Bill Text: FL S1520 | 2010 | Regular Session | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Screening [SPSC]

Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (Republican 2-1)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2010-04-28 - Placed on Special Order Calendar; Read 2nd time -SJ 00959; Amendment(s) adopted (886258, 636420, 348828, 343964) -SJ 00959; Substituted CS/HB 7069 -SJ 00960; Laid on Table, companion bill(s) passed, see CS/HB 7069 (Ch. 2010-114), CS/HB 951 (Ch. 2010-62), CS/HB 5401 (Ch. 2010-162) -SJ 00960 [S1520 Detail]

Download: Florida-2010-S1520-Comm_Sub.html
 
Florida Senate - 2010               CS for CS for CS for SB 1520 
 
By the Committees on Health and Human Services Appropriations; 
Criminal Justice; and Children, Families, and Elder Affairs; and 
Senators Storms and Crist 
603-04870-10                                          20101520c3 
1                        A bill to be entitled 
2         An act relating to screening; amending s. 39.001, 
3         F.S.; revising an exemption from screening 
4         requirements for volunteers who assist providers under 
5         contract with the Department of Children and Family 
6         Services; amending s. 39.821, F.S.; revising 
7         background screening requirements for the Guardian Ad 
8         Litem Program; amending s. 215.5586, F.S.; removing 
9         reference to ch. 435, F.S., for background screening 
10         of hurricane mitigation inspectors; amending s. 
11         393.0655, F.S.; revising an exemption from screening 
12         requirements for volunteers; removing a temporary 
13         exemption from screening requirements for direct 
14         service providers awaiting completion of a background 
15         screening; adding additional disqualifying offenses 
16         for the screening of direct service providers for 
17         persons with developmental disabilities; amending s. 
18         394.4572, F.S.; revising background screening 
19         requirements for mental health personnel; amending s. 
20         400.215, F.S.; revising background screening 
21         requirements for nursing home personnel; amending s. 
22         400.506, F.S.; conforming provisions to changes made 
23         by the act; amending s. 400.512, F.S.; revising 
24         background screening requirements for home health 
25         agency personnel, nurse registry personnel, and 
26         companions and homemakers; amending s. 400.6065, F.S.; 
27         revising background screening requirements for hospice 
28         personnel; amending s. 400.801, F.S.; revising 
29         background screening requirements for personnel at 
30         homes for special services; amending s. 400.805, F.S.; 
31         revising background screening requirements for 
32         transitional living facility personnel; creating s. 
33         400.9065, F.S.; providing background screening 
34         requirements for prescribed pediatric extended care 
35         center personnel; amending s. 400.934, F.S.; revising 
36         minimum standards for home medical equipment 
37         providers; amending s. 400.953, F.S.; revising 
38         background screening requirements for home medical 
39         equipment provider personnel; repealing s. 400.955, 
40         F.S., relating to the procedures for screening of home 
41         medical equipment provider personnel; amending s. 
42         400.964, F.S.; revising background screening 
43         requirements for personnel at intermediate care 
44         facilities for developmentally disabled persons; 
45         amending s. 400.980, F.S.; revising background 
46         screening requirements for personnel at health care 
47         services pools; amending s. 400.991, F.S.; revising 
48         background screening requirements for applicants and 
49         personnel at health care clinics; amending s. 408.806, 
50         F.S.; adding a requirement for an affidavit relating 
51         to background screening to the license application 
52         process under the Agency for Health Care 
53         Administration; amending s. 408.808, F.S.; conforming 
54         provisions to changes made by the act; amending s. 
55         408.809, F.S.; revising background screening 
56         requirements under the Agency for Health Care 
57         Administration; requiring electronic submission of 
58         fingerprints; amending s. 402.302, F.S.; revising 
59         exemptions from screening requirements for volunteers 
60         and students; amending s. 409.175, F.S.; revising an 
61         exemption from screening requirements for volunteers; 
62         revising background screening requirements for 
63         employees and volunteers in summer day camps and 
64         summer 24-hour camps; requiring periodic drug testing 
65         for licensed foster parents; requiring payment by the 
66         foster parent; amending s. 409.221, F.S.; revising 
67         background screening requirements for persons who 
68         render consumer-directed care; amending s. 409.907, 
69         F.S.; revising background screening requirements for 
70         Medicaid providers; amending s. 409.912, F.S.; 
71         requiring Medicaid providers to obtain a level 2 
72         background screening for each provider employee in 
73         direct contact with or providing direct services to 
74         Medicaid recipients; amending s. 411.01, F.S.; 
75         requiring school districts to make a list of eligible 
76         substitute teachers available to early learning 
77         coalitions; amending s. 429.14, F.S.; revising 
78         administrative penalty provisions relating to assisted 
79         living facilities; amending s. 429.174, F.S.; revising 
80         background screening requirements for assisted living 
81         facility personnel; amending s. 429.67, F.S.; revising 
82         licensure requirements for adult family-care home 
83         personnel and household members; amending s. 429.69, 
84         F.S.; revising background screening requirements for 
85         adult family-care home personnel; amending s. 429.911, 
86         F.S.; revising administrative penalty provisions 
87         relating to adult day care centers; amending s. 
88         429.919, F.S.; revising background screening 
89         requirements for adult day care center personnel; 
90         creating s. 430.0402, F.S.; providing background 
91         screening requirements for direct service providers 
92         under the Department of Elderly Affairs; amending s. 
93         435.01, F.S.; revising provisions related to the 
94         applicability of ch. 435, F.S., statutory references 
95         to the chapter, and rulemaking; providing construction 
96         with respect to the doctrine of incorporation by 
97         reference; amending s. 435.02, F.S.; revising and 
98         adding definitions; amending s. 435.03, F.S.; revising 
99         level 1 screening standards; adding disqualifying 
100         offenses; amending s. 435.04, F.S.; revising level 2 
101         screening standards; requiring electronic submission 
102         of fingerprints after a certain date; authorizing 
103         agencies to contract for electronic fingerprinting; 
104         adding disqualifying offenses; amending s. 435.05, 
105         F.S.; revising background check requirements for 
106         covered employees and employers; amending s. 435.06, 
107         F.S.; revising provisions relating to exclusion from 
108         employment; providing that an employer may not hire, 
109         select, or otherwise allow an employee contact with 
110         any vulnerable person until the screening process is 
111         completed; requiring removal of an employee arrested 
112         for disqualifying offenses from roles requiring 
113         background screening until the employee’s eligibility 
114         for employment is determined; amending s. 435.07, 
115         F.S.; revising provisions relating to exemptions from 
116         disqualification; amending s. 435.08, F.S.; revising 
117         provisions relating to the payment for processing of 
118         fingerprints and criminal history records checks; 
119         amending s. 464.203, F.S.; conforming provisions to 
120         changes made by the act; amending s. 489.115, F.S.; 
121         removing reference to ch. 435, F.S., for background 
122         screening of construction contractors; amending s. 
123         943.05, F.S.; revising provisions relating to the 
124         Criminal Justice Information Program under the 
125         Department of Law Enforcement; authorizing agencies to 
126         request the retention of certain fingerprints by the 
127         department; providing for rulemaking to require 
128         employers to keep the agencies informed of any change 
129         in the affiliation, employment, or contractual status 
130         of each person whose fingerprints are retained in 
131         certain circumstances; providing departmental duties 
132         upon notification that a federal fingerprint retention 
133         program is in effect; amending s. 943.053, F.S.; 
134         removing obsolete references relating to the 
135         dissemination of criminal justice information; 
136         amending s. 984.01, F.S.; revising an exemption from 
137         screening requirements for volunteers who assist with 
138         programs for children; amending s. 985.644, F.S.; 
139         revising background screening requirements for the 
140         Department of Juvenile Justice; authorizing 
141         rulemaking; amending ss. 381.60225, 409.912, 464.018, 
142         468.3101, 744.309, 744.474, and 985.04, F.S.; 
143         conforming provisions to changes made to ch. 435, 
144         F.S., by the act; repealing s. 409.1758, F.S., 
145         relating to screening of summer camp personnel; 
146         repealing s. 456.039(4)(d), F.S., relating to 
147         information required for licensure of designated 
148         health care professionals; providing for prospective 
149         application of the act; providing an effective date. 
150 
151  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 
152 
153         Section 1. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section 
154  39.001, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
155         39.001 Purposes and intent; personnel standards and 
156  screening.— 
157         (2) DEPARTMENT CONTRACTS.—The department may contract with 
158  the Federal Government, other state departments and agencies, 
159  county and municipal governments and agencies, public and 
160  private agencies, and private individuals and corporations in 
161  carrying out the purposes of, and the responsibilities 
162  established in, this chapter. 
163         (a) When the department contracts with a provider for any 
164  program for children, all personnel, including owners, 
165  operators, employees, and volunteers, in the facility must be of 
166  good moral character. A volunteer who assists on an intermittent 
167  basis for less than 10 40 hours per month need not be screened, 
168  provided a person who meets the screening requirement of this 
169  section is always present and has the volunteer within his or 
170  her line of sight if the volunteer is under direct and constant 
171  supervision by persons who meet the screening requirements. 
172         Section 2. Subsection (1) of section 39.821, Florida 
173  Statutes, is amended to read: 
174         39.821 Qualifications of guardians ad litem.— 
175         (1) Because of the special trust or responsibility placed 
176  in a guardian ad litem, the Guardian Ad Litem Program may use 
177  any private funds collected by the program, or any state funds 
178  so designated, to conduct a security background investigation 
179  before certifying a volunteer to serve. A security background 
180  investigation must include, but need not be limited to, 
181  employment history checks, checks of references, local criminal 
182  records checks through local law enforcement agencies, and 
183  statewide criminal records checks through the Department of Law 
184  Enforcement. Upon request, an employer shall furnish a copy of 
185  the personnel record for the employee or former employee who is 
186  the subject of a security background investigation conducted 
187  under this section. The information contained in the personnel 
188  record may include, but need not be limited to, disciplinary 
189  matters and the reason why the employee was terminated from 
190  employment. An employer who releases a personnel record for 
191  purposes of a security background investigation is presumed to 
192  have acted in good faith and is not liable for information 
193  contained in the record without a showing that the employer 
194  maliciously falsified the record. A security background 
195  investigation conducted under this section must ensure that a 
196  person is not certified as a guardian ad litem if the person has 
197  been convicted of, regardless of adjudication, or entered a plea 
198  of nolo contendere or guilty to, any offense prohibited under 
199  the provisions listed in s. 435.04. All applicants certified on 
200  or after August 1, 2010, must undergo a level 2 background 
201  screening pursuant to chapter 435 before being certified the 
202  provisions of the Florida Statutes specified in s. 435.04(2) or 
203  under any similar law in another jurisdiction. Before certifying 
204  an applicant to serve as a guardian ad litem, the Guardian Ad 
205  Litem Program may request a federal criminal records check of 
206  the applicant through the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In 
207  analyzing and evaluating the information obtained in the 
208  security background investigation, the program must give 
209  particular emphasis to past activities involving children, 
210  including, but not limited to, child-related criminal offenses 
211  or child abuse. The program has the sole discretion in 
212  determining whether to certify a person based on his or her 
213  security background investigation. The information collected 
214  pursuant to the security background investigation is 
215  confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1). 
216         Section 3. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section 
217  215.5586, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
218         215.5586 My Safe Florida Home Program.—There is established 
219  within the Department of Financial Services the My Safe Florida 
220  Home Program. The department shall provide fiscal 
221  accountability, contract management, and strategic leadership 
222  for the program, consistent with this section. This section does 
223  not create an entitlement for property owners or obligate the 
224  state in any way to fund the inspection or retrofitting of 
225  residential property in this state. Implementation of this 
226  program is subject to annual legislative appropriations. It is 
227  the intent of the Legislature that the My Safe Florida Home 
228  Program provide trained and certified inspectors to perform 
229  inspections for owners of site-built, single-family, residential 
230  properties and grants to eligible applicants as funding allows. 
231  The program shall develop and implement a comprehensive and 
232  coordinated approach for hurricane damage mitigation that may 
233  include the following: 
234         (1) HURRICANE MITIGATION INSPECTIONS.— 
235         (b) To qualify for selection by the department as a wind 
236  certification entity to provide hurricane mitigation 
237  inspections, the entity shall, at a minimum, meet the following 
238  requirements: 
239         1. Use hurricane mitigation inspectors who: 
240         a. Are certified as a building inspector under s. 468.607; 
241         b. Are licensed as a general or residential contractor 
242  under s. 489.111; 
243         c. Are licensed as a professional engineer under s. 471.015 
244  and who have passed the appropriate equivalency test of the 
245  building code training program as required by s. 553.841; 
246         d. Are licensed as a professional architect under s. 
247  481.213; or 
248         e. Have at least 2 years of experience in residential 
249  construction or residential building inspection and have 
250  received specialized training in hurricane mitigation 
251  procedures. Such training may be provided by a class offered 
252  online or in person. 
253         2. Use hurricane mitigation inspectors who also: 
254         a. Have undergone drug testing and a level 2 background 
255  screening checks pursuant to s. 435.04. The department may 
256  conduct criminal record checks of inspectors used by wind 
257  certification entities. Inspectors must submit a set of the 
258  fingerprints to the department for state and national criminal 
259  history checks and must pay the fingerprint processing fee set 
260  forth in s. 624.501. The fingerprints shall be sent by the 
261  department to the Department of Law Enforcement and forwarded to 
262  the Federal Bureau of Investigation for processing. The results 
263  shall be returned to the department for screening. The 
264  fingerprints shall be taken by a law enforcement agency, 
265  designated examination center, or other department-approved 
266  entity; and 
267         b. Have been certified, in a manner satisfactory to the 
268  department, to conduct the inspections. 
269         3. Provide a quality assurance program including a 
270  reinspection component. 
271         Section 4. Paragraphs (a) and (e) of subsection (1) of 
272  section 393.0655, Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection 
273  (5) is added to that section, to read: 
274         393.0655 Screening of direct service providers.— 
275         (1) MINIMUM STANDARDS.—The agency shall require level 2 
276  employment screening pursuant to chapter 435 for direct service 
277  providers who are unrelated to their clients, including support 
278  coordinators, and managers and supervisors of residential 
279  facilities or comprehensive transitional education programs 
280  licensed under this chapter and any other person, including 
281  volunteers, who provide care or services, who have access to a 
282  client’s living areas, or who have access to a client’s funds or 
283  personal property. Background screening shall include employment 
284  history checks as provided in s. 435.03(1) and local criminal 
285  records checks through local law enforcement agencies. 
286         (a) A volunteer who assists on an intermittent basis for 
287  less than 10 40 hours per month does not have to be screened, 
288  provided a person who meets the screening requirement of this 
289  section is always present and has the volunteer within his or 
290  her line of sight if the volunteer is under the direct and 
291  constant visual supervision of persons who meet the screening 
292  requirements of this section. 
293         (e)A direct service provider who is awaiting the 
294  completion of background screening is temporarily exempt from 
295  the screening requirements under this section if the provider is 
296  under the direct and constant visual supervision of persons who 
297  meet the screening requirements of this section. Such exemption 
298  expires 90 days after the direct service provider first provides 
299  care or services to clients, has access to a client’s living 
300  areas, or has access to a client’s funds or personal property. 
301         (5)DISQUALIFYING OFFENSES.—The background screening 
302  conducted under this section must ensure that, in addition to 
303  the disqualifying offenses listed in s. 435.04, no person 
304  subject to the provisions of this section has an arrest awaiting 
305  final disposition for, has been found guilty of, regardless of 
306  adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, 
307  or has been adjudicated delinquent and the record has not been 
308  sealed or expunged for, any offense prohibited under any of the 
309  following provisions of the Florida Statutes or under any 
310  similar statute of another jurisdiction: 
311         (a) Any authorizing statutes, if the offense was a felony. 
312         (b) This chapter, if the offense was a felony. 
313         (c) Section 409.920, relating to Medicaid provider fraud. 
314         (d) Section 409.9201, relating to Medicaid fraud. 
315         (e) Section 817.034, relating to fraudulent acts through 
316  mail, wire, radio, electromagnetic, photoelectronic, or 
317  photooptical systems. 
318         (f) Section 817.234, relating to false and fraudulent 
319  insurance claims. 
320         (g) Section 817.505, relating to patient brokering. 
321         (h) Section 817.568, relating to criminal use of personal 
322  identification information. 
323         (i) Section 817.60, relating to obtaining a credit card 
324  through fraudulent means. 
325         (j) Section 817.61, relating to fraudulent use of credit 
326  cards, if the offense was a felony. 
327         (k) Section 831.01, relating to forgery. 
328         (l) Section 831.02, relating to uttering forged 
329  instruments. 
330         (m) Section 831.07, relating to forging bank bills, checks, 
331  drafts, or promissory notes. 
332         (n) Section 831.09, relating to uttering forged bank bills, 
333  checks, drafts, or promissory notes. 
334         Section 5. Section 394.4572, Florida Statutes, is amended 
335  to read: 
336         394.4572 Screening of mental health personnel.— 
337         (1)(a) The department and the Agency for Health Care 
338  Administration shall require level 2 background employment 
339  screening pursuant to chapter 435 for mental health personnel 
340  using the standards for level 2 screening set forth in chapter 
341  435. “Mental health personnel” includes all program directors, 
342  professional clinicians, staff members, and volunteers working 
343  in public or private mental health programs and facilities who 
344  have direct contact with individuals held for examination or 
345  admitted for mental health treatment unmarried patients under 
346  the age of 18 years. For purposes of this chapter, employment 
347  screening of mental health personnel shall also include, but is 
348  not limited to, employment screening as provided under chapter 
349  435 and s. 408.809. 
