AB 1217, as amended, Lowenthal. Home Care Services Consumer Protection Act of 2013.
Existing law provides for the In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) program, a county-administered program under which qualified aged, blind, and disabled persons receive services enabling them to remain in their own homes. The IHSS program includes various eligibility requirements for individuals who provide services to recipients under the program. Under existing law, a private provider of in-home care services is not subject to the requirements of the IHSS program.
Existing law provides for the licensing and regulation of various community care facilities by the State Department of Social Services.
This bill would enact the Home Care Services Consumer Protection Act of 2013, which would provide, on and after July 1, 2014, for the licensure and regulation of home care organizations, as defined, by the State Department of Social Services, and the certification of home care aides. The bill would exclude specified entities from the definition of a home care organization. The bill would impose various licensure requirements on a home care organization. The bill would also impose a civil penalty on an individual or entity that operates a home care organization without a license, except as specified. The bill would require a home care organization to provide a client with specified information before arranging for the provision of home care services, as defined, to that client, including, but not limited to, the types and hours of available home care services, and the extent to which payment may be expected from specified sources. In addition, this bill would require a home care organization, among other things, to distribute to the client its advance directive policy and provide a written notice to the client of certain rights. The bill would also prohibit a home care organization from hiring an individual as a home care aide unless that individual meets certain requirements, including, but not limited to, demonstrating that he or she has specified language skills and providing proof of certification as a home care aide, as specified.
The bill would require certain employment agencies to maintain liability insurance, as specified, and ensure that any person it refers to provide home care services has been certified prior to the referral.
This bill would require background clearances for home care aides, as prescribed, and would set forth specific duties of the home care organization, the department, and the Department of Justice in this regard. The bill would require home care aides to demonstrate they are free of active tuberculosis. The bill would also require a home care organization to conduct regular evaluations of its home care aides, as specified. The bill would require the department to impose various fees to be deposited in the Home Care Organization and Home Care Aide Fund to be created by this bill. This bill, in addition, would prescribe enforcement procedures, fines, and penalties for violations of the act by a home care organization or a home care aide and violations of specified requirements by an employment agency, as defined.
This bill would specify that the provisions do not supersede local laws regulating home care organizations and home care services, including licensing, reporting, registration, and providing for civil penalties.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of
2the following:
3(a) Seniors, individuals with disabilities, and the frail elderly
4frequently find themselves in need of part-time to full-time
5assistance from a caregiver in order to live at home independently.
6(b) Out of the 701,000 estimated home care aides working in
7the country, more than 70,000 work in California.
8(c) The Employment Development Department has identified
9home care services as one of the fastest growing fields of
10employment.
11(d) In California, most individuals hiring a home care
12organization believe that the home care aide entering their home
13has been thoroughly screened and trained. However, a business
14license is the only requirement needed to provide nonmedical home
15care services in an individual’s home.
16(e) In view of the increasing number of home care aides entering
17private homes, the number of incidents of abuse and neglect by
18home care aides currently being reported in the media is alarming
19and concerning because, according to prosecutors, for every
20reported incident of abuse or neglect, four others go unreported.
21(f) Twenty-three states, including Texas, Illinois, Florida, and
22New York, have standards requiring home care organizations to
23register
or obtain a license.
24(g) Discharge planners commonly maintain lists of home care
25aides and home care organizations for purposes of patient referral
26without any information about the individuals or the organizations,
27thereby placing both the patient and the referring organization at
28risk.
29(h) Typically, family members looking for home care services
30are in a crisis and will not ask all of the “right” questions when
31choosing a home care organization or an individual provider. In
32addition, there is currently no centralized list of home care
33organizations or individual providers in California for family
34members, seniors, or disabled individuals to consult when in need
35of home care services for their loved ones or themselves.
Chapter 13 (commencing with Section 1796.10) is
37added to Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:
2
This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the
6Home Care Services Consumer Protection Act of 2013.
The State Department of Social Services shall
8administer and enforce this chapter.
For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions
10shall apply:
11(a) “Client” means an individual who receives home care
12services.
13(b) “Department” means the State Department of Social
14Services.
15(c) “Employment agency” means an employment agency that
16procures, offers, refers, provides, or attempts to provide but is not
17the employer of, a home care aide who provides home care services
18to clients and consumers in accordance with Section 1812.5095
19of the Civil Code, as long as the agency is not the employer of a
20home
care aide or other worker who provides assistance with
21activities of daily living to the consumer.
22(d) “Family member” means any person who is related to the
23person who receives home care services. This relationship shall
24be by blood, adoption, marriage, domestic partnership, or affinity
25within the fifth degree of kinship, including stepparents,
26stepsiblings, and all relatives whose status is preceded by the words
27“great,” “great-great,” or “grand” or the spouse of any of these
28persons, even if the marriage was terminated by death or
29dissolution.
30(e) “Geographic location” meansbegin delete theend deletebegin insert only the specificend insert city or
31county
in which the home care organizationbegin insert or home care aideend insert is
32located.
33(f) (1) “Home care aide” means an individual who provides
34home care services to a client in the client’s residence, and is
35synonymous, for purposes of this chapter, with “caregiver,”
36“custodial care,” “personal care attendant,” “homemaker,” and
37“companion.” In addition, “home care aide” includes an individual
38who qualifies as a personal attendant, as defined in Industry Wage
39Order 15-2001, issued by the Industrial Welfare Commission, who
40provides home care services.
