NYAPRS Note: Earlier this week, Susan Arbetter, the host of Capital Tonight, wrote a blog post about the impact of the coronavirus to human services agencies highlighting the importance of funding our #3for5 campaign ask to win a 3% across the board increase to NY’s human services sector for each of the next 5 years. See more at https://3for5ny.org/, which has been a top NYAPRS priority this year.
#3for5 campaign leader Glenn Liebman has been eloquent here: “the strength of #3for5 has been the collective voices of our entire sector speaking with one powerful voice. We are relying on the Governor and the Legislature to work with us to identify how desperately funding is needed for human services agencies that are on the front lines responding to the coronavirus. Human services agencies in mental health, developmental disabilities, substance use, foster care and aging are 24 hour agencies that must have staff and resources available to keep programs whole because we are the safety net providers for those in greatest need. Nowhere has this been more evident than in these times of crisis.”
NYAPRS and our colleagues have intensified our internal and media advocacy efforts this week in advance of what should be a Friday budget deal.
Caregivers Could Be the Other Victims of Coronavirus. Here’s How
By Susan Arbetter New York State of Politics March 16, 2020
Last year at this time, media outlets covering Albany were giving airtime and column inches to the usual array of worthy mid-March arrivals to the state Capitol: The Patriotic Millionaires, good government groups, and school districts that fall in between the cracks of the Foundation Aid formula.
There were also stories about the human services sector – those groups that represent people who need social services in a variety of areas: mental health, developmental disabilities, child welfare, foster care, domestic violence, homelessness, and aging.
This year, everything has been upended. Media outlets covering Albany like media outlets everywhere are focused on the coronavirus and its ripple effects. Lawmakers are conferencing issues that will address the pandemic including paid sick leave and unemployment insurance for workers affected.
While some areas of the state budget are forgone conclusions, and others will survive neglect, social services could feel serious pain if lawmakers pass a budget extender or a “skinny” budget that doesn’t address their needs.
It’s a bitter irony since these are the very organizations that will “bear the brunt of the crisis”, according to Glenn Liebman of the Mental Health Association of New York.
“The humanitarian work of the human service sector is on full display during this crisis. They are the ultimate safety net for those in greatest need,” says Liebman.
These 40-plus organizations started working in tandem on their “ask” this year: The group’s campaign is called “3 for 5”, which is shorthand for the request that the governor and the Legislature commit to a 3% increase across rates and contracts for the next five years.
“New York’s human service sector has always been there to answer the call,” argues Harvey Rosenthal of the New York Association of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services. “It’s long past time for state policymakers to answer the call and step up to preserve and bolster our essential human services sector.”
The Fiscal Policy Institute’s Ron Deutsch echoes Rosenthal.
“As the governor and state legislature put together the final budget, seemingly over the next few days, I really hope they remember to take care of the workers who are compassionately caring for everyone else. Many of these workers have gone a decade without a statutory increase in pay and deserve to be remembered and respected during budget negotiations.”
But need may not be enough this year.
E.J. McMahon of the Empire Center acknowledges that this sector may have legitimate needs. But he warns, “the events of the past 3-plus weeks have blown a multibillion-dollar hole in state revenues, and in local revenues to boot.”
McMahon warns, “The spending proposed in the governor’s budget, which the Legislature had hoped and planned to increase before passing, is going to need to be cut by billions for the budget to balance. So everything will be on the table, regardless of need.”