Chapter 062 |
2023 -- S 0722 SUBSTITUTE B Enacted 06/14/2023 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES -- STATUTES AND STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION |
Introduced By: Senators Acosta, Miller, and DiPalma |
Date Introduced: March 22, 2023 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Sections 16-24-7, 16-24-10, 16-24-11 and 16-24-16 of the General Laws in |
Chapter 16-24 entitled "Children With Disabilities [See Title 16 Chapter 97 — The Rhode Island |
Board of Education Act]" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
16-24-7. “Mentally retarded minors” defined. Minors with intellectual and/or |
developmental disabilities defined. Minors with intellectual or developmental disabilities |
defined. |
The term “mentally retarded minors” "minors with intellectual or developmental |
disabilities" means all children between the age of three (3) and twenty-one (21) who because of |
retarded delayed intellectual development, as determined by an individual multidisciplinary |
evaluation, require specialized instruction appropriate to their individual capacity. |
16-24-10. Arrangements by cities and towns having small numbers of retarded |
children. Arrangements by cities and towns having small numbers of children with |
intellectual and/or developmental disabilities. Arrangements by cities and towns having small |
numbers of children minors with intellectual or developmental disabilities. |
Each city and town which that contains fewer than eight (8) mentally retarded minors with |
intellectual or developmental disabilities may contract with another city or town for the education |
of the minors or may establish a special class pursuant to the previous provision with the consent |
of the board of regents for elementary and secondary education. In the event that a city or town |
does not establish a class for fewer than eight (8) mentally retarded minors with intellectual or |
developmental disabilities or contract with another city or town, then the city or town shall contract |
with a suitable day school for instruction adapted to the mental attainments of the minors; provided |
that the day schools shall be subject to the regulations and supervision of the state board of regents |
for elementary and secondary education. |
16-24-11. Transportation for retarded children. Transportation for children with |
intellectual and/or developmental disabilities. Transportation for children pupils with |
intellectual or developmental disabilities. |
Transportation shall be provided for all pupils attending a special class or suitable day |
schools. |
16-24-16. Approved centers. |
For the purpose of furnishing transportation and providing incidental expenses for the |
education of mentally retarded children under the age of eighteen (18) minors with intellectual or |
developmental disabilities, a center approved by the director of behavioral healthcare, |
developmental disabilities and hospitals shall be decreed to be a school as considered in this |
chapter. |
SECTION 2. Sections 23-17.8-1 and 23-17.8-3.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-17.8 |
entitled "Abuse in Healthcare Facilities" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
23-17.8-1. Definitions. |
(a)(1) “Abuse” means: |
(i) Any assault as defined in chapter 5 of title 11, including, but not limited to, hitting, |
kicking, pinching, slapping, or the pulling of hair; provided, however, unless it is required as an |
element of the offense charged, it shall not be necessary to prove that the patient or resident was |
injured by the assault; |
(ii) Any assault as defined in chapter 37 of title 11; |
(iii) Any offense under chapter 10 of title 11; |
(iv) Any conduct which that harms or is likely to physically harm the patient or resident |
except where the conduct is a part of the care and treatment, and in furtherance of the health and |
safety of the patient or resident; or |
(v) Intentionally engaging in a pattern of harassing conduct which that causes or is likely |
to cause emotional or psychological harm to the patient or resident, including but not limited to,: |
ridiculing or demeaning a patient or resident,; making derogatory remarks to a patient or resident |
or cursing directed towards a patient or resident,; or threatening to inflict physical or emotional |
harm on a patient or resident. |
(2) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit the prosecution of any violator of |
this section under any other chapter. |
(b) “Department” means the department of health when the incident occurs in a health care |
healthcare facility, and the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and |
hospitals when the incident occurs in a community residence for people who are mentally retarded |
or persons with intellectual or developmental disabilities. |
(c) “Facility” means any health care healthcare facility or community residence for |
persons who are mentally retarded, or persons with intellectual or developmental disabilities as |
those terms are defined in this section. “Health care Healthcare facility” means any hospital or |
facility which that provides long-term health care required to be licensed under chapter 17 of this |
title, and any assisted living residence required to be licensed under chapter 17.4 of this title, and |
any community residence whether privately or publicly owned. “Community residence” for |
persons who are mentally retarded or persons with intellectual or developmental disabilities means |
any residential program licensed by the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental |
disabilities and hospitals which that meets the definition of a community residence as defined in § |
40.1-24-1(2) and provides services to people who are mentally retarded or persons with intellectual |
or developmental disabilities. |
