Nurse Staffing Committees. Hospitals are required to establish nurse staffing committees whose membership consists of:
The responsibilities of the nurse staffing committee include:
When developing the annual staffing plan, the committee must consider certain statutory factors, such as patient activity, intensity level, nature of care required, and level of experience of staff.
If the staffing plan is not adopted by the hospital, the chief executive officer must provide reasons why the plan was not adopted and either identify the changes to the plan prior to the hospital's adoption or prepare an alternative staffing plan that the hospital will adopt. Hospitals must submit their nurse staffing plans annually to the Department of Health (DOH).
DOH must investigate complaints related to the failure to establish a staffing committee, submit a nurse staffing plan annually, conduct a semi-annual review of the nurse staffing plan, or follow nursing assignments or shift-to-shift adjustments. There are statutory limitations on when DOH may investigate a complaint of a failure to follow nurse assignments or shift-to-shift adjustments.
After an investigation, if DOH determines there has been a violation, DOH must require the hospital to submit a corrective action plan within 45 days of the presentation of findings from DOH to the hospital. If the hospital fails to submit or follow the corrective action plan, DOH may impose a civil penalty of $100 per day.
Various provisions related to the staffing committees, including requirements for DOH to investigate complaints, is set to expire June 1, 2023.
Meal and Rest Breaks. In general, hospitals must provide employees with uninterrupted meal and rest breaks, except for:
In the case of a clinical circumstance, if a rest break is interrupted before ten minutes by the employer, the employee must be given an additional ten minute uninterrupted rest break at the earliest reasonable time during the work period.
An unforeseeable emergent circumstance is:
The meal and rest break provision applies to a hospital employee who is:
Health Care Facility Overtime. No employee of a health care facility may be required to work overtime and the acceptance by an employee of overtime is strictly voluntary.
The overtime restriction does not apply to overtime work that occurs because of:
Health care facilities covered by the overtime restrictions include hospitals, hospices, rural health care facilities, psychiatric hospitals, and facilities owned and operated by the Department of Corrections.
A violation of the overtime provision is a class 1 civil infraction.
The Department of Labor and Industries (L&I) enforces the meal and rest break and overtime provisions, as well as other wage and hour laws and workplace health and safety standards.
Staffing Committees. The staffing committee statutes are recodified under the jurisdiction of L&I, rather than DOH. The expiration date of provisions related to staffing committees and investigations is repealed.
Instead of nurse staffing committees, hospitals are required to have hospital staffing committees whose membership consists of:
The hospital staffing committee must submit its annual staffing plan using the uniform format established by L&I. Factors considered by the hospital staffing committee when developing the staffing plan are modified.
If the staffing plan is not adopted by consensus of the staffing committee, the prior staffing plan remains in effect and the hospital is subject to daily fines of $5,000. The daily fine is $100 for critical access hospitals, hospitals with fewer than 25 acute care beds, and certain sole community hospitals certified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
The chief executive officer must provide feedback to the staffing committee on a semiannual basis prior to the committee's semiannual review and adoption of the staffing plan.
Ancillary health care personnel, patients, collective bargaining representatives, and other individuals are allowed to file complaints to the staffing committee on variations of personnel assignments. All complaints submitted to the staffing committee must be reviewed, regardless of what format the complainant uses to submit the complaint.
Hospital staffing committees must file a charter with L&I that includes:
L&I must review submitted staffing plans to ensure they are timely received and completed. Failure to timely submit a staffing plan or a charter will result in a violation and civil penalty of $25,000.
L&I must investigate complaints. The provision limiting investigations to complaints with evidence of a continuing pattern of unresolved violations is removed. Provisions prohibiting investigation of complaints in the event of unforeseeable emergency circumstances or where the hospital documents efforts to obtain staffing are also removed.
Hospitals will not be found in violation of the minimum staffing standards if there were unforeseeable emergent circumstances or the hospital documents that it made reasonable efforts to obtain and retain staffing.
An unforeseeable emergent circumstance means:
No later than 30 days after a hospital deviates from its staffing plan, the hospital incident command must provide the staffing committee an assessment of staffing needs arising from the emergency and the hospital's plan to address the staffing needs. The staffing committee must develop a contingency staffing plan. The hospital may not deviate from its staffing plan for more than 90 days without the approval of the staffing committee.
Failure to submit or follow a corrective action plan is increased from $100 per day, to $5,000 per day, except the $100 per day remains for critical access hospitals, hospitals with fewer than 25 acute care beds, and certain sole community hospitals certified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The fines apply until the hospital follows the corrective action plan for 90 days, after which L&I may reduce the accumulated fine.
