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9/5-9/9/2005 Meetings for the week of September 5th- September 9th Page 1 of 1 The City of Saint Paul Alt Meetings for the Week of September 5th, thru September 9th, 2005 MONDAY - September 5th No Meetings Scheduled TUESDAY - September 6th *Ramsey County Board 9:00 AM Council Chambers, City Hall/Court House Legislative Hearing 10:00 AM Room 330, City Hall Legislative Hearing 1:30 PM Room 330, City Hall WEDNESDAY - September 7th *Budget Meeting 9:00 AM Council Chambers, City Hall Library Agency Board Meeting 2:00 PM Council Chambers, City Hall *City Council--- see Agenda 3:30 PM Council Chambers, City Hall *City Council Public Hearing 5:30 PM Council Chambers, City Hall THURSDAY - September 8th Heritage Preservation Commission 5:00 PM 4th Floor, Central Library FRIDAY - September 9th Planning Commission 8:30 AM Room 40, City Hall * Cablecast live and repeated on Saint Paul Channel 18. Interpreter service for the hearing impaired will be provided at public meetings upon request.Request can be made by calling(651)266-8509(Voice and TDD)Monday thru Friday, 8.00 A.M. to 4.30 P.M A minimum of two days notice is required. For more information on any of these meetings,you can send Email to: citizen.service@ci.stpaul.mn us, or call the Saint Paul Citizen Service Office at 651-266-8989 http://www.ci.stpaul.mn.us/depts/meetings.html 9/6/2005 SAINT rST PAUL CITY COUNCIL CITY OF SAINT PAUL PAUL � !+^L Dept.of Planning and �� 1 Economic Development A A A A �u o f`}` Phone:(651)266-6589 �~__ Fax: (651)228-3220 iic Hearing Notice C\-0 FILE#05-136-773 PURPOSE: Appeal of the Planning Commission's decision to deny Conditional Use Permit for Auto Detailing(Zoning File#05-117-785) PROPERTY ADDRESS: 1229 Payne Ave.,SW corner at Hawthorne FILE NAME: Rase Automotive,Inc. HEARING DATE: Wednesday,September 7,2005,at 5:30 p.m. All public hearings are held in City Council Chambers, 3"'Floor City Hall -Court House. 15 W. Kellogg Boulevard.You may send written comments to the Zoning office at the address listed on the reverse side of this card. Please call (651) 266-6591, or e-mail emily.ulmer@ci.stpaul.mn.com,or call your District Council representative at (651)774-5234 if you have any questions. Mailed: August 27,2005 Christine Haas - Fwd: Library Board Agenda Page 1 From: Shari Moore To: Haas, Christine Date: 9/1/2005 2:29:19 PM Subject: Fwd: Library Board Agenda >>> Mary Rubio 9/1/2005 2:20:53 PM >>> Attached to this email is the agenda for the Saint Paul Public Library Agency's Board Meeting. The Library Agency Board Meeting has been rescheduled for Wednesday, September 7, 2005 in the City Council Chambers Office from 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. The regular Library Agency Board meeting scheduled for September 21 has been canceled. If you have any questions please call me at(651)266-7073. Thank you, Mary Rubio St. Paul Public Library/Administration Office 90 West Fourth Street Saint Paul, MN 55102 (651)266-7073 Fax: (651)266-7060 A 1 N SAINT PAUL - RAMSEY COUNTY - A L 410,‘ COMMUNITY HEALTH SERVICES milk A A A A ADVISORY COMMITTEE TO THE SAINT PAUL CITY COUNCIL AND THE RAMSEY COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS 555 Cedar Street r Saint Paul,Minnesota 55101-2260 - RAMSEY COUNTY 651-266-1200 MEETING NOTICE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2005 SAINT PAUL - RAMSEY COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH Ramsey County Government Center West (RCGC-West) 50 West Kellogg Boulevard, Suite 930 - STAR Room Saint Paul Enter on the river side/back of the building. Map and Directions are Enclosed. RECEIVED AUG 3 0 2005 AGENDA CITY CLERK 1. Call to Order 2. Update on the STEPS to a Healthier St. Paul Grant 3. Introduction Exercise 4. Updates Since Last Meeting 5. Overview of Department and CHSAC 6. Discussion on New Program Year 7. Adjourn CHSAC Public Meeting will begin at 5:30 p.m. NEXT MEETING OCTOBER 5, 2005 PACKET ENCLOSURES 1. July 2005 Section Updates 2. August 2005 Section Updates 3. Map and Directions to RCGC-West ** Attention CHS Advisory Committee Members ** Please contact Jan Pierson if you will not be attending the meeting: Phone: 651-266-2408 E-Mail: jan.piersonaco.ramsey.mn.us S.a( 4 MI** 11110 IWm:eyGouMy Saint Paul- Ramsey County Department of Public Health Section ' UpcCates - JuCy 2005 MEDICAL DIRECTOR During July and August,I will be hosting a physician from the occupational medicine residency at Regions Hospital, Dr. Kenton Dodd. He will be observing and participating in activities here at Saint Paul - Ramsey County Department of Public Health,the Minnesota Institute of Public Health, and the Environmental Resource Council. Born in Nashville TN, he was educated at Tennessee State University and Meharry Medical College,both in Nashville. After two years of an internal medicine residency, he started the Occupational