(d) “High Managerial Agent” means an officer of a facility, the administrator and assistant |
administrator of the facility, the director and assistant director of nursing services, or any other |
agent in a position of comparable authority with respect to the formulation of the policies of the |
facility or the supervision in a managerial capacity of subordinate employees. |
(e) (f) “Mistreatment” means the inappropriate use of medications, isolation, or use of |
physical or chemical restraints: |
(1) As punishment; |
(2) For staff convenience; |
(3) As a substitute for treatment or care; |
(4) In conflict with a physician’s order; or |
(5) In quantities which that inhibit effective care or treatment, or which that harms harm |
or is likely to harm the patient or resident. |
(f) (g) “Neglect” means the intentional failure to provide treatment, care, goods, and |
services necessary to maintain the health and safety of the patient or resident,; or the intentional |
failure to carry out a plan of treatment or care prescribed by the physician of the patient or resident,; |
or the intentional failure to report patient or resident health problems or changes in health problems |
or changes in health conditions to an immediate supervisor or nurse,; or the intentional lack of |
attention to the physical needs of a patient or resident including, but not limited to toileting, bathing, |
meals, and safety. No person shall be considered to be neglected for the sole reason that he or she |
the person relies on or is being furnished treatment in accordance with the tenets and teachings of |
a well-recognized church or denomination by a duly-accredited practitioner of a well-recognized |
church or denomination. |
(g) (k) “Patient” means any person who is admitted to a facility for treatment or care, while |
“resident” means any person who maintains their residence or domicile, on either a temporary or |
permanent basis, in a facility. |
(h) (l) “Person” means any natural person, corporation, partnership, unincorporated |
association, or other business entity. |
(i) (e) “Immediate jeopardy” means a situation in which the nursing facility’s alleged |
noncompliance with one or more state or federal requirements or conditions has caused, or is likely |
to cause serious injury, harm, impairment, or death to a resident; or shall be defined in accordance |
with 42 CFR 489 C.F.R. Part 489 or any subsequent applicable federal regulations. |
(j) (h) “Non-immediate jeopardy — high potential for harm” means a situation in which a |
nursing facility’s alleged noncompliance with one or more state or federal requirements or |
conditions may have caused harm that negatively impacts the individual’s mental, physical, and/or |
psychosocial status; or shall be defined in accordance with 42 CFR 489 C.F.R. Part 489 or any |
subsequent applicable federal regulations. |
(k) (j) “Non-immediate jeopardy — medium potential for harm” means a situation in which |
a nursing facility’s alleged noncompliance with one or more state or federal requirements or |
conditions has caused or may have caused harm that is of limited consequence and does not |
significantly impair the individual’s mental, physical, and/or psychosocial status to function; or |
shall be defined in accordance with 42 CFR 489 C.F.R. Part 489 or any subsequent applicable |
federal regulations. |
(l) (i) “Non-immediate jeopardy — low potential for harm” means a situation in which a |
nursing facility’s alleged noncompliance with one or more state or federal requirements or |
conditions may have caused mental, physical, and/or psychosocial discomfort that does not |
constitute injury or damage; or shall be defined in accordance with 42 CFR 489 C.F.R. Part 489 |
or any subsequent applicable federal regulations. |
23-17.8-3.1. Physician’s, certified registered nurse practitioner’s and physician |
assistant’s report of examination — Duty of facility. |
Whenever a facility shall receive a report by a person other than a physician or a certified |
registered nurse practitioner or physician assistant that a patient or resident of the facility has been |
harmed as a result of abuse, neglect, or mistreatment, the facility shall have the patient examined |
by a licensed physician or a certified registered nurse practitioner or physician assistant. It shall be |
mandatory for the physician or certified registered nurse practitioner or physician assistant to make |
a preliminary report of his or her their findings to the department of health for a healthcare facility, |
or to the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals for a |
community residence for people who are mentally retarded or persons with intellectual or |
developmental disabilities and to the facility within forty-eight (48) hours after his or her the |
examination, and a written report within five (5) days after his or her the examination. |
SECTION 3. Section 23-74-4 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-74 entitled "Unlicensed |
Health Care Practices" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
23-74-4. Prohibited conduct. |
The director may impose disciplinary action as described in this chapter against any |
unlicensed health care healthcare practitioner. The following conduct is prohibited and is grounds |
for disciplinary action: |
(1) Conviction of a crime, including a finding or verdict of guilt, and admission of guilt, or |
a no contest plea, in any court in Rhode Island or any other jurisdiction in the United States, |
reasonably related to engaging in health care healthcare practices. Conviction, as used in this |
subdivision, includes a conviction of an offense which that, if committed in this state, would be |
deemed a felony or misdemeanor, without regard to its designation elsewhere, or a criminal |
proceeding where a finding or verdict of guilty is made or returned, but the adjudication of guilt is |
either withheld or not entered. |
(2) Engaging in sexual contact with an unlicensed health care healthcare client, engaging |
in contact that may be reasonably interpreted by a client as sexual or engaging in sexual exploitation |
of a client. |
(3) Advertising that is false, fraudulent, deceptive, or misleading. |
(4) Conduct likely to deceive, defraud, or harm the public or demonstrating a willful or |
careless disregard for the health or safety of an unlicensed health care healthcare client in which |
case, proof of actual injury need not be established. |
(5) Adjudication as mentally incompetent or as a person who is dangerous to self or |
adjudicated as any of the following: chemically dependent, mentally ill, mentally retarded, mentally |
ill and dangerous to the public, or as a sexual psychopathic personality or sexually dangerous |
person. |
(6) Inability to engage in unlicensed health care healthcare practices with reasonable |
safety to unlicensed health care clients. |
(7) Dependence upon controlled substances, habitual drunkenness or engaging in |
unlicensed health care healthcare practices while intoxicated or incapacitated by the use of drugs. |
(8) Revealing a communication from, or relating to, an unlicensed health care healthcare |
client except when otherwise required or permitted by law. |
(9) Failure to comply with an unlicensed health care healthcare client’s request to furnish |
an unlicensed health care healthcare client record or report required by law. |
(10) Splitting fees or promising to pay a portion of a fee to any other professional other |
than for services rendered by the other professional to the unlicensed health care healthcare client. |
(11) Engaging in abusive or fraudulent billing practices, including violations of the federal |
Medicare and Medicaid laws or state medical assistance laws. |
(12) Obtaining money, property, or services from an unlicensed health care healthcare |
client, other than reasonable fees for services provided to the client, through the use of undue |
influence, harassment, duress, deception, or fraud. |
(13) Failure to provide an unlicensed health care healthcare client with a copy of the client |
bill of rights or violation of any provision of the client bill of rights. |
(14) Violating any order issued by the director. |
(15) Failure to comply with any provision of any rules adopted by the director. |
(16) Failure to comply with any additional disciplinary grounds established by the director |
by rule. |
(17) Revocation, suspension, restriction, limitation, or other disciplinary action against any |
health care healthcare license, certificate, registration, or right to practice of the unlicensed health |
care healthcare practitioner in this or another state or jurisdiction for offenses that would be subject |
to disciplinary action in this state or failure to report to the department that charges regarding the |
practitioner’s license, certificate, registration, or right of practice have been brought in this or |
another state or jurisdiction. |
(18) False or misleading use of the title “doctor,” “Dr.”, “physician” alone or in |
combination with any other words, letters, or insignia to describe the unlicensed health care |
healthcare practices the practitioner provides. |
SECTION 4. Section 31-6-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 31-6 entitled "Registration |
Fees" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
31-6-6. Vehicles exempt from fees. |
(a) No registration fee is required for the registration of motor-driven equipment owned by |
the following: |
(1) American Legion bloodmobile; |
(2) American National Red Cross or any of its chapters within this state; |
(3) American Red Cross, Jamestown chapter ambulance; |
(4) American Red Cross, Tiverton chapter ambulance; |
(5) American Red Cross, Warwick chapter ambulances; |
(6) Animal Rescue League of Southern Rhode Island truck used for rescue work; |
(7) Burrillville Ambulance Corps ambulance; |
(8) Burrillville American Legion Post No. 17 ambulances; |
(9) Civil Air Patrol, Rhode Island wing motor vehicle equipment; |
(10) East Greenwich Ambulance Association ambulances; |
(11) East Greenwich American Legion Post No. 15 (incorporated February 20, 1933) |
ambulances; |
(12) East Tiverton Volunteer Fire Department Rescue Squad of Tiverton (a non-business |
corporation, incorporated February 16, 1955) equipment, that motor vehicle being a rescue truck |
equipped with resuscitators, underwater equipment, emergency lighting units with generators, and |
various other devices needed to effect rescue and save lives and property under any emergency and |
used for this purpose only; |
(13) Foster Ambulance Association ambulances; |
(14) Georgiaville Volunteer Fire Company, Smithfield town ambulance; |
(15) Glocester Ambulance Corps, Inc. ambulance; |
(16) Hianloland Farms Fire Engine Company of West Greenwich RI, (a non-business |
corporation, incorporated November 15, 1940) equipment; |
(17) Hope Valley Ambulance Squad, Inc., ambulances and rescue trucks; |
(18) Hope Valley volunteer fire company ambulances; |
(19) Hope Valley volunteer fire company crash-truck; |
(20) Hospital ambulances; |
(21) Johnston Hose Company No. 1 ambulance; |
(22) Johnston Hose Company No. 3 ambulance; |
(23) Lake Mishnock Volunteer Fire Company Rescue Squad, West Greenwich, Rhode |
Island; |
(24) Le Baron C. Colt Memorial Ambulance, Inc. (with plates designated “car 5,” |
providing ambulance service to any resident of the town of Bristol, incorporated October 17, 1923, |
as a charitable corporation) ambulance; |
(25) Narragansett Rescue Corps, Inc., ambulance; |
(26) North Kingstown Ambulance Association, Inc. (incorporated July 23, 1943, as a |
charitable corporation) ambulance; |
