2022 -- H 7616

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LC004771

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     STATE OF RHODE ISLAND

IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY

JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2022

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A N   A C T

RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHY

AGING

     

     Introduced By: Representatives Carson, Donovan, Ruggiero, McLaughlin, Cortvriend,
Speakman, Ajello, and Potter

     Date Introduced: March 02, 2022

     Referred To: House Finance

     It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:

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     SECTION 1. Legislative findings.

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     The general assembly finds and declares as follows:

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     (1) In the United States, there are approximately fifty-two (52) million people age sixty-

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five (65) or older, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. This demographic is projected to almost

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double in size by the year 2060, with a result that one out of five (5) people will be senior citizens.

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Older adults are also predicted to outnumber children in the next ten (10) years. This significant

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increase is largely due to many medical and technological improvements that have helped older

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adults live longer.

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     (2) Rhode Island currently has the eleventh (11th) largest concentration of elders in its

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communities. There are currently two hundred ninety-eight thousand (298,000) senior residents in

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the state, making up nearly one-third (1/3) of the population and close to fifty percent (50%) of the

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voting public. Rhode Island’s older adult population is growing rapidly.

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     (3) Rhode Island holds a special place in the country’s services for older adults. In 1965,

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the year that both Medicare and Medicaid became law, former Rhode Island Congressman John E.

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Fogarty introduced and won passage of H.R. 3708, The Older Americans Act of 1965 (OAA) (Pub.

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L. 89–73, 79 Stat. 218). The OAA established the Administration on Aging (AOA), provided for

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state grants “To provide assistance in the development of new or improved programs to help older

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persons…”, and required states to develop and submit plans on aging to the AOA approval.

 

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     (4) Senior centers have become one of the most widely used services among America’s

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older adults, recognized by the OAA as a community focal point. Today, almost ten thousand

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(10,000) senior centers enable one million individuals to stay healthy and independent by providing

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meals, health programs, transportation, benefits counseling, employment, and more.

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     (5) During the pandemic, senior centers became lifelines for homebound older adults by

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offering home-delivered meals, telephone checks, and virtual programs. As the COVID-19 vaccine

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became available, senior centers again stepped up to serve as vaccination sites and hubs of trusted

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information about how to stay safe.

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     (6) The federal government produced, Older Americans 2020: Key Indicators of Well-

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Being (Older Americans 2020). The report provides a comprehensive picture of our older

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population with an accessible compendium of indicators drawn from the most reliable and recent

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official statistics. It includes strong language that would support the modernization of senior centers

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to fill this tremendous need.

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     (7) In 2011 the Rhode Island department of elderly affairs was changed to a division within

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the department of human services. In 2019, the state budget bill included an article that made an

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additional change to the division of elderly affairs and renamed it to the office of healthy aging

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(OHA).

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      (8) With a large percentage of the population at the age of sixty-five (65) and over, the

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increasing needs of services in a post-pandemic world, and acknowledging that Rhode Island’s

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older adults have spent a lifetime providing financial support to the current systems of education

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and public service, the time has come to update and restructure the administration and delivery of

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services.

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     (9) The purpose of this legislation is to accelerate efforts to shift Rhode Island's narrative

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on aging and to position the state to better meet the demands of our growing and vital constituency.

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This bill serves as a blueprint for action to strengthen organizational operations and program

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offerings while recognizing that people's needs and desires are diverse and multi-dimensional as

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they age, by re-naming the office of healthy aging and establishing the department of healthy aging.

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     SECTION 2. The title of Chapter 42-66 of the General Laws entitled "Office of Healthy

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Aging" is hereby amended to read as follows:

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CHAPTER 42-66

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Office of Healthy Aging

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CHAPTER 42-66

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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHY AGING

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     SECTION 3. Sections 42-66-2, 42-66-3, 42-66-4, 42-66-5, 42-66-7, and 42-66-8 of the

 

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General Laws in Chapter 42-66 entitled "Office of Healthy Aging" are hereby amended to read as

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follows:

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     42-66-2. Establishment of department -- Director.

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     There is established within the executive branch of state government a department of

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elderly affairs healthy aging. The director of the department shall be the director of elderly affairs

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healthy aging, appointed by and reporting directly to the governor, with the advice and consent of

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the senate.

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     42-66-3. Transfer of functions from the department of community affairs.

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     There are transferred to the director of the department of elderly affairs healthy aging:

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     (1) Those duties with respect to elderly citizens persons as enacted by former §§ 42-44-9

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and 42-44-10;

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     (2) So much of other functions or parts of functions of the director of the department of

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community affairs; provided, however, that those duties with respect to housing facilities, projects,

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and programs for the elderly shall be within the jurisdiction of the governor's office of

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intergovernmental relations; and

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     (3) Whenever in the general laws or in any public law the words "administration of division

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of aging," "division on aging," and "director and/or department of community affairs," and the

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"office of healthy aging shall appear in relation to elderly affairs ", the reference shall be deemed

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to mean and include the director and the department of elderly affairs healthy aging, as the case

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may be.

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     42-66-4. Duties of the division Duties of the department of healthy aging.

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     (a) The division department of healthy aging shall be the principal agency of the state to

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mobilize the human, physical, and financial resources available to plan, develop, and implement

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and bring awareness to innovative programs to ensure the dignity and independence of elderly

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persons, including the planning, development, and implementation of a home- and long-term-care

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program for the elderly in the communities of the state.

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     (b)(1) The division department shall serve as an advocate for the needs of the adult with a

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disability as these needs and services overlap the needs and services of elderly persons.

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     (2) The division department shall serve as the state's central agency for the administration

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and coordination of a long-term-care entry system, using community-based access points, that will

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provide the following services related to long-term care: information and referral; initial screening

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for service and benefits eligibility; and a uniform assessment program for state-supported long-

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term care.

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     (3) The division department shall investigate reports of elder abuse, neglect, exploitation,

 

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or self-neglect and shall provide and/or coordinate protective services.

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     (4) The department shall monitor and maintain a strong relationship between the various

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state agencies and the actual service providers for elderly persons.

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     (c) To accomplish these objectives, the director is authorized:

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     (1) To provide assistance to communities in solving local problems with regard to elderly

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persons including, but not limited to, problems in identifying and coordinating local resources to

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serve the needs of elderly persons;

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     (2) To facilitate communications and the free flow of information and expand the lines of

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communication between communities, seniors service providers, and the offices, agencies, and

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employees of the state;

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     (3) To encourage and assist communities, agencies, and state departments to plan, develop,

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and implement home- and long-term care programs;

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     (4) To provide and act as a clearinghouse for information, data, and other materials relative

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to elderly persons;

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     (5) To initiate and carry out studies and analyses that will aid in solving local, regional,

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and statewide problems concerning elderly persons;

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     (6) To coordinate those programs of other state agencies designed to assist in the solution

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of local, regional, and statewide problems concerning elderly persons;

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     (7) To advise and inform the governor on the affairs and problems of elderly persons in the

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state;

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     (8) To exercise the powers and discharge the duties assigned to the director in the fields of

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health care, nutrition, homemaker services, geriatric day care, economic opportunity, local and

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regional planning, transportation, and education and pre-retirement programs;

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     (9) To further the cooperation of local, state, federal, and private agencies and institutions

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providing for services or having responsibility for elderly persons;

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     (10) To represent and act on behalf of the state in connection with federal grant programs

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applicable to programs for elderly persons in the functional areas described in this chapter;

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     (11) To seek, accept, and otherwise take advantage of all federal aid available to the

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division, and to assist other agencies of the state, local agencies, and community groups in taking

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advantage of all federal grants and subventions available for elderly persons and to accept other

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sources of funds with the approval of the director of administration that shall be deposited as general

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revenues;

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     (12) To render advice and assistance to communities and other groups in the preparation

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and submission of grant applications to state and federal agencies relative to programs for elderly

 

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persons;

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     (13) To review and coordinate those activities of agencies of the state and of any political

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subdivision of the state at the request of the subdivision, that affect the full and fair utilization of

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community resources for programs for elderly persons, and initiate programs that will help ensure

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such utilization;

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     (14) To encourage the formation of councils on aging and to assist local communities in

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the development of the councils;

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     (15) To promote and coordinate daycare facilities for the frail elderly who are in need of

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supportive care and supervision during the daytime;

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     (16) To provide and coordinate the delivery of in-home services to the elderly, as defined

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under the rules and regulations adopted by the office department of healthy aging;

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     (17) To advise and inform the public of the risks of accidental hypothermia;

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     (18) To establish a clearinghouse for information and education of the elderly citizens

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persons of the state, including, but not limited to, and subject to available funding, a web-based

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caregiver support information center;

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     (19) [As amended by P.L. 2019, ch. 110, § 2]. To establish and operate, in collaboration

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with the departments of behavioral health, developmental disabilities and hospitals; human

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services; and children youth and families regular community agencies supporting caregivers, a

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statewide family-caregiver support association and a family-caregiver resource network to provide

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and coordinate family-caregiver training and support services to include counseling and elder

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caregiver respite services, which shall be subject to available funding, and include home

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health/homemaker care, adult day services, assisted living, and nursing facility care; and

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     (19) [As amended by P.L. 2019, ch. 130, § 2]. To establish and operate, in collaboration

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with the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals; the

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department of human services; the department of children, youth and families, and community

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agencies supporting caregivers, a statewide family-caregiver support association and a family-

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caregiver resource network to provide and coordinate family-caregiver training and support

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services to include counseling and caregiver respite services, which shall be subject to available

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funding, and include home health/homemaker care, adult day services, assisted living, and nursing

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facility care; and

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     (20) To supervise the citizens' commission for the safety and care of the elderly created

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pursuant to the provisions of chapter 1.4 of title 12.

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     (21) To protect and enable senior persons to stay healthy and independent by providing

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meals, health programs, transportation, benefits counseling, employment, and more.

 

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     (22) To encourage the various state agencies to employ individuals that have expertise in

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the areas of transportation, housing, nutrition, health, financial and economic literacy and stability,

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lifelong learning, physical and social engagement, and adult protective services,

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     (23) To provide professional development to agencies and programs providing senior

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services.

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     (24) To act as a liaison to governmental agencies advocating for aging issues.

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     (25) To provide a clearing house for partnering agencies and businesses to assist senior

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centers and municipalities to better serve their senior residents.

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     (26) To appoint senior centers as the community hub for emergency service delivery.

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     (27) To manage and develop a multi-tiered system of transportation that joins the

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department of health and human services, the department of transportation and senior centers to

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work with all available modes of public transportation at the municipal level to develop municipal

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plans that suit the elderly population of each municipality.

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     (28) To give senior centers and municipalities the authority to bill Medicaid for

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transportation services.

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     (29)To develop and submit to the general assembly for approval a funding formula that

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meets the requirements and furthers the purposes of this chapter. The funding formula shall include:

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     (i) Input from senior residents and their caregivers, and

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     (ii) An allocation of funding to the municipality with a restriction that the money be used

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only for the municipality’s senior center (s) based on the population of senior residents living in

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the municipality.

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     (d) In order to assist in the discharge of the duties of the division, the director may request

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from any agency of the state information pertinent to the affairs and problems of elderly persons.

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     42-66-5. Divisions of department.

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     There shall be within the department of elderly affairs healthy aging a division of program

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planning, development and operations and a division of community services.

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     42-66-7. Advisory commission on aging.

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     (a) Within the department of elderly affairs healthy aging there shall be an advisory

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commission on aging consisting of twenty-five (25) members, four (4) of whom shall be from the

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general assembly as hereinafter provided, and twenty-one (21) of whom shall be appointed by the

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governor, thirteen (13) of whom shall be elderly consumers representative of that segment of the

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population. In the case of members of the commission appointed by the governor, they shall be

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chosen and shall hold office for three (3) years, except that in the original appointments, seven (7)

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members shall be designated to serve for one year, seven (7) members shall be designated to serve

 

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for two (2) years and seven (7) members shall be designated to serve for three (3) years,

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respectively, and until their respective successors are appointed and qualified. In the month of

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February in each year the governor shall appoint successors to the members of the commission

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whose terms shall expire in such year to hold office until the first day of March in the third year

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after their appointment and until their respective successors are appointed and qualified.

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     (b) The four (4) members from the general assembly shall be appointed, two (2) from the

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house of representatives by the speaker, one from each of the two (2) major political parties, and

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two (2) from the senate by the president of the senate, one each from the two (2) major political

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parties, each to serve until the thirty-first day of December in the second year of the term to which

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the member has been elected. Any vacancy, which may occur in the commission, shall be filled in

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like manner as the original appointment, for the remainder of the unexpired term.

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     (c) The members of the commission at the first meeting shall elect a chairperson and such

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other officers as they may deem necessary. The commission shall meet at the call of the governor

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or the chairperson and shall make suggestions to and advise the governor or the director concerning

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the policies and problems confronting the aged and aging of the state. The members of the

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commission shall serve without compensation but shall be compensated for their necessary and

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actual traveling expenses in the performance of their official duties.

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     42-66-8. Abuse, neglect, exploitation, and self-neglect of elderly persons -- Duty to

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report.

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     (a) Any person who has reasonable cause to believe that any person sixty (60) years of age

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or older has been abused, neglected, or exploited, or is self-neglecting, shall make an immediate

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report to the director of the office department of healthy aging, or his or her designee. The office

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department of healthy aging may then notify law enforcement if appropriate. This section applies

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to any person sixty (60) years of age or older regardless of where he or she lives in the community.

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     (b) Any physician, physician assistant, medical intern, registered nurse, licensed practical

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nurse, nurse's aide, orderly, certified nursing assistant, medical examiner, dentist, optometrist,

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optician, chiropractor, podiatrist, coroner, police officer, probation officer, emergency medical

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technician, firefighter, speech pathologist, audiologist, social worker, pharmacist, physical or

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occupational therapist, or health officer, who has reasonable cause to believe that any person sixty

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(60) years of age or older has been abused, neglected, or exploited, or is self-neglecting, shall make

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an immediate report to the director of the office department of healthy aging, or his or her designee.

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The office department of healthy aging may then notify law enforcement if appropriate. This

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section applies to any person sixty (60) years of age or older regardless of where he or she lives in

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the community. Reporting requirements relating to individuals in healthcare facilities are further

 

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set forth in § 23-17.8-2. The report pursuant to this section shall contain:

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     (1) The name, address, telephone number, occupation, and employer's address and the

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phone number of the person reporting;

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     (2) The name and address of the patient or resident elderly person who is believed to be

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the victim of the abuse, mistreatment, or neglect;

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     (3) The details, observations, and beliefs concerning the incident(s);

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     (4) Any statements regarding the incident made by the patient or resident elderly person

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who is believed to be the victim and to whom they were made;

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     (5) The date, time, and place of the incident;

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     (6) The name of any individual(s) believed to have knowledge of the incident;

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     (7) The name of any individual(s) believed to have been responsible for the incident;

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     (8) The name of the individual's caretaker, if known;

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     (9) Any medical treatment being received if immediately required and need to coordinate

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care, if known;

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     (10) Any other information the reporter believes relevant to the investigation; and

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     (11) The name and address of the reporter and where the reporter can be contacted. The

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reporter's identity shall remain confidential unless disclosure is consented to by the reporter or by

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court order.

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     (c) Individuals required to report pursuant to the provisions of subsection (b) of this section

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shall, whenever practical and if known, provide twenty-four hour (24) notice of discharge to the

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department and shall include the address and telephone number of the individual being discharged.

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     (d) In cases of abuse, neglect, or exploitation, any person who fails to make the report shall

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be punished by a fine of not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000). Nothing in this section shall

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require an elder who is a victim of abuse, neglect, exploitation or who is self neglecting, to make a

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report regarding such abuse, neglect, exploitation, or self-neglect to the director of the office

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department of healthy aging, or his or her designee. The office department of healthy aging may

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then notify law enforcement if appropriate.

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     (e) No person required to report pursuant to the provisions of this section shall be liable in

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any civil or criminal action by reason of the report; provided, however, that such person did not

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perpetrate, inflict, or cause the abuse. No employer or supervisor may discharge, demote, transfer,

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reduce pay, benefits, or work privileges; prepare a negative work performance evaluation; or take

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any other action detrimental to an employee or supervisee who files a report in accordance with the

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provisions of this section by reason of such report.

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     SECTION 4. Sections 5-37-22 and 5-37-23 of the General Laws in Chapter 5-37 entitled

 

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"Board of Medical Licensure and Discipline" are hereby amended to read as follows:

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     5-37-22. Disclosures.

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     (a)(1) Any physician who is not a participant in a medical insurance plan shall post a notice,

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in a conspicuous place in his or her medical offices where it can be read by his or her patients, that

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reads, in substance, as follows:

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     "To my patients:

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     I do not participate in a medical insurance plan. You should know that you shall be

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responsible for the payment of my medical fees."

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     (2) Any physician who fails to post this notice shall not be entitled to charge his or her

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patients any amount for medical fees in excess of that allowed had the physician participated in a

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medical insurance plan.

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     (b) Every physician shall disclose to patients eligible for Medicare, in advance of treatment,

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whether the physician accepts assignment under Medicare reimbursement as payment in full for

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medical services and/or treatment in the physician's office. This disclosure shall be given by posting

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in each physician's office, in a conspicuous place, a summary of the physician's Medicare

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reimbursement policy. Any physician who fails to make the disclosure as required in this section

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shall not be allowed to charge the patient in excess of the Medicare assignment amount for the

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medical procedure performed.

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     (c) When a patient requests, in writing, that his or her medical records be transferred to

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another physician or medical practice group, the original physician or medical-practice group shall

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promptly honor the request. The physician or medical-practice group shall be reimbursed for

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reasonable expenses (as defined by the director pursuant to § 23-1-48) incurred in connection with

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copying the medical records.

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     (d) Every physician or medical-practice group shall, upon written request of any patient (or

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his or her authorized representative as defined in § 5-37.3-3(1)) who has received healthcare

26

services from the physician or medical-practice group, at the option of the physician or medical-

27

practice group either permit the patient (or his or her authorized representative) to examine and

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copy the patient's confidential healthcare information, or provide the patient (or his or her

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authorized representative) a summary of that information. If the physician or medical-practice

30

group decides to provide a summary and the patient is not satisfied with a summary, then the patient

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may request, and the physician or medical-practice group shall provide, a copy of the entire record.