Medicine residency at Regions Hospital and will finish in June 2006. Dr. Dodd is interested in public health prevention programs for underserved populations, having seen the many preventable problems afflicting his underserved patients while working as an internal medicine resident. I continue to serve on the Maternal/Child Health Advisory Task Force for the Minnesota Department of Health. The tuberculosis clinic continues to be very busy with many new cases of the disease to assess and treat. Rob Carlson, the Regions physician assistant who has been seeing patients in the TB clinic here has just returned from six months of service with the American Refugee Committee in the Darfur region of the Sudan. We are happy to have him back. HEALTHY FAMILIES SECTION C&TC Update: Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, and Ramsey County Child and Teen Checkups Programs have teamed up with ECHO to promote Child and Teen Checkups and Back-To—School Health on their show schedule. ECHO can be seen on TPT/channel 17. The segment will air July 24th at the following times: 8:00PM—Spanish, 8:20PM-Hmong, Somali-8: 40PM The segment will air again on July31 at the following times: 8:00PM-Vietnamese, 8:20PM Lao, 8:40PM Cambodian 1 The show will replay on August 20th, at 11:00PM and on September 3rd, at 11:00PM. The information will also be available on the web through streaming video after the show airs on TPT/channel 17. For further information about ECHO and additional web links about C&TC go to www.echominnesota.org. HEALTHY COMMUNITIES SECTION Injury Prevention: The Injury Prevention Program Coordinator is teaching safety classes at the East Side YMCA Summer Camp this year. Bike Safety and Poison Prevention were the topics for June and July and Home Safety will be covered in August. Classes are taught to about 40 children in two age groups, 5 up to 8 and 8 to 11. This is the third year that Public Health and the YMCA have worked together on this summer camp program. The Risk Watch School Based Injury Prevention Program gives children and their families the skills and knowledge they need to create safer homes and communities. The program has trained a total of 447 teachers so far this year with more requests coming in for late summer. These teachers come from 85 St. Paul schools including 8 preschools and all of Head Start. Teacher evaluations continue to come in with positive responses. Orders for supplies for the '05— '06 school year have come in showing a strong commitment to the Program as well. Health Partners just recently gave a grant of$1,000 to Risk Watch. The St. Paul Fire and Safety Services Department continues to coordinate with the Ramsey County Sheriff's Department, Saint Paul School District, and Saint Paul -Ramsey County Department of Public Health as active partners on the Team. PREVENTIVE HEALTH SERVICES SECTION Robert Carlson is a Physician Assistant at the Center for International Health and Infectious Disease Clinic at Regions Hospital. He also works in the Refugee/Immigrant Health and TB Clinics at Ramsey County Public Health. He has recently returned from a 6 month leave of absence working with the American Refugee Committee (ARC) in Sudan, Africa. ARC works for the survival, health and well being of refugees, displaced persons and those at risk in order to rebuild productive lives while respecting the values of those served. Sudan has been plagued with civil war,which has resulted in famine and widespread health crises. Rob worked with local staff providing Primary Care and Reproductive Health Services in South Darfur. In collaboration with UNICEF and other United Nations partners, he participated in National Immunization Campaigns to vaccinate children against Polio. Over 25,000 oral vaccine doses where administered to children in remote villages. We welcome Rob back with appreciation for his contribution to the ARC working during political unrest in high risk security areas. 2 Immunization Program: The Immunization program has seen a shift in service needs over the last couple of years with the same trend continuing in 2005. In 2003 the immunization clinics had 2,589 visits with 31%being travel related and the remaining 69%being regular,routine immunization visits (none of these visits include flu clinic visits). In 2004 the immunization program had 2,992 visits (an increase of 16% over 2003) with 51%being travel related and 49%regular, routine immunization visits (again, none of these visits were flu visits). The decreasing number of visits for regular, routine immunizations is being felt in most counties since the focus of all county immunization programs is to serve those clients that are uninsured or underinsured. This is a positive decrease as long as those who are fully insured are going to their own clinic for shots and well child exams/physicals. The immunization program believes strongly in getting