(27) North Providence Chamber of Commerce Ambulance Service, Inc. (incorporated |
March 15, 1947, as a charitable corporation) ambulance; |
(28) North Smithfield Ambulance Association ambulances; |
(29) North Smithfield Ambulance and Rescue Association rescue wagon and rescue boat |
trailer; |
(30) Northern Lincoln Volunteer Ambulance Corps ambulance; |
(31) Northern Rhode Island Radio Emergency Associated Citizens Teams (REACT) rescue |
truck and other emergency vehicles; |
(32) Public health league or district nursing association in any city or town in this state; |
(33) Rhode Island American Legion, (incorporated January 29, 1941) first district |
ambulance committee of the department ambulances; |
(34) Rhode Island Association of Retarded Citizens, Northern Rhode Island Chapter motor |
vehicles used for the transportation of retarded citizens Seven Hills Rhode Island; |
(35) Rhode Island Association of Retarded Citizens, South County Chapter motor vehicles |
used for the transportation of retarded children Perspectives Corporation; |
(36) Rhode Island Association for Retarded Children, Westerly-Chariho Chapter motor |
vehicles to be used for the transportation of retarded children Frank Olean Center; |
(37) Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals’ motor vehicles; |
(38) Rhode Island Lions Sight Foundation, Inc., vehicle; |
(39) Rhode Island state departments’ or agencies’ motor vehicles, trailers, or semi-trailers; |
(40) Roy Carpenter’s beach volunteer fire department, Matunuck ambulance; |
(41) Salvation Army of Providence emergency canteen vehicle; |
(42) Scituate Ambulance and Rescue Corps ambulances; |
(43) South County Ambulance Corps, Inc. (incorporated October 28, 1939, as a charitable |
corporation) ambulance; |
(44) South Foster Volunteer Fire Department No. 1 ambulances; |
(45) United States government motor vehicles; |
(46) United States government-accredited motor vehicles owned by a representative of a |
foreign country; |
(47) United States mail rural free delivery driver-owned vehicles. This exemption applies |
to the particular motor vehicle used in carrying that mail, and not to persons or concerns contracting |
to carry the United States mail. The words “United States mail” must be plainly printed on two (2) |
sides of that vehicle; |
(48) Veterans of Foreign Wars bloodmobile; |
(49) Veterans of Foreign Wars, Harold F. Flynn Post No. 263, Woonsocket ambulance; |
(50) Volunteer ambulance or rescue corps ambulance or rescue vehicle of a city or town |
used in transporting sick or injured patients; |
(51) Westerly Ambulance Corps boat-trailer; |
(52) Westerly Ambulance Corps crash-truck; and |
(53) Westerly Ambulance Corps ambulances. |
(b) Each owner may be required to pay the cost price of the number plates or markers |
required to be displayed on its vehicle. |
SECTION 5. Section 33-5-4 of the General Laws in Chapter 33-5 entitled "Execution and |
Revocation of Wills" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
33-5-4. Nomination of guardian by will. |
Every person authorized by law to make a will may nominate by his or her the person’s |
will a guardian or guardians for his or her the person’s children during their minority, and a |
successor guardian or guardians for persons who are retarded with intellectual or developmental |
disabilities as defined in chapter 22 of title 40.1 for whom he or she the person had been appointed |
guardian during his or her the person’s lifetime, and the probate court shall appoint the guardian |
or guardians unless good cause be shown to the contrary; provided, that, in the case of husband and |
wife, the survivor, being otherwise qualified, shall be the guardian of their children. |
SECTION 6. Section 34-4-25 of the General Laws in Chapter 34-4 entitled "Estates in Real |
Property" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
34-4-25. Invalidity of certain restrictive covenants. |
Since many mentally retarded and mentally disabled individuals with intellectual or |
developmental disabilities or who are mentally disabled are able to live in the community with |
some assistance, it is the public policy of the state of Rhode Island to establish community |
residences in residential areas. Therefore, any restrictive covenant or other private legal |
impediment which directly or indirectly prevents or restricts the establishment of licensed |
community residences as defined in § 40.1-24-1 for eight (8) or fewer mentally retarded or mentally |
disabled persons with intellectual or developmental disabilities shall be void and unenforceable as |
to those community residences. |
SECTION 7. Chapter 40.1-8 of the General Laws entitled "Governor’s Committee on |
Mental Retardation" is hereby repealed in its entirety. |
CHAPTER 40.1-8 |
Governor’s Committee on Mental Retardation |
40.1-8-1. Creation — Members. |
(a) There is hereby created a fourteen (14) member permanent committee to be known as |
the “Governor’s Committee on Mental Retardation,” hereinafter referred to as “the committee”: |
(1) Six (6) of whom shall be representatives of non-governmental organizations or groups |
concerned with education, employment, rehabilitation, welfare, and health, to be appointed by the |
governor; |
(2) Six (6) of whom shall be representatives of consumers who are mentally retarded, of |
this group, three (3) of whom shall be selected from a list of nominees submitted by the RI ARC, |
to be appointed by the governor; |
(3) One of whom shall be from the house of representatives to be appointed by the speaker; |
(4) And one of whom shall be from the senate to be appointed by the president of the senate. |
(b) The assistant director for developmental disabilities within the department of behavioral |
healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals shall serve as an ex officio member but shall |