P5 1(2) “Home care aide” does not include either of the following:
2(A) A family member of the person who receives home care
3services.
4(B) A person who is employed by, or contracts with, an
5organization vendored or contracted through a regional center or
6the State Department of Developmental Services pursuant to the
7Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Services Act (Division 4.5
8(commencing with Section 4500) of the Welfare and Institutions
9Code) and the California Early Intervention Services Act (Title
1014 (commencing with Section 95000) of the Government Code)
11to provide services and support for persons with developmental
12disabilities, as defined in Section 4512 of the Welfare and
13Institutions Code, when funding for those services is provided
14through the State Department of Developmental Services and more
15than 50 percent of the recipients of the home care services provided
16by the organization
are persons with developmental disabilities.
17(g) (1) “Home care organization” or “home care agency” means
18an individual, partnership, corporation, limited liability company,
19joint venture, association, or other entity that arranges for the
20provision of home care services by a home care aide to a client in
21the client’s residence and that is licensed pursuant to this chapter.
22(2) “Home care organization” does not include any of the
23following:
24(A) A home health agency licensed under Chapter 8
25(commencing with Section 1725).
26(B) A hospice licensed under Chapter 8.5 (commencing with
27Section 1745).
28(C) A health facility licensed under Chapter 2 (commencing
29with Section 1250).
30 (D) A county providing in-home supportive services pursuant
31to Article 7 (commencing with Section 12300) of Chapter 3 of
32Part 3 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, without
33regard to whether the county provides these services as a public
34authority or through a nonprofit consortium established pursuant
35to Section 12301.6 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.
36(E) A home medical device retail facility licensed under Section
37111656.
38(F) An organization vendored or contracted through a regional
39center or the State Department of Developmental Services pursuant
40to the Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Services Act
P6 1(Division
4.5 (commencing with Section 4500) of the Welfare and
2Institutions Code) and the California Early Intervention Services
3Act (Title 14 (commencing with Section 95000) of the Government
4Code) to provide services and support for persons with
5developmental disabilities, as defined in Section 4512 of the
6Welfare and Institutions Code, when funding for those services is
7provided through the State Department of Developmental Services
8and more than 50 percent of the recipients of the home care services
9provided by the organization are persons with developmental
10disabilities.
11(G) An employment agency, as defined in Section 1812.5095
12of the Civil Code, that procures, offers, refers, provides, or attempts
13to provide a home care aide or other worker who provides home
14care services or domestic services to clients and consumers
15pursuant to that
section, as long as the agency is not the employer
16of the home care aide or other worker who provides to the clients
17or consumers assistance with activities of daily living, including,
18but not limited to, bathing, dressing, feeding, toileting, ambulation,
19and transferring.
20(H) A residential care facility for the elderly licensed under
21Chapter 3.2 (commencing with Section 1569).
22(h) “Priority one complaint” means a complaint of sexual abuse
23that involves penetration, a complaint of physical abuse that
24involves an act that results in great bodily injury, such as a broken
25bone, severe cut, head injury, or burn, or a complaint of suspicious
26circumstances regarding the death of a client.
27(i) “Priority two complaint” means a
complaint of sexual abuse
28that involves sexual behavior that does not include penetration, a
29complaint of physical abuse that involves an act that results in a
30minor injury or bruise, or a complaint of felony offenses, including,
31but not limited to, robbery, arson, grand theft, and chemical
32restraint.
33(j) “Residence” means a temporary or permanent location where
34a client receives home care services.
35(k) “Transportation” means transportation in a motor vehicle
36in good working order provided by a home care aide who is a
37licensed and insured driver.
(a) For purposes of this chapter, “home care services”
39means services provided by a home care aide to a client who,
40because of advanced age or physical or mental infirmity, cannot
P7 1perform these services for himself or herself. These services
2include, but are not limited to, bathing, dressing, feeding,
3exercising, personal hygiene and grooming, transferring,
4ambulating, positioning, toileting and incontinence care, assisting
5with medication that the client normally self-administers,
6housekeeping, meal planning and preparation, laundry,
7transportation, correspondence, making telephone calls, shopping
8for personal care items or groceries, and companionship. This
9subdivision shall not
be construed to authorize a home care aide
10to administer medication that would otherwise require
11administration or oversight by a licensed health care professional.
12(b) Home care services shall not include any of the following:
13(1) Services authorized to be provided by a licensed home health
14agency under Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 1725).
15(2) Services authorized to be provided by a licensed hospice
16pursuant to Chapter 8.5 (commencing with Section 1745).
17(3) Services authorized to be provided by a licensed health
18facility pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 1250).
19(4) In-home supportive services
provided pursuant to Article 7
20(commencing with Section 12300) of Chapter 3 of Part 3 of
21Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.
22(5) Services authorized to be provided by a licensed residential
23care facility for the elderly pursuant to Chapter 3.2 (commencing
24with Section 1569).
25(6) Services authorized to be provided pursuant to Section 2731
26of the Business and Professions Code.
27(c) This chapter shall not be construed to prohibit an individual
28from employing a home care aide without the assistance of a home
29care organization.
30(d) Nothing in this chapter shall preempt or supersede local law
31regulating home care organizations or home care services, including
32
regulation of home care organizations that are coextensive or
33duplicative of the provisions of this chapter, including, but not
34limited to, licensing, reporting, and registry requirements.
