Amendment #914 to H4200

Pilot loan repayment program for direct care human service workers

Representatives Roy of Franklin, Vega of Holyoke, Scibak of South Hadley, Donahue of Worcester, Puppolo of Springfield, DuBois of Brockton, Coppinger of Boston, Gregoire of Marlborough, Galvin of Canton, Sannicandro of Ashland, Cantwell of Marshfield, Cabral of New Bedford, Ashe of Longmeadow, Dwyer of Woburn, Chan of Quincy, McMurtry of Dedham, Hunt of Boston, Stanley of Waltham, Brodeur of Melrose, Peisch of Wellesley, Hecht of Watertown, Pignatelli of Lenox, Ultrino of Malden, Linsky of Natick, Gonzalez of Springfield, Poirier of North Attleborough, Rogers of Cambridge, Provost of Somerville, Cutler of Duxbury, McGonagle of Everett, Dykema of Holliston, Orrall of Lakeville, Khan of Newton, Cariddi of North Adams, Mahoney of Worcester, Gentile of Sudbury, Tosado of Springfield, Malia of Boston, Gordon of Bedford, Kocot of Northampton, Garlick of Needham, Barber of Somerville, Decker of Cambridge and Rogers of Norwood move to amend the bill by adding the following outside section:

 

Section X.

 

“No less than $750,000 shall be expended for the Executive Office of Health and Human Services to develop a pilot program for direct care human service workers pursuant to the following language:

 

“Section 16 of Chapter 6A shall be amended by inserting the following new section, 16A. There shall be a student loan program for credentialed direct care human service workers for the purpose of encouraging individuals to enter and continue to work in human service programs. The Executive Office of Health and Human Services shall administer the program in accordance with guidelines promulgated by the Department of Education.

 

The term "qualified education loan'' shall mean any indebtedness including interest on such indebtedness incurred to pay tuition or other direct expenses incurred in connection with the pursuit of a certificate, undergraduate or graduate degree by an applicant, but shall not include loans made by any person related to the applicant.

 

To be eligible for this program a participant must be working a minimum of 35 hours per week as a credentialed direct care human service worker and have an individual income of less than forty-five thousand annually. This program will also help defray costs from previously incurred student loans for graduates holding certificate, undergraduate or graduate degrees once they have maintained twelve consecutive months of employment at a minimum of 35 hours per week.

 

Eligible participants in this program can be reimbursed up to $1800 per year based on the amount of loan payments made in the previous calendar year, and pending state funding for the program. The commonwealth shall repay the eligible participant's student loan at a rate not to exceed $150 dollars per month for a period not to exceed 48 months. Payments by the commonwealth shall cover loan payments by the eligible participant in the months during which the direct care human service worker provides services in the commonwealth.

 

A "credentialed direct care human service worker" is defined as a credentialed worker who provides services by supporting individuals and families efforts to function in daily living situations. Human service worker is a generic term for people who hold professional and paraprofessional jobs in settings such as group homes and halfway houses; institutional or residential settings; correctional, mental retardation, and community mental health centers; family, child, and youth service agencies, and programs concerned with alcoholism, drug abuse, family violence, and aging; in addition such worker shall have passed the course requirements and been issued a credential by the Massachusetts Council of Human Services Providers.”

 


Additional co-sponsor(s) added to Amendment #914 to H4200

Pilot loan repayment program for direct care human service workers

Representative:

Timothy J. Toomey, Jr.

Paul R. Heroux

Frank I. Smizik

Kate Hogan

Chris Walsh

Brendan P. Crighton

Louis L. Kafka

Walter F. Timilty