
The Mental Health/Disability Services of the East Central Region (ECR) is set to dissolve by June 30, and leadership is focused on ensuring a smooth transition, CEO Mae Hingtgen told the Johnson County Board of Supervisors Wednesday. ECR is a partnership between the counties of Benton, Bremer, Buchanan, Delaware, Dubuque, Iowa, Johnson, Jones and Linn […]
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Click here to purchase a paywall bypass linkThe Mental Health/Disability Services of the East Central Region (ECR) is set to dissolve by June 30, and leadership is focused on ensuring a smooth transition, CEO Mae Hingtgen told the Johnson County Board of Supervisors Wednesday.
ECR is a partnership between the counties of Benton, Bremer, Buchanan, Delaware, Dubuque, Iowa, Johnson, Jones and Linn to provide comprehensive brain health and disability services to individuals within the region.
House File 2673, passed last year, overhauls Iowa’s behavioral health and disability services system, shifting oversight from the state’s 13 mental health and disability service regions to the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services. The restructuring creates a new behavioral health service system, dividing the state into seven districts to manage mental health and substance use disorder services.
Iowa HHS has been hiring administrative services organizations to oversee each district. ECR had applied for the District 7 role but was not selected.
“The state chose to go with a private, non-profit corporation that will do the behavioral health administrative services organization duties for the entire state of Iowa. So no regions were selected,” Ms. Hingtgen told the board.
The region had also applied to be a disability access point, and a decision on that application is expected by Feb. 21.
“Without the behavioral health administrative services organization designation, and even if we’re the disability access point with that very limited budget, we do need to transition away from being a region,” Ms. Hingtgen said.
Services, staff remain priority
Ms. Hingtgen outlined five priorities to the board for ECR’s transition away from its role as the essential region:- Support a smooth handoff to the statewide behavioral health system
- Maintain service quality and integrity during the transition
- Provide clear communication throughout the process
- Support the well-being and job transitions of the 34 regional staff members who have lost their positions
- Manage the logistical and financial aspects of dissolving the region, which includes the transfer of assets