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CVTC report echoes across Virginia

Central Virginia Training Center CVTC

Credit: File photo

Central Virginia Training Center in Madison Heights


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A federal agency’s sharply critical report on Central Virginia Training Center reverberated in the House of Delegates Monday, with delegates citing it as a reason the state should spend more on community housing for disabled people.

The U.S. Department of Justice, after a three-year investigation of CVTC, said last week that the institution had harmed residents by not helping them move into community housing at a faster rate.

Parents of some CVTC residents replied that most of their children are too severely and profoundly disabled to make a transition to other homes.

“The DOJ report was written by persons who don’t have even a rudimentary understanding of real-world conditions at CVTC in terms of the levels of residents’ intellectual and physical disabilities or of the special care and treatments they require,” said Charles Fallis, president of the parents’ group.

In Richmond, Del. Kirk Cox, R-Colonial Heights, said the House has pushed the Senate in recent years into agreeing to pay for more “waiver slots” for people to live in group homes, and more waivers will be needed this year.

Waivers are the slots Virginia uses to provide Medicaid funds to help individuals live in small, intermediate-care facilities and group homes in communities where residents can have more autonomy.

Already this year, the House has proposed adding waiver slots to the governor’s version of the budget, while the Senate has not, Cox said.

Gov. Bob McDonnell had budgeted 275 additional waiver slots for people with intellectual disabilities, and the House recommended adding 100 more waivers.

But after the Justice Department’s findings on CVTC last week, Cox said, it will be crucial “that we do the 100 (additional) waiver slots” to move people out of training centers.

“I will be blunt,” Cox added. “We are going to have to do more” than 100 additoinal waivers. “That is not going to be acceptable” to DOJ negotiators who will talk with Virginia’s top health officials about CVTC and community-based housing, said Cox, a House negotiator on the conference committee that resolves differences between the House and Senate budgets.

Del. Robin Abbott, D-Newport News, said the U.S. Department of Justice had cited harm to residents of CVTC as a reason Virginia should move its residents into community housing.

“I hope we will provide more waiver slots,” Abbott said.

Fallis said the DOJ report was overly optimistic about the potential of CVTC residents to thrive in smaller homes.

“It is my own considered opinion that most if not all of those involved in this so-called ‘investigation’ are living in fantasyland. There are few, if any, remaining residents at CVTC who have the potential to fulfill the fantasies of these DOJ ‘investigators’ and their ‘consultants’,” Fallis said.

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