not be eligible to vote. |
(c) No employee of any state agency or institution engaged in the care or training of persons |
who are mentally retarded shall be eligible for appointment to the committee. |
40.1-8-2. Terms of appointment. |
(a) Of the nonlegislative members appointed originally under this chapter, one-third (⅓) |
shall be appointed for a term of one year; one-third (⅓) shall be appointed for a term of two (2) |
years; and one-third (⅓) shall be appointed for a term of three (3) years. The two (2) legislative |
members shall serve for the length of their current elected term in office and reappointment or |
replacement shall be for like terms. Thereafter, vacancies created by the expiration of terms shall |
be filled with appointments for terms of three (3) years. Members whose terms expire may be |
reappointed to succeed themselves. |
(b) Vacancies occurring prior to the expiration of the term for which appointed shall be |
filled by appointment in like manner for the remainder of the term. |
40.1-8-3. Appointment of officers and employees — Rules — Meetings. |
(a) The governor shall designate one member of the committee to serve as its chairperson |
during the governor’s term of office or until he or she appoints another member of the committee |
to serve in that capacity. The committee shall elect annually, from among its members, a vice |
chairperson, who shall serve as such until a successor is elected and who is authorized to act as |
chairperson pro tempore of the committee during the absence of the chairperson or should there be |
a vacancy for any cause in the office of the chairperson. The committee shall appoint an executive |
secretary to serve as executive officer and secretary of the committee. The executive secretary may |
be the employee of another agency of state government, appointed to serve as executive secretary |
of the committee, with the consent of the executive office of the secretary’s own agency. |
(b) The committee may appoint such other personnel as may be necessary for the efficient |
performance of the duties prescribed by this chapter. |
(c) The committee shall make rules for the conduct of its affairs, and shall meet at least |
bimonthly, and at other times upon the call of the chair or the written request of any two (2) |
members. |
40.1-8-4. Compensation and expenses of committee. |
The members of the committee shall receive no compensation for their services as |
committee members, but may, at the discretion of the governor, be reimbursed for traveling and |
other expenses actually incurred in the performance of their official duties. |
40.1-8-5. Purpose of committee. |
(a) It shall be the duty of the committee to work in cooperation with the President’s |
Committee for People with Intellectual Disabilities and such other interested federal and state |
agencies, private organizations, and community groups in promoting the amelioration of mental |
retardation through the utilization of whatever community and state resources the committee may |
deem necessary to accomplish this. |
(b) The committee shall consider and advise the governor, through the office of mental |
retardation, and the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals, |
on such mental retardation legislation and other retardation matters as its members, the governor, |
the director of the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals, |
and the assistant director for mental retardation may request; including, but not being limited to, |
advising and consulting with the office of mental retardation concerning improving the care, |
rehabilitation, and the training of mentally retarded persons, purchase of facilities, plans for |
construction of mental retardation facilities and the administration of programs and facilities |
(private and public) which receive state funds for the purpose of ameliorating mental retardation |
and/or otherwise providing services for mentally retarded persons. |
40.1-8-6. Authority to receive gifts. |
The committee is authorized to receive any gifts, grants, or donations made for any of the |
purposes of its program, and to disburse and administer the same in accordance with the terms |
thereof. |
SECTION 8. Section 40.1-24.5-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 40.1-24.5 entitled |
"Community Residences" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
40.1-24.5-1. Definitions. |
Whenever used in this chapter, or in any order, rule, or regulation made or promulgated |
pursuant to this chapter or in any printed forms prepared by the department of behavioral healthcare, |
developmental disabilities and hospitals in furtherance of this chapter, unless otherwise expressly |
stated, or unless the context or subject matter otherwise requires: |
(1) “Community residence” means a place, such as a group home, however named, licensed |
pursuant to chapter 24 of this title for the purpose of providing rehabilitation, psychological |
support, skills training, social guidance, and living accommodations to individuals who are |
mentally disabled, as defined by § 40.1-5-2; provided, however, that this definition shall not be |
deemed to include places, however named, for persons with intellectual or developmental |
disabilities, or who are mentally retarded, alcoholics, or drug abusers persons with substance use |
disorders. |
(2) “Director” means the head or the chief administrative officer of the community |
residence, or his or her the director’s designee. |
(3) “Grievance procedure” means the formalized process mandated by § 40.1-24.5-8 to |
enable residents to register alleged violations of the resident’s rights assured by §§ 40.1-24.5-5 and |
40.1-24.5-6. |
(4) “Individualized service plan” means the document that sets forth specific services, such |
as vocational, social, medical, psychiatric, and rehabilitative, that are structured to accomplish and |
