Alta California Regional Center
Central Valley Regional Center
East Los Angeles County Regional Center
Far Northern Regional Center
Frank D. Lanterman Regional Center
Golden Gate Regional Center
Harbor Regional Center
Inland Regional Center
Kern Regional Center
North Bay Regional Center
North Los Angeles County Regional Center
San Gabriel/Pomona Regional Center
Redwood Coast Regional Center
Regional Center of Orange County
Regional Center of the East Bay
San Andreas Regional Center
San Diego Regional Center
Tri-Counties Regional Center
Valley Mountain Regional Center
Westside Regional Center
American Association of People with Disabilities
Association for Persons in Supported Employment
American Network of Community Options
ARC
Association for Persons in Supported Employment
Autism Society of America
Autism Speaks
Best Buddies International
California Association of Health Facilities
California Council on Developmental Disabilities
CARF Commission on the Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities
Crisis Prevention Institute
Human Service Institute
Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Services Act Adult Residential Care Facilities
Los Angeles Times Developmental Disabilities
National Association for Dual Diagnosed
National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities (CDC)
National Organization for Rare Disorders
NISH Creating Employment Opportunities for People with Severe Disabilities
Person Centered Planning
TASH Equity Opportunity and Inclusion for People with Developmental Disabilities
UCLA Disability and Computing Program
World Institute on Disability
Florida Developmental Disabilities Council
Illinois Council on Developmental Disabilities
Kentucky Council on Mental Retardation
Maryland Department of Health
New York Office of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disability
North Carolina Dept of Health and Human Services
Pennsylvania Developmental Disabilities Council
South Carolina Developmental Disabilities Council
Tennessee Council on Developmental Disabilities
Virginia Board of People With Disabilities
US Administration for Children and Families
West Virginia Developmental Disabilities Council
Wisconsin Facilities Serving People with Developmental Disabilities
California Dept Mental Health
Los Angeles County Dept Mental Health
Los Angeles County Emergency Psychiatric Evaluation (Pet Team)
Los Angeles Times County Psychiatric Emergency Team
Mental Health America Los Angeles
National Alliance on Mental Illness
National Alliance Mental Illness California
National Institute of Mental Health
PsychCentral
Psychiatric Hospitals In Los Angeles
Schziophrenia.com
Southern California Mental Health Resources
Exceptional Vacations
National Center on Health, Physical Activity and Disability
Therapeutic Equestrian
Therapeutic Recreation
Trips INC Special Adventures
Adult Protective Services Los Angeles
County of Los Angeles Survival Guide
Disability Rights California
Los Angeles County Fire Dept Earthquake Preparedness
Mental Disability Rights International
A Possible Dream: The Andrea Friedman Story Preview
Asperger BBC History
Bipolar: A Manic Depressive Illness
BBC My Autism and Me
California Department of Developmental Services YouTube Channel
Louis Theroux Documentary. America’s Medicated Kids
Louis Theroux Documentary Extreme Love – Autism
Mental Illness in Los Angeles
Refrigerator Mothers and Autism
The Woman Who Thinks Like A Cow
Temple Grandhin Thinking In Pictures
Alta
East Bay
East LA
Harbor
Kern
Lanterman LA
North LA
Orange
San Diego
San Gabriel Pomona
South Central
Tri-County Ventura
West Side
Map of Regional Centers Los Angeles by Zip Code
Map of Regional Centers California
Service Level Definitions
Direct Support Professional Training
Regional Center Staffing Requirements Title 17
Regional Center is governed by the Department of Developmental Services. Each Regional Center covers a specific geographic region known as a catchment area. Developmentally Disabled individuals typically have intellectual disability, autism, cerebral palsy seizure disorder and function at various levels of independence. Taking care of Regional Center consumers involves a considerable amount of work and commitment. Each Regional Center consumer has an Individual Program Plan that specifies the goals the client is working on. A typical goal might be “the consumer will learn to use city bus services,” or “…reduce in-stances of wandering,” or “…will take a community college class.”
The Regional Center has it’s own application process that is separate from Community Care Licensing. Regional Center also requires that you attend a special orientation at their office. There are 21 Regional Centers in California. The Regional Center contracts with you to provide a specific level of care. There are different levels of care ranging from Level 2 through 4 with many sub levels.
Each Adult Residential Facility vendored by a regional center is designated to provide one of 4 service levels. Levels refer to facilities, not clients.
Facility Rates by Level 2019
Service Level 1: Limited care and supervision for persons with self-care skills and no behavior problems.
Service Level 2: Care, supervision and incidental training for persons with some self-care skills and no major behavior problems.
Service Level 3: Care, supervision and ongoing training for persons with significant deficits in self-help skills, and/or some limitations in physical coordination and mobility, and/or disruptive or self-injurious behavior.
Service Level 4: Care, supervision and professionally supervised training for persons with deficits in self-help skills, and/or severe impairment in physical coordination and mobility, and/or severely disruptive or self-injurious behavior.
Service Level 4 is subdivided into Levels 4A through 4I in which staffing levels are increased to correspond to the escalating severity of disability levels.
Working with Regional Center clients involves a considerable amount of work and commitment. Because of the unique needs of developmentally disabled individuals, Regional Center requires that the Administrator of the facility have experience working with the population. Most Regional Centers require direct experience in a residential setting.
Many people satisfy the experience requirement by working in a residential setting on a part time basis. You may contact homes to see if you can obtain a position working as a staff to satisfy the experience requirement. It is best to work for a larger company that has a training program and other benefits rather than a small family run business.
To become a vendor with Regional Center you must attend an orientation at their local office and write a Program Design based on the principles of normalization. The Regional Center Program Design is different from the Community Care Licensing Application. The Program Design requirements are specified in Title 17 (56013) and published by the Department of Developmental Services. Most Regional
Centers develop their own requirements for how they want the Program Design prepared.
Contact your local Regional Center to request their current Program Design requirements. An example of the vendorization steps for Inland Regional Center can be found here. South Central Regional Center information can be found here. Each Regional Center has different steps and requirements. Check with the Regional Center you wish to become vendored with about their requirements.
Working with developmentally disabled individuals requires a philosophical shift from the traditional medical model of care. Historically individuals with a developmental disability have been treated like children placing the care provider in the role of parent. Services were recommended and implemented by physicians, social workers and family, friends and care providers.
Person Centered Planning turns this old medical model l upside down by shifting control to the individual who receives the services. The model is based on the simple idea that those who receive services have the right to chose which services they receive and by whom.
Mental Health clients suffer from psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and depression; they are usually on medication. Mental health clients pay for their stay in the facility through their Social Security disability income. This amounts to approximately $1000.00 per month. Mental Health clients are not managed by Regional Center. To be successful, you must market your facility to hospitals, psychiatrists and others in the mental health community. Most residential programs for mental health clients are large commercial facilities with over 100 beds.
Mental Health services in California are regulated by the Department of Mental Health.
Many residential care
Veterans Hospital nearest you. Here are a list of helpful links to obtain information regarding housing programs and services for Veterans:
Veterans Hospital and Services
Contact the Social Service Department of a local VA hospital.
California Veterans Affairs
800.952.5626
Guide To Long-Term Care Veterans
Public Resources
[email protected]
718.982.5055
Housing Grants for Disabled Veterans