SB 548, as amended, De León. Child care: family child care providers: bargaining representatives.
Existing law, the California Child Day Care Facilities Act, provides for the licensure and regulation of family day care homes by the State Department of Social Services. Existing law, the Child Care and Development Services Act, administered by the State Department of Education, requires the Superintendent of Public Instruction to administer child care and development programs that offer a full range of services for eligible children from infancy to 13 years of age, including, among others, resource and referral programs, alternative payment programs, and family child care home education networks.
This bill would authorize family child care providers, as defined, to form, join, and participate in the activities of provider organizations, as defined, and to seek the certification of a provider organization to act as the exclusive representative for family child care providers on matters related to state-funded child care programs pursuant to a petition and election process overseen by the Public Employment Relations Board or a neutral 3rd party designated by the board.
The bill would require the State Department of Social Services and the State Department of Education, with the assistance of specified state departments and agencies, and their contractors and subcontractors, to make specified information regarding family child care providers available to provider organizations, and would require the provider organization requesting the information to bear the costs of collecting the information, as provided.
The bill would establish the scope of representation of the certified provider organization, and would require the Governor, through the Department of Human Resources, in consultation with the Superintendent of Public Instruction and other entities, to meet and confer in good faith with the certified provider organization on all matters within that scope of representation. The bill would require the parties to jointly prepare a memorandum of understanding if agreement is reached, which would be binding on all state departments and agencies, and their contractors and subcontractors, that are involved in the administration of state-funded child care programs. The bill would authorize the parties, if, after a reasonable period of time they fail to reach agreement, to agree to submit unresolved issues to the California State Mediation and Conciliation Service for mediation or binding arbitration, and would authorize either party to declare that an impasse has been reached and request the Public Employment Relations Board to appoint a mediator or arbitrator from the service to perform mediation or binding arbitration.
The bill would authorize a certified provider organization to enter into an agreement with the state that provides that the state will require entities that make subsidy payments to providers, including the contractors or subcontractors of state agencies and departments, to deduct membership dues and other voluntary deductions from those subsidy payments. The bill would prohibit provider organizations from calling strikes. The bill would prohibit the state and provider organizations from engaging in specified prohibited behavior with each other and providers.
The bill would requirebegin delete an unspecified entityend deletebegin insert the Governor or his or her designeeend insert to perform a study of best practices for engaging families in their children’s early care and education in family child care settings, as provided, and would requirebegin delete this entityend deletebegin insert
the Governor or his or her designeeend insert to report to the Legislature and the Department of Finance on or before January 1, 2017, withbegin delete itsend deletebegin insert his or herend insert findings and a proposed framework of priorities in which to invest.
The bill would require a certified provider organization and the state to form a Joint Committee on Child Care Training, Education, and Quality Improvement made up of specified individuals. Among other things, the bill would require the committee to identify gaps in the training available to family child care providersbegin insert and barriers that prevent family child care providers from gaining greater skills and accessing postsecondary education,end insert and issue recommendationsbegin insert on an annual basisend insert to improve the quality of care offered by licensed and licensed-exempt family child care providers. The bill would require the provider organization to establish a training program to carry out the recommendations of the committee.
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 finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(a) Quality, affordable child care is essential to prepare
4California’s children to succeed in school and in life and to allow
5families to work and contribute to the state’s economy with the
6assurance that their children are safe, well cared for, and learning.
7(b) Family child care is the child care setting of choice for many
8families because of its warm homelike environment, conveniencebegin insert,end insert
9 and affordability. The flexibility offered by many family child care
10providers is particularly vital to low-wage workers who
are subject
11to highly unpredictable work schedules, and to the many California
12workers who work nontraditional hours and need child care on
13evenings, overnights, and weekends. Close to 40 percent of licensed
14family child care homes offer evening, weekend, and overnight
15care, compared with only 2 percent of centers.
16(c) Family child care providers are small business owners who
17contribute significantly to the economies of their communities and
18the state. As businesses, family child care providers are engines
19for economic growth, generating 100,000 direct and indirect jobs,
20three billion five hundred million dollars ($3,500,000,000) in
21economic output, and five hundred fifty million dollars
22($550,000,000) in tax revenues. Family child care providers also
23contribute to the economy by serving as a vital job support for
24working families.
