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art.004/11/004/9/004/8/004/7/004/6/004/5/004/4/004/3/004/2/004/1 | ||
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1 | ARTICLE 4 | |
2 | RELATING TO GOVERNMENT REORGANIZATION | |
3 | SECTION 1. Sections 5-65-1, 5-65-3, 5-65-7.1, 5-65-10, 5-65-15, 5-65-15.1 and 5-65-20 | |
4 | of the General Laws in Chapter 5-65 entitled "Contractors' Registration and Licensing Board" are | |
5 | hereby amended to read as follows: | |
6 | 5-65-1. Definitions. | |
7 | As used in this chapter: | |
8 | (1) "Board" means the contractors' registration and licensing board established pursuant to | |
9 | the provisions of § 5-65-14 or its designees. | |
10 | (2) "Claim for retainage" means an allegation that a person seeking payment of retainage | |
11 | breached the person's contract for the project; provided, however, that a "claim" related to a project | |
12 | with a contract value of not less than two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) shall be subject | |
13 | to the applicable dispute resolution procedure, notice, and other requirements in the contract for | |
14 | construction. | |
15 | (3) "Commission" means the building code commission supportive of the contractors' | |
16 | registration and licensing board. | |
17 | (4)(3)(i) "Contractor" means a person who, in the pursuit of an independent business, | |
18 | undertakes or offers to undertake or submits a bid, or for compensation and with or without the | |
19 | intent to sell the structure arranges to construct, alter, repair, improve, move over public highways, | |
20 | roads, or streets or demolish a structure or to perform any work in connection with the construction, | |
21 | alteration, repair, improvement, moving over public highways, roads, or streets or demolition of a | |
22 | structure, and the appurtenances thereto. For the purposes of this chapter, "appurtenances" includes | |
23 | the installation, alteration, or repair of wells connected to a structure consistent with chapter 13.2 | |
24 | of title 46. "Contractor" includes, but is not limited to, any person who purchases or owns property | |
25 | and constructs, or for compensation arranges for the construction of, one or more structures. | |
26 | (ii) A certificate of registration is necessary for each "business entity" regardless of the fact | |
27 | that each entity may be owned by the same individual. | |
28 | (5)(4) "Contract for construction" means a contract for which a lien may be established | |
29 | under chapter 28 of title 34 or for state or municipal public works projects as defined in title 37 on | |
30 | a project for which the person on whose contract with the project owner has an original contract | |
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1 | price of not less than two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000); provided, however, that | |
2 | "contract for construction" shall not include a project containing, or designed to contain, at least | |
3 | one, but not more than four (4), dwelling units. | |
4 | (6)(5) "Deliverable" means a project close-out document that shall be submitted by the | |
5 | person seeking payment of retainage under the person's contract for construction; provided, | |
6 | however, that a lien waiver or release, which is a deliverable, shall comply with chapter 28 of title | |
7 | 34; provided, further, that "deliverable" shall not include any document affirming, certifying, or | |
8 | confirming completion or correction of labor, materials, or other items furnished or incomplete or | |
9 | defective work. | |
10 | (7)(6) "Dwelling unit" means a single unit providing complete independent living facilities | |
11 | for one or more persons, including permanent provisions for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, and | |
12 | sanitation. | |
13 | (8)(7) "Hearing officer" means a person designated by the executive director director of | |
14 | the department of business regulation or the director’s designee to hear contested claims or cases, | |
15 | contested enforcement proceedings, and contested administrative fines, in accordance with the | |
16 | "administrative procedures act", chapter 35 of title 42. | |
17 | (9)(8) "Incomplete or defective work" means labor, materials, or any other item required | |
18 | for full performance by a person seeking payment of retainage that remains to be furnished by the | |
19 | person under the person's contract for construction or that has been furnished by the person but | |
20 | requires correction, repair, further completion, revision, or replacement; provided, however, that | |
21 | "incomplete or defective work" shall not include deliverables or labor, materials, or any other item | |
22 | to be repaired or replaced after substantial or final completion pursuant to a warranty, guarantee, | |
23 | or other contractual obligation to correct defective work after substantial or final completion. | |
24 | (10)(9) "Monetary damages" means the dollar amount required in excess of the contract | |
25 | amount necessary to provide the claimant with what was agreed to be provided under the terms of | |
26 | the contract reduced by any amount due and unpaid to the respondent inclusive of any and all | |
27 | awards and restitution. | |
28 | (10) "Office" means the state building office. | |
29 | (11) "Person" means any natural person, joint venture, partnership, corporation, or other | |
30 | business or legal entity who or that enters into a contract for construction. | |
31 | (12) "Prime contractor" means a person who or that enters into a contract for construction | |
32 | with the project owner. | |
33 | (13) "Retainage" means a portion or percentage of a payment due pursuant to a contract | |
34 | for construction that is withheld to ensure full performance of the contract for construction. | |
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1 | (14) "Staff" means the executive director for the contractors' registration and licensing | |
2 | board, and any other staff necessary to carry out the powers, functions, and duties of the board | |
3 | including inspectors, hearing officers, and other supportive staff. | |
4 | (15) "State" means the state of Rhode Island. | |
5 | (16) "Structure" means (i) Any commercial building; or (ii) Any building containing one | |
6 | or more residences and their appurtenances. The board's dispute resolution process shall apply only | |
7 | to residential structures containing dwelling units, as defined in the state building code, or | |
8 | residential portions of other types of buildings without regard to how many units any structure may | |
9 | contain. The board retains jurisdiction and may conduct hearings regarding violations against all | |
10 | contractors required to be registered or licensed by the board. | |
11 | (17) "Substantially" means any violation that affects the health, safety, and welfare of the | |
12 | general public. | |
13 | (18) "Substantial completion" means the stage in the progress of the project when the work | |
14 | required by the contract for construction with the project owner is sufficiently complete in | |
15 | accordance with the contract for construction so that the project owner may occupy or utilize the | |
16 | work for its intended use; provided, further, that "substantial completion" may apply to the entire | |
17 | project or a phase of the entire project if the contract for construction with the project owner | |
18 | expressly permits substantial completion to apply to defined phases of the project. | |
19 | 5-65-3. Registration for work on a structure required of contractor -- Issuance of | |
20 | building permits to unregistered or unlicensed contractors prohibited -- Evidence of activity | |
21 | as a contractor -- Duties of contractors. | |
22 | (a) A person shall not undertake, offer to undertake, or submit a bid to do work as a | |
23 | contractor on a structure or arrange to have work done unless that person has a current, valid | |
24 | certificate of registration for all construction work issued by the board. A partnership, corporation, | |
25 | or joint venture may do the work; offer to undertake the work; or submit a bid to do the work only | |
26 | if that partnership, corporation, or joint venture is registered for the work. In the case of registration | |
27 | by a corporation or partnership, an individual shall be designated to be responsible for the | |
28 | corporation's or partnership's work. The corporation or partnership and its designee shall be jointly | |
29 | and severally liable for the payment of the registration fee, as required in this chapter, and for | |
30 | violations of any provisions of this chapter. Disciplinary action taken on a registration held by a | |
31 | corporation, partnership, or sole proprietor may affect other registrations held by the same | |
32 | corporation, partnership, or sole proprietorship, and may preclude future registration by the | |
33 | principal of that business entity. | |
34 | (b) A registered partnership or corporation shall notify the board in writing immediately | |
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1 | upon any change in partners or corporate officers. | |
2 | (c) A city, town, or the state shall not issue a building permit to anyone required to be | |
3 | registered under this chapter who does not have a current, valid certificate of registration | |
4 | identification card or valid license that shall be presented at the time of issuance of a permit and | |
5 | shall become a condition of a valid permit. Each city, town, or the state that requires the issuance | |
6 | of a permit as a condition precedent to construction, alteration, improvement, demolition, | |
7 | movement, or repair of any building or structure or the appurtenance to the structure shall also | |
8 | require that each applicant for the permit file, as a condition to issuing the permit, a written affidavit | |
9 | subject to the penalties of perjury, subscribed by the applicant, that the applicant is registered under | |
10 | the provisions of this chapter, giving the number of the registration and stating that the registration | |
11 | is in full force and effect, or, if the applicant is exempt from the provisions of this chapter, listing | |
12 | the basis for the exemption. The city, town, or the state shall list the contractor's registration number | |
13 | on the permit obtained by that contractor, and if a homeowner is issued a permit, the building | |
14 | inspector or official must ascertain registration numbers of each contractor on the premises and | |
15 | shall inform the registration board of any non-registered contractors performing work at the site. | |
16 | (d) Every city and town that requires the issuance of a business license as a condition | |
17 | precedent to engaging, within the city or town, in a business that is subject to regulation under this | |
18 | chapter, shall require that each licensee and each applicant for issuance or renewal of the license | |
19 | file, or has on file, with the city or town a signed statement that the licensee or applicant is registered | |
20 | under the provisions of this chapter and stating that the registration is in full force and effect. | |
21 | (e) It shall be prima facie evidence of doing business as a contractor when a person for that | |
22 | person's own use performs, employs others to perform, or for compensation and with the intent to | |
23 | sell the structure, arranges to have performed any work described in § 5-65-1(4) if within any one | |
24 | twelve-month (12) period that person offers for sale one or more structures on which that work was | |
25 | performed. | |
26 | (f) Registration under this chapter shall be prima facie evidence that the registrant conducts | |
27 | a separate, independent business. | |
28 | (g) The provisions of this chapter shall be exclusive and no city or town shall require or | |
29 | shall issue any registrations or licenses nor charge any fee for the regulatory registration of any | |
30 | contractor registered with the board. Nothing in this subsection shall limit or abridge the authority | |
31 | of any city or town to license and levy and collect a general and nondiscriminatory license fee | |
32 | levied upon all businesses, or to levy a tax based upon business conducted by any firm within the | |
33 | city or town's jurisdiction, if permitted under the laws of the state. | |
34 | (h)(1) Every contractor shall maintain a list that shall include the following information | |
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1 | about all subcontractors or other contractors performing work on a structure for that contractor: | |
2 | (i) Names and addresses; and | |
3 | (ii) Registration numbers or other license numbers. | |
4 | (2) The list referred to in subsection (h)(1) of this section shall be delivered to the board | |
5 | within twenty-four (24) hours after a request is made during reasonable working hours, or a fine of | |
6 | twenty-five dollars ($25.00) may be imposed for each offense. | |
7 | (i) The following subcontractors who are not employees of a registered contractor must | |
8 | obtain a registration certificate prior to conducting any work: (1) Carpenters, including finish | |
9 | carpenters and framers; (2) Siding installers; (3) Roofers; (4) Foundation installers, including | |
10 | concrete installers and form installers; (5) Drywall installers; (6) Plasterers; (7) Insulation installers; | |
11 | (8) Ceramic tile installers; (9) Floor covering installers; (10) Swimming pool installers, both above | |
12 | ground and in ground; (11) Masons, including chimney installers, fireplace installers, and general | |
13 | masonry erectors. This list is not all inclusive and shall not be limited to the above-referenced | |
14 | contractors. No subcontractor licensed by another in-state agency pursuant to § 5-65-2 shall be | |
15 | required to register, provided that said work is performed under the purview of that license. | |
16 | (j) A contractor including, but not limited to, a general contractor, shall not hire any | |
17 | subcontractor or other contractor to work on a structure unless the contractor is registered under | |
18 | this chapter or exempt from registration under the provisions of § 5-65-2. | |
19 | (k) A summary of this chapter, prepared by the board and provided at cost to all registered | |
20 | contractors, shall be delivered by the contractor to the owner when the contractor begins work on | |
21 | a structure; failure to comply may result in a fine. | |
22 | (l) The registration number of each contractor shall appear in any advertising by that | |
23 | contractor. Advertising in any form by an unregistered contractor shall be prohibited, including | |
24 | alphabetical or classified directory listings, vehicles, business cards, and all other forms of | |
25 | advertisements. The violations could result in a penalty being assessed by the board per | |
26 | administrative procedures established. | |
27 | (i) The board may publish, revoke, or suspend registrations and the date the registration | |
28 | was suspended or revoked on a quarterly basis. | |
29 | (ii) Use of the word "license" in any form of advertising when only registered may subject | |
30 | the registrant or those required to be registered to a fine of one hundred dollars ($100) for each | |
31 | offense at the discretion of the board. | |
32 | (m) The contractor must see that permits required by the state building code are secured on | |
33 | behalf of the owner prior to commencing the work involved. The contractor's registration number | |
34 | must be affixed to the permit as required by the state building code. | |
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1 | (n) The board may assess an interest penalty of twelve percent (12%) annually when a | |
2 | monetary award is ordered by the board. | |
3 | (o) All work performed, including labor and materials, in excess of one thousand dollars | |
4 | ($1,000) shall be accompanied by a contract in writing. Contracts required pursuant to this | |
5 | subsection shall include a location on or near the signature line location on or in which the parties | |
6 | to the contract shall initial to evidence the receipt of certain consumer education materials or | |
7 | information approved and provided by the board to the contractor. The educational materials and/or | |
8 | information shall include, but not be limited to, the following notice and shall be provided by the | |
9 | contractor to the homeowner: | |
10 | NOTICE OF POSSIBLE MECHANIC'S LIEN | |
11 | To: Insert name of owner, lessee or tenant, or owner of less than the simple fee. | |
12 | The undersigned is about to perform work and/or furnish materials for the construction, | |
13 | erection, alterations or repair upon the land at (INSERT ADDRESS) under contract with you. This | |
14 | is a notice that the undersigned and any other persons who provide labor and materials for the | |
15 | improvement under contract with the undersigned may file a mechanic's lien upon the land in the | |
16 | event of nonpayment to them. It is your responsibility to assure yourself that those other persons | |
17 | under contract with the undersigned receive payment for their work performed and materials | |
18 | furnished for the construction, erection, alteration or repair upon the land. Failure to adhere to the | |
19 | provisions of this subsection may result in a one-thousand-dollar ($1,000) fine against the | |
20 | contractor and shall not affect the right of any other person performing work or furnishing materials | |
21 | of claiming a lien pursuant to chapter 28 of title 34. However, such person failing to provide such | |
22 | notice shall indemnify and hold harmless any owner, lessee or tenant, or owner of less than the fee | |
23 | simple from any payment or costs incurred on account of any liens claims by those not in privity | |
24 | with them, unless such owner, lessee or tenant, or owner of less than the fee simple shall not have | |
25 | paid such person. | |
26 | (p) Contracts entered into must contain notice of right of rescission as stipulated in all | |
27 | pertinent Rhode Island consumer protection laws and/or § 5-65-27 if applicable. | |
28 | (q) The contractor must stipulate whether or not all the proper insurances are in effect for | |
29 | each job contracted. | |
30 | (r) Contractors who are in compliance with the provisions of this subsection shall be | |
31 | exempt from the requirements of § 34-28-4.1. | |
32 | (s) In addition to the requirements of this chapter, contractors engaged in well drilling | |
33 | activities shall also be subject to regulations pertaining to licensing and registration promulgated | |
34 | by the contractors' registration and licensing board pursuant to chapter 65.2 of this title and § 46- | |
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1 | 13.2-4. | |
2 | 5-65-7.1. Notice of cancellation or failure to renew policies. | |
3 | Upon the cancellation or failure to renew, the insurance company having written a liability | |
4 | policy, as described in § 5-65-7, shall notify the director of the contractors' registration and | |
5 | licensing board of the cancellation or failure to renew. The policy shall continue in effect until ten | |
6 | (10) days after written notice of the cancellation is given to the director of the contractors' | |
7 | registration and licensing board of the cancellation or termination of the liability policy by the | |
8 | issuing insurance company or companies in addition to any other notices which may be required | |
9 | by law. Any insurance company that fails to notify the director contractors’ registration and | |
10 | licensing board, as required in this section shall be subject to prosecution for a misdemeanor and | |
11 | upon conviction of that offense may be punished by a fine of not more than two hundred fifty | |
12 | dollars ($250) for each offense and shall be responsible for any claims, fines or penalties from any | |
13 | parties resulting from lack of notice. All criminal actions for any violation of this section shall be | |
14 | prosecuted by the attorney general. The attorney general shall prosecute actions to enforce the | |
15 | payment penalties and fines at the request of the director of the department of business regulation | |
16 | or the director’s designee. | |
17 | 5-65-10. Grounds for discipline -- Injunctions. | |
18 | (a) The board or commission office may revoke, suspend, or refuse to issue, reinstate, or | |
19 | reissue a certificate of registration if the board or commission office determines after notice and | |
20 | opportunity for a hearing: | |
21 | (1) That the registrant or applicant has violated § 5-65-3. | |
22 | (2) That the insurance required by § 5-65-7 is not currently in effect. | |
23 | (3) That the registrant, licensee or applicant has engaged in conduct as a contractor that is | |
24 | dishonest or fraudulent that the board finds injurious to the welfare of the public. | |
25 | (4) Has violated a rule or order of the board. | |
26 | (5) That the registrant has knowingly assisted an unregistered person to act in violation of | |
27 | this chapter. | |
28 | (6) That a lien was filed on a structure under chapter 28 of title 34 because the registrant or | |
29 | applicant wrongfully failed to perform a contractual duty to pay money to the person claiming the | |
30 | lien. | |
31 | (7) That the registrant has substantially violated state or local building codes. | |
32 | (8) That the registrant has made false or fraudulent statements on his or her application. | |
33 | (9) That a registrant has engaged in repeated acts in violation of this chapter and the board's | |
34 | rules and regulations inclusive of substandard workmanship and any misuse of registration. | |
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1 | (10) The board may take disciplinary action against a contractor who performed work or | |
2 | arranged to perform, while the registration was suspended, invalidated or revoked. Deposits | |
3 | received by a contractor and ordered returned are not considered a monetary award when no | |
4 | services or supplies have been received. | |
5 | (11) That the registrant breached a contract. | |
6 | (12) That the registrant performed negligent and/or improper work. | |
7 | (13) That the registrant has advertised with a license number instead of using a registration | |
8 | number. | |
9 | (14) That the registrant has failed to complete a project(s) for construction or a willful | |
10 | failure to comply with the terms of a contract or written warranty. | |
