Bill Text: MN SF1120 | 2011-2012 | 87th Legislature | Engrossed


Bill Title: Human services telephone equipment program for communication impaired persons, disability services, continuing care policy, comprehensive assessments, case management services provisions modifications

Sponsorship: Partisan Bill (Republican 1)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2011-05-18 - HF substituted on General Orders HF1406 [SF1120 Detail]

Download: Minnesota-2011-SF1120-Engrossed.html

1.1A bill for an act
1.2relating to human services; amending continuing care policy provisions; making
1.3changes to the telephone equipment program; making changes to disability
1.4services provisions; reforming comprehensive assessments and case management
1.5services; making changes to nursing facility provisions; making technical and
1.6conforming changes; providing for rulemaking authority; requiring reports;
1.7amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 144A.071, subdivisions 3, 4a, 5a;
1.8144A.073, subdivision 3c, by adding a subdivision; 144D.08; 237.50; 237.51;
1.9237.52; 237.53; 237.54; 237.55; 237.56; 245A.03, subdivision 7; 245A.11,
1.10subdivision 8; 252.32, subdivision 1a; 252A.21, subdivision 2; 256.476,
1.11subdivision 11; 256B.0625, subdivision 19c; 256B.0659, subdivisions 1, 2, 3,
1.123a, 4, 9, 11, 13, 14, 19, 21, 30; 256B.0911, subdivisions 1, 1a, 2b, 2c, 3, 3a, 3b,
1.133c, 4a, 4c, 6; 256B.0913, subdivisions 7, 8; 256B.0915, subdivisions 1a, 1b, 3c,
1.146, 10; 256B.0916, subdivision 7; 256B.092, subdivisions 1, 1a, 1b, 1e, 1g, 2, 3,
1.155, 7, 8, 8a, 9, 11; 256B.096, subdivision 5; 256B.19, subdivision 1e; 256B.431,
1.16subdivisions 2t, 26; 256B.438, subdivisions 1, 3, 4, by adding a subdivision;
1.17256B.441, subdivision 55a, by adding a subdivision; 256B.49, subdivisions 13,
1.1814, 15, 21; 256B.4912; 256G.02, subdivision 6; proposing coding for new law
1.19in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 252; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2010, section
1.20144A.073, subdivisions 4, 5.
1.21BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:

1.22ARTICLE 1
1.23TELEPHONE EQUIPMENT PROGRAM

1.24    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 237.50, is amended to read:
1.25237.50 DEFINITIONS.
1.26    Subdivision 1. Scope. The terms used in sections 237.50 to 237.56 have the
1.27meanings given them in this section.
1.28    Subd. 3. Communication impaired disability. "Communication impaired
1.29disability" means certified as deaf, severely hearing impaired, hard-of-hearing having
1.30a hearing loss, speech impaired, deaf and blind disability, or mobility impaired if the
2.1mobility impairment significantly impedes the ability physical disability that makes it
2.2difficult or impossible to use standard customer premises telecommunications services
2.3and equipment.
2.4    Subd. 4. Communication device. "Communication device" means a device that
2.5when connected to a telephone enables a communication-impaired person to communicate
2.6with another person utilizing the telephone system. A "communication device" includes a
2.7ring signaler, an amplification device, a telephone device for the deaf, a Brailling device
2.8for use with a telephone, and any other device the Department of Human Services deems
2.9necessary.
2.10    Subd. 4a. Deaf. "Deaf" means a hearing impairment loss of such severity that the
2.11individual must depend primarily upon visual communication such as writing, lip reading,
2.12manual communication sign language, and gestures.
2.13    Subd. 4b. Deafblind. "Deafblind" means any combination of vision and hearing
2.14loss that interferes with acquiring information from the environment to the extent that
2.15compensatory strategies and skills are necessary to access that or other information.
2.16    Subd. 5. Exchange. "Exchange" means a unit area established and described by the
2.17tariff of a telephone company for the administration of telephone service in a specified
2.18geographical area, usually embracing a city, town, or village and its environs, and served
2.19by one or more central offices, together with associated facilities used in providing
2.20service within that area.
2.21    Subd. 6. Fund. "Fund" means the telecommunications access Minnesota fund
2.22established in section 237.52.
2.23    Subd. 6a. Hard-of-hearing. "Hard-of-hearing" means a hearing impairment loss
2.24resulting in a functional loss limitation, but not to the extent that the individual must
2.25depend primarily upon visual communication.
2.26    Subd. 7. Interexchange service. "Interexchange service" means telephone service
2.27between points in two or more exchanges.
2.28    Subd. 8. Inter-LATA interexchange service. "Inter-LATA interexchange service"
2.29means interexchange service originating and terminating in different LATAs.
2.30    Subd. 9. Local access and transport area. "Local access and transport area
2.31(LATA)" means a geographical area designated by the Modification of Final Judgment
2.32in U.S. v. Western Electric Co., Inc., 552 F. Supp. 131 (D.D.C. 1982), including
2.33modifications in effect on the effective date of sections 237.51 to 237.54.
2.34    Subd. 10. Local exchange service. "Local exchange service" means telephone
2.35service between points within an exchange.
3.1    Subd. 10a. Telecommunications device. "Telecommunications device" means
3.2a device that (1) allows a person with a communication disability to have access to
3.3telecommunications services as defined in subdivision 13, and (2) is specifically
3.4selected by the Department of Human Services for its capacity to allow persons with
3.5communication disabilities to use telecommunications services in a manner that is
3.6functionally equivalent to the ability of an individual who does not have a communication
3.7disability. A telecommunications device may include a ring signaler, an amplified
3.8telephone, a hands-free telephone, a text telephone, a captioned telephone, a wireless
3.9device, a device that produces Braille output for use with a telephone, and any other
3.10device the Department of Human Services deems appropriate.
3.11    Subd. 11. Telecommunication Telecommunications Relay service Services.
3.12"Telecommunication Telecommunications Relay service Services" or "TRS" means
3.13a central statewide service through which a communication-impaired person,
3.14using a communication device, may send and receive messages to and from a
3.15non-communication-impaired person whose telephone is not equipped with a
3.16communication device and through which a non-communication-impaired person
3.17may, by using voice communication, send and receive messages to and from a
3.18communication-impaired person the telecommunications transmission services required
3.19under Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations at Code of Federal
3.20Regulations, title 47, sections 64.604 to 64.606. TRS allows an individual who has
3.21a communication disability to use telecommunications services in a manner that is
3.22functionally equivalent to the ability of an individual who does not have a communication
3.23disability.
3.24    Subd. 12. Telecommunications. "Telecommunications" means the transmission,
3.25between or among points specified by the user, of information of the user's choosing,
3.26without change in the form or content of the information as sent and received.
3.27    Subd. 13. Telecommunications services. "Telecommunications services" means
3.28the offering of telecommunications for fee directly to the public, or to such classes of users
3.29as to be effectively available to the public, regardless of the facilities used.

3.30    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 237.51, is amended to read:
3.31237.51 TELECOMMUNICATIONS ACCESS MINNESOTA PROGRAM
3.32ADMINISTRATION.
3.33    Subdivision 1. Creation. The commissioner of commerce shall:
4.1(1) administer through interagency agreement with the commissioner of human
4.2services a program to distribute communication telecommunications devices to eligible
4.3communication-impaired persons who have communication disabilities; and
4.4(2) contract with a one or more qualified vendor vendors that serves
4.5communication-impaired serve persons who have communication disabilities to create
4.6and maintain a telecommunication provide telecommunications relay service services.
4.7For purposes of sections 237.51 to 237.56, the Department of Commerce and any
4.8organization with which it contracts pursuant to this section or section 237.54, subdivision
4.92
, are not telephone companies or telecommunications carriers as defined in section
4.10237.01 .
4.11    Subd. 5. Commissioner of commerce duties. In addition to any duties specified
4.12elsewhere in sections 237.51 to 237.56, the commissioner of commerce shall:
4.13(1) prepare the reports required by section 237.55;
4.14(2) administer the fund created in section 237.52; and
4.15(3) adopt rules under chapter 14 to implement the provisions of sections 237.50
4.16to 237.56.
4.17    Subd. 5a. Department Commissioner of human services duties. (a) In addition to
4.18any duties specified elsewhere in sections 237.51 to 237.56, the commissioner of human
4.19services shall:
4.20(1) define economic hardship, special needs, and household criteria so as to
4.21determine the priority of eligible applicants for initial distribution of devices and to
4.22determine circumstances necessitating provision of more than one communication
4.23telecommunications device per household;
4.24(2) establish a method to verify eligibility requirements;
4.25(3) establish specifications for communication telecommunications devices to be
4.26purchased provided under section 237.53, subdivision 3; and
4.27(4) inform the public and specifically the community of communication-impaired
4.28persons who have communication disabilities of the program.; and
4.29(5) provide devices based on the assessed need of eligible applicants.
4.30(b) The commissioner may establish an advisory board to advise the department
4.31in carrying out the duties specified in this section and to advise the commissioner of
4.32commerce in carrying out duties under section 237.54. If so established, the advisory
4.33board must include, at a minimum, the following communication-impaired persons:
4.34(1) at least one member who is deaf;
4.35(2) at least one member who is has a speech impaired disability;
5.1(3) at least one member who is mobility impaired has a physical disability that
5.2makes it difficult or impossible for the person to access telecommunications services; and
5.3(4) at least one member who is hard-of-hearing.
5.4The membership terms, compensation, and removal of members and the filling of
5.5membership vacancies are governed by section 15.059. Advisory board meetings shall be
5.6held at the discretion of the commissioner.

5.7    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 237.52, is amended to read:
5.8237.52 TELECOMMUNICATIONS ACCESS MINNESOTA FUND.
5.9    Subdivision 1. Fund established. A telecommunications access Minnesota fund is
5.10established as an account in the state treasury. Earnings, such as interest, dividends, and
5.11any other earnings arising from fund assets, must be credited to the fund.
5.12    Subd. 2. Assessment. (a) The commissioner of commerce, the commissioner
5.13of employment and economic development, and the commissioner of human services
5.14shall annually recommend to the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) an adequate and
5.15appropriate surcharge and budget to implement sections 237.50 to 237.56, 248.062,
5.16and 256C.30, respectively. The maximum annual budget for section 248.062 must not
5.17exceed $100,000 and for section 256C.30 must not exceed $300,000. The Public Utilities
5.18Commission shall review the budgets for reasonableness and may modify the budget
5.19to the extent it is unreasonable. The commission shall annually determine the funding
5.20mechanism to be used within 60 days of receipt of the recommendation of the departments
5.21and shall order the imposition of surcharges effective on the earliest practicable date. The
5.22commission shall establish a monthly charge no greater than 20 cents for each customer
5.23access line, including trunk equivalents as designated by the commission pursuant to
5.24section 403.11, subdivision 1.
5.25(b) If the fund balance falls below a level capable of fully supporting all programs
5.26eligible under subdivision 5 and sections 248.062 and 256C.30, expenditures under
5.27sections 248.062 and 256C.30 shall be reduced on a pro rata basis and expenditures under
5.28sections 237.53 and 237.54 shall be fully funded. Expenditures under sections 248.062
5.29and 256C.30 shall resume at fully funded levels when the commissioner of commerce
5.30determines there is a sufficient fund balance to fully fund those expenditures.
5.31    Subd. 3. Collection. Every telephone company or communications carrier that
5.32provides service provider of services capable of originating a telecommunications relay
5.33TRS call, including cellular communications and other nonwire access services, in this
5.34state shall collect the charges established by the commission under subdivision 2 and
5.35transfer amounts collected to the commissioner of public safety in the same manner as
6.1provided in section 403.11, subdivision 1, paragraph (d). The commissioner of public
6.2safety must deposit the receipts in the fund established in subdivision 1.
6.3    Subd. 4. Appropriation. Money in the fund is appropriated to the commissioner of
6.4commerce to implement sections 237.51 to 237.56, to the commissioner of employment
6.5and economic development to implement section 248.062, and to the commissioner of
6.6human services to implement section 256C.30.
6.7    Subd. 5. Expenditures. (a) Money in the fund may only be used for:
6.8(1) expenses of the Department of Commerce, including personnel cost, public
6.9relations, advisory board members' expenses, preparation of reports, and other reasonable
6.10expenses not to exceed ten percent of total program expenditures;
6.11(2) reimbursing the commissioner of human services for purchases made or services
6.12provided pursuant to section 237.53;
6.13(3) reimbursing telephone companies for purchases made or services provided
6.14under section 237.53, subdivision 5; and
6.15(4) contracting for establishment and operation of the telecommunication relay
6.16service the provision of TRS required by section 237.54.
6.17(b) All costs directly associated with the establishment of the program, the purchase
6.18and distribution of communication telecommunications devices, and the establishment
6.19and operation of the telecommunication relay service provision of TRS are either
6.20reimbursable or directly payable from the fund after authorization by the commissioner
6.21of commerce. The commissioner of commerce shall contract with the message relay
6.22service operator one or more TRS providers to indemnify the local exchange carriers of
6.23the relay telecommunications service providers for any fines imposed by the Federal
6.24Communications Commission related to the failure of the relay service to comply with
6.25federal service standards. Notwithstanding section 16A.41, the commissioner may
6.26advance money to the contractor of the telecommunication relay service TRS providers if
6.27the contractor establishes providers establish to the commissioner's satisfaction that the
6.28advance payment is necessary for the operation provision of the service. The advance
6.29payment may be used only for working capital reserve for the operation of the service.
6.30The advance payment must be offset or repaid by the end of the contract fiscal year
6.31together with interest accrued from the date of payment.

