81R18855 YDB-F By: Menendez, Naishtat H.B. No. 216 Substitute the following for H.B. No. 216: By: Rose C.S.H.B. No. 216 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT relating to the regulation of boarding home facilities for persons with disabilities or elderly persons and assisted living facilities. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: SECTION 1. Subtitle B, Title 4, Health and Safety Code, is amended by adding Chapter 254 to read as follows: CHAPTER 254. BOARDING HOME FACILITIES Sec. 254.001. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter: (1) "Assistance with self-administering medication" means assisting a resident by reminding the resident to take medication, opening and removing medications from a container, or reminding the resident when a prescription medication needs to be refilled. (2) "Boarding home facility" means an establishment that: (A) furnishes, in one or more buildings, lodging to three or more persons with disabilities or elderly persons who are unrelated to the owner of the establishment by blood or marriage; and (B) provides community meals, light housework, meal preparation, transportation, grocery shopping, money management, laundry services, or assistance with self-administration of medication but does not provide personal care services as defined by Section 247.002 to those persons. (3) "Commission" means the Health and Human Services Commission. (4) "Elderly person" has the meaning assigned by Section 48.002, Human Resources Code. (5) "Executive commissioner" means the executive commissioner of the Health and Human Services Commission. (6) "Person with a disability" means a disabled person as defined by Section 48.002, Human Resources Code. (7) "Resident" means a person who is residing in a boarding home facility. Sec. 254.002. EXEMPTIONS. This chapter does not apply to: (1) a person that is required to be licensed under Chapter 142, 242, 246, 247, or 252; (2) a person that is exempt from licensing under Section 142.003(a)(19), 242.003(3), or 247.004(4); (3) a hotel as defined by Section 156.001, Tax Code; (4) a retirement community; (5) a monastery or convent; (6) a child-care facility as defined by Section 42.002, Human Resources Code; (7) a family violence shelter center as defined by Section 51.002, Human Resources Code; or (8) a sorority or fraternity house or other dormitory associated with an institution of higher education. Sec. 254.003. MODEL STANDARDS. The executive commissioner shall develop and publish in the Texas Register model standards for the operation of a boarding home facility relating to: (1) the construction or remodeling of a boarding home facility, including plumbing, heating, lighting, ventilation, and other housing conditions, to ensure the residents' health, safety, comfort, and protection from fire hazard; (2) sanitary and related conditions in a boarding home facility and its surroundings, including insect and rodent control, water supply, sewage disposal, food handling, and general hygiene to ensure the residents' health, safety, and comfort; (3) the reporting and investigation of injuries, incidents, and unusual accidents and the establishment of other policies and procedures necessary to ensure resident health and safety; (4) assistance with self-administering medication; (5) requirements for in-service education of the facility's staff; (6) criminal history record checks; and (7) assessment and periodic monitoring to ensure that a resident: (A) does not require the boarding home facility to provide personal care, nursing, or other services not listed in Section 254.001(2); and (B) is capable of self-administering medication or is aware of what the resident's medications look like and knows when the medications should be taken but requires assistance with self-administering medication. Sec. 254.004. LOCAL REGULATION. A county or municipality may require a person to obtain a permit from the county or municipality to operate a boarding home facility within the county's or municipality's jurisdiction. A county or municipality may adopt the standards developed by the executive commissioner under Section 254.003 and require a boarding home facility that holds a permit issued by the county or municipality to comply with the adopted standards. Sec. 254.005. PERMIT PROCEDURES; FEES; FINES. (a) A county or municipality that requires a person to obtain a boarding home facility permit as authorized by Section 254.004 may establish procedures for the submission of a boarding home facility permit application and for the issuance, denial, renewal, suspension, and revocation of the permit. (b) A county or municipality that requires a person to obtain a boarding home facility permit as authorized under Section 254.004 may set reasonable fees for issuance of the permit, renewal of the permit, and inspections and may impose fines for noncompliance with the county or municipal boarding home facility regulations. The fees collected and fines imposed by the county or municipality must be used to administer the county or municipal permitting program, as a source of local matching funds