Bill Text: FL S1468 | 2010 | Regular Session | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Home and Community-based Services [WPSC]

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Failed) 2010-04-30 - Died in Senate, companion bill(s) passed, see HB 5303 (Ch. 2010-157) [S1468 Detail]

Download: Florida-2010-S1468-Comm_Sub.html
 
Florida Senate - 2010                      CS for CS for SB 1468 
 
By the Policy and Steering Committee on Ways and Means; the 
Committee on Health and Human Services Appropriations; and 
Senator Peaden 
576-03798A-10                                         20101468c2 
1                        A bill to be entitled 
2         An act relating to home and community-based services; 
3         amending s. 393.0661, F.S.; reducing the annual 
4         maximum expenditure to each client assigned by the 
5         Agency for Persons With Disabilities to tier one, tier 
6         two, tier three, and tier four level services; 
7         eliminating behavior assistant services in certain 
8         group homes as a deliverable service to eligible 
9         clients; creating s. 393.0662, F.S.; establishing the 
10         iBudget program for the delivery of home and 
11         community-based services; providing for amendment of 
12         current contracts to implement the iBudget system; 
13         providing for the phasing in of the program; requiring 
14         clients to use certain resources before using funds 
15         from their iBudget; requiring the agency to provide 
16         training for clients and evaluate and adopt rules with 
17         respect to the iBudget system; providing a contingent 
18         effective date. 
19 
20  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 
21 
22         Section 1. Paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (d), and (f) of 
23  subsection (3) of section 393.0661, Florida Statutes, are 
24  amended to read: 
25         393.0661 Home and community-based services delivery system; 
26  comprehensive redesign.—The Legislature finds that the home and 
27  community-based services delivery system for persons with 
28  developmental disabilities and the availability of appropriated 
29  funds are two of the critical elements in making services 
30  available. Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature that 
31  the Agency for Persons with Disabilities shall develop and 
32  implement a comprehensive redesign of the system. 
33         (3) The Agency for Health Care Administration, in 
34  consultation with the agency, shall seek federal approval and 
35  implement a four-tiered waiver system to serve eligible clients 
36  through the developmental disabilities and family and supported 
37  living waivers. The agency shall assign all clients receiving 
38  services through the developmental disabilities waiver to a tier 
39  based on a valid assessment instrument, client characteristics, 
40  and other appropriate assessment methods. 
41         (a) Tier one is limited to clients who have service needs 
42  that cannot be met in tier two, three, or four for intensive 
43  medical or adaptive needs and that are essential for avoiding 
44  institutionalization, or who possess behavioral problems that 
45  are exceptional in intensity, duration, or frequency and present 
46  a substantial risk of harm to themselves or others. Total annual 
47  expenditures under tier one may not exceed $120,000 per client 
48  each year. 
49         (b) Tier two is limited to clients whose service needs 
50  include a licensed residential facility and who are authorized 
51  to receive a moderate level of support for standard residential 
52  habilitation services or a minimal level of support for behavior 
53  focus residential habilitation services, or clients in supported 
54  living who receive more than 6 hours a day of in-home support 
55  services. Total annual expenditures under tier two may not 
56  exceed $49,500 $55,000 per client each year. 
57         (c) Tier three includes, but is not limited to, clients 
58  requiring residential placements, clients in independent or 
59  supported living situations, and clients who live in their 
60  family home. Total annual expenditures under tier three may not 
61  exceed $31,500 $35,000 per client each year. 
62         (d) Tier four is the family and supported living waiver and 
63  includes, but is not limited to, clients in independent or 
64  supported living situations and clients who live in their family 
65  home. Total annual expenditures under tier four may not exceed 
66  $13,313 $14,792 per client each year. 
67         (f) The agency shall seek federal waivers and amend 
68  contracts as necessary to make changes to services defined in 
69  federal waiver programs administered by the agency as follows: 
70         1. Supported living coaching services may not exceed 20 
71  hours per month for persons who also receive in-home support 
72  services. 
73         2. Limited support coordination services is the only type 
74  of support coordination service that may be provided to persons 
75  under the age of 18 who live in the family home. 
76         3. Personal care assistance services are limited to 180 
77  hours per calendar month and may not include rate modifiers. 
78  Additional hours may be authorized for persons who have 
79  intensive physical, medical, or adaptive needs if such hours are 
80  essential for avoiding institutionalization. 
81         4. Residential habilitation services are limited to 8 hours 
82  per day. Additional hours may be authorized for persons who have 
83  intensive medical or adaptive needs and if such hours are 
84  essential for avoiding institutionalization, or for persons who 
85  possess behavioral problems that are exceptional in intensity, 
86  duration, or frequency and present a substantial risk of harming 
87  themselves or others. This restriction shall be in effect until 
88  the four-tiered waiver system is fully implemented. 
89         5. Chore services, nonresidential support services, and 
90  homemaker services are eliminated. The agency shall expand the 
91  definition of in-home support services to allow the service 
92  provider to include activities previously provided in these 
93  eliminated services. 
