Pubdate: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2000 Houston Chronicle Contact: Viewpoints Editor, P.O. Box 4260 Houston, Texas 77210-4260 Fax: (713) 220-3575 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Page: 25A Author: John W. Gonzalez, Houston Chronicle Austin Bureau TCADA BUDGET WOES FORCE CUTS IN FUNDING FOR SERVICE PROVIDERS AUSTIN -- In a move that could reduce treatment options for poor, homeless or uninsured people, the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse on Wednesday said it is scaling back contracts with 200 community-based service providers to avert a projected $28 million budget shortfall. Though services will continue at their 1999 pace, they won't expand as planned during the state budget cycle that ends in August, officials said. Twenty-four Houston area providers, some with multiple locations, will be affected. The providers range from counseling centers to hospitals and nonprofits that offer prevention, intervention and treatment programs for children and adults. Together, the Houston-area facilities will receive about $30.5 million in the fiscal year ending Aug. 31, the same as last year. Statewide, the commission will spend about $149.5 million this year. The problems facing the commission can be traced to last year's budget process. In its request to lawmakers, the commission underestimated the amount service providers were spending in 1999 and overestimated how much would be left unspent for use this year. "We have resolved this budget situation in a way that preserves 1999 service levels in every region of the state," said TCADA director Jay Kimbrough. Kimbrough took charge Feb. 1, when the commission was emerging from the trauma of conservatorship imposed by the state in 1995 due to fiscal mismanagement. Kimbrough said he's determined to keep the agency focused on helping the neediest. "Programs that provide critical direct services to clients, such as youth treatment, methadone and specialized female services, took the smallest (spending) restriction to ensure that needs of the most vulnerable populations took priority," he said. The commission is cutting spending by about 4 percent or 5 percent. Officials are confident the cuts won't force drastic changes at agencies that cater to high-priority groups. "It's something we've got to live with and still serve the same population," said Leslie Smith, who operates Families Under Urban & Social Attack Inc. in Houston. Similarly, Eugene Davis at Easy Does It Inc. of Houston said the funding reduction is a wake-up call for nonprofit groups that rely heavily on government funding. He praised TCADA for minimizing the adverse impact of the funding rollback. "TCADA only did what it had to do, and Easy Does It is willing to do its part" by seeking other funds, Davis said. "We can't sit around and wait for TCADA money. We have to go after federal dollars, foundation dollars and municipal dollars because they're there for kids," he said. "We really think we'll be able to continue giving the services that we're giving," said Davis, adding, "we were prepared for this." Even so, some providers said there's no way they will be able to serve as many adults with the new restrictions. "We're not going to be able to provide services to as many clients," said Pamela S. Smith, president of Door to Recovery Inc. in Houston. "Your medically indigent clients are going to be the ones really hurt by this -- the client who has no health insurance or any insurance that would pay for drug and alcohol abuse treatment," Smith said. "That individual and the homeless individual are going to be hit pretty hard." Programs and personnel could be affected, Smith said. Like others, Smith is striving to minimize turmoil by seeking funds from other sources, she said. "We will have to make some real hard decision, some serious cuts." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart