AB 1477,
as amended, Committee on Budget. begin deleteBudget Act of 2014. end deletebegin insertHuman services.end insert
(1) Under existing law, the State Department of Social Services regulates the licensure and operation of various types of facilities, including community care facilities and residential care facilities for the elderly.
end insertbegin insertExisting law authorizes the department to appoint a temporary manager to assume the operation of a community care facility or residential care facility for the elderly for 60 days, subject to extension by the department, when specified circumstances exist. To the extent department funds are used for the costs of the temporary manager or related expenses, existing law requires the department to be reimbursed from the revenues accruing to the facility or to the licensee, and to the extent those revenues are insufficient, requires that the unreimbursed amount constitute a lien upon the asset of the facility or the proceeds from the sale of the facility.
end insertbegin insertExisting law also authorizes the department to apply for a court order appointing a receiver to temporarily operate a community care facility or a residential care facility for the elderly for no more than 3 months, subject to extension by the department, when certain circumstances exist. To the extent that state funds are used to pay for the salary of the receiver or other related expenses, existing law requires the state be reimbursed from the revenues accruing to the facility or to the licensee or the entity related to the license, and to the extent that those revenues are insufficient, requires the unreimbursed amount constitute a lien on the assets of the facility or the proceeds from the sale of the facility.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would instead provide that if the revenues are insufficient to reimburse the department for the costs of the temporary manager, the salary of the receiver, or related expenses, the unreimbursed amount shall constitute grounds for a monetary judgment in civil court and subsequent lien upon the assets of the facility or the proceeds from the sale thereof. The bill would make other related changes to these provisions. The bill would provide that liens placed against the personal and real property of a licensee for reimbursement of funds relating to the receivership be given judgment creditor priority.
end insertbegin insert(2) Existing law requires each county to provide cash assistance and other social services to needy families through the California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids (CalWORKs) program using federal Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) block grant program, state, and county funds. Existing law specifies the amounts of cash aid to be paid each month to CalWORKs recipients. Existing law continuously appropriates moneys from the General Fund to defray a portion of county costs under the CalWORKs program.
end insertbegin insertExisting law establishes the Aid to Families with Dependent Children-Foster Care (AFDC-FC) program, under which counties provide payments to foster care providers on behalf of qualified children in foster care. Under existing law, a child is eligible for AFDC-FC if he or she is placed in the approved home of a relative and is otherwise eligible for federal financial participation in the AFDC-FC payment, as specified. Existing law, beginning January 1, 2015, establishes the Approved Relative Caregiver Funding Option Program in counties choosing to participate, for the purpose of making the amount paid to relative caregivers for the in-home care of children placed with them who are ineligible for AFDC-FC payments equal to the amount paid on behalf of children who are eligible for AFDC-FC payments.
end insertbegin insertExisting law requires that the related child placed in the home meet certain requirements in order to be eligible under the Approved Relative Caregiver Funding Option Program and requires that specified funding be used for the program.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would require, for purposes of this program, that the care and placement of the child be the responsibility of the county welfare department or the county probation department. The bill would also, for purposes of funding the program, delete the requirement that the funding of the applicable per-child CalWORKs grant be limited to the federal funds received.
end insertbegin insert(3) Under existing law, foster care providers licensed as group homes have rates established by classifying each group home program and applying a standardized schedule of rates. Existing law prohibits the establishment of a new group home rate or change to an existing rate under the AFDC-FC program, except for exemptions granted by the department on a case-by-case basis. Existing law also limits, for the 2012-13 and 2013-14 fiscal years, exceptions for any program with a rate classification level below 10 to exceptions associated with a program change.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would extend that limitation to the 2014-15 fiscal year.
end insertbegin insert(4) Existing law requires each applicant or recipient to assign to the county, as a condition of eligibility for aid paid under CalWORKs, any rights to support from any other person the applicant or recipient may have on his or her own behalf, or on behalf of any other family member for whom the applicant or recipient is applying for or receiving aid, and to cooperate with the county welfare department and local child support agency in establishing the paternity of a child of the applicant or recipient born out of wedlock with respect to whom aid is claimed, and in establishing, modifying, or enforcing a support order with respect to a child of the individual for whom aid is requested or obtained. Existing law exempts from these provisions an assistance unit that excludes any adults pursuant to specified provisions of law, including a provision that makes an individual ineligible for CalWORKs aid if the individual has been convicted in state or federal court for a felony drug conviction, as specified, after December 31, 1997.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would provide that if the income for an assistance unit that excludes any adults as described above includes reasonably anticipated income derived from child support, the first $50 of any amount of child support received each month shall not be considered income or resources and shall not be deducted from the amount of aid to which the assistance unit otherwise would be eligible.
end insertbegin insert(5) Existing law establishes the In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) program, administered by the State Department of Social Services and counties, under which qualified aged, blind, and disabled persons are provided with services in order to permit them to remain in their own homes and avoid institutionalization. Existing law establishes the Medi-Cal program, administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, under which qualified low-income individuals receive health care services. The Medi-Cal program is, in part, governed and funded by federal Medicaid Program provisions. Existing law authorizes certain Medi-Cal recipients to receive waiver personal care services, as defined, in order to allow the recipients to remain in their own homes.
end insertbegin insertExisting law requires that in-home supportive services and waiver personal care services be performed by providers within a workweek that does not exceed 66 hours per week, as reduced by a specified net percentage.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would, if certain conditions are met, deem a provider authorized to work a recipient’s county-approved adjusted hours for the week when a recipient’s weekly authorized hours are adjusted and at the time of adjustment the recipient currently receives all authorized hours of services from one provider.
end insertbegin insert(6) Existing law authorizes the State Department of Social Services to implement specified provisions of the Chapter 29 of the Statutes of 2014 through all-county letters or similar instructions and requires the department to adopt emergency regulations implementing these provisions no later than January 1, 2016.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would extend that authorization for all-county letters and similar instructions to additional provisions of Chapter 29 of the Statutes of 2014 that relate to the CalFresh program.
end insertbegin insert(7) Item 5180-151-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2014 appropriated $1,435,400,000 to the State Department of Social Services for local assistance for children and adult services, which includes, among other things, increased costs associated with cases of child abuse and neglect and revised federal requirements for child welfare case reviews, and funds for the Commercially Sexually Exploited Children Program. Item 5180-153-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2014 also appropriated $1,901,000 to the State Department of Social Services for local assistance for increased costs associated with revised county collection and reporting activities for cases of child abuse and neglect and revised federal requirements for child welfare case reviews.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would revise these items by increasing the appropriation in Item 5180-151-0001 by $1,686,000 for the Commercially Sexually Exploited Children Program, and by reducing the appropriation in Item 5180-153-0001 by $1,686,000.
end insertbegin insert(8) This bill would provide that the continuous appropriation applicable to CalWORKs is not made for purposes of implementing the bill.
end insertbegin insert(9) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.
end insertThis bill would express the intent of the Legislature to enact statutory changes relating to the Budget Act of 2014.
end deleteVote: majority.
Appropriation: begin deleteno end deletebegin insertyesend insert.
Fiscal committee: begin deleteno end deletebegin insertyesend insert.
State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
begin insertSection 1546.1 of the end insertbegin insertHealth and Safety Codeend insertbegin insert, as
2added by Section 11 of Chapter 29 of the Statutes of 2014, is
3amended to read:end insert
(a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting
5this section to authorize the department to take quick, effective
6action to protect the health and safety of clients of community care
7facilities and to minimize the effects of transfer trauma that
8accompany the abrupt transfer of clients by appointing a temporary
9manager to assume the operation of a facility that is found to be
10in a condition in which continued operation by the licensee or his
11or her representative presents a substantial probability of imminent
12danger of serious physical harm or death to the clients.
13(2) A temporary manager appointed pursuant to this section
14shall assume the operation of the facility in order to bring it into
15compliance with the law, facilitate a
transfer of ownership to a
16new licensee, or ensure the orderly transfer of clients should the
17facility be required to close. Upon a final decision and order of
18revocation of the license or a forfeiture by operation of law, the
19department shall immediately issue a provisional license to the
20appointed temporary manager. Notwithstanding the applicable
21sections of this code governing the revocation of a provisional
P6 1license, the provisional license issued to a temporary manager shall
2automatically expire upon the termination of the temporary
3manager. The temporary manager shall possess the provisional
4license solely for purposes of carrying out the responsibilities
5authorized by this section and the duties set forth in the written
6agreement between the department and the temporary manager.
7The temporary manager shall have no right to appeal the expiration
8of the provisional license.
9(b) For purposes of this section, “temporary manager” means
10the
person, corporation, or other entity appointed temporarily by
11the department as a substitute facility licensee or administrator
12with authority to hire, terminate, reassign staff, obligate facility
13funds, alter facility procedures, and manage the facility to correct
14deficiencies identified in the facility’s operation. The temporary
15manager shall have the final authority to direct the care and
16supervision activities of any person associated with the facility,
17including superseding the authority of the licensee and the
18administrator.
19(c) The director may appoint a temporary manager when it is
20determined that it is necessary to temporarily suspend any license
21of a community care facility pursuant to Section 1550.5 and any
22of the following circumstances exist:
23(1) The immediate relocation of the clients is not feasible based
24on transfer trauma, lack of alternate placements, or other
emergency
25considerations for the health and safety of the clients.
26(2) The licensee is unwilling or unable to comply with the
27requirements of Section 1556 for the safe and orderly relocation
28of clients when ordered to do so by the department.
29(d) (1) Upon appointment, the temporary manager shall
30complete its application for a license to operate a community care
31facility and take all necessary steps and make best efforts to
32eliminate any substantial threat to the health and safety to clients
33or complete the transfer of clients to alternative placements
34pursuant to Section 1556. For purposes of a provisional license
35issued to a temporary manager, the licensee’s existing fire safety
36clearance shall serve as the fire safety clearance for the temporary
37manager’s provisional license.
38(2) A person
shall not impede the operation of a temporary
39manager. The temporary manager’s access to, or possession of,
40the property shall not be interfered with during the term of the
P7 1temporary manager appointment. There shall be an automatic stay
2for a 60-day period subsequent to the appointment of a temporary
3manager of any action that would interfere with the functioning
4of the facility, including, but not limited to, termination of utility
5services, attachments or set-offs of client trust funds, and
6repossession of equipment in the facility.
7(e) (1) The appointment of a temporary manager shall be
8immediately effective and shall continue for a period not to exceed
960 days unless otherwise extended in accordance with paragraph
10(2) of subdivision (h) at the discretion of the department or
11otherwise terminated earlier by any of the following events:
12(A) The temporary
manager notifies the department, and the
13department verifies, that the facility meets state and, if applicable,
14federal standards for operation, and will be able to continue to
15maintain compliance with those standards after the termination of
16the appointment of the temporary manager.
17(B) The department approves a new temporary manager.
18(C) A new operator is licensed.
19(D) The department closes the facility.
20(E) A hearing or court order ends the temporary manager
21appointment, including the appointment of a receiver under Section
221546.2.
23(F) The appointment is terminated by the department or the
24temporary manager.
25(2) The
appointment of a temporary manager shall authorize
26the temporary manager to act pursuant to this section. The
27appointment shall be made pursuant to a written agreement between
28the temporary manager and the department that outlines the
29circumstances under which the temporary manager may expend
30funds. The department shall provide the licensee and administrator
31with a copy of the accusation to appoint a temporary manager at
32the time of appointment. The accusation shall notify the licensee
33of the licensee’s right to petition the Office of Administrative
34Hearings for a hearing to contest the appointment of the temporary
35manager as described in subdivision (f) and shall provide the
36licensee with a form and appropriate information for the licensee’s
37use in requesting a hearing.
38(3) The director may rescind the appointment of a temporary
39manager and appoint a new temporary manager at any time that
P8 1the director determines the temporary manager is not
adhering to
2the conditions of the appointment.
3(f) (1) The licensee of a community care facility may contest
4the appointment of the temporary manager by filing a petition for
5an order to terminate the appointment of the temporary manager
6with the Office of Administrative Hearings within 15 days from
7the date of mailing of the accusation to appoint a temporary
8manager under subdivision (e). On the same day as the petition is
9filed with the Office of Administrative Hearings, the licensee shall
10serve a copy of the petition to the office of the director.
11(2) Upon receipt of a petition under paragraph (1), the Office
12of Administrative Hearings shall set a hearing date and time within
1310 business days of the receipt of the petition. The office shall
14promptly notify the licensee and the department of the date, time,
15and place of the hearing. The office shall assign
the case to an
16administrative law judge. At the hearing, relevant evidence may
17be presented pursuant to Section 11513 of the Government Code.
18The administrative law judge shall issue a written decision on the
19petition within 10 business days of the conclusion of the hearing.
20The 10-day time period for holding the hearing and for rendering
21a decision may be extended by the written agreement of the parties.
22(3) The administrative law judge shall uphold the appointment
23of the temporary manager if the department proves, by a
24preponderance of the evidence, that the circumstances specified
25in subdivision (c) applied to the facility at the time of the
26appointment. The administrative law judge shall order the
27termination of the temporary manager if the burden of proof is not
28satisfied.
29(4) The decision of the administrative law judge is subject to
30judicial review as provided in Section
1094.5 of the Code of Civil
31Procedure by the superior court of the county where the facility is
32located. This review may be requested by the licensee of the facility
33or the department by filing a petition seeking relief from the order.
34The petition may also request the issuance of temporary injunctive
35relief pending the decision on the petition. The superior court shall
36hold a hearing within 10 business days of the filing of the petition
37and shall issue a decision on the petition within 10 days of the
38hearing. The department may be represented by legal counsel
39within the department for purposes of court proceedings authorized
40under this section.
P9 1(g) If the licensee of the community care facility does not protest
2the appointment or does not prevail at either the administrative
3hearing under paragraph (2) of subdivision (f) or the superior court
4hearing under paragraph (4) of subdivision (f), the temporary
5manager shall continue in accordance
with subdivision (e).