35
(a) On and after July 1, 2014, subject to the
39exceptions set forth in paragraph (2) of subdivision (f) of Section
401796.12, an individual, partnership, corporation, limited liability
P8 1company, joint venture, association, or other entity shall not arrange
2for the provision of home care services by a home care aide to a
3client in this state before obtaining a license pursuant to this
4chapter.
5(b) An individual or entity that violates subdivision (a) shall be
6liable for a civil penalty not to exceed nine hundred dollars ($900)
7per day for each calendar day of each violation.
8(c) Upon
discovering that an individual or entity is in violation
9
of subdivision (a), the department shall send a written notice of
10noncompliance to the individual or entity and to the Attorney
11General or appropriate district attorney. Upon receiving this notice,
12the Attorney General or district attorney shall do any or all of the
13following:
14(1) Issue a cease and desist order, which shall remain in effect
15until the individual or entity has obtained a license pursuant to this
16chapter. If the individual or entity fails to comply with the cease
17and desist order within 20 calendar days, the Attorney General or
18a district attorney shall apply for an injunction.
19(2) Impose the civil penalty described in subdivision (b).
20(3) Bring an action against the individual or entity under
Chapter
215 (commencing with Section 17200) of Part 2 of Division 7 of the
22Business and Professions Code.
23(d) The requirements of this section shall not apply to an
24employment agency, as defined in Section 1812.5095 of the Civil
25Code, that procures, offers, refers, provides, or attempts to provide
26a home care aide or other worker who provides home care services
27or domestic services to clients and consumers pursuant to that
28section, as long as the agency is not the employer of the home care
29aide or other worker who provides assistance with activities of
30daily living to the consumer.
(a) A home care organization that has its principal
32place of business in another state, in addition to the other
33requirements of this chapter, before arranging for home care
34services provided by a home care aide to a client in
California,
35shall have an office in California.
36(b) If the home care organization is a foreign corporation,
37foreign limited liability company, foreign limited partnership,
38foreign association, or a foreign limited liability partnership, as
39defined in Sections 170, 171, 171.03, 171.05, and 16101 of the
40Corporations Code, before arranging for home care services
P9 1provided by a home care aide to a client in California,begin insert the home
2care organizationend insert shall have an office in California and shall
3register with the Secretary of State to conduct intrastate business
4in California.
The enactment of this chapter is an exercise of the
6police power of the state for the protection of the public welfare,
7prosperity, health, safety, and peace of its people. The civil
8penalties provided by this chapter are in addition to any other
9penalty provided by law.
In order to carry out the provisions of this chapter,
11the department may do any of the following:
12(a) Adopt rules and regulations to implement this chapter.
13(b) Establish procedures for the receipt, investigation, and
14resolution of complaints against home care organizations.
15(c) Investigate priority one and priority two complaints against
16certified home care aides not employed by a home care
17
organization. The department may take disciplinary action in
18accordance with subdivision (d) of Section 1796.30.
19(d) (1) Maintain on the department’s Internet Web site a registry
20of, with the capability to look up the certification status of, any
21certified home care aide, the name and geographic location of the
22home care aide’sbegin delete employerend deletebegin insert home care organizationend insert, if there is one,
23or name and geographic location of allbegin delete employersend deletebegin insert home care
24organizations,end insert if there are more than one,
and any disciplinary
25action taken against the home care aide. In the case of a home care
26aide who is an independent contractor and not employed by a home
27care organization, the Internet Web site shall indicate that status.
28To expedite the ability of a consumer to search and locate an
29appropriate home care aide, the Internet Web site shall enable
30consumers to look up the certification status, including any
31disciplinary action taken against the home care aide, by providing
32the home care aide’s name, certificate number, and geographic
33location. The Internet Web site shall not provide any additional,
34individually identifiable information about a home care aide. The
35department also may request and maintain additional employment
36information for a certified home care aide, as necessary, which
37shall not be publicly available on the registry.
38(2) The department shall update the Internet Web site upon
39receiving notification from a certified home care aide that he or
P10 1she has left a home care organization or has changed home care
2organizations.
3(3) The department’s Internet Web site registry of certified aides
4shall include a link and reference to the California Employment
5Development Department’s Household Employer Guide.
6(e) Maintain a registry on the department’s Internet Web site
7on the licensure status of all licensed home care organizations,
8along with the name, address, and telephone number of the home
9care organization, and the status of any completed disciplinary
10action against the licensed home care organization. The department
11also may request and maintain additional information for a licensed
12home
care organization, as necessary, which shall not be publicly
13available on the registry.
The department shall share information that it obtains
15pursuant to this chapter, including information reported by home
16care organizations, home care aides, and the Department of Justice,
17with any city, county, or district or any agency, department, officer,
18or official, upon request and to the fullest extent permitted by law,
19including contracted restrictions applicable to information reported
20by the Department of Justice.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter,
22the department shall issue a home care organization license to an
23entity that satisfies all of the following requirements:
24(a) Files an application, including the fees required pursuant to
25Section 1796.70.
26(b) Submits proof of general and professional liability insurance
27in the amount of at least one million dollars ($1,000,000) per
28occurrence and three million dollars ($3,000,000) in the aggregate.
29(c) Submits proof of a valid workers’ compensation policy
30covering its home
care aides. The proof shall consist of the policy
31number, the effective and expiration dates of the policy, and the
32name and address of the policy carrier.
