California 2017-2018 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB130 Compare Versions

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1-Assembly Bill No. 130 CHAPTER 251An act to amend Sections 12301.61, 12306.16, 13303, 14126.022, 17605, 17605.07, and 17606.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to health and human services, and making an appropriation therefor, to take effect immediately, bill related to the budget. [ Approved by Governor September 16, 2017. Filed with Secretary of State September 16, 2017. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 130, Committee on Budget. Health and human services.(1) Existing law establishes the county-administered In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) program, under which qualified aged, blind, and disabled persons are provided with services in order to permit them to remain in their own homes and avoid institutionalization. Under existing law, a county board of supervisors may elect to contract with a nonprofit consortium to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services, or establish, by ordinance, a public authority to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services. Existing law requires, until January 1, 2020, a specified mediation process to be held if a public authority or nonprofit consortium fails to reach agreement on a bargaining contract with its in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.This bill would clarify that the specified mediation process is required if a public authority or nonprofit consortium and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.Existing law requires the state and counties to share the annual cost of providing in-home supportive services and requires all counties to have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE) commencing July 1, 2017, as prescribed. Existing law requires that a portion of IHSS costs that are the counties responsibility to be offset using a combination of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, as specified.Existing law requires the Controller to deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount, and requires the Controller to allocate funds to counties based on those calculations. Existing law requires the Controller, for the 2015 16 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter and after satisfying the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account, to deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027% of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account, as specified.This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount, as specified.Existing law requires the Controller, for the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, to allocate a specified amount to the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, city, or city and county from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance.This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, or city and county, as specified.Existing law defines growth for purposes of the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account to mean the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for costs from specified social services programs, including the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017. Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, growth includes the County IHSS MOE costs to counties commencing on July 1, 2017, for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less specified amounts.This bill would revise these factors used to calculate the caseload growth, by changing the definition of growth to exclude the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017, and by including offsets provided by General Fund moneys and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the redirected sales tax growth revenues, as specified above, in the calculation of the County IHSS MOE costs. The bill would also require the State Controller, commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, to annually post on its Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.(2) Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services to provide grants to qualifying nonprofit organizations for purposes of providing services that include, among other things, services relating to the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.This bill would appropriate $20,000,000 to the department for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to those provisions for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(3) Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of health facilities, including skilled nursing facilities, by the State Department of Public Health. Among other requirements, these provisions generally require skilled nursing facilities to have a minimum number of nursing hours per patient day of 3.2 hours, and effective July 1, 2018, requires skilled nursing facilities, except as specified, to have a minimum number of direct care service hours, as defined, of 3.5 hours per patient day. Existing law requires the department to adopt regulations to create a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements.Existing law requires the State Department of Health Care Services, in connection with its administration of the Medi-Cal program, to develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, and requires the system to be utilized to, among other things, assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to direct care staffing levels at a skilled nursing facility, including the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements. Existing law establishes the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund in the State Treasury, which is a continuously appropriated fund that contains moneys from the assessment of specified administrative penalties and setasides of General Fund moneys, for the purposes of making the quality and accountability payments.Existing law, to a specified extent, provides that a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above. Existing law, to a specified extent, prohibits using compliance with the direct care service hour requirements to determine facility qualification for supplemental payments and instead requires the department to apply the nursing hour requirements for purposes of administering the supplemental payments until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year.This bill, instead, would specify that for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements. The bill would, for performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, provide that a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hour requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above for the duration of time for which the waiver is granted. By expanding the number of facilities that would be eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program and therefore expanding the payments from a continuously appropriated fund, the bill would make an appropriation.(4) The Budget Act of 2017 appropriated a specified sum to the State Department of Social Services for local assistance relating to the CalWORKs program and other assistance payments.This bill would require the department to allocate $5,400,000 from the General Fund moneys in the above-described appropriation to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017, and, as a condition of receiving these funds, the bill would require the City of San Jose to provide quarterly reports to the department, as specified.(5) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: YES Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 12301.61 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:12301.61. (a) If a public authority or nonprofit consortium established pursuant to Section 12301.6, acting as the employer of record, and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018, either party may request mediation, pursuant to Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c). The mediation shall be held no more than 15 business days from the date requested by either party.(b) If the parties are unable to effect settlement through mediation as described in subdivision (a), the parties shall then submit their differences to factfinding, pursuant to Section 3505 and 3505.4 of the Government Code. Alternatively, if both parties agree, the parties may bypass the mediation process in subdivision (a) and move directly to factfinding.(1) The factfinding panel shall make findings of fact and recommend terms of settlement, which shall be advisory only, within 30 days after the panel is appointed by the Public Employment Relations Board.(2) Within 15 days after the factfinding panel has released its findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, either party may request post-factfinding mediation consistent with Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c).(3) If either party elects post-factfinding mediation, the findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, shall not be made public until the mediation has concluded.(4) Mediation shall be held no more than 15 days from the date requested, and may include, at the mediators discretion, the factfinding panel and representatives of both parties. The director, or his or her designee, shall be available to provide information and expertise, as necessary.(c) The Public Employment Relations Board shall designate a pool of no more than five qualified individuals to serve as mediators or on a factfinding panel. The pool shall consist of individuals with relevant subject matter expertise. The board shall select individuals for the pool in consultation with the department and the affected employers and employee organizations. Priority shall be given to individuals with knowledge of the In-Home Supportive Services program. The board may designate the mediator to serve as the neutral member of the factfinding panel.(d) The costs for the services of the factfinding panel and the mediator shall be equally divided between the parties, and shall include per diem fees, if any, and actual and necessary travel and subsistence expenses.(e) By April 1, 2018, the department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature on the status of all in-home supportive services bargaining contracts in each county.(f) If no individual is available to serve as a mediator or factfinder within the timelines specified in this section, the timelines shall be extended until the next mediator or factfinder is available.(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2020, and as of that date is repealed.SEC. 2. Section 12306.16 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:12306.16. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, all counties shall have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE).(b) (1) (A) The statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be established at one billion seven hundred sixty-nine million four hundred forty-three thousand dollars ($1,769,443,000). This amount reflects the estimated county share of IHSS program base costs calculated pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017, and reflected in the departments 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table for the 201718 fiscal year.(B) If actual IHSS program base costs, as determined by the Department of Finance on or before May 14, 2018, attributable to the 201718 fiscal year are lower than the costs assumed in the 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table, the statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be adjusted accordingly pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017.(2) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine each countys share of the statewide total County IHSS MOE base amount. The County IHSS MOE base shall be unique to each individual county.(3) (A) Administration expenditures are included in the County IHSS MOE and shall include both county administration, including costs associated with the IHSS case management, information, and payrolling system, and public authority administration.(B) The amount of General Fund moneys available for county administration and public authority administration is limited to the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated for those specific purposes in the annual Budget Act, and increases to this amount do not impact the County IHSS MOE.(C) To be eligible to receive its share of General Fund moneys appropriated in a fiscal year for county administration and public authority administration costs, the county is only required to expend the full amount of its County IHSS MOE that is attributable to county and public authority administration for that fiscal year and no additional county share of cost shall be required. The department shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine the county-by-county distribution of the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act for county administration and public authority administration.(D) Amounts expended by a county or public authority on administration in excess of the amount described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall not be attributed towards the county meeting its County IHSS MOE requirement.(E) As part of the preparation of the 201819 Governors Budget, the department shall work with the California State Association of Counties, County Welfare Directors Association of California, and the Department of Finance to examine the workload and budget assumptions related to administration of the IHSS program for the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years.(c) (1) On July 1, 2018, the County IHSS MOE base as specified in subdivision (b) shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 5 percent.(2) Beginning on July 1, 2019, and annually thereafter, the County IHSS MOE from the previous year shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 7 percent.(3) (A) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is less than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be zero.(B) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is equal to or up to 2 percent greater than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be one-half of the amount specified in either paragraph (1) or (2).(C) The Department of Finance shall provide notification to the appropriate fiscal committees of the Legislature and the California State Association of Counties by May 14 of each year of the inflation factor that will apply for the following fiscal year, based on the calculation in subparagraph (A) and (B).(d) In addition to the adjustment in subdivision (c), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted for the annualized cost of increases in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed, on or after July 1, 2017, including any increases in provider wages or health benefits adopted by ordinance pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 9100) of Chapter 2 of Division 9 of the Elections Code.(1) (A) If the department approves an increase in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the cost increase in accordance with subparagraph (B).(B) With respect to any increase in provider wages or health benefits approved on or after July 1, 2017, pursuant to subparagraph (A), the state shall participate in that increase as provided in subparagraph (A) up to the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any cost increase exceeding the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1.(C) With respect to an increase in benefits, other than individual health benefits, locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed by a county, public authority, or nonprofit consortium, or adopted by ordinance, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment equal to 35 percent of the nonfederal share of the increased benefit costs.(D) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraphs (A) to (C), inclusive, shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C), that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(2) (A) If the department does not approve the increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1 or paragraph (3), the county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of the cost increases.(B) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate county sharing ratio as grown by the appropriate number of applicable inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(3) In addition to the rate approval requirements specified in subdivisions (a) to (c), inclusive, of Section 12306.1, it shall be presumed by the department that rates and other economic terms that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance are approved.(4) (A) With respect to any rate increases to existing contracts that a county has already entered into pursuant to Section 12302, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the amount of the rate increase up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the rate increase exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS contract hours, or the paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective if the contract becomes effective on or after July 1, 2017, using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(B) With respect to rates for new contracts entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients to be provided under the contract up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the contract rate exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio.(C) The county share of these expenditures shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amounts established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any rate increases for existing contracts or rates for new contracts, entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, that become effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the increase or rate for new contracts. This adjustment shall be calculated as follows:(i) For a contract described in subparagraph (A), the first-year cost of the amount of the rate increase calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the increase became effective.(ii) For a contract described in subparagraph (B), the first-year cost of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the contract became effective.(5) In the event the state ceases to receive enhanced federal financial participation for the provision of services pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted one time to reflect a 35-percent share of the enhanced federal financial participation that would have been received pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)) for the fiscal year in which the state ceases to receive the enhanced federal financial participation.(6) The County IHSS MOE shall not be adjusted for increases in individual provider wages that are locally negotiated pursuant to subdivision (a) of, and paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (d) of, Section 12306.1 when the increase has been specifically negotiated to take effect at the same time as, and to be the same amount as, state minimum wage increases.(7) (A) A county may negotiate a wage supplement. The first time the wage supplement is applied, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment by the amount of the increase, as specified in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph (1).(B) A wage supplement negotiated pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall subsequently be applied to the county individual provider wage when the county individual provider wage meets all of the following criteria:(i) The increase to the county individual provider wage takes effect at the same time as the state minimum wage increase.(ii) The increase to the county individual provider wage is the same amount as the state minimum wage increase.(iii) The minimum wage increase exceeds the county individual provider wage prior to applying the minimum wage increase.(8) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to develop the computations for the annualized amounts pursuant to this subdivision.(e) The County IHSS MOE shall only be adjusted pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) A countys County IHSS MOE costs paid to the state shall be reduced by the amount of any General Fund offset provided to the county pursuant to Section 12306.17.SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and any appeals arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) (A) (i) Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii) For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for individuals whose criminal records are shown to be inaccurate.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum, or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b).(f) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.SEC. 4. Section 14126.022 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:14126.022. (a) (1) By August 1, 2011, the department shall develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, subject to approval by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the availability of federal, state, or other funds.(2) (A) The system shall be utilized to provide supplemental payments to skilled nursing facilities that improve the quality and accountability of care rendered to residents in skilled nursing facilities, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, and to penalize those facilities that do not meet measurable standards.(B) A freestanding pediatric subacute care facility, as defined in Section 51215.8 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, shall be exempt from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System.(3) The system shall be phased in, beginning with the 201011 rate year.(4) The department may utilize the system to do all of the following:(A) Assess overall facility quality of care and quality of care improvement, and assign quality and accountability payments to skilled nursing facilities pursuant to performance measures described in subdivision (i).(B) Assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to quality of care, or direct care staffing levels, wages, and benefits, or both.(C) Limit the reimbursement of legal fees incurred by skilled nursing facilities engaged in the defense of governmental legal actions filed against the facilities.(D) Publish each facilitys quality assessment and quality and accountability payments in a manner and form determined by the director, or his or her designee.(E) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, establish a base year to collect performance measures described in subdivision (i).(F) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, publish the direct care staffing level data and the performance measures required pursuant to subdivision (i).(5) The department, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, shall report to the relevant Assembly and Senate budget subcommittees by May 1, 2016, information regarding the quality and accountability supplemental payments, including, but not limited to, its assessment of whether the payments are adequate to incentivize quality care and to sustain the program.(b) (1) There is hereby created in the State Treasury, the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. The fund shall contain moneys deposited pursuant to subdivisions (g) and (j) to (m), inclusive. Notwithstanding Section 16305.7 of the Government Code, the fund shall contain all interest and dividends earned on moneys in the fund.(2) Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, the fund shall be continuously appropriated without regard to fiscal year to the department for making quality and accountability payments, in accordance with subdivision (n), to facilities that meet or exceed predefined measures as established by this section.(3) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, moneys in the fund may also be used for any of the following purposes:(A) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Public Health for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(B) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Health Care Services for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(C) To provide funding assistance for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(c) No appropriation associated with Chapter 717 of the Statutes of 2010 is intended to implement the provisions of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code.(d) (1) There is hereby appropriated for the 201011 fiscal year, one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund to the California Department of Aging for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5. It is the intent of the Legislature for the one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the fund to be in addition to the four million one hundred sixty-eight thousand dollars ($4,168,000) proposed in the Governors May Revision for the 201011 Budget. It is further the intent of the Legislature to increase this level of appropriation in subsequent years to provide support sufficient to carry out the mandates and activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(2) The department, in partnership with the California Department of Aging, shall seek approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to obtain federal Medicaid reimbursement for activities conducted by the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program. The department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature during budget hearings on progress being made and any unresolved issues during the 201112 budget deliberations.(e) There is hereby created in the Special Deposit Fund established pursuant to Section 16370 of the Government Code, the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account. The account shall contain all moneys deposited pursuant to subdivision (f).(f) (1) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall use the direct care staffing level data it collects to determine whether a skilled nursing facility has met the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(2) (A) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall assess a skilled nursing facility, licensed pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, an administrative penalty if the State Department of Public Health determines that the skilled nursing facility fails to meet the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, as follows:(i) Fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for 5 percent or more of the audited days up to 49 percent.(ii) Thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for over 49 percent or more of the audited days.(B) (i) If the skilled nursing facility does not dispute the determination or assessment, the penalties shall be paid in full by the licensee to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the notice of penalty and deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(ii) The State Department of Public Health may, upon written notification to the licensee, request that the department offset any moneys owed to the licensee by the Medi-Cal program or any other payment program administered by the department to recoup the penalty provided for in this section.(C) (i) If a facility disputes the determination or assessment made pursuant to this paragraph, the facility shall, within 15 days of the facilitys receipt of the determination and assessment, simultaneously submit a request for appeal to both the department and the State Department of Public Health. The request shall include a detailed statement describing the reason for appeal and include all supporting documents the facility will present at the hearing.(ii) Within 10 days of the State Department of Public Healths receipt of the facilitys request for appeal, the State Department of Public Health shall submit, to both the facility and the department, all supporting documents that will be presented at the hearing.(D) The department shall hear a timely appeal and issue a decision as follows:(i) The hearing shall commence within 60 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(ii) The department shall issue a decision within 120 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(iii) The decision of the departments hearing officer, when issued, shall be the final decision of the State Department of Public Health.(E) The appeals process set forth in this paragraph shall be exempt from Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400) and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500), of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. The provisions of Sections 100171 and 131071 of the Health and Safety Code do not apply to appeals under this paragraph.(F) If a hearing decision issued pursuant to subparagraph (D) is in favor of the State Department of Public Health, the skilled nursing facility shall pay the penalties to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the decision. The penalties collected shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(G) The assessment of a penalty under this subdivision does not supplant the State Department of Public Healths investigation process or issuance of deficiencies or citations under Chapter 2.4 (commencing with Section 1417) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(g) The State Department of Public Health shall transfer, on a monthly basis, all penalty payments collected pursuant to subdivision (f) into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(h) This section does not impact the effectiveness or utilization of Section 1278.5 or 1432 of the Health and Safety Code relating to whistleblower protections, or Section 1420 of the Health and Safety Code relating to complaints.(i) (1) Beginning in the 201011 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall establish and publish quality and accountability measures, benchmarks, and data submission deadlines by November 30, 2010.(2) The methodology developed pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, the following requirements and performance measures:(A) Beginning in the 201112 fiscal year:(i) Immunization rates.(ii) Facility acquired pressure ulcer incidence.(iii) The use of physical restraints.(iv) Compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(v) Resident and family satisfaction.(vi) Direct care staff retention, if sufficient data is available.(B) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, in accordance with Section 14126.033, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, beginning in the 201314 rate year, shall incorporate additional measures into the system, including, but not limited to, quality and accountability measures required by federal health care reform that are identified by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.(C) The department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, may incorporate additional performance measures, including, but not limited to, the following:(i) Compliance with state policy associated with the United States Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C. ex rel. Zimring (1999) 527 U.S. 581.(ii) Direct care staff retention, if not addressed in the 201213 rate year.(iii) The use of chemical restraints.(D) Beginning with the 201516 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall incorporate direct care staff retention as a performance measure in the methodology developed pursuant to this section.(j) (1) Beginning with the 201011 rate year, and pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (5) of subdivision (a) of Section 14126.023, the department shall set aside savings achieved from setting the professional liability insurance cost category, including any insurance deductible costs paid by the facility, at the 75th percentile. From this amount, the department shall transfer the General Fund portion into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. A skilled nursing facility shall provide supplemental data on insurance deductible costs to facilitate this adjustment, in the format and by the deadlines determined by the department. If this data is not provided, a facilitys insurance deductible costs will remain in the administrative costs category.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), for the 201213 rate year only, savings from capping the professional liability insurance cost category pursuant to paragraph (1) shall remain in the General Fund and shall not be transferred to the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(k) For the 201314 rate year, if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside the first 1 percent of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase for the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(l) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, for the 201415 rate year, in addition to the amount set aside pursuant to subdivision (k), if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside at least one-third of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase, up to a maximum of 1 percent, from which the department shall transfer the General Fund portion of this amount into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(m) Beginning with the 201516 rate year, and each subsequent rate year thereafter for which this article is operative, an amount equal to the amount deposited in the fund pursuant to subdivisions (k) and (l) for the 201415 rate year shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund, for the purposes specified in this section.(n) (1) (A) Beginning with the 201314 rate year, the department shall pay a supplemental payment, by April 30, 2014, to skilled nursing facilities based on all of the criteria in subdivision (i), as published by the department, and according to performance measure benchmarks determined by the department in consultation with stakeholders.(B) (i) The department may convene a diverse stakeholder group, including, but not limited to, representatives from consumer groups and organizations, labor, nursing home providers, advocacy organizations involved with the aging community, staff from the Legislature, and other interested parties, to discuss and analyze alternative mechanisms to implement the quality and accountability payments provided to nursing homes for reimbursement.(ii) The department shall articulate in a report to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature the implementation of an alternative mechanism as described in clause (i) at least 90 days prior to any policy or budgetary changes, and seek subsequent legislation in order to enact the proposed changes.(2) Skilled nursing facilities that do not submit required performance data by the departments specified data submission deadlines pursuant to subdivision (i) are not eligible to receive supplemental payments.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if a facility appeals the performance measure of compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements, pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, to the State Department of Public Health, and it is unresolved by the departments published due date, the department shall not use that performance measure when determining the facilitys supplemental payment.(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if the department is unable to pay the supplemental payments by April 30, 2014, then on May 1, 2014, the department shall use the funds available in the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund as a result of savings identified in subdivisions (k) and (l), less the administrative costs required to implement subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), in addition to any Medicaid funds that are available as of December 31, 2013, to increase provider rates retroactively to August 1, 2013.(o) The department shall seek necessary approvals from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to implement this section. The department shall implement this section only in a manner that is consistent with federal Medicaid law and regulations, and only to the extent that approval is obtained from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and federal financial participation is available.(p) In implementing this section, the department and the State Department of Public Health may contract as necessary, with Californias Medicare Quality Improvement Organization, or other entities deemed qualified by the department or the State Department of Public Health, not associated with a skilled nursing facility, to assist with development, collection, analysis, and reporting of the performance data pursuant to subdivision (i), and with demonstrated expertise in long-term care quality, data collection or analysis, and accountability performance measurement models pursuant to subdivision (i). This subdivision establishes an accelerated process for issuing any contract pursuant to this section. Any contract entered into pursuant to this subdivision is exempt from the requirements of the Public Contract Code, through December 31, 2020.(q) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, the following apply:(1) The director shall implement this section, in whole or in part, by means of provider bulletins, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(2) The State Public Health Officer may implement this section by means of all-facility letters, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(r) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of subdivision (n), if a final judicial determination is made by any state or federal court that is not appealed, in any action by any party, or a final determination is made by the administrator of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, that any payments pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (n), are invalid, unlawful, or contrary to any provision of federal law or regulations, or of state law, these subdivisions shall become inoperative, and for the 201112 rate year, the rate increase provided under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (c) of Section 14126.033 shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivision (j). For the 201314 and 201415 rate years, any rate increase shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivisions (j) to (l), inclusive.(s) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code.(t) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, compliance with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code, as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017, shall not be used to determine facility qualification for the supplemental payments provided for in this section until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year. This limitation shall also apply to the issuance of citations pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d) of Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code based upon the failure to comply with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017. Until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year, the department shall apply the provisions of Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code for purposes of administering the supplemental payments pursuant to this section. For performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver pursuant to subdivision (l) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirement pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code that would have applied in the absence of Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017 for the duration of the time for which the waiver is granted.SEC. 5. Section 17605 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17605. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount to be determined by the Department of Finance, that represents the sum of the shortfalls between the actual realignment revenues received by each county and each city and county from the Social Services Subaccount of the Local Revenue Fund in the 199192 fiscal year and the net costs incurred by each of those counties and cities and counties in the fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 10101.1, 11322.2, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and former Section 11322. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocation schedule on or before August 15, 1993, that shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited to the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision. The Controller shall allocate these funds no later than August 27, 1993.(b) (1) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance, in consultation with the appropriate state departments and the California State Association of Counties, that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads, as specified in paragraph (2), and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocations schedule on or before March 15 of each year. The schedule shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited into the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision.(B) It is the intent of the Legislature that counties shall receive allocations from the Caseload Subaccount as soon as possible after funds are received in the Sales Tax Growth Account. The Department of Finance shall recommend to the Legislature, by January 10, 2005, a procedure to expedite the preparation and provision of the allocations schedule described in subparagraph (A) and the allocation of funds by the Controller.(2) (A) (i) For the 199293 fiscal year through the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, growth means, for purposes of this subdivision, the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code.(ii) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, for purposes of this subdivision, growth means the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code. (B) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, in addition to subparagraph (A), growth shall also include the following:(i) The additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (g) of Section 17600.15 to fund the amount specified in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (f) of Section 17600.15 and the amount of vehicle license fee revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17606.20, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17605.07 and subdivision (g) of Section 17606.10.(ii) Any additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the prior fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the preceding prior fiscal year that were not included in caseload growth calculation pursuant to clause (i) from the prior caseload growth calculation.(3) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year through the 201617 fiscal year, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realigned programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(B) For the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(C) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero. (c) Annually, the Controller shall allocate, to the local health and welfare trust fund social services account, the amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the Caseload Subaccount, pursuant to the schedules of allocations of caseload growth described in subdivision (b), within 45 days of receiving those schedules from the Department of Finance. If there are insufficient funds to fully satisfy all caseload growth obligations, each countys or city and countys allocation for each program specified in subdivision (d) shall be prorated.(d) Prior to allocating funds pursuant to subdivision (b), to the extent that funds are available from funds deposited in the Caseload Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account in the Local Revenue Fund, the Controller shall allocate moneys to counties or cities and counties to correct any inequity or inequities in the computation of the child welfare services portion of the schedule required by subdivision (a) of Section 17602.(e) (1) For the 200304 fiscal year, no Sales Tax Growth Account funds shall be allocated pursuant to this chapter until the caseload portion of the base of each countys social services account in the countys health and welfare trust fund is funded to the level of the 200102 fiscal year. Funds to meet this requirement shall be allocated from the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund. If sufficient funds are not available in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund to achieve that funding level in the 200304 fiscal year, this requirement shall be funded in each succeeding fiscal year in which there are sufficient funds in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund until the caseload base funding level for which each county would have otherwise been eligible in accordance with subdivision (e) of Section 17602 for that year.(2) The caseload portion of each countys social services account base shall be determined by subtracting its noncaseload portion of the base, as determined by the Department of Finance in its annual calculation of General Growth Account allocations, from the total base of each countys social services account for the 200102 fiscal year.(f) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall annually post on his or her Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.SEC. 6. Section 17605.07 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17605.07. (a) (1) For the 199293 fiscal year through the 201415 fiscal year, inclusive, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(b) (1) For the 201516 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(c) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount pursuant to subdivision (b), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties.(2) The funding allocated pursuant to paragraph (1) shall only be available for allocation to the counties that participate in the County Medical Services Program in the 201617 fiscal year.SEC. 7. Section 17606.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17606.10. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year and subsequent fiscal years, the Controller shall allocate funds, on an annual basis from the General Growth Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account to the appropriate accounts in the local health and welfare trust fund of each county, city, and city and county in accordance with a schedule setting forth the percentage of total state resources received in the 199091 fiscal year, including State Legalization Impact Assistance Grants distributed by the state under former Part 4.5 (commencing with Section 16700), funding provided for purposes of implementation of Division 5 (commencing with Section 5000), for the organization and financing of community mental health services, including the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Surtax proceeds that are allocated to county mental health programs pursuant to Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989, Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990, and Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990, and state hospital funding and funding distributed for programs administered under Sections 1794, 10101.1, and 11322.2, as annually adjusted by the Department of Finance, in conjunction with the appropriate state department to reflect changes in equity status from the base percentages. However, for the 199293 fiscal year, the allocation for community mental health services shall be based on the following schedule:Percentageof StatewideJurisdictionResource BaseAlameda ........................ 4.3693Alpine ........................ 0.0128Amador ........................ 0.0941Butte ........................ 0.7797Calaveras ........................ 0.1157Colusa ........................ 0.0847Contra Costa ........................ 2.3115Del Norte ........................ 0.1237El Dorado ........................ 0.3966Fresno ........................ 3.1419Glenn ........................ 0.1304Humboldt ........................ 0.6175Imperial ........................ 0.5425Inyo ........................ 0.1217Kern ........................ 1.8574Kings ........................ 0.4229Lake ........................ 0.2362Lassen ........................ 0.1183Los Angeles ........................ 27.9666 Madera ........................ 0.3552Marin ........................ 0.9180Mariposa ........................ 0.0792Mendocino ........................ 0.4099Merced ........................ 0.8831Modoc ........................ 0.0561Mono ........................ 0.0511Monterey ........................ 1.1663Napa ........................ 0.3856Nevada ........................ 0.2129Orange ........................ 5.3423Placer ........................ 0.5034Plumas ........................ 0.1134Riverside ........................ 3.6179Sacramento ........................ 4.1872San Benito ........................ 0.1010San Bernardino ........................ 4.5494San Diego ........................ 7.8773San Francisco ........................ 3.5335San Joaquin ........................ 2.4690San Luis Obispo ........................ 0.6652San Mateo ........................ 2.5169Santa Barbara ........................ 1.0745Santa Clara ........................ 5.0488Santa Cruz ........................ 0.7960Shasta ........................ 0.5493Sierra ........................ 0.0345Siskiyou ........................ 0.2051Solano ........................ 0.6694Sonoma ........................ 1.1486Stanislaus ........................ 1.4701Sutter/Yuba ........................ 0.6294Tehama ........................ 0.2384Trinity ........................ 0.0826Tulare ........................ 1.4704Tuolumne ........................ 0.1666Ventura ........................ 1.9311Yolo ........................ 0.5443Berkeley ........................ 0.2688Tri-City ........................ 0.2347(b) The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of the local health and welfare trust fund of each city, county, and city and county for the 199495 fiscal year general growth allocations according to subdivisions (c) and (d). For the 199596 fiscal year and annually until the end of the 201213 fiscal year, the Department of Finance shall prepare the schedule of allocations of growth based upon the recalculation of the resource base as provided by subdivision (c).(c) For the Mental Health Account, the Department of Finance shall do all of the following:(1) Use the following sources as reported by the State Department of Health Care Services:(A) The final December 1992 distribution of resources associated with Institutes for Mental Disease.(B) The 199091 fiscal year state hospitals and community mental health allocations.(C) Allocations for services provided for under Chapter 1294 of the Statutes of 1989.(2) Expand the resource base with the following nonrealigned funding sources as allocated among the counties:(A) Tobacco surtax allocations made under Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989 and Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990.(B) For the 199495 allocation year only, Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990.(C) 199394 fiscal year federal homeless block grant allocation.(D) 199394 fiscal year Mental Health Special Education allocations.(E) 199394 fiscal year allocations for the system of care for children, in accordance with Chapter 1229 of the Statutes of 1992.(F) 199394 fiscal year federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration block grant allocations pursuant to Subchapter 1 (commencing with Section 10801) of Chapter 114 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(d) For the Health Account, the Department of Finance shall use the historical resource base of state funds as allocated among the counties, cities, and city and county as reported by the former State Department of Health Services in a September 17, 1991, report of Indigent and Community Health Resources.(e) The Department of Finance shall use these adjusted resource bases for the Health Account and Mental Health Account to calculate what the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount allocations would have been, and together with 199495 fiscal year Base Restoration Subaccount allocations, CMSP subaccount allocations, equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 17606.05, as that subparagraph read on January 1, 2015, and special equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subdivision (e) of Section 17606.15 reconstruct the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount resource base for the 199596 allocation year for each county, city, and city and county. Notwithstanding any other law, the actual 199495 general growth allocations shall not become part of the realignment base allocations to each county, city, and city and county. The total amounts distributed by the Controller for general growth for the 199495 allocation year shall be reallocated among the counties, cities, and city and county in the 199596 allocation year according to this paragraph, and shall be included in the general growth resource base for the 199697 allocation year and each fiscal year thereafter. For the 199697 allocation year and fiscal years thereafter, the Department of Finance shall update the base with actual growth allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of each county, city, and city and county local health and welfare trust fund in the prior year, and adjust for actual changes in nonrealigned funds specified in subdivision (c) in the year prior to the allocation year.(f) For the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall do all of the following:(1) Allocate to the Mental Health Account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Mental Health Account in accordance with subdivision (c) and allocate based on that recalculation.(2) Allocate 18.4545 percent of the total General Growth Subaccount to the health account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance in accordance with subdivision (d).(3) Allocate the remainder of the funds in the General Growth Subaccount to the family support account of each county or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. These funds shall be expended in accordance with Section 17601.50.(g) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (f), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate funds in the following amounts from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account of each county and city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties:(A) The funding that would have been allocated to the Mental Health Account of each county or city and county pursuant to the calculations specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (f).(B) The funding that would have been allocated to the health account of each county or city and county pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (f), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, Article 12 (commencing with Section 17612.1), and Article 13 (commencing with 17613.1).(2) The allocation of funds from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account as described in paragraph (1) shall not apply to the amount of funds available for allocation to the Mental Health Accounts and health accounts of the Cities of Berkeley, Pasadena, Tri-City, and Long Beach.(h) The amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the General Growth Subaccount shall be allocated on an annual basis by the Controller, as described in subdivisions (f) and (g), within 45 days of receiving the General Growth Subaccount allocation schedule from the Department of Finance.SEC. 8. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, from the General Fund moneys appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in Item 5180-101-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2017, the department shall allocate five million four hundred thousand dollars ($5,400,000), in a single payment by the Controller, to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017.(b) As a condition of receiving these funds, the City of San Jose shall provide quarterly reports to the department regarding the number of families served and the types of services they received, until all funds have been expended.SEC. 9. This act is a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill within the meaning of subdivision (e) of Section 12 of Article IV of the California Constitution, has been identified as related to the budget in the Budget Bill, and shall take effect immediately.
