Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Commerce & Labor Committee | |
HB 2672
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.
Brief Description: Addressing adult family home caregivers.
Sponsors: Representatives Conway, Green, Barlow, Hasegawa, Loomis, Simpson, VanDeWege, Kenney and Seaquist.
Brief Summary of Bill |
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Hearing Date: 1/29/08
Staff: Jill Reinmuth (786-7134).
Background:
In Washington there are a variety of long-term care services for persons who are elderly or have
disabilities. These services include nursing homes, assisted living facilities, adult family homes,
and individual providers (home care workers).
Adult Family Home Providers
The Department of Social and Health Services (Department) licenses adult family homes to
provide residential care for up to six persons in a home-like setting. The residents in adult family
homes are persons who are elderly or who have physical or developmental disabilities. They
generally require supervision or assistance with activities of daily living and/or health-related
services and are unable to live alone. The Department sends payments directly to adult family
homes that provide long-term care services for clients who are eligible for Medicaid and
development disabilities programs.
Individual Providers
The Department also contracts with individual providers (home care workers) to provide
long-term care services for persons who are elderly or who have disabilities and who are eligible
for Medicaid and developmental disabilities programs. The individual providers provide the
Department's clients with personal care assistance for various tasks such as toileting, bathing,
dressing, ambulating, meal preparation, and household chores. The individual providers are
hired and fired by the consumer client, but are paid by the Department.
The Home Care Quality Authority (Authority) provides oversight of home care services provided
by individual providers. The Authority's duties include establishing qualifications and
accountability standards for, and investigating the background of, individual providers. It also
recruits new individual providers, provides them with training opportunities, and administers a
referral registry to help consumers find an individual provider.
Collective Bargaining
Employees of cities, counties, and other political subdivisions of the state bargain their wages
and working conditions under the Public Employees' Collective Bargaining Act (PECBA). Adult
family home providers and individual providers who receive payments from the Medicaid and
state-funded long-term care programs and individual providers also have collective bargaining
rights under the PECBA.
Summary of Bill:
Various provisions relating to adult family home caregivers are enacted and amended. They
establish a referral registry, grant collective bargaining rights, and provide for training
opportunities. They also address the minimum wage rate paid to caregivers and the Medicaid
and state-funded long-term care rates paid to providers.
For purposes of these provisions, "caregivers" are those who are employed by adult family home
providers. "Adult family home providers" are those who receive payments from the Medicaid
and state-funded long-term care programs and who have collective bargaining rights under the
Public Employees' Collective Bargaining Act (PECBA).
Referral Registry
The Home Care Quality Authority (Authority) must establish and manage a referral registry, and
must assist adult family home providers in finding caregivers and respite care through the referral
registry.
Adult family home providers must provide lists of caregivers to the Authority to be included in
the referral registry. Lists must include the names and addresses of caregivers, as well as
information necessary to determine whether caregivers have met minimum training requirements
and undergone criminal background checks.
The Authority must determine that caregivers have met minimum training requirements,
undergone criminal background checks, and are not listed on the Department of Social and
Health Services' long-term care abuse and neglect registry before including them in the referral
registry.
Adult family home providers must contract with the Authority for all hours of care provided by
caregivers beginning October 1, 2009.
The Authority must, upon request, provide lists of caregivers to labor organizations seeking to
organize caregivers. Lists must include names and addresses of caregivers.
Caregiver Compensation and Long-Term Care Payment Rates
Beginning July 1, 2008, adult family home providers must pay caregivers wages of not less than
$9 per hour.
Beginning October 1, 2009, the Authority must pay caregivers wages based on the greater of the
minimum hourly rate ($9 per hour), a rate set by legislation, a rate set by collective bargaining, or
a rate requested by the provider. The Authority must also administer fringe benefits and deduct
and remit payroll taxes.
Beginning October 1, 2009, the Authority must collect cost reports from adult family home
providers. Cost reports must include: (1) hours of care provided by providers, hours of care
provided by caregivers, and costs of those hours; and (2) costs of noncare-related items, such as
supplies or capital costs.
Client-specific daily Medicaid and state-funded long-term care rates must be increased to reflect
personnel costs (as a percentage of overall costs) and increases to wage rates.
Collective Bargaining for Caregivers
Solely for purposes of collective bargaining, caregivers are "public employees" and the Governor
is the "public employer." The only appropriate unit is a statewide unit of all caregivers. The
exclusive representative is determined in the manner specified in the PECBA.
The scope of bargaining is limited to the following:
Caregivers are subject to mediation and binding interest arbitration if an impasse occurs in
negotiations.
Union dues are deducted from the caregiver's payments as authorized by the caregiver or as
required by a union security clause.
The following are not modified:
Training
Training opportunities for caregivers represented by an exclusive bargaining representative must
be offered through contracts with the training partnership.
Other
The scope of bargaining with adult family home providers is modified to exclude matters subject
to bargaining with caregivers.
The Authority has the same authority with respect to caregivers as it has with respect to
individual providers, including rulemaking.
A new dedicated account is established into which payments from providers are deposited and
from which payments to caregivers are made. The account is subject to allotment, but not
appropriation. The Authority may contract with a financial institution to receive and deposit
payments in and make expenditures from the account. The account retains its interest earnings.
Rules Authority: The Home Care Quality Authority (Authority) is generally authorized to issue
necessary rules. The Authority is specifically required to establish hourly rates paid by adult
family home providers for caregivers in rule.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Requested on January 26, 2008.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.