32

At the time of the examination, copying, or provision of summary information, the physician or

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medical-practice group shall be reimbursed for reasonable expenses (as defined by the director

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pursuant to § 23-1-48) in connection with copying this information. If, in the professional judgment

 

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of the treating physician, it would be injurious to the mental or physical health of the patient to

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disclose certain confidential healthcare information to the patient, the physician or medical-practice

3

group shall not be required to disclose or provide a summary of that information to the patient, but

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shall upon written request of the patient (or his or her authorized representative) disclose that

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information to another physician or medical-practice group designated by the patient.

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     (e) Every physician who has ownership interest in health facilities or laboratories, including

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any healthcare facility licensed pursuant to chapter 17 of title 23, any residential-care/assisted-

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living facility licensed pursuant to chapter 17.4 of title 23, any adult day-care program licensed or

9

certified by the director of the office department of healthy aging, or any equipment not on the

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physician's premises, shall, in writing, make full patient disclosure of his or her ownership interest

11

in the facility or therapy prior to utilization. The written notice shall state that the patient has free

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choice either to use the physician's proprietary facility or therapy or to seek the needed medical

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services elsewhere.

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     (f) Every physician who makes a referral of a patient to receive physical therapy services

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shall provide the notice required by this section if the services are provided by employees or

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independent contractors of the physician or if the entity is one in which the physician has an

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ownership interest. Any such interest referenced in this paragraph shall be in accordance with

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federal and state law, specifically including, but not limited to, chapter 48.1 of this title.

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     (g) Unless otherwise expressly stated in writing by the medical-practice group, all medical

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records shall be the property of the medical-practice group with which a physician is associated

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when that physician created all such medical records. A medical-practice group shall provide

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patients with access to patients' medical records in the same manner as is required of individual

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physicians under this chapter. To the extent a medical-practice group fails to provide access to

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patients in accordance with the requirements of this chapter, the individual officers of the medical-

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practice group (or in the absence of officers, the shareholders or owners of the medical-practice

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group), in their capacities as licensees of the board, shall be subject to the disciplinary powers of

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the board.

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     5-37-23. Over-billing reward program.

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     (a) Any person sixty-five (65) years of age or older who is billed for healthcare services

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that have never been provided to that person may report the billing error to the office department

31

of healthy aging. The division shall investigate the report.

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     (b) The healthcare provider shall repay any verified billing error, and in addition shall pay

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ten percent (10%) of the billing error to this patient. The ten percent (10%) award shall not preclude

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recovery by the patient under any other provision of the Rhode Island general laws. Diagnostic-

 

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related group billings are exempt from the ten percent (10%) penalty.

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     SECTION 5. Section 5-37.3-4 of the General Laws in Chapter 5-37.3 entitled

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"Confidentiality of Health Care Communications and Information Act" is hereby amended to read

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as follows:

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     5-37.3-4. Limitations on and permitted disclosures.

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     (a)(1) Except as provided in subsection (b), or as specifically provided by the law, a

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patient's confidential healthcare information shall not be released or transferred without the written

8

consent of the patient, or his or her authorized representative, on a consent form meeting the

9

requirements of subsection (d). A copy of any notice used pursuant to subsection (d) and of any

10

signed consent shall, upon request, be provided to the patient prior to his or her signing a consent

11

form. Any and all managed care entities and managed care contractors writing policies in the state

12

shall be prohibited from providing any information related to enrollees that is personal in nature

13

and could reasonably lead to identification of an individual and is not essential for the compilation

14

of statistical data related to enrollees, to any international, national, regional, or local medical-

15

information database. This provision shall not restrict or prohibit the transfer of information to the

16

department of health to carry out its statutory duties and responsibilities.

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     (2) Any person who violates the provisions of this section may be liable for actual and

18

punitive damages.

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     (3) The court may award a reasonable attorney's fee at its discretion to the prevailing party

20

in any civil action under this section.

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     (4) Any person who knowingly and intentionally violates the provisions of this section

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shall, upon conviction, be fined not more than five thousand ($5,000) dollars for each violation, or

23

imprisoned not more than six (6) months for each violation, or both.

24

     (5) Any contract or agreement that purports to waive the provisions of this section shall be

25

declared null and void as against public policy.

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     (b) No consent for release or transfer of confidential healthcare information shall be

27

required in the following situations:

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     (1) To a physician, dentist, or other medical personnel who believes, in good faith, that the

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information is necessary for diagnosis or treatment of that individual in a medical or dental

30

emergency;

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     (2) To medical and dental peer-review boards, or the board of medical licensure and

32

discipline, or board of examiners in dentistry;

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     (3) To qualified personnel for the purpose of conducting scientific research, management

34

audits, financial audits, program evaluations, actuarial, insurance underwriting, or similar studies;

 

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provided, that personnel shall not identify, directly or indirectly, any individual patient in any report

2

of that research, audit, or evaluation, or otherwise disclose patient identities in any manner;

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     (4)(i) By a healthcare provider to appropriate law enforcement personnel, or to a person if

4

the healthcare provider believes that person, or his or her family, is in danger from a patient; or to

5

appropriate law enforcement personnel if the patient has, or is attempting to obtain, narcotic drugs

6

from the healthcare provider illegally; or to appropriate law enforcement personnel, or appropriate

7

child-protective agencies, if the patient is a minor child or the parent or guardian of said child and/or

8

the healthcare provider believes, after providing healthcare services to the patient, that the child is,

9

or has been, physically, psychologically, or sexually abused and neglected as reportable pursuant

10

to § 40-11-3; or to appropriate law enforcement personnel or the office department of healthy aging

11

if the patient is an elder person and the healthcare provider believes, after providing healthcare

12

services to the patient, that the elder person is, or has been, abused, neglected, or exploited as

13

reportable pursuant to § 42-66-8; or to law enforcement personnel in the case of a gunshot wound

14

reportable under § 11-47-48, or to patient emergency contacts and certified peer recovery

15

specialists notified in the case of an opioid overdose reportable under § 23-17.26-3;

16

     (ii) A healthcare provider may disclose protected health information in response to a law

17

enforcement official's request for such information for the purpose of identifying or locating a

18

suspect, fugitive, material witness, or missing person, provided that the healthcare provider may

19

disclose only the following information:

20

     (A) Name and address;

21

     (B) Date and place of birth;

22

     (C) Social security number;

23

     (D) ABO blood type and RH factor;

24

     (E) Type of injury;

25

     (F) Date and time of treatment;

26

     (G) Date and time of death, if applicable; and

27

     (H) A description of distinguishing physical characteristics, including height, weight,

28

gender, race, hair and eye color, presence or absence of facial hair (beard or moustache), scars, and

29

tattoos.

30

     (I) Except as permitted by this subsection, the healthcare provider may not disclose for the

31

purposes of identification or location under this subsection any protected health information related

32

to the patient's DNA or DNA analysis, dental records, or typing, samples, or analysis of body fluids

33

or tissue;

34

     (iii) A healthcare provider may disclose protected health information in response to a law

 

LC004771 - Page 12 of 67

1

enforcement official's request for such information about a patient who is, or is suspected to be, a

2

victim of a crime, other than disclosures that are subject to subsection (b)(4)(vii), if:

3

     (A) The patient agrees to the disclosure; or

4

     (B) The healthcare provider is unable to obtain the patient's agreement because of

5

incapacity or other emergency circumstances provided that:

6

     (1) The law enforcement official represents that the information is needed to determine

7

whether a violation of law by a person other than the victim has occurred, and such information is

8

not intended to be used against the victim;

9

     (2) The law enforcement official represents that immediate law enforcement activity that

10

depends upon the disclosure would be materially and adversely affected by waiting until the patient

11

is able to agree to the disclosure; and

12

     (3) The disclosure is in the best interests of the patient as determined by the healthcare

13

provider in the exercise of professional judgment;

14

     (iv) A healthcare provider may disclose protected health information about a patient who

15

has died to a law enforcement official for the purpose of alerting law enforcement of the death of

16

the patient if the healthcare provider has a suspicion that such death may have resulted from

17

criminal conduct;

18

     (v) A healthcare provider may disclose to a law enforcement official protected health

19

information that the healthcare provider believes in good faith constitutes evidence of criminal

20

conduct that occurred on the premises of the healthcare provider;

21

     (vi)(A) A healthcare provider providing emergency health care in response to a medical

22

emergency, other than such emergency on the premises of the covered healthcare provider, may

23

disclose protected health information to a law enforcement official if such disclosure appears

24

necessary to alert law enforcement to:

25

     (1) The commission and nature of a crime;

26

     (2) The location of such crime or of the victim(s) of such crime; and

27

     (3) The identity, description, and location of the perpetrator of such crime.

28

     (B) If a healthcare provider believes that the medical emergency described in subsection

29

(b)(4)(vi)(A) is the result of abuse, neglect, or domestic violence of the individual in need of

30

emergency health care, subsection (b)(4)(vi)(A) does not apply and any disclosure to a law

31

enforcement official for law enforcement purposes is subject to subsection (b)(4)(vii);

32

     (vii)(A) Except for reports permitted by subsection (b)(4)(i), a healthcare provider may

33

disclose protected health information about a patient the healthcare provider reasonably believes to

34

be a victim of abuse, neglect, or domestic violence to law enforcement or a government authority,

 

LC004771 - Page 13 of 67

1

including a social-service or protective-services agency, authorized by law to receive reports of

2

such abuse, neglect, or domestic violence:

3

     (1) To the extent the disclosure is required by law and the disclosure complies with, and is

4

limited to, the relevant requirements of such law;

5

     (2) If the patient agrees to the disclosure; or

6

     (3) To the extent the disclosure is expressly authorized by statute or regulation and:

7

     (i) The healthcare provider, in the exercise of professional judgment, believes the

8

disclosure is necessary to prevent serious harm to the patient or other potential victims; or

9

     (ii) If the patient is unable to agree because of incapacity, a law enforcement or other public

10

official authorized to receive the report represents that the protected health information for which

11

disclosure is sought is not intended to be used against the patient and that an immediate enforcement

12

activity that depends upon the disclosure would be materially and adversely affected by waiting

13

until the patient is able to agree to the disclosure.

14

     (B) A healthcare provider that makes a disclosure permitted by subsection (b)(4)(vii)(A)

15

must promptly inform the patient that such a report has been, or will be, made, except if:

16

     (1) The healthcare facility, in the exercise of professional judgment, believes informing the

17

patient would place the individual at risk of serious harm; or

18

     (2) The healthcare provider would be informing a personal representative, and the

19

healthcare provider reasonably believes the personal representative is responsible for the abuse,

20

neglect, or other injury, and that informing such person would not be in the best interests of the

21

individual as determined by the covered entity in the exercise of professional judgment;

22

     (viii) The disclosures authorized by this subsection shall be limited to the minimum amount

23

of information necessary to accomplish the intended purpose of the release of information;

24

     (5) Between, or among, qualified personnel and healthcare providers within the healthcare

25

system for purposes of coordination of healthcare services given to the patient and for purposes of

26

education and training within the same healthcare facility;

27

     (6) To third-party health insurers, including to utilization review agents as provided by §

28

23-17.12-9(c)(4), third-party administrators licensed pursuant to chapter 20.7 of title 27, and other

29

entities that provide operational support to adjudicate health insurance claims or administer health

30

benefits;

31

     (7) To a malpractice insurance carrier or lawyer if the healthcare provider has reason to

32

anticipate a medical-liability action;

33

     (8)(i) To the healthcare provider's own lawyer or medical-liability insurance carrier if the

34

patient whose information is at issue brings a medical-liability action against a healthcare provider.

 

LC004771 - Page 14 of 67

1

     (ii) Disclosure by a healthcare provider of a patient's healthcare information that is relevant

2

to a civil action brought by the patient against any person or persons other than that healthcare

3

provider may occur only under the discovery methods provided by the applicable rules of civil

4

procedure (federal or state). This disclosure shall not be through ex parte contacts and not through

5

informal ex parte contacts with the provider by persons other than the patient or his or her legal

6

representative.

7

     Nothing in this section shall limit the right of a patient, or his or her attorney, to consult

8

with that patient's own physician and to obtain that patient's own healthcare information;

9

     (9) To public-health authorities in order to carry out their functions as described in this title

10

and titles 21 and 23 and rules promulgated under those titles. These functions include, but are not

11

restricted to, investigations into the causes of disease, the control of public-health hazards,

12

enforcement of sanitary laws, investigation of reportable diseases, certification and licensure of

13

health professionals and facilities, review of health care such as that required by the federal

14

government and other governmental agencies;

15

     (10) To the state medical examiner in the event of a fatality that comes under his or her

16

jurisdiction;

17

     (11) In relation to information that is directly related to a current claim for workers'

18

compensation benefits or to any proceeding before the workers' compensation commission or

19

before any court proceeding relating to workers' compensation;

20

     (12) To the attorneys for a healthcare provider whenever that provider considers that

21

release of information to be necessary in order to receive adequate legal representation;

22

     (13) By a healthcare provider to appropriate school authorities of disease, health screening,

23

and/or immunization information required by the school; or when a school-age child transfers from

24

one school or school district to another school or school district;

25

     (14) To a law enforcement authority to protect the legal interest of an insurance institution,

26

agent, or insurance-support organization in preventing and prosecuting the perpetration of fraud

27

upon them;

28

     (15) To a grand jury, or to a court of competent jurisdiction, pursuant to a subpoena or

29

subpoena duces tecum when that information is required for the investigation or prosecution of

30

criminal wrongdoing by a healthcare provider relating to his, her or its provisions of healthcare

31

services and that information is unavailable from any other source; provided, that any information

32

so obtained, is not admissible in any criminal proceeding against the patient to whom that

33

information pertains;

34

     (16) To the state board of elections pursuant to a subpoena or subpoena duces tecum when

 

LC004771 - Page 15 of 67

1

that information is required to determine the eligibility of a person to vote by mail ballot and/or the

2

legitimacy of a certification by a physician attesting to a voter's illness or disability;

3

     (17) To certify, pursuant to chapter 20 of title 17, the nature and permanency of a person's

4

illness or disability, the date when that person was last examined and that it would be an undue

5

hardship for the person to vote at the polls so that the person may obtain a mail ballot;

6

     (18) To the central cancer registry;

7

     (19) To the Medicaid fraud control unit of the attorney general's office for the investigation

8

or prosecution of criminal or civil wrongdoing by a healthcare provider relating to his, her, or its

9

provision of healthcare services to then-Medicaid-eligible recipients or patients, residents, or

10

former patients or residents of long-term residential-care facilities; provided, that any information

11

obtained shall not be admissible in any criminal proceeding against the patient to whom that

12

information pertains;

13

     (20) To the state department of children, youth and families pertaining to the disclosure of

14

healthcare records of children in the custody of the department;

15

     (21) To the foster parent, or parents, pertaining to the disclosure of healthcare records of

16

children in the custody of the foster parent, or parents; provided, that the foster parent or parents

17

receive appropriate training and have ongoing availability of supervisory assistance in the use of

18

sensitive information that may be the source of distress to these children;

19

     (22) A hospital may release the fact of a patient's admission and a general description of a

20

patient's condition to persons representing themselves as relatives or friends of the patient or as a

21

representative of the news media. The access to confidential healthcare information to persons in

22

accredited educational programs under appropriate provider supervision shall not be deemed

23

subject to release or transfer of that information under subsection (a);

24

     (23) To the workers' compensation fraud prevention unit for purposes of investigation

25

under §§ 42-16.1-12 -- 42-16.1-16. The release or transfer of confidential healthcare information

26

under any of the above exceptions is not the basis for any legal liability, civil or criminal, nor

27

considered a violation of this chapter; or

28

     (24) To a probate court of competent jurisdiction, petitioner, respondent, and/or their

29

attorneys, when the information is contained within a decision-making assessment tool that

30

conforms to the provisions of § 33-15-47.

31

     (c) Third parties receiving, and retaining, a patient's confidential healthcare information

32

must establish at least the following security procedures:

33

     (1) Limit authorized access to personally identifiable confidential healthcare information

34

to persons having a "need to know" that information; additional employees or agents may have

 

LC004771 - Page 16 of 67

1

access to that information that does not contain information from which an individual can be

2

identified;

3

     (2) Identify an individual, or individuals, who have responsibility for maintaining security

4

procedures for confidential healthcare information;

5

     (3) Provide a written statement to each employee or agent as to the necessity of maintaining

6

the security and confidentiality of confidential healthcare information, and of the penalties provided

7

for in this chapter for the unauthorized release, use, or disclosure of this information. The receipt

8

of that statement shall be acknowledged by the employee or agent, who signs and returns the

9

statement to his or her employer or principal, who retains the signed original. The employee or

10

agent shall be furnished with a copy of the signed statement; and

11

     (4) Take no disciplinary or punitive action against any employee or agent solely for

12

bringing evidence of violation of this chapter to the attention of any person.

13

     (d) Consent forms for the release or transfer of confidential healthcare information shall

14

contain, or in the course of an application or claim for insurance be accompanied by a notice

15

containing, the following information in a clear and conspicuous manner:

16

     (1) A statement of the need for and proposed uses of that information;

17

     (2) A statement that all information is to be released or clearly indicating the extent of the

18

information to be released; and

19

     (3) A statement that the consent for release or transfer of information may be withdrawn at

20

any future time and is subject to revocation, except where an authorization is executed in connection

21

with an application for a life or health insurance policy in which case the authorization expires two

22

(2) years from the issue date of the insurance policy, and when signed in connection with a claim

23

for benefits under any insurance policy, the authorization shall be valid during the pendency of that

24

claim. Any revocation shall be transmitted in writing.

25

     (e) Except as specifically provided by law, an individual's confidential healthcare

26

information shall not be given, sold, transferred, or in any way relayed to any other person not

27

specified in the consent form or notice meeting the requirements of subsection (d) without first

28

obtaining the individual's additional written consent on a form stating the need for the proposed

29

new use of this information or the need for its transfer to another person.

30

     (f) Nothing contained in this chapter shall be construed to limit the permitted disclosure of

31

confidential healthcare information and communications described in subsection (b).

32

     SECTION 6. Sections 7-11.2-3 and 7-11.2-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 7-11.2 entitled

33

"Senior Savings Protection Act" are hereby amended to read as follows:

34

     7-11.2-3. Notification of agencies and family members.

 

LC004771 - Page 17 of 67

1

     If a qualified individual reasonably believes that financial exploitation of a qualified adult

2

has occurred, has been attempted, or is being attempted, the qualified individual shall notify the

3

department of business regulation as well as the office department of healthy aging and law

4

enforcement in accordance with § 42-66-8. Subsequent to providing this notification, an agent or

5

qualified individual may notify an immediate family member, legal guardian, conservator,

6

cotrustee, successor trustee, or agent under a power of attorney of the qualified adult of the belief.

