Welcome to Nationwide Report®
Saturday, August 2, 2025
Nationwide Report
  • States
    • Midwest
      • Illinois
      • Indiana
      • Iowa
      • Kansas
      • Michigan
      • Minnesota
      • Missouri
      • Nebraska
      • North Dakota
      • Ohio
      • South Dakota
      • Wisconsin
    • Northeast
      • Connecticut
      • Maine
      • Massachusetts
      • New Hampshire
      • New Jersey
      • New York
      • Pennsylvania
      • Rhode Island
      • Vermont
    • Southeast
      • Alabama
      • Arkansas
      • Delaware
      • Florida
      • Georgia
      • Kentucky
      • Louisiana
      • Maryland
      • Mississippi
      • North Carolina
      • South Carolina
      • Tennessee
      • Virginia
      • West Virginia
    • Southwest
      • Arizona
      • New Mexico
      • Oklahoma
      • Texas
    • West
      • California
      • Colorado
      • Hawaii
      • Idaho
      • Montana
      • Nevada
      • Oregon
      • Utah
      • Washington
      • Wyoming
  • Breaking News
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Sports
    Jimmy Page, Warner Chappell, Sony Pictures Settle ‘Dazed and Confused’ Copyright Dispute

    Jimmy Page, Warner Chappell, Sony Pictures Settle ‘Dazed and Confused’ Copyright Dispute

    Wall Street’s Not Feelin’ Spotify—SPOT Remains Down 10%+ Following Disappointing Q2 Earnings

    Wall Street’s Not Feelin’ Spotify—SPOT Remains Down 10%+ Following Disappointing Q2 Earnings

    Federal Judge Denies Ex-Register Shira Perlmutter’s Preliminary Injunction Motion — Appeal Already Underway

    Federal Judge Denies Ex-Register Shira Perlmutter’s Preliminary Injunction Motion — Appeal Already Underway

    Corporation for Public Broadcasting Announces ‘Orderly Wind-Down of Its Operations’ Following Rescissions Package Passage

    Corporation for Public Broadcasting Announces ‘Orderly Wind-Down of Its Operations’ Following Rescissions Package Passage

    Joey Bada$$ Throws Columbia Records Under the Bus Over Album Delay

    Joey Bada$$ Throws Columbia Records Under the Bus Over Album Delay

    Steve Martin, Alison Brown Will Host 2025 Bluegrass Music Awards

    Steve Martin, Alison Brown Will Host 2025 Bluegrass Music Awards

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    NM health department reports possible measles exposure at Meow Wolf

    NM health department reports possible measles exposure at Meow Wolf

    A Trump order targets gender-affirming care for youth. California is suing to block it

    A Trump order targets gender-affirming care for youth. California is suing to block it

    Washington’s food banks are on the brink

    Washington’s food banks are on the brink

    New Mexico environment leaders push back at EPA’s proposed climate change rollback

    Republican health care cuts will devastate working Arizona families like mine

    Republican health care cuts will devastate working Arizona families like mine

    She had to fight for help with medical bills. A new California bill could make it easier

    She had to fight for help with medical bills. A new California bill could make it easier

  • Resources
    • Accident Report + Free Consulation
    • Find a Repair Center
    • Law Enforcement Agencies
    • Online Traffic School
  • Tech
    The 3 hottest VPNs for protecting your data this weekend – plus a bonus free option, chosen by our cybersecurity experts

    The 3 hottest VPNs for protecting your data this weekend – plus a bonus free option, chosen by our cybersecurity experts

    Slow Horses season 6: everything we know so far about the hit Apple TV+ show’s return

    Slow Horses season 6: everything we know so far about the hit Apple TV+ show’s return

    ICYMI: the week’s 7 biggest tech stories from DJI and Insta360 trading blows to OpenAI getting scared by its own AI

    ICYMI: the week’s 7 biggest tech stories from DJI and Insta360 trading blows to OpenAI getting scared by its own AI

    Wi-Fi 8 won’t be faster, but will be better – more details emerge just hours after Wi-Fi 7 protocols are officially ratified

    Wi-Fi 8 won’t be faster, but will be better – more details emerge just hours after Wi-Fi 7 protocols are officially ratified

