SENATE BILL REPORT

SB 6199

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

As of January 26, 2018

Title: An act relating to the individual provider employment administrator program.

Brief Description: Concerning the individual provider employment administrator program.

Sponsors: Senators Cleveland, Conway, Miloscia, Keiser and Fortunato; by request of Department of Social and Health Services.

Brief History:

Committee Activity: Health & Long Term Care: 1/25/18.

Brief Summary of Bill

  • Authorizes the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) to implement an Individual Provider Employment Administrator (IPEA) program to act as the legal employer of individual providers (IPs).

  • Establishes a rate-setting board to determine IP labor rates and IPEA administrative rates.

  • Modifies the IP overtime expenditure requirements.

SENATE COMMITTEE ON HEALTH & LONG TERM CARE

Staff: LeighBeth Merrick (786-7445)

Background: In-home care services are available to Medicaid eligible older adults and people with developmental disabilities. Eligible persons (consumers) are assessed by DSHS to determine the level of the consumer's in-home care needs. Consumers may choose to receive services from either an IP or agency providers.

DSHS contracts with the IP to provide in-home care for consumers and with the Area Agencies on Aging (AAA) to provide case management services. Case management services include: establishing the consumer's plan of care, verifying the IP has met the training requirements, conducting or verifying an IP's criminal background check, monitoring the consumer's needs and the IP's performance, and reassessing and reauthorizing services. Consumers have the right to select, hire, supervise, and terminate any IP providing services to them. DSHS and the AAA may suspend or terminate IPs if they find or suspect that the IP's performance is jeopardizing the health, safety, or well-being of a consumer.

The state is the IP employer only for the purposes of collective bargaining. Wages, hours, and working conditions of IPs are determined through the collective bargaining process. No state agency or department may establish policies or rules governing the wages or hours of IPs. The consumer has the right to select their IPs and to assign hours to one or more IPs, within the maximum hours determined by the consumer's care plan.

In 2014, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Medicaid home care workers in Illinois are not required to pay union dues. The court declared that IPs are not full-fledged public employees because they are hired and fired by the consumer. Washington IPs are represented and can elect to not pay union dues.

In 2016, the Legislature passed a law that established overtime pay requirements for IPs. Unless approved, IPs must not work more than 40 hours per work week, not including paid travel time and paid training time. Expenditures for hours worked beyond 40 hours per week must not exceed 8.75 percent of the total average authorized personal care hours as projected by the Caseload Forecast Council. DSHS submits quarterly overtime expenditure reports to the Legislative fiscal committees and the Joint Legislative-Executive Overtime Oversight Task Force.

Summary of Bill: IPEA Program. DSHS is authorized to establish an IPEA program to provide personal care, respite care, and similar services to individuals with functional impairments under the medicaid program.

The IPEA is the IP's legal employer for administrative purposes which includes:

The consumer is the managing employer and has the primary right to select, dismiss, assign hours and supervise the work of one or more IPs. Consumers must authorize the distribution of their plan of care.

The AAA develop a plan of care; monitor the consumer's plan of care and verify it meets the client's needs; reasses and reauthorize services; and notify the IPEA if they have concerns about the IP's ability to meet the plan of care.

By October 1, 2018, a stakeholder work group must make recommendations to the Legislature about establishing a separate license or certification for IPEAs. DSHS is permitted to contract with a maximum of two IPEAs. IPEA selection will be based on a strong commitment to consumer choice; commitment to recruiting and retaining a high quality and diverse workforce; ability to deliver high quality training; and ability to build and adapt technology tools to enhance efficiency of services. By January 1, 2021, DSHS must contract and initiate the transition of IPs to the IPEA. DSHS will conduct a readiness review to determine when they will terminate their contracts with IPs and fully transition to the IPEA.

Once DSHS determines that the transition to the IPEA is complete, biennial funding in the next ensuing biennium for case management and social work must be reduced by no more than:

DSHS will continue to establish the plan of care for each consumer and determine the number of service hours per consumer; manage-long term in home care services and determine the level of care for each consumer; and maintain the obligation to comply with federal requirements.

Rates. The rates paid to the IPEA must include a labor rate and an administrative rate. The labor rate is the portion of the payment that is used to compensate the IPs, which includes wages, benefits, and any associated taxes. The administrative rate is the portion of the payment that is used to compensate the IPEA for their administrative duties. Until labor rates are established, the initial labor rate will be based on the most recent collective bargaining agreement between the Governor and the Service Employees International Union 775, plus hourly roll-up costs of any additional legally required benefits and labor costs.

A 14-person rate-setting board is established to evaluate and propose changes to the rates paid to the IPEA. The rate setting board is comprised of four voting members: one representative from the Governor's Office; one representative from DSHS; one representative from the IPEA; and one designee from the exclusive bargaining representative of IPs. At the first board meeting, the voting members must select a fifth voting member to act as the board chair and cast any tie-breaking votes. The remaining nine non-voting members are: four legislators, one member from each caucus of the House of Representatives and the Senate; one representative from the State Council on Aging; one representative of an organization representing people with intellectual or developmental disabilities; one representative of an organization representing people with physical disabilities; one representative from licensed home care agency; and one home care worker.

The rate-setting board must consider current factors used in public employee collective bargaining related to individual providers, such as a comparison of wages; the financial ability of the state to pay for the compensation and fringe benefits; the state's interest in a stable long-term care workforce; the state's interest in assuring access to affordable, quality health care; and the state's fiscal interest in reducing reliance upon public benefit programs.

By October 1 of every year, the rate-setting board must submit their rate request to the Office of Financial Management (OFM). If the OFM director considers the request as financially feasible, the Governor will include the request in the Governor's budget. The Legislature then has the option to approve or reject the request as a whole. If the Legislature rejects the request, the rate stays at the current level.

Overtime. DSHS must adopt rules describing the criteria under which a consumer is permitted to use a single IP for more than 40 hours per week. Expenditures for hour worked beyond 40 hours per week may not exceed 8.25 percent of the total average authorized personal care hours as projected by the Caseload Forecast Council.

Beginning September 1, 2018 and every year after, DSHS must submit overtime expenditure reports to the Legislative fiscal committees and the Joint Legislative-Executive Overtime Oversight Task Force. The task force is required to meet when they are projected or anticipate they will exceed their expenditure limits.

Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Available.

Creates Committee/Commission/Task Force that includes Legislative members: Yes.

Effective Date: Ninety days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.

Staff Summary of Public Testimony: PRO: The vast majority of the state's LTSS consumers are in-home. Many have aged in place and the complexity of managing the IP workforce has increased. It is time the state moves to a private entity that specializes in managing this type of workforce. A case manager's time should be devoted to monitoring the consumer's need and not spent administering employer functions like ensuring the IP has met their training requirements.

CON: The system is already difficult for IPs to navigate. Less mandates and regulation for IPs is needed. This would complicate the system more. Funding should be spent on simplifying the existing system rather than contracting with an administrator.

OTHER: This would establish a state-contracted home care agency. Washington already has many private home care agencies and the state should not be in competition with the private industry.

Persons Testifying: PRO: Senator Annette Cleveland, Prime Sponsor; Bill Moss, Aging and Long Term Support Administration, DSHS; Dan Murphy, Northwest Regional Council. CON: Loren Freeman, Freeman & Associates; Maxford Nelsen, Freedom Foundation. OTHER: Leslie Emerick, Washington Home Care Association.

Persons Signed In To Testify But Not Testifying: No one.