clients in for C&TC, well child visits and other preventive services. Countless referrals to St. Mary's Health Clinics, Portico Healthnet, C&TC, dental and WIC services etc. are made by the nurses during immunization visits. The staff in the immunization program are doing a wonderful job of changing to meet the needs of the many clients we serve! WIC SECTION Not all of our seven clinics have been able to call in their monthly counts for June yet,but based on the counts we have in hand, it looks like our caseload for June 2005 could be the highest we have ever had. It will certainly be over 17,000. We had three Farmers'Market vendors at our East Side WIC clinic last Thursday to launch the first ever Farmers' Market located right at one of our WIC clinics. Participants and staff are very happy to have the market right at East Side. This market will continue into late September on Thursday afternoons from 2-6 pm. 3 Ramsey County Saint Paul- Ramsey County Department of PubCic Health Section Updates - ,August 2005 MEDICAL DIRECTOR I've been asked to serve as chair of the Minnesota Heart Disease& Stroke Prevention Committee. This advisory committee will have its first meeting near the end of September. The purpose is to advise the Minnesota Department of Health on its 2004-2010 State Strategic Plan for Heart Disease and Stroke. That plan is available on the MDH website at www.health.state.mn.us/cvh. There are three post-graduate medical trainees spending time at St. Paul - Ramsey County Department of Public Health during August. Dr. Kenton Dodd from the Regions Hospital occupational medicine residency is spending July and August with us. During August he will be joined by two other physicians, Dr. Adam Ailabouni from the University-St. John's family medicine residency in Maplewood and Dr. Akira Fujiyoshi, a fellow at the Mayo Clinic preventive medicine program. Each of the three physicians has provided me with a bit of information about himself. Kenton Dodd grew up in Nashville TN and was educated at Tennessee State University and Meharry Medical College in Nashville. He completed two years of internal medicine training before joining the occupational medicine training program at Regions Hospital in St. Paul. He is interested in public health prevention programs for underserved populations. Akira Fujiyoshi graduated from a med school in Japan in 1991, worked as an endoscopist/internist for several years in Japan, and then changed his career focus to health promotion, disease prevention, and nutrition/lifestyle modification. Akira completed a medical residency at the University of Hawaii in 2005 and is currently a fellow in Preventive Medicine at Mayo Clinic. He is interested in nutritional epidemiology and lifestyle related diseases, especially now that obesity is becoming universal in Japan as well as the US. Adam Ailabouni is a second year resident in the family medicine program at St. John's Hospital in Maplewood. He grew up in Farmington, MN, graduated from Iowa State University with an aerospace engineering degree,then changed career paths and attended medical school at the University of Minnesota - Duluth and then the University of Minnesota Twin Cities. He plans to practice family medicine in the Twin Cities area after completing his training program. ADMINISTRATION SECTION Juenemann Building It is anticipated that this fall the parking lot, sidewalks and ramp to the garage will undergo improvements. Ramsey County Capital Improvement funds have been approved for these projects. The dates, timeline, or impact on our operations is not yet known,but as plans are finalized staff at the Juenemann building will be informed. 1 _ I VITAL RECORDS Obtaining a Vital Record will cost more this Fall. In July, the fee for a marriage license increased to $100. By receiving 12 hours of special premarital marriage counseling, you may have that fee reduced to $30. Birth and death certificate fees also increased in August. The cost of a certified birth certificate is now $16 and death certificate $13. Passport changes are soon coming in three stages: • December 31, 2005—passports are required for all travel to or from the Caribbean, Bermuda, Central & South America • December 31, 2006—passports required for all air and sea travel to or from Mexico & Canada • December 31, 2007—passports required for all border crossings. For some land border crossings other documents may be accepted in lieu of a passport,these include Sentri for Mexico and Nexus for Canada. The cost for a passport is $97 for 16+years old. ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SECTION ADMINISTRATION Energy Task Force. Ramsey County recently joined the Metro Counties Energy Task Force, which includes Anoka, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, Stearns and Washington Counties. Ramsey County is represented by Commissioners Ortega and Carter, and Zack Hansen and Dan Donkers from the Environmental Health Section are participating in staff-level work of the Task Force. The Task Force is involved in energy policy supporting reliable, affordable energy supply, efforts to support renewable energy such as wind and waste-to-energy, and programs promoting energy efficiency in county facilities and other local government facilities. Membership for 2005 is on a trial basis; Ramsey County will decide whether to continue involvement when it considers the department's budget for 2006-07. COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT Radon Outreach Funding. We recently received short-term Federal funding through MDH to increase radon outreach education in Spanish, Hmong and Somali. Activities to be funded included translation of materials,placement of radon awareness ads in community papers and creation of recorded radon "hotlines" in Spanish, Hmong and Somali. Earth Action Challenge. A team of EH Section employees has been busy planning for the return debut of the Earth Action Challenge on September 15th. The Challenge will spiritedly promote the values and principles of the Ramsey County Environmental Mission over the upcoming year. The Challenge will assist employees in their roles as environmental stewards of Ramsey County's resources by providing tools and resources along with timely,useful information. The EH Section has already planned many activities to promote the issues that the Challenge addresses, including monthly articles,pledges, quizzes, mini-trainings, a purchasing fair, and environmentally friendly incentives to increase participation. However, the team working on the Challenge is eager to hear what issues you would like to learn about, and is willing to adjust the plan to accommodate most requests. Watch for the Ramsey News on September 15th to learn more about the Challenge and how you can make a difference! 2 COMPLIANCE PROGRAM: SOLID AND HAZARDOUS WASTE Refuse Hauler Licensing. The Solid and Hazardous Waste Compliance Program has issued regional solid waste hauler licenses for the current 2005-06 license year to 86 waste haulers,with applications from an additional 10 - 15 haulers expected. The 6" x 6" orange decals are required to be displayed on the cab side of the garbage truck. Look for the decal the next time your garbage is picked up and call us if you don't see one! Michael Reed, 651-773-4443. Eight solid waste transfer stations and one infectious waste treatment facility have been licensed for 2005-06 as well. These facilities are inspected at varying frequencies depending on facility size and types of waste managed. Inspection frequencies range from once quarterly to monthly. RESOURCE RECOVERY Two important policy actions were taken in recent weeks: Tipping Fee Reduced from $39 per ton to $34 per ton. At their respective meetings on August 9, the Ramsey and Washington County Boards reduced the tipping fee for haulers that have contracted to deliver all of their Ramsey and Washington County waste to the Resource Recovery Facility in Newport. It is hoped that the tipping fee reduction will increase and stabilize deliveries to the Newport Facility. Both Ramsey and Washington County Boards have policies that support processing of waste and support a transition to a merchant facility after their contract with NRG Energy for the Newport Facility expires in July 2007. Declining deliveries at the Newport Facility are partially the result of competitive pricing at landfills. The waste stream has not decreased,but the deliveries to places other than the Newport Facility have increased. The County Environmental Charge (charged as a portion of refuse hauler bills) indirectly affected deliveries to the Newport Facility due to redefining portions of the industrial waste stream. Waste currently being handled as industrial waste was formerly handled as Municipal Solid Waste, which was delivered to the Newport Facility. Industrial waste can be delivered to landfill. The reduction in the tipping fee will somewhat offset the loss of the State Processing payment,which was rebated to haulers who delivered to the Newport Facility. This payment ended in June 2005 and was not funded by the State for future years. Resource Recovery Project Budget Approved. On August 9, 2005, Ramsey and Washington County Boards of Commissioners approved a two-year Resource Recovery Project Budget for 2006 and 2007. The 2007 budget is actually for seven months of 2007 because the contract between the Counties and NRG Energy will expire in July 2007. The budget is based on the reduction in the tipping fee from $39 per ton for haulers who deliver all waste to the Resource Recovery Facility to $34 per ton. Specific Tonnage haulers (haulers that have agreed to deliver a specific amount of waste)will continue to deliver at $41 per ton and can receive a rebate to the $34 per ton level if they meet their