6.32    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 237.53, is amended to read:
6.33237.53 COMMUNICATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS DEVICE.
7.1    Subdivision 1. Application. A person applying for a communication
7.2telecommunications device under this section must apply to the program administrator on
7.3a form prescribed by the Department of Human Services.
7.4    Subd. 2. Eligibility. To be eligible to obtain a communication telecommunications
7.5device under this section, a person must be:
7.6(1) be able to benefit from and use the equipment for its intended purpose;
7.7(2) have a communication impaired disability;
7.8(3) be a resident of the state;
7.9(4) be a resident in a household that has a median income at or below the applicable
7.10median household income in the state, except a deaf and blind person who is deafblind
7.11applying for a telebraille unit Braille device may reside in a household that has a median
7.12income no more than 150 percent of the applicable median household income in the
7.13state; and
7.14(5) be a resident in a household that has telephone telecommunications service
7.15or that has made application for service and has been assigned a telephone number; or
7.16a resident in a residential care facility, such as a nursing home or group home where
7.17telephone telecommunications service is not included as part of overall service provision.
7.18    Subd. 3. Distribution. The commissioner of human services shall purchase and
7.19distribute a sufficient number of communication telecommunications devices so that each
7.20eligible household receives an appropriate device devices as determined under section
7.21237.51, subdivision 5a. The commissioner of human services shall distribute the devices
7.22to eligible households in each service area free of charge as determined under section
7.23237.51, subdivision 5a.
7.24    Subd. 4. Training; maintenance. The commissioner of human services shall
7.25maintain the communication telecommunications devices until the warranty period
7.26expires, and provide training, without charge, to first-time users of the devices.
7.27    Subd. 5. Wiring installation. If a communication-impaired person is not served by
7.28telephone service and is subject to economic hardship as determined by the Department
7.29of Human Services, the telephone company providing local service shall at the direction
7.30of the administrator of the program install necessary outside wiring without charge to
7.31the household.
7.32    Subd. 6. Ownership. All communication Telecommunications devices purchased
7.33pursuant to subdivision 3 will become are the property of the state of Minnesota. Policies
7.34and procedures for the return of devices from individuals who withdraw from the program
7.35or whose eligibility status changes shall be determined by the commissioner of human
7.36services.
8.1    Subd. 7. Standards. The communication telecommunications devices distributed
8.2under this section must comply with the electronic industries association alliance standards
8.3and be approved by the Federal Communications Commission. The commissioner of
8.4human services must provide each eligible person a choice of several models of devices,
8.5the retail value of which may not exceed $600 for a communication device for the deaf
8.6text telephone, and a retail value of $7,000 for a telebraille Braille device, or an amount
8.7authorized by the Department of Human Services for a telephone device for the deaf with
8.8auxiliary equipment all other telecommunications devices and auxiliary equipment it
8.9deems cost-effective and appropriate to distribute according to sections 237.51 to 237.56.

8.10    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 237.54, is amended to read:
8.11237.54 TELECOMMUNICATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS RELAY
8.12SERVICE SERVICES (TRS).
8.13    Subd. 2. Operation. (a) The commissioner of commerce shall contract with
8.14a one or more qualified vendor vendors for the operation and maintenance of the
8.15telecommunication relay system provision of Telecommunications Relay Services (TRS).
8.16(b) The telecommunication relay service provider TRS providers shall operate the
8.17relay service within the state of Minnesota. The operator of the system TRS providers
8.18shall keep all messages confidential, shall train personnel in the unique needs of
8.19communication-impaired people, and shall inform communication-impaired persons
8.20and the public of the availability and use of the system. Except in the case of a speech-
8.21or mobility-impaired person, the operator shall not relay a message unless it originates
8.22or terminates through a communication device for the deaf or a Brailling device for use
8.23with a telephone comply with all current and subsequent FCC regulations at Code of
8.24Federal Regulations, title 47, sections 64.601 to 64.606, and shall inform persons who
8.25have communication disabilities and the public of the availability and use of TRS.

8.26    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 237.55, is amended to read:
8.27237.55 ANNUAL REPORT ON COMMUNICATION
8.28TELECOMMUNICATIONS ACCESS.
8.29The commissioner of commerce must prepare a report for presentation to the Public
8.30Utilities Commission by January 31 of each year. Each report must review the accessibility
8.31of the telephone system to communication-impaired persons, review the ability of
8.32non-communication-impaired persons to communicate with communication-impaired
8.33persons via the telephone system telecommunications services to persons who have
8.34communication disabilities, describe services provided, account for money received and
9.1disbursed annually annual revenues and expenditures for each aspect of the program fund
9.2to date, and include predicted program future operation.

9.3    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 237.56, is amended to read:
9.4237.56 ADEQUATE SERVICE ENFORCEMENT.
9.5The services required to be provided under sections 237.50 to 237.55 may be
9.6enforced under section 237.081 upon a complaint of at least two communication-impaired
9.7persons within the service area of any one telephone company telecommunications
9.8service provider, provided that if only one person within the service area of a company
9.9is receiving service under sections 237.50 to 237.55, the commission Public Utilities
9.10Commission may proceed upon a complaint from that person.

9.11ARTICLE 2
9.12DISABILITY SERVICES

9.13    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 245A.03, subdivision 7, is amended to
9.14read:
9.15    Subd. 7. Licensing moratorium. (a) The commissioner shall not issue an
9.16initial license for child foster care licensed under Minnesota Rules, parts 2960.3000 to
9.172960.3340, or adult foster care licensed under Minnesota Rules, parts 9555.5105 to
9.189555.6265, under this chapter for a physical location that will not be the primary residence
9.19of the license holder for the entire period of licensure. If a license is issued during this
9.20moratorium, and the license holder changes the license holder's primary residence away
9.21from the physical location of the foster care license, the commissioner shall revoke the
9.22license according to section 245A.07. Exceptions to the moratorium include:
9.23(1) foster care settings that are required to be registered under chapter 144D;
9.24(2) foster care licenses replacing foster care licenses in existence on May 15, 2009,
9.25and determined to be needed by the commissioner under paragraph (b);
9.26(3) new foster care licenses determined to be needed by the commissioner under
9.27paragraph (b) for the closure or downsizing of a nursing facility, ICF/MR, or regional
9.28treatment center;
9.29(4) new foster care licenses determined to be needed by the commissioner under
9.30paragraph (b) for persons requiring hospital level care; or
9.31(5) new foster care licenses determined to be needed by the commissioner for the
9.32transition of people from personal care assistance to the home and community-based
9.33services.
10.1(b) The commissioner shall determine the need for newly licensed foster care homes
10.2as defined under this subdivision. As part of the determination, the commissioner shall
10.3consider the availability of foster care capacity in the area in which the licensee seeks to
10.4operate, and the recommendation of the local county board. The determination by the
10.5commissioner must be final. A determination of need is not required for a change in
10.6ownership at the same address.
10.7    (c) Residential settings that would otherwise be subject to the moratorium established
10.8in paragraph (a), that are in the process of receiving an adult or child foster care license as
10.9of July 1, 2009, shall be allowed to continue to complete the process of receiving an adult
10.10or child foster care license. For this paragraph, all of the following conditions must be met
10.11to be considered in the process of receiving an adult or child foster care license:
10.12    (1) participants have made decisions to move into the residential setting, including
10.13documentation in each participant's care plan;
10.14    (2) the provider has purchased housing or has made a financial investment in the
10.15property;
10.16    (3) the lead agency has approved the plans, including costs for the residential setting
10.17for each individual;
10.18    (4) the completion of the licensing process, including all necessary inspections, is
10.19the only remaining component prior to being able to provide services; and
10.20    (5) the needs of the individuals cannot be met within the existing capacity in that
10.21county.
10.22To qualify for the process under this paragraph, the lead agency must submit
10.23documentation to the commissioner by August 1, 2009, that all of the above criteria are
10.24met.
10.25(d) (c) The commissioner shall study the effects of the license moratorium under this
10.26subdivision and shall report back to the legislature by January 15, 2011. This study shall
10.27include, but is not limited to the following:
10.28(1) the overall capacity and utilization of foster care beds where the physical location
10.29is not the primary residence of the license holder prior to and after implementation
10.30of the moratorium;
10.31(2) the overall capacity and utilization of foster care beds where the physical
10.32location is the primary residence of the license holder prior to and after implementation
10.33of the moratorium; and
10.34(3) the number of licensed and occupied ICF/MR beds prior to and after
10.35implementation of the moratorium.
11.1(d) At the time of application and reapplication for licensure, the applicant and the
11.2license holder that are subject to the moratorium or an exclusion established in paragraph
11.3(a) are required to inform the commissioner whether the physical location where the foster
11.4care will be provided is or will be the primary residence of the license holder for the entire
11.5period of licensure. If the primary residence of the applicant or license holder changes, the
11.6applicant or license holder must notify the commissioner immediately. The commissioner
11.7shall print on the foster care license certificate whether or not the physical location is the
11.8primary residence of the license holder.
11.9(e) License holders of foster care homes identified under paragraph (e) that are not
11.10the primary residence of the license holder and that also provide services in the foster care
11.11home that are covered by a federally approved home and community-based services
11.12waiver, as authorized under section 256B.0915, 256B.092, or 256B.49 must inform the
11.13human services licensing division that the license holder provides or intends to provide
11.14these waiver-funded services. These license holders must be considered registered under
11.15section 256B.092, subdivision 11, paragraph (c), and this registration status must be
11.16identified on their license certificates.

11.17    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 245A.11, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
11.18    Subd. 8. Community residential setting license. (a) The commissioner shall
11.19establish provider standards for residential support services that integrate service standards
11.20and the residential setting under one license. The commissioner shall propose statutory
11.21language and an implementation plan for licensing requirements for residential support
11.22services to the legislature by January 15, 2011 2012, as a component of the quality outcome
11.23standards recommendations required by Laws 2010, chapter 352, article 1, section 24.
11.24(b) Providers licensed under chapter 245B, and providing, contracting, or arranging
11.25for services in settings licensed as adult foster care under Minnesota Rules, parts
11.269555.5105 to 9555.6265, or child foster care under Minnesota Rules, parts 2960.3000 to
11.272960.3340; and meeting the provisions of section 256B.092, subdivision 11, paragraph
11.28(b), must be required to obtain a community residential setting license.

11.29    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 252.32, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
11.30    Subd. 1a. Support grants. (a) Provision of support grants must be limited to
11.31families who require support and whose dependents are under the age of 21 and who
11.32have been certified disabled under section 256B.055, subdivision 12, paragraphs (a),
11.33(b), (c), (d), and (e). Families who are receiving: home and community-based waivered
11.34services for persons with developmental disabilities authorized under section 256B.092 or
12.1256B.49; personal care assistance under section 256B.0652; or a consumer support grant
12.2under section 256.476 are not eligible for support grants.
12.3Families whose annual adjusted gross income is $60,000 or more are not eligible for
12.4support grants except in cases where extreme hardship is demonstrated. Beginning in state
12.5fiscal year 1994, the commissioner shall adjust the income ceiling annually to reflect the
12.6projected change in the average value in the United States Department of Labor Bureau of
12.7Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index (all urban) for that year.
12.8(b) Support grants may be made available as monthly subsidy grants and lump-sum
12.9grants.
12.10(c) Support grants may be issued in the form of cash, voucher, and direct county
12.11payment to a vendor.
12.12(d) Applications for the support grant shall be made by the legal guardian to the
12.13county social service agency. The application shall specify the needs of the families, the
12.14form of the grant requested by the families, and the items and services to be reimbursed.

12.15    Sec. 4. [252.34] REPORT BY COMMISSIONER.
12.16Beginning January 1, 2013, the commissioner shall provide a biennial report to the
12.17chairs of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over health and human services
12.18policy and funding. The report must provide a summary of overarching goals and priorities
12.19for persons with disabilities, including the status of how each of the following programs
12.20administered by the commissioner is supporting the overarching goals and priorities:
12.21(1) home and community-based services waivers for persons with disabilities under
12.22sections 256B.092 and 256B.49;
12.23(2) home care services under section 256B.0652; and
12.24(3) other relevant programs and services as determined by the commissioner.

12.25    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 252A.21, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
12.26    Subd. 2. Rules. The commissioner shall adopt rules to implement this chapter.
12.27The rules must include standards for performance of guardianship or conservatorship
12.28duties including, but not limited to: twice a year visits with the ward; quarterly reviews
12.29of records from day, residential, and support services; a requirement that the duties of
12.30guardianship or conservatorship and case management not be performed by the same
12.31person; specific standards for action on "do not resuscitate" orders, sterilization requests,
12.32and the use of psychotropic medication and aversive procedures.