6(h) (1) If the licensee of the community care facility petitions
7the Office of Administrative Hearings pursuant to subdivision (f),
8the appointment of the temporary manager by the director pursuant
9to this section shall continue until it is terminated by the
10administrative law judge or by the superior court, or it shall
11continue until the conditions of subdivision (e) are satisfied,
12whichever is earlier.
13(2) At any time during the appointment of the temporary
14manager, the director may request an extension of the appointment
15by filing a petition for hearing with the Office of Administrative
16Hearings and serving a copy of the petition on the licensee. The
17office shall proceed as specified in paragraph (2) of subdivision
18(f). The administrative law judge may extend the appointment of
19the temporary manager an additional 60 days upon a
showing by
20the department that the conditions specified in subdivision (c)
21continue to exist.
22(3) The licensee or the department may request review of the
23administrative law judge’s decision on the extension as provided
24in paragraph (4) of subdivision (f).
25(i) The temporary manager appointed pursuant to this section
26shall meet the following qualifications:
27(1) Be qualified to oversee correction of deficiencies on the
28basis of experience and education.
29(2) Not be the subject of any pending actions by the department
30or any other state agency nor have ever been excluded from a
31department licensed facility or had a license or certification
32suspended or revoked by an administrative action by the
33department or any other state agency.
34(3) Have no financial ownership interest in the facility and have
35no member of his or her immediate family who has a financial
36ownership interest in the facility.
37(4) Not currently serve, or within the past two years have served,
38as a member of the staff of the facility.
39(j) Payment of the costs of the temporary manager shall comply
40with the following requirements:
P10 1(1) Upon agreement with the licensee, the costs of the temporary
2manager and any other expenses in connection with the temporary
3management shall be paid directly by the facility while the
4temporary manager is assigned to that facility. Failure of the
5licensee to agree to the payment of those costs may result in the
6payment of the costs by the department and subsequent required
7reimbursement of
the department by the licensee pursuant to this
8section.
9(2) Direct costs of the temporary manager shall be equivalent
10to the sum of the following:
11(A) The prevailing fee paid by licensees for positions of the
12same type in the facility’s geographic area.
13(B) Additional costs that reasonably would have been incurred
14by the licensee if the licensee and the temporary manager had been
15in an employment relationship.
16(C) Any other reasonable costs incurred by the temporary
17manager in furnishing services pursuant to this section.
18(3) May exceed the amount specified in paragraph (2) if the
19department is otherwise unable to attract a qualified temporary
20manager.
21(k) (1) The responsibilities of the temporary manager may
22include, but are not limited to, the following:
23(A) Paying wages to staff. The temporary manager shall have
24the full power to hire, direct, manage, and discharge employees
25of the facility, subject to any contractual rights they may have.
26The temporary manager shall pay employees at the same rate of
27compensation, including benefits, that the employees would have
28received from the licensee or wages necessary to provide adequate
29staff for the protection of clients and compliance with the law.
30(B) Preserving client funds. The temporary manager shall be
31entitled to, and shall take possession of, all property or assets of
32clients that are in the possession of the licensee or administrator
33of the facility. The temporary manager shall preserve all
property,
34assets, and records of clients of which the temporary manager takes
35possession.
36(C) Contracting for outside services as may be needed for the
37operation of the facility. Any contract for outside services in excess
38of five thousand dollars ($5,000) shall be approved by the director.
39(D) Paying commercial creditors of the facility to the extent
40required to operate the facility. The temporary manager shall honor
P11 1all leases, mortgages, and secured transactions affecting the
2building in which the facility is located and all goods and fixtures
3in the building, but only to the extent of payments that, in the case
4of a rental agreement, are for the use of the property during the
5period of the temporary management, or that, in the case of a
6purchase agreement, come due during the period of the temporary
7management.
8(E) Doing all things necessary and proper to maintain and
9operate the facility in accordance with sound fiscal policies. The
10temporary manager shall take action as is reasonably necessary to
11protect or conserve the assets or property of which the temporary
12manager takes possession and may use those assets or property
13only in the performance of the powers and duties set out in this
14section.
15(2) Expenditures by the temporary manager in excess of five
16thousand dollars ($5,000) shall be approved by the director. Total
17encumbrances and expenditures by the temporary manager for the
18duration of the temporary management shall not exceed the sum
19of forty-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars ($49,999)
20unless approved by the director in writing.
21(3) The temporary manager shall make no capital improvements
22to the facility in excess of five thousand dollars ($5,000)
without
23the approval of the director.
24(l) (1) To the extent department funds are advanced for the
25costs of the temporary manager or for other expenses in connection
26with the temporary management, the department shall be
27reimbursed from the revenues accruing to the facility or to the
28licensee or an entity related to the licensee. Any reimbursement
29received by the department shall be redeposited in the account
30from which the department funds were advanced. If the revenues
31are insufficient to reimburse the department, the unreimbursed
32amount shall constitutebegin delete aend deletebegin insert grounds for a monetary judgment in civil
33court and a subsequentend insert lien upon the assets of the facility or the
34proceeds from the sale thereof.begin delete Theend deletebegin insert
Pursuant to Chapter 2
35(commencing with Section 697.510) of Division 2 of Title 9 of Part
362 of the Code of Civil Procedure, aend insert lien against the personal assets
37of the facility or an entity related to the licenseebegin insert based on the
38monetary judgment obtainedend insert shall be filed with the Secretary of
39State on the forms required for a notice of judgment lien. A lien
40against the real property of the facility or an entity related to the
P12 1licenseebegin insert based on the monetary judgment obtainedend insert shall be
2recorded with the county recorder of the county where the facility
3of the licensee is located or where the real property of the entity
4related to the licensee is located. The lien shall not attach to the
5interests of a lessor, unless the lessor is operating the facility. The
6
authority to place a lien against the personal and real property of
7the licensee for the reimbursement of any state funds expended
8pursuant to this section shall be given judgment creditor priority.
9(2) For purposes of this section, “entity related to the licensee”
10means an entity, other than a natural person, of which the licensee
11is a subsidiary or an entity in which a person who was obligated
12to disclose information under Section 1520 possesses an interest
13that would also require disclosure pursuant to Section 1520.
14(m) Appointment of a temporary manager under this section
15does not relieve the licensee of any responsibility for the care and
16supervision of clients under this chapter. The licensee, even if the
17license is deemed surrendered or the facility abandoned, shall be
18required to reimburse the department for all costs associated with
19operation of the facility during the
period the temporary manager
20is in place that are not accounted for by using facility revenues or
21for the relocation of clients handled by the department if the
22licensee fails to comply with the relocation requirements of Section
231556 when required by the department to do so. If the licensee
24fails to reimburse the department under this section, then the
25department, along with using its own remedies available under
26this chapter, may request that the Attorney General’s office, the
27city attorney’s office, or the local district attorney’s office seek
28any available criminal, civil, or administrative remedy, including,
29but not limited to, injunctive relief, restitution, and damages in the
30same manner as provided for in Chapter 5 (commencing with
31Section 17200) of Part 2 of Division 7 of the Business and
32Professions Code.
33(n) The department may use funds from the emergency client
34contingency account pursuant to Section 1546 when needed to
35supplement
the operation of the facility or the transfer of clients
36under the control of the temporary manager appointed under this
37section if facility revenues are unavailable or exhausted when
38needed. Pursuant to subdivision (l), the licensee shall be required
39to reimburse the department for any funds used from the emergency
P13 1client contingency account during the period of control of the
2temporary manager and any incurred costs of collection.
3(o) This section does not apply to a residential facility that serves
4six or fewer persons and is also the principal residence of the
5licensee.
6(p) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the temporary
7manager shall be liable only for damages resulting from gross
8negligence in the operation of the facility or intentional tortious
9acts.
10(q) All governmental immunities otherwise
applicable to the
11state shall also apply to the state in the use of a temporary manager
12in the operation of a facility pursuant to this section.
13(r) A licensee shall not be liable for any occurrences during the
14temporary management under this section except to the extent that
15the occurrences are the result of the licensee’s conduct.
16(s) The department may adopt regulations for the administration
17of this section.
begin insertSection 1546.2 of the end insertbegin insertHealth and Safety Codeend insertbegin insert, as added
19by Section 12 of Chapter 29 of the Statutes of 2014, is amended
20to read:end insert
(a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this
22section to authorize the department to take quick, effective action
23to protect the health and safety of residents of community care
24facilities and to minimize the effects of transfer trauma that
25accompany the abrupt transfer of clients through a system whereby
26the department may apply for a court order appointing a receiver
27to temporarily operate a community care facility. The receivership
28is not intended to punish a licensee or to replace attempts to secure
29cooperative action to protect the clients’ health and safety. The
30receivership is intended to protect the clients in the absence of
31other reasonably available alternatives. The receiver shall assume
32the operation of the facility in order to bring it into compliance
33with law, facilitate a transfer of ownership to a
new licensee, or
34ensure the orderly transfer of clients should the facility be required
35to close.
36(b) (1) Whenever circumstances exist indicating that continued
37management of a community care facility by the current licensee
38would present a substantial probability or imminent danger of
39serious physical harm or death to the clients, or the facility is
40closing or intends to terminate operation as a community care
P14 1facility and adequate arrangements for relocation of clients have
2not been made at least 30 days prior to the closing or termination,
3the director may petition the superior court for the county in which
4the community care facility is located for an order appointing a
5receiver to temporarily operate the community care facility in
6accordance with this section.
7(2) The petition shall allege the facts upon which the action is
8based and shall be supported
by an affidavit of the director. A copy
9of the petition and affidavits, together with an order to appear and
10show cause why temporary authority to operate the community
11care facility should not be vested in a receiver pursuant to this
12section, shall be delivered to the licensee, administrator, or a
13responsible person at the facility to the attention of the licensee
14and administrator. The order shall specify a hearing date, which
15shall be not less than 10, nor more than 15, days following delivery
16of the petition and order upon the licensee, except that the court
17may shorten or lengthen the time upon a showing of just cause.
18(c) (1) If the director files a petition pursuant to subdivision (b)
19for appointment of a receiver to operate a community care facility,
20in accordance with Section 564 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
21the director may also petition the court, in accordance with Section
22527 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
for an order appointing a
23temporary receiver. A temporary receiver appointed by the court
24pursuant to this subdivision shall serve until the court has made a
25final determination on the petition for appointment of a receiver
26filed pursuant to subdivision (b). A receiver appointed pursuant
27to this subdivision shall have the same powers and duties as a
28receiver would have if appointed pursuant to subdivision (b). Upon
29the director filing a petition for a receiver, the receiver shall
30complete its application for a provisional license to operate a
31community care facility. For purposes of a provisional license
32issued to a receiver, the licensee’s existing fire safety clearance
33shall serve as the fire safety clearance for the receiver’s provisional
34license.
35(2) At the time of the hearing, the department shall advise the
36licensee of the name of the proposed receiver. The receiver shall
37be a certified community care facility administrator or other
38
responsible person or entity, as determined by the court, from a
39list of qualified receivers established by the department, and, if
40need be, with input from providers of residential care and consumer
P15 1representatives. Persons appearing on the list shall have experience
2in the delivery of care services to clients of community care
3facilities, and, if feasible, shall have experience with the operation
4of a community care facility, shall not be the subject of any pending
5actions by the department or any other state agency, and shall not
6have ever been excluded from a department licensed facility nor
7have had a license or certification suspended or revoked by an
8administrative action by the department or any other state agency.
9The receivers shall have sufficient background and experience in
10management and finances to ensure compliance with orders issued
11by the court. The owner, licensee, or administrator shall not be
12appointed as the receiver unless authorized by the court.
13(3) If at the conclusion of the hearing, which may include oral
14testimony and cross-examination at the option of any party, the
15court determines that adequate grounds exist for the appointment
16of a receiver and that there is no other reasonably available remedy
17to protect the clients, the court may issue an order appointing a
18receiver to temporarily operate the community care facility and
19enjoining the licensee from interfering with the receiver in the
20conduct of his or her duties. In these proceedings, the court shall
21make written findings of fact and conclusions of law and shall
22require an appropriate bond to be filed by the receiver and paid
23for by the licensee. The bond shall be in an amount necessary to
24protect the licensee in the event of any failure on the part of the
25receiver to act in a reasonable manner. The bond requirement may
26be waived by the licensee.
27(4) The court may
permit the licensee to participate in the
28continued operation of the facility during the pendency of any
29receivership ordered pursuant to this section and shall issue an
30order detailing the nature and scope of participation.
31(5) Failure of the licensee to appear at the hearing on the petition
32shall constitute an admission of all factual allegations contained
33in the petition for purposes of these proceedings only.
34(6) The licensee shall receive notice and a copy of the
35application each time the receiver applies to the court or the
36department for instructions regarding his or her duties under this
37section, when an accounting pursuant to subdivision (i) is
38submitted, and when any other report otherwise required under
39this section is submitted. The licensee shall have an opportunity
40to present objections or otherwise participate in those proceedings.
P16 1(d) A person shall not impede the operation of a receivership
2created under this section. The receiver’s access to, or possession
3of, the property shall not be interfered with during the term of the
4receivership. There shall be an automatic stay for a 60-day period
5subsequent to the appointment of a receiver of any action that
6would interfere with the functioning of the facility, including, but
7not limited to, cancellation of insurance policies executed by the
8licensees, termination of utility services, attachments or setoffs of
9client trust funds and working capital accounts, and repossession
10of equipment in the facility.
11(e) When a receiver is appointed, the licensee may, at the
12discretion of the court, be divested of possession and control of
13the facility in favor of the receiver. If the court divests the licensee
14of possession and control of the facility in favor of the receiver,
15
the department shall immediately issue a provisional license to the
16receiver. Notwithstanding the applicable sections of this code
17governing the revocation of a provisional license, the provisional
18license issued to a receiver shall automatically expire upon the
19termination of the receivership. The receiver shall possess the
20provisional license solely for purposes of carrying out the
21responsibilities authorized by this section and the duties ordered
22by the court. The receiver shall have no right to appeal the
23expiration of the provisional license.