P4 1(d) There is a need to improve the quality of
child care and to
2increase stability in the industry that is charged with providing
3safe and quality care for children in California. Turnover among
4child care providers is estimated at more than 30 percent per year,
5more than four times higher than among teachers in the public
6school system. Losing a caregiver leaves working parents
7scrambling to find other arrangements and disruptsbegin insert theend insert children’s
8cognitive and social development, putting them at a disadvantage
9when it is time for them to start school.
10(e) Experienced child care providers who care for children under
11California’s state-funded child care program are leaving the
12profession because extremely low reimbursement rates and a lack
13of access to employment benefits mean they cannot afford to
14provide for their own families. The state’s fragmented, disorganized
15system for paying
child care providers under the state-funded child
16care program, in which more than 120 different agencies contract
17with the state to pay child care providers, also contributes to this
18turnover. Child care providers’ pay is often late, reduced, orbegin delete doesn’tend delete
19begin insert does notend insert arrive at all, and there is a lack of clear authority and
20redress when problems arise.
21(f) The supply of quality child care in California is inadequate
22to meet the demand. Since 2008begin insert,end insert the state has seen a decline of
23almost 26 percent in the number of licensed family child care
24homes. California lost over 11,000 licensed family child care
25providers and over 61,000 slots for children in these
homes. In
262012, there was licensed child care capacity for only 25 percent
27of children of working parents.
28(g) In order to address one of the areas of greatest need in the
29state-funded child care program, to improve developmental and
30educational outcomes for children in poverty, and to build off the
31goals of thebegin delete Local Control Funding Formulaend deletebegin insert local control funding
32formulaend insert, additional slots for California’s neediest children must
33be added.
34(h) Family child care providers’ role in the state’s child care
35program gives them unique insight into how quality, access, and
36stability could be improved for children and families. For the last
37several years, child care providers have worked together with
the
38State Department of Education to make improvements to the state’s
39requirements for timeliness of payment and communications with
40child care providers and families. This progress shows the value
P5 1that child care provider voices can add. But it also highlights the
2need for child care providers to have a formal role in
3decisionmaking on issues that shape the child care system and the
4way they carry out their profession.
5(i) To promote higher quality and greater access and stability
6in the child care system, it is necessary to enact legislation to grant
7family child care providers the right to choose a representative to
8negotiate with the state over the operation of the state-funded child
9care program. Permitting family child care providers a formal
10voice will allow the state to get input from providers and to
11maximize its return on its investment in child care, and will allow
12providers to advocate to improve the quality, access, and stability
13
of care available to California’s children and families.
14(j) The existing system for providing training to child care
15providers is a patchwork. Training is provided by hundreds of
16different entities and is challenging to access for large numbers of
17child care providers.begin insert Family child care providers also face
18particular barriers to gaining greater skills and accessing
19postsecondary education, including language barriers, scheduling
20of classes that are incompatible with the operation of their family
21child care homes, and lack of access to tutoring and mentoring.end insert
22 Consistent with the state’s focus on the improvement and expansion
23of workforce development and apprenticeships, a training
24partnership between the state and a certified provider organization
25will be able to draw down federal and private funding to add
26capacity to existing state
training resources, from general education
27classes (GED) and English language learner (ELL) classes to
28providing support for child care providers who seek to obtain
29higher education credentials in child development. This training
30partnership will help build skills, knowledge, and techniques to
31provide higher quality early learning for family child care providers
32as well as center or school-based care providers. Financial
33incentives, such as rate add-ons for child care providers who obtain
34additional training or who complete apprenticeship programs, will
35encourage participation, acknowledge additional skill, and help
36ensure that child care providers with greater training remain serving
37at-risk children.
38(k) Parent engagement is a crucial part of children’s success in
39early care, in school and later in life. Family child care providers’
40role in the state’s child care program gives them unique insight
P6 1into how quality, access, and stability could
be improved for
2children and families. Many parents choose home-based child care
3providers due to shared values and culture, close personal
4relationships, and provider flexibility with erratic work schedules.
5Accordingly, pursuant to Section 8439 of the Education Code, the
6begin delete ______end deletebegin insert Governor or his or her designeeend insert shall perform a study of
7best practices for culturally competent parent engagement in family
8child care, including in particular engagement of parents who work
9nontraditional hours. The study shall determine how to most
10effectively ensure that parents are involved with their children’s
11development and are better able to provide learning and other
12developmental opportunities for their children at home in a
13culturally appropriate manner. The goal of the study will be to
14identify best practices that target
low-income families and to
15propose some options for a California parent engagement program
16as well as identify possible funding sources for such work.