    Millions of users have fallen victim to malicious browser extensions because of a critical flaw, but things are changing — here’s what you need to know

    Millions of users have fallen victim to malicious browser extensions because of a critical flaw, but things are changing — here’s what you need to know

    Gamers at risk as scammers are using malware-infected cheats and mods to steal passwords and crypto — here’s how to stay safe

    Gamers at risk as scammers are using malware-infected cheats and mods to steal passwords and crypto — here’s how to stay safe

Nationwide Report
  • States
    • Midwest
      • Illinois
      • Indiana
      • Iowa
      • Kansas
      • Michigan
      • Minnesota
      • Missouri
      • Nebraska
      • North Dakota
      • Ohio
      • South Dakota
      • Wisconsin
    • Northeast
      • Connecticut
      • Maine
      • Massachusetts
      • New Hampshire
      • New Jersey
      • New York
      • Pennsylvania
      • Rhode Island
      • Vermont
    • Southeast
      • Alabama
      • Arkansas
      • Delaware
      • Florida
      • Georgia
      • Kentucky
      • Louisiana
      • Maryland
      • Mississippi
      • North Carolina
      • South Carolina
      • Tennessee
      • Virginia
      • West Virginia
    • Southwest
      • Arizona
      • New Mexico
      • Oklahoma
      • Texas
    • West
      • California
      • Colorado
      • Hawaii
      • Idaho
      • Montana
      • Nevada
      • Oregon
      • Utah
      • Washington
      • Wyoming
  • Breaking News
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Sports
    Jimmy Page, Warner Chappell, Sony Pictures Settle ‘Dazed and Confused’ Copyright Dispute

    Jimmy Page, Warner Chappell, Sony Pictures Settle ‘Dazed and Confused’ Copyright Dispute

    Wall Street’s Not Feelin’ Spotify—SPOT Remains Down 10%+ Following Disappointing Q2 Earnings

    Wall Street’s Not Feelin’ Spotify—SPOT Remains Down 10%+ Following Disappointing Q2 Earnings

    Federal Judge Denies Ex-Register Shira Perlmutter’s Preliminary Injunction Motion — Appeal Already Underway

    Federal Judge Denies Ex-Register Shira Perlmutter’s Preliminary Injunction Motion — Appeal Already Underway

    Corporation for Public Broadcasting Announces ‘Orderly Wind-Down of Its Operations’ Following Rescissions Package Passage

    Corporation for Public Broadcasting Announces ‘Orderly Wind-Down of Its Operations’ Following Rescissions Package Passage

    Joey Bada$$ Throws Columbia Records Under the Bus Over Album Delay

    Joey Bada$$ Throws Columbia Records Under the Bus Over Album Delay

    Steve Martin, Alison Brown Will Host 2025 Bluegrass Music Awards

    Steve Martin, Alison Brown Will Host 2025 Bluegrass Music Awards

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    NM health department reports possible measles exposure at Meow Wolf

    NM health department reports possible measles exposure at Meow Wolf

    A Trump order targets gender-affirming care for youth. California is suing to block it

    A Trump order targets gender-affirming care for youth. California is suing to block it

    Washington’s food banks are on the brink

    Washington’s food banks are on the brink

    New Mexico environment leaders push back at EPA’s proposed climate change rollback

    Republican health care cuts will devastate working Arizona families like mine

    Republican health care cuts will devastate working Arizona families like mine

    She had to fight for help with medical bills. A new California bill could make it easier

    She had to fight for help with medical bills. A new California bill could make it easier

  • Resources
    • Accident Report + Free Consulation
    • Find a Repair Center
    • Law Enforcement Agencies
    • Online Traffic School
  • Tech
    The 3 hottest VPNs for protecting your data this weekend – plus a bonus free option, chosen by our cybersecurity experts

    The 3 hottest VPNs for protecting your data this weekend – plus a bonus free option, chosen by our cybersecurity experts

    Slow Horses season 6: everything we know so far about the hit Apple TV+ show’s return

    Slow Horses season 6: everything we know so far about the hit Apple TV+ show’s return

