Pubdate: Thu, 18 Sep 2003 Source: Morning Call (PA) Copyright: 2003 The Morning Call Inc. Contact: http://www.mcall.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/275 Author: David Slade CASEWORKERS PROTEST CUTS THAT CRIPPLE DRUG, ALCOHOL AGENCY Pickets Staged In Front Of Offices In Lehighton And Stroudsburg Drug and alcohol caseworkers in Lehighton and Stroudsburg marked Addiction Counselor Appreciation Day on Wednesday by picketing their own offices to protest deep state budget cuts. The Carbon-Monroe-Pike Drug and Alcohol Commission lost $917,000 in state money this year and in response laid off six of its 50 employees, raised fees charged to some of its poorest clients and eliminated most short- and long-term treatment options, manager Joe Guardiani said. ''People are ordered by the courts into mandatory treatment, but there's no money for the treatment,'' Guardiani said. Treatment providers and their clients, along with law enforcement officials and other social service providers, for months have protested a 90 percent cut to the state's Human Services Development Fund that took effect July 1. The $33.5 million budget cut was part of a broader continuing dispute between Gov. Ed Rendell and the Legislature over how to eliminate a budget deficit and fund Rendell's initiatives such as all-day kindergarten. The state Public Welfare Department estimated in August that social services budget cuts have resulted in 500 layoffs, 39 programs closing and 100 others having reduced capacity. That has meant 29,000 people lost services, the state said. Some estimates suggest 40,000 people could lose access to drug and alcohol treatments and hundreds could be sent to prison instead of treatment facilities because of the cutbacks. In Lehighton, the small storefront that houses Carbon County's drug and alcohol program now is open four days a week instead of five, and Guardiani said new clients wait up to two weeks for a face-to-face evaluation of their treatment needs. He said the long wait has increased sharply the number of people who request treatment but later don't show up for an evaluation. Outside the Lehighton office Wednesday, Guardiani and five employees marched with signs for an hour to protest the budget cuts and cheered each time a passing motorist gave a honk of support. ''I've seen people not being able to get services they need,'' said treatment counselor Kim Bonner, who carried a sign in each hand. ''We have a sliding scale, but some people can't afford the treatment they need.'' Clients not eligible for medical assistance — felons, for example — now pay a minimum of $15 for each outpatient treatment visit, up from $2 last year. ''If they have to come twice a week, that really adds up,'' Bonner said. The commission is funding no long-term inpatient programs this year because of the budget cuts, and there's only enough money to send about 10 people to short-term programs that served more than 70 last year, Guardiani said. Advocates hope that when a budget deal finally is hammered out, it will include restoration of at least some human services funding. ''A lot of people just can't believe the depths of the cuts,'' Guardiani said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens