing block grant funds under
redeployment, and the creative use of existing open-ended federal titles under
refinancing. It does not happen often, but there are occasionally new federal
fund sources to consider. Two such sources are available as a result of the
passage of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA) of 1993:
1) Family Preservation and Family Support funds: For the first time, federal
funds are provided for the specific purpose of supporting family preservation
and family support services. The funds are a state entitlement, included in a
new section of Title IV-B. Total funding under this section increases over five
years from $60 million in Federal Fiscal Year (FFY) 1994 to $255 million in FFY
1998. In the first year, states are required to conduct a broadly based planning
process which sets out five year goals for family preservation and family
support, and identifies how state and federal resources will be used to improve
the overall system of services for families and children.
2) Empowerment Zones and Enterprise Communities: These new funds present a major
opportunity to combine human service reform and economic development work in
local communities. Funds are provided to support 6 urban and 3 rural Empowerment
Zones and 65 urban and 30 rural Enterprise Communities. Empowerment Zone awards
will provide $100 million over two years to urban sites and $40 million to rural
sites. The smaller Enterprise Community awards will provide grants of about $3
million plus a wide array of tax and other benefits. Return
to "Contents"
B. State and Local Funding
Several approaches to increasing state and local revenue should be considered in
any comprehensive multi-year financing plan.
1) Fair Share of Revenue Growth. Family and children's services arguably have a
claim to total revenue growth at least equal to the state or local growth rate
in general fund revenue. While the argument only works in years of revenue
increase, it can be argued that new spending for families and children should be
equal to revenue growth net of inflation. These are complex positions to
articulate but may represent the largest block of resources available for reform
agendas over the long term.
2) Taxes. There are, of course, a wide range of tax strategies, all of which are
politically risky. But taxes (particularly special purpose taxes) should not be
left out of the arsenal. Special purpose taxing districts for children have
operated in some Florida counties since the 1940's. There has been more mixed
success with special purpose lotteries (the only known form of popular tax),
with revenues sometimes used to offset education formula funds or other base
funding. Tax check-offs are used in many states allowing taxpayers to designate
a portion of their taxes for special purposes. They can produce a small but
useful revenue stream. If the agenda is sufficiently important and politically
compelling, it may even be possible to consider mainstream tax strategies. The
point is that, while tax approaches must be handled with care, they should not
be ignored as part of a potential financing plan. Return to
"Contents"
C. Private Funding
Private funding sources are often ignored in putting together public financing
packages, but a wide range of private sources can and should be considered. By
private funding we mean any funds which derive from a non-governmental source.
As with other funding strategies, it is essential that private funding
approaches support and not drive program goals. Following are some of the more
important categories of private financial support:
1) Third Party Collections: This includes everything from child support
collections to collections of health and other insurance benefits. If properly
planned, revenue will almost always exceed collection costs and the net profit
from such efforts can be reinvested.
2) Fees: Where appropriate, fees can be charged to recover some or all of the
cost of service. Fees are commonly used in services for which there is a private
market, such as child care or personal care services. Fee revenue can be
obtained by increasing traditional fees (including indexing to inflation), or by
considering non-traditional use of fees.
3) Donations: Foundations and businesses can provide important flexible funding
particularly for leveraging other funding or gap filling purposes.
4) Volunteers: Volunteerism constitutes a form of non monetary donation which
can be an important financing tool. Volunteers can be used to directly
supplement the workforce, as in the case of outreach and education, or can
provide services and supports, not part of the paid service system such as
mentoring, recreation or peer counseling.
5) Loans: If a sound case can be made for a return on investment, then bond
financing or other forms of borrowing are theoretically possible. These are, of
course, fundamental approaches in business, and widely used in community and
economic development but relatively new to human services. It may be possible to
apply loan based financing to some of the out-of-home care or health service
investments discussed in the redeployment section above. It is also possible to
use revolving loan funds within the government budget structure to support the
start up costs of service enterprises (such as child care), or to test the
concepts of human service investment before seeking private financing. Return
to "Contents"
D. Roll revenue forward. Roll
expenditures back: This is borrowing against future revenue, or
delaying payment on legitimate expenses. Both produce one-time increases in
resources. There is, of course, a serious down side. These amounts must be paid back in
a future budget. The one exception is improvements to cashflow. If such
improvements can be maintained, then a one-time increase in resources will
occur, which does not have to be paid back.
