Introduction
NAMI Alaska's
Children &emdash; Long Range Plan
|
Our Mission is to help
families and professionals work together as full partners, so that
they can improve the systems of care - at both the local and state
levels - for children who have a mental
disorder.
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Our long range plan is our information base. Because it is on-line
it is readily accessible to all advocates. Because it is "issue
oriented" it is easily expanded to take advantage of changing
conditions and new opportunities.
Because advocates do not have any decision making
authority, we must take a different approach to planning than may be
done by a government agency or private business.
To affect change, we must advocate before the
decision making groups: the legislature, government agencies, boards
and commissions, and provider agencies. In this environment our
advocacy must be consistent, based on the best scientific research
available, and be realistic of attainment.
Since we do not control the planning agenda, we
have to adapt to the target group's agenda. Hence, we need to
understand some of the weaknesses in government planning in
Alaska.
- At both the state and local level the responsibility for
services is fragmented between a numerous agencies. No single
agency, at any level, is responsible for assessing the needs of
the whole child and their families. Because the state lacks
an overall strategic plan, each agency plans for the goals
assigned to that individual agency. From a child's standpoint,
this assures that planning will be fragmented, incomplete,
overlapping, and difficult to coordinate.
- In most agencies, planning is done through collaborative
processes. While this involves many people, providers and
families, the planning generally depends on the knowledge of
participants. The planning groups do not review changes in the
law, current research recommendations, and the new delegated
authorities that they may have gained through changes in federal
laws and regulations. Since 1984 the federal government has
gradually relaxed their regulations so that state and local
agencies have far more freedom to innovate than they had in the
past. However, many agencies do not recognize that they have this
new freedom. Hence, the agency planning tends to foster the
"status quo." Collaborative processes generally reduce proposals
to the "lowest common denominator" before agreement is reached;
this makes innovation difficult.
- Most agency personnel also seem to be "boxed" in by existing
laws, regulations, and policies. This is partly due to the way the
state legislature appropriates money; it is difficult for the
departments to shift money between programs. While the agencies
need the legislature's approval for changes in direction, the
planning processes seldom allow for proposing changes in the state
laws or regulations. This again makes change difficult.
- Most of the local services are provided through grant
agencies, which have employees to protect and payrolls and other
expenses. Hence, any proposed changes are going to affect someone,
and "turf" issues are often a higher priority to that agency than
meeting the needs of children and families. Hence, local planning
tends to support the status quo and fragmentation.
- Politics plays a big role at all levels.
- Most of all, no one at any level is responsible for assessing
and planning for the needs of the whole child in a systematic and
analytical manner
The state should reform their planning processes. However,
children cannot wait. Hence, we need to structure our processes to
work within what exists.
While we do not want to be antagonistic, we need
to be factual. Many children are being allowed to develop serious
disabilities and even die unnecessarily. Hence, where we have the
facts, we need to say that publicly.
It is not intended that everyone work on all of the
issues in this plan. However, at any one time advocates are working
with statewide or local boards and agencies on a number of these
issues. Having the information, including issue papers and supporting
documents, readily available gives advocates a powerful tool.
The plan includes the following sections (an explanation is with
each section).
1. Introduction
2. Mission, Goals and Assumptions
3. Service Principles
4. Issues
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Date Last Modified: 5/7/01