350         (b) Students in the health care professions who are 
351  interning in a mental health facility licensed under chapter 
352  395, where the primary purpose of the facility is not the 
353  treatment of minors, are exempt from the fingerprinting and 
354  screening requirements if, provided they are under direct 
355  supervision in the actual physical presence of a licensed health 
356  care professional. 
357         (c) Mental health personnel working in a facility licensed 
358  under chapter 395 who have less than 15 hours per week of direct 
359  contact with patients or who are health care professionals 
360  licensed by the Agency for Health Care Administration or a board 
361  thereunder are exempt from the fingerprinting and screening 
362  requirements, except for persons working in mental health 
363  facilities where the primary purpose of the facility is the 
364  treatment of minors. 
365         (c)(d) A volunteer who assists on an intermittent basis for 
366  less than 10 40 hours per month is exempt from the 
367  fingerprinting and screening requirements, provided a person who 
368  meets the screening requirement of paragraph (a) is always 
369  present and has the volunteer within his or her line of sight 
370  the volunteer is under direct and constant supervision by 
371  persons who meet the screening requirements of paragraph (a). 
372         (2) The department or the Agency for Health Care 
373  Administration may grant exemptions from disqualification as 
374  provided in chapter 435 s. 435.06. 
375         (3) Prospective mental health personnel who have previously 
376  been fingerprinted or screened pursuant to this chapter, chapter 
377  393, chapter 397, chapter 402, or chapter 409, or teachers who 
378  have been fingerprinted pursuant to chapter 1012, who have not 
379  been unemployed for more than 90 days thereafter, and who under 
380  the penalty of perjury attest to the completion of such 
381  fingerprinting or screening and to compliance with the 
382  provisions of this section and the standards for level 1 
383  screening contained in chapter 435, shall not be required to be 
384  refingerprinted or rescreened in order to comply with any 
385  screening requirements of this part. 
386         Section 6. Section 400.215, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
387  read: 
388         400.215 Personnel screening requirement.— 
389         (1) The agency shall require level 2 background screening 
390  for personnel as required in s. 408.809(1)(e) pursuant to as 
391  provided in chapter 435 and s. 408.809. for all employees or 
392  prospective employees of facilities licensed under this part who 
393  are expected to, or whose responsibilities may require them to: 
394         (a) Provide personal care or services to residents; 
395         (b) Have access to resident living areas; or 
396         (c) Have access to resident funds or other personal 
397  property. 
398         (2) Employers and employees shall comply with the 
399  requirements of s. 435.05. 
400         (a) Notwithstanding the provisions of s. 435.05(1), 
401  facilities must have in their possession evidence that level 1 
402  screening has been completed before allowing an employee to 
403  begin working with patients as provided in subsection (1). All 
404  information necessary for conducting background screening using 
405  level 1 standards as specified in s. 435.03 shall be submitted 
406  by the nursing facility to the agency. Results of the background 
407  screening shall be provided by the agency to the requesting 
408  nursing facility. 
409         (b) Employees qualified under the provisions of paragraph 
410  (a) who have not maintained continuous residency within the 
411  state for the 5 years immediately preceding the date of request 
412  for background screening must complete level 2 screening, as 
413  provided in chapter 435. Such employees may work in a 
414  conditional status up to 180 days pending the receipt of written 
415  findings evidencing the completion of level 2 screening. Level 2 
416  screening shall not be required of employees or prospective 
417  employees who attest in writing under penalty of perjury that 
418  they meet the residency requirement. Completion of level 2 
419  screening shall require the employee or prospective employee to 
420  furnish to the nursing facility a full set of fingerprints to 
421  enable a criminal background investigation to be conducted. The 
422  nursing facility shall submit the completed fingerprint card to 
423  the agency. The agency shall establish a record of the request 
424  in the database provided for in paragraph (c) and forward the 
425  request to the Department of Law Enforcement, which is 
426  authorized to submit the fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of 
427  Investigation for a national criminal history records check. The 
428  results of the national criminal history records check shall be 
429  returned to the agency, which shall maintain the results in the 
430  database provided for in paragraph (c). The agency shall notify 
431  the administrator of the requesting nursing facility or the 
432  administrator of any other facility licensed under chapter 393, 
433  chapter 394, chapter 395, chapter 397, chapter 429, or this 
434  chapter, as requested by such facility, as to whether or not the 
435  employee has qualified under level 1 or level 2 screening. An 
436  employee or prospective employee who has qualified under level 2 
437  screening and has maintained such continuous residency within 
438  the state shall not be required to complete a subsequent level 2 
439  screening as a condition of employment at another facility. 
440         (c) The agency shall establish and maintain a database of 
441  background screening information which shall include the results 
442  of both level 1 and level 2 screening. The Department of Law 
443  Enforcement shall timely provide to the agency, electronically, 
444  the results of each statewide screening for incorporation into 
445  the database. The agency shall, upon request from any facility, 
446  agency, or program required by or authorized by law to screen 
447  its employees or applicants, notify the administrator of the 
448  facility, agency, or program of the qualifying or disqualifying 
449  status of the employee or applicant named in the request. 
450         (d) Applicants and employees shall be excluded from 
451  employment pursuant to s. 435.06. 
452         (3) The applicant is responsible for paying the fees 
453  associated with obtaining the required screening. Payment for 
454  the screening shall be submitted to the agency. The agency shall 
455  establish a schedule of fees to cover the costs of level 1 and 
456  level 2 screening. Facilities may reimburse employees for these 
457  costs. The Department of Law Enforcement shall charge the agency 
458  for a level 1 or level 2 screening a rate sufficient to cover 
459  the costs of such screening pursuant to s. 943.053(3). The 
460  agency shall, as allowable, reimburse nursing facilities for the 
461  cost of conducting background screening as required by this 
462  section. This reimbursement will not be subject to any rate 
463  ceilings or payment targets in the Medicaid Reimbursement plan. 
464         (4)(a) As provided in s. 435.07, the agency may grant an 
465  exemption from disqualification to an employee or prospective 
466  employee who is subject to this section and who has not received 
467  a professional license or certification from the Department of 
468  Health. 
469         (b) As provided in s. 435.07, the appropriate regulatory 
470  board within the Department of Health, or that department itself 
471  when there is no board, may grant an exemption from 
472  disqualification to an employee or prospective employee who is 
473  subject to this section and who has received a professional 
474  license or certification from the Department of Health or a 
475  regulatory board within that department. 
476         (5) Any provision of law to the contrary notwithstanding, 
477  persons who have been screened and qualified as required by this 
478  section and who have not been unemployed for more than 180 days 
479  thereafter, and who under penalty of perjury attest to not 
480  having been convicted of a disqualifying offense since the 
481  completion of such screening, shall not be required to be 
482  rescreened. An employer may obtain, pursuant to s. 435.10, 
483  written verification of qualifying screening results from the 
484  previous employer or other entity which caused such screening to 
485  be performed. 
486         (6) The agency and the Department of Health shall have 
487  authority to adopt rules pursuant to the Administrative 
488  Procedure Act to implement this section. 
489         (7) All employees shall comply with the requirements of 
490  this section by October 1, 1998. No current employee of a 
491  nursing facility as of the effective date of this act shall be 
492  required to submit to rescreening if the nursing facility has in 
493  its possession written evidence that the person has been 
494  screened and qualified according to level 1 standards as 
495  specified in s. 435.03(1). Any current employee who meets the 
496  level 1 requirement but does not meet the 5-year residency 
497  requirement as specified in this section must provide to the 
498  employing nursing facility written attestation under penalty of 
499  perjury that the employee has not been convicted of a 
500  disqualifying offense in another state or jurisdiction. All 
501  applicants hired on or after October 1, 1998, shall comply with 
502  the requirements of this section. 
503         (8) There is no monetary or unemployment liability on the 
504  part of, and no cause of action for damages arising against an 
505  employer that, upon notice of a disqualifying offense listed 
506  under chapter 435 or an act of domestic violence, terminates the 
507  employee against whom the report was issued, whether or not the 
508  employee has filed for an exemption with the Department of 
509  Health or the Agency for Health Care Administration. 
510         Section 7. Subsection (9) of section 400.506, Florida 
511  Statutes, is amended to read: 
512         400.506 Licensure of nurse registries; requirements; 
513  penalties.— 
514         (9) Each nurse registry must comply with the background 
515  screening requirements procedures set forth in s. 400.512 for 
516  maintaining records of the work history of all persons referred 
517  for contract and is subject to the standards and conditions set 
518  forth in that section. However, an initial screening may not be 
519  required for persons who have been continuously registered with 
520  the nurse registry since October 1, 2000. 
521         Section 8. Section 400.512, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
522  read: 
523         400.512 Screening of home health agency personnel; nurse 
524  registry personnel and contractors; and companions and 
525  homemakers.—The agency, registry, or service shall require level 
526  2 background screening for employees or contractors as required 
527  in s. 408.809(1)(e) pursuant to chapter 435 and s. 408.809 
528  employment or contractor screening as provided in chapter 435, 
529  using the level 1 standards for screening set forth in that 
530  chapter, for home health agency personnel; persons referred for 
531  employment by nurse registries; and persons employed by 
532  companion or homemaker services registered under s. 400.509. 
533         (1)(a) The Agency for Health Care Administration may, upon 
534  request, grant exemptions from disqualification from employment 
535  or contracting under this section as provided in s. 435.07, 
536  except for health care practitioners licensed by the Department 
537  of Health or a regulatory board within that department. 
538         (b) The appropriate regulatory board within the Department 
539  of Health, or that department itself when there is no board, 
540  may, upon request of the licensed health care practitioner, 
541  grant exemptions from disqualification from employment or 
542  contracting under this section as provided in s. 435.07. 
543         (2) The administrator of each home health agency, the 
544  managing employee of each nurse registry, and the managing 
545  employee of each companion or homemaker service registered under 
546  s. 400.509 must sign an affidavit annually, under penalty of 
547  perjury, stating that all personnel hired or contracted with or 
548  registered on or after October 1, 2000, who enter the home of a 
549  patient or client in their service capacity have been screened. 
550         (3) As a prerequisite to operating as a home health agency, 
551  nurse registry, or companion or homemaker service under s. 
552  400.509, the administrator or managing employee, respectively, 
553  must submit to the agency his or her name and any other 
554  information necessary to conduct a complete screening according 
555  to this section. The agency shall submit the information to the 
556  Department of Law Enforcement for state processing. The agency 
557  shall review the record of the administrator or manager with 
558  respect to the offenses specified in this section and shall 
559  notify the owner of its findings. If disposition information is 
560  missing on a criminal record, the administrator or manager, upon 
561  request of the agency, must obtain and supply within 30 days the 
562  missing disposition information to the agency. Failure to supply 
563  missing information within 30 days or to show reasonable efforts 
564  to obtain such information will result in automatic 
565  disqualification. 
566         (4) Proof of compliance with the screening requirements of 
567  chapter 435 shall be accepted in lieu of the requirements of 
568  this section if the person has been continuously employed or 
569  registered without a breach in service that exceeds 180 days, 
570  the proof of compliance is not more than 2 years old, and the 
571  person has been screened by the Department of Law Enforcement. A 
572  home health agency, nurse registry, or companion or homemaker 
573  service registered under s. 400.509 shall directly provide proof 
574  of compliance to another home health agency, nurse registry, or 
575  companion or homemaker service registered under s. 400.509. The 
576  recipient home health agency, nurse registry, or companion or 
577  homemaker service registered under s. 400.509 may not accept any 
578  proof of compliance directly from the person who requires 
579  screening. Proof of compliance with the screening requirements 
580  of this section shall be provided upon request to the person 
581  screened by the home health agencies; nurse registries; or 
582  companion or homemaker services registered under s. 400.509. 
583         (5) There is no monetary liability on the part of, and no 
584  cause of action for damages arises against, a licensed home 
585  health agency, licensed nurse registry, or companion or 
586  homemaker service registered under s. 400.509, that, upon notice 
587  that the employee or contractor has been found guilty of, 
588  regardless of adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere 
589  or guilty to, any offense prohibited under s. 435.03 or under 
590  any similar statute of another jurisdiction, terminates the 
591  employee or contractor, whether or not the employee or 
592  contractor has filed for an exemption with the agency in 
593  accordance with chapter 435 and whether or not the time for 
594  filing has expired. 
595         (6) The costs of processing the statewide correspondence 
596  criminal records checks must be borne by the home health agency; 
597  the nurse registry; or the companion or homemaker service 
598  registered under s. 400.509, or by the person being screened, at 
599  the discretion of the home health agency, nurse registry, or s. 
600  400.509 registrant. 
601         Section 9. Section 400.6065, Florida Statutes, is amended 
602  to read: 
603         400.6065 Background screening.—The agency shall require 
604  level 2 background employment or contractor screening for 
605  personnel as required in s. 408.809(1)(e) pursuant to chapter 
606  435 and s. 408.809 as provided in chapter 435, using the level 1 
607  standards for screening set forth in that chapter, for hospice 
608  personnel. 
609         Section 10. Subsection (2) of section 400.801, Florida 
610  Statutes, is amended to read: 
611         400.801 Homes for special services.— 
612         (2)(a) The requirements of part II of chapter 408 apply to 
613  the provision of services that require licensure pursuant to 
614  this section and part II of chapter 408 and entities licensed by 
615  or applying for such licensure from the agency pursuant to this 
616  section. A license issued by the agency is required in order to 
617  operate a home for special services in this state. 
618         (b) The agency shall require level 2 background screening 
619  for personnel as required in s. 408.809(1)(e) pursuant to 
620  chapter 435 and s. 408.809. 
621         Section 11. Paragraph (d) is added to subsection (2) of 
622  section 400.805, Florida Statutes, to read: 
623         400.805 Transitional living facilities.— 
624         (2) 
625         (d) The agency shall require level 2 background screening 
626  for personnel as required in s. 408.809(1)(e) pursuant to 
627  chapter 435 and s. 408.809. 
628         Section 12. Section 400.9065, Florida Statutes, is created 
629  to read: 
630         400.9065 Background screening.—The agency shall require 
631  level 2 background screening for personnel as required in s. 
632  408.809(1)(e) pursuant to chapter 435 and s. 408.809. 
633         Section 13. Subsection (16) of section 400.934, Florida 
634  Statutes, is amended to read: 
635         400.934 Minimum standards.—As a requirement of licensure, 
636  home medical equipment providers shall: 
637         (16) Establish procedures for maintaining a record of the 
638  employment history, including background screening as required 
639  by ss. s. 400.953 and 408.809(1) and chapter 435, of all home 
640  medical equipment provider personnel. A home medical equipment 
641  provider must require its personnel to submit an employment 
642  history to the home medical equipment provider and must verify 
643  the employment history for at least the previous 5 years, unless 
644  through diligent efforts such verification is not possible. 
645  There is no monetary liability on the part of, and no cause of 
646  action for damages arising against a former employer, a 
647  prospective employee, or a prospective independent contractor 
648  with a licensed home medical equipment provider, who reasonably 
649  and in good faith communicates his or her honest opinions about 
650  a former employee’s job performance. This subsection does not 
651  affect the official immunity of an officer or employee of a 
652  public corporation. 
653         Section 14. Section 400.953, Florida Statutes, is amended 
654  to read: 
655         400.953 Background screening of home medical equipment 
656  provider personnel.—The agency shall require level 2 background 
657  screening for personnel as required in s. 408.809(1)(e) pursuant 
658  to chapter 435 and s. 408.809 employment screening as provided 
659  in chapter 435, using the level 1 standards for screening set 
660  forth in that chapter, for home medical equipment provider 
661  personnel. 
662         (1) The agency may grant exemptions from disqualification 
663  from employment under this section as provided in s. 435.07. 
664         (2) The general manager of each home medical equipment 
665  provider must sign an affidavit annually, under penalty of 
666  perjury, stating that all home medical equipment provider 
667  personnel hired on or after July 1, 1999, who enter the home of 
668  a patient in the capacity of their employment have been screened 
669  and that its remaining personnel have worked for the home 
670  medical equipment provider continuously since before July 1, 
671  1999. 
672         (3) Proof of compliance with the screening requirements of 
673  s. 110.1127, s. 393.0655, s. 394.4572, s. 397.451, s. 402.305, 
674  s. 402.313, s. 409.175, s. 464.008, or s. 985.644 or this part 
675  must be accepted in lieu of the requirements of this section if 
676  the person has been continuously employed in the same type of 
677  occupation for which he or she is seeking employment without a 
678  breach in service that exceeds 180 days, the proof of compliance 
679  is not more than 2 years old, and the person has been screened 
680  by the Department of Law Enforcement. An employer or contractor 
681  shall directly provide proof of compliance to another employer 
682  or contractor, and a potential employer or contractor may not 
683  accept any proof of compliance directly from the person 
684  requiring screening. Proof of compliance with the screening 
685  requirements of this section shall be provided, upon request, to 
686  the person screened by the home medical equipment provider. 
687         (4) There is no monetary liability on the part of, and no 
688  cause of action for damages arising against, a licensed home 
689  medical equipment provider that, upon notice that an employee 
690  has been found guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or entered 
691  a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, any offense prohibited 
692  under s. 435.03 or under any similar statute of another 
693  jurisdiction, terminates the employee, whether or not the 
694  employee has filed for an exemption with the agency and whether 
695  or not the time for filing has expired. 