33(d) Provides the department with a complete list of its home
34care aides, and proof that each satisfies the requirements of Section
351796.60.
36(e) The owner or owners of the home care organization pass a
37background clearance, as required pursuant to Section 1796.26.
(a) The term of a license issued pursuant to this
39chapter shall be two years.
P11 1(b) A license may be renewed upon application to the department
2and the payment of a renewal fee prescribed by the department.
3(c) At least 90 days before the expiration of a license, the
4department shall mail to the licensee, at the latest address furnished
5by the licensee to the department, a notice stating the amount of
6the renewal fee and the date on which it is due, and that failure to
7pay that fee on or before the date due will result in the expiration
8of the
license.
(a) In order to obtain a license, the following
10individual or individuals shall consent to the background clearance
11described in Section 1796.62:
12(1) The owner or owners of a home care organization if the
13owners are individuals.
14(2) If the owner of a home care organization is a corporation,
15limited liability company, joint venture, association, or other entity,
16an individual having a 10-percent or greater interest in that entity.
17(b) (1) If the background clearance conducted pursuant to
18subdivision
(a) discloses a conviction for a crime that is
19
substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of
20operating a home care organization, the application for a license
21may be denied.
22(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), a license shall not be denied
23under this section if the applicant has obtained a certificate of
24rehabilitation under Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
254852.01) of Title 6 of Part 3 of the Penal Code or the information
26or accusation against him or her has been dismissed pursuant to
27Section 1203.4 of the Penal Code.
28(c) In determining whether or not to deny the application for
29licensure or renewal pursuant to subdivision (b), the department
30shall take into consideration the following factors as evidence of
31good character and rehabilitation:
32(1) The nature and seriousness of the conduct or crime under
33consideration and its relationship to the person’s employment
34duties and responsibilities.
35(2) Activities since conviction, including employment or
36participation in therapy or education, that would indicate changed
37behavior.
38(3) The time that has elapsed since the commission of the
39conduct or offense referred to in paragraph (1) or (2) and the
40number of offenses.
P12 1(4) The extent to which the person has complied with any terms
2of parole, probation, restitution, or any other sanction lawfully
3imposed against the person.
4(5) Any
rehabilitation evidence, including character references,
5submitted by the person.
6(6) Employment history and current employer recommendations.
7(7) Circumstances surrounding the commission of the offense
8that would demonstrate the unlikelihood of repetition.
9(d) If the department makes a determination to deny an
10application, the department shall notify the applicant of this
11determination by either personal service or registered mail. The
12notice shall include the following information:
13(1) A statement of the department’s reasons for the denial that
14evaluates evidence of rehabilitation submitted by the applicant, if
15any, and that specifically addresses any evidence submitted
relating
16to the factors considered in subdivision (c).
17(2) A copy of the applicant’s criminal offender record
18information search response. The department shall provide this
19information in a manner that protects the confidentiality and
20privacy of the criminal offender record information search
21response.
22(A) The state criminal history record shall not be modified or
23altered from its form or content as provided by the Department of
24Justice.
25(B) The department shall record the date the copy of the
26response was provided to the individual.
27(C) The criminal offender record information search response
28shall not be made available by the department to any
individual
29other than the applicant.
30(3) An opportunity to correct inaccurate information on the
31record by submitting certified court minute orders to the
32department.
33(e) (1) Upon written notification that the department has
34determined that a license shall be denied, the applicant may request
35an administrative hearing by submitting a written request to the
36department within 15 business days of receipt of the written
37notification. Upon receipt of a written request, the department shall
38hold an administrative hearing consistent with the procedures
39specified in Section 100171, except where those procedures are
40inconsistent with this section.
P13 1(2) A hearing under this subdivision shall be
conducted by a
2hearing officer or administrative law judge designated by the
3director. A written decision shall be sent by certified mail to the
4applicant.
A private or public organization, with the exception
6of a county providing in-home supportive services pursuant to
7Article 7 (commencing with Section 12300) of Chapter 3 of Part
83 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, and the
9exceptions provided for in subdivision (c), shall not do any of the
10following, unless it is licensed under this chapter:
11(a) Represent itself to be a home care organization by its name
12or advertising, soliciting, or any other presentments to the public,
13or in the context of services within the scope of this chapter, imply
14that it is licensed to provide those services or to make any reference
15to employee bonding in
relation to those services.
16(b) Use the terms “home care organization,” “home care,”
17“in-home care,” or any combination of those terms, within its
18name.
19(c) This section does not apply to either of the following:
20(1) A county providing in-home supportive services pursuant
21to Article 7 (commencing with Section 12300) of Chapter 3 of
22Part 3 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.
23(2) An employment agency, as defined in Section 1812.5095
24of the Civil Code, that procures, offers, refers, provides, or attempts
25to provide a home care aide or other worker who provides home
26care services or domestic services to clients and consumers
27pursuant to that
section, as long as the agency is not the employer
28of a home care aide or other worker who provides domestic
29
services.
30
(a) The department may review and, if it determines
34necessary, investigate complaints filed against home care
35organizations or home care aides not employed by a home care
36organization that meet the specified definition of a priority one or
37priority two complaint.
38(b) The department shall verify through random, unannounced
39inspections at least once every five years that a home care
P14 1organization meets the requirements of this chapter and the
2regulations adopted pursuant thereto.
