The Department of Social and Health Services (Department) provides publicly funded personal care services to eligible clients who live in their own homes and are elderly or have developmental disabilities. Personal care services include assistance with various tasks such as toileting, bathing, dressing, ambulating, meal preparation, and household chores. Personal care services may be provided in the client's home by either an individual provider or by an employee of a home care agency.
Individual providers are persons who have contracted with the Department to provide personal care or respite care services to clients. Clients have the right to select, hire, supervise the work of, and terminate any individual provider providing services to them. Individual providers are paid through a direct contract with the Department. Individual providers are considered public employees solely for the purpose of collective bargaining which determines their wages, hours, and working conditions, but they are not otherwise considered employees of the state.
In 2018 legislation was enacted to authorize the Department to establish a consumer directed employer (CDE) program. A CDE is a private entity that contracts with the Department to be the legal employer of individual providers for the purpose of administrative functions related to providing personal care, respite care, and similar services to clients under Medicaid programs. A CDE's responsibilities generally include coordination with the consumer, establishment of wages and benefits for individual providers, tax activities on behalf of individual providers, verification of individual provider qualifications, and other administrative and employment-related supports. The Department may contract with up to two vendors to serve as a CDE. The Department must initiate the transition of individual providers to the CDE no later than July 1, 2021.
Initial labor rates for individual providers employed through a CDE are established as the rates paid under the most recent collective bargaining agreement between the Governor and the Service Employees International Union 775. Subsequent labor and administrative rates for the CDE must be established by a rate-setting board. The rate-setting board consists of 14 members, four of whom are voting members. The four voting members select a person to chair the rate-setting board and to cast the fifth vote in the event of a tie.
The composition of the voting membership of the rate-setting board for consumer directed employers (CDEs) is changed from having a single representative of a CDE to having a representative from each CDE. Voting procedures for the rate-setting board are adjusted so that if there is only one CDE in operation in Washington, each of the four voting members of the rate-setting board has one vote, but if there are two CDEs, each CDE representative has one vote and the other three members have two votes. Voting members are prohibited from splitting votes and a majority of voting members constitutes a quorum for transacting business and taking action.
The rate-setting board is authorized to take testimony and make a recommendation for the administrative rate for home care agencies that serve Medicaid clients.
The Department of Social and Health Services (Department) may modify the labor and administrative rates between the rate-setting board's activities without convening the rate setting board or following the rate-setting process on condition that:
The definition of "administrative rate" is clarified to expressly include losses for bad debt, compensation for business and occupation taxes, and all other costs associated with operating as the CDE.
The Department must make a one-time transfer of funds to the CDE totaling the amount of previously unclaimed paid leave. The liability for payment of unclaimed paid time off is also transferred to the CDE.
The stakeholder group responsible for adopting recommendations related to whether or not a separate credentialing category should be established for CDEs is eliminated and it is stated that a CDE does not require a separate credentialing category.
The deadline for initiating the transition of individual providers to the CDE is extended from July 1, 2021 to December 31, 2021.
(In support) This bill will provide flexibility to the Department of Social and Health Services as well as the private entities administering the program. This bill opens up the opportunity for competition in the program. This bill will support the transfer of funding for paid time off for individual providers, which is part of the benefit that will need to be paid by the consumer directed employer.
(Opposed) None.