EMERGENCY RULES
SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES
(Aging and Disability Services Administration)
Effective Date of Rule: Immediately.
Purpose: The department is adding new WAC 388-71-06020 through 388-71-06420. As a result of the 2009-2011 supplemental operating budget (ESSB 6444), the home care quality authority is no longer funded, and the home care referral registry program has moved to the aging and disability services administration's home and community services division effective July 1, 2010.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.520.
Other Authority: Washington state 2009-2011 supplemental operating budget (ESSB 6444).
Under RCW 34.05.350 the agency for good cause finds that in order to implement the requirements or reductions in appropriations enacted in any budget for fiscal years 2009, 2010, or 2011, which necessitates the need for the immediate adoption, amendment, or repeal of a rule, and that observing the time requirements of notice and opportunity to comment upon adoption of a permanent rule would be contrary to the fiscal needs or requirements of the agency.
Reasons for this Finding: These amendments are necessary to address the state's revenue shortfall as outlined in the 2009-2011 supplemental operating budget (ESSB 6444). The home care quality authority is no longer funded, and the home care referral registry moved to the home and community services division effective July 1, 2010. This CR-103E continues emergency rules filed as WSR 10-14-051 while the department completes adoption of permanent rules. A CR-101 was filed as WSR 10-14-052, and the department is currently in the process of filing a CR-102 Proposed rule making.
Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Comply with Federal Statute: New 23, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Federal Rules or Standards: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Recently Enacted State Statutes: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted at Request of a Nongovernmental Entity: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted on the Agency's Own Initiative: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Clarify, Streamline, or Reform Agency Procedures: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted Using Negotiated Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Pilot Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Other Alternative Rule Making: New 23, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Date Adopted: October 26, 2010.
Katherine I. Vasquez
Rules Coordinator
4217.2Referral registry
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"AAA" refers to the local area agency on aging.
"ALJ" refers to administrative law judge.
"Consumer/employer" refers to an adult or child with functional or developmental disabilities who qualifies for and uses personal care or respite care paid for through medicaid or state-only funds.
"Consumer representative" refers to an individual who is acting on behalf of the consumer/employer.
"Department" means the department of social and health services.
"DSHS" refers to the department of social and health services.
"Emergency provider" means an individual provider who is employed as a back-up for a provider who did not show up or who was unable to work due to unexpected circumstances.
"Employer" refers to the consumer.
"HCRR" refers to the home care referral registry.
"Home care referral registry operations" refers to the activities carried out at the local level to recruit and register individual providers or prospective individual providers for the referral registry and assist consumers to utilize the referral registry to find qualified individual providers.
"Individual provider" means a person, regardless of relationship, including a personal aide working for a consumer under self-directed care, who has a contract with the department of social and health services to provide personal care or respite care services to adults or children with functional or developmental disabilities and is reimbursed for those services through medicaid or state-only funding.
"IP" refers to an individual provider.
"Malfeasance" means any unlawful act committed by the provider, whether in the course of employment or otherwise.
"Mandatory reporter" is an employee of DSHS; law enforcement officer; social worker; professional school personnel; individual provider; an employee of a facility; an operator of a facility; an employee of a social service, welfare, mental health, adult day health, adult day care, home health, home care, or hospice agency; county coroner or medical examiner; Christian science practitioner; or health care provider subject to chapter 18.130 RCW.
"Misfeasance" means performance of a workplace duty in an improper manner; including events which jeopardize the health and safety of persons, unresolved patter of performance, issues related to truth or dishonesty, including failure to report a criminal conviction.
"OAH" refers to the office of administrative hearings.
"Prospective individual provider" refers to someone who is seeking employment with a consumer/employer.
"Provider" means an individual provider.
"Referral registry" is a data base that is designed to assist consumers with finding individual providers and to assist individual providers to find employment.
"Respite provider" means an individual provider who is employed on a prearranged short-term basis to fill in for a routine caregiver.
"Routine provider" means an individual provider who is employed on a regularly scheduled basis.
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(1) Takes into account the consumer/employer needs and preferences when identifying potential individual providers;
(2) Provides for reasonable standards of accountability providers and prospective individual providers listed through the registry;
(3) Is voluntary for individual providers and prospective individual providers and consumers/employers;
(4) Promotes job opportunities for individual providers and prospective individual providers;
(5) Provides access to the data base for consumer/employers who want to query a referral independently; and
(6) Increases a consumer/employer's choice of individual providers and prospective individual providers via an established pool of available individual providers and prospective individual providers on the registry.
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(1) Consumer/employers who are adults or children with functional or developmental disabilities who qualify for and use personal care or respite care paid for through medicaid or state-only funds.
(2) People who are authorized to request a referral on behalf of a consumer including family members, area agency on aging case managers, department social workers and/or a consumer representative.
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(1) An individual provider is someone who has signed a department contract.
(2) A prospective individual provider is someone who is seeking employment with a consumer/employer and who has not yet signed a DSHS contract.
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(1) Prior to January 1, 2012 satisfactorily complete a Washington state patrol background check and not be convicted of a disqualifying crime or negative action based on the applicable department list of disqualifying crimes and negative actions; and
(2) Complete an FBI fingerprint-based background check if the person has lived in the state of Washington less than three consecutive years immediately before the background check. An individual provider or prospective individual provider that has lived in Washington state less than three consecutive years may be included on the referral registry for a one hundred twenty-day provisional period as allowed by law or program rules when:
(a) A fingerprint-based background check is pending; and
(b) The individual provider or prospective individual provider is not disqualified based on the immediate result of the Washington state patrol background check.