24(f) A receiver appointed pursuant to this section:
25(1) May exercise those powers and shall perform those duties
26ordered by the court, in addition to other duties provided by statute.
27(2) Shall operate the facility in a manner that ensures the safety
28and adequate care for
the clients.
29(3) Shall have the same rights to possession of the building in
30which the facility is located, and of all goods and fixtures in the
31building at the time the petition for receivership is filed, as the
32licensee and administrator would have had if the receiver had not
33been appointed.
34(4) May use the funds, building, fixtures, furnishings, and any
35accompanying consumable goods in the provision of care and
36services to clients and to any other persons receiving services from
37the facility at the time the petition for receivership was filed.
38(5) Shall take title to all revenue coming to the facility in the
39name of the receiver who shall use it for the following purposes
40in descending order of priority:
P17 1(A) To pay wages to staff. The receiver shall
have full power
2to hire, direct, manage, and discharge employees of the facility,
3subject to any contractual rights they may have. The receiver shall
4pay employees at the same rate of compensation, including
5benefits, that the employees would have received from the licensee
6or wages necessary to provide adequate staff for the protection of
7the clients and compliance with the law.
8(B) To preserve client funds. The receiver shall be entitled to,
9and shall take, possession of all property or assets of clients that
10are in the possession of the licensee or operator of the facility. The
11receiver shall preserve all property, assets, and records of clients
12of which the receiver takes possession.
13(C) To contract for outside services as may be needed for the
14operation of the community care facility. Any contract for outside
15services in excess of five thousand dollars ($5,000) shall be
16
approved by the court.
17(D) To pay commercial creditors of the facility to the extent
18required to operate the facility. Except as provided in subdivision
19(h), the receiver shall honor all leases, mortgages, and secured
20transactions affecting the building in which the facility is located
21and all goods and fixtures in the building of which the receiver
22has taken possession, but only to the extent of payments which,
23in the case of a rental agreement, are for the use of the property
24during the period of receivership, or which, in the case of a
25purchase agreement, come due during the period of receivership.
26(E) To receive a salary, as approved by the court.
27(F) To do all things necessary and proper to maintain and operate
28the facility in accordance with sound fiscal policies. The receiver
29shall take action as is reasonably
necessary to protect or conserve
30the assets or property of which the receiver takes possession and
31may use those assets or property only in the performance of the
32powers and duties set out in this section and by order of the court.
33(G) To ask the court for direction in the treatment of debts
34incurred prior to the appointment, if the licensee’s debts appear
35extraordinary, of questionable validity, or unrelated to the normal
36and expected maintenance and operation of the facility, or if
37payment of the debts will interfere with the purposes of
38receivership.
39(g) (1) A person who is served with notice of an order of the
40court appointing a receiver and of the receiver’s name and address
P18 1shall be liable to pay the receiver, rather than the licensee, for any
2goods or services provided by the community care facility after
3the date of the order. The receiver shall give
a receipt for each
4payment and shall keep a copy of each receipt on file. The receiver
5shall deposit amounts received in a special account and shall use
6this account for all disbursements. Payment to the receiver pursuant
7to this subdivision shall discharge the obligation to the extent of
8the payment and shall not thereafter be the basis of a claim by the
9licensee or any other person. A client shall not be evicted nor may
10any contract or rights be forfeited or impaired, nor may any
11forfeiture be effected or liability increased, by reason of an
12omission to pay the licensee, operator, or other person a sum paid
13to the receiver pursuant to this subdivision.
14(2) This section shall not be construed to suspend, during the
15temporary management by the receiver, any obligation of the
16licensee for payment of local, state, or federal taxes. A licensee
17shall not be held liable for acts or omissions of the receiver during
18the term of the temporary
management.
19(3) Upon petition of the receiver, the court may order immediate
20payment to the receiver for past services that have been rendered
21and billed, and the court may also order a sum not to exceed one
22month’s advance payment to the receiver of any sums that may
23become payable under the Medi-Cal program.
24(h) (1) A receiver shall not be required to honor a lease,
25mortgage, or secured transaction entered into by the licensee of
26the facility and another party if the court finds that the agreement
27between the parties was entered into for a collusive, fraudulent
28purpose or that the agreement is unrelated to the operation of the
29facility.
30(2) A lease, mortgage, or secured transaction or an agreement
31unrelated to the operation of the facility that the receiver is
32permitted to dishonor pursuant to
this subdivision shall only be
33subject to nonpayment by the receiver for the duration of the
34receivership, and the dishonoring of the lease, mortgage, security
35interest, or other agreement, to this extent, by the receiver shall
36not relieve the owner or operator of the facility from any liability
37for the full amount due under the lease, mortgage, security interest,
38or other agreement.
39(3) If the receiver is in possession of real estate or goods subject
40to a lease, mortgage, or security interest that the receiver is
P19 1permitted to avoid pursuant to paragraph (1), and if the real estate
2or goods are necessary for the continued operation of the facility,
3the receiver may apply to the court to set a reasonable rent, price,
4or rate of interest to be paid by the receiver during the duration of
5the receivership. The court shall hold a hearing on this application
6within 15 days. The receiver shall send notice of the application
7to any known owner of the
property involved at least 10 days prior
8to the hearing.
9(4) Payment by the receiver of the amount determined by the
10court to be reasonable is a defense to any action against the receiver
11for payment or possession of the goods or real estate, subject to
12the lease or mortgage, which is brought by any person who received
13the notice required by this subdivision. However, payment by the
14receiver of the amount determined by the court to be reasonable
15shall not relieve the owner or operator of the facility from any
16liability for the difference between the amount paid by the receiver
17and the amount due under the original lease, mortgage, or security
18interest.
19(i) A monthly accounting shall be made by the receiver to the
20department of all moneys received and expended by the receiver
21on or before the 15th day of the following month or as ordered by
22the court, and the remainder of income
over expenses for that
23month shall be returned to the licensee. A copy of the accounting
24shall be provided to the licensee. The licensee or owner of the
25community care facility may petition the court for a determination
26as to the reasonableness of any expenditure made pursuant to
27paragraph (5) of subdivision (f).
28(j) (1) The receiver shall be appointed for an initial period of
29not more than three months. The initial three-month period may
30be extended for additional periods not exceeding three months, as
31determined by the court pursuant to this section. At the end of one
32month, the receiver shall report to the court on its assessment of
33the probability that the community care facility will meet state
34standards for operation by the end of the initial three-month period
35and will continue to maintain compliance with those standards
36after termination of the receiver’s management. If it appears that
37the facility cannot be
brought into compliance with state standards
38within the initial three-month period, the court shall take
39appropriate action as follows:
P20 1(A) Extend the receiver’s management for an additional three
2months if there is a substantial likelihood that the facility will meet
3state standards within that period and will maintain compliance
4with the standards after termination of the receiver’s management.
5The receiver shall report to the court in writing upon the facility’s
6progress at the end of six weeks of any extension ordered pursuant
7to this paragraph.
8(B) Order the director to revoke or temporarily suspend, or both,
9the license pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 1550)
10and extend the receiver’s management for the period necessary to
11transfer clients in accordance with the transfer plan, but for not
12more than three months from the date of initial appointment of a
13receiver,
or 14 days, whichever is greater. An extension of an
14additional three months may be granted if deemed necessary by
15the court.
16(2) If it appears at the end of six weeks of an extension ordered
17pursuant to subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1) that the facility
18cannot be brought into compliance with state standards for
19operation or that it will not maintain compliance with those
20standards after the receiver’s management is terminated, the court
21shall take appropriate action as specified in subparagraph (B) of
22paragraph (1).
23(3) In evaluating the probability that a community care facility
24will maintain compliance with state standards of operation after
25the termination of receiver management ordered by the court, the
26court shall consider at least the following factors:
27(A) The duration, frequency, and severity of past
violations in
28the facility.
29(B) History of compliance in other care facilities operated by
30the proposed licensee.
31(C) Efforts by the licensee to prevent and correct past violations.
32(D) The financial ability of the licensee to operate in compliance
33with state standards.
34(E) The recommendations and reports of the receiver.
35(4) Management of a community care facility operated by a
36receiver pursuant to this section shall not be returned to the
37licensee, to any person related to the licensee, or to any person
38who served as a member of the facility’s staff or who was
39employed by the licensee prior to the appointment of the receiver
40unless both of the following conditions are met:
P21 1(A) The department believes that it would be in the best interests
2of the clients of the facility, requests that the court return the
3operation of the facility to the former licensee, and provides clear
4and convincing evidence to the court that it is in the best interests
5of the facility’s clients to take that action.
6(B) The court finds that the licensee has fully cooperated with
7the department in the appointment and ongoing activities of a
8receiver appointed pursuant to this section, and, if applicable, any
9temporary manager appointed pursuant to Section 1546.1.
10(5) The owner of the facility may at any time sell, lease, or close
11the facility, subject to the following provisions:
12(A) If the owner closes the facility, or the sale or lease results
13in the
closure of the facility, the court shall determine if a transfer
14plan is necessary. If the court so determines, the court shall adopt
15and implement a transfer plan consistent with the provisions of
16Section 1556.
17(B) If the licensee proposes to sell or lease the facility and the
18facility will continue to operate as a community care facility, the
19court and the department shall reevaluate any proposed transfer
20plan. If the court and the department determine that the sale or
21lease of the facility will result in compliance with licensing
22standards, the transfer plan and the receivership shall, subject to
23those conditions that the court may impose and enforce, be
24terminated upon the effective date of the sale or lease.
25(k) (1) The salary of the receiver shall be set by the court
26commensurate with community care facility industry standards,
27giving due consideration
to the difficulty of the duties undertaken,
28and shall be paid from the revenue coming to the facility. If the
29revenue is insufficient to pay the salary in addition to other
30expenses of operating the facility, the receiver’s salary shall be
31paid from the emergency client contingency account as provided
32in Section 1546. State advances of funds in excess of five thousand
33dollars ($5,000) shall be approved by the director. Total advances
34for encumbrances and expenditures shall not exceed the sum of
35forty-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars ($49,999)
36unless approved by the director in writing.
37(2) To the extent state funds are advanced for the salary of the
38receiver or for other expenses in connection with the receivership,
39as limited by subdivision (g), the state shall be reimbursed from
40the revenues accruing to the facility or to the licensee or an entity
P22 1related to the licensee. Any reimbursement received by the state
2shall be
redeposited in the account from which the state funds were
3advanced. If the revenues are insufficient to reimburse the state,
4the unreimbursed amount shall constitutebegin delete aend deletebegin insert grounds for a monetary
5judgment in civil court and a subsequentend insert lien upon the assets of
6the facility or the proceeds from the sale thereof.begin delete Theend deletebegin insert Pursuant to
7Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 697.510) of Division 2 of
8Title 9 of Part 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure, aend insert lien against the
9personal assets of the facility or an entity related to the licensee
10begin insert
based on the monetary judgment obtainedend insert shall be filed with the
11Secretary of State on the forms required for a notice of judgment
12lien. A lien against the real property of the facility or an entity
13related to the licenseebegin insert based on the monetary judgment obtainedend insert
14 shall be recorded with the county recorder of the county where the
15facility of the licensee is located or where the real property of the
16entity related to the licensee is located. The lien shall not attach
17to the interests of a lessor, unless the lessor is operating the facility.
18begin insert The authority to place a lien against the personal and real property
19of the licensee for the reimbursement of any state funds expended
20pursuant to this section shall be given judgment creditor priority.end insert
21(3) For purposes of this subdivision, “entity related to the
22licensee” means an entity, other than a natural person, of which
23the licensee is a subsidiary or an entity in which any person who
24was obligated to disclose information under Section 1520 possesses
25an interest that would also require disclosure pursuant to Section
261520.
27(l) (1) This section does not impair the right of the owner of a
28community care facility to dispose of his or her property interests
29in the facility, but any facility operated by a receiver pursuant to
30this section shall remain subject to that administration until
31terminated by the court. The termination shall be promptly
32effectuated, provided that the interests of the clients have been
33safeguarded as determined by the court.
34(2) This section does not limit the power of
the court to appoint
35a receiver under any other applicable provision of law or to order
36any other remedy available under law.
37(m) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the receiver
38shall be liable only for damages resulting from gross negligence
39in the operation of the facility or intentional tortious acts.
P23 1(2) All governmental immunities otherwise applicable to the
2State of California shall also apply in the use of a receiver in the
3operation if a facility pursuant to this section.
4(3) The licensee shall not be liable for any occurrences during
5the receivership except to the extent that the occurrences are the
6result of the licensee’s conduct.
7(n) The department may adopt regulations for the administration
8of this
section. This section does not impair the authority of the
9department to temporarily suspend licenses under Section 1550.5
10or to reach a voluntary agreement with the licensee for alternate
11management of a community care facility including the use of a
12temporary manager under Section 1546.1. This section does not
13authorize the department to interfere in a labor dispute.
14(o) This section does not apply to a residential facility that serves
15six or fewer persons and is also the principal residence of the
16licensee.
17(p) This section does not apply to a licensee that has obtained
18a certificate of authority to offer continuing care contracts, as
19defined in paragraph (8) of subdivision (c) of Section 1771.
begin insertSection 1569.481 of the end insertbegin insertHealth and Safety Codeend insertbegin insert, as
21added by Section 24 of Chapter 29 of the Statutes of 2014, is
22amended to read:end insert
(a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting
24this section to authorize the department to take quick, effective
25action to protect the health and safety of residents of residential
26care facilities for the elderly and to minimize the effects of transfer
27trauma that accompany the abrupt transfer of residents by
28appointing a temporary manager to assume the operation of a
29facility that is found to be in a condition in which continued
30operation by the licensee or his or her representative presents a
31substantial probability of imminent danger of serious physical
32harm or death to the residents.