11 | (15) That the registrant has misrepresented his registration status as valid when said | |
12 | registration is suspended, revoked, invalidated, inactive or unregistered as required by the board. | |
13 | (16) That the registrant has failed to pay a fine or comply with any order issued by the | |
14 | board. | |
15 | (17) That the registrant has failed to obtain or maintain the required continuing | |
16 | education/units required by the board, or failed to sign the affidavit statement required by the board | |
17 | for registration or renewal. | |
18 | (18) When a violation for hiring a non-registered contractor, working as a non-registered | |
19 | contractor, or not maintaining the insurance required is issued, the registration may become | |
20 | invalidated until the violation is resolved or hearing is requested on this offense. | |
21 | (19) That the registrant has violated any of the provisions of chapters 25-3, 28-3, 28-12, | |
22 | 28-14, 28-36, 28-50, and/or 37-13. A finding that the registrant has violated any of those chapters | |
23 | shall not be grounds for imposition of a monetary penalty under subsection (c) below. | |
24 | (b) In addition to all other remedies, when it appears to the board that a person has engaged | |
25 | in, or is engaging in, any act, practice or transaction which violates the provisions of this chapter, | |
26 | the board may direct the attorney general to apply to the court for an injunction restraining the | |
27 | person from violating the provisions of this chapter. An injunction shall not be issued for failure to | |
28 | maintain the list provided for in § 5-65-3(h) unless the court determines that the failure is | |
29 | intentional. | |
30 | (c)(1) For each first violation of a particular section of this chapter or any rule or regulation | |
31 | promulgated by the board, a fine not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000) may be imposed after | |
32 | a hearing by the board. Provided, further, that the board at its discretion may, after a hearing, impose | |
33 | an additional fine up to but not to exceed the face value of the contract or the actual damages caused | |
34 | by the contractor, whichever shall be greater. Where the claim is for actual damages the board shall | |
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1 | require proof satisfactory to the board indicating said damages. Where corrective work is completed | |
2 | as ordered by the board, the fine assessed may be reduced as determined by the board. Fines and | |
3 | decisions on claims or violations inclusive of monetary awards can be imposed against registered | |
4 | as well as contractors required to be registered by the board. | |
5 | (2) For each subsequent violation of a particular subsection of this chapter or of a rule or | |
6 | regulation promulgated by the board, a fine not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000) may be | |
7 | imposed after a hearing by the board. All fines collected by the board shall be deposited as general | |
8 | revenues until June 30, 2008 to be used to enforce the provisions of this chapter. Beginning July 1, | |
9 | 2008, all fines collected by the board shall be deposited into a restricted receipt account to be used | |
10 | to enforce the provisions of this chapter. | |
11 | (3) For the first violation of § 5-65-3, only for non-registered contractors, a fine of up to | |
12 | five thousand dollars ($5,000) for a first offense and up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each | |
13 | subsequent offense shall be imposed. | |
14 | (d) The hearing officer, upon rendering a conclusion may require the registrant, in lieu of | |
15 | a fine, to attend continuing education courses as appropriate. Failure to adhere to the requirement | |
16 | could result in immediate revocation of registration. | |
17 | (e) The expiration of a registration by operation of law or by order or decision of the board | |
18 | or a court, or the voluntary surrender of registration by the registrant, does not deprive the board of | |
19 | jurisdiction, an action or disciplinary proceeding against the registrant or to render a decision | |
20 | suspending or revoking a registration. | |
21 | (f) In emergency situations, when a registrant is acting to the detriment of the health, | |
22 | welfare and safety of the general public, the board's executive director of the department of business | |
23 | regulation or the director’s designee may revoke or suspend a registration without a hearing for just | |
24 | cause for a period of thirty (30) days. | |
25 | (g) A registrant may petition the board to partially or completely expunge his or her record | |
26 | provided that notice of said expungement proceedings has been provided to the claimant who was | |
27 | the subject of the violation. For purposes of this subsection "notice" shall consist of a mailing to | |
28 | the last known address of the claimant and need not be actual notice. | |
29 | (h) Any person or contractor, registered or not, who uses another contractor's registration, | |
30 | contractor's registration identification card, or allows another person to use their contractor's | |
31 | registration fraudulently in any way, will be subject to a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars | |
32 | ($10,000). | |
33 | (i) When the use of fraudulent advertising entices an individual to hire an unregistered | |
34 | contractor, a fine of up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) may be imposed by the board. | |
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1 | (j) It shall be unlawful to retain a social security number or copy of the driver's license from | |
2 | a registrant by a building official as a condition of obtaining a permit. | |
3 | (k) The board is further authorized upon certain findings or violations to: | |
4 | (1) Put a lien on property held by a contractor. | |
5 | (2) Take action on registrant when the continuing education requirements have failed to be | |
6 | attained as required in rules and regulations. | |
7 | (3) When upon investigation a complaint reveals: serious code infractions; unsatisfied | |
8 | mechanic's liens; abandonment of a job for a substantial period of time without apparent cause; or | |
9 | any other conduct detrimental to the public, the board can double the fines. | |
10 | (4) Suspend, revoke or refuse to issue, reinstate or reissue a certificate of registration to | |
11 | any registrant who has contracted, advertised, offered to contract or submitted a bid when the | |
12 | contractor's registration is suspended, revoked, invalidated or inactive or unregistered as required | |
13 | by the board. | |
14 | (l) No person shall register as a contractor with the contractors' registration board for the | |
15 | purpose of deceiving or circumventing the registration process by enabling a person whose | |
16 | registration has been suspended or revoked to conduct business. Provided, further, that any person | |
17 | who, in good faith relies on the board or the contractor's registration website for information | |
18 | regarding registration status of another shall be exempt from violations pursuant to this section if | |
19 | the information is not correct. Violators of this section shall be jointly and individually liable for | |
20 | damages resulting from their activities as contractors pursuant to this chapter. Violations of this | |
21 | subsection may result in a revocation of registration and/or fines not to exceed ten thousand dollars | |
22 | ($10,000) and/or up to one year in jail. Furthermore, the director of the department of business | |
23 | regulation or the director’s designee shall require that all applicants for registration shall swear by | |
24 | way of affidavit sign a statement that they are aware of this provision and its implications. | |
25 | (m) Upon receipt of notice of a final determination, after the exhaustion of all appeals, by | |
26 | the department of labor and training, consent agreement, or court order that a registered contractor | |
27 | violated any of the provisions of chapters 25-3, 28-3, 28-12, 28-14, 28-36, 28-50, and/or 37-13 and | |
28 | owes any wages, benefits or other sums arising out of such violation, the board shall immediately | |
29 | suspend the contractor's registration of such contractor in accordance with this subsection. The | |
30 | suspension shall continue until all wages, benefits, or other sums owed have been paid or the | |
31 | contractor has entered into a written, binding agreement to pay the same acceptable to the | |
32 | department of labor and training and is not in default in payment under such agreement. If the | |
33 | contractor fails to remain current in payment under any such agreement, the department of labor | |
34 | and training shall notify the contractors' registration board and the suspension shall be imposed or | |
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1 | reinstated as the case may be. The foregoing sanction is mandatory, but shall not be grounds for | |
2 | imposition of a monetary penalty under subsection (c) above. | |
3 | (n) When the registration of a contractor has been revoked or suspended, neither the | |
4 | contractor nor any successor entity or sole proprietorship that: (1) Has one or more of the same | |
5 | principals or officers as the partnership, limited partnership, limited liability partnership, joint | |
6 | venture, limited liability company, corporation, or sole proprietorship as the subject contractor; and | |
7 | (2) Is engaged in the same or equivalent trade or activity shall be qualified to register or retain a | |
8 | registration as a contractor under this chapter, unless and until the board shall determine that the | |
9 | basis of the revocation or suspension has been satisfied or removed and that the registrant or | |
10 | applicant otherwise satisfies the requirements for registration under this chapter. Notwithstanding | |
11 | the foregoing, a natural person may obtain relief from the application and enforcement of this | |
12 | subsection as to him or her, if he or she can establish that he or she was not responsible for, and did | |
13 | not acquiesce to the misconduct which is the basis of the revocation, suspension or denial of | |
14 | registration. | |
15 | 5-65-15. Officers -- Quorum -- Compensation and expenses. | |
16 | (a) The board shall select from among its members a chairperson, a vice chairperson and | |
17 | any other officers for the terms and with the duties and powers necessary for the performance of | |
18 | their duties that the board determines. | |
19 | (b) A majority of the members of the board shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of | |
20 | business. | |
21 | (c) The board shall have an executive director a member of staff who shall attend all | |
22 | meetings and shall direct the conduct of any investigation which may be necessary in the | |
23 | preparation of any hearing. The executive director shall be a member of the classified service on | |
24 | the staff of the state building commissioner and shall be compensated as appropriate for the required | |
25 | expertise. | |
26 | 5-65-15.1. Staff. | |
27 | (a) The state building code commission office shall provide the board with appropriate | |
28 | staff, including hearing officials and investigators, who shall perform their duties under the | |
29 | administrative supervision of the executive director of the department of business regulation or the | |
30 | director’s designee. | |
31 | (b) The board may delegate the powers, functions and duties to the provided staff. | |
32 | 5-65-20. Administrative hearings. | |
33 | (a) Contested claims or cases, contested enforcement proceedings, and contested | |
34 | administrative fines shall be heard, in accordance with the Administrative Procedures Act, chapter | |
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1 | 35 of title 42, and the administrative regulations promulgated by the board, by the hearings | |
2 | officer(s) assigned by the executive director of the department of business regulation or the | |
3 | director’s designee of the board. | |
4 | (b) The board has jurisdiction to hear appeals from decisions of the hearing officer(s), and | |
5 | may by regulation impose a filing fee, not to exceed twenty dollars ($20.00), for any appeal. | |
6 | (c) Notwithstanding the preceding, the executive director of the department of business | |
7 | regulation or the director’s designee for the board is authorized to resolve contested enforcement | |
8 | or claim proceedings through informal disposition pursuant to regulations promulgated by the | |
9 | board. | |
10 | SECTION 2. Effective January 1, 2020, Section 5-84-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 5- | |
11 | 84 entitled "Division of Building, Design and Fire Professionals" is hereby amended to read as | |
12 | follows: | |
13 | 5-84-3. Division membership. | |
14 | The division consists of the membership of the office of the state fire marshal, the fire | |
15 | safety code board of review and appeal, and the office of the state building office. commissioner, | |
16 | the board of registration for professional engineers, board of registration for professional land | |
17 | surveyors, board of examination and registration of architects, the board of examiners of landscape | |
18 | architects, and the contractors' registration and licensing board. | |
19 | SECTION 3. Effective January 1, 2020, Section 5-84 of the General Laws entitled | |
20 | "Division of Building, Design and Fire Professionals" is hereby amended by adding thereto the | |
21 | following section: | |
22 | 5-84-3. 1. Establishment of the state building office. | |
23 | (a) There shall be the state building office within the department of business regulation's | |
24 | division of building, design and fire professionals which shall consist of the office of the state | |
25 | building commissioner, the board of registration for professional engineers, the board of | |
26 | registration for professional land surveyors, the board of examination and registration of architects, | |
27 | the board of examiners of landscape architects, and the contractors' registration and licensing board. | |
28 | (b) The department of business regulation is hereby designated as the administrative entity | |
29 | responsible for the operation of the state building office. In the discretion of the director of business | |
30 | regulation, the department shall provide appropriate staff support to the state building office, and | |
31 | any such staff may be shared within the state building office as necessary. | |
32 | SECTION 4. Effective January 1, 2020, Sections 23-27.3-100.1.3, 23-27.3-100.1.4, 23- | |
33 | 27.3-100.1.5.1, 23-27.3-107.2, 23-27.3-107.8, 23-27.3-107.9, 23-27.3-108.1.3.1, 23-27.3-108.2 | |
34 | and 23-27.3-118.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-27.3 entitled "State Building Code" are | |
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| |
1 | hereby amended to read as follows: | |
2 | 23-27.3-100.1.3. Creation of the state building code standards committee. | |
3 | (a) There is created as an agency of state government a state building code standards | |
4 | committee that shall adopt, promulgate, and administer a state building code for the purpose of | |
5 | regulating the design, construction, and use of buildings or structures previously erected, in | |
6 | accordance with a rehabilitation building and fire code for existing buildings and structures | |
7 | developed pursuant to chapter 29.1 of this title, and to make any amendments to them as they, from | |
8 | time to time, deem necessary or desirable, the building code to include any code, rule, or regulation | |
9 | incorporated in the code by reference. | |
10 | (b) A standing subcommittee is made part of the state building code standards committee | |
11 | to promulgate and administer a state housing and property maintenance code for the purpose of | |
12 | establishing minimum requirements and standards and to regulate the occupancy and use of existing | |
13 | premises, structures, buildings, equipment, and facilities, and to make amendments to them as | |
14 | deemed necessary. | |
15 | (c) A joint committee, with membership as set forth in § 23-29.1-2(a) from the state | |
16 | building code standards committee, shall develop and recommend for adoption and promulgation, | |
17 | a rehabilitation building and fire code for existing buildings and structures, which code shall include | |
18 | building code elements to be administered by the state building code standards committee as the | |
19 | authority having jurisdiction over the elements. | |
20 | (d) The state building code standards committee shall be housed within the office of the | |
21 | state building commissioner office. | |
22 | 23-27.3-100.1.4. Appointment and qualifications of the committee. | |
23 | (a) The building code standards committee shall be composed of twenty-five (25) | |
24 | members, residents of the state who shall be appointed by the governor with the advice and consent | |
25 | of the senate. Eight (8) members are to be appointed for terms of one year each, seven (7) for a | |
26 | term of two (2) years each, and ten (10) for terms of three (3) years each. Annually, thereafter, the | |
27 | governor, with the advice and consent of the senate, shall appoint members to the committee to | |
28 | succeed those whose terms expired; the members to serve for terms of three (3) years each and until | |
29 | their successors are appointed and qualified. Two (2) members shall be architects registered in the | |
30 | state; three (3) shall be professional engineers registered in the state, one specializing in | |
31 | mechanical, one specializing in structural, and one specializing in electrical engineering; one | |
32 | landscape architect, registered in the state; one full-time certified electrical inspector; two (2) shall | |
33 | be builders or superintendents of building construction; one shall be a public health official; one | |
34 | shall be a qualified fire code official; two (2) shall be from the Rhode Island building trades council; | |
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1 | two (2) shall be from the Rhode Island Builders Association; one shall be a holder of Class "A" | |
2 | electrician's license; one shall be a master plumber; two (2) shall be from the general public; three | |
3 | (3) shall be building officials in office, one from a municipality with a population of sixty thousand | |
4 | (60,000) persons or more, one from a municipality with a population of over twenty thousand | |
5 | (20,000) persons but less than sixty thousand (60,000), and one from a municipality with a | |
6 | population of less than twenty thousand (20,000) persons; one shall be a minimum housing official | |
7 | in office from one of the local municipalities; and two (2) residents of the state who shall be persons | |
8 | with disabilities as defined in § 42-87-1. | |
9 | (b) All members shall have no less than five (5) years practical experience in their | |
10 | profession or business. The committee shall elect its own chairperson and may elect from among | |
11 | its members such other officers as it deems necessary. Thirteen (13) members of the board shall | |
12 | constitute a quorum and the vote of a majority vote of those present shall be required for action. | |
13 | The committee shall adopt rules and regulations for procedure. The state building commissioner | |
14 | shall serve as the executive secretary to the committee. The committee shall have the power, within | |
15 | the limits of appropriations provided therefor, to employ such assistance as may be necessary to | |
16 | conduct business. | |
17 | (c) Members of the commission committee shall be removable by the governor pursuant to | |
18 | § 36-1-7 and for cause only, and removal solely for partisan or personal reasons unrelated to | |
19 | capacity or fitness for the office shall be unlawful. | |
20 | (d) The state housing and property maintenance code subcommittee shall be composed of | |
21 | nine (9) members, residents of the state. Five (5) of these members are to be current members of | |
22 | the state building code standards committee and are to be appointed by that committee. The four | |
23 | (4) remaining members are to be appointed by the governor, with the advice and consent of the | |
24 | senate. The four (4) appointed by the governor, with the advice and consent of the senate, shall | |
25 | initially be appointed on a staggered term basis, one for one year, one for two (2) years, and two | |
26 | (2) for three (3) years. Annually thereafter, the building code standards committee, and the | |
27 | governor, with the advice and consent of the senate, shall appoint the subcommittee members, for | |
28 | which they are respectively responsible, to succeed those whose terms have expired; the members | |
29 | to serve for terms of three (3) years each and until their successors are appointed and qualified. Of | |
30 | the members appointed by the committee, one shall be a full-time certified electrical inspector; one | |
31 | shall be a master plumber and mechanical equipment expert; one shall be a builder or | |
32 | superintendent of building construction; one member shall be a qualified state fire code official; | |
33 | one shall be a property manager; and one shall be a current minimum housing official from a local | |
34 | municipality. The four (4) members to be appointed by the governor, with the advice and consent | |
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| |
1 | of the senate, shall all be current minimum housing officials from local municipalities. One shall | |
2 | be from a municipality with a population of sixty thousand (60,000) persons or more, two (2) from | |
3 | municipalities with a population of over twenty thousand (20,000) persons but less than sixty | |
4 | thousand (60,000), and one from a municipality with a population of less than twenty thousand | |
5 | (20,000) persons. | |
6 | 23-27.3-100.1.5.1. Housing and maintenance code -- Powers and duties of the building | |
7 | code standards committee. | |
8 | (a) The committee shall have the authority to adopt and promulgate a housing and | |
9 | maintenance code which shall be reasonably consistent with recognized and accepted standards | |
10 | and codes promoted by national model code organizations. The code shall be submitted to the | |
11 | legislature for adoption and amendments as required. Once adopted by the legislature, the law shall | |
12 | not be amended by the cities and towns. The committee shall have the singular authority to submit | |