12.33    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256.476, subdivision 11, is amended to read:
13.1    Subd. 11. Consumer support grant program after July 1, 2001. Effective
13.2July 1, 2001, the commissioner shall allocate consumer support grant resources to
13.3serve additional individuals based on a review of Medicaid authorization and payment
13.4information of persons eligible for a consumer support grant from the most recent fiscal
13.5year. The commissioner shall use the following methodology to calculate maximum
13.6allowable monthly consumer support grant levels:
13.7    (1) For individuals whose program of origination is medical assistance home care
13.8under sections 256B.0651 and 256B.0653 to 256B.0656, the maximum allowable monthly
13.9grant levels are calculated by:
13.10    (i) determining 50 percent of the average the service authorization for each
13.11individual based on the individual's home care rating assessment;
13.12    (ii) calculating the overall ratio of actual payments to service authorizations by
13.13program;
13.14    (iii) applying the overall ratio to the average 50 percent of the service authorization
13.15level of each home care rating; and
13.16    (iv) adjusting the result for any authorized rate increases changes provided by the
13.17legislature; and.
13.18    (v) adjusting the result for the average monthly utilization per recipient.
13.19    (2) The commissioner may review and evaluate shall ensure the methodology to
13.20reflect changes in is consistent with the home care programs.

13.21    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0625, subdivision 19c, is amended to
13.22read:
13.23    Subd. 19c. Personal care. Medical assistance covers personal care assistance
13.24services provided by an individual who is qualified to provide the services according to
13.25subdivision 19a and sections 256B.0651 to 256B.0656, provided in accordance with a
13.26plan, and supervised by a qualified professional.
13.27"Qualified professional" means a mental health professional as defined in section
13.28245.462, subdivision 18 , clauses (1) to (6), or 245.4871, subdivision 27, clauses (1) to (6);
13.29or a registered nurse as defined in sections 148.171 to 148.285, a licensed social worker
13.30as defined in sections 148D.010 and 148D.055, or a qualified developmental disabilities
13.31specialist under section 245B.07, subdivision 4. The qualified professional shall perform
13.32the duties required in section 256B.0659.

13.33    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
14.1    Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section, the terms defined in
14.2paragraphs (b) to (r) have the meanings given unless otherwise provided in text.
14.3    (b) "Activities of daily living" means grooming, dressing, bathing, transferring,
14.4mobility, positioning, eating, and toileting.
14.5    (c) "Behavior," effective January 1, 2010, means a category to determine the home
14.6care rating and is based on the criteria found in this section. "Level I behavior" means
14.7physical aggression towards self, others, or destruction of property that requires the
14.8immediate response of another person.
14.9    (d) "Complex health-related needs," effective January 1, 2010, means a category to
14.10determine the home care rating and is based on the criteria found in this section.
14.11    (e) "Critical activities of daily living," effective January 1, 2010, means transferring,
14.12mobility, eating, and toileting.
14.13    (f) "Dependency in activities of daily living" means a person requires assistance to
14.14begin and complete one or more of the activities of daily living.
14.15    (g) "Extended personal care assistance service" means personal care assistance
14.16services included in a service plan under one of the home and community-based services
14.17waivers authorized under sections 256B.0915, 256B.092, subdivision 5, and 256B.49,
14.18which exceed the amount, duration, and frequency of the state plan personal care
14.19assistance services for participants who:
14.20    (1) need assistance provided periodically during a week, but less than daily will not
14.21be able to remain in their homes without the assistance, and other replacement services
14.22are more expensive or are not available when personal care assistance services are to
14.23be terminated reduced; or
14.24    (2) need additional personal care assistance services beyond the amount authorized
14.25by the state plan personal care assistance assessment in order to ensure that their safety,
14.26health, and welfare are provided for in their homes.
14.27    (h) "Health-related procedures and tasks" means procedures and tasks that can
14.28be delegated or assigned by a licensed health care professional under state law to be
14.29performed by a personal care assistant.
14.30    (i) "Instrumental activities of daily living" means activities to include meal planning
14.31and preparation; basic assistance with paying bills; shopping for food, clothing, and other
14.32essential items; performing household tasks integral to the personal care assistance
14.33services; communication by telephone and other media; and traveling, including to
14.34medical appointments and to participate in the community.
14.35    (j) "Managing employee" has the same definition as Code of Federal Regulations,
14.36title 42, section 455.
15.1    (k) "Qualified professional" means a professional providing supervision of personal
15.2care assistance services and staff as defined in section 256B.0625, subdivision 19c.
15.3    (l) "Personal care assistance provider agency" means a medical assistance enrolled
15.4provider that provides or assists with providing personal care assistance services and
15.5includes a personal care assistance provider organization, personal care assistance choice
15.6agency, class A licensed nursing agency, and Medicare-certified home health agency.
15.7    (m) "Personal care assistant" or "PCA" means an individual employed by a personal
15.8care assistance agency who provides personal care assistance services.
15.9    (n) "Personal care assistance care plan" means a written description of personal
15.10care assistance services developed by the personal care assistance provider according
15.11to the service plan.
15.12    (o) "Responsible party" means an individual who is capable of providing the support
15.13necessary to assist the recipient to live in the community.
15.14    (p) "Self-administered medication" means medication taken orally, by injection or
15.15insertion, or applied topically without the need for assistance.
15.16    (q) "Service plan" means a written summary of the assessment and description of the
15.17services needed by the recipient.
15.18    (r) "Wages and benefits" means wages and salaries, the employer's share of FICA
15.19taxes, Medicare taxes, state and federal unemployment taxes, workers' compensation,
15.20mileage reimbursement, health and dental insurance, life insurance, disability insurance,
15.21long-term care insurance, uniform allowance, and contributions to employee retirement
15.22accounts.

15.23    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
15.24    Subd. 3. Noncovered personal care assistance services. (a) Personal care
15.25assistance services are not eligible for medical assistance payment under this section
15.26when provided:
15.27    (1) by the recipient's spouse, parent of a recipient under the age of 18, paid legal
15.28guardian, licensed foster provider, except as allowed under section 256B.0652, subdivision
15.2910
, or responsible party;
15.30    (2) in lieu of other staffing options order to meet staffing or license requirements in a
15.31residential or child care setting;
15.32    (3) solely as a child care or babysitting service; or
15.33    (4) without authorization by the commissioner or the commissioner's designee.
15.34    (b) The following personal care services are not eligible for medical assistance
15.35payment under this section when provided in residential settings:
16.1    (1) effective January 1, 2010, when the provider of home care services who is not
16.2related by blood, marriage, or adoption owns or otherwise controls the living arrangement,
16.3including licensed or unlicensed services; or
16.4    (2) when personal care assistance services are the responsibility of a residential or
16.5program license holder under the terms of a service agreement and administrative rules.
16.6    (c) Other specific tasks not covered under paragraph (a) or (b) that are not eligible
16.7for medical assistance reimbursement for personal care assistance services under this
16.8section include:
16.9    (1) sterile procedures;
16.10    (2) injections of fluids and medications into veins, muscles, or skin;
16.11    (3) home maintenance or chore services;
16.12    (4) homemaker services not an integral part of assessed personal care assistance
16.13services needed by a recipient;
16.14    (5) application of restraints or implementation of procedures under section 245.825;
16.15    (6) instrumental activities of daily living for children under the age of 18, except
16.16when immediate attention is needed for health or hygiene reasons integral to the personal
16.17care services and the need is listed in the service plan by the assessor; and
16.18    (7) assessments for personal care assistance services by personal care assistance
16.19provider agencies or by independently enrolled registered nurses.

16.20    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 9, is amended to
16.21read:
16.22    Subd. 9. Responsible party; generally. (a) "Responsible party" means an
16.23individual who is capable of providing the support necessary to assist the recipient to live
16.24in the community.
16.25(b) A responsible party must be 18 years of age, actively participate in planning and
16.26directing of personal care assistance services, and attend all assessments for the recipient.
16.27(c) A responsible party must not be the:
16.28(1) personal care assistant;
16.29(2) qualified professional;
16.30(3) home care provider agency owner or staff manager; or
16.31(4) home care provider agency staff unless staff who are not listed in clauses (1) to
16.32(3) are related to the recipient by blood, marriage, or adoption; or
16.33(3) (5) county staff acting as part of employment.
17.1(d) A licensed family foster parent who lives with the recipient may be the
17.2responsible party as long as the family foster parent meets the other responsible party
17.3requirements.
17.4(e) A responsible party is required when:
17.5(1) the person is a minor according to section 524.5-102, subdivision 10;
17.6(2) the person is an incapacitated adult according to section 524.5-102, subdivision
17.76
, resulting in a court-appointed guardian; or
17.8(3) the assessment according to subdivision 3a determines that the recipient is in
17.9need of a responsible party to direct the recipient's care.
17.10(f) There may be two persons designated as the responsible party for reasons such
17.11as divided households and court-ordered custodies. Each person named as responsible
17.12party must meet the program criteria and responsibilities.
17.13(g) The recipient or the recipient's legal representative shall appoint a responsible
17.14party if necessary to direct and supervise the care provided to the recipient. The
17.15responsible party must be identified at the time of assessment and listed on the recipient's
17.16service agreement and personal care assistance care plan.

17.17    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 11, is amended to
17.18read:
17.19    Subd. 11. Personal care assistant; requirements. (a) A personal care assistant
17.20must meet the following requirements:
17.21    (1) be at least 18 years of age with the exception of persons who are 16 or 17 years
17.22of age with these additional requirements:
17.23    (i) supervision by a qualified professional every 60 days; and
17.24    (ii) employment by only one personal care assistance provider agency responsible
17.25for compliance with current labor laws;
17.26    (2) be employed by a personal care assistance provider agency;
17.27    (3) enroll with the department as a personal care assistant after clearing a background
17.28study. Except as provided in subdivision 11a, before a personal care assistant provides
17.29services, the personal care assistance provider agency must initiate a background study on
17.30the personal care assistant under chapter 245C, and the personal care assistance provider
17.31agency must have received a notice from the commissioner that the personal care assistant
17.32is:
17.33    (i) not disqualified under section 245C.14; or
17.34    (ii) is disqualified, but the personal care assistant has received a set aside of the
17.35disqualification under section 245C.22;
18.1    (4) be able to effectively communicate with the recipient and personal care
18.2assistance provider agency;
18.3    (5) be able to provide covered personal care assistance services according to the
18.4recipient's personal care assistance care plan, respond appropriately to recipient needs,
18.5and report changes in the recipient's condition to the supervising qualified professional
18.6or physician;
18.7    (6) not be a consumer of personal care assistance services;
18.8    (7) maintain daily written records including, but not limited to, time sheets under
18.9subdivision 12;
18.10    (8) effective January 1, 2010, complete standardized training as determined
18.11by the commissioner before completing enrollment. The training must be available
18.12in languages other than English and to those who need accommodations due to
18.13disabilities. Personal care assistant training must include successful completion of the
18.14following training components: basic first aid, vulnerable adult, child maltreatment,
18.15OSHA universal precautions, basic roles and responsibilities of personal care assistants
18.16including information about assistance with lifting and transfers for recipients, emergency
18.17preparedness, orientation to positive behavioral practices, fraud issues, and completion of
18.18time sheets. Upon completion of the training components, the personal care assistant must
18.19demonstrate the competency to provide assistance to recipients;
18.20    (9) complete training and orientation on the needs of the recipient within the first
18.21seven days after the services begin; and
18.22    (10) be limited to providing and being paid for up to 275 hours per month, except
18.23that this limit shall be 275 hours per month for the period July 1, 2009, through June 30,
18.242011, of personal care assistance services regardless of the number of recipients being
18.25served or the number of personal care assistance provider agencies enrolled with. The
18.26number of hours worked per day shall not be disallowed by the department unless in
18.27violation of the law.
18.28    (b) A legal guardian may be a personal care assistant if the guardian is not being paid
18.29for the guardian services and meets the criteria for personal care assistants in paragraph (a).
18.30    (c) Effective January 1, 2010, Persons who do not qualify as a personal care assistant
18.31include parents, and stepparents, and legal guardians of minors,; spouses,; paid legal
18.32guardians, of adults; family foster care providers, except as otherwise allowed in section
18.33256B.0625, subdivision 19a , or; and staff of a residential setting.

18.34    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 13, is amended to
18.35read:
19.1    Subd. 13. Qualified professional; qualifications. (a) The qualified professional
19.2must work for a personal care assistance provider agency and meet the definition under
19.3section 256B.0625, subdivision 19c. Before a qualified professional provides services, the
19.4personal care assistance provider agency must initiate a background study on the qualified
19.5professional under chapter 245C, and the personal care assistance provider agency must
19.6have received a notice from the commissioner that the qualified professional:
19.7    (1) is not disqualified under section 245C.14; or
19.8    (2) is disqualified, but the qualified professional has received a set aside of the
19.9disqualification under section 245C.22.
19.10    (b) The qualified professional shall perform the duties of training, supervision, and
19.11evaluation of the personal care assistance staff and evaluation of the effectiveness of
19.12personal care assistance services. The qualified professional shall:
19.13    (1) develop and monitor with the recipient a personal care assistance care plan based
19.14on the service plan and individualized needs of the recipient;
19.15    (2) develop and monitor with the recipient a monthly plan for the use of personal
19.16care assistance services;
19.17    (3) review documentation of personal care assistance services provided;
19.18    (4) provide training and ensure competency for the personal care assistant in the
19.19individual needs of the recipient; and
19.20    (5) document all training, communication, evaluations, and needed actions to
19.21improve performance of the personal care assistants.
19.22    (c) Effective July 1, 2010 2011, the qualified professional shall complete the provider
19.23training with basic information about the personal care assistance program approved by
19.24the commissioner. Newly hired qualified professionals must complete the training within
19.25six months of the date hired by a personal care assistance provider agency. Qualified
19.26professionals who have completed the required training as a worker from a personal care
19.27assistance provider agency do not need to repeat the required training if they are hired
19.28by another agency, if they have completed the training within the last three years. The
19.29required training shall must be available in languages other than English and to those who
19.30need accommodations due to disabilities, with meaningful access according to title VI of
19.31the Civil Rights Act and federal regulations adopted under that law or any guidance from
19.32the United States Health and Human Services Department. The required training must
19.33be available online, or by electronic remote connection, and. The required training must
19.34provide for competency testing to demonstrate an understanding of the content without
19.35attending in-person training. A qualified professional is allowed to be employed and is not
19.36subject to the training requirement until the training is offered online or through remote
20.1electronic connection. A qualified professional employed by a personal care assistance
20.2provider agency certified for participation in Medicare as a home health agency is exempt
20.3from the training required in this subdivision. When available, the qualified professional
20.4working for a Medicare-certified home health agency must successfully complete the
20.5competency test. The commissioner shall ensure there is a mechanism in place to verify
20.6the identity of persons completing the competency testing electronically.

