Chapter 236 |
2023 -- S 1030 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED Enacted 06/23/2023 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES -- QUALITY SELF-DIRECTED SERVICES |
Introduced By: Senators Cano, DiPalma, Euer, Lawson, DiMario, Murray, Burke, Mack, Kallman, and Britto |
Date Introduced: May 19, 2023 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. This Act shall be known and may be cited as the Personal Choice Self- |
directed Personal Care Services Act of 2023. |
(1) The State of Rhode Island is committed to rebalancing the provision of long-term care |
away from institutional care and towards a home- and community-based care model by enhancing |
self-direction and consumer choice. |
(2) The purpose of this chapter is to maximize the array of self-directed personal care |
services available to Medicaid Long-term services and supports (LTSS) participants by merging |
the Independent Provider program into the Personal Choice Program. Accordingly, upon the |
implementation date set forth in this act, the Independent Provider program will cease operations; |
providing, however, that the elements of the Independent Provider program specified in this chapter |
related to collective bargaining and negotiations for self-directed personal care services are |
incorporated into the reconstituted Personal Choice program. |
(3) The merger of these two (2) self-directed programs will further the State’s state’s |
rebalancing goal by streamlining the delivery of personal care support services, increasing |
administrative efficiency, making it easier for consumers to self-direct the care they need and want. |
In addition, by incorporating into the Personal Choice program the collective bargaining rights that |
were established in the Independent Provider program, the merger will enhance service access, |
increase the availability of education and training options, and improve the recruitment and |
retention of the people selected by Medicaid LTSS participants as individual providers. To ensure |
the merger realizes these ends, the secretary is directed to facilitate a smooth transition of |
Independent Provider participants opting to continue self-directed personal care services through |
the Personal Choice program. At a minimum, at least sixty (60) days prior to the end of operations, |
the executive office of health and human services must notify enrollees and advise them of their |
option to change to another home and community-based service option or be auto-transitioned to |
the Personal Choice program. |
(4) This act does not alter or limit the secretary’s authority to administer the Personal |
Choice Program, enforce existing rules, regulations, and procedures or adopt amended rules, |
regulations, and procedures for operating the program, determine a participant Medicaid eligibility |
and appropriateness for self-directed personal care services, or assess the scope, amount and |
duration of services authorized to meet a participant's needs, except as specifically set forth in this |
chapter. |
(5) This act does not alter or limit the rights of participants and their representative to select, |
direct, and terminate the services of individual providers or to determine the wages of individual |
providers within a range set by the secretary in implementing regulations once the programs are |
combined. |
(6) This act does not alter or impede the administration or delivery of self-directed |
programs, including those self-directed programs for Medicaid LTSS participants operated by the |
department of behavioral healthcare, development disabilities and hospitals for individuals with |
intellectual disabilities. |
SECTION 2. Sections 40-8.14-1 and 40-8.14-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-8.14 |
entitled "Quality Self-Directed Services" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
40-8.14-1. Definitions. |
For purposes of this section: |
(1) “Activities of daily living” (ADL) means the routine activities that people tend to do |
every day without needing assistance. There are six (6) basic ADLs: eating, bathing, dressing, |
toileting, transferring (walking), and continence. |
(2) “Covered home- and community-based services (HCBS)” means any core, preventive, |
or specialized long-term-care services and supports available in a person’s home or a community- |
based living arrangement that the state is authorized to provide under the Medicaid state plan, the |
Medicaid section 1115 waiver, or any similar program. |
(3) “Direct-support services” means the range of home- and community-based services |
(HCBS) covered services that are identified in the Medicaid state plan, Rhode Island’s section 1115 |
waiver, or any similar program that may provide similar services in the future, and the rules and |
regulations promulgated by the executive office of health and human services (EOHHS) or a |
designated agency authorize individual home-care providers to provide. The direct-support services |
must be provided in accordance with applicable federal and state law, rules, and regulations and |
include, but are not limited to, personal care assistance, homemaker, and companion services that |
the state is authorized to provide under the Medicaid state plan, the Medicaid section 1115 waiver, |
or any similar program in the future, including: |
(i) Participant assistance with activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily |
living as defined in this chapter; |
(ii) Assistance with monitoring health status and physical condition; |
(iii) Assistance with preparation and eating of meals (not the cost of the meal itself); |
(iv) Assistance with housekeeping activities (bed making, dusting, vacuuming, laundry, |
grocery shopping, cleaning); |
(v) Assistance with transferring, ambulation, and use of special mobility devices assisting |
the participant by directly providing or arranging transportation; and |
(vi) Other similar, in-home, non-medical long-term services and supports provided to an |
elderly person or individual with a disability by an individual provider to meet the person’s daily |
living needs and ensure that the person may adequately function in the person’s home and have |
safe access to the community. |
(4) “Director” means the director of the Rhode Island department of administration. |
(2) "Executive office of health and human services (EOHHS)" means the agency in the |
executive branch of state government that is designated as the Medicaid single state agency and |
which, in this capacity, oversees the administration of the Medicaid LTSS program. |
(5)(3) “Fiscal intermediary” means a third-party organization operating in accordance with |
applicable federal and state requirements under contract with the EOHHS state that is responsible |
