HomeMy WebLinkAboutEI-115 Interagency Agreement1
FRANKLIN/FULTON COUNTY
MENTAL HEALTH/INTELLECTUAL & DEVELOPMENTAL
DISABILITIES/EARLY INTERVENTION
425 Franklin Farm Lane
Chambersburg, PA 17202
(717) 264-5387
MH/IDD/EI PROCEDURE STATEMENT
PROCEDURE SUBJECT: Interagency Agreement
PROCEDURE NUMBER: EI-115
Effective: March 9, 2013
Date Revised: October 7, 2020
References:
- Act 212-1990 § 104
- IDEA 34 CFR §303.301-303 and §300.311
- Title 55 PA Code §4226.24 and §4226.34
- Title 22 PA Code §14.121 and §14.152
- Announcement: EI-09 #13 Childfind System Including Children who are Wards of the
State, Children Living in Residential Facilities, Children who were abused and Children
who are Homeless
- Announcement: EI-10 #04 Operational Guidance for Infant/Toddler Programs Regarding
Children Living in Residential Facilities
- Announcement: EI-12 #02 Updates to Early Intervention Policy Based on Requirements
in IDEA Part C Regulations
- Announcement: EI-13 #01 Children Experiencing Homelessness
- Announcement: DS-03 Inclusion of All Children in Early Childhood Programs in
Pennsylvania
- Announcement: EI-17 #02 Reduction of Expulsion and Suspension in Early Childhood
Programs in Pennsylvania
POLICY:
Franklin/Fulton Early Intervention Program has an interagency agreement that includes the
following:
Signatory to the Local Interagency Coordinating Council (LICC) include Franklin/Fulton
MH/IDD/EI, the Intermediate Units for Franklin and Fulton Counties, the local Early Head
Start/Head Start programs, and the Department of Health agency. Other signatories may include
Early Intervention providers and other community agencies who participate with the LICC.
The LICC in both Counties try to establish working relationships that will increase efficiency
and effectiveness for Early Intervention services, reflect a continuum of coordinated and
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comprehensive services that maximize the use of fiscal and personnel resources to meet the
unique needs of families and children with disabilities. The LICC also implements coordinated
service delivery through The Local Interagency Agreement.
The Local Interagency Agreement is signed each year after a review and prior to the beginning
of a new fiscal year. Historically this has been June of each year,
Franklin/Fulton Early Intervention Program supports the LICC through shared staff and
resources, interagency planning and implementation, and joint staff training. There are planned
periodic meetings to discuss the LICC agreement. Discussion also occurs regarding the Risk and
Reach report as well as the Family Survey results. In-service sessions are planned based on
topics of interest for all parties involved. Careful attention and planning are employed that
reflect interagency and interdisciplinary coordination of services.
Inclusion of young children begins at birth and continues throughout a child’s life in early
childhood programs, school and adulthood. Inclusion for young children addresses their
participation in home, school or community environments. The goal of the Office of Child
Development and Early Learning (OCDEL) is that high-quality early childhood education (ECE)
programs are inclusive of children with disabilities. Franklin/Fulton Early Intervention program,
along with families, Early Intervention providers, ECE providers, the Early Learning Resource
Center (ELRC) and other community partners, will work to assure that all children are included
in Early Childhood Programs. This will include, but is not limited to, professional development
opportunities, collaboration with families and ECE program staff to review and modify existing
policies, practices and procedures to ensure barriers are removed that would prevent including
children with disabilities, develop and strengthen partnerships between ECE programs and the
Early Intervention program, and develop resources for effective communication between
families and ECE program staff to ensure families know the benefits of and their rights related to
inclusion.
Expulsions and suspensions occur at high rates in preschool settings and are associated with
negative educational and life outcomes. Expulsion and suspension does nothing to teach
appropriate behavior and denies children the opportunity to access the benefits of an Early
Childhood program. Franklin/Fulton Early Intervention program, along with families, Early
Intervention providers and community partners, will work to assure that all children and families
are supported in Early Childhood programs to reduce suspension and expulsion. Additionally, in
collaboration with Early Childhood program staff and families, Franklin/Fulton Early
Intervention program and community partners will help Early Childhood programs develop
policies that will address staff implementation of positive behavior strategies, provide resources
and training assistance to Early Childhood program staff and provide additional individualized
support and services to children and families who are eligible for Early Intervention services.
Franklin/Fulton Early Intervention Program Specialist and the Service Coordination Supervisor
participate in the LICC. The service coordinators, when they are able to attend, help to identify
priority areas and also report any ideas or concern that family have shared.