33(2) A temporary manager appointed pursuant to this section
34shall assume the operation of the facility in order to bring it into
35compliance with
the law, facilitate a transfer of ownership to a
36new licensee, or ensure the orderly transfer of residents should the
37facility be required to close. Upon a final decision and order of
38revocation of the license, issuance of a temporary suspension, or
39a forfeiture by operation of law, the department shall immediately
40issue a provisional license to the appointed temporary manager.
P24 1Notwithstanding the applicable sections of this code governing
2the revocation of a provisional license, the provisional license
3issued to a temporary manager shall automatically expire upon the
4termination of the temporary manager. The temporary manager
5shall possess the provisional license solely for purposes of carrying
6out the responsibilities authorized by this section and the duties
7set forth in the written agreement between the department and the
8temporary manager. The temporary manager shall have no right
9to appeal the expiration of the provisional license.
10(b) For purposes of this section, “temporary manager” means
11the person, corporation, or other entity appointed temporarily by
12the department as a substitute facility licensee or administrator
13with authority to hire, terminate, reassign staff, obligate facility
14funds, alter facility procedures, and manage the facility to correct
15deficiencies identified in the facility’s operation. The temporary
16manager shall have the final authority to direct the care and
17supervision activities of any person associated with the facility,
18including superseding the authority of the licensee and the
19administrator.
20(c) The director, in order to protect the residents of the facility
21from physical or mental abuse, abandonment, or any other
22substantial threat to health or safety, may appoint a temporary
23manager when any of the following circumstances exist:
24(1) The director determines that it
is necessary to temporarily
25suspend the license of a residential care facility for the elderly
26pursuant to Section 1569.50 and the immediate relocation of the
27residents is not feasible based on transfer trauma, lack of available
28alternative placements, or other emergency considerations for the
29health and safety of the residents.
30(2) The licensee is unwilling or unable to comply with the
31requirements of Section 1569.525 or the requirements of Section
321569.682 regarding the safe and orderly relocation of residents
33when ordered to do so by the department or when otherwise
34required by law.
35(3) The licensee has opted to secure a temporary manager
36pursuant to Section 1569.525.
37(d) (1) Upon appointment, the temporary manager shall
38complete its application for a license to operate a residential care
39
facility for the elderly and take all necessary steps and make best
40efforts to eliminate any substantial threat to the health and safety
P25 1to residents or complete the transfer of residents to alternative
2placements pursuant to Section 1569.525 or 1569.682. For purposes
3of a provisional license issued to a temporary manager, the
4licensee’s existing fire safety clearance shall serve as the fire safety
5clearance for the temporary manager’s provisional license.
6(2) A person shall not impede the operation of a temporary
7manager. The temporary manager’s access to, or possession of,
8the property shall not be interfered with during the term of the
9temporary manager appointment. There shall be an automatic stay
10for a 60-day period subsequent to the appointment of a temporary
11manager of any action that would interfere with the functioning
12of the facility, including, but not limited to, termination of utility
13services, attachments, or setoffs of resident
trust funds, and
14repossession of equipment in the facility.
15(e) (1) The appointment of a temporary manager shall be
16immediately effective and shall continue for a period not to exceed
1760 days unless otherwise extended in accordance with paragraph
18(2) of subdivision (h) at the discretion of the department or as
19permitted by paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 1569.525,
20or unless otherwise terminated earlier by any of the following
21events:
22(A) The temporary manager notifies the department, and the
23department verifies, that the facility meets state and, if applicable,
24federal standards for operation, and will be able to continue to
25maintain compliance with those standards after the termination of
26the appointment of the temporary manager.
27(B) The department approves a new temporary manager.
28(C) A new operator is licensed.
29(D) The department closes the facility.
30(E) A hearing or court order ends the temporary manager
31appointment, including the appointment of a receiver under Section
321569.482.
33(F) The appointment is terminated by the department or the
34temporary manager.
35(2) The appointment of a temporary manager shall authorize
36the temporary manager to act pursuant to this section. The
37appointment shall be made pursuant to a written agreement between
38the temporary manager and the department that outlines the
39circumstances under which the temporary manager may expend
40funds. The department shall provide the licensee and administrator
P26 1with a copy of the accusation to
appoint a temporary manager at
2the time of appointment. The accusation shall notify the licensee
3of the licensee’s right to petition the Office of Administrative
4Hearings for a hearing to contest the appointment of the temporary
5manager as described in subdivision (f) and shall provide the
6licensee with a form and appropriate information for the licensee’s
7use in requesting a hearing.
8(3) The director may rescind the appointment of a temporary
9manager and appoint a new temporary manager at any time that
10the director determines the temporary manager is not adhering to
11the conditions of the appointment.
12(f) (1) The licensee of a residential care facility for the elderly
13may contest the appointment of the temporary manager by filing
14a petition for an order to terminate the appointment of the
15temporary manager with the Office of Administrative Hearings
16within 15
days from the date of mailing of the accusation to appoint
17a temporary manager under subdivision (e). On the same day as
18the petition is filed with the Office of Administrative Hearings,
19the licensee shall serve a copy of the petition to the office of the
20director.
21(2) Upon receipt of a petition under paragraph (1), the Office
22of Administrative Hearings shall set a hearing date and time within
2310 business days of the receipt of the petition. The office shall
24promptly notify the licensee and the department of the date, time,
25and place of the hearing. The office shall assign the case to an
26administrative law judge. At the hearing, relevant evidence may
27be presented pursuant to Section 11513 of the Government Code.
28The administrative law judge shall issue a written decision on the
29petition within 10 business days of the conclusion of the hearing.
30The 10-day time period for holding the hearing and for rendering
31a decision may be extended by the
written agreement of the parties.
32(3) The administrative law judge shall uphold the appointment
33of the temporary manager if the department proves, by a
34preponderance of the evidence, that the circumstances specified
35in subdivision (c) applied to the facility at the time of the
36appointment. The administrative law judge shall order the
37termination of the temporary manager if the burden of proof is not
38satisfied.
39(4) The decision of the administrative law judge is subject to
40judicial review as provided in Section 1094.5 of the Code of Civil
P27 1Procedure by the superior court of the county where the facility is
2located. This review may be requested by the licensee of the facility
3or the department by filing a petition seeking relief from the order.
4The petition may also request the issuance of temporary injunctive
5relief pending the decision on the petition. The superior court shall
6hold
a hearing within 10 business days of the filing of the petition
7and shall issue a decision on the petition within 10 days of the
8hearing. The department may be represented by legal counsel
9within the department for purposes of court proceedings authorized
10under this section.
11(g) If the licensee does not protest the appointment or does not
12prevail at either the administrative hearing under paragraph (2) of
13subdivision (f) or the superior court hearing under paragraph (4)
14of subdivision (f), the temporary manager shall continue in
15accordance with subdivision (e).
16(h) (1) If the licensee petitions the Office of Administrative
17Hearings pursuant to subdivision (f), the appointment of the
18temporary manager by the director pursuant to this section shall
19continue until it is terminated by the administrative law judge or
20by the superior court, or it shall continue
until the conditions of
21subdivision (e) are satisfied, whichever is earlier.
22(2) At any time during the appointment of the temporary
23manager, the director may request an extension of the appointment
24by filing a petition for hearing with the Office of Administrative
25Hearings and serving a copy of the petition on the licensee. The
26office shall proceed as specified in paragraph (2) of subdivision
27(f). The administrative law judge may extend the appointment of
28the temporary manager an additional 60 days upon a showing by
29the department that the conditions specified in subdivision (c)
30continue to exist.
31(3) The licensee or the department may request review of the
32administrative law judge’s decision on the extension as provided
33in paragraph (4) of subdivision (f).
34(i) The temporary manager appointed pursuant to this
section
35shall meet the following qualifications:
36(1) Be qualified to oversee correction of deficiencies in a
37residential care facility for the elderly on the basis of experience
38and education.
39(2) Not be the subject of any pending actions by the department
40or any other state agency nor have ever been excluded from a
P28 1department-licensed facility or had a license or certification
2suspended or revoked by an administrative action by the
3department or any other state agency.
4(3) Have no financial ownership interest in the facility and have
5no member of his or her immediate family who has a financial
6ownership interest in the facility.
7(4) Not currently serve, or within the past two years have served,
8as a member of the staff of the facility.
9(j) Payment of the costs of the temporary manager shall comply
10with the following requirements:
11(1) Upon agreement with the licensee, the costs of the temporary
12manager and any other expenses in connection with the temporary
13management shall be paid directly by the facility while the
14temporary manager is assigned to that facility. Failure of the
15licensee to agree to the payment of those costs may result in the
16payment of the costs by the department and subsequent required
17reimbursement of the department by the licensee pursuant to this
18section.
19(2) Direct costs of the temporary manager shall be equivalent
20to the sum of the following:
21(A) The prevailing fee paid by licensees for positions of the
22same type in the facility’s geographic area.
23(B) Additional costs that reasonably would have been incurred
24by the licensee if the licensee and the temporary manager had been
25in an employment relationship.
26(C) Any other reasonable costs incurred by the temporary
27manager in furnishing services pursuant to this section.
28(3) Direct costs may exceed the amount specified in paragraph
29(2) if the department is otherwise unable to find a qualified
30temporary manager.
31(k) (1) The responsibilities of the temporary manager may
32include, but are not limited to, the following:
33(A) Paying wages to staff. The temporary manager shall have
34the full power to hire, direct, manage, and discharge employees
35of the facility, subject to any
contractual rights they may have.
36The temporary manager shall pay employees at the same rate of
37compensation, including benefits, that the employees would have
38received from the licensee or wages necessary to provide adequate
39staff for the protection of clients and compliance with the law.
P29 1(B) Preserving resident funds. The temporary manager shall be
2entitled to, and shall take possession of, all property or assets of
3residents that are in the possession of the licensee or administrator
4of the facility. The temporary manager shall preserve all property,
5assets, and records of residents of which the temporary manager
6takes possession.
7(C) Contracting for outside services as may be needed for the
8operation of the facility. Any contract for outside services in excess
9of five thousand dollars ($5,000) shall be approved by the director.
10(D) Paying commercial creditors of the facility to the extent
11required to operate the facility. The temporary manager shall honor
12all leases, mortgages, and secured transactions affecting the
13building in which the facility is located and all goods and fixtures
14in the building, but only to the extent of payments that, in the case
15of a rental agreement, are for the use of the property during the
16period of the temporary management, or that, in the case of a
17purchase agreement, come due during the period of the temporary
18management.
19(E) Performing all acts that are necessary and proper to maintain
20and operate the facility in accordance with sound fiscal policies.
21 The temporary manager shall take action as is reasonably necessary
22to protect or conserve the assets or property of which the temporary
23manager takes possession and may use those assets or property
24only in the performance of the
powers and duties set forth in this
25section.
26(2) Expenditures by the temporary manager in excess of five
27thousand dollars ($5,000) shall be approved by the director. Total
28encumbrances and expenditures by the temporary manager for the
29duration of the temporary management shall not exceed the sum
30of forty-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars ($49,999)
31unless approved by the director in writing.
32(3) The temporary manager shall not make capital improvements
33to the facility in excess of five thousand dollars ($5,000) without
34the approval of the director.
35(l) (1) To the extent department funds are advanced for the
36costs of the temporary manager or for other expenses in connection
37with the temporary management, the department shall be
38reimbursed from the revenues accruing to the facility or
to the
39licensee or an entity related to the licensee. Any reimbursement
40received by the department shall be redeposited in the account
P30 1from which the department funds were advanced. If the revenues
2are insufficient to reimburse the department, the unreimbursed
3amount shall constitutebegin delete aend deletebegin insert grounds for a monetary judgment in civil
4court and a subsequentend insert lien upon the assets of the facility or the
5proceeds from the sale thereof.begin delete Theend deletebegin insert Pursuant to Chapter 2
6(commencing with Section 697.510) of Division 2 of Title 9 of Part
72 of the Code of Civil Procedure, aend insert
lien against the personal assets
8of the facility or an entity related to the licenseebegin insert based on the
9monetary judgment obtainedend insert shall be filed with the Secretary of
10State on the forms required for a notice of judgment lien. A lien
11against the real property of the facility or an entity related to the
12licenseebegin insert based on the monetary judgment obtainedend insert shall be
13recorded with the county recorder of the county where the facility
14of the licensee is located or where the real property of the entity
15related to the licensee is located. The lien shall not attach to the
16interests of a lessor, unless the lessor is operating the facility. The
17authority to place a lien against the personal and real property of
18the licensee for the reimbursement of any state funds expended
19pursuant to this section
shall be given judgment creditor priority.
20(2) For purposes of this section, “entity related to the licensee”
21means an entity, other than a natural person, of which the licensee
22is a subsidiary or an entity in which a person who was obligated
23to disclose information under Section 1569.15 possesses an interest
24that would also require disclosure pursuant to Section 1569.15.
25(m) Appointment of a temporary manager under this section
26does not relieve the licensee of any responsibility for the care and
27supervision of residents under this chapter. The licensee, even if
28the license is deemed surrendered or the facility abandoned, shall
29be required to reimburse the department for all costs associated
30with operation of the facility during the period the temporary
31manager is in place that are not accounted for by using facility
32revenues or for the relocation of residents handled by the
33
department if the licensee fails to comply with the relocation
34requirements of Section 1569.525 or 1569.682 when required by
35the department to do so. If the licensee fails to reimburse the
36department under this section, then the department, along with
37using its own remedies available under this chapter, may request
38that the Attorney General’s office, the city attorney’s office, or the
39local district attorney’s office seek any available criminal, civil,
40or administrative remedy, including, but not limited to, injunctive
P31 1relief, restitution, and damages in the same manner as provided
2for in Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 17200) of Part 2 of
3Division 7 of the Business and Professions Code.
4(n) The department may use funds from the emergency resident
5contingency account pursuant to Section 1569.48 when needed to
6supplement the operation of the facility or the transfer of residents
7under the control of the temporary manager appointed under this
8
section if facility revenues are unavailable or exhausted when
9needed. Pursuant to subdivision (l), the licensee shall be required
10to reimburse the department for any funds used from the emergency
11resident contingency account during the period of control of the
12temporary manager and any incurred costs of collection.