express short- and long-term goals and objectives responsive to the individual needs of the resident. |
(5) “Mental health advocate” means and refers to the individual appointed by the governor |
with the advice and consent of the senate in accordance with § 40.1-5-14 and to his or her the |
advocate’s duly appointed assistants. |
(6) “Person” means any individual, partnership, corporation, company, or association and |
the legal successors in interest thereof. |
(7) “Resident” means an individual of lawful age admitted to a community residence. |
SECTION 9. Sections 40.1-21-4.3 and 40.1-21-11 of the General Laws in Chapter 40.1-21 |
entitled "Division of Developmental Disabilities" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
40.1-21-4.3. Definitions. |
As used in this chapter and in chapter 22 of this title the words: |
(5)(1) “Developmentally disabled adult” "Adult with intellectual or developmental |
disabilities" means a person, eighteen (18) years old or older and not under the jurisdiction of the |
department of children, youth and families who is either a mentally retarded developmentally |
disabled an adult with intellectual or developmental disabilities or is a person with a severe, chronic |
disability that: |
(i) Is attributable to a mental or physical impairment or combination of mental and physical |
impairments; |
(ii) Is manifested before the person attains age twenty-two (22); |
(iii) Is likely to continue indefinitely; |
(iv) Results in substantial functional limitations in three (3) or more of the following areas |
of major life activity: |
(A) Self care; |
(B) Receptive and expressive language; |
(C) Learning; |
(D) Mobility; |
(E) Self-direction; |
(F) Capacity for independent living; |
(G) Economic self-sufficiency; and |
(v) Reflects the person’s need for a combination and sequence of special, interdisciplinary, |
or generic care, treatment, or other services that are of lifelong or extended duration and are |
individually planned and coordinated. For purposes of funding, it is understood that students |
enrolled in school will continue to receive education from their local education authority in |
accordance with § 16-24-1 et seq. |
(vi) In addition, the words “adult with intellectual or developmental disabilities” also |
means a person eighteen (18) years old or older and not under the jurisdiction of the department of |
children, youth and families, with significant sub-average, general intellectual functioning two (2) |
standard deviations below the norm, existing concurrently with deficits in adaptive behavior and |
manifested during the developmental period. For purposes of funding, it is understood that students |
enrolled in school will continue to receive education from their local education authority in |
accordance with § 16-21 24-1 16-24-1 et seq. |
(1)(2) “Ancillary services” means those services provided, and shall include, but not be |
limited to, transportation, housing, housing adaptation, personal attendant care, and homemaker |
services. |
(2)(3) “Case management” means the implementation of an individual’s program by |
providing information, by referral to appropriate service providers, by procurement of services, and |
by the coordination of the necessary services. |
(3)(4) “Department” means the Rhode Island department of behavioral healthcare, |
developmental disabilities and hospitals. |
(4)(5) “Developmental services” means those services provided to developmentally |
disabled adults, and shall include, but not be limited to, habilitation and rehabilitation services, and |
day services. |
(6) “Diagnosis and evaluation” means a process to determine whether and to what extent |
an individual is intellectually or developmentally disabled and a study of the individual’s condition, |
situation, and needs that lead to a recommendation of what services, if any, would benefit the |
individual. |
(7) “Individualized program plan” or “general service plan” means a plan, however named, |
that includes, but shall not be limited to, the following: |
(i) An evaluation of the strengths, difficulties, needs, and goals of the individual; |
(ii) A description of those services found to be necessary or appropriate to assist the |
individual in realizing his or her the individual’s potential for self-sufficiency in major life |
activities; |
(iii) A description of the agencies and/or individuals, who or that are proposed to provide |
each of the recommended services; |
(iv) The intermediate and long-range objectives for the individual’s development and |
habilitation; |
(v) The expected duration for the provision of the services; |
(vi) A description of the tests and other evaluative devices used and their results; |
(vii) Proposed criteria for monitoring and evaluating the success of the services in meeting |
the individual’s needs; and |
(viii) The signatures of the preparers of the plan and the date. |
The individual individualized program plan shall indicate developmental, supportive, or |
ancillary services by function and frequency, the manner of subsidy and delivery and the categories |
of need for services such as transportation, job training, or occupation, housing, housing adaptation, |
personal attendant care, homemaker, or other services. This plan shall be reviewed at least annually; |
provided, however, that authorizations for services and funding issued prior to July 1, 2011, are |
null and void. Authorizations will be paid at the rate effective in the quarter the service was |
provided. |
(8) “Mentally retarded developmentally disabled adult” means a person eighteen (18) years |
old or older and not under the jurisdiction of the department of children, youth and families, with |
significant sub-average, general intellectual functioning two (2) standard deviations below the |
