Bill Text: HI HB988 | 2022 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Relating To Services For Kupuna.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-12-10 - Carried over to 2022 Regular Session. [HB988 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2022-HB988-Amended.html
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
988 |
THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021 |
H.D. 2 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO SERVICES FOR KUPUNA.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION
1. The legislature finds that Act 238, Session
Laws of Hawaii 2012, established the kupuna care program within the executive
office on aging to provide long-term services and supports to address the needs
of Hawaii's kupuna wishing to age in their own homes. The program is implemented through the area
agencies on aging in each county. The
program offers two service options: traditional
service delivery through contracted providers or participant-directed services
and supports.
Act
102, Session Laws of Hawaii 2017, established the kupuna caregivers program in
the executive office on aging to focus on working caregivers and provide
assistance to enable caregivers to remain in the workforce. The county area agencies on aging implement
and execute the kupuna caregivers program. For the kupuna caregivers program, the
qualified caregiver must work at least thirty hours per week and is awarded $70
per day paid to the contracted provider with the area agency on aging and providing
care to the care recipient. If
additional services are needed for the care recipient, kupuna care services are
also provided.
The
legislature further finds that Act 126, Session Laws of Hawaii 2019, increased
the amount provided to caregivers to $210 per week to allow provider agencies
more flexibility to increase the number of caregivers receiving services. Due to the COVID‑19 pandemic in 2020, many
caregivers lost their jobs and contracted service providers either closed or
decreased their services. This increased
the burden on caregivers and their caregiving duties. With the uncertainty of the State's economic
situation and when businesses will be able to recover, caregivers and service have
been forced to develop a new normal. To
give more flexibility to the kupuna caregivers program, the executive office on
aging recommends that the area agencies on aging be allowed more options to
better serve kupuna and their caregivers.
The
purpose of this Act is to amend kupuna care and
caregiver support services laws to:
(1) Expand the definition of "coach" to include an individual that assists the care recipient and caregiver with enrollment into programs and completing necessary forms;
(2) Amend the definition of "person-centered support plan" to mean a plan developed by a care recipient and the recipient's qualified caregiver that identifies the needs of the care recipient and allows the caregiver to remain in the workforce;
(3) Allow qualified caregivers to work less than thirty hours a week during a declared state of emergency;
(4) Add traditional services and kupuna caregiver-directed services to the kupuna caregivers program; and
(5) Allow funds allocated to qualified caregivers under the kupuna caregivers program to be issued directly to a financial management service provider.
SECTION
2. Section
349-16, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:
1. By adding a new definition
to be appropriately inserted and to read:
""Financial management
service provider" means a service provider who is a fiscal agent and is responsible
for financial payments on behalf of the care recipient enrolled in a participant-directed
or kupuna caregiver-directed program."
2. By amending the definition
of "coach" to read:
""Coach"
means an individual who:
(1) Helps the care recipient understand the program
of participant-directed services and support;
(2) Develops and implements a spending plan to
describe how the care recipient will spend the care recipient's budget; [and]
(3) Evaluates whether the participant-directed
service and support program is meeting the care recipient's needs[.];
and
(4) Assists the care recipient and caregiver with
enrollment into programs and completing necessary forms, including but not
limited to state and federal tax forms, privacy and confidentiality forms,
criminal background checks, financial management forms, employer- and employee-related
forms, and forms requested by the executive office on aging."
3. By amending the definition of "homemaker services" to read:
""Homemaker
[services]" means services that provide assistance with
preparing meals, shopping for personal items, managing money, using the
telephone, or performing light housework."
4.
By amending the definition of "kupuna
care core services" to read:
""Kupuna
care core services" means services consisting of:
(1) Adult day care;
(2) Attendant care;
(3) Case management;
(4) Chores;
(5) Homemaker [services];
(6) Home-delivered meals;
(7) Personal care;
(8) Transportation; or
(9) Assisted transportation."