1+Enrolled September 15, 2017 Passed IN Senate September 15, 2017 Passed IN Assembly September 15, 2017 Amended IN Senate September 11, 2017 Amended IN Senate September 06, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 130Introduced by Committee on Budget (Assembly Members Ting (Chair), Arambula, Bloom, Caballero, Chiu, Cooper, Cristina Garcia, Jones-Sawyer, Limn, McCarty, Medina, Mullin, Muratsuchi, ODonnell, Rubio, Mark Stone, Weber, and Wood)January 10, 2017An act to amend Sections 12301.61, 12306.16, 13303, 14126.022, 17605, 17605.07, and 17606.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to health and human services, and making an appropriation therefor, to take effect immediately, bill related to the budget.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 130, Committee on Budget. Health and human services.(1) Existing law establishes the county-administered In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) program, under which qualified aged, blind, and disabled persons are provided with services in order to permit them to remain in their own homes and avoid institutionalization. Under existing law, a county board of supervisors may elect to contract with a nonprofit consortium to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services, or establish, by ordinance, a public authority to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services. Existing law requires, until January 1, 2020, a specified mediation process to be held if a public authority or nonprofit consortium fails to reach agreement on a bargaining contract with its in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.This bill would clarify that the specified mediation process is required if a public authority or nonprofit consortium and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.Existing law requires the state and counties to share the annual cost of providing in-home supportive services and requires all counties to have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE) commencing July 1, 2017, as prescribed. Existing law requires that a portion of IHSS costs that are the counties responsibility to be offset using a combination of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, as specified.Existing law requires the Controller to deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount, and requires the Controller to allocate funds to counties based on those calculations. Existing law requires the Controller, for the 2015 16 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter and after satisfying the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account, to deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027% of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account, as specified.This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount, as specified.Existing law requires the Controller, for the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, to allocate a specified amount to the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, city, or city and county from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance.This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, or city and county, as specified.Existing law defines growth for purposes of the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account to mean the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for costs from specified social services programs, including the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017. Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, growth includes the County IHSS MOE costs to counties commencing on July 1, 2017, for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less specified amounts.This bill would revise these factors used to calculate the caseload growth, by changing the definition of growth to exclude the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017, and by including offsets provided by General Fund moneys and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the redirected sales tax growth revenues, as specified above, in the calculation of the County IHSS MOE costs. The bill would also require the State Controller, commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, to annually post on its Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.(2) Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services to provide grants to qualifying nonprofit organizations for purposes of providing services that include, among other things, services relating to the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.This bill would appropriate $20,000,000 to the department for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to those provisions for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(3) Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of health facilities, including skilled nursing facilities, by the State Department of Public Health. Among other requirements, these provisions generally require skilled nursing facilities to have a minimum number of nursing hours per patient day of 3.2 hours, and effective July 1, 2018, requires skilled nursing facilities, except as specified, to have a minimum number of direct care service hours, as defined, of 3.5 hours per patient day. Existing law requires the department to adopt regulations to create a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements.Existing law requires the State Department of Health Care Services, in connection with its administration of the Medi-Cal program, to develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, and requires the system to be utilized to, among other things, assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to direct care staffing levels at a skilled nursing facility, including the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements. Existing law establishes the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund in the State Treasury, which is a continuously appropriated fund that contains moneys from the assessment of specified administrative penalties and setasides of General Fund moneys, for the purposes of making the quality and accountability payments.Existing law, to a specified extent, provides that a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above. Existing law, to a specified extent, prohibits using compliance with the direct care service hour requirements to determine facility qualification for supplemental payments and instead requires the department to apply the nursing hour requirements for purposes of administering the supplemental payments until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year.This bill, instead, would specify that for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements. The bill would, for performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, provide that a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hour requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above for the duration of time for which the waiver is granted. By expanding the number of facilities that would be eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program and therefore expanding the payments from a continuously appropriated fund, the bill would make an appropriation.(4) The Budget Act of 2017 appropriated a specified sum to the State Department of Social Services for local assistance relating to the CalWORKs program and other assistance payments.This bill would require the department to allocate $5,400,000 from the General Fund moneys in the above-described appropriation to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017, and, as a condition of receiving these funds, the bill would require the City of San Jose to provide quarterly reports to the department, as specified.(5) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: YES Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 12301.61 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:12301.61. (a) If a public authority or nonprofit consortium established pursuant to Section 12301.6, acting as the employer of record, and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018, either party may request mediation, pursuant to Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c). The mediation shall be held no more than 15 business days from the date requested by either party.(b) If the parties are unable to effect settlement through mediation as described in subdivision (a), the parties shall then submit their differences to factfinding, pursuant to Section 3505 and 3505.4 of the Government Code. Alternatively, if both parties agree, the parties may bypass the mediation process in subdivision (a) and move directly to factfinding.(1) The factfinding panel shall make findings of fact and recommend terms of settlement, which shall be advisory only, within 30 days after the panel is appointed by the Public Employment Relations Board.(2) Within 15 days after the factfinding panel has released its findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, either party may request post-factfinding mediation consistent with Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c).(3) If either party elects post-factfinding mediation, the findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, shall not be made public until the mediation has concluded.(4) Mediation shall be held no more than 15 days from the date requested, and may include, at the mediators discretion, the factfinding panel and representatives of both parties. The director, or his or her designee, shall be available to provide information and expertise, as necessary.(c) The Public Employment Relations Board shall designate a pool of no more than five qualified individuals to serve as mediators or on a factfinding panel. The pool shall consist of individuals with relevant subject matter expertise. The board shall select individuals for the pool in consultation with the department and the affected employers and employee organizations. Priority shall be given to individuals with knowledge of the In-Home Supportive Services program. The board may designate the mediator to serve as the neutral member of the factfinding panel.(d) The costs for the services of the factfinding panel and the mediator shall be equally divided between the parties, and shall include per diem fees, if any, and actual and necessary travel and subsistence expenses.(e) By April 1, 2018, the department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature on the status of all in-home supportive services bargaining contracts in each county.(f) If no individual is available to serve as a mediator or factfinder within the timelines specified in this section, the timelines shall be extended until the next mediator or factfinder is available.(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2020, and as of that date is repealed.SEC. 2. Section 12306.16 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:12306.16. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, all counties shall have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE).(b) (1) (A) The statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be established at one billion seven hundred sixty-nine million four hundred forty-three thousand dollars ($1,769,443,000). This amount reflects the estimated county share of IHSS program base costs calculated pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017, and reflected in the departments 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table for the 201718 fiscal year.(B) If actual IHSS program base costs, as determined by the Department of Finance on or before May 14, 2018, attributable to the 201718 fiscal year are lower than the costs assumed in the 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table, the statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be adjusted accordingly pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017.(2) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine each countys share of the statewide total County IHSS MOE base amount. The County IHSS MOE base shall be unique to each individual county.(3) (A) Administration expenditures are included in the County IHSS MOE and shall include both county administration, including costs associated with the IHSS case management, information, and payrolling system, and public authority administration.(B) The amount of General Fund moneys available for county administration and public authority administration is limited to the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated for those specific purposes in the annual Budget Act, and increases to this amount do not impact the County IHSS MOE.(C) To be eligible to receive its share of General Fund moneys appropriated in a fiscal year for county administration and public authority administration costs, the county is only required to expend the full amount of its County IHSS MOE that is attributable to county and public authority administration for that fiscal year and no additional county share of cost shall be required. The department shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine the county-by-county distribution of the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act for county administration and public authority administration.(D) Amounts expended by a county or public authority on administration in excess of the amount described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall not be attributed towards the county meeting its County IHSS MOE requirement.(E) As part of the preparation of the 201819 Governors Budget, the department shall work with the California State Association of Counties, County Welfare Directors Association of California, and the Department of Finance to examine the workload and budget assumptions related to administration of the IHSS program for the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years.(c) (1) On July 1, 2018, the County IHSS MOE base as specified in subdivision (b) shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 5 percent.(2) Beginning on July 1, 2019, and annually thereafter, the County IHSS MOE from the previous year shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 7 percent.(3) (A) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is less than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be zero.(B) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is equal to or up to 2 percent greater than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be one-half of the amount specified in either paragraph (1) or (2).(C) The Department of Finance shall provide notification to the appropriate fiscal committees of the Legislature and the California State Association of Counties by May 14 of each year of the inflation factor that will apply for the following fiscal year, based on the calculation in subparagraph (A) and (B).(d) In addition to the adjustment in subdivision (c), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted for the annualized cost of increases in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed, on or after July 1, 2017, including any increases in provider wages or health benefits adopted by ordinance pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 9100) of Chapter 2 of Division 9 of the Elections Code.(1) (A) If the department approves an increase in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the cost increase in accordance with subparagraph (B).(B) With respect to any increase in provider wages or health benefits approved on or after July 1, 2017, pursuant to subparagraph (A), the state shall participate in that increase as provided in subparagraph (A) up to the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any cost increase exceeding the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1.(C) With respect to an increase in benefits, other than individual health benefits, locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed by a county, public authority, or nonprofit consortium, or adopted by ordinance, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment equal to 35 percent of the nonfederal share of the increased benefit costs.(D) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraphs (A) to (C), inclusive, shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C), that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(2) (A) If the department does not approve the increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1 or paragraph (3), the county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of the cost increases.(B) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate county sharing ratio as grown by the appropriate number of applicable inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(3) In addition to the rate approval requirements specified in subdivisions (a) to (c), inclusive, of Section 12306.1, it shall be presumed by the department that rates and other economic terms that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance are approved.(4) (A) With respect to any rate increases to existing contracts that a county has already entered into pursuant to Section 12302, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the amount of the rate increase up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the rate increase exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS contract hours, or the paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective if the contract becomes effective on or after July 1, 2017, using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(B) With respect to rates for new contracts entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients to be provided under the contract up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the contract rate exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio.(C) The county share of these expenditures shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amounts established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any rate increases for existing contracts or rates for new contracts, entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, that become effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the increase or rate for new contracts. This adjustment shall be calculated as follows:(i) For a contract described in subparagraph (A), the first-year cost of the amount of the rate increase calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the increase became effective.(ii) For a contract described in subparagraph (B), the first-year cost of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the contract became effective.(5) In the event the state ceases to receive enhanced federal financial participation for the provision of services pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted one time to reflect a 35-percent share of the enhanced federal financial participation that would have been received pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)) for the fiscal year in which the state ceases to receive the enhanced federal financial participation.(6) The County IHSS MOE shall not be adjusted for increases in individual provider wages that are locally negotiated pursuant to subdivision (a) of, and paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (d) of, Section 12306.1 when the increase has been specifically negotiated to take effect at the same time as, and to be the same amount as, state minimum wage increases.(7) (A) A county may negotiate a wage supplement. The first time the wage supplement is applied, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment by the amount of the increase, as specified in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph (1).(B) A wage supplement negotiated pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall subsequently be applied to the county individual provider wage when the county individual provider wage meets all of the following criteria:(i) The increase to the county individual provider wage takes effect at the same time as the state minimum wage increase.(ii) The increase to the county individual provider wage is the same amount as the state minimum wage increase.(iii) The minimum wage increase exceeds the county individual provider wage prior to applying the minimum wage increase.(8) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to develop the computations for the annualized amounts pursuant to this subdivision.(e) The County IHSS MOE shall only be adjusted pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) A countys County IHSS MOE costs paid to the state shall be reduced by the amount of any General Fund offset provided to the county pursuant to Section 12306.17.SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and any appeals arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) (A) (i) Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii) For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for individuals whose criminal records are shown to be inaccurate.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum, or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b).(f) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.SEC. 4. Section 14126.022 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:14126.022. (a) (1) By August 1, 2011, the department shall develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, subject to approval by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the availability of federal, state, or other funds.(2) (A) The system shall be utilized to provide supplemental payments to skilled nursing facilities that improve the quality and accountability of care rendered to residents in skilled nursing facilities, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, and to penalize those facilities that do not meet measurable standards.(B) A freestanding pediatric subacute care facility, as defined in Section 51215.8 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, shall be exempt from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System.(3) The system shall be phased in, beginning with the 201011 rate year.(4) The department may utilize the system to do all of the following:(A) Assess overall facility quality of care and quality of care improvement, and assign quality and accountability payments to skilled nursing facilities pursuant to performance measures described in subdivision (i).(B) Assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to quality of care, or direct care staffing levels, wages, and benefits, or both.(C) Limit the reimbursement of legal fees incurred by skilled nursing facilities engaged in the defense of governmental legal actions filed against the facilities.(D) Publish each facilitys quality assessment and quality and accountability payments in a manner and form determined by the director, or his or her designee.(E) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, establish a base year to collect performance measures described in subdivision (i).(F) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, publish the direct care staffing level data and the performance measures required pursuant to subdivision (i).(5) The department, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, shall report to the relevant Assembly and Senate budget subcommittees by May 1, 2016, information regarding the quality and accountability supplemental payments, including, but not limited to, its assessment of whether the payments are adequate to incentivize quality care and to sustain the program.(b) (1) There is hereby created in the State Treasury, the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. The fund shall contain moneys deposited pursuant to subdivisions (g) and (j) to (m), inclusive. Notwithstanding Section 16305.7 of the Government Code, the fund shall contain all interest and dividends earned on moneys in the fund.(2) Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, the fund shall be continuously appropriated without regard to fiscal year to the department for making quality and accountability payments, in accordance with subdivision (n), to facilities that meet or exceed predefined measures as established by this section.(3) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, moneys in the fund may also be used for any of the following purposes:(A) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Public Health for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(B) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Health Care Services for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(C) To provide funding assistance for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(c) No appropriation associated with Chapter 717 of the Statutes of 2010 is intended to implement the provisions of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code.(d) (1) There is hereby appropriated for the 201011 fiscal year, one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund to the California Department of Aging for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5. It is the intent of the Legislature for the one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the fund to be in addition to the four million one hundred sixty-eight thousand dollars ($4,168,000) proposed in the Governors May Revision for the 201011 Budget. It is further the intent of the Legislature to increase this level of appropriation in subsequent years to provide support sufficient to carry out the mandates and activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(2) The department, in partnership with the California Department of Aging, shall seek approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to obtain federal Medicaid reimbursement for activities conducted by the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program. The department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature during budget hearings on progress being made and any unresolved issues during the 201112 budget deliberations.(e) There is hereby created in the Special Deposit Fund established pursuant to Section 16370 of the Government Code, the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account. The account shall contain all moneys deposited pursuant to subdivision (f).(f) (1) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall use the direct care staffing level data it collects to determine whether a skilled nursing facility has met the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(2) (A) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall assess a skilled nursing facility, licensed pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, an administrative penalty if the State Department of Public Health determines that the skilled nursing facility fails to meet the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, as follows:(i) Fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for 5 percent or more of the audited days up to 49 percent.(ii) Thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for over 49 percent or more of the audited days.(B) (i) If the skilled nursing facility does not dispute the determination or assessment, the penalties shall be paid in full by the licensee to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the notice of penalty and deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(ii) The State Department of Public Health may, upon written notification to the licensee, request that the department offset any moneys owed to the licensee by the Medi-Cal program or any other payment program administered by the department to recoup the penalty provided for in this section.(C) (i) If a facility disputes the determination or assessment made pursuant to this paragraph, the facility shall, within 15 days of the facilitys receipt of the determination and assessment, simultaneously submit a request for appeal to both the department and the State Department of Public Health. The request shall include a detailed statement describing the reason for appeal and include all supporting documents the facility will present at the hearing.(ii) Within 10 days of the State Department of Public Healths receipt of the facilitys request for appeal, the State Department of Public Health shall submit, to both the facility and the department, all supporting documents that will be presented at the hearing.(D) The department shall hear a timely appeal and issue a decision as follows:(i) The hearing shall commence within 60 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(ii) The department shall issue a decision within 120 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(iii) The decision of the departments hearing officer, when issued, shall be the final decision of the State Department of Public Health.(E) The appeals process set forth in this paragraph shall be exempt from Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400) and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500), of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. The provisions of Sections 100171 and 131071 of the Health and Safety Code do not apply to appeals under this paragraph.(F) If a hearing decision issued pursuant to subparagraph (D) is in favor of the State Department of Public Health, the skilled nursing facility shall pay the penalties to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the decision. The penalties collected shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(G) The assessment of a penalty under this subdivision does not supplant the State Department of Public Healths investigation process or issuance of deficiencies or citations under Chapter 2.4 (commencing with Section 1417) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(g) The State Department of Public Health shall transfer, on a monthly basis, all penalty payments collected pursuant to subdivision (f) into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(h) This section does not impact the effectiveness or utilization of Section 1278.5 or 1432 of the Health and Safety Code relating to whistleblower protections, or Section 1420 of the Health and Safety Code relating to complaints.(i) (1) Beginning in the 201011 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall establish and publish quality and accountability measures, benchmarks, and data submission deadlines by November 30, 2010.(2) The methodology developed pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, the following requirements and performance measures:(A) Beginning in the 201112 fiscal year:(i) Immunization rates.(ii) Facility acquired pressure ulcer incidence.(iii) The use of physical restraints.(iv) Compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(v) Resident and family satisfaction.(vi) Direct care staff retention, if sufficient data is available.(B) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, in accordance with Section 14126.033, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, beginning in the 201314 rate year, shall incorporate additional measures into the system, including, but not limited to, quality and accountability measures required by federal health care reform that are identified by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.(C) The department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, may incorporate additional performance measures, including, but not limited to, the following:(i) Compliance with state policy associated with the United States Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C. ex rel. Zimring (1999) 527 U.S. 581.(ii) Direct care staff retention, if not addressed in the 201213 rate year.(iii) The use of chemical restraints.(D) Beginning with the 201516 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall incorporate direct care staff retention as a performance measure in the methodology developed pursuant to this section.(j) (1) Beginning with the 201011 rate year, and pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (5) of subdivision (a) of Section 14126.023, the department shall set aside savings achieved from setting the professional liability insurance cost category, including any insurance deductible costs paid by the facility, at the 75th percentile. From this amount, the department shall transfer the General Fund portion into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. A skilled nursing facility shall provide supplemental data on insurance deductible costs to facilitate this adjustment, in the format and by the deadlines determined by the department. If this data is not provided, a facilitys insurance deductible costs will remain in the administrative costs category.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), for the 201213 rate year only, savings from capping the professional liability insurance cost category pursuant to paragraph (1) shall remain in the General Fund and shall not be transferred to the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(k) For the 201314 rate year, if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside the first 1 percent of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase for the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(l) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, for the 201415 rate year, in addition to the amount set aside pursuant to subdivision (k), if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside at least one-third of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase, up to a maximum of 1 percent, from which the department shall transfer the General Fund portion of this amount into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(m) Beginning with the 201516 rate year, and each subsequent rate year thereafter for which this article is operative, an amount equal to the amount deposited in the fund pursuant to subdivisions (k) and (l) for the 201415 rate year shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund, for the purposes specified in this section.(n) (1) (A) Beginning with the 201314 rate year, the department shall pay a supplemental payment, by April 30, 2014, to skilled nursing facilities based on all of the criteria in subdivision (i), as published by the department, and according to performance measure benchmarks determined by the department in consultation with stakeholders.(B) (i) The department may convene a diverse stakeholder group, including, but not limited to, representatives from consumer groups and organizations, labor, nursing home providers, advocacy organizations involved with the aging community, staff from the Legislature, and other interested parties, to discuss and analyze alternative mechanisms to implement the quality and accountability payments provided to nursing homes for reimbursement.(ii) The department shall articulate in a report to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature the implementation of an alternative mechanism as described in clause (i) at least 90 days prior to any policy or budgetary changes, and seek subsequent legislation in order to enact the proposed changes.(2) Skilled nursing facilities that do not submit required performance data by the departments specified data submission deadlines pursuant to subdivision (i) are not eligible to receive supplemental payments.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if a facility appeals the performance measure of compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements, pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, to the State Department of Public Health, and it is unresolved by the departments published due date, the department shall not use that performance measure when determining the facilitys supplemental payment.(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if the department is unable to pay the supplemental payments by April 30, 2014, then on May 1, 2014, the department shall use the funds available in the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund as a result of savings identified in subdivisions (k) and (l), less the administrative costs required to implement subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), in addition to any Medicaid funds that are available as of December 31, 2013, to increase provider rates retroactively to August 1, 2013.(o) The department shall seek necessary approvals from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to implement this section. The department shall implement this section only in a manner that is consistent with federal Medicaid law and regulations, and only to the extent that approval is obtained from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and federal financial participation is available.(p) In implementing this section, the department and the State Department of Public Health may contract as necessary, with Californias Medicare Quality Improvement Organization, or other entities deemed qualified by the department or the State Department of Public Health, not associated with a skilled nursing facility, to assist with development, collection, analysis, and reporting of the performance data pursuant to subdivision (i), and with demonstrated expertise in long-term care quality, data collection or analysis, and accountability performance measurement models pursuant to subdivision (i). This subdivision establishes an accelerated process for issuing any contract pursuant to this section. Any contract entered into pursuant to this subdivision is exempt from the requirements of the Public Contract Code, through December 31, 2020.(q) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, the following apply:(1) The director shall implement this section, in whole or in part, by means of provider bulletins, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(2) The State Public Health Officer may implement this section by means of all-facility letters, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(r) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of subdivision (n), if a final judicial determination is made by any state or federal court that is not appealed, in any action by any party, or a final determination is made by the administrator of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, that any payments pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (n), are invalid, unlawful, or contrary to any provision of federal law or regulations, or of state law, these subdivisions shall become inoperative, and for the 201112 rate year, the rate increase provided under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (c) of Section 14126.033 shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivision (j). For the 201314 and 201415 rate years, any rate increase shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivisions (j) to (l), inclusive.(s) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code.(t) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, compliance with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code, as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017, shall not be used to determine facility qualification for the supplemental payments provided for in this section until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year. This limitation shall also apply to the issuance of citations pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d) of Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code based upon the failure to comply with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017. Until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year, the department shall apply the provisions of Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code for purposes of administering the supplemental payments pursuant to this section. For performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver pursuant to subdivision (l) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirement pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code that would have applied in the absence of Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017 for the duration of the time for which the waiver is granted.SEC. 5. Section 17605 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17605. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount to be determined by the Department of Finance, that represents the sum of the shortfalls between the actual realignment revenues received by each county and each city and county from the Social Services Subaccount of the Local Revenue Fund in the 199192 fiscal year and the net costs incurred by each of those counties and cities and counties in the fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 10101.1, 11322.2, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and former Section 11322. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocation schedule on or before August 15, 1993, that shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited to the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision. The Controller shall allocate these funds no later than August 27, 1993.(b) (1) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance, in consultation with the appropriate state departments and the California State Association of Counties, that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads, as specified in paragraph (2), and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocations schedule on or before March 15 of each year. The schedule shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited into the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision.(B) It is the intent of the Legislature that counties shall receive allocations from the Caseload Subaccount as soon as possible after funds are received in the Sales Tax Growth Account. The Department of Finance shall recommend to the Legislature, by January 10, 2005, a procedure to expedite the preparation and provision of the allocations schedule described in subparagraph (A) and the allocation of funds by the Controller.(2) (A) (i) For the 199293 fiscal year through the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, growth means, for purposes of this subdivision, the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code.(ii) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, for purposes of this subdivision, growth means the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code. (B) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, in addition to subparagraph (A), growth shall also include the following:(i) The additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (g) of Section 17600.15 to fund the amount specified in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (f) of Section 17600.15 and the amount of vehicle license fee revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17606.20, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17605.07 and subdivision (g) of Section 17606.10.(ii) Any additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the prior fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the preceding prior fiscal year that were not included in caseload growth calculation pursuant to clause (i) from the prior caseload growth calculation.(3) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year through the 201617 fiscal year, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realigned programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(B) For the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(C) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero. (c) Annually, the Controller shall allocate, to the local health and welfare trust fund social services account, the amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the Caseload Subaccount, pursuant to the schedules of allocations of caseload growth described in subdivision (b), within 45 days of receiving those schedules from the Department of Finance. If there are insufficient funds to fully satisfy all caseload growth obligations, each countys or city and countys allocation for each program specified in subdivision (d) shall be prorated.(d) Prior to allocating funds pursuant to subdivision (b), to the extent that funds are available from funds deposited in the Caseload Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account in the Local Revenue Fund, the Controller shall allocate moneys to counties or cities and counties to correct any inequity or inequities in the computation of the child welfare services portion of the schedule required by subdivision (a) of Section 17602.(e) (1) For the 200304 fiscal year, no Sales Tax Growth Account funds shall be allocated pursuant to this chapter until the caseload portion of the base of each countys social services account in the countys health and welfare trust fund is funded to the level of the 200102 fiscal year. Funds to meet this requirement shall be allocated from the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund. If sufficient funds are not available in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund to achieve that funding level in the 200304 fiscal year, this requirement shall be funded in each succeeding fiscal year in which there are sufficient funds in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund until the caseload base funding level for which each county would have otherwise been eligible in accordance with subdivision (e) of Section 17602 for that year.(2) The caseload portion of each countys social services account base shall be determined by subtracting its noncaseload portion of the base, as determined by the Department of Finance in its annual calculation of General Growth Account allocations, from the total base of each countys social services account for the 200102 fiscal year.(f) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall annually post on his or her Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.SEC. 6. Section 17605.07 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17605.07. (a) (1) For the 199293 fiscal year through the 201415 fiscal year, inclusive, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(b) (1) For the 201516 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(c) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount pursuant to subdivision (b), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties.(2) The funding allocated pursuant to paragraph (1) shall only be available for allocation to the counties that participate in the County Medical Services Program in the 201617 fiscal year.SEC. 7. Section 17606.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17606.10. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year and subsequent fiscal years, the Controller shall allocate funds, on an annual basis from the General Growth Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account to the appropriate accounts in the local health and welfare trust fund of each county, city, and city and county in accordance with a schedule setting forth the percentage of total state resources received in the 199091 fiscal year, including State Legalization Impact Assistance Grants distributed by the state under former Part 4.5 (commencing with Section 16700), funding provided for purposes of implementation of Division 5 (commencing with Section 5000), for the organization and financing of community mental health services, including the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Surtax proceeds that are allocated to county mental health programs pursuant to Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989, Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990, and Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990, and state hospital funding and funding distributed for programs administered under Sections 1794, 10101.1, and 11322.2, as annually adjusted by the Department of Finance, in conjunction with the appropriate state department to reflect changes in equity status from the base percentages. However, for the 199293 fiscal year, the allocation for community mental health services shall be based on the following schedule:Percentageof StatewideJurisdictionResource BaseAlameda ........................ 4.3693Alpine ........................ 0.0128Amador ........................ 0.0941Butte ........................ 0.7797Calaveras ........................ 0.1157Colusa ........................ 0.0847Contra Costa ........................ 2.3115Del Norte ........................ 0.1237El Dorado ........................ 0.3966Fresno ........................ 3.1419Glenn ........................ 0.1304Humboldt ........................ 0.6175Imperial ........................ 0.5425Inyo ........................ 0.1217Kern ........................ 1.8574Kings ........................ 0.4229Lake ........................ 0.2362Lassen ........................ 0.1183Los Angeles ........................ 27.9666 Madera ........................ 0.3552Marin ........................ 0.9180Mariposa ........................ 0.0792Mendocino ........................ 0.4099Merced ........................ 0.8831Modoc ........................ 0.0561Mono ........................ 0.0511Monterey ........................ 1.1663Napa ........................ 0.3856Nevada ........................ 0.2129Orange ........................ 5.3423Placer ........................ 0.5034Plumas ........................ 0.1134Riverside ........................ 3.6179Sacramento ........................ 4.1872San Benito ........................ 0.1010San Bernardino ........................ 4.5494San Diego ........................ 7.8773San Francisco ........................ 3.5335San Joaquin ........................ 2.4690San Luis Obispo ........................ 0.6652San Mateo ........................ 2.5169Santa Barbara ........................ 1.0745Santa Clara ........................ 5.0488Santa Cruz ........................ 0.7960Shasta ........................ 0.5493Sierra ........................ 0.0345Siskiyou ........................ 0.2051Solano ........................ 0.6694Sonoma ........................ 1.1486Stanislaus ........................ 1.4701Sutter/Yuba ........................ 0.6294Tehama ........................ 0.2384Trinity ........................ 0.0826Tulare ........................ 1.4704Tuolumne ........................ 0.1666Ventura ........................ 1.9311Yolo ........................ 0.5443Berkeley ........................ 0.2688Tri-City ........................ 0.2347(b) The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of the local health and welfare trust fund of each city, county, and city and county for the 199495 fiscal year general growth allocations according to subdivisions (c) and (d). For the 199596 fiscal year and annually until the end of the 201213 fiscal year, the Department of Finance shall prepare the schedule of allocations of growth based upon the recalculation of the resource base as provided by subdivision (c).(c) For the Mental Health Account, the Department of Finance shall do all of the following:(1) Use the following sources as reported by the State Department of Health Care Services:(A) The final December 1992 distribution of resources associated with Institutes for Mental Disease.(B) The 199091 fiscal year state hospitals and community mental health allocations.(C) Allocations for services provided for under Chapter 1294 of the Statutes of 1989.(2) Expand the resource base with the following nonrealigned funding sources as allocated among the counties:(A) Tobacco surtax allocations made under Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989 and Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990.(B) For the 199495 allocation year only, Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990.(C) 199394 fiscal year federal homeless block grant allocation.(D) 199394 fiscal year Mental Health Special Education allocations.(E) 199394 fiscal year allocations for the system of care for children, in accordance with Chapter 1229 of the Statutes of 1992.(F) 199394 fiscal year federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration block grant allocations pursuant to Subchapter 1 (commencing with Section 10801) of Chapter 114 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(d) For the Health Account, the Department of Finance shall use the historical resource base of state funds as allocated among the counties, cities, and city and county as reported by the former State Department of Health Services in a September 17, 1991, report of Indigent and Community Health Resources.(e) The Department of Finance shall use these adjusted resource bases for the Health Account and Mental Health Account to calculate what the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount allocations would have been, and together with 199495 fiscal year Base Restoration Subaccount allocations, CMSP subaccount allocations, equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 17606.05, as that subparagraph read on January 1, 2015, and special equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subdivision (e) of Section 17606.15 reconstruct the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount resource base for the 199596 allocation year for each county, city, and city and county. Notwithstanding any other law, the actual 199495 general growth allocations shall not become part of the realignment base allocations to each county, city, and city and county. The total amounts distributed by the Controller for general growth for the 199495 allocation year shall be reallocated among the counties, cities, and city and county in the 199596 allocation year according to this paragraph, and shall be included in the general growth resource base for the 199697 allocation year and each fiscal year thereafter. For the 199697 allocation year and fiscal years thereafter, the Department of Finance shall update the base with actual growth allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of each county, city, and city and county local health and welfare trust fund in the prior year, and adjust for actual changes in nonrealigned funds specified in subdivision (c) in the year prior to the allocation year.(f) For the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall do all of the following:(1) Allocate to the Mental Health Account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Mental Health Account in accordance with subdivision (c) and allocate based on that recalculation.(2) Allocate 18.4545 percent of the total General Growth Subaccount to the health account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance in accordance with subdivision (d).(3) Allocate the remainder of the funds in the General Growth Subaccount to the family support account of each county or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. These funds shall be expended in accordance with Section 17601.50.(g) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (f), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate funds in the following amounts from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account of each county and city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties:(A) The funding that would have been allocated to the Mental Health Account of each county or city and county pursuant to the calculations specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (f).(B) The funding that would have been allocated to the health account of each county or city and county pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (f), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, Article 12 (commencing with Section 17612.1), and Article 13 (commencing with 17613.1).(2) The allocation of funds from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account as described in paragraph (1) shall not apply to the amount of funds available for allocation to the Mental Health Accounts and health accounts of the Cities of Berkeley, Pasadena, Tri-City, and Long Beach.(h) The amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the General Growth Subaccount shall be allocated on an annual basis by the Controller, as described in subdivisions (f) and (g), within 45 days of receiving the General Growth Subaccount allocation schedule from the Department of Finance.SEC. 8. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, from the General Fund moneys appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in Item 5180-101-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2017, the department shall allocate five million four hundred thousand dollars ($5,400,000), in a single payment by the Controller, to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017.(b) As a condition of receiving these funds, the City of San Jose shall provide quarterly reports to the department regarding the number of families served and the types of services they received, until all funds have been expended.SEC. 9. This act is a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill within the meaning of subdivision (e) of Section 12 of Article IV of the California Constitution, has been identified as related to the budget in the Budget Bill, and shall take effect immediately.