696         (5) The costs of processing the statewide correspondence 
697  criminal records checks must be borne by the home medical 
698  equipment provider or by the person being screened, at the 
699  discretion of the home medical equipment provider. 
700         (6) Neither the agency nor the home medical equipment 
701  provider may use the criminal records or juvenile records of a 
702  person for any purpose other than determining whether that 
703  person meets minimum standards of good moral character for home 
704  medical equipment provider personnel. 
705         (7)(a) It is a misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable 
706  as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083, for any person 
707  willfully, knowingly, or intentionally to: 
708         1. Fail, by false statement, misrepresentation, 
709  impersonation, or other fraudulent means, to disclose in any 
710  application for paid employment a material fact used in making a 
711  determination as to the person’s qualifications to be an 
712  employee under this section; 
713         2. Operate or attempt to operate an entity licensed under 
714  this part with persons who do not meet the minimum standards for 
715  good moral character as contained in this section; or 
716         3. Use information from the criminal records obtained under 
717  this section for any purpose other than screening that person 
718  for employment as specified in this section, or release such 
719  information to any other person for any purpose other than 
720  screening for employment under this section. 
721         (b) It is a felony of the third degree, punishable as 
722  provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084, for any 
723  person willfully, knowingly, or intentionally to use information 
724  from the juvenile records of a person obtained under this 
725  section for any purpose other than screening for employment 
726  under this section. 
727         Section 15. Section 400.955, Florida Statutes, is repealed. 
728         Section 16. Section 400.964, Florida Statutes, is amended 
729  to read: 
730         400.964 Personnel screening requirement.— 
731         (1) The agency shall require level 2 background screening 
732  for personnel as required in s. 408.809(1)(e) pursuant to 
733  chapter 435 and s. 408.809 as provided in chapter 435 for all 
734  employees or prospective employees of facilities licensed under 
735  this part who are expected to be, or whose responsibilities are 
736  such that they would be considered to be, a direct service 
737  provider. 
738         (2) Employers and employees shall comply with the 
739  requirements of chapter 435. 
740         (3) Applicants and employees shall be excluded from 
741  employment pursuant to s. 435.06. 
742         (4) The applicant is responsible for paying the fees 
743  associated with obtaining the required screening. Payment for 
744  the screening must be submitted to the agency as prescribed by 
745  the agency. 
746         (5) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, persons who 
747  have been screened and qualified as required by this section and 
748  who have not been unemployed for more than 180 days thereafter, 
749  and who under penalty of perjury attest to not having been 
750  convicted of a disqualifying offense since the completion of 
751  such screening are not required to be rescreened. An employer 
752  may obtain, pursuant to s. 435.10, written verification of 
753  qualifying screening results from the previous employer or other 
754  entity that caused such screening to be performed. 
755         (6) The agency may adopt rules to administer this section. 
756         (7) All employees must comply with the requirements of this 
757  section by October 1, 2000. A person employed by a facility 
758  licensed pursuant to this part as of the effective date of this 
759  act is not required to submit to rescreening if the facility has 
760  in its possession written evidence that the person has been 
761  screened and qualified according to level 1 standards as 
762  specified in s. 435.03. Any current employee who meets the level 
763  1 requirement but does not meet the 5-year residency requirement 
764  must provide to the employing facility written attestation under 
765  penalty of perjury that the employee has not been convicted of a 
766  disqualifying offense in another state or jurisdiction. All 
767  applicants hired on or after October 1, 1999, must comply with 
768  the requirements of this section. 
769         (8) There is no monetary or unemployment liability on the 
770  part of, and no cause of action for damages arises against an 
771  employer that, upon notice of a disqualifying offense listed 
772  under chapter 435 or an act of domestic violence, terminates the 
773  employee, whether or not the employee has filed for an exemption 
774  with the Department of Health or the Agency for Health Care 
775  Administration. 
776         Section 17. Subsection (3) of section 400.980, Florida 
777  Statutes, is amended to read: 
778         400.980 Health care services pools.— 
779         (3) Upon receipt of a completed, signed, and dated 
780  application, The agency shall require level 2 background 
781  screening for personnel as required in s. 408.809(1)(e) pursuant 
782  to chapter 435 and s. 408.809, in accordance with the level 1 
783  standards for screening set forth in chapter 435, of every 
784  individual who will have contact with patients. 
785         Section 18. Subsection (5) of section 400.991, Florida 
786  Statutes, is amended to read: 
787         400.991 License requirements; background screenings; 
788  prohibitions.— 
789         (5) Each applicant for licensure shall comply with the 
790  following requirements: 
791         (a) As used in this subsection, the term “applicant” means 
792  individuals owning or controlling, directly or indirectly, 5 
793  percent or more of an interest in a clinic; the medical or 
794  clinic director, or a similarly titled person who is responsible 
795  for the day-to-day operation of the licensed clinic; the 
796  financial officer or similarly titled individual who is 
797  responsible for the financial operation of the clinic; and 
798  licensed health care practitioners at the clinic. 
799         (b) Upon receipt of a completed, signed, and dated 
800  application, The agency shall require level 2 background 
801  screening for applicants and personnel as required in s. 
802  408.809(1)(e) pursuant to chapter 435 and s. 408.809 of the 
803  applicant, in accordance with the level 2 standards for 
804  screening set forth in chapter 435. Proof of compliance with the 
805  level 2 background screening requirements of chapter 435 which 
806  has been submitted within the previous 5 years in compliance 
807  with any other health care licensure requirements of this state 
808  is acceptable in fulfillment of this paragraph. Applicants who 
809  own less than 10 percent of a health care clinic are not 
810  required to submit fingerprints under this section. 
811         (c) Each applicant must submit to the agency, with the 
812  application, a description and explanation of any exclusions, 
813  permanent suspensions, or terminations of an applicant from the 
814  Medicare or Medicaid programs. Proof of compliance with the 
815  requirements for disclosure of ownership and control interest 
816  under the Medicaid or Medicare programs may be accepted in lieu 
817  of this submission. The description and explanation may indicate 
818  whether such exclusions, suspensions, or terminations were 
819  voluntary or not voluntary on the part of the applicant. 
820         (d) A license may not be granted to a clinic if the 
821  applicant has been found guilty of, regardless of adjudication, 
822  or has entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, any 
823  offense prohibited under the level 2 standards for screening set 
824  forth in chapter 435, or a violation of insurance fraud under s. 
825  817.234, within the past 5 years. If the applicant has been 
826  convicted of an offense prohibited under the level 2 standards 
827  or insurance fraud in any jurisdiction, the applicant must show 
828  that his or her civil rights have been restored prior to 
829  submitting an application. 
830         Section 19. Paragraph (h) is added to subsection (1) of 
831  section 408.806, Florida Statutes, to read: 
832         408.806 License application process.— 
833         (1) An application for licensure must be made to the agency 
834  on forms furnished by the agency, submitted under oath, and 
835  accompanied by the appropriate fee in order to be accepted and 
836  considered timely. The application must contain information 
837  required by authorizing statutes and applicable rules and must 
838  include: 
839         (h)An affidavit, under penalty of perjury, as required in 
840  s. 435.05(3), stating compliance with the provisions of this 
841  section and chapter 435. 
842         Section 20. Subsection (2) of section 408.808, Florida 
843  Statutes, is amended to read: 
844         408.808 License categories.— 
845         (2) PROVISIONAL LICENSE.—A provisional license may be 
846  issued to an applicant pursuant to s. 408.809(3). An applicant 
847  against whom a proceeding denying or revoking a license is 
848  pending at the time of license renewal may be issued a 
849  provisional license effective until final action not subject to 
850  further appeal. A provisional license may also be issued to an 
851  applicant applying for a change of ownership. A provisional 
852  license shall be limited in duration to a specific period of 
853  time, not to exceed 12 months, as determined by the agency. 
854         Section 21. Section 408.809, Florida Statutes, is amended 
855  to read: 
856         408.809 Background screening; prohibited offenses.— 
857         (1) Level 2 background screening pursuant to chapter 435 
858  must be conducted through the agency on each of the following 
859  persons, who shall be considered an employee for the purposes of 
860  conducting screening under chapter 435: 
861         (a) The licensee, if an individual. 
862         (b) The administrator or a similarly titled person who is 
863  responsible for the day-to-day operation of the provider. 
864         (c) The financial officer or similarly titled individual 
865  who is responsible for the financial operation of the licensee 
866  or provider. 
867         (d) Any person who is a controlling interest if the agency 
868  has reason to believe that such person has been convicted of any 
869  offense prohibited by s. 435.04. For each controlling interest 
870  who has been convicted of any such offense, the licensee shall 
871  submit to the agency a description and explanation of the 
872  conviction at the time of license application. 
873         (e) Any person, as required by authorizing statutes, 
874  seeking employment with a licensee or provider who is expected 
875  to, or whose responsibilities may require him or her to, provide 
876  personal care or services directly to clients or have access to 
877  client funds, personal property, or living areas; and any 
878  person, as required by authorizing statutes, contracting with a 
879  licensee or provider whose responsibilities require him or her 
880  to provide personal care or personal services directly to 
881  clients. Evidence of contractor screening may be retained by the 
882  contractor’s employer or the licensee. 
883         (2) Every 5 years following his or her licensure, 
884  employment, or entry into a contract in a capacity that under 
885  subsection (1) would require level 2 background screening under 
886  chapter 435, each such person must submit to level 2 background 
887  rescreening as a condition of retaining such license or 
888  continuing in such employment or contractual status. For any 
889  such rescreening, the agency shall request the Department of Law 
890  Enforcement to forward the person’s fingerprints to the Federal 
891  Bureau of Investigation for a national criminal history record 
892  check. If the fingerprints of such a person are not retained by 
893  the Department of Law Enforcement under s. 943.05(2)(g), the 
894  person must file a complete set of fingerprints with the agency 
895  and the agency shall forward the fingerprints to the Department 
896  of Law Enforcement for state processing, and the Department of 
897  Law Enforcement shall forward the fingerprints to the Federal 
898  Bureau of Investigation for a national criminal history record 
899  check. The fingerprints may be retained by the Department of Law 
900  Enforcement under s. 943.05(2)(g). The cost of the state and 
901  national criminal history records checks required by level 2 
902  screening may be borne by the licensee or the person 
903  fingerprinted. Proof of compliance with level 2 screening 
904  standards submitted within the previous 5 years to meet any 
905  provider or professional licensure requirements of the agency, 
906  the Department of Health, the Agency for Persons with 
907  Disabilities, or the Department of Children and Family Services, 
908  or the Department of Financial Services for an applicant for a 
909  certificate of authority or provisional certificate of authority 
910  to operate a continuing care retirement community under chapter 
911  651 satisfies the requirements of this section, provided that 
912  the person subject to screening has not been unemployed for more 
913  than 90 days and such proof is accompanied, under penalty of 
914  perjury, by an affidavit of compliance with the provisions of 
915  chapter 435 and this section using forms provided by the agency. 
916  Proof of compliance with the background screening requirements 
917  of the Department of Financial Services submitted within the 
918  previous 5 years for an applicant for a certificate of authority 
919  to operate a continuing care retirement community under chapter 
920  651 satisfies the Department of Law Enforcement and Federal 
921  Bureau of Investigation portions of a level 2 background check. 
922         (3) All fingerprints must be provided in electronic format. 
923  Screening results shall be reviewed by the agency with respect 
924  to the offenses specified in s. 435.04 and this section, and the 
925  qualifying or disqualifying status of the person named in the 
926  request shall be maintained in a database. The qualifying or 
927  disqualifying status of the person named in the request shall be 
928  posted on a secure website for retrieval by the licensee or 
929  designated agent on the licensee’s behalf. A provisional license 
930  may be granted to an applicant when each individual required by 
931  this section to undergo background screening has met the 
932  standards for the Department of Law Enforcement background check 
933  but the agency has not yet received background screening results 
934  from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. A standard license may 
935  be granted to the licensee upon the agency’s receipt of a report 
936  of the results of the Federal Bureau of Investigation background 
937  screening for each individual required by this section to 
938  undergo background screening that confirms that all standards 
939  have been met or upon the granting of an exemption from 
940  disqualification by the agency as set forth in chapter 435. 
941         (4) When a person is newly employed in a capacity that 
942  requires screening under this section, the licensee must notify 
943  the agency of the change within the time period specified in the 
944  authorizing statute or rules and must submit to the agency 
945  information necessary to conduct level 2 screening or provide 
946  evidence of compliance with background screening requirements of 
947  this section. The person may serve in his or her capacity 
948  pending the agency’s receipt of the report from the Federal 
949  Bureau of Investigation if he or she has met the standards for 
950  the Department of Law Enforcement background check. However, the 
951  person may not continue to serve in his or her capacity if the 
952  report indicates any violation of background screening standards 
953  unless an exemption from disqualification has been granted by 
954  the agency as set forth in chapter 435. 
955         (4)(5)Effective October 1, 2009, In addition to the 
956  offenses listed in s. ss. 435.03 and 435.04, all persons 
957  required to undergo background screening pursuant to this part 
958  or authorizing statutes must not have an arrest awaiting final 
959  disposition for, must not have been found guilty of, regardless 
960  of adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty 
961  to, and must not have been adjudicated delinquent and the record 
962  not have been sealed or expunged for any of the following 
963  offenses or any similar offense of another jurisdiction: 
964         (a) Any authorizing statutes, if the offense was a felony. 
965         (b) This chapter, if the offense was a felony. 
966         (c) Section 409.920, relating to Medicaid provider fraud, 
967  if the offense was a felony. 
968         (d) Section 409.9201, relating to Medicaid fraud, if the 
969  offense was a felony. 
970         (e) Section 741.28, relating to domestic violence. 
971         (f) Chapter 784, relating to assault, battery, and culpable 
972  negligence, if the offense was a felony. 
973         (g) Section 810.02, relating to burglary. 
974         (f)(h) Section 817.034, relating to fraudulent acts through 
975  mail, wire, radio, electromagnetic, photoelectronic, or 
976  photooptical systems. 
977         (g)(i) Section 817.234, relating to false and fraudulent 
978  insurance claims. 
979         (h)(j) Section 817.505, relating to patient brokering. 
980         (i)(k) Section 817.568, relating to criminal use of 
981  personal identification information. 
982         (j)(l) Section 817.60, relating to obtaining a credit card 
983  through fraudulent means. 
984         (k)(m) Section 817.61, relating to fraudulent use of credit 
985  cards, if the offense was a felony. 
986         (l)(n) Section 831.01, relating to forgery. 
987         (m)(o) Section 831.02, relating to uttering forged 
988  instruments. 
989         (n)(p) Section 831.07, relating to forging bank bills, 
990  checks, drafts, or promissory notes. 
991         (o)(q) Section 831.09, relating to uttering forged bank 
992  bills, checks, drafts, or promissory notes. 
993         (p)(r) Section 831.30, relating to fraud in obtaining 
994  medicinal drugs. 
995         (q)(s) Section 831.31, relating to the sale, manufacture, 
996  delivery, or possession with the intent to sell, manufacture, or 
997  deliver any counterfeit controlled substance, if the offense was 
998  a felony. 
999 
1000  A person who serves as a controlling interest of, or is employed 
1001  by, or contracts with a licensee on July 31, 2010 September 30, 
1002  2009, who has been screened and qualified according to standards 
1003  specified in s. 435.03 or s. 435.04 must be rescreened by July 
1004  31, 2015. The agency may adopt rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) 
1005  and 120.54 to establish a schedule to stagger the implementation 
1006  of the required rescreening over the 5-year period, beginning 
1007  July 31, 2010, through July 31, 2015. If, upon rescreening, is 
1008  not required by law to submit to rescreening if that licensee 
1009  has in its possession written evidence that the person has been 
1010  screened and qualified according to the standards specified in 
1011  s. 435.03 or s. 435.04. However, if such person has a 
1012  disqualifying offense that was not a disqualifying offense at 
1013  the time of the last screening, but is a current disqualifying 
1014  offense and was committed prior to the last screening listed in 
1015  this section, he or she may apply for an exemption from the 
1016  appropriate licensing agency before September 30, 2009, and, if 
1017  agreed to by the employer, may continue to perform his or her 
1018  duties until the licensing agency renders a decision on the 
1019  application for exemption as long as the person is eligible to 
1020  apply for an exemption and the exemption request is received by 
1021  the agency within 30 days after receipt of the rescreening 
1022  results by the person for offenses listed in this section. 
1023  Exemptions from disqualification may be granted pursuant to s. 
1024  435.07. 
1025         (5)(6)The costs associated with obtaining the required 
1026  screening must be borne either by the licensee or the person 
1027  subject to screening. Licensees may reimburse persons for these 
1028  costs. The Department of Law Enforcement shall charge the agency 
1029  for screening pursuant to s. 943.053(3). The agency shall 
1030  establish a schedule of fees to cover the costs of screening The 
1031  attestations required under ss. 435.04(5) and 435.05(3) must be 
1032  submitted at the time of license renewal, notwithstanding the 
1033  provisions of ss. 435.04(5) and 435.05(3) which require annual 
1034  submission of an affidavit of compliance with background 
1035  screening requirements. 
1036         (6)(a) As provided in chapter 435, the agency may grant an 
1037  exemption from disqualification to a person who is subject to 
1038  this section and who has not received a professional license or 
1039  certification from the Department of Health if that person is 
1040  providing a service that is within the scope of his or her 
1041  licensed or certified practice. 
