Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Concerns Around At-Home Care Program

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PPL Responds to Critics on Statewide Home Care Program

The company hired to administer a statewide program that pays at-home personal care assistants responded to critics on Friday. The program serves roughly 250,000 Medicaid eligible New Yorkers and pays family and friends to care for their loved ones.

Public Partnerships, LLC (PPL) to Manage Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program (CDPAP)

Governor Kathy Hochul announced PPL was selected to serve as the statewide fiscal intermediary and was awarded a $9 billion contract in September. Hochul and the company maintain the move will strengthen CDPAP.

PPL’s Goal: Connect Consumers to At-Home Care

President and Chief Strategy Officer of PPL Maria Perrin said the company’s goal is to connect consumers to the at-home care they need.

“Our approach is to just focus on the consumers’ and the personal assistants’ experience, making sure their transition goes well and is seamless and that there’s no disruption in care,” said Perrin.

Eliminating Fraud, Waste, and Abuse

Perrin said in addition to making sure there are no disruptions in care, they want to focus on eliminating fraud, waste, and abuse within the system.

“All of the workers who were doing such great care to continue to provide services to the consumers in need. But those who might be fraudulent or waste in the system, that don’t have to do with providing good care, can be rooted out so that those resources can go back to the program and support more people,” said Perrin.

Addressing Concerns

Those who rely on CDPAP have concerns over PPL’s work in other states, citing a class action lawsuit in Pennsylvania, where at-home care providers said they were not paid overtime.

Perrin said that lawsuit is specific to how the program was set up in that state, where the financial intermediary was not considered an employer, but rather was just administering payroll and not authorized to approve overtime.

“It has nothing to do with CDPAP. CDPAP is what’s called a joint employer program, where both the consumer and fi have joint employer responsibilities and so, would have responsibility for paying overtime,” said Perrin.

Next Steps

PPL will open a call center in Albany and eight offices throughout the state. The company expects to hire 1,200 New Yorkers.

PPL will hold its first virtual information session for New Yorkers next week on November 21. In-person information sessions will start in December.

Conclusion

PPL’s goal is to connect consumers to at-home care and eliminate fraud, waste, and abuse within the system. While some have raised concerns over PPL’s work in other states, the company maintains that the lawsuit in Pennsylvania is specific to that state’s program and has no bearing on CDPAP.

FAQs

Q: What is the Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program (CDPAP)?

A: CDPAP is a statewide program that pays family and friends to care for their loved ones at home.

Q: Who is Public Partnerships, LLC (PPL)?

A: PPL is the company hired to administer CDPAP and was awarded a $9 billion contract in September.

Q: What is PPL’s goal for CDPAP?

A: PPL’s goal is to connect consumers to at-home care and eliminate fraud, waste, and abuse within the system.

Q: What is the timeline for the transition to PPL?

A: The statewide partnership is slated to go into effect January 6, and they expect the transition to be completed by April 1.

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