13 | further amendments to the legislature as required. These new provisions shall replace, and/or amend | |
14 | the existing provisions of the Minimum Housing Standards, chapter 24.2 of title 45, and the | |
15 | Housing, Maintenance and Occupancy Code, chapter 24.3 of title 45. Once adopted by the | |
16 | legislature, the laws shall not be amended by the cities and towns without prior approval of the | |
17 | committee and subsequently the legislature. The state housing and property maintenance code | |
18 | subcommittee shall carry out its responsibilities to the building code standards committee by acting | |
19 | as an entity of the committee in administering the code, by recommending needed code | |
20 | amendments, by promulgating the code, and by serving as the board of standards and appeals for | |
21 | the code. | |
22 | (b) The subcommittee shall also have a recording secretary who shall attend all meetings | |
23 | and direct the conduct of any investigation which may be necessary in the preparation of any | |
24 | hearing. The recording secretary shall be a member of the classified service on the staff of the state | |
25 | building commissioner office and shall be compensated as appropriate for the expertise required. | |
26 | The administration and appeals procedures pertaining to these laws shall remain in the prerogatives | |
27 | of the local municipalities and the legislature. | |
28 | (c) Within ninety (90) days after the end of each fiscal year, the committee shall approve | |
29 | and submit an annual report to the governor, the speaker of the house of representatives, the | |
30 | president of the senate, and the secretary of state, of its activities during that fiscal year. The report | |
31 | shall provide: an operating statement summarizing meetings or hearings held, including meeting | |
32 | minutes, subjects addressed, decisions rendered, applications considered and their disposition, rules | |
33 | or regulations promulgated, studies conducted, policies and plans developed, approved, or | |
34 | modified, and programs administered or initiated; a consolidated financial statement of all funds | |
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1 | received and expended including the source of the funds, a listing of any staff supported by these | |
2 | funds, and a summary of any clerical, administrative or technical support received; a summary of | |
3 | performance during the previous fiscal year including accomplishments, shortcomings and | |
4 | remedies; a synopsis of hearings, complaints, suspensions, or other legal matters related to the | |
5 | authority of the committee; a summary of any training courses held pursuant to this chapter; a | |
6 | briefing on anticipated activities in the upcoming fiscal year, and findings and recommendations | |
7 | for improvements. The report shall be posted electronically on the websites of the general assembly | |
8 | and the secretary of state pursuant to the provisions of § 42-20-8.2. The director of the department | |
9 | of administration shall be responsible for the enforcement of the provisions of this section. | |
10 | (d) To conduct a training course for newly appointed and qualified members within six (6) | |
11 | months of their qualification or designation. The course shall be developed by the chair of the | |
12 | committee, be approved by the committee, and be conducted by the chair of the committee. The | |
13 | committee may approve the use of any committee and/or staff members and/or individuals to assist | |
14 | with training. The training course shall include instruction in the following areas: the provisions of | |
15 | chapters 42-46, 36-14 and 38-2; and the committee's rules and regulations. The director of the | |
16 | department of administration shall, within ninety (90) days of June 16, 2006, prepare and | |
17 | disseminate training materials relating to the provisions of chapters 42-46, 36-14, and 38-2. | |
18 | 23-27.3-107.2. Alternate local building official. | |
19 | The appropriate local authority shall appoint an alternate building official to act on behalf | |
20 | of the building official during any period of disability caused by, but not limited to, illness, absence, | |
21 | or conflict of interest. The alternate building official shall meet the qualifications of § 23-27.3- | |
22 | 107.5. The appropriate local authority shall appoint an alternate local building official within ten | |
23 | (10) calendar days or request the commissioner's state building office's services as allowed in § 23- | |
24 | 27.3-107.3. When the state building commissioner's office's services are used due to the lack of a | |
25 | local building official, the salary and operating expenses of the commissioner or his or her designee | |
26 | shall be reimbursed to the commissioner's account state as allowed by § 23-27.3-108.2(c). | |
27 | 23-27.3-107.8. Restriction on employees' activities. | |
28 | Neither the building commissioner, nor any full-time building officials, or full-time local | |
29 | inspectors, as defined in this code, shall be engaged in, or directly or indirectly connected with, the | |
30 | furnishing of labor, materials, or appliances for the construction, alteration, or maintenance of any | |
31 | building or structure, or the preparation of plans or specifications therefor for the state, in the case | |
32 | of the building commissioner, or within the municipality in which he or she is respectively | |
33 | employed in the case of a building official or local inspector unless the individual is the owner of | |
34 | the building or structure; nor shall any officer or employee associated with the state building office | |
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| |
1 | department of the state or municipality engage in any work which conflicts with his or her official | |
2 | duties or with the interests of the department of business regulation. | |
3 | 23-27.3-107.9. Relief from personal responsibility. | |
4 | The state building commissioner, the members and staff of the building code standards | |
5 | committee and the board of standards and appeals, the building official, officer, or employee | |
6 | charged with the enforcement, administration and/or review of this code, while acting for the state | |
7 | or a municipality, shall not thereby render himself or herself liable personally, and he or she is | |
8 | hereby relieved from all personal liability for any damages that may accrue to persons or property | |
9 | as a result of any act required or permitted in the discharge of his or her official duties. Any suit | |
10 | instituted against any of these officers or employees because of an act performed by him or her in | |
11 | the lawful discharge of his or her duties and under the provisions of this code shall be defended by | |
12 | the legal representative of the state in the case of the members and staff of the building code | |
13 | standards committee and the board of standards and appeals, and the building commissioner or his | |
14 | or her agents or by the legal representative of the municipality, in the case of the building official, | |
15 | officer, or employee, until the final determination of the proceedings. In no case shall members and | |
16 | staff of the building code standards committee and the board of standards and appeals, the state | |
17 | building commissioner, building official, or any of their subordinates be liable for costs or damages | |
18 | in any action, suit, or proceeding that may be instituted pursuant to the provisions of this code and | |
19 | the members and staff of the building code standards committee and the board of standards and | |
20 | appeals, the state building commissioner or his or her agents or an officer of the department of state | |
21 | building inspection office, acting in good faith and without malice and within the scope of their | |
22 | employment, is free from liability for acts performed under any of its provisions or by reason of | |
23 | any act or omission in the performance of his or her official duties in connection with this code. | |
24 | 23-27.3-108.1.3.1. Test results. | |
25 | Copies of the results of all the tests shall be forwarded to the committee after completion | |
26 | of the tests within ten (10) days, and shall be kept on file in the permanent records of the state | |
27 | building department office. | |
28 | 23-27.3-108.2. State building commissioner's duties. | |
29 | (a) This code shall be enforced by the state building commissioner as to any structures or | |
30 | buildings or parts thereof that are owned or are temporarily or permanently under the jurisdiction | |
31 | of the state or any of its departments, commissions, agencies, or authorities established by an act | |
32 | of the general assembly, and as to any structures or buildings or parts thereof that are built upon | |
33 | any land owned by or under the jurisdiction of the state. | |
34 | (b) Permit fees for the projects shall be established by the committee. The fees shall be | |
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1 | deposited as general revenues. | |
2 | (c)(1) The local cities and towns shall charge each permit applicant an additional .1 (.001) | |
3 | percent levy of the total construction cost for each permit issued. The levy shall be limited to a | |
4 | maximum of fifty dollars ($50.00) for each of the permits issued for one and two (2) family | |
5 | dwellings. This additional levy shall be transmitted monthly to the state building commission office | |
6 | at the department of business regulation, and shall be used to staff and support the purchase or lease | |
7 | and operation of a web-accessible service and/or system to be utilized by the state and | |
8 | municipalities for uniform, statewide electronic plan review, permit management and inspection | |
9 | system and other programs described in this chapter. The fee levy shall be deposited as general | |
10 | revenues. | |
11 | (2) On or before July 1, 2013, the building commissioner shall develop a standard statewide | |
12 | process for electronic plan review, permit management and inspection. | |
13 | (3) On or before December 1, 2013, the building commissioner, with the assistance of the | |
14 | office of regulatory reform, shall implement the standard statewide process for electronic plan | |
15 | review, permit management and inspection. In addition, the building commissioner shall develop | |
16 | a technology and implementation plan for a standard web-accessible service or system to be utilized | |
17 | by the state and municipalities for uniform, statewide electronic plan review, permit management | |
18 | and inspection. | |
19 | (d) The building commissioner shall, upon request by any state contractor described in § | |
20 | 37-2-38.1, review, and when all conditions for certification have been met, certify to the state | |
21 | controller that the payment conditions contained in § 37-2-38.1 have been met. | |
22 | (e) The building commissioner shall coordinate the development and implementation of | |
23 | this section with the state fire marshal to assist with the implementation of § 23-28.2-6. | |
24 | (f) The building commissioner shall submit, in coordination with the state fire marshal, a | |
25 | report to the governor and general assembly on or before April 1, 2013, and each April 1st | |
26 | thereafter, providing the status of the web-accessible service and/or system implementation and | |
27 | any recommendations for process or system improvement. | |
28 | 23-27.3-118.1. Special fees. | |
29 | The payment of the fee for construction, alteration, removal, or demolition, and for all work | |
30 | done in connection with, or concurrently with, the work contemplated by a building permit, shall | |
31 | not relieve the applicant or holder of the permit from the payment of other fees that may be | |
32 | prescribed in accordance with § 23-27.3-119.0 for water taps, sewer connections, electrical and | |
33 | plumbing permits, erection of signs and display structures, marquees, or other appurtenant | |
34 | structures, or fees for inspections, certificates of use and occupancy for other privileges or | |
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1 | requirements, both within and without the jurisdiction of the state building department office. | |
2 | SECTION 5. Section 30-17.1-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 30-17.1 entitled "Veterans' | |
3 | Affairs" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
4 | 30-17.1-6. Establishment of the office of veterans' affairs; director. | |
5 | (a) There is hereby established within the executive branch of government an office of | |
6 | veterans' affairs. The director of the office of veterans' affairs shall be a person qualified through | |
7 | experience and training and shall be an honorably discharged war veteran of the United States | |
8 | armed forces. The director of the office of veterans' affairs shall be appointed by and report directly | |
9 | to the governor, but the office shall reside within the department of human services for | |
10 | administrative purposes. | |
11 | (b) The director of veterans' affairs shall have all such powers, consistent with law, as are | |
12 | necessary and/or convenient to effectuate the purposes of this chapter and to administer its | |
13 | functions, including, but, not limited to, the power to promulgate and adopt regulations. The | |
14 | director shall have authority to apply for, receive, and administer grants and funds from the federal | |
15 | government and all other public and private entities to accomplish the purposes of the office. | |
16 | (c) Effective July 1, 2019, the office of veterans' affairs, as established pursuant to | |
17 | subsection (a) of this section, shall be henceforth referred to and renamed as "the office of veterans | |
18 | services" and the director of veterans' affairs, established pursuant to subsection (a) of this section | |
19 | shall henceforth be referred to and renamed as the "director of veterans services." | |
20 | (d) Effective July 1, 2019, all references in the general laws to the office of veterans' affairs | |
21 | established pursuant to subsection (a) of this section and to the director of veterans' affairs | |
22 | established pursuant to subsection (a) of this section shall be deemed to mean and refer, | |
23 | respectively, to the office of veterans services and the director of veterans services. | |
24 | SECTION 6. Section 30-27-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 30-27 entitled "Veterans' | |
25 | Organizations" is hereby repealed as follows. | |
26 | 30-27-1. Appropriations for annual encampment of Spanish war veterans. | |
27 | The general assembly shall annually appropriate such sum as it may deem necessary to | |
28 | defray the expenses of the annual encampment of the united spanish war veterans, department of | |
29 | Rhode Island, to be expended under the direction of the department of human services or of any | |
30 | other department as the general assembly shall indicate and direct at any future time; and the | |
31 | controller is hereby authorized and directed to draw orders upon the general treasurer for the | |
32 | payment of that sum, or so much thereof as may be necessary from time to time, upon the receipt | |
33 | by the controller of proper vouchers approved by the director of human services, or such other | |
34 | approving authority as the general assembly may direct. | |
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1 | SECTION 7. Sections 31-38-7 and 31-38-18 of the General Laws in Chapter 31-38 entitled | |
2 | "Inspection of Motor Vehicles" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
3 | 31-38-7. Operation of official stations. | |
4 | (a) No permit for an official station shall be assigned or transferred or used at any location | |
5 | other than designated in it, and the permit shall be posted in a conspicuous place at the designated | |
6 | location. | |
7 | (b) The state certified person operating an official inspection station shall issue a certificate | |
8 | of inspection and approval upon an official form to the owner of a vehicle upon inspection of the | |
9 | vehicle and determining that its equipment required under the provisions of this chapter is in good | |
10 | condition and proper adjustment, otherwise, no certificate shall be issued. A record and report shall | |
11 | be made of every inspection and every certificate issued. The records shall be kept available for | |
12 | review by the motor vehicle inspection station commission or those employees of the department | |
13 | of revenue that the director may designate. | |
14 | (c) The following fees shall be charged for inspection and issuance of certificate of | |
15 | inspection and approval: | |
16 | (1) For every vehicle with a registered gross weight of not more than eight thousand five | |
17 | hundred pounds (8,500 lbs.), the fee shall be included with the fee charged pursuant to § 31-47.1- | |
18 | 11; | |
19 | (2) For every vehicle of a registered gross weight of more than eight thousand five hundred | |
20 | pounds (8,500 lbs.) or more, except trailers, fifteen dollars ($15.00); | |
21 | (3) For every motorcycle and electrically powered vehicle, eleven dollars ($11.00); | |
22 | (4) For every trailer or semi-trailer with a registered gross weight of more than one | |
23 | thousand pounds (1,000 lbs.), eleven dollars ($11.00); and | |
24 | (5) Provided that for the inspection of vehicles used for the transportation of persons for | |
25 | hire, as provided in § 31-22-12, and subject to an inspection pursuant to chapter 47.1 of this title, | |
26 | the fee shall be included with the fee charged pursuant to § 31-47.1-11. | |
27 | (d) The director of the department of revenue may establish a state inspection facility at | |
28 | which any motor vehicle may be reinspected at no cost to the owner. The state inspection facility | |
29 | may inspect all public conveyance vehicles or these inspections may be otherwise provided for by | |
30 | the director, or any other vehicles which in the opinion of the director of revenue, or his or her | |
31 | designee, require specific testing to ensure for the health and safety of the general public. | |
32 | (e) Any other inspections or activities which may be required to be performed at a state | |
33 | inspection facility may be performed at any official inspection station if determined by the director. | |
34 | 31-38-18. Conduct of hearings. | |
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| |
1 | The director of the department of revenuecommission shall hold and conduct hearings in | |
2 | accordance with § 31-38-17. These hearings shall be governed by rules to be adopted by the director | |
3 | of the department of revenuecommission, and the director of the department of revenuecommission | |
4 | shall not be bound by technical rules of evidence. The director of the department of | |
5 | revenuecommission may subpoena witnesses and require the producing of documental evidence, | |
6 | and shall sit as an impartial independent body in order to make decisions affecting the interest of | |
7 | the motor vehicle inspection owner and/or operator. The concurrence of a majority of the members | |
8 | present and voting of the commission is required for a decision. | |
9 | SECTION 8. Sections 31-38-15 and 31-38-16 of the General Laws in Chapter 31-38 | |
10 | entitled "Inspection of Motor Vehicles" are hereby repealed. | |
11 | 31-38-15. Motor vehicle inspection commission. | |
12 | (a) Within the department of revenue there shall be a motor vehicle inspection commission, | |
13 | referred to in this chapter as the "commission", which shall function as a unit in the department. | |
14 | The commission shall consist of seven (7) members who shall be appointed by the governor, with | |
15 | the advice and consent of the senate. In making said appointments, the governor shall give due | |
16 | consideration to including in the commission's membership one or more garage keeper(s) and/or | |
17 | inspection station owner(s). | |
18 | (b) The tenure of all members of the commission as of the effective date of this act [March | |
19 | 29, 2006] shall expire on the effective date of this act [March 29, 2006], and the governor shall | |
20 | nominate seven (7) new members as follows: | |
21 | (1) The governor shall appoint seven (7) members of the commission; three (3) of whom | |
22 | shall serve initial terms of three (3) years; two (2) of whom shall serve an initial term of two (2) | |
23 | years; and two (2) of whom shall serve an initial term of one year. | |
24 | (2) Thereafter, all members of the commission shall be appointed to serve three (3) year | |
25 | terms. | |
26 | (c) The governor shall designate one member of the commission to serve as chairperson. | |
27 | The commission may elect from among its members such other officers as they deem necessary. | |
28 | (d) No person shall be eligible for appointment to the commission after the effective date | |
29 | of this act [March 29, 2006] unless he or she is a resident of this state. | |
30 | (e) Four (4) members of the commission shall constitute a quorum. | |
31 | (f) Members of the commission shall be removable by the governor pursuant to the | |
32 | provisions of § 36-1-7 of the general laws and for cause only, and removal solely for partisan or | |
33 | personal reasons unrelated to capacity of fitness for the office shall be unlawful. | |
34 | (g) Within ninety (90) days after the end of each fiscal year, the commission shall approve | |
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1 | and submit an annual report to the governor, the speaker of the house of representatives, the | |
2 | president of the senate, and the secretary of state of its activities during that fiscal year. The report | |
3 | shall provide: an operating statement summarizing meetings or hearings held, including meeting | |
4 | minutes, subjects addressed, decisions rendered, licenses considered and their disposition, rules or | |
5 | regulations promulgated, studies conducted, policies and plans developed, approved or modified | |
6 | and programs administered or initiated; a consolidated financial statement of all funds received and | |
7 | expended including the source of the funds, a listing of any staff supported by these funds and a | |
8 | summary of any clerical, administrative or technical support received; a summary of performance | |
9 | during the previous fiscal year including accomplishments, shortcomings and remedies; a synopsis | |
10 | of hearings, complaints, suspensions or other legal matters related to the authority of the | |