norm, existing concurrently with deficits in adaptive behavior and manifested during the |
developmental period. For purposes of funding, it is understood that students enrolled in school |
will continue to receive education from their local education authority in accordance with § 16- |
24-1 et seq. |
(9)(8) “Service broker” means that individual who assists in facilitating the connection |
between the developmentally disabled person with intellectual or developmental disabilities and |
the services required by the individual individualized program plan. |
(10)(9) “Subsidized access to service” means the provisions of financial resources through |
vouchers to a developmentally disabled person with intellectual or developmental disabilities to |
enable the person to gain access to appropriate generic and/or special services as required by the |
individual individualized program plan. |
(11)(10) “Supportive services” means those services provided to developmentally disabled |
adults with intellectual or developmental disabilities, and shall include, but not be limited to, |
occupational therapy, physical therapy, psychological services, counseling, nursing services, and |
medical services. |
40.1-21-11. References to director or assistant director of social welfare. |
Whenever, in any general or special law, reference is or shall be made to the director of |
social welfare or the assistant director of social welfare for curative services pertaining to the |
Doctor Joseph H. Ladd Center, programs, and services for people who are mentally retarded with |
intellectual or developmental disabilities, the reference shall mean, and be construed to mean, the |
director of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals. |
SECTION 10. Sections 40.1-22-3 and 40.1-22-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 40.1-22 |
entitled "Developmental Disabilities" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
40.1-22-3. Definitions. |
Whenever used in this chapter, or in any order, rule, or regulation made or promulgated |
pursuant to this chapter, or in the printed forms prepared by the director, unless otherwise expressly |
stated, or unless the context or subject matter otherwise requires: |
(1) “Client” means any developmentally disabled adult who is in potential need of, or is |
receiving, services aimed at alleviating his or her condition of functional dependence. |
(2) “Department” means the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental |
disabilities and hospitals. |
(3) “Development, education, rehabilitation, and care” means physical development, |
application of these abilities to meaningful occupations, development of personal and social skills, |
all of which are directed to the objective of independent living and self-maintenance. Care also |
includes medical care, surgical attendance, medication, as well as food, clothing, supervision, and |
maintenance furnished to a resident. |
(4) “Director” means the director of the department of behavioral healthcare, |
developmental disabilities and hospitals or his or her the director’s designees. |
(5) “Facility” means any public or private facility, inpatient rehabilitation center, hospital, |
institution, or other domiciliary facility, the office of developmental disabilities or any part thereof, |
equipped to habilitate, on a residential basis, persons who are intellectually or developmentally |
disabled and in need of residential care. This shall include any facility maintaining adequate staff |
and facilities within the state providing in-residence supervision and habilitation and approved by |
the director upon application of the facility. Included within this definition shall be all institutions |
and facilities under the control and direction of the director. Nothing contained herein shall be |
construed to amend or repeal any of the provisions of chapters 17 or 17.4 of title 23, or of chapter |
15 of title 40, or of chapter 21 of this title or of chapter 72.1 of title 42. Whenever it shall be brought |
to the attention of the director that any private facility may not have adequate staff, or facilities as |
determined by regulations of the director, then the facility shall not be approved for the placement |
of developmentally disabled adults with intellectual or developmental disabilities under the |
provisions of this chapter. |
(6) “Notice” means written notice in as simple and non-technical language as practicable |
as required by the department, or the court of competent jurisdiction. The notice shall be in writing |
to the director of the department by registered or certified mail, return receipt required. Notice sent |
to a client shall also include verbal reading of the written notice by duly authorized agents of the |
department, and/or court. The agents shall make verified return of the oral notification as well as |
the written. This requirement of oral notice to anyone alleged to be intellectually or |
developmentally disabled shall be required because of the recognized limitation that many retarded |
and developmentally disabled persons with intellectual or developmental disabilities are unable to |
comprehend written notices. |
(7) “Objection.” If an objection is raised it shall be in writing, of a timely nature, and filed |
with the clerk of the family or district court, a copy of which is to be sent to the director of the |
department via registered or certified mail, return receipt requested. |
(8) “Parent” means the natural, adoptive, foster parent, or caretaker of the child. |
(9) “Qualified intellectual disability professional (QIDP)” means a person as defined in 42 |
C.F.R. 483.430, as amended. |
(10) “Team” means an interdisciplinary team which includes such professional personnel |
designated by the director and which shall consist of no less than three (3) persons selected by order |
