The citymeetings.nyc logo showing a pigeon at a podium with a microphone.

citymeetings.nyc

Your guide to NYC's public proceedings.

Q&A

Interagency partnerships and future of the Community Care Plan

0:51:35

·

3 min

Council Member Hudson inquires about interagency partnerships with parks and libraries, and the future of the Community Care Plan. Commissioner Cortés-Vázquez explains:

  • Partnerships with Parks Department to address mental health issues among older adults using recreation facilities
  • Collaboration with libraries to identify gaps in services for older adults and develop joint solutions
  • The future of the plan involves continuing the comprehensive approach aligned with creating an age-inclusive city

Additional details:

  • The department is implementing a systemic program to provide geriatric mental health workers to parks facilities
  • The plan will continue to evolve, focusing on alternatives for different age groups (60-64, 65-80, 85+)
  • There's a need for a shift in how state-level Medicaid and long-term care services approach the 85+ population
Crystal Hudson
0:51:35
Can you explain a little bit more about the interagency partnerships with parks and libraries?
0:51:40
What does that
Lorraine Cortés-Vázquez
0:51:41
work?
0:51:41
Sure.
0:51:42
So That is the beauty.
0:51:47
I wish the state would do this, and I'm so happy that Senator Jillibrand has now said for every state to have a state master plan.
0:51:58
New York State State Master Plan needs, I'm not sure where it's going yet.
0:52:02
But we have a model in New York, like the aging cabinet, that has really served us well.
0:52:09
So one of the things that came out, Andrew, for your information, is we looked at parks department started thinking of don't you know, I always get everybody's name wrong.
0:52:24
Parks department was looking at the older adults that they serve in their recreation facilities.
0:52:31
Right?
0:52:32
And one of the things that they found was like, a lot of these people are having mental health issues, low level mental health issues, and higher mental health issues.
0:52:42
And so one of the things that we've done is say, alright, let's not look at this as a bifurcated program.
0:52:48
Let's see how we could integrate.
0:52:49
So we first started by sending them a worker, a community mental health worker, geriatric mental health worker once in a while.
0:52:59
Well, now we've done it as a systemic program, and now we're linking them as if they were an older adult club the way we have hub and spokes.
0:53:06
That's what.
0:53:07
And the same thing with the libraries.
0:53:09
Just looking at the partnership with the libraries.
0:53:11
We met with with Dennis to start thinking about, okay.
0:53:16
You do a lot with older adults.
0:53:18
What is it that you need?
0:53:19
Where are the gaps?
0:53:19
And how do we work this together?
Crystal Hudson
0:53:21
Great.
0:53:22
Thank you for that.
0:53:24
You mentioned the state master plan.
0:53:26
Well, this plan is a 5 year road map, and we're more than halfway through its time frame.
0:53:31
What's the future of the plan?
0:53:33
And given great and growing needs of the city's older adult population, does NYC aging plan on introducing a longer term plan to the community care plan?
Lorraine Cortés-Vázquez
0:53:43
So the answer is yes and yes.
0:53:46
Alright?
0:53:46
Yes.
0:53:48
As I said and so the first
Crystal Hudson
0:53:50
the first question was, what's the future of the plan?
0:53:52
Which is
Chris Banks
0:53:52
the future
Tara Klein
0:53:52
of the plan?
Lorraine Cortés-Vázquez
0:53:52
The future of the plan is to continue this.
0:53:54
You can't you can't go back from looking at things comprehensively to go back to look at things in silo.
0:54:01
It just makes no sense, particularly when the population is growing.
0:54:05
So the future of the plan is to obviously continue this approach, particularly because it's aligned with an age inclusive city.
0:54:12
So that's that's the trajectory.
0:54:17
Now, what I would say is staging out what needs to be done, what are some alternatives for the 60 to 64.
0:54:27
Pop up cafes are those the alternative.
0:54:30
Is Parks Department, the alternatives.
0:54:32
Start looking at it from what we are learning so far, and then going forward.
0:54:37
And we know that for the 85 plus, the only way we're gonna really serve those individuals well if they want a continuing community is to have a a shift and a change in the way state because the state does the those Medicaid and long term care services.
0:54:55
Is to have a shift in the way that they look at this population and look at an integrated approach to it.
Crystal Hudson
0:55:01
Great.
0:55:02
I'm gonna break here and and turn to my colleagues from for some of their questions starting with Council member banks.
Citymeetings.nyc pigeon logo

Is citymeetings.nyc useful to you?

I'm thrilled!

Please help me out by answering just one question.

What do you do?

Thank you!

Want to stay up to date? Sign up for the newsletter.