11 | commission; a summary of any training courses held pursuant to the provisions of this section; a | |
12 | briefing on anticipated activities in the upcoming fiscal year; and findings and recommendations | |
13 | for improvements. The report shall be posted electronically on the general assembly and secretary | |
14 | of state's websites as prescribed in § 42-20-8.2. The director of the department of revenue shall be | |
15 | responsible for the enforcement of the provisions of this subsection. | |
16 | (h) To conduct a training course for newly appointed and qualified members within six (6) | |
17 | months of their qualification or designation. The course shall be developed by the chair of the | |
18 | commission, approved by the commission, and conducted by the chair of the commission. The | |
19 | commission may approve the use of any commission or staff members or other individuals to assist | |
20 | with training. The training course shall include instruction in the following areas: the provisions of | |
21 | chapters 42-46, 36-14, and 38-2; and the commission's rules and regulations. The director of the | |
22 | department of revenue shall, within ninety (90) days of the effective date of this act [March 29, | |
23 | 2006], prepare and disseminate training material relating to the provisions of chapters 42-46, 36- | |
24 | 14, and 38-2. | |
25 | 31-38-16. Meetings -- Compensation. | |
26 | The commission shall meet at least once a month to consider any matters that may be proper | |
27 | before it. The members of the commission shall receive no compensation for their services, but | |
28 | each member shall be reimbursed for traveling or other expenses that are actually incurred in the | |
29 | discharge of the member's duties. | |
30 | SECTION 9. Sections 35-1.1-1 through 35-1.1-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 35-1.1 | |
31 | entitled "Office of Management and Budget" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
32 | 35-1.1-1. Statement of intent. | |
33 | The purpose of this chapter is to establish a comprehensive public finance and management | |
34 | system for the State of Rhode Island that manages a data-driven budget process, monitors state | |
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1 | departments' and agencies' performance, maximizes the application for and use of federal grants | |
2 | improves the regulatory climate and ensures accountability and transparency regarding the use of | |
3 | public funds and regulatory impact. | |
4 | 35-1.1-2. Establishment of the office of management and budget. | |
5 | There is hereby established within the department of administration an office of | |
6 | management and budget. This office shall serve as the principal agency of the executive branch of | |
7 | state government for managing budgetary functions, regulatory review, performance management, | |
8 | internal audit, and federal grants management. In this capacity, the office shall: | |
9 | (1) Establish an in-depth form of data analysis within and between departments and | |
10 | agencies, creating a more informed process for resource allocation to best meet the needs of Rhode | |
11 | Island citizens; | |
12 | (2) Identify federal grant funding opportunities to support the governor's and general | |
13 | assembly's major policy initiatives and provide technical assistance with the application process | |
14 | and post-award grants management; | |
15 | (2) Analyze the impact of proposed regulations on the public and state as required by | |
16 | chapters 42-64.13 and 42-35; | |
17 | (3) Analyze federal budgetary issues and report on potential impacts to the state; | |
18 | (4) Coordinate the budget functions of the state with performance management objectives; | |
19 | (5) Maximize efficiencies in departments, agencies, advisory councils, and | |
20 | instrumentalities of the state by improving processes and prioritizing programs; | |
21 | (6) Be responsible for the internal audit function of state government and conduct audits of | |
22 | any state department, state agency, or private entity that is a recipient of state funding or state | |
23 | grants; provide management advisory and consulting services; or conduct investigations relative to | |
24 | the financial affairs or the efficiency of management, or both, of any state department or agency. | |
25 | 35-1.1-3. Director of management and budget -- Appointment and responsibilities. | |
26 | (a) Within the department of administration there shall be a director of management and | |
27 | budget who shall be appointed by the director of administration with the approval of the governor. | |
28 | The director shall be responsible to the governor and director of administration for supervising the | |
29 | office of management and budget and for managing and providing strategic leadership and direction | |
30 | to the budget officer, the performance management office, and the federal grants management | |
31 | office. | |
32 | (b) The director of management and budget shall be responsible to: | |
33 | (1) Oversee, coordinate, and manage the functions of the budget officer as set forth by | |
34 | chapter 3 of this title; program performance management as set forth by § 35-3-24.1; approval of | |
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1 | agreements with federal agencies defined by § 35-3-25; and budgeting, appropriation, and receipt | |
2 | of federal monies as set forth by chapter 41 of title 42; | |
3 | (2) Oversee the director of regulatory reform as set forth by § 42-64.13-6; | |
4 | (2) Manage federal fiscal proposals and guidelines and serve as the state clearinghouse for | |
5 | the application of federal grants; | |
6 | (3) Maximize the indirect cost recoveries by state agencies set forth by § 35-4-23.1; and | |
7 | (4) Undertake a comprehensive review and inventory of all reports filed by the executive | |
8 | office and agencies of the state with the general assembly. The inventory should include, but not | |
9 | be limited to: the type, title, and summary of reports; the author(s) of the reports; the specific | |
10 | audience of the reports; and a schedule of the reports' release. The inventory shall be presented to | |
11 | the general assembly as part of the budget submission on a yearly basis. The office of management | |
12 | and budget shall also make recommendations to consolidate, modernize the reports, and to make | |
13 | recommendations for elimination or expansion of each report. | |
14 | 35-1.1-4. Offices and functions assigned to the office of management and budget -- | |
15 | Powers and duties. | |
16 | (a) The offices assigned to the office of management and budget include the budget office, | |
17 | the office of regulatory reform, the performance management office, and the office of internal audit, | |
18 | and the federal grants management office. | |
19 | (b) The offices assigned to the office of management and budget shall: | |
20 | (1) Exercise their respective powers and duties in accordance with their statutory authority | |
21 | and the general policy established by the governor or by the director acting on behalf of the | |
22 | governor or in accordance with the powers and authorities conferred upon the director by this | |
23 | chapter; | |
24 | (2) Provide such assistance or resources as may be requested or required by the governor | |
25 | and/or the director; | |
26 | (3) Provide such records and information as may be requested or required by the governor | |
27 | and/or the director, to the extent allowed under the provisions of any applicable general or public | |
28 | law, regulation, or agreement relating to the confidentiality, privacy, or disclosure of such records | |
29 | or information; and | |
30 | (c) Except as provided herein, no provision of this chapter or application thereof shall be | |
31 | construed to limit or otherwise restrict the budget officer from fulfilling any statutory requirement | |
32 | or complying with any valid rule or regulation. | |
33 | 35-1.1-5. Federal grants management. | |
34 | (a) The office of management and budget controller shall be responsible for managing | |
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1 | federal grant applications, providing administrative assistance to agencies regarding reporting | |
2 | requirements, providing technical assistance and approving agreements with federal agencies | |
3 | pursuant to § 35-1-1. The director controller shall: | |
4 | (1) Establish state goals and objectives for maximizing the utilization of federal aid | |
5 | programs; | |
6 | (2) Ensure that the state establishes and maintains statewide federally-mandated grants | |
7 | management processes and procedures as mandated by the federal Office of Management and | |
8 | Budget; | |
9 | (3) Promulgate procedures and guidelines for all state departments, agencies, advisory | |
10 | councils, instrumentalities of the state and public higher education institutions covering | |
11 | applications for federal grants; | |
12 | (4) Require, upon request, any state department, agency, advisory council, instrumentality | |
13 | of the state or public higher education institution receiving a grant of money from the federal | |
14 | government to submit a report to the director controller of expenditures and program measures for | |
15 | the fiscal period in question; | |
16 | (5) Ensure state departments and agencies adhere to the requirements of § 42-41-5 | |
17 | regarding Legislative appropriation authority and delegation thereof; | |
18 | (6) Assist the state controller in managing and overseeing overseeing Manage and oversee | |
19 | the disbursements of federal funds in accordance with § 35-6-42; | |
20 | (7) Assist the state controller in the preparation of Prepare the statewide cost allocation | |
21 | plan and serve as the monitoring agency to ensure that state departments and agencies are working | |
22 | within the guidelines contained in the plan; and, | |
23 | (8) Provide technical assistance to agencies to ensure resolution and closure of all single | |
24 | state audit findings and recommendations made by the Auditor General related to Federal funding. | |
25 | (b) The office of management and budget Accounts and control shall serve as the Sstate | |
26 | Cclearinghouse for purposes of coordinating federal grants, aid and assistance applied for and/or | |
27 | received by any state department, agency, advisory council or instrumentality of the state. Any state | |
28 | department, agency, advisory council, or instrumentality of the state applying for federal funds, | |
29 | aids, loans, or grants shall file a summary notification of the intended application with the director | |
30 | controller. | |
31 | (1) When as a condition to receiving federal funds, the state is required to match the federal | |
32 | funds, a statement shall be filed with the notice of intent or summary of the application stating: | |
33 | (i) The amount and source of state funds needed for matching purposes; | |
34 | (ii) The length of time the matching funds shall be required; | |
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1 | (iii) The growth of the program; | |
2 | (iv) How the program will be evaluated; | |
3 | (v) What action will be necessary should the federal funds be canceled, curtailed, or | |
4 | restricted; and, | |
5 | (vi) Any other financial and program management data required by the office or by law. | |
6 | (2) Except as otherwise required, any application submitted by an executive agency for | |
7 | federal funds, aids, loans, or grants which will require state matching or replacement funds at the | |
8 | time of application or at any time in the future, must be approved by the director of the office of | |
9 | management and budget or their designated agents prior to its filing with the appropriate federal | |
10 | agency. Any application submitted by an executive agency for federal funds, aids, loans, or grants | |
11 | which will require state matching or replacement funds at the time of application or at any time in | |
12 | the future, when funds have not been appropriated for that express purpose, must be approved by | |
13 | the General Assembly in accordance with § 42-41-5. When the general assembly is not in session, | |
14 | the application shall be reported to and reviewed by the Director pursuant to rules and regulations | |
15 | promulgated by the Director. | |
16 | (3) When any federal funds, aids, loans, or grants are received by any state department, | |
17 | agency, advisory council or instrumentality of the state, a report of the amount of funds received | |
18 | shall be filed with the office; and this report shall specify the amount of funds which would | |
19 | reimburse an agency for indirect costs, as provided for under federal OMB Circular A- | |
20 | 87requirements. | |
21 | (4) The director controller may refuse to issue approval for the disbursement of any state | |
22 | or federal funds from the State Treasury as the result of any application which is not approved as | |
23 | provided by this section, or in regard to which the statement or reports required by this section were | |
24 | not filed. | |
25 | (5) The director controller shall be responsible for the orderly administration of this section | |
26 | and for issuing the appropriate guidelines and regulations from each source of funds used. | |
27 | SECTION 10. Section 35-6-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 35-6 entitled "Accounts and | |
28 | Control" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
29 | 35-6-1. Controller -- Duties in general. | |
30 | (a) Within the department of administration there shall be a controller who shall be | |
31 | appointed by the director of administration pursuant to chapter 4 of title 36. The controller shall be | |
32 | responsible for accounting and expenditure control and shall be required to: | |
33 | (1) Administer a comprehensive accounting and recording system which will classify the | |
34 | transactions of the state departments and agencies in accordance with the budget plan; | |
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1 | (2) Maintain control accounts for all supplies, materials, and equipment for all departments | |
2 | and agencies except as otherwise provided by law; | |
3 | (3) Prescribe a financial, accounting, and cost accounting system for state departments and | |
4 | agencies; | |
5 | (4) Identify federal grant funding opportunities to support the governor's and general | |
6 | assembly's major policy initiatives and provide technical assistance with the application process | |
7 | and post-award grants management; | |
8 | (5) Manage federal fiscal proposals and guidelines and serve as the state clearinghouse for | |
9 | the application of federal grants; | |
10 | (4)(6) Preaudit all state receipts and expenditures; | |
11 | (5)(7) Prepare financial statements required by the several departments and agencies, by | |
12 | the governor, or by the general assembly; | |
13 | (6) (8) Approve the orders drawn on the general treasurer; provided, that the preaudit of all | |
14 | expenditures under authority of the legislative department and the judicial department by the state | |
15 | controller shall be purely ministerial, concerned only with the legality of the expenditure and | |
16 | availability of the funds, and in no event shall the state controller interpose his or her judgment | |
17 | regarding the wisdom or expediency of any item or items of expenditure; | |
18 | (7)(9) Prepare and timely file, on behalf of the state, any and all reports required by the | |
19 | United States, including, but not limited to, the internal revenue service, or required by any | |
20 | department or agency of the state, with respect to the state payroll; and | |
21 | (8)(10) Prepare a preliminary closing statement for each fiscal year. The controller shall | |
22 | forward the statement to the chairpersons of the house finance committee and the senate finance | |
23 | committee, with copies to the house fiscal advisor and the senate fiscal and policy advisor, by | |
24 | September 1 following the fiscal year ending the prior June 30 or thirty (30) days after enactment | |
25 | of the appropriations act, whichever is later. The report shall include but is not limited to: | |
26 | (i) A report of all revenues received by the state in the completed fiscal year, together with | |
27 | the estimates adopted for that year as contained in the final enacted budget, and together with all | |
28 | deviations between estimated revenues and actual collections. The report shall also include cash | |
29 | collections and accrual adjustments; | |
30 | (ii) A comparison of actual expenditures with each of the actual appropriations, including | |
31 | supplemental appropriations and other adjustments provided for in the Rhode Island General Laws; | |
32 | (iii) A statement of the opening and closing surplus in the general revenue account; and | |
33 | (iv) A statement of the opening surplus, activity, and closing surplus in the state budget | |
34 | reserve and cash stabilization account and the state bond capital fund. | |
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1 | (b) The controller shall provide supporting information on revenues, expenditures, capital | |
2 | projects, and debt service upon request of the house finance committee chairperson, senate finance | |
3 | committee chairperson, house fiscal advisor, or senate fiscal and policy advisor. | |
4 | (c) Upon issuance of the audited annual financial statement, the controller shall provide a | |
5 | report of the differences between the preliminary financial report and the final report as contained | |
6 | in the audited annual financial statement. | |
7 | (d) The controller shall create a special fund not part of the general fund and shall deposit | |
8 | amounts equivalent to all deferred contributions under this act into that fund. Any amounts | |
9 | remaining in the fund on June 15, 2010, shall be transferred to the general treasurer who shall | |
10 | transfer such amounts into the retirement system as appropriate. | |
11 | (e) The controller shall implement a direct deposit payroll system for state employees. | |
12 | (i) There shall be no service charge of any type paid by the state employee at any time | |
13 | which shall decrease the net amount of the employee's salary deposited to the financial institution | |
14 | of the personal choice of the employee as a result of the use of direct deposit. | |
15 | (ii) Employees hired after September 30, 2014, shall participate in the direct deposit | |
16 | system. At the time the employee is hired, the employee shall identify a financial institution that | |
17 | will serve as a personal depository agent for the employee. | |
18 | (iii) No later than June 30, 2016, each employee hired before September 30, 2014, who is | |
19 | not a participant in the direct deposit system, shall identify a financial institution that will serve as | |
20 | a personal depository agent for the employee. | |
21 | (iv) The controller shall promulgate rules and regulations as necessary for implementation | |
22 | and administration of the direct deposit system, which shall include limited exceptions to required | |
23 | participation. | |
24 | SECTION 11. Section 36-4-34.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 36-4 entitled "Merit | |
25 | System" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
26 | 36-4-34.1. Transfer of state employees. | |
27 | (a) The director of the department of administration (the "director") is hereby authorized | |
28 | to transfer any employee within the executive branch who is not covered by a collective bargaining | |
29 | unit as provided in chapter 11 of this title. Any employee may be transferred to a comparable | |
30 | position upon the approval of the director of the department of administration and the personnel | |
31 | administrator. The transfers may be initially authorized for a period up to one year's duration and | |
32 | may be further extended with the approval of the personnel administrator (the "personnel | |
33 | administrator"). | |
34 | (b) Within seven (7) days of making a transfer of an any employee or further extending the | |
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| |
1 | duration of a transfer as provided by subsection (a), the director making the transfer or the personnel | |
2 | administrator extending the transfer shall file a written report with the speaker of the house, the | |
3 | senate president, and the chairpersons of the house and senate finance committees, for each | |
4 | employee to be transferred. This report shall include: | |
5 | (1) The identity of the employee; | |
6 | (2) The employee's current work position and location, and the proposed new work position | |
7 | and location; | |
8 | (3) The reason(s) for the employee transfer; | |
9 | (4) The specific task(s) to be assigned to and completed by the transferred employee; | |
10 | (5) An explanation of how the task(s) to be completed by the transferred employee relates | |
11 | to the mission of the transferee department, division or agency; and | |
12 | (6) The anticipated duration of the employee's transfer. | |
13 | SECTION 12. Sections 42-6-1, 42-6-2 and 42-6-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-6 | |
14 | entitled "Departments of State Government" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
15 | 42-6-1. Enumeration of departments. | |
16 | All the administrative powers and duties heretofore vested by law in the several state | |
17 | departments, boards, divisions, bureaus, commissions, and other agencies shall be vested in the | |
18 | following departments and other agencies which are specified in this title: | |
19 | (a) Executive department (chapter 7 of this title); | |
20 | (b) Department of state (chapter 8 of this title); | |
21 | (c) Department of the attorney general (chapter 9 of this title); | |
22 | (d) Treasury department (chapter 10 of this title); | |
23 | (e) Department of administration (chapter 11 of this title); | |
24 | (f) Department of business regulation (chapter 14 of this title); | |
25 | (g) Department of children, youth and families (chapter 72 of this title); | |
26 | (h) Department of corrections (chapter 56 of this title); | |
27 | (i) Department of elderly affairs (chapter 66 of this title); | |
28 | (ji) Department of elementary and secondary education (chapter 60 of title 16); | |
29 | (kj) Department of environmental management (chapter 17.1 of this title); | |
30 | (lk) Department of health (chapter 18 of this title); | |