of the director, no less than one of whom shall be a licensed physician, no less than one of whom |
shall be a member of the social work profession, and no less than one of whom shall be a qualified |
intellectual disability professional (QIDP). |
40.1-22-9. Admission upon application of director, relative, or guardian. |
(a)(1) Upon the application of the director of the department of behavioral healthcare, |
developmental disabilities and hospitals or his or her the director’s designee, or of any relative, |
next of kin, or legally designated guardian of a person alleged to be developmentally disabled, and |
in need of immediate care and treatment, the superintendent or other official in charge of any |
facility may receive the person; provided the application is accompanied by the certificate of one |
examining physician; provided further, that the person alleged to be intellectually or |
developmentally disabled does not object to admission, or that parents, guardian, spouse, or next |
of kin do not object if under eighteen (18); and provided further, that the need for residential care |
shall be confirmed by the facility by a team examination within twenty (20) days of admission. |
(2) If objection is raised, by the person, or by the parent, guardian, spouse, or next of kin, |
then the matter shall be heard as provided in § 40.1-22-10, so far as possible. |
(b) If upon examination at the facility by a team the need of the client for residential care |
and treatment is not confirmed, the client shall be discharged. |
(c) If upon examination by a team at the facility the need of the client for residential care |
and treatment is confirmed and the client agrees to remain in the facility as a voluntary client, then |
he or she the person shall be considered a voluntary client as of the date of his or her the person |
so agreeing. |
(d) If upon examination at the facility the need of the client for residential care and |
treatment is confirmed and the client, if over eighteen (18), declines or refuses to remain in the |
facility as a voluntary client, then the certificate of a team supporting the application shall be filed |
with the facility. The team may be on the staff of any facility as herein defined, but persons on this |
team shall have no interest, directly or indirectly, in the assets or estate of the person who is |
mentally retarded with intellectual or developmental disabilities, nor shall they be related to the |
person by blood or marriage. The examination and certification shall be made no later than ten (10) |
days from the date of the confirmation of the client’s need for hospitalization, care, and treatment |
at the facility. |
(e) From the time of his or her the person’s admission under the previous subsection, the |
retention of the person for residential care and treatment shall be subject to the provisions for notice, |
hearing, review, and judicial approval of continued retention or transfer and continued retention as |
provided in this chapter. For the purposes of subsections (d) and (e) of this section, the date of |
admission of the client shall be deemed to be the date of the second examination and certification. |
(f) Failure to obtain the second certificate as required within the period specified shall result |
in the discharge of the client no later than twenty (20) days after his or her the person’s original |
admission to the facility under the provisions of this chapter. |
SECTION 11. Section 40.1-24.5-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 40.1-24.5 entitled |
"Community Residences" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
40.1-24.5-1. Definitions. |
Whenever used in this chapter, or in any order, rule, or regulation made or promulgated |
pursuant to this chapter or in any printed forms prepared by the department of behavioral healthcare, |
developmental disabilities and hospitals in furtherance of this chapter, unless otherwise expressly |
stated, or unless the context or subject matter otherwise requires: |
(1) “Community residence” means a place, such as a group home, however named, licensed |
pursuant to chapter 24 of this title for the purpose of providing rehabilitation, psychological |
support, skills training, social guidance, and living accommodations to individuals who are |
mentally disabled, as defined by § 40.1-5-2; provided, however, that this definition shall not be |
deemed to include places, however named, for persons who are mentally retarded with intellectual |
or developmental disabilities, alcoholics, or drug abusers or persons with substance use disorders. |
(2) “Director” means the head or the chief administrative officer of the community |
residence, or his or her the director’s designee. |
(3) “Grievance procedure” means the formalized process mandated by § 40.1-24.5-8 to |
enable residents to register alleged violations of the resident’s rights assured by §§ 40.1-24.5-5 and |
40.1-24.5-6. |
(4) “Individualized service plan” means the document that sets forth specific services, such |
as vocational, social, medical, psychiatric, and rehabilitative, that are structured to accomplish and |
express short- and long-term goals and objectives responsive to the individual needs of the resident. |
(5) “Mental health advocate” means and refers to the individual appointed by the governor |
with the advice and consent of the senate in accordance with § 40.1-5-14 and to his or her the |
advocate’s duly appointed assistants. |
(6) “Person” means any individual, partnership, corporation, company, or association and |
the legal successors in interest thereof. |
(7) “Resident” means an individual of lawful age admitted to a community residence. |
SECTION 12. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC001646/SUB B |
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