94         6. Massage therapy, medication review, behavior assistant 
95  services provided in a standard or behavior-focus group home, 
96  and psychological assessment services are eliminated. 
97         7. The agency shall conduct supplemental cost plan reviews 
98  to verify the medical necessity of authorized services for plans 
99  that have increased by more than 8 percent during either of the 
100  2 preceding fiscal years. 
101         8. The agency shall implement a consolidated residential 
102  habilitation rate structure to increase savings to the state 
103  through a more cost-effective payment method and establish 
104  uniform rates for intensive behavioral residential habilitation 
105  services. 
106         9. Pending federal approval, the agency may extend current 
107  support plans for clients receiving services under Medicaid 
108  waivers for 1 year beginning July 1, 2007, or from the date 
109  approved, whichever is later. Clients who have a substantial 
110  change in circumstances which threatens their health and safety 
111  may be reassessed during this year in order to determine the 
112  necessity for a change in their support plan. 
113         10. The agency shall develop a plan to eliminate 
114  redundancies and duplications between in-home support services, 
115  companion services, personal care services, and supported living 
116  coaching by limiting or consolidating such services. 
117         11. The agency shall develop a plan to reduce the intensity 
118  and frequency of supported employment services to clients in 
119  stable employment situations who have a documented history of at 
120  least 3 years’ employment with the same company or in the same 
121  industry. 
122         Section 2. Section 393.0662, Florida Statutes, is created 
123  to read: 
124         393.0662Individual budgets for delivery of home and 
125  community-based services; iBudget system established.—The 
126  Legislature finds that improved financial management of the 
127  existing home and community-based Medicaid waiver program is 
128  necessary to avoid deficits that impede the provision of 
129  services to individuals who are on the waiting list for 
130  enrollment in the program. The Legislature further finds that 
131  clients and their families should have greater flexibility to 
132  choose the services that best allow them to live in their 
133  community within the limits of an established budget. Therefore, 
134  the Legislature intends that the agency, in consultation with 
135  the Agency for Health Care Administration, develop and implement 
136  a comprehensive redesign of the service delivery system using 
137  individual budgets as the basis for allocating the funds 
138  appropriated for the home and community-based services Medicaid 
139  waiver program among eligible enrolled clients. The service 
140  delivery system that uses individual budgets shall be called the 
141  iBudget system. 
142         (1)The agency shall establish an individual budget, 
143  referred to as an iBudget, for each individual served by the 
144  home and community-based services Medicaid waiver program. The 
145  funds appropriated to the agency shall be allocated through the 
146  iBudget system to eligible, Medicaid-enrolled clients. The 
147  iBudget system shall be designed to provide for: enhanced client 
148  choice within a specified service package; appropriate 
149  assessment strategies; an efficient consumer budgeting and 
150  billing process that includes reconciliation and monitoring 
151  components; a redefined role for support coordinators which 
152  avoids potential conflicts of interest; a flexible and 
153  streamlined service review process; and a methodology and 
154  process that ensures the equitable allocation of available funds 
155  to each client based on the client’s level of need, as 
156  determined by the variables in the allocation algorithm. 
157         (a)In developing each client’s iBudget, the agency shall 
158  use an allocation algorithm and methodology. The algorithm shall 
159  use variables that have been determined by the agency to have a 
160  statistically validated relationship to the client’s level of 
161  need for services provided through the home and community-based 
162  services Medicaid waiver program. The algorithm and methodology 
163  may consider individual characteristics, including, but not 
164  limited to, a client’s age and living situation, information 
165  from a formal assessment instrument that the agency determines 
166  is valid and reliable, and information from other assessment 
167  processes. 
168         (b)The allocation methodology shall provide the algorithm 
169  that determines the amount of funds allocated to a client’s 
170  iBudget. The agency may approve an increase in the amount of 
171  funds allocated, as determined by the algorithm, based on the 
172  client having: 
173         1.An extraordinary need that would place the health and 
174  safety of the client, the client’s caregiver, or the public in 
175  immediate, serious jeopardy unless the increase is approved. An 
176  extraordinary need may include, but is not limited to: 
177         a.A documented history of significant, potentially life 
178  threatening behaviors, such as recent attempts at suicide, 
179  arson, nonconsensual sexual behavior, or self-injurious behavior 
180  requiring medical attention; 
181         b.A complex medical condition that requires active 
182  intervention by a licensed nurse on an ongoing basis which 
183  cannot be taught or delegated to a nonlicensed person; 
184         c.A chronic co-morbid condition. As used in this 
185  subparagraph, the term “co-morbid condition” means a medical 
186  condition existing simultaneously but independently along with 
187  another medical condition in a patient; or 
188         d.A need for total physical assistance with activities 
189  such as eating, bathing, toileting, grooming, and personal 
190  hygiene. 
191 
192  However, the presence of an extraordinary need alone does not 
193  warrant an increase in the amount of funds allocated to a 
194  client’s iBudget as determined by the algorithm. 