31 | (ml) Board of governors for higher education (chapter 59 of title 16); | |
32 | (nm) Department of labor and training (chapter 16.1 of this title); | |
33 | (on) Department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals (chapter | |
34 | 12.1 of this title); | |
|
| |
1 | (po) Department of human services (chapter 12 of this title); | |
2 | (qp) Department of transportation (chapter 13 of this title); | |
3 | (rq) Public utilities commission (chapter 14.3 of this title); | |
4 | (sr) Department of revenue (chapter 142 of title 42); | |
5 | (ts) Department of public safety (chapter 7.3 of this title). | |
6 | 42-6-2. Heads of departments. | |
7 | The governor, secretary of state, attorney general, and general treasurer, hereinafter called | |
8 | general officers, shall each be in charge of a department. There shall also be a director of | |
9 | administration, a director of revenue, a director of public safety, a director of human services, a | |
10 | director of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals, a director of | |
11 | transportation, a director of business regulation, a director of labor and training, a director of | |
12 | environmental management, a director for children, youth and families, a director of elderly affairs, | |
13 | and a director of corrections. Each director shall hold office at the pleasure of the governor and he | |
14 | or she shall serve until his or her successor is duly appointed and qualified unless the director is | |
15 | removed from office by special order of the governor. | |
16 | 42-6-3. Appointment of directors. | |
17 | (a) At the January session following his or her election to office, the governor shall appoint | |
18 | a director of administration, a director of revenue, a director of public safety, a director of human | |
19 | services, a director of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals, a director of | |
20 | transportation, a director of business regulation, a director of labor and training, a director of | |
21 | environmental management, a director for children, youth and families, a director of elderly affairs, | |
22 | and a director of corrections. The governor shall, in all cases of appointment of a director while the | |
23 | senate is in session, notify the senate of his or her appointment and the senate shall, within sixty | |
24 | (60) legislative days after receipt of the notice, act upon the appointment. If the senate shall, within | |
25 | sixty (60) legislative days, vote to disapprove the appointment it shall so notify the governor, who | |
26 | shall forthwith appoint and notify the senate of the appointment of a different person as director | |
27 | and so on in like manner until the senate shall fail to so vote disapproval of the governor's | |
28 | appointment. If the senate shall fail, for sixty (60) legislative days next after notice, to act upon any | |
29 | appointment of which it has been notified by the governor, the person so appointed shall be the | |
30 | director. The governor may withdraw any appointment of which he or she has given notice to the | |
31 | senate, at any time within sixty (60) legislative days thereafter and before action has been taken | |
32 | thereon by the senate. | |
33 | (b) Except as expressly provided in § 42-6-9, no director of any department shall be | |
34 | appointed or employed pursuant to any contract of employment for a period of time greater than | |
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| |
1 | the remainder of the governor's current term of office. Any contract entered into in violation of this | |
2 | section after July 1, 1994 is hereby declared null and void. | |
3 | SECTION 13. Section 42-11-10 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-11 entitled | |
4 | "Department of Administration" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
5 | 42-11-10. Statewide planning program. | |
6 | (a) Findings. The general assembly finds that the people of this state have a fundamental | |
7 | interest in the orderly development of the state; the state has a positive interest and demonstrated | |
8 | need for establishment of a comprehensive, strategic state planning process and the preparation, | |
9 | maintenance, and implementation of plans for the physical, economic, and social development of | |
10 | the state; the continued growth and development of the state presents problems that cannot be met | |
11 | by the cities and towns individually and that require effective planning by the state; and state and | |
12 | local plans and programs must be properly coordinated with the planning requirements and | |
13 | programs of the federal government. | |
14 | (b) Establishment of statewide planning program. | |
15 | (1) A statewide planning program is hereby established to prepare, adopt, and amend | |
16 | strategic plans for the physical, economic, and social development of the state and to recommend | |
17 | these to the governor, the general assembly, and all others concerned. | |
18 | (2) All strategic planning, as defined in subsection ( c) of this section, undertaken by all | |
19 | departments and agencies of the executive branch unless specifically exempted, shall be conducted | |
20 | by or under the supervision of the statewide planning program. The statewide planning program | |
21 | shall consist of a state planning council, and the division of statewide planning, which shall be a | |
22 | division within the department of administration. | |
23 | (c) Strategic planning. Strategic planning includes the following activities: | |
24 | (1) Establishing or identifying general goals. | |
25 | (2) Refining or detailing these goals and identifying relationships between them. | |
26 | (3) Formulating, testing, and selecting policies and standards that will achieve desired | |
27 | objectives. | |
28 | (4) Preparing long-range or system plans or comprehensive programs that carry out the | |
29 | policies and set time schedules, performance measures, and targets. | |
30 | (5) Preparing functional, short-range plans or programs that are consistent with established | |
31 | or desired goals, objectives, and policies, and with long-range or system plans or comprehensive | |
32 | programs where applicable, and that establish measurable, intermediate steps toward their | |
33 | accomplishment of the goals, objectives, policies, and/or long-range system plans. | |
34 | (6) Monitoring the planning of specific projects and designing of specific programs of short | |
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| |
1 | duration by the operating departments, other agencies of the executive branch, and political | |
2 | subdivisions of the state to ensure that these are consistent with, and carry out the intent of, | |
3 | applicable strategic plans. | |
4 | (7) Reviewing the execution of strategic plans, and the results obtained, and making | |
5 | revisions necessary to achieve established goals. | |
6 | (d) State guide plan. Components of strategic plans prepared and adopted in accordance | |
7 | with this section may be designated as elements of the state guide plan. The state guide plan shall | |
8 | be comprised of functional elements or plans dealing with land use; physical development and | |
9 | environmental concerns; economic development; housing production; energy supply, including the | |
10 | development of renewable energy resources in Rhode Island, and energy access, use, and | |
11 | conservation; human services; climate change and resiliency, and other factors necessary to | |
12 | accomplish the objective of this section. The state guide plan shall be a means for centralizing, | |
13 | integrating, and monitoring long-range goals, policies, plans, and implementation activities related | |
14 | thereto. State agencies concerned with specific subject areas, local governments, and the public | |
15 | shall participate in the state guide planning process, which shall be closely coordinated with the | |
16 | budgeting process. | |
17 | (e) Membership of state planning council. The state planning council shall consist of the | |
18 | following members: | |
19 | (1) The director of the department of administration as chairperson; | |
20 | (2) The director, policy office, in the office of the governor, as vice-chairperson; | |
21 | (3) The governor, or his or her designee; | |
22 | (4) The budget officer; | |
23 | (5)(4) The chairperson of the housing resources commission; | |
24 | (6)(5) The highest-ranking administrative officer of the division of statewide planning, as | |
25 | secretary; | |
26 | (7)(6) The president of the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns or his or her designee | |
27 | and one official of local government who shall be appointed by the governor from a list of not less | |
28 | than three; | |
29 | (3) submitted by the Rhode Island League Cities and Towns; | |
30 | (8)(7) The executive director of the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns; | |
31 | (8) Three (3) chief elected officials of cities and towns appointed by the governor after | |
32 | consultation with the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns, one of whom shall be from a | |
33 | community with a population greater than 40,000 persons; one of whom shall be from a community | |
34 | with a population of between 20,000 and 40,000 persons; and one of whom shall be from a | |
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1 | community with a population less than 20,000 persons; | |
2 | (9) One representative of a nonprofit community development or housing organization | |
3 | appointed by the governor; | |
4 | (10) Six (6) Four (4) public members, appointed by the governor, one of whom shall be an | |
5 | employer with fewer than fifty (50) employees; and one of whom shall be an employer with greater | |
6 | than fifty (50) employees; one of whom shall represent a professional planning or engineering | |
7 | organization in Rhode Island; and one of whom shall represent a chamber of commerce or | |
8 | economic development organization; | |
9 | (11) Two (2) representatives of a private, nonprofit, environmental or environmental justice | |
10 | advocacy organizations, both to be appointed by the governor; | |
11 | (12) The director of planning and development for the city of Providence; | |
12 | (13) The director of the department of transportation; | |
13 | (14) The director of the department of environmental management; | |
14 | (15) The director of the department of health; | |
15 | (16) The chief executive officer of the commerce corporation; | |
16 | (17) The commissioner of the Rhode Island office of energy resources; | |
17 | (18) The chief executive officer of the Rhode Island public transit authority; | |
18 | (19) The executive director of Rhode Island housing; and | |
19 | (20) The executive director of the coastal resources management council.; and | |
20 | (21) The director of the Rhode Island emergency management agency. | |
21 | (t) Powers and duties of state planning council. The state planning council shall have the | |
22 | following powers and duties: | |
23 | (1) To adopt strategic plans as defined in this section and the long-range state guide plan, | |
24 | and to modify and amend any of these, following the procedures for notification and public hearing | |
25 | set forth in § 42-35-3, and to recommend and encourage implementation of these goals to the | |
26 | general assembly, state and federal agencies, and other public and private bodies; approval of | |
27 | strategic plans by the governor; and to ensure that strategic plans and the long-range state guide | |
28 | plan are consistent with the findings, intent, and goals set forth in§ 45-22.2-3, the "Rhode Island | |
29 | Comprehensive Planning and Land Use Regulation Act"; | |
30 | (2) To coordinate the planning and development activities of all state agencies, in | |
31 | accordance with strategic plans prepared and adopted as provided for by this section; | |
32 | (3) To review and comment on the proposed annual work program of the statewide | |
33 | planning program; | |
34 | (4) To adopt rules and standards and issue orders concerning any matters within its | |
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1 | jurisdiction as established by this section and amendments to it; | |
2 | (5) To establish advisory committees and appoint members thereto representing diverse | |
3 | interests and viewpoints as required in the state planning process and in the preparation or | |
4 | implementation of strategic plans. At minimum, tThe state planning council shall appoint a three | |
5 | (3) permanent committees comprised of: | |
6 | (i) A technical committee. comprised of pPublic members from different geographic areas | |
7 | of the state representing diverse interests; and along with | |
8 | (ii) Oofficials of state, local, and federal government, who shall review all proposed | |
9 | elements of the state guide plan, or amendment or repeal of any element of the plan, and shall | |
10 | advise the state planning council thereon before the council acts on any such proposal. This | |
11 | committee shall also advise the state planning council on any other matter referred to it by the | |
12 | council; and | |
13 | (6)(ii) To establish and appoint members to a An executive committee consisting of major | |
14 | participants of a Rhode Island geographic infonnation system with oversight responsibility for its | |
15 | activities.; and | |
16 | (iii) A transportation advisory committee, made up of diverse representation, including but | |
17 | not limited to municipal elected and appointed officials; representatives of various transportation | |
18 | sectors, departments, and agencies; and other groups and agencies with an interest in transportation | |
19 | operations, maintenance, construction, and policy, who shall review transportation-related plans | |
20 | and amendments and recommend action to the state planning council. | |
21 | (7)(6) To adopt, amend, and maintain, as an element of the state guide plan or as an | |
22 | amendment to an existing element of the state guide plan, standards and guidelines for the location | |
23 | of eligible, renewable energy resources and renewable energy facilities in Rhode Island with due | |
24 | consideration for the location of such resources and facilities in commercial and industrial areas, | |
25 | agricultural areas, areas occupied by public and private institutions, and property of the state and | |
26 | its agencies and corporations, provided such areas are of sufficient size, and in other areas of the | |
27 | state as appropriate. | |
28 | (8)(7) To act as the single, statewide metropolitan planning organization for transportation | |
29 | planning, and to promulgate all rules and regulations that are necessary thereto. | |
30 | (g) Division of statewide planning. | |
31 | (1) The division of statewide planning shall be the principal staff agency of the state | |
32 | planning council for preparing and/or coordinating strategic plans for the comprehensive | |
33 | management of the state's human, economic, and physical resources. The division of statewide | |
34 | planning shall recommend to the state planning council specific guidelines, standards, and | |
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1 | programs to be adopted to implement strategic planning and the state guide plan and shall undertake | |
2 | any other duties established by this section and amendments thereto. | |
3 | (2) The division of statewide planning shall maintain records (which shall consist of files | |
4 | of complete copies) of all plans, recommendations, rules, and modifications or amendments thereto | |
5 | adopted or issued by the state planning council under this section. The records shall be open to the | |
6 | public. | |
7 | (3) The division of statewide planning shall manage and administer the Rhode Island | |
8 | geographic information system of land-related resources, and shall coordinate these efforts with | |
9 | other state departments and agencies, including the University of Rhode Island, which shall provide | |
10 | technical support and assistance in the development and maintenance of the system and its | |
11 | associated data base. | |
12 | (4) The division of statewide planning shall coordinate and oversee the provision of | |
13 | technical assistance to political subdivisions of the state in preparing and implementing plans to | |
14 | accomplish the purposes, goals, objectives, policies, and/or standards of applicable elements of the | |
15 | state guide plan and shall make available to cities and towns data and guidelines that may be used | |
16 | in preparing comprehensive plans and elements thereof and in evaluating comprehensive plans and | |
17 | elements thereby. | |
18 | (h) [Deleted by P.L. 2011, ch. 215, § 4, and by P.L. 2011, ch. 313, § 4]. | |
19 | (i) The division of planning shall be the principal staff agency of the water resources board | |
20 | established pursuant to chapter 15 of title 46 ("Water Resources Board") and the water resources | |
21 | board corporate established pursuant to chapter 15.1 of title 46 ("Water Supply Facilities"). | |
22 | SECTION 14. Sections 42-12-23 and 42-12-23.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-12 | |
23 | entitled "Department of Human Services" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
24 | 42-12-23. Child care -- Planning and coordinating. | |
25 | (a) The department of human services shall be the principal agency of the state for the | |
26 | planning and coordination of state involvement in the area of child care. To accomplish this | |
27 | purpose, the department's duties shall include submitting an annual report to the governor and the | |
28 | general assembly on the status of child care in Rhode Island. | |
29 | (b) The annual report of the department shall include, but not be limited to, the following | |
30 | information: | |
31 | (1) The amount of state and federal funds spent on child care in each of the two (2) | |
32 | preceding years; | |
33 | (2) The number of child care providers licensed; pursuant to the provisions of chapter 72.1 | |
34 | of this title; | |
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1 | (3) The number of children served in state subsidized programs; | |
2 | (4) The number of taxpayers who have claimed the child care assistance and development | |
3 | tax credit pursuant to chapter 47 of title 44; | |
4 | (5) The average cost for both infant and preschool child care; | |
5 | (6) An estimate of unmet needs for child care; | |
6 | (7) Information on child care staff salaries and training and education programs, and | |
7 | (8) Recommendations for any changes in child care public policy. | |
8 | (c) The department shall cooperate with the unit of the department of children, youth, and | |
9 | families which licenses and monitors child care providers pursuant to the terms of chapter 72.1 of | |
10 | this title. | |
11 | (d)(c) The department is hereby charged with the responsibility of assuring that a statewide | |
12 | child care resource and referral system exists in this state to provide services and consumer | |
13 | information to assist parents in locating and choosing licensed, approved and/or certified providers, | |
14 | and to maintain data necessary for such referrals. | |
15 | 42-12-23.1. Quality of early care and education and school-age child care through | |
16 | voluntary quality rating system. | |
17 | (a) There is hereby established a voluntary quality rating system which will assess quality | |
18 | in early care and education programs and school-age child care. For purposes of this section, early | |
19 | care and education programs and school-age child care shall mean programs licensed under chapter | |
20 | 72.1, title 42 12.5, title 42 and approved under chapter 48, title 16, including without limitation | |
21 | child care centers, family child care homes, group family child care homes, school-age child care | |
22 | programs and preschools, but excluding child placement agencies. The voluntary quality rating | |
23 | system is established to promote continuous quality improvement of programs and to further the | |
24 | goals of Rhode Island's "starting right" initiative. | |
25 | (b) The department of human services, the department of children, youth and families, the | |
26 | department of health, the department of elementary and secondary education and other partners and | |
27 | agencies shall share information and work cooperatively with the Rhode Island quality rating | |
28 | system, a public-private partnership, to ensure that Rhode Island children have access to quality | |
29 | early care and education programs and school-age child care. | |
30 | (c) The voluntary quality rating system shall also provide a mechanism to gather data about | |
31 | program quality, and shall report this information to parents, providers and other persons interested | |
32 | in the quality of early care and education programs and school-age child care services in Rhode | |
33 | Island. | |
34 | SECTION 15. Title 42 of the General Laws entitled "STATE AFFAIRS AND | |
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| |
1 | GOVERNMENT" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: | |
2 | CHAPTER 42-12.5 | |
3 | LICENSING AND MONITORING OF CHILD DAY CARE PROVIDERS | |
4 | 42-12.5-1. Statement of purpose. | |
5 | (a) The director of the department of human services shall establish within the department | |
6 | a unit to license and monitor child day care service providers to protect the health, safety and | |
7 | wellbeing of children while being cared for as a commercial service and are away from their homes. | |
8 | (b) Services for children requiring licensure under this chapter shall include all child day | |
9 | care providers which offer services within the state, except as defined in § 42-12.5-5. | |
10 | 42-12.5-2. Definitions. | |
11 | As used in this chapter: | |
12 | (1) "Administrator of licensing" means the director of the licensing unit (or his/her | |
13 | designee) that carries out the provisions of this chapter, hereafter referred to as the "administrator". | |
14 | (2) "Applicant" means a child day care provider that applies for a license to operate. | |
15 | (3) "Child" means any person less than eighteen (18) years of age; | |
16 | (4) "Child day care" means daily care and/or supervision offered commercially to the | |
17 | public for any part of a twenty-four (24) hour day to children away from their homes. | |
18 | (5) "Child day care center" means any person, firm, corporation, association, or agency | |
19 | who, on a regular or irregular basis, receives any child under the age of sixteen (16) years, for the | |
