Bill: HB 1769, 84(R) - 2015

Committee

House Human Services

Companion Bill

SB 785

Vote Recommendation

Vote Recommendation Economic Freedom Property Rights Personal Responsibility Limited Government Individual Liberty
Yes Neutral Neutral Neutral Positive Neutral

Author(s)

John Zerwas

Bill Caption

Relating to requirements for assisted living facility license applicants.

Fiscal Notes

Estimated Two-year Net Impact to General Revenue Related Funds for HB 1769, Committee Report 1st House, Substituted: a negative impact of ($329,311) through the biennium ending August 31, 2017.

The bill would make no appropriation but could provide the legal basis for an appropriation of funds to implement the provisions of the bill.

No fiscal implication to units of local government is anticipated.

Bill Analysis

5/7/15 Update:

This bill is substantively the same as when we reported on it in its original chamber. We continue to support HB 1769. The second chamber sponsor is Senator Uresti.

First chamber analysis below:

Current law requires a new assisted living facility to pass a building inspection, a life safety inspection, hire and train a full staff, and admit more than one and no more than three residents before it requests the Department of Aging and Disability Services (DADS) to conduct a final health inspection.

The bill would amend Chapter 247 of the Health and Safety Code by authorizing DADS to issue an initial assisted living facility license that would not require an on-site health inspection to an applicant considered in good standing. Applicants would be required to submit policies, procedures, verification of employee background checks, and employee credentials. The bill would require DADS to conduct a survey of these facilities within 90 days after the date the license is issued. Until DADS conducts the survey, the facility would be required to inform incoming residents that DADS has not yet conducted the survey.

The bill would define a license applicant in good standing as a license applicant who has operated an assisted living facility in Texas for at least six consecutive years, has not had a violation that resulted in actual harm to a resident or a violation that posed an immediate threat of harm, and has not had an administrative sanction.

Vote Recommendation Notes

The primary objective of the legislation is to reduce the waiting period before an assisted living facility can admit more than three residents, provided the applicant meets the good standing threshold. The bill's good standing definition establishes a reasonable bar intended to prevent bad actors from inflicting harm on residents. The bill alleviates an administrative burden on assisted living facilities while ensuring strict qualifications are met in order for assisted living facilities to start admitting additional residents. We support HB 1769.

Source URL (retrieved on 03/28/2024 09:03 PM): http://reports.texasaction.com/bill/84r/hb1769?print_view=true