Good indications for St. Joe’s
By EMILY HUNKLER, Adirondack Daily Enterprise Staff Writer
Printed: Adirondack Daily Enterprise December 12, 2008
SARANAC LAKE - While most state-funded organizations are struggling to cut costs and absorb the cuts
proposed in the governor's 2009-10 budget, St. Joseph's Rehabilitation Center has fared comparatively well.
St. Joseph's has had three projects in the planning stages:
building a veterans' treatment facility, cooperating with
Camp Gabriels prison to create treatment programs for inmates,
and cooperating with Adirondack Medical Center to develop
a detoxification center on site to create more jobs and increase
the value of the facility. All of these have at least a glimmer
of state funding hope, although plans are not yet worked out.
Veterans' treatment facility
Earlier in the year, St. Joseph's was awarded a multi-million-dollar
grant to construct a 25-bed treatment facility to help Iraq
and Afghanistan war veterans dealing with addiction and post-traumatic
stress disorder, but it was questionable whether those funds
would actually be released by the state.
Although vague, it now seems St. Joseph's is well positioned to receive the funds.
A packet developed by the state Office of Alcoholism and
Substance Abuse Services that highlights budgetary items
that will affect its recipients says the state will "continue
the development of over 295 community beds for high priority
populations including adolescents, women with children and veterans."
Cooperation with Camp Gabriels
According to OASAS, the proposed budget adds $4 million
to support statewide diversion programs intended to redirect
criminal offenders into chemical dependence treatment instead
of more costly prison sentences. These projects will be done
in collaboration with the state Division of Criminal Justice Services.
The budget would also redirect $2 million from the Department
of Parole to OASAS to partially offset their elimination
of funding for relapse prevention service to parolees in
outpatient and residential programs.
The money will be awarded through a competitive process,
which could be difficult for St. Joseph's since the proposed
budget calls for the closing of Camp Gabriels.
Detoxification
The OASAS packet stated that new funding of $6 million is
available from the state Department of Health during the
coming budget year to increase community-based fees for medically
supervised outpatient detoxification services.
This money could help St. Joseph's develop a detoxification
center for the treatment facility for patients that would
now be treated in the emergency rooms at Adirondack Medical
Center. St. Joseph's CEO Bob Ross has said his center would
treat detox patients in a more cost-effective manner than
a hospital, and these patients would then have direct access
to St. Joseph's long-term rehabilitation services.
"If someone comes here with withdrawal for alcohol
or narcotics, obviously we need to treat that as a medical
emergency," AMC spokesman Joe Riccio said. "But
as far as a comprehensive program, which is what they really
need and St. Joseph's is looking to offer, it would certainly
be a service to the community."
Ross, who was in Albany on Tuesday to discuss the proposed
OASAS budget and his facility's potential for project funding,
could not be reached for comment as of press time.
Contact Emily Hunkler at 891-2600 ext. 24 or
ehunkler@adirondackdailyenterprise.com.
|