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State restores Early Intervention funding, but it's a temporary fix

Bethany and Kyle
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Flickr/Creative Commons

A recent agreement means that, despite the budget impasse, Illinois will fund services for disabled babies. But therapists and children who rallied at the Statehouse today say their worries aren't over.

Illinois stopped funding Early Intervention from July until last week. Maggie Lay says therapists who couldn't afford to work without paychecks stopped seeing her daughter, Tessa.

Tessa is 21 months old and has Down Syndrome. During the rally to preserve those services, Tessa hugged her mom and munched on a Ritz cracker.

"Can you show her how you say cracker? ...  She signs it."

Therapy's back on -- funding the services is not part of court-ordered spending; but Maggie says she's worried Tessa could lose support again.

The current deal is just temporary. Gov. Bruce Rauner is proposing reducing eligibility, and Tessa would just miss the cutoff.

"If we lose our services, we lose our lifeline; our therapists are our lifeline," Maggie said. 

Maggie says she's got good insurance, but it doesn't cover Tessa's occupational therapy. 

Amanda Vinicky moved to Chicago Tonight on WTTW-TV PBS in 2017.