Article 19.5 (commencing with Section 8430) is added
18to Chapter 2 of Part 6 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the Education
19Code, to read:
20
This article shall be known, and may be cited, as the
24Raising Child Care Quality and Accessibility Act.
(a) The purpose of this article is to promote quality,
26access, and stability in the child care system by increasing the
27number of child care slots available to California’s neediest
28children; by authorizing an appropriate unit of family child care
29providers to choose a provider organization to act as their exclusive
30representative for purposes of the meet and confer process set forth
31in this article and the administration and enforcement of any
32resulting memorandum of understanding; by establishing a training
33partnership between the state and that exclusive representative;
34and by conducting a study of best practices for parent engagement
35in home-based early care and education. It is also the purpose of
36this article to promote full communication between family child
37care providers and the state by permitting
a provider organization
38certified as the representative of family child care providers to
39meet and confer with the state regarding the state’s child care
40system.
P7 1(b) This article does not changebegin insert theend insert family child care providers’
2status as independent business owners or classify family child care
3providers as public employees.
As used in this article:
5(a) “Certified provider organization” means a provider
6organization that is, or provider organizations that jointly are,
7certified by the Public Employment Relations Board as the
8exclusive representative of family child care providers in an
9appropriate unit after a proceeding under Section 8434.
10(b) “Family child care provider” or “provider” means a child
11care provider that participates in a state-funded child care program
12and is either of the following:
13(1) A family day care home provider, as described in Section
141596.78 of the Health and Safety Code, who is licensed pursuant
15to the requirement in Section 1596.80
of the Health and Safety
16Code.
17(2) An individual who meets both of the following criteria:
18(A) Provides child care in his or her own home or in the home
19of the child receiving care.
20(B) Is exempt from licensing requirements pursuant to Section
211596.792 of the Health and Safety Code.
22(c) “Maintenance of checkoff” means an agreement between a
23provider and a provider organization that the provider’s
24authorization for the deduction of union dues or their equivalent
25can only be withdrawn during a designated window period.
26(d) “Provider organization” means an organization that has all
27of the following characteristics:
28(1) Includes family child care providersbegin insert as membersend insert.
29(2) Has as one of its main purposes the representation of family
30child care providers in their relations with public or private entities
31in Californiabegin insert and the terms of their participation in state-funded
32child care programsend insert.
33(3) Is not an entity that contracts with the state or a county to
34administer or process payments for a state-funded child care
35program.
36(e) “Public Employment Relations Board” or “board” means
37the Public Employment Relations Board established pursuant to
38Section 3541 of the Government Code. The powers and duties of
39the board described in
Sections 3514.5, 3520.5, and 3541.3 of the
40Government Code, and the respective implementing regulations,
P8 1shall apply, as appropriate, to this article to the extent those
2procedures are not inconsistent with the procedures specified in
3this article. If a provision of this article is the same or substantially
4the same as that contained in Chapter 10 (commencing with Section
53500), Chapter 10.3 (commencing with Section 3512), or Chapter
610.7 (commencing with Section 3540) of Division 4 of Title 1 of
7the Government Code, it shall be interpreted and applied in
8accordance with the judicial interpretations of the provision in
9those statutes.
10(f) “State-funded child care program” means a program
11begin delete established pursuant to this chapter andend delete administered by the State
12Department of Education, the State Department of Social Services,
13or another department, agency, or political
subdivision of the state,
14including programs established subsequent to the passage of this
15article, to subsidize early learning and care for childrenbegin insert, but not
16including the public education systemend insert.
The state action antitrust exemption to the application
18of federal and state antitrust laws is applicable to the activities of
19family child care providers and their representatives authorized
20under this article.
Family child care providers have the right to form, join,
22and participate in the activities of provider organizations of their
23own choosing for the purpose of being represented in all matters
24specified in this article. Family child care providers have the right
25to refuse to join or participate in the activities of provider
26organizations. This article does not change the rights of family
27child care providers to represent themselves individually in their
28relations with the state, agencies or departments of the state,
29contractors of the state, parents, or othersbegin insert, or their rights to speak
30to and petition the government with respect to all aspects of the
31state’s child care program or any other topicend insert.