20.7    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 14, is amended to
20.8read:
20.9    Subd. 14. Qualified professional; duties. (a) Effective January 1, 2010, all personal
20.10care assistants must be supervised by a qualified professional.
20.11    (b) Through direct training, observation, return demonstrations, and consultation
20.12with the staff and the recipient, the qualified professional must ensure and document
20.13that the personal care assistant is:
20.14    (1) capable of providing the required personal care assistance services;
20.15    (2) knowledgeable about the plan of personal care assistance services before services
20.16are performed; and
20.17    (3) able to identify conditions that should be immediately brought to the attention of
20.18the qualified professional.
20.19    (c) The qualified professional shall evaluate the personal care assistant within the
20.20first 14 days of starting to provide regularly scheduled services for a recipient, or sooner as
20.21determined by the qualified professional, except for the personal care assistance choice
20.22option under subdivision 19, paragraph (a), clause (4). For the initial evaluation, the
20.23qualified professional shall evaluate the personal care assistance services for a recipient
20.24through direct observation of a personal care assistant's work. The qualified professional
20.25may conduct additional training and evaluation visits, based upon the needs of the
20.26recipient and the personal care assistant's ability to meet those needs. Subsequent visits to
20.27evaluate the personal care assistance services provided to a recipient do not require direct
20.28observation of each personal care assistant's work and shall occur:
20.29    (1) at least every 90 days thereafter for the first year of a recipient's services;
20.30    (2) every 120 days after the first year of a recipient's service or whenever needed for
20.31response to a recipient's request for increased supervision of the personal care assistance
20.32staff; and
20.33    (3) after the first 180 days of a recipient's service, supervisory visits may alternate
20.34between unscheduled phone or Internet technology and in-person visits, unless the
20.35in-person visits are needed according to the care plan.
21.1    (d) Communication with the recipient is a part of the evaluation process of the
21.2personal care assistance staff.
21.3    (e) At each supervisory visit, the qualified professional shall evaluate personal care
21.4assistance services including the following information:
21.5    (1) satisfaction level of the recipient with personal care assistance services;
21.6    (2) review of the month-to-month plan for use of personal care assistance services;
21.7    (3) review of documentation of personal care assistance services provided;
21.8    (4) whether the personal care assistance services are meeting the goals of the service
21.9as stated in the personal care assistance care plan and service plan;
21.10    (5) a written record of the results of the evaluation and actions taken to correct any
21.11deficiencies in the work of a personal care assistant; and
21.12    (6) revision of the personal care assistance care plan as necessary in consultation
21.13with the recipient or responsible party, to meet the needs of the recipient.
21.14    (f) The qualified professional shall complete the required documentation in the
21.15agency recipient and employee files and the recipient's home, including the following
21.16documentation:
21.17    (1) the personal care assistance care plan based on the service plan and individualized
21.18needs of the recipient;
21.19    (2) a month-to-month plan for use of personal care assistance services;
21.20    (3) changes in need of the recipient requiring a change to the level of service and the
21.21personal care assistance care plan;
21.22    (4) evaluation results of supervision visits and identified issues with personal care
21.23assistance staff with actions taken;
21.24    (5) all communication with the recipient and personal care assistance staff; and
21.25    (6) hands-on training or individualized training for the care of the recipient.
21.26    (g) The documentation in paragraph (f) must be done on agency forms templates.
21.27    (h) The services that are not eligible for payment as qualified professional services
21.28include:
21.29    (1) direct professional nursing tasks that could be assessed and authorized as skilled
21.30nursing tasks;
21.31    (2) supervision of personal care assistance completed by telephone;
21.32    (3) (2) agency administrative activities;
21.33    (4) (3) training other than the individualized training required to provide care for a
21.34recipient; and
21.35    (5) (4) any other activity that is not described in this section.

22.1    Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 19, is amended to
22.2read:
22.3    Subd. 19. Personal care assistance choice option; qualifications; duties. (a)
22.4Under personal care assistance choice, the recipient or responsible party shall:
22.5    (1) recruit, hire, schedule, and terminate personal care assistants according to the
22.6terms of the written agreement required under subdivision 20, paragraph (a);
22.7    (2) develop a personal care assistance care plan based on the assessed needs
22.8and addressing the health and safety of the recipient with the assistance of a qualified
22.9professional as needed;
22.10    (3) orient and train the personal care assistant with assistance as needed from the
22.11qualified professional;
22.12    (4) effective January 1, 2010, supervise and evaluate the personal care assistant with
22.13the qualified professional, who is required to visit the recipient at least every 180 days;
22.14    (5) monitor and verify in writing and report to the personal care assistance choice
22.15agency the number of hours worked by the personal care assistant and the qualified
22.16professional;
22.17    (6) engage in an annual face-to-face reassessment to determine continuing eligibility
22.18and service authorization; and
22.19    (7) use the same personal care assistance choice provider agency if shared personal
22.20assistance care is being used.
22.21    (b) The personal care assistance choice provider agency shall:
22.22    (1) meet all personal care assistance provider agency standards;
22.23    (2) enter into a written agreement with the recipient, responsible party, and personal
22.24care assistants;
22.25    (3) not be related as a parent, child, sibling, or spouse to the recipient, qualified
22.26professional, or the personal care assistant; and
22.27    (4) ensure arm's-length transactions without undue influence or coercion with the
22.28recipient and personal care assistant.
22.29    (c) The duties of the personal care assistance choice provider agency are to:
22.30    (1) be the employer of the personal care assistant and the qualified professional for
22.31employment law and related regulations including, but not limited to, purchasing and
22.32maintaining workers' compensation, unemployment insurance, surety and fidelity bonds,
22.33and liability insurance, and submit any or all necessary documentation including, but not
22.34limited to, workers' compensation and unemployment insurance;
22.35    (2) bill the medical assistance program for personal care assistance services and
22.36qualified professional services;
23.1    (3) request and complete background studies that comply with the requirements for
23.2personal care assistants and qualified professionals;
23.3    (4) pay the personal care assistant and qualified professional based on actual hours
23.4of services provided;
23.5    (5) withhold and pay all applicable federal and state taxes;
23.6    (6) verify and keep records of hours worked by the personal care assistant and
23.7qualified professional;
23.8    (7) make the arrangements and pay taxes and other benefits, if any, and comply with
23.9any legal requirements for a Minnesota employer;
23.10    (8) enroll in the medical assistance program as a personal care assistance choice
23.11agency; and
23.12    (9) enter into a written agreement as specified in subdivision 20 before services
23.13are provided.

23.14    Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 21, is amended to
23.15read:
23.16    Subd. 21. Requirements for initial enrollment of personal care assistance
23.17provider agencies. (a) All personal care assistance provider agencies must provide, at the
23.18time of enrollment as a personal care assistance provider agency in a format determined
23.19by the commissioner, information and documentation that includes, but is not limited to,
23.20the following:
23.21    (1) the personal care assistance provider agency's current contact information
23.22including address, telephone number, and e-mail address;
23.23    (2) proof of surety bond coverage in the amount of $50,000 or ten percent of the
23.24provider's payments from Medicaid in the previous year, whichever is less;
23.25    (3) proof of fidelity bond coverage in the amount of $20,000;
23.26    (4) proof of workers' compensation insurance coverage;
23.27    (5) proof of liability insurance;
23.28    (6) a description of the personal care assistance provider agency's organization
23.29identifying the names of all owners, managing employees, staff, board of directors, and
23.30the affiliations of the directors, owners, or staff to other service providers;
23.31    (7) a copy of the personal care assistance provider agency's written policies and
23.32procedures including: hiring of employees; training requirements; service delivery;
23.33and employee and consumer safety including process for notification and resolution
23.34of consumer grievances, identification and prevention of communicable diseases, and
23.35employee misconduct;
24.1    (8) copies of all other forms the personal care assistance provider agency uses in
24.2the course of daily business including, but not limited to:
24.3    (i) a copy of the personal care assistance provider agency's time sheet if the time
24.4sheet varies from the standard time sheet for personal care assistance services approved
24.5by the commissioner, and a letter requesting approval of the personal care assistance
24.6provider agency's nonstandard time sheet;
24.7    (ii) the personal care assistance provider agency's template for the personal care
24.8assistance care plan; and
24.9    (iii) the personal care assistance provider agency's template for the written
24.10agreement in subdivision 20 for recipients using the personal care assistance choice
24.11option, if applicable;
24.12    (9) a list of all training and classes that the personal care assistance provider agency
24.13requires of its staff providing personal care assistance services;
24.14    (10) documentation that the personal care assistance provider agency and staff have
24.15successfully completed all the training required by this section;
24.16    (11) documentation of the agency's marketing practices;
24.17    (12) disclosure of ownership, leasing, or management of all residential properties
24.18that is used or could be used for providing home care services;
24.19    (13) documentation that the agency will use the following percentages of revenue
24.20generated from the medical assistance rate paid for personal care assistance services
24.21for employee personal care assistant wages and benefits: 72.5 percent of revenue in the
24.22personal care assistance choice option and 72.5 percent of revenue from other personal
24.23care assistance providers; and
24.24    (14) effective May 15, 2010, documentation that the agency does not burden
24.25recipients' free exercise of their right to choose service providers by requiring personal
24.26care assistants to sign an agreement not to work with any particular personal care
24.27assistance recipient or for another personal care assistance provider agency after leaving
24.28the agency and that the agency is not taking action on any such agreements or requirements
24.29regardless of the date signed.
24.30    (b) Personal care assistance provider agencies shall provide the information specified
24.31in paragraph (a) to the commissioner at the time the personal care assistance provider
24.32agency enrolls as a vendor or upon request from the commissioner. The commissioner
24.33shall collect the information specified in paragraph (a) from all personal care assistance
24.34providers beginning July 1, 2009.
24.35    (c) All personal care assistance provider agencies shall require all employees in
24.36management and supervisory positions and owners of the agency who are active in the
25.1day-to-day management and operations of the agency to complete mandatory training
25.2as determined by the commissioner before enrollment of the agency as a provider.
25.3Employees in management and supervisory positions and owners who are active in
25.4the day-to-day operations of an agency who have completed the required training as
25.5an employee with a personal care assistance provider agency do not need to repeat
25.6the required training if they are hired by another agency, if they have completed the
25.7training within the past three years. By September 1, 2010, the required training must be
25.8available in languages other than English and to those who need accommodations due
25.9to disabilities, with meaningful access according to title VI of the Civil Rights Act and
25.10federal regulations adopted under that law or any guidance from the United States Health
25.11and Human Services Department. The required training must be available online, or by
25.12electronic remote connection, and. The required training must provide for competency
25.13testing. Personal care assistance provider agency billing staff shall complete training about
25.14personal care assistance program financial management. This training is effective July 1,
25.152009. Any personal care assistance provider agency enrolled before that date shall, if it
25.16has not already, complete the provider training within 18 months of July 1, 2009. Any new
25.17owners or employees in management and supervisory positions involved in the day-to-day
25.18operations are required to complete mandatory training as a requisite of working for the
25.19agency. Personal care assistance provider agencies certified for participation in Medicare
25.20as home health agencies are exempt from the training required in this subdivision. When
25.21available, Medicare-certified home health agency owners, supervisors, or managers must
25.22successfully complete the competency test.

25.23    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 30, is amended to
25.24read:
25.25    Subd. 30. Notice of service changes to recipients. The commissioner must provide:
25.26    (1) by October 31, 2009, information to recipients likely to be affected that (i)
25.27describes the changes to the personal care assistance program that may result in the
25.28loss of access to personal care assistance services, and (ii) includes resources to obtain
25.29further information;
25.30    (2) effective through January 1, 2012, notice of changes in medical assistance
25.31personal care assistance services to each affected recipient at least 30 days before the
25.32effective date of the change.
25.33The notice shall include how to get further information on the changes, how to get help to
25.34obtain other services, a list of community resources, and appeal rights. Notwithstanding
26.1section 256.045, a recipient may request continued services pending appeal within the
26.2time period allowed to request an appeal; and
26.3    (3) a service agreement authorizing personal care assistance hours of service at
26.4the previously authorized level, throughout the appeal process period, when a recipient
26.5requests services pending an appeal.