7

     7-11.2-6. Website for training resources to prevent and detect financial exploitation.

8

     No later than July 1, 2020, the department of business regulation and the office department

9

of healthy aging shall develop and make available websites that include training resources to assist

10

broker-dealers and agents in the prevention and detection of financial exploitation of qualified

11

adults. The resources shall include, at a minimum, indicators of financial exploitation of qualified

12

adults and potential steps broker-dealers and agents may take to prevent suspected financial

13

exploitation of qualified adults as authorized by law.

14

     SECTION 7. Section 12-1.4-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 12-1.4 entitled "Citizens'

15

Commission for the Safety and Care of the Elderly" is hereby amended to read as follows:

16

     12-1.4-3. Purpose.

17

     The purpose of the commission shall be to act as a liaison between the legislature, public

18

safety officials, the office department of healthy aging, and the older population of Rhode Island in

19

the area of crime against the elderly, fire safety, and protective service options available to the

20

elderly.

21

     SECTION 8. Section 19-34-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 19-34 entitled "The Elder

22

Adult Financial Exploitation Prevention Act" is hereby amended to read as follows:

23

     19-34-1. Definitions.

24

     As used in this chapter:

25

     (1) "Department" means the Rhode Island office department of healthy aging.

26

     (2) "Elder adult" means a person who is sixty (60) years of age or older.

27

     (3) "Exploitation" means the fraudulent or otherwise illegal, unauthorized, or improper act

28

or process of an individual, including, but not limited to, a caregiver or fiduciary that uses the

29

resources of an elder adult for monetary or personal benefit, profit, gain, or that results in depriving

30

an elder adult of rightful access to or use of benefits, resources, belongings, or assets by use, undue

31

influence, harassment, duress, deception, false representation or false pretenses, or conduct in

32

violation of § 11-68-2.

33

     (4) "Financial exploitation" means:

34

     (i) The wrongful or unauthorized taking, withholding, appropriation, or use of the money,

 

LC004771 - Page 18 of 67

1

assets, or other property or the identifying information of a person; or

2

     (ii) Any act or omission taken by a person, including through the use of a power of attorney,

3

guardianship, or any other legal authority, regarding an elder adult to:

4

     (A) Obtain control through deception, intimidation, fraud, or undue influence, over the

5

other person's money, assets, or property to deprive the other person of the ownership, use, benefit,

6

or possession of the property; or

7

     (B) Convert the money, assets, or other property of the other person to deprive the other

8

person of the ownership, use, benefit, or possession of the property.

9

     (5) "Regulated institution" means any financial institution, credit union, or other insured

10

deposit-taking institution, that is authorized to do business in this state, including one authorized

11

by operation of an interstate banking statute that allowed it original entry.

12

     SECTION 9. Section 21-36-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 21-36 entitled "The Inter-

13

Agency Food & Nutrition Policy Advisory Council" is hereby amended to read as follows:

14

     21-36-3. Council composition.

15

     There shall be an inter-agency food and nutrition policy advisory council which shall

16

consist of seven (7) members: the director of health, or his or her designee; the director of

17

environmental management, or his or her designee; the director of administration, or his or her

18

designee; the director of the department of human services, or his or her designee; the director of

19

the office department of healthy aging, or his or her designee; the director of the department of

20

corrections, or his or her designee; and the commissioner of elementary and secondary education,

21

or his or her designee. The members of the commission shall elect a chairperson from among

22

themselves.

23

     SECTION 10. Sections 23-1.7-2 and 23-1.7-4 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-1.7

24

entitled "Rhode Island Program to Address Alzheimer's Disease" are hereby amended to read as

25

follows:

26

     23-1.7-2. Creation of advisory council.

27

     (a) There is hereby established a council to be called the "Advisory Council on Alzheimer's

28

Disease Research and Treatment." The advisory council shall consist of thirteen (13) members to

29

be composed as follows: the lieutenant governor, or designee; the director of the department of

30

health, or designee; the director of the office department of healthy aging, or designee; the

31

chairperson of the long-term care coordinating council; one member appointed by the speaker of

32

the house; one member appointed by the president of the senate; and seven (7) members appointed

33

by the governor. The members appointed by the governor shall include one member who is an

34

Alzheimer's disease patient advocate; one member who is an Alzheimer's disease caregiver; one

 

LC004771 - Page 19 of 67

1

member who is a healthcare provider; one member who is a researcher with Alzheimer's-related

2

expertise in basic, translational, clinical, or drug-development science; one member who is a

3

representative from an Alzheimer's disease organization that funds research and has demonstrated

4

experience in care and patient services; one member from an Alzheimer's advocacy organization

5

that provides services to families and professionals, including information and referrals, support

6

groups, care consultation, education, and safety services; and one member who is a representative

7

of a healthcare insurer. Advisory council members shall select their own chairperson. Seven (7)

8

members shall constitute a quorum.

9

     (b) The member appointed by the speaker of the house,, the member appointed by the

10

president of the senate, and three (3) members appointed by the governor shall be initially appointed

11

for a term to expire July 1, 2020, and four (4) members to be appointed by the governor shall be

12

initially appointed for a term to expire July 1, 2021. After the initial term, the appointed members

13

shall serve two-year (2) terms, until their successor is appointed.

14

     23-1.7-4. Assessment protocol.

15

     (a) The director of the department of health shall establish and publish an Alzheimer's

16

disease assessment protocol specifically focused on recognizing the signs and symptoms of

17

cognitive impairments, including, but not limited to, Alzheimer's disease and appropriate resource

18

information for effective medical screening, investigation, and service planning.

19

     (b) The director of the department of health shall make available upon request a copy of

20

the assessment protocol to protective-services caseworkers, healthcare professionals, and members

21

of the public.

22

     (c) Protective-services caseworkers assigned to or employed by the office department of

23

healthy aging shall be familiar with the information contained in the assessment protocol.

24

     SECTION 11. Section 23-17.3-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-17.3 entitled "Long-

25

Term Care Coordinating Council" is hereby amended to read as follows:

26

     23-17.3-2. Membership.

27

     The council shall be comprised of thirty-three (33) members, as follows: the lieutenant

28

governor or designee; the director of the department of health or designee; the secretary of the

29

executive office of health and human services or designee; the director of the department of

30

behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals or designee; the attorney general or

31

designee; the director of the office department of healthy aging or designee; the chair of the Rhode

32

Island advisory commission on aging or designee; the director of the Rhode Island Chapter of the

33

American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) or designee; the state long-term care

34

ombudsman or designee; the president of the Rhode Island Senior Center Directors Association or

 

LC004771 - Page 20 of 67

1

designee; the executive director of the Rhode Island chapter of the Alzheimer's Association or

2

designee; a representative of a not-for-profit long-term-care provider organization other than a

3

nursing home owner and a representative of a long-term-care service provider that primarily serves

4

persons with developmental disabilities, both to be appointed by the governor; a representative of

5

an assisted living residence other than a nursing home, to be appointed by the lieutenant governor;

6

a public member with no direct interest in long-term-care ownership representing a senior advocacy

7

organization, to be appointed by the speaker; a representative of the state program of all inclusive

8

care for the elderly, to be appointed by the lieutenant governor; a representative of senior housing,

9

to be appointed by the lieutenant governor; a representative of a hospice provider organization, to

10

be appointed by the senate president; a licensed home-care provider or a licensed home nursing

11

care provider, to be appointed by the speaker; a representative of a community mental health center,

12

to be appointed by the president of the senate; a registered nurse experienced in the care of the

13

elderly, to be appointed by the governor; a representative of nonmanagerial nursing home

14

employees, to be appointed by the president of the senate; two (2) members of the house, not more

15

than one (1) from the same political party, to be appointed by the speaker; a nursing home owner,

16

to be appointed by the speaker; two (2) members of the senate, not more than one from the same

17

political party, to be appointed by the president of the senate; one consumer of home- and

18

community-based care or a caregiver of a consumer of home- and community-based care, to be

19

appointed by the lieutenant governor; one consumer of behavioral health services or a caregiver of

20

a consumer of behavioral health services, to be appointed by the speaker; a member of the public

21

representing the interests of parents of children with special care needs, to be appointed by the

22

governor; a person with developmental disabilities or a representative of an organization that

23

advocates for the rights of persons with developmental disabilities, to be appointed by the lieutenant

24

governor; a general physician or advanced practice nurse with experience in serving persons with

25

long-term care and behavioral health needs, to be appointed by the president of the senate; and a

26

representative of a managed care health insurer providing long-term support and services, to be

27

appointed by the governor. The members of the council shall serve two-year (2) terms, expiring on

28

the second anniversary of each individual's appointment or on the date that their respective

29

successors are appointed and qualified, whichever is later.

30

     SECTION 12. Section 23-17.17-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-17.17 entitled

31

"Health Care Quality Program" is hereby amended to read as follows:

32

     23-17.17-6. Health care quality steering committee.

33

     (a) The director shall establish and serve as chairperson of a health care quality steering

34

committee of no more than nineteen (19) members to advise in the following matters:

 

LC004771 - Page 21 of 67

1

     (1) Determination of the comparable performance measures to be reported on;

2

     (2) Assessment of factors, including, but not limited to, factors related to incidents and

3

events reported to the department pursuant to § 23-17-40, contributing to the provision of quality

4

health care and patient safety;

5

     (3) Selection of the patient satisfaction survey measures and instrument;

6

     (4) Methods and format for data collection;

7

     (5) Program expansion and quality improvement initiatives;

8

     (6) Format for the public quality performance measurement report;

9

     (7) Consideration of nursing-sensitive performance measures to be reported on;

10

     (8) Consideration of the relationship between human resources and quality, beginning with

11

measurement and reporting for nursing staff;

12

     (9) Consideration of measures associated with hospital-acquired infections with

13

consultation of infections control experts and with the hospital-acquired infections and prevention

14

advisory committee as established herein:

15

     (i) Hospital-acquired infections and prevention advisory committee:

16

     (A) The director of the department of health as the chairperson of the steering committee

17

shall appoint a permanent subcommittee called the hospital-acquired infections and prevention

18

advisory committee. Membership shall include representatives from public and private hospitals,

19

infection control professionals, director care nursing staff, physicians, epidemiologists with

20

expertise in hospital-acquired infections, academic researchers, consumer organizations, health

21

insurers, health maintenance organizations, organized labor, and purchasers of health insurance,

22

such as employers. The advisory committee shall have a majority of members representing the

23

infection control community.

24

     (B) The director of the department of health shall conduct a national and state specific

25

public reporting format scan of hospital acquired infection public reporting to be completed and

26

transmitted to the steering committee and referred to the advisory committee by October 1, 2008.

27

     (C) The advisory committee shall assist and advise the steering committee and the

28

department in the development of all aspects of the department's methodology for collecting,

29

analyzing, and disclosing the information collected under this act, including collection methods,

30

formatting, and methods and means for release and dissemination.

31

     (D) In developing the methodology for collecting and analyzing the hospital infection data,

32

the department, steering committee and advisory committee shall consider existing methodologies

33

and systems for data collection, such as the centers for disease control's national healthcare safety

34

network, or its successor; provided, however, the department's discretion to adopt a methodology

 

LC004771 - Page 22 of 67

1

shall not be limited or restricted to any existing methodology or system. The data collection and

2

analysis methodology shall be disclosed with the public report at the time of release.

3

     (E) The department, steering committee and the advisory committee shall evaluate, on a

4

regular basis, the quality and accuracy of hospital information reported under this act chapter and

5

the data collection, analysis, and dissemination methodologies.

6

     (ii) Hospital reports:

7

     (A) Individual hospitals shall collect data on hospital-acquired infections for the specific

8

clinical procedures determined by the department by regulation, which may include the following

9

general categories as further defined by the advisory committee:

10

     (I) Surgical site infections;

11

     (II) Ventilator-associated pneumonia;

12

     (III) Central line-related bloodstream infections;

13

     (IV) Urinary tract infections;

14

     (V) Process of care measures, such as compliance with the surgical infection

15

prevention/surgical care improvement program (SIP/SCIP) parameters, prevention bundles for

16

central line-associated bloodstream infections, prevention bundles for catheter-associated urinary

17

tract infections, hand hygiene compliance, compliance with isolation precautions; and

18

     (VI) Other categories as recommended by the advisory committee.

19

     (B) Beginning on or before April 1, 2009, hospitals shall submit quarterly reports on their

20

hospital-acquired infection rates to the department. Quarterly reports shall be submitted, in a format

21

set forth in regulations adopted by the department. Data in quarterly reports must cover a period

22

ending not earlier than one month prior to submission of the report. Annual reports shall be made

23

available to the public at each hospital and through the department. The first annual report shall be

24

due no later than October 2010.

25

     (C) The advisory committee shall recommend standardized criteria for reporting surgical

26

site infection outcome data for quality improvement recommendations. This will include standards

27

for post discharge surveillance. The information shall be included in hospital's quality improvement

28

and safety plan to reduce surgical site infection. The advisory committee shall recommend written

29

guidelines to be given to every individual before and if necessary during their hospitalization for

30

the purpose of preventing hospital-acquired infections. In emergency hospitalizations, written

31

guidelines shall be given within a reasonable period of time.

32

     (D) If the hospital is a division or subsidiary of another entity that owns or operates other

33

hospitals or related organizations, the quarterly report shall be for the specific division or subsidiary

34

and not the other entity.

 

LC004771 - Page 23 of 67

1

     (iii) Department reports:

2

     (A) The department shall annually submit to the legislature a report summarizing the

3

hospital quarterly reports and shall publish the annual report on its website. The first annual report

4

shall be submitted and published no later than December 2010. Following the initial report, the

5

department shall update the public information on a yearly basis after it has been reviewed by the

6

steering committee with advice from the hospital-acquired infections and prevention advisory

7

committee.

8

     (B) All reports of outcome measures issued by the department may be risk-adjusted using

9

NHSN methodology or other nationally accepted methodology, to adjust for the differences among

10

hospitals as reviewed and recommended by the hospital-acquired infections and prevention

11

advisory committee.

12

     (C) The annual report shall compare hospital-acquired infection data as recommended by

13

the advisory committee, collected under subsection (9)(B), for each individual hospital in the state.

14

The department, in consultation with the advisory committee, shall make this comparison as easy

15

to comprehend as possible. The report shall also include an executive summary, written in plain

16

language that shall include, but not be limited to, a discussion of findings, conclusions, and trends

17

concerning the overall state of hospital-acquired infections in the state, including a comparison to

18

prior years. The report may include policy recommendations, as appropriate.

19

     (D) The department shall publicize the report and its availability as widely as practical to

20

interested parties, including, but not limited to, hospitals, providers, media organizations, health

21

insurers, health maintenance organizations, purchasers of health insurance, organized labor,

22

consumer or patient advocacy groups, and individual consumers. The annual report shall be made

23

available to any person upon request.

24

     (E) No hospital report of department disclosure may contain information identifying a

25

patient, employee, or licensed healthcare professional in connection with a specific infection

26

incident.

27

     (10) Consideration of pressure ulcer occurrence; and

28

     (11) Other related issues as requested by the director.

29

     (b) The members of the health care quality performance steering committee shall include

30

one member of the house of representatives, to be appointed by the speaker; one member of the

31

senate, to be appointed by the president of the senate; the director or director's designee of the

32

department of human services; the director or the director's designee of the department of

33

behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals; the director or the director's

34

designee of the office department of healthy aging; and thirteen (13) members to be appointed by

 

LC004771 - Page 24 of 67

1

the director of the department of health to include persons representing Rhode Island licensed

2

hospitals and other licensed facilities/providers, the medical and nursing professions, the business

3

community, organized labor, consumers, and health insurers and health plans and other parties

4

committed to healthcare quality.

5

     SECTION 13. Sections 30-17.1-9 and 30-17.1-10 of the General Laws in Chapter 30-17.1

6

entitled "Veterans' Affairs" are hereby amended to read as follows:

7

     30-17.1-9. Definitions.

8

     When used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:

9

     (1) "Advisory committee" means the veterans' services strategic plan advisory committee

10

as established in § 30-17.1-10.

11

     (2) "Committee" means the veterans' committee pursuant to the provisions of § 30-17.1-

12

11(c).

13

     (3) "State agencies" means state entities responsible for the implementation of services for

14

Rhode Island veterans and their families including:

15

     (i) The office of veterans services;

16

     (ii) The Rhode Island public transit authority;

17

     (iii) The department of human services;

18

     (iv) The office of postsecondary education;

19

     (v) The department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals;

20

     (vi) The department of health;

21

     (vii) The office department of healthy aging;

22

     (viii) The department of business regulation;

23

     (ix) The Rhode Island veteran's court;

24

     (x) The department of labor and training;

25

     (xi) The Rhode Island commerce corporation;

26

     (xii) The office of the secretary of state; and

27

     (xiii) The Rhode Island national guard.

28

     (4) "Veterans' services strategic plan ('VSSP')" means the strategic plan as established in §

29

30-17.1-11.

30

     30-17.1-10. Veterans' services strategic plan advisory committee established.

31

     (a) There is hereby created a veterans' services strategic plan advisory committee known

32

as "the Rhode Island veterans' services strategic plan advisory committee" consisting of fourteen

33

(14) members as follows:

34

     (1) One of whom shall be the director of the office of veterans services, or his or her

 

LC004771 - Page 25 of 67

1

designee, who shall serve as chairperson;

2

     (2) One of whom shall be the director of the department of human services, or his or her

3

designee;

4

     (3) One of whom shall be the executive director of the public transit authority, or his or her

5

designee;

6

     (4) One of whom shall be the postsecondary education commissioner, or his or her

7

designee;

8

     (5) One of whom shall be the director of the department of behavioral healthcare,

9

developmental disabilities and hospitals, or his or her designee;

10

     (6) One of whom shall be the director of the department of health, or his or her designee;

11

     (7) One of whom shall be the director of the office department of healthy aging, or his or

12

her designee;

13

     (8) One of whom shall be the director of the department of business regulation, or his or

14

her designee;

15

     (9) One of whom shall be the chief judge of the district court, or his or her designee;

16

     (10) One of whom shall be the director of the department of labor and training, or his or

17

her designee;

18

     (11) One of whom shall be the director of the Rhode Island commerce corporation, or his

19

or her designee;

20

     (12) One of whom shall be the secretary of state, or his or her designee;

21

     (13) One of whom shall be the adjutant general of the Rhode Island national guard, or his

22

or her designee; and

23

     (14) One of whom shall be a representative for Rhode Island municipal governments.

24

     (b) Forthwith upon the passage of this chapter, the members of the advisory committee

25

shall meet at the call of the chairperson and organize. Thereafter, the committee shall meet at the

26

call of the chairperson or three (3) members of the advisory committee.