Family child care providers are not public employees,
33and this article does not create an employer-employee relationship
34between family child care providers and the state or a public or
35private nonprofit entity for any purpose, including, but not limited
36to, eligibility for health or retirement benefits or vicarious liability
37in tort. This article does not alter the status of a family child care
38provider as a business owner, an employee of a family, or a
39contractor.
This article does not alter the rights of families to select,
2direct, and terminate the services of family child care providers.
(a) Within 10 days of receipt of a request from a
4provider organization, the State Department of Social Services
5shall make available to that provider organization information
6regarding family child care providers described in paragraph (1)
7of subdivision (b) of Section 8431, including each provider’s name,
8home address, mailing address, telephone number, email address,
9and license number.
10(b) Within 30 days of receipt of a request from a provider
11organization, the State Department of Education, with the
12assistance of the State Department of Social Services and any state
13department or agency, or its contractor or subcontractor, in
14possession of the relevant information, shall collect information
15regarding family child care providers, including
each provider’s
16name, home address, mailing address, telephone number, email
17address, unique provider identification number, if applicable, and
18shall make that information available to the provider organization.
19The provider organization shall bear the reasonable costs of
20collecting the information described in this subdivision to the
21extent that the state is not already collecting it and is not already
22required by federal or state law or regulation to collect it.
23(c) Upon the request of a certified provider organization, the
24State Department of Social Services and the State Department of
25Education shall make available to that organization the information
26specified in subdivisions (a) and (b), updated on a monthly basis.
27(d) A provider organization under this article shall be considered
28a day care organization for purposes of subdivisions (b) and (c) of
29Section 1596.86 of the
Health and Safety Code. All confidentiality
30requirements applicable to recipients of information pursuant to
31Section 1596.86 of the Health and Safety Code apply to provider
32organizations and shall apply also to protect the personal
33information of family child care providers as defined in paragraph
34(2) of subdivision (b) of Section 8431. Information provided
35pursuant to this section shall be used only for purposes of
36organizing and representing family child care providers.
37(e) Upon written request of a family child care provider, the
38State Department of Education and the State Department of Social
39Services shall remove the family child care provider’s home
40address and home telephone number from the mailing lists
P10 1referenced in subdivisions (a), (b), and (c) before to the release
2of the lists.
(a) begin deleteAn end deletebegin insertThe end insertappropriate unit of family child care
4providers, as described in subdivision (e), may designate, in
5accordance with the provisions of this article, the provider
6organization, if any, that shall be its exclusive representative. The
7board shall certify a provider organization designated by an
8appropriate unit of family child care providers as the exclusive
9representative of those providers.
10(b) Requests for elections, challenges, and competing claims,
11requests for intervention, and requests for decertification shall be
12filed with, received by, and
acted upon by the board, provided that
13a valid petition for a certification or decertification election is
14resolved by a secret ballot election among family child care
15providers. The board may designate a neutral third party to act on
16any of the requests filed with the board pursuant to this subdivision.
17(c) The provider organization that presents a petition requesting
18certification shall pay the reasonable costs of verifying the number
19of family child care providers that have designated a provider
20organization to act as their exclusive representative. The board, or
21a neutral third party designated by the board to act on a request
22for certification election, shall consider a document evidencing a
23family child care provider’s support for a provider organization
24valid if it was signed by the family child care provider within two
25years of the date it is submitted to the board.
26(d) All provider organizations placed on the ballot shall share
27equally the cost of an election.
28(e) The only appropriate unit shall consist of all family child
29care providers in the state.
30(f) A certified provider organization shall represent each
31provider in the represented unit fairly with respect to matters within
32the scope of the certified provider organization’s role as exclusive
33representative of the bargaining unit, without discrimination and
34without regard to whether the provider is a member of the provider
35organization.
The scope of representation shall include all of the
37following:
38(a) The administration of laws and regulations governing
39licensing for providers.
40(b) Joint labor-management committees.
P11 1(c) Contract grievance arbitration.
2(d) Expanded access to professional development and training
3opportunities for providers, including, but not limited to, through
4the training partnership established pursuant to Section 8439.5,
5and state contributions to the training partnership.
6(e) Benefits for providers.
7(f) Payment procedures for state-funded child care programs.