contractual obligation by delivering the designated tonnage throughout the year. POLICY, PLANNING, EVALUATION Amendment of Contract for Providing Recycling Consulting Assistance to Municipalities. The Department has contracted since 2003 with the national solid waste consulting firm of R.W. Beck, along with the local firm of Dan Krivit and Associates, to provide technical assistance to municipalities on recycling program issues. At its August 9 meeting, the Ramsey County Board increased the contract amount by an additional $20,000 because of the continued demand for services by municipalities. During the remainder of the contract this year, the consultants will continue to provide assistance to the City of Maplewood, to help them procure a new curbside recycling contract and increase recycling in apartment buildings, to the City of North Oaks, to help them with a curbside recycling contract and a pilot recycling program with collection of additional recyclable materials,to the City of Roseville, to complete a pilot recycling study report, and to one or two other communities, as the need arises. 3 HEALTHY COMMUNITIES SECTION WAKANHEZA UPDATE . The Wakanheza Project continues to grow throughout Ramsey County and continues to get State and National attention. In September, Donald Gault has been invited to spend a day and a half at Helena,Montana for"The Montana Coalition Against Domestic& Sexual Abuse (MCADSV) Annual"Leading the Way" Conference. Donald will be sharing the lessons and perspectives of the Initiative for Violence Free Families and Communities in Ramsey County and highlighting workplace and community violence prevention tools. Wakanheza will be shared as an example of the processes and products that participants can take back to their communities in crafting their own violence prevention initiative. In October, Darleen Simmons has been invited to Richmond,Virginia's "Action Alliance" Conference to showcase and facilitate a five-hour presentation/discussion of The Initiative for Violence Free Families and Communities in Ramsey County's practices,philosophies and work in violence prevention. Joe Olson, Senior Director of Visitor Services&Volunteers at the Minnesota Children's Museum will be joining Darleen in this presentation to highlight how the MN Children's Museum has imbedded the principals and practices of Wakanheza into their organization. The Wakanheza Project is also expanding to schools statewide. Through a unique partnership with the Minnesota Department of Education,Minnesota Children's Museum, Twin Cities Public Television, Minnesota Parent Teachers Association, Minnesota Elementary School Principals Association and Saint Paul-Ramsey County Department of Public Health,Wakanheza is being implemented to enhance school environments and assure that all families,children,youth and staff in schools feel comfortable and welcome. HEALTHY FAMILIES SECTION In mid-August,the newly named Bienestar Latino ("well-being of Latin people")work group (formerly known as the Beta Spanish Work Group)visited the new CLUES and Mexican Consul building on Payne Avenue to meet with representatives from the Latino Community and HealthEast to discuss collaborative outreach in the community. CLUES Director Jesse Bethke Gomez reported that, in partnership with HealthEast Care System,their organization will be opening an on-site clinic this September that will work towards developing a public health model of care to provide services to all Saint Paul and Ramsey County residents. Additionally he is looking to pilot a health plan with HealthEast clinics,with the goal of having it replicated nationally to cover all uninsured Americans. Other areas that CLUES plans to work with are mental and chemical health, case management services, and tobacco cessation initiatives. Jesse also plans to invite the Ramsey County Board of Commissioners to the new CLUES location so they can see first- hand the positive and exciting things that are happening in the Latino community. Nathan Wolf Lustbader, Mexican Consul for the four-state area including Minnesota, described the role of the consulate, including promoting Latino businesses,providing protection with immigration concerns, issuing ID and matricular cards,and serving as a bridge to better understand Latino/Mexican and American communities. Nathan summarized the contribution of Mexican workers to the U.S. economy at $160 billion dollars per year. He also shared that through collaboration with groups such as DPH's Bienestar Latino, the Consulate could be influential in creating changes that will benefit the Latino community. 