(3) Not be listed on any long-term care abuse and neglect registry used by the department;
(4) Be eighteen years of age or older;
(5) Provide a valid Washington state driver's license or other valid picture identification;
(6) Have a Social Security card or proof of authorization to work in the United States as required on the employment verification form; and
(7) Comply with requirements listed in WAC 388-71-06180 and other applicable requirements in chapter 388-71 WAC.
(8) Effective January 1, 2012, be screened through the department's fingerprint-based background check, as required by RCW 74.39A.055.
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(1) A background check that reveals a disqualifying crime or negative action listed on an applicable department list of disqualifying crimes and/or negative actions;
(2) He or she is listed on any state abuse or neglect registry;
(3) He or she is subject to a current and valid protective order that was issued in the state of Washington barring or restricting contact with children, vulnerable adults or persons with disabilities;
(4) The department individual provider contract is denied; or
(5) He or she is found ineligible per WAC 388-71-0540.
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(1) He or she failed to disclose pending charges, criminal convictions, or negative actions on background authorization form;
(2) The department has a reasonable, good faith belief that he or she is unable to meet the care needs of consumers;
(3) The background check reveals an offense or pattern of offenses, not listed on the applicable list of disqualifying crimes, that the department determines may put consumers at risk; or
(4) Information found in WAC 388-71-0543.
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(1) Contact their local home care referral registry operations;
(2) Request and complete an application packet; and
(3) Meet the qualifications specified in WAC 388-71-06120.
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(a) Contact the referral registry office once a month to verify that the information in the system is accurate and up-to-date; and
(b) Successfully complete the criminal history background check process every twelve months, described in WAC 388-71-06130 and 388-71-0513.
(2) Failure to comply with ongoing responsibilities will result in placing the individual provider or prospective individual provider in an "inactive" status. The provider will not be referred to a consumer/employer when in "inactive" status.
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(1) Fails to meet the qualifications identified in WAC 388-71-06120 and 388-71-06180;
(2) Committed misfeasance in the performance of his or her duties as an individual provider;
(3) Committed malfeasance in the performance of his or her duties as an individual provider;
(4) Requests that their name be removed from the registry;
(5) Has his or her individual provider contract with the department terminated for cause;
(6) Has a cause for denial, as listed in WAC 388-71-06130, exists; or
(7) Fails to meet qualifications found in WAC 388-71-0510 and 388-71-0540.
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The department and/or its designee, will review all complaints and disqualification information received and:
(1) For those complaints that fall under the legal jurisdiction of law enforcement or adult protective services (APS) or child protective services (CPS), an immediate referral will be made to the appropriate agency.
(a) The department may initiate an emergency proceeding to inactivate the individual provider or prospective individual provider on the registry pending the investigation.
(b) If APS, CPS, and/or law enforcement declines the referral, the complaint will proceed to assessment, recommendation and decision.
(c) If APS, CPS, and/or law enforcement accepts the complaint, then action beyond the emergency adjudicative process per RCW 34.05.479 will be stayed pending APS, CPS, and/or law enforcement action.
(2) For those complaints not forwarded to APS, CPS, or law enforcement, the department will conduct an internal assessment.
(a) Upon assessment, a decision will be made and notification will be sent, in writing to the individual provider or prospective individual provider.
(b) The individual provider or prospective individual provider has the right to appeal an adverse decision.
(c) The appeal must be sent in writing to the office of administrative hearings (OAH) as designated on the formal notice within twenty-eight days of the date the formal notice was mailed by the department.
(d) OAH will schedule the hearing and notify interested parties.
(e) An administrative law judge (ALJ) from OAH will act as presiding officer for the adjudicative proceeding as provided in RCW 34.05.425 (1)(c).
(f) The ALJ will render an initial decision.
(g) The initial decision will be reviewed and final agency action will be taken by the department board of appeals, either adopting, modifying, or reversing the initial decision.
(h) The final order is the final department action and will be provided to all interested parties and to the individual provider or prospective individual provider along with information regarding the right to seek judicial review in superior court when applicable.
(i) The final order will include, or incorporate by reference to the initial order, all matters required by RCW 34.05.461(3).
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(1) An internal assessment will be conducted, a decision will be made and notification will be sent, in writing to the individual provider or prospective individual provider.
(2) The individual provider or prospective individual provider has the right to appeal an adverse decision.
(3) The appeal must be sent in writing to the office of administrative hearings (OAH) as designated on the formal notice within twenty-eight days of the date the formal notice was mailed by DSHS.
(4) OAH will schedule the hearing and notify interested parties.
(5) An administrative law judge from OAH will act as presiding officer for the adjudicative proceeding as provided in RCW 34.05.425 (1)(c).
(6) The ALJ will render an initial decision.
(7) The initial decision will be reviewed and final department action will be taken by the department board of appeals, either adopting, modifying, or reversing the initial decision.
(8) The final order is the final department action and will be provided to all interested parties and to the individual provider or prospective individual providers along with information regarding the right to seek judicial review in superior court when applicable.
(9) The final order will include, or incorporate by reference to the initial order, all matters required by RCW 34.05.461(3).
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A letter will be sent notifying the individual provider or prospective individual provider that he or she is being removed from the registry and will include information pertaining to the appeal and hearing process.
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Upon successful submission of a request application, a consumer/employer or consumer representative may request a user name and password to access the registry independently to generate a list of names.
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(1) The individual provider or prospective individual does not meet the requirements to contract with DSHS; or
(2) The case manager has a reasonable, good faith belief that the person will be unable to appropriately meet the consumer/employer needs.
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