13(o) This section does not apply to a residential care facility for
14the elderly that serves six or fewer persons and is also the principal
15residence of the licensee.
16(p) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the temporary
17manager shall be liable only for damages resulting from gross
18negligence in the operation of the facility or intentional tortious
19acts.
20(q) All governmental immunities otherwise applicable to the
21state shall also apply to the state in the use of a temporary manager
22in the operation
of a facility pursuant to this section.
23(r) A licensee shall not be liable for any occurrences during the
24temporary management under this section except to the extent that
25the occurrences are the result of the licensee’s conduct.
26(s) The department may adopt regulations for the administration
27of this section.
begin insertSection 1569.482 of the end insertbegin insertHealth and Safety Codeend insertbegin insert, as
29added by Section 25 of Chapter 29 of the Statutes of 2014, is
30amended to read:end insert
(a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this
32section to authorize the department to take quick, effective action
33to protect the health and safety of residents of residential care
34facilities for the elderly and to minimize the effects of transfer
35trauma that accompany the abrupt transfer of residents through a
36system whereby the department may apply for a court order
37appointing a receiver to temporarily operate a residential care
38facility for the elderly. The receivership is not intended to punish
39a licensee or to replace attempts to secure cooperative action to
40protect the residents’ health and safety. The receivership is intended
P32 1to protect the residents in the absence of other reasonably available
2alternatives. The receiver shall assume the operation of the facility
3in order to bring it into compliance with
law, facilitate a transfer
4of ownership to a new licensee, or ensure the orderly transfer of
5residents should the facility be required to close.
6(b) (1) Whenever circumstances exist indicating that continued
7management of a residential care facility by the current licensee
8would present a substantial probability or imminent danger of
9serious physical harm or death to the residents, or the facility is
10closing or intends to terminate operation as a residential care
11facility for the elderly and adequate arrangements for relocation
12of residents have not been made at least 30 days prior to the closing
13or termination, the director may petition the superior court for the
14county in which the facility is located for an order appointing a
15receiver to temporarily operate the facility in accordance with this
16section.
17(2) The petition shall allege the facts upon which the
action is
18based and shall be supported by an affidavit of the director. A copy
19of the petition and affidavits, together with an order to appear and
20show cause why temporary authority to operate the residential care
21facility for the elderly should not be vested in a receiver pursuant
22to this section, shall be delivered to the licensee, administrator, or
23a responsible person at the facility to the attention of the licensee
24and administrator. The order shall specify a hearing date, which
25shall be not less than 10, nor more than 15, days following delivery
26of the petition and order upon the licensee, except that the court
27may shorten or lengthen the time upon a showing of just cause.
28(c) (1) If the director files a petition pursuant to subdivision (b)
29for appointment of a receiver to operate a residential care facility
30for the elderly, in accordance with Section 564 of the Code of Civil
31Procedure, the director may also
petition the court, in accordance
32with Section 527 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for an order
33appointing a temporary receiver. A temporary receiver appointed
34by the court pursuant to this subdivision shall serve until the court
35has made a final determination on the petition for appointment of
36a receiver filed pursuant to subdivision (b). A receiver appointed
37pursuant to this subdivision shall have the same powers and duties
38as a receiver would have if appointed pursuant to subdivision (b).
39Upon the director filing a petition for a receiver, the receiver shall
40complete its application for a provisional license to operate a
P33 1residential care facility for the elderly. For purposes of a
2provisional license issued to a receiver, the licensee’s existing fire
3safety clearance shall serve as the fire safety clearance for the
4receiver’s provisional license.
5(2) At the time of the hearing, the department shall advise the
6licensee of the name of the
proposed receiver. The receiver shall
7be a certified residential care facility for the elderly administrator
8or other responsible person or entity, as determined by the court,
9from a list of qualified receivers established by the department,
10and, if need be, with input from providers of residential care and
11consumer representatives. Persons appearing on the list shall have
12experience in the delivery of care services to clients of community
13care facilities, and, if feasible, shall have experience with the
14operation of a residential care facility for the elderly, shall not be
15the subject of any pending actions by the department or any other
16state agency, and shall not have ever been excluded from a
17department licensed facility nor have had a license or certification
18suspended or revoked by an administrative action by the
19department or any other state agency. The receivers shall have
20sufficient background and experience in management and finances
21to ensure compliance with orders issued by the court. The owner,
22
licensee, or administrator shall not be appointed as the receiver
23unless authorized by the court.
24(3) If at the conclusion of the hearing, which may include oral
25testimony and cross-examination at the option of any party, the
26court determines that adequate grounds exist for the appointment
27of a receiver and that there is no other reasonably available remedy
28to protect the residents, the court may issue an order appointing a
29receiver to temporarily operate the residential care facility for the
30elderly and enjoining the licensee from interfering with the receiver
31in the conduct of his or her duties. In these proceedings, the court
32shall make written findings of fact and conclusions of law and
33shall require an appropriate bond to be filed by the receiver and
34paid for by the licensee. The bond shall be in an amount necessary
35to protect the licensee in the event of any failure on the part of the
36receiver to act in a reasonable manner. The bond
requirement may
37be waived by the licensee.
38(4) The court may permit the licensee to participate in the
39continued operation of the facility during the pendency of any
P34 1receivership ordered pursuant to this section and shall issue an
2order detailing the nature and scope of participation.
3(5) Failure of the licensee to appear at the hearing on the petition
4shall constitute an admission of all factual allegations contained
5in the petition for purposes of these proceedings only.
6(6) The licensee shall receive notice and a copy of the
7application each time the receiver applies to the court or the
8department for instructions regarding his or her duties under this
9section, when an accounting pursuant to subdivision (i) is
10submitted, and when any other report otherwise required under
11this section is submitted. The licensee
shall have an opportunity
12to present objections or otherwise participate in those proceedings.
13(d) A person shall not impede the operation of a receivership
14created under this section. The receiver’s access to, or possession
15of, the property shall not be interfered with during the term of the
16receivership. There shall be an automatic stay for a 60-day period
17subsequent to the appointment of a receiver of any action that
18would interfere with the functioning of the facility, including, but
19not limited to, cancellation of insurance policies executed by the
20licensees, termination of utility services, attachments, or setoffs
21of resident trust funds and working capital accounts and
22repossession of equipment in the facility.
23(e) When a receiver is appointed, the licensee may, at the
24discretion of the court, be divested of possession and control of
25the facility in favor of the receiver.
If the court divests the licensee
26of possession and control of the facility in favor of the receiver,
27the department shall immediately issue a provisional license to the
28receiver. Notwithstanding the applicable sections of this code
29governing the revocation of a provisional license, the provisional
30license issued to a receiver shall automatically expire upon the
31termination of the receivership. The receiver shall possess the
32provisional license solely for purposes of carrying out the
33responsibilities authorized by this section and the duties ordered
34by the court. The receiver shall have no right to appeal the
35expiration of the provisional license.
36(f) A receiver appointed pursuant to this section:
37(1) May exercise those powers and shall perform those duties
38ordered by the court, in addition to other duties provided by statute.
39(2) Shall operate the facility in a manner that ensures the safety
40and adequate care for the residents.
P35 1(3) Shall have the same rights to possession of the building in
2which the facility is located, and of all goods and fixtures in the
3building at the time the petition for receivership is filed, as the
4licensee and administrator would have had if the receiver had not
5been appointed.
6(4) May use the funds, building, fixtures, furnishings, and any
7accompanying consumable goods in the provision of care and
8services to residents and to any other persons receiving services
9from the facility at the time the petition for receivership was filed.
10(5) Shall take title to all revenue coming to the facility in the
11name of the receiver who shall use it for the following purposes
12in descending order of priority:
13(A) To pay wages to staff. The receiver shall have full power
14to hire, direct, manage, and discharge employees of the facility,
15subject to any contractual rights they may have. The receiver shall
16pay employees at the same rate of compensation, including
17benefits, that the employees would have received from the licensee
18or wages necessary to provide adequate staff for the protection of
19the clients and compliance with the law.
20(B) To preserve resident funds. The receiver shall be entitled
21to, and shall take, possession of all property or assets of residents
22that are in the possession of the licensee or operator of the facility.
23The receiver shall preserve all property, assets, and records of
24residents of which the receiver takes possession.
25(C) To contract for outside services as may be needed for the
26operation of the
residential care facility for the elderly. Any
27contract for outside services in excess of five thousand dollars
28($5,000) shall be approved by the court.
29(D) To pay commercial creditors of the facility to the extent
30required to operate the facility. Except as provided in subdivision
31(h), the receiver shall honor all leases, mortgages, and secured
32transactions affecting the building in which the facility is located
33and all goods and fixtures in the building of which the receiver
34has taken possession, but only to the extent of payments which,
35in the case of a rental agreement, are for the use of the property
36during the period of receivership, or which, in the case of a
37purchase agreement, come due during the period of receivership.
38(E) To receive a salary, as approved by the court.
39(F) To do all things necessary and
proper to maintain and operate
40the facility in accordance with sound fiscal policies. The receiver
P36 1shall take action as is reasonably necessary to protect or conserve
2the assets or property of which the receiver takes possession and
3may use those assets or property only in the performance of the
4powers and duties set out in this section and by order of the court.
5(G) To ask the court for direction in the treatment of debts
6incurred prior to the appointment, if the licensee’s debts appear
7extraordinary, of questionable validity, or unrelated to the normal
8and expected maintenance and operation of the facility, or if
9payment of the debts will interfere with the purposes of
10receivership.
11(g) (1) A person who is served with notice of an order of the
12court appointing a receiver and of the receiver’s name and address
13shall be liable to pay the receiver, rather than
the licensee, for any
14goods or services provided by the residential care facility for the
15elderly after the date of the order. The receiver shall give a receipt
16for each payment and shall keep a copy of each receipt on file.
17The receiver shall deposit amounts received in a special account
18and shall use this account for all disbursements. Payment to the
19receiver pursuant to this subdivision shall discharge the obligation
20to the extent of the payment and shall not thereafter be the basis
21of a claim by the licensee or any other person. A resident shall not
22be evicted nor may any contract or rights be forfeited or impaired,
23nor may any forfeiture be effected or liability increased, by reason
24of an omission to pay the licensee, operator, or other person a sum
25paid to the receiver pursuant to this subdivision.
26(2) This section shall not be construed to suspend, during the
27temporary management by the receiver, any obligation of the
28licensee for
payment of local, state, or federal taxes. A licensee
29shall not be held liable for acts or omissions of the receiver during
30the term of the temporary management.
31(3) Upon petition of the receiver, the court may order immediate
32payment to the receiver for past services that have been rendered
33and billed, and the court may also order a sum not to exceed one
34month’s advance payment to the receiver of any sums that may
35become payable under the Medi-Cal program.
36(h) (1) A receiver shall not be required to honor a lease,
37mortgage, or secured transaction entered into by the licensee of
38the facility and another party if the court finds that the agreement
39between the parties was entered into for a collusive, fraudulent
P37 1purpose or that the agreement is unrelated to the operation of the
2facility.
3(2) A
lease, mortgage, or secured transaction or an agreement
4unrelated to the operation of the facility that the receiver is
5permitted to dishonor pursuant to this subdivision shall only be
6subject to nonpayment by the receiver for the duration of the
7receivership, and the dishonoring of the lease, mortgage, security
8interest, or other agreement, to this extent, by the receiver shall
9not relieve the owner or operator of the facility from any liability
10for the full amount due under the lease, mortgage, security interest,
11or other agreement.
12(3) If the receiver is in possession of real estate or goods subject
13to a lease, mortgage, or security interest that the receiver is
14permitted to avoid pursuant to paragraph (1), and if the real estate
15or goods are necessary for the continued operation of the facility,
16the receiver may apply to the court to set a reasonable rent, price,
17or rate of interest to be paid by the receiver during the duration of
18the
receivership. The court shall hold a hearing on this application
19within 15 days. The receiver shall send notice of the application
20to any known owner of the property involved at least 10 days prior
21to the hearing.
22(4) Payment by the receiver of the amount determined by the
23court to be reasonable is a defense to any action against the receiver
24for payment or possession of the goods or real estate, subject to
25the lease or mortgage, which is brought by any person who received
26the notice required by this subdivision. However, payment by the
27receiver of the amount determined by the court to be reasonable
28shall not relieve the owner or operator of the facility from any
29liability for the difference between the amount paid by the receiver
30and the amount due under the original lease, mortgage, or security
31interest.
32(i) A monthly accounting shall be made by the receiver to the
33department of
all moneys received and expended by the receiver
34on or before the 15th day of the following month or as ordered by
35the court, and the remainder of income over expenses for that
36month shall be returned to the licensee. A copy of the accounting
37shall be provided to the licensee. The licensee or owner of the
38residential care facility for the elderly may petition the court for
39a determination as to the reasonableness of any expenditure made
40pursuant to paragraph (5) of subdivision (f).
P38 1(j) (1) The receiver shall be appointed for an initial period of
2not more than three months. The initial three-month period may
3be extended for additional periods not exceeding three months, as
4determined by the court pursuant to this section. At the end of one
5month, the receiver shall report to the court on its assessment of
6the probability that the residential care facility for the elderly will
7meet state standards for operation by the end of
the initial
8three-month period and will continue to maintain compliance with
9those standards after termination of the receiver’s management.
10If it appears that the facility cannot be brought into compliance
11with state standards within the initial three-month period, the court
12shall take appropriate action as follows:
13(A) Extend the receiver’s management for an additional three
14months if there is a substantial likelihood that the facility will meet
15state standards within that period and will maintain compliance
16with the standards after termination of the receiver’s management.
17The receiver shall report to the court in writing upon the facility’s
18progress at the end of six weeks of any extension ordered pursuant
19to this paragraph.