1042         (b) As provided in chapter 435, the appropriate regulatory 
1043  board within the Department of Health, or the department itself 
1044  when there is no board, may grant an exemption from 
1045  disqualification to a person who is subject to this section and 
1046  who has received a professional license or certification from 
1047  the Department of Health or a regulatory board within that 
1048  department and that person is providing a service within the 
1049  scope of his or her licensed or certified practice. 
1050         (7) The agency and the Department of Health may adopt rules 
1051  pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54 to implement this section, 
1052  chapter 435, and authorizing statutes requiring background 
1053  screening and to implement and adopt criteria relating to 
1054  retaining fingerprints pursuant to s. 943.05(2). 
1055         (8) There is no unemployment compensation or other monetary 
1056  liability on the part of, and no cause of action for damages 
1057  arising against, an employer that, upon notice of a 
1058  disqualifying offense listed under chapter 435 or this section, 
1059  terminates the person against whom the report was issued, 
1060  whether or not that person has filed for an exemption with the 
1061  Department of Health or the agency. 
1062         Section 22. Subsection (3) of section 402.302, Florida 
1063  Statutes, is amended to read: 
1064         402.302 Definitions.— 
1065         (3) “Child care personnel” means all owners, operators, 
1066  employees, and volunteers working in a child care facility. The 
1067  term does not include persons who work in a child care facility 
1068  after hours when children are not present or parents of children 
1069  in a child care facility Head Start. For purposes of screening, 
1070  the term includes any member, over the age of 12 years, of a 
1071  child care facility operator’s family, or person, over the age 
1072  of 12 years, residing with a child care facility operator if the 
1073  child care facility is located in or adjacent to the home of the 
1074  operator or if the 
1075  family member of, or person residing with, the child care 
1076  facility operator has any direct contact with the children in 
1077  the facility during its hours of operation. Members of the 
1078  operator’s family or persons residing with the operator who are 
1079  between the ages of 12 years and 18 years shall not be required 
1080  to be fingerprinted but shall be screened for delinquency 
1081  records. For purposes of screening, the term shall also include 
1082  persons who work in child care programs which provide care for 
1083  children 15 hours or more each week in public or nonpublic 
1084  schools, summer day camps, family day care homes, or those 
1085  programs otherwise exempted under s. 402.316. The term does not 
1086  include public or nonpublic school personnel who are providing 
1087  care during regular school hours, or after hours for activities 
1088  related to a school’s program for grades kindergarten through 
1089  12. A volunteer who assists on an intermittent basis for less 
1090  than 10 40 hours per month is not included in the term 
1091  “personnel” for the purposes of screening and training, provided 
1092  a person who meets the screening requirement of s. 402.305(2) is 
1093  always present and has the volunteer in his or her line of sight 
1094  that the volunteer is under direct and constant supervision by 
1095  persons who meet the personnel requirements of s. 402.305(2). 
1096  Students who observe and participate in a child care facility as 
1097  a part of their required coursework shall not be considered 
1098  child care personnel, provided such observation and 
1099  participation are on an intermittent basis and a person who 
1100  meets the screening requirement of s. 402.305(2) is always 
1101  present and has the student in his or her line of sight the 
1102  students are under direct and constant supervision of child care 
1103  personnel. 
1104         Section 23. Paragraphs (i) and (k) of subsection (2) of 
1105  section 409.175, Florida Statutes, are amended, present 
1106  paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection (5) of that section are 
1107  redesignated as paragraphs (c) and (d), respectively, and a new 
1108  paragraph (b) is added to that section to read: 
1109         409.175 Licensure of family foster homes, residential 
1110  child-caring agencies, and child-placing agencies; public 
1111  records exemption.— 
1112         (2) As used in this section, the term: 
1113         (i) “Personnel” means all owners, operators, employees, and 
1114  volunteers working in a child-placing agency, family foster 
1115  home, or residential child-caring agency who may be employed by 
1116  or do volunteer work for a person, corporation, or agency which 
1117  holds a license as a child-placing agency or a residential 
1118  child-caring agency, but the term does not include those who do 
1119  not work on the premises where child care is furnished and 
1120  either have no direct contact with a child or have no contact 
1121  with a child outside of the presence of the child’s parent or 
1122  guardian. For purposes of screening, the term shall include any 
1123  member, over the age of 12 years, of the family of the owner or 
1124  operator or any person other than a client, over the age of 12 
1125  years, residing with the owner or operator if the agency or 
1126  family foster home is located in or adjacent to the home of the 
1127  owner or operator or if the family member of, or person residing 
1128  with, the owner or operator has any direct contact with the 
1129  children. Members of the family of the owner or operator, or 
1130  persons residing with the owner or operator, who are between the 
1131  ages of 12 years and 18 years shall not be required to be 
1132  fingerprinted, but shall be screened for delinquency records. 
1133  For purposes of screening, the term “personnel” shall also 
1134  include owners, operators, employees, and volunteers working in 
1135  summer day camps, or summer 24-hour camps providing care for 
1136  children. A volunteer who assists on an intermittent basis for 
1137  less than 10 40 hours per month shall not be included in the 
1138  term “personnel” for the purposes of screening, provided a 
1139  person who meets the screening requirement of this section is 
1140  always present and has the volunteer in his or her line of sight 
1141  that the volunteer is under direct and constant supervision by 
1142  persons who meet the personnel requirements of this section. 
1143         (k) “Screening” means the act of assessing the background 
1144  of personnel and includes, but is not limited to, employment 
1145  history checks as provided in chapter 435, using the level 2 
1146  standards for screening set forth in that chapter. Screening for 
1147  employees and volunteers in summer day camps and summer 24-hour 
1148  camps and screening for all volunteers included under the 
1149  definition of “personnel” shall be conducted as provided in 
1150  chapter 435, using the level 1 standards set forth in that 
1151  chapter. 
1152         (5) 
1153         (b) The department shall randomly drug test a licensed 
1154  foster parent if there is a reasonable suspicion that he or she 
1155  is using illegal drugs. The cost of testing shall be paid by the 
1156  foster parent but shall be reimbursed by the department if the 
1157  test is negative. The department may adopt rules necessary to 
1158  administer this paragraph. 
1159         Section 24. Paragraph (i) of subsection (4) of section 
1160  409.221, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
1161         409.221 Consumer-directed care program.— 
1162         (4) CONSUMER-DIRECTED CARE.— 
1163         (i) Background screening requirements.—All persons who 
1164  render care under this section must undergo level 2 background 
1165  screening pursuant to chapter 435 shall comply with the 
1166  requirements of s. 435.05. Persons shall be excluded from 
1167  employment pursuant to s. 435.06. 
1168         1. Persons excluded from employment may request an 
1169  exemption from disqualification, as provided in s. 435.07. 
1170  Persons not subject to certification or professional licensure 
1171  may request an exemption from the agency. In considering a 
1172  request for an exemption, the agency shall comply with the 
1173  provisions of s. 435.07. 
1174         2. The agency shall, as allowable, reimburse consumer 
1175  employed caregivers for the cost of conducting background 
1176  screening as required by this section. 
1177 
1178  For purposes of this section, a person who has undergone 
1179  screening, who is qualified for employment under this section 
1180  and applicable rule, and who has not been unemployed for more 
1181  than 90 180 days following such screening is not required to be 
1182  rescreened. Such person must attest under penalty of perjury to 
1183  not having been convicted of a disqualifying offense since 
1184  completing such screening. 
1185         Section 25. Subsection (8) of section 409.907, Florida 
1186  Statutes, is amended to read: 
1187         409.907 Medicaid provider agreements.—The agency may make 
1188  payments for medical assistance and related services rendered to 
1189  Medicaid recipients only to an individual or entity who has a 
1190  provider agreement in effect with the agency, who is performing 
1191  services or supplying goods in accordance with federal, state, 
1192  and local law, and who agrees that no person shall, on the 
1193  grounds of handicap, race, color, or national origin, or for any 
1194  other reason, be subjected to discrimination under any program 
1195  or activity for which the provider receives payment from the 
1196  agency. 
1197         (8)(a) Each provider, or each principal of the provider if 
1198  the provider is a corporation, partnership, association, or 
1199  other entity, seeking to participate in the Medicaid program 
1200  must submit a complete set of his or her fingerprints to the 
1201  agency for the purpose of conducting a criminal history record 
1202  check. Principals of the provider include any officer, director, 
1203  billing agent, managing employee, or affiliated person, or any 
1204  partner or shareholder who has an ownership interest equal to 5 
1205  percent or more in the provider. However, a director of a not 
1206  for-profit corporation or organization is not a principal for 
1207  purposes of a background investigation as required by this 
1208  section if the director: serves solely in a voluntary capacity 
1209  for the corporation or organization, does not regularly take 
1210  part in the day-to-day operational decisions of the corporation 
1211  or organization, receives no remuneration from the not-for 
1212  profit corporation or organization for his or her service on the 
1213  board of directors, has no financial interest in the not-for 
1214  profit corporation or organization, and has no family members 
1215  with a financial interest in the not-for-profit corporation or 
1216  organization; and if the director submits an affidavit, under 
1217  penalty of perjury, to this effect to the agency and the not 
1218  for-profit corporation or organization submits an affidavit, 
1219  under penalty of perjury, to this effect to the agency as part 
1220  of the corporation’s or organization’s Medicaid provider 
1221  agreement application. Notwithstanding the above, the agency may 
1222  require a background check for any person reasonably suspected 
1223  by the agency to have been convicted of a crime. This subsection 
1224  shall not apply to: 
1225         1. A hospital licensed under chapter 395; 
1226         2. A nursing home licensed under chapter 400; 
1227         3. A hospice licensed under chapter 400; 
1228         4. An assisted living facility licensed under chapter 429; 
1229         5. A unit of local government, except that requirements of 
1230  this subsection apply to nongovernmental providers and entities 
1231  when contracting with the local government to provide Medicaid 
1232  services. The actual cost of the state and national criminal 
1233  history record checks must be borne by the nongovernmental 
1234  provider or entity; or 
1235         6. Any business that derives more than 50 percent of its 
1236  revenue from the sale of goods to the final consumer, and the 
1237  business or its controlling parent either is required to file a 
1238  form 10-K or other similar statement with the Securities and 
1239  Exchange Commission or has a net worth of $50 million or more. 
1240         (b) Background screening shall be conducted in accordance 
1241  with chapter 435 and s. 408.809. The agency shall submit the 
1242  fingerprints to the Department of Law Enforcement. The 
1243  department shall conduct a state criminal-background 
1244  investigation and forward the fingerprints to the Federal Bureau 
1245  of Investigation for a national criminal-history record check. 
1246  The cost of the state and national criminal record check shall 
1247  be borne by the provider. 
1248         (c) The agency may permit a provider to participate in the 
1249  Medicaid program pending the results of the criminal record 
1250  check. However, such permission is fully revocable if the record 
1251  check reveals any crime-related history as provided in 
1252  subsection (10). 
1253         (c)(d) Proof of compliance with the requirements of level 2 
1254  screening under chapter 435 s. 435.04 conducted within 12 months 
1255  prior to the date that the Medicaid provider application is 
1256  submitted to the agency shall fulfill the requirements of this 
1257  subsection. Proof of compliance with the requirements of level 1 
1258  screening under s. 435.03 conducted within 12 months prior to 
1259  the date that the Medicaid provider application is submitted to 
1260  the agency shall meet the requirement that the Department of Law 
1261  Enforcement conduct a state criminal history record check. 
1262         Section 26. Paragraph (b) of subsection (48) of section 
1263  409.912, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
1264         409.912 Cost-effective purchasing of health care.—The 
1265  agency shall purchase goods and services for Medicaid recipients 
1266  in the most cost-effective manner consistent with the delivery 
1267  of quality medical care. To ensure that medical services are 
1268  effectively utilized, the agency may, in any case, require a 
1269  confirmation or second physician’s opinion of the correct 
1270  diagnosis for purposes of authorizing future services under the 
1271  Medicaid program. This section does not restrict access to 
1272  emergency services or poststabilization care services as defined 
1273  in 42 C.F.R. part 438.114. Such confirmation or second opinion 
1274  shall be rendered in a manner approved by the agency. The agency 
1275  shall maximize the use of prepaid per capita and prepaid 
1276  aggregate fixed-sum basis services when appropriate and other 
1277  alternative service delivery and reimbursement methodologies, 
1278  including competitive bidding pursuant to s. 287.057, designed 
1279  to facilitate the cost-effective purchase of a case-managed 
1280  continuum of care. The agency shall also require providers to 
1281  minimize the exposure of recipients to the need for acute 
1282  inpatient, custodial, and other institutional care and the 
1283  inappropriate or unnecessary use of high-cost services. The 
1284  agency shall contract with a vendor to monitor and evaluate the 
1285  clinical practice patterns of providers in order to identify 
1286  trends that are outside the normal practice patterns of a 
1287  provider’s professional peers or the national guidelines of a 
1288  provider’s professional association. The vendor must be able to 
1289  provide information and counseling to a provider whose practice 
1290  patterns are outside the norms, in consultation with the agency, 
1291  to improve patient care and reduce inappropriate utilization. 
1292  The agency may mandate prior authorization, drug therapy 
1293  management, or disease management participation for certain 
1294  populations of Medicaid beneficiaries, certain drug classes, or 
1295  particular drugs to prevent fraud, abuse, overuse, and possible 
1296  dangerous drug interactions. The Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics 
1297  Committee shall make recommendations to the agency on drugs for 
1298  which prior authorization is required. The agency shall inform 
1299  the Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee of its decisions 
1300  regarding drugs subject to prior authorization. The agency is 
1301  authorized to limit the entities it contracts with or enrolls as 
1302  Medicaid providers by developing a provider network through 
1303  provider credentialing. The agency may competitively bid single 
1304  source-provider contracts if procurement of goods or services 
1305  results in demonstrated cost savings to the state without 
1306  limiting access to care. The agency may limit its network based 
1307  on the assessment of beneficiary access to care, provider 
1308  availability, provider quality standards, time and distance 
1309  standards for access to care, the cultural competence of the 
1310  provider network, demographic characteristics of Medicaid 
1311  beneficiaries, practice and provider-to-beneficiary standards, 
1312  appointment wait times, beneficiary use of services, provider 
1313  turnover, provider profiling, provider licensure history, 
1314  previous program integrity investigations and findings, peer 
1315  review, provider Medicaid policy and billing compliance records, 
1316  clinical and medical record audits, and other factors. Providers 
1317  shall not be entitled to enrollment in the Medicaid provider 
1318  network. The agency shall determine instances in which allowing 
1319  Medicaid beneficiaries to purchase durable medical equipment and 
1320  other goods is less expensive to the Medicaid program than long 
1321  term rental of the equipment or goods. The agency may establish 
1322  rules to facilitate purchases in lieu of long-term rentals in 
1323  order to protect against fraud and abuse in the Medicaid program 
1324  as defined in s. 409.913. The agency may seek federal waivers 
1325  necessary to administer these policies. 
1326         (48) 
1327         (b) The agency shall limit its network of durable medical 
1328  equipment and medical supply providers. For dates of service 
1329  after January 1, 2009, the agency shall limit payment for 
1330  durable medical equipment and supplies to providers that meet 
1331  all the requirements of this paragraph. 
1332         1. Providers must be accredited by a Centers for Medicare 
1333  and Medicaid Services deemed accreditation organization for 
1334  suppliers of durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, 
1335  and supplies. The provider must maintain accreditation and is 
1336  subject to unannounced reviews by the accrediting organization. 
1337         2. Providers must provide the services or supplies directly 
1338  to the Medicaid recipient or caregiver at the provider location 
1339  or recipient’s residence or send the supplies directly to the 
1340  recipient’s residence with receipt of mailed delivery. 
1341  Subcontracting or consignment of the service or supply to a 
1342  third party is prohibited. 
1343         3. Notwithstanding subparagraph 2., a durable medical 
1344  equipment provider may store nebulizers at a physician’s office 
1345  for the purpose of having the physician’s staff issue the 
1346  equipment if it meets all of the following conditions: 
1347         a. The physician must document the medical necessity and 
1348  need to prevent further deterioration of the patient’s 
1349  respiratory status by the timely delivery of the nebulizer in 
1350  the physician’s office. 
1351         b. The durable medical equipment provider must have written 
1352  documentation of the competency and training by a Florida 
1353  licensed registered respiratory therapist of any durable medical 
1354  equipment staff who participate in the training of physician 
1355  office staff for the use of nebulizers, including cleaning, 
1356  warranty, and special needs of patients. 
1357         c. The physician’s office must have documented the training 
1358  and competency of any staff member who initiates the delivery of 
1359  nebulizers to patients. The durable medical equipment provider 
1360  must maintain copies of all physician office training. 
1361         d. The physician’s office must maintain inventory records 
1362  of stored nebulizers, including documentation of the durable 
1363  medical equipment provider source. 
1364         e. A physician contracted with a Medicaid durable medical 
1365  equipment provider may not have a financial relationship with 
1366  that provider or receive any financial gain from the delivery of 
1367  nebulizers to patients. 
1368         4. Providers must have a physical business location and a 
1369  functional landline business phone. The location must be within 
1370  the state or not more than 50 miles from the Florida state line. 
1371  The agency may make exceptions for providers of durable medical 
1372  equipment or supplies not otherwise available from other 
1373  enrolled providers located within the state. 
1374         5. Physical business locations must be clearly identified 
1375  as a business that furnishes durable medical equipment or 
1376  medical supplies by signage that can be read from 20 feet away. 