Staffing Standards. Minimum staffing standards are established for hospitals. Direct care registered nurses may not be assigned more patients than the following for any shift—shown as nurse:patient ratios:
Direct care nursing assistants-certified may not be assigned more patients than the following for any shift:
A direct care registered nurse or direct care nursing assistant-certified may not be assigned to a nursing unit or clinical area unless that nurse first received orientation sufficient to provide competent care and the nurse has demonstrated current competence in providing care in that area.
Hospitals must implement the minimum staffing standards no later than two years after the effective date of the bill. However, critical access hospitals, hospitals with fewer than 25 acute care beds, and certain sole community hospitals certified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, have up to four years to implement the minimum staffing standards.
A process is created for hospitals to apply for, and L&I to grant, variances from the staffing standards for good cause. Good cause means situations where compliance with the staffing standards is infeasible and a variance does not have a significant harmful effect on the health, safety, and welfare of the employees and patients.
Meal and Rest Breaks and Overtime Restrictions. Combining meal and rest breaks is allowed for any work period in which an employee is entitled to one or more meal periods and more than one rest period.
Provisions that allowed certain clinical circumstances to exempt hospitals from meal and rest break requirements are amended. The requirement to provide uninterrupted meal and rest breaks does not apply when there is a clinical circumstance, as determined by the employee that may lead to a significant adverse effect on the patient's condition, unless the employer determines that the patient may suffer life-threatening adverse effects.
The definition of employee is broadened, applying the meal and rest break provisions and overtime restrictions to an employee who is involved in direct patient care activities or clinical services; and receives an hourly wage or is covered by a collective bargaining agreement.
Unforeseen disasters or other catastrophic events that substantially affect the need for health care services are removed from the definition of unforeseeable emergent circumstances.
For the purposes of exemptions to the overtime restrictions the prescheduled on-call time must not exceed more than 24 hours per week; and the health care facility's reasonable efforts to obtain staffing are not reasonable if overtime is used to fill vacancies from chronic staff shortages that persist longer than three months.
Enforcement. A person may file a complaint with L&I alleging violations of the staffing provisions, meal and rest break requirements, and overtime restrictions. Procedures are established for the issuance of citations and notices of assessments, appeals, and other processes. Unless different amounts are provided in specific provisions, L&I may impose a maximum penalty of $1,000 for each violation, up to three violations; $2,500 for the fourth violation; and $5,000 for each subsequent
violation.
Department of Health. By November 1, 2023, DOH must submit a report to the Legislature assessing the state's alternatives to increase registered nurse licensure reciprocity. The report must include an assessment of current reciprocity laws, compacts, and rules and alternatives to those laws, and information on how military spouses may benefit from a compact or reciprocity.
The requirement that the staffing plan developed and overseen by the staffing committee comply with the nurse staffing standards established under the bill is removed. The requirement that a hospital staffing committee review its staffing plan against the ability to meet the staffing standards established under the bill is removed.
In the factors a staffing committee must consider when developing a staffing plan, that the ability to comply with relevant state and federal laws and rules is not limited to only those regarding meal and rest breaks and use of overtime and on-call shifts.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: Staffing shortages are an issue that causes nurses to leave the profession, leading to even larger staffing shortages. Staffing committees do not involve the nurses and hospital administrations can veto the staffing plans without an explanation. Skilled staff are leaving and not being replaced. DOH does not hold hospitals accountable. Short staffing leads to a lack of quality of care and leads to transferring nurses to units without a proper orientation. Understaffed hospitals lead to backups in other emergency services. Hospitals have the money to make these changes.
CON: The bill would increase the equity gap for rural and remote pregnant mothers and could lead to the closure of obstetrical services at rural hospitals and increase the costs of other services. Ratios will make it even harder for rural hospitals to hire nurses and will lead to patients being turned away. The prescheduled on-call exception is necessary for patient safety. Low volume, highly specialized fields need people to be on-call. The bill will not ease the workforce shortage. California has ratios and still has a workforce shortage and worse patient outcomes. The bill will lead to patients waiting in emergency rooms to maintain ratios and will lead to deaths. Every hospital will need to apply for variances under the bill. The acuity of patients and nurse expertise go into ratios and it is not one size fits all.
PRO: Despite current law it is clear in the fiscal note that the University of Washington is not appropriately staffing their plan. Most plans already meet these staffing levels but the hospitals are not staffing at that level. There are 120,000 active nurse licenses and half as many filled positions. Current staffing levels are leading to extreme burnout.
CON: This bill would require hiring 7000 additional nurses. It isn't a matter of hiring one more nurse. Hospitals treat patients 24/7 so it takes four nurses to staff a 24-hour period. There are not enough nurses to meet these ratios, especially in rural communities. The inability to meet these ratios will result in canceled procedures. Large cost increases, will reduce number of beds and people served. This bill would have a negative impact on patients.