20(B) Order the director to revoke or temporarily suspend, or both,
21the license pursuant to Section 1569.50 and extend the receiver’s
22management for the
period necessary to transfer clients in
23accordance with the transfer plan, but for not more than three
24months from the date of initial appointment of a receiver, or 14
25days, whichever is greater. An extension of an additional three
26months may be granted if deemed necessary by the court.
27(2) If it appears at the end of six weeks of an extension ordered
28pursuant to subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1) that the facility
29cannot be brought into compliance with state standards for
30operation or that it will not maintain compliance with those
31standards after the receiver’s management is terminated, the court
32shall take appropriate action as specified in subparagraph (B) of
33paragraph (1).
34(3) In evaluating the probability that a residential care facility
35for the elderly will maintain compliance with state standards of
36operation after the termination of receiver management ordered
37by the
court, the court shall consider at least the following factors:
38(A) The duration, frequency, and severity of past violations in
39the facility.
P39 1(B) History of compliance in other care facilities operated by
2the proposed licensee.
3(C) Efforts by the licensee to prevent and correct past violations.
4(D) The financial ability of the licensee to operate in compliance
5with state standards.
6(E) The recommendations and reports of the receiver.
7(4) Management of a residential care facility for the elderly
8operated by a receiver pursuant to this section shall not be returned
9to the licensee, to any person related to the licensee, or to
any
10person who served as a member of the facility’s staff or who was
11employed by the licensee prior to the appointment of the receiver
12unless both of the following conditions are met:
13(A) The department believes that it would be in the best interests
14of the residents of the facility, requests that the court return the
15operation of the facility to the former licensee, and provides clear
16and convincing evidence to the court that it is in the best interests
17of the facility’s residents to take that action.
18(B) The court finds that the licensee has fully cooperated with
19the department in the appointment and ongoing activities of a
20receiver appointed pursuant to this section, and, if applicable, any
21temporary manager appointed pursuant to Section 1569.481.
22(5) The owner of the facility may at any time sell, lease, or close
23
the facility, subject to the following provisions:
24(A) If the owner closes the facility, or the sale or lease results
25in the closure of the facility, the court shall determine if a transfer
26plan is necessary. If the court so determines, the court shall adopt
27and implement a transfer plan consistent with the provisions of
28Section 1569.682.
29(B) If the licensee proposes to sell or lease the facility and the
30facility will continue to operate as a residential care facility for
31the elderly, the court and the department shall reevaluate any
32proposed transfer plan. If the court and the department determine
33that the sale or lease of the facility will result in compliance with
34licensing standards, the transfer plan and the receivership shall,
35subject to those conditions that the court may impose and enforce,
36be terminated upon the effective date of the sale or lease.
37(k) (1) The salary of the receiver shall be set by the court
38commensurate with community care facility industry standards,
39giving due consideration to the difficulty of the duties undertaken,
40and shall be paid from the revenue coming to the facility. If the
P40 1revenue is insufficient to pay the salary in addition to other
2expenses of operating the facility, the receiver’s salary shall be
3paid from the emergency resident contingency account as provided
4in Section 1569.48. State advances of funds in excess of five
5thousand dollars ($5,000) shall be approved by the director. Total
6advances for encumbrances and expenditures shall not exceed the
7sum of forty-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars
8($49,999) unless approved by the director in writing.
9(2) To the extent state funds are advanced for the salary of the
10receiver or for other expenses in connection with
the receivership,
11as limited by subdivision (g), the state shall be reimbursed from
12the revenues accruing to the facility or to the licensee or an entity
13related to the licensee. Any reimbursement received by the state
14shall be redeposited in the account from which the state funds were
15advanced. If the revenues are insufficient to reimburse the state,
16the unreimbursed amount shall constitutebegin delete aend deletebegin insert grounds for a monetary
17judgment in civil court and a subsequentend insert lien upon the assets of
18the facility or the proceeds from the sale thereof.begin delete Theend deletebegin insert Pursuant to
19Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 697.510) of Division 2 of
20Title 9 of Part 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
aend insert lien against the
21personal assets of the facility or an entity related to the licensee
22begin insert based on the monetary judgment obtainedend insert shall be filed with the
23Secretary of State on the forms required for a notice of judgment
24lien. A lien against the real property of the facility or an entity
25related to the licenseebegin insert based on the monetary judgment obtainedend insert
26 shall be recorded with the county recorder of the county where the
27facility of the licensee is located or where the real property of the
28entity related to the licensee is located. The lien shall not attach
29to the interests of a lessor, unless the lessor is operating the facility.
30begin insert
The authority to place a end insertbegin insertlien against the personal and real property
31of the licensee for the reimbursement of any state funds expended
32pursuant to this section shall be given judgment creditor priority.end insert
33(3) For purposes of this subdivision, “entity related to the
34licensee” means an entity, other than a natural person, of which
35the licensee is a subsidiary or an entity in which any person who
36was obligated to disclose information under Section 1569.15
37possesses an interest that would also require disclosure pursuant
38to Section 1569.15.
39(l) (1) This section does not impair the right of the owner of a
40residential care facility for the elderly to dispose of his or her
P41 1property interests in the facility, but any
facility operated by a
2receiver pursuant to this section shall remain subject to that
3administration until terminated by the court. The termination shall
4be promptly effectuated, provided that the interests of the residents
5have been safeguarded as determined by the court.
6(2) This section does not limit the power of the court to appoint
7a receiver under any other applicable provision of law or to order
8any other remedy available under law.
9(m) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the receiver
10shall be liable only for damages resulting from gross negligence
11in the operation of the facility or intentional tortious acts.
12(2) All governmental immunities otherwise applicable to the
13State of California shall also apply in the use of a receiver in the
14operation if a facility pursuant to
this section.
15(3) The licensee shall not be liable for any occurrences during
16the receivership except to the extent that the occurrences are the
17result of the licensee’s conduct.
18(n) The department may adopt regulations for the administration
19of this section. This section does not impair the authority of the
20department to temporarily suspend licenses under Section 1569.50
21or to reach a voluntary agreement with the licensee for alternate
22management of a community care facility including the use of a
23temporary manager under Section 1569.481. This section does not
24authorize the department to interfere in a labor dispute.
25(o) This section does not apply to a residential care facility for
26the elderly that serves six or fewer persons and is also the principal
27residence of the licensee.
28(p) This section does not apply to a licensee that has obtained
29a certificate of authority to offer continuing care contracts, as
30defined in paragraph (8) of subdivision (c) of Section 1771.
begin insertSection 1569.682 of the end insertbegin insertHealth and Safety Codeend insertbegin insert is
32amended to read:end insert
(a) A licensee of a licensed residential care facility
34for the elderly shall, prior to transferring a resident of the facility
35to another facility or to an independent living arrangement as a
36result of the forfeiture of a license, as described in subdivision (a),
37(b), or (f) of Section 1569.19, or a change of use of the facility
38pursuant to the department’s regulations, take all reasonable steps
39to transfer affected residents safely and to minimize possible
40transfer trauma, and shall, at a minimum, do all of the following:
P42 1(1) Prepare, for each resident, a relocation evaluation of the
2needs of that resident, which shall include both of the following:
3(A) Recommendations on the type of facility
that would meet
4the needs of the resident based on the current service plan.
5(B) A list of facilities, within a 60-mile radius of the resident’s
6current facility, that meet the resident’s present needs.
7(2) Provide each resident or the resident’s responsible person
8with a written notice no later than 60 days before the intended
9eviction. The notice shall include all of the following:
10(A) The reason for the eviction, with specific facts to permit a
11determination of the date, place, witnesses, and circumstances
12concerning the reasons.
13(B) A copy of the resident’s current service plan.
14(C) The relocation evaluation.
15(D) A list of referral agencies.
16(E) The right of the resident or resident’s legal representative
17to contact the department to investigate the reasons given for the
18eviction pursuant to Section 1569.35.
19(F) The contact information for the local long-term care
20ombudsman, including address and telephone number.
21(3) Discuss the relocation evaluation with the resident and his
22or her legal representative within 30 days of issuing the notice of
23eviction.
24(4) Submit a written report of any eviction to the licensing
25agency within five days.
26(5) Upon issuing the written notice of eviction, a licensee shall
27not accept new residents or enter into new admission agreements.
28(6) (A) For paid preadmission fees in excess of five hundred
29dollars ($500), the resident is entitled to a refund in accordance
30with all of the following:
31(i) A 100-percent refund if preadmission fees were paid within
32six months of notice of eviction.
33(ii) A 75-percent refund if preadmission fees were paid more
34than six months but not more than 12 months before notice of
35eviction.
36(iii) A 50-percent refund if preadmission fees were paid more
37than 12 months but not more than 18 months before notice of
38eviction.
39(iv) A 25-percent refund if preadmission fees were paid more
40than 18 months but less than 25 months before notice of eviction.
P43 1(B) No preadmission refund is required if preadmission fees
2were paid 25 months or more before the notice of eviction.
3(C) The preadmission refund required by this paragraph shall
4be paid within 15 days of issuing the eviction notice. In lieu of the
5refund, the resident may request that the licensee provide a credit
6toward the resident’s monthly fee obligation in an amount equal
7to the preadmission fee refund due.
8(7) If the resident gives notice five days before leaving the
9facility, the licensee shall refund to the resident or his or her legal
10representative a proportional per diem amount of any prepaid
11monthly fees at the time the resident leaves the facility and the
12unit is vacated. Otherwise the licensee shall pay the refund within
13seven days from the date that the resident leaves the facility and
14the unit is
vacated.
15(8) Within 10 days of all residents having left the facility, the
16licensee, based on information provided by the resident or
17resident’s legal representative, shall submit a final list of names
18and new locations of all residents to the department and the local
19ombudsman program.
20(b) If seven or more residents of a residential care facility for
21the elderly will be transferred as a result of the forfeiture of a
22license or change in the use of the facility pursuant to subdivision
23(a), the licensee shall submit a proposed closure plan to the
24department for approval. The department shall approve or
25disapprove the closure plan, and monitor its implementation, in
26accordance with the following requirements:
27(1) Upon submission of the closure plan, the licensee shall be
28prohibited from accepting new residents and
entering into new
29admission agreements for new residents.
30(2) The closure plan shall meet the requirements described in
31subdivision (a), and describe the staff available to assist in the
32transfers. The department’s review shall include a determination
33as to whether the licensee’s closure plan contains a relocation
34evaluation for each resident.
35(3) Within 15 working days of receipt, the department shall
36approve or disapprove the closure plan prepared pursuant to this
37subdivision, and, if the department approves the plan, it shall
38become effective upon the date the department grants its written
39approval of the plan.
P44 1(4) If the department disapproves a closure plan, the licensee
2may resubmit an amended plan, which the department shall
3promptly either approve or disapprove, within 10 working days
4of receipt by the
department of the amended plan. If the department
5fails to approve a closure plan, it shall inform the licensee, in
6writing, of the reasons for the disapproval of the plan.
7(5) If the department fails to take action within 20 working days
8of receipt of either the original or the amended closure plan, the
9plan, or amended plan, as the case may be, shall be deemed
10approved.
11(6) Until such time that the department has approved a licensee’s
12closure plan, the facility shall not issue a notice of transfer or
13require any resident to transfer.
14(7) Upon approval by the department, the licensee shall send a
15copy of the closure plan to the local ombudsman program.
16(c) (1) If a licensee fails to comply with the requirements of
17this section,begin delete andend deletebegin insert
orend insert if the director determines that it is necessary
18to protect the residents of a facility from physical or mental abuse,
19abandonment, or any other substantial threat to health or safety,
20the department shall take any necessary action to minimize trauma
21for the residents, including caring for the residents through the use
22of a temporary managerbegin insert or receiverend insert as provided for inbegin delete Section begin insert Sections 1569.481 and 1569.482end insert when the director
231569.481end delete
24determines the immediate relocation of the residents is not feasible
25based on transfer trauma or other considerations such as the
26unavailability of alternative placements. The department shall
27contact any local agency that may have
assessment placement,
28protective, or advocacy responsibility for the residents, and shall
29work together with those agencies to locate alternative placement
30sites, contact relatives or other persons responsible for the care of
31these residents, provide onsite evaluation of the residents, and
32assist in the transfer of residents.
33(2) The participation of the department and local agencies in
34the relocation of residents from a residential care facility for the
35elderly shall not relieve the licensee of any responsibility under
36this section. A licensee that fails to comply with the requirements
37of this section shall be required to reimburse the department and
38local agencies for the cost of providing the relocation services or
39the costs incurred in caring for the residents through the use of a
40temporary managerbegin insert or receiverend insert
as provided for inbegin delete Section begin insert Sections 1569.481 and 1569.482.end insert If the licensee fails
P45 11569.481.end delete
2to provide the relocation services required in this section, then the
3department may request that the Attorney General’s office, the
4city attorney’s office, or the local district attorney’s office seek
5injunctive relief and damages in the same manner as provided for
6in Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 17200) of Part 2 of
7Division 7 of the Business and Professions Code, including
8restitution to the department of any costs incurred in caring for the
9residents through the use of a temporary managerbegin insert or receiverend insert as
10provided for inbegin delete Section 1569.481.end deletebegin insert
Sections 1569.481 and 1569.482.end insert
11(d) A licensee who fails to comply with requirements of this
12section shall be liable for the imposition of civil penalties in the
13amount of one hundred dollars ($100) per violation per day for
14each day that the licensee is in violation of this section, until such
15time that the violation has been corrected. The civil penalties shall
16be issued immediately following the written notice of violation.
17However, if the violation does not present an immediate or
18substantial threat to the health or safety of residents and the licensee
19corrects the violation within three days after receiving the notice
20of violation, the licensee shall not be liable for payment of any
21civil penalties pursuant to this subdivision related to the corrected
22violation.
