Stanly moves forward to disengage with Cardinal Innovations

The management care organization which operated behavioral health care in Stanly may soon be changing.

At Monday’s meeting of the Stanly County Board of Commissioners, the board passed several measures relating to efforts to disengage from Cardinal Innovations.

Commissioners’ efforts to disengage from Cardinal were first authorized by the board in November. The county began the process to switch from Cardinal to Partners Behavioral Health.

Cabarrus and Union counties have passed similar measures regarding Cardinal and have both submitted formal packets to Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services Dr. Mandy Cohen.

County Manager Andy Lucas said the required 60-day comment period had passed, while also posting said comments for 30 days on the county website. Three comments were made during the period which along with responses from Lucas were included in commissioners’ packets.

Two of the comments centered on not wanting a change to their children’s provider.

“Partners and Cardinal are the MCOs (managed care organizations), they are not the direct providers of care,” Lucas wrote in an email. “Partners will accept (the child’s) provider and every other direct provider into their network. Stanly County and many other counties in Cardinal’s catchment area have attempted on multiple occasions to voice concerns regarding Cardinal’s approach to mental health services. “

Lucas added, “Those concerns have been simply dismissed by Cardinal’s leadership for multiple years. Cardinal’s one size fits all approach does not work for rural counties. Thus, Stanly County is moving to a new MCO partner that understands the value of innovation, collaboration and true partnership.”

Lucas presented to commissioners a resolution to approve the following items: an authorizing resolution of the county’s disengagement plan, a continuity of services plan, disengagement financial liabilities report and a distribution of real property plan. The property plan was not applicable to Stanly since Cardinal did not own any real property in the county, according to Lucas.

Commissioners unanimously passed a motion to approve the plans and submit them to the state.

SportsPlus

News

SCC to host medical careers open house

News

Albemarle Parks and Recreation to host egg hunt

News

Oakboro Museum of History showcases Blalock’s clocks

News

Former White House nurse to speak in Albemarle

News

Albemarle accepts nominees for Walk of Fame program

News

Camp parking lot renovations are complete

News

Rowan, Stanly to partner on virtual learning

News

Stanly County Chorale presents ‘A Night at the Tonys: Broadway’s Best!’

News

Extension offers livestock marketing panel

News

NC NEWSLINE: County ‘snapshots’ show North Carolinians burdened by high rents

News

Custodian nominated for LifeChanger of the Year award

News

Birdwatchers have new opportunity

News

Student accepted to House Page program

News

Stanly County youth participate in Mini Medley Relay

News

Master Gardeners to have native plants sale

News

NC NEWSLINE: NC bill would require community colleges to share student info with some parents

News

Stanly County Fire Marshal issues burn ban

News

Hunt for golden shoes nears

News

Albemarle reveals Food Truck Friday schedule

News

Singing Americans begins rehearsals Monday

News

Homes of Hope announces new director

News

Swain picked for another term as GOP chairman

News

Red Cross Giving Day rallies supporters

News

NC NEWSLINE: NC government has more than 1,000 job openings. Where they are, what they do, how much they pay. The state’s new head of HR is pledging to get long-vacant and high-turnover positions filled. It can take six months to fill a single one.