27

     (c) All departments and agencies of the state shall furnish such advice and information,

28

documentation, and otherwise to the committee and its agents as is deemed necessary or desirable

29

by the advisory committee to facilitate the purposes of this chapter.

30

     (d) The office of veterans services is hereby directed to provide suitable quarters and staff

31

for the advisory committee.

32

     (e) [Deleted by P.L. 2017, ch. 131, § 1 and P.L. 2017, ch. 152, § 1].

33

     (f) The members of the advisory committee shall receive no compensation for their

34

services.

 

LC004771 - Page 26 of 67

1

     SECTION 14. Section 23-17.8-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-17.8 entitled "Abuse

2

in Healthcare Facilities" is hereby amended to read as follows:

3

     23-17.8-2. Duty to report.

4

     (a) Any physician, physician assistant, medical intern, registered nurse, licensed practical

5

nurse, nurse's aide, orderly, certified nursing assistant, medical examiner, dentist, optometrist,

6

optician, chiropractor, podiatrist, coroner, police officer, probation officer, emergency medical

7

technician, firefighter, speech pathologist, audiologist, social worker, pharmacist, physical or

8

occupational therapist, or health officer, or any person, within the scope of their employment at a

9

facility or in their professional capacity, who has knowledge of or reasonable cause to believe that

10

a patient or resident in a facility has been abused, mistreated, or neglected, either while in the

11

facility or prior to being admitted, shall make, within twenty-four (24) hours or by the end of the

12

next business day, a telephone report to the director of the department of health, or his or her

13

designee, for those incidents involving healthcare facilities, and in addition to the office department

14

of the state long-term care ombudsperson for those incidents involving nursing facilities, assisted

15

living residences, home-care and home nursing-care providers, veterans' homes and long-term care

16

units in Eleanor Slater hospital, or to the director of the department of behavioral healthcare,

17

developmental disabilities and hospitals, or his or her designee, for those incidents involving

18

community residences for people with developmental disabilities or the director of the office

19

department of healthy aging for individuals aged sixty (60) years or older. The report shall contain:

20

     (1) The name, address, telephone number, occupation, and employer's address and the

21

phone number of the person reporting;

22

     (2) The name and address of the patient or resident who is believed to be the victim of the

23

abuse, mistreatment, or neglect;

24

     (3) The details, observations, and beliefs concerning the incident(s);

25

     (4) Any statements regarding the incident made by the patient or resident and to whom they

26

were made;

27

     (5) The date, time, and place of the incident;

28

     (6) The name of any individual(s) believed to have knowledge of the incident;

29

     (7) The name of any individual(s) believed to have been responsible for the incident;

30

     (8) The name of the individual's caregiver, if known;

31

     (9) Any medical treatment being received if immediately required and need to coordinate

32

care, if known;

33

     (10) Any other information the reporter believes relevant to the investigation; and

34

     (11) The name and address of the reporter and where the reporter can be contacted. The

 

LC004771 - Page 27 of 67

1

reporter's identity shall remain confidential unless disclosure is consented to by the reporter or by

2

court order.

3

     (b) In addition to those persons required to report pursuant to this section, any other person

4

may make a report if that person has reasonable cause to believe that a patient or resident of a

5

facility has been abused, mistreated, or neglected. Additional provisions for the reporting of abuse

6

of individuals regardless of where they reside in the community are set forth in § 42-66-8.

7

     (c) Any person required to make a report pursuant to this section shall be deemed to have

8

complied with these requirements if a report is made to a high managerial agent of the facility in

9

which the alleged incident occurred. Once notified, the high managerial agent shall be required to

10

meet all reporting requirements of this section within the time frames specified by this chapter.

11

     (d) Telephone reports made pursuant to this section shall be followed-up within three (3)

12

business days with a written report.

13

     (e) Individuals required to report pursuant to this section shall, whenever practical and if

14

known, provide the office department of healthy aging twenty-four hour (24) notice of the discharge

15

from a facility, of any person subject to abuse or neglect and shall include any relevant address and

16

telephone number(s).

17

     (f) No person required to report pursuant to this section shall be liable in any civil or

18

criminal action by reason of the report; provided, however, that the person did not perpetrate, inflict,

19

or cause the abuse. No employer or supervisor may discharge, demote, transfer, reduce pay,

20

benefits, or work privileges; prepare a negative work performance evaluation; or take any other

21

action detrimental to an employee or supervisee who files a report in accordance with the provisions

22

of this section by reason of the report.

23

     SECTION 15. Section 34-25.1-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 34-25.1 entitled "Reverse

24

Mortgages" is hereby amended to read as follows:

25

     34-25.1-9. Required counseling.

26

     (a) All lenders shall deliver to all reverse mortgage loan applicants a statement, if available,

27

prepared by the office department of healthy aging on the advisability and availability of

28

independent counseling and information services. With respect to every reverse mortgage loan, the

29

prospective mortgagor(s) shall complete a reverse mortgage counseling program. An original

30

certificate, dated and signed by both the counselor and the mortgagor(s), certifying that the

31

counseling required by this section has taken place, shall be delivered to the mortgagee at least

32

three (3) business days prior to the closing of the loan. The lender shall not process a reverse

33

mortgage loan application, other than ordering an automated valuation model, ordering a credit

34

report, obtaining information required for inclusion in a loan application, including documenting

 

LC004771 - Page 28 of 67

1

and verifying credit, income, assets and property charges, evaluating extenuating circumstances

2

and compensating factors, evaluating the results of the financial assessment in determining

3

eligibility for a home equity conversion mortgage, determining whether a life expectancy set-aside

4

will be required and whether the set-aside must be fully or partially funded, and completing a home

5

equity conversion mortgage financial assessment worksheet; and ordering a preliminary title

6

search, until the counseling required by this section has been completed and the certificate of

7

counseling is delivered to the mortgagee.

8

     (b) The reverse mortgage counseling program shall include, but is not limited to, all matters

9

enumerated in subsections (e)(1) through (e)(6) of this section. The office department of healthy

10

aging shall maintain a list of counseling programs and agencies approved by the United States

11

Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Federal Housing Administration to satisfy

12

the requirements of this section and shall make such list available to all lenders and to the public,

13

provided that: (1) the counseling agency is not affiliated with the reverse mortgage lender; and (2)

14

the counseling agency complies with the counseling requirements of this section. The director of

15

the office department of healthy aging shall have the right to prescribe the form of counseling

16

certificate that will meet the requirements of subsection (a) of this section.

17

     (c) Counseling shall comply with the following requirements: (1) It shall be conducted in

18

person; however, if the prospective mortgagor(s) cannot or choose(s) not to travel to a housing

19

counseling agency and cannot be visited by a counselor in their home, telephone counseling shall

20

be permitted by counseling agencies that are authorized by the United States Department of

21

Housing and Urban Development or the Federal Housing Administration to conduct telephone

22

counseling. (2) The reverse mortgage loan shall close within one hundred eighty (180) days after

23

the prospective mortgagor(s) sign(s) the counseling certificate. If the reverse mortgage loan does

24

not close within such one hundred eighty (180) day period, the parties shall be required to again

25

comply with the counseling requirements of this section. (3) Mortgagees shall provide prospective

26

mortgagors with the name of at least three (3) independent, authorized counseling agencies

27

approved by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development or the Federal

28

Housing Administration. The mortgagee shall not recommend a counseling agency that is an

29

affiliate of the mortgagee.

30

     (d) In the event that counseling shall not be available free of charge, the mortgagee shall

31

be responsible for the cost of the counseling to the extent that all other legitimate sources of funding

32

the counseling including, without limitation, nonprofit organizations and grants have not been

33

obtained. In the event that 12 U.S.C. § 1715z-20 or the federal regulations promulgated with respect

34

thereto shall, at the time such counseling fee is due and payable by the mortgagee, expressly

 

LC004771 - Page 29 of 67

1

prohibit a mortgagee from being responsible for the cost of counseling, then subsection (d) of this

2

section shall not apply to a reverse mortgage loan that is subject to 12 U.S.C. § 1715z-20 and the

3

federal regulations promulgated with respect thereto.

4

     (e) Counseling shall include, without limitation, discussion of the following with the

5

prospective mortgagor(s):

6

     (1) Options other than a reverse mortgage that are available to the mortgagor(s), including

7

other housing, social service, health, and financial options;

8

     (2) Other home equity conversion options that are or may become available to the

9

mortgagor(s), such as other reverse mortgages, sale-leaseback financing, deferred payment loan,

10

and property tax deferral;

11

     (3) The financial implications of entering into a reverse mortgage;

12

     (4) A disclosure that a reverse mortgage may have tax consequences, affect eligibility for

13

assistance under federal and state programs, and have an impact on the estate and heirs of the

14

homeowner(s), as well as an explanation of how the reverse mortgage may affect the estate and

15

public benefits of the mortgagor(s);

16

     (5) Such other topics as shall be required to be addressed during counseling with respect to

17

a reverse mortgage pursuant to 12 U.S.C. § 1715z-20, and/or any regulations promulgated pursuant

18

thereto; and

19

     (6) Such other topics as shall be required to be addressed by the director of the office

20

department of healthy aging.

21

     (f) Subsections (b), (c), (e) of this section shall not apply to any reverse mortgage loan that

22

is subject to 12 U.S.C. § 1715z-20 and the federal regulations promulgated with respect thereto;

23

provided that such loan complies with the counseling requirements set forth in 12 U.S.C. § 1715z-

24

20 and the federal regulations promulgated with respect thereto (including without limitation 24

25

C.F.R. Part 206).

26

     SECTION 16. Section 36-4-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 36-4 entitled "Merit System"

27

is hereby amended to read as follows:

28

     36-4-2. Positions in unclassified service.

29

     (a) The classified service shall comprise all positions in the state service, now existing or

30

hereinafter established, except the following specific positions which, with other positions

31

heretofore or hereinafter specifically exempted by legislative act, shall constitute the unclassified

32

service:

33

     (1) Officers and legislators elected by popular vote and persons appointed to fill vacancies

34

in elective offices.

 

LC004771 - Page 30 of 67

1

     (2) Employees of both houses of the general assembly.

2

     (3) Officers, secretaries, and employees of the office of the governor, office of the

3

lieutenant governor, department of state, department of the attorney general, and the treasury

4

department.

5

     (4) Members of boards and commissions appointed by the governor, members of the state

6

board of elections and the appointees of the board, members of the commission for human rights

7

and the employees of the commission, and directors of departments.

8

     (5) The following specific offices:

9

     (i) In the department of administration: director, chief information officer, cybersecurity

10

officer, director of office of management and budget, director of performance management, deputy

11

director, chief of staff, public information officer and legislative/policy director, and within the

12

health benefits exchange: director, deputy director, administrative assistant, senior policy analyst,

13

and chief strategic planning monitoring and evaluation;

14

     (ii) In the department of business regulation: director;

15

     (iii) In the department of elementary and secondary education: commissioner of elementary

16

and secondary education;

17

     (iv) In the department of higher education: commissioner of postsecondary education;

18

     (v) In the department of health: director, executive director, and deputy director;

19

     (vi) In the department of labor and training: director, administrative assistant, administrator

20

of the labor board and legal counsel to the labor board, executive director, and communications

21

director;

22

     (vii) In the department of environmental management: director;

23

     (viii) In the department of transportation: director, chief operating officer,

24

administrator/division of project management, administrator/division of planning, chief of staff,

25

communications director, legislative director, and policy director;

26

     (ix) In the department of human services: director and director of veterans' affairs;

27

     (x) In the state properties committee: secretary;

28

     (xi) In the workers' compensation court: judges, administrator, deputy administrator, clerk,

29

assistant clerk, clerk secretary;

30

     (xii) In the office department of healthy aging: director;

31

     (xiii) In the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals:

32

director;

33

     (xiv) In the department of corrections: director, assistant director (institutions/operations),

34

assistant director (rehabilitative services), assistant director (administration), and wardens;

 

LC004771 - Page 31 of 67

1

     (xv) In the department of children, youth and families: director, one assistant director, one

2

associate director, one executive director, and a chief of staff;

3

     (xvi) In the public utilities commission: public utilities administrator;

4

     (xvii) In the water resources board: general manager;

5

     (xviii) In the human resources investment council: executive director;

6

     (xix) In the office of health and human services: secretary of health and human services;

7

     (xx) In the office of commerce: secretary, deputy secretary, chief of staff, communications

8

director, legislative director, and policy director.

9

     (6) Chief of the hoisting engineers, licensing division, and his or her employees; executive

10

director of the veterans memorial building and his or her clerical employees.

11

     (7) One confidential stenographic secretary for each director of a department and each

12

board and commission appointed by the governor.

13

     (8) Special counsel, special prosecutors, regular and special assistants appointed by the

14

attorney general, the public defender and employees of his or her office, and members of the Rhode

15

Island bar occupying a position in the state service as legal counsel to any appointing authority.

16

     (9) The academic and/or commercial teaching staffs of all state institution schools, with

17

the exception of those institutions under the jurisdiction of the council on elementary and secondary

18

education and the council on postsecondary education.

19

     (10) Members of the military or naval forces, when entering or while engaged in the

20

military or naval service.

21

     (11) Judges, referees, receivers, clerks, assistant clerks, and clerical assistants of the

22

supreme, superior, family, and district courts, the traffic tribunal, security officers of the traffic

23

tribunal, jurors, and any persons appointed by any court.

24

     (12) Election officials and employees.

25

     (13) Deputy sheriffs and other employees of the sheriffs division within the department of

26

public safety.

27

     (14) Patient or inmate help in state charitable, penal, and correctional institutions and

28

religious instructors of these institutions and student nurses in training, residents in psychiatry in

29

training, and clinical clerks in temporary training at the institute of mental health within the state

30

of Rhode Island medical center.

31

     (15)(i) Persons employed to make or conduct a temporary and special inquiry,

32

investigation, project, or examination on behalf of the legislature, or a committee therefor, or on

33

behalf of any other agency of the state if the inclusion of these persons in the unclassified service

34

is approved by the personnel administrator. The personnel administrator shall notify the house

 

LC004771 - Page 32 of 67

1

fiscal advisor and the senate fiscal advisor whenever he or she approves the inclusion of a person

2

in the unclassified service.

3

     (ii) The duration of the appointment of a person, other than the persons enumerated in this

4

section, shall not exceed ninety (90) days or until presented to the department of administration.

5

The department of administration may extend the appointment another ninety (90) days. In no event

6

shall the appointment extend beyond one hundred eighty (180) days.

7

     (16) Members of the division of state police within the department of public safety.

8

     (17) Executive secretary of the Blackstone Valley district commission.

9

     (18) Artist and curator of state-owned art objects.

10

     (19) Mental health advocate.

11

     (20) Child advocate.

12

     (21) The position of aquaculture coordinator and marine infrastructure specialist within the

13

coastal resources management council.

14

     (22) Employees of the office of the health insurance commissioner.

15

     (23) In the department of revenue: the director, secretary, attorney.

16

     (24) In the department of public safety: the director.

17

     (b) Provided, however, that, if any position added to the unclassified service by legislative

18

act after January 1, 2015, is occupied by a classified employee on June 30, 2015, such position

19

shall remain in the classified service until such position becomes vacant.

20

     SECTION 17. Section 39-2-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-2 entitled "Duties of

21

Utilities and Carriers" is hereby amended to read as follows:

22

     39-2-5. Exceptions to anti-discrimination provisions.

23

     The provisions of §§ 39-2-2 -- 39-2-4 shall be subject to the following exceptions:

24

     (1) A public utility may issue or give free transportation or service to its employees and

25

their families, its officers, agents, surgeons, physicians, and attorneys at law, and to the officers,

26

agents, and employees, and their families of any other public utility.

27

     (2) With the approval of the division, any public utility may give free transportation or

28

service, upon such conditions as the public utility may impose, or grant special rates therefor to the

29

state, to any town or city, or to any water or fire district, and to the officers thereof, for public

30

purposes, and also to any special class or classes of persons, not otherwise referred to in this section,

31

in cases where the same shall seem to the division just and reasonable, or required in the interests

32

of the public, and not unjustly discriminatory.

33

     (3) With the approval of the division, any public utility operating a railroad or street railway

34

may furnish to the publishers of newspapers and magazines, and to their employees, passenger

 

LC004771 - Page 33 of 67

1

transportation in return for advertising in the newspapers or magazines at full rates.

2

     (4) With the approval of the division, any public utility may exchange its service for the

3

service of any other public utility furnishing a different class of service.

4

     (5) Nothing in this section or any other provision of the law shall be construed to prohibit

5

the giving by any public utility, of free or reduced-rate service to an elderly person as defined by

6

the division.

7

     (6) Any motor carrier of persons, as defined in chapter 13 of this title, may elect to file a

8

tariff providing for a rate reduction of twenty-five percent (25%) below its one-way-fare tariff

9

applying to any person who is sixty-five (65) years of age or older and any person assisting and

10

traveling with a blind passenger who is not required to pay any fare pursuant to the provisions of §

11

39-2-13 for bus rides between the hours of ten o'clock (10:00) a.m. and three o'clock (3:00) p.m. of

12

each day. In such event, the reduced fare shall be paid in part by the passenger and in part by the

13

state. That part of the reduced fare payable by the state shall be one-half (½) of the reduced fare

14

adjusted upward to end in the nearest zero (0) or five cents (.05), and that part payable by the

15

passenger shall be the balance of the reduced fare. Payments by the state under this section shall be

16

paid monthly under procedures agreed upon by the department of transportation and the carrier.

17

     (7) [Deleted by P.L. 2004, ch. 378, § 4, and by P.L. 2004, ch. 504, § 4.]

18

     (8) Any person, firm, or corporation or any officer, agent, servant, or employee thereof

19

who shall violate the provisions of subsection (7) of this section by fraudulently obtaining a

20

telecommunications device shall, upon conviction, be fined not exceeding five hundred dollars

21

($500) or be imprisoned for a term not exceeding one year.