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3- Assembly Bill No. 130 CHAPTER 251An act to amend Sections 12301.61, 12306.16, 13303, 14126.022, 17605, 17605.07, and 17606.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to health and human services, and making an appropriation therefor, to take effect immediately, bill related to the budget. [ Approved by Governor September 16, 2017. Filed with Secretary of State September 16, 2017. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 130, Committee on Budget. Health and human services.(1) Existing law establishes the county-administered In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) program, under which qualified aged, blind, and disabled persons are provided with services in order to permit them to remain in their own homes and avoid institutionalization. Under existing law, a county board of supervisors may elect to contract with a nonprofit consortium to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services, or establish, by ordinance, a public authority to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services. Existing law requires, until January 1, 2020, a specified mediation process to be held if a public authority or nonprofit consortium fails to reach agreement on a bargaining contract with its in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.This bill would clarify that the specified mediation process is required if a public authority or nonprofit consortium and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.Existing law requires the state and counties to share the annual cost of providing in-home supportive services and requires all counties to have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE) commencing July 1, 2017, as prescribed. Existing law requires that a portion of IHSS costs that are the counties responsibility to be offset using a combination of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, as specified.Existing law requires the Controller to deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount, and requires the Controller to allocate funds to counties based on those calculations. Existing law requires the Controller, for the 2015 16 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter and after satisfying the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account, to deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027% of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account, as specified.This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount, as specified.Existing law requires the Controller, for the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, to allocate a specified amount to the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, city, or city and county from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance.This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, or city and county, as specified.Existing law defines growth for purposes of the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account to mean the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for costs from specified social services programs, including the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017. Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, growth includes the County IHSS MOE costs to counties commencing on July 1, 2017, for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less specified amounts.This bill would revise these factors used to calculate the caseload growth, by changing the definition of growth to exclude the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017, and by including offsets provided by General Fund moneys and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the redirected sales tax growth revenues, as specified above, in the calculation of the County IHSS MOE costs. The bill would also require the State Controller, commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, to annually post on its Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.(2) Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services to provide grants to qualifying nonprofit organizations for purposes of providing services that include, among other things, services relating to the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.This bill would appropriate $20,000,000 to the department for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to those provisions for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(3) Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of health facilities, including skilled nursing facilities, by the State Department of Public Health. Among other requirements, these provisions generally require skilled nursing facilities to have a minimum number of nursing hours per patient day of 3.2 hours, and effective July 1, 2018, requires skilled nursing facilities, except as specified, to have a minimum number of direct care service hours, as defined, of 3.5 hours per patient day. Existing law requires the department to adopt regulations to create a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements.Existing law requires the State Department of Health Care Services, in connection with its administration of the Medi-Cal program, to develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, and requires the system to be utilized to, among other things, assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to direct care staffing levels at a skilled nursing facility, including the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements. Existing law establishes the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund in the State Treasury, which is a continuously appropriated fund that contains moneys from the assessment of specified administrative penalties and setasides of General Fund moneys, for the purposes of making the quality and accountability payments.Existing law, to a specified extent, provides that a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above. Existing law, to a specified extent, prohibits using compliance with the direct care service hour requirements to determine facility qualification for supplemental payments and instead requires the department to apply the nursing hour requirements for purposes of administering the supplemental payments until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year.This bill, instead, would specify that for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements. The bill would, for performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, provide that a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hour requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above for the duration of time for which the waiver is granted. By expanding the number of facilities that would be eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program and therefore expanding the payments from a continuously appropriated fund, the bill would make an appropriation.(4) The Budget Act of 2017 appropriated a specified sum to the State Department of Social Services for local assistance relating to the CalWORKs program and other assistance payments.This bill would require the department to allocate $5,400,000 from the General Fund moneys in the above-described appropriation to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017, and, as a condition of receiving these funds, the bill would require the City of San Jose to provide quarterly reports to the department, as specified.(5) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: YES Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Enrolled September 15, 2017 Passed IN Senate September 15, 2017 Passed IN Assembly September 15, 2017 Amended IN Senate September 11, 2017 Amended IN Senate September 06, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 130Introduced by Committee on Budget (Assembly Members Ting (Chair), Arambula, Bloom, Caballero, Chiu, Cooper, Cristina Garcia, Jones-Sawyer, Limn, McCarty, Medina, Mullin, Muratsuchi, ODonnell, Rubio, Mark Stone, Weber, and Wood)January 10, 2017An act to amend Sections 12301.61, 12306.16, 13303, 14126.022, 17605, 17605.07, and 17606.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to health and human services, and making an appropriation therefor, to take effect immediately, bill related to the budget.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 130, Committee on Budget. Health and human services.(1) Existing law establishes the county-administered In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) program, under which qualified aged, blind, and disabled persons are provided with services in order to permit them to remain in their own homes and avoid institutionalization. Under existing law, a county board of supervisors may elect to contract with a nonprofit consortium to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services, or establish, by ordinance, a public authority to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services. Existing law requires, until January 1, 2020, a specified mediation process to be held if a public authority or nonprofit consortium fails to reach agreement on a bargaining contract with its in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.This bill would clarify that the specified mediation process is required if a public authority or nonprofit consortium and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.Existing law requires the state and counties to share the annual cost of providing in-home supportive services and requires all counties to have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE) commencing July 1, 2017, as prescribed. Existing law requires that a portion of IHSS costs that are the counties responsibility to be offset using a combination of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, as specified.Existing law requires the Controller to deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount, and requires the Controller to allocate funds to counties based on those calculations. Existing law requires the Controller, for the 2015 16 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter and after satisfying the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account, to deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027% of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account, as specified.This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount, as specified.Existing law requires the Controller, for the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, to allocate a specified amount to the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, city, or city and county from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance.This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, or city and county, as specified.Existing law defines growth for purposes of the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account to mean the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for costs from specified social services programs, including the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017. Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, growth includes the County IHSS MOE costs to counties commencing on July 1, 2017, for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less specified amounts.This bill would revise these factors used to calculate the caseload growth, by changing the definition of growth to exclude the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017, and by including offsets provided by General Fund moneys and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the redirected sales tax growth revenues, as specified above, in the calculation of the County IHSS MOE costs. The bill would also require the State Controller, commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, to annually post on its Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.(2) Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services to provide grants to qualifying nonprofit organizations for purposes of providing services that include, among other things, services relating to the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.This bill would appropriate $20,000,000 to the department for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to those provisions for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(3) Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of health facilities, including skilled nursing facilities, by the State Department of Public Health. Among other requirements, these provisions generally require skilled nursing facilities to have a minimum number of nursing hours per patient day of 3.2 hours, and effective July 1, 2018, requires skilled nursing facilities, except as specified, to have a minimum number of direct care service hours, as defined, of 3.5 hours per patient day. Existing law requires the department to adopt regulations to create a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements.Existing law requires the State Department of Health Care Services, in connection with its administration of the Medi-Cal program, to develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, and requires the system to be utilized to, among other things, assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to direct care staffing levels at a skilled nursing facility, including the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements. Existing law establishes the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund in the State Treasury, which is a continuously appropriated fund that contains moneys from the assessment of specified administrative penalties and setasides of General Fund moneys, for the purposes of making the quality and accountability payments.Existing law, to a specified extent, provides that a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above. Existing law, to a specified extent, prohibits using compliance with the direct care service hour requirements to determine facility qualification for supplemental payments and instead requires the department to apply the nursing hour requirements for purposes of administering the supplemental payments until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year.This bill, instead, would specify that for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements. The bill would, for performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, provide that a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hour requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above for the duration of time for which the waiver is granted. By expanding the number of facilities that would be eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program and therefore expanding the payments from a continuously appropriated fund, the bill would make an appropriation.(4) The Budget Act of 2017 appropriated a specified sum to the State Department of Social Services for local assistance relating to the CalWORKs program and other assistance payments.This bill would require the department to allocate $5,400,000 from the General Fund moneys in the above-described appropriation to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017, and, as a condition of receiving these funds, the bill would require the City of San Jose to provide quarterly reports to the department, as specified.(5) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: YES Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
4+
5+ Enrolled September 15, 2017 Passed IN Senate September 15, 2017 Passed IN Assembly September 15, 2017 Amended IN Senate September 11, 2017 Amended IN Senate September 06, 2017
6+
7+Enrolled September 15, 2017
8+Passed IN Senate September 15, 2017
9+Passed IN Assembly September 15, 2017
10+Amended IN Senate September 11, 2017
11+Amended IN Senate September 06, 2017
12+
13+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION
414
515 Assembly Bill No. 130
6-CHAPTER 251
16+
17+Introduced by Committee on Budget (Assembly Members Ting (Chair), Arambula, Bloom, Caballero, Chiu, Cooper, Cristina Garcia, Jones-Sawyer, Limn, McCarty, Medina, Mullin, Muratsuchi, ODonnell, Rubio, Mark Stone, Weber, and Wood)January 10, 2017
18+
19+Introduced by Committee on Budget (Assembly Members Ting (Chair), Arambula, Bloom, Caballero, Chiu, Cooper, Cristina Garcia, Jones-Sawyer, Limn, McCarty, Medina, Mullin, Muratsuchi, ODonnell, Rubio, Mark Stone, Weber, and Wood)
20+January 10, 2017
721
822 An act to amend Sections 12301.61, 12306.16, 13303, 14126.022, 17605, 17605.07, and 17606.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to health and human services, and making an appropriation therefor, to take effect immediately, bill related to the budget.
9-
10- [ Approved by Governor September 16, 2017. Filed with Secretary of State September 16, 2017. ]
1123
1224 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1325
1426 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1527
1628 AB 130, Committee on Budget. Health and human services.
1729
1830 (1) Existing law establishes the county-administered In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) program, under which qualified aged, blind, and disabled persons are provided with services in order to permit them to remain in their own homes and avoid institutionalization. Under existing law, a county board of supervisors may elect to contract with a nonprofit consortium to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services, or establish, by ordinance, a public authority to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services. Existing law requires, until January 1, 2020, a specified mediation process to be held if a public authority or nonprofit consortium fails to reach agreement on a bargaining contract with its in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.This bill would clarify that the specified mediation process is required if a public authority or nonprofit consortium and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.Existing law requires the state and counties to share the annual cost of providing in-home supportive services and requires all counties to have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE) commencing July 1, 2017, as prescribed. Existing law requires that a portion of IHSS costs that are the counties responsibility to be offset using a combination of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, as specified.Existing law requires the Controller to deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount, and requires the Controller to allocate funds to counties based on those calculations. Existing law requires the Controller, for the 2015 16 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter and after satisfying the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account, to deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027% of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account, as specified.This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount, as specified.Existing law requires the Controller, for the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, to allocate a specified amount to the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, city, or city and county from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance.This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, or city and county, as specified.Existing law defines growth for purposes of the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account to mean the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for costs from specified social services programs, including the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017. Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, growth includes the County IHSS MOE costs to counties commencing on July 1, 2017, for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less specified amounts.This bill would revise these factors used to calculate the caseload growth, by changing the definition of growth to exclude the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017, and by including offsets provided by General Fund moneys and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the redirected sales tax growth revenues, as specified above, in the calculation of the County IHSS MOE costs. The bill would also require the State Controller, commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, to annually post on its Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.(2) Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services to provide grants to qualifying nonprofit organizations for purposes of providing services that include, among other things, services relating to the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.This bill would appropriate $20,000,000 to the department for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to those provisions for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(3) Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of health facilities, including skilled nursing facilities, by the State Department of Public Health. Among other requirements, these provisions generally require skilled nursing facilities to have a minimum number of nursing hours per patient day of 3.2 hours, and effective July 1, 2018, requires skilled nursing facilities, except as specified, to have a minimum number of direct care service hours, as defined, of 3.5 hours per patient day. Existing law requires the department to adopt regulations to create a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements.Existing law requires the State Department of Health Care Services, in connection with its administration of the Medi-Cal program, to develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, and requires the system to be utilized to, among other things, assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to direct care staffing levels at a skilled nursing facility, including the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements. Existing law establishes the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund in the State Treasury, which is a continuously appropriated fund that contains moneys from the assessment of specified administrative penalties and setasides of General Fund moneys, for the purposes of making the quality and accountability payments.Existing law, to a specified extent, provides that a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above. Existing law, to a specified extent, prohibits using compliance with the direct care service hour requirements to determine facility qualification for supplemental payments and instead requires the department to apply the nursing hour requirements for purposes of administering the supplemental payments until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year.This bill, instead, would specify that for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements. The bill would, for performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, provide that a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hour requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above for the duration of time for which the waiver is granted. By expanding the number of facilities that would be eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program and therefore expanding the payments from a continuously appropriated fund, the bill would make an appropriation.(4) The Budget Act of 2017 appropriated a specified sum to the State Department of Social Services for local assistance relating to the CalWORKs program and other assistance payments.This bill would require the department to allocate $5,400,000 from the General Fund moneys in the above-described appropriation to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017, and, as a condition of receiving these funds, the bill would require the City of San Jose to provide quarterly reports to the department, as specified.(5) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.
1931
2032 (1) Existing law establishes the county-administered In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) program, under which qualified aged, blind, and disabled persons are provided with services in order to permit them to remain in their own homes and avoid institutionalization. Under existing law, a county board of supervisors may elect to contract with a nonprofit consortium to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services, or establish, by ordinance, a public authority to provide for the delivery of in-home supportive services. Existing law requires, until January 1, 2020, a specified mediation process to be held if a public authority or nonprofit consortium fails to reach agreement on a bargaining contract with its in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.
2133
2234 This bill would clarify that the specified mediation process is required if a public authority or nonprofit consortium and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018.
2335
2436 Existing law requires the state and counties to share the annual cost of providing in-home supportive services and requires all counties to have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE) commencing July 1, 2017, as prescribed. Existing law requires that a portion of IHSS costs that are the counties responsibility to be offset using a combination of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, as specified.
2537
2638 Existing law requires the Controller to deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount, and requires the Controller to allocate funds to counties based on those calculations. Existing law requires the Controller, for the 2015 16 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter and after satisfying the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account, to deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027% of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account, as specified.
2739
2840 This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount, as specified.
2941
3042 Existing law requires the Controller, for the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, to allocate a specified amount to the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, city, or city and county from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance.
3143
3244 This bill, for the 201617 fiscal year, would instead require the Controller to allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the Mental Health Account and health account of each county, or city and county, as specified.
3345
3446 Existing law defines growth for purposes of the above-mentioned obligation to deposit revenues into the Caseload Subaccount from the Sales Tax Growth Account to mean the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for costs from specified social services programs, including the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017. Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, growth includes the County IHSS MOE costs to counties commencing on July 1, 2017, for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less specified amounts.
3547
3648 This bill would revise these factors used to calculate the caseload growth, by changing the definition of growth to exclude the County IHSS MOE in effect on June 30, 2017, and by including offsets provided by General Fund moneys and redirected 1991 Realignment Vehicle License Fee growth revenues, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the redirected sales tax growth revenues, as specified above, in the calculation of the County IHSS MOE costs. The bill would also require the State Controller, commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, to annually post on its Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.
3749
3850 (2) Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services to provide grants to qualifying nonprofit organizations for purposes of providing services that include, among other things, services relating to the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.
3951
4052 This bill would appropriate $20,000,000 to the department for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to those provisions for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.
4153
4254 (3) Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of health facilities, including skilled nursing facilities, by the State Department of Public Health. Among other requirements, these provisions generally require skilled nursing facilities to have a minimum number of nursing hours per patient day of 3.2 hours, and effective July 1, 2018, requires skilled nursing facilities, except as specified, to have a minimum number of direct care service hours, as defined, of 3.5 hours per patient day. Existing law requires the department to adopt regulations to create a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements.
4355
4456 Existing law requires the State Department of Health Care Services, in connection with its administration of the Medi-Cal program, to develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, and requires the system to be utilized to, among other things, assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to direct care staffing levels at a skilled nursing facility, including the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements. Existing law establishes the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund in the State Treasury, which is a continuously appropriated fund that contains moneys from the assessment of specified administrative penalties and setasides of General Fund moneys, for the purposes of making the quality and accountability payments.
4557
4658 Existing law, to a specified extent, provides that a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above. Existing law, to a specified extent, prohibits using compliance with the direct care service hour requirements to determine facility qualification for supplemental payments and instead requires the department to apply the nursing hour requirements for purposes of administering the supplemental payments until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year.
4759
4860 This bill, instead, would specify that for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements. The bill would, for performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, provide that a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver of the direct care service hour requirements shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hour requirements that would have applied in the absence of the direct care service hour requirements described above for the duration of time for which the waiver is granted. By expanding the number of facilities that would be eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program and therefore expanding the payments from a continuously appropriated fund, the bill would make an appropriation.
4961
5062 (4) The Budget Act of 2017 appropriated a specified sum to the State Department of Social Services for local assistance relating to the CalWORKs program and other assistance payments.
5163
5264 This bill would require the department to allocate $5,400,000 from the General Fund moneys in the above-described appropriation to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017, and, as a condition of receiving these funds, the bill would require the City of San Jose to provide quarterly reports to the department, as specified.
5365
5466 (5) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.
5567
5668 ## Digest Key
5769
5870 ## Bill Text
5971
6072 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 12301.61 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:12301.61. (a) If a public authority or nonprofit consortium established pursuant to Section 12301.6, acting as the employer of record, and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018, either party may request mediation, pursuant to Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c). The mediation shall be held no more than 15 business days from the date requested by either party.(b) If the parties are unable to effect settlement through mediation as described in subdivision (a), the parties shall then submit their differences to factfinding, pursuant to Section 3505 and 3505.4 of the Government Code. Alternatively, if both parties agree, the parties may bypass the mediation process in subdivision (a) and move directly to factfinding.(1) The factfinding panel shall make findings of fact and recommend terms of settlement, which shall be advisory only, within 30 days after the panel is appointed by the Public Employment Relations Board.(2) Within 15 days after the factfinding panel has released its findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, either party may request post-factfinding mediation consistent with Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c).(3) If either party elects post-factfinding mediation, the findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, shall not be made public until the mediation has concluded.(4) Mediation shall be held no more than 15 days from the date requested, and may include, at the mediators discretion, the factfinding panel and representatives of both parties. The director, or his or her designee, shall be available to provide information and expertise, as necessary.(c) The Public Employment Relations Board shall designate a pool of no more than five qualified individuals to serve as mediators or on a factfinding panel. The pool shall consist of individuals with relevant subject matter expertise. The board shall select individuals for the pool in consultation with the department and the affected employers and employee organizations. Priority shall be given to individuals with knowledge of the In-Home Supportive Services program. The board may designate the mediator to serve as the neutral member of the factfinding panel.(d) The costs for the services of the factfinding panel and the mediator shall be equally divided between the parties, and shall include per diem fees, if any, and actual and necessary travel and subsistence expenses.(e) By April 1, 2018, the department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature on the status of all in-home supportive services bargaining contracts in each county.(f) If no individual is available to serve as a mediator or factfinder within the timelines specified in this section, the timelines shall be extended until the next mediator or factfinder is available.(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2020, and as of that date is repealed.SEC. 2. Section 12306.16 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:12306.16. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, all counties shall have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE).(b) (1) (A) The statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be established at one billion seven hundred sixty-nine million four hundred forty-three thousand dollars ($1,769,443,000). This amount reflects the estimated county share of IHSS program base costs calculated pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017, and reflected in the departments 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table for the 201718 fiscal year.(B) If actual IHSS program base costs, as determined by the Department of Finance on or before May 14, 2018, attributable to the 201718 fiscal year are lower than the costs assumed in the 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table, the statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be adjusted accordingly pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017.(2) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine each countys share of the statewide total County IHSS MOE base amount. The County IHSS MOE base shall be unique to each individual county.(3) (A) Administration expenditures are included in the County IHSS MOE and shall include both county administration, including costs associated with the IHSS case management, information, and payrolling system, and public authority administration.(B) The amount of General Fund moneys available for county administration and public authority administration is limited to the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated for those specific purposes in the annual Budget Act, and increases to this amount do not impact the County IHSS MOE.(C) To be eligible to receive its share of General Fund moneys appropriated in a fiscal year for county administration and public authority administration costs, the county is only required to expend the full amount of its County IHSS MOE that is attributable to county and public authority administration for that fiscal year and no additional county share of cost shall be required. The department shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine the county-by-county distribution of the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act for county administration and public authority administration.(D) Amounts expended by a county or public authority on administration in excess of the amount described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall not be attributed towards the county meeting its County IHSS MOE requirement.(E) As part of the preparation of the 201819 Governors Budget, the department shall work with the California State Association of Counties, County Welfare Directors Association of California, and the Department of Finance to examine the workload and budget assumptions related to administration of the IHSS program for the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years.(c) (1) On July 1, 2018, the County IHSS MOE base as specified in subdivision (b) shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 5 percent.(2) Beginning on July 1, 2019, and annually thereafter, the County IHSS MOE from the previous year shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 7 percent.(3) (A) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is less than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be zero.(B) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is equal to or up to 2 percent greater than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be one-half of the amount specified in either paragraph (1) or (2).(C) The Department of Finance shall provide notification to the appropriate fiscal committees of the Legislature and the California State Association of Counties by May 14 of each year of the inflation factor that will apply for the following fiscal year, based on the calculation in subparagraph (A) and (B).(d) In addition to the adjustment in subdivision (c), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted for the annualized cost of increases in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed, on or after July 1, 2017, including any increases in provider wages or health benefits adopted by ordinance pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 9100) of Chapter 2 of Division 9 of the Elections Code.(1) (A) If the department approves an increase in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the cost increase in accordance with subparagraph (B).(B) With respect to any increase in provider wages or health benefits approved on or after July 1, 2017, pursuant to subparagraph (A), the state shall participate in that increase as provided in subparagraph (A) up to the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any cost increase exceeding the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1.(C) With respect to an increase in benefits, other than individual health benefits, locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed by a county, public authority, or nonprofit consortium, or adopted by ordinance, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment equal to 35 percent of the nonfederal share of the increased benefit costs.(D) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraphs (A) to (C), inclusive, shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C), that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(2) (A) If the department does not approve the increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1 or paragraph (3), the county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of the cost increases.(B) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate county sharing ratio as grown by the appropriate number of applicable inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(3) In addition to the rate approval requirements specified in subdivisions (a) to (c), inclusive, of Section 12306.1, it shall be presumed by the department that rates and other economic terms that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance are approved.(4) (A) With respect to any rate increases to existing contracts that a county has already entered into pursuant to Section 12302, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the amount of the rate increase up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the rate increase exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS contract hours, or the paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective if the contract becomes effective on or after July 1, 2017, using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(B) With respect to rates for new contracts entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients to be provided under the contract up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the contract rate exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio.(C) The county share of these expenditures shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amounts established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any rate increases for existing contracts or rates for new contracts, entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, that become effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the increase or rate for new contracts. This adjustment shall be calculated as follows:(i) For a contract described in subparagraph (A), the first-year cost of the amount of the rate increase calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the increase became effective.(ii) For a contract described in subparagraph (B), the first-year cost of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the contract became effective.(5) In the event the state ceases to receive enhanced federal financial participation for the provision of services pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted one time to reflect a 35-percent share of the enhanced federal financial participation that would have been received pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)) for the fiscal year in which the state ceases to receive the enhanced federal financial participation.(6) The County IHSS MOE shall not be adjusted for increases in individual provider wages that are locally negotiated pursuant to subdivision (a) of, and paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (d) of, Section 12306.1 when the increase has been specifically negotiated to take effect at the same time as, and to be the same amount as, state minimum wage increases.(7) (A) A county may negotiate a wage supplement. The first time the wage supplement is applied, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment by the amount of the increase, as specified in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph (1).(B) A wage supplement negotiated pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall subsequently be applied to the county individual provider wage when the county individual provider wage meets all of the following criteria:(i) The increase to the county individual provider wage takes effect at the same time as the state minimum wage increase.(ii) The increase to the county individual provider wage is the same amount as the state minimum wage increase.(iii) The minimum wage increase exceeds the county individual provider wage prior to applying the minimum wage increase.(8) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to develop the computations for the annualized amounts pursuant to this subdivision.(e) The County IHSS MOE shall only be adjusted pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) A countys County IHSS MOE costs paid to the state shall be reduced by the amount of any General Fund offset provided to the county pursuant to Section 12306.17.SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and any appeals arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) (A) (i) Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii) For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for individuals whose criminal records are shown to be inaccurate.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum, or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b).(f) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.SEC. 4. Section 14126.022 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:14126.022. (a) (1) By August 1, 2011, the department shall develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, subject to approval by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the availability of federal, state, or other funds.(2) (A) The system shall be utilized to provide supplemental payments to skilled nursing facilities that improve the quality and accountability of care rendered to residents in skilled nursing facilities, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, and to penalize those facilities that do not meet measurable standards.(B) A freestanding pediatric subacute care facility, as defined in Section 51215.8 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, shall be exempt from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System.(3) The system shall be phased in, beginning with the 201011 rate year.(4) The department may utilize the system to do all of the following:(A) Assess overall facility quality of care and quality of care improvement, and assign quality and accountability payments to skilled nursing facilities pursuant to performance measures described in subdivision (i).(B) Assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to quality of care, or direct care staffing levels, wages, and benefits, or both.(C) Limit the reimbursement of legal fees incurred by skilled nursing facilities engaged in the defense of governmental legal actions filed against the facilities.(D) Publish each facilitys quality assessment and quality and accountability payments in a manner and form determined by the director, or his or her designee.(E) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, establish a base year to collect performance measures described in subdivision (i).(F) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, publish the direct care staffing level data and the performance measures required pursuant to subdivision (i).(5) The department, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, shall report to the relevant Assembly and Senate budget subcommittees by May 1, 2016, information regarding the quality and accountability supplemental payments, including, but not limited to, its assessment of whether the payments are adequate to incentivize quality care and to sustain the program.(b) (1) There is hereby created in the State Treasury, the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. The fund shall contain moneys deposited pursuant to subdivisions (g) and (j) to (m), inclusive. Notwithstanding Section 16305.7 of the Government Code, the fund shall contain all interest and dividends earned on moneys in the fund.(2) Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, the fund shall be continuously appropriated without regard to fiscal year to the department for making quality and accountability payments, in accordance with subdivision (n), to facilities that meet or exceed predefined measures as established by this section.(3) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, moneys in the fund may also be used for any of the following purposes:(A) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Public Health for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(B) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Health Care Services for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(C) To provide funding assistance for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(c) No appropriation associated with Chapter 717 of the Statutes of 2010 is intended to implement the provisions of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code.(d) (1) There is hereby appropriated for the 201011 fiscal year, one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund to the California Department of Aging for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5. It is the intent of the Legislature for the one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the fund to be in addition to the four million one hundred sixty-eight thousand dollars ($4,168,000) proposed in the Governors May Revision for the 201011 Budget. It is further the intent of the Legislature to increase this level of appropriation in subsequent years to provide support sufficient to carry out the mandates and activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(2) The department, in partnership with the California Department of Aging, shall seek approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to obtain federal Medicaid reimbursement for activities conducted by the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program. The department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature during budget hearings on progress being made and any unresolved issues during the 201112 budget deliberations.(e) There is hereby created in the Special Deposit Fund established pursuant to Section 16370 of the Government Code, the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account. The account shall contain all moneys deposited pursuant to subdivision (f).(f) (1) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall use the direct care staffing level data it collects to determine whether a skilled nursing facility has met the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(2) (A) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall assess a skilled nursing facility, licensed pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, an administrative penalty if the State Department of Public Health determines that the skilled nursing facility fails to meet the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, as follows:(i) Fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for 5 percent or more of the audited days up to 49 percent.(ii) Thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for over 49 percent or more of the audited days.(B) (i) If the skilled nursing facility does not dispute the determination or assessment, the penalties shall be paid in full by the licensee to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the notice of penalty and deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(ii) The State Department of Public Health may, upon written notification to the licensee, request that the department offset any moneys owed to the licensee by the Medi-Cal program or any other payment program administered by the department to recoup the penalty provided for in this section.(C) (i) If a facility disputes the determination or assessment made pursuant to this paragraph, the facility shall, within 15 days of the facilitys receipt of the determination and assessment, simultaneously submit a request for appeal to both the department and the State Department of Public Health. The request shall include a detailed statement describing the reason for appeal and include all supporting documents the facility will present at the hearing.(ii) Within 10 days of the State Department of Public Healths receipt of the facilitys request for appeal, the State Department of Public Health shall submit, to both the facility and the department, all supporting documents that will be presented at the hearing.(D) The department shall hear a timely appeal and issue a decision as follows:(i) The hearing shall commence within 60 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(ii) The department shall issue a decision within 120 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(iii) The decision of the departments hearing officer, when issued, shall be the final decision of the State Department of Public Health.(E) The appeals process set forth in this paragraph shall be exempt from Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400) and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500), of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. The provisions of Sections 100171 and 131071 of the Health and Safety Code do not apply to appeals under this paragraph.(F) If a hearing decision issued pursuant to subparagraph (D) is in favor of the State Department of Public Health, the skilled nursing facility shall pay the penalties to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the decision. The penalties collected shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(G) The assessment of a penalty under this subdivision does not supplant the State Department of Public Healths investigation process or issuance of deficiencies or citations under Chapter 2.4 (commencing with Section 1417) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(g) The State Department of Public Health shall transfer, on a monthly basis, all penalty payments collected pursuant to subdivision (f) into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(h) This section does not impact the effectiveness or utilization of Section 1278.5 or 1432 of the Health and Safety Code relating to whistleblower protections, or Section 1420 of the Health and Safety Code relating to complaints.(i) (1) Beginning in the 201011 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall establish and publish quality and accountability measures, benchmarks, and data submission deadlines by November 30, 2010.(2) The methodology developed pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, the following requirements and performance measures:(A) Beginning in the 201112 fiscal year:(i) Immunization rates.(ii) Facility acquired pressure ulcer incidence.(iii) The use of physical restraints.(iv) Compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(v) Resident and family satisfaction.(vi) Direct care staff retention, if sufficient data is available.(B) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, in accordance with Section 14126.033, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, beginning in the 201314 rate year, shall incorporate additional measures into the system, including, but not limited to, quality and accountability measures required by federal health care reform that are identified by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.(C) The department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, may incorporate additional performance measures, including, but not limited to, the following:(i) Compliance with state policy associated with the United States Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C. ex rel. Zimring (1999) 527 U.S. 581.(ii) Direct care staff retention, if not addressed in the 201213 rate year.(iii) The use of chemical restraints.(D) Beginning with the 201516 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall incorporate direct care staff retention as a performance measure in the methodology developed pursuant to this section.(j) (1) Beginning with the 201011 rate year, and pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (5) of subdivision (a) of Section 14126.023, the department shall set aside savings achieved from setting the professional liability insurance cost category, including any insurance deductible costs paid by the facility, at the 75th percentile. From this amount, the department shall transfer the General Fund portion into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. A skilled nursing facility shall provide supplemental data on insurance deductible costs to facilitate this adjustment, in the format and by the deadlines determined by the department. If this data is not provided, a facilitys insurance deductible costs will remain in the administrative costs category.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), for the 201213 rate year only, savings from capping the professional liability insurance cost category pursuant to paragraph (1) shall remain in the General Fund and shall not be transferred to the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(k) For the 201314 rate year, if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside the first 1 percent of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase for the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(l) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, for the 201415 rate year, in addition to the amount set aside pursuant to subdivision (k), if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside at least one-third of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase, up to a maximum of 1 percent, from which the department shall transfer the General Fund portion of this amount into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(m) Beginning with the 201516 rate year, and each subsequent rate year thereafter for which this article is operative, an amount equal to the amount deposited in the fund pursuant to subdivisions (k) and (l) for the 201415 rate year shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund, for the purposes specified in this section.(n) (1) (A) Beginning with the 201314 rate year, the department shall pay a supplemental payment, by April 30, 2014, to skilled nursing facilities based on all of the criteria in subdivision (i), as published by the department, and according to performance measure benchmarks determined by the department in consultation with stakeholders.