Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05781 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 08/28/2023

                    O F F I C E O F L E G I S L A T I V E R E S E A R C H 
P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 
  	Page 1 
PA 23-48—HB 5781 
Aging Committee 
 
AN ACT CONCERNING NO TICE OF A PROPOSED I NVOLUNTARY 
TRANSFER OR DISCHARG E OF A NURSING FACIL ITY RESIDENT, 
FAMILY COUNCILS IN MANAGED RESIDENTIAL COMMUNITIES, 
COORDINATION OF DEME NTIA SERVICES, NURSI NG HOME 
TRANSPARENCY AND HOM EMAKER-COMPANION AGE NCIES 
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 
 
§§ 1-3 — INVOLUNTARY TRANSFER OR DISCHARG E NOTIFICATION 
Requires nursing homes to notify the long-term care ombudsman about an involuntary transfer or 
discharge on the same day the resident is notified; failure to do so invalidates the transfer 
§§ 4 & 5 — MANAGED RESIDENTIAL COMMUNITIES FAMILY 
COUNCILS 
Requires managed residential communities offering assisted living services to encourage and help 
establish family councils by January 1, 2024 
§ 6 — DEMENTIA SERVICES COORDINATOR 
Establishes a dementia services coordinator position within ADS 
§ 7 — NURSING HOME FACILITY COST REPORTING REQUIREMENTS 
Requires (1) nursing homes to submit annual narrative cost expenditures summaries to DSS and 
(2) the DSS commissioner to create a form for these submissions; subjects violators to a fine of up 
to $10,000 
§ 8 — NURSING HOME PRIVATE EQUITY OWNERS HIP 
Requires nursing home licensure applicants to disclose any private equity company or real estate 
investment trust that owns any part of the home and give DPH the owner’s audited and certified 
financial statements 
§ 9 — RELATED PARTY INCOME REPORTING 
Broadens the related party income reporting requirement for chronic and convalescent nursing 
homes that receive Medicaid funding by extending it to nonprofit homes and lowering the income 
threshold for related parties from $50,000 to $30,000 
§ 10 — MEDICAID RATE SETTING GUIDEBOOK FOR NURSING HO MES 
Requires the DSS commissioner to develop and post online a guidebook that explains in plain 
language the Medicaid nursing home rate setting process 
§ 11 — TRANSITION PLAN FOR HOMEMAKER-COMPANION AGEN CY 
OVERSIGHT  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 	Page 2 of 8  
Requires OPM to develop a plan and proposed timeline to transfer homemaker-companion agency 
oversight from DCP to DPH; requires the plan to include recommendations on training standards 
and appropriate use of the term “care” to describe homemaker-companion services 
§ 12 — HOMEMAKER -COMPANION AGENCY REGISTRATION 
REVOCATION 
Adds failure to give a consumer written notice that the agency provides nonmedical care to a list 
of violations for which DCP may revoke, suspend, or refuse to issue or renew a homemaker-
companion agency’s registration; requires DCP to revoke a homemaker-companion agency’s 
registration if the agency is found to have violated any revokable provisions three times in a 
calendar year 
§ 13 — HOMEMAKER -COMPANION AGENCY CONTRA CTS & SERVICE 
PLANS 
Requires homemaker-companion agencies to develop a service plan or contract in consultation 
with the consumer; the service plan or contract must include (1) a person-centered plan of care, 
(2) the agency’s anticipated oversight of the employee assigned to the consumer, and (3) how 
often the person who oversees the agency’s employee and the consumer will meet 
§§ 13 & 14 — HOMEMAKER-COMPANION AGENCY CONSUMER 
COMPLAINTS 
Requires DCP to post on its website a guide detailing the process for consumers to file complaints 
against a homemaker-companion agency; requires agencies to give consumers a printed copy of 
this guide with their contract or service plan 
§§ 15-17 — HOMEMAKER -COMPANION AGENCY AD VERTISING AND 
SCOPE OF SERVICES 
Requires every homemaker-companion agency to create a brochure and maintain a website 
detailing the services it provides; allows a homemaker-companion agency to (1) use the word 
“care” in its business name and advertising and (2) advertise having employees trained to 
provide services to people with memory difficulties, if certain requirements are met; requires a 
homemaker-companion agency to give consumers written notice that the agency provides 
nonmedical care and obtain the consumer’s signature on this notice before providing services 
 
 
SUMMARY: This act sets certain nursing home transparency and reporting 
requirements, expands supports for people with dementia, and implements the 
recommendations of the Homemaker-Companion Agency Task Force, as described 
in the section-by-section analysis below. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage, unless noted otherwise below. 
 