4 Len Kaiser, Administrator of HealthEast clinics, described the creation of a health clinic at CLUES called La Clinica HealthEast Salud Integral, following the vision of HealthEast Care Systems, CLUES and St. Joseph's Hospital. Originally designed for Latinos,the clinic will serve all community members through a medical model of practice, with two medical doctors and a certified nurse-midwife. Staff will be bilingual and bicultural, supporting the language/cultural model mentioned previously. It is expected to open in September. As a non-profit but not federally-subsidized clinic, it is working on ways to service uninsured clients, possibly through a health care plan for Latinos with Portico insurance or a charity care policy and referral system; it does not plan to offer a sliding fee scale. As it develops, the clinic is dedicated to advance and expand services from a public health perspective. Representatives from Public Health's Bienestar Latino, CLUES, the Mexican Consulate, and HealthEast will continue to work together, and input from the greater community is always welcome. Current members of Bienestar Latino include Deb Schumacher and Michelle Lessard, co-coordinators, Martha Alicia, Elaine Borsheim, Kristi Brennan,Norma Cheesebrow, Marisol Chiclana-Ayala, Rosana Connell, Tara Swaby, Sherrie Dougherty, Amy Edelstein, Rob Fulton, Donald Gault, Beverly Gerdes, Deb Hendricks, Paula Henry, Diane Holmgren, Ann Hueller, Jillayn Lindahl, Cathi Lyman-Onkka, Sharon Lynch, Barb Nelson, Mary Peick, Karla Schmieg, Patty Seflow, Mary Sonnen, and Denise Wolff. PREVENTIVE HEALTH SERVICES SECTION Family Planning Program Family Planning Staff received the following letter from a patient for whom we provided services: "Hello, My name is . When I was in school in the early 1990's, I would visit the St. Paul-Ramsey County Public Health offices for check-ups and medications,but didn't always have the money to cover the full cost of services. Thanks to the sliding payment scale where I could pay according to my income, I was able to continue receiving medical attention as needed. I was always grateful for that,but even more grateful for the kind, non judgmental, and generous care I received from those working there. I told myself that once I was out on my own and more financially stable,that I'd send a donation of some kind to the center. Please accept this donation to Family Planning in order to repay a small portion of what I used, and maybe help pay a little towards someone who needs it. Use it however you see fit. Thanks again for all of your help in the past. You've been a part of my success." The Refugee Health and TB Control Programs have been very busy the past month managing the influx of Hmong refugees from Wat Tham Krabok Camp in Thailand. According to the Minnesota Department of Health(MDH), there were an estimated 5,180 Hmong refugees remaining in Wat Camp as of the end of May, 2005. It is estimated that approximately 4,600 will be coming to the US by the end of September, 2005. Approximately 1/3 or 1,500 of those refugees will come to Minnesota with @ 1,050 arriving in Ramsey County. The Refugee Health Program has been at full screening capacity since March, 2005, and has been working closely with MDH and private clinics in Ramsey County to assure that the recent influx of refugees are screened in a timely fashion. 5 From the information received from MDH, as well as what we have seen thus far, a significant percentage of the newly arriving Hmong refugees from the Wat Camp are designated as Class B TB. These individuals need to be seen on a priority basis in the TB clinic, as they are either TB cases who have completed treatment or persons with an abnormal CXR who need to be evaluated for active TB disease. In addition,there are many children who are contacts of cases of TB disease in the camp and have been placed on latent TB infection treatment. This influx of Hmong refugees with TB-related concerns comes at a time when the TB Clinic is already providing services to record numbers of patients. As of July 30th of this year,the TB Control Program is providing services to 21 "counted" TB cases and 16 TB suspects. This compares with 11 "counted" cases and 9 suspects at the same time last year. The total number of"counted" TB cases was 27 in 2004 and 29 in 2003. The number of patients who are being treated for latent TB infection, that is,those persons with a positive TB skin test and normal CXR who are advised to take medicine for 9 months to prevent TB disease from developing in the future, has risen 47% over 2004 and 65%over 2003. The majority of these patients have been identified through our Refugee Health Program. Thus, as refugee numbers increase, referrals for latent TB infection treatment also increase. We follow these patients for up to a year as they complete their medication regime. Thus, the recent influx of refugees will continue to impact the TB Control Program in the coming months. The TB Control Program and Health Records are continuing their participation in two CDC-sponsored studies. One study is examining the factors associated with acceptance of and adherence to treatment for latent TB