23(e) A resident of a residential care facility for the elderly covered
24
under this section, may bring a civil action against any person,
25firm, partnership, or corporation who owns, operates, establishes,
26manages, conducts, or maintains a residential care facility for the
27elderly who violates the rights of a resident, as set forth in this
28section. Any person, firm, partnership, or corporation who owns,
29operates, establishes, manages, conducts, or maintains a residential
30care facility for the elderly who violates this section shall be
31responsible for the acts of the facility’s employees and shall be
32liable for costs and attorney’s fees. Any such residential care
33facility for the elderly may also be enjoined from permitting the
34violation to continue. The remedies specified in this section shall
35be in addition to any other remedy provided by law.
36(f) This section shall not apply to a licensee that has obtained
37a certificate of authority to offer continuing care contracts, as
38defined in paragraph (8) of subdivision (c)
of Section 1771.
begin insertSection 11461.3 of the end insertbegin insertWelfare and Institutions Codeend insertbegin insert,
2as added by Section 74 of Chapter 29 of the Statutes of 2014,
is
3amended to read:end insert
(a) The Approved Relative Caregiver Funding Option
5Program is hereby established for the purpose of making the
6amount paid to approved relative caregivers for the in-home care
7of children placed with them who are ineligible for AFDC-FC
8payments equal to the amount paid on behalf of children who are
9eligible for AFDC-FC payments. This is an optional program for
10counties choosing to participate, and in so doing, participating
11counties agree to the terms of this section as a condition of their
12participation. It is the intent of the Legislature that the funding
13described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) for the Approved
14Relative Caregiver Funding Option Program be appropriated, and
15available for use from January through December of each year,
16unless otherwise specified.
17(b) Subject to subdivision (c), effective January 1, 2015, counties
18shall pay an approved relative caregiver a per child per month rate
19in return for the care and supervision, as defined in subdivision
20(b) of Section 11460, of a child that is placed with the relative
21caregiver that is equal to the basic rate paid to foster care providers
22pursuant to subdivision (g) of Section 11461, if both of the
23following conditions are met:
24(1) The county with payment responsibility has notified the
25department in writing by October 1 of the year before participation
26begins of its decision to participate in the Approved Relative
27Caregiver Funding Option Program.
28(2) The related child placed in the home meets all of the
29following requirements:
30(A) The child resides in the State of California.
31(B) The child is described by subdivision (b), (c), or (e) of
32Section 11401begin delete and is not eligible for AFDC-FC pursuant to begin insert and the county welfare
33subdivision (a) of Section 11404.end delete
34department or the county probation department is responsible for
35the placement and care of the child.end insert
36(C) The child is not eligible for AFDC-FC while placed with
37the approved relative caregiver because the child is not eligible
38for federal financial participation in the AFDC-FC payment.
39(c) A county’s election to participate in the Approved Relative
40Caregiver Funding Option Program shall affirmatively indicate
P47 1that the county understands and agrees to all of
the following
2conditions:
3(1) Commencing October 1, 2014, the county shall notify the
4department in writing of its decision to participate in the Approved
5Relative Caregiver Funding Option Program. Failure to make
6timely notification, without good cause as determined by the
7department, shall preclude the county from participating in the
8program for the upcoming year. Annually thereafter, any county
9not presently participating who elects to do so shall notify the
10department in writing no later than October 1 of its decision to
11participate for the upcoming calendar year.
12(2) The county shall confirm that it will make per child per
13month payments to all approved relative caregivers on behalf of
14eligible children in the amount specified in subdivision (b) for the
15duration of the participation of the county in this program.
16(3) The county shall confirm that it will be solely responsible
17to pay any additional costs needed to make all payments pursuant
18to subdivision (b) if the state and federal funds allocated to the
19Approved Relative Caregiver Funding Option Program pursuant
20to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) are insufficient to make all
21eligible payments.
22(d) (1) A county deciding to opt out of the Approved Relative
23Caregiver Funding Option Program shall provide at least 120 days’
24prior written notice of that decision to the department. Additionally,
25the county shall provide at least 90 days’ prior written notice to
26the approved relative caregiver or caregivers informing them that
27his or her per child per month payment will be reduced and the
28date that the reduction will occur.
29(2) The department shall presume all counties have opted out
30of the Approved Relative Caregiver Funding
Option Program if
31the funding appropriated in subclause (II) of clause (i) of
32subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (e), including
33any additional funds appropriated pursuant to clause (ii) of
34subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (e), is reduced,
35unless a county notifies the department in writing of its intent to
36opt in within 60 days of enactment of the state budget. The counties
37shall provide at least 90 days’ prior written notice to the approved
38relative caregiver or caregivers informing them that his or her per
39child per month payment will be reduced, and the date that the
40reduction will occur.
P48 1(3) Any reduction in payments received by an approved relative
2caregiver on behalf of a child under this section that results from
3a decision by a county, including the presumed opt-out pursuant
4to paragraph (2), to not participate in the Approved Relative
5Caregiver Funding Option Program shall be exempt from state
6hearing
jurisdiction under Section 10950.
7(e) (1) The following funding shall be used for the Approved
8Relative Caregiver Funding Option Program:
9(A) The applicable regional per-child CalWORKsbegin delete grant from
10federal funds received as part of the TANF block grant program.end delete
11begin insert grant.end insert
12(B) (i) General Fund resources that do not count toward the
13state’s maintenance of effort requirements under Section
14609(a)(7)(B)(i) of Title 42 of the United States Code. For this
15purpose, the following money is hereby appropriated:
16(I) The sum of thirty million dollars
($30,000,000) from the
17General Fund for the period January 1, 2015 through December
1831, 2015.
19(II) The sum of thirty million dollars ($30,000,000) from the
20General Fund in each calendar year thereafter, as cumulatively
21adjusted annually by the California Necessities Index used for each
22May Revision of the Governor’s Budget, to be used in each
23respective calendar year.
24(ii) To the extent that the appropriation made in subclause (I)
25is insufficient to fully fund the base caseload of approved relative
26caregivers as of July 1, 2014, for the period of time described in
27subclause (I), as jointly determined by the department and the
28County Welfare Directors’ Association and approved by the
29Department of Finance on or before October 1, 2015, the amounts
30specified in subclauses (I) and (II) shall be increased in the
31respective amounts necessary to fully fund that base caseload.
32Thereafter,
the adjusted amount of subclause (II), and the other
33terms of that provision, including an annual California Necessities
34Index adjustment to its amount, shall apply.
35(C) County funds only to the extent required under paragraph
36(3) of subdivision (c).
37(D) This section is intended to appropriate the funding necessary
38to fully fund the base caseload of approved relative caregivers,
39defined as the number of approved relative caregivers caring for
P49 1a child who is not eligible to receive AFDC-FC payments, as of
2July 1, 2014.
3(2) Funds available pursuant to subparagraphs (A) and (B) of
4paragraph (1) shall be allocated to participating counties
5proportionate to the number of their approved relative caregiver
6placements, using a methodology and timing developed by the
7department, following consultation with county human
services
8agencies and their representatives.
9(3) Notwithstanding subdivision (c), if in any calendar year the
10entire amount of funding appropriated by the state for the Approved
11Relative Caregiver Funding Option Program has not been fully
12allocated to or utilized by counties, a county that has paid any
13funds pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subdivision
14(e) may request reimbursement for those funds from the
15department. The authority of the department to approve the requests
16shall be limited by the amount of available unallocated funds.
17(f) An approved relative caregiver receiving payments on behalf
18of a child pursuant to this section shall not be eligible to receive
19additional CalWORKs payments on behalf of the same child under
20Section 11450.
21(g) To the extent permitted by federal law, payments
received
22by the approved relative caregiver from the Approved Relative
23Caregiver Funding Option Program shall not be considered income
24for the purpose of determining other public benefits.
25(h) Prior to referral of any individual or recipient, or that
26person’s case, to the local child support agency for child support
27services pursuant to Section 17415 of the Family Code, the county
28human services agency shall determine if an applicant or recipient
29has good cause for noncooperation, as set forth in Section
3011477.04. If the applicant or recipient claims good cause exception
31at any subsequent time to the county human services agency or
32the local child support agency, the local child support agency shall
33suspend child support services until the county social services
34agency determines the good cause claim, as set forth in Section
3511477.04. If good cause is determined to exist, the local child
36support agency shall suspend child support services until
the
37applicant or recipient requests their resumption, and shall take
38other measures that are necessary to protect the applicant or
39recipient and the children. If the applicant or recipient is the parent
40of the child for whom aid is sought and the parent is found to have
P50 1not cooperated without good cause as provided in Section
211477.04, the applicant’s or recipient’s family grant shall be
3reduced by 25 percent for the time the failure to cooperate lasts.
4(i) Consistent with Section 17552 of the Family Code, if aid is
5paid under this chapter on behalf of a child who is under the
6jurisdiction of the juvenile court and whose parent or guardian is
7receiving reunification services, the county human services agency
8shall determine, prior to referral of the case to the local child
9support agency for child support services, whether the referral is
10in the best interest of the child, taking into account both of the
11following:
12(1) Whether the payment of support by the parent will pose a
13barrier to the proposed reunification in that the payment of support
14will compromise the parent’s ability to meet the requirements of
15the parent’s reunification plan.
16(2) Whether the payment of support by the parent will pose a
17barrier to the proposed reunification in that the payment of support
18will compromise the parent’s current or future ability to meet the
19financial needs of the child.
begin insertSection 11462.04 of the end insertbegin insertWelfare and Institutions Codeend insert
21begin insert is amended to read:end insert
(a) Notwithstanding any other law, no new group
23home rate or change to an existing rate shall be established pursuant
24to Section 11462. An application shall not be accepted or processed
25for any of the following:
26(1) A new program.
27(2) A new provider.
28(3) A program change, such as a rate classification level (RCL)
29increase.
30(4) A program capacity increase.
31(5) A program reinstatement.
32(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the department may
grant
33exceptions as appropriate on a case-by-case basis, based upon a
34written request and supporting documentation provided by county
35placing agencies, including county welfare or probation directors.
36(c) For the 2012-13begin delete andend deletebegin insert,end insert 2013-14begin insert, and 2014-15end insert
fiscal years,
37notwithstanding subdivision (b), for any program below RCL 10,
38the only exception that may be sought and granted pursuant to this
39section is for an application requesting a program change, such as
P51 1an RCL increase. The authority to grant other exceptions does not
2apply to programs below RCL 10 during these fiscal years.
begin insertSection 11477 of the end insertbegin insertWelfare and Institutions Codeend insertbegin insert,
4as amended by Section 75 of Chapter 29 of the Statutes of 2014,
5
is amended to read:end insert
As a condition of eligibility for aid paid under this
7chapter, each applicant or recipient shall do all of the following:
8(a) (1) Do either of the following:
9(i) For applications received before October 1, 2009, assign to
10the county any rights to support from any other person the applicant
11or recipient may have on his or her own behalf or on behalf of any
12other family member for whom the applicant or recipient is
13applying for or receiving aid, not exceeding the total amount of
14cash assistance provided to the family under this chapter. Receipt
15of public assistance under this chapter shall operate as an
16assignment by operation of law. An assignment of support rights
17to the county shall also
constitute an assignment to the state. If
18support rights are assigned pursuant to this subdivision, the
19assignee may become an assignee of record by the local child
20support agency or other public official filing with the court clerk
21an affidavit showing that an assignment has been made or that
22there has been an assignment by operation of law. This procedure
23does not limit any other means by which the assignee may become
24an assignee of record.
25(ii) For applications received on or after October 1, 2009, assign
26to the county any rights to support from any other person the
27applicant or recipient may have on his or her own behalf, or on
28behalf of any other family member for whom the applicant or
29recipient is applying for or receiving aid. The assignment shall
30apply only to support that accrues during the period of time that
31the applicant is receiving assistance under this chapter, and shall
32not exceed the total amount of cash assistance provided to
the
33family under this chapter. Receipt of public assistance under this
34chapter shall operate as an assignment by operation of law. An
35assignment of support rights to the county shall also constitute an
36assignment to the state. If support rights are assigned pursuant to
37this subdivision, the assignee may become an assignee of record
38by the local child support agency or other public official filing
39with the court clerk an affidavit showing that an assignment has
40been made or that there has been an assignment by operation of
P52 1law. This procedure does not limit any other means by which the
2assignee may become an assignee of record.
3(2) Support that has been assigned pursuant to paragraph (1)
4and that accrues while the family is receiving aid under this chapter
5shall be permanently assigned until the entire amount of aid paid
6has been reimbursed.
7(3) If the federal government does not
permit states to adopt the
8same order of distribution for preassistance and postassistance
9child support arrears that are assigned on or after October 1, 1998,
10support arrears that accrue before the family receives aid under
11this chapter that are assigned pursuant to this subdivision shall be
12assigned as follows:
13(A) Child support assigned prior to January 1, 1998, shall be
14permanently assigned until aid is no longer received and the entire
15amount of aid has been reimbursed.
16(B) Child support assigned on or after January 1, 1998, but prior
17to October 1, 2000, shall be temporarily assigned until aid under
18this chapter is no longer received and the entire amount of aid paid
19has been reimbursed or until October 1, 2000, whichever comes
20first.
21(C) On or after October 1, 2000, support assigned pursuant to
22this subdivision
that was not otherwise permanently assigned shall
23be temporarily assigned to the county until aid is no longer
24received.
25(D) On or after October 1, 2000, support that was temporarily
26assigned pursuant to this subdivision shall, when a payment is
27received from the federal tax intercept program, be temporarily
28assigned until the entire amount of aid paid has been reimbursed.
29(4) If the federal government permits states to adopt the same
30order of distribution for preassistance and postassistance child
31support arrears, child support arrears shall be assigned, as follows:
32(A) Child support assigned pursuant to this subdivision prior
33to October 1, 1998, shall be assigned until aid under this chapter
34is no longer received and the entire amount has been reimbursed.
35(B) On or after October 1, 1998, child support assigned pursuant
36to this subdivision that accrued before the family receives aid under
37this chapter and that was not otherwise permanently assigned, shall
38be temporarily assigned until aid under this chapter is no longer
39received.
P53 1(C) On or after October 1, 1998, support that was temporarily
2assigned pursuant to this subdivision shall, when a payment is
3received from the federal tax intercept program, be temporarily
4assigned until the entire amount of aid paid has been reimbursed.
