Illinois lawmakers are coming together to call for an audit
into ongoing issues at group homes for those with disabilities.
A Community Integrated Living Arrangement, or CILA, is a
group home where eight or fewer unrelated adults with developmental disabilities
live under the supervision of the community developmental services agency.
State Rep. Charlie Meier, R-Okawville, has previously shared
examples of problems at some of these facilities.
"You have heard from the first responders about the
incidents of rape, sexual abuse, the neglect of residents, and even starvations
that we can document in the state of Illinois that have taken place in
CILAs," Meier said.
Meier's House Bill 1298 would require the Department of
Human Services to establish a system of sight inspections at the facilities.
On Tuesday, the Legislative Audit Commission approved a
resolution to trigger an Auditor General Performance Audit.
State Rep. Randy Frese, R-Quincy, said the facility's shoddy
performance had led lawmakers to seek answers.
"We all understand that there is a need for us to be
looking closer into this, and I am looking forward to hearing the report that
comes from it," Frese said.
The issue has been a bipartisan one in Springfield. State
Rep. LaShawn Ford, D-Chicago, said doing nothing is a misuse of their power.
"They [the state] just got notice there is a
problem," Ford told The Center Square. "To ignore it and to do
nothing, I think, is a dereliction of duty on our part."
Ford said the state cannot make mistakes on this issue.
"The state should meet and set up some form of a task
force to look at these facilities and make sure that we do not piecemeal this
process, but we work to make sure that we have a holistic type of change to the
safety measures at these institutions," Ford said.
Meier had said he's worked on getting the state to address
these issues for years.
"If you look back and read anything I have put out over
the last 11 years, you will see that I have fought for 11 years for this,"
Meier said. "Often, people will not listen. I have fought with [Department
of Human Services], I have fought with Republican governors and Democrat
governors. I am not just starting this today."
There wasn't an immediate timetable offered for when the
audit will be started and finished before the findings are released. However,
on March 15, 2017, the house adopted a similar resolution calling for an audit
of CILA homes. That report was released in July 2018.