22

     (9)(i) Nothing in this section or any other provision of the general laws shall be construed

23

to prohibit the commission from taking actions to enable the state to participate in a Federal

24

Communications Commission telephone lifeline program. The commission may set a subscriber-

25

funded, monthly residence basic exchange lifeline telephone service credit in an amount not to

26

exceed the federal subscriber line access charge or the monthly basic-service charge, whichever is

27

less, for those persons who receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Aid to Families With

28

Dependent Children (AFDC), general public assistance (GPA), aid from the Rhode Island medical

29

assistance program, or food stamps issued pursuant to the Food Stamp Act of 1964 as amended

30

(Pub. L. No. 88-525 and amendments made thereto, 7 U.S.C. § 2011 et seq.), assistance from the

31

Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) as administered by the department of

32

administration, division of planning, and effective April 1, 1993, assistance from the Rhode Island

33

pharmaceutical assistance program administered by the office department of healthy aging. The

34

public utilities commission may promulgate regulations to implement this section. The department

 

LC004771 - Page 34 of 67

1

of human services and the department of administration, division of planning, shall certify

2

subscriber eligibility for the programs in accordance with public utilities commission and Federal

3

Communications Commission guidelines.

4

     (ii) The department of human services shall report monthly to the governor and to the house

5

of representatives fiscal advisor the number of persons newly eligible for the lifeline telephone

6

service credit hereunder solely by virtue of their eligibility to receive food stamp assistance and the

7

department of administration, division of planning, shall, also, report monthly to the governor and

8

to the house of representatives fiscal advisor the number of persons newly eligible for the lifeline

9

telephone service credit hereunder solely by virtue of their participation in the Low Income Home

10

Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP).

11

     (10) Nothing in this section or any other provision of the general laws shall be construed

12

to prohibit any public utility with the approval of the commission, from forgiving arrearages of any

13

person in accordance with the provisions of § 39-2-1(d).

14

     (11) Nothing in this section or any other provision of the law shall be construed to prohibit

15

any utility company from cutting, disconnecting, or removing mains, poles, wires, conduits, or

16

fixtures free of charge to nonprofit housing development corporations prior to moving a building

17

to be used as affordable housing for at least a ten-year (10) period.

18

     (12) Nothing in this section or any other provision of the general laws shall be construed

19

to prohibit any telecommunications provider, with the approval of the commission, from offering

20

any residential customer a reduced rate, provided such rate covers all costs. A telecommunications

21

provider may offer a business customer a reduced rate without commission approval; provided that

22

the rate covers all costs.

23

     (13) A gas or electric distribution company may provide discounts to low-income

24

customers in accordance with the affordable energy plan provisions of § 42-141-5(d) [repealed].

25

Nothing contained herein shall prohibit the continuation of any low-income discounts approved by

26

the commission prior to January 1, 2006, and in effect as of that date.

27

     SECTION 18. Section 39-18-4 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-18 entitled "Rhode

28

Island Public Transit Authority" is hereby amended to read as follows:

29

     39-18-4. Powers and duties of the authority.

30

     (a) The authority is hereby authorized and empowered:

31

     (1) To adopt bylaws for the regulation of its affairs and the conduct of its business;

32

     (2) To adopt an official seal and alter the seal at pleasure;

33

     (3) To maintain an office at such place or places within the state as it may designate;

34

     (4) To sue and be sued in its own name, plead, and be impleaded; provided, however, that

 

LC004771 - Page 35 of 67

1

any and all actions against the authority shall be brought only in the county in which the principal

2

office of the authority shall be located;

3

     (5) To acquire, purchase, hold, use, and dispose of any property, real, personal, or mixed,

4

tangible or intangible, or any interest therein, necessary or desirable for carrying out the purposes

5

of the authority, and to lease as lessee or lessor any property, real, personal, or mixed, or any interest

6

therein, for such term and at such rental as the authority may deem fair and reasonable, and to sell,

7

transfer, convey, mortgage, or give a security interest in any property, real, personal, or mixed,

8

tangible or intangible, or any interest therein, at any time acquired by the authority;

9

     (6) To employ, in its discretion, planning, architectural, and engineering consultants,

10

attorneys, accountants, construction, financial, transportation, and traffic experts and consultants,

11

superintendents, managers, and such other officers, employees, and agents as may be necessary in

12

its judgment, and to fix their compensation;

13

     (7)(i) To fix, from time to time, subject to the provisions of this chapter, schedules and

14

such rates of fare and charges for service furnished or operated as in its judgment are best adopted

15

to ensure sufficient income to meet the cost of service; provided, however, the authority is not

16

empowered to operate a passenger vehicle under its control in competition with passenger vehicles

17

of a private carrier over routes that the private carrier operates pursuant to a certificate of public

18

convenience and necessity issued to the private carrier by the division of public utilities and

19

carriers; and provided further that the authority shall not require any person who meets the means-

20

test criteria as defined by the Rhode Island office department of healthy aging and who is either

21

sixty-five (65) years of age, or over, or who is a person with a disability to pay more than one-half

22

(½) of any fare for bus rides; provided, however, that under no circumstances shall fares or charges

23

for special service routes be discounted. Any person who is either sixty-five (65) years of age, or

24

over, or who is a person with a disability, who does not satisfy the means-test criteria as heretofore

25

provided, shall only be required to pay one-half (½) of the fare or charge for bus rides during off-

26

peak hours, but shall not be eligible for a reduction during peak hours. For the purposes of this

27

chapter, "peak hours," "off-peak hours," and "special service routes" shall be determined annually

28

by the authority. The authority, in conjunction with the department of human services, shall

29

establish an advisory committee comprised of seniors/persons with disabilities who are constituent

30

users of the authority's services to assist in the implementation of this section;

31

     (ii) Any person who accompanies and is assisting a person with a disability when the person

32

with a disability uses a wheelchair shall be eligible for the same price exemptions extended to a

33

person with a disability by subsection (a)(7)(i). The cost to the authority for providing the service

34

to the elderly shall be paid by the state;

 

LC004771 - Page 36 of 67

1

     (iii) Any person who accompanies and is assisting a passenger who is blind or visually

2

impaired shall be eligible for the same price exemptions extended to the passenger who is blind or

3

visually impaired by subsection (a)(7)(i). The cost to the authority for providing the service to the

4

elderly shall be paid by the state;

5

     (iv) The authority shall be authorized and empowered to charge a fare for any paratransit

6

services required by the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., in accordance

7

with 49 C.F.R. Part 37;

8

(8) To borrow money and to issue bonds of the authority for any of its purposes including, without

9

limitation, the borrowing of money in anticipation of the issuance of bonds or the receipt of any

10

operating revenues or other funds or property to be received by the authority, and the financing of

11

property to be owned by others and used, in whole or substantial part, by the authority for any of

12

its purposes, all as may, from time to time, be authorized by resolution of the authority; the bonds

13

to contain on their face a statement to the effect that neither the state nor any municipality or other

14

political subdivision of the state shall be obligated to pay the same or the interest thereon;

15

     (9) To enter into management contracts for the operation, management, and supervision of

16

any or all transit properties under the jurisdiction of the authority, and to make and enter into all

17

contracts and agreements necessary or incidental to the performance of its duties and the execution

18

of its powers under this chapter;

19

     (10) Without limitation of the foregoing, to borrow money from, to receive and accept

20

grants for or in aid of the purchase, leasing, improving, equipping, furnishing, maintaining,

21

repairing, constructing, and operating of transit property, and to enter into contracts, leases, or other

22

transactions with any federal agency; and to receive and accept from the state, from any

23

municipality, or other political subdivision thereof, and from any other source, aid or contributions

24

of either money, property, labor, or other things of value, to be held, used, and applied only for the

25

purposes for which the grants and contributions may be made;

26

     (11) To acquire in the name of the authority, by negotiated purchase or otherwise, on such

27

terms and conditions and in such manner as it may deem proper, or by the exercise of the power of

28

condemnation to the extent only and in the manner as provided in this chapter, public and private

29

lands, including public parks, playgrounds or reservations, or parts thereof, or rights therein, rights-

30

of-way, property rights, easements, and interests as it may deem necessary for carrying out the

31

provisions of this chapter; provided, however, that all public property damaged in carrying out the

32

powers granted by this chapter shall be restored or repaired and placed in its original condition as

33

nearly as practicable;

34

     (12) To contract with any municipality, public or private company or organization,

 

LC004771 - Page 37 of 67

1

whereby the authority will receive a subsidy to avoid discontinuance of service, and each

2

municipality within the state is hereby authorized to make and enter into such contracts and to

3

make, grant, or give to the authority a subsidy in such amount and for such period of time as it may

4

deem advisable;

5

     (13) To operate open-door service from Rhode Island to and from locations in

6

Massachusetts and Connecticut that are within five (5) miles of the Rhode Island border; and

7

     (14) To do all things necessary, convenient, or desirable to carry out the purposes of this

8

chapter.

9

     (b) To effectuate the purposes of this chapter the authority shall have the following duties:

10

     (1) To participate in and contribute to transportation planning initiatives that are relevant

11

to the purposes of the authority;

12

     (2) To plan, coordinate, develop, operate, maintain, and manage a statewide public transit

13

system consistent with the purposes of the authority, including plans to meet demands for public

14

transit where such demand, current or prospective, exceeds supply and/or availability of public

15

transit services;

16

     (3) To work with departments, agencies, authorities, and corporations of federal, state, and

17

local government, public and private institutions, businesses, nonprofit organizations, users of the

18

system, and other entities and persons to coordinate public transit services and provide a seamless

19

network of mobility options.

20

     SECTION 19. Section 40-6-5.2 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-6 entitled "Public

21

Assistance Act" is hereby amended to read as follows:

22

     40-6-5.2. Cashing of AFDC, GPA checks.

23

     (a) For the purposes of this section, the term "banking institution" shall mean: (1) Any state

24

or federally chartered bank, savings bank, loan and investment bank, or credit union located within

25

this state; and (2) Any currency-exchange specialist located within this state and enrolled with the

26

department of human services pursuant to regulations to be adopted by the department.

27

     (b) Each banking institution shall cash, at its main office or any of its branch offices within

28

the state, any check drawn by the state and payable within the state to a recipient of aid to families

29

with dependent children (AFDC) or general public assistance (GPA), if the check is negotiated to

30

the banking institution by the original payee of the check, and if the payee produces reasonable

31

identification required by this section and as provided for in regulations adopted pursuant to

32

subsection (d) hereof.

33

     (c) Nothing in this section shall be interpreted as limiting any rights the banking institution

34

may have against the payee by contract or at law, with regard to items that are negotiated to it as

 

LC004771 - Page 38 of 67

1

provided for in this section, that are not paid upon presentment, or where the payee breaches a

2

warranty made under § 6A-3-417. This section shall not apply to any check negotiated to a banking

3

institution if the institution has reason to believe that the check will not be paid on presentment or

4

that the tendering party may be in breach of one or more of the warranties contained in § 6A-3-417.

5

     (d) Provided that a banking institution properly employed the identification procedures

6

prescribed in regulations adopted pursuant to this subsection at the time an AFDC or GPA check

7

was cashed by such institution, the state shall honor and make payment on the AFDC or GPA

8

check, and the banking institution shall not be liable to reimburse the state for a loss incurred as a

9

result of the wrongful payment of a check by the banking institution. The director of the department

10

of human services shall adopt regulations specifying: (1) The forms of reasonable identification

11

that a banking institution shall accept when cashing an AFDC or GPA check pursuant to subsection

12

(b); and (2) The identification procedures the institution must employ to receive payment thereon

13

and to avoid liability for the wrongful payment of any such check. The regulations shall provide

14

that the forms of reasonable identification shall include, but need not be limited to: (i) An AFDC

15

or GPA photo-identification card issued by the department of human services; (ii) A valid

16

identification card issued by the administrator of the division of motor vehicles pursuant to § 3-8-

17

6; (iii) A valid driver's license; (iv) An identification card issued by the office department of healthy

18

aging; and (v) A valid identification card issued by the United States Immigration and

19

Naturalization Service.

20

     (e) The department of human services shall issue a stop-payment order with respect to any

21

AFDC or GPA check reported as lost, stolen, or undelivered. The department of human services

22

shall not issue a replacement AFDC or GPA check for a period of three (3) business days from the

23

date of the report of such loss, theft, or nondelivery.

24

     SECTION 20. Sections 40-6-5.2 and 40-6-27 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-6 entitled

25

"Public Assistance Act" are hereby amended to read as follows:

26

     40-6-5.2. Cashing of AFDC, GPA checks.

27

     (a) For the purposes of this section, the term "banking institution" shall mean: (1) Any state

28

or federally chartered bank, savings bank, loan and investment bank, or credit union located within

29

this state; and (2) Any currency-exchange specialist located within this state and enrolled with the

30

department of human services pursuant to regulations to be adopted by the department.

31

     (b) Each banking institution shall cash, at its main office or any of its branch offices within

32

the state, any check drawn by the state and payable within the state to a recipient of aid to families

33

with dependent children (AFDC) or general public assistance (GPA), if the check is negotiated to

34

the banking institution by the original payee of the check, and if the payee produces reasonable

 

LC004771 - Page 39 of 67

1

identification required by this section and as provided for in regulations adopted pursuant to

2

subsection (d) hereof.

3

     (c) Nothing in this section shall be interpreted as limiting any rights the banking institution

4

may have against the payee by contract or at law, with regard to items that are negotiated to it as

5

provided for in this section, that are not paid upon presentment, or where the payee breaches a

6

warranty made under § 6A-3-417. This section shall not apply to any check negotiated to a banking

7

institution if the institution has reason to believe that the check will not be paid on presentment or

8

that the tendering party may be in breach of one or more of the warranties contained in § 6A-3-417.

9

     (d) Provided that a banking institution properly employed the identification procedures

10

prescribed in regulations adopted pursuant to this subsection at the time an AFDC or GPA check

11

was cashed by such institution, the state shall honor and make payment on the AFDC or GPA

12

check, and the banking institution shall not be liable to reimburse the state for a loss incurred as a

13

result of the wrongful payment of a check by the banking institution. The director of the department

14

of human services shall adopt regulations specifying: (1) The forms of reasonable identification

15

that a banking institution shall accept when cashing an AFDC or GPA check pursuant to subsection

16

(b); and (2) The identification procedures the institution must employ to receive payment thereon

17

and to avoid liability for the wrongful payment of any such check. The regulations shall provide

18

that the forms of reasonable identification shall include, but need not be limited to: (i) An AFDC

19

or GPA photo-identification card issued by the department of human services; (ii) A valid

20

identification card issued by the administrator of the division of motor vehicles pursuant to § 3-8-

21

6; (iii) A valid driver's license; (iv) An identification card issued by the office department of healthy

22

aging; and (v) A valid identification card issued by the United States Immigration and

23

Naturalization Service.

24

     (e) The department of human services shall issue a stop-payment order with respect to any

25

AFDC or GPA check reported as lost, stolen, or undelivered. The department of human services

26

shall not issue a replacement AFDC or GPA check for a period of three (3) business days from the

27

date of the report of such loss, theft, or nondelivery.

28

     40-6-27. Supplemental Security Income.

29

     (a)(1) The director of the department is hereby authorized to enter into agreements on

30

behalf of the state with the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services or other

31

appropriate federal officials, under the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program established

32

by Title XVI of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1381 et seq., concerning the administration

33

and determination of eligibility for SSI benefits for residents of this state, except as otherwise

34

provided in this section. The state's monthly share of supplementary assistance to the Supplemental

 

LC004771 - Page 40 of 67

1

Security Income program shall be as follows:

2

     (i) Individual living alone: $39.92

3

     (ii) Individual living with others: $51.92

4

     (iii) Couple living alone: $79.38

5

     (iv) Couple living with others: $97.30

6

     (v) Individual living in state-licensed assisted-living residence: $332.00

7

     (vi) [Deleted by P.L. 2021, ch. 162, art. 12, § 1.]

8

     (vii) Individual living in state-licensed, supportive residential-care settings that, depending

9

on the population served, meet the standards set by the department of human services in conjunction

10

with the department of children, youth and families, the office department of healthy aging, and/or

11

the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals: $300.00

12

     Provided, however, that the department of human services shall, by regulation, reduce,

13

effective January 1, 2009, the state's monthly share of supplementary assistance to the

14

Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program for each of the above-listed payment levels, by the

15

same value as the annual federal cost of living adjustment to be published by the federal Social

16

Security Administration in October 2008 and becoming effective on January 1, 2009, as determined

17

under the provisions of Title XVI of the federal Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1381 et seq.; and

18

provided further, that it is the intent of the general assembly that the January 1, 2009, reduction in

19

the state's monthly share shall not cause a reduction in the combined federal and state payment

20

level for each category of recipients in effect in the month of December 2008; provided further,

21

that the department of human services is authorized and directed to provide for payments to

22

recipients in accordance with the above directives.

23

     (2) As of July 1, 2010, state supplement payments shall not be federally administered and

24

shall be paid directly by the department of human services to the recipient.

25

     (3) Individuals living in institutions shall receive a twenty-dollar ($20.00) per-month

26

personal needs allowance from the state that shall be in addition to the personal needs allowance

27

allowed by the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 301 et seq.

28

     (4) Individuals living in state-licensed supportive residential-care settings and assisted-

29

living residences who are receiving SSI supplemental payments under this section shall be allowed

30

to retain a minimum personal needs allowance of fifty-five dollars ($55.00) per month from their

31

SSI monthly benefit prior to payment of any monthly fees in addition to any amounts established

32

in an administrative rule promulgated by the secretary of the executive office of health and human

33

services for persons eligible to receive Medicaid-funded long-term services and supports in the

34

settings identified in subsection (a)(1)(v).

 

LC004771 - Page 41 of 67

1

     (5) The department is authorized and directed to make a determination of the medical need

2

and whether a setting provides the appropriate services for those persons who:

3

     (i) Have applied for or are receiving SSI, and who apply for admission to supportive

4

residential-care settings and assisted-living residences on or after October 1, 1998; or

5

     (ii) Who are residing in supportive residential-care settings and assisted-living residences,

6

and who apply for or begin to receive SSI on or after October 1, 1998.

7

     (6) The process for determining medical need required by subsection (a)(5) of this section

8

shall be developed by the executive office of health and human services in collaboration with the

9

departments of that office and shall be implemented in a manner that furthers the goals of

10

establishing a statewide coordinated long-term-care entry system as required pursuant to the

11

Medicaid section 1115 waiver demonstration.

12

     (7) To assure access to high-quality, coordinated services, the executive office of health

13

and human services is further authorized and directed to establish certification or contract standards

14

that must be met by those state-licensed supportive residential-care settings, including adult

15

supportive-care homes and assisted-living residences admitting or serving any persons eligible for

16

state-funded supplementary assistance under this section. The certification or contract standards

17

shall define:

18

     (i) The scope and frequency of resident assessments, the development and implementation

19

of individualized service plans, staffing levels and qualifications, resident monitoring, service

20

coordination, safety risk management and disclosure, and any other related areas;

21

     (ii) The procedures for determining whether the certifications or contract standards have

22

been met; and

23

     (iii) The criteria and process for granting a one-time, short-term good-cause exemption

24

from the certification or contract standards to a licensed supportive residential-care setting or

25

assisted-living residence that provides documented evidence indicating that meeting, or failing to

26

meet, the standards poses an undue hardship on any person eligible under this section who is a

27

prospective or current resident.

