CHARLOTTE, N.C — A man who depends on private nurses 24 hours a day is asking legislators to include raises for them in this year's budget. 

The North Carolina House and Senate are drafting their recommendations for the state budget cycle beginning July 2021. Once the House and Senate have their individual budgets, they will meet and vote on a final budget for Gov. Roy Cooper to sign.

Ari Anderson needs 24-hour care from private duty nurses, who he said are leaving for higher paying jobs in hospitals and other facilities.

So, he is urging North Carolina legislators to include $5.8 million in the budget for a raise in private duty nurse's Medicaid reimbursement from $39.60 to $45 an hour.


What You Need To Know

  • The North Carolina House and Senate are drafting their recommendations for the state budget cycle beginning July 2021

  • Ari Anderson said private duty nurses are leaving for higher paying jobs at hospitals and private facilities

  • Anderson is asking for a $5.8 million increase to the North Carolina budget beginning July 2021, to raise private duty nurse's Medicaid reimbursement

  • Anderson has lost six private duty nurses over the past three years and has not been able to replace them

Anderson has spinal muscular atrophy and can't move or breathe on his own.

He has lost six nurses over the past three years and said his staffing agencies have no one to replace them. If a night nurse can't make it, Anderson has to rely on his mother, Stephanie Goldberg, to take care of him through the night.

“Sometimes my mom is so tired that she can barely walk or stand, after working a grueling shift at the hospital,” Anderson said. “It breaks my heart into a million pieces when she is then asked to stay up another 12 hours, because we don’t have a night nurse.”

Goldberg is also frightened she won't have the energy to take care of her son through the night.

“My thought is, 'Will I have the energy to take care of Ari? Will I fall asleep and I won’t hear the alarms or hear his call for help,'” Goldberg asked. “These are scary things that can literally happen. Too many people have died because the caregiver has fallen asleep.”

Anderson said he doesn't blame nurses for leaving to make a better living, but he does think North Carolina legislators can help.

By making sure their Medicaid reimbursement raise is in the final budget, he says they can get nurses to stay in private duty care.