26.6    Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0916, subdivision 7, is amended to
26.7read:
26.8    Subd. 7. Annual report by commissioner. (a) Beginning November 1, 2001, and
26.9each November 1 thereafter, the commissioner shall issue an annual report on county and
26.10state use of available resources for the home and community-based waiver for persons with
26.11developmental disabilities. For each county or county partnership, the report shall include:
26.12(1) the amount of funds allocated but not used;
26.13(2) the county specific allowed reserve amount approved and used;
26.14(3) the number, ages, and living situations of individuals screened and waiting for
26.15services;
26.16(4) the urgency of need for services to begin within one, two, or more than two
26.17years for each individual;
26.18(5) the services needed;
26.19(6) the number of additional persons served by approval of increased capacity within
26.20existing allocations;
26.21(7) results of action by the commissioner to streamline administrative requirements
26.22and improve county resource management; and
26.23(8) additional action that would decrease the number of those eligible and waiting
26.24for waivered services.
26.25The commissioner shall specify intended outcomes for the program and the degree to
26.26which these specified outcomes are attained.
26.27(b) This subdivision expires January 1, 2012.

26.28    Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 11, is amended to
26.29read:
26.30    Subd. 11. Residential support services. (a) Upon federal approval, there is
26.31established a new service called residential support that is available on the community
26.32alternative care, community alternatives for disabled individuals, developmental
26.33disabilities, and traumatic brain injury waivers. Existing waiver service descriptions
26.34must be modified to the extent necessary to ensure there is no duplication between
27.1other services. Residential support services must be provided by vendors licensed as a
27.2community residential setting as defined in section 245A.11, subdivision 8.
27.3(b) Residential support services must meet the following criteria:
27.4(1) providers of residential support services must own or control the residential site;
27.5(2) the residential site must not be the primary residence of the license holder;
27.6(3) the residential site must have a designated program supervisor responsible for
27.7program oversight, development, and implementation of policies and procedures;
27.8(4) the provider of residential support services must provide supervision, training,
27.9and assistance as described in the person's community support plan; and
27.10(5) the provider of residential support services must meet the requirements of
27.11licensure and additional requirements of the person's community support plan.
27.12(c) Providers of residential support services that meet the definition in paragraph
27.13(a) must be registered using a process determined by the commissioner beginning July
27.141, 2009. Providers licensed to provide child foster care under Minnesota Rules, parts
27.152960.3000 to 2960.3340, or adult foster care licensed under Minnesota Rules, parts
27.169555.5105 to 9555.6265, and that meet the requirements in section 245A.03, subdivision
27.177, paragraph (e), are considered registered under this section.

27.18    Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.096, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
27.19    Subd. 5. Biennial report. (a) The commissioner shall provide a biennial report to
27.20the chairs of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over health and human services
27.21policy and funding beginning January 15, 2009, on the development and activities of the
27.22quality management, assurance, and improvement system designed to meet the federal
27.23requirements under the home and community-based services waiver programs for persons
27.24with disabilities. By January 15, 2008, the commissioner shall provide a preliminary
27.25report on priorities for meeting the federal requirements, progress on development and
27.26field testing of the annual survey, appropriations necessary to implement an annual survey
27.27of service recipients once field testing is completed, recommendations for improvements
27.28in the incident reporting system, and a plan for incorporating quality assurance efforts
27.29under section 256B.095 and other regional efforts into the statewide system.
27.30(b) This subdivision expires January 1, 2012.

27.31    Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.49, subdivision 21, is amended to read:
27.32    Subd. 21. Report. (a) The commissioner shall expand on the annual report required
27.33under section 256B.0916, subdivision 7, to include information on the county of residence
28.1and financial responsibility, age, and major diagnoses for persons eligible for the home
28.2and community-based waivers authorized under subdivision 11 who are:
28.3(1) receiving those services;
28.4(2) screened and waiting for waiver services; and
28.5(3) residing in nursing facilities and are under age 65.
28.6(b) This subdivision expires January 1, 2012.

28.7    Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.4912, is amended to read:
28.8256B.4912 HOME AND COMMUNITY-BASED WAIVERS; PROVIDERS
28.9AND PAYMENT.
28.10    Subdivision 1. Provider qualifications. For the home and community-based
28.11waivers providing services to seniors and individuals with disabilities, the commissioner
28.12shall establish:
28.13(1) agreements with enrolled waiver service providers to ensure providers meet
28.14qualifications defined in the waiver plans Minnesota health care program requirements;
28.15(2) regular reviews of provider qualifications, and including requests of proof of
28.16documentation; and
28.17(3) processes to gather the necessary information to determine provider
28.18qualifications.
28.19    By July 2010, Beginning July 2011, staff that provide direct contact, as defined
28.20in section 245C.02, subdivision 11, that are employees of waiver service providers for
28.21services specified in the federally approved waiver plans must meet the requirements
28.22of chapter 245C prior to providing waiver services and as part of ongoing enrollment.
28.23Beginning July 2012, service owners and managerial officials overseeing the management
28.24or policies of services that provide direct contact as specified in the federally approved
28.25waiver plans must meet the requirements of chapter 245C prior to reenrollment or, for new
28.26providers, prior to initial enrollment. Upon federal approval, this requirement must also
28.27apply to consumer-directed community supports.
28.28    Subd. 1a. Definitions. For the purposes of this section, the following definitions
28.29apply.
28.30(a) "Home and community-based service providers" means approved vendors who
28.31provide community services and long-term supports under medical assistance programs
28.32that include waiver programs as defined in sections 245B.092, 256B.0915, and 256B.49,
28.33and state plan home care services as defined in section 256B.0651.
29.1(b) "Home and community-based service administrators" means counties and tribes
29.2that, individually or collaboratively, administer home and community-based waiver
29.3services delivery in a consistent manner under a state agency directive.
29.4    Subd. 2. Rate-setting methodologies. The commissioner shall establish
29.5statewide rate-setting methodologies that meet federal waiver requirements for home
29.6and community-based waiver services for individuals with disabilities. The rate-setting
29.7methodologies must abide by the principles of transparency and equitability across the
29.8state. The methodologies must involve a uniform process of structuring rates for each
29.9service and must promote quality and participant choice.
29.10    Subd. 3. Payment rate criteria. (a) The payment structures and methodologies
29.11under this section shall reflect the payment rate criteria in paragraphs (b) and (c).
29.12(b) Payment rates must be based on reasonable costs that are ordinary, necessary,
29.13and related to delivery of authorized client services.
29.14(c) The commissioner must not reimburse:
29.15(1) unauthorized service delivery;
29.16(2) services provided under a receipt of a special grant;
29.17(3) services provided under contract to a local school district;
29.18(4) extended employment services under Minnesota Rules, parts 3300.2005 to
29.193300.3100, or vocational rehabilitation services provided under the federal Rehabilitation
29.20Act, as amended, Title I, section 110, or Title VI-C, and not through use of medical
29.21assistance or county social service funds; or
29.22(5) services provided to a client by a licensed medical, therapeutic, or rehabilitation
29.23practitioner or any other vendor of medical care which are billed separately on a
29.24fee-for-service basis.
29.25    Subd. 4. Rate exception process. The payment structures and methodologies
29.26under this section must include procedures to seek authorization from the commissioner
29.27for exceptions for very dependent persons with special needs to the rates in excess of the
29.28amounts as determined utilizing individualized payment structures and methodologies
29.29established by the commissioner under subdivision 2.
29.30    Subd. 5. Shared service limits. The commissioner retains authority to limit the
29.31number of people that share waiver and day services. Individualized payment structures
29.32and methodologies established by the commissioner under subdivision 2 must reflect the
29.33option to share services within the limits established by the commissioner.
29.34    Subd. 6. Home and community-based service administrator roles and
29.35responsibilities. The commissioner shall define roles and responsibilities of home and
29.36community-based service administrators to include:
30.1(1) certification functions to include monitoring and review of waiver home and
30.2community-based service providers in compliance with federal requirements; and
30.3(2) assessment of home and community-based waiver service capacity and
30.4development to address identified service gaps.
30.5    Subd. 7. Recommendations to the legislature. The commissioner shall consult
30.6with existing advisory groups on rate-setting methodologies, provider qualifications, and
30.7home and community-based service administrator roles and responsibilities to develop
30.8and test processes, roles, and rate-setting methodologies described in this section. The
30.9commissioner shall recommend by January 15, 2012, to the chairs of the legislative
30.10committees with jurisdiction over health and human services policy and funding,
30.11statutory changes that define the processes, roles, and rate-setting methodologies for
30.12full implementation by January 1, 2013.

30.13    Sec. 22. STREAMLINE CONSUMER-DIRECTED SERVICES.
30.14The commissioner of human services shall prepare and provide recommendations
30.15for streamlining administrative oversight, financial management, and payment protocols
30.16for consumer-directed services administered through the commissioner, including
30.17consumer-directed community supports, under Minnesota Statutes, sections 256B.49,
30.18subdivision 16, and 256B.0916, subdivision 6a; consumer support grants, under Minnesota
30.19Statutes, section 256.476; family support grants, under Minnesota Statutes, section 252.32;
30.20and any other consumer directed service options identified by the commissioner. The
30.21commissioner shall report to the legislature by January 15, 2012, with recommendations
30.22prepared under this section.

30.23ARTICLE 3
30.24COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT AND CASE MANAGEMENT REFORM

30.25    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 1, is amended to
30.26read:
30.27    Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section, the terms defined in
30.28paragraphs (b) to (r) have the meanings given unless otherwise provided in text.
30.29    (b) "Activities of daily living" means grooming, dressing, bathing, transferring,
30.30mobility, positioning, eating, and toileting.
30.31    (c) "Level I behavior," effective January 1, 2010, means a category to determine
30.32the home care rating and is based on the criteria found in this section. "Level I behavior"
30.33means and is defined as physical aggression towards self, others, or destruction of property
30.34that requires the immediate response of another person and either:
31.1(1) has occurred within 30 days prior to the assessment; or
31.2(2) there is objective evidence that, without intervention, it would have occurred
31.330 days prior to the assessment. Objective evidence includes logs of intervention kept
31.4by the family or provider.
31.5    (d) "Complex health-related needs," effective January 1, 2010, means a category to
31.6determine the home care rating and is based on the criteria found in this section.
31.7    (e) "Critical activities of daily living," effective January 1, 2010, means transferring,
31.8mobility, eating, and toileting.
31.9    (f) "Dependency in activities of daily living" means a person requires assistance to
31.10begin and complete one or more of the activities of daily living.
31.11    (g) "Extended personal care assistance service" means personal care assistance
31.12services included in a service plan under one of the home and community-based services
31.13waivers authorized under sections 256B.0915, 256B.092, subdivision 5, and 256B.49,
31.14which exceed the amount, duration, and frequency of the state plan personal care
31.15assistance services for participants who:
31.16    (1) need assistance provided periodically during a week, but less than daily will not
31.17be able to remain in their homes without the assistance, and other replacement services
31.18are more expensive or are not available when personal care assistance services are to be
31.19terminated; or
31.20    (2) need additional personal care assistance services beyond the amount authorized
31.21by the state plan personal care assistance assessment in order to ensure that their safety,
31.22health, and welfare are provided for in their homes.
31.23    (h) "Health-related procedures and tasks" means procedures and tasks that can
31.24be delegated or assigned by a licensed health care professional under state law to be
31.25performed by a personal care assistant.
31.26    (i) "Instrumental activities of daily living" means activities to include meal planning
31.27and preparation; basic assistance with paying bills; shopping for food, clothing, and other
31.28essential items; performing household tasks integral to the personal care assistance
31.29services; communication by telephone and other media; and traveling, including to
31.30medical appointments and to participate in the community.
31.31    (j) "Managing employee" has the same definition as Code of Federal Regulations,
31.32title 42, section 455.
31.33    (k) "Qualified professional" means a professional providing supervision of personal
31.34care assistance services and staff as defined in section 256B.0625, subdivision 19c.
31.35    (l) "Personal care assistance provider agency" means a medical assistance enrolled
31.36provider that provides or assists with providing personal care assistance services and
32.1includes a personal care assistance provider organization, personal care assistance choice
32.2agency, class A licensed nursing agency, and Medicare-certified home health agency.
32.3    (m) "Personal care assistant" or "PCA" means an individual employed by a personal
32.4care assistance agency who provides personal care assistance services.
32.5    (n) "Personal care assistance care plan" means a written description of personal
32.6care assistance services developed by the personal care assistance provider according
32.7to the service plan.
32.8    (o) "Responsible party" means an individual who is capable of providing the support
32.9necessary to assist the recipient to live in the community.
32.10    (p) "Self-administered medication" means medication taken orally, by injection,
32.11nebulizer, or insertion, or applied topically without the need for assistance.
32.12    (q) "Service plan" means a written summary of the assessment and description of the
32.13services needed by the recipient.
32.14    (r) "Wages and benefits" means wages and salaries, the employer's share of FICA
32.15taxes, Medicare taxes, state and federal unemployment taxes, workers' compensation,
32.16mileage reimbursement, health and dental insurance, life insurance, disability insurance,
32.17long-term care insurance, uniform allowance, and contributions to employee retirement
32.18accounts.