for state grants, or for other purposes directly related to providing boarding home facility or other assisted living services to elderly persons and persons with disabilities. (c) A person required to obtain a boarding home facility permit from a county or municipality as authorized under Section 254.004 shall pay any fees required or fines imposed by the county or municipality. Sec. 254.006. POSTING. A boarding home facility that holds a permit issued by a county or municipality shall prominently and conspicuously post for display in a public area of the boarding home facility that is readily available to residents, the operator, employees, and visitors: (1) the permit issued by a county or municipality; (2) a sign prescribed by the county or municipality that issued the permit that specifies how complaints may be registered with the county or municipality; (3) a notice in a form prescribed by the county or municipality that issued the permit stating that inspection and related reports are available at the boarding home facility for public inspection and providing a telephone number that may be used to obtain information concerning the boarding home facility; (4) a concise summary of the most recent inspection report relating to the boarding home facility; and (5) a notice in a form prescribed by the county or municipality that issued the permit that lists the name, location, and contact information for: (A) the closest local public health services agency in the proximity of the boarding home facility; and (B) a local organization or entity that represents, advocates, or serves elderly persons or persons with disabilities, including any related toll-free contact information for reporting emergencies to the organization or entity. Sec. 254.007. INSPECTIONS. (a) A county or municipality may conduct any inspection, survey, or investigation that it considers necessary and may enter the premises of a boarding home facility at reasonable times to make an inspection, survey, or investigation. (b) A county or municipality is entitled to access to books, records, and other documents maintained by or on behalf of a boarding home facility to the extent necessary to enforce the standards adopted by the county or municipality. Sec. 254.008. INTERLOCAL COOPERATION. Two or more counties or municipalities may cooperate and contract with each other for the purpose of inspecting and permitting boarding home facilities. Sec. 254.009. REPORTING OF ABUSE, NEGLECT, OR EXPLOITATION. (a) A person, including an owner, operator, or employee of a boarding home facility that holds a permit issued by a county or municipality, who has cause to believe that a resident who is an elderly person or a person with a disability has been abused, neglected, or exploited or may be adversely affected by abuse, neglect, or exploitation caused by another person shall report the abuse, neglect, or exploitation to the Department of Family and Protective Services for investigation by that agency. (b) Each boarding home facility that holds a permit issued by a county or municipality shall require each employee of the boarding home facility, as a condition of employment with the boarding home facility, to sign a statement that the employee acknowledges that the employee may be criminally liable under Section 48.052, Human Resources Code, for failure to report abuse, neglect, or exploitation. Sec. 254.010. COMPETITIVE GRANT PROGRAM. (a) The commission shall establish a competitive grant program that promotes innovation and effectiveness in the local regulation of boarding home facilities. (b) A grant awarded by the commission under this section shall be used to support creative and innovative approaches to local regulation, including: (1) public-private initiatives; (2) cooperative arrangements among local agencies and governmental entities; (3) use of mental health or social services personnel; (4) public awareness and education campaigns; and (5) other activities that improve local regulation and quality of life of residents. (c) The commission shall request proposals for the award of a grant under the program. The commission shall evaluate each proposal and award a grant based on the proposal's quantifiable effectiveness and potentially positive impact on the regulation of boarding home facilities. (d) The commission may require a county or municipality to spend local matching funds as a condition for the award of a grant under this section. The commission may not collect any additional money from the county or municipality that is derived from fees collected or fines imposed for the administration of a boarding home facility permitting program authorized under this chapter. (e) The commission may award a grant under the program only to a county, a municipality, or two or more counties or municipalities that have entered into an interlocal cooperation agreement. A grant recipient may use the grant money received under this section only to pay for activities directly related to the purpose of the grant program as described by Subsection (b). (f) The commission shall establish procedures to administer the