§§ 1-3 — INVOLUNTARY TRANSFER OR DISCHARGE NOTIFICATION 
 
Requires nursing homes to notify the long-term care ombudsman about an involuntary transfer or 
discharge on the same day the resident is notified; failure to do so invalidates the transfer 
 
The act requires nursing homes to notify the long-term care ombudsman about 
a proposed involuntary transfer or discharge of a resident on the same day the 
nursing home notifies the resident. The ombudsman must prescribe how to provide  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 	Page 3 of 8  
the notification.  
By law, nursing homes must give residents and their representatives written 
notification about a proposed discharge or transfer at least 30 days in advance, 
including information on the appeals process and the ombudsman’s contact 
information. Under the act, nursing homes must also notify the ombudsman on the 
same date if the transfer or discharge is involuntary. Existing law grants the 
ombudsman access to a long-term care resident’s medical and social records. The 
act specifies that this includes access to discharge plans. 
The act also requires the facility to affirm to the resident being transferred or 
discharged, and his or her representative, that notice was given to the ombudsman. 
If a nursing home fails to notify the ombudsman, the involuntary transfer or 
discharge is invalidated.  
Lastly, the act makes technical and conforming changes. 
 
Background — Involuntary Transfers and Discharges 
 
Under federal and state law, nursing homes cannot transfer or discharge a 
resident unless the (1) facility cannot provide the resident adequate care; (2) 
resident’s health has improved to the point that he or she no longer needs the home’s 
services; (3) health or safety of people in the facility are endangered; (4) resident 
failed to pay for care after reasonable notice; or (5) facility closes (42 C.F.R. § 
483.15(c), CGS § 19a-535(b)). 
 
§§ 4 & 5 — MANAGED RESIDENTIAL COMMUNITIES FAMILY COUNCILS  
 
Requires managed residential communities offering assisted living services to encourage and help 
establish family councils by January 1, 2024 
 
The act requires managed residential communities (MRCs) that offer assisted 
living services to encourage and help establish family councils by January 1, 2024. 
Under the act, family councils are self-determined, independent groups of family 
members and friends who (1) advocate for an MRC’s residents’ needs and interests 
and (2) facilitate open communication between its administration, residents, and 
residents’ family and friends. A resident’s family member or friend cannot 
participate in a council without the resident’s consent unless the resident lives in a 
dementia special care unit.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2023 
 
§ 6 — DEMENTIA SERVICES COORDINATOR 
 
Establishes a dementia services coordinator position within ADS 
 
The act establishes a dementia services coordinator within the Department of 
Aging and Disability Services (ADS). The coordinator’s duties include: 
1. coordinating dementia services across state agencies,  
2. assessing and analyzing dementia-related data collected by the state,  
3. evaluating state-funded dementia services,   O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 	Page 4 of 8  
4. identifying and supporting the development of dementia-specific training 
programs, and 
5. other relevant duties the ADS commissioner determines.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2023 
 
§ 7 — NURSING HOME FACILITY COST REPORTING REQUIREMENTS 
 
Requires (1) nursing homes to submit annual narrative cost expenditures summaries to DSS and 
(2) the DSS commissioner to create a form for these submissions; subjects violators to a fine of up 
to $10,000 
 
Beginning with the current cost reporting year (ending September 30, 2023), 
the act requires nursing homes to annually submit narrative summaries of cost 
expenditures to the Department of Social Services (DSS) commissioner, alongside 
their statutorily required cost reports. The summaries must include (1) profit and 
loss statements for the preceding three cost report years; (2) total revenue, 
expenditures, assets, and liabilities; (3) short- and long-term debt; and (4) cash 
flows from investing, operating, and financing activities.  
The act requires the DSS commissioner to develop and post on the agency’s 
website a uniform narrative summary form for nursing homes to use to comply. 
Starting by January 1, 2024, the commissioner must annually post these cost reports 
and summaries for each nursing home in a conspicuous place on the agency’s 
website. 
Under the act, nursing homes that fail to comply with this reporting requirement 
must be fined up to $10,000. Before imposing a penalty, the DSS commissioner 
must notify the nursing home about the violation and allow it to request a review. 
The home must request a review within 15 days after receiving the notice, and DSS 
cannot impose the penalty while the review is pending. 
The penalty may be imposed even if the nursing home’s ownership changes 
after the violation takes place, as long as DSS issued the notice about the violation 
before the change in ownership became effective and the notice’s record is readily 
available in a central registry maintained by DSS. Payments made for these 
penalties must be deposited in the General Fund and credited to the Medicaid 
account. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2023 
 