32.19    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
32.20    Subd. 2. Personal care assistance services; covered services. (a) The personal
32.21care assistance services eligible for payment include services and supports furnished
32.22to an individual, as needed, to assist in:
32.23(1) activities of daily living;
32.24(2) health-related procedures and tasks;
32.25(3) observation and redirection of behaviors; and
32.26(4) instrumental activities of daily living.
32.27(b) Activities of daily living include the following covered services:
32.28(1) dressing, including assistance with choosing, application, and changing of
32.29clothing and application of special appliances, wraps, or clothing;
32.30(2) grooming, including assistance with basic hair care, oral care, shaving, applying
32.31cosmetics and deodorant, and care of eyeglasses and hearing aids. Nail care is included,
32.32except for recipients who are diabetic or have poor circulation;
32.33(3) bathing, including assistance with basic personal hygiene, and inspection of the
32.34skin and skin care;
33.1(4) eating, including and assistance with hand washing and application of orthotics
33.2required for eating, transfers, and feeding;
33.3(5) transfers, including assistance with transferring the recipient from one seating or
33.4reclining area to another;
33.5(6) mobility, including assistance with ambulation, including use of a wheelchair.
33.6Mobility does not include providing transportation for a recipient;
33.7(7) positioning, including assistance with positioning or turning a recipient for
33.8necessary care and comfort; and
33.9(8) toileting, including assistance with helping recipient with bowel or bladder
33.10elimination and care including transfers, mobility, positioning, feminine hygiene, use of
33.11toileting equipment or supplies, cleansing the perineal area, inspection of the skin, and
33.12adjusting clothing.
33.13(c) Health-related procedures and tasks include the following covered services:
33.14(1) range of motion and passive exercise to maintain a recipient's strength and
33.15muscle functioning;
33.16(2) assistance with self-administered medication as defined by this section, including.
33.17The personal care assistant must not determine the medication dose or time for the
33.18medication. Assistance with medications includes reminders to take medication, bringing
33.19medication to the recipient, and assistance with opening medication under the direction of
33.20the recipient or responsible party, including medications given through a nebulizer;
33.21(3) interventions for seizure disorders, including monitoring and observation; and
33.22(4) other activities considered within the scope of the personal care service and
33.23meeting the definition of health-related procedures and tasks under this section.
33.24(d) A personal care assistant may provide health-related procedures and tasks
33.25associated with the complex health-related needs of a recipient if the procedures and
33.26tasks meet the definition of health-related procedures and tasks under this section and the
33.27personal care assistant is trained by a qualified professional and demonstrates competency
33.28to safely complete the procedures and tasks. Delegation of health-related procedures and
33.29tasks and all training must be documented in the personal care assistance care plan and the
33.30recipient's and personal care assistant's files.
33.31(e) Effective January 1, 2010, for a personal care assistant to provide the
33.32health-related procedures and tasks of tracheostomy suctioning and services to recipients
33.33on ventilator support there must be:
33.34(1) delegation and training by a registered nurse, certified or licensed respiratory
33.35therapist, or a physician;
33.36(2) utilization of clean rather than sterile procedure;
34.1(3) specialized training about the health-related procedures and tasks and equipment,
34.2including ventilator operation and maintenance;
34.3(4) individualized training regarding the needs of the recipient; and
34.4(5) supervision by a qualified professional who is a registered nurse.
34.5(f) Effective January 1, 2010, a personal care assistant may observe and redirect the
34.6recipient for episodes where there is a need for redirection due to behaviors. Training of
34.7the personal care assistant must occur based on the needs of the recipient, the personal
34.8care assistance care plan, and any other support services provided.
34.9(g) Instrumental activities of daily living under subdivision 1, paragraph (i).

34.10    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 3a, is amended to
34.11read:
34.12    Subd. 3a. Assessment; defined. This subdivision is effective until notification
34.13is given by the commissioner as described under section 256B.0911, subdivision 3a.
34.14"Assessment" means a review and evaluation of a recipient's need for home personal care
34.15assistance services conducted in person. Assessments for personal care assistance services
34.16shall be conducted by the county public health nurse or a certified public health nurse under
34.17contract with the county except when a long-term care consultation is being conducted
34.18for the purposes of determining a person's eligibility for home and community-based
34.19waiver services according to section 256B.0911 and the support plan may include personal
34.20care assistance services. An in-person assessment must include: documentation of
34.21health status, determination of need, evaluation of service effectiveness, identification of
34.22appropriate services, service plan development or modification, coordination of services,
34.23referrals and follow-up to appropriate payers and community resources, completion of
34.24required reports, recommendation of service authorization, and consumer education.
34.25Once the need for personal care assistance services is determined under this section or
34.26sections 256B.0651, 256B.0653, 256B.0654, and 256B.0656, the county public health
34.27nurse or certified public health nurse under contract with the county is responsible for
34.28communicating this recommendation to the commissioner and the recipient. An in-person
34.29assessment must occur at least annually or when there is a significant change in the
34.30recipient's condition or when there is a change in the need for personal care assistance
34.31services. A service update may substitute for the annual face-to-face assessment when
34.32there is not a significant change in recipient condition or a change in the need for
34.33personal care assistance service. A service update may be completed by telephone, used
34.34when there is no need for an increase in personal care assistance services, and used
34.35for two consecutive assessments if followed by a face-to-face assessment. A service
35.1update must be completed on a form approved by the commissioner. A service update
35.2or review for temporary increase includes a review of initial baseline data, evaluation of
35.3service effectiveness, redetermination of service need, modification of service plan and
35.4appropriate referrals, update of initial forms, obtaining service authorization, and on going
35.5consumer education. Assessments or reassessments must be completed on forms provided
35.6by the commissioner within 30 20 days of a request for home care services by a recipient
35.7or responsible party or personal care provider agency.

35.8    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0659, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
35.9    Subd. 4. Assessment for personal care assistance services; limitations. (a) An
35.10assessment as defined in subdivision 3a must be completed for personal care assistance
35.11services.
35.12    (b) The following limitations apply to the assessment:
35.13    (1) a person must be assessed as dependent in an activity of daily living based on the
35.14person's daily need or need on the days during the week the activity is completed for:
35.15    (i) cuing and constant supervision to complete the task; or
35.16    (ii) hands-on assistance to complete the task; and
35.17    (2) a child may not be found to be dependent in an activity of daily living if because
35.18of the child's age an adult would either perform the activity for the child or assist the child
35.19with the activity. Assistance needed is the assistance appropriate for a typical child of
35.20the same age.
35.21    (c) Assessment for complex health-related needs must meet the criteria in this
35.22paragraph. During the assessment process, a recipient qualifies as having complex
35.23health-related needs if the recipient has one or more of the interventions that are ordered by
35.24a physician, specified in a personal care assistance care plan, and found in the following:
35.25    (1) tube feedings requiring:
35.26    (i) a gastrojejunostomy tube; or
35.27    (ii) continuous tube feeding lasting longer than 12 hours per day;
35.28    (2) wounds described as:
35.29    (i) stage III or stage IV;
35.30    (ii) multiple wounds;
35.31    (iii) requiring sterile or clean dressing changes or a wound vac; or
35.32    (iv) open lesions such as burns, fistulas, tube sites, or ostomy sites that require
35.33specialized care;
35.34    (3) parenteral therapy described as:
36.1    (i) IV therapy more than two times per week lasting longer than four hours for
36.2each treatment; or
36.3    (ii) total parenteral nutrition (TPN) daily;
36.4    (4) respiratory interventions, including:
36.5    (i) oxygen required more than eight hours per day;
36.6    (ii) respiratory vest more than one time per day;
36.7    (iii) bronchial drainage treatments more than two times per day;
36.8    (iv) sterile or clean suctioning more than six times per day;
36.9    (v) dependence on another to apply respiratory ventilation augmentation devices
36.10such as BiPAP and CPAP; and
36.11    (vi) ventilator dependence under section 256B.0652;
36.12    (5) insertion and maintenance of catheter, including:
36.13    (i) sterile catheter changes more than one time per month;
36.14    (ii) clean intermittent catheterization, and including self-catheterization more than
36.15six times per day; or
36.16    (iii) bladder irrigations;
36.17    (6) bowel program more than two times per week requiring more than 30 minutes to
36.18perform each time;
36.19    (7) neurological intervention, including:
36.20    (i) seizures more than two times per week and requiring significant physical
36.21assistance to maintain safety; or
36.22    (ii) swallowing disorders diagnosed by a physician and requiring specialized
36.23assistance from another on a daily basis; and
36.24    (8) other congenital or acquired diseases creating a need for significantly increased
36.25direct hands-on assistance and interventions in six to eight activities of daily living.
36.26    (d) An assessment of behaviors must meet the criteria in this paragraph. A recipient
36.27qualifies as having a need for assistance due to behaviors if the recipient's behavior requires
36.28assistance at least four times per week and shows one or more of the following behaviors:
36.29    (1) physical aggression towards self or others, or destruction of property that requires
36.30the immediate response of another person;
36.31    (2) increased vulnerability due to cognitive deficits or socially inappropriate
36.32behavior; or
36.33    (3) increased need for assistance for recipients who are verbally aggressive and or
36.34 resistive to care such that the time needed to perform activities of daily living is increased.

36.35    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
37.1    Subdivision 1. Purpose and goal. (a) The purpose of long-term care consultation
37.2services is to assist persons with long-term or chronic care needs in making long-term care
37.3decisions and selecting support and service options that meet their needs and reflect their
37.4preferences. The availability of, and access to, information and other types of assistance,
37.5including assessment and support planning, is also intended to prevent or delay certified
37.6nursing facility institutional placements and to provide access to transition assistance
37.7after admission. Further, the goal of these services is to contain costs associated with
37.8unnecessary certified nursing facility institutional admissions. Long-term consultation
37.9services must be available to any person regardless of public program eligibility. The
37.10commissioner of human services shall seek to maximize use of available federal and state
37.11funds and establish the broadest program possible within the funding available.
37.12(b) These services must be coordinated with long-term care options counseling
37.13provided under section 256.975, subdivision 7, and section 256.01, subdivision 24, for
37.14telephone assistance and follow up and to offer a variety of cost-effective alternatives
37.15to persons with disabilities and elderly persons. The county or tribal lead agency or
37.16managed care plan providing long-term care consultation services shall encourage the use
37.17of volunteers from families, religious organizations, social clubs, and similar civic and
37.18service organizations to provide community-based services.

37.19    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 1a, is amended to
37.20read:
37.21    Subd. 1a. Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:
37.22    (a) "Long-term care consultation services" means:
37.23    (1) intake for and access to assistance in identifying services needed to maintain an
37.24individual in the most inclusive environment;
37.25    (2) providing recommendations on for and referrals to cost-effective community
37.26services that are available to the individual;
37.27    (3) development of an individual's person-centered community support plan;
37.28    (4) providing information regarding eligibility for Minnesota health care programs;
37.29    (5) face-to-face long-term care consultation assessments, which may be completed
37.30in a hospital, nursing facility, intermediate care facility for persons with developmental
37.31disabilities (ICF/DDs), regional treatment centers, or the person's current or planned
37.32residence;
37.33    (6) federally mandated preadmission screening to determine the need for an
37.34institutional level of care activities described under subdivision subdivisions 4a and 4b;
38.1    (7) determination of home and community-based waiver and other service eligibility
38.2as required under sections 256B.0913, 256B.0915, and 256B.49, including level of care
38.3determination for individuals who need an institutional level of care as defined under
38.4section 144.0724, subdivision 11, or 256B.092, service eligibility including state plan
38.5home care services identified in sections 256B.0625, subdivisions 6, 7, and 19, paragraphs
38.6(a) and (c), and 256B.0657, based on assessment and community support plan development
38.7with, appropriate referrals to obtain necessary diagnostic information, and including the
38.8option an eligibility determination for consumer-directed community supports;
38.9(8) providing recommendations for nursing facility institutional placement when
38.10there are no cost-effective community services available; and
38.11(9) providing access to assistance to transition people back to community settings
38.12after facility institutional admission.
38.13(b) Upon statewide implementation of lead agency requirements in subdivisions 2b,
38.142c, and 3a, "long-term care consultation services" also means:
38.15(1) service eligibility determination for state plan home care services identified in:
38.16(i) section 256B.0625, subdivisions 7, 19a, and 19c;
38.17(ii) section 256B.0657; or
38.18(iii) consumer support grants under section 256.476;
38.19(2) notwithstanding provisions in Minnesota Rules, parts 9525.0004 to 9525.0024,
38.20determination of eligibility for case management services available under sections
38.21256B.0621, subdivision 2, paragraph (4), and 256B.0924 and Minnesota Rules, part
38.229525.0016, and also includes obtaining necessary diagnostic information;
38.23(3) determination of institutional level of care, waiver, and other service eligibility
38.24as required under section 256B.092, determination of eligibility for family support grants
38.25under section 252.32, semi-independent living services under section 252.275 and day
38.26training and habilitation services under section 256B.092;
38.27    (8) (4) providing recommendations for nursing facility institutional placement when
38.28there are no cost-effective community services available; and
38.29    (9) (5) providing access to assistance to transition people back to community settings
38.30after facility institutional admission.
38.31    (b) (c) "Long-term care options counseling" means the services provided by the
38.32linkage lines as mandated by sections 256.01 and 256.975, subdivision 7, and also
38.33includes telephone assistance and follow up once a long-term care consultation assessment
38.34has been completed.
38.35    (c) (d) "Minnesota health care programs" means the medical assistance program
38.36under chapter 256B and the alternative care program under section 256B.0913.
39.1    (d) (e) "Lead agencies" means counties administering or a collaboration of counties,
39.2tribes, and health plans administering under contract with the commissioner to administer
39.3long-term care consultation assessment and support planning services.