for performing payroll and other employment-related functions on behalf of the participant as set |
forth in the implementing regulations for the personal choice program promulgated by the secretary |
of EOHHS. |
(i) The fiscal intermediary shall: |
(A) Be authorized by the secretary or a designated agency to receive and distribute support |
funds on behalf of a participant in accordance with the participant’s service plan; and |
(B) Act as a fiscal intermediary on behalf of a participant in compliance with all rules, |
regulations, and terms and conditions established by the secretary. |
(ii) The fiscal intermediary shall not make any decisions regarding hiring, supervising, or |
firing individual providers. |
(6)(4) “Individual provider” means an individual selected by and working under the |
direction of a Medicaid LTSS beneficiary participant or the beneficiary’s participant's duly |
authorized representative to provide direct-support self-directed personal care services to the |
participant in accordance with the beneficiary’s service plan, a person-centered plan and the |
implementing regulations promulgated for the program by the secretary of EOHHS. Individual |
provider does not mean or but does not include an employee of a provider agency, subject to the |
agency’s direction and control commensurate with agency employee status or an individual |
providing services to a participant electing the personal choice option in any program. |
(7) “Instrumental activities of daily living” means the skills a person needs to live safely |
and successfully in a residential setting of choice without outside supports. These skills include, |
but are not limited to, using the telephone, traveling, shopping, preparing meals, doing housework, |
taking medications properly, and managing money. |
(8)(5) “Medicaid LTSS beneficiary participant” means a person who has been determined |
by the state to obtain be eligible for Medicaid-funded long-term services and supports under the |
Medicaid state plan and/or the RI section 1115 waiver demonstration and/or Medicaid authorities |
created in the future. |
(9) “Participant” means a Medicaid LTSS beneficiary who receives direct-support services |
from an individual provider. |
(10)(6) “Participant’s representative” means a participant’s legal guardian or an individual |
having a person who has been designated by the participant or otherwise has the authority and |
responsibility to act on behalf of a participant with respect to the provision of direct-support self- |
directed services, including the self-directed personal care services subject to this act. |
(11)(7) “Provider representative” means a provider organization that is certified as the |
exclusive negotiating representative of individual providers as provided in § 40-8.15-7. |
(12)(8) “Secretary” means the secretary of the Rhode Island executive office of health and |
human services (EOHHS). |
(9) "Self-directed personal care services" means home and community-based personal care |
services a Medicaid LTSS participant is authorized to self-direct to meet their daily living needs, |
function adequately at home, safely access the community, or other nonprofessional services under |
the personal choice program, independent provider program, or any similar program that may |
provide similar services in the future under the Medicaid state plan, section 1115 demonstration |
waiver, or future Medicaid authorities promulgated by the secretary. |
40-8.14-3. Use of employee workforce. |
The requirement under § 40-8.14-2 shall not restrict the state’s ability to afford participants |
and participants’ representatives who choose not to employ an individual provider, or are unable to |
do so, the option of receiving direct-support personal care services through a personal choice option |
or through the employees of provider agencies, rather than through an individual provider. |
Nothing in this chapter shall restrict the state’s ability to afford Medicaid LTSS |
beneficiaries authorized to receive HCBS-covered services participants with the freedom of choice |
guaranteed under Title XIX to enter into service delivery agreements with any authorized Medicaid |
provider. |
SECTION 3. Section 40-8.15-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-8.15 entitled |
"Individual Providers of Direct-Support Services" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
40-8.15-9. Individual providers not state employees Duties of the executive office for |
health and human services. |
(c) Notwithstanding the state’s obligations to meet and negotiate under chapter 7 of title |
28, nothing in this chapter shall be construed to make individual providers employees of the state |
for any purpose, including for the purposes of eligibility for the state employee pension program |
or state employee health benefits. |
(a) The secretary has authority over the terms and conditions of individual providers' |
employment, including compensation as required under § 40-8.15-14, payment, benefit terms, |
provider qualification standards, other appropriate terms and conditions for the workforce of |
individual providers without infringing on participants' or participant representatives' rights and |
responsibilities to hire, direct, supervise, and/or terminate the employment of their individual |
providers, and orientation, training, and the operation of a registry as required under § 40-8.15-15. |
(b) The secretary's authority in subsection (a) of this section only applies to self-directed |
personal care services and is subject to the state's obligation to meet and negotiate with a provider |
representative pursuant to § 40-8.15-16. |
SECTION 4. Chapter 40-8.15 of the General Laws entitled "Individual Providers of Direct- |
Support Services" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
40-8.15-14. Wage ranges. |
(a) The state shall set wage ranges for all individual providers. All self-directed personal |
care services performed by individual providers must be compensated at a wage that is within the |
range set by the secretary for the services provided, but the participant may choose what wage to |
pay within the applicable range. |
(b) The wage range may be the subject of collective bargaining as provided in this chapter. |
However, such collective bargaining shall be related solely to self-directed personal care services. |
All other self-directed services available to personal choice participants other than personal care |
are excluded from collective bargaining. |
(c) The provisions of this section shall take effect on the date of implementation, as |
provided in § 40-8.15-16(c). |
40-8.15-15. Other duties of the executive office for health and human services. |
(a)(1) The secretary shall determine by regulation whether and to what extent individual |