28

     (8) The certification or contract standards required by this section shall be developed in

29

collaboration by the departments, under the direction of the executive office of health and human

30

services, so as to ensure that they comply with applicable licensure regulations either in effect or

31

in development.

32

     (b) The department is authorized and directed to provide additional assistance to

33

individuals eligible for SSI benefits for:

34

     (1) Moving costs or other expenses as a result of an emergency of a catastrophic nature,

 

LC004771 - Page 42 of 67

1

which is defined as a fire or natural disaster; and

2

     (2) Lost or stolen SSI benefit checks or proceeds of them; and

3

     (3) Assistance payments to SSI-eligible individuals in need because of the application of

4

federal SSI regulations regarding estranged spouses; and the department shall provide the

5

assistance in a form and amount that the department shall by regulation determine.

6

     SECTION 21. Section 40-8.4-14 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-8.4 entitled "Health

7

Care for Families" is hereby amended to read as follows:

8

     40-8.4-14. Permanent joint committee on health care oversight.

9

     (a) The legislature hereby finds and declares that: (1) Access to affordable, quality health

10

and long-term care is of concern for all Rhode Islanders; (2) The complexities of the health-

11

insurance and healthcare-delivery systems result in inefficiencies, confusion, and additional costs

12

for consumers and other participants in the healthcare system; (3) Reform to the health-insurance

13

and healthcare-delivery systems is achievable only through an ongoing, focused, directed, and

14

informed effort; and (4) Steps taken to reduce the numbers of uninsured Rhode Islanders, enhance

15

the quality of care, contain costs, ensure accessibility to services, and promote healthy lifestyles

16

should be monitored, adjusted or expanded as needed. Therefore, there is hereby created a

17

permanent legislative committee to monitor, study, report, and make recommendations on all areas

18

of healthcare provision, insurance, liability, licensing, cost, and delivery of services, and the

19

adequacy, efficacy and efficiency of statutes, rules, regulations, guidelines, practices, and programs

20

related to health care, long-term care, or health insurance coverage in Rhode Island.

21

     (b) The committee consists of twelve (12) members of the general assembly: six (6) of

22

whom shall be members of the house of representatives, to include the chair or deputy chair of the

23

committee on finance, the chair or vice chair of the committee on corporations, the chair or vice

24

chair of the committee on health, education and welfare; and one of whom shall be from the

25

minority party, to be appointed by, and to serve at the discretion of, the speaker of the house of

26

representatives; and six (6) of whom shall be from the senate, to include the chair or vice chair of

27

the committee on finance, the chair or vice chair of the committee on commerce, housing and

28

municipal government, the chair or vice chair of the committee on health and human services; and

29

one of whom from the minority party, to be appointed by, and to serve at the discretion of, the

30

president of the senate.

31

     (c) The committee shall have co-chairpersons, one appointed by the speaker of the house

32

of representatives and one by the president of the senate.

33

     (d) The committee may review or study any matter related to the provision of healthcare

34

services and long-term care that it considers of significance to the citizens of Rhode Island,

 

LC004771 - Page 43 of 67

1

including the availability of health care, the quality of health care, the effectiveness and efficiency

2

of managed care systems, the efficiency and the operation of state healthcare programs, and the

3

availability of improved processes or new technologies to achieve more effective and timely

4

resolution of disputes, better communication, speedier, more reliable and less costly administrative

5

processes, claims, payments, and other matters involving the interaction among any or all of

6

government, employers, consumers of health care, providers, healthcare facilities, insurers and

7

others. The committee may request information from any healthcare provider, healthcare facility,

8

insurer or others. The committee may request and shall receive from any instrumentality of the

9

state, including the department of human services, the department of business regulation, the

10

department of health, the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and

11

hospitals, the office department of healthy aging, and the long-term care coordinating council, or

12

any other governmental advisory body or commission, including, but not limited to, the governor's

13

advisory council on health, information and assistance as it deems necessary for the proper

14

execution of its powers and duties under this section, including the annual report of the governor's

15

advisory council on health. The committee will undertake a comprehensive study of the state's

16

regulatory structure for health insurance, including the roles, relevance, impact, and coordination

17

of current state laws and agencies involved in insurance oversight. This study will include any

18

necessary recommendations for the restructuring of the state's laws and regulatory bodies. The

19

recommendations will be made to the speaker of the house and the president of the senate on or

20

before March 1, 2005.

21

     (e) In addition to the notification regarding regulations required under § 40-8.4-10(b), the

22

department of human services shall file with the permanent joint committee on health care oversight

23

a detailed plan for the implementation of the programs created under this chapter by August 1,

24

2000.

25

     (f) The committee shall have the power to hold hearings, shall meet at least quarterly, may

26

make recommendations to the general assembly, state agencies, private industry, or any other

27

entity, and shall report to the general assembly on its findings and recommendations as it

28

determines appropriate.

29

     (g) The office of the health insurance commissioner and the executive office of health and

30

human services shall issue a series of reports to the joint committee on or before October 1 of 2012,

31

on state implementation options related to the U.S. Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of

32

2010, as amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, and any further

33

amendments to or regulations or guidance issued thereunder ("ACA"). These reports shall analyze

34

the state options and make recommendations to the committee for legislative action regarding the

 

LC004771 - Page 44 of 67

1

following topics:

2

     (i) The feasibility of instituting a basic health program pursuant to Section 131 of the ACA,

3

including a proposed plan for implementation;

4

     (ii) The impact of eliminating gender as a rating factor, limiting variation in community

5

rates based on age, and limiting waiting periods for coverage, as required under the Act;

6

     (iii) The impact of merging the individual and small group-insurance markets on rates and

7

coverage, including a proposed plan for implementation;

8

     (iv) The feasibility of requiring insurance product consistency inside and outside of a state

9

health insurance exchange, including an assessment of coverage and rate impacts; and

10

     (v) The substantially equivalent utilization coverage limits that the legislature may

11

substitute for the current dollar coverage limits on numerous state health insurance mandates, to

12

conform with the Act.

13

     SECTION 22. Sections 40-8.9-4 and 40-8.9-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-8.9

14

entitled "Medical Assistance - Long-Term Care Service and Finance Reform" are hereby amended

15

to read as follows:

16

     40-8.9-4. Unified long-term care budget.

17

     Beginning on July 1, 2007, a unified long-term-care budget shall combine in a single, line-

18

item appropriation within the executive office of health and human services (executive office),

19

annual executive office Medicaid appropriations for nursing facility and community-based, long-

20

term-care services for elderly sixty-five (65) years and older and younger persons at risk of nursing

21

home admissions (including adult day care, home health, PACE, and personal care in assisted-

22

living settings). Beginning on July 1, 2007, the total system savings attributable to the value of the

23

reduction in nursing home days including hospice nursing home days paid for by Medicaid shall

24

be allocated in the budget enacted by the general assembly for the ensuing fiscal year for the express

25

purpose of promoting and strengthening community-based alternatives; provided, further,

26

beginning July 1, 2009, said savings shall be allocated within the budgets of the executive office

27

and, as appropriate, the department of human services, office department of healthy aging. The

28

allocation shall include, but not be limited to, funds to support an ongoing, statewide community

29

education and outreach program to provide the public with information on home and community

30

services and the establishment of presumptive eligibility criteria for the purposes of accessing home

31

and community care. The home- and community-care service presumptive eligibility criteria shall

32

be developed through rule or regulation on or before September 30, 2007. The allocation may also

33

be used to fund home and community services provided by the office department of healthy aging

34

for persons eligible for Medicaid long-term care, and the co-pay program administered pursuant to

 

LC004771 - Page 45 of 67

1

chapter 66.3 of title 42. Any monies in the allocation that remain unexpended in a fiscal year shall

2

be carried forward to the next fiscal year for the express purpose of strengthening community-based

3

alternatives.

4

     The caseload estimating conference pursuant to § 35-17-1 shall determine the amount of

5

general revenues to be added to the current service estimate of community-based, long-term-care

6

services for elderly sixty-five (65) and older and younger persons at risk of nursing home

7

admissions for the ensuing budget year by multiplying the combined, cost per day of nursing home

8

and hospice nursing home days estimated at the caseload conference for that year by the reduction

9

in nursing home and hospice nursing home days from those in the second fiscal year prior to the

10

current fiscal year to those in the first fiscal year prior to the current fiscal year.

11

     40-8.9-6. Recognizing long-term reform performance -- Reporting.

12

     (a) Annual performance reports showing progress in long-term-care system reform and

13

rebalancing shall be submitted by April 1 of each year by the executive office of health and human

14

services to the finance committees of both the senate and the house of representatives and the long-

15

term care coordinating council and shall include:

16

     (1) The number of Medicaid-eligible persons aged sixty-five (65) years and over and adults

17

with disabilities served in nursing facilities;

18

     (2) The number of Medicaid-eligible persons aged sixty-five (65) years and over and adults

19

with disabilities transitioned from nursing homes to Medicaid-supported home- and community-

20

based care;

21

     (3) The number of persons aged sixty-five (65) years and over and adults with disabilities

22

served in Medicaid and office department of healthy aging home and community care, to include

23

home care, adult day services, assisted living, the personal choice program, the program of all-

24

inclusive care of the elderly (PACE) and shared living;

25

     (4) The dollar amounts and percent of expenditures spent on nursing facility care and

26

home- and community-based care for those aged sixty-five (65) years and over and adults with

27

disabilities and the average cost of care for nursing facility care and home- and community-based

28

care;

29

     (5) The amount of savings attributed to the value of the reduction in nursing home days,

30

including hospice nursing home days paid for by Medicaid in accordance with § 40-8.9-4, and how

31

the savings, if any, are allocated in the current fiscal year and in the proposed budget for the ensuing

32

fiscal year to promote and strengthen community-based alternatives; and

33

     (6) Estimates of the continued investments necessary to provide stability to the existing

34

system and establish the infrastructure and programs required to achieve systemwide reform and

 

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1

the targeted goal of spending fifty percent (50%) of Medicaid long-term-care dollars on nursing

2

facility care and fifty percent (50%) on home- and community-based services.

3

     (b) Beginning in 2019, to measure and show progress in achieving the state's goals for

4

long-term services and supports reform, the executive office of health and human services shall

5

develop and make public on its website a long-term services and supports performance scorecard

6

based on the measures detailed in subsections (a)(1) through (a)(5) of this section showing data for

7

the most recent four-year (4) period.

8

     SECTION 23. Section 40-8.10-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-8.10 entitled "Long-

9

Term Care Service Reform for Medicaid Eligible Individuals" is hereby amended to read as

10

follows:

11

     40-8.10-6. Rules and regulations.

12

     The secretary of the executive office of health and human services, the directors of the

13

department of human services, the office department of healthy aging, the department of children,

14

youth and families and the department of behavioral healthcare, development disabilities and

15

hospitals are hereby authorized to promulgate rules and regulations necessary to implement all

16

provisions of this chapter and to seek necessary federal approvals in accordance with the provisions

17

of the state's Medicaid section 1115 demonstration waiver.

18

     SECTION 24. Section 40-17-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-17 entitled "Support of

19

Homeless" is hereby amended to read as follows:

20

     40-17-2. Agency established.

21

     (a) There is hereby created a permanent council to be called the "interagency council on

22

homelessness" consisting of eighteen (18) members and two (2) ex-officio members:

23

     (1) One of whom shall be the chief of the office of housing and community development,

24

or his or her designee, who shall chair the interagency council on homelessness;

25

     (2) One of whom shall be the director of the department of administration, or his or her

26

designee;

27

     (3) One of whom shall be the chair of the housing resources commission, or his or her

28

designee;

29

     (4) One of whom shall be the director of the department of human services, or his or her

30

designee;

31

     (5) One of whom shall be the director of the department of health, or his or her designee;

32

     (6) One of whom shall be the director of the department of children, youth and families, or

33

his or her designee;

34

     (7) One of whom shall be the director of the office department of healthy aging, or his or

 

LC004771 - Page 47 of 67

1

her designee;

2

     (8) One of whom shall be the director of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities

3

and hospitals, or his or her designee;

4

     (9) One of whom shall be director of the department of labor and training, or his or her

5

designee;

6

     (10) One of whom shall be the director of the department of corrections, or his or her

7

designee;

8

     (11) One of whom shall be the commissioner of the department of elementary and

9

secondary education, or his or her designee;

10

     (12) One of whom shall be the director of the Rhode Island housing and mortgage finance

11

corporation, or his or her designee;

12

     (13) One of whom shall be the director of the emergency management agency, or his or

13

her designee;

14

     (14) One of whom shall be a representative from the Rhode Island office of veterans

15

services, or his or her designee;

16

     (15) One of whom shall be the public defender, or his or her designee;

17

     (16) One of whom shall be the Medicaid director within the department of human services,

18

or his or her designee;

19

     (17) One of whom shall be the secretary of the executive office of health and human

20

services, or his or her designee;

21

     (18) One of whom shall be the lieutenant governor, or his or her designee;

22

     (19) One of whom shall be an ex-officio member who shall be from the Providence

23

Veterans Administration Medical Center who specializes in health care for homeless veterans; and

24

     (20) One of whom shall be an ex-officio member who shall be the chair, or his or her

25

designee, of the interagency council on homelessness advisory council as described in this chapter

26

herein.

27

     (b) Forthwith upon the effective date of this chapter, the members of the commission shall

28

meet at the call of the chair and organize. Vacancies in the commission shall be filled in like manner

29

as the original appointment.

30

     (c) The department of administration is hereby directed to provide suitable quarters and

31

staff for the commission.

32

     (d) All departments and agencies of the state shall furnish advice and information,

33

documentary, and otherwise to the commission and its agents as is deemed necessary or desirable

34

by the commission to facilitate the purposes of this chapter.

 

LC004771 - Page 48 of 67

1

     SECTION 25. Section 40-18-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-18 entitled "Long-Term

2

Home Health Care - Alternative to Placement in Skilled Nursing or Intermediate Care Facility" is

3

hereby amended to read as follows:

4

40-18-2. Definitions.

5

     As used in this chapter, the following words and phrases shall have the following meanings

6

unless the context otherwise requires:

7

     (1) "Adult daycare service" means a comprehensive supervised program on a regularly

8

scheduled basis to adults with disabilities for a substantial part of the day in a single physical

9

location for a specified number of participants daily. The adult daycare center shall be reviewed

10

and approved by the office department of healthy aging or other appropriate state agency. Adult

11

daycare services may include, but are not limited to, medical supervision, social and educational

12

activities, snacks and/or hot lunch, and transportation to and from the daycare site. All adult daycare

13

services must meet the conditions set forth in the rules and regulations of the office department of

14

healthy aging and must provide these services as an alternative to twenty-four-hour (24) long-term

15

institutional care.

16

     (2) "Case management services" means the coordination of a plan of care and services

17

provided at home to persons with disabilities who are medically eligible for placement in a skilled

18

nursing facility or an intermediate-care facility upon discharge from a hospital. Such programs shall

19

be provided in the person's home or in the home of a responsible relative or other responsible adult,

20

but not provided in a skilled nursing facility and/or an intermediate-care facility.

21

     (3) "Certified home health" means a home-care services agency that is licensed by the state

22

and is qualified to participate as a home health agency under the provisions of Titles XVII and XIX

23

of the federal Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1395x, and shall provide, directly or through contract

24

arrangement, a minimum of the following services, which are of a preventative, therapeutic,

25

rehabilitative health guidance, and/or supportive nature to persons at home: skilled nursing

26

services, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and home health aide services.

27

     (4) "Director" means the director of the department of human services.

28

     (5) "Emergency response system" means a twenty-four-hour (24) per-day monitoring

29

service designed for use by elderly adults in the community. The purpose of that system is to

30

provide contact between the elderly adult in the community and the appropriate emergency

31

response agency.

32

     (6) "Government funds" means funds provided under the provisions of chapter 8 of this

33

title.

34

     (7) "Home-care services" means those services provided by: (i) a Medicare/Medicaid

 

LC004771 - Page 49 of 67

1

certified and state-licensed home health agency; and (ii) a state-licensed home health

2

aide/homemaker agency.

3

     (8) "Home health aide/homemaker agency" means: (i) Home health aide services, at a

4

minimum, includes assistance with personal hygiene, dressing, feeding, and household tasks

5

essential to the patient's health; and (ii) Homemaker services, at a minimum, includes light work or

6

household tasks such as cooking, cleaning, shopping, and laundry.

7

     (9) "Hospital" means a hospital as defined in chapter 17 of title 23.

8

     SECTION 26. Sections 40-20-1 and 40-20-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-20 entitled

9

"Long-Term Care System Planning" are hereby amended to read as follows:

10

     40-20-1. Long-term-care plan and budget.

11

     The directors of the department of human services, the office department of healthy aging,

12

the department of health, and the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities

13

and hospitals shall develop a five-year (5) Rhode Island long-term-care plan and recommended

14

budget prior to January 1, 1998. In developing the plan, the directors shall seek input and comment

15

from members of the public, consumers, and providers. The plan shall be based on the goals and

16

objectives set forth in the long-term care coordinating council's "Long-Term Care Plan for Rhode

17

Island: 1995-2000" and shall incorporate at least the following:

18

     (a) Guiding principles:

19

     (1) Address and promote physical, mental, and psycho-social well-being.

20

     (2) Allow consumers to choose less restrictive and more cost-effective and appropriate

21

settings for care.

22

     (3) Place emphasis on consumer choice and satisfaction.

23

     (4) Strive to ensure that all services are available as appropriate to needs and resources.

24

     (5) Base the plan on consumer needs, not provider needs.

25

     (6) Recognize that cost-effectiveness, efficiency, and quality of life are important to public

26

and private-pay consumers.

27

     (b) Essential elements:

28

     (1) A long-term-care coordinator responsible for assisting persons to access long-term-care

29

services shall be available to all communities.

30

     (2) A uniform screening and assessment shall be conducted for anyone seeking state-

31

funded long-term-care assistance. The assessment shall be available to private pay consumers as

32

well.

33

     (3) A consumer long-term-care information system shall be developed in collaboration

34

with the long-term care coordinating council.

 

LC004771 - Page 50 of 67

1

     40-20-2. Long-term-care entry system.