5(b) (1) Cooperate with the county welfare department and local
6child support agency in establishing the paternity of a child of the
7applicant or recipient born out of wedlock with respect to whom
8aid is claimed, and in establishing, modifying, or enforcing a
9support order with respect to a child of the individual for whom
10
aid is requested or obtained, unless the applicant or recipient
11qualifies for a good cause exception pursuant to Section 11477.04.
12The granting of aid shall not be delayed or denied if the applicant
13is otherwise eligible, if the applicant completes the necessary forms
14and agrees to cooperate with the local child support agency in
15securing support and determining paternity, if applicable. The local
16child support agency shall have staff available, in person or by
17telephone, at all county welfare offices and shall conduct an
18interview with each applicant to obtain information necessary to
19establish paternity and establish, modify, or enforce a support order
20at the time of the initial interview with the welfare office. The local
21child support agency shall make the determination of cooperation.
22If the applicant or recipient attests under penalty of perjury that
23he or she cannot provide the information required by this
24subdivision, the local child support agency shall make a finding
25regarding whether the
individual could reasonably be expected to
26provide the information before the local child support agency
27determines whether the individual is cooperating. In making the
28finding, the local child support agency shall consider all of the
29following:
30(A) The age of the child for whom support is sought.
31(B) The circumstances surrounding the conception of the child.
32(C) The age or mental capacity of the parent or caretaker of the
33child for whom aid is being sought.
34(D) The time that has elapsed since the parent or caretaker last
35had contact with the alleged father or obligor.
36(2) Cooperation includes all of the following:
37(A) Providing the name of the alleged parent or obligor and
38other information about that person if known to the applicant or
39recipient, such as address, social security number, telephone
P54 1number, place of employment or school, and the names and
2addresses of relatives or associates.
3(B) Appearing at interviews, hearings, and legal proceedings
4provided the applicant or recipient is provided with reasonable
5advance notice of the interview, hearing, or legal proceeding and
6does not have good cause not to appear.
7(C) If paternity is at issue, submitting to genetic tests, including
8genetic testing of the child, if necessary.
9(D) Providing any additional information known to or reasonably
10obtainable by the applicant or recipient necessary to establish
11paternity or to establish, modify, or enforce a child support
order.
12(3) A recipient or applicant shall not be required to sign a
13voluntary declaration of paternity, as set forth in Chapter 3
14(commencing with Section 7570) of Part 2 of Division 12 of the
15Family Code, as a condition of cooperation.
16(c) begin insert(1)end insertbegin insert end insertThis section shall not apply if all of the adults are
17excluded from the assistance unit pursuant to Section 11251.3,
1811454, or 11486.5.
19(d)
end delete
20begin insert(2)end insert It is the intent of the
Legislature that the regular receipt of
21child support in the preceding reporting period be considered in
22determining reasonably anticipated income for the following
23reporting period.
24(3) In accordance with Sections 11265.2 and 11265.46, if the
25income of an assistance unit described in paragraph (1) includes
26reasonably anticipated income derived from child support, the
27first fifty dollars ($50) of any amount of child support received
28each month shall not be considered income or resources and shall
29not be deducted from the amount of aid to which the assistance
30unit otherwise would be eligible.
begin insertSection 12300.4 of the end insertbegin insertWelfare and Institutions Codeend insertbegin insert,
32as added by Section 76 of Chapter 29 of the Statutes of 2014,
is
33amended to read:end insert
(a) Notwithstanding any other law, including, but
35not limited to, Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 3500) of
36Division 4 of Title 1 of the Government Code and Title 23
37(commencing with Section 110000) of the Government Code, a
38recipient who is authorized to receive in-home supportive services
39pursuant to this article, or Section 14132.95, 14132.952, or
4014132.956, administered by the State Department of Social
P55 1Services, or waiver personal care services pursuant to Section
214132.97, administered by the State Department of Health Care
3Services, or any combination of these services, shall direct these
4authorized services, and the authorized services shall be performed
5by a provider or providers within a workweek and in a manner
6that complies with the requirements of this section.
7(b) (1) A workweek is defined as beginning at 12:00 a.m. on
8Sunday and includes the next consecutive 168 hours, terminating
9at 11:59 p.m. the following Saturday.
10(2) A provider of services specified in subdivision (a) shall not
11work a total number of hours within a workweek that exceeds 66,
12as reduced by the net percentage defined by Sections 12301.02
13and 12301.03, as applicable, and in accordance with subdivision
14(d). The total number of hours worked within a workweek by a
15provider is defined as the sum of the following:
16(A) All hours worked providing authorized services specified
17in subdivision (a).
18(B) Travel time as defined in subdivision (f), only if federal
19financial participation is not available to compensate for that travel
20
time. If federal financial participation is available for travel time
21as defined in subdivision (f), the travel time shall not be included
22in the calculation of the total weeklybegin delete authorized hours of services.end delete
23begin insert hours worked within a workweek.end insert
24(3) (A) If the authorized in-home supportive services of a
25recipient cannot be provided by a single provider as a result of the
26limitation specified in paragraph (2), it is the responsibility of the
27recipient to employ an additional provider or providers, as needed,
28to ensure his or her authorized services are provided within his or
29her total weekly authorized hours of services established pursuant
30to subdivision (b) of Section 12301.1.
31(B) If the provider of authorized waiver personal care services
32cannot provide those services to a recipient as a result of the
33limitation specified in paragraph (2), the State Department of
34Health Care Services shall work with the recipient to engage
35additional providers, as necessary. It is the intent of the Legislature
36that this section shall not result in reduced services authorized to
37recipients of waiver personal care services defined in subdivision
38(a).
P56 1(4) (A) A provider shall inform each of his or her recipients of
2the number of hours that the provider is available to work for that
3recipient, in accordance with this section.
4(B) A recipient, his or her authorized representative, or any
5other entity, including any person or entity providing services
6pursuant to Section 14186.35, shall not authorize any provider to
7work hours that exceed
the applicable limitation or limitations of
8this section.
9(C) A recipient may authorize a provider to work hours in excess
10of the recipient’s weekly authorized hours established pursuant to
11Section 12301.1 without notification of the county welfare
12department, in accordance with both of the following:
13(i) The authorization does not result in more than 40 hours of
14authorized services per week being provided.
15(ii) The authorization does not exceed the recipient’s authorized
16hours of monthly services pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision
17(b) of Section 12301.1.
18(5) For providers of in-home supportive services, the State
19Department of Social Services or a county may terminate the
20provider from providing services under the IHSS program if a
21provider
continues to violate the limitations of this section on
22multiple occasions.
23(c) Notwithstanding any other law, only federal law and
24regulations regarding overtime compensation apply to providers
25of services defined in subdivision (a).
26(d) A provider of services defined in subdivision (a) is subject
27to all of the following, as applicable to his or her situation:
28(1) begin insert(A)end insertbegin insert end insertA provider who works forbegin delete anend deletebegin insert oneend insert
individual recipient
29of those services shall not work a total number of hours within a
30workweek that exceeds 66 hours, as reduced by the net percentage
31defined by Sections 12301.02 and 12301.03, as applicable. In no
32circumstance shall the provision of these services by that provider
33to the individual recipient exceed the total weekly hours of the
34services authorized to that recipient, except as additionally
35authorized pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (4) of
36subdivision (b). If multiple providers serve the same recipient, it
37shall continue to be the responsibility of that recipient or his or
38her authorized representative to schedule the work of his or her
39providers to ensure the authorized services of the recipient are
40provided in accordance with this section.
P57 1(B) When a recipient’s weekly authorized hours are adjusted
2pursuant to
subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b)
3of Section 12301.1 and exceed 66 hours, as reduced by the net
4percentage defined by Sections 12301.02 and 12301.03, as
5applicable, and at the time of adjustment the recipient currently
6receives all authorized hours of service from one provider, that
7provider shall be deemed authorized to work the recipient’s
8county-approved adjusted hours for that week, but only if the
9additional hours of work, based on the adjustment, do not exceed
10the total number of hours worked that are compensable at an
11overtime pay rate that the provider would have been authorized
12to work in that month if the weekly hours had not been adjusted.
13(2) A provider of in-home supportive services described in
14subdivision (a) who serves multiple recipients is not authorized
15to, and shall not, work more than 66 total hours in a workweek,
16as reduced by the net percentage defined by Sections 12301.02
17and
12301.03, as applicable, regardless of the number of recipients
18for whom the provider provides services authorized by subdivision
19(a). Providers are subject to the limits of each recipient’s total
20authorized weekly hours of in-home supportive services described
21in subdivision (a), except as additionally authorized pursuant to
22subparagraph (C) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (b).
23(e) Recipients and providers shall be informed of the limitations
24and requirements contained in this section, through notices at
25intervals and on forms as determined by the State Department of
26Social Services or the State Department of Health Care Services,
27as applicable, following consultation with stakeholders.
28(f) (1) A provider of services described in subdivision (a) shall
29not engage in travel time in excess of seven hours per week. For
30the purposes of this subdivision, “travel
time” means time spent
31traveling directly from a location where authorized services
32specified in subdivision (a) are provided to one recipient, to another
33location where authorized services are to be provided to another
34recipient. A provider shall coordinate hours of work with his or
35herbegin delete recipient orend delete recipients to comply with this section.
36(2) The hourly wage to compensate a provider for travel time
37described in this subdivision when the travel is between two
38counties shall be the hourly wage of the destination county.
39(3) Travel time, and compensation for that travel time, between
40a recipient of authorized in-home supportive services specified in
P58 1subdivision (a) and a recipient of authorized waiver personal care
2services specified in subdivision (a), shall be attributed to the
3program
authorizing services for the recipient to whom the provider
4is traveling.
5(4) Hours spent by a provider while engaged in travel time shall
6not be deducted from the authorized hours of service of any
7recipient of services specified in subdivision (a).
8(5) The State Department of Social Services and the State
9Department of Health Care Services shall issue guidance and
10processes for travel time between recipients that will assist the
11provider and recipient to comply with this subdivision. Each county
12shall provide technical assistance to providers and recipients, as
13necessary, to implement this subdivision.
14(g) A provider of authorized in-home supportive services
15specified in subdivision (a) shall timely submit, deliver, or mail,
16verified by postmark or request for delivery, a signed payroll
17timesheet within two weeks
after the end of each bimonthly payroll
18period. Notwithstanding any other law, a provider who submits
19an untimely payroll timesheet for providing authorized in-home
20supportive services specified in subdivision (a) shall be paid by
21the state within 30 days of the receipt of the signed payroll
22timesheet.
23(h) This section does not apply to a contract entered into
24pursuant to Section 12302 or 12302.6 for authorized in-home
25supportive services. Contract rates negotiated pursuant to Section
2612302 or 12302.6 shall be based on costs consistent with a 40-hour
27workweek.
28(i) The state and counties are immune from any liability resulting
29from implementation of this section.
30(j) Any action authorized under this section that is implemented
31in a program authorized pursuant to Section 14132.95, 14132.97,
3214132.952, or 14132.956
shall be compliant with federal Medicaid
33requirements, as determined by the State Department of Health
34Care Services.
35(k) Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the
36Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with
37Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
38Code), the State Department of Social Services and the State
39Department of Health Care Services may implement, interpret, or
P59 1make specific this section by means of all-county letters or similar
2instructions, without taking any regulatory action.
3(l) (1) This section shall become operative only when the
4regulatory amendments made by RIN 1235-AA05 to Part 552 of
5Title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations are deemed effective,
6either on the date specified in RIN 1235-AA05 or at a later date
7specified by the Federal Department of Labor, whichever is later.
8(2) If the regulatory amendments described in paragraph (1)
9become only partially effective by the date specified in paragraph
10(1), this section shall become operative only for those persons for
11whom federal financial participation is available as of that date.
begin insertSection 88 of Chapter 29 of the Statutes of 2014 is
13amended to read:end insert
(a) Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of
15the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with
16Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
17Code), the department may implement and administer the changes
18made by Sections 1, 64, 67, 68, 69, 70, 72, 73, 74, 75, 77, 79, 80,
19begin delete and 81 of this actend deletebegin insert 81, 82, and 83 of Chapter 29 of the Statutes of
202014end insert through all-county letters or similar instructions until
21regulations are adopted.
22(b) The department shall adopt emergency regulations
23implementing these provisions no later than January 1, 2016. The
24
department may readopt any emergency regulation authorized by
25this section that is the same as, or substantially equivalent to, any
26emergency regulation previously adopted pursuant to this section.
27The initial adoption of regulations pursuant to this section and one
28readoption of emergency regulations shall be deemed to be an
29emergency and necessary for the immediate preservation of the
30public peace, health, safety, or general welfare. Initial emergency
31regulations and the one readoption of emergency regulations
32authorized by this section shall be exempt from review by the
33Office of Administrative Law. The initial emergency regulations
34and the one readoption of emergency regulations authorized by
35this section shall be submitted to the Office of Administrative Law
36for filing with the Secretary of State and each shall remain in effect
37for no more than 180 days, by which time final regulations shall
38be adopted.
The amount of one million six hundred eighty-six
40thousand dollars ($1,686,000) is hereby appropriated to the State
P60 1Department of Social Services in augmentation of Item
25180-151-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2014, for
3Program 25.30 for the Commercially Sexually Exploited Children
4Program, and total the amount appropriated in Item
55180-153-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2014 is hereby
6reduced by the amount of one million six hundred eighty-six
7thousand dollars ($1,686,000) to offset that appropriation.
begin insertNo appropriation pursuant to Section 15200 of the
9Welfare and Institutions Code is made for purposes of this act.end insert
This act is a bill providing for appropriations related
11to the Budget Bill within the meaning of subdivision (e) of Section
1212 of Article IV of the California Constitution, has been identified
13as related to the budget in the Budget Bill, and shall take effect
14immediately.
It is the intent of the Legislature to enact statutory
16changes relating to the Budget Act of 2014.
O
98