    ICYMI: the week’s 7 biggest tech stories from DJI and Insta360 trading blows to OpenAI getting scared by its own AI

    ICYMI: the week’s 7 biggest tech stories from DJI and Insta360 trading blows to OpenAI getting scared by its own AI

    Wi-Fi 8 won’t be faster, but will be better – more details emerge just hours after Wi-Fi 7 protocols are officially ratified

    Wi-Fi 8 won’t be faster, but will be better – more details emerge just hours after Wi-Fi 7 protocols are officially ratified

    Millions of users have fallen victim to malicious browser extensions because of a critical flaw, but things are changing — here’s what you need to know

    Millions of users have fallen victim to malicious browser extensions because of a critical flaw, but things are changing — here’s what you need to know

    Gamers at risk as scammers are using malware-infected cheats and mods to steal passwords and crypto — here’s how to stay safe

    Gamers at risk as scammers are using malware-infected cheats and mods to steal passwords and crypto — here’s how to stay safe

Nationwide Report
Home AHCCCS
Start a Quiz

Political standoff threatens services for thousands of disabled Arizonans

by RSS News
February 26, 2025
in AHCCCS, Arizona, Arizona Department of Economic Security, Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, azleg, Brandi Coon, Care 4 Caregivers, David Livingston, Division of Developmental Disabilities, Donald Trump, Gabrielle Ficchi, Kathleen Muldoon, Katie Hobbs, Law & Government, Mark Finchem, Matt Gress, Medicaid, Parents as Paid Caregivers Program, Raising Voices Coalition, SB1302, Wes Fletcher
Reading Time: 8 mins read
Political standoff threatens services for thousands of disabled Arizonans
0
SHARES
3
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on X

Read More

Disability rights advocates gather Feb. 26 at the Arizona Capitol in Phoenix to urge Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs and Republican legislative leaders to remedy a funding shortfall in the state’s Division of Developmental Disabilities that could leave them suddenly without essential services. Photo by Caitlin Sievers | Arizona Mirror

Phoenix mother Jessica Grace relies on state and federally funded programs to provide vital services for her sons. Now, she could face once-unthinkable choices because of a political fight between the GOP legislature and Democratic governor over funding those programs. 

With the spectre of losing services as early as May looming, Grace told the Arizona Mirror that she and her family are trying to wrap their heads around the worst case scenario of institutionalization. The teens, who have autism and intellectual disabilities, cannot safely be left unsupervised. 

“How are we going to plan for our future?” Grace asked. “How am I going to properly address our needs?”

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

Gov. Katie Hobbs and the Republicans who control the state legislature have spent weeks trading barbs over who’s at fault for an impending lapse in funding. Meanwhile, people with disabilities who face the possibility of losing vital services are caught in the middle. 

If Hobbs and GOP lawmakers don’t come to an agreement about how to deal with a $122 million deficit in the state’s Division of Developmental Disabilities budget by the end of April, Grace’s family will be among the tens of thousands of Arizonans with disabilities who could suffer the consequences. 

A group of parents, caregivers and people with disabilities made the difficult trek to the Capitol Wednesday to urge lawmakers to view them and their families as people in need of essential services instead of line items in a budget. 

Grace, like many other parents who attended the protest, relies on the Parents as Paid Caregivers Program at the center of the funding debate.

The Parents as Paid Caregivers Program was implemented in Arizona in 2020 during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic when service providers couldn’t find workers willing to go into peoples’ homes to provide caregiving services. 

The program, which was initially completely federally funded, pays parents to provide care to their own children, if their children require “extraordinary care” above and beyond typical parenting tasks. The parents must undergo the same training as professional caregivers to care for their children, of any age, who have cerebral palsy, autism, epilepsy or intellectual or cognitive disabilities. 

The Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, the state’s Medicaid program, received permission from the federal government in February 2024 to make the program permanent. But going forward, it would require a 35% state match, and Republicans in the Legislature refused to allocate funding specifically for the program in the 2025 fiscal year budget. 

On Jan. 29, Arizona Department of Economic Security Deputy Director Wes Fletcher explained to legislators on the House Appropriations Committee that DDD is facing a $122 million shortfall before the fiscal year ends on June 30. He said the program’s costs were higher than expected largely due to growth in the Parents as Paid Caregivers program, as well as increases in payment amounts to Medicaid providers. 