39.4    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 2b, is amended to
39.5read:
39.6    Subd. 2b. Certified assessors. (a) Beginning January 1, 2011, This section is
39.7effective upon completion of the training and certification process identified in subdivision
39.82c. Each lead agency shall use certified assessors who have completed training and the
39.9certification processes determined by the commissioner in subdivision 2c. Certified
39.10assessors shall demonstrate best practices in assessment and support planning including
39.11person-centered planning principals and have a common set of skills that must ensure
39.12consistency and equitable access to services statewide. Assessors must be part of a
39.13multidisciplinary team of professionals that includes public health nurses, social workers,
39.14and other professionals as defined in paragraph (b). For persons with complex health care
39.15needs, a public health nurse or registered nurse from a multidisciplinary team must be
39.16consulted. A lead agency may choose, according to departmental policies, to contract
39.17with a qualified, certified assessor to conduct assessments and reassessments on behalf
39.18of the lead agency.
39.19    (b) Certified assessors are persons with a minimum of a bachelor's degree in social
39.20work, nursing with a public health nursing certificate, or other closely related field with at
39.21least one year of home and community-based experience or a two-year registered nursing
39.22degree with at least three years of home and community-based experience that have
39.23received training and certification specific to assessment and consultation for long-term
39.24care services in the state.

39.25    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 2c, is amended to
39.26read:
39.27    Subd. 2c. Assessor training and certification. The commissioner shall develop
39.28and implement a curriculum and an assessor certification process to begin no later than
39.29January 1, 2010. All existing lead agency staff designated to provide the services defined
39.30in subdivision 1a must be certified within timelines specified by the commissioner, but
39.31no sooner than six months after statewide availability of the training and certification
39.32process. The commissioner must establish the timelines for training and certification in
39.33such a manner that allows lead agencies to most efficiently adopt the automated process
39.34established in subdivision 5 by December 30, 2010. Each lead agency is required to ensure
40.1that they have sufficient numbers of certified assessors to provide long-term consultation
40.2assessment and support planning within the timelines and parameters of the service by
40.3January 1, 2011. Certified assessors are required to be recertified every three years.

40.4    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
40.5    Subd. 3. Long-term care consultation team. (a) Until January 1, 2011, A long-term
40.6care consultation team shall be established by the county board of commissioners. Each
40.7local consultation team shall consist of at least one social worker and at least one public
40.8health nurse from their respective county agencies. The board may designate public
40.9health or social services as the lead agency for long-term care consultation services. If a
40.10county does not have a public health nurse available, it may request approval from the
40.11commissioner to assign a county registered nurse with at least one year experience in
40.12home care to participate on the team. Two or more counties may collaborate to establish
40.13a joint local consultation team or teams.
40.14(b) Certified assessors must be part of a multidisciplinary team of professionals
40.15that includes public health nurses, social workers, and other professionals as defined in
40.16subdivision 2b, paragraph (b). The team is responsible for providing long-term care
40.17consultation services to all persons located in the county who request the services,
40.18regardless of eligibility for Minnesota health care programs.
40.19(c) The commissioner shall allow arrangements and make recommendations that
40.20encourage counties and tribes to collaborate to establish joint local long-term care
40.21consultation teams to ensure that long-term care consultations are done within the
40.22timelines and parameters of the service. This includes integrated service models as
40.23required in subdivision 1, paragraph (b).
40.24(d) Tribes and health plans under contract with the commissioner must provide
40.25long-term care consultation services as specified in the contract.

40.26    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 3a, is amended to
40.27read:
40.28    Subd. 3a. Assessment and support planning. (a) Persons requesting assessment,
40.29services planning, or other assistance intended to support community-based living,
40.30including persons who need assessment in order to determine waiver or alternative care
40.31program eligibility, must be visited by a long-term care consultation team within 15 20
40.32calendar days after the date on which an assessment was requested or recommended.
40.33After January 1, 2011 Upon statewide implementation of subdivisions 2b, 2c, and 5,
40.34these requirements this requirement also apply applies to assessment of persons requesting
41.1personal care assistance services, and private duty nursing, and home health agency
41.2services, on timelines established in subdivision 5. The commissioner shall provide at
41.3least a 90-day notice to lead agencies prior to the effective date of this requirement.
41.4Face-to-face assessments must be conducted according to paragraphs (b) to (i).
41.5    (b) The county may utilize a team of either the social worker or public health nurse,
41.6or both. After January 1, 2011 Upon implementation of subdivisions 2b, 2c, and 5, lead
41.7agencies shall use certified assessors to conduct the assessment in a face-to-face interview
41.8assessments. The consultation team members must confer regarding the most appropriate
41.9care for each individual screened or assessed. For persons with complex health care needs,
41.10a public health or registered nurse from the team must be consulted.
41.11    (c) The assessment must be comprehensive and include a person-centered assessment
41.12of the health, psychological, functional, environmental, and social needs of referred
41.13individuals and provide information necessary to develop a community support plan that
41.14meets the consumers needs, using an assessment form provided by the commissioner.
41.15    (d) The assessment must be conducted in a face-to-face interview with the person
41.16being assessed and the person's legal representative, as required by legally executed
41.17documents, and other individuals as requested by the person, who can provide information
41.18on the needs, strengths, and preferences of the person necessary to develop a community
41.19support plan that ensures the person's health and safety, but who is not a provider of
41.20service or has any financial interest in the provision of services.
41.21    (e) The person, or the person's legal representative, must be provided with written
41.22recommendations for community-based services, including consumer-directed options,
41.23or institutional care that include documentation that the most cost-effective alternatives
41.24available were offered to the individual. For purposes of this requirement, "cost-effective
41.25alternatives" means community services and living arrangements that cost the same as or
41.26less than institutional care.
41.27    (f) (e) If the person chooses to use community-based services, the person or the
41.28person's legal representative must be provided with a written community support plan
41.29within 40 calendar days of the assessment visit, regardless of whether the individual
41.30is eligible for Minnesota health care programs. The written community support plan
41.31must include:
41.32(1) a summary of assessed needs as defined in paragraphs (c) and (d);
41.33(2) the individual's options and choices to meet identified needs, including all
41.34available options for case management services and providers;
41.35(3) identification of health and safety risks and how those risks will be addressed,
41.36including personal risk management strategies;
42.1(4) referral information; and
42.2(5) informal caregiver supports, if applicable.
42.3For persons determined eligible for services defined under subdivision 1a, paragraph
42.4(a), clause (7), and paragraph (b), the community support plan must also include the
42.5estimated annual and monthly budget amount for those services. In addition, for persons
42.6determined eligible for state plan home care under subdivision 1a, paragraph (b), clause
42.7(1), the person or person's representative must also receive a copy of the home care service
42.8plan developed by the certified assessor.
42.9(f) A person may request assistance in identifying community supports without
42.10participating in a complete assessment. Upon a request for assistance identifying
42.11community support, the person must be transferred or referred to the long-term care
42.12options counseling services available under sections 256.975, subdivision 7, and 256.01,
42.13subdivision 24, for telephone assistance and follow up.
42.14    (g) The person has the right to make the final decision between institutional
42.15placement and community placement after the recommendations have been provided,
42.16except as provided in subdivision 4a, paragraph (c).
42.17    (h) The team lead agency must give the person receiving assessment or support
42.18planning, or the person's legal representative, materials, and forms supplied by the
42.19commissioner containing the following information:
42.20    (1) written recommendations for community-based services and consumer-directed
42.21options;
42.22(2) documentation that the most cost-effective alternatives available were offered to
42.23the individual. For purposes of this clause, "cost-effective" means community services
42.24and living arrangements that cost the same as or less than institutional care;
42.25(3) the need for and purpose of preadmission screening if the person selects nursing
42.26facility placement;
42.27    (2) (4) the role of the long-term care consultation assessment and support planning
42.28in waiver and alternative care program eligibility determination for waiver and alternative
42.29care programs, and state plan home care, case management, and other services as defined
42.30in subdivision 1a, paragraph (a), clause (7), and paragraph (b);
42.31    (3) (5) information about Minnesota health care programs;
42.32    (4) (6) the person's freedom to accept or reject the recommendations of the team;
42.33    (5) (7) the person's right to confidentiality under the Minnesota Government Data
42.34Practices Act, chapter 13;
42.35    (6) (8) the long-term care consultant's certified assessor's decision regarding the
42.36person's need for institutional level of care as determined under criteria established
43.1in section 144.0724, subdivision 11, or 256B.092 and the certified assessor's decision
43.2regarding eligibility for all services and programs as defined in subdivision 1a, paragraph
43.3(a), clause (7) , and paragraph (b)
; and
43.4    (7) (9) the person's right to appeal any certified assessor's decision regarding
43.5eligibility for all services and programs as defined in subdivision 1a, paragraph (a), clause
43.6(7), and paragraph (b), and incorporating the decision regarding the need for nursing
43.7facility institutional level of care or the county's lead agency's final decisions regarding
43.8public programs eligibility according to section 256.045, subdivision 3.
43.9    (i) Face-to-face assessment completed as part of eligibility determination for
43.10the alternative care, elderly waiver, community alternatives for disabled individuals,
43.11community alternative care, and traumatic brain injury waiver programs under sections
43.12256B.0913, 256B.0915, 256B.0917, and 256B.49 is valid to establish service eligibility
43.13for no more than 60 calendar days after the date of assessment. The effective eligibility
43.14start date for these programs can never be prior to the date of assessment. If an assessment
43.15was completed more than 60 days before the effective waiver or alternative care program
43.16eligibility start date, assessment and support plan information must be updated in a
43.17face-to-face visit and documented in the department's Medicaid Management Information
43.18System (MMIS). Notwithstanding retroactive medical assistance coverage of state plan
43.19services, the effective date of program eligibility in this case for programs included in this
43.20item cannot be prior to the date the most recent updated assessment is completed.

43.21    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 3b, is amended to
43.22read:
43.23    Subd. 3b. Transition assistance. (a) A long-term care consultation team Lead
43.24agency certified assessors shall provide assistance to persons residing in a nursing
43.25facility, hospital, regional treatment center, or intermediate care facility for persons with
43.26developmental disabilities who request or are referred for assistance. Transition assistance
43.27must include assessment, community support plan development, referrals to long-term
43.28care options counseling under section 256B.975 256.975, subdivision 10 7, for community
43.29support plan implementation and to Minnesota health care programs, including home and
43.30community-based waiver services and consumer-directed options through the waivers,
43.31and referrals to programs that provide assistance with housing. Transition assistance
43.32must also include information about the Centers for Independent Living and the Senior
43.33LinkAge Line, Disability Linkage Line, and about other organizations that can provide
43.34assistance with relocation efforts, and information about contacting these organizations to
43.35obtain their assistance and support.
44.1    (b) The county lead agency shall develop transition processes with institutional
44.2social workers and discharge planners to ensure that:
44.3    (1) referrals for in-person assessments are taken from long-term care options
44.4counselors as provided for in section 256.975, subdivision 7, paragraph (b), clause (11);
44.5(2) persons admitted to facilities assessed in institutions receive information about
44.6transition assistance that is available;
44.7    (2) (3) the assessment is completed for persons within ten working 20 calendar days
44.8of the date of request or recommendation for assessment; and
44.9    (3) (4) there is a plan for transition and follow-up for the individual's return to the
44.10community. The plan must require, including notification of other local agencies when a
44.11person who may require assistance is screened by one county for admission to a facility
44.12from agencies located in another county.; and
44.13(5) relocation targeted case management as defined in section 256B.0621,
44.14subdivision 2, clause (4), is authorized for an eligible medical assistance recipient.
44.15    (c) If a person who is eligible for a Minnesota health care program is admitted to a
44.16nursing facility, the nursing facility must include a consultation team member or the case
44.17manager in the discharge planning process.

44.18    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 3c, is amended to
44.19read:
44.20    Subd. 3c. Transition to housing with services. (a) Housing with services
44.21establishments offering or providing assisted living under chapter 144G shall inform
44.22all prospective residents of the availability of and contact information for transitional
44.23consultation services under this subdivision prior to executing a lease or contract with the
44.24prospective resident. The purpose of transitional long-term care consultation is to support
44.25persons with current or anticipated long-term care needs in making informed choices
44.26among options that include the most cost-effective and least restrictive settings, and to
44.27delay spenddown to eligibility for publicly funded programs by connecting people to
44.28alternative services in their homes before transition to housing with services. Regardless
44.29of the consultation, prospective residents maintain the right to choose housing with
44.30services or assisted living if that option is their preference.
44.31    (b) Transitional consultation services are provided as determined by the
44.32commissioner of human services in partnership with county long-term care consultation
44.33units, and the Area Agencies on Aging, and are a combination of telephone-based
44.34and in-person assistance provided under models developed by the commissioner. The
44.35consultation shall be performed in a manner that provides objective and complete
45.1information. Transitional consultation must be provided within five working days of the
45.2request of the prospective resident as follows:
45.3    (1) the consultation must be provided by a qualified professional as determined by
45.4the commissioner;
45.5    (2) the consultation must include a review of the prospective resident's reasons for
45.6considering assisted living, the prospective resident's personal goals, a discussion of the
45.7prospective resident's immediate and projected long-term care needs, and alternative
45.8community services or assisted living settings that may meet the prospective resident's
45.9needs; and
45.10    (3) the prospective resident shall be informed of the availability of long-term care
45.11consultation services described in subdivision 3a that are available at no charge to the
45.12prospective resident to assist the prospective resident in assessment and planning to meet
45.13the prospective resident's long-term care needs. The Senior LinkAge Line and long-term
45.14care consultation team shall give the highest priority to referrals of individuals who are at
45.15highest risk of nursing facility placement or as needed for determining eligibility.