8(g) Reimbursement rates, including, but not limited to, rate
9add-ons for providers who complete additional training, and other
10economic matters.
11(h) Expanded access tobegin insert and funding forend insert food and nutrition
12programs.
13(i) The deduction of membership dues and other voluntary
14deductions authorized by individual family child care providers,
15including, but not limited to, honoring maintenance of checkoff
16agreements, and allocation of the costs of implementing such a
17deduction system.
18(j) Expanded access to the state-funded child care
program to
19families in need of subsidies.
20(k) Any changes to current practice other than those listed in
21subdivisions (a) to (j), inclusive, that would do any of the
22following:
23(1) Improve recruitment and retention of qualified providers.
24(2) Improve the quality of the programs.
25(3) Encourage qualified providers to seek additional education
26and training.
27(4) Promote the health and safety of providers and the children
28in their care.
(a) The Governor, through the Department of Human
30Resources, in consultation with the Superintendent, other state
31agencies that administerbegin delete programs of publicly funded child careend delete
32begin insert state-funded child care programsend insert, and their contractors, as needed,
33shall meet and confer in good faith regarding all matters within
34the scope of representation with representatives of a certified
35provider organization and, before arriving at a determination of
36policy or course of action, shall consider fully the presentations
37made by the certified provider organization on behalf of the
38providers it represents.
39(b) As used in this section, “meet and confer in good faith”
40means that the Governor, through the Department of Human
P12 1Resources, and representatives of the certified provider
2organization shall have the mutual obligation to meet and confer
3promptly upon request by either party and continue for a reasonable
4period of time in order to exchange freely information, opinions,
5and proposals. The duty to meet and confer in good faith also
6requires the parties to begin negotiations sufficiently in advance
7of the adoption of the state’s final budget for the ensuing fiscal
8year so that there is adequate time for agreement to be reached
9before the adoption of the final budget and for the resolution of
10an impasse.
(a) If agreement is reached between the Governor,
12through the Department of Human Resources, and the certified
13provider organization, they jointly shall prepare a written
14memorandum of understanding. Any portions of the memorandum
15of understanding requiring appropriation by the Legislature or
16statutory or regulatory revisions shall be subject to legislative
17approval of those appropriations or statutory or regulatory
18revisions.
19(b) A memorandum of understanding between the Governor,
20through the Department of Human Resources, and the certified
21provider organization is binding on all state departments and
22agencies that are involved in the administration of the state-funded
23child care program, and the relevant contractors or subcontractors
24of
those departments and agencies.
25(c) An agreement pursuant to this section may provide for
26binding arbitration of grievances concerning the interpretation,
27application, or violation of the agreement.
28(d) This article does not alter the requirements governing the
29child care reimbursement system that are set forth in Section 8222.
(a) A certified provider organization shall have the right
31to enter into an agreement with the state that provides that the state
32will require entities that make subsidy payments to providers,
33including the contractors or subcontractors of state agencies and
34departments, to deduct membership dues and other voluntary
35deductions from those subsidy payments.
36(b) If the deduction of membership dues or other voluntary
37deductions for a provider requires action by more than one agency,
38department, contractor, or subcontractor, the certified provider
39organization shall establish procedures to ensure both of the
40following:
P13 1(1) The total amount deducted does not exceed the total dues
2and
other voluntary deductions owed by that provider.
3(2) The administrative procedures for deducting dues and other
4voluntary deductions are reasonable.
5(c) The state, its agencies and departments, and their contractors
6and subcontractors shall not be liable in any action by a provider
7seeking recovery of, or damage for, improper calculation or use
8of dues or other voluntary deductions.
(a) It is unlawful for the state, including its agencies,
10boards, commissions, departments, public benefit corporations,
11political subdivisions, contractors, subcontractors, or employees,
12to do tobegin insert theend insert providers or provider organizations any of the things
13made unlawful under Section 3519 of the Government Code.
14(b) It shall be unlawful for a provider organization to do to the
15state or tobegin insert theend insert providers any of the things made unlawful under
16Section 3519.5 of the Government Code.
17(c) For purposes of subdivisions (a) and (b), the references in
18subdivision (e) of Section 3519 of, and subdivision (d) of Section
193519.5 of, the Government Code to “the mediation procedure set
20forth in Section 3518” shall be deemed to refer to the impasse
21procedures set forth in Section 8437.5.