If the state doesn’t take action on the shortfall, DDD is at risk of defaulting on its contracted payments to service providers. And if that happens, it could put those providers out of business, making what seemed like a temporary problem permanent. 

When the Hobbs administration in January asked legislative appropriators for an additional $122 million to make up the difference, committee Chairman David Livingston, R-Peoria, scoffed at the idea, accusing Hobbs of overstepping her authority by continuing the program after the Legislature refused to fund it. 

Since then, Hobbs and Livingston have sparred publicly, trading barbs in a series of letters and press releases, each blaming the other for the crisis looming over disabled people and their families. 

Republican Sen. Mark Finchem briefly addresses a group of disability rights advocates Feb. 26, 2025 at the Arizona Capitol in Phoenix. Photo by Caitlin Sievers | Arizona Mirror

Meanwhile, parents of disabled people who rely on DDD services and groups that advocate for them are panicking at the prospect of losing the Parents as Paid Caregivers Program — to say nothing of the payments for medical services, occupational therapy and physical therapy that will abruptly end if the department runs out of money in May. 

During the Jan. 29 meeting, Livingston proposed a 25%-50% cut to the Parents as Paid Caregivers Program that he acknowledged was “going to hurt.” Livingston said that the state can’t fund “unlimited growth” in programs no matter how important they are. 

Plus, he said, state leaders need to prepare for the inevitable federal cuts that are coming as President Donald Trump promises to slash funding. 

In a bit of irony, Rep. Matt Gress, R-Scottsdale, in the same meeting accused Hobbs of making the Parents as Paid Caregivers program permanent “without appropriate legislative authority” — the same thing that Trump has done at the federal level when he fired workers and slashed budgets without approval from Congress. 

“Make no mistake about it: Governor Hobbs is responsible and now the Legislature is going to have to clean up her mess,” Gress said. 

On Wednesday, Kathleen Muldoon, one of the leaders of Care 4 Caregivers, told other advocates gathered at the Capitol about her 11-year-old son, who has 42 medical diagnoses. He relies on a team of 20 medical professionals, some provided through DDD and Medicaid, to navigate everyday life. 

“People with disabilities cannot reduce their needs by 25% to 50%,” she said. “Their medical conditions won’t pause, their care requirements won’t shrink. Slashing these services will force thousands into institutions, stripping them of their independence; drive providers out of the workforce, worsening Arizona’s caregiver shortage; and create a ripple effect of increased public spending, higher hospital costs, and put economic strain on families and communities alike.”

Many parents who use the Parents as Paid Caregivers Program, like Grace, can’t work outside the home because they can’t find alternative care for their children, and their children cannot safely be left alone. Those children would still qualify for DDD-funded at-home care even if the Parents as Paid Caregivers was cut, they just likely wouldn’t be able to find anyone to do it. 

If DDD runs out of funding or the parent program ends, Grace said that her family will have to start living on savings that will eventually run out. She built up those savings with the hope that her sons wouldn’t have to be institutionalized after she and her husband die. 

Grace and her 14-year-old son have attended multiple House Appropriations Committee meetings over the past month to advocate for the Legislature to approve the $122 million in supplemental funding. It’s been both heartwarming and soul crushing, Grace said, to see her son empathize with other kids with disabilities who were at the meetings, especially since he has autism, which can make empathy a challenge.  

“This shouldn’t be something my 14-year-old feels he needs to carry on his shoulders,” she said. 

Unintended impact

Brandi Coon, co-founder of the Raising Voices Coalition, which advocates for people with disabilities, told the protesters gathered at the Capitol Wednesday that cutting the Parents as Paid Caregivers Program would actually have the opposite impact than what lawmakers intend.

“Without Parents as Paid Caregivers, many families would face further financial devastation, and be forced to consider institutional placement or relinquish guardianship of their child to the state, which is not only disruptive and heartbreaking, but extremely more expensive for Arizona,” Coon said. 

In 2019, the Government Accountability Office found that Medicaid costs for home-based services for people with disabilities were generally lower than those for institutionalization. 