(B) (i) The department may convene a diverse stakeholder group, including, but not limited to, representatives from consumer groups and organizations, labor, nursing home providers, advocacy organizations involved with the aging community, staff from the Legislature, and other interested parties, to discuss and analyze alternative mechanisms to implement the quality and accountability payments provided to nursing homes for reimbursement.(ii) The department shall articulate in a report to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature the implementation of an alternative mechanism as described in clause (i) at least 90 days prior to any policy or budgetary changes, and seek subsequent legislation in order to enact the proposed changes.(2) Skilled nursing facilities that do not submit required performance data by the departments specified data submission deadlines pursuant to subdivision (i) are not eligible to receive supplemental payments.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if a facility appeals the performance measure of compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements, pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, to the State Department of Public Health, and it is unresolved by the departments published due date, the department shall not use that performance measure when determining the facilitys supplemental payment.(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if the department is unable to pay the supplemental payments by April 30, 2014, then on May 1, 2014, the department shall use the funds available in the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund as a result of savings identified in subdivisions (k) and (l), less the administrative costs required to implement subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), in addition to any Medicaid funds that are available as of December 31, 2013, to increase provider rates retroactively to August 1, 2013.(o) The department shall seek necessary approvals from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to implement this section. The department shall implement this section only in a manner that is consistent with federal Medicaid law and regulations, and only to the extent that approval is obtained from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and federal financial participation is available.(p) In implementing this section, the department and the State Department of Public Health may contract as necessary, with Californias Medicare Quality Improvement Organization, or other entities deemed qualified by the department or the State Department of Public Health, not associated with a skilled nursing facility, to assist with development, collection, analysis, and reporting of the performance data pursuant to subdivision (i), and with demonstrated expertise in long-term care quality, data collection or analysis, and accountability performance measurement models pursuant to subdivision (i). This subdivision establishes an accelerated process for issuing any contract pursuant to this section. Any contract entered into pursuant to this subdivision is exempt from the requirements of the Public Contract Code, through December 31, 2020.(q) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, the following apply:(1) The director shall implement this section, in whole or in part, by means of provider bulletins, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(2) The State Public Health Officer may implement this section by means of all-facility letters, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(r) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of subdivision (n), if a final judicial determination is made by any state or federal court that is not appealed, in any action by any party, or a final determination is made by the administrator of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, that any payments pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (n), are invalid, unlawful, or contrary to any provision of federal law or regulations, or of state law, these subdivisions shall become inoperative, and for the 201112 rate year, the rate increase provided under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (c) of Section 14126.033 shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivision (j). For the 201314 and 201415 rate years, any rate increase shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivisions (j) to (l), inclusive.(s) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code.(t) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, compliance with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code, as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017, shall not be used to determine facility qualification for the supplemental payments provided for in this section until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year. This limitation shall also apply to the issuance of citations pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d) of Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code based upon the failure to comply with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017. Until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year, the department shall apply the provisions of Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code for purposes of administering the supplemental payments pursuant to this section. For performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver pursuant to subdivision (l) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirement pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code that would have applied in the absence of Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017 for the duration of the time for which the waiver is granted.SEC. 5. Section 17605 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17605. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount to be determined by the Department of Finance, that represents the sum of the shortfalls between the actual realignment revenues received by each county and each city and county from the Social Services Subaccount of the Local Revenue Fund in the 199192 fiscal year and the net costs incurred by each of those counties and cities and counties in the fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 10101.1, 11322.2, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and former Section 11322. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocation schedule on or before August 15, 1993, that shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited to the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision. The Controller shall allocate these funds no later than August 27, 1993.(b) (1) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance, in consultation with the appropriate state departments and the California State Association of Counties, that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads, as specified in paragraph (2), and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocations schedule on or before March 15 of each year. The schedule shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited into the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision.(B) It is the intent of the Legislature that counties shall receive allocations from the Caseload Subaccount as soon as possible after funds are received in the Sales Tax Growth Account. The Department of Finance shall recommend to the Legislature, by January 10, 2005, a procedure to expedite the preparation and provision of the allocations schedule described in subparagraph (A) and the allocation of funds by the Controller.(2) (A) (i) For the 199293 fiscal year through the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, growth means, for purposes of this subdivision, the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code.(ii) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, for purposes of this subdivision, growth means the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code. (B) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, in addition to subparagraph (A), growth shall also include the following:(i) The additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (g) of Section 17600.15 to fund the amount specified in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (f) of Section 17600.15 and the amount of vehicle license fee revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17606.20, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17605.07 and subdivision (g) of Section 17606.10.(ii) Any additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the prior fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the preceding prior fiscal year that were not included in caseload growth calculation pursuant to clause (i) from the prior caseload growth calculation.(3) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year through the 201617 fiscal year, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realigned programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(B) For the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(C) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero. (c) Annually, the Controller shall allocate, to the local health and welfare trust fund social services account, the amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the Caseload Subaccount, pursuant to the schedules of allocations of caseload growth described in subdivision (b), within 45 days of receiving those schedules from the Department of Finance. If there are insufficient funds to fully satisfy all caseload growth obligations, each countys or city and countys allocation for each program specified in subdivision (d) shall be prorated.(d) Prior to allocating funds pursuant to subdivision (b), to the extent that funds are available from funds deposited in the Caseload Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account in the Local Revenue Fund, the Controller shall allocate moneys to counties or cities and counties to correct any inequity or inequities in the computation of the child welfare services portion of the schedule required by subdivision (a) of Section 17602.(e) (1) For the 200304 fiscal year, no Sales Tax Growth Account funds shall be allocated pursuant to this chapter until the caseload portion of the base of each countys social services account in the countys health and welfare trust fund is funded to the level of the 200102 fiscal year. Funds to meet this requirement shall be allocated from the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund. If sufficient funds are not available in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund to achieve that funding level in the 200304 fiscal year, this requirement shall be funded in each succeeding fiscal year in which there are sufficient funds in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund until the caseload base funding level for which each county would have otherwise been eligible in accordance with subdivision (e) of Section 17602 for that year.(2) The caseload portion of each countys social services account base shall be determined by subtracting its noncaseload portion of the base, as determined by the Department of Finance in its annual calculation of General Growth Account allocations, from the total base of each countys social services account for the 200102 fiscal year.(f) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall annually post on his or her Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.SEC. 6. Section 17605.07 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17605.07. (a) (1) For the 199293 fiscal year through the 201415 fiscal year, inclusive, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(b) (1) For the 201516 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(c) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount pursuant to subdivision (b), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties.(2) The funding allocated pursuant to paragraph (1) shall only be available for allocation to the counties that participate in the County Medical Services Program in the 201617 fiscal year.SEC. 7. Section 17606.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17606.10. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year and subsequent fiscal years, the Controller shall allocate funds, on an annual basis from the General Growth Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account to the appropriate accounts in the local health and welfare trust fund of each county, city, and city and county in accordance with a schedule setting forth the percentage of total state resources received in the 199091 fiscal year, including State Legalization Impact Assistance Grants distributed by the state under former Part 4.5 (commencing with Section 16700), funding provided for purposes of implementation of Division 5 (commencing with Section 5000), for the organization and financing of community mental health services, including the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Surtax proceeds that are allocated to county mental health programs pursuant to Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989, Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990, and Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990, and state hospital funding and funding distributed for programs administered under Sections 1794, 10101.1, and 11322.2, as annually adjusted by the Department of Finance, in conjunction with the appropriate state department to reflect changes in equity status from the base percentages. However, for the 199293 fiscal year, the allocation for community mental health services shall be based on the following schedule:Percentageof StatewideJurisdictionResource BaseAlameda ........................ 4.3693Alpine ........................ 0.0128Amador ........................ 0.0941Butte ........................ 0.7797Calaveras ........................ 0.1157Colusa ........................ 0.0847Contra Costa ........................ 2.3115Del Norte ........................ 0.1237El Dorado ........................ 0.3966Fresno ........................ 3.1419Glenn ........................ 0.1304Humboldt ........................ 0.6175Imperial ........................ 0.5425Inyo ........................ 0.1217Kern ........................ 1.8574Kings ........................ 0.4229Lake ........................ 0.2362Lassen ........................ 0.1183Los Angeles ........................ 27.9666 Madera ........................ 0.3552Marin ........................ 0.9180Mariposa ........................ 0.0792Mendocino ........................ 0.4099Merced ........................ 0.8831Modoc ........................ 0.0561Mono ........................ 0.0511Monterey ........................ 1.1663Napa ........................ 0.3856Nevada ........................ 0.2129Orange ........................ 5.3423Placer ........................ 0.5034Plumas ........................ 0.1134Riverside ........................ 3.6179Sacramento ........................ 4.1872San Benito ........................ 0.1010San Bernardino ........................ 4.5494San Diego ........................ 7.8773San Francisco ........................ 3.5335San Joaquin ........................ 2.4690San Luis Obispo ........................ 0.6652San Mateo ........................ 2.5169Santa Barbara ........................ 1.0745Santa Clara ........................ 5.0488Santa Cruz ........................ 0.7960Shasta ........................ 0.5493Sierra ........................ 0.0345Siskiyou ........................ 0.2051Solano ........................ 0.6694Sonoma ........................ 1.1486Stanislaus ........................ 1.4701Sutter/Yuba ........................ 0.6294Tehama ........................ 0.2384Trinity ........................ 0.0826Tulare ........................ 1.4704Tuolumne ........................ 0.1666Ventura ........................ 1.9311Yolo ........................ 0.5443Berkeley ........................ 0.2688Tri-City ........................ 0.2347(b) The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of the local health and welfare trust fund of each city, county, and city and county for the 199495 fiscal year general growth allocations according to subdivisions (c) and (d). For the 199596 fiscal year and annually until the end of the 201213 fiscal year, the Department of Finance shall prepare the schedule of allocations of growth based upon the recalculation of the resource base as provided by subdivision (c).(c) For the Mental Health Account, the Department of Finance shall do all of the following:(1) Use the following sources as reported by the State Department of Health Care Services:(A) The final December 1992 distribution of resources associated with Institutes for Mental Disease.(B) The 199091 fiscal year state hospitals and community mental health allocations.(C) Allocations for services provided for under Chapter 1294 of the Statutes of 1989.(2) Expand the resource base with the following nonrealigned funding sources as allocated among the counties:(A) Tobacco surtax allocations made under Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989 and Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990.(B) For the 199495 allocation year only, Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990.(C) 199394 fiscal year federal homeless block grant allocation.(D) 199394 fiscal year Mental Health Special Education allocations.(E) 199394 fiscal year allocations for the system of care for children, in accordance with Chapter 1229 of the Statutes of 1992.(F) 199394 fiscal year federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration block grant allocations pursuant to Subchapter 1 (commencing with Section 10801) of Chapter 114 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(d) For the Health Account, the Department of Finance shall use the historical resource base of state funds as allocated among the counties, cities, and city and county as reported by the former State Department of Health Services in a September 17, 1991, report of Indigent and Community Health Resources.(e) The Department of Finance shall use these adjusted resource bases for the Health Account and Mental Health Account to calculate what the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount allocations would have been, and together with 199495 fiscal year Base Restoration Subaccount allocations, CMSP subaccount allocations, equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 17606.05, as that subparagraph read on January 1, 2015, and special equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subdivision (e) of Section 17606.15 reconstruct the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount resource base for the 199596 allocation year for each county, city, and city and county. Notwithstanding any other law, the actual 199495 general growth allocations shall not become part of the realignment base allocations to each county, city, and city and county. The total amounts distributed by the Controller for general growth for the 199495 allocation year shall be reallocated among the counties, cities, and city and county in the 199596 allocation year according to this paragraph, and shall be included in the general growth resource base for the 199697 allocation year and each fiscal year thereafter. For the 199697 allocation year and fiscal years thereafter, the Department of Finance shall update the base with actual growth allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of each county, city, and city and county local health and welfare trust fund in the prior year, and adjust for actual changes in nonrealigned funds specified in subdivision (c) in the year prior to the allocation year.(f) For the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall do all of the following:(1) Allocate to the Mental Health Account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Mental Health Account in accordance with subdivision (c) and allocate based on that recalculation.(2) Allocate 18.4545 percent of the total General Growth Subaccount to the health account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance in accordance with subdivision (d).(3) Allocate the remainder of the funds in the General Growth Subaccount to the family support account of each county or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. These funds shall be expended in accordance with Section 17601.50.(g) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (f), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate funds in the following amounts from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account of each county and city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties:(A) The funding that would have been allocated to the Mental Health Account of each county or city and county pursuant to the calculations specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (f).(B) The funding that would have been allocated to the health account of each county or city and county pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (f), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, Article 12 (commencing with Section 17612.1), and Article 13 (commencing with 17613.1).(2) The allocation of funds from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account as described in paragraph (1) shall not apply to the amount of funds available for allocation to the Mental Health Accounts and health accounts of the Cities of Berkeley, Pasadena, Tri-City, and Long Beach.(h) The amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the General Growth Subaccount shall be allocated on an annual basis by the Controller, as described in subdivisions (f) and (g), within 45 days of receiving the General Growth Subaccount allocation schedule from the Department of Finance.SEC. 8. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, from the General Fund moneys appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in Item 5180-101-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2017, the department shall allocate five million four hundred thousand dollars ($5,400,000), in a single payment by the Controller, to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017.(b) As a condition of receiving these funds, the City of San Jose shall provide quarterly reports to the department regarding the number of families served and the types of services they received, until all funds have been expended.SEC. 9. This act is a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill within the meaning of subdivision (e) of Section 12 of Article IV of the California Constitution, has been identified as related to the budget in the Budget Bill, and shall take effect immediately.
6173
6274 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6375
6476 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6577
6678 SECTION 1. Section 12301.61 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:12301.61. (a) If a public authority or nonprofit consortium established pursuant to Section 12301.6, acting as the employer of record, and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018, either party may request mediation, pursuant to Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c). The mediation shall be held no more than 15 business days from the date requested by either party.(b) If the parties are unable to effect settlement through mediation as described in subdivision (a), the parties shall then submit their differences to factfinding, pursuant to Section 3505 and 3505.4 of the Government Code. Alternatively, if both parties agree, the parties may bypass the mediation process in subdivision (a) and move directly to factfinding.(1) The factfinding panel shall make findings of fact and recommend terms of settlement, which shall be advisory only, within 30 days after the panel is appointed by the Public Employment Relations Board.(2) Within 15 days after the factfinding panel has released its findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, either party may request post-factfinding mediation consistent with Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c).(3) If either party elects post-factfinding mediation, the findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, shall not be made public until the mediation has concluded.(4) Mediation shall be held no more than 15 days from the date requested, and may include, at the mediators discretion, the factfinding panel and representatives of both parties. The director, or his or her designee, shall be available to provide information and expertise, as necessary.(c) The Public Employment Relations Board shall designate a pool of no more than five qualified individuals to serve as mediators or on a factfinding panel. The pool shall consist of individuals with relevant subject matter expertise. The board shall select individuals for the pool in consultation with the department and the affected employers and employee organizations. Priority shall be given to individuals with knowledge of the In-Home Supportive Services program. The board may designate the mediator to serve as the neutral member of the factfinding panel.(d) The costs for the services of the factfinding panel and the mediator shall be equally divided between the parties, and shall include per diem fees, if any, and actual and necessary travel and subsistence expenses.(e) By April 1, 2018, the department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature on the status of all in-home supportive services bargaining contracts in each county.(f) If no individual is available to serve as a mediator or factfinder within the timelines specified in this section, the timelines shall be extended until the next mediator or factfinder is available.(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2020, and as of that date is repealed.
6779
6880 SECTION 1. Section 12301.61 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
6981
7082 ### SECTION 1.
7183
7284 12301.61. (a) If a public authority or nonprofit consortium established pursuant to Section 12301.6, acting as the employer of record, and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018, either party may request mediation, pursuant to Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c). The mediation shall be held no more than 15 business days from the date requested by either party.(b) If the parties are unable to effect settlement through mediation as described in subdivision (a), the parties shall then submit their differences to factfinding, pursuant to Section 3505 and 3505.4 of the Government Code. Alternatively, if both parties agree, the parties may bypass the mediation process in subdivision (a) and move directly to factfinding.(1) The factfinding panel shall make findings of fact and recommend terms of settlement, which shall be advisory only, within 30 days after the panel is appointed by the Public Employment Relations Board.(2) Within 15 days after the factfinding panel has released its findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, either party may request post-factfinding mediation consistent with Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c).(3) If either party elects post-factfinding mediation, the findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, shall not be made public until the mediation has concluded.(4) Mediation shall be held no more than 15 days from the date requested, and may include, at the mediators discretion, the factfinding panel and representatives of both parties. The director, or his or her designee, shall be available to provide information and expertise, as necessary.(c) The Public Employment Relations Board shall designate a pool of no more than five qualified individuals to serve as mediators or on a factfinding panel. The pool shall consist of individuals with relevant subject matter expertise. The board shall select individuals for the pool in consultation with the department and the affected employers and employee organizations. Priority shall be given to individuals with knowledge of the In-Home Supportive Services program. The board may designate the mediator to serve as the neutral member of the factfinding panel.(d) The costs for the services of the factfinding panel and the mediator shall be equally divided between the parties, and shall include per diem fees, if any, and actual and necessary travel and subsistence expenses.(e) By April 1, 2018, the department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature on the status of all in-home supportive services bargaining contracts in each county.(f) If no individual is available to serve as a mediator or factfinder within the timelines specified in this section, the timelines shall be extended until the next mediator or factfinder is available.(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2020, and as of that date is repealed.
7385
7486 12301.61. (a) If a public authority or nonprofit consortium established pursuant to Section 12301.6, acting as the employer of record, and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018, either party may request mediation, pursuant to Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c). The mediation shall be held no more than 15 business days from the date requested by either party.(b) If the parties are unable to effect settlement through mediation as described in subdivision (a), the parties shall then submit their differences to factfinding, pursuant to Section 3505 and 3505.4 of the Government Code. Alternatively, if both parties agree, the parties may bypass the mediation process in subdivision (a) and move directly to factfinding.(1) The factfinding panel shall make findings of fact and recommend terms of settlement, which shall be advisory only, within 30 days after the panel is appointed by the Public Employment Relations Board.(2) Within 15 days after the factfinding panel has released its findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, either party may request post-factfinding mediation consistent with Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c).(3) If either party elects post-factfinding mediation, the findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, shall not be made public until the mediation has concluded.(4) Mediation shall be held no more than 15 days from the date requested, and may include, at the mediators discretion, the factfinding panel and representatives of both parties. The director, or his or her designee, shall be available to provide information and expertise, as necessary.(c) The Public Employment Relations Board shall designate a pool of no more than five qualified individuals to serve as mediators or on a factfinding panel. The pool shall consist of individuals with relevant subject matter expertise. The board shall select individuals for the pool in consultation with the department and the affected employers and employee organizations. Priority shall be given to individuals with knowledge of the In-Home Supportive Services program. The board may designate the mediator to serve as the neutral member of the factfinding panel.(d) The costs for the services of the factfinding panel and the mediator shall be equally divided between the parties, and shall include per diem fees, if any, and actual and necessary travel and subsistence expenses.(e) By April 1, 2018, the department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature on the status of all in-home supportive services bargaining contracts in each county.(f) If no individual is available to serve as a mediator or factfinder within the timelines specified in this section, the timelines shall be extended until the next mediator or factfinder is available.(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2020, and as of that date is repealed.
7587
7688 12301.61. (a) If a public authority or nonprofit consortium established pursuant to Section 12301.6, acting as the employer of record, and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018, either party may request mediation, pursuant to Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c). The mediation shall be held no more than 15 business days from the date requested by either party.(b) If the parties are unable to effect settlement through mediation as described in subdivision (a), the parties shall then submit their differences to factfinding, pursuant to Section 3505 and 3505.4 of the Government Code. Alternatively, if both parties agree, the parties may bypass the mediation process in subdivision (a) and move directly to factfinding.(1) The factfinding panel shall make findings of fact and recommend terms of settlement, which shall be advisory only, within 30 days after the panel is appointed by the Public Employment Relations Board.(2) Within 15 days after the factfinding panel has released its findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, either party may request post-factfinding mediation consistent with Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c).(3) If either party elects post-factfinding mediation, the findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, shall not be made public until the mediation has concluded.(4) Mediation shall be held no more than 15 days from the date requested, and may include, at the mediators discretion, the factfinding panel and representatives of both parties. The director, or his or her designee, shall be available to provide information and expertise, as necessary.(c) The Public Employment Relations Board shall designate a pool of no more than five qualified individuals to serve as mediators or on a factfinding panel. The pool shall consist of individuals with relevant subject matter expertise. The board shall select individuals for the pool in consultation with the department and the affected employers and employee organizations. Priority shall be given to individuals with knowledge of the In-Home Supportive Services program. The board may designate the mediator to serve as the neutral member of the factfinding panel.(d) The costs for the services of the factfinding panel and the mediator shall be equally divided between the parties, and shall include per diem fees, if any, and actual and necessary travel and subsistence expenses.(e) By April 1, 2018, the department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature on the status of all in-home supportive services bargaining contracts in each county.(f) If no individual is available to serve as a mediator or factfinder within the timelines specified in this section, the timelines shall be extended until the next mediator or factfinder is available.(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2020, and as of that date is repealed.
7789
7890
7991
8092 12301.61. (a) If a public authority or nonprofit consortium established pursuant to Section 12301.6, acting as the employer of record, and the employee organization have not reached an agreement on a bargaining contract with in-home supportive services workers by January 1, 2018, either party may request mediation, pursuant to Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c). The mediation shall be held no more than 15 business days from the date requested by either party.
8193
8294 (b) If the parties are unable to effect settlement through mediation as described in subdivision (a), the parties shall then submit their differences to factfinding, pursuant to Section 3505 and 3505.4 of the Government Code. Alternatively, if both parties agree, the parties may bypass the mediation process in subdivision (a) and move directly to factfinding.
8395
8496 (1) The factfinding panel shall make findings of fact and recommend terms of settlement, which shall be advisory only, within 30 days after the panel is appointed by the Public Employment Relations Board.
8597
8698 (2) Within 15 days after the factfinding panel has released its findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, either party may request post-factfinding mediation consistent with Section 3505.2 of the Government Code, which shall be mandatory. If the parties fail to agree on a mediator, the Public Employment Relations Board shall appoint one from the pool described in subdivision (c).
8799
88100 (3) If either party elects post-factfinding mediation, the findings of fact and recommended settlement terms, shall not be made public until the mediation has concluded.
89101
90102 (4) Mediation shall be held no more than 15 days from the date requested, and may include, at the mediators discretion, the factfinding panel and representatives of both parties. The director, or his or her designee, shall be available to provide information and expertise, as necessary.
91103
92104 (c) The Public Employment Relations Board shall designate a pool of no more than five qualified individuals to serve as mediators or on a factfinding panel. The pool shall consist of individuals with relevant subject matter expertise. The board shall select individuals for the pool in consultation with the department and the affected employers and employee organizations. Priority shall be given to individuals with knowledge of the In-Home Supportive Services program. The board may designate the mediator to serve as the neutral member of the factfinding panel.
93105
94106 (d) The costs for the services of the factfinding panel and the mediator shall be equally divided between the parties, and shall include per diem fees, if any, and actual and necessary travel and subsistence expenses.
95107
96108 (e) By April 1, 2018, the department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature on the status of all in-home supportive services bargaining contracts in each county.
97109
98110 (f) If no individual is available to serve as a mediator or factfinder within the timelines specified in this section, the timelines shall be extended until the next mediator or factfinder is available.
99111
100112 (g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2020, and as of that date is repealed.
101113
102114 SEC. 2. Section 12306.16 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:12306.16. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, all counties shall have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE).(b) (1) (A) The statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be established at one billion seven hundred sixty-nine million four hundred forty-three thousand dollars ($1,769,443,000). This amount reflects the estimated county share of IHSS program base costs calculated pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017, and reflected in the departments 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table for the 201718 fiscal year.(B) If actual IHSS program base costs, as determined by the Department of Finance on or before May 14, 2018, attributable to the 201718 fiscal year are lower than the costs assumed in the 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table, the statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be adjusted accordingly pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017.(2) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine each countys share of the statewide total County IHSS MOE base amount. The County IHSS MOE base shall be unique to each individual county.(3) (A) Administration expenditures are included in the County IHSS MOE and shall include both county administration, including costs associated with the IHSS case management, information, and payrolling system, and public authority administration.(B) The amount of General Fund moneys available for county administration and public authority administration is limited to the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated for those specific purposes in the annual Budget Act, and increases to this amount do not impact the County IHSS MOE.(C) To be eligible to receive its share of General Fund moneys appropriated in a fiscal year for county administration and public authority administration costs, the county is only required to expend the full amount of its County IHSS MOE that is attributable to county and public authority administration for that fiscal year and no additional county share of cost shall be required. The department shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine the county-by-county distribution of the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act for county administration and public authority administration.(D) Amounts expended by a county or public authority on administration in excess of the amount described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall not be attributed towards the county meeting its County IHSS MOE requirement.(E) As part of the preparation of the 201819 Governors Budget, the department shall work with the California State Association of Counties, County Welfare Directors Association of California, and the Department of Finance to examine the workload and budget assumptions related to administration of the IHSS program for the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years.(c) (1) On July 1, 2018, the County IHSS MOE base as specified in subdivision (b) shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 5 percent.(2) Beginning on July 1, 2019, and annually thereafter, the County IHSS MOE from the previous year shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 7 percent.(3) (A) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is less than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be zero.(B) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is equal to or up to 2 percent greater than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be one-half of the amount specified in either paragraph (1) or (2).(C) The Department of Finance shall provide notification to the appropriate fiscal committees of the Legislature and the California State Association of Counties by May 14 of each year of the inflation factor that will apply for the following fiscal year, based on the calculation in subparagraph (A) and (B).(d) In addition to the adjustment in subdivision (c), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted for the annualized cost of increases in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed, on or after July 1, 2017, including any increases in provider wages or health benefits adopted by ordinance pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 9100) of Chapter 2 of Division 9 of the Elections Code.(1) (A) If the department approves an increase in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the cost increase in accordance with subparagraph (B).(B) With respect to any increase in provider wages or health benefits approved on or after July 1, 2017, pursuant to subparagraph (A), the state shall participate in that increase as provided in subparagraph (A) up to the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any cost increase exceeding the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1.(C) With respect to an increase in benefits, other than individual health benefits, locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed by a county, public authority, or nonprofit consortium, or adopted by ordinance, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment equal to 35 percent of the nonfederal share of the increased benefit costs.(D) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraphs (A) to (C), inclusive, shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C), that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(2) (A) If the department does not approve the increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1 or paragraph (3), the county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of the cost increases.(B) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate county sharing ratio as grown by the appropriate number of applicable inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(3) In addition to the rate approval requirements specified in subdivisions (a) to (c), inclusive, of Section 12306.1, it shall be presumed by the department that rates and other economic terms that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance are approved.(4) (A) With respect to any rate increases to existing contracts that a county has already entered into pursuant to Section 12302, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the amount of the rate increase up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the rate increase exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS contract hours, or the paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective if the contract becomes effective on or after July 1, 2017, using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(B) With respect to rates for new contracts entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients to be provided under the contract up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the contract rate exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio.(C) The county share of these expenditures shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amounts established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any rate increases for existing contracts or rates for new contracts, entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, that become effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the increase or rate for new contracts. This adjustment shall be calculated as follows:(i) For a contract described in subparagraph (A), the first-year cost of the amount of the rate increase calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the increase became effective.(ii) For a contract described in subparagraph (B), the first-year cost of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the contract became effective.(5) In the event the state ceases to receive enhanced federal financial participation for the provision of services pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted one time to reflect a 35-percent share of the enhanced federal financial participation that would have been received pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)) for the fiscal year in which the state ceases to receive the enhanced federal financial participation.(6) The County IHSS MOE shall not be adjusted for increases in individual provider wages that are locally negotiated pursuant to subdivision (a) of, and paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (d) of, Section 12306.1 when the increase has been specifically negotiated to take effect at the same time as, and to be the same amount as, state minimum wage increases.(7) (A) A county may negotiate a wage supplement. The first time the wage supplement is applied, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment by the amount of the increase, as specified in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph (1).(B) A wage supplement negotiated pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall subsequently be applied to the county individual provider wage when the county individual provider wage meets all of the following criteria:(i) The increase to the county individual provider wage takes effect at the same time as the state minimum wage increase.(ii) The increase to the county individual provider wage is the same amount as the state minimum wage increase.(iii) The minimum wage increase exceeds the county individual provider wage prior to applying the minimum wage increase.(8) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to develop the computations for the annualized amounts pursuant to this subdivision.(e) The County IHSS MOE shall only be adjusted pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) A countys County IHSS MOE costs paid to the state shall be reduced by the amount of any General Fund offset provided to the county pursuant to Section 12306.17.
103115
104116 SEC. 2. Section 12306.16 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
105117
106118 ### SEC. 2.
107119
108120 12306.16. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, all counties shall have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE).(b) (1) (A) The statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be established at one billion seven hundred sixty-nine million four hundred forty-three thousand dollars ($1,769,443,000). This amount reflects the estimated county share of IHSS program base costs calculated pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017, and reflected in the departments 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table for the 201718 fiscal year.(B) If actual IHSS program base costs, as determined by the Department of Finance on or before May 14, 2018, attributable to the 201718 fiscal year are lower than the costs assumed in the 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table, the statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be adjusted accordingly pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017.(2) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine each countys share of the statewide total County IHSS MOE base amount. The County IHSS MOE base shall be unique to each individual county.(3) (A) Administration expenditures are included in the County IHSS MOE and shall include both county administration, including costs associated with the IHSS case management, information, and payrolling system, and public authority administration.(B) The amount of General Fund moneys available for county administration and public authority administration is limited to the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated for those specific purposes in the annual Budget Act, and increases to this amount do not impact the County IHSS MOE.(C) To be eligible to receive its share of General Fund moneys appropriated in a fiscal year for county administration and public authority administration costs, the county is only required to expend the full amount of its County IHSS MOE that is attributable to county and public authority administration for that fiscal year and no additional county share of cost shall be required. The department shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine the county-by-county distribution of the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act for county administration and public authority administration.(D) Amounts expended by a county or public authority on administration in excess of the amount described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall not be attributed towards the county meeting its County IHSS MOE requirement.(E) As part of the preparation of the 201819 Governors Budget, the department shall work with the California State Association of Counties, County Welfare Directors Association of California, and the Department of Finance to examine the workload and budget assumptions related to administration of the IHSS program for the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years.(c) (1) On July 1, 2018, the County IHSS MOE base as specified in subdivision (b) shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 5 percent.(2) Beginning on July 1, 2019, and annually thereafter, the County IHSS MOE from the previous year shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 7 percent.(3) (A) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is less than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be zero.(B) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is equal to or up to 2 percent greater than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be one-half of the amount specified in either paragraph (1) or (2).(C) The Department of Finance shall provide notification to the appropriate fiscal committees of the Legislature and the California State Association of Counties by May 14 of each year of the inflation factor that will apply for the following fiscal year, based on the calculation in subparagraph (A) and (B).(d) In addition to the adjustment in subdivision (c), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted for the annualized cost of increases in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed, on or after July 1, 2017, including any increases in provider wages or health benefits adopted by ordinance pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 9100) of Chapter 2 of Division 9 of the Elections Code.(1) (A) If the department approves an increase in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the cost increase in accordance with subparagraph (B).(B) With respect to any increase in provider wages or health benefits approved on or after July 1, 2017, pursuant to subparagraph (A), the state shall participate in that increase as provided in subparagraph (A) up to the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any cost increase exceeding the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1.(C) With respect to an increase in benefits, other than individual health benefits, locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed by a county, public authority, or nonprofit consortium, or adopted by ordinance, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment equal to 35 percent of the nonfederal share of the increased benefit costs.(D) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraphs (A) to (C), inclusive, shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C), that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(2) (A) If the department does not approve the increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1 or paragraph (3), the county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of the cost increases.(B) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate county sharing ratio as grown by the appropriate number of applicable inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(3) In addition to the rate approval requirements specified in subdivisions (a) to (c), inclusive, of Section 12306.1, it shall be presumed by the department that rates and other economic terms that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance are approved.(4) (A) With respect to any rate increases to existing contracts that a county has already entered into pursuant to Section 12302, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the amount of the rate increase up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the rate increase exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS contract hours, or the paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective if the contract becomes effective on or after July 1, 2017, using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(B) With respect to rates for new contracts entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients to be provided under the contract up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the contract rate exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio.(C) The county share of these expenditures shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amounts established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any rate increases for existing contracts or rates for new contracts, entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, that become effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the increase or rate for new contracts. This adjustment shall be calculated as follows:(i) For a contract described in subparagraph (A), the first-year cost of the amount of the rate increase calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the increase became effective.(ii) For a contract described in subparagraph (B), the first-year cost of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the contract became effective.(5) In the event the state ceases to receive enhanced federal financial participation for the provision of services pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted one time to reflect a 35-percent share of the enhanced federal financial participation that would have been received pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)) for the fiscal year in which the state ceases to receive the enhanced federal financial participation.(6) The County IHSS MOE shall not be adjusted for increases in individual provider wages that are locally negotiated pursuant to subdivision (a) of, and paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (d) of, Section 12306.1 when the increase has been specifically negotiated to take effect at the same time as, and to be the same amount as, state minimum wage increases.(7) (A) A county may negotiate a wage supplement. The first time the wage supplement is applied, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment by the amount of the increase, as specified in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph (1).(B) A wage supplement negotiated pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall subsequently be applied to the county individual provider wage when the county individual provider wage meets all of the following criteria:(i) The increase to the county individual provider wage takes effect at the same time as the state minimum wage increase.(ii) The increase to the county individual provider wage is the same amount as the state minimum wage increase.(iii) The minimum wage increase exceeds the county individual provider wage prior to applying the minimum wage increase.(8) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to develop the computations for the annualized amounts pursuant to this subdivision.(e) The County IHSS MOE shall only be adjusted pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) A countys County IHSS MOE costs paid to the state shall be reduced by the amount of any General Fund offset provided to the county pursuant to Section 12306.17.