22(d) The initial determination as to whether charges of unfair
23practices are justified and, if so, what remedy is necessary to
24effectuate the purposes of this article shall be a matter within the
25exclusive jurisdiction of the board.
A provider organization shall not direct or call a strike.
If after a reasonable period of time the parties fail to
28reach agreement, the parties may agree to submit unresolved issues
29to the California State Mediation and Conciliation Service
30established by the Department of Industrial Relations for mediation
31or binding arbitration, or either party may declare that an impasse
32has been reached and request the board to appoint a mediator or
33an arbitrator from the California State Mediation and Conciliation
34Service to perform mediation or binding arbitration. A
35memorandum of understanding reached by means of mediation or
36arbitration is subject to appropriation by the Legislature and
37necessary statutory and regulatory revisions.
If orientations are held for providers by the state or any
39department, contractor, agency, or political subdivision of the state,
40a certified provider organization shall be permitted to make a brief
P14 1presentation about the organization and its activities, its
2negotiations and memorandum of understanding, and membership
3at the orientation.
It is the intent of the Legislature to create ____
5additional slots in alternative payment voucher programs for
6children living in extreme poverty, defined as 50 percent of the
7federal poverty level, pending approval through the annual budget
8process.
(a) Thebegin delete ____end deletebegin insert Governor or his or her designeeend insert shall
10perform a study of best practices for engaging families in their
11children’s early care and education in family child care settings,
12and of federal and other funding streams that could support this
13work without reducing the availability and affordability of child
14care in California, and shall report to the Legislature and the
15Department of Finance, on or before January 1, 2017, with its
16findings and a proposed framework of priorities in which to invest.
17In performing the study, thebegin delete ____end deletebegin insert
Governor or his or her designeeend insert
18 shall consult with stakeholders, including thebegin insert Stateend insert Department of
19Social Services, First 5 California, and organizations that represent
20parents with young children, particularlybegin delete lowerincomeend deletebegin insert lower
21incomeend insert and non-English-speaking families, to consider how best
22to engage and support those families in a culturally competent
23manner.
24(b) (1) A report submitted to the Legislature pursuant to this
25section shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the
26Government Code.
27(2) The requirement
for submitting a report pursuant to this
28section shall become inoperative on January 1, 2021, pursuant to
29Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.
(a) If a provider organization is certified pursuant to
31Section 8434, the state and the certified provider organization shall
32establish a training partnership that will consist of a Joint
33Committee on Child Care Training, Education, and Quality
34Improvement, made up of representatives of the certified provider
35organization and designees of the Governor. The provider
36organization shall establish a training program that shall carry out
37the recommendations of the committee.
38(b) The committee shall meet to identify gaps in the training
39available to family child care providersbegin insert and barriers that prevent
40family child care providers from gaining greater skills and
P15 1
accessing postsecondary education,end insert and issue recommendations
2begin insert on an annual basisend insert to improve the quality of care offered by
3licensed and licensed-exempt family child care providers.
4(c) The committee shall play a coordinating role in ensuring
5that the training offered to providers through the training program
6meets the state’s needs for the child care workforce; satisfies the
7health, safety, and educational standards prescribed by the state;
8aligns with the state’s quality rating systems; and identifies and
9works to eliminate barriers to providers accessing training.
10(d) The committee’s recommendations may include, but are not
11limited to: ways to access federal and private funding for training
12to expand capacity to existing state training resources,
such as
13general education classes and English language learner classes;
14ways to support providers who seek to obtainbegin insert training orend insert higher
15education credentials in child development; ways for the training
16program to work with existing training providers and educational
17institutions, including, but not limited to, resource and referral
18networks, community colleges, and apprenticeship programs; and
19ways for the training program to make training and education
20available to child carebegin insert workersend insert and other workers employed by
21child care centers and schools.
22(e) It is the intent of the Legislature to allocate funds in the
23Budget Act of 2015, in the amount of one million dollars
24($1,000,000), to carry out the initial recommendations of the
25
committee. It is the intent of the Legislature, that in subsequent
26years, the recommendations of the committee shall be funded by
27contributions agreed to for that purpose in the memorandum of
28understanding between the provider organization and the Governor,
29through the Department of Human Resources, as specified in
30Section 8435.5.
O
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