IV.
RESTRUCTURING FINANCIAL SYSTEMS: USING FINANCIAL STRUCTURES TO EFFECT CHANGE
Even the best reform strategies may ultimately fail if financial systems and
financial incentives work against reform goals. An essential part of any reform
strategy is reform of the financial system itself. Following is a basic list of
structural changes which may be considered as part of this process:
1) Seamless Services Design: Service structures should make financing (and
federal fund claiming) invisible to families and children to the greatest extent
possible. Service systems should be designed to operate with a "front
room," where families are treated with respect, the needs of all members
considered, and services provided regardless of federal or state service
categories. In the "back room," the service agency should do
everything possible to qualify families and children for different funding
streams, and collect as much reimbursement as possible to support the services
for all families.
2) Funding Pools: Funding pools can provide the flexibility necessary for
communities to produce better results for less money; but only if the funding
pool provides new forms of accountability to replace the old categorical
accountability structures. At the bottom line, funding pools involve structuring
a new "contract" between the agencies providing funds and the
communities using those funds. In its best form, such a contract should
represent a trade of new authority and flexibility in the use of funds for new
accountability for outcomes for families and children.
3) Flexible dollars: Even without changing the whole system, it is possible to
create pockets of flexible funding which can be used to fill gaps in services.
Such funds are often an inexpensive way to make a categorical system more
effective. As such, they remove the barriers to meeting families' unique needs.
4) Incentives: Incentive promote change by rewarding good practice. There are a
wide range of incentive structures possible from the casework level (making it
easier to prevent foster care than it is to remove and place children outside
the home) to the systemic level (allowing local collaboratives to keep savings
from reduced placements). Ultimately systems must shift to providing incentives
for improving results for families and children.
5) Trust Funds for families and children: Trust funds can provide a financial
sanctuary for an investment pool for families and children. Redeployment
investment schemes might actually be structured to repay trust fund
"loans."
6) Outcome (or Result) Based Budgeting: Major changes are needed in the
budgeting and decision making structures which frame the long term investment
decisions for families and children, and help hold us all accountable for
outcomes for families and children. Major elements of an outcome based budgeting
structure include a Family and Children' Budget; a periodic consensus
forecast of the cost of continuing current policy; an analysis of prevention
and non prevention expenditures and a systematic assessment of
investment options; a multi-year budget process which
derives spending priorities from an orderly review of outcomes, indicators of
outcome achievement, effective strategies which change outcomes, and the
resources necessary to put effective services and supports in place. Return
to "Contents"
CONCLUSION
This broad inventory of financing strategies is intended to support a systematic
approach to thinking about ways to pay for family and children's services
reform. Using the document involves taking each element of an ambitious plan for
change, and considering how each of the four financing strategies discussed
above may be used or adapted. By working systematically through these options,
and using the process to explore non-traditional approaches, it may be possible
to craft a financing plan to support an ambitious programmatic agenda. Together,
these financing approaches could produce a significant portion of the investment
funds necessary to produce better outcomes for our families and children. And in
the long run, improving outcomes for families and children, by investing in
prevention and support, and lowering the cost of treating problems after they
occur, may be the most important financing strategy of all.
Footnotes:
1. Some state and local accounting systems permit federal
fund reimbursement to be received directly as general fund revenue, in much the
same way that fee payments or debt collection amounts are treated. These amounts
may then be rematched with federal funds when they are used for federally
eligible purposes. Alternatively, state and local accounting systems may require
that federal reimbursement be credited to the specific accounts which generated
the claim. In this case, an equal general fund amount can be freed, and these
freed funds can be rematched with federal funds when used for federally eligible
purposes. In cases where the funds freed by refinancing are federal block grant
funds, it may be necessary to, first, exchange these funds for general funds by
transfer between program budgets.
2. Administrative activities which require the skills of a
medical professional (e.g., public health nurse) are reimbursed at 75 percent.
Return to "Contents"
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