Date: Fri 02-May-1997
Date: Fri 02-May-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
health-district-budget
Full Text:
State Cuts May Hike Local Health District Costs
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Costs to local taxpayers for health services could rise significantly if
proposed cuts in state revenue are approved by the legislature, Newtown Health
District Director Mark A.R. Cooper warned Wednesday evening.
Speaking at a public hearing called to answer questions about the Newtown
Health District's proposed 1997-98 budget, Mr Cooper said the district budget
may have to be increased if state funding is cut.
Although health districts don't know what their 1997-98 state revenue will be,
the state Department of Health and Addiction Services has directed local
health directors to submit their budgets this week.
The Newtown Health District's proposed budget is $320,443, up $8,820 from this
year largely because Mr Cooper recommended that $10,300 be put into
contingency account. Operating costs aren't expected to increase next year, he
said, but some additional funds will be needed for salary increases. Contract
negotiations still are taking place with the unions that represent the
district employees.
The legislature's Appropriations Committee has passed a proposed budget which
would cut $1 of the $1.52 per capita paid by the state to local health
districts. In the current fiscal year, the Newtown Health District received
$32,348 in its state per capita grant.
The proposed state cutbacks also would make districts pay for environmental
testing done by the state lab, a service which is currently provided by the
state.
"Newtown had nearly $70,000 in testing done last year for public health issues
like water quality, rabies, lead, and asbestos," Mr Cooper said. "Urban health
departments spend amounts up to $600,000 just on lead testing. This is an
enormous amount for the legislature to expect local budgets to absorb in one
year. It will result in significant cutbacks in public health services."
Mr Cooper said the proposed cutbacks were the main topic of a meeting earlier
Wednesday in Wethersfield involving the directors of local health departments,
health districts and state Commissioner of Public Health Stephen Harriman.
Much of the water quality testing submitted by Newtown to the state lab
involved neighborhoods like Dodgingtown, where a gasoline tanker crashed last
October, and in the Apple Blossom Lane area, where traces of the chemical PCE
have been found in private wells. The gasoline tanker's insurance company
ultimately will pay for the testing of the Dodgingtown wells; testing in the
Apple Blossom area is being done under a consent order funded by a special
state grant.
No action was taken on the proposed 1997-98 health district budget Wednesday
night because a special meeting scheduled to be held immediately after the
public hearing could not be held due to lack of a quorum. Board Chairman Jim
Smith explained that board members Joan Crick and Audrey Grasso were unable to
attend because of illness and their alternates also were not available. The
special meeting will be rescheduled, he said.