3(c) An investigation or inspection conducted by the department
4pursuant to this
chapter may include, but is not limited to, the
5following:
6(1) Inspection of the books, records, and premises of a home
7care organization. A home care organization’s refusal to make
8those records, books, or premises available shall constitute cause
9for the revocation of the home care organization’s license.
10(2) Direct observation of the provision of home care services
11to a client in the client’s residence, if the client’s consent is
12obtained.
13(d) If the department determines that a home care aide is in
14violation of this chapter or any rules promulgated hereunder, a
15notice of violation shall be served upon the individual. Each notice
16of violation shall be prepared in writing and shall specify the nature
17of the violation
and the statutory provision or rule alleged to have
18been violated. The notice shall inform the individual of any action
19the department may take under this chapter, including an action
20to suspend, revoke, or deny renewal of the certificate. The director
21or his or her designee shall also inform the individual of his or her
22rights to a hearing under this chapter.
23
A home care organization shall do all of the following:
27(a) Post its license in its place of business in a conspicuous
28location, visible both to clients and to its home care aides.
29(b) Operate the home care organization in a commercial office
30space that complies with local zoning ordinances.
31(c) Have plans, procedures, and policies in place, including all
32of the following:
33(1) Plans and procedures to be followed in the event of
34emergencies or natural disasters that would
result in the interruption
35of home care services.
36(2) A documented backup staffing plan in the event that a home
37care aide scheduled to provide home care services becomes
38unavailable.
39(3) A written policy regarding advance directives.
P15 1(4) A receipt and disbursement policy for expenditures made
2on behalf of a client to ensure that financial abuse does not occur.
3(d) Maintain a valid workers’ compensation policy covering its
4home care aides.
5(e) Maintain an employee dishonesty bond, including third-party
6coverage, with a minimum limit of ten thousand dollars ($10,000).
7(f) Comply with the regulations adopted by the department
8implementing this chapter.
With respect to home care aides employed by a home
10care organization, the home care organization shall consult the
11department’s registry, if a registry is maintained by the department,
12before hiring an individual or placing him or her in direct contact
13with patients. In addition, the home care organization shall do all
14of the following:
15(a) (1) Ensure that each of its home care aides employed before
16January 1, 2015, meets the requirements of Section 1796.61 no
17later than July 1, 2015.
18(2) Ensure that all individuals hired on or after January 1, 2015,
19have met the
requirements of Section 1796.61 before being hired
20as a home care aide.
21(b) (1) Investigate complaints made by a client, or a client’s
22family member or guardian, against home care aides regarding a
23service that is or fails to be furnished. The home care organization
24shall document both the existence and the resolution of those
25complaints.
26(2) If the home care organization completes an investigation of
27a complaint against a home care aide pursuant to paragraph (1)
28and finds that, in its opinion, the home care aide is in violation of
29this chapter, the home care organization shall immediately notify
30the department in order for the department to take the appropriate
31steps, which may include revoking the home care aide’s certificate.
32(c) Evaluate home care aides as follows:
33(1) Conduct an annual assessment of the performance and
34effectiveness of each home care aide, including, if client consent
35is obtained, at least one observation of the aide providing home
36care services in the residence of a client.
37(2) Every 90 days, supervise each home care aide providing
38home care services in the residence of a client, provided that client
39consent is obtained. The supervision required by this paragraph
40shall not be billed to the client.
P16 1(d) Ensure that a home care aide, when providing services to a
2client, has access at all times to a representative of the home care
3organization who is in a
supervisory capacity and who does not
4regularly render home care services to that client.
5(e) Require a home care aide, while providing home care
6services, to wear a badge that includes all of the following
7information in 12-point type or larger:
8(1) The aide’s name.
9(2) A photograph of the aide.
10(3) The name of the home care organization.
11(4) The expiration date of the license of the home care
12organization.
13(5) The home care aide’s certificate number as issued by the
14department.
15(f) Require home care aides to demonstrate that they are free
16of active tuberculosis, pursuant to Section 1796.63.
17(g) Require home care aides to annually complete not less than
18five hours of department-approved training on job-related topics.
19(h) Prohibit home care aides from accepting money or property
20from a client without written permission from the home care
21organization.
22(i) Immediately notify the department when the home care
23organization no longer employs an individual as a home care aide
24in order for the department to update its Internet Web site.
25
(a) An employment agency, as defined in Section
291812.5095 of the Civil Code, that procures, offers, refers, provides,
30or attempts to provide a home care aide who provides home care
31services or other worker who provides assistance with activities
32of daily living to the client or consumer pursuant to that section,
33shall, at all times, maintain general and professional liability
34insurance in the amount of at least one million dollars ($1,000,000)
35per occurrence and three million dollars ($3,000,000) in the
36aggregate.
37(b) An employment agency shall submit to the department proof
38of insurance required pursuant to subdivision (a)
no later than July
391, 2014, and annually thereafter.
P17 1(c) The department may assess a civil penalty not to exceed
2nine hundred dollars ($900) a day for violation of this section.
3(d) Nothing in this section shall authorize the department to
4assess a civil penalty on an employment agency for lack of
5coverage if the lack of coverage is found to be the fault of the
6professional liability insurer.
7
With respect to clients, a home care organization shall
11do all of the following:
12(a) Advise a client of any change in the client’s plan for home
13care services.
14(b) Before arranging for the provision of home care services to
15a client, do all of the following:
16(1) Distribute to the client its advance directive policy, along
17with a written summary of applicable state law.