195         2.A significant need for one-time or temporary support or 
196  services that, if not provided, would place the health and 
197  safety of the client, the client’s caregiver, or the public in 
198  serious jeopardy, unless the increase, as determined by the 
199  total of the algorithm and any adjustments based on 
200  subparagraphs 1. and 3., is approved. A significant need may 
201  include, but is not limited to, the provision of environmental 
202  modifications, durable medical equipment, services to address 
203  the temporary loss of support from a caregiver, or special 
204  services or treatment for a serious temporary condition when the 
205  service or treatment is expected to ameliorate the underlying 
206  condition. As used in this subparagraph, the term “temporary” 
207  means a period of less than 12 continuous months. 
208         3.A significant increase in the need for services after 
209  the beginning of the service plan year which would place the 
210  health and safety of the client, the client’s caregiver, or the 
211  public in serious jeopardy because of substantial changes in the 
212  client’s circumstances, including, but not limited to, permanent 
213  or long-term loss or incapacity of a caregiver, loss of services 
214  authorized under the state Medicaid plan due to a change in age, 
215  or a significant change in medical or functional status which 
216  requires the provision of additional services on a permanent or 
217  long-term basis and which cannot be accommodated within the 
218  client’s current iBudget. As used in this subparagraph, the term 
219  “long-term” means a period of 12 or more continuous months. 
220 
221  The agency shall reserve portions of the appropriation for the 
222  home and community-based services Medicaid waiver program for 
223  adjustments required pursuant to this paragraph and may use the 
224  services of an independent actuary in determining the amount of 
225  the portions to be reserved. 
226         (c)A client’s iBudget shall be the total of the amount 
227  determined by the algorithm and any additional funding provided 
228  pursuant to paragraph (b). A client’s annual expenditures for 
229  home and community-based services Medicaid waiver services may 
230  not exceed the limits of his or her iBudget. The total of a 
231  client’s projected annual iBudget expenditures may not exceed 
232  the agency’s appropriation for waiver services. 
233         (2)The Agency for Health Care Administration, in 
234  consultation with the agency, shall seek federal approval to 
235  amend current waivers, request a new waiver, and amend contracts 
236  as necessary to implement the iBudget system to serve eligible, 
237  enrolled clients through the home and community-based services 
238  Medicaid waiver program and the Consumer-Directed Care Plus 
239  Program. 
240         (3)The agency shall provide for the transition of all 
241  eligible, enrolled clients to the iBudget system. The agency may 
242  gradually phase in the iBudget system. 
243         (a)While the agency phases in the iBudget system, the 
244  agency may continue to serve eligible, enrolled clients under 
245  the four-tiered waiver system established under s. 393.065 while 
246  those clients await the transition to the iBudget system. 
247         (b)The agency shall design the phase-in process to ensure 
248  that a client does not experience more than one-half of any 
249  expected overall increase or decrease to his or her existing 
250  annualized cost plan during the first year that the client is 
251  provided an iBudget due solely to the transition to the iBudget 
252  system. 
253         (4)A client must use all available services authorized 
254  under the state Medicaid plan, school-based services, private 
255  insurance, and other benefits and use any other resources that 
256  are available to the client before using funds from his or her 
257  iBudget to pay for support and services. 
258         (5)Rates for any or all services established under rules 
259  of the Agency for Health Care Administration shall be designated 
260  as the maximum rather than a fixed amount for individuals who 
261  receive an iBudget, except for services specifically identified 
262  in those rules which the agency determines are not appropriate 
263  for negotiation, including, but not limited to, residential 
264  habilitation services. 
265         (6)The agency shall ensure that clients and caregivers 
266  have access to training and education to inform them about the 
267  iBudget system and enhance their ability for self-direction. 
268  Such training shall be offered in a variety of formats and, at a 
269  minimum, shall address the policies and processes of the iBudget 
270  system; the roles and responsibilities of consumers, caregivers, 
271  waiver support coordinators, providers, and the agency; 
272  information available to help the client make decisions 
273  regarding the iBudget system; and examples of support and 
274  resources available in the community. 
275         (7)The agency shall collect data to evaluate the 
276  implementation and outcomes of the iBudget system. 
277         (8)The agency and the Agency for Health Care 
278  Administration may adopt rules specifying the allocation 
279  algorithm and methodology; criteria and processes for clients to 
280  access reserved funds for extraordinary needs, temporarily or 
281  permanently changed needs, and one-time needs; and processes and 
282  requirements for selection and review of services, development 
283  of support and cost plans, and management of the iBudget system 
284  as needed to administer this section. 
285         Section 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2010; 
286  however, the amendments to s. 393.0661(3)(b), (c), (d), and 
287  (f)6., Florida Statutes, made by this act do not take effect if 
288  federal law extends the enhanced Federal Medicaid Assistance 
289  Percentage rate, as provided under the American Reinvestment and 
290  Recovery Act (Pub. L. No. 111-5), from December 31, 2010, 
291  through June 30, 2011. 
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