20 | purpose of care and/or supervision, not in a home or residence, apart from the child's parent or | |
21 | guardian for any part of a twenty-four (24) hour day irrespective of compensation. It shall include | |
22 | child day care programs that are offered to employees at the worksite. It does not include preschool | |
23 | programs operating in schools approved by the commissioner of elementary and secondary | |
24 | education. | |
25 | (6) "Child day care provider" means a person or agency, which offers daily care and/or | |
26 | supervision offered commercially to the public for any part of a twenty-four (24) hour day to | |
27 | children away from their homes. | |
28 | (7) "Department" means the department of human services (DHS). | |
29 | (8) "Director" means the director of the department of human services, or the director's | |
30 | designee. | |
31 | (9) "Family day care home" means any home other than the child's home in which child | |
32 | day care in lieu of parental care and/or supervision is offered at the same time to four (4) or more | |
33 | children who are not relatives of the care giver. | |
34 | (10) "Group family day care home" means a residence occupied by an individual of at least | |
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| |
1 | twenty-one (21) years of age who provides care for not less than nine (9) and not more than twelve | |
2 | (12) children, with the assistance of one or more approved adults, for any part of a twenty-four (24) | |
3 | hour day. These programs shall be subject to yearly licensing as addressed in this chapter and shall | |
4 | comply with all applicable state and local fire, health, and zoning regulations. | |
5 | (11) "Licensee" means any person, firm, corporation, association, or agency, which holds | |
6 | a valid license under this chapter. | |
7 | (12) "Regulation" means any requirement for licensure, promulgated pursuant to this | |
8 | chapter having the force of law. | |
9 | (13) "Related" means any of the following relationships, by marriage, blood or adoption, | |
10 | even following the death or divorce of a natural parent: parent, grandparent, brother, sister, aunt, | |
11 | uncle, and first cousin. In a prosecution under this chapter or of any law relating thereto, a defendant | |
12 | who relies for a defense upon the relationship of any child to him or herself, the defendant shall | |
13 | have the burden of proof as to the relationship. | |
14 | 42-12.5-3. Powers and scope of activities. | |
15 | (a) The department shall issue, deny, suspend, and revoke licenses for, and monitor the | |
16 | operation of, facilities and programs by child day care providers, as defined in § 42-12.5-2. | |
17 | (b) The department is hereby authorized and directed to adopt, amend, and rescind | |
18 | regulations in accordance with this chapter and implement its provisions. The regulations shall be | |
19 | promulgated and become effective in accordance with the provisions of the Administrative | |
20 | Procedures Act, chapter 35 of title 42 and shall address, but need not be limited to the following: | |
21 | (1) Financial, administrative and organizational ability, and stability of the applicant; | |
22 | (2) Compliance with specific fire and safety codes and health regulations; | |
23 | (3) Character, health suitability, qualifications of child day care providers; | |
24 | (4) Staff/child ratios and workload assignments of staff providing care or supervision to | |
25 | children; | |
26 | (5) Type and content of records or documents that must be maintained to collect and retain | |
27 | information for the planning and caring for children; | |
28 | (6) Procedures and practices regarding basic child day care to ensure protection to the child; | |
29 | (7) Service to families of children in care; | |
30 | (8) Program activities, including components related to physical growth, social, emotional, | |
31 | educational, and recreational activities; | |
32 | (9) Investigation of previous employment, criminal record check and department records | |
33 | check; and | |
34 | (10) Immunization and testing requirements for communicable diseases, including, but not | |
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| |
1 | limited to, tuberculosis, of child day care providers and children at any child day-care center or | |
2 | family day-care home as is specified in regulations promulgated by the director of the department | |
3 | of health. Notwithstanding the foregoing, all licensing and monitoring authority shall remain with | |
4 | the department of human services. | |
5 | (c) The department through its licensing unit shall administer and manage the regulations | |
6 | pertaining to the licensing and monitoring of child day care providers, and shall exercise all | |
7 | statutory and administrative powers necessary to carry out its functions. | |
8 | (d) The administrator shall investigate complaints of noncompliance, and shall take | |
9 | licensing action as may be necessary pursuant to this chapter. | |
10 | (e) The administrator may: | |
11 | (1) Prescribe any forms for reports, statements, notices, and other documents deemed | |
12 | necessary; | |
13 | (2) Prepare and publish manuals and guides explaining this chapter and the regulations to | |
14 | facilitate compliance with and enforcement of the regulations; | |
15 | (3) Prepare reports and studies to advance the purpose of this chapter; | |
16 | (4) Provide consultation and technical assistance, as requested, to assist licensees in | |
17 | maintaining compliance; and | |
18 | (f) The department may promulgate rules and regulations for the establishment of child day | |
19 | care centers located on the second floor. | |
20 | (g) When the department is otherwise unsuccessful in remedying noncompliance with the | |
21 | provisions of this chapter and the regulations promulgated thereunder it may petition the superior | |
22 | court for an order enjoining the noncompliance or for any order that equity and justice may require. | |
23 | (h) The department shall collaborate with the departments of children, youth, and families, | |
24 | elementary and secondary education, and health to provide monitoring, mentoring, training, | |
25 | technical assistance, and other services which are necessary and appropriate to improving the | |
26 | quality of child day care offered by child day care providers who are certified, licensed, or approved | |
27 | by the department or the department of elementary and secondary education or who are seeking | |
28 | certification, licensure, or approval pursuant to § 42-12.5 or § 16-48-2, including non-English | |
29 | speaking providers. | |
30 | (i) Notwithstanding the transfer of licensing to and the licensing and monitoring of day and | |
31 | child care facilities to the department of human services, pursuant to chapter 42-72.1, the | |
32 | department of children, youth and families will continue to be the agency responsible for | |
33 | investigating any complaint of abuse and neglect that is alleged to have occurred at a day care or | |
34 | child care facility. Any appeal of an investigative finding of abuse or neglect against a staff member, | |
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1 | paid or otherwise, including managerial or contract personnel, or visitor may be appealed to the | |
2 | Rhode Island Family Court. | |
3 | 42-12.5-4. License required. | |
4 | (a) No person shall receive or place children in child day care services, including day care | |
5 | arrangements, without a license issued pursuant to this chapter. This requirement does not apply to | |
6 | a person related by blood, marriage, guardianship or adoption to the child, unless that arrangement | |
7 | is for the purposes of day care. | |
8 | (b) The licensing requirement does not apply to shelter operations for parents with children, | |
9 | boarding schools, recreation camps, nursing homes, hospitals, maternity residences, and centers for | |
10 | developmentally disabled children. | |
11 | (c) No person, firm, corporation, association, or agency shall operate a family day care | |
12 | home without a registration certificate issued by the department, unless they hold an unexpired | |
13 | registration certificate issued by the Department of Children, Youth, and Families prior to January | |
14 | 1, 2020. | |
15 | (d) No state, county, city, or political subdivision shall operate a child day care agency or | |
16 | center, program or facility without a license issued pursuant to this chapter. | |
17 | (e) No person shall be exempt from a required license by reason of public or private, | |
18 | sectarian, non-sectarian, child day care program, for profit or non-profit status, or by any other | |
19 | reason of funding, sponsorship, or affiliation. | |
20 | 42-12.5-5. General licensing provisions. | |
21 | The following general licensing provisions shall apply: | |
22 | (1) A license issued under this chapter is not transferable and applies only to the licensee | |
23 | and the location stated in the application and remains the property of the department. A license | |
24 | shall be publicly displayed. A license shall be valid for one year from the date of issue and upon | |
25 | continuing compliance with the regulations, except that a certificate issued to a family day care | |
26 | home shall be valid for two (2) years from the date of issue. | |
27 | (2) Every license application issued pursuant to § 42-12.5-4 shall be accompanied by a | |
28 | nonrefundable application fee paid to the State of Rhode Island as follows: | |
29 | (a) Child day care center license- five hundred dollars ($500); | |
30 | (b) Group family day care home license – two hundred and fifty dollars ($250); | |
31 | (c) Family day care home license- one hundred dollars ($100). | |
32 | (3) All fees collected by the state pursuant to paragraph (2) of this section shall be deposited | |
33 | by the general treasurer as general revenues. | |
34 | (4) A licensee shall comply with applicable state fire and health safety standards. | |
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1 | (5) The department may grant a provisional license to an applicant who is not able to | |
2 | demonstrate compliance with all of the regulations because the program or residence is not in full | |
3 | operation; however, the applicant must meet all regulations that can be met in the opinion of the | |
4 | administrator before the program is fully operational. The provisional license shall be granted for | |
5 | a limited period not to exceed six (6) months and shall be subject to review every three (3) months. | |
6 | (6) The department may grant a probationary license to a licensee who is temporarily | |
7 | unable to comply with a rule or rules when the noncompliance does not present an immediate threat | |
8 | to the health and well-being of the children, and when the licensee has obtained a plan approved | |
9 | by the administrator to correct the areas of noncompliance within the probationary period. A | |
10 | probationary license shall be issued for up to twelve (12) months; it may be extended for an | |
11 | additional six (6) months at the discretion of the administrator. A probationary license that states | |
12 | the conditions of probation may be issued by the administrator at any time for due cause. Any prior | |
13 | existing license is invalidated when a probationary license is issued. When the probationary license | |
14 | expires, the administrator may reinstate the original license to the end of its term, issue a new | |
15 | license, suspend, or revoke the license. | |
16 | (7) The administrator will establish criteria and procedure for granting variances as part of | |
17 | the regulations. | |
18 | (8) The above exceptions (probationary and provisional licensing and variances) do not | |
19 | apply to and shall not be deemed to constitute any variance from state fire and health safety | |
20 | standards. However, if a request for a variance of fire inspection deficiencies has been submitted | |
21 | to the fire safety code board of appeal and review, DHS may grant a provisional license to terminate | |
22 | no later than thirty (30) days following the board's decision on said variance. | |
23 | (9) A license under this chapter shall be granted to a child day care program without the | |
24 | necessity for a separate fire, building, or radon inspection, when said child day care program is | |
25 | conducted at a Rhode Island elementary or secondary school which has already been found in | |
26 | compliance with said inspections, provided that an applicant complies with all other provisions of | |
27 | DHS regulations, or has been granted appropriate variances by the department. | |
28 | 42-12.5-6. Violations, suspensions and revocations of license. | |
29 | (a) When a licensee violates the terms of the license, the provisions of this chapter, or any | |
30 | regulation thereunder, the department may pursue the administrative remedies herein provided, in | |
31 | addition to other civil or criminal remedies according to the general laws. | |
32 | (b) After notice and hearing, as provided by the Administrative Procedures Act, chapter 35 | |
33 | of title 42, the administrator may revoke the license, or suspend the license for a period not | |
34 | exceeding six (6) months. | |
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| |
1 | (c) During a suspension, the facility or program shall cease operation. | |
2 | (d) To end a suspension, the licensee shall, within thirty (30) days of the notice of | |
3 | suspension, submit an acceptable plan of corrective action to the administrator. The plan shall | |
4 | outline the steps and timetables for immediate correction of the areas of noncompliance and is | |
5 | subject to the approval of the administrator. | |
6 | (e) At the end of the suspension, the administrator may reinstate the license for the term of | |
7 | the original license, revoke the license, issue a new license, or deny a reapplication. | |
8 | (f) Upon revocation, the licensed program or facility shall cease operation. The licensee | |
9 | whose license has been revoked may not apply for a similar license within a three (3) year period | |
10 | from the date of revocation. | |
11 | (g) Except in those instances wherein there is a determination that there exists a danger to | |
12 | the public health, safety, or welfare or there is a determination that the childcare provider has | |
13 | committed a serious breach of state law, orders, or regulation, the director shall utilize progressive | |
14 | penalties for noncompliance of any rule, regulation or order relating to childcare providers. | |
15 | Progressive penalties could include written notice of noncompliance, education and training, | |
16 | suspending enrollment to the program, assessing fines, suspension of license, and revocation of | |
17 | license. | |
18 | (h) Any child day care provider, as defined in this chapter, who has exhausted all | |
19 | administrative remedies within the department of human services and who aggrieved by a final | |
20 | order of the department of human services, may file for judicial review in the superior court of | |
21 | Providence county pursuant to § 42-35-15. | |
22 | (i) The Rhode Island Family Court shall retain jurisdiction over those complaints | |
23 | investigated by the department of children, youth and families, pursuant to chapter 72.1, regardless | |
24 | of whether licensing and monitoring is performed under chapter 12.5 of this title or chapter 72.1 of | |
25 | this title. | |
26 | 42-12.5-7. Penalties for violations. | |
27 | (a) Any person who violates any of the provisions of this chapter, or any regulations issued | |
28 | pursuant to this chapter, or who shall intentionally make any false statement or reports to the | |
29 | director with reference to the matters contained herein, shall, upon conviction for the first offense, | |
30 | be imprisoned for a term not exceeding six (6) months or be fined not exceeding five hundred | |
31 | dollars ($500), or both, and for a second or subsequent offense, shall be imprisoned for a term not | |
32 | exceeding one year or be fined not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1000), or both the fine and | |
33 | imprisonment. | |
34 | (b) Anyone who maintains or conducts a program or facility without first having obtained | |
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| |
1 | a license pursuant to this chapter, or who maintains or conducts a program or facility after a license | |
2 | has been revoked or suspended, or who shall refuse to permit a reasonable inspection and | |
3 | examination of a program or facility, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, shall | |
4 | be fined not more than five hundred dollars ($500) for each week that the program or facility shall | |
5 | have been maintained without a license or for each refusal to permit inspection and examination by | |
6 | the director. | |
7 | (c) Any individual, firm, corporation, or other entity who maintains or conducts a family | |
8 | day care home without first having obtained a registration certificate for the home pursuant to this | |
9 | chapter, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, shall be fined not less than twenty- | |
10 | five dollars ($25.00) nor more than one hundred dollars ($100) for each week that the home shall | |
11 | have been maintained without a valid registration certificate. | |
12 | (d) The department shall refer any violations to the attorney general's office for | |
13 | prosecution. | |
14 | 42-12.5-8. Open door policy. | |
15 | There shall be an open door policy permitting any custodial parent or legal guardian to | |
16 | have access to a day care facility for any program when their child is in attendance. | |
17 | SECTION 16. Section 42-35.1-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-35.1 entitled "Small | |
18 | Business Regulatory Fairness in Administrative Procedures" are hereby amended to read as | |
19 | follows: | |
20 | 42-35.1-5. Small business enforcement ombudsman. | |
21 | (a) The director of the office of regulatory reform department of business regulation shall | |
22 | designate an existing staff member as a "small business regulatory enforcement ombudsman,", who | |
23 | shall report directly to the director of business regulation. | |
24 | (b) The ombudsman shall: | |
25 | (1) Work with each agency with regulatory authority over small businesses to ensure that | |
26 | small business concerns that receive or are subject to an audit, on-site inspection, compliance | |
27 | assistance effort, or other enforcement related communication or contact by agency personnel are | |
28 | provided with a means to comment on the enforcement activity conducted by such personnel; | |
29 | (2) Establish means to receive comments from small business concerns regarding actions | |
30 | by agency employees conducting compliance or enforcement activities; | |
31 | (3) Within six (6) months of appointment, work with each regulating entity to develop and | |
32 | publish reporting policies; | |
33 | (4) Based on substantiated comments received from small business concerns the | |
34 | ombudsman shall annually report to the general assembly and affected agencies evaluating the | |
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1 | enforcement activities of agency personnel including a rating of the responsiveness of the | |
2 | regulatory agencies policies; | |
3 | (5) Coordinate and report annually on the activities, findings and recommendations to the | |
4 | general assembly and the directors of affected agencies; and | |
5 | (6) Provide the affected agency with an opportunity to comment on reports prepared | |
6 | pursuant to this chapter, and include a section of the final report in which the affected agency may | |
7 | make such comments as are not addressed by the ombudsman. | |
8 | SECTION 17. Sections 42-66-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-66 entitled "Elderly | |
9 | Affairs Department" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
10 | 42-66-2. Establishment of department -- Director. | |
11 | There is established within the executive branch of state government a department of | |
12 | elderly affairs. The head director of the department shall be the director of elderly affairs, who shall | |
13 | be a person qualified by training and experience to perform the duties of the office appointed by | |
14 | and reporting directly to the governor, with the advice and consent of the senate. The director shall | |
15 | be in the unclassified service, appointed by the governor with the advice and consent of the senate, | |
16 | and shall serve at the pleasure of the governor and until the appointment and qualification of the | |
17 | director's successor. The director shall receive a salary as provided by law. | |
18 | SECTION 18. Section 42-64.13-8 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-64.13 entitled | |
19 | "Rhode Island Regulatory Reform Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
20 | 42-64.13-8. Regulatory analysis responsibilities. | |
21 | The office of regulatory reform shall have the following regulatory analysis and reporting | |
22 | responsibilities: | |
23 | (1) The office of regulatory reform shall, upon the conclusion of each fiscal year, prepare | |
24 | and publish a report on the regulatory processes of state and municipal agencies and permitting | |
25 | authorities through a review and an analysis of proposed and existing rules and regulations to: (i) | |
26 | Encourage agencies to eliminate, consolidate, simplify, expedite or otherwise improve permits, | |
27 | permitting procedures and paperwork burdens affecting businesses, municipal government | |
28 | undertakings, industries and other matters of economic development impact in the state; (ii) | |
29 | Analyze the impact of proposed and existing rules and regulations on matters such as public health, | |
30 | safety and welfare, including job creation, and make recommendations for simplifying regulations | |
31 | and regulatory processes of state and municipal agencies and permitting authorities; (iii) Propose | |
32 | to any state or municipal agency consideration for amendment or repeal of any existing rules or | |
33 | procedures which may be obsolete, harmful to the economy or job growth in the state, or | |
34 | excessively burdensome with respect to any state or federal statutes or regulations; and (iv) Assist | |
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1 | and coordinate with all agencies during the periodic review of rules required by § 42-35-3.4 of the | |