providers selected by personal choice participants to provide self-directed personal care are |
required to complete an orientation, pursuant to the secretary’s authority under § 40-8.14-4(c)(2). |
The secretary shall determine by regulation the specific types of education, experience, or training |
that may be required for an individual provider to be included on a registry of persons qualified to |
be self-directed individual providers. |
(12) The subjects of this section shall be collectively bargained with the provider |
representative. Nothing in this act prohibits a personal choice participant from requiring an |
individual provider to complete more training or education than is minimally required by the |
secretary. |
(b) The secretary shall maintain a registry for individual providers pursuant to its authority |
under § 40-8.14-4(c)(4) and shall collaborate with the provider representative to maintain this |
registry. |
(c) The provisions of this section shall take effect on the date of implementation, as |
provided in § 40-8.15-16(c). |
40-8.15-16. Implementation. |
(a) For purposes of this section, the independent provider (IP) program and the personal |
choice program shall have the meanings that were set forth in 210-RICR-50-10-2.2(A)(1) and |
(A)(2) as of the effective date of the personal choice in self-directed personal care services act of |
2023. |
(b) The secretary shall merge the independent provider program into the personal choice |
program, so that as of the date of implementation the independent provider program will cease |
operations. All new Medicaid LTSS participants seeking self-directed personal care services in a |
program included under this act will be enrolled in the personal choice program if all necessary |
requirements are met. The secretary shall transition independent provider participants opting to |
continue self-direction into the personal choice program no later than the date of their annual |
reassessment. |
(1) The secretary shall make all changes to regulations and practices as needed to |
implement this merger. |
(2) The secretary within one hundred and twenty (120) days of the effective date of this act |
shall apply for any necessary federal approvals, including the submission of any necessary |
Medicaid state pan plan amendments to the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. |
(c) Once the secretary has implemented the merger of the programs, and no later than one |
hundred twenty (120) days after any necessary federal approvals are obtained, the secretary shall |
certify that the personal choice self-directed personal care services act of 2023 has been |
implemented. The date of that certification shall be the “date of implementation” for all provisions |
of this chapter. |
(d) Within ninety (90) days of the effective date of the personal choice self-directed |
personal care services act of 2023, any provider organization that has previously been certified to |
serve as the provider representative of any individual providers pursuant to § 40-8.15-7 shall be |
furnished by the secretary with contact information for every person providing self-directed |
personal care services under the personal choice program. The secretary shall provide any such |
provider organization with updated contact information every sixty (60) days thereafter. |
(e) Any provider organization that has previously been certified to serve as the provider |
representative of any individual providers pursuant to § 40-8.15-7 may, prior to the date of |
implementation, petition to be certified as the provider representative of the bargaining unit that |
will be comprised of all the individual providers in the personal choice program after the date of |
implementation. The secretary shall hold an election to determine whether such a provider |
organization shall be certified as the provider representative for that bargaining unit upon a ten |
percent (10%) showing of interest. All persons who are providing self-direct self-directed services |
under the personal choice program shall be considered part of the bargaining unit for purposes of |
the showing of interest and shall be eligible to vote in the certification election. If a majority of |
those casting ballots vote to be represented by that provider organization, then the provider |
organization shall be certified as the provider representative to negotiate with the state over the |
terms and conditions of individual providers' participation in providing self-directed personal care |
services for all individual providers in the state as of the date of implementation. The provisions of |
this chapter shall otherwise apply. |
(f) Nothing in this act shall be construed to alter or limit the rights of participants and their |
representative to select, direct, and terminate the services of individual providers or to determine |
individual providers’ wages within a range set by the secretary, or to alter or limit the secretary’s |
authority to administer the personal choice program including to adopt rules and operate the |
program, to determine participant budgets, to determine eligibility, or to authorize services, except |
as specifically set forth in this chapter. |
(g) Nothing in this act shall be construed to affect the administration or delivery of self- |
directed programs for individuals with intellectual disabilities. |
(h) Nothing in this act shall be construed to alter or limit the rights of participants and their |
representative to select, direct, and terminate the services of individual providers or to determine |
individual providers' wages within a range set by the secretary, or to alter or limit the secretary's |
authority to administer the personal choice program, including to adopt rules and operate the |
program, to determine participant budgets, to determine eligibility, or to authorize services, except |
as specifically set forth in this chapter. |
(ih) No provision of any agreement or award resulting from collective bargaining and |
negotiations under this act shall provide for a reduction in Medicaid federal financial participation |
under Title XIX of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1396 et seq., nor shall any provision of |
any agreement or award provide for a reduction in the self-directed personal care services for |
eligible personal choice program Medicaid LTSS participants. Any provision in any agreement or |
award which that would require an additional appropriation in order to maintain the levels of |
services provided by existing appropriations shall be subject to the annual budget process. |
SECTION 5. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC003039/SUB A/2 |
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