grant program, including a procedure for the submission of a proposal and a procedure to be used by the commission to evaluate a proposal. (g) The commission shall enter into a contract that includes performance requirements with each grant recipient. The commission shall monitor and enforce the terms of the contract. The contract must authorize the commission to recoup grant money from a grant recipient for failure of the grant recipient to comply with the terms of the contract. (h) The commission shall post on its Internet website a summary of each grant awarded under this section. SECTION 2. Sections 247.002(1), (2), (4), (5), and (7), Health and Safety Code, are amended to read as follows: (1) "Assisted living facility" means an establishment that: (A) furnishes, in one or more facilities, food and shelter to four or more persons who are unrelated to the proprietor of the establishment; [and] (B) provides: (i) personal care services; or (ii) administration of medication by a person licensed in this state to administer the medication; and (C) may provide assistance with or supervision of the administration of medication. (2) "Board" means the executive commissioner of the Health and [Texas Board of] Human Services Commission. (4) "Department" means the [Texas] Department of Aging and Disability [Human] Services. (5) "Personal care services" means: (A) assistance with feeding [meals], dressing, moving [movement], bathing, or other personal needs or maintenance; or (B) [the administration of medication by a person licensed to administer medication or the assistance with or supervision of medication; or [(C)] general supervision or oversight of the physical and mental well-being of a person who needs assistance to maintain a private and independent residence in an assisted living facility or who needs assistance to manage the person's personal life, regardless of whether a guardian has been appointed for the person. (7) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of the department [human services]. SECTION 3. Section 247.004, Health and Safety Code, is amended to read as follows: Sec. 247.004. EXEMPTIONS. This chapter does not apply to: (1) a boarding home facility as defined by Section 254.001 [that has rooms for rent and that may offer community meals, light housework, meal preparation, transportation, grocery shopping, money management, or laundry services but that does not provide personal care services]; (2) an establishment conducted by or for the adherents of the Church of Christ, Scientist, for the purpose of providing facilities for the care or treatment of the sick who depend exclusively on prayer or spiritual means for healing without the use of any drug or material remedy if the establishment complies with local safety, sanitary, and quarantine ordinances and regulations; (3) a facility conducted by or for the adherents of a qualified religious society classified as a tax-exempt organization under an Internal Revenue Service group exemption ruling for the purpose of providing personal care services without charge solely for the society's professed members or ministers in retirement, if the facility complies with local safety, sanitation, and quarantine ordinances and regulations; or (4) a facility that provides personal care services only to persons enrolled in a program that is funded in whole or in part by the department [Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation] and that is monitored by the department [Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation] or its designated local mental retardation authority in accordance with standards set by the department [Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation]. SECTION 4. Section 247.030, Health and Safety Code, is repealed. SECTION 5. It is the intent of the legislature that the passage by the 81st Legislature, Regular Session, 2009, of another bill that amends Subtitle B, Title 4, Health and Safety Code, and Chapter 247, Health and Safety Code, and the amendments made by this Act shall be harmonized, if possible, as provided by Section 311.025(b), Government Code, so that effect may be given to each. If the amendments made by this Act to Subtitle B, Title 4, Health and Safety Code, and Chapter 247, Health and Safety Code, and the amendments made to Subtitle B, Title 4, Health and Safety Code, and Chapter 247, Health and Safety Code, by any other bill are irreconcilable, it is the intent of the legislature that this Act prevail, regardless of the relative dates of enactment of this Act and the other bill or bills, but only to the extent that differences are irreconcilable. SECTION 6. Not later than September 1, 2010, the executive commissioner of the Health and Human Services Commission shall adopt the model standards required by Section 254.003, Health and Safety Code, as added by this Act. SECTION 7. (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b) of this section, this Act takes effect September 1, 2009. (b) Sections 254.004 through 254.008, Health and Safety Code, as added by this Act, and Section 4 of this Act take effect September 1, 2010.