2 | Administrative Procedures Act. | |
3 | (2) The ombudsman of the office department of business regulation regulatory reform shall | |
4 | implement the provisions of § 42-35.1-1 of the general laws entitled Small Business Regulatory | |
5 | Fairness and Administrative Procedures, and shall be the small business regulatory enforcement | |
6 | office pursuant to § 42-35.1-5 of the general laws. | |
7 | SECTION 19. Section 42-72-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-72 entitled "Department | |
8 | of Children, Youth and Families" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
9 | 42-72-5. Powers and scope of activities. | |
10 | (a) The department is the principal agency of the state to mobilize the human, physical, and | |
11 | financial resources available to plan, develop, and evaluate a comprehensive and integrated | |
12 | statewide program of services designed to ensure the opportunity for children to reach their full | |
13 | potential. The services include prevention, early intervention, outreach, placement, care and | |
14 | treatment, and after-care programs; provided, however, that the department notifies the state police | |
15 | and cooperates with local police departments when it receives and/or investigates a complaint of | |
16 | sexual assault on a minor and concludes that probable cause exists to support the allegations(s). | |
17 | The department also serves as an advocate for the needs of children. | |
18 | (b) To accomplish the purposes and duties, as set forth in this chapter, the director is | |
19 | authorized and empowered: | |
20 | (1) To establish those administrative and operational divisions of the department that the | |
21 | director determines is in the best interests of fulfilling the purposes and duties of this chapter; | |
22 | (2) To assign different tasks to staff members that the director determines best suit the | |
23 | purposes of this chapter; | |
24 | (3) To establish plans and facilities for emergency treatment, relocation, and physical | |
25 | custody of abused or neglected children that may include, but are not limited to, | |
26 | homemaker/educator child-case aides, specialized foster-family programs, day-care facilities, crisis | |
27 | teams, emergency parents, group homes for teenage parents, family centers within existing | |
28 | community agencies, and counseling services; | |
29 | (4) To establish, monitor, and evaluate protective services for children including, but not | |
30 | limited to, purchase of services from private agencies and establishment of a policy and procedure | |
31 | manual to standardize protective services; | |
32 | (5) To plan and initiate primary- and secondary-treatment programs for abused and | |
33 | neglected children; | |
34 | (6) To evaluate the services of the department and to conduct periodic, comprehensive- | |
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1 | needs assessment; | |
2 | (7) To license, approve, monitor, and evaluate all residential and non-residential child care | |
3 | institutions, group homes, foster homes, and programs; | |
4 | (8) To recruit and coordinate community resources, public and private; | |
5 | (9) To promulgate rules and regulations concerning the confidentiality, disclosure, and | |
6 | expungement of case records pertaining to matters under the jurisdiction of the department; | |
7 | (10) To establish a minimum mandatory level of twenty (20) hours of training per year and | |
8 | provide ongoing staff development for all staff; provided, however, all social workers hired after | |
9 | June 15, 1991, within the department shall have a minimum of a bachelor's degree in social work | |
10 | or a closely related field, and must be appointed from a valid, civil-service list; | |
11 | (11) To establish procedures for reporting suspected child abuse and neglect pursuant to | |
12 | chapter 11 of title 40; | |
13 | (12) To promulgate all rules and regulations necessary for the execution of departmental | |
14 | powers pursuant to the Administrative Procedures Act, chapter 35 of title 42; | |
15 | (13) To provide and act as a clearinghouse for information, data, and other materials | |
16 | relative to children; | |
17 | (14) To initiate and carry out studies and analysis that will aid in solving local, regional, | |
18 | and statewide problems concerning children; | |
19 | (15) To represent and act on behalf of the state in connection with federal-grant programs | |
20 | applicable to programs for children in the functional areas described in this chapter; | |
21 | (16) To seek, accept, and otherwise take advantage of all federal aid available to the | |
22 | department, and to assist other agencies of the state, local agencies, and community groups in taking | |
23 | advantage of all federal grants and subventions available for children; | |
24 | (17) To review and coordinate those activities of agencies of the state, and of any political | |
25 | subdivision of the state, that affect the full and fair utilization of community resources for programs | |
26 | for children, and initiate programs that will help ensure utilization; | |
27 | (18) To administer the pilot, juvenile-restitution program, including the overseeing and | |
28 | coordinating of all local, community-based restitution programs, and the establishment of | |
29 | procedures for the processing of payments to children performing community service; | |
30 | (19) To adopt rules and regulations that: | |
31 | (i) For the twelve-month (12) period beginning on October 1, 1983, and for each | |
32 | subsequent twelve-month (12) period, establish specific goals as to the maximum number of | |
33 | children who will remain in foster care for a period in excess of two (2) years; and | |
34 | (ii) Are reasonably necessary to implement the child-welfare services and foster-care | |
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1 | programs; | |
2 | (20) May establish and conduct seminars for the purpose of educating children regarding | |
3 | sexual abuse; | |
4 | (21) To establish fee schedules by regulations for the processing of requests from adoption | |
5 | placement agencies for adoption studies, adoption study updates, and supervision related to | |
6 | interstate and international adoptions. The fee shall equal the actual cost of the service(s) rendered, | |
7 | but in no event shall the fee exceed two thousand dollars ($2,000); | |
8 | (22) To be responsible for the education of all children who are placed, assigned, or | |
9 | otherwise accommodated for residence by the department in a state-operated or -supported | |
10 | community residence licensed by a Rhode Island state agency. In fulfilling this responsibility, the | |
11 | department is authorized to enroll and pay for the education of students in the public schools or, | |
12 | when necessary and appropriate, to itself provide education in accordance with the regulations of | |
13 | the board of regents for elementary and secondary education either directly or through contract; | |
14 | (23) To develop multidisciplinary service plans, in conjunction with the department of | |
15 | health, at hospitals prior to the discharge of any drug-exposed babies. The plan requires the | |
16 | development of a plan using all health-care professionals; | |
17 | (24) To be responsible for the delivery of appropriate mental health services to seriously | |
18 | emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental disabilities. | |
19 | Appropriate mental health services may include hospitalization, placement in a residential | |
20 | treatment facility, or treatment in a community-based setting. The department is charged with the | |
21 | responsibility for developing the public policy and programs related to the needs of seriously | |
22 | emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental disabilities; | |
23 | In fulfilling its responsibilities the department shall: | |
24 | (i) Plan a diversified and comprehensive network of programs and services to meet the | |
25 | needs of seriously emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental | |
26 | disabilities; | |
27 | (ii) Provide the overall management and supervision of the state program for seriously | |
28 | emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental disabilities; | |
29 | (iii) Promote the development of programs for preventing and controlling emotional or | |
30 | behavioral disorders in children; | |
31 | (iv) Coordinate the efforts of several state departments and agencies to meet the needs of | |
32 | seriously emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental disabilities | |
33 | and to work with private agencies serving those children; | |
34 | (v) Promote the development of new resources for program implementation in providing | |
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1 | services to seriously emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental | |
2 | disabilities. | |
3 | The department shall adopt rules and regulations that are reasonably necessary to | |
4 | implement a program of mental health services for seriously emotionally disturbed children. | |
5 | Each community, as defined in chapter 7 of title 16, shall contribute to the department, at | |
6 | least in accordance with rules and regulations to be adopted by the department, at least its average | |
7 | per-pupil cost for special education for the year in which placement commences, as its share of the | |
8 | cost of educational services furnished to a seriously emotionally disturbed child pursuant to this | |
9 | section in a residential treatment program that includes the delivery of educational services. | |
10 | "Seriously emotionally disturbed child" means any person under the age of eighteen (18) | |
11 | years, or any person under the age of twenty-one (21) years, who began to receive services from | |
12 | the department prior to attaining eighteen (18) years of age and has continuously received those | |
13 | services thereafter; who has been diagnosed as having an emotional, behavioral, or mental disorder | |
14 | under the current edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual and that disability has been | |
15 | ongoing for one year or more or has the potential of being ongoing for one year or more; and the | |
16 | child is in need of multi-agency intervention; and the child is in an out-of-home placement or is at | |
17 | risk of placement because of the disability. | |
18 | A child with a "functional developmental disability" means any person under the age of | |
19 | eighteen (18) years or any person under the age of twenty-one (21) years who began to receive | |
20 | services from the department prior to attaining eighteen (18) years of age and has continuously | |
21 | received those services thereafter. | |
22 | The term "functional developmental disability" includes autism spectrum disorders and | |
23 | means a severe, chronic disability of a person that: | |
24 | (A) Is attributable to a mental or physical impairment or combination of mental physical | |
25 | impairments; | |
26 | (B) Is manifested before the person attains age eighteen (18); | |
27 | (C) Is likely to continue indefinitely; | |
28 | (D) Results in age-appropriate, substantial, functional limitations in three (3) or more of | |
29 | the following areas of major life activity: | |
30 | (I) Self-care; | |
31 | (II) Receptive and expressive language; | |
32 | (III) Learning; | |
33 | (IV) Mobility; | |
34 | (V) Self direction; | |
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1 | (VI) Capacity for independent living; and | |
2 | (VII) Economic self-sufficiency; and | |
3 | (E) Reflects the person's need for a combination and sequence of special, interdisciplinary, | |
4 | or generic care, treatment, or other services that are of life-long or extended duration and are | |
5 | individually planned and coordinated. | |
6 | Funding for these clients shall include funds that are transferred to the department of human | |
7 | services as part of the managed health-care-program transfer. However, the expenditures relating | |
8 | to these clients shall not be part of the department of human services' caseload estimated for the | |
9 | semi-annual, caseload-estimating conference. The expenditures shall be accounted for separately; | |
10 | (25) To provide access to services to any person under the age of eighteen (18) years, or | |
11 | any person under the age of twenty-one (21) years who began to receive child-welfare services | |
12 | from the department prior to attaining eighteen (18) years of age, has continuously received those | |
13 | services thereafter, and elects to continue to receive such services after attaining the age of eighteen | |
14 | (18) years. The general assembly has included funding in the FY 2008 DCYF budget in the amount | |
15 | of $10.5 million from all sources of funds and $6.0 million from general revenues to provide a | |
16 | managed system to care for children serviced between 18 to 21 years of age. The department shall | |
17 | manage this caseload to this level of funding; | |
18 | (26) To initiate transition planning in cooperation with the department of behavioral | |
19 | healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals and local school departments for any child who | |
20 | receives services through DCYF; is seriously emotionally disturbed or developmentally delayed | |
21 | pursuant to paragraph (b)(24)(v); and whose care may or shall be administered by the department | |
22 | of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals after the age of twenty-one (21) | |
23 | years; the transition planning shall commence at least twelve (12) months prior to the person's | |
24 | twenty-first birthday and shall result in a collaborative plan submitted to the family court by both | |
25 | the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals and the | |
26 | department of children, youth and families and shall require the approval of the court prior to the | |
27 | dismissal of the abuse, neglect, dependency, or miscellaneous petition before the child's twenty- | |
28 | first birthday; | |
29 | (27) To develop and maintain, in collaboration with other state and private agencies, a | |
30 | comprehensive continuum of care in this state for children in the care and custody of the department | |
31 | or at risk of being in state care. This continuum of care should be family centered and community | |
32 | based with the focus of maintaining children safely within their families or, when a child cannot | |
33 | live at home, within as close proximity to home as possible based on the needs of the child and | |
34 | resource availability. The continuum should include community-based prevention, family support, | |
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1 | and crisis-intervention services, as well as a full array of foster care and residential services, | |
2 | including residential services designed to meet the needs of children who are seriously emotionally | |
3 | disturbed, children who have a functional developmental disability, and youth who have juvenile | |
4 | justice issues. The director shall make reasonable efforts to provide a comprehensive continuum of | |
5 | care for children in the care and custody of DCYF, taking into account the availability of public | |
6 | and private resources and financial appropriations and the director shall submit an annual report to | |
7 | the general assembly as to the status of his or her efforts in accordance with the provisions of § 42- | |
8 | 72-4(b)(13); | |
9 | (28) To administer funds under the John H. Chafee Foster Care Independence and | |
10 | Educational and Training Voucher (ETV) Programs of Title IV-E of the Social Security Act [42 | |
11 | U.S.C. § 677] and the DCYF higher education opportunity grant program as outlined in chapter | |
12 | 72.8 of title 42, in accordance with rules and regulations as promulgated by the director of the | |
13 | department; and | |
14 | (29) To process nationwide, criminal-record checks on prospective foster parents and any | |
15 | household member age 18 or older, prospective adoptive parents and any household member age | |
16 | 18 and older, operators of child-care facilities, persons seeking to act as volunteer court-appointed | |
17 | special advocates, persons seeking employment in a child-care facility or at the training school for | |
18 | youth or on behalf of any person seeking employment at DCYF, who are required to submit to | |
19 | nationwide, criminal-background checks as a matter of law. | |
20 | (c) In order to assist in the discharge of his or her duties, the director may request from any | |
21 | agency of the state information pertinent to the affairs and problems of children. | |
22 | SECTION 20. The title of Chapter 42-72.1 of the General Laws entitled "Licensing and | |
23 | Monitoring of Childcare Providers and Child-Placing Agencies" is hereby amended to read as | |
24 | follows: | |
25 | CHAPTER 42-72.1 | |
26 | LICENSING AND MONITORING OF CHILDCARE PROVIDERS AND CHILD-PLACING | |
27 | AGENCIES | |
28 | CHAPTER 42-72.1 | |
29 | LICENSING AND MONITORING OF CHILD PLACING AGENCIES, CHILD CARING | |
30 | AGENCIES, FOSTER AND ADOPTIVE HOMES, AND CHILDREN'S BEHAVIORAL | |
31 | HEALTH PROGRAMS | |
32 | SECTION 21. Sections 42-72.1-1, 42-72.1-2, 42-72.1-3, 42-72.1-4, 42-72.1-5, 42-72.1-6 | |
33 | and 42-72.1-7 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-72.1 entitled "Licensing and Monitoring of | |
34 | Childcare Providers and Child-Placing Agencies" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
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1 | 42-72.1-1. Statement of purpose. | |
2 | (a) The director of the department of children, youth, and families, pursuant to § 42-72- | |
3 | 5(b)(7) and § 42-72-5(b)(24), shall establish within the department a unit to license and monitor | |
4 | child care providers and child-placing agencies, child caring agencies, foster and adoptive homes, | |
5 | and children’s behavioral health programs to protect the health, safety and well being of children | |
6 | temporarily separated from or being cared for away from their natural families. | |
7 | (b) Services for children requiring licensure under this chapter shall include all child care | |
8 | providers and child placing agencies, child caring agencies, foster and adoptive homes, and | |
9 | children’s behavioral health programs which offer services within the state, except as defined in § | |
10 | 42-72.1-5. | |
11 | 42-72.1-2. Definitions. | |
12 | As used in this chapter: | |
13 | (1) "Administrator of licensing" means the director of the licensing unit (or his/her | |
14 | designee) that carries out the provisions of this chapter, hereafter referred to as the "administrator". | |
15 | (2) "Applicant" means a child-placing agency, child caring agencies, foster and adoptive | |
16 | homes, and children’s behavioral health programs or childcare provider that applies for a license to | |
17 | operate. | |
18 | (3) "Child" means any person less than eighteen (18) years of age; provided, that a child | |
19 | over eighteen (18) years of age who is nevertheless subject to continuing jurisdiction of the family | |
20 | court, pursuant to chapter 1 of title 14, or defined as emotionally disturbed according to chapter 7 | |
21 | of title 40.1, shall be considered a child for the purposes of this chapter. | |
22 | (4) "Childcare provider" means a person or agency, which offers residential or | |
23 | nonresidential care and/or treatment for a child outside of his/her natural home. | |
24 | (5) "Child day care or childcare" means daily care and/or supervision offered commercially | |
25 | to the public for any part of a twenty-four (24) hour day to children away from their homes. | |
26 | (6) "Child day-care center or childcare center" means any person, firm, corporation, | |
27 | association, or agency who, on a regular or irregular basis, receives any child under the age of | |
28 | sixteen (16) years, for the purpose of care and/or supervision, not in a home or residence, apart | |
29 | from the child's parent or guardian for any part of a twenty-four (24) hour day irrespective of | |
30 | compensation or reward. It shall include childcare programs that are offered to employees at the | |
31 | worksite. It does not include nursery schools or other programs of educational services subject to | |
32 | approval by the commissioner of elementary and secondary education. | |
33 | (4) “Child Caring Agency” means any facility that provides residential treatment, | |
34 | residential group home care or semi-independent living, or residential assessment and stabilization. | |
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1 | (7)(5) "Child-placing agency" means any private or public agency, which receives children | |
2 | for placement into independent living arrangements, supervised apartment living, residential group | |
3 | care facilities, family foster homes, or adoptive homes. | |
4 | (6) “Children’s Behavioral Health Program” means any private or public agency which | |
5 | provides behavioral health services to children. | |
6 | (8)(7) "Department" means the department of children, youth and families (DCYF). | |
7 | (9)(8) "Director" means the director of the department of children, youth and families, or | |
8 | the director's designee. | |
9 | (9) “Foster and Adoptive Homes” means one or more adults who are licensed to provide | |
10 | foster or adoptive caregiving in a family-based home setting. | |
11 | (10) "Family day-care home" means any home other than the child's home in which child | |
12 | day care in lieu of parental care and/or supervision is offered at the same time to four (4) or more | |
13 | children who are not relatives of the care giver. | |
14 | (11) "Group family day-care home" means a residence occupied by an individual of at least | |
15 | twenty-one (21) years of age who provides care for not less than nine (9) and not more than twelve | |
16 | (12) children, with the assistance of one or more approved adults, for any part of a twenty-four (24) | |
17 | hour day. The maximum of twelve (12) children shall include children under six (6) years of age | |
18 | who are living in the home, school-age children under the age of twelve (12) years whether they | |
19 | are living in the home or are received for care, and children related to the provider who are received | |
20 | for care. These programs shall be subject to yearly licensing as addressed in this chapter and shall | |
21 | comply with all applicable state and local fire, health, and zoning regulations. | |