5. By amending the definitions of "person-centered support plan" or "support plan", "qualified caregiver", and "respite care" to read:
""Person-centered
support plan" or "support plan" means a plan developed by a care
recipient [with the assistance of a coach] and the recipient's
qualified caregiver that [allows] identifies the needs of
the care recipient [to establish the goals, skills, and knowledge
necessary to work toward the desired outcomes and lays out practical steps
toward the achievement of the goals; provided that family members and friends
may provide assistance in developing a care recipient's plan if the care
recipient chooses to include them.] and allows the caregiver to remain
in the workforce.
"Qualified
caregiver" means an individual who meets the following requirements:
(1) Provides care for a care recipient; and
(2) Is employed at least thirty hours per week by
one or more employers[.], or has reduced hours during a declared
state of emergency.
"Respite care" means services
that offer temporary, substitute supports, or living arrangements for care
recipients to provide a brief period of rest to qualified caregivers. "Respite care" includes:
(1) In-home
respite (personal care, homemaker [services], and other in-home
respite);
(2) Respite
provided by attendance of the care recipient at a nonresidential program;
(3) Institutional
respite provided by placing the care recipient in an institutional setting such
as a nursing home for a short period of time as a respite service to the
caregiver; and
(4) Any
combination of services to assist the caregiver as deemed appropriate by the
area agency on aging."
SECTION
3. Section 349-18 Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"[[]§349-18[]]
Kupuna caregivers program. (a) The
executive office on aging may establish the kupuna caregivers program. The program shall provide assistance to a
qualified caregiver who meets the requirements of this section.
(b) The program shall be coordinated and
administered by the executive office on aging and implemented through the area
agency on aging. The executive office on
aging shall develop and implement a plan to maximize the number of caregivers
served by the program.
(c)
The kupuna caregivers program shall be delivered
through two distinct service options: traditional
service delivery or kupuna caregiver-directed services (kupuna caregiver-directed
services), based on a support plan for each eligible care recipient and the
care recipient's qualified caregiver; provided that:
(1) Traditional service delivery shall be through
a service provider organization or person who provides services to clients
under a formal contractual arrangement with the executive office on aging or
area agency on aging who shall deliver to each care recipient one or more
services identified in subsection (d) to address the care recipient's specific
needs that have been identified in the care recipient and caregiver's support
plan; and
(2) Kupuna caregiver-directed services shall address
the care recipient's assessed needs and allow for the qualified caregiver to
remain in the workforce. The care
recipient and qualified caregiver shall have shared decision-making authority
over the budgeted dollar amount to purchase and manage the needed services and
supports. Kupuna caregiver-directed services
shall provide the care recipient and caregiver with a coach to assist the care
recipient with enrollment into the kupuna caregiver-directed program to
maintain independence and a quality living experience in the community, and
assist the caregiver with enrollment into the kupuna caregiver-directed program
to maintain employment.
[(c)]
(d) The kupuna caregivers program
shall award an allocation of funds, subject to the availability of funding and
up to a maximum of $210 per week, to cover costs for services that would otherwise
be performed by the qualified caregiver for the care recipient, including but
not limited to:
(1) Care coordination or case management;
(2) Adult day care;
(3) Assisted transportation;
(4) Chores;
(5) Home-delivered meals;
(6) Homemaker [services];
(7) Personal care;
(8) Respite care; or
(9) Transportation;
provided that the allocated funds shall
be issued directly to the service provider or financial management service
provider upon request and receipt of an invoice for services rendered."
SECTION
4. Statutory material to be repealed is
bracketed and stricken. New statutory
material is underscored.
SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2060.
Report Title:
Executive Office on Aging; Kupuna Care; Kupuna Caregivers
Description:
Amends the definitions "coach" and "person-centered support plan" under kupuna care and caregiver support services laws. Allows for qualified caregivers to continue providing services even if they work less than thirty hours a week during a declared state of emergency. Adds traditional services and kupuna caregiver-directed services to the kupuna caregivers program. Allows funds allocated to qualified caregivers under the program to be issued directly to a financial management service provider. Effective 07/01/2060. (HD2)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.