18(2) Advise the client of its policy regarding the disclosure of
19client records.
20(3) Inform the client of the types and hours of available home
21care services.
22(4) Inform the client, orally and in writing, of the home care
23services that are or are not covered by Medi-Cal or Medicare, as
24applicable, and the extent to which payment may be expected from
25the client, from Medicare or Medi-Cal, and from any other source.
26(c) Inform the client, both orally and in writing, of a change to
27the information provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (b) as
28soon as possible, but not later than 30 days of becoming aware of
29that change.
30(d) Have a written agreement with the client that includes, but
31is not limited to, the cost of and the hours during which
home care
32services will be provided to the client and reference to the personal
33attendant requirements, if applicable, as referenced in Wage Order
3415-2001, issued by the Industrial Welfare Commission.
(a) Home care clients are entitled to the following
36rights:
37(1) The right to have the client’s property treated with respect.
38(2) The right to voice grievances free from reprisal regarding a
39home care service that is or fails to be provided or regarding the
40violation of any of the rights listed in this section.
P18 1(3) The right to be informed of and to participate in the planning
2of the client’s home care services.
3(4) The right to confidentiality
of the client’s personal
4information.
5(b) Before arranging for the provision of home care services to
6a client, a home care organization shall provide a written notice
7to the client stating that the client has all of the rights enumerated
8in subdivision (a).
9(c) A home care organization shall maintain written
10documentation showing that it has complied with subdivision (a).
11(d) If a client lacks the capacity to understand the rights listed
12in this section, as determined by a court of competent jurisdiction
13or by the client’s physician, unless the physician’s opinion is
14controverted by the client or the client’s legal representative, the
15client’s legal representative shall have those rights.
16(e) A home care organization shall protect, and promote the
17exercise of, the rights listed in this section.
18
(a) (1) Beginning January 1, 2015, the department
22shall require any person hired as a home care aide on or after
23January 1, 2015, to be certified before being hired and shall require
24that any home care aide or person providing assistance with
25activities of daily living to the client or consumer referred by an
26employment agency, as defined in Section 1812.5095 of the Civil
27Code, be certified prior to any referral.
28(2) The term of a certificate issued pursuant to this chapter shall
29be two years. The certificate may be renewed upon application to
30the department and payment of the renewal fee prescribed by the
31department
pursuant to this chapter.
32(b) In order to receive a certificate from the department to
33provide home care services for the elderly or persons with
34disabilities, a home care aide shall meet the minimum training
35requirements in this section. Only training curriculum approved
36by the department may be used to fulfill the training requirements
37specified in this section.
38(c) (1) A prospective home care aide shall complete a minimum
39of five hours of entry-level training, as follows:
P19 1(A) Two hours of orientation training regarding his or her role
2as caregiver and the applicable terms of employment.
3(B) Three hours of safety training, including basic
safety
4precautions, emergency procedures, and infection control.
5(C) Other training related to core competencies and
6population-specific competencies as required by regulation, which
7shall include, but are not limited to, the following areas:
8(i) Client rights and safety.
9(ii) How to provide for and respond to a client’s daily living
10needs.
11(iii) How to report, prevent, and detect abuse and neglect.
12(iv) How to assist a client with personal hygiene and other home
13care services.
14(v) If transportation services are provided, how to safely
15transport
a client.
16(2) If the department determines that the training required by
17paragraph (1) is unavailable in an applicant’s county, the
18
department shall issue a temporary home care aide certificate to
19that individual that will be valid until the date that proper training
20is made available in that county. Upon completion of the required
21training, the department shall replace the temporary home care
22aide certificate and issue a permanent home care aide certificate.
23(3) The entry-level training, and annual training on
24department-approved job-related topics, may be completed through
25an online training program.
26(d) The department shall only approve a training curriculum
27that satisfies both of the following conditions:
28(1) The training curriculum has been developed with input from
29consumer and worker representatives.
30(2) The training curriculum requires comprehensive instruction
31by qualified instructors on the competencies and training topics
32identified in this section.
33(e) The applicant shall consent to the background clearance
34described in Section 1796.62.
35(f) The department shall issue a home care aide certificate to
36each individual who meets the requirements of this section.
37(g) The department shall set a fee for certification under this
38section that shall be paid for by the home care aide.
P20 1(h) The applicant shall submit to an examination, as defined in
2Section 1796.63, to determine if he or she is free of
active
3tuberculosis.
(a) On and after January 1, 2015, a home care
5organization shall not hire an individual as a home care aide unless
6the individual complies with all of the following requirements:
7(1) Completes an individual interview, to the satisfaction of the
8home care organization.
9(2) Provides at least two work- or school-related references or,
10for an individual with no previous work experience, at least two
11character references from nonrelatives. The home care organization
12shall verify the references before hiring the individual.
13(3) Demonstrates that he or she possesses sufficient language
14skills to read and understand instructions, prepare and maintain
15written reports and records, and communicate with a client.
16(4) Provides proof of certification as a home care aide, pursuant
17to Section 1796.60.
18(b) For home care aides employed by a home care organization
19before January 1, 2015, a certificate pursuant to this chapter shall
20be obtained by July 1, 2015, in order for both the home care aide
21and the home care organization to be in compliance with this
22chapter.