22 | (12)(10) "Licensee" means any person, firm, corporation, association, or agency, which | |
23 | holds a valid license under this chapter. | |
24 | (13)(11) "Regulation" means any requirement for licensure, promulgated pursuant to this | |
25 | chapter having the force of law. | |
26 | (14)(12) "Related" means any of the following relationships, by marriage, blood or | |
27 | adoption, even following the death or divorce of a natural parent: parent, grandparent, brother, | |
28 | sister, aunt, uncle, and first cousin. In a prosecution under this chapter or of any law relating thereto, | |
29 | a defendant who relies for a defense upon the relationship of any child to him or herself, the | |
30 | defendant shall have the burden of proof as to the relationship. | |
31 | 42-72.1-3. Powers and scope of activities. | |
32 | (a) The department shall issue, deny, and revoke licenses for, and monitor the operation of, | |
33 | facilities and programs by child placing agencies, child caring agencies, foster and adoptive homes, | |
34 | and children’s behavioral health programs and child care providers, as defined in § 42-72.1-2. | |
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| |
1 | (b) The department shall adopt, amend, and rescind regulations in accordance with this | |
2 | chapter and implement its provisions. The regulations shall be promulgated and become effective | |
3 | in accordance with the provisions of the Administrative Procedures Act, chapter 35 of this title. | |
4 | (c) The department through its licensing unit shall administer and manage the regulations | |
5 | pertaining to the licensing and monitoring of those agencies, and shall exercise all statutory and | |
6 | administrative powers necessary to carry out its functions. | |
7 | (d) The administrator shall investigate complaints of noncompliance, and shall take | |
8 | licensing action as required. | |
9 | (e) Regulations formulated pursuant to the foregoing authority shall include, but need not | |
10 | be limited to, the following: | |
11 | (1) Financial, administrative and organizational ability, and stability of the applicant; | |
12 | (2) Compliance with specific fire and safety codes and health regulations; | |
13 | (3) Character, health suitability, qualifications of child-placing agencies, child caring | |
14 | agencies, foster and adoptive homes, and children’s behavioral health programs childcare | |
15 | providers; | |
16 | (4) Staff/child ratios and workload assignments of staff providing care or supervision to | |
17 | children; | |
18 | (5) Type and content of records or documents that must be maintained to collect and retain | |
19 | information for the planning and caring for children; | |
20 | (6) Procedures and practices regarding basic childcare and placing services to ensure | |
21 | protection to the child regarding the manner and appropriateness of placement; | |
22 | (7) Service to families of children in care; | |
23 | (8) Program activities, including components related to physical growth, social, emotional, | |
24 | educational, and recreational activities, social services and habilitative or rehabilitative treatment; | |
25 | and | |
26 | (9) Investigation of previous employment, criminal record check and department records | |
27 | check.; and | |
28 | (10) Immunization and testing requirements for communicable diseases, including, but not | |
29 | limited to, tuberculosis, of childcare providers and children at any child day-care center or family | |
30 | day-care home as is specified in regulations promulgated by the director of the department of health. | |
31 | Notwithstanding the foregoing, all licensing and monitoring authority shall remain with the | |
32 | department of children, youth and families. | |
33 | (f) The administrator may: | |
34 | (1) Prescribe any forms for reports, statements, notices, and other documents deemed | |
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| |
1 | necessary; | |
2 | (2) Prepare and publish manuals and guides explaining this chapter and the regulations to | |
3 | facilitate compliance with and enforcement of the regulations; | |
4 | (3) Prepare reports and studies to advance the purpose of this chapter; | |
5 | (4) Provide consultation and technical assistance, as requested, to assist licensees in | |
6 | maintaining compliance; and | |
7 | (5) Refer to the advisory council for children and families for advice and consultation on | |
8 | licensing matters. | |
9 | (g) The department may promulgate rules and regulations for the establishment of child | |
10 | day care centers located on the second floor. | |
11 | (h)(g) When the department is otherwise unsuccessful in remedying noncompliance with | |
12 | the provisions of this chapter and the regulations promulgated under it, it may petition the family | |
13 | court for an order enjoining the noncompliance or for any order that equity and justice may require. | |
14 | (i) The department shall collaborate with the departments of human services, elementary | |
15 | and secondary education, and health to provide monitoring, mentoring, training, technical | |
16 | assistance, and other services which are necessary and appropriate to improving the quality of | |
17 | childcare offered by childcare providers who are certified, licensed, or approved by the department | |
18 | or the department of elementary and secondary education or who are seeking certification, | |
19 | licensure, or approval pursuant to this chapter or § 16-48-2, including non-English speaking | |
20 | providers. | |
21 | (j)(h) The department shall adopt, amend, and rescind regulations in the same manner as | |
22 | set forth above in order to permit the placement of a pregnant minor in a group residential facility | |
23 | which provides a shelter for pregnant adults as its sole purpose. | |
24 | (i) Notwithstanding the transfer of licensing to and the licensing and monitoring of day and | |
25 | child care facilities to the department of human services, pursuant to chapter 42-12.5, the | |
26 | department of children, youth and families will continue to be the agency responsible for | |
27 | investigating any complaint of abuse and neglect that is alleged to have occurred at a day care or | |
28 | child care facility. Any appeal of an investigative finding of abuse or neglect against a staff member, | |
29 | paid or otherwise, including managerial or contract personnel, or visitor may be appealed to the | |
30 | Rhode Island Family Court. | |
31 | (j) The Rhode Island Family Court shall retain jurisdiction over those complaints | |
32 | investigated by the department of children, youth and families, pursuant to this chapter, regardless | |
33 | of whether licensing and monitoring is performed under chapter 12.5 of this title or chapter 72.1 of | |
34 | this title. | |
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1 | 42-72.1-4. License required. | |
2 | (a) No person shall provide continuing full-time care for a child apart from the child's | |
3 | parents, or receive or place children in child care services, including day care arrangements, without | |
4 | a license issued pursuant to this chapter. This requirement does not apply to a person related by | |
5 | blood, marriage, guardianship or adoption to the child. Licensing requirements for child day care | |
6 | services are governed by §42-12.5-4 et seq. , unless that arrangement is for the purposes of day | |
7 | care. | |
8 | (b) The licensing requirement does not apply to shelter operations for parents with children, | |
9 | boarding schools, recreation camps, nursing homes, hospitals, maternity residences, and centers for | |
10 | developmentally disabled children. | |
11 | (c) No person, firm, corporation, association, or agency, other than a parent shall place, | |
12 | offer to place, or assist in the placement of a child in Rhode Island, for the purpose of adoption, | |
13 | unless the person, firm, corporation, or agency shall have been licensed for those purposes by the | |
14 | department or is a governmental child-placing agency, and that license shall not have been | |
15 | rescinded at the time of placement of a child for the purpose of adoption. The above does not apply | |
16 | when a person, firm, corporation, association, or agency places, offers to place, or assists in the | |
17 | placement of a child in Rhode Island, for the purpose of adoption through a child-placement agency | |
18 | duly licensed for child-placement in the state or through the department of children, youth, and | |
19 | families, nor when the child is placed with a father, sister, brother, aunt, uncle, grandparent, or | |
20 | stepparent of the child. | |
21 | (d) No parent shall assign or otherwise transfer to another not related to him or her by blood | |
22 | or marriage, his or her rights or duties with respect to the permanent care and custody of his or her | |
23 | child under eighteen (18) years of age unless duly authorized so to do by an order or decree of | |
24 | court. | |
25 | (e) No person shall bring or send into the state any child for the purpose of placing him or | |
26 | her out, or procuring his or her adoption, or placing him or her in a foster home without first | |
27 | obtaining the written consent of the director, and that person shall conform to the rules of the | |
28 | director and comply with the provisions of the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children, | |
29 | chapter 15 of title 40. | |
30 | (f) No person, firm, corporation, association, or agency shall operate a family day care | |
31 | home without a registration certificate issued by the department. | |
32 | (fg) No state, county, city, or political subdivision shall operate a child placing or child | |
33 | care agency, child caring agency, foster and adoptive home, or children’s behavioral health | |
34 | program or facility without a license issued pursuant to this chapter. | |
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1 | (gh) No person shall be exempt from a required license by reason of public or private, | |
2 | sectarian, non-sectarian, court-operated child placement program child-care program, child caring | |
3 | agency, foster and adoptive home, or children’s behavioral health program for profit or non-profit | |
4 | status, or by any other reason of funding, sponsorship, or affiliation. | |
5 | 42-72.1-5. General licensing provisions. | |
6 | The following general licensing provisions shall apply: | |
7 | (1) A license issued under this chapter is not transferable and applies only to the licensee | |
8 | and the location stated in the application and remains the property of the department. A license | |
9 | shall be publicly displayed. A license shall be valid for one year from the date of issue and upon | |
10 | continuing compliance with the regulations, except that a certificate issued to a family day care | |
11 | home, a license issued to a foster parent, and/or a license issued to a program for mental health | |
12 | services for "seriously emotionally disturbed children" as defined in § 42-72-5(b)(24) shall be valid | |
13 | for two (2) years from the date of issue. | |
14 | (2) Every license application issued pursuant to § 42-72.1-4 shall be accompanied by a | |
15 | nonrefundable application fee paid to the State of Rhode Island as follows: | |
16 | (a) Adoption and foster care child placing agency license- one thousand dollars ($1000); | |
17 | (b) Child day care center license- five hundred dollars ($500); | |
18 | (c) Group family day care home license -- two hundred and fifty dollars ($250); | |
19 | (d) Family day care home license- one hundred dollars ($100). | |
20 | (3) All fees collected by the State pursuant to paragraph (2) of this section shall be | |
21 | deposited by the general treasurer as general revenues. | |
22 | (4) A licensee shall comply with applicable state fire and health safety standards. | |
23 | (5) The department may grant a provisional license to an applicant, excluding any foster | |
24 | parent applicant, who is not able to demonstrate compliance with all of the regulations because the | |
25 | program or residence is not in full operation; however, the applicant must meet all regulations that | |
26 | can be met in the opinion of the administrator before the program is fully operational. The | |
27 | provisional license shall be granted for a limited period not to exceed six (6) months and shall be | |
28 | subject to review every three (3) months. | |
29 | (6) The department may grant a probationary license to a licensee who is temporarily | |
30 | unable to comply with a rule or rules when the noncompliance does not present an immediate threat | |
31 | to the health and well-being of the children, and when the licensee has obtained a plan approved | |
32 | by the administrator to correct the areas of noncompliance within the probationary period. A | |
33 | probationary license shall be issued for up to twelve (12) months; it may be extended for an | |
34 | additional six (6) months at the discretion of the administrator. A probationary license that states | |
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1 | the conditions of probation may be issued by the administrator at any time for due cause. Any prior | |
2 | existing license is invalidated when a probationary license is issued. When the probationary license | |
3 | expires, the administrator may reinstate the original license to the end of its term, issue a new | |
4 | license or revoke the license. | |
5 | (7) The administrator will establish criteria and procedure for granting variances as part of | |
6 | the regulations. | |
7 | (8) The above exceptions (probationary and provisional licensing and variances) do not | |
8 | apply to and shall not be deemed to constitute any variance from state fire and health safety | |
9 | standards. However, if a request for a variance of fire inspection deficiencies has been submitted | |
10 | to the fire safety code board of appeal and review, DCYF may grant a provisional license to | |
11 | terminate no later than thirty (30) days following the board's decision on said variance. | |
12 | (9) A license under this chapter shall be granted to a school age child day care program | |
13 | without the necessity for a separate fire, building, or radon inspection, when said child day care | |
14 | program is conducted at a Rhode Island elementary or secondary school which has already been | |
15 | found in compliance with said inspections, provided that an applicant complies with all other | |
16 | provisions of DCYF regulations, or has been granted appropriate variances by the department. | |
17 | 42-72.1-6. Violations, suspensions and revocations of license. | |
18 | (a) When a licensee violates the terms of the license, the provisions of this chapter, or any | |
19 | regulation thereunder, the department may pursue the administrative remedies herein provided, in | |
20 | addition to other civil or criminal remedies according to the general laws. | |
21 | (b) After notice and hearing, as provided by the Administrative Procedures Act, chapter 35 | |
22 | of this title, the administrator may revoke the license, or suspend the license for a period not | |
23 | exceeding six (6) months. | |
24 | (c) During a suspension, the agency, facility or program shall cease operation. | |
25 | (d) To end a suspension, the licensee shall, within thirty (30) days of the notice of | |
26 | suspension, submit a plan of corrective action to the administrator. The plan shall outline the steps | |
27 | and timetables for immediate correction of the areas of noncompliance and is subject to the | |
28 | approval of the administrator. | |
29 | (e) At the end of the suspension, the administrator may reinstate the license for the term of | |
30 | the original license, revoke the license, issue a new license, or deny a reapplication. | |
31 | (f) Upon revocation, the licensed agency, program or facility shall cease operation. The | |
32 | licensee whose license has been revoked may not apply for a similar license within a three (3) year | |
33 | period from the date of revocation. | |
34 | (g) Except in those instances wherein there is a determination that there exists a danger to | |
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1 | the public health, safety, or welfare or there is a determination that the childcare provider has | |
2 | committed a serious breach of State law, orders, or regulation, the director shall utilize progressive | |
3 | penalties for noncompliance of any rule, regulation or order relating to childcare providers. | |
4 | Progressive penalties could include written notice of noncompliance, education and training, | |
5 | suspending enrollment to the program, assessing fines, suspension of license, and revocation of | |
6 | license. | |
7 | 42-72.1-7. Penalties for violations. | |
8 | (a) Any person who violates any of the provisions of this chapter, or any regulations issued | |
9 | pursuant to this chapter, or who shall intentionally make any false statement or reports to the | |
10 | director with reference to the matters contained herein, shall, upon conviction for the first offense, | |
11 | be imprisoned for a term not exceeding six (6) months or be fined not exceeding five hundred | |
12 | dollars ($500), or both, and for a second or subsequent offense, shall be imprisoned for a term not | |
13 | exceeding one year or be fined not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1000), or both the fine and | |
14 | imprisonment. | |
15 | (b) Anyone who maintains or conducts a program, agency, or facility without first having | |
16 | obtained a license, or who maintains or conducts a program, agency, or facility after a license has | |
17 | been revoked or suspended, or who shall refuse to permit a reasonable inspection and examination | |
18 | of a program, agency, or facility, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, shall be | |
19 | fined not more than five hundred dollars ($500) for each week that the program, agency, or facility | |
20 | shall have been maintained without a license or for each refusal to permit inspection and | |
21 | examination by the director. | |
22 | (c) Any individual, firm, corporation, or other entity who maintains or conducts a family | |
23 | day care home without first having obtained a registration certificate for the home, shall be guilty | |
24 | of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, shall be fined not less than twenty-five dollars ($25.00) | |
25 | nor more than one hundred dollars ($100) for each week that the home shall have been maintained | |
26 | without a valid registration certificate. | |
27 | (d) (c) The department shall refer any violations to the attorney general's office for | |
28 | prosecution. | |
29 | SECTION 22. Section 42-72.1-8 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-72.1 entitled | |
30 | "Licensing and Monitoring of Childcare Providers and Child-Placing Agencies" is hereby repealed. | |
31 | 42-72.1-8. Open door policy. | |
32 | There shall be an open door policy permitting any custodial parent or legal guardian to | |
33 | have access to a day care facility for any program when their child is in attendance. | |
34 | SECTION 23. Section 42-72.11-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-72.11 entitled | |
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1 | "Administrative Penalties for Childcare Licensing Violations" is hereby amended to read as | |
2 | follows: | |
3 | 42-72.11-1. Definitions. | |
4 | As used in this chapter, the following words, unless the context clearly requires otherwise, | |
5 | shall have the following meanings: | |
6 | (1) "Administrative penalty" means a monetary penalty not to exceed the civil penalty | |
7 | specified by statute or, where not specified by statute, an amount not to exceed five hundred dollars | |
8 | ($500). | |
9 | (2) "Director" means the director of the department of children, youth and families human | |
10 | services or his or her duly authorized agent. | |
11 | (3) "Person" means any public or private corporation, individual, partnership, association, | |
12 | or other entity that is licensed as a child day care center, family child day care home, group family | |
13 | child day care home or any officer, employee or agent thereof. | |
14 | (4) "Citation" means a notice of an assessment of an administrative penalty issued by the | |
15 | director or his or her duly authorized agent. | |
16 | (5) “Department” means the department of human services. | |
17 | SECTION 24. Sections 42-154-1 and 42-154-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-154 | |
18 | entitled "Division of Elderly Affairs" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
19 | 42-154-1. Establishment of division -- Director. | |
20 | (a) There is hereby established within the executive branch of state government and the | |
21 | department of human services a division of elderly affairs, effective July 1, 2011. The division shall | |
22 | reside within the department of human services for administrative purposes only. The head of the | |
23 | division shall be the director of the division of elderly affairs, appointed by and reporting directly | |
24 | to the governor, with the advice and consent of the senate. who shall be a person qualified through | |
25 | and by training and experience to perform the duties of the division. The director shall be in the | |
26 | unclassified service. | |
27 | (b) Effective July 1, 2019, the division of elderly affairs, as established pursuant to | |
28 | subsection (a) of this section, shall be henceforth referred to and renamed as the "office of healthy | |
29 | aging." | |
30 | 42-154-3. Construction of references. | |
31 | Effective July 1, 2011, all references in the general laws to the department of elderly affairs | |
32 | established pursuant to chapter 42-66 ("Elderly Affairs Department") shall be deemed to mean and | |
33 | refer to the division of elderly affairs within the department of human services as set forth in this | |
34 | chapter. Effective July 1, 2019, all references in the general laws to either the department of elderly | |
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1 | affairs established pursuant to chapter 42-66 ("Elderly Affairs Department") or the division of | |
2 | elderly affairs established pursuant to § 42-154-1(a) shall be deemed to mean and refer to the office | |
3 | of healthy aging within the department of human services. | |
4 | SECTION 25. Sections 1 through 4 shall take effect on January 1, 2020. The remaining | |
5 | sections of this article shall take effect upon passage. | |
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