1377  The location must be readily accessible to the public during 
1378  normal, posted business hours and must operate no less than 5 
1379  hours per day and no less than 5 days per week, with the 
1380  exception of scheduled and posted holidays. The location may not 
1381  be located within or at the same numbered street address as 
1382  another enrolled Medicaid durable medical equipment or medical 
1383  supply provider or as an enrolled Medicaid pharmacy that is also 
1384  enrolled as a durable medical equipment provider. A licensed 
1385  orthotist or prosthetist that provides only orthotic or 
1386  prosthetic devices as a Medicaid durable medical equipment 
1387  provider is exempt from the provisions in this paragraph. 
1388         6. Providers must maintain a stock of durable medical 
1389  equipment and medical supplies on site that is readily available 
1390  to meet the needs of the durable medical equipment business 
1391  location’s customers. 
1392         7. Providers must provide a surety bond of $50,000 for each 
1393  provider location, up to a maximum of 5 bonds statewide or an 
1394  aggregate bond of $250,000 statewide, as identified by Federal 
1395  Employer Identification Number. Providers who post a statewide 
1396  or an aggregate bond must identify all of their locations in any 
1397  Medicaid durable medical equipment and medical supply provider 
1398  enrollment application or bond renewal. Each provider location’s 
1399  surety bond must be renewed annually and the provider must 
1400  submit proof of renewal even if the original bond is a 
1401  continuous bond. A licensed orthotist or prosthetist that 
1402  provides only orthotic or prosthetic devices as a Medicaid 
1403  durable medical equipment provider is exempt from the provisions 
1404  in this paragraph. 
1405         8. Providers must obtain a level 2 background screening, in 
1406  accordance with chapter 435 and s. 408.809 as provided under s. 
1407  435.04, for each provider employee in direct contact with or 
1408  providing direct services to recipients of durable medical 
1409  equipment and medical supplies in their homes. This requirement 
1410  includes, but is not limited to, repair and service technicians, 
1411  fitters, and delivery staff. The provider shall pay for the cost 
1412  of the background screening. 
1413         9. The following providers are exempt from the requirements 
1414  of subparagraphs 1. and 7.: 
1415         a. Durable medical equipment providers owned and operated 
1416  by a government entity. 
1417         b. Durable medical equipment providers that are operating 
1418  within a pharmacy that is currently enrolled as a Medicaid 
1419  pharmacy provider. 
1420         c. Active, Medicaid-enrolled orthopedic physician groups, 
1421  primarily owned by physicians, which provide only orthotic and 
1422  prosthetic devices. 
1423         Section 27. Subsection (12) is added to section 411.01, 
1424  Florida Statutes, to read: 
1425         411.01 School readiness programs; early learning 
1426  coalitions.— 
1427         (12) SUBSTITUTE INSTRUCTORS.—Each school district shall 
1428  make a list of all individuals currently eligible to act as a 
1429  substitute teacher within the county pursuant to the rules 
1430  adopted by the school district pursuant to s. 1012.35 available 
1431  to an early learning coalition serving students within the 
1432  school district. Child care facilities, as defined by s. 
1433  402.302, may employ individuals listed as substitute instructors 
1434  for the purpose of offering the school readiness program, the 
1435  Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program, and all other 
1436  legally operating child care programs. 
1437         Section 28. Subsection (1) of section 429.14, Florida 
1438  Statutes, is amended to read: 
1439         429.14 Administrative penalties.— 
1440         (1) In addition to the requirements of part II of chapter 
1441  408, the agency may deny, revoke, and suspend any license issued 
1442  under this part and impose an administrative fine in the manner 
1443  provided in chapter 120 against a licensee of an assisted living 
1444  facility for a violation of any provision of this part, part II 
1445  of chapter 408, or applicable rules, or for any of the following 
1446  actions by a licensee of an assisted living facility, for the 
1447  actions of any person subject to level 2 background screening 
1448  under s. 408.809, or for the actions of any facility employee: 
1449         (a) An intentional or negligent act seriously affecting the 
1450  health, safety, or welfare of a resident of the facility. 
1451         (b) The determination by the agency that the owner lacks 
1452  the financial ability to provide continuing adequate care to 
1453  residents. 
1454         (c) Misappropriation or conversion of the property of a 
1455  resident of the facility. 
1456         (d) Failure to follow the criteria and procedures provided 
1457  under part I of chapter 394 relating to the transportation, 
1458  voluntary admission, and involuntary examination of a facility 
1459  resident. 
1460         (e) A citation of any of the following deficiencies as 
1461  specified in s. 429.19: 
1462         1. One or more cited class I deficiencies. 
1463         2. Three or more cited class II deficiencies. 
1464         3. Five or more cited class III deficiencies that have been 
1465  cited on a single survey and have not been corrected within the 
1466  times specified. 
1467         (f) Failure to comply with the A determination that a 
1468  person subject to level 2 background screening under s. 408.809 
1469  does not meet the screening standards of this part, s. 
1470  408.809(1), or chapter 435 s. 435.04 or that the facility is 
1471  retaining an employee subject to level 1 background screening 
1472  standards under s. 429.174 who does not meet the screening 
1473  standards of s. 435.03 and for whom exemptions from 
1474  disqualification have not been provided by the agency. 
1475         (g) A determination that an employee, volunteer, 
1476  administrator, or owner, or person who otherwise has access to 
1477  the residents of a facility does not meet the criteria specified 
1478  in s. 435.03(2), and the owner or administrator has not taken 
1479  action to remove the person. Exemptions from disqualification 
1480  may be granted as set forth in s. 435.07. No administrative 
1481  action may be taken against the facility if the person is 
1482  granted an exemption. 
1483         (g)(h) Violation of a moratorium. 
1484         (h)(i) Failure of the license applicant, the licensee 
1485  during relicensure, or a licensee that holds a provisional 
1486  license to meet the minimum license requirements of this part, 
1487  or related rules, at the time of license application or renewal. 
1488         (i)(j) An intentional or negligent life-threatening act in 
1489  violation of the uniform firesafety standards for assisted 
1490  living facilities or other firesafety standards that threatens 
1491  the health, safety, or welfare of a resident of a facility, as 
1492  communicated to the agency by the local authority having 
1493  jurisdiction or the State Fire Marshal. 
1494         (j)(k) Knowingly operating any unlicensed facility or 
1495  providing without a license any service that must be licensed 
1496  under this chapter or chapter 400. 
1497         (k)(l) Any act constituting a ground upon which application 
1498  for a license may be denied. 
1499         Section 29. Section 429.174, Florida Statutes, is amended 
1500  to read: 
1501         429.174 Background screening; exemptions.—The agency shall 
1502  require level 2 background screening for personnel as required 
1503  in s. 408.809(1)(e) pursuant to chapter 435 and s. 408.809. The 
1504  owner or administrator of an assisted living facility must 
1505  conduct level 1 background screening, as set forth in chapter 
1506  435, on all employees hired on or after October 1, 1998, who 
1507  perform personal services as defined in s. 429.02(16). The 
1508  agency may exempt an individual from employment disqualification 
1509  as set forth in chapter 435. Such persons shall be considered as 
1510  having met this requirement if: 
1511         (1) Proof of compliance with level 1 screening requirements 
1512  obtained to meet any professional license requirements in this 
1513  state is provided and accompanied, under penalty of perjury, by 
1514  a copy of the person’s current professional license and an 
1515  affidavit of current compliance with the background screening 
1516  requirements. 
1517         (2) The person required to be screened has been 
1518  continuously employed in the same type of occupation for which 
1519  the person is seeking employment without a breach in service 
1520  which exceeds 180 days, and proof of compliance with the level 1 
1521  screening requirement which is no more than 2 years old is 
1522  provided. Proof of compliance shall be provided directly from 
1523  one employer or contractor to another, and not from the person 
1524  screened. Upon request, a copy of screening results shall be 
1525  provided by the employer retaining documentation of the 
1526  screening to the person screened. 
1527         (3) The person required to be screened is employed by a 
1528  corporation or business entity or related corporation or 
1529  business entity that owns, operates, or manages more than one 
1530  facility or agency licensed under this chapter, and for whom a 
1531  level 1 screening was conducted by the corporation or business 
1532  entity as a condition of initial or continued employment. 
1533         Section 30. Subsection (4) of section 429.67, Florida 
1534  Statutes, is amended to read: 
1535         429.67 Licensure.— 
1536         (4) Upon receipt of a completed license application or 
1537  license renewal, and the fee, The agency shall require level 2 
1538  initiate a level 1 background screening for personnel as 
1539  required in s. 408.809(1)(e), including as provided under 
1540  chapter 435 on the adult family-care home provider, the 
1541  designated relief person, and all adult household members, 
1542  pursuant to chapter 435 and s. 408.809, and all staff members. 
1543         (a) Proof of compliance with level 1 screening standards 
1544  which has been submitted within the previous 5 years to meet any 
1545  facility or professional licensure requirements of the agency or 
1546  the Department of Health satisfies the requirements of this 
1547  subsection. Such proof must be accompanied, under penalty of 
1548  perjury, by a copy of the person’s current professional license 
1549  and an affidavit of current compliance with the background 
1550  screening requirements. 
1551         (b) The person required to be screened must have been 
1552  continuously employed in the same type of occupation for which 
1553  the person is seeking employment without a breach in service 
1554  that exceeds 180 days, and proof of compliance with the level 1 
1555  screening requirement which is no more than 2 years old must be 
1556  provided. Proof of compliance shall be provided directly from 
1557  one employer or contractor to another, and not from the person 
1558  screened. Upon request, a copy of screening results shall be 
1559  provided to the person screened by the employer retaining 
1560  documentation of the screening. 
1561         Section 31. Section 429.69, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
1562  read: 
1563         429.69 Denial, revocation, and suspension of a license.—In 
1564  addition to the requirements of part II of chapter 408, the 
1565  agency may deny, suspend, and revoke a license for any of the 
1566  following reasons: 
1567         (1) Failure to comply with the of any of the persons 
1568  required to undergo background screening standards of this part, 
1569  s. 408.809(1), or chapter 435 under s. 429.67 to meet the level 
1570  1 screening standards of s. 435.03, unless an exemption from 
1571  disqualification has been provided by the agency. 
1572         (2) Failure to correct cited fire code violations that 
1573  threaten the health, safety, or welfare of residents. 
1574         Section 32. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section 
1575  429.911, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
1576         429.911 Denial, suspension, revocation of license; 
1577  emergency action; administrative fines; investigations and 
1578  inspections.— 
1579         (2) Each of the following actions by the owner of an adult 
1580  day care center or by its operator or employee is a ground for 
1581  action by the agency against the owner of the center or its 
1582  operator or employee: 
1583         (c) A Failure to comply with the of persons subject to 
1584  level 2 background screening standards of this part, s. 
1585  408.809(1), or chapter 435 under s. 408.809 to meet the 
1586  screening standards of s. 435.04, or the retention by the center 
1587  of an employee subject to level 1 background screening standards 
1588  under s. 429.174 who does not meet the screening standards of s. 
1589  435.03 and for whom exemptions from disqualification have not 
1590  been provided by the agency. 
1591         Section 33. Section 429.919, Florida Statutes, is amended 
1592  to read: 
1593         429.919 Background screening.—The agency shall require 
1594  level 2 background screening for personnel as required in s. 
1595  408.809(1)(e) pursuant to chapter 435 and s. 408.809. The owner 
1596  or administrator of an adult day care center must conduct level 
1597  1 background screening as set forth in chapter 435 on all 
1598  employees hired on or after October 1, 1998, who provide basic 
1599  services or supportive and optional services to the 
1600  participants. Such persons satisfy this requirement if: 
1601         (1) Proof of compliance with level 1 screening requirements 
1602  obtained to meet any professional license requirements in this 
1603  state is provided and accompanied, under penalty of perjury, by 
1604  a copy of the person’s current professional license and an 
1605  affidavit of current compliance with the background screening 
1606  requirements. 
1607         (2) The person required to be screened has been 
1608  continuously employed, without a breach in service that exceeds 
1609  180 days, in the same type of occupation for which the person is 
1610  seeking employment and provides proof of compliance with the 
1611  level 1 screening requirement which is no more than 2 years old. 
1612  Proof of compliance must be provided directly from one employer 
1613  or contractor to another, and not from the person screened. Upon 
1614  request, a copy of screening results shall be provided to the 
1615  person screened by the employer retaining documentation of the 
1616  screening. 
1617         (3) The person required to be screened is employed by a 
1618  corporation or business entity or related corporation or 
1619  business entity that owns, operates, or manages more than one 
1620  facility or agency licensed under chapter 400 or this chapter, 
1621  and for whom a level 1 screening was conducted by the 
1622  corporation or business entity as a condition of initial or 
1623  continued employment. 
1624         Section 34. Section 430.0402, Florida Statutes, is created 
1625  to read: 
1626         430.0402Screening of direct service providers.— 
1627         (1)(a)Level 2 background screening pursuant to chapter 435 
1628  is required for direct service providers. Background screening 
1629  shall include employment history checks as provided in s. 
1630  435.03(1) and local criminal records checks through local law 
1631  enforcement agencies. 
1632         (b)For purposes of this section, the term “direct service 
1633  provider” means a person 18 years of age or older who, pursuant 
1634  to a program to provide services to the elderly, has direct, 
1635  face-to-face contact with a client while providing services to 
1636  the client or has access to the client’s living areas or to the 
1637  client’s funds or personal property. The term includes 
1638  coordinators, managers, and supervisors of residential 
1639  facilities and volunteers. 
1640         (2) Licensed physicians, nurses, or other professionals 
1641  licensed by the Department of Health are not subject to 
1642  background screening pursuant to this section if they are 
1643  providing a service that is within the scope of their licensed 
1644  practice. 
1645         (3) Refusal on the part of an employer to dismiss a 
1646  manager, supervisor, or direct service provider who has been 
1647  found to be in noncompliance with standards of this section 
1648  shall result in the automatic denial, termination, or revocation 
1649  of the license or certification, rate agreement, purchase order, 
1650  or contract, in addition to any other remedies authorized by 
1651  law. 
1652         (4)The background screening conducted pursuant to this 
1653  section must ensure that, in addition to the disqualifying 
1654  offenses listed in s. 435.04, no person subject to the 
1655  provisions of this section has an arrest awaiting final 
1656  disposition for, has been found guilty of, regardless of 
1657  adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, 
1658  or has been adjudicated delinquent and the record has not been 
1659  sealed or expunged for, any offense prohibited under any of the 
1660  following provisions of the Florida Statutes or under any 
1661  similar statute of another jurisdiction: 
1662         (a) Any authorizing statutes, if the offense was a felony. 
1663         (b) Section 409.920, relating to Medicaid provider fraud. 
1664         (c) Section 409.9201, relating to Medicaid fraud. 
1665         (d) Section 817.034, relating to fraudulent acts through 
1666  mail, wire, radio, electromagnetic, photoelectronic, or 
1667  photooptical systems. 
1668         (e) Section 817.234, relating to false and fraudulent 
1669  insurance claims. 
1670         (f) Section 817.505, relating to patient brokering. 
1671         (g) Section 817.568, relating to criminal use of personal 
1672  identification information. 
1673         (h) Section 817.60, relating to obtaining a credit card 
1674  through fraudulent means. 
1675         (i) Section 817.61, relating to fraudulent use of credit 
1676  cards, if the offense was a felony. 
1677         (j) Section 831.01, relating to forgery. 
1678         (k) Section 831.02, relating to uttering forged 
1679  instruments. 
1680         (l) Section 831.07, relating to forging bank bills, checks, 
1681  drafts, or promissory notes. 
1682         (m) Section 831.09, relating to uttering forged bank bills, 
1683  checks, drafts, or promissory notes. 
1684         Section 35. Section 435.01, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
1685  read: 
1686         435.01 Applicability of this chapter; statutory references; 
1687  rulemaking.— 
1688         (1)(a) Unless otherwise provided by law, whenever a 
1689  background screening for employment or a background security 
1690  check is required by law to be conducted pursuant to this 
1691  chapter for employment, unless otherwise provided by law, the 
1692  provisions of this chapter shall apply. 
1693         (b) Unless expressly provided otherwise, a reference in any 
1694  section of the Florida Statutes to chapter 435 or to any section 
1695  or sections or portion of a section of chapter 435 includes, and 
1696  shall be understood as including, all subsequent amendments to 
1697  chapter 435 or to the referenced section or sections or portions 
1698  of a section. The purpose of this chapter is to facilitate 
1699  uniform background screening and, to this end, a reference to 
1700  this chapter, or to any section or subdivision within this 
1701  chapter, constitutes a general reference under the doctrine of 
1702  incorporation by reference. 
1703         (2) Agencies may adopt rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) and 
1704  120.54 necessary to implement the provisions of this chapter. 
1705         Section 36. Section 435.02, Florida Statutes, is reordered 
1706  and amended to read: 
1707         435.02 Definitions.—For the purposes of this chapter, the 
1708  term: 
1709         (2)(1) “Employee” means any person required by law to be 
1710  screened pursuant to the provisions of this chapter. 
1711         (3)(2) “Employer” means any person or entity required by 
1712  law to conduct screening of employees pursuant to this chapter. 