§ 8 — NURSING HOME PRIVATE EQUITY OWNERSHIP 
 
Requires nursing home licensure applicants to disclose any private equity company or real estate 
investment trust that owns any part of the home and give DPH the owner’s audited and certified 
financial statements 
 
The act expands the information that nursing home licensure applicants must 
give the Department of Public Health (DPH) to include (1) information on any 
private equity company or real estate investment trust (REIT) that owns any part of 
the home and (2) the owner’s audited and certified financial statements. If a private 
equity company or REIT owns any part of the home, then it must give DPH the  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 	Page 5 of 8  
same information the federal government requires when providers apply for and 
maintain enrollment in Medicare. The audited and certified financial statements 
must include a balance sheet from the end of the most recent fiscal year and income 
statements from the most recent fiscal year (or an applicable shorter period if the 
owner has not existed for a full fiscal year). Existing law, unchanged by the act, 
allows the DPH commissioner to require an applicant to submit additional 
information, including these statements. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2023 
 
§ 9 — RELATED PARTY INCOME REPORTING 
 
Broadens the related party income reporting requirement for chronic and convalescent nursing 
homes that receive Medicaid funding by extending it to nonprofit homes and lowering the income 
threshold for related parties from $50,000 to $30,000 
 
The act broadens certain reporting requirements for chronic and convalescent 
nursing homes that receive Medicaid funding. Prior law required these types of for-
profit homes to include in their annual reports a profit and loss statement from each 
related party (i.e., a company related to the home through family association, 
common ownership, control, or business association with the home’s owners or 
operators) that received at least $50,000 of income from the home per year. The act 
extends the requirement to all of these types of nursing homes, not just for-profits, 
and lowers the requirement’s income threshold from $50,000 to $30,000.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2023 
 
§ 10 — MEDICAID RATE SETTING GUIDEBOOK FOR NURSING HOMES 
 
Requires the DSS commissioner to develop and post online a guidebook that explains in plain 
language the Medicaid nursing home rate setting process 
 
The act requires the DSS commissioner to develop a guidebook that at least 
includes a glossary and a plain language (1) description of the Medicaid nursing 
home rate setting process and (2) explanation of terms related to it. The 
commissioner must post the guidebook in a conspicuous place on the agency’s 
website by July 1, 2024, and may update it as needed. 
 
§ 11 — TRANSITION PLAN FOR HOMEMAKER -COMPANION AGENCY 
OVERSIGHT 
 
Requires OPM to develop a plan and proposed timeline to transfer homemaker-companion agency 
oversight from DCP to DPH; requires the plan to include recommendations on training standards 
and appropriate use of the term “care” to describe homemaker-companion services 
 
The act requires the Office of Policy and Management (OPM) secretary to 
develop a plan and proposed timeline to transfer homemaker-companion agency 
registration and oversight responsibilities from the Department of Consumer 
Protection (DCP) to DPH. The plan must also include recommendations on training 
standards that (1) exemplify best practices for providing homemaker-companion  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 	Page 6 of 8  
services; (2) include instruction and specialized training benchmarks for caring for 
clients with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, and related conditions; and (3) ensure 
a high level of care for homemaker-companion agency clients. It may also evaluate 
and make recommendations on the appropriate use of the term “care” to describe 
services homemaker-companion agencies provide, and any limitations on using the 
term to ensure consumer clarity.  
The secretary must prepare the plan in consultation with the DCP and DPH 
commissioners and report on it to the Aging, General Law, and Public Health 
committees by August 1, 2024.  
 
§ 12 — HOMEMAKER -COMPANION AGENCY REGISTRATIO N 
REVOCATION 
 
Adds failure to give a consumer written notice that the agency provides nonmedical care to a list 
of violations for which DCP may revoke, suspend, or refuse to issue or renew a homemaker-
companion agency’s registration; requires DCP to revoke a homemaker-companion agency’s 
registration if the agency is found to have violated any revokable provisions three times in a 
calendar year  
 
Existing law generally allows the DCP commissioner to revoke, suspend, or 
refuse to issue or renew a homemaker-companion agency’s registration for (1) 
conduct that misleads or defrauds the public or commissioner, (2) engaging in 
misleading advertising, (3) failing to give a consumer a notice of legal liabilities 
under certain circumstances, or (4) failing to complete background checks on 
prospective employees and maintain the materials from them. The act also allows 
the commissioner to do this if an agency fails to give a consumer written notice, or 
obtain and maintain the consumer’s signed copy of this notice, that the agency 
provides nonmedical care, as required by the act (see § 17).  
In addition, the act requires the DCP commissioner to revoke a homemaker-
companion agency’s registration if the agency is found, through an administrative 
hearing, to have violated any of these provisions three times in a calendar year.  
 