The Franklin and Fulton Local Interagency Coordinating Council reviews and revises the
interagency Childfind plan annually.
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A well-formed interagency agreement will establish foreseeable guidelines, enlist clearly defined
procedures that are to be followed and clearly define the roles and responsibilities of the
participating agencies and/or individuals. Additionally, these agreements will acknowledge the
unique quality of services for children birth to five (5) years; a) the location (rural, urban), b)
value cultural diversity and differences, c) the role of family in planning, coordination and
implementation of activities, d) individual and developmentally appropriate services, e)
collaboration of smooth transitions and, f) comprehensive evaluation/review of the program
models/coordinated services.
The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) in its 2004 reauthorization strengthened
requirements for the referral, identification and evaluation of all eligible children, specifically
children who are homeless; in foster care and wards of the state; have been the subject of a
substantiated case of abuse or neglect; identified as directly affected by illegal substance abuse or
withdrawal symptoms resulting from prenatal drug exposure; and Indian infants/toddlers with
disabilities and their families residing on a reservation geographically located in the State. Local
Infant/Toddler Early Intervention programs have the proactive responsibility for all children,
including the populations mentioned, to identify children eligible for Early Intervention services
and to ensure that potentially eligible children are evaluated and receive needed Early
Intervention services in a timely manner and that families receive the procedural protections
available through the Early Intervention system. The comprehensive Childfind system shall be
an effective and coordinated effort by local Infant/Toddler Early Intervention Programs, as well
as the other agencies responsible for administering various education, health, and social service
programs. In addition to the agencies identified in §4226.24(b) (1-6), Local Infant/Toddler Early
Intervention Programs shall coordinate Childfind efforts with the following:
Local County Children and Youth Agencies;
Child care programs;
Programs that provide services under the Family Violence Prevention and Services Act
(42 U.S.C. 1001 et seq.) such as programs preventing family violence and family
domestic shelters;
Department of Health Early Hearing Detection and Intervention (EHDI) systems;
Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP);
Other State or Federally funded early childhood or home visiting programs.
The Franklin and Fulton Local Interagency Coordinating Council through their Childfind system
is coordinated and non-duplicative of the programs that follow:
Infant, Toddler or Preschool Early Intervention Programs
The Early Intervention Program including infants/toddlers/preschool children from birth to
school age who may have a developmental delay. The programs work closely with their Head
Start partners and Early Head Start partners to collaboratively work with families to ensure a
smooth transition from one program to the next. Transition from Early Intervention to Preschool
is spelled out and worked through our LICC Agreement.
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Maternal and Child Health Programs
The Maternal and Child Health Program is a Title V program that is focused on implementing
systems that address the specific health needs of children. Currently this program is functioning
in Franklin County, but not in Fulton County. In Fulton County, the Nutritionist from the Fulton
County Medical Center works with children through the Fulton County Family Partnership.
Maternal, Infant and Early Childhood Home Programs
Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting supports pregnant women and families and
helps at-risk parents of children from birth to Kindergarten entry tap the resources and hone the
skills they need to raise children who are physically, socially and emotionally healthy and ready
to learn. These programs improve maternal and child health, prevents child abuse and neglect,
encourage positive parenting, and promote child development and school readiness.
This is not a program that is currently offered in Franklin or Fulton County.
Early Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Training (EPSDT)
The LICC in both counties collaborate extensively to ensure that children benefit from
screenings, immunizations and the extensive benefits of EPSDT.
States are required to provide comprehensive services and furnish all Medicaid coverable,
appropriate, and medically necessary services needed to correct and ameliorate health conditions,
based on certain federal guidelines.
The Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment (EPSDT) benefit provides
comprehensive and preventive health care services for children under age 21 who are enrolled in
Medicaid. EPSDT is key to ensuring that children and adolescents receive appropriate
preventive, dental, mental health, and developmental, and specialty services.
Early Assessing and identifying problems early
Periodic Checking children's health at periodic, age-appropriate intervals
Screening Providing physical, mental, developmental, dental, hearing, vision, and other
screening tests to detect potential problems
Diagnostic Performing diagnostic tests to follow up when a risk is identified, and
Treatment Control, correct or reduce health problems found.
Head Start and Early Head Start Programs
Early Head Start works closely with the Early Intervention Program to make referrals.
Head Start and Early Head Start programs support the mental, social, and emotional
development of children from birth to age five (5) years. In addition to education services, the
programs provide children and their families with health, nutrition, social, and other services.