109121
110122 12306.16. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, all counties shall have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE).(b) (1) (A) The statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be established at one billion seven hundred sixty-nine million four hundred forty-three thousand dollars ($1,769,443,000). This amount reflects the estimated county share of IHSS program base costs calculated pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017, and reflected in the departments 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table for the 201718 fiscal year.(B) If actual IHSS program base costs, as determined by the Department of Finance on or before May 14, 2018, attributable to the 201718 fiscal year are lower than the costs assumed in the 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table, the statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be adjusted accordingly pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017.(2) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine each countys share of the statewide total County IHSS MOE base amount. The County IHSS MOE base shall be unique to each individual county.(3) (A) Administration expenditures are included in the County IHSS MOE and shall include both county administration, including costs associated with the IHSS case management, information, and payrolling system, and public authority administration.(B) The amount of General Fund moneys available for county administration and public authority administration is limited to the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated for those specific purposes in the annual Budget Act, and increases to this amount do not impact the County IHSS MOE.(C) To be eligible to receive its share of General Fund moneys appropriated in a fiscal year for county administration and public authority administration costs, the county is only required to expend the full amount of its County IHSS MOE that is attributable to county and public authority administration for that fiscal year and no additional county share of cost shall be required. The department shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine the county-by-county distribution of the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act for county administration and public authority administration.(D) Amounts expended by a county or public authority on administration in excess of the amount described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall not be attributed towards the county meeting its County IHSS MOE requirement.(E) As part of the preparation of the 201819 Governors Budget, the department shall work with the California State Association of Counties, County Welfare Directors Association of California, and the Department of Finance to examine the workload and budget assumptions related to administration of the IHSS program for the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years.(c) (1) On July 1, 2018, the County IHSS MOE base as specified in subdivision (b) shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 5 percent.(2) Beginning on July 1, 2019, and annually thereafter, the County IHSS MOE from the previous year shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 7 percent.(3) (A) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is less than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be zero.(B) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is equal to or up to 2 percent greater than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be one-half of the amount specified in either paragraph (1) or (2).(C) The Department of Finance shall provide notification to the appropriate fiscal committees of the Legislature and the California State Association of Counties by May 14 of each year of the inflation factor that will apply for the following fiscal year, based on the calculation in subparagraph (A) and (B).(d) In addition to the adjustment in subdivision (c), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted for the annualized cost of increases in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed, on or after July 1, 2017, including any increases in provider wages or health benefits adopted by ordinance pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 9100) of Chapter 2 of Division 9 of the Elections Code.(1) (A) If the department approves an increase in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the cost increase in accordance with subparagraph (B).(B) With respect to any increase in provider wages or health benefits approved on or after July 1, 2017, pursuant to subparagraph (A), the state shall participate in that increase as provided in subparagraph (A) up to the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any cost increase exceeding the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1.(C) With respect to an increase in benefits, other than individual health benefits, locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed by a county, public authority, or nonprofit consortium, or adopted by ordinance, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment equal to 35 percent of the nonfederal share of the increased benefit costs.(D) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraphs (A) to (C), inclusive, shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C), that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(2) (A) If the department does not approve the increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1 or paragraph (3), the county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of the cost increases.(B) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate county sharing ratio as grown by the appropriate number of applicable inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(3) In addition to the rate approval requirements specified in subdivisions (a) to (c), inclusive, of Section 12306.1, it shall be presumed by the department that rates and other economic terms that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance are approved.(4) (A) With respect to any rate increases to existing contracts that a county has already entered into pursuant to Section 12302, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the amount of the rate increase up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the rate increase exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS contract hours, or the paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective if the contract becomes effective on or after July 1, 2017, using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(B) With respect to rates for new contracts entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients to be provided under the contract up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the contract rate exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio.(C) The county share of these expenditures shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amounts established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any rate increases for existing contracts or rates for new contracts, entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, that become effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the increase or rate for new contracts. This adjustment shall be calculated as follows:(i) For a contract described in subparagraph (A), the first-year cost of the amount of the rate increase calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the increase became effective.(ii) For a contract described in subparagraph (B), the first-year cost of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the contract became effective.(5) In the event the state ceases to receive enhanced federal financial participation for the provision of services pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted one time to reflect a 35-percent share of the enhanced federal financial participation that would have been received pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)) for the fiscal year in which the state ceases to receive the enhanced federal financial participation.(6) The County IHSS MOE shall not be adjusted for increases in individual provider wages that are locally negotiated pursuant to subdivision (a) of, and paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (d) of, Section 12306.1 when the increase has been specifically negotiated to take effect at the same time as, and to be the same amount as, state minimum wage increases.(7) (A) A county may negotiate a wage supplement. The first time the wage supplement is applied, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment by the amount of the increase, as specified in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph (1).(B) A wage supplement negotiated pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall subsequently be applied to the county individual provider wage when the county individual provider wage meets all of the following criteria:(i) The increase to the county individual provider wage takes effect at the same time as the state minimum wage increase.(ii) The increase to the county individual provider wage is the same amount as the state minimum wage increase.(iii) The minimum wage increase exceeds the county individual provider wage prior to applying the minimum wage increase.(8) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to develop the computations for the annualized amounts pursuant to this subdivision.(e) The County IHSS MOE shall only be adjusted pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) A countys County IHSS MOE costs paid to the state shall be reduced by the amount of any General Fund offset provided to the county pursuant to Section 12306.17.
111123
112124 12306.16. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, all counties shall have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE).(b) (1) (A) The statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be established at one billion seven hundred sixty-nine million four hundred forty-three thousand dollars ($1,769,443,000). This amount reflects the estimated county share of IHSS program base costs calculated pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017, and reflected in the departments 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table for the 201718 fiscal year.(B) If actual IHSS program base costs, as determined by the Department of Finance on or before May 14, 2018, attributable to the 201718 fiscal year are lower than the costs assumed in the 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table, the statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be adjusted accordingly pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017.(2) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine each countys share of the statewide total County IHSS MOE base amount. The County IHSS MOE base shall be unique to each individual county.(3) (A) Administration expenditures are included in the County IHSS MOE and shall include both county administration, including costs associated with the IHSS case management, information, and payrolling system, and public authority administration.(B) The amount of General Fund moneys available for county administration and public authority administration is limited to the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated for those specific purposes in the annual Budget Act, and increases to this amount do not impact the County IHSS MOE.(C) To be eligible to receive its share of General Fund moneys appropriated in a fiscal year for county administration and public authority administration costs, the county is only required to expend the full amount of its County IHSS MOE that is attributable to county and public authority administration for that fiscal year and no additional county share of cost shall be required. The department shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine the county-by-county distribution of the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act for county administration and public authority administration.(D) Amounts expended by a county or public authority on administration in excess of the amount described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall not be attributed towards the county meeting its County IHSS MOE requirement.(E) As part of the preparation of the 201819 Governors Budget, the department shall work with the California State Association of Counties, County Welfare Directors Association of California, and the Department of Finance to examine the workload and budget assumptions related to administration of the IHSS program for the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years.(c) (1) On July 1, 2018, the County IHSS MOE base as specified in subdivision (b) shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 5 percent.(2) Beginning on July 1, 2019, and annually thereafter, the County IHSS MOE from the previous year shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 7 percent.(3) (A) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is less than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be zero.(B) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is equal to or up to 2 percent greater than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be one-half of the amount specified in either paragraph (1) or (2).(C) The Department of Finance shall provide notification to the appropriate fiscal committees of the Legislature and the California State Association of Counties by May 14 of each year of the inflation factor that will apply for the following fiscal year, based on the calculation in subparagraph (A) and (B).(d) In addition to the adjustment in subdivision (c), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted for the annualized cost of increases in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed, on or after July 1, 2017, including any increases in provider wages or health benefits adopted by ordinance pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 9100) of Chapter 2 of Division 9 of the Elections Code.(1) (A) If the department approves an increase in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the cost increase in accordance with subparagraph (B).(B) With respect to any increase in provider wages or health benefits approved on or after July 1, 2017, pursuant to subparagraph (A), the state shall participate in that increase as provided in subparagraph (A) up to the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any cost increase exceeding the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1.(C) With respect to an increase in benefits, other than individual health benefits, locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed by a county, public authority, or nonprofit consortium, or adopted by ordinance, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment equal to 35 percent of the nonfederal share of the increased benefit costs.(D) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraphs (A) to (C), inclusive, shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C), that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(2) (A) If the department does not approve the increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1 or paragraph (3), the county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of the cost increases.(B) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate county sharing ratio as grown by the appropriate number of applicable inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(3) In addition to the rate approval requirements specified in subdivisions (a) to (c), inclusive, of Section 12306.1, it shall be presumed by the department that rates and other economic terms that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance are approved.(4) (A) With respect to any rate increases to existing contracts that a county has already entered into pursuant to Section 12302, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the amount of the rate increase up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the rate increase exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS contract hours, or the paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective if the contract becomes effective on or after July 1, 2017, using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.(B) With respect to rates for new contracts entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients to be provided under the contract up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the contract rate exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio.(C) The county share of these expenditures shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amounts established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any rate increases for existing contracts or rates for new contracts, entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, that become effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the increase or rate for new contracts. This adjustment shall be calculated as follows:(i) For a contract described in subparagraph (A), the first-year cost of the amount of the rate increase calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the increase became effective.(ii) For a contract described in subparagraph (B), the first-year cost of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the contract became effective.(5) In the event the state ceases to receive enhanced federal financial participation for the provision of services pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted one time to reflect a 35-percent share of the enhanced federal financial participation that would have been received pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)) for the fiscal year in which the state ceases to receive the enhanced federal financial participation.(6) The County IHSS MOE shall not be adjusted for increases in individual provider wages that are locally negotiated pursuant to subdivision (a) of, and paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (d) of, Section 12306.1 when the increase has been specifically negotiated to take effect at the same time as, and to be the same amount as, state minimum wage increases.(7) (A) A county may negotiate a wage supplement. The first time the wage supplement is applied, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment by the amount of the increase, as specified in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph (1).(B) A wage supplement negotiated pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall subsequently be applied to the county individual provider wage when the county individual provider wage meets all of the following criteria:(i) The increase to the county individual provider wage takes effect at the same time as the state minimum wage increase.(ii) The increase to the county individual provider wage is the same amount as the state minimum wage increase.(iii) The minimum wage increase exceeds the county individual provider wage prior to applying the minimum wage increase.(8) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to develop the computations for the annualized amounts pursuant to this subdivision.(e) The County IHSS MOE shall only be adjusted pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) A countys County IHSS MOE costs paid to the state shall be reduced by the amount of any General Fund offset provided to the county pursuant to Section 12306.17.
113125
114126
115127
116128 12306.16. (a) Commencing July 1, 2017, all counties shall have a County IHSS Maintenance of Effort (MOE).
117129
118130 (b) (1) (A) The statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be established at one billion seven hundred sixty-nine million four hundred forty-three thousand dollars ($1,769,443,000). This amount reflects the estimated county share of IHSS program base costs calculated pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017, and reflected in the departments 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table for the 201718 fiscal year.
119131
120132 (B) If actual IHSS program base costs, as determined by the Department of Finance on or before May 14, 2018, attributable to the 201718 fiscal year are lower than the costs assumed in the 2017 May Revision local assistance subvention table, the statewide total County IHSS MOE base for the 201718 fiscal year shall be adjusted accordingly pursuant to Sections 10101.1 and 12306, as those sections read on June 1, 2017.
121133
122134 (2) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine each countys share of the statewide total County IHSS MOE base amount. The County IHSS MOE base shall be unique to each individual county.
123135
124136 (3) (A) Administration expenditures are included in the County IHSS MOE and shall include both county administration, including costs associated with the IHSS case management, information, and payrolling system, and public authority administration.
125137
126138 (B) The amount of General Fund moneys available for county administration and public authority administration is limited to the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated for those specific purposes in the annual Budget Act, and increases to this amount do not impact the County IHSS MOE.
127139
128140 (C) To be eligible to receive its share of General Fund moneys appropriated in a fiscal year for county administration and public authority administration costs, the county is only required to expend the full amount of its County IHSS MOE that is attributable to county and public authority administration for that fiscal year and no additional county share of cost shall be required. The department shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to determine the county-by-county distribution of the amount of General Fund moneys appropriated in the annual Budget Act for county administration and public authority administration.
129141
130142 (D) Amounts expended by a county or public authority on administration in excess of the amount described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall not be attributed towards the county meeting its County IHSS MOE requirement.
131143
132144 (E) As part of the preparation of the 201819 Governors Budget, the department shall work with the California State Association of Counties, County Welfare Directors Association of California, and the Department of Finance to examine the workload and budget assumptions related to administration of the IHSS program for the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years.
133145
134146 (c) (1) On July 1, 2018, the County IHSS MOE base as specified in subdivision (b) shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 5 percent.
135147
136148 (2) Beginning on July 1, 2019, and annually thereafter, the County IHSS MOE from the previous year shall be adjusted by an inflation factor of 7 percent.
137149
138150 (3) (A) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is less than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be zero.
139151
140152 (B) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), in fiscal years when the total of 1991 realignment revenues received pursuant to Sections 6051.2 and 6201.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, for the prior fiscal year is equal to or up to 2 percent greater than the total received for the next prior fiscal year, the inflation factor shall be one-half of the amount specified in either paragraph (1) or (2).
141153
142154 (C) The Department of Finance shall provide notification to the appropriate fiscal committees of the Legislature and the California State Association of Counties by May 14 of each year of the inflation factor that will apply for the following fiscal year, based on the calculation in subparagraph (A) and (B).
143155
144156 (d) In addition to the adjustment in subdivision (c), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted for the annualized cost of increases in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed, on or after July 1, 2017, including any increases in provider wages or health benefits adopted by ordinance pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 9100) of Chapter 2 of Division 9 of the Elections Code.
145157
146158 (1) (A) If the department approves an increase in provider wages or health benefits that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the cost increase in accordance with subparagraph (B).
147159
148160 (B) With respect to any increase in provider wages or health benefits approved on or after July 1, 2017, pursuant to subparagraph (A), the state shall participate in that increase as provided in subparagraph (A) up to the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any cost increase exceeding the amount specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subdivision (d) of Section 12306.1.
149161
150162 (C) With respect to an increase in benefits, other than individual health benefits, locally negotiated, mediated, or imposed by a county, public authority, or nonprofit consortium, or adopted by ordinance, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment equal to 35 percent of the nonfederal share of the increased benefit costs.
151163
152164 (D) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraphs (A) to (C), inclusive, shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C), that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.
153165
154166 (2) (A) If the department does not approve the increase in provider wages or health benefits, or increase in other benefits pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance pursuant to Section 12306.1 or paragraph (3), the county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of the cost increases.
155167
156168 (B) The county share of increased expenditures pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amount established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any increase in provider wages or health benefits that becomes effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the wage or health benefit increase. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS hours and the appropriate county sharing ratio as grown by the appropriate number of applicable inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.
157169
158170 (3) In addition to the rate approval requirements specified in subdivisions (a) to (c), inclusive, of Section 12306.1, it shall be presumed by the department that rates and other economic terms that are locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance are approved.
159171
160172 (4) (A) With respect to any rate increases to existing contracts that a county has already entered into pursuant to Section 12302, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the amount of the rate increase up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the rate increase exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys 201718 paid IHSS contract hours, or the paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective if the contract becomes effective on or after July 1, 2017, using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio as grown by the applicable number of inflation factors pursuant to subdivision (c) that have occurred up to and including the fiscal year in which the increase becomes effective.
161173
162174 (B) With respect to rates for new contracts entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, the state shall pay 65 percent, and the affected county shall pay 35 percent, of the nonfederal share of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients to be provided under the contract up to the maximum amounts established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. The county shall pay the entire nonfederal share of any portion of the contract rate exceeding the maximum amount established pursuant to Sections 12302.1 and 12303. This adjustment shall be calculated based on the countys paid contract hours in the fiscal year in which the contract becomes effective using the appropriate cost-sharing ratio.
163175
164176 (C) The county share of these expenditures shall be included in the County IHSS MOE, in addition to the amounts established under subdivisions (b) and (c). For any rate increases for existing contracts or rates for new contracts, entered into by a county pursuant to Section 12302 on or after July 1, 2017, that become effective on a date other than July 1, the Department of Finance shall adjust the countys County IHSS MOE to reflect the annualized cost of the countys share of the nonfederal cost of the increase or rate for new contracts. This adjustment shall be calculated as follows:
165177
166178 (i) For a contract described in subparagraph (A), the first-year cost of the amount of the rate increase calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the increase became effective.
167179
168180 (ii) For a contract described in subparagraph (B), the first-year cost of the difference between the locally negotiated, mediated, imposed, or adopted by ordinance, provider wage and the contract rate for all of the hours of service to IHSS recipients calculated using the pro rata share of the number of hours of service provided in the contract for the fiscal year in which the contract became effective.
169181
170182 (5) In the event the state ceases to receive enhanced federal financial participation for the provision of services pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)), the County IHSS MOE shall be adjusted one time to reflect a 35-percent share of the enhanced federal financial participation that would have been received pursuant to Section 1915(k) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396n(k)) for the fiscal year in which the state ceases to receive the enhanced federal financial participation.
171183
172184 (6) The County IHSS MOE shall not be adjusted for increases in individual provider wages that are locally negotiated pursuant to subdivision (a) of, and paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (d) of, Section 12306.1 when the increase has been specifically negotiated to take effect at the same time as, and to be the same amount as, state minimum wage increases.
173185
174186 (7) (A) A county may negotiate a wage supplement. The first time the wage supplement is applied, the countys County IHSS MOE shall include a one-time adjustment by the amount of the increase, as specified in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph (1).
175187
176188 (B) A wage supplement negotiated pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall subsequently be applied to the county individual provider wage when the county individual provider wage meets all of the following criteria:
177189
178190 (i) The increase to the county individual provider wage takes effect at the same time as the state minimum wage increase.
179191
180192 (ii) The increase to the county individual provider wage is the same amount as the state minimum wage increase.
181193
182194 (iii) The minimum wage increase exceeds the county individual provider wage prior to applying the minimum wage increase.
183195
184196 (8) The Department of Finance shall consult with the California State Association of Counties to develop the computations for the annualized amounts pursuant to this subdivision.
185197
186198 (e) The County IHSS MOE shall only be adjusted pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).
187199
188200 (f) A countys County IHSS MOE costs paid to the state shall be reduced by the amount of any General Fund offset provided to the county pursuant to Section 12306.17.
189201
190202 SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and any appeals arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) (A) (i) Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii) For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for individuals whose criminal records are shown to be inaccurate.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum, or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b).(f) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
191203
192204 SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
193205
194206 ### SEC. 3.
195207
196208 13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and any appeals arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) (A) (i) Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii) For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for individuals whose criminal records are shown to be inaccurate.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum, or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b).(f) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
197209
198210 13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and any appeals arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) (A) (i) Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii) For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for individuals whose criminal records are shown to be inaccurate.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum, or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b).(f) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
199211
200212 13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and any appeals arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) (A) (i) Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii) For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for individuals whose criminal records are shown to be inaccurate.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum, or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b).(f) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
201213
202214
203215
204216 13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.
205217
206218 (b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:
207219
208220 (1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:
209221
210222 (A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.
211223
212224 (B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies.
213225
214226 (C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and any appeals arising from the process.
215227
216228 (2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.
217229
218230 (3) (A) (i) Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.
219231
220232 (ii) For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.
221233
222234 (B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for individuals whose criminal records are shown to be inaccurate.
223235
224236 (c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
225237
226238 (1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.
227239
228240 (2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).
229241
230242 (3) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.
231243
232244 (4) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum, or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections.
233245
234246 (d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.
235247
236248 (e) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings:
237249
238250 (1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.
239251
240252 (2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).
241253
242254 (3) The number of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).
243255
244256 (4) The number of clients served.
245257
246258 (5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.
247259
248260 (6) The regions served.
249261
250262 (7) The ethnic communities served.
251263
252264 (8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b).
253265
254266 (f) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.
255267
256268 (g) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to, federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.
257269
258270 (h) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
259271
260272 SEC. 4. Section 14126.022 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:14126.022. (a) (1) By August 1, 2011, the department shall develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, subject to approval by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the availability of federal, state, or other funds.(2) (A) The system shall be utilized to provide supplemental payments to skilled nursing facilities that improve the quality and accountability of care rendered to residents in skilled nursing facilities, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, and to penalize those facilities that do not meet measurable standards.(B) A freestanding pediatric subacute care facility, as defined in Section 51215.8 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, shall be exempt from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System.(3) The system shall be phased in, beginning with the 201011 rate year.(4) The department may utilize the system to do all of the following:(A) Assess overall facility quality of care and quality of care improvement, and assign quality and accountability payments to skilled nursing facilities pursuant to performance measures described in subdivision (i).(B) Assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to quality of care, or direct care staffing levels, wages, and benefits, or both.(C) Limit the reimbursement of legal fees incurred by skilled nursing facilities engaged in the defense of governmental legal actions filed against the facilities.(D) Publish each facilitys quality assessment and quality and accountability payments in a manner and form determined by the director, or his or her designee.(E) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, establish a base year to collect performance measures described in subdivision (i).(F) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, publish the direct care staffing level data and the performance measures required pursuant to subdivision (i).(5) The department, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, shall report to the relevant Assembly and Senate budget subcommittees by May 1, 2016, information regarding the quality and accountability supplemental payments, including, but not limited to, its assessment of whether the payments are adequate to incentivize quality care and to sustain the program.(b) (1) There is hereby created in the State Treasury, the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. The fund shall contain moneys deposited pursuant to subdivisions (g) and (j) to (m), inclusive. Notwithstanding Section 16305.7 of the Government Code, the fund shall contain all interest and dividends earned on moneys in the fund.(2) Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, the fund shall be continuously appropriated without regard to fiscal year to the department for making quality and accountability payments, in accordance with subdivision (n), to facilities that meet or exceed predefined measures as established by this section.(3) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, moneys in the fund may also be used for any of the following purposes:(A) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Public Health for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(B) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Health Care Services for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(C) To provide funding assistance for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(c) No appropriation associated with Chapter 717 of the Statutes of 2010 is intended to implement the provisions of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code.(d) (1) There is hereby appropriated for the 201011 fiscal year, one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund to the California Department of Aging for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5. It is the intent of the Legislature for the one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the fund to be in addition to the four million one hundred sixty-eight thousand dollars ($4,168,000) proposed in the Governors May Revision for the 201011 Budget. It is further the intent of the Legislature to increase this level of appropriation in subsequent years to provide support sufficient to carry out the mandates and activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(2) The department, in partnership with the California Department of Aging, shall seek approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to obtain federal Medicaid reimbursement for activities conducted by the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program. The department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature during budget hearings on progress being made and any unresolved issues during the 201112 budget deliberations.(e) There is hereby created in the Special Deposit Fund established pursuant to Section 16370 of the Government Code, the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account. The account shall contain all moneys deposited pursuant to subdivision (f).(f) (1) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall use the direct care staffing level data it collects to determine whether a skilled nursing facility has met the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(2) (A) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall assess a skilled nursing facility, licensed pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, an administrative penalty if the State Department of Public Health determines that the skilled nursing facility fails to meet the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, as follows:(i) Fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for 5 percent or more of the audited days up to 49 percent.(ii) Thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for over 49 percent or more of the audited days.(B) (i) If the skilled nursing facility does not dispute the determination or assessment, the penalties shall be paid in full by the licensee to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the notice of penalty and deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(ii) The State Department of Public Health may, upon written notification to the licensee, request that the department offset any moneys owed to the licensee by the Medi-Cal program or any other payment program administered by the department to recoup the penalty provided for in this section.(C) (i) If a facility disputes the determination or assessment made pursuant to this paragraph, the facility shall, within 15 days of the facilitys receipt of the determination and assessment, simultaneously submit a request for appeal to both the department and the State Department of Public Health. The request shall include a detailed statement describing the reason for appeal and include all supporting documents the facility will present at the hearing.(ii) Within 10 days of the State Department of Public Healths receipt of the facilitys request for appeal, the State Department of Public Health shall submit, to both the facility and the department, all supporting documents that will be presented at the hearing.(D) The department shall hear a timely appeal and issue a decision as follows:(i) The hearing shall commence within 60 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(ii) The department shall issue a decision within 120 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(iii) The decision of the departments hearing officer, when issued, shall be the final decision of the State Department of Public Health.(E) The appeals process set forth in this paragraph shall be exempt from Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400) and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500), of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. The provisions of Sections 100171 and 131071 of the Health and Safety Code do not apply to appeals under this paragraph.(F) If a hearing decision issued pursuant to subparagraph (D) is in favor of the State Department of Public Health, the skilled nursing facility shall pay the penalties to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the decision. The penalties collected shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(G) The assessment of a penalty under this subdivision does not supplant the State Department of Public Healths investigation process or issuance of deficiencies or citations under Chapter 2.4 (commencing with Section 1417) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(g) The State Department of Public Health shall transfer, on a monthly basis, all penalty payments collected pursuant to subdivision (f) into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(h) This section does not impact the effectiveness or utilization of Section 1278.5 or 1432 of the Health and Safety Code relating to whistleblower protections, or Section 1420 of the Health and Safety Code relating to complaints.(i) (1) Beginning in the 201011 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall establish and publish quality and accountability measures, benchmarks, and data submission deadlines by November 30, 2010.(2) The methodology developed pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, the following requirements and performance measures:(A) Beginning in the 201112 fiscal year:(i) Immunization rates.(ii) Facility acquired pressure ulcer incidence.(iii) The use of physical restraints.(iv) Compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(v) Resident and family satisfaction.(vi) Direct care staff retention, if sufficient data is available.(B) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, in accordance with Section 14126.033, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, beginning in the 201314 rate year, shall incorporate additional measures into the system, including, but not limited to, quality and accountability measures required by federal health care reform that are identified by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.(C) The department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, may incorporate additional performance measures, including, but not limited to, the following:(i) Compliance with state policy associated with the United States Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C. ex rel. Zimring (1999) 527 U.S. 581.(ii) Direct care staff retention, if not addressed in the 201213 rate year.(iii) The use of chemical restraints.(D) Beginning with the 201516 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall incorporate direct care staff retention as a performance measure in the methodology developed pursuant to this section.(j) (1) Beginning with the 201011 rate year, and pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (5) of subdivision (a) of Section 14126.023, the department shall set aside savings achieved from setting the professional liability insurance cost category, including any insurance deductible costs paid by the facility, at the 75th percentile. From this amount, the department shall transfer the General Fund portion into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. A skilled nursing facility shall provide supplemental data on insurance deductible costs to facilitate this adjustment, in the format and by the deadlines determined by the department. If this data is not provided, a facilitys insurance deductible costs will remain in the administrative costs category.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), for the 201213 rate year only, savings from capping the professional liability insurance cost category pursuant to paragraph (1) shall remain in the General Fund and shall not be transferred to the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(k) For the 201314 rate year, if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside the first 1 percent of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase for the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(l) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, for the 201415 rate year, in addition to the amount set aside pursuant to subdivision (k), if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside at least one-third of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase, up to a maximum of 1 percent, from which the department shall transfer the General Fund portion of this amount into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(m) Beginning with the 201516 rate year, and each subsequent rate year thereafter for which this article is operative, an amount equal to the amount deposited in the fund pursuant to subdivisions (k) and (l) for the 201415 rate year shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund, for the purposes specified in this section.(n) (1) (A) Beginning with the 201314 rate year, the department shall pay a supplemental payment, by April 30, 2014, to skilled nursing facilities based on all of the criteria in subdivision (i), as published by the department, and according to performance measure benchmarks determined by the department in consultation with stakeholders.(B) (i) The department may convene a diverse stakeholder group, including, but not limited to, representatives from consumer groups and organizations, labor, nursing home providers, advocacy organizations involved with the aging community, staff from the Legislature, and other interested parties, to discuss and analyze alternative mechanisms to implement the quality and accountability payments provided to nursing homes for reimbursement.(ii) The department shall articulate in a report to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature the implementation of an alternative mechanism as described in clause (i) at least 90 days prior to any policy or budgetary changes, and seek subsequent legislation in order to enact the proposed changes.(2) Skilled nursing facilities that do not submit required performance data by the departments specified data submission deadlines pursuant to subdivision (i) are not eligible to receive supplemental payments.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if a facility appeals the performance measure of compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements, pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, to the State Department of Public Health, and it is unresolved by the departments published due date, the department shall not use that performance measure when determining the facilitys supplemental payment.(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if the department is unable to pay the supplemental payments by April 30, 2014, then on May 1, 2014, the department shall use the funds available in the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund as a result of savings identified in subdivisions (k) and (l), less the administrative costs required to implement subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), in addition to any Medicaid funds that are available as of December 31, 2013, to increase provider rates retroactively to August 1, 2013.(o) The department shall seek necessary approvals from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to implement this section. The department shall implement this section only in a manner that is consistent with federal Medicaid law and regulations, and only to the extent that approval is obtained from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and federal financial participation is available.(p) In implementing this section, the department and the State Department of Public Health may contract as necessary, with Californias Medicare Quality Improvement Organization, or other entities deemed qualified by the department or the State Department of Public Health, not associated with a skilled nursing facility, to assist with development, collection, analysis, and reporting of the performance data pursuant to subdivision (i), and with demonstrated expertise in long-term care quality, data collection or analysis, and accountability performance measurement models pursuant to subdivision (i). This subdivision establishes an accelerated process for issuing any contract pursuant to this section. Any contract entered into pursuant to this subdivision is exempt from the requirements of the Public Contract Code, through December 31, 2020.(q) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, the following apply:(1) The director shall implement this section, in whole or in part, by means of provider bulletins, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(2) The State Public Health Officer may implement this section by means of all-facility letters, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(r) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of subdivision (n), if a final judicial determination is made by any state or federal court that is not appealed, in any action by any party, or a final determination is made by the administrator of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, that any payments pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (n), are invalid, unlawful, or contrary to any provision of federal law or regulations, or of state law, these subdivisions shall become inoperative, and for the 201112 rate year, the rate increase provided under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (c) of Section 14126.033 shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivision (j). For the 201314 and 201415 rate years, any rate increase shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivisions (j) to (l), inclusive.(s) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code.(t) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, compliance with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code, as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017, shall not be used to determine facility qualification for the supplemental payments provided for in this section until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year. This limitation shall also apply to the issuance of citations pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d) of Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code based upon the failure to comply with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017. Until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year, the department shall apply the provisions of Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code for purposes of administering the supplemental payments pursuant to this section. For performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver pursuant to subdivision (l) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirement pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code that would have applied in the absence of Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017 for the duration of the time for which the waiver is granted.
261273
262274 SEC. 4. Section 14126.022 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
263275
264276 ### SEC. 4.