§ 13 — HOMEMAKER -COMPANION AGENCY CONTRA CTS & SERVICE 
PLANS 
 
Requires homemaker-companion agencies to develop a service plan or contract in consultation 
with the consumer; the service plan or contract must include (1) a person-centered plan of care, 
(2) the agency’s anticipated oversight of the employee assigned to the consumer, and (3) how 
often the person who oversees the agency’s employee and the consumer will meet 
 
Existing law requires homemaker-companion agencies to give consumers a 
written contract or service plan detailing the anticipated scope, type, frequency, 
duration, and cost of services provided by the agency within seven days of 
beginning services.  
The act additionally requires the agencies to develop this plan or contract in 
consultation with the consumer and expands its required content to include: 
1. a person-centered plan of care and services;  
2. the anticipated scope, type, and frequency of oversight by the agency over  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 	Page 7 of 8  
the employee assigned to the consumer; and  
3. how often the person who oversees the agency’s employee and the 
consumer will meet.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2023 
 
§§ 13 & 14 — HOMEMAKER-COMPANION AGENCY CONSUMER 
COMPLAINTS 
 
Requires DCP to post on its website a guide detailing the process for consumers to file complaints 
against a homemaker-companion agency; requires agencies to give consumers a printed copy of 
this guide with their contract or service plan 
 
The act requires the DCP commissioner, by October 1, 2023, to post on DCP’s 
website a guide detailing the process for homemaker-companion agency consumers 
to file complaints against an agency. It requires the agencies to also give consumers 
a printed copy of this guide when they give them the written contract or service 
plan as described above. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage, except the requirement to give consumers a 
printed copy of the guide is effective October 1, 2023. 
 
§§ 15-17 — HOMEMAKER -COMPANION AGENCY AD VERTISING AND 
SCOPE OF SERVICES 
 
Requires every homemaker-companion agency to create a brochure and maintain a website 
detailing the services it provides; allows a homemaker-companion agency to (1) use the word 
“care” in its business name and advertising and (2) advertise having employees trained to 
provide services to people with memory difficulties, if certain requirements are met; requires a 
homemaker-companion agency to give consumers written notice that the agency provides 
nonmedical care and obtain the consumer’s signature on this notice before providing services 
 
Brochure and Website (§ 15) 
 
The act requires every homemaker-companion agency, by January 1, 2024, to 
(1) create a printed consumer brochure and maintain a website detailing the services 
it provides and (2) give the brochure or website address when a consumer requests 
it. 
 
Advertising (§ 16) 
 
Under the act, starting October 1, 2023, a homemaker-companion agency may 
use the term “care” in its business name and advertising as long as its advertising 
meets certain conditions. Specifically, it must (1) prominently display in plain font 
and contrasting colors at the top of the ad, the clear and conspicuous words: 
“(agency’s name) solely provides nonmedical care,” or audibly convey these words 
in an audio advertisement at the same speed as the rest of the audio, and (2) not use 
any words, such as those related to medical or health care licensure or services, to 
describe services beyond the scope of those a homemaker-companion agency is 
authorized to provide. The requirement to display the disclaimer at the top of the  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 	Page 8 of 8  
ad applies to each page of the agency’s web site, social media posts, print media, 
and audio-visual advertisements. A violation of this provision constitutes untruthful 
or misleading advertising.  
The act allows a homemaker-companion agency to use in its advertising any 
words deemed appropriate by the DCP commissioner to accurately describe having 
employees trained to provide services to people with memory difficulties, as long 
as the agency details the type and number of hours of training these employees 
received. A violation of this provision also constitutes untruthful or misleading 
advertising. 
 
Notice (§ 17) 
 
The act requires a homemaker-companion agency, before providing services, 
to (1) give consumers written notice that the agency provides nonmedical care and 
(2) obtain the consumer’s signature on this notice. The agency must keep the signed 
notice until the consumer no longer receives services from the agency and make a 
copy of the signed notice available to the DCP commissioner upon request.