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Head Start services are responsive to each child and family's ethnic, cultural, and linguistic
heritage.
Head Start encourages the role of parents as their child's first and most important teachers.
Programs build relationships with families that support positive parent-child relationships, family
well-being, and connections to peers and community. Head Start began as a program for
preschoolers, ages three (3) and four (4) years old, which made up over 80 percent of the
children served by Head Start last year.
Early Head Start serves pregnant women, infants, and toddlers. Early Head Start programs are
available to the family until the child turns three (3) years old and is ready to transition into Head
Start or another Pre-K program. Early Head Start helps families care for their infants/toddlers
through early, continuous, intensive, and comprehensive services.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
The Supplemental Security Income (SSI); program is used for those infants/toddlers who are
diagnosed with a physical or mental disability. SSI supplements the money families may need
for their child’s medical and physical needs and is non-duplicative. Service Coordinators may
often assist families in applying for SSI benefits for an infant/toddler.
This is a most important program for all of the providers in both counties. Helping families
through the application process is a collaboration that all provider share along with the families.
Child Protection and Child Welfare Programs Including Foster Care
The LICC in both Counties collaborate with Children Services. This is a benefit to families who
may not even realize they need help. The LICC works to ensure that families get a very positive
presentation of what the service can provide.
The Department’s Child Welfare Program works in partnership with local communities, courts
and tribes to ensure the safety, timely permanency and well-being of children. The people, who
work in the Child Welfare Program conduct, supervise and administer programs for dependent
children and their families.
Child Welfare Program services are directed toward these goals:
The prevention of separation of children from their families.
The protection of children alleged to be dependent or dependent children including
provision of emergency and long-term alternate living arrangements.
The reunification of families who have had children placed in foster homes or
institutions.
The permanent placement of children who cannot be reunited with their families or when
reunification would not be in the best interest of the child.
The transition to self-sufficiency for older children who continue to be in foster care as
adolescents.
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The preparation of young adults that exit foster care at age 18 to make the transition to
self-sufficiency as adults.
Early Learning Programs
The goal for early learning is to improve the health, social-emotional, and cognitive outcomes for
all children from birth through 3rd grade, so that all children, particularly those with high needs,
are on track for graduation from high school/college, and ready to begin a career.
To enhance the quality of programs and services and improve outcomes for young children,
including children with disabilities and those who are English Learners, the department
administers programs and promotes initiatives that increase access to high-quality programs,
improve the early learning workforce, and build state capacity to support high-quality programs
and ensure program effectiveness.
Early Learning Resource Centers (ELRC) were created to improve the quality of and access to
early learning services in the state and help families identify the best child care option that meet
the needs of the child(ren). ELRCs provide a single point-of-contact for families, early learning
service providers and communities to gain information and access services that support high-
quality childcare and early learning programs. The LICC collaborates with ELRC staff to
provide resources and support to families and the community.
Programs under the Family Violence Prevention and Services Act
This is not a duplicated service and there is a need for increased collaboration in both counties.
The Family Violence Prevention and Services Act (FVPSA) provides the primary federal
funding stream dedicated to the support of emergency shelter and supportive services for victims
of domestic violence and their dependents.
Early Hearing Detection and Intervention (EHDI) Systems
The LICC has provided brochures and information to families regarding EHDI and efforts for
outreach continue. The Public Health Service Act was expanded to provide programs for deaf
and hard-of-hearing newborns and infants to include young children.
Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP):
The LICC in both counties provides brochures and pamphlets at various locations throughout the
counties ensuring families that their child can get low price affordable coverage.
Children who are without health insurance may be able to get low cost or free health coverage
from the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) or Children’s Medicaid. Both programs
cover office visits, prescription drugs, dental care, eye exams, glasses, and much more.
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Families with children who get Children’s Medicaid pay nothing and children with CHIP pay no
more than $50 a year for health care coverage. Some families with CHIP may also have co-pays
for some services.
The Franklin and Fulton County Local Interagency Coordinating Councils will continue to make
efforts to be aware and involved in collaboration efforts with all service providers and resources.
The Local Interagency Coordinating Councils in both counties will evaluate all policies and
procedures relating to the Interagency Agreement. The agreements will be reviewed annually or
sooner when changes or updates are released. Special consideration will be focused on Childfind
activities and working on collaboration with all service providers in the Counties. Families will
be encouraged to be part of the LICC in both Counties.