In 2021, Coon began advocating to make the parent program permanent. The caregiver shortage predated the pandemic and continuity of care had always been a problem because of a high turnover rate for caregivers due to the difficulty of the job coupled with low pay. 

Gabrielle Ficchi, co-founder of Care 4 the Caregivers, told protesters that her parents were advised to institutionalize her when she was 3 years old due to a cerebral palsy diagnosis. 

Now, she’s a therapist with a doctorate, thanks in part to the kinds of services provided by Medicaid that might be cut if the funding gap isn’t addressed. 

“These services are not luxuries,” she said. “They’re what allows disabled people to be contributing, valuable members of their society.” 

Ficchi credited those services with allowing her to reach her full potential. 

“These people want disabled people to stop being a ‘burden on society,’ but then they want to take away the services that allow us to figure out how to be more independent,” she said. 

Gabrielle Ficchi, co-founder of Care 4 the Caregivers, speaks to a crowd of disability advocates Feb. 26, 2025 at the Arizona Capitol about services that helped her achieve her full potential. Photo by Caitlin Sievers | Arizona Mirror

Solutions

Coon told the Mirror that she had met with several Republican lawmakers in the past few weeks to advocate for the legislature to approve the $122 million in supplemental funding, including Gress, Livingston, Senate President Warren Petersen and Sen. Mark Finchem. 

“I’m hopeful that we can get this gap funding in place and continue the conversations about how to improve DDD and long-term care so that it’s sustainable long term,” Coon said, adding that the legislators said they want to cut waste and improve services. 

Finchem’s Senate Bill 1302, which would put an additional $130 million per year toward caregiver pay increases starting in the 2026 fiscal year, passed through the Senate Appropriations Committee unanimously on Feb. 25. 

Republicans on the House Appropriations Committee already shot down a proposal from Democrats to allocate the $122 million in gap funding, and Livingston has said that he’ll only agree to any supplemental funding through the state’s traditional budget process. 

The Legislature and Hobbs have until June 30 to negotiate a budget. They typically don’t pass their package of budget bills until May or June, and to prevent the DDD funding cliff they would have to do so in April. 

“There’s a lot of public performance within the committees,” Coon said, but she added that Republican legislators have been much more personable and understanding in one-on-one conversations. 

“But words aren’t actions,” she said. 

Livingston and other Republicans have accused Hobbs of refusing to negotiate on the gap funding or the 2026 budget as a whole, while Hobbs accused them of the same. 

During a Wednesday morning press conference, Hobbs claimed that she had started negotiations on the budget simply by sending her proposed budget to Republicans. When asked whether she’d sat down with Republican leaders to talk things through, Hobbs said they needed to send her their proposed budget first or there was nothing to talk about.

YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.

This post was originally authored and published by Caitlin Sievers from AZ Mirror via RSS Feed. Join today to get your news feed on Nationwide Report®.

Currently Playing

What's the Job? Guess the Profession!

What's the Job? Guess the Profession!

00:10:58

Ultimate Fruit Trivia Quiz!

00:11:54

Junk Food Quiz: Can You Name That Snack?

00:11:12

Fill In The Blanks: Fruit Challenge!

00:10:39
Nationwide Report®

Nationwide Resources

Nationwide Report® has built a nationwide sponsorship network with those that specialize in accidents, injuries and safe driving.

Get Accident Report
Find A Repair Center
Online Traffic School
Start a Quiz

Obtaining your accident report is a critical, nationwide step after any collision, serving as an official record vital for post-accident procedures.  Nationwide Report® provides a modern, efficient, and free alternative to get your report and connect with essential support. Visit our Request Form today to get your accident report for free and navigate the post-accident process with greater ease and confidence, reducing your worries.