265277
266278 14126.022. (a) (1) By August 1, 2011, the department shall develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, subject to approval by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the availability of federal, state, or other funds.(2) (A) The system shall be utilized to provide supplemental payments to skilled nursing facilities that improve the quality and accountability of care rendered to residents in skilled nursing facilities, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, and to penalize those facilities that do not meet measurable standards.(B) A freestanding pediatric subacute care facility, as defined in Section 51215.8 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, shall be exempt from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System.(3) The system shall be phased in, beginning with the 201011 rate year.(4) The department may utilize the system to do all of the following:(A) Assess overall facility quality of care and quality of care improvement, and assign quality and accountability payments to skilled nursing facilities pursuant to performance measures described in subdivision (i).(B) Assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to quality of care, or direct care staffing levels, wages, and benefits, or both.(C) Limit the reimbursement of legal fees incurred by skilled nursing facilities engaged in the defense of governmental legal actions filed against the facilities.(D) Publish each facilitys quality assessment and quality and accountability payments in a manner and form determined by the director, or his or her designee.(E) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, establish a base year to collect performance measures described in subdivision (i).(F) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, publish the direct care staffing level data and the performance measures required pursuant to subdivision (i).(5) The department, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, shall report to the relevant Assembly and Senate budget subcommittees by May 1, 2016, information regarding the quality and accountability supplemental payments, including, but not limited to, its assessment of whether the payments are adequate to incentivize quality care and to sustain the program.(b) (1) There is hereby created in the State Treasury, the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. The fund shall contain moneys deposited pursuant to subdivisions (g) and (j) to (m), inclusive. Notwithstanding Section 16305.7 of the Government Code, the fund shall contain all interest and dividends earned on moneys in the fund.(2) Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, the fund shall be continuously appropriated without regard to fiscal year to the department for making quality and accountability payments, in accordance with subdivision (n), to facilities that meet or exceed predefined measures as established by this section.(3) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, moneys in the fund may also be used for any of the following purposes:(A) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Public Health for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(B) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Health Care Services for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(C) To provide funding assistance for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(c) No appropriation associated with Chapter 717 of the Statutes of 2010 is intended to implement the provisions of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code.(d) (1) There is hereby appropriated for the 201011 fiscal year, one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund to the California Department of Aging for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5. It is the intent of the Legislature for the one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the fund to be in addition to the four million one hundred sixty-eight thousand dollars ($4,168,000) proposed in the Governors May Revision for the 201011 Budget. It is further the intent of the Legislature to increase this level of appropriation in subsequent years to provide support sufficient to carry out the mandates and activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(2) The department, in partnership with the California Department of Aging, shall seek approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to obtain federal Medicaid reimbursement for activities conducted by the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program. The department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature during budget hearings on progress being made and any unresolved issues during the 201112 budget deliberations.(e) There is hereby created in the Special Deposit Fund established pursuant to Section 16370 of the Government Code, the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account. The account shall contain all moneys deposited pursuant to subdivision (f).(f) (1) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall use the direct care staffing level data it collects to determine whether a skilled nursing facility has met the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(2) (A) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall assess a skilled nursing facility, licensed pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, an administrative penalty if the State Department of Public Health determines that the skilled nursing facility fails to meet the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, as follows:(i) Fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for 5 percent or more of the audited days up to 49 percent.(ii) Thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for over 49 percent or more of the audited days.(B) (i) If the skilled nursing facility does not dispute the determination or assessment, the penalties shall be paid in full by the licensee to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the notice of penalty and deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(ii) The State Department of Public Health may, upon written notification to the licensee, request that the department offset any moneys owed to the licensee by the Medi-Cal program or any other payment program administered by the department to recoup the penalty provided for in this section.(C) (i) If a facility disputes the determination or assessment made pursuant to this paragraph, the facility shall, within 15 days of the facilitys receipt of the determination and assessment, simultaneously submit a request for appeal to both the department and the State Department of Public Health. The request shall include a detailed statement describing the reason for appeal and include all supporting documents the facility will present at the hearing.(ii) Within 10 days of the State Department of Public Healths receipt of the facilitys request for appeal, the State Department of Public Health shall submit, to both the facility and the department, all supporting documents that will be presented at the hearing.(D) The department shall hear a timely appeal and issue a decision as follows:(i) The hearing shall commence within 60 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(ii) The department shall issue a decision within 120 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(iii) The decision of the departments hearing officer, when issued, shall be the final decision of the State Department of Public Health.(E) The appeals process set forth in this paragraph shall be exempt from Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400) and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500), of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. The provisions of Sections 100171 and 131071 of the Health and Safety Code do not apply to appeals under this paragraph.(F) If a hearing decision issued pursuant to subparagraph (D) is in favor of the State Department of Public Health, the skilled nursing facility shall pay the penalties to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the decision. The penalties collected shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(G) The assessment of a penalty under this subdivision does not supplant the State Department of Public Healths investigation process or issuance of deficiencies or citations under Chapter 2.4 (commencing with Section 1417) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(g) The State Department of Public Health shall transfer, on a monthly basis, all penalty payments collected pursuant to subdivision (f) into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(h) This section does not impact the effectiveness or utilization of Section 1278.5 or 1432 of the Health and Safety Code relating to whistleblower protections, or Section 1420 of the Health and Safety Code relating to complaints.(i) (1) Beginning in the 201011 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall establish and publish quality and accountability measures, benchmarks, and data submission deadlines by November 30, 2010.(2) The methodology developed pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, the following requirements and performance measures:(A) Beginning in the 201112 fiscal year:(i) Immunization rates.(ii) Facility acquired pressure ulcer incidence.(iii) The use of physical restraints.(iv) Compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(v) Resident and family satisfaction.(vi) Direct care staff retention, if sufficient data is available.(B) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, in accordance with Section 14126.033, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, beginning in the 201314 rate year, shall incorporate additional measures into the system, including, but not limited to, quality and accountability measures required by federal health care reform that are identified by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.(C) The department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, may incorporate additional performance measures, including, but not limited to, the following:(i) Compliance with state policy associated with the United States Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C. ex rel. Zimring (1999) 527 U.S. 581.(ii) Direct care staff retention, if not addressed in the 201213 rate year.(iii) The use of chemical restraints.(D) Beginning with the 201516 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall incorporate direct care staff retention as a performance measure in the methodology developed pursuant to this section.(j) (1) Beginning with the 201011 rate year, and pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (5) of subdivision (a) of Section 14126.023, the department shall set aside savings achieved from setting the professional liability insurance cost category, including any insurance deductible costs paid by the facility, at the 75th percentile. From this amount, the department shall transfer the General Fund portion into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. A skilled nursing facility shall provide supplemental data on insurance deductible costs to facilitate this adjustment, in the format and by the deadlines determined by the department. If this data is not provided, a facilitys insurance deductible costs will remain in the administrative costs category.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), for the 201213 rate year only, savings from capping the professional liability insurance cost category pursuant to paragraph (1) shall remain in the General Fund and shall not be transferred to the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(k) For the 201314 rate year, if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside the first 1 percent of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase for the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(l) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, for the 201415 rate year, in addition to the amount set aside pursuant to subdivision (k), if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside at least one-third of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase, up to a maximum of 1 percent, from which the department shall transfer the General Fund portion of this amount into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(m) Beginning with the 201516 rate year, and each subsequent rate year thereafter for which this article is operative, an amount equal to the amount deposited in the fund pursuant to subdivisions (k) and (l) for the 201415 rate year shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund, for the purposes specified in this section.(n) (1) (A) Beginning with the 201314 rate year, the department shall pay a supplemental payment, by April 30, 2014, to skilled nursing facilities based on all of the criteria in subdivision (i), as published by the department, and according to performance measure benchmarks determined by the department in consultation with stakeholders.(B) (i) The department may convene a diverse stakeholder group, including, but not limited to, representatives from consumer groups and organizations, labor, nursing home providers, advocacy organizations involved with the aging community, staff from the Legislature, and other interested parties, to discuss and analyze alternative mechanisms to implement the quality and accountability payments provided to nursing homes for reimbursement.(ii) The department shall articulate in a report to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature the implementation of an alternative mechanism as described in clause (i) at least 90 days prior to any policy or budgetary changes, and seek subsequent legislation in order to enact the proposed changes.(2) Skilled nursing facilities that do not submit required performance data by the departments specified data submission deadlines pursuant to subdivision (i) are not eligible to receive supplemental payments.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if a facility appeals the performance measure of compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements, pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, to the State Department of Public Health, and it is unresolved by the departments published due date, the department shall not use that performance measure when determining the facilitys supplemental payment.(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if the department is unable to pay the supplemental payments by April 30, 2014, then on May 1, 2014, the department shall use the funds available in the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund as a result of savings identified in subdivisions (k) and (l), less the administrative costs required to implement subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), in addition to any Medicaid funds that are available as of December 31, 2013, to increase provider rates retroactively to August 1, 2013.(o) The department shall seek necessary approvals from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to implement this section. The department shall implement this section only in a manner that is consistent with federal Medicaid law and regulations, and only to the extent that approval is obtained from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and federal financial participation is available.(p) In implementing this section, the department and the State Department of Public Health may contract as necessary, with Californias Medicare Quality Improvement Organization, or other entities deemed qualified by the department or the State Department of Public Health, not associated with a skilled nursing facility, to assist with development, collection, analysis, and reporting of the performance data pursuant to subdivision (i), and with demonstrated expertise in long-term care quality, data collection or analysis, and accountability performance measurement models pursuant to subdivision (i). This subdivision establishes an accelerated process for issuing any contract pursuant to this section. Any contract entered into pursuant to this subdivision is exempt from the requirements of the Public Contract Code, through December 31, 2020.(q) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, the following apply:(1) The director shall implement this section, in whole or in part, by means of provider bulletins, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(2) The State Public Health Officer may implement this section by means of all-facility letters, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(r) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of subdivision (n), if a final judicial determination is made by any state or federal court that is not appealed, in any action by any party, or a final determination is made by the administrator of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, that any payments pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (n), are invalid, unlawful, or contrary to any provision of federal law or regulations, or of state law, these subdivisions shall become inoperative, and for the 201112 rate year, the rate increase provided under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (c) of Section 14126.033 shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivision (j). For the 201314 and 201415 rate years, any rate increase shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivisions (j) to (l), inclusive.(s) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code.(t) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, compliance with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code, as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017, shall not be used to determine facility qualification for the supplemental payments provided for in this section until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year. This limitation shall also apply to the issuance of citations pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d) of Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code based upon the failure to comply with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017. Until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year, the department shall apply the provisions of Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code for purposes of administering the supplemental payments pursuant to this section. For performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver pursuant to subdivision (l) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirement pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code that would have applied in the absence of Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017 for the duration of the time for which the waiver is granted.
267279
268280 14126.022. (a) (1) By August 1, 2011, the department shall develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, subject to approval by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the availability of federal, state, or other funds.(2) (A) The system shall be utilized to provide supplemental payments to skilled nursing facilities that improve the quality and accountability of care rendered to residents in skilled nursing facilities, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, and to penalize those facilities that do not meet measurable standards.(B) A freestanding pediatric subacute care facility, as defined in Section 51215.8 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, shall be exempt from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System.(3) The system shall be phased in, beginning with the 201011 rate year.(4) The department may utilize the system to do all of the following:(A) Assess overall facility quality of care and quality of care improvement, and assign quality and accountability payments to skilled nursing facilities pursuant to performance measures described in subdivision (i).(B) Assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to quality of care, or direct care staffing levels, wages, and benefits, or both.(C) Limit the reimbursement of legal fees incurred by skilled nursing facilities engaged in the defense of governmental legal actions filed against the facilities.(D) Publish each facilitys quality assessment and quality and accountability payments in a manner and form determined by the director, or his or her designee.(E) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, establish a base year to collect performance measures described in subdivision (i).(F) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, publish the direct care staffing level data and the performance measures required pursuant to subdivision (i).(5) The department, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, shall report to the relevant Assembly and Senate budget subcommittees by May 1, 2016, information regarding the quality and accountability supplemental payments, including, but not limited to, its assessment of whether the payments are adequate to incentivize quality care and to sustain the program.(b) (1) There is hereby created in the State Treasury, the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. The fund shall contain moneys deposited pursuant to subdivisions (g) and (j) to (m), inclusive. Notwithstanding Section 16305.7 of the Government Code, the fund shall contain all interest and dividends earned on moneys in the fund.(2) Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, the fund shall be continuously appropriated without regard to fiscal year to the department for making quality and accountability payments, in accordance with subdivision (n), to facilities that meet or exceed predefined measures as established by this section.(3) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, moneys in the fund may also be used for any of the following purposes:(A) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Public Health for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(B) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Health Care Services for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(C) To provide funding assistance for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(c) No appropriation associated with Chapter 717 of the Statutes of 2010 is intended to implement the provisions of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code.(d) (1) There is hereby appropriated for the 201011 fiscal year, one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund to the California Department of Aging for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5. It is the intent of the Legislature for the one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the fund to be in addition to the four million one hundred sixty-eight thousand dollars ($4,168,000) proposed in the Governors May Revision for the 201011 Budget. It is further the intent of the Legislature to increase this level of appropriation in subsequent years to provide support sufficient to carry out the mandates and activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(2) The department, in partnership with the California Department of Aging, shall seek approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to obtain federal Medicaid reimbursement for activities conducted by the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program. The department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature during budget hearings on progress being made and any unresolved issues during the 201112 budget deliberations.(e) There is hereby created in the Special Deposit Fund established pursuant to Section 16370 of the Government Code, the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account. The account shall contain all moneys deposited pursuant to subdivision (f).(f) (1) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall use the direct care staffing level data it collects to determine whether a skilled nursing facility has met the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(2) (A) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall assess a skilled nursing facility, licensed pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, an administrative penalty if the State Department of Public Health determines that the skilled nursing facility fails to meet the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, as follows:(i) Fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for 5 percent or more of the audited days up to 49 percent.(ii) Thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for over 49 percent or more of the audited days.(B) (i) If the skilled nursing facility does not dispute the determination or assessment, the penalties shall be paid in full by the licensee to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the notice of penalty and deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(ii) The State Department of Public Health may, upon written notification to the licensee, request that the department offset any moneys owed to the licensee by the Medi-Cal program or any other payment program administered by the department to recoup the penalty provided for in this section.(C) (i) If a facility disputes the determination or assessment made pursuant to this paragraph, the facility shall, within 15 days of the facilitys receipt of the determination and assessment, simultaneously submit a request for appeal to both the department and the State Department of Public Health. The request shall include a detailed statement describing the reason for appeal and include all supporting documents the facility will present at the hearing.(ii) Within 10 days of the State Department of Public Healths receipt of the facilitys request for appeal, the State Department of Public Health shall submit, to both the facility and the department, all supporting documents that will be presented at the hearing.(D) The department shall hear a timely appeal and issue a decision as follows:(i) The hearing shall commence within 60 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(ii) The department shall issue a decision within 120 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(iii) The decision of the departments hearing officer, when issued, shall be the final decision of the State Department of Public Health.(E) The appeals process set forth in this paragraph shall be exempt from Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400) and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500), of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. The provisions of Sections 100171 and 131071 of the Health and Safety Code do not apply to appeals under this paragraph.(F) If a hearing decision issued pursuant to subparagraph (D) is in favor of the State Department of Public Health, the skilled nursing facility shall pay the penalties to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the decision. The penalties collected shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(G) The assessment of a penalty under this subdivision does not supplant the State Department of Public Healths investigation process or issuance of deficiencies or citations under Chapter 2.4 (commencing with Section 1417) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(g) The State Department of Public Health shall transfer, on a monthly basis, all penalty payments collected pursuant to subdivision (f) into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(h) This section does not impact the effectiveness or utilization of Section 1278.5 or 1432 of the Health and Safety Code relating to whistleblower protections, or Section 1420 of the Health and Safety Code relating to complaints.(i) (1) Beginning in the 201011 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall establish and publish quality and accountability measures, benchmarks, and data submission deadlines by November 30, 2010.(2) The methodology developed pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, the following requirements and performance measures:(A) Beginning in the 201112 fiscal year:(i) Immunization rates.(ii) Facility acquired pressure ulcer incidence.(iii) The use of physical restraints.(iv) Compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(v) Resident and family satisfaction.(vi) Direct care staff retention, if sufficient data is available.(B) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, in accordance with Section 14126.033, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, beginning in the 201314 rate year, shall incorporate additional measures into the system, including, but not limited to, quality and accountability measures required by federal health care reform that are identified by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.(C) The department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, may incorporate additional performance measures, including, but not limited to, the following:(i) Compliance with state policy associated with the United States Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C. ex rel. Zimring (1999) 527 U.S. 581.(ii) Direct care staff retention, if not addressed in the 201213 rate year.(iii) The use of chemical restraints.(D) Beginning with the 201516 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall incorporate direct care staff retention as a performance measure in the methodology developed pursuant to this section.(j) (1) Beginning with the 201011 rate year, and pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (5) of subdivision (a) of Section 14126.023, the department shall set aside savings achieved from setting the professional liability insurance cost category, including any insurance deductible costs paid by the facility, at the 75th percentile. From this amount, the department shall transfer the General Fund portion into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. A skilled nursing facility shall provide supplemental data on insurance deductible costs to facilitate this adjustment, in the format and by the deadlines determined by the department. If this data is not provided, a facilitys insurance deductible costs will remain in the administrative costs category.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), for the 201213 rate year only, savings from capping the professional liability insurance cost category pursuant to paragraph (1) shall remain in the General Fund and shall not be transferred to the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(k) For the 201314 rate year, if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside the first 1 percent of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase for the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(l) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, for the 201415 rate year, in addition to the amount set aside pursuant to subdivision (k), if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside at least one-third of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase, up to a maximum of 1 percent, from which the department shall transfer the General Fund portion of this amount into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(m) Beginning with the 201516 rate year, and each subsequent rate year thereafter for which this article is operative, an amount equal to the amount deposited in the fund pursuant to subdivisions (k) and (l) for the 201415 rate year shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund, for the purposes specified in this section.(n) (1) (A) Beginning with the 201314 rate year, the department shall pay a supplemental payment, by April 30, 2014, to skilled nursing facilities based on all of the criteria in subdivision (i), as published by the department, and according to performance measure benchmarks determined by the department in consultation with stakeholders.(B) (i) The department may convene a diverse stakeholder group, including, but not limited to, representatives from consumer groups and organizations, labor, nursing home providers, advocacy organizations involved with the aging community, staff from the Legislature, and other interested parties, to discuss and analyze alternative mechanisms to implement the quality and accountability payments provided to nursing homes for reimbursement.(ii) The department shall articulate in a report to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature the implementation of an alternative mechanism as described in clause (i) at least 90 days prior to any policy or budgetary changes, and seek subsequent legislation in order to enact the proposed changes.(2) Skilled nursing facilities that do not submit required performance data by the departments specified data submission deadlines pursuant to subdivision (i) are not eligible to receive supplemental payments.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if a facility appeals the performance measure of compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements, pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, to the State Department of Public Health, and it is unresolved by the departments published due date, the department shall not use that performance measure when determining the facilitys supplemental payment.(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if the department is unable to pay the supplemental payments by April 30, 2014, then on May 1, 2014, the department shall use the funds available in the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund as a result of savings identified in subdivisions (k) and (l), less the administrative costs required to implement subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), in addition to any Medicaid funds that are available as of December 31, 2013, to increase provider rates retroactively to August 1, 2013.(o) The department shall seek necessary approvals from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to implement this section. The department shall implement this section only in a manner that is consistent with federal Medicaid law and regulations, and only to the extent that approval is obtained from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and federal financial participation is available.(p) In implementing this section, the department and the State Department of Public Health may contract as necessary, with Californias Medicare Quality Improvement Organization, or other entities deemed qualified by the department or the State Department of Public Health, not associated with a skilled nursing facility, to assist with development, collection, analysis, and reporting of the performance data pursuant to subdivision (i), and with demonstrated expertise in long-term care quality, data collection or analysis, and accountability performance measurement models pursuant to subdivision (i). This subdivision establishes an accelerated process for issuing any contract pursuant to this section. Any contract entered into pursuant to this subdivision is exempt from the requirements of the Public Contract Code, through December 31, 2020.(q) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, the following apply:(1) The director shall implement this section, in whole or in part, by means of provider bulletins, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(2) The State Public Health Officer may implement this section by means of all-facility letters, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(r) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of subdivision (n), if a final judicial determination is made by any state or federal court that is not appealed, in any action by any party, or a final determination is made by the administrator of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, that any payments pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (n), are invalid, unlawful, or contrary to any provision of federal law or regulations, or of state law, these subdivisions shall become inoperative, and for the 201112 rate year, the rate increase provided under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (c) of Section 14126.033 shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivision (j). For the 201314 and 201415 rate years, any rate increase shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivisions (j) to (l), inclusive.(s) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code.(t) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, compliance with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code, as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017, shall not be used to determine facility qualification for the supplemental payments provided for in this section until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year. This limitation shall also apply to the issuance of citations pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d) of Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code based upon the failure to comply with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017. Until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year, the department shall apply the provisions of Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code for purposes of administering the supplemental payments pursuant to this section. For performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver pursuant to subdivision (l) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirement pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code that would have applied in the absence of Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017 for the duration of the time for which the waiver is granted.
269281
270282 14126.022. (a) (1) By August 1, 2011, the department shall develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, subject to approval by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the availability of federal, state, or other funds.(2) (A) The system shall be utilized to provide supplemental payments to skilled nursing facilities that improve the quality and accountability of care rendered to residents in skilled nursing facilities, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, and to penalize those facilities that do not meet measurable standards.(B) A freestanding pediatric subacute care facility, as defined in Section 51215.8 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, shall be exempt from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System.(3) The system shall be phased in, beginning with the 201011 rate year.(4) The department may utilize the system to do all of the following:(A) Assess overall facility quality of care and quality of care improvement, and assign quality and accountability payments to skilled nursing facilities pursuant to performance measures described in subdivision (i).(B) Assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to quality of care, or direct care staffing levels, wages, and benefits, or both.(C) Limit the reimbursement of legal fees incurred by skilled nursing facilities engaged in the defense of governmental legal actions filed against the facilities.(D) Publish each facilitys quality assessment and quality and accountability payments in a manner and form determined by the director, or his or her designee.(E) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, establish a base year to collect performance measures described in subdivision (i).(F) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, publish the direct care staffing level data and the performance measures required pursuant to subdivision (i).(5) The department, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, shall report to the relevant Assembly and Senate budget subcommittees by May 1, 2016, information regarding the quality and accountability supplemental payments, including, but not limited to, its assessment of whether the payments are adequate to incentivize quality care and to sustain the program.(b) (1) There is hereby created in the State Treasury, the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. The fund shall contain moneys deposited pursuant to subdivisions (g) and (j) to (m), inclusive. Notwithstanding Section 16305.7 of the Government Code, the fund shall contain all interest and dividends earned on moneys in the fund.(2) Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, the fund shall be continuously appropriated without regard to fiscal year to the department for making quality and accountability payments, in accordance with subdivision (n), to facilities that meet or exceed predefined measures as established by this section.(3) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, moneys in the fund may also be used for any of the following purposes:(A) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Public Health for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(B) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Health Care Services for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.(C) To provide funding assistance for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(c) No appropriation associated with Chapter 717 of the Statutes of 2010 is intended to implement the provisions of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code.(d) (1) There is hereby appropriated for the 201011 fiscal year, one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund to the California Department of Aging for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5. It is the intent of the Legislature for the one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the fund to be in addition to the four million one hundred sixty-eight thousand dollars ($4,168,000) proposed in the Governors May Revision for the 201011 Budget. It is further the intent of the Legislature to increase this level of appropriation in subsequent years to provide support sufficient to carry out the mandates and activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.(2) The department, in partnership with the California Department of Aging, shall seek approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to obtain federal Medicaid reimbursement for activities conducted by the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program. The department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature during budget hearings on progress being made and any unresolved issues during the 201112 budget deliberations.(e) There is hereby created in the Special Deposit Fund established pursuant to Section 16370 of the Government Code, the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account. The account shall contain all moneys deposited pursuant to subdivision (f).(f) (1) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall use the direct care staffing level data it collects to determine whether a skilled nursing facility has met the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(2) (A) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall assess a skilled nursing facility, licensed pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, an administrative penalty if the State Department of Public Health determines that the skilled nursing facility fails to meet the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, as follows:(i) Fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for 5 percent or more of the audited days up to 49 percent.(ii) Thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for over 49 percent or more of the audited days.(B) (i) If the skilled nursing facility does not dispute the determination or assessment, the penalties shall be paid in full by the licensee to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the notice of penalty and deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(ii) The State Department of Public Health may, upon written notification to the licensee, request that the department offset any moneys owed to the licensee by the Medi-Cal program or any other payment program administered by the department to recoup the penalty provided for in this section.(C) (i) If a facility disputes the determination or assessment made pursuant to this paragraph, the facility shall, within 15 days of the facilitys receipt of the determination and assessment, simultaneously submit a request for appeal to both the department and the State Department of Public Health. The request shall include a detailed statement describing the reason for appeal and include all supporting documents the facility will present at the hearing.(ii) Within 10 days of the State Department of Public Healths receipt of the facilitys request for appeal, the State Department of Public Health shall submit, to both the facility and the department, all supporting documents that will be presented at the hearing.(D) The department shall hear a timely appeal and issue a decision as follows:(i) The hearing shall commence within 60 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(ii) The department shall issue a decision within 120 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.(iii) The decision of the departments hearing officer, when issued, shall be the final decision of the State Department of Public Health.(E) The appeals process set forth in this paragraph shall be exempt from Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400) and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500), of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. The provisions of Sections 100171 and 131071 of the Health and Safety Code do not apply to appeals under this paragraph.(F) If a hearing decision issued pursuant to subparagraph (D) is in favor of the State Department of Public Health, the skilled nursing facility shall pay the penalties to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the decision. The penalties collected shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.(G) The assessment of a penalty under this subdivision does not supplant the State Department of Public Healths investigation process or issuance of deficiencies or citations under Chapter 2.4 (commencing with Section 1417) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(g) The State Department of Public Health shall transfer, on a monthly basis, all penalty payments collected pursuant to subdivision (f) into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(h) This section does not impact the effectiveness or utilization of Section 1278.5 or 1432 of the Health and Safety Code relating to whistleblower protections, or Section 1420 of the Health and Safety Code relating to complaints.(i) (1) Beginning in the 201011 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall establish and publish quality and accountability measures, benchmarks, and data submission deadlines by November 30, 2010.(2) The methodology developed pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, the following requirements and performance measures:(A) Beginning in the 201112 fiscal year:(i) Immunization rates.(ii) Facility acquired pressure ulcer incidence.(iii) The use of physical restraints.(iv) Compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.(v) Resident and family satisfaction.(vi) Direct care staff retention, if sufficient data is available.(B) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, in accordance with Section 14126.033, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, beginning in the 201314 rate year, shall incorporate additional measures into the system, including, but not limited to, quality and accountability measures required by federal health care reform that are identified by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.(C) The department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, may incorporate additional performance measures, including, but not limited to, the following:(i) Compliance with state policy associated with the United States Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C. ex rel. Zimring (1999) 527 U.S. 581.(ii) Direct care staff retention, if not addressed in the 201213 rate year.(iii) The use of chemical restraints.(D) Beginning with the 201516 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall incorporate direct care staff retention as a performance measure in the methodology developed pursuant to this section.(j) (1) Beginning with the 201011 rate year, and pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (5) of subdivision (a) of Section 14126.023, the department shall set aside savings achieved from setting the professional liability insurance cost category, including any insurance deductible costs paid by the facility, at the 75th percentile. From this amount, the department shall transfer the General Fund portion into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. A skilled nursing facility shall provide supplemental data on insurance deductible costs to facilitate this adjustment, in the format and by the deadlines determined by the department. If this data is not provided, a facilitys insurance deductible costs will remain in the administrative costs category.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), for the 201213 rate year only, savings from capping the professional liability insurance cost category pursuant to paragraph (1) shall remain in the General Fund and shall not be transferred to the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(k) For the 201314 rate year, if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside the first 1 percent of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase for the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(l) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, for the 201415 rate year, in addition to the amount set aside pursuant to subdivision (k), if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside at least one-third of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase, up to a maximum of 1 percent, from which the department shall transfer the General Fund portion of this amount into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.(m) Beginning with the 201516 rate year, and each subsequent rate year thereafter for which this article is operative, an amount equal to the amount deposited in the fund pursuant to subdivisions (k) and (l) for the 201415 rate year shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund, for the purposes specified in this section.(n) (1) (A) Beginning with the 201314 rate year, the department shall pay a supplemental payment, by April 30, 2014, to skilled nursing facilities based on all of the criteria in subdivision (i), as published by the department, and according to performance measure benchmarks determined by the department in consultation with stakeholders.(B) (i) The department may convene a diverse stakeholder group, including, but not limited to, representatives from consumer groups and organizations, labor, nursing home providers, advocacy organizations involved with the aging community, staff from the Legislature, and other interested parties, to discuss and analyze alternative mechanisms to implement the quality and accountability payments provided to nursing homes for reimbursement.(ii) The department shall articulate in a report to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature the implementation of an alternative mechanism as described in clause (i) at least 90 days prior to any policy or budgetary changes, and seek subsequent legislation in order to enact the proposed changes.(2) Skilled nursing facilities that do not submit required performance data by the departments specified data submission deadlines pursuant to subdivision (i) are not eligible to receive supplemental payments.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if a facility appeals the performance measure of compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements, pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, to the State Department of Public Health, and it is unresolved by the departments published due date, the department shall not use that performance measure when determining the facilitys supplemental payment.(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if the department is unable to pay the supplemental payments by April 30, 2014, then on May 1, 2014, the department shall use the funds available in the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund as a result of savings identified in subdivisions (k) and (l), less the administrative costs required to implement subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), in addition to any Medicaid funds that are available as of December 31, 2013, to increase provider rates retroactively to August 1, 2013.(o) The department shall seek necessary approvals from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to implement this section. The department shall implement this section only in a manner that is consistent with federal Medicaid law and regulations, and only to the extent that approval is obtained from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and federal financial participation is available.(p) In implementing this section, the department and the State Department of Public Health may contract as necessary, with Californias Medicare Quality Improvement Organization, or other entities deemed qualified by the department or the State Department of Public Health, not associated with a skilled nursing facility, to assist with development, collection, analysis, and reporting of the performance data pursuant to subdivision (i), and with demonstrated expertise in long-term care quality, data collection or analysis, and accountability performance measurement models pursuant to subdivision (i). This subdivision establishes an accelerated process for issuing any contract pursuant to this section. Any contract entered into pursuant to this subdivision is exempt from the requirements of the Public Contract Code, through December 31, 2020.(q) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, the following apply:(1) The director shall implement this section, in whole or in part, by means of provider bulletins, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(2) The State Public Health Officer may implement this section by means of all-facility letters, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.(r) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of subdivision (n), if a final judicial determination is made by any state or federal court that is not appealed, in any action by any party, or a final determination is made by the administrator of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, that any payments pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (n), are invalid, unlawful, or contrary to any provision of federal law or regulations, or of state law, these subdivisions shall become inoperative, and for the 201112 rate year, the rate increase provided under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (c) of Section 14126.033 shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivision (j). For the 201314 and 201415 rate years, any rate increase shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivisions (j) to (l), inclusive.(s) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code.(t) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, compliance with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code, as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017, shall not be used to determine facility qualification for the supplemental payments provided for in this section until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year. This limitation shall also apply to the issuance of citations pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d) of Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code based upon the failure to comply with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017. Until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year, the department shall apply the provisions of Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code for purposes of administering the supplemental payments pursuant to this section. For performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver pursuant to subdivision (l) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirement pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code that would have applied in the absence of Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017 for the duration of the time for which the waiver is granted.
271283
272284
273285
274286 14126.022. (a) (1) By August 1, 2011, the department shall develop the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System, subject to approval by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the availability of federal, state, or other funds.
275287
276288 (2) (A) The system shall be utilized to provide supplemental payments to skilled nursing facilities that improve the quality and accountability of care rendered to residents in skilled nursing facilities, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, and to penalize those facilities that do not meet measurable standards.
277289
278290 (B) A freestanding pediatric subacute care facility, as defined in Section 51215.8 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, shall be exempt from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Supplemental Payment System.
279291
280292 (3) The system shall be phased in, beginning with the 201011 rate year.
281293
282294 (4) The department may utilize the system to do all of the following:
283295
284296 (A) Assess overall facility quality of care and quality of care improvement, and assign quality and accountability payments to skilled nursing facilities pursuant to performance measures described in subdivision (i).
285297
286298 (B) Assign quality and accountability payments or penalties relating to quality of care, or direct care staffing levels, wages, and benefits, or both.
287299
288300 (C) Limit the reimbursement of legal fees incurred by skilled nursing facilities engaged in the defense of governmental legal actions filed against the facilities.
289301
290302 (D) Publish each facilitys quality assessment and quality and accountability payments in a manner and form determined by the director, or his or her designee.
291303
292304 (E) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, establish a base year to collect performance measures described in subdivision (i).
293305
294306 (F) Beginning with the 201112 fiscal year, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, publish the direct care staffing level data and the performance measures required pursuant to subdivision (i).
295307
296308 (5) The department, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, shall report to the relevant Assembly and Senate budget subcommittees by May 1, 2016, information regarding the quality and accountability supplemental payments, including, but not limited to, its assessment of whether the payments are adequate to incentivize quality care and to sustain the program.
297309
298310 (b) (1) There is hereby created in the State Treasury, the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. The fund shall contain moneys deposited pursuant to subdivisions (g) and (j) to (m), inclusive. Notwithstanding Section 16305.7 of the Government Code, the fund shall contain all interest and dividends earned on moneys in the fund.
299311
300312 (2) Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, the fund shall be continuously appropriated without regard to fiscal year to the department for making quality and accountability payments, in accordance with subdivision (n), to facilities that meet or exceed predefined measures as established by this section.
301313
302314 (3) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, moneys in the fund may also be used for any of the following purposes:
303315
304316 (A) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Public Health for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.
305317
306318 (B) To cover the administrative costs incurred by the State Department of Health Care Services for positions and contract funding required to implement this section.
307319
308320 (C) To provide funding assistance for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.
309321
310322 (c) No appropriation associated with Chapter 717 of the Statutes of 2010 is intended to implement the provisions of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code.
311323
312324 (d) (1) There is hereby appropriated for the 201011 fiscal year, one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund to the California Department of Aging for the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5. It is the intent of the Legislature for the one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) from the fund to be in addition to the four million one hundred sixty-eight thousand dollars ($4,168,000) proposed in the Governors May Revision for the 201011 Budget. It is further the intent of the Legislature to increase this level of appropriation in subsequent years to provide support sufficient to carry out the mandates and activities pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 9700) of Division 8.5.
313325
314326 (2) The department, in partnership with the California Department of Aging, shall seek approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to obtain federal Medicaid reimbursement for activities conducted by the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program. The department shall report to the fiscal committees of the Legislature during budget hearings on progress being made and any unresolved issues during the 201112 budget deliberations.
315327
316328 (e) There is hereby created in the Special Deposit Fund established pursuant to Section 16370 of the Government Code, the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account. The account shall contain all moneys deposited pursuant to subdivision (f).
317329
318330 (f) (1) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall use the direct care staffing level data it collects to determine whether a skilled nursing facility has met the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.
319331
320332 (2) (A) Beginning with the 201011 fiscal year, the State Department of Public Health shall assess a skilled nursing facility, licensed pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, an administrative penalty if the State Department of Public Health determines that the skilled nursing facility fails to meet the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, as follows:
321333
322334 (i) Fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for 5 percent or more of the audited days up to 49 percent.
323335
324336 (ii) Thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) if the facility fails to meet the requirements for over 49 percent or more of the audited days.
325337
326338 (B) (i) If the skilled nursing facility does not dispute the determination or assessment, the penalties shall be paid in full by the licensee to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the notice of penalty and deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.
327339
328340 (ii) The State Department of Public Health may, upon written notification to the licensee, request that the department offset any moneys owed to the licensee by the Medi-Cal program or any other payment program administered by the department to recoup the penalty provided for in this section.
329341
330342 (C) (i) If a facility disputes the determination or assessment made pursuant to this paragraph, the facility shall, within 15 days of the facilitys receipt of the determination and assessment, simultaneously submit a request for appeal to both the department and the State Department of Public Health. The request shall include a detailed statement describing the reason for appeal and include all supporting documents the facility will present at the hearing.
331343
332344 (ii) Within 10 days of the State Department of Public Healths receipt of the facilitys request for appeal, the State Department of Public Health shall submit, to both the facility and the department, all supporting documents that will be presented at the hearing.
333345
334346 (D) The department shall hear a timely appeal and issue a decision as follows:
335347
336348 (i) The hearing shall commence within 60 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.
337349
338350 (ii) The department shall issue a decision within 120 days from the date of receipt by the department of the facilitys timely request for appeal.
339351
340352 (iii) The decision of the departments hearing officer, when issued, shall be the final decision of the State Department of Public Health.
341353
342354 (E) The appeals process set forth in this paragraph shall be exempt from Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400) and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11500), of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. The provisions of Sections 100171 and 131071 of the Health and Safety Code do not apply to appeals under this paragraph.
343355
344356 (F) If a hearing decision issued pursuant to subparagraph (D) is in favor of the State Department of Public Health, the skilled nursing facility shall pay the penalties to the State Department of Public Health within 30 days of the facilitys receipt of the decision. The penalties collected shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Minimum Staffing Penalty Account.
345357
346358 (G) The assessment of a penalty under this subdivision does not supplant the State Department of Public Healths investigation process or issuance of deficiencies or citations under Chapter 2.4 (commencing with Section 1417) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.
347359
348360 (g) The State Department of Public Health shall transfer, on a monthly basis, all penalty payments collected pursuant to subdivision (f) into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.
349361
350362 (h) This section does not impact the effectiveness or utilization of Section 1278.5 or 1432 of the Health and Safety Code relating to whistleblower protections, or Section 1420 of the Health and Safety Code relating to complaints.
351363
352364 (i) (1) Beginning in the 201011 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall establish and publish quality and accountability measures, benchmarks, and data submission deadlines by November 30, 2010.