1713         (1)(3) “Licensing Agency” means any state, or county, or 
1714  municipal agency that which grants licenses or registration 
1715  permitting the operation of an employer or is itself an employer 
1716  or that otherwise facilitates the screening of employees 
1717  pursuant to this chapter. When there is no state licensing 
1718  agency or the municipal or county licensing agency chooses not 
1719  to conduct employment screening, “licensing agency” means the 
1720  Department of Children and Family Services. 
1721         (4) “Employment” means any activity or service sought to be 
1722  performed by an employee that requires the employee to be 
1723  subject to screening pursuant to this chapter. 
1724         (5) “Vulnerable person” means a minor or a vulnerable adult 
1725  as defined in s. 415.102. 
1726         Section 37. Section 435.03, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
1727  read: 
1728         435.03 Level 1 screening standards.— 
1729         (1) All employees required by law to be screened pursuant 
1730  to this section must shall be required to undergo background 
1731  screening as a condition of employment and continued employment 
1732  which includes. For the purposes of this subsection, level 1 
1733  screenings shall include, but need not be limited to, employment 
1734  history checks and statewide criminal correspondence checks 
1735  through the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, a check of 
1736  the Dru Sjodin National Sex Offender Public Website, and may 
1737  include local criminal records checks through local law 
1738  enforcement agencies. 
1739         (2) Any person required by law to be screened pursuant to 
1740  this section must not have an arrest awaiting final disposition, 
1741  for whom employment screening is required by statute must not 
1742  have been found guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or 
1743  entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, and must not 
1744  have been adjudicated delinquent and the record has not been 
1745  sealed or expunged for, any offense prohibited under any 
1746  provision of s. 435.04(2) of the following provisions of the 
1747  Florida Statutes or under any similar statute of another 
1748  jurisdiction.: 
1749         (a) Section 393.135, relating to sexual misconduct with 
1750  certain developmentally disabled clients and reporting of such 
1751  sexual misconduct. 
1752         (b) Section 394.4593, relating to sexual misconduct with 
1753  certain mental health patients and reporting of such sexual 
1754  misconduct. 
1755         (c) Section 415.111, relating to abuse, neglect, or 
1756  exploitation of a vulnerable adult. 
1757         (d) Section 782.04, relating to murder. 
1758         (e) Section 782.07, relating to manslaughter, aggravated 
1759  manslaughter of an elderly person or disabled adult, or 
1760  aggravated manslaughter of a child. 
1761         (f) Section 782.071, relating to vehicular homicide. 
1762         (g) Section 782.09, relating to killing of an unborn quick 
1763  child by injury to the mother. 
1764         (h) Section 784.011, relating to assault, if the victim of 
1765  the offense was a minor. 
1766         (i) Section 784.021, relating to aggravated assault. 
1767         (j) Section 784.03, relating to battery, if the victim of 
1768  the offense was a minor. 
1769         (k) Section 784.045, relating to aggravated battery. 
1770         (l) Section 787.01, relating to kidnapping. 
1771         (m) Section 787.02, relating to false imprisonment. 
1772         (n) Section 794.011, relating to sexual battery. 
1773         (o) Former s. 794.041, relating to prohibited acts of 
1774  persons in familial or custodial authority. 
1775         (p) Chapter 796, relating to prostitution. 
1776         (q) Section 798.02, relating to lewd and lascivious 
1777  behavior. 
1778         (r) Chapter 800, relating to lewdness and indecent 
1779  exposure. 
1780         (s) Section 806.01, relating to arson. 
1781         (t) Chapter 812, relating to theft, robbery, and related 
1782  crimes, if the offense was a felony. 
1783         (u) Section 817.563, relating to fraudulent sale of 
1784  controlled substances, only if the offense was a felony. 
1785         (v) Section 825.102, relating to abuse, aggravated abuse, 
1786  or neglect of an elderly person or disabled adult. 
1787         (w) Section 825.1025, relating to lewd or lascivious 
1788  offenses committed upon or in the presence of an elderly person 
1789  or disabled adult. 
1790         (x) Section 825.103, relating to exploitation of an elderly 
1791  person or disabled adult, if the offense was a felony. 
1792         (y) Section 826.04, relating to incest. 
1793         (z) Section 827.03, relating to child abuse, aggravated 
1794  child abuse, or neglect of a child. 
1795         (aa) Section 827.04, relating to contributing to the 
1796  delinquency or dependency of a child. 
1797         (bb) Former s. 827.05, relating to negligent treatment of 
1798  children. 
1799         (cc) Section 827.071, relating to sexual performance by a 
1800  child. 
1801         (dd) Chapter 847, relating to obscene literature. 
1802         (ee) Chapter 893, relating to drug abuse prevention and 
1803  control, only if the offense was a felony or if any other person 
1804  involved in the offense was a minor. 
1805         (ff) Section 916.1075, relating to sexual misconduct with 
1806  certain forensic clients and reporting of such sexual 
1807  misconduct. 
1808         (3) The security background investigations under this 
1809  section must ensure that no person subject to the provisions of 
1810  this section has been found guilty of, regardless of 
1811  adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, 
1812  any offense that constitutes domestic violence as defined in s. 
1813  741.28, whether such act was committed in this state or in 
1814  another jurisdiction. Standards must also ensure that the 
1815  person: 
1816         (a) For employees and employers licensed or registered 
1817  pursuant to chapter 400 or chapter 429, and for employees and 
1818  employers of developmental disabilities centers as defined in s. 
1819  393.063, intermediate care facilities for the developmentally 
1820  disabled as defined in s. 400.960, and mental health treatment 
1821  facilities as defined in s. 394.455, meets the requirements of 
1822  this chapter. 
1823         (b) Has not committed an act that constitutes domestic 
1824  violence as defined in s. 741.28. 
1825         Section 38. Section 435.04, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
1826  read: 
1827         435.04 Level 2 screening standards.— 
1828         (1)(a) All employees required by law to be screened 
1829  pursuant to this section must in positions designated by law as 
1830  positions of trust or responsibility shall be required to 
1831  undergo security background investigations as a condition of 
1832  employment and continued employment which includes. For the 
1833  purposes of this subsection, security background investigations 
1834  shall include, but need not be limited to, fingerprinting for 
1835  statewide criminal history records all purposes and checks in 
1836  this subsection, statewide criminal and juvenile records checks 
1837  through the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, and national 
1838  federal criminal history records checks through the Federal 
1839  Bureau of Investigation, and may include local criminal records 
1840  checks through local law enforcement agencies. 
1841         (b)Fingerprints submitted pursuant to this section on or 
1842  after July 1, 2012, must be submitted electronically to the 
1843  Department of Law Enforcement. 
1844         (c)An agency may contract with one or more vendors to 
1845  perform all or part of the electronic fingerprinting pursuant to 
1846  this section. Such contracts must ensure that the owners and 
1847  personnel of the vendor performing the electronic fingerprinting 
1848  are qualified and will ensure the integrity and security of all 
1849  personal information. 
1850         (d)An agency may require by rule adopted pursuant to 
1851  chapter 120 that fingerprints submitted pursuant to this section 
1852  must be submitted electronically to the Department of Law 
1853  Enforcement on a date earlier than July 1, 2012. 
1854         (2) The security background investigations under this 
1855  section must ensure that no persons subject to the provisions of 
1856  this section have been arrested for and are awaiting final 
1857  disposition of, have been found guilty of, regardless of 
1858  adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, 
1859  or have been adjudicated delinquent and the record has not been 
1860  sealed or expunged for, any offense prohibited under any of the 
1861  following provisions of the Florida Statutes or under any 
1862  similar statute of another jurisdiction: 
1863         (a) Section 393.135, relating to sexual misconduct with 
1864  certain developmentally disabled clients and reporting of such 
1865  sexual misconduct. 
1866         (b) Section 394.4593, relating to sexual misconduct with 
1867  certain mental health patients and reporting of such sexual 
1868  misconduct. 
1869         (c) Section 415.111, relating to adult abuse, neglect, or 
1870  exploitation of aged persons or disabled adults. 
1871         (d) Section 782.04, relating to murder. 
1872         (e) Section 782.07, relating to manslaughter, aggravated 
1873  manslaughter of an elderly person or disabled adult, or 
1874  aggravated manslaughter of a child. 
1875         (f) Section 782.071, relating to vehicular homicide. 
1876         (g) Section 782.09, relating to killing of an unborn quick 
1877  child by injury to the mother. 
1878         (h) Chapter 784, relating to assault, battery, and culpable 
1879  negligence, if the offense was a felony. 
1880         (i)(h) Section 784.011, relating to assault, if the victim 
1881  of the offense was a minor. 
1882         (i) Section 784.021, relating to aggravated assault. 
1883         (j) Section 784.03, relating to battery, if the victim of 
1884  the offense was a minor. 
1885         (k) Section 784.045, relating to aggravated battery. 
1886         (l) Section 784.075, relating to battery on a detention or 
1887  commitment facility staff. 
1888         (k)(m) Section 787.01, relating to kidnapping. 
1889         (l)(n) Section 787.02, relating to false imprisonment. 
1890         (m) Section 787.025, relating to luring or enticing a 
1891  child. 
1892         (n)(o) Section 787.04(2), relating to taking, enticing, or 
1893  removing a child beyond the state limits with criminal intent 
1894  pending custody proceedings. 
1895         (o)(p) Section 787.04(3), relating to carrying a child 
1896  beyond the state lines with criminal intent to avoid producing a 
1897  child at a custody hearing or delivering the child to the 
1898  designated person. 
1899         (p)(q) Section 790.115(1), relating to exhibiting firearms 
1900  or weapons within 1,000 feet of a school. 
1901         (q)(r) Section 790.115(2)(b), relating to possessing an 
1902  electric weapon or device, destructive device, or other weapon 
1903  on school property. 
1904         (r)(s) Section 794.011, relating to sexual battery. 
1905         (s)(t) Former s. 794.041, relating to prohibited acts of 
1906  persons in familial or custodial authority. 
1907         (t) Section 794.05, relating to unlawful sexual activity 
1908  with certain minors. 
1909         (u) Chapter 796, relating to prostitution. 
1910         (v) Section 798.02, relating to lewd and lascivious 
1911  behavior. 
1912         (w) Chapter 800, relating to lewdness and indecent 
1913  exposure. 
1914         (x) Section 806.01, relating to arson. 
1915         (y) Section 810.02, relating to burglary. 
1916         (z) Section 810.14, relating to voyeurism, if the offense 
1917  is a felony. 
1918         (aa) Section 810.145, relating to video voyeurism, if the 
1919  offense is a felony. 
1920         (bb)(y) Chapter 812, relating to theft, robbery, and 
1921  related crimes, if the offense is a felony. 
1922         (cc)(z) Section 817.563, relating to fraudulent sale of 
1923  controlled substances, only if the offense was a felony. 
1924         (dd)(aa) Section 825.102, relating to abuse, aggravated 
1925  abuse, or neglect of an elderly person or disabled adult. 
1926         (ee)(bb) Section 825.1025, relating to lewd or lascivious 
1927  offenses committed upon or in the presence of an elderly person 
1928  or disabled adult. 
1929         (ff)(cc) Section 825.103, relating to exploitation of an 
1930  elderly person or disabled adult, if the offense was a felony. 
1931         (gg)(dd) Section 826.04, relating to incest. 
1932         (hh)(ee) Section 827.03, relating to child abuse, 
1933  aggravated child abuse, or neglect of a child. 
1934         (ii)(ff) Section 827.04, relating to contributing to the 
1935  delinquency or dependency of a child. 
1936         (jj)(gg) Former s. 827.05, relating to negligent treatment 
1937  of children. 
1938         (kk)(hh) Section 827.071, relating to sexual performance by 
1939  a child. 
1940         (ll)(ii) Section 843.01, relating to resisting arrest with 
1941  violence. 
1942         (mm)(jj) Section 843.025, relating to depriving a law 
1943  enforcement, correctional, or correctional probation officer 
1944  means of protection or communication. 
1945         (nn)(kk) Section 843.12, relating to aiding in an escape. 
1946         (oo)(ll) Section 843.13, relating to aiding in the escape 
1947  of juvenile inmates in correctional institutions. 
1948         (pp)(mm) Chapter 847, relating to obscene literature. 
1949         (qq)(nn) Section 874.05(1), relating to encouraging or 
1950  recruiting another to join a criminal gang. 
1951         (rr)(oo) Chapter 893, relating to drug abuse prevention and 
1952  control, only if the offense was a felony or if any other person 
1953  involved in the offense was a minor. 
1954         (ss)(pp) Section 916.1075, relating to sexual misconduct 
1955  with certain forensic clients and reporting of such sexual 
1956  misconduct. 
1957         (tt)(qq) Section 944.35(3), relating to inflicting cruel or 
1958  inhuman treatment on an inmate resulting in great bodily harm. 
1959         (uu) Section 944.40, relating to escape. 
1960         (vv)(rr) Section 944.46, relating to harboring, concealing, 
1961  or aiding an escaped prisoner. 
1962         (ww)(ss) Section 944.47, relating to introduction of 
1963  contraband into a correctional facility. 
1964         (xx)(tt) Section 985.701, relating to sexual misconduct in 
1965  juvenile justice programs. 
1966         (yy)(uu) Section 985.711, relating to contraband introduced 
1967  into detention facilities. 
1968         (3) The security background investigations under this 
1969  section must ensure that no person subject to this section has 
1970  been found guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or entered a 
1971  plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, any offense that 
1972  constitutes domestic violence as defined in s. 741.28, whether 
1973  such act was committed in this state or in another jurisdiction. 
1974  The security background investigations conducted under this 
1975  section for employees of the Department of Juvenile Justice must 
1976  ensure that no persons subject to the provisions of this section 
1977  have been found guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or 
1978  entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, any offense 
1979  prohibited under any of the following provisions of the Florida 
1980  Statutes or under any similar statute of another jurisdiction: 
1981         (a) Section 784.07, relating to assault or battery of law 
1982  enforcement officers, firefighters, emergency medical care 
1983  providers, public transit employees or agents, or other 
1984  specified officers. 
1985         (b) Section 810.02, relating to burglary, if the offense is 
1986  a felony. 
1987         (c) Section 944.40, relating to escape. 
1988 
1989  The Department of Juvenile Justice may not remove a 
1990  disqualification from employment or grant an exemption to any 
1991  person who is disqualified under this section for any offense 
1992  disposed of during the most recent 7-year period. 
1993         (4) Standards must also ensure that the person: 
1994         (a) For employees or employers licensed or registered 
1995  pursuant to chapter 400 or chapter 429, does not have a 
1996  confirmed report of abuse, neglect, or exploitation as defined 
1997  in s. 415.102(6), which has been uncontested or upheld under s. 
1998  415.103. 
1999         (b) Has not committed an act that constitutes domestic 
2000  violence as defined in s. 741.30. 
2001         (5) Under penalty of perjury, all employees in such 
2002  positions of trust or responsibility shall attest to meeting the 
2003  requirements for qualifying for employment and agreeing to 
2004  inform the employer immediately if convicted of any of the 
2005  disqualifying offenses while employed by the employer. Each 
2006  employer of employees in such positions of trust or 
2007  responsibilities which is licensed or registered by a state 
2008  agency shall submit to the licensing agency annually or at the 
2009  time of license renewal, under penalty of perjury, an affidavit 
2010  of compliance with the provisions of this section. 
2011         Section 39. Section 435.05, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
2012  read: 
2013         435.05 Requirements for covered employees and employers. 
2014  Except as otherwise provided by law, the following requirements 
2015  shall apply to covered employees and employers: 
2016         (1)(a) Every person required by law to be screened pursuant 
2017  to the provisions of this chapter must employed in a position 
2018  for which employment screening is required must, within 5 
2019  working days after starting to work, submit to the employer a 
2020  complete set of information necessary to conduct a screening 
2021  under this chapter section. 
2022         (b) For level 1 screening, the employer must submit the 
2023  information necessary for screening to the Florida Department of 
2024  Law Enforcement within 5 working days after receiving it. The 
2025  Florida Department of Law Enforcement will conduct a search of 
2026  its records and will respond to the employer or agency. The 
2027  employer will inform the employee whether screening has revealed 
2028  any disqualifying information. 
2029         (c) For level 2 screening, the employer or licensing agency 
2030  must submit the information necessary for screening to the 
2031  Florida Department of Law Enforcement within 5 working days 
2032  after receiving it. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement 
2033  will perform a criminal history record check of its conduct a 
2034  search of its criminal and juvenile records and will request 
2035  that the Federal Bureau of Investigation perform a national 
2036  criminal history record check conduct a search of its records 
2037  for each employee for whom the request is made. The Florida 
2038  Department of Law Enforcement will respond to the employer or 
2039  licensing agency, and the employer or licensing agency will 
2040  inform the employee whether screening has revealed disqualifying 
2041  information. 
2042         (d) The person whose background is being checked must 
2043  supply any missing criminal or other necessary information upon 
2044  request to the requesting employer or agency within 30 days 
2045  after receiving the employer makes a request for the information 
2046  or be subject to automatic disqualification. 
2047         (2) Every employee must attest, subject to penalty of 
2048  perjury, to meeting the requirements for qualifying for 
2049  employment pursuant to this chapter and agreeing to inform the 
2050  employer immediately if arrested for any of the disqualifying 
2051  offenses while employed by the employer. Unless otherwise 
2052  prohibited by state or federal law, new employees may be placed 
2053  on probationary status pending a determination of compliance 
2054  with minimum standards set forth in this chapter. 