2

     The directors of the department of human services, the office department of healthy aging,

3

the department of health, and the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities

4

and hospitals, shall work collaboratively to design and implement subject to appropriation by

5

October 1, 2006, a standardized, community-based, comprehensive system for entry into state long-

6

term-care programs and services. The system shall include community-based staff to administer

7

pre-screening long-term-care assessments and care-management services, as defined and required

8

under chapter 66.6 of title 42, and to make recommendations for services, including home- and

9

community-based alternatives to residential care, and to assist with access to services. The long-

10

term-care entry system shall include the essential elements contained in § 40-20-1(b).

11

     SECTION 27. Sections 40.1-29-3 and 40.1-29-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 40.1-29

12

entitled "Governor's Council on Behavioral Health" are hereby amended to read as follows:

13

     40.1-29-3. Members.

14

     (a) The council shall consist of thirty-one (31) voting members.

15

     (1) There shall be four (4) members of the legislature, two (2) shall be from the senate and

16

shall be appointed by the senate president to serve for their legislative term, one from each of the

17

major political parties, and two (2) shall be from the house of representatives and shall be appointed

18

by the speaker to serve for their legislative term, one from each of the two (2) major political parties.

19

     (2) The nonlegislative members shall be the executive director of the Substance Use and

20

Mental Health Leadership Council of RI, the mental health advocate, the child advocate, and a

21

representative of the AFL-CIO to be appointed by the governor.

22

     (3) The remaining twenty-three (23) public members shall be appointed by and serve at the

23

pleasure of the governor and shall represent community interests such as substance use disorder

24

treatment and prevention professionals; youth with behavioral health challenges, or their

25

representatives; consumers of substance use disorder programs and their families; mental health

26

treatment professionals; adult and elderly consumers of mental health services and their families;

27

families of children who are consumers of mental health and substance use disorder services; the

28

judiciary; criminal justice officials; and local government officials.

29

     (4) Not less than fifty (50%) percent of the public members shall be individuals who are

30

not state employees or providers of behavioral health services.

31

     (5) There shall be sufficient representation by the families of children who are consumers

32

of mental health and substance use disorder services in order to ensure adequate representation of

33

such children.

34

     (6) Every effort shall be made to ensure that appointed members represent the cultural

 

LC004771 - Page 51 of 67

1

diversity of the state.

2

     (7) All members shall have demonstrable expertise in, or experience with, substance use

3

disorders or mental health services in Rhode Island. In addition, the directors or their designees of

4

the departments of children, youth and families; corrections; education; health; human services;

5

behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals; the office department of healthy

6

aging; the attorney general, or designee, and the executive director of the Rhode Island justice

7

commission shall serve as ex officio and without a vote as members of the council.

8

     (b) Any vacancy that may occur in the council shall be filled in the same manner as the

9

original appointments.

10

     (c) The governor shall designate one member as the chairperson of the council.

11

     40.1-29-6. Staff and employees.

12

     The director of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals shall

13

provide the council with professional and secretarial staff and other support as shall be appropriate

14

for it to carry out its designated functions. The director of the department of children, youth and

15

families and the director of the office department of healthy aging shall provide the council with

16

additional professional and secretarial staff and other employees as shall be appropriate for the

17

council to carry out functions related to the respective responsibilities of these departments. All

18

departments and agencies of the state shall furnish any advice and information, documentary and

19

otherwise, to the council that is deemed necessary to fulfill the purpose and functions of the council.

20

     SECTION 28. Sections 42-6-1, 42-6-2 and 42-6-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-6

21

entitled "Departments of State Government" are hereby amended to read as follows:

22

     42-6-1. Enumeration of departments.

23

     All the administrative powers and duties heretofore vested by law in the several state

24

departments, boards, divisions, bureaus, commissions, and other agencies shall be vested in the

25

following departments and other agencies that are specified in this title:

26

     (a) Executive department (chapter 7 of this title);

27

     (b) Department of state (chapter 8 of this title);

28

     (c) Department of the attorney general (chapter 9 of this title);

29

     (d) Treasury department (chapter 10 of this title);

30

     (e) Department of administration (chapter 11 of this title);

31

     (f) Department of business regulation (chapter 14 of this title);

32

     (g) Department of children, youth and families (chapter 72 of this title);

33

     (h) Department of corrections (chapter 56 of this title);

34

     (i) [Deleted by P.L. 2019, ch. 88, art. 4, § 12];

 

LC004771 - Page 52 of 67

1

     (j) Department of elementary and secondary education (chapter 60 of title 16);

2

     (k) Department of environmental management (chapter 17.1 of this title);

3

     (l) Department of health (chapter 18 of this title);

4

     (m) Board of governors for higher education (chapter 59 of title 16);

5

     (n) Department of labor and training (chapter 16.1 of this title);

6

     (o) Department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals (chapter

7

12.1 of this title);

8

     (p) Department of human services (chapter 12 of this title);

9

     (q) Department of transportation (chapter 13 of this title);

10

     (r) Public utilities commission (chapter 14.3 of this title);

11

     (s) Department of revenue (chapter 142 of this title);

12

     (t) Department of public safety (chapter 7.3 of this title).;

13

     (u) Department of Healthy Aging (chapter 66 of this title).

14

     42-6-2. Heads of departments.

15

     The governor, secretary of state, attorney general, and general treasurer, hereinafter called

16

general officers, shall each be in charge of a department. There shall also be a director of

17

administration, a director of revenue, a director of public safety, a director of human services, a

18

director of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals, a director of

19

transportation, a director of business regulation, a director of labor and training, a director of

20

environmental management, a director for children, youth and families, a director of healthy aging

21

and a director of corrections. Each director shall hold office at the pleasure of the governor and he

22

or she shall serve until his or her successor is duly appointed and qualified unless the director is

23

removed from office by special order of the governor.

24

     42-6-3. Appointment of directors.

25

     (a) At the January session following his or her election to office, the governor shall appoint

26

a director of administration, a director of revenue, a director of public safety, a director of human

27

services, a director of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals, a director of

28

transportation, a director of business regulation, a director of labor and training, a director of

29

environmental management, a director for children, youth and families, a director of healthy aging

30

and a director of corrections. The governor shall, in all cases of appointment of a director while the

31

senate is in session, notify the senate of his or her appointment and the senate shall, within sixty

32

(60) legislative days after receipt of the notice, act upon the appointment. If the senate shall, within

33

sixty (60) legislative days, vote to disapprove the appointment, it shall so notify the governor, who

34

shall forthwith appoint and notify the senate of the appointment of a different person as director

 

LC004771 - Page 53 of 67

1

and so on in like manner until the senate shall fail to so vote disapproval of the governor's

2

appointment. If the senate shall fail, for sixty (60) legislative days next after notice, to act upon any

3

appointment of which it has been notified by the governor, the person so appointed shall be the

4

director. The governor may withdraw any appointment of which he or she has given notice to the

5

senate, at any time within sixty (60) legislative days thereafter and before action has been taken

6

thereon by the senate.

7

     (b) Except as expressly provided in § 42-6-9, and except that the governor may enter into

8

a contract of employment for a director of the department of children, youth and families for a

9

period of time up to three (3) years, no director of any department shall be appointed or employed

10

pursuant to any contract of employment for a period of time greater than the remainder of the

11

governor's current term of office. Any contract entered into in violation of this section after July 1,

12

1994, is hereby declared null and void.

13

     SECTION 29. Sections 42-66.2-3 and 42-66.2-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-66.2

14

entitled "Pharmaceutical Assistance to the Elderly Act" are hereby amended to read as follows:

15

     42-66.2-3. Definitions.

16

     As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:

17

     (1) "Consumer" means any full-time resident of the state who fulfills the eligibility

18

requirements set forth in § 42-66.2-5. Residence for purposes of this chapter shall be in accordance

19

with the definitions and evidence standards set forth in § 17-1-3.1.

20

     (2) "Contractor" means a third party or private vendor capable of administering a program

21

of reimbursement for prescription drugs, and drug program eligibility administrative support as

22

required by the director, the vendor to be determined through a competitive bid process in which

23

the director awards a three (3) year contract for services.

24

     (3) "Department" means the office department of healthy aging.

25

     (4) "Director" means the director of the office department of healthy aging.

26

     (5)(i) "Eligible drugs" means insulin, injectable drugs for multiple sclerosis, and shall mean

27

non-injectable drugs which require a physician's prescription according to federal law and which

28

are contained in the following American Hospital Formulary Service pharmacologic-therapeutic

29

classifications categories that have not been determined by the federal "Drug Efficacy and Safety

30

Implementation (DESI) Commission" to lack substantial evidence of effectiveness. Eligible drugs

31

are limited to the following classification categories: cardiac drugs, hypotensive drugs, diuretics,

32

anti-diabetic agents, insulin, disposable insulin syringes, vasodilators (cardiac indications only),

33

anticoagulants, hemorreolgic agents, glaucoma drugs, drugs for the treatment of Parkinson's

34

disease, antilipemic drugs and oral antineoplastic drugs and drugs for the treatment of asthma and

 

LC004771 - Page 54 of 67

1

other chronic respiratory diseases and prescription vitamin and mineral supplements for renal

2

patients, and drugs approved for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease, drugs used for the treatment

3

of depression, those drugs approved for the treatment of urinary incontinence, anti-infectives, drugs

4

used for the treatment of arthritis, drugs approved for the treatment of osteoporosis, and

5

neuraminidase inhibiting drugs indicated for the treatment of influenza A and B.

6

     (ii) "Additional drugs" means non-injectable drugs which require a physician's prescription

7

according to federal law and which are contained in the American Hospital Formulary Service

8

pharmacologic-therapeutic classifications categories that have not been determined by the federal

9

"Drug Efficacy and Safety Implementation (DESI) Commission" to lack substantial evidence of

10

effectiveness, which are not included in the definition of drugs as defined in this subdivision.

11

However, this shall not include prescription drugs used for cosmetic purposes.

12

     (6) "Income" for the purposes of this chapter means the sum of federal adjusted gross

13

income as defined in the Internal Revenue Code of the United States, 26 U.S.C. § 1 et seq., and all

14

nontaxable income including, but not limited to, the amount of capital gains excluded from adjusted

15

gross income, alimony, support money, nontaxable strike benefits, cash public assistance and relief

16

(not including relief granted under this chapter), the gross amount of any pension or annuity

17

(including Railroad Retirement Act benefits, 45 U.S.C. § 231 et seq., all payments received under

18

the federal Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 301 et seq., state unemployment insurance laws, and

19

veterans' disability pensions), nontaxable interest received from the federal government or any of

20

its instrumentalities, workers' compensation, and the gross amount of "loss of time" insurance. It

21

does not include gifts from nongovernmental sources, or surplus foods or other relief in kind

22

supplied by a public or private agency.

23

     (7) "Pharmaceutical manufacturer" means any entity holding legal title to or possession of

24

a national drug code number issued by the federal food and drug administration.

25

     (8) "Pharmacy" means a pharmacy licensed by the state of Rhode Island.

26

     (9) [Deleted by P.L. 2008, ch. 100, art. 8, § 2].

27

     42-66.2-6. Responsibilities of office of healthy aging Responsibilities of the

28

department of healthy aging.

29

     (a) Determination of eligibility. The department shall adopt regulations relating to the

30

determination of eligibility of prospective consumers and the determination and elimination of

31

program abuse. The department has the power to declare ineligible any consumer who abuses or

32

misuses the established prescription plan. The department has the power to investigate cases of

33

suspected provider or consumer fraud.

34

     (b) Program criteria. The program includes the following criteria:

 

LC004771 - Page 55 of 67

1

     (1) Senior citizens participating in the program are required to maintain records of each

2

transaction as specified by the director in accordance with subsection 42-66.2-4(c);

3

     (2) Prescription benefits for any single prescription may be dispensed in the amounts

4

authorized by the physician, and agreed to by the consumer, up to a maximum of a one hundred

5

(100) day supply or two hundred (200) doses, whichever is less and/or a one hundred (100) day

6

supply or one quart of liquid, whichever is less; provided, however, that disposable insulin syringes

7

are dispersed in a quantity of one hundred (100);

8

     (3) Experimental drugs are excluded from the program;

9

     (4) A system of mail order delivery for prescriptions is allowed under this program; and

10

     (5) Eligible and additional drugs must be dispensed within one year of the original

11

prescription order.

12

     (c) The director shall provide a mechanism, within the department, to handle all public

13

inquiries concerning the program.

14

     (d) The director shall establish a process, in accordance with the Administrative Procedures

15

Act, chapter 35 of this title, to provide an appeals hearing on the determination of eligibility.

16

     (e) The director shall forward to the contractor a list of all eligible consumers.

17

     (f) Expenditures for multiple sclerosis drugs shall not exceed thirty thousand dollars

18

($30,000).

19

     (g) Generic drug substitution is mandatory when there is an available generic drug

20

equivalent.

21

     SECTION 30. Sections 42-66.2.1-2 and 42-66.2.1-7 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-

22

66.2.1 entitled "Rhode Island Best Rx Prescription Drug Discount Program for the Uninsured" are

23

hereby amended to read as follows:

24

     42-66.2.1-2. Discount drug program.

25

     The departments of human services and elderly affairs shall develop a prescription drug

26

discount program for the uninsured to be implemented on or before March 15, 2005, and the office

27

department of healthy aging shall issue a request for proposal to entities for the management of the

28

discount program. Once the bid has been awarded to a contractor, the contract may be modified as

29

necessary and appropriate to achieve the purpose of the program at any time, with the agreement

30

of all parties.

31

     42-66.2.1-7. Advisory commission.

32

     (a) There is hereby established the Rhode Island Best Rx Program Advisory Commission.

33

The Commission shall be responsible for the marketing, education and promotion of the Rhode

34

Island Best Rx Discount Program for the Uninsured and shall set administrative fees as required

 

LC004771 - Page 56 of 67

1

under § 42-66.2.1-6 and otherwise advise the General Assembly on the operation of the Rhode

2

Island Best Rx Discount Program for the Uninsured.

3

     (b) The advisory commission shall have the following composition: (i) a representative of

4

organized labor appointed by the president of the Rhode Island AFL-CIO; (ii) a representative of

5

the Alliance for Retired Americans appointed by the executive director; (iii) a representative of the

6

American Association of Retired Persons appointed by the executive director; (iv) a representative

7

of retail pharmacists licensed and operating in the state of Rhode Island, as appointed by the Rhode

8

Island Pharmacists Association; (v) three (3) representatives of the research-based pharmaceutical

9

manufacturers; (vi) the speaker of the house or his or her designee; (vii) the president of the senate

10

or his or her designee; (viii) the Director of the Department of Human Services, or his or her

11

designee; and (ix) the Director of the Office Department of Healthy Aging, or his or her designee.

12

     (c) The speaker of the house or his or her designee, and the president of the senate or his

13

or her designee, shall co-chair the advisory commission, and the commission shall meet at the call

14

of the chair, but no less frequently than once per year.

15

     (d) Commission members in subsections (i) through (iv) herein shall be appointed as above

16

and shall serve such terms as may be designated by their respective constituencies and shall receive

17

no compensation for their service.

18

     (e) The director or designated representative of the department of human services and the

19

office department of healthy aging shall be non-voting ex-officio members of the advisory

20

commission.

21

     (f) A quorum for consideration of business is no fewer than five (5) voting members

22

present. Recommendations and action of the council shall be adopted by a two-thirds (⅔) majority,

23

and no minority action shall be authorized.

24

     SECTION 31. Section 42-66.3-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-66.3 entitled "Home

25

and Community Care Services to the Elderly" is hereby amended to read as follows:

26

     42-66.3-1. Definitions.

27

     As used in this chapter:

28

     (1) "Adult day services program" is an agency licensed through the department of health

29

that provides a comprehensive supervised program on a regular basis to physically and/or mentally

30

handicapped adults for a substantial part of a day in a single physical location for a specified number

31

of participants daily. Adult day services may include, medical supervision, social and educational

32

activities, snacks and/or hot lunch.

33

     (2) "Case management agency" means a community-based agency designated by the office

34

department of healthy aging to provide care coordination for home and community care clients.

 

LC004771 - Page 57 of 67

1

     (3) "Director" means the director of the office department of healthy aging.

2

     (4) "Home and community care services" means arranging for, or providing directly to the

3

client, or providing through contract services -- such as home health aid/homemaker services and

4

such other services that may be required for a client to remain in the community and as may be

5

promulgated by department regulations.

6

     (5) "Home care agency" means an agency licensed by the department of health as a "home

7

nursing provider" and/or "home care provider" under the provisions of chapter 17 of title 23.

8

     (6) "Long-term care ombudsperson" means the person or persons designated by the director

9

of the office department of healthy aging for the purpose of advocating on behalf of recipients of

10

long-term care services and of receiving, investigating and resolving through mediation,

11

negotiation and administrative action complaints filed by recipients of long-term care services;

12

individuals acting on their behalf or any individual organization or government agency that has

13

reason to believe that a long-term care agency has engaged in activities, practices or omissions that

14

constitute a violation of applicable statutes or regulations or that may have an adverse effect upon

15

the health, safety, welfare, rights or the quality of life of recipients of long-term care services.

16

     (7) "Home health aide services" means simple healthcare tasks, personal hygiene services,

17

housekeeping tasks essential to the patient's health, and other related supportive services. These

18

services shall be in accordance with a plan of treatment for the patient and shall be under the

19

supervision of the appropriate healthcare professional. These services shall be provided by a person

20

who meets the standards established by the department of health.

21

     (8) "Homebound" means the condition of the client is such that the client does not have the

22

normal ability to leave home, consequently leaving the home requires a considerable and taxing

23

effort by the client. A client does not have to be confined to bed to be homebound.

24

     (9) "Homemaker services" means assistance and instruction in managing and maintaining

25

a household and incidental household tasks for persons at home because of illness, incapacity, or

26

the absence of a caretaker relative. These services shall be provided by a person who meets the

27

standards established by the department of health.

28

     (10) "Assisted living residences" means a publicly or privately operated residence that is

29

licensed pursuant to § 23-17-4 of the general laws as amended.

30

     (11) "Respite care services" means temporary care given inside or outside the home of a

31

client who cannot entirely care for themselves and thereby offers relief to caregivers.

32

     (12) "Shared living" program means a privately owned residence in which the family

33

provides for or arranges for the needs of the client so that the client can remain in the community,

34

a program that is designed to respect the unique character of each individual, promotes self-reliance

 

LC004771 - Page 58 of 67

1

and the freedom to make choices, and fosters dignity, autonomy and personal safety. Services may

2

be provided in-home or a host home residence in which the family provides for or arranges for the

3

needs of the client so that the client can remain in the community including but not limited to

4

lodging and meals. This program is designed to provide the opportunity for the provision of an

5

inter-generational multidisciplinary supports to preserve and strengthen families.