353365
354366 (2) The methodology developed pursuant to this section shall include, but not be limited to, the following requirements and performance measures:
355367
356368 (A) Beginning in the 201112 fiscal year:
357369
358370 (i) Immunization rates.
359371
360372 (ii) Facility acquired pressure ulcer incidence.
361373
362374 (iii) The use of physical restraints.
363375
364376 (iv) Compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code.
365377
366378 (v) Resident and family satisfaction.
367379
368380 (vi) Direct care staff retention, if sufficient data is available.
369381
370382 (B) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, in accordance with Section 14126.033, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, beginning in the 201314 rate year, shall incorporate additional measures into the system, including, but not limited to, quality and accountability measures required by federal health care reform that are identified by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
371383
372384 (C) The department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, may incorporate additional performance measures, including, but not limited to, the following:
373385
374386 (i) Compliance with state policy associated with the United States Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C. ex rel. Zimring (1999) 527 U.S. 581.
375387
376388 (ii) Direct care staff retention, if not addressed in the 201213 rate year.
377389
378390 (iii) The use of chemical restraints.
379391
380392 (D) Beginning with the 201516 fiscal year, the department, in consultation with representatives from the long-term care industry, organized labor, and consumers, shall incorporate direct care staff retention as a performance measure in the methodology developed pursuant to this section.
381393
382394 (j) (1) Beginning with the 201011 rate year, and pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (5) of subdivision (a) of Section 14126.023, the department shall set aside savings achieved from setting the professional liability insurance cost category, including any insurance deductible costs paid by the facility, at the 75th percentile. From this amount, the department shall transfer the General Fund portion into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund. A skilled nursing facility shall provide supplemental data on insurance deductible costs to facilitate this adjustment, in the format and by the deadlines determined by the department. If this data is not provided, a facilitys insurance deductible costs will remain in the administrative costs category.
383395
384396 (2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), for the 201213 rate year only, savings from capping the professional liability insurance cost category pursuant to paragraph (1) shall remain in the General Fund and shall not be transferred to the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.
385397
386398 (k) For the 201314 rate year, if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside the first 1 percent of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase for the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.
387399
388400 (l) If this act is extended beyond the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed, for the 201415 rate year, in addition to the amount set aside pursuant to subdivision (k), if there is a rate increase in the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate, the department shall set aside at least one-third of the weighted average Medi-Cal reimbursement rate increase, up to a maximum of 1 percent, from which the department shall transfer the General Fund portion of this amount into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund.
389401
390402 (m) Beginning with the 201516 rate year, and each subsequent rate year thereafter for which this article is operative, an amount equal to the amount deposited in the fund pursuant to subdivisions (k) and (l) for the 201415 rate year shall be deposited into the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund, for the purposes specified in this section.
391403
392404 (n) (1) (A) Beginning with the 201314 rate year, the department shall pay a supplemental payment, by April 30, 2014, to skilled nursing facilities based on all of the criteria in subdivision (i), as published by the department, and according to performance measure benchmarks determined by the department in consultation with stakeholders.
393405
394406 (B) (i) The department may convene a diverse stakeholder group, including, but not limited to, representatives from consumer groups and organizations, labor, nursing home providers, advocacy organizations involved with the aging community, staff from the Legislature, and other interested parties, to discuss and analyze alternative mechanisms to implement the quality and accountability payments provided to nursing homes for reimbursement.
395407
396408 (ii) The department shall articulate in a report to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature the implementation of an alternative mechanism as described in clause (i) at least 90 days prior to any policy or budgetary changes, and seek subsequent legislation in order to enact the proposed changes.
397409
398410 (2) Skilled nursing facilities that do not submit required performance data by the departments specified data submission deadlines pursuant to subdivision (i) are not eligible to receive supplemental payments.
399411
400412 (3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if a facility appeals the performance measure of compliance with the nursing hours or direct care service hours per patient per day requirements, pursuant to Section 1276.5 or 1276.65, as applicable, of the Health and Safety Code, to the State Department of Public Health, and it is unresolved by the departments published due date, the department shall not use that performance measure when determining the facilitys supplemental payment.
401413
402414 (4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if the department is unable to pay the supplemental payments by April 30, 2014, then on May 1, 2014, the department shall use the funds available in the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality and Accountability Special Fund as a result of savings identified in subdivisions (k) and (l), less the administrative costs required to implement subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), in addition to any Medicaid funds that are available as of December 31, 2013, to increase provider rates retroactively to August 1, 2013.
403415
404416 (o) The department shall seek necessary approvals from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to implement this section. The department shall implement this section only in a manner that is consistent with federal Medicaid law and regulations, and only to the extent that approval is obtained from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and federal financial participation is available.
405417
406418 (p) In implementing this section, the department and the State Department of Public Health may contract as necessary, with Californias Medicare Quality Improvement Organization, or other entities deemed qualified by the department or the State Department of Public Health, not associated with a skilled nursing facility, to assist with development, collection, analysis, and reporting of the performance data pursuant to subdivision (i), and with demonstrated expertise in long-term care quality, data collection or analysis, and accountability performance measurement models pursuant to subdivision (i). This subdivision establishes an accelerated process for issuing any contract pursuant to this section. Any contract entered into pursuant to this subdivision is exempt from the requirements of the Public Contract Code, through December 31, 2020.
407419
408420 (q) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, the following apply:
409421
410422 (1) The director shall implement this section, in whole or in part, by means of provider bulletins, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.
411423
412424 (2) The State Public Health Officer may implement this section by means of all-facility letters, or other similar instructions without taking regulatory action.
413425
414426 (r) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of subdivision (n), if a final judicial determination is made by any state or federal court that is not appealed, in any action by any party, or a final determination is made by the administrator of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, that any payments pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (n), are invalid, unlawful, or contrary to any provision of federal law or regulations, or of state law, these subdivisions shall become inoperative, and for the 201112 rate year, the rate increase provided under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (c) of Section 14126.033 shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivision (j). For the 201314 and 201415 rate years, any rate increase shall be reduced by the amounts described in subdivisions (j) to (l), inclusive.
415427
416428 (s) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, for performance periods in the 201718 and 201819 fiscal years, a skilled nursing facility shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirements pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code.
417429
418430 (t) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, but only to the extent the department determines federal financial participation is available and not otherwise jeopardized, compliance with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code, as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017, shall not be used to determine facility qualification for the supplemental payments provided for in this section until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year. This limitation shall also apply to the issuance of citations pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d) of Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code based upon the failure to comply with the provisions of subdivision (c) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code as amended by Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017. Until the performance period beginning in the 201920 fiscal year, the department shall apply the provisions of Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code for purposes of administering the supplemental payments pursuant to this section. For performance periods beginning in the 201920 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, a skilled nursing facility that is granted a waiver pursuant to subdivision (l) of Section 1276.65 of the Health and Safety Code shall remain eligible to participate in the supplemental payment program pursuant to this section so long as the facility meets the applicable nursing hours per patient per day requirement pursuant to Section 1276.5 of the Health and Safety Code that would have applied in the absence of Chapter 52 of the Statutes of 2017 for the duration of the time for which the waiver is granted.
419431
420432 SEC. 5. Section 17605 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17605. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount to be determined by the Department of Finance, that represents the sum of the shortfalls between the actual realignment revenues received by each county and each city and county from the Social Services Subaccount of the Local Revenue Fund in the 199192 fiscal year and the net costs incurred by each of those counties and cities and counties in the fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 10101.1, 11322.2, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and former Section 11322. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocation schedule on or before August 15, 1993, that shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited to the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision. The Controller shall allocate these funds no later than August 27, 1993.(b) (1) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance, in consultation with the appropriate state departments and the California State Association of Counties, that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads, as specified in paragraph (2), and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocations schedule on or before March 15 of each year. The schedule shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited into the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision.(B) It is the intent of the Legislature that counties shall receive allocations from the Caseload Subaccount as soon as possible after funds are received in the Sales Tax Growth Account. The Department of Finance shall recommend to the Legislature, by January 10, 2005, a procedure to expedite the preparation and provision of the allocations schedule described in subparagraph (A) and the allocation of funds by the Controller.(2) (A) (i) For the 199293 fiscal year through the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, growth means, for purposes of this subdivision, the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code.(ii) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, for purposes of this subdivision, growth means the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code. (B) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, in addition to subparagraph (A), growth shall also include the following:(i) The additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (g) of Section 17600.15 to fund the amount specified in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (f) of Section 17600.15 and the amount of vehicle license fee revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17606.20, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17605.07 and subdivision (g) of Section 17606.10.(ii) Any additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the prior fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the preceding prior fiscal year that were not included in caseload growth calculation pursuant to clause (i) from the prior caseload growth calculation.(3) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year through the 201617 fiscal year, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realigned programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(B) For the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(C) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero. (c) Annually, the Controller shall allocate, to the local health and welfare trust fund social services account, the amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the Caseload Subaccount, pursuant to the schedules of allocations of caseload growth described in subdivision (b), within 45 days of receiving those schedules from the Department of Finance. If there are insufficient funds to fully satisfy all caseload growth obligations, each countys or city and countys allocation for each program specified in subdivision (d) shall be prorated.(d) Prior to allocating funds pursuant to subdivision (b), to the extent that funds are available from funds deposited in the Caseload Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account in the Local Revenue Fund, the Controller shall allocate moneys to counties or cities and counties to correct any inequity or inequities in the computation of the child welfare services portion of the schedule required by subdivision (a) of Section 17602.(e) (1) For the 200304 fiscal year, no Sales Tax Growth Account funds shall be allocated pursuant to this chapter until the caseload portion of the base of each countys social services account in the countys health and welfare trust fund is funded to the level of the 200102 fiscal year. Funds to meet this requirement shall be allocated from the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund. If sufficient funds are not available in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund to achieve that funding level in the 200304 fiscal year, this requirement shall be funded in each succeeding fiscal year in which there are sufficient funds in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund until the caseload base funding level for which each county would have otherwise been eligible in accordance with subdivision (e) of Section 17602 for that year.(2) The caseload portion of each countys social services account base shall be determined by subtracting its noncaseload portion of the base, as determined by the Department of Finance in its annual calculation of General Growth Account allocations, from the total base of each countys social services account for the 200102 fiscal year.(f) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall annually post on his or her Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.
421433
422434 SEC. 5. Section 17605 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
423435
424436 ### SEC. 5.
425437
426438 17605. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount to be determined by the Department of Finance, that represents the sum of the shortfalls between the actual realignment revenues received by each county and each city and county from the Social Services Subaccount of the Local Revenue Fund in the 199192 fiscal year and the net costs incurred by each of those counties and cities and counties in the fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 10101.1, 11322.2, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and former Section 11322. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocation schedule on or before August 15, 1993, that shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited to the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision. The Controller shall allocate these funds no later than August 27, 1993.(b) (1) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance, in consultation with the appropriate state departments and the California State Association of Counties, that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads, as specified in paragraph (2), and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocations schedule on or before March 15 of each year. The schedule shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited into the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision.(B) It is the intent of the Legislature that counties shall receive allocations from the Caseload Subaccount as soon as possible after funds are received in the Sales Tax Growth Account. The Department of Finance shall recommend to the Legislature, by January 10, 2005, a procedure to expedite the preparation and provision of the allocations schedule described in subparagraph (A) and the allocation of funds by the Controller.(2) (A) (i) For the 199293 fiscal year through the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, growth means, for purposes of this subdivision, the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code.(ii) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, for purposes of this subdivision, growth means the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code. (B) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, in addition to subparagraph (A), growth shall also include the following:(i) The additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (g) of Section 17600.15 to fund the amount specified in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (f) of Section 17600.15 and the amount of vehicle license fee revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17606.20, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17605.07 and subdivision (g) of Section 17606.10.(ii) Any additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the prior fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the preceding prior fiscal year that were not included in caseload growth calculation pursuant to clause (i) from the prior caseload growth calculation.(3) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year through the 201617 fiscal year, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realigned programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(B) For the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(C) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero. (c) Annually, the Controller shall allocate, to the local health and welfare trust fund social services account, the amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the Caseload Subaccount, pursuant to the schedules of allocations of caseload growth described in subdivision (b), within 45 days of receiving those schedules from the Department of Finance. If there are insufficient funds to fully satisfy all caseload growth obligations, each countys or city and countys allocation for each program specified in subdivision (d) shall be prorated.(d) Prior to allocating funds pursuant to subdivision (b), to the extent that funds are available from funds deposited in the Caseload Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account in the Local Revenue Fund, the Controller shall allocate moneys to counties or cities and counties to correct any inequity or inequities in the computation of the child welfare services portion of the schedule required by subdivision (a) of Section 17602.(e) (1) For the 200304 fiscal year, no Sales Tax Growth Account funds shall be allocated pursuant to this chapter until the caseload portion of the base of each countys social services account in the countys health and welfare trust fund is funded to the level of the 200102 fiscal year. Funds to meet this requirement shall be allocated from the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund. If sufficient funds are not available in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund to achieve that funding level in the 200304 fiscal year, this requirement shall be funded in each succeeding fiscal year in which there are sufficient funds in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund until the caseload base funding level for which each county would have otherwise been eligible in accordance with subdivision (e) of Section 17602 for that year.(2) The caseload portion of each countys social services account base shall be determined by subtracting its noncaseload portion of the base, as determined by the Department of Finance in its annual calculation of General Growth Account allocations, from the total base of each countys social services account for the 200102 fiscal year.(f) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall annually post on his or her Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.
427439
428440 17605. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount to be determined by the Department of Finance, that represents the sum of the shortfalls between the actual realignment revenues received by each county and each city and county from the Social Services Subaccount of the Local Revenue Fund in the 199192 fiscal year and the net costs incurred by each of those counties and cities and counties in the fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 10101.1, 11322.2, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and former Section 11322. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocation schedule on or before August 15, 1993, that shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited to the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision. The Controller shall allocate these funds no later than August 27, 1993.(b) (1) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance, in consultation with the appropriate state departments and the California State Association of Counties, that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads, as specified in paragraph (2), and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocations schedule on or before March 15 of each year. The schedule shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited into the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision.(B) It is the intent of the Legislature that counties shall receive allocations from the Caseload Subaccount as soon as possible after funds are received in the Sales Tax Growth Account. The Department of Finance shall recommend to the Legislature, by January 10, 2005, a procedure to expedite the preparation and provision of the allocations schedule described in subparagraph (A) and the allocation of funds by the Controller.(2) (A) (i) For the 199293 fiscal year through the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, growth means, for purposes of this subdivision, the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code.(ii) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, for purposes of this subdivision, growth means the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code. (B) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, in addition to subparagraph (A), growth shall also include the following:(i) The additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (g) of Section 17600.15 to fund the amount specified in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (f) of Section 17600.15 and the amount of vehicle license fee revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17606.20, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17605.07 and subdivision (g) of Section 17606.10.(ii) Any additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the prior fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the preceding prior fiscal year that were not included in caseload growth calculation pursuant to clause (i) from the prior caseload growth calculation.(3) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year through the 201617 fiscal year, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realigned programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(B) For the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(C) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero. (c) Annually, the Controller shall allocate, to the local health and welfare trust fund social services account, the amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the Caseload Subaccount, pursuant to the schedules of allocations of caseload growth described in subdivision (b), within 45 days of receiving those schedules from the Department of Finance. If there are insufficient funds to fully satisfy all caseload growth obligations, each countys or city and countys allocation for each program specified in subdivision (d) shall be prorated.(d) Prior to allocating funds pursuant to subdivision (b), to the extent that funds are available from funds deposited in the Caseload Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account in the Local Revenue Fund, the Controller shall allocate moneys to counties or cities and counties to correct any inequity or inequities in the computation of the child welfare services portion of the schedule required by subdivision (a) of Section 17602.(e) (1) For the 200304 fiscal year, no Sales Tax Growth Account funds shall be allocated pursuant to this chapter until the caseload portion of the base of each countys social services account in the countys health and welfare trust fund is funded to the level of the 200102 fiscal year. Funds to meet this requirement shall be allocated from the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund. If sufficient funds are not available in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund to achieve that funding level in the 200304 fiscal year, this requirement shall be funded in each succeeding fiscal year in which there are sufficient funds in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund until the caseload base funding level for which each county would have otherwise been eligible in accordance with subdivision (e) of Section 17602 for that year.(2) The caseload portion of each countys social services account base shall be determined by subtracting its noncaseload portion of the base, as determined by the Department of Finance in its annual calculation of General Growth Account allocations, from the total base of each countys social services account for the 200102 fiscal year.(f) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall annually post on his or her Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.
429441
430442 17605. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount to be determined by the Department of Finance, that represents the sum of the shortfalls between the actual realignment revenues received by each county and each city and county from the Social Services Subaccount of the Local Revenue Fund in the 199192 fiscal year and the net costs incurred by each of those counties and cities and counties in the fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 10101.1, 11322.2, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and former Section 11322. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocation schedule on or before August 15, 1993, that shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited to the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision. The Controller shall allocate these funds no later than August 27, 1993.(b) (1) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance, in consultation with the appropriate state departments and the California State Association of Counties, that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads, as specified in paragraph (2), and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocations schedule on or before March 15 of each year. The schedule shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited into the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision.(B) It is the intent of the Legislature that counties shall receive allocations from the Caseload Subaccount as soon as possible after funds are received in the Sales Tax Growth Account. The Department of Finance shall recommend to the Legislature, by January 10, 2005, a procedure to expedite the preparation and provision of the allocations schedule described in subparagraph (A) and the allocation of funds by the Controller.(2) (A) (i) For the 199293 fiscal year through the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, growth means, for purposes of this subdivision, the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code.(ii) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, for purposes of this subdivision, growth means the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code. (B) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, in addition to subparagraph (A), growth shall also include the following:(i) The additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (g) of Section 17600.15 to fund the amount specified in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (f) of Section 17600.15 and the amount of vehicle license fee revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17606.20, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17605.07 and subdivision (g) of Section 17606.10.(ii) Any additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the prior fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the preceding prior fiscal year that were not included in caseload growth calculation pursuant to clause (i) from the prior caseload growth calculation.(3) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year through the 201617 fiscal year, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realigned programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(B) For the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.(C) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero. (c) Annually, the Controller shall allocate, to the local health and welfare trust fund social services account, the amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the Caseload Subaccount, pursuant to the schedules of allocations of caseload growth described in subdivision (b), within 45 days of receiving those schedules from the Department of Finance. If there are insufficient funds to fully satisfy all caseload growth obligations, each countys or city and countys allocation for each program specified in subdivision (d) shall be prorated.(d) Prior to allocating funds pursuant to subdivision (b), to the extent that funds are available from funds deposited in the Caseload Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account in the Local Revenue Fund, the Controller shall allocate moneys to counties or cities and counties to correct any inequity or inequities in the computation of the child welfare services portion of the schedule required by subdivision (a) of Section 17602.(e) (1) For the 200304 fiscal year, no Sales Tax Growth Account funds shall be allocated pursuant to this chapter until the caseload portion of the base of each countys social services account in the countys health and welfare trust fund is funded to the level of the 200102 fiscal year. Funds to meet this requirement shall be allocated from the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund. If sufficient funds are not available in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund to achieve that funding level in the 200304 fiscal year, this requirement shall be funded in each succeeding fiscal year in which there are sufficient funds in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund until the caseload base funding level for which each county would have otherwise been eligible in accordance with subdivision (e) of Section 17602 for that year.(2) The caseload portion of each countys social services account base shall be determined by subtracting its noncaseload portion of the base, as determined by the Department of Finance in its annual calculation of General Growth Account allocations, from the total base of each countys social services account for the 200102 fiscal year.(f) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall annually post on his or her Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.
431443
432444
433445
434446 17605. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount to be determined by the Department of Finance, that represents the sum of the shortfalls between the actual realignment revenues received by each county and each city and county from the Social Services Subaccount of the Local Revenue Fund in the 199192 fiscal year and the net costs incurred by each of those counties and cities and counties in the fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 10101.1, 11322.2, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and former Section 11322. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocation schedule on or before August 15, 1993, that shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited to the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision. The Controller shall allocate these funds no later than August 27, 1993.
435447
436448 (b) (1) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, the Controller shall deposit into the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund, from revenues deposited into the Sales Tax Growth Account, an amount determined by the Department of Finance, in consultation with the appropriate state departments and the California State Association of Counties, that is sufficient to fund the net cost for the realigned portion of the county or city and county share of growth in social services caseloads, as specified in paragraph (2), and any share of growth from the previous year or years for which sufficient revenues were not available in the Caseload Subaccount. The Department of Finance shall provide the Controller with an allocations schedule on or before March 15 of each year. The schedule shall be used by the Controller to allocate funds deposited into the Caseload Subaccount under this subdivision.
437449
438450 (B) It is the intent of the Legislature that counties shall receive allocations from the Caseload Subaccount as soon as possible after funds are received in the Sales Tax Growth Account. The Department of Finance shall recommend to the Legislature, by January 10, 2005, a procedure to expedite the preparation and provision of the allocations schedule described in subparagraph (A) and the allocation of funds by the Controller.
439451
440452 (2) (A) (i) For the 199293 fiscal year through the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year, growth means, for purposes of this subdivision, the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 12306, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code.
441453
442454 (ii) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, for purposes of this subdivision, growth means the increase in the actual caseload expenditures for the prior fiscal year over the actual caseload expenditures for the fiscal year preceding the prior fiscal year for the programs described in Sections 10101, 15200, 15204.2, and 18906.5, and for which funds are allocated pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 123940 of the Health and Safety Code.
443455
444456 (B) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, in addition to subparagraph (A), growth shall also include the following:
445457
446458 (i) The additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the current fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the prior fiscal year, less the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (g) of Section 17600.15 to fund the amount specified in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (f) of Section 17600.15 and the amount of vehicle license fee revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17606.20, and, for the 201617 fiscal year, the amount of sales tax revenues received pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 17605.07 and subdivision (g) of Section 17606.10.
447459
448460 (ii) Any additional County IHSS MOE costs to counties pursuant to Sections 12306.16 and 12306.17 for the prior fiscal year over the County IHSS MOE costs to counties for the preceding prior fiscal year that were not included in caseload growth calculation pursuant to clause (i) from the prior caseload growth calculation.
449461
450462 (3) (A) For the 199394 fiscal year through the 201617 fiscal year, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realigned programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.
451463
452464 (B) For the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.
453465
454466 (C) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201819 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the difference in caseload expenditures between the fiscal years as determined by clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) shall be multiplied by the factors that represent the change in county or city and county shares of the realignment programs. These products shall then be added or subtracted, taking into account whether the countys or city and countys share of costs was increased or decreased as a result of realignment, and added to the amounts determined pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) to yield each countys or city and countys allocation for caseload growth. Allocations for counties or cities and counties with allocations of less than zero shall be set at zero.
455467
456468 (c) Annually, the Controller shall allocate, to the local health and welfare trust fund social services account, the amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the Caseload Subaccount, pursuant to the schedules of allocations of caseload growth described in subdivision (b), within 45 days of receiving those schedules from the Department of Finance. If there are insufficient funds to fully satisfy all caseload growth obligations, each countys or city and countys allocation for each program specified in subdivision (d) shall be prorated.
457469
458470 (d) Prior to allocating funds pursuant to subdivision (b), to the extent that funds are available from funds deposited in the Caseload Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account in the Local Revenue Fund, the Controller shall allocate moneys to counties or cities and counties to correct any inequity or inequities in the computation of the child welfare services portion of the schedule required by subdivision (a) of Section 17602.
459471
460472 (e) (1) For the 200304 fiscal year, no Sales Tax Growth Account funds shall be allocated pursuant to this chapter until the caseload portion of the base of each countys social services account in the countys health and welfare trust fund is funded to the level of the 200102 fiscal year. Funds to meet this requirement shall be allocated from the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund. If sufficient funds are not available in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund to achieve that funding level in the 200304 fiscal year, this requirement shall be funded in each succeeding fiscal year in which there are sufficient funds in the Sales Tax Account of the Local Revenue Fund until the caseload base funding level for which each county would have otherwise been eligible in accordance with subdivision (e) of Section 17602 for that year.
461473
462474 (2) The caseload portion of each countys social services account base shall be determined by subtracting its noncaseload portion of the base, as determined by the Department of Finance in its annual calculation of General Growth Account allocations, from the total base of each countys social services account for the 200102 fiscal year.
463475
464476 (f) Commencing with the caseload growth calculation for the 201718 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall annually post on his or her Internet Web site the total amount of unfunded caseload growth by county.
465477
466478 SEC. 6. Section 17605.07 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17605.07. (a) (1) For the 199293 fiscal year through the 201415 fiscal year, inclusive, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(b) (1) For the 201516 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(c) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount pursuant to subdivision (b), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties.(2) The funding allocated pursuant to paragraph (1) shall only be available for allocation to the counties that participate in the County Medical Services Program in the 201617 fiscal year.
467479
468480 SEC. 6. Section 17605.07 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
469481
470482 ### SEC. 6.
471483
472484 17605.07. (a) (1) For the 199293 fiscal year through the 201415 fiscal year, inclusive, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(b) (1) For the 201516 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(c) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount pursuant to subdivision (b), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties.(2) The funding allocated pursuant to paragraph (1) shall only be available for allocation to the counties that participate in the County Medical Services Program in the 201617 fiscal year.
473485
474486 17605.07. (a) (1) For the 199293 fiscal year through the 201415 fiscal year, inclusive, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(b) (1) For the 201516 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(c) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount pursuant to subdivision (b), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties.(2) The funding allocated pursuant to paragraph (1) shall only be available for allocation to the counties that participate in the County Medical Services Program in the 201617 fiscal year.
475487
476488 17605.07. (a) (1) For the 199293 fiscal year through the 201415 fiscal year, inclusive, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(b) (1) For the 201516 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.(2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.(c) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount pursuant to subdivision (b), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties.(2) The funding allocated pursuant to paragraph (1) shall only be available for allocation to the counties that participate in the County Medical Services Program in the 201617 fiscal year.
477489
478490
479491
480492 17605.07. (a) (1) For the 199293 fiscal year through the 201415 fiscal year, inclusive, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.
481493
482494 (2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.
483495
484496 (b) (1) For the 201516 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter, after satisfying the obligations set forth in Section 17605, the Controller shall deposit into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount 4.027 percent of the amounts remaining and unexpended in the Sales Tax Growth Account of the Local Revenue Fund.
485497
486498 (2) If the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 17605 exceeds twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) for any fiscal year, then an additional amount equal to 4.027 percent of the amount deposited to the Caseload Subaccount shall be deposited to the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Growth Account.
487499
488500 (c) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate to the social services account of each county and city and county the amount that would otherwise have been deposited into the County Medical Services Program Growth Subaccount pursuant to subdivision (b), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties.
489501
490502 (2) The funding allocated pursuant to paragraph (1) shall only be available for allocation to the counties that participate in the County Medical Services Program in the 201617 fiscal year.
491503
492504 SEC. 7. Section 17606.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:17606.10. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year and subsequent fiscal years, the Controller shall allocate funds, on an annual basis from the General Growth Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account to the appropriate accounts in the local health and welfare trust fund of each county, city, and city and county in accordance with a schedule setting forth the percentage of total state resources received in the 199091 fiscal year, including State Legalization Impact Assistance Grants distributed by the state under former Part 4.5 (commencing with Section 16700), funding provided for purposes of implementation of Division 5 (commencing with Section 5000), for the organization and financing of community mental health services, including the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Surtax proceeds that are allocated to county mental health programs pursuant to Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989, Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990, and Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990, and state hospital funding and funding distributed for programs administered under Sections 1794, 10101.1, and 11322.2, as annually adjusted by the Department of Finance, in conjunction with the appropriate state department to reflect changes in equity status from the base percentages. However, for the 199293 fiscal year, the allocation for community mental health services shall be based on the following schedule:Percentageof StatewideJurisdictionResource BaseAlameda ........................ 4.3693Alpine ........................ 0.0128Amador ........................ 0.0941Butte ........................ 0.7797Calaveras ........................ 0.1157Colusa ........................ 0.0847Contra Costa ........................ 2.3115Del Norte ........................ 0.1237El Dorado ........................ 0.3966Fresno ........................ 3.1419Glenn ........................ 0.1304Humboldt ........................ 0.6175Imperial ........................ 0.5425Inyo ........................ 0.1217Kern ........................ 1.8574Kings ........................ 0.4229Lake ........................ 0.2362Lassen ........................ 0.1183Los Angeles ........................ 27.9666 Madera ........................ 0.3552Marin ........................ 0.9180Mariposa ........................ 0.0792Mendocino ........................ 0.4099Merced ........................ 0.8831Modoc ........................ 0.0561Mono ........................ 0.0511Monterey ........................ 1.1663Napa ........................ 0.3856Nevada ........................ 0.2129Orange ........................ 5.3423Placer ........................ 0.5034Plumas ........................ 0.1134Riverside ........................ 3.6179Sacramento ........................ 4.1872San Benito ........................ 0.1010San Bernardino ........................ 4.5494San Diego ........................ 7.8773San Francisco ........................ 3.5335San Joaquin ........................ 2.4690San Luis Obispo ........................ 0.6652San Mateo ........................ 2.5169Santa Barbara ........................ 1.0745Santa Clara ........................ 5.0488Santa Cruz ........................ 0.7960Shasta ........................ 0.5493Sierra ........................ 0.0345Siskiyou ........................ 0.2051Solano ........................ 0.6694Sonoma ........................ 1.1486Stanislaus ........................ 1.4701Sutter/Yuba ........................ 0.6294Tehama ........................ 0.2384Trinity ........................ 0.0826Tulare ........................ 1.4704Tuolumne ........................ 0.1666Ventura ........................ 1.9311Yolo ........................ 0.5443Berkeley ........................ 0.2688Tri-City ........................ 0.2347(b) The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of the local health and welfare trust fund of each city, county, and city and county for the 199495 fiscal year general growth allocations according to subdivisions (c) and (d). For the 199596 fiscal year and annually until the end of the 201213 fiscal year, the Department of Finance shall prepare the schedule of allocations of growth based upon the recalculation of the resource base as provided by subdivision (c).(c) For the Mental Health Account, the Department of Finance shall do all of the following:(1) Use the following sources as reported by the State Department of Health Care Services:(A) The final December 1992 distribution of resources associated with Institutes for Mental Disease.(B) The 199091 fiscal year state hospitals and community mental health allocations.(C) Allocations for services provided for under Chapter 1294 of the Statutes of 1989.(2) Expand the resource base with the following nonrealigned funding sources as allocated among the counties:(A) Tobacco surtax allocations made under Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989 and Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990.(B) For the 199495 allocation year only, Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990.(C) 199394 fiscal year federal homeless block grant allocation.(D) 199394 fiscal year Mental Health Special Education allocations.(E) 199394 fiscal year allocations for the system of care for children, in accordance with Chapter 1229 of the Statutes of 1992.(F) 199394 fiscal year federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration block grant allocations pursuant to Subchapter 1 (commencing with Section 10801) of Chapter 114 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(d) For the Health Account, the Department of Finance shall use the historical resource base of state funds as allocated among the counties, cities, and city and county as reported by the former State Department of Health Services in a September 17, 1991, report of Indigent and Community Health Resources.(e) The Department of Finance shall use these adjusted resource bases for the Health Account and Mental Health Account to calculate what the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount allocations would have been, and together with 199495 fiscal year Base Restoration Subaccount allocations, CMSP subaccount allocations, equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 17606.05, as that subparagraph read on January 1, 2015, and special equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subdivision (e) of Section 17606.15 reconstruct the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount resource base for the 199596 allocation year for each county, city, and city and county. Notwithstanding any other law, the actual 199495 general growth allocations shall not become part of the realignment base allocations to each county, city, and city and county. The total amounts distributed by the Controller for general growth for the 199495 allocation year shall be reallocated among the counties, cities, and city and county in the 199596 allocation year according to this paragraph, and shall be included in the general growth resource base for the 199697 allocation year and each fiscal year thereafter. For the 199697 allocation year and fiscal years thereafter, the Department of Finance shall update the base with actual growth allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of each county, city, and city and county local health and welfare trust fund in the prior year, and adjust for actual changes in nonrealigned funds specified in subdivision (c) in the year prior to the allocation year.(f) For the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall do all of the following:(1) Allocate to the Mental Health Account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Mental Health Account in accordance with subdivision (c) and allocate based on that recalculation.(2) Allocate 18.4545 percent of the total General Growth Subaccount to the health account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance in accordance with subdivision (d).(3) Allocate the remainder of the funds in the General Growth Subaccount to the family support account of each county or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. These funds shall be expended in accordance with Section 17601.50.(g) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (f), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate funds in the following amounts from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account of each county and city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties:(A) The funding that would have been allocated to the Mental Health Account of each county or city and county pursuant to the calculations specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (f).(B) The funding that would have been allocated to the health account of each county or city and county pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (f), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, Article 12 (commencing with Section 17612.1), and Article 13 (commencing with 17613.1).(2) The allocation of funds from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account as described in paragraph (1) shall not apply to the amount of funds available for allocation to the Mental Health Accounts and health accounts of the Cities of Berkeley, Pasadena, Tri-City, and Long Beach.(h) The amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the General Growth Subaccount shall be allocated on an annual basis by the Controller, as described in subdivisions (f) and (g), within 45 days of receiving the General Growth Subaccount allocation schedule from the Department of Finance.
