Pennsylvania Department of Human Services Budget Hearing – Part 2 Overview
Part 2 of the Senate DHS budget hearing focused heavily on long-term care, workforce shortages, intellectual disability services, federal match issues, childcare workforce stabilization, and administrative capacity. Lawmakers pressed the department on structural sustainability challenges, while DHS leadership emphasized demographic shifts, community-based care preferences, and federal regulatory constraints.
Below is a comprehensive issue-by-issue breakdown of the discussion, including legislator questions and agency responses.
1. Nursing Facility Closures & Private Equity Concerns
Legislative Concern
Senators raised concerns about:
Legislators referenced legislation passed in the House addressing private equity involvement and urged Senate consideration.
DHS Response
Secretary Arkoosh acknowledged concerns about ownership trends and quality outcomes. She noted:
However, DHS emphasized a broader structural reality:
Key Policy Framing: DHS views the shift toward home- and community-based services (HCBS) as consistent with participant preference and long-term system design.
2. Stabilizing Skilled Nursing Workforce
Legislative Question (Senator Culver)
With Pennsylvania’s aging population and more facilities closing than opening, what is DHS doing to stabilize skilled nursing care in the Commonwealth?
DHS Response
Secretary Arkoosh candidly stated that stabilizing the nursing facility workforce is not currently a top DHS priority compared to expanding community-based care
The department’s position:
This exchange highlighted a philosophical divide:
Legislators focused on maintaining facility capacity; DHS emphasized system transformation toward community living.
3. Office of Long-Term Living (OLTL) & Residential Habilitation Rates
Legislative Concern (Senator Carney)
Residential habilitation providers have not received rate increases since 2010. Accountability appears unclear between OLTL and Community HealthChoices (CHC) managed care organizations. How can this be resolved?
DHS Response
DHS acknowledged the frustration and complexity of the issue, describing it as a longstanding tension between:
The department indicated continued engagement but did not commit to a specific rate adjustment proposal during the hearing.
Implication: Rate adequacy for long-term services remains unresolved and may require legislative budget intervention.
4. Workers with Job Success & Federal Match Issues
Legislative Question (Senator Vogel)
Did DHS reapply for federal financial participation for the Workers with Job Success component of the Medical Assistance for Workers with Disabilities (MAWD) program?
DHS Response
Fiscal Impact: Loss of anticipated federal match limits revenue flexibility in the MAWD program.
5. Budget Deficit & Available Funds
Legislative Question
Is DHS expecting any excess funds that could help offset the projected budget deficit?
DHS Response
DHS indicated:
Theme: Limited near-term fiscal flexibility within DHS appropriations.
6. Office of Developmental Programs (ODP) & ID Waiver Waiting List
Legislative Question
The proposed budget includes a $76.8 million increase for the ODP Community Waiver Program.
How will the remaining $46.8 million be allocated?
DHS Response:
The remaining funds address:
DHS referred legislators to detailed explanations in the DHS “Blue Book.”
Key Tension: While waiver expansion is occurring, growth in utilization and complexity continues to outpace full elimination of the waiting list.
7. Childcare Recruitment & Retention Grants
Legislative Question (Senator Cappelletti)
Last year’s budget included $25 million for childcare recruitment and retention bonuses; this year proposes $35 million. What challenges have emerged in implementation?
DHS Response:
The department framed bonuses as stabilization tools but acknowledged broader workforce shortages remain a structural issue.
8. Bureau of Hearings & Appeals (BHA) Capacity
Legislative Concern
If courts require full merits hearings before placement on the child abuse registry, what would be the impact?
DHS Response
Implication: Judicial decisions could significantly increase administrative workload and require additional staffing.
9. Gender Dysphoria & Coverage Clarification
Early in the session, discussion referenced whether individuals carried diagnoses of gender dysphoria and whether certain procedures were being performed
The Chairman redirected the discussion, suggesting broader policy issues should be handled in a dedicated oversight hearing.
Note: No major policy shift or program change was announced during this exchange.
Key Themes Emerging from Part 2
1. Long-Term Care System Transformation
DHS continues shifting policy focus toward home- and community-based care, even as legislators express concern about facility closures.
2. Structural Workforce Shortages
Whether nursing facilities, habilitation providers, or childcare centers, workforce shortages are systemic and not limited to any single program.
3. Federal Constraints Limit State Flexibility
From MAWD federal match denial to court-driven hearing requirements, federal decisions continue shaping DHS fiscal realities.
4. Waiver Expansion vs. Growing Demand
ID waiver funding increases are meaningful but insufficient to fully address long waiting lists.
5. Limited Fiscal Cushion
DHS signaled constrained ability to redirect funds to close projected deficits.
Conclusion
Part 2 of the DHS budget hearing highlighted the tension between:
As budget negotiations advance, debates will likely center on: