State wants lower overtime hours for home caregivers

Tami Straub, a caregiver employed through the Illinois Department of Human Services, spoke against the Rauner administration’s overtime rules at a statehouse news conference. (Dave Dahl)

 

By Dave Dahl

SPRINGFIELD – Groups watching out for the homebound say the Rauner administration is going about saving money the wrong way.

David Spurney of Staunton is confined to a wheelchair and has autonomic dysflexia. His caregiver “is my lifeline in more ways than one. She provides services that people in her line of work often do.”

The problem is, rules implemented last year cap his caregiver’s hours at 45 per week. His state senator, Andy Manar (D-Bunker Hill) pointed out, he’s disabled 168 hours per week and isn’t in a great position to recruit a second caregiver to small-town Southern Illinois.

Aide Tami Straub, who has taken Spurney into her home and who has been with him 27 years, says the staet has done a 180 in terms of service.

“The counselors (previously said) ‘Are your needs being met?’ ‘What can we do for you?’” Straub said. “Now, there’s nothing. There is no help in trying to fill out their paperwork. It’s lengthy. It doesn’t have any explanation. You’d have to see it to believe it.”

Sen. Manar, a regular critic of the Rauner administration on this matter, brushed aside a suggestion this could be a pre-election press pop, saying Spurney wanted to have the news conference a month ago, but a hospital stay intervened.

DHS issued the following statement:

Over 16,000 new caregivers have been hired since the rule went into effect. 98.8% of caregivers are working within the overtime rule. No caregiver has been suspended. We have received 775 requests for overtime exceptions and 61% percent of those were approved and 21% were denied. Other requests are pending or were withdrawn.

Dave Dahl can be reached at [email protected]

Blogs

Labor Day – Expanding voting rights for all

By Mike Matejka Because of COVID, there is no Labor Day Parade this year.  It’s always a great event for our everyday workers to march proudly down the street and enjoys the festive crowd. If there had been a parade, this year’s Labor Day theme was to be “150 years of struggle: your right to vote.” …

Is federal mobilization the answer?

By Mike Matejka As President Donald Trump threatens to send federal marshals into Chicago, over the objections of Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker, recall another Illinois Governor who protested the incursion of armed federal personnel into the city.   Those federal troops, rather than calming, escalated the situation, leading to deaths and violence. Illinois poet Vachel Lindsay…

In these troubled times, to my fellow white Americans

By Mike Matejka Our nation is at a unique watershed in human relations. African-Americans have been killed too many times in the past before George Floyd, but the response to this man’s death is international and all-encompassing. I was a grade-schooler during the Civil Rights 1960s. I watched Birmingham demonstrators hosed and the Selma – Montgomery…

Workers’ Memorial Day – Remember those whose job took their life

Looking around our community, when we say employer, most will respond to State Farm, Country, or Illinois State University.   We too often forget those who are building our roads, serving our food, or our public employees. COVID-19 has made us more aware of the risk.  Going to work every day for some people means…