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NCARF Electronic News
February 4, 2011
In This Issue
NCARF Survey Results
Coalition Budget Statement
Training Session
Business Productivity
NC Council Community News Update
From the NC Center for Non-Profits
Fitzsimon File
Save the Date
Calendar of Events
 

April 6-8, 2011
NCARF Leadership Forum
Wrightsville Beach, NC

  
Quick Links
  
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NCARF Headquarters
 
1500 Sunday Drive,
Suite 102
Raleigh, NC 27607
 
Phone
919-863-9486
 
Email
Nicole Shore
Association Executive
 
Michelle Eggleston
Membership Coordinator
 
NCARF Survey Results

NCARF Members,

Thank you for your timely response to my brief survey of the numbers of people we collectively are serving and the number of jobs NCARF all of our organizations in total represent.

You may or may not be surprised to find out that in total the 26 member organizations who responded to this survey are serving 6031  consumers annually in services and that we employ 1843 FTEs in jobs with our companies!

The Coalition is conducting a statewide survey to count all services from all Coalition members and NCARF will provide each of your responses to the Coalition (so if you receive a Coalition survey request from another source, please do not respond as your information has already been included).

Alicia Camacho
NCARF President 2009-2011

 

 

 

 

The Coalition Budget Statement

 

The Coalition Budget StaTement

 

February 1, 2011

 

FINDING SOLUTIONS

 

The Coalition recognizes the significance of North Carolina's difficult budget issues and the economic condition of our state. The individuals and families who rely upon the public mental health, developmental disabilities and substance abuse system for the basic services and supports necessary to live in communities have truly felt the effects of recession. All too often the impact has resulted in serious harm to the well being of these individuals.

 

Coalition members who provide these basic services and supports have had the triple impact of:

 

1.    state and federal funding reductions

2.    increases in the number of new people in need of services and supports

3.    reduced ability to access other funding sources such as fundraising or credit markets.

 

The Coalition believes the services and supports provided all across North Carolina are critical to the well being of North Carolina citizens, and that the jobs needed to provide these services are part of the fabric of local communities.

 

We cannot solve this fiscal crisis with budget cuts alone.  There must be a balanced approach of

 

·         creative methods of service provision

·         budget reductions

·         prioritizing services that avoid cost-shifting

 

Taking this balanced approach can lead to a better North Carolina for all our citizens.  We want to work with the General Assembly and the Administration to develop solutions.  As we work toward these solutions The Coalition will adhere to the following principles:

 

  • Save jobs - cuts to services would increase unemployment in communities already hard-hit by recession

 

  • Seek business efficiencies - eliminate costly over-regulation and duplicative administrative functions which waste resources

 

  • Protect federal match - many services bring in funds from federal sources that stretch our resources to serve more people

 

  • Protect community services as the first priority - any reductions in community services must be paired with comparable reductions in state-operated healthcare facilities.

 

  • If there are reductions in service funding they must be paired with a comparable reduction in administrative funding.

 

 

 

The Coalition is a group of 40 state-wide advocacy, consumer, family, provider and professional organizations that speak on behalf of North Carolinians and their families living with mental illness, developmental disabilities, and the disease of addiction.  See reverse for a list of the members.

For information contact Coalition Chair Tad Clodfelter - clodfeltert@southlight.org    

 

 

 

 

NC Advancing Strong Leadership Initiative Invites You to a One Day Session

Understanding Medicaid Waivers in the Context of Demographic and Economic Realities

Come hear about new directions in how North Carolina and states across the
country are allocating resources, using Medicaid Waiver dollars.  We'll
discuss national trends, what's happening in North Carolina with creative
uses of Medicaid Waivers and options for funding Home and Community Based
Services and participant-directed services.

February 24, 2011 - 9:30 am - 3:30 pm (coffee and registration at 9)

The fee for individuals who are not Advancing Strong Leadership participants
is $65.  Space is limited.  To register, click below.  You may pay by credit
card or electronic check.  All payments must be received in advance:   
https://primus.nss.udel.edu/casforms/hdfs/aslw/   

 

 

 

Business Productivity
   

Forget These 5 E-mail Myths: New Ways to Say Less, Get More Done

http://www.refreshleadership.com/index.php/2010/04/5-email-myths/


NC Council Community News Update
   


Click to View January 2011 Newsletter


 

From the NC Center for Non-Profits
    

From the NC Center for Non-Profits - this webinar is a condensed version of the "Rolling Up Your Sleeves for the 2011 Legislature" workshop that the Center previously hosted. 

 

View the PowerPoint at: http://www.ncnonprofits.org/advocacy/January_21_2011_Webinar.pdf.  

 

If you were unable to participate in the webinar, you can hear the archived webinar at: https://cc.readytalk.com/cc/playback/Playback.do?id=gi064l.  

  

 

Courtesy of-   

David R. Heinen

Director of Public Policy and Advocacy

N.C. Center for Nonprofits

919/790-1555, ext. 111

www.ncnonprofits.org



Fitzsimon File
   

The good, the bad, and the confusing budget developments

By Chris Fitzsimon


This week brought three significant developments in the state budget debate, one that makes sense, one that doesn't and one that is a mixed bag of unusual troubling financial practices that could distract lawmakers from the real revenue issues before them.


First, the good news.  A group of prominent state business leaders sent a letter to Governor Beverly Perdue asking her to call for new revenue in her budget to protect critical investments in education, worker training and other parts of the public infrastructure that are vital to the state's economy and business climate.


The group includes leaders from the textiles, technology, manufacturing, and investment sectors and ought to help counter the claims that raising new revenue to help address the $3.7 billion budget shortfall is somehow anti-business.


A not so positive development this week was the strong signal from Governor Perdue that she was considering proposing the legalization of video poker to raise money to address the budget shortfall and possibly putting it under the state lottery commission. [Read more...]


 

save the date 


News to Share?
Please send any news you wish to include in the weekly updates to
Michelle Eggleston at meggleston@firstpointresources.com.
 
 
Sincerely,
 
NCARF Staff
 
 
 
***The information in the NCARF Weekly Update is presented for informational purposes.  Unless expressly stated, opinions may not be the opinion of NCARF as an organization.  Inclusion of information in the Weekly Update is not meant to imply endorsement by NCARF or its member organizations.  NCARF cannot guarantee the accuracy of all information that is passed along from various outside sources.
This email was sent to meggleston@firstpointresources.com by meggleston@firstpointresources.com |  
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