23(c) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an
24employment agency, as defined in Section 1812.5095 of the Civil
25Code, shall ensure that any home care
aide it refers to provide
26home care services, or person it refers who provides assistance
27with activities of daily living to the client or consumer, has been
28
certified under Section 1796.60 prior to the referral.
29(2) The department may investigate complaints against an
30employment agency, as defined in Section 1812.5095 of the Civil
31Code, including, but not limited to, complaints made by a client
32or a client’s family member or guardian if the employment agency
33fails to comply with the provisions of this section. An employment
34agency that violates this subdivision shall be liable for a civil
35penalty not to exceed nine hundred dollars ($900) per day for each
36calendar day of each violation.
(a) A background clearance is required, unless the
38individual holds a valid, unexpired license, certification, or
39registration in a health-related field that requires a background
40check as a condition of the license, certification, or registration.
P21 1(b) (1) The department shall electronically submit to the
2Department of Justice fingerprint images and related information
3required by the Department of Justice of all home care aides, as
4defined under subdivision (e) of Section 1796.12, and owners of
5home care organizations, as set forth in Section 1796.26, for the
6purposes of obtaining information as to the
existence and content
7of a record of state convictions and state arrests, and also
8information as to the existence and content of a record of state
9arrests for which the Department of Justice establishes that the
10person is free on bail or on his or her own recognizance pending
11trial or appeal.
12(2) The Department of Justice shall provide a state response to
13the department pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (n) of
14Section 11105 of the Penal Code.
15(3) The department shall request from the Department of Justice
16subsequent arrest notification service, as provided pursuant to
17Section 11105.2 of the Penal Code, for persons described in
18paragraph (1).
19(4) The Department of Justice shall charge a fee not to exceed
20the
actual cost of processing the request described in this
21subdivision.
22(c) If the background check required by subdivision (b) discloses
23a conviction or incarceration for a conviction of any of the
24following provisions of the Penal Code within 10 years, the
25department shall deny the home care aide certification to that
26individual:
27(1) A violation of subdivision (a) of Section 273a of the Penal
28Code, or Section 368 of the Penal Code, or similar violations in
29another jurisdiction.
30(2) A violent or serious felony, as specified in subdivision (c)
31of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code and subdivision (c) of Section
321192.7 of the Penal Code.
33(3) A felony offense
for which a person is required to register
34under subdivision (c) of Section 290 of the Penal Code. For
35purposes of this subparagraph, the 10-year time period specified
36in this section shall commence with the date of conviction for, or
37incarceration following a conviction for, the underlying offense,
38and not the date of registration.
39(d) Notwithstanding subdivision (c), a certification shall not be
40denied under this section if the applicant has obtained a certificate
P22 1of rehabilitation under Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
24852.01) of Title 6 of Part 3 of the Penal Code or the information
3or accusation against him or her has been dismissed pursuant to
4Section 1203.4 of the Penal Code.
5(e) Upon determination to deny an application, if the denial of
6a certificate is due at
least in part to the applicant’s state criminal
7history record, the department shall notify the applicant of this
8determination by either personal service or registered mail, and
9the notification shall include the same information as required in
10subdivision (d) of Section 1796.26.
11(f) An applicant who has been convicted of an offense identified
12in subdivision (c) may seek from the department a general
13exception to the exclusion provided for in this section. The
14department shall consider the same factors when determining
15whether to grant a general exception as considered in subdivision
16(c) of Section 1796.26.
17(g) (1) Upon written notification that the department has
18determined that a request for exception shall be denied, the
19applicant may request an
administrative hearing by submitting a
20written request to the department within 15 business days of receipt
21of the written notification. Upon receipt of a written request, the
22department shall hold an administrative hearing consistent with
23the procedures specified in Section 100171, except where those
24procedures are inconsistent with this section.
25(2) A hearing under this subdivision shall be conducted by a
26hearing officer or administrative law judge designated by the
27director. A written decision shall be sent by certified mail to the
28applicant.
29(h) The applicant shall complete and pay for the background
30clearance specified in subdivision (b).
31(i) A home care aide employed on or after July 1, 2014, shall
32not be
permitted to provide home care services until he or she
33passes the background clearance pursuant to this section.
(a) An individual hired as a home care aide on or
35after January 1, 2015, shall be terminated from employment unless
36the individual submitted to an examination within six months prior
37to employment to determine that the individual is free of active
38tuberculosis. For purposes of this section, “examination” consists
39of a tuberculin skin test and, if that test is positive, an X-ray of the
40lungs.
P23 1(b) A home care aide whose employment with a home care
2organization began before January 1, 2015, shall submit to the
3examination described in subdivision (a) before July 1, 2015.
4(c) After submitting to an examination, a home care aide whose
5
tuberculin skin test is negative shall be required to undergo an
6examination at least once every two years. Once a home care aide
7has a documented positive skin test that has been followed by an
8X-ray, the examination is no longer required.
9(d) After the examination, a home care aide shall submit, and
10the home care organization shall keep on file, a certificate from
11the examining practitioner showing that the home care aide was
12examined and found free from active tuberculosis.
13(e) The examination is a condition of initial and continuing
14employment with the home care organization. The home care aide
15shall pay the cost of the examination.
16(f) A home care aide who transfers employment from one home
17care
organization to another shall be deemed to meet the
18requirements of subdivision (a) or (b) if that individual can produce
19a certificate showing that he or she submitted to the examination
20within the past two years and was found to be free of
21communicable tuberculosis, or if it is verified by the home care
22organization previously employing him or her that it has a
23certificate on file which contains that showing.