2055         (3) Each employer that is licensed or registered with an 
2056  agency and is required by law to conduct level 2 background 
2057  screening must submit to the agency sign an affidavit annually 
2058  or at the time of license renewal, under penalty of perjury, a 
2059  signed affidavit attesting to compliance with the provisions of 
2060  this chapter stating that all covered employees have been 
2061  screened or are newly hired and are awaiting the results of the 
2062  required screening checks. 
2063         Section 40. Section 435.06, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
2064  read: 
2065         435.06 Exclusion from employment.— 
2066         (1) When an employer or licensing agency has reasonable 
2067  cause to believe that grounds exist for the denial or 
2068  termination of employment of any employee as a result of 
2069  background screening, it shall notify the employee in writing, 
2070  stating the specific record that which indicates noncompliance 
2071  with the standards in this chapter section. It shall be the 
2072  responsibility of the affected employee to contest his or her 
2073  disqualification or to request exemption from disqualification. 
2074  The only basis for contesting the disqualification shall be 
2075  proof of mistaken identity. 
2076         (2)(a) An employer may not hire, select, or otherwise allow 
2077  an employee to have contact with any vulnerable person that 
2078  would place the employee in a role that would require background 
2079  screening until such time as the screening process is completed 
2080  and demonstrates the absence of any grounds for the denial or 
2081  termination of employment. If the screening process shows any 
2082  grounds for the denial or termination of employment, the 
2083  employer may not hire, select, or otherwise allow the employee 
2084  to have contact with any vulnerable person that would place the 
2085  employee in a role that would require background screening 
2086  unless the employee is granted an exemption for the 
2087  disqualification by the agency as provided under s. 435.07. 
2088         (b) If at any time an employer becomes aware that an 
2089  employee has been arrested for a disqualifying offense, the 
2090  employer must remove the employee from contact with any 
2091  vulnerable person that would place the employee in a role that 
2092  would require background screening until such time as the arrest 
2093  is resolved in such a way that the employer determines that the 
2094  employee is still eligible for employment under this chapter. 
2095         (c) The employer must either terminate the employment of 
2096  any of its personnel found to be in noncompliance with the 
2097  minimum standards of this chapter for good moral character 
2098  contained in this section or place the employee in a position 
2099  for which background screening is not required unless the 
2100  employee is granted an exemption from disqualification pursuant 
2101  to s. 435.07. 
2102         (3) Any employee person who is required to undergo 
2103  employment screening and who refuses to cooperate in such 
2104  screening or refuses to timely submit the information necessary 
2105  to complete the screening, including fingerprints when required, 
2106  must shall be disqualified for employment in such position or, 
2107  if employed, must shall be dismissed. 
2108         (4)There is no unemployment compensation or other monetary 
2109  liability on the part of, and no cause of action for damages 
2110  arising against, an employer that, upon notice of a conviction 
2111  or arrest for a disqualifying offense listed under this chapter, 
2112  terminates the person against whom the report was issued or who 
2113  was arrested, regardless of whether or not that person has filed 
2114  for an exemption pursuant to this chapter. 
2115         Section 41. Section 435.07, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
2116  read: 
2117         435.07 Exemptions from disqualification.—Unless otherwise 
2118  provided by law, the provisions of this section shall apply to 
2119  exemptions from disqualification for disqualifying offenses 
2120  revealed pursuant to background screenings required by law to be 
2121  conducted pursuant to this chapter, regardless of whether those 
2122  disqualifying offenses are listed in this chapter or are 
2123  codified in other statutes. 
2124         (1) The head of the appropriate licensing agency may grant 
2125  to any employee otherwise disqualified from employment an 
2126  exemption from disqualification for: 
2127         (a) Felonies for which at least 3 years have elapsed since 
2128  the applicant for the exemption has completed or been lawfully 
2129  released from confinement, supervision, or sanction for the 
2130  disqualifying felony committed more than 3 years prior to the 
2131  date of disqualification; 
2132         (b) Misdemeanors prohibited under any of the Florida 
2133  Statutes cited in this chapter or under similar statutes of 
2134  other jurisdictions for which the applicant for the exemption 
2135  has completed or been lawfully released from confinement, 
2136  supervision, or sanction; 
2137         (c) Offenses that were felonies when committed but that are 
2138  now misdemeanors and for which the applicant for the exemption 
2139  has completed or been lawfully released from confinement, 
2140  supervision, or sanction; or 
2141         (d) Findings of delinquency. For offenses that would be 
2142  felonies if committed by an adult and the record has not been 
2143  sealed or expunged, the exemption may not be granted until at 
2144  least 3 years have elapsed since the applicant for the exemption 
2145  has completed or been lawfully released from confinement, 
2146  supervision, or sanction for the disqualifying offense; or 
2147         (e)Commissions of acts of domestic violence as defined in 
2148  s. 741.30. 
2149 
2150  For the purposes of this subsection, the term “felonies” means 
2151  both felonies prohibited under any of the Florida Statutes cited 
2152  in this chapter or under similar statutes of other 
2153  jurisdictions. 
2154         (2) Persons employed, or applicants for employment, by 
2155  treatment providers who treat adolescents 13 years of age and 
2156  older who are disqualified from employment solely because of 
2157  crimes under s. 817.563, s. 893.13, or s. 893.147 may be 
2158  exempted from disqualification from employment pursuant to this 
2159  chapter section without application of the 3-year waiting period 
2160  in paragraph (1)(a). 
2161         (3)(a) In order for the head of an agency a licensing 
2162  department to grant an exemption to any employee, the employee 
2163  must demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that the 
2164  employee should not be disqualified from employment. Employees 
2165  seeking an exemption have the burden of setting forth clear and 
2166  convincing sufficient evidence of rehabilitation, including, but 
2167  not limited to, the circumstances surrounding the criminal 
2168  incident for which an exemption is sought, the time period that 
2169  has elapsed since the incident, the nature of the harm caused to 
2170  the victim, and the history of the employee since the incident, 
2171  or any other evidence or circumstances indicating that the 
2172  employee will not present a danger if employment or continued 
2173  employment is allowed. 
2174         (b) The agency may consider as part of its deliberations of 
2175  the employee’s rehabilitation the fact that the employee has, 
2176  subsequent to the conviction for the disqualifying offense for 
2177  which the exemption is being sought, been arrested for or 
2178  convicted of another crime, even if that crime is not a 
2179  disqualifying offense. 
2180         (c) The decision of the head of an agency licensing 
2181  department regarding an exemption may be contested through the 
2182  hearing procedures set forth in chapter 120. The standard of 
2183  review by the administrative law judge is whether the agency’s 
2184  intended action is an abuse of discretion. 
2185         (4)(a) Disqualification from employment under this chapter 
2186  subsection (1) may not be removed from, nor may an exemption be 
2187  granted to, any personnel who is found guilty of, regardless of 
2188  adjudication, or who has entered a plea of nolo contendere or 
2189  guilty to, any felony covered by s. 435.03 or s. 435.04 solely 
2190  by reason of any pardon, executive clemency, or restoration of 
2191  civil rights. 
2192         (b) Disqualification from employment under this chapter may 
2193  not be removed from, nor may an exemption be granted to, any 
2194  person who is a: 
2195         1. Sexual predator as designated pursuant to s. 775.21; 
2196         2. Career offender pursuant to s. 775.261; or 
2197         3. Sexual offender pursuant to s. 943.0435, unless the 
2198  requirement to register as a sexual offender has been removed 
2199  pursuant to s. 943.04354. 
2200         (5) Exemptions granted by one licensing agency shall be 
2201  considered by subsequent licensing agencies, but are not binding 
2202  on the subsequent licensing agency. 
2203         Section 42. Section 435.08, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
2204  read: 
2205         435.08 Payment for processing of fingerprints and state 
2206  criminal records checks.—Either the employer or the employee is 
2207  responsible for paying the costs of screening. Payment shall be 
2208  submitted to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement with the 
2209  request for screening. The appropriate agency is responsible for 
2210  collecting and paying any fee related to fingerprints retained 
2211  on its behalf to the Department of Law Enforcement for costs 
2212  resulting from the fingerprint information retention services. 
2213  The amount of the annual fee and procedures for the submission 
2214  and retention of fingerprint information and for the 
2215  dissemination of search results shall be established by rule of 
2216  the Department of Law Enforcement. 
2217         Section 43. Subsection (1) of section 464.203, Florida 
2218  Statutes, is amended to read: 
2219         464.203 Certified nursing assistants; certification 
2220  requirement.— 
2221         (1) The board shall issue a certificate to practice as a 
2222  certified nursing assistant to any person who demonstrates a 
2223  minimum competency to read and write and successfully passes the 
2224  required background Level I or Level II screening pursuant to s. 
2225  400.215 and meets one of the following requirements: 
2226         (a) Has successfully completed an approved training program 
2227  and achieved a minimum score, established by rule of the board, 
2228  on the nursing assistant competency examination, which consists 
2229  of a written portion and skills-demonstration portion approved 
2230  by the board and administered at a site and by personnel 
2231  approved by the department. 
2232         (b) Has achieved a minimum score, established by rule of 
2233  the board, on the nursing assistant competency examination, 
2234  which consists of a written portion and skills-demonstration 
2235  portion, approved by the board and administered at a site and by 
2236  personnel approved by the department and: 
2237         1. Has a high school diploma, or its equivalent; or 
2238         2. Is at least 18 years of age. 
2239         (c) Is currently certified in another state; is listed on 
2240  that state’s certified nursing assistant registry; and has not 
2241  been found to have committed abuse, neglect, or exploitation in 
2242  that state. 
2243         (d) Has completed the curriculum developed under the 
2244  Enterprise Florida Jobs and Education Partnership Grant and 
2245  achieved a minimum score, established by rule of the board, on 
2246  the nursing assistant competency examination, which consists of 
2247  a written portion and skills-demonstration portion, approved by 
2248  the board and administered at a site and by personnel approved 
2249  by the department. 
2250         Section 44. Subsection (9) of section 489.115, Florida 
2251  Statutes, is amended to read: 
2252         489.115 Certification and registration; endorsement; 
2253  reciprocity; renewals; continuing education.— 
2254         (9) An initial applicant shall submit, along with the 
2255  application, a complete set of fingerprints to in a form and 
2256  manner required by the department. The fingerprints shall be 
2257  submitted to the Department of Law Enforcement for state 
2258  processing, and the Department of Law Enforcement shall forward 
2259  them to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for national 
2260  processing for the purpose of determining if the applicant has a 
2261  criminal history record conducting a level 2 background check 
2262  pursuant to s. 435.04. The department shall and the board may 
2263  review the background results to determine if an applicant meets 
2264  licensure requirements. The cost for the fingerprint processing 
2265  shall be borne by the person subject to the background 
2266  screening. These fees are to be collected by the authorized 
2267  agencies or vendors. The authorized agencies or vendors are 
2268  responsible for paying the processing costs to the Department of 
2269  Law Enforcement. 
2270         Section 45. Paragraphs (g) and (h) of subsection (2) of 
2271  section 943.05, Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection 
2272  (4) is added to that section, to read: 
2273         943.05 Criminal Justice Information Program; duties; crime 
2274  reports.— 
2275         (2) The program shall: 
2276         (g) Upon official written request, and subject to the 
2277  department having sufficient funds and equipment to participate 
2278  in such a request, from the agency executive director or 
2279  secretary, or from his or her designee, or from qualified 
2280  entities participating in the volunteer and employee criminal 
2281  history screening system under s. 943.0542, or as otherwise 
2282  required As authorized by law, retain fingerprints submitted by 
2283  criminal and noncriminal justice agencies to the department for 
2284  a criminal history background screening in a manner provided by 
2285  rule and enter the fingerprints in the statewide automated 
2286  fingerprint identification system authorized by paragraph (b). 
2287  Such fingerprints shall thereafter be available for all purposes 
2288  and uses authorized for arrest fingerprint submissions cards 
2289  entered into the statewide automated fingerprint identification 
2290  system pursuant to s. 943.051. 
2291         (h)1.For each agency or qualified entity that officially 
2292  requests retention of fingerprints or for which retention is 
2293  otherwise required As authorized by law, search all arrest 
2294  fingerprint submissions cards received under s. 943.051 against 
2295  the fingerprints retained in the statewide automated fingerprint 
2296  identification system under paragraph (g). 
2297         1. Any arrest record that is identified with the retained 
2298  fingerprints of a person subject to background screening as 
2299  provided in paragraph (g) shall be reported to the appropriate 
2300  agency or qualified entity. 
2301         2. To Agencies may participate in this search process, 
2302  agencies or qualified entities must notify each person 
2303  fingerprinted that his or her fingerprints will be retained, pay 
2304  by payment of an annual fee to the department, and inform by 
2305  informing the department of any change in the affiliation, 
2306  employment, or contractual status or place of affiliation, 
2307  employment, or contracting of each person the persons whose 
2308  fingerprints are retained under paragraph (g) when such change 
2309  removes or eliminates the agency or qualified entity’s basis or 
2310  need for receiving reports of any arrest of that person, so that 
2311  the agency or qualified entity will not be obligated to pay the 
2312  upcoming annual fee for the retention and searching of that 
2313  person’s fingerprints to the department. The department shall 
2314  adopt a rule setting the amount of the annual fee to be imposed 
2315  upon each participating agency or qualified entity for 
2316  performing these searches and establishing the procedures for 
2317  the retention of fingerprints and the dissemination of search 
2318  results. The fee may be borne by the agency, qualified entity, 
2319  or person subject to fingerprint retention or as otherwise 
2320  provided by law. Fees may be waived or reduced by the executive 
2321  director for good cause shown. Consistent with the recognition 
2322  of criminal justice agencies expressed in s. 943.053(3), these 
2323  services will be provided to criminal justice agencies for 
2324  criminal justice purposes free of charge. 
2325         3. Agencies that participate in the fingerprint retention 
2326  and search process may adopt rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) 
2327  and 120.54 to require employers to keep the agency informed of 
2328  any change in the affiliation, employment, or contractual status 
2329  of each person whose fingerprints are retained under paragraph 
2330  (g) when such change removes or eliminates the agency’s basis or 
2331  need for receiving reports of any arrest of that person, so that 
2332  the agency will not be obligated to pay the upcoming annual fee 
2333  for the retention and searching of that person’s fingerprints to 
2334  the department. 
2335         (4) Upon notification that a federal fingerprint retention 
2336  program is in effect, and subject to the department being funded 
2337  and equipped to participate in such a program, the department 
2338  shall, when state and national criminal history records checks 
2339  and retention of submitted prints are authorized or required by 
2340  law, retain the fingerprints as provided in paragraphs (2)(g) 
2341  and (h) and advise the Federal Bureau of Investigation to retain 
2342  the fingerprints at the national level for searching against 
2343  arrest fingerprint submissions received at the national level. 
2344         Section 46. Subsections (6) and (11) of section 943.053, 
2345  Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 
2346         943.053 Dissemination of criminal justice information; 
2347  fees.— 
2348         (6) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
2349  department shall provide to the Florida Department of Revenue 
2350  Child Support Enforcement access to Florida criminal records 
2351  which are not exempt from disclosure under chapter 119, and to 
2352  such information as may be lawfully available from other states 
2353  via the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, for 
2354  the purpose of locating subjects who owe or potentially owe 
2355  support, as defined in s. 409.2554, or to whom such obligation 
2356  is owed pursuant to Title IV-D of the Social Security Act. Such 
2357  information may be provided to child support enforcement 
2358  authorities in other states for these specific purposes. 
2359         (11) A criminal justice agency that is authorized under 
2360  federal rules or law to conduct a criminal history background 
2361  check on an agency employee who is not certified by the Criminal 
2362  Justice Standards and Training Commission under s. 943.12 may 
2363  submit to the department the fingerprints of the noncertified 
2364  employee to obtain state and national criminal history 
2365  information. Effective January 15, 2007, The fingerprints 
2366  submitted shall be retained and entered in the statewide 
2367  automated fingerprint identification system authorized by s. 
2368  943.05 and shall be available for all purposes and uses 
2369  authorized for arrest fingerprint submissions cards entered in 
2370  the statewide automated fingerprint identification system 
2371  pursuant to s. 943.051. The department shall search all arrest 
2372  fingerprint submissions cards received pursuant to s. 943.051 
2373  against the fingerprints retained in the statewide automated 
2374  fingerprint identification system pursuant to this section. In 
2375  addition to all purposes and uses authorized for arrest 
2376  fingerprint submissions cards for which submitted fingerprints 
2377  may be used, any arrest record that is identified with the 
2378  retained employee fingerprints must be reported to the 
2379  submitting employing agency. 
2380         Section 47. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section 
2381  984.01, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
2382         984.01 Purposes and intent; personnel standards and 
2383  screening.— 
2384         (2) The Department of Juvenile Justice or the Department of 
2385  Children and Family Services, as appropriate, may contract with 
2386  the Federal Government, other state departments and agencies, 
2387  county and municipal governments and agencies, public and 
2388  private agencies, and private individuals and corporations in 
2389  carrying out the purposes of, and the responsibilities 
2390  established in, this chapter. 
2391         (a) When the department of Juvenile Justice or the 
2392  Department of Children and Family Services contracts with a 
2393  provider for any program for children, all personnel, including 
2394  owners, operators, employees, and volunteers, in the facility 
2395  must be of good moral character. Each contract entered into by 
2396  either department for services delivered on an appointment or 
2397  intermittent basis by a provider that does not have regular 
2398  custodial responsibility for children and each contract with a 
2399  school for before or aftercare services must ensure that the 
2400  owners, operators, and all personnel who have direct contact 
2401  with children are of good moral character. A volunteer who 
2402  assists on an intermittent basis for less than 10 40 hours per 
2403  month need not be screened, provided a person who meets the 
2404  screening requirement of this section is always present and has 
2405  the volunteer in his or her line of sight if the volunteer is 
2406  under direct and constant supervision by persons who meet the 
2407  screening requirements. 