Related Breaking News

Utah’s deadliest month for motorcyclists: One woman’s loss, statewide warning

Multiple injured in head-on crash in TN

Multi-vehicle crash with injuries causing traffic delays in Franklin

Pedestrian seriously injured after traffic crash in Colorado Springs

U.S. Highway 93 north of Jackpot back open after crash

Tech News

OpenAI pulls chat sharing tool after Google search privacy scare
ChatGPT

OpenAI pulls chat sharing tool after Google search privacy scare

August 1, 2025
If Amazon wants to kill Alexa+ stone dead, its CEO’s latest advertisement idea is probably the way to do it
Home

If Amazon wants to kill Alexa+ stone dead, its CEO’s latest advertisement idea is probably the way to do it

August 1, 2025
Watch how Chinese are converting thousands of Geforce RTX 5090 cards into AI accelerators and there’s nothing Nvidia can do to stop it
Pro

Watch how Chinese are converting thousands of Geforce RTX 5090 cards into AI accelerators and there’s nothing Nvidia can do to stop it

August 1, 2025
Nearly half of all code generated by AI found to contain security flaws – even big LLMs affected
Pro

Nearly half of all code generated by AI found to contain security flaws – even big LLMs affected

August 1, 2025

Around The Nation

Fatal Pedestrian Crash on Interstate 44 near Villa Ridge Kills 1 [Franklin County, MO]

73-Year-Old Alejo Gonzales Dies in Pedestrian Crash on Broadway Avenue [Moses Lake, WA]

July 27, 2025
Horrific Traffic Accident Near Mines Road Injures 4 [Livermore, CA]

Single-Vehicle Crash on CR 237 Injures 2 People [Buchanan County, MO]

July 27, 2025
2-Vehicle Crash on Highway 63 Injures 2 Men [Callaway County, MO]

2-Vehicle Crash on Highway 63 Injures 2 Men [Callaway County, MO]

July 27, 2025
Sponsored

Nationwide Report® locates and sources news for local areas across the United States. In addition, we offer and connect you to resources in your area.

About

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Daily Newsletter

Join over 4,500 Daily Subscribers!

  • ¹ Accident Report & Legal Consultation Disclaimer
  • ² Affiliate Disclaimer 
  • ³ Sponsored News Content Disclaimer
  • Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information

NOTICE ABOUT ATTORNEY & SPONSOR ADVERTISING: This website contains sponsor advertisements such as our accident report retrieval. Nationwide Report is not a lawfirm or a lawyer referral service and cannot retrieve the reports online – a human has to manually review your unique accident details. Attorneys and/or sponsors have paid an advertising fee. Using our website is not intended to and does not create an attorney-client relationship between a lawyer or sponsor. The information contained on Nationwidereport.com is not legal advice and the lawyer or sponsor does not in any way constitute a referral or endorsement by this site. If you live in AL, FL, MO, NY or WY, click here to see additional information about the attorney or sponsor advertising in these states.

COOKIE & PRIVACY NOTICE: We use cookies to customize your experience and analyze our website traffic. We share information about your activity on our site with our analytics partners, who may combine it with other data you’ve provided or that they’ve gathered from your usage of their services. By continuing to use our website, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more about our Privacy Policy and for those in California, you can learn about the notice of collection here.

Copyright © 2025 Nationwide Report®. All rights reserved.

  • States
    • Midwest
      • Illinois
      • Indiana
      • Iowa
      • Kansas
      • Michigan
      • Minnesota
      • Missouri
      • Nebraska
      • North Dakota
      • Ohio
      • South Dakota
      • Wisconsin
    • Northeast
      • Connecticut
      • Maine
      • Massachusetts
      • New Hampshire
      • New Jersey
      • New York
      • Pennsylvania
      • Rhode Island
      • Vermont
    • Southeast
      • Alabama
      • Arkansas
      • Delaware
      • Florida
      • Georgia
      • Kentucky
      • Louisiana
      • Maryland
      • Mississippi
      • North Carolina
      • South Carolina
      • Tennessee
      • Virginia
      • West Virginia
    • Southwest
      • Arizona
      • New Mexico
      • Oklahoma
      • Texas
    • West
      • California
      • Colorado
      • Hawaii
      • Idaho
      • Montana
      • Nevada
      • Oregon
      • Utah
      • Washington
      • Wyoming
  • Breaking News
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Resources
    • Accident Report + Free Consulation
    • Find a Repair Center
    • Law Enforcement Agencies
    • Online Traffic School
  • Tech

© 2024 Nationwide Report® - Regional news updates from different parts of the nation.