6

     SECTION 32. Section 42-66.7-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-66.7 entitled "Long-

7

Term Care Ombudsperson Act of 1995" is hereby amended to read as follows:

8

     42-66.7-3. Definitions.

9

     As used in this chapter:

10

     (1) An "act" of any facility or government agency includes any failure or refusal to act by

11

any facility or government agency.

12

     (2) "Administrator" means any person who is charged with the general administration or

13

supervision of a facility whether or not that person has an ownership interest and whether or not

14

that person's functions and duties are shared with one or more other persons.

15

     (3) "Elderly" means any person sixty (60) years of age or older who is a resident of any

16

facility.

17

     (4) "Facility" means any facility or institution, home care provider or home nursing care

18

provider, whether public or private, offering health or health related services for the

19

institutionalized elderly, and which is subject to regulation, visitation, inspection, or supervision

20

by any government agency. "Facilities" include, but are not limited to, nursing homes, intermediate

21

care facilities, extended care facilities, convalescent homes, rehabilitation centers, home care

22

agencies, homes for the aged, veterans' homes, boarding homes, and adult supportive care,

23

residential care and assisted living residences.

24

     (5) "Government agency" means any department, division, office, bureau, board,

25

commission, authority, nonprofit community organization, or any other agency or instrumentality

26

created by any municipality or by the state, or to which the state is a party, which is responsible for

27

the regulation, inspection, visitation, or supervision of facilities or which provides services to

28

residents of facilities.

29

     (6) "Ombudsperson" means the person or persons designated by the director. That person

30

or persons shall have expertise and experience in the fields of social work, long-term care, and

31

advocacy, and shall be qualified and experienced in communicating with the elderly.

32

     (7) "Resident" means any person age sixty (60) years of age or older who is receiving

33

treatment, care, or housing in any facility in all of its aspects including, but not limited to,

34

admission, retention, confinement, period of residence, transfer, discharge, and in any instances

 

LC004771 - Page 59 of 67

1

directly related to that status. Residents include patients and clients. Residents shall also include

2

disabled persons under sixty (60) years of age residing in nursing homes, or clients of residential

3

and assisted living facilities and home care providers/home nursing care providers and long-term

4

care units at the Eleanor Slater Hospital, including the Zambarano facility.

5

     (8) "Interfere" means willing and continuous conduct which prevents the ombudsperson

6

from performing her or his official duties.

7

     (9) "Official duties" means work pursuant to the long-term care ombudsperson program

8

authorized by the federal Older Americans Act or the long-term care ombudsperson program

9

authorized by state law and carried out under the auspices and general direction of the state long-

10

term care ombudsperson.

11

     (10) "Director" means the director of the office department of healthy aging.

12

     (11) "Person" means any individual, trust, or estate, partnership, limited liability

13

corporation, corporation (including associations, joint stock companies, and insurance companies),

14

state, or political subdivision or instrumentality of a state.

15

     (12) "Health oversight agency" means, for the purposes of this chapter, the office

16

department of healthy aging or the person or entity designated as the state's long-term care

17

ombudsperson by the director of the office department of healthy aging, including the employees

18

or agents of such person or entity, when they are acting to fulfill the duties and responsibilities of

19

the state's long-term care ombudsperson program in which health information is necessary to

20

oversee the health system and in accordance with the U.S. Health Insurance Portability and

21

Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996.

22

     SECTION 33. Section 42-66.12-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-66.12 entitled "The

23

Rhode Island Aging and Disability Resource Center" is hereby amended to read as follows:

24

     42-66.12-3. Aging and disability resource center established.

25

     The Rhode Island aging and disability resource center (ADRC) shall be established and

26

operated by the department of human services, office of healthy aging in collaboration with other

27

agencies within the executive office of health and human services. The office department of healthy

28

aging shall build on its experience in development and implementation of the current ADRC

29

program. The ADRC is an integral part of the Rhode Island system of long-term supports and

30

services working to promote the state's long-term system rebalancing goals by diverting persons,

31

when appropriate, from institutional care to home and community-based services and preventing

32

short-term institutional stays from becoming permanent through options counseling and screening

33

for eligibility for home- and community-based services.

34

     SECTION 34. Sections 44-9-10, 44-9-11 and 44-9-12 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-

 

LC004771 - Page 60 of 67

1

9 entitled "Tax Sales" are hereby amended to read as follows:

2

     44-9-10. Notice of sale to taxpayer.

3

     (a) Whether or not the person or general partnership to whom the estate is taxed as of

4

December 31st prior to the tax sale is a resident of this state, the collector shall, in addition to the

5

foregoing, notify the taxpayer of the time and place of sale first by first-class mail not less than

6

ninety (90) days before the date of sale or any adjournment of the sale, and again by certified mail

7

not less than forty (40) days before the date of sale or any adjournment of the sale, sent postpaid to

8

the street address of the real estate liable for payment of taxes, and, if different, to the taxpayer's

9

address listed with the tax assessor's office of the city or town where the real estate is located or to

10

any other address which the taxpayer designates by written notice to the tax assessor, or to the

11

address of the taxpayer stated on the deed recorded in the land evidence records of the city or town

12

where the real estate is located or to the last-known address of the taxpayer or be left at the

13

taxpayer's last-known address or personally served on the taxpayer not less than thirty (30) days

14

before the date of sale or any adjournment of the sale, but no notice of adjournments shall be

15

necessary other than the announcement made at the sale. Copies of such notices shall be provided

16

to Rhode Island Housing and Mortgage Finance Corporation by mail or hand delivery, or a manifest

17

of such notices shall be electronically delivered in a machine-readable format through secure means

18

established by the Rhode Island Housing and Mortgage Finance Corporation not less than forty

19

(40) days before the date of sale or any adjournment of the sale. Failure to notify the Rhode Island

20

Housing and Mortgage Finance Corporation as prescribed herein shall nullify any tax sale of any

21

property with respect to which such notice was not given.

22

     (b) Persons aged sixty-five (65) years and over or persons suffering from a disability may

23

designate a third party to whom notice may be sent as required pursuant to this section by advising

24

the tax assessor of the name and address of the person.

25

     (c) If the estate taxed is a corporation, the notice may be sent either by registered or certified

26

mail to its place of business or left at the business office of the corporation with some person

27

employed there.

28

     (d) In the event the person to whom the estate is taxed is listed in the records of the assessor

29

and/or collector as having applied for and been granted a property tax abatement based wholly or

30

partially on the age of the taxpayer, then the collector shall also notify the office department of

31

healthy aging by mail, hand delivery, or a manifest of such notices shall be electronically delivered

32

in a machine-readable format through the secure means established by the Rhode Island Housing

33

and Mortgage Finance Corporation pursuant to subsection (a), not less than forty (40) days before

34

the date of sale. Failure to notify the office department of healthy aging as prescribed herein shall

 

LC004771 - Page 61 of 67

1

nullify any tax sale of any property with respect to which such notice was not given.

2

     (e) Within ninety (90) days after the end of each calendar year, the office department of

3

healthy aging shall prepare and submit an annual report to the governor, the speaker of the house

4

of representatives, the president of the senate, and the secretary of state. The report shall contain

5

information concerning the number of notices received by the office department of healthy aging

6

pursuant to this section of law during the calendar year and information concerning the identity of

7

the specific parcels that might be sold in each city or town as well as a description of exactly what

8

action followed on each such notice. The report shall conclude by indicating the present status of

9

each case in which the division received such a notice as well as an indication as to whether each

10

such case is open or closed.

11

     44-9-11. Notice to mortgagees and other parties in interest.

12

     (a) In case the collector shall advertise for sale any property, real, personal, or mixed, in

13

which any person other than the person to whom the tax is assessed has an interest, it shall not be

14

necessary for the collector to notify the interested party, except for the following interested parties,

15

provided that their interest was of record at least ninety (90) days prior to the date set for the sale:

16

the present owner of record; mortgagees of record and mortgage assignees of record; former fee

17

holders whose right to redeem has not been foreclosed; holders of tax title; federal agencies having

18

a recorded lien on the subject property; holders of life estates of record and vested remainder, whose

19

identity can be ascertained from an examination of the land or probate records of the municipality

20

conducting the sale; and/or their assignees of record who shall be notified by the collector, either

21

by registered or certified mail sent postpaid not less than twenty (20) days before the date of sale

22

or any adjournment of the sale to an agent authorized by appointment or by law to receive service

23

of process; or to the address of the party in interest set forth in the recorded mortgage document or

24

the recorded assignment; or to the last known address of the party in interest; but no notice of

25

adjournments shall be necessary other than the announcement made at the sale. The posting and

26

publication of the notice of the time and place of sale in the manner provided by § 44-9-9 shall be

27

deemed sufficient notice to all other interested parties. This provision shall apply to all taxes levied

28

prior to and subsequent to 1896. This provision shall be subject to the notice requirements of § 44-

29

9-10. It shall not be necessary, however, to provide the names of the mortgagees and other parties

30

in interest under this section to the Rhode Island Housing and Mortgage Finance Corporation or to

31

the office department of healthy aging. In the event that the Rhode Island Housing and Mortgage

32

Finance Corporation does in fact pay the tax and acquire a lien on the subject property, then the

33

Rhode Island Housing and Mortgage Finance Corporation shall, within ninety (90) days of making

34

the tax payment, notify those mortgagees of record and mortgagee assignees of record whose

 

LC004771 - Page 62 of 67

1

interests in the property was of record at least ninety (90) days prior to the date set for the tax sale

2

as identified in the recorded collector's deed of the fact that the taxes have been paid by the Rhode

3

Island Housing and Mortgage Finance Corporation and that a tax lien has been acquired by the

4

Rhode Island Housing and Mortgage Finance Corporation.

5

     (b) Only a person or entity failing to receive notice in accordance with the provisions of

6

this section and §§ 44-9-9 and 44-9-10 shall be entitled to raise the issue of lack of notice or

7

defective notice to void the tax sale. The right to notice shall be personal to each party entitled to it

8

and shall not be asserted on behalf of another party in interest. If there is a defect in notice, the tax

9

sale shall be void only as to the party deprived of adequate notice, but shall be valid as to all other

10

parties in interest who received proper notice of the tax sale.

11

     (c) Once a petition is filed under § 44-9-25, and any party in interest entitled to notice of

12

the tax sale receives actual notice of the pendency of the petition to foreclose, the party must raise

13

the notice defense in accordance with the provisions of § 44-9-31 or be estopped from alleging lack

14

of notice in any action to vacate a final decree entered in accordance with § 44-9-30.

15

     44-9-12. Collector's deed -- Rights conveyed to purchaser -- Recording.

16

     (a) The collector shall execute and deliver to the purchaser a deed of the land stating the

17

cause of sale; the price for which the land was sold; the places where the notices were posted; the

18

name of the newspaper in which the advertisement of the sale was published; the names and

19

addresses of all parties who were sent notice in accordance with the provisions of §§ 44-9-10 and

20

44-9-11; the residence of the grantee; and if notice of the sale was given to the Rhode Island housing

21

and mortgage finance corporation or to the office department of healthy aging under the provisions

22

of § 44-9-10. The deed shall convey the land to the purchaser, subject to the right of redemption.

23

The conveyed title shall, until redemption or until the right of redemption is foreclosed, be held as

24

security for the repayment of the purchase price with all intervening costs, terms imposed for

25

redemption, and charges, with interest; and the premises conveyed, both before and after either

26

redemption or foreclosure, shall also be subject to, and have the benefit of, all easements and

27

restrictions lawfully existing in, upon, or over the land or appurtenant to the land. The deed is not

28

valid against any intervening interests unless recorded within sixty (60) days after the sale. If the

29

deed is recorded, it is prima facie evidence of all facts essential to the validity of the title conveyed

30

by the deed. It shall be the duty of the collector to record the deed within sixty (60) days of the sale

31

and to forward said deed promptly to the tax sale purchaser. The applicable recording fee shall be

32

paid by the purchaser. The purchaser shall be reimbursed for said fee upon redemption by the

33

redeeming party, if any. Except as provided, no sale shall give to the purchaser any right to either

34

the possession, or the rents or profits of the land until the expiration of one year after the date of

 

LC004771 - Page 63 of 67

1

the sale, nor shall any sale obviate or transfer any responsibility of an owner of property to comply

2

with any statute of this state or ordinance of any municipality governing the use, occupancy, or

3

maintenance or conveyance of property until the right of redemption is foreclosed.

4

     (b) The rents to which the purchaser shall be entitled after the expiration of one year and

5

prior to redemption shall be those net rents actually collected by the former fee holder or a

6

mortgagee under an assignment of rents. Rents shall not include mere rental value of the land, nor

7

shall the purchaser be entitled to any rent for owner-occupied, single-unit residential property. For

8

purposes of redemption, net rents shall be computed by deducting from gross rents actually

9

collected any sums expended directly or on behalf of the tenant from whom the rent was collected.

10

Such expenditure shall include utilities furnished, repairs made to the tenanted unit, and services

11

provided for the benefit of the tenant. However, mortgagee payments, taxes, and sums expended

12

for general repair and renovation (i.e. capital improvements) shall not be deductible expenses in

13

the computation of the rent.

14

     (c) This tax title purchaser shall not be liable for any enforcement or penalties arising from

15

violations of environmental or minimum-housing standards prior to the expiration of one year from

16

the date of the tax sale, or five (5) years from the date of the tax sale if the Rhode Island housing

17

and mortgage finance corporation is the tax title purchaser pursuant to § 44-9-8.3, except for

18

violations that are the result of intentional acts by the tax sale purchaser or his or her agents.

19

     (d) Upon the expiration of one year after the date of the sale, the tax title holder shall be

20

jointly and severally liable with the owner for all responsibility and liability for the property and

21

shall be responsible to comply with any statute of this state or ordinance of any municipality

22

governing the use, occupancy, or maintenance or conveyance of the property even prior to the right

23

of redemption being foreclosed; except, however, that if the Rhode Island housing and mortgage

24

finance corporation is the tax title holder pursuant to § 44-9-8.3, then joint and several liability shall

25

arise upon the expiration of five (5) years after the date of the sale. Nothing in this section shall be

26

construed to confer any liability upon a city or town that receives tax title as a result of any bids

27

being made for the land offered for sale at an amount equal to the tax and charges.

28

     (e) In the event that the tax title is acquired by the Rhode Island housing and mortgage

29

finance corporation, and the corporation has paid the taxes due, title shall remain with the owner

30

of the property, subject to the right of the corporation to take the property in its own name, pursuant

31

to applicable statutes and any regulations duly adopted by the corporation. Upon such notice by the

32

corporation, the collector shall execute and deliver a deed to the corporation as herein provided.

33

     (f) The priority of any tax title with respect to other tax titles shall be determined by the

34

chronological order in which the underlying tax sales were conducted, with subsequent tax titles

 

LC004771 - Page 64 of 67

1

being superior to earlier tax titles.

2

     (g) The holder of an earlier tax title shall be entitled to exercise the right of redemption

3

with respect to any subsequent tax title, in the manner provided in this chapter, unless and until the

4

right to redeem the subsequent tax title is foreclosed in accordance with this chapter. The holder of

5

an earlier tax title shall be entitled to notice of any proceedings to foreclose the right of redemption

6

with respect to a subsequent tax title.

7

     (h) The mere existence of a subsequent tax title shall have no effect upon:

8

     (1) The existence or validity of an earlier tax title; or

9

     (2) The validity of any proceedings to foreclose the right of redemption with respect to the

10

earlier tax title, so long as the right of redemption with respect to a subsequent tax title has not been

11

foreclosed.

12

     (i) Any proceeding to foreclose the right of redemption with respect to an earlier tax title

13

shall have no effect upon a subsequent tax title, and in any such proceeding, the holder of a

14

subsequent tax title is not a necessary party.

15

     SECTION 35. Chapter 42-154 of the General Laws entitled "Division of Elderly Affairs"

16

is hereby repealed in its entirety.

17

CHAPTER 42-154

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Division of Elderly Affairs

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.

25

     (b) Effective July 1, 2019, the division of elderly affairs, as established pursuant to

26

subsection (a) of this section, shall be henceforth referred to and renamed as the "office of healthy

27

aging."

28

     42-154-2. Transfer of powers and duties from the department of elderly affairs.

29

     There is hereby transferred to the division of elderly affairs within the department of human

30

services those powers and duties formerly administered by the department of elderly affairs as

31

provided for in chapters 42-66 ("Elderly Affairs Department") through 42-66.10 ("Elder Health

32

Insurance Consumer Assistance Program"), inclusive, and any other applicable provisions of the

33

general laws; provided, however, in order that there is no interruption in the functions of elderly

34

affairs and/or human services the transfer may be postponed until such time as determined by the

 

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1

secretary of the office of health and human services that the transfer may best be put into force and

2

effect; provided, further, the governor shall submit to the 2012 Assembly any recommended

3

statutory changes necessary to facilitate the merger.

4

     42-154-3. Construction of references.

5

     Effective July 1, 2011, all references in the general laws to the department of elderly affairs

6

established pursuant to chapter 66 of this title ("Elderly Affairs Department") shall be deemed to

7

mean and refer to the division of elderly affairs within the department of human services as set

8

forth in this chapter. Effective July 1, 2019, all references in the general laws to either the

9

department of elderly affairs established pursuant to chapter 66 of this title ("Elderly Affairs

10

Department") or the division of elderly affairs established pursuant to § 42-154-1(a) shall be

11

deemed to mean and refer to the office of healthy aging within the department of human services.

12

     SECTION 36. This act shall take effect upon passage.

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EXPLANATION

BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL

OF

A N   A C T

RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHY

AGING

***

1

     This act would rename the Office of Healthy Aging to The Department of Healthy Aging,

2

restructure the administration and delivery of services, and expand the authority of its director in

3

various ways such as:

4

     (1) Encouraging state agencies to employ individuals who have expertise in the areas of

5

transportation, housing, nutrition, health, financial and economic literacy and stability, lifelong

6

learning, physical and social engagement, and adult protective services, etc.;

7

     (2) Providing professional development to agencies and programs providing senior

8

services;

9

     (3) Appointing senior centers as the community hub for emergency service delivery; and

10

     (4) Giving senior centers and municipalities the authority to bill Medicaid for

11

transportation services.

12

     This act would require the director to develop and submit to the general assembly for

13

approval, a funding formula that would further the purposes of the act. This act would also make

14

clerical changes in the various statutes to reflect the name change

15

     This act would take effect upon passage.

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