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1
HOUSE RESOLUTION

 
2    WHEREAS, The Department of Human Services (DHS), through
3its Office of the Inspector General (OIG), is responsible for
4investigating allegations of abuse and neglect that occur in
5mental health and developmental disability facilities and
6community agencies licensed, certified, or funded by DHS to
7provide mental health and developmental disability services
8operated by DHS; and
 
9    WHEREAS, The OIG is essential in assisting agencies and
10facilities in prevention efforts by investigating all reports
11of abuse, neglect, and mistreatment in a timely manner to
12foster humane, competent, respectful, and caring treatment of
13persons with mental and developmental disabilities; and
 
14    WHEREAS, In December 2024, the Office of the Auditor
15General released a report of the program audit of the OIG and
16DHS that covered FY21 through FY23; and
 
17    WHEREAS, The audit found significant problems with the
18quality of investigations being conducted by the OIG, causing
19misconduct allegations within DHS to increase and OIG to
20become slower to investigate complaints; this audit resulted
21in 12 recommendations, including improving the timeliness of
22investigation completion, involving interview procedure and

 

 

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1supervisory review, determining the OIG must fulfill statutory
2requirements to appoint members to the Quality Care Board, and
3declaring the OIG and DHS should work together to identify and
4mitigate the bottlenecks in the hiring process and address pay
5structure imbalances; and
 
6    WHEREAS, The timeliness of case file reviews has worsened
7since the FY20 audit; during FY20, it took the OIG on average
841 days to complete a supervisory review of substantiated
9cases; during this audit period, the average number of
10calendar days to review substantiated cases for FY21 was 71
11days, for FY22 was 66 days, and for FY23 was 86 days; case
12investigations took an average of 205 calendar days to
13complete during FY23 compared to an average of 180 calendar
14days during FY20; and
 
15    WHEREAS, The Quality Care Board (the Board) is required to
16monitor and oversee the operations, policies, and procedures
17of OIG to ensure the prompt and thorough investigation of
18allegations of neglect and abuse; the Department of Human
19Services Act requires the Board to be composed of seven
20members appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent
21of the Senate, and two members are required to be a person with
22a disability or a parent of a person with a disability; and
 
23    WHEREAS, The OIG continues to show improvement in meeting

 

 

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1the statutorily required Board membership; for example, in
2FY20, the Board had five members compared to having four
3members in FY17; as of September 10, 2024, the Board's website
4showed that there were seven members on the Board, meeting
5statutory requirements, but three members were serving on
6expired terms; and
 
7    WHEREAS, During the audit period of FY21 through FY23, the
8OIG requested to hire for 38 positions; 17 positions had been
9filled as of August 17, 2023, and 21 were still vacant; once
10position requests were posted, two positions were filled
11within three months, ten positions took between four and six
12months to fill, and five positions took between seven and 12
13months to fill after the hiring request was made; and
 
14    WHEREAS, The OIG has struggled to retain and recruit
15employees to improve their efficiency as employees are
16overloaded with work and vacancies require employees to take
17on additional responsibilities; employees are so overwhelmed
18with responsibilities that the DHS State-operated facilities'
195,024 employees accumulated 1,606,962 hours of overtime during
20FY23; and
 
21    WHEREAS, The OIG officials stated that a lack of
22investigators worsens timeliness, increases caseloads, and
23creates detrimental effects on residents and employees; the

 

 

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1requirement for completing cases per OIG directives is 60
2working days; during the audit period, the OIG completed 42%
3of cases within 60 working day during FY23; however, there
4were also 858 cases during the audit period that took 500 or
5more days to complete; and
 
6    WHEREAS, The OIG cannot effectively carry out its
7statutory mandate of investigating allegations of abuse and
8neglect as these issues persist; the lower quality and longer
9time an investigation is conducted, the more its usefulness is
10diminished; all of the underlying issues must be effectively
11addressed to allow the OIG to perform investigations of abuse
12and neglect and fulfill their obligation which is imperative
13to ensuring the safety of residents living within
14State-operated facilities; therefore, be it
 
15    RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE
16HUNDRED FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that
17we urge the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) and the
18Department of Human Services (DHS) to review the audit
19findings and implement the recommendations listed in a timely
20and satisfactory manner; and be it further
 
21    RESOLVED, That we urge the OIG to work to improve the
22timeliness of investigative case completion by identifying the
23barriers that are preventing timely completion and seeking the

 

 

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1appropriate remedies for the issues identified and recommended
2in the audit; and be it further
 
3    RESOLVED, That we urge the OIG to work with the necessary
4entities relevant to strengthen its investigation process,
5including State agencies such as the Illinois State Police,
6the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS), and the
7Department of Public Health (DPH); and be it further
 
8    RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be
9delivered to DHS and the OIG.