24(g) Notwithstanding the results of an examination, a home care
25aide shall annually complete a tuberculosis survey that includes,
26but is not limited to, all of the following information:
27(1) The individual’s name, address, and telephone number.
28(2) The date and result of all previous tuberculin skin tests and,
29where
applicable, all X-ray examinations.
30(3) Answers to questions concerning whether the individual has
31recently experienced any of the following symptoms:
32(A) A chronic cough for a period exceeding two weeks.
33(B) Chronic fatigue or listlessness for a period exceeding two
34weeks.
35(C) Fever for a period exceeding one week.
36(D) Night sweats.
37(E) Unexplained weight loss of eight pounds or more.
(a) The department shall assess licensure and
4certification fees in amounts sufficient to support the costs of each
5activity authorized by this chapter. Except for General Fund
6moneys that are otherwise transferred or appropriated for the initial
7costs of administering this chapter, or penalties collected pursuant
8to this chapter that are appropriated by the Legislature for the
9purposes of this chapter, no General Fund moneys shall be used
10for any purpose under this chapter.
11 (b) The Home Care Organization and Home Care Aide Fund is
12hereby created within the State Treasury for the purpose of this
13chapter. All licensure and
certification fees authorized by this
14chapter shall be deposited into the Home Care Organization and
15Home Care Aide Fund. Moneys in this fund shall, upon
16appropriation by the Legislature, be made available to the
17department for purposes of administering this chapter.
18(c) The licensure fee shall be equivalent to the cost of
19administering the licensure program, as defined by the department.
20(d) The certification fee shall be equivalent to the cost of
21administering the certification program, as defined by the
22department.
23(e) Commencing February 1, 2015, and every February 1
24thereafter, the department shall publish the fees estimated pursuant
25to this section. The calculation of
estimated fees and the publication
26of estimated fees shall not be subject to the rulemaking
27requirements of Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of
28Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. By
29February 1 of each year, the department shall make the fee
30estimates available to the public by submitting them to the
31Legislature and posting them on the department’s Internet Web
32site.
33(f) (1) The department shall prepare a report of all costs for
34home care licensure and home care aide certification activities. At
35a minimum, this report shall include a narrative of all baseline
36adjustments and their calculations, descriptions of assumptions
37used in any calculations, and shall recommend home care
38organization licensure fees and home care aide certification fees
39sufficient to support projected
costs.
P25 1(2) The department shall make a copy of the report available to
2the public on the department’s Internet Web site and provide a
3copy to the Legislature. A report to the Legislature shall be
4submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government
5Code.
6
(a) A home care organization or employment agency,
10as defined in Section 1812.5095 of the Civil Code, providing
11certified home care aides, that operates in violation of any
12requirement or obligation imposed by this chapter or any
13implementing rule or regulation, may be subject to the fines levied
14or licensure action taken by the department as specified in this
15section.
16(b) When the department determines that a home care
17organization is in violation of this chapter or any rules promulgated
18hereunder or that an employment agency is in violation of Section
191796.45 or subdivision (a) of Section 1796.60, a notice of violation
20shall
be served upon the licensee. Each notice of violation shall
21be prepared in writing and shall specify the nature of the violation
22and the statutory provision or rule alleged to have been violated.
23The notice shall inform the licensee of any action the department
24may take under this chapter, including the requirement of an agency
25plan of correction, assessment of a penalty, or action to suspend,
26revoke, or deny renewal of the license. The director or his or her
27designee shall also inform the licensee of rights to a hearing under
28this chapter.
29(c) The department may impose a fine of up to nine hundred
30dollars ($900) per violation per day commencing on the date the
31violation was identified and ending on the date each violation is
32corrected, or action is taken to suspend, revoke, or deny renewal
33of the license, whichever comes first.
34(d) In determining the penalty or licensure action, the director
35shall consider all of the following factors:
36(1) The gravity of the violation, including the probability that
37death or serious physical or mental harm to a client will result or
38has resulted, the severity of the actual or potential harm, and the
39extent to which the provisions of the applicable statutes or
40regulations were violated.
P26 1(2) The reasonable diligence exercised by the licensee and
2efforts to correct violations.
3(3) Any previous violation committed by the licensee.
4(4) The financial benefit to the home care organization of
5committing
or continuing the violation.
6(e) The department shall adopt regulations establishing
7procedures for notices, correction plans, appeals, and hearings. In
8developing the procedures, the department shall convene and
9consult with a working group of affected stakeholders.
10(f) Nothing in this section shall prohibit local laws from
11regulating privately funded home care services, whether provided
12by home care organizations or other entities, including, but not
13limited to, agencies regulated pursuant to Section 1725.
14(g) Nothing in this section shall prohibit local laws from
15providing for civil penalties, including, but not limited to, the
16suspension or revocation of the local license of a home care
17organization, for any violation of
local laws regulating home care
18organizations, or a violation of this chapter.
Any fines and penalties collected pursuant to this
20chapter shall be deposited into the Home Care Organization and
21Home Care Aide Penalties Subaccount, which is hereby created
22within the Home Care Organization and Home Care Aide Fund
23created pursuant to Section 1796.70. Moneys in this account shall,
24upon appropriation by the Legislature, be made available to the
25department for purposes of enforcing this chapter.
O
95