493505
494506 SEC. 7. Section 17606.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
495507
496508 ### SEC. 7.
497509
498510 17606.10. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year and subsequent fiscal years, the Controller shall allocate funds, on an annual basis from the General Growth Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account to the appropriate accounts in the local health and welfare trust fund of each county, city, and city and county in accordance with a schedule setting forth the percentage of total state resources received in the 199091 fiscal year, including State Legalization Impact Assistance Grants distributed by the state under former Part 4.5 (commencing with Section 16700), funding provided for purposes of implementation of Division 5 (commencing with Section 5000), for the organization and financing of community mental health services, including the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Surtax proceeds that are allocated to county mental health programs pursuant to Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989, Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990, and Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990, and state hospital funding and funding distributed for programs administered under Sections 1794, 10101.1, and 11322.2, as annually adjusted by the Department of Finance, in conjunction with the appropriate state department to reflect changes in equity status from the base percentages. However, for the 199293 fiscal year, the allocation for community mental health services shall be based on the following schedule:Percentageof StatewideJurisdictionResource BaseAlameda ........................ 4.3693Alpine ........................ 0.0128Amador ........................ 0.0941Butte ........................ 0.7797Calaveras ........................ 0.1157Colusa ........................ 0.0847Contra Costa ........................ 2.3115Del Norte ........................ 0.1237El Dorado ........................ 0.3966Fresno ........................ 3.1419Glenn ........................ 0.1304Humboldt ........................ 0.6175Imperial ........................ 0.5425Inyo ........................ 0.1217Kern ........................ 1.8574Kings ........................ 0.4229Lake ........................ 0.2362Lassen ........................ 0.1183Los Angeles ........................ 27.9666 Madera ........................ 0.3552Marin ........................ 0.9180Mariposa ........................ 0.0792Mendocino ........................ 0.4099Merced ........................ 0.8831Modoc ........................ 0.0561Mono ........................ 0.0511Monterey ........................ 1.1663Napa ........................ 0.3856Nevada ........................ 0.2129Orange ........................ 5.3423Placer ........................ 0.5034Plumas ........................ 0.1134Riverside ........................ 3.6179Sacramento ........................ 4.1872San Benito ........................ 0.1010San Bernardino ........................ 4.5494San Diego ........................ 7.8773San Francisco ........................ 3.5335San Joaquin ........................ 2.4690San Luis Obispo ........................ 0.6652San Mateo ........................ 2.5169Santa Barbara ........................ 1.0745Santa Clara ........................ 5.0488Santa Cruz ........................ 0.7960Shasta ........................ 0.5493Sierra ........................ 0.0345Siskiyou ........................ 0.2051Solano ........................ 0.6694Sonoma ........................ 1.1486Stanislaus ........................ 1.4701Sutter/Yuba ........................ 0.6294Tehama ........................ 0.2384Trinity ........................ 0.0826Tulare ........................ 1.4704Tuolumne ........................ 0.1666Ventura ........................ 1.9311Yolo ........................ 0.5443Berkeley ........................ 0.2688Tri-City ........................ 0.2347(b) The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of the local health and welfare trust fund of each city, county, and city and county for the 199495 fiscal year general growth allocations according to subdivisions (c) and (d). For the 199596 fiscal year and annually until the end of the 201213 fiscal year, the Department of Finance shall prepare the schedule of allocations of growth based upon the recalculation of the resource base as provided by subdivision (c).(c) For the Mental Health Account, the Department of Finance shall do all of the following:(1) Use the following sources as reported by the State Department of Health Care Services:(A) The final December 1992 distribution of resources associated with Institutes for Mental Disease.(B) The 199091 fiscal year state hospitals and community mental health allocations.(C) Allocations for services provided for under Chapter 1294 of the Statutes of 1989.(2) Expand the resource base with the following nonrealigned funding sources as allocated among the counties:(A) Tobacco surtax allocations made under Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989 and Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990.(B) For the 199495 allocation year only, Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990.(C) 199394 fiscal year federal homeless block grant allocation.(D) 199394 fiscal year Mental Health Special Education allocations.(E) 199394 fiscal year allocations for the system of care for children, in accordance with Chapter 1229 of the Statutes of 1992.(F) 199394 fiscal year federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration block grant allocations pursuant to Subchapter 1 (commencing with Section 10801) of Chapter 114 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(d) For the Health Account, the Department of Finance shall use the historical resource base of state funds as allocated among the counties, cities, and city and county as reported by the former State Department of Health Services in a September 17, 1991, report of Indigent and Community Health Resources.(e) The Department of Finance shall use these adjusted resource bases for the Health Account and Mental Health Account to calculate what the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount allocations would have been, and together with 199495 fiscal year Base Restoration Subaccount allocations, CMSP subaccount allocations, equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 17606.05, as that subparagraph read on January 1, 2015, and special equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subdivision (e) of Section 17606.15 reconstruct the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount resource base for the 199596 allocation year for each county, city, and city and county. Notwithstanding any other law, the actual 199495 general growth allocations shall not become part of the realignment base allocations to each county, city, and city and county. The total amounts distributed by the Controller for general growth for the 199495 allocation year shall be reallocated among the counties, cities, and city and county in the 199596 allocation year according to this paragraph, and shall be included in the general growth resource base for the 199697 allocation year and each fiscal year thereafter. For the 199697 allocation year and fiscal years thereafter, the Department of Finance shall update the base with actual growth allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of each county, city, and city and county local health and welfare trust fund in the prior year, and adjust for actual changes in nonrealigned funds specified in subdivision (c) in the year prior to the allocation year.(f) For the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall do all of the following:(1) Allocate to the Mental Health Account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Mental Health Account in accordance with subdivision (c) and allocate based on that recalculation.(2) Allocate 18.4545 percent of the total General Growth Subaccount to the health account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance in accordance with subdivision (d).(3) Allocate the remainder of the funds in the General Growth Subaccount to the family support account of each county or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. These funds shall be expended in accordance with Section 17601.50.(g) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (f), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate funds in the following amounts from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account of each county and city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties:(A) The funding that would have been allocated to the Mental Health Account of each county or city and county pursuant to the calculations specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (f).(B) The funding that would have been allocated to the health account of each county or city and county pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (f), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, Article 12 (commencing with Section 17612.1), and Article 13 (commencing with 17613.1).(2) The allocation of funds from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account as described in paragraph (1) shall not apply to the amount of funds available for allocation to the Mental Health Accounts and health accounts of the Cities of Berkeley, Pasadena, Tri-City, and Long Beach.(h) The amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the General Growth Subaccount shall be allocated on an annual basis by the Controller, as described in subdivisions (f) and (g), within 45 days of receiving the General Growth Subaccount allocation schedule from the Department of Finance.
499511
500512 17606.10. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year and subsequent fiscal years, the Controller shall allocate funds, on an annual basis from the General Growth Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account to the appropriate accounts in the local health and welfare trust fund of each county, city, and city and county in accordance with a schedule setting forth the percentage of total state resources received in the 199091 fiscal year, including State Legalization Impact Assistance Grants distributed by the state under former Part 4.5 (commencing with Section 16700), funding provided for purposes of implementation of Division 5 (commencing with Section 5000), for the organization and financing of community mental health services, including the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Surtax proceeds that are allocated to county mental health programs pursuant to Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989, Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990, and Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990, and state hospital funding and funding distributed for programs administered under Sections 1794, 10101.1, and 11322.2, as annually adjusted by the Department of Finance, in conjunction with the appropriate state department to reflect changes in equity status from the base percentages. However, for the 199293 fiscal year, the allocation for community mental health services shall be based on the following schedule:Percentageof StatewideJurisdictionResource BaseAlameda ........................ 4.3693Alpine ........................ 0.0128Amador ........................ 0.0941Butte ........................ 0.7797Calaveras ........................ 0.1157Colusa ........................ 0.0847Contra Costa ........................ 2.3115Del Norte ........................ 0.1237El Dorado ........................ 0.3966Fresno ........................ 3.1419Glenn ........................ 0.1304Humboldt ........................ 0.6175Imperial ........................ 0.5425Inyo ........................ 0.1217Kern ........................ 1.8574Kings ........................ 0.4229Lake ........................ 0.2362Lassen ........................ 0.1183Los Angeles ........................ 27.9666 Madera ........................ 0.3552Marin ........................ 0.9180Mariposa ........................ 0.0792Mendocino ........................ 0.4099Merced ........................ 0.8831Modoc ........................ 0.0561Mono ........................ 0.0511Monterey ........................ 1.1663Napa ........................ 0.3856Nevada ........................ 0.2129Orange ........................ 5.3423Placer ........................ 0.5034Plumas ........................ 0.1134Riverside ........................ 3.6179Sacramento ........................ 4.1872San Benito ........................ 0.1010San Bernardino ........................ 4.5494San Diego ........................ 7.8773San Francisco ........................ 3.5335San Joaquin ........................ 2.4690San Luis Obispo ........................ 0.6652San Mateo ........................ 2.5169Santa Barbara ........................ 1.0745Santa Clara ........................ 5.0488Santa Cruz ........................ 0.7960Shasta ........................ 0.5493Sierra ........................ 0.0345Siskiyou ........................ 0.2051Solano ........................ 0.6694Sonoma ........................ 1.1486Stanislaus ........................ 1.4701Sutter/Yuba ........................ 0.6294Tehama ........................ 0.2384Trinity ........................ 0.0826Tulare ........................ 1.4704Tuolumne ........................ 0.1666Ventura ........................ 1.9311Yolo ........................ 0.5443Berkeley ........................ 0.2688Tri-City ........................ 0.2347(b) The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of the local health and welfare trust fund of each city, county, and city and county for the 199495 fiscal year general growth allocations according to subdivisions (c) and (d). For the 199596 fiscal year and annually until the end of the 201213 fiscal year, the Department of Finance shall prepare the schedule of allocations of growth based upon the recalculation of the resource base as provided by subdivision (c).(c) For the Mental Health Account, the Department of Finance shall do all of the following:(1) Use the following sources as reported by the State Department of Health Care Services:(A) The final December 1992 distribution of resources associated with Institutes for Mental Disease.(B) The 199091 fiscal year state hospitals and community mental health allocations.(C) Allocations for services provided for under Chapter 1294 of the Statutes of 1989.(2) Expand the resource base with the following nonrealigned funding sources as allocated among the counties:(A) Tobacco surtax allocations made under Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989 and Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990.(B) For the 199495 allocation year only, Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990.(C) 199394 fiscal year federal homeless block grant allocation.(D) 199394 fiscal year Mental Health Special Education allocations.(E) 199394 fiscal year allocations for the system of care for children, in accordance with Chapter 1229 of the Statutes of 1992.(F) 199394 fiscal year federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration block grant allocations pursuant to Subchapter 1 (commencing with Section 10801) of Chapter 114 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(d) For the Health Account, the Department of Finance shall use the historical resource base of state funds as allocated among the counties, cities, and city and county as reported by the former State Department of Health Services in a September 17, 1991, report of Indigent and Community Health Resources.(e) The Department of Finance shall use these adjusted resource bases for the Health Account and Mental Health Account to calculate what the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount allocations would have been, and together with 199495 fiscal year Base Restoration Subaccount allocations, CMSP subaccount allocations, equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 17606.05, as that subparagraph read on January 1, 2015, and special equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subdivision (e) of Section 17606.15 reconstruct the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount resource base for the 199596 allocation year for each county, city, and city and county. Notwithstanding any other law, the actual 199495 general growth allocations shall not become part of the realignment base allocations to each county, city, and city and county. The total amounts distributed by the Controller for general growth for the 199495 allocation year shall be reallocated among the counties, cities, and city and county in the 199596 allocation year according to this paragraph, and shall be included in the general growth resource base for the 199697 allocation year and each fiscal year thereafter. For the 199697 allocation year and fiscal years thereafter, the Department of Finance shall update the base with actual growth allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of each county, city, and city and county local health and welfare trust fund in the prior year, and adjust for actual changes in nonrealigned funds specified in subdivision (c) in the year prior to the allocation year.(f) For the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall do all of the following:(1) Allocate to the Mental Health Account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Mental Health Account in accordance with subdivision (c) and allocate based on that recalculation.(2) Allocate 18.4545 percent of the total General Growth Subaccount to the health account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance in accordance with subdivision (d).(3) Allocate the remainder of the funds in the General Growth Subaccount to the family support account of each county or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. These funds shall be expended in accordance with Section 17601.50.(g) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (f), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate funds in the following amounts from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account of each county and city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties:(A) The funding that would have been allocated to the Mental Health Account of each county or city and county pursuant to the calculations specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (f).(B) The funding that would have been allocated to the health account of each county or city and county pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (f), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, Article 12 (commencing with Section 17612.1), and Article 13 (commencing with 17613.1).(2) The allocation of funds from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account as described in paragraph (1) shall not apply to the amount of funds available for allocation to the Mental Health Accounts and health accounts of the Cities of Berkeley, Pasadena, Tri-City, and Long Beach.(h) The amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the General Growth Subaccount shall be allocated on an annual basis by the Controller, as described in subdivisions (f) and (g), within 45 days of receiving the General Growth Subaccount allocation schedule from the Department of Finance.
501513
502514 17606.10. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year and subsequent fiscal years, the Controller shall allocate funds, on an annual basis from the General Growth Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account to the appropriate accounts in the local health and welfare trust fund of each county, city, and city and county in accordance with a schedule setting forth the percentage of total state resources received in the 199091 fiscal year, including State Legalization Impact Assistance Grants distributed by the state under former Part 4.5 (commencing with Section 16700), funding provided for purposes of implementation of Division 5 (commencing with Section 5000), for the organization and financing of community mental health services, including the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Surtax proceeds that are allocated to county mental health programs pursuant to Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989, Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990, and Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990, and state hospital funding and funding distributed for programs administered under Sections 1794, 10101.1, and 11322.2, as annually adjusted by the Department of Finance, in conjunction with the appropriate state department to reflect changes in equity status from the base percentages. However, for the 199293 fiscal year, the allocation for community mental health services shall be based on the following schedule:Percentageof StatewideJurisdictionResource BaseAlameda ........................ 4.3693Alpine ........................ 0.0128Amador ........................ 0.0941Butte ........................ 0.7797Calaveras ........................ 0.1157Colusa ........................ 0.0847Contra Costa ........................ 2.3115Del Norte ........................ 0.1237El Dorado ........................ 0.3966Fresno ........................ 3.1419Glenn ........................ 0.1304Humboldt ........................ 0.6175Imperial ........................ 0.5425Inyo ........................ 0.1217Kern ........................ 1.8574Kings ........................ 0.4229Lake ........................ 0.2362Lassen ........................ 0.1183Los Angeles ........................ 27.9666 Madera ........................ 0.3552Marin ........................ 0.9180Mariposa ........................ 0.0792Mendocino ........................ 0.4099Merced ........................ 0.8831Modoc ........................ 0.0561Mono ........................ 0.0511Monterey ........................ 1.1663Napa ........................ 0.3856Nevada ........................ 0.2129Orange ........................ 5.3423Placer ........................ 0.5034Plumas ........................ 0.1134Riverside ........................ 3.6179Sacramento ........................ 4.1872San Benito ........................ 0.1010San Bernardino ........................ 4.5494San Diego ........................ 7.8773San Francisco ........................ 3.5335San Joaquin ........................ 2.4690San Luis Obispo ........................ 0.6652San Mateo ........................ 2.5169Santa Barbara ........................ 1.0745Santa Clara ........................ 5.0488Santa Cruz ........................ 0.7960Shasta ........................ 0.5493Sierra ........................ 0.0345Siskiyou ........................ 0.2051Solano ........................ 0.6694Sonoma ........................ 1.1486Stanislaus ........................ 1.4701Sutter/Yuba ........................ 0.6294Tehama ........................ 0.2384Trinity ........................ 0.0826Tulare ........................ 1.4704Tuolumne ........................ 0.1666Ventura ........................ 1.9311Yolo ........................ 0.5443Berkeley ........................ 0.2688Tri-City ........................ 0.2347(b) The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of the local health and welfare trust fund of each city, county, and city and county for the 199495 fiscal year general growth allocations according to subdivisions (c) and (d). For the 199596 fiscal year and annually until the end of the 201213 fiscal year, the Department of Finance shall prepare the schedule of allocations of growth based upon the recalculation of the resource base as provided by subdivision (c).(c) For the Mental Health Account, the Department of Finance shall do all of the following:(1) Use the following sources as reported by the State Department of Health Care Services:(A) The final December 1992 distribution of resources associated with Institutes for Mental Disease.(B) The 199091 fiscal year state hospitals and community mental health allocations.(C) Allocations for services provided for under Chapter 1294 of the Statutes of 1989.(2) Expand the resource base with the following nonrealigned funding sources as allocated among the counties:(A) Tobacco surtax allocations made under Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989 and Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990.(B) For the 199495 allocation year only, Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990.(C) 199394 fiscal year federal homeless block grant allocation.(D) 199394 fiscal year Mental Health Special Education allocations.(E) 199394 fiscal year allocations for the system of care for children, in accordance with Chapter 1229 of the Statutes of 1992.(F) 199394 fiscal year federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration block grant allocations pursuant to Subchapter 1 (commencing with Section 10801) of Chapter 114 of Title 42 of the United States Code.(d) For the Health Account, the Department of Finance shall use the historical resource base of state funds as allocated among the counties, cities, and city and county as reported by the former State Department of Health Services in a September 17, 1991, report of Indigent and Community Health Resources.(e) The Department of Finance shall use these adjusted resource bases for the Health Account and Mental Health Account to calculate what the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount allocations would have been, and together with 199495 fiscal year Base Restoration Subaccount allocations, CMSP subaccount allocations, equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 17606.05, as that subparagraph read on January 1, 2015, and special equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subdivision (e) of Section 17606.15 reconstruct the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount resource base for the 199596 allocation year for each county, city, and city and county. Notwithstanding any other law, the actual 199495 general growth allocations shall not become part of the realignment base allocations to each county, city, and city and county. The total amounts distributed by the Controller for general growth for the 199495 allocation year shall be reallocated among the counties, cities, and city and county in the 199596 allocation year according to this paragraph, and shall be included in the general growth resource base for the 199697 allocation year and each fiscal year thereafter. For the 199697 allocation year and fiscal years thereafter, the Department of Finance shall update the base with actual growth allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of each county, city, and city and county local health and welfare trust fund in the prior year, and adjust for actual changes in nonrealigned funds specified in subdivision (c) in the year prior to the allocation year.(f) For the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall do all of the following:(1) Allocate to the Mental Health Account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Mental Health Account in accordance with subdivision (c) and allocate based on that recalculation.(2) Allocate 18.4545 percent of the total General Growth Subaccount to the health account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance in accordance with subdivision (d).(3) Allocate the remainder of the funds in the General Growth Subaccount to the family support account of each county or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. These funds shall be expended in accordance with Section 17601.50.(g) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (f), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate funds in the following amounts from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account of each county and city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties:(A) The funding that would have been allocated to the Mental Health Account of each county or city and county pursuant to the calculations specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (f).(B) The funding that would have been allocated to the health account of each county or city and county pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (f), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, Article 12 (commencing with Section 17612.1), and Article 13 (commencing with 17613.1).(2) The allocation of funds from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account as described in paragraph (1) shall not apply to the amount of funds available for allocation to the Mental Health Accounts and health accounts of the Cities of Berkeley, Pasadena, Tri-City, and Long Beach.(h) The amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the General Growth Subaccount shall be allocated on an annual basis by the Controller, as described in subdivisions (f) and (g), within 45 days of receiving the General Growth Subaccount allocation schedule from the Department of Finance.
503515
504516
505517
506518 17606.10. (a) For the 199293 fiscal year and subsequent fiscal years, the Controller shall allocate funds, on an annual basis from the General Growth Subaccount in the Sales Tax Growth Account to the appropriate accounts in the local health and welfare trust fund of each county, city, and city and county in accordance with a schedule setting forth the percentage of total state resources received in the 199091 fiscal year, including State Legalization Impact Assistance Grants distributed by the state under former Part 4.5 (commencing with Section 16700), funding provided for purposes of implementation of Division 5 (commencing with Section 5000), for the organization and financing of community mental health services, including the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Surtax proceeds that are allocated to county mental health programs pursuant to Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989, Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990, and Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990, and state hospital funding and funding distributed for programs administered under Sections 1794, 10101.1, and 11322.2, as annually adjusted by the Department of Finance, in conjunction with the appropriate state department to reflect changes in equity status from the base percentages. However, for the 199293 fiscal year, the allocation for community mental health services shall be based on the following schedule:
507519
508520 Percentage
509521 of Statewide
510522 Jurisdiction Resource Base
511523 Alameda ........................ 4.3693
512524 Alpine ........................ 0.0128
513525 Amador ........................ 0.0941
514526 Butte ........................ 0.7797
515527 Calaveras ........................ 0.1157
516528 Colusa ........................ 0.0847
517529 Contra Costa ........................ 2.3115
518530 Del Norte ........................ 0.1237
519531 El Dorado ........................ 0.3966
520532 Fresno ........................ 3.1419
521533 Glenn ........................ 0.1304
522534 Humboldt ........................ 0.6175
523535 Imperial ........................ 0.5425
524536 Inyo ........................ 0.1217
525537 Kern ........................ 1.8574
526538 Kings ........................ 0.4229
527539 Lake ........................ 0.2362
528540 Lassen ........................ 0.1183
529541 Los Angeles ........................ 27.9666
530542 Madera ........................ 0.3552
531543 Marin ........................ 0.9180
532544 Mariposa ........................ 0.0792
533545 Mendocino ........................ 0.4099
534546 Merced ........................ 0.8831
535547 Modoc ........................ 0.0561
536548 Mono ........................ 0.0511
537549 Monterey ........................ 1.1663
538550 Napa ........................ 0.3856
539551 Nevada ........................ 0.2129
540552 Orange ........................ 5.3423
541553 Placer ........................ 0.5034
542554 Plumas ........................ 0.1134
543555 Riverside ........................ 3.6179
544556 Sacramento ........................ 4.1872
545557 San Benito ........................ 0.1010
546558 San Bernardino ........................ 4.5494
547559 San Diego ........................ 7.8773
548560 San Francisco ........................ 3.5335
549561 San Joaquin ........................ 2.4690
550562 San Luis Obispo ........................ 0.6652
551563 San Mateo ........................ 2.5169
552564 Santa Barbara ........................ 1.0745
553565 Santa Clara ........................ 5.0488
554566 Santa Cruz ........................ 0.7960
555567 Shasta ........................ 0.5493
556568 Sierra ........................ 0.0345
557569 Siskiyou ........................ 0.2051
558570 Solano ........................ 0.6694
559571 Sonoma ........................ 1.1486
560572 Stanislaus ........................ 1.4701
561573 Sutter/Yuba ........................ 0.6294
562574 Tehama ........................ 0.2384
563575 Trinity ........................ 0.0826
564576 Tulare ........................ 1.4704
565577 Tuolumne ........................ 0.1666
566578 Ventura ........................ 1.9311
567579 Yolo ........................ 0.5443
568580 Berkeley ........................ 0.2688
569581 Tri-City ........................ 0.2347
570582
571583
572584
573585 Percentage
574586
575587
576588
577589 of Statewide
578590
579591 Jurisdiction
580592
581593 Resource Base
582594
583595 Alameda ........................
584596
585597 4.3693
586598
587599 Alpine ........................
588600
589601 0.0128
590602
591603 Amador ........................
592604
593605 0.0941
594606
595607 Butte ........................
596608
597609 0.7797
598610
599611 Calaveras ........................
600612
601613 0.1157
602614
603615 Colusa ........................
604616
605617 0.0847
606618
607619 Contra Costa ........................
608620
609621 2.3115
610622
611623 Del Norte ........................
612624
613625 0.1237
614626
615627 El Dorado ........................
616628
617629 0.3966
618630
619631 Fresno ........................
620632
621633 3.1419
622634
623635 Glenn ........................
624636
625637 0.1304
626638
627639 Humboldt ........................
628640
629641 0.6175
630642
631643 Imperial ........................
632644
633645 0.5425
634646
635647 Inyo ........................
636648
637649 0.1217
638650
639651 Kern ........................
640652
641653 1.8574
642654
643655 Kings ........................
644656
645657 0.4229
646658
647659 Lake ........................
648660
649661 0.2362
650662
651663 Lassen ........................
652664
653665 0.1183
654666
655667 Los Angeles ........................
656668
657669 27.9666
658670
659671 Madera ........................
660672
661673 0.3552
662674
663675 Marin ........................
664676
665677 0.9180
666678
667679 Mariposa ........................
668680
669681 0.0792
670682
671683 Mendocino ........................
672684
673685 0.4099
674686
675687 Merced ........................
676688
677689 0.8831
678690
679691 Modoc ........................
680692
681693 0.0561
682694
683695 Mono ........................
684696
685697 0.0511
686698
687699 Monterey ........................
688700
689701 1.1663
690702
691703 Napa ........................
692704
693705 0.3856
694706
695707 Nevada ........................
696708
697709 0.2129
698710
699711 Orange ........................
700712
701713 5.3423
702714
703715 Placer ........................
704716
705717 0.5034
706718
707719 Plumas ........................
708720
709721 0.1134
710722
711723 Riverside ........................
712724
713725 3.6179
714726
715727 Sacramento ........................
716728
717729 4.1872
718730
719731 San Benito ........................
720732
721733 0.1010
722734
723735 San Bernardino ........................
724736
725737 4.5494
726738
727739 San Diego ........................
728740
729741 7.8773
730742
731743 San Francisco ........................
732744
733745 3.5335
734746
735747 San Joaquin ........................
736748
737749 2.4690
738750
739751 San Luis Obispo ........................
740752
741753 0.6652
742754
743755 San Mateo ........................
744756
745757 2.5169
746758
747759 Santa Barbara ........................
748760
749761 1.0745
750762
751763 Santa Clara ........................
752764
753765 5.0488
754766
755767 Santa Cruz ........................
756768
757769 0.7960
758770
759771 Shasta ........................
760772
761773 0.5493
762774
763775 Sierra ........................
764776
765777 0.0345
766778
767779 Siskiyou ........................
768780
769781 0.2051
770782
771783 Solano ........................
772784
773785 0.6694
774786
775787 Sonoma ........................
776788
777789 1.1486
778790
779791 Stanislaus ........................
780792
781793 1.4701
782794
783795 Sutter/Yuba ........................
784796
785797 0.6294
786798
787799 Tehama ........................
788800
789801 0.2384
790802
791803 Trinity ........................
792804
793805 0.0826
794806
795807 Tulare ........................
796808
797809 1.4704
798810
799811 Tuolumne ........................
800812
801813 0.1666
802814
803815 Ventura ........................
804816
805817 1.9311
806818
807819 Yolo ........................
808820
809821 0.5443
810822
811823 Berkeley ........................
812824
813825 0.2688
814826
815827 Tri-City ........................
816828
817829 0.2347
818830
819831 (b) The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of the local health and welfare trust fund of each city, county, and city and county for the 199495 fiscal year general growth allocations according to subdivisions (c) and (d). For the 199596 fiscal year and annually until the end of the 201213 fiscal year, the Department of Finance shall prepare the schedule of allocations of growth based upon the recalculation of the resource base as provided by subdivision (c).
820832
821833 (c) For the Mental Health Account, the Department of Finance shall do all of the following:
822834
823835 (1) Use the following sources as reported by the State Department of Health Care Services:
824836
825837 (A) The final December 1992 distribution of resources associated with Institutes for Mental Disease.
826838
827839 (B) The 199091 fiscal year state hospitals and community mental health allocations.
828840
829841 (C) Allocations for services provided for under Chapter 1294 of the Statutes of 1989.
830842
831843 (2) Expand the resource base with the following nonrealigned funding sources as allocated among the counties:
832844
833845 (A) Tobacco surtax allocations made under Chapter 1331 of the Statutes of 1989 and Chapter 51 of the Statutes of 1990.
834846
835847 (B) For the 199495 allocation year only, Chapter 1323 of the Statutes of 1990.
836848
837849 (C) 199394 fiscal year federal homeless block grant allocation.
838850
839851 (D) 199394 fiscal year Mental Health Special Education allocations.
840852
841853 (E) 199394 fiscal year allocations for the system of care for children, in accordance with Chapter 1229 of the Statutes of 1992.
842854
843855 (F) 199394 fiscal year federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration block grant allocations pursuant to Subchapter 1 (commencing with Section 10801) of Chapter 114 of Title 42 of the United States Code.
844856
845857 (d) For the Health Account, the Department of Finance shall use the historical resource base of state funds as allocated among the counties, cities, and city and county as reported by the former State Department of Health Services in a September 17, 1991, report of Indigent and Community Health Resources.
846858
847859 (e) The Department of Finance shall use these adjusted resource bases for the Health Account and Mental Health Account to calculate what the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount allocations would have been, and together with 199495 fiscal year Base Restoration Subaccount allocations, CMSP subaccount allocations, equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 17606.05, as that subparagraph read on January 1, 2015, and special equity allocations to the Health Account and Mental Health Account as adjusted by subdivision (e) of Section 17606.15 reconstruct the 199495 fiscal year General Growth Subaccount resource base for the 199596 allocation year for each county, city, and city and county. Notwithstanding any other law, the actual 199495 general growth allocations shall not become part of the realignment base allocations to each county, city, and city and county. The total amounts distributed by the Controller for general growth for the 199495 allocation year shall be reallocated among the counties, cities, and city and county in the 199596 allocation year according to this paragraph, and shall be included in the general growth resource base for the 199697 allocation year and each fiscal year thereafter. For the 199697 allocation year and fiscal years thereafter, the Department of Finance shall update the base with actual growth allocations to the Health Account, Mental Health Account, and Social Services Account of each county, city, and city and county local health and welfare trust fund in the prior year, and adjust for actual changes in nonrealigned funds specified in subdivision (c) in the year prior to the allocation year.
848860
849861 (f) For the 201314 fiscal year and every fiscal year thereafter, the Controller shall do all of the following:
850862
851863 (1) Allocate to the Mental Health Account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. The Department of Finance shall recalculate the resource base used in determining the General Growth Subaccount allocations to the Mental Health Account in accordance with subdivision (c) and allocate based on that recalculation.
852864
853865 (2) Allocate 18.4545 percent of the total General Growth Subaccount to the health account of each county, city, or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance in accordance with subdivision (d).
854866
855867 (3) Allocate the remainder of the funds in the General Growth Subaccount to the family support account of each county or city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance. These funds shall be expended in accordance with Section 17601.50.
856868
857869 (g) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (f), for the 201617 fiscal year, the Controller shall allocate funds in the following amounts from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account of each county and city and county based on a schedule provided by the Department of Finance developed in consultation with the California State Association of Counties:
858870
859871 (A) The funding that would have been allocated to the Mental Health Account of each county or city and county pursuant to the calculations specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (f).
860872
861873 (B) The funding that would have been allocated to the health account of each county or city and county pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (f), except for the amount of funds to be redirected pursuant to Section 17600.50, Article 12 (commencing with Section 17612.1), and Article 13 (commencing with 17613.1).
862874
863875 (2) The allocation of funds from the General Growth Subaccount of the Sales Tax Account to the social services account as described in paragraph (1) shall not apply to the amount of funds available for allocation to the Mental Health Accounts and health accounts of the Cities of Berkeley, Pasadena, Tri-City, and Long Beach.
864876
865877 (h) The amounts deposited and remaining unexpended and unreserved in the General Growth Subaccount shall be allocated on an annual basis by the Controller, as described in subdivisions (f) and (g), within 45 days of receiving the General Growth Subaccount allocation schedule from the Department of Finance.
866878
867879 SEC. 8. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, from the General Fund moneys appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in Item 5180-101-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2017, the department shall allocate five million four hundred thousand dollars ($5,400,000), in a single payment by the Controller, to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017.(b) As a condition of receiving these funds, the City of San Jose shall provide quarterly reports to the department regarding the number of families served and the types of services they received, until all funds have been expended.
868880
869881 SEC. 8. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, from the General Fund moneys appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in Item 5180-101-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2017, the department shall allocate five million four hundred thousand dollars ($5,400,000), in a single payment by the Controller, to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017.(b) As a condition of receiving these funds, the City of San Jose shall provide quarterly reports to the department regarding the number of families served and the types of services they received, until all funds have been expended.
870882
871883 SEC. 8. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, from the General Fund moneys appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in Item 5180-101-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2017, the department shall allocate five million four hundred thousand dollars ($5,400,000), in a single payment by the Controller, to the City of San Jose for purposes of assisting homeless and low-income individuals displaced by the Coyote Creek flooding that occurred in February 2017.
872884
873885 ### SEC. 8.
874886
875887 (b) As a condition of receiving these funds, the City of San Jose shall provide quarterly reports to the department regarding the number of families served and the types of services they received, until all funds have been expended.
876888
877889 SEC. 9. This act is a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill within the meaning of subdivision (e) of Section 12 of Article IV of the California Constitution, has been identified as related to the budget in the Budget Bill, and shall take effect immediately.
878890
879891 SEC. 9. This act is a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill within the meaning of subdivision (e) of Section 12 of Article IV of the California Constitution, has been identified as related to the budget in the Budget Bill, and shall take effect immediately.
880892
881893 SEC. 9. This act is a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill within the meaning of subdivision (e) of Section 12 of Article IV of the California Constitution, has been identified as related to the budget in the Budget Bill, and shall take effect immediately.
882894
883895 ### SEC. 9.