infection. This involves a retrospective chart review,which is being conducted by Chris Bogut, Supervisor of Health Records. The purpose of the second study is to describe the epidemiology of TB among foreign-born persons in the U.S. and Canada in order to identify barriers to care and missed opportunities for prevention. This involves interviewing a random sample of TB cases seen in the TB Clinic. The interview is conducted by CDC-supported staff housed at MDH. These studies will provide valuable information in our continuing efforts to improve TB-related services to foreign-born persons. SCREENING &CASE MANAGEMENT SECTION PCA Program The Personal Care Assistant(PCA)program continues to see an increasing demand for services from an increasingly diverse population. Since 1996, there has been a state mandate that county Public Health Nurses perform these assessments on behalf of the State. The staff who work in this program provide assessments to persons who are on straight MA to recommend eligibility for benefit under the Minnesota Department of Human Services PCA program. Approximately 45%of the client assessments in Ramsey County require the use of an interpreter. Data for this program demonstrates the increasing number of assessments over the past several years: PCA 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Assessments 1,094 1,173 1;396 1,503 1,959 Case Management Services In 2003 the Minnesota Legislature adopted a service model, Minnesota Senior Care, intended to integrate acute care and continuing care service by transferring the administration of the Elderly Waiver(EW) 6 program from counties to health plans. The four health plans in Ramsey County are Blue Cross, Health Partners, Medica and UCare. This model is to be effective 7/1/06. By 1/1/06 all four health plans will offer the Minnesota Senior Health Options (MSHO)product which will combine Medicare(parts A, B, and D) and Medical Assistance dollars for the "dually eligible". Case management for consumers selecting the MSHO product will be provided by the health plans. We have had numerous internal discussions and external discussions with colleagues from metro counties at the Association of Minnesota Counties (AMC) Elderly Services Subcommittee meetings regarding how these changes will affect our clients, the potential gains and losses, and the staffing and financial implications for us. WIC SECTION The WIC participation count for July is in: WIC served an all time high number of participants: 17,251. The WIC dietitians who counsel WIC participants with more serious health problems (eg stunted growth, very low hemoglobins, failure to gain weight in pregnancy, etc)report that they are delighted with the gains in growth and the resolution of low hemoglobin problems they are seeing in Hmong refugee children who are coming back to WIC for follow up visits. They are doing very well! This should make all of us in Public Health who have worked with these families very proud. It is due to the work of many Sections that these children are thriving. WIC Breastfeeding Initiation Rates for July, 2005: West Side 82.32% New Brighton 71.80% Midway 68.81% White Bear Lake 65.95% 555 Cedar 60.54% East Side 50.08% McDonough 47.93% Consolidated 61.02% 55%- 79%of the women who initiated breastfeeding are still breastfeeding at 3 months. These duration rates, along with the initiation rates, continue to rise. WIC staff have been working hard to provide outstanding breastfeeding education and support, and it's great to see these efforts pay off in higher rates of initiation and duration. 7 Directions to the Government Center West Building on the River Side Entrance Public Health, 50 W. Kellogg Blvd., Suite 930, Saint Paul, Minnesota From I94 going east or west, take the Marion Street/Kellogg Blvd. exit and proceed down Kellogg Blvd (towards downtown) to West Seventh Street. Turn right on 7th street and go one block to Chestnut Street. At Chestnut turn left from West 7`h. Proceed down Chestnut to the 2nd stop light (Science Museum will be in front of you) and take a right and proceed down to Shepard Road. After you cross the railroad tracks, go left on Shepard Road. Proceed east on Shepard Rd. to the next stop light and take a left. You will go back across the railroad tracks. As soon as you cross the tracks go right. You will see the District Energy plant on your left and then the Government Center WEST building (on your left). Park anywhere behind the GC WEST building and enter the building under the brown awning. Security will open the door. Present your ID (drivers license or other picture ID). Come up to the 9th floor. When you get off the elevator turn left and proceed to the STAR room. THE P Bldg. a LEGEND • �j Gn STORE .. s�y Skyway oe State Capitol � � PIISSWrGEMEA WORLD TRUE CENTER �` 9`'Op T 9 MS.STH ST. 30E.?THST. % a 1'e. 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