Our Services

Our 245D program is a licensed Home and Community Based Program, providing services in a manner that supports the individual’s preferences, daily needs, and activities needed to accomplish their personal goals.

Basic Support Services

  • 24-hour emergency assistance.
  • Adult companion services.
  • Homemaker.
  • Individual community living support.
  • Individualized home supports.
  • Night supervision.
  • Respite care, in home or out-of-home

Intensive support services

  • Individualized home supports with family training.
  • Individualized home supports with training.
  • Semi-independent living skills

Integrated community supports (ICS)

  • Community Participation Healthy, safety, and wellness Household Management

We strive to address the functional constraints of those who require support with their daily routine tasks through these home and community-based programs.

We serve individuals with disabilities and those ages 65 and older. We can also accommodate those who are in Medicaid waiver programs such as Brain Injury (BI), Community Alternatives for Disabled Individuals (CADI), Community Access for Disability Inclusion (CADI), Developmental Disabilities (DD), and Elderly Waiver/Alternatives Care Program (EW/AC).

Services that provide support and training in community living service categories to persons 18 and older who live in a provider-controlled ICS living unit (e.g., apartment in a multi-family housing building).

ICS can be provided up to 24 hours a day and includes training and assistance to satisfy a person’s specific evaluated needs and goals in at least one of the following community living service categories:

  • Community participation
  • Health, safety, and wellness
  • Household management
  • Adaptive skills.
  • Community supports.

Support in service categories: Suggestion, Maintenance of Skills, Guidance, Instruction, Assistance in Daily and Community Activities or Direct Supervision.

Training in Community Living Service Categories: Training and instructional services to acquire, retain and enhance personal and social experience. Training should address the identified needs of the individual.

  • Community mobility and pedestrian safety (e.g., safely getting in and around the community)
  • Community resource use and access
  • Community safety and awareness
  • Informal support system and network development
  • Interpersonal communications skills
  • Leisure, recreation, and socialization planning
  • Skill-building to meet transportation needs.

These are services that provide the level of assistance, supervision and care that is necessary to ensure the health and safety of the person.

  • Individual community living supports (ILCS): For people who need reminders, cues intermittent/moderate supervision or physical assistance to remain in their own homes.
  • 24-hour emergency assistance: On-call counseling and problem-solving and/or immediate response for assistance at a person’s home due to a health/personal emergency.
  • Companion services: Non-medical care, supervision, and socialization to a person age 18 or older.
  • Homemaker services: Eligible services range from light household cleaning to household cleaning with incidental assistance with home management and/or activities of daily living.
  • Night supervision: Provides overnight assistance and monitoring by an awake staff in the person’s home.
  • Individualized home supports: Services provided in the person’s home or community in support of achieving potential, increasing independence and meeting community inclusion goals.       
  • Without training: This service option is provided to adults or children when they need support in at least one of the community living service categories.
  • Respite care services: Short-term care due to the absence or need for relief of the family member(s) or primary caregiver normally providing the care.

These services are intended to promote training, habilitation, or rehabilitation of the person.

  • Independent living skills training: Services that develop, maintain and improve the community-living skills of a person.

               With training: This service option is provided to adults when they need support and training in at least one of the community living service categories.

               With family training: This service option is designed for people who live with their family to provide training to the person and their family members. The training increases their capabilities to care for and maintain the person’s ability to live in the home.

  • Semi-independent living skills: Services needed by an adult with a developmental disability or related condition(s) to live successfully in the community.