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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Carraro
DATE TYPED 2/22/05
HB
SHORT TITLE Employee Abuse Registry Act
SB 590/SJCS/aSFC
ANALYST Hanika-Ortiz
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
Minimal
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Office of the Attorney General (AGO)
Department of Health (DOH)
Aging and Long-Term Services Department (ALTSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFC Amendment
The Senate Finance Committee Amendment clarifies a provider as not civilly liable for the hir-
ing, deciding not to hire or terminating of an individual in good faith pursuant to the Employee
Abuse Registry Act.
Synopsis of Substitute Bill
SB 590/SJCS enacts the “Employee Abuse Registry Act” (EARA) requiring the DOH to main-
tain an electronic database registry of direct care providers in long-term care facilities or com-
munity based waiver services who have substantiated abuse, neglect, or exploitation charges as
determined by DOH and/or ALTSD. The substitute bill covers employees and contractors who
provide financial or physical care to the disabled or elderly, but does not include licensed health
care professionals practicing within the scope of their license or certified nursing assistants. The
substitute bill provides for administrative due process hearings, appeal rights, procedures for re-
moval from the registry after three years, and civil monetary penalties of up to $5,000 per in-
stance on providers who fail to comply with the terms of the EARA. The DOH and ALTSD must
adopt rules by January 1, 2006, which is necessary to carry out the provisions of the Act.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 590/SJCS/aSFC-- Page 2
Significant Issues
The substitute bill directs DOH to review reports of abuse, neglect and exploitation against em-
ployees of providers that DOH licenses and investigate those reports to determine whether there
is a reasonable basis to believe that abuse, neglect or exploitation occurred. If DOH determines
that abuse, neglect, or exploitation occurred, it shall notify the provider and the employee. Simi-
lar obligations are placed on ALTSD for employees and providers under its jurisdiction, and re-
quire APS to report substantiated finding of abuse, neglect or exploitation to DOH.
The substitute bill establishes a notice and hearing process that DOH and ALTSD must follow
before placing a person’s name on the registry. The departments will consider the “severity” of
the alleged abuse, neglect and exploitation, and if a hearing is requested, the department that
made the determination shall conduct the hearing. If an employee is aggrieved by the final deci-
sion, the employee would have a right to judicial review.
Long-term care facilities and community-based waiver services would be required to check the
registry before making hiring or contracting decisions and keep record of the inquiries to the
registry. Providers are offered some immunity if they report abuse, or fail to hire an employee
after consulting the registry. After three years, an employee may petition to have his or her name
removed from the registry.
The AGO reports the substitute bill clarifies the roles of the ALTSD and the DOH with regard to
investigations and hearings. The original bill was unclear with regard to the division of responsi-
bilities between those agencies.
This is a Governor’s Priority Bill that directly impacts the Zero Tolerance for Elder Abuse prior-
ity.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
The AGO notes ALTSD currently has authority to investigate allegations of abuse against adults.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Staff time and resources will be required for rules adoption, fair hearing process, investigating
reports of abuse, neglect and exploitation, sanctions, and registry maintenance for both the DOH
and ALTSD.
ALTSD anticipates it will need to conduct three to four hearings per year at a cost of about
$3,000 to $5,000 per hearing, including judicial appeals.
DOH reports current resources are sufficient to develop the registry and conduct hearings. The
DOH currently administers the Nurse Aide Registry and could use that structure to help imple-
ment a new registry. The maintenance of the registry will require one to two FTE that could re-
ceive Medicaid matching funds. The state mach funds and cost of fair hearings would be ab-
sorbed out of the current budget.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 590/SJCS/aSFC-- Page 3
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The DOH report the use of Nurse Aide Registry regulations can serve as guidelines to potentially
reduce implementation costs.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Duplicates HLHR Sub for HB 626, which modifies the definition of provider and definition of
neglect to be more in line with the Resident Abuse Act, modifies language about the fair hearing
process and corrects the date for implementing rules from January 2007 to January 2006.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
Trainings for providers will need to be conducted to employers are fully informed of their duties
and responsibilities under the substitute bill. Employers should also be required to provide train-
ing for their employees.
Consideration should be given to ensure that language or social disadvantage is not a barrier in
reaching effective resolution.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The substitute bill would make the definitions of abuse, neglect and exploitation the same as the
APS definitions. It would also assure that the employee fair hearing process and judicial review
are made available by both agencies.
ALTSD report under present law and regulations, there is no comprehensive registry of persons
who have had substantiated allegations of abuse, neglect or exploitation. Unless the allegations
were serious enough to warrant action by the criminal authorities, it has been fairly easy for per-
sons to move from job to job.
ALTERNATIVES
None
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL.
The ALTSD will continue to investigate abuse and neglect under the Adult Protective Services
Act.
AH/njw:lg