2408         Section 48. Section 985.644, Florida Statutes, is amended 
2409  to read: 
2410         985.644 Departmental contracting powers; personnel 
2411  standards and screening.— 
2412         (1) The department of Juvenile Justice or the Department of 
2413  Children and Family Services, as appropriate, may contract with 
2414  the Federal Government, other state departments and agencies, 
2415  county and municipal governments and agencies, public and 
2416  private agencies, and private individuals and corporations in 
2417  carrying out the purposes of, and the responsibilities 
2418  established in, this chapter. 
2419         (a) When the Department of Juvenile Justice or the 
2420  Department of Children and Family Services contracts with a 
2421  provider for any program for children, all personnel, including 
2422  owners, operators, employees, and volunteers, in the facility 
2423  must be of good moral character. Each contract entered into by 
2424  the either department for services delivered on an appointment 
2425  or intermittent basis by a provider that does not have regular 
2426  custodial responsibility for children and each contract with a 
2427  school for before or aftercare services must ensure that all the 
2428  owners, operators, and all personnel who have direct contact 
2429  with children are subject to level 2 background screening 
2430  pursuant to chapter 435 of good moral character. 
2431         (b) A volunteer who assists the department or any program 
2432  for children on an intermittent basis for less than 10 40 hours 
2433  per month need not be screened, provided a person who meets the 
2434  screening requirement of this section is always present and has 
2435  the volunteer in his or her line of sight if the volunteer is 
2436  under direct and constant supervision by persons who meet the 
2437  screening requirements. 
2438         (b) The Department of Juvenile Justice and the Department 
2439  of Children and Family Services shall require employment 
2440  screening pursuant to chapter 435, using the level 2 standards 
2441  set forth in that chapter for personnel in programs for children 
2442  or youths. 
2443         (c) The Department of Juvenile Justice or the Department of 
2444  Children and Family Services may grant exemptions from 
2445  disqualification from working with children as provided in s. 
2446  435.07. 
2447         (2) The department may contract with the Federal 
2448  Government, other state departments and agencies, county and 
2449  municipal governments and agencies, public and private agencies, 
2450  and private individuals and corporations in carrying out the 
2451  purposes and the responsibilities of the delinquency services 
2452  and programs of the department. 
2453         (2)(3) The department shall adopt a rule pursuant to 
2454  chapter 120 establishing a procedure to provide notice of policy 
2455  changes that affect contracted delinquency services and 
2456  programs. A policy is defined as an operational requirement that 
2457  applies to only the specified contracted delinquency service or 
2458  program. The procedure shall include: 
2459         (a) Public notice of policy development. 
2460         (b) Opportunity for public comment on the proposed policy. 
2461         (c) Assessment for fiscal impact upon the department and 
2462  providers. 
2463         (d) The department’s response to comments received. 
2464         (4) When the department contracts with a provider for any 
2465  delinquency service or program, all personnel, including all 
2466  owners, operators, employees, and volunteers in the facility or 
2467  providing the service or program shall be of good moral 
2468  character. A volunteer who assists on an intermittent basis for 
2469  less than 40 hours per month is not required to be screened if 
2470  the volunteer is under direct and constant supervision by 
2471  persons who meet the screening requirements. 
2472         (3)(5)(a) All employees of the department and all personnel 
2473  of contract providers for any program for children, including 
2474  all owners, operators, employees, persons who have access to 
2475  confidential juvenile records, and volunteers, must complete For 
2476  any person employed by the department, or by a provider under 
2477  contract with the department, in delinquency facilities, 
2478  services, or programs, the department shall require: 
2479         1. A level 2 employment screening pursuant to chapter 435 
2480  prior to employment. The security background investigations 
2481  conducted under this section must ensure that, in addition to 
2482  the disqualifying offenses listed in s. 435.04, no person 
2483  subject to the background screening provisions of this section 
2484  has been found guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or entered 
2485  a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, any offense prohibited 
2486  under any of the following provisions of the Florida Statutes or 
2487  under any similar statute of another jurisdiction: 
2488         a. Section 784.07, relating to assault or battery of law 
2489  enforcement officers, firefighters, emergency medical care 
2490  providers, public transit employees or agents, or other 
2491  specified officers. 
2492         b. Section 817.568, relating to criminal use of personal 
2493  identification information. 
2494         2. A national federal criminal records check by the Federal 
2495  Bureau of Investigation every 5 years following the date of the 
2496  person’s employment. 
2497         (b) Except for law enforcement, correctional, and 
2498  correctional probation officers, to whom s. 943.13(5) applies, 
2499  the department shall electronically submit to the Department of 
2500  Law Enforcement: 
2501         1. Fingerprint information obtained during the employment 
2502  screening required by subparagraph (a)1. 
2503         2. Beginning on December 15, 2005, Fingerprint information 
2504  for all persons employed by the department, or by a provider 
2505  under contract with the department, in delinquency facilities, 
2506  services, or programs if such fingerprint information has not 
2507  previously been electronically submitted to the Department of 
2508  Law Enforcement under this paragraph. 
2509         (c) All fingerprint information electronically submitted to 
2510  the Department of Law Enforcement under paragraph (b) shall be 
2511  retained by the Department of Law Enforcement and entered into 
2512  the statewide automated fingerprint identification system 
2513  authorized by s. 943.05(2)(b). Thereafter, such fingerprint 
2514  information shall be available for all purposes and uses 
2515  authorized for arrest fingerprint information entered into the 
2516  statewide automated fingerprint identification system pursuant 
2517  to s. 943.051 until the fingerprint information is removed 
2518  pursuant to paragraph (e). The Department of Law Enforcement 
2519  shall search all arrest fingerprint information received 
2520  pursuant to s. 943.051 against the fingerprint information 
2521  entered into the statewide automated fingerprint system pursuant 
2522  to this subsection. Any arrest records identified as a result of 
2523  the search shall be reported to the department in the manner and 
2524  timeframe established by the Department of Law Enforcement by 
2525  rule. 
2526         (d) The department shall pay an annual fee to the 
2527  Department of Law Enforcement for its costs resulting from the 
2528  fingerprint information retention services required by this 
2529  subsection. The amount of the annual fee and procedures for the 
2530  submission and retention of fingerprint information and for the 
2531  dissemination of search results shall be established by the 
2532  Department of Law Enforcement by a rule that is applicable to 
2533  the department individually pursuant to this subsection or that 
2534  is applicable to the department and other employing agencies 
2535  pursuant to rulemaking authority otherwise provided by law. 
2536         (e) The department shall notify the Department of Law 
2537  Enforcement when a person whose fingerprint information is 
2538  retained by the Department of Law Enforcement under this 
2539  subsection is no longer employed by the department, or by a 
2540  provider under contract with the department, in a delinquency 
2541  facility, service, or program. This notice shall be provided by 
2542  the department to the Department of Law Enforcement no later 
2543  than 6 months after the date of the change in the person’s 
2544  employment status. Fingerprint information for persons 
2545  identified by the department in the notice shall be removed from 
2546  the statewide automated fingerprint system. 
2547         (6) The department may grant exemptions from 
2548  disqualification from working with children as provided in s. 
2549  435.07. 
2550         (7) The department may adopt rules pursuant to ss. 
2551  120.536(1) and 120.54 to describe the procedure and requirements 
2552  necessary to implement the employment screening and fingerprint 
2553  retention services for all employees of the department and all 
2554  personnel of contract providers for any program for children, 
2555  including all owners, operators, employees, and volunteers, 
2556  including the collection of associated fees. 
2557         Section 49. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section 
2558  381.60225, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
2559         381.60225 Background screening.— 
2560         (1) Each applicant for certification must comply with the 
2561  following requirements: 
2562         (a) Upon receipt of a completed, signed, and dated 
2563  application, the Agency for Health Care Administration shall 
2564  require background screening, in accordance with the level 2 
2565  standards for screening set forth in chapter 435, of the 
2566  managing employee, or other similarly titled individual 
2567  responsible for the daily operation of the organization, agency, 
2568  or entity, and financial officer, or other similarly titled 
2569  individual who is responsible for the financial operation of the 
2570  organization, agency, or entity, including billings for 
2571  services. The applicant must comply with the procedures for 
2572  level 2 background screening as set forth in chapter 435, as 
2573  well as the requirements of s. 435.03(3). 
2574         Section 50. Subsection (32) of section 409.912, Florida 
2575  Statutes, is amended to read: 
2576         409.912 Cost-effective purchasing of health care.—The 
2577  agency shall purchase goods and services for Medicaid recipients 
2578  in the most cost-effective manner consistent with the delivery 
2579  of quality medical care. To ensure that medical services are 
2580  effectively utilized, the agency may, in any case, require a 
2581  confirmation or second physician’s opinion of the correct 
2582  diagnosis for purposes of authorizing future services under the 
2583  Medicaid program. This section does not restrict access to 
2584  emergency services or poststabilization care services as defined 
2585  in 42 C.F.R. part 438.114. Such confirmation or second opinion 
2586  shall be rendered in a manner approved by the agency. The agency 
2587  shall maximize the use of prepaid per capita and prepaid 
2588  aggregate fixed-sum basis services when appropriate and other 
2589  alternative service delivery and reimbursement methodologies, 
2590  including competitive bidding pursuant to s. 287.057, designed 
2591  to facilitate the cost-effective purchase of a case-managed 
2592  continuum of care. The agency shall also require providers to 
2593  minimize the exposure of recipients to the need for acute 
2594  inpatient, custodial, and other institutional care and the 
2595  inappropriate or unnecessary use of high-cost services. The 
2596  agency shall contract with a vendor to monitor and evaluate the 
2597  clinical practice patterns of providers in order to identify 
2598  trends that are outside the normal practice patterns of a 
2599  provider’s professional peers or the national guidelines of a 
2600  provider’s professional association. The vendor must be able to 
2601  provide information and counseling to a provider whose practice 
2602  patterns are outside the norms, in consultation with the agency, 
2603  to improve patient care and reduce inappropriate utilization. 
2604  The agency may mandate prior authorization, drug therapy 
2605  management, or disease management participation for certain 
2606  populations of Medicaid beneficiaries, certain drug classes, or 
2607  particular drugs to prevent fraud, abuse, overuse, and possible 
2608  dangerous drug interactions. The Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics 
2609  Committee shall make recommendations to the agency on drugs for 
2610  which prior authorization is required. The agency shall inform 
2611  the Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee of its decisions 
2612  regarding drugs subject to prior authorization. The agency is 
2613  authorized to limit the entities it contracts with or enrolls as 
2614  Medicaid providers by developing a provider network through 
2615  provider credentialing. The agency may competitively bid single 
2616  source-provider contracts if procurement of goods or services 
2617  results in demonstrated cost savings to the state without 
2618  limiting access to care. The agency may limit its network based 
2619  on the assessment of beneficiary access to care, provider 
2620  availability, provider quality standards, time and distance 
2621  standards for access to care, the cultural competence of the 
2622  provider network, demographic characteristics of Medicaid 
2623  beneficiaries, practice and provider-to-beneficiary standards, 
2624  appointment wait times, beneficiary use of services, provider 
2625  turnover, provider profiling, provider licensure history, 
2626  previous program integrity investigations and findings, peer 
2627  review, provider Medicaid policy and billing compliance records, 
2628  clinical and medical record audits, and other factors. Providers 
2629  shall not be entitled to enrollment in the Medicaid provider 
2630  network. The agency shall determine instances in which allowing 
2631  Medicaid beneficiaries to purchase durable medical equipment and 
2632  other goods is less expensive to the Medicaid program than long 
2633  term rental of the equipment or goods. The agency may establish 
2634  rules to facilitate purchases in lieu of long-term rentals in 
2635  order to protect against fraud and abuse in the Medicaid program 
2636  as defined in s. 409.913. The agency may seek federal waivers 
2637  necessary to administer these policies. 
2638         (32) Each managed care plan that is under contract with the 
2639  agency to provide health care services to Medicaid recipients 
2640  shall annually conduct a background check with the Florida 
2641  Department of Law Enforcement of all persons with ownership 
2642  interest of 5 percent or more or executive management 
2643  responsibility for the managed care plan and shall submit to the 
2644  agency information concerning any such person who has been found 
2645  guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or has entered a plea of 
2646  nolo contendere or guilty to, any of the offenses listed in s. 
2647  435.04 435.03. 
2648         Section 51. Paragraph (e) of subsection (1) of section 
2649  464.018, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
2650         464.018 Disciplinary actions.— 
2651         (1) The following acts constitute grounds for denial of a 
2652  license or disciplinary action, as specified in s. 456.072(2): 
2653         (e) Having been found guilty of, regardless of 
2654  adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, 
2655  any offense prohibited under s. 435.04 435.03 or under any 
2656  similar statute of another jurisdiction; or having committed an 
2657  act which constitutes domestic violence as defined in s. 741.28. 
2658         Section 52. Paragraph (m) of subsection (1) of section 
2659  468.3101, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
2660         468.3101 Disciplinary grounds and actions.— 
2661         (1) The department may make or require to be made any 
2662  investigations, inspections, evaluations, and tests, and require 
2663  the submission of any documents and statements, which it 
2664  considers necessary to determine whether a violation of this 
2665  part has occurred. The following acts shall be grounds for 
2666  disciplinary action as set forth in this section: 
2667         (m) Having been found guilty of, regardless of 
2668  adjudication, or pleading guilty or nolo contendere to, any 
2669  offense prohibited under s. 435.04 435.03 or under any similar 
2670  statute of another jurisdiction. 
2671         Section 53. Subsection (3) of section 744.309, Florida 
2672  Statutes, is amended to read: 
2673         744.309 Who may be appointed guardian of a resident ward.— 
2674         (3) DISQUALIFIED PERSONS.—No person who has been convicted 
2675  of a felony or who, from any incapacity or illness, is incapable 
2676  of discharging the duties of a guardian, or who is otherwise 
2677  unsuitable to perform the duties of a guardian, shall be 
2678  appointed to act as guardian. Further, no person who has been 
2679  judicially determined to have committed abuse, abandonment, or 
2680  neglect against a child as defined in s. 39.01 or s. 984.03(1), 
2681  (2), and (37), or who has been found guilty of, regardless of 
2682  adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, 
2683  any offense prohibited under s. 435.04 435.03 or under any 
2684  similar statute of another jurisdiction, shall be appointed to 
2685  act as a guardian. Except as provided in subsection (5) or 
2686  subsection (6), a person who provides substantial services to 
2687  the proposed ward in a professional or business capacity, or a 
2688  creditor of the proposed ward, may not be appointed guardian and 
2689  retain that previous professional or business relationship. A 
2690  person may not be appointed a guardian if he or she is in the 
2691  employ of any person, agency, government, or corporation that 
2692  provides service to the proposed ward in a professional or 
2693  business capacity, except that a person so employed may be 
2694  appointed if he or she is the spouse, adult child, parent, or 
2695  sibling of the proposed ward or the court determines that the 
2696  potential conflict of interest is insubstantial and that the 
2697  appointment would clearly be in the proposed ward’s best 
2698  interest. The court may not appoint a guardian in any other 
2699  circumstance in which a conflict of interest may occur. 
2700         Section 54. Subsection (12) of section 744.474, Florida 
2701  Statutes, is amended to read: 
2702         744.474 Reasons for removal of guardian.—A guardian may be 
2703  removed for any of the following reasons, and the removal shall 
2704  be in addition to any other penalties prescribed by law: 
2705         (12) Having been found guilty of, regardless of 
2706  adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, 
2707  any offense prohibited under s. 435.04 435.03 or under any 
2708  similar statute of another jurisdiction. 
2709         Section 55. Paragraph (a) of subsection (6) of section 
2710  985.04, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
2711         985.04 Oaths; records; confidential information.— 
2712         (6)(a) Records maintained by the department, including 
2713  copies of records maintained by the court, which pertain to a 
2714  child found to have committed a delinquent act which, if 
2715  committed by an adult, would be a crime specified in s. ss. 
2716  435.03 and 435.04 may not be destroyed under this section for a 
2717  period of 25 years after the youth’s final referral to the 
2718  department, except in cases of the death of the child. Such 
2719  records, however, shall be sealed by the court for use only in 
2720  meeting the screening requirements for personnel in s. 402.3055 
2721  and the other sections cited above, or under departmental rule; 
2722  however, current criminal history information must be obtained 
2723  from the Department of Law Enforcement in accordance with s. 
2724  943.053. The information shall be released to those persons 
2725  specified in the above cited sections for the purposes of 
2726  complying with those sections. The court may punish by contempt 
2727  any person who releases or uses the records for any unauthorized 
2728  purpose. 
2729         Section 56. Section 409.1758, Florida Statutes, is 
2730  repealed. 
2731         Section 57. Paragraph (d) of subsection (4) of section 
2732  456.039, Florida Statutes, is repealed. 
2733         Section 58. The changes made by this act are intended to be 
2734  prospective in nature. It is not intended that persons who are 
2735  employed or licensed on the effective date of this act be 
2736  rescreened until such time as they are otherwise required to be 
2737  rescreened pursuant to law, at which time they must meet the 
2738  requirements for screening as set forth in this act. 
2739         Section 59. This act shall take effect August 1, 2010. 
feedback