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DCFS Inspector General replaced via late Friday news dump

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* Friday night at 6:30…

Lester Bovia will serve as Interim Inspector General of the Department of Children and Family Services. Bovia currently serves as Deputy General Counsel and Ethics Officer at the Illinois Human Rights Commission, where he was instrumental in the General Counsel’s office’s initiative to eliminate the Commission’s 2,500-case backlog. He has served the Commission for over 10 years, also serving as Acting General Counsel from October 2018 to January 2019 and as an administrative law judge since his start in September 2009. During his 22 years of legal experience, Bovia has practiced as a litigation associate at Winston and Strawn, as a conflicts attorney at Perkins Coie and as in-house counsel for a small restaurant chain. He also currently teaches as an adjunct law professor at DePaul University College of Law. Bovia earned his Bachelor of Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Juris Doctor from the University of Illinois College of Law.

* Rumors have circled for a while now about how the governor was hoping to replace DCFS IG Meryl Paniak. I asked the governor’s office what was going on…

Meryl Paniak asked the Governor to withdraw her appointment as Inspector General at DCFS to pursue other opportunities. The Governor will appoint Lester Bovia as interim Inspector General at DCFS. He is an experienced attorney who recently served as Deputy General Counsel at the Illinois Human Rights Commission where he worked to eliminate the backlog at the agency. The administration will conduct a thorough search to name a permanent appointment.

* Hannah Meisel at the Daily Line

Those in child welfare circles had for months heard the Pritzker administration had been looking for a replacement for Paniak, whose window of time to get Senate confirmation was running out in March. State Sen. Tony Munoz (D-Chicago), who chairs the Senate’s appointment committee, filed Paniak’s appointment message on March 5, 2019. But appointments only last for 60 legislative days, and Paniak’s was about to expire, despite efforts within the Senate to confirm Paniak before time ran out.

When asked by The Daily Line in January whether he was directing people in his administration to look for someone to replace Paniak, Pritzker said no.

“I’m not interviewing anybody for that position so I’m not sure why you’re asking that question,” Pritzker said. “I’m not interviewing anybody to replace that position.” […]

ACLU Illinois Director of Institutional Reform Heidi Dalenberg, who is in charge of a decades-old consent decree governing the treatment of Illinois foster children and DCFS as a whole, said in a statement Sunday that children in DCFS care “need a strong, experienced and fearless Inspector General.”

“While we do not know the details behind Ms. Paniak’s departure, her most recent report was well-researched and a helpful guide for those committed to reforming the Department,” Dalenberg said. “The next Inspector General for DCFS must be willing to be a straightforward and speak truth to power inside DCFS. The lives of children are at stake.”

* Meanwhile…

Recognizing the unprecedented challenges families, medical providers, and state agencies are facing from COVID-19, the launch of YouthCare services for DCFS youth in care will be postponed a minimum of 30 days, the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services announced today.

Letters are being sent to all families and group homes informing them of this delay. In close coordination with the Illinois Department of Public Health and stakeholders across the state, HFS and DCFS will assess the timeline as we move forward and announce a new transition date as soon as possible.

“With more medical providers than ever, teams of dedicated care coordinators and other vital services never offered before, we look forward to offering this enhanced care to vulnerable youth as soon as possible,” said Theresa Eagleson, Director of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services. “But the challenges facing our healthcare system and families at this time as a result of the coronavirus must be our top focus, and we are determined not to distract from those crucial priorities.”

“The safety and health of the children we serve is, and always will be, my top priority,” said Marc Smith, Director of the Department of Children and Family Services. “The transition to Managed Care will improve the coordination and access to health services for youth in care. But addressing the unprecedented crisis of COVID-19 outbreak must be a priority at the moment. Delaying the rollout will allow DCFS to remain focused on addressing the emerging challenges of COVID-19 and ensure a smooth transition to YouthCare in the months ahead.”

HFS and DCFS have been working closely with the ACLU and other crucial stakeholders to bolster several aspects of the program’s operations. YouthCare already offers more than three times as many medical providers as the current DCFS healthcare system. More than 90 percent of major providers in the current system have already joined YouthCare. The program also offers more providers across every major category than the current system, from hospitals and primary care physicians, to vision and dental.

…Adding… From Heidi Dalenberg, Director of Institutional Reform, ACLU of Illinois…

Governor Pritzker and his administration today showed true leadership and the right priorities in announcing a delay in the roll-out of a managed care system to direct health care for children under the care of DCFS. In light of the coronavirus crisis, it is the right decision. When this crisis passes, we stand ready to work with the Department and others in the State government to ready DCFS for this transition in a way that protects the children in our care.

posted by Rich Miller
Monday, Mar 16, 20 @ 9:58 am

Comments

  1. Les is a good guy, cares, and is very sharp. Good luck to him.

    Comment by Ron Burgundy Monday, Mar 16, 20 @ 10:01 am

  2. From everything I’ve heard, Lester Bovia is a true professional and made a good impression during the HRC transition away from their past days of complaining about backlogs without taking any action.

    Comment by NIU Grad Monday, Mar 16, 20 @ 10:20 am

  3. I am not surprised that J.B. wanted a fresh pair of eyes on DCFS. He can’t trust anybody who has been there a long time.

    Comment by Last Bull Moose Monday, Mar 16, 20 @ 10:32 am

  4. Let’s hope he can provide a more sophisticated approach that the one that emphasizes a search for
    bad apples when catastrophes happen, as they inevitably will.

    In preparation, maybe he could read some of the current literature on understanding accidents and disasters.

    Comment by Cassandra Monday, Mar 16, 20 @ 11:54 am

  5. “you have to wonder who let it get that bad.”

    Years and years of political appointees refusing to take action and complaining that they needed more money before they could find a way to streamline the system. I think they had the same ED for over a decade…

    Comment by NIU Grad Monday, Mar 16, 20 @ 2:14 pm

  6. Paniak was a great OIG — well-liked by legislators ,advocates, and child welfare workers alike
    because of her honesty and candor about what is needed to fix DCFS and what went wrong.
    FACT:
    Pritzker’s people had it out for her and boxed her into a resignation.

    Comment by horsesmouth Monday, Mar 16, 20 @ 4:20 pm

  7. Any word on IDOT Secretary? He hasn’t been confirmed either

    Comment by Just wondering Monday, Mar 16, 20 @ 6:43 pm

  8. Paniak knows her stuff — she has been an excellent DCFS-OIG and, during her time as a DCFS enployee was an advocate for system change in an agency that avoids making decisions. I hope the new guy is as versed in the toxic DCFS culture and DCFS Procedures 300 — the good, the bad and the ugly, as Ms Paniak is.

    Comment by Arguenda Tuesday, Mar 17, 20 @ 3:53 am

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