45.16    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 4a, is amended to
45.17read:
45.18    Subd. 4a. Preadmission screening activities related to nursing facility
45.19admissions. (a) All applicants to Medicaid certified nursing facilities, including certified
45.20boarding care facilities, must be screened prior to admission regardless of income, assets,
45.21or funding sources for nursing facility care, except as described in subdivision 4b. The
45.22purpose of the screening is to determine the need for nursing facility level of care as
45.23described in paragraph (d) and to complete activities required under federal law related to
45.24mental illness and developmental disability as outlined in paragraph (b).
45.25(b) A person who has a diagnosis or possible diagnosis of mental illness or
45.26developmental disability must receive a preadmission screening before admission
45.27regardless of the exemptions outlined in subdivision 4b, paragraph (b), to identify the need
45.28for further evaluation and specialized services, unless the admission prior to screening is
45.29authorized by the local mental health authority or the local developmental disabilities case
45.30manager, or unless authorized by the county agency according to Public Law 101-508.
45.31The following criteria apply to the preadmission screening:
45.32(1) the county lead agency must use forms and criteria developed by the
45.33commissioner to identify persons who require referral for further evaluation and
45.34determination of the need for specialized services; and
46.1(2) the evaluation and determination of the need for specialized services must be
46.2done by:
46.3(i) a qualified independent mental health professional, for persons with a primary or
46.4secondary diagnosis of a serious mental illness; or
46.5(ii) a qualified developmental disability professional, for persons with a primary or
46.6secondary diagnosis of developmental disability. For purposes of this requirement, a
46.7qualified developmental disability professional must meet the standards for a qualified
46.8developmental disability professional under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, section
46.9483.430 .
46.10(c) The local county mental health authority or the state developmental disability
46.11authority under Public Law Numbers 100-203 and 101-508 may prohibit admission to a
46.12nursing facility if the individual does not meet the nursing facility level of care criteria or
46.13needs specialized services as defined in Public Law Numbers 100-203 and 101-508. For
46.14purposes of this section, "specialized services" for a person with developmental disability
46.15means active treatment as that term is defined under Code of Federal Regulations, title
46.1642, section 483.440 (a)(1).
46.17(d) The determination of the need for nursing facility level of care must be made
46.18according to criteria established in section 144.0724, subdivision 11, and 256B.092,
46.19using forms developed by the commissioner. In assessing a person's needs, consultation
46.20team members shall have a physician available for consultation and shall consider the
46.21assessment of the individual's attending physician, if any. The individual's physician must
46.22be included if the physician chooses to participate. Other personnel may be included on
46.23the team as deemed appropriate by the county lead agency.

46.24    Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 4c, is amended to
46.25read:
46.26    Subd. 4c. Screening requirements. (a) A person may be screened for nursing
46.27facility admission by telephone or in a face-to-face screening interview. Consultation team
46.28members Certified assessors shall identify each individual's needs using the following
46.29categories:
46.30    (1) the person needs no face-to-face screening interview to determine the need
46.31for nursing facility level of care based on information obtained from other health care
46.32professionals;
46.33    (2) the person needs an immediate face-to-face screening interview to determine the
46.34need for nursing facility level of care and complete activities required under subdivision
46.354a; or
47.1    (3) the person may be exempt from screening requirements as outlined in subdivision
47.24b, but will need transitional assistance after admission or in-person follow-along after
47.3a return home.
47.4    (b) Persons admitted on a nonemergency basis to a Medicaid-certified nursing
47.5facility must be screened prior to admission.
47.6    (c) The county lead agency screening or intake activity must include processes to
47.7identify persons who may require transition assistance as described in subdivision 3b.

47.8    Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0911, subdivision 6, is amended to
47.9read:
47.10    Subd. 6. Payment for long-term care consultation services. (a) The total payment
47.11for each county must be paid monthly by certified nursing facilities in the county. The
47.12monthly amount to be paid by each nursing facility for each fiscal year must be determined
47.13by dividing the county's annual allocation for long-term care consultation services by 12
47.14to determine the monthly payment and allocating the monthly payment to each nursing
47.15facility based on the number of licensed beds in the nursing facility. Payments to counties
47.16in which there is no certified nursing facility must be made by increasing the payment
47.17rate of the two facilities located nearest to the county seat.
47.18    (b) The commissioner shall include the total annual payment determined under
47.19paragraph (a) for each nursing facility reimbursed under section 256B.431 or, 256B.434,
47.20or 256B.441 according to section 256B.431, subdivision 2b, paragraph (g).
47.21    (c) In the event of the layaway, delicensure and decertification, or removal from
47.22layaway of 25 percent or more of the beds in a facility, the commissioner may adjust
47.23the per diem payment amount in paragraph (b) and may adjust the monthly payment
47.24amount in paragraph (a). The effective date of an adjustment made under this paragraph
47.25shall be on or after the first day of the month following the effective date of the layaway,
47.26delicensure and decertification, or removal from layaway.
47.27    (d) Payments for long-term care consultation services are available to the county
47.28or counties to cover staff salaries and expenses to provide the services described in
47.29subdivision 1a. The county shall employ, or contract with other agencies to employ, within
47.30the limits of available funding, sufficient personnel to provide long-term care consultation
47.31services while meeting the state's long-term care outcomes and objectives as defined in
47.32section 256B.0917, subdivision 1. The county shall be accountable for meeting local
47.33objectives as approved by the commissioner in the biennial home and community-based
47.34services quality assurance plan on a form provided by the commissioner.
48.1    (e) Notwithstanding section 256B.0641, overpayments attributable to payment of the
48.2screening costs under the medical assistance program may not be recovered from a facility.
48.3    (f) The commissioner of human services shall amend the Minnesota medical
48.4assistance plan to include reimbursement for the local consultation teams.
48.5    (g) Until the alternative payment methodology in paragraph (h) is implemented,
48.6the county may bill, as case management services, assessments, support planning, and
48.7follow-along provided to persons determined to be eligible for case management under
48.8Minnesota health care programs. No individual or family member shall be charged for an
48.9initial assessment or initial support plan development provided under subdivision 3a or 3b.
48.10(h) The commissioner shall develop an alternative payment methodology for
48.11long-term care consultation services that includes the funding available under this
48.12subdivision, and sections 256B.092 and 256B.0659. In developing the new payment
48.13methodology, the commissioner shall consider the maximization of other funding sources,
48.14including federal funding, for this all long-term care consultation and preadmission
48.15screening activity.

48.16    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0913, subdivision 7, is amended to
48.17read:
48.18    Subd. 7. Case management. (a) The provision of case management under the
48.19alternative care program is governed by requirements in section 256B.0915, subdivisions
48.201a and 1b.
48.21(b) The case manager must not approve alternative care funding for a client in any
48.22setting in which the case manager cannot reasonably ensure the client's health and safety.
48.23(c) The case manager is responsible for the cost-effectiveness of the alternative care
48.24individual care coordinated services and support plan and must not approve any care plan
48.25in which the cost of services funded by alternative care and client contributions exceeds
48.26the limit specified in section 256B.0915, subdivision 3, paragraph (b).
48.27(d) Case manager responsibilities include those in section 256B.0915, subdivision
48.281a, paragraph (g).

48.29    Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0913, subdivision 8, is amended to
48.30read:
48.31    Subd. 8. Requirements for individual care coordinated services and support
48.32plan. (a) The case manager shall implement the coordinated services and support plan of
48.33care for each alternative care client and ensure that a client's service needs and eligibility
48.34are reassessed at least every 12 months. The coordinated services and support plan must
49.1meet the requirements in section 256B.0915, subdivision 6. The plan shall include any
49.2services prescribed by the individual's attending physician as necessary to allow the
49.3individual to remain in a community setting. In developing the individual's care plan, the
49.4case manager should include the use of volunteers from families and neighbors, religious
49.5organizations, social clubs, and civic and service organizations to support the formal home
49.6care services. The lead agency shall be held harmless for damages or injuries sustained
49.7through the use of volunteers under this subdivision including workers' compensation
49.8liability. The case manager shall provide documentation in each individual's plan of care
49.9and, if requested, to the commissioner that the most cost-effective alternatives available
49.10have been offered to the individual and that the individual was free to choose among
49.11available qualified providers, both public and private, including qualified case management
49.12or service coordination providers other than those employed by any county; however, the
49.13county or tribe maintains responsibility for prior authorizing services in accordance with
49.14statutory and administrative requirements. The case manager must give the individual a
49.15ten-day written notice of any denial, termination, or reduction of alternative care services.
49.16    (b) The county of service or tribe must provide access to and arrange for case
49.17management services, including assuring implementation of the coordinated services
49.18and support plan. "County of service" has the meaning given it in Minnesota Rules,
49.19part 9505.0015, subpart 11. The county of service must notify the county of financial
49.20responsibility of the approved care plan and the amount of encumbered funds.

49.21    Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0915, subdivision 1a, is amended to
49.22read:
49.23    Subd. 1a. Elderly waiver case management services. (a) Elderly Except
49.24as provided to individuals under prepaid medical assistance programs as described
49.25in paragraph (h), case management services under the home and community-based
49.26services waiver for elderly individuals are available from providers meeting qualification
49.27requirements and the standards specified in subdivision 1b. Eligible recipients may choose
49.28any qualified provider of elderly case management services.
49.29    (b) Case management services assist individuals who receive waiver services in
49.30gaining access to needed waiver and other state plan services, and assist individuals in
49.31appeals under section 256.045, as well as needed medical, social, educational, and other
49.32services regardless of the funding source for the services to which access is gained. Case
49.33managers shall collaborate with consumers, families, legal representatives, and relevant
49.34medical experts and service providers in the development and periodic review of the
49.35coordinated services and support plan.
50.1    (c) A case aide shall provide assistance to the case manager in carrying out
50.2administrative activities of the case management function. The case aide may not assume
50.3responsibilities that require professional judgment including assessments, reassessments,
50.4and care plan development. The case manager is responsible for providing oversight of
50.5the case aide.
50.6    (d) Case managers shall be responsible for ongoing monitoring of the provision of
50.7services included in the individual's plan of care. Case managers shall initiate and oversee
50.8the process of assessment and reassessment of the individual's care coordinated services
50.9and support plan as defined in subdivision 6 and review the plan of care at intervals
50.10specified in the federally approved waiver plan.
50.11    (e) The county of service or tribe must provide access to and arrange for case
50.12management services. County of service has the meaning given it in Minnesota Rules,
50.13part 9505.0015, subpart 11.
50.14(f) Except as described in paragraph (h), case management services must be provided
50.15by a public or private agency that is enrolled as a medical assistance provider determined
50.16by the commissioner to meet all of the requirements in subdivision 1b. Case management
50.17services must not be provided to a recipient by a private agency that has a financial interest
50.18in the provision of any other services included in the recipient's coordinated service and
50.19support plan. For purposes of this section, "private agency" means any agency that is not
50.20identified as a lead agency under section 256B.0911, subdivision 1a, paragraph (e).
50.21(g) Case management service activities provided to or arranged for a person include:
50.22(1) development of the coordinated services and support plan under subdivision 6;
50.23(2) informing the individual or the individual's legal guardian or conservator of
50.24service options, and options for case management services and providers;
50.25(3) consulting with relevant medical experts or service providers;
50.26(4) assisting the person in the identification of potential providers;
50.27(5) assisting the person to access services;
50.28(6) coordination of services; and
50.29(7) evaluation and monitoring of the services identified in the plan, including at least
50.30one annual face-to-face visit by the case manager with each person.
50.31(h) For individuals enrolled in prepaid medical assistance programs under section
50.32256B.69, subdivisions 6b and 23, the health plan will provide or arrange to provide elderly
50.33waiver case management services in paragraph (g), as part of an integrated delivery system
50.34in accordance with contract requirements established by the commissioner.

51.1    Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0915, subdivision 1b, is amended to
51.2read:
51.3    Subd. 1b. Provider qualifications and standards. (a) The commissioner must
51.4enroll qualified providers of elderly case management services under the home and
51.5community-based waiver for the elderly under section 1915(c) of the Social Security
51.6Act. The enrollment process shall ensure the provider's ability to meet the qualification
51.7requirements and standards in this subdivision and other federal and state requirements
51.8of this service. An elderly A case management provider is an enrolled medical
51.9assistance provider who is determined by the commissioner to have all of the following
51.10characteristics:
51.11    (1) the demonstrated capacity and experience to provide the components of
51.12case management to coordinate and link community resources needed by the eligible
51.13population;
51.14    (2) administrative capacity and experience in serving the target population for
51.15whom it will provide services and in ensuring quality of services under state and federal
51.16requirements;
51.17    (3) a financial management system that provides accurate documentation of services
51.18and costs under state and federal requirements;
51.19    (4) the capacity to document and maintain individual case records under state and
51.20federal requirements; and
51.21    (5) the lead agency may allow a case manager employed by the lead agency to
51.22delegate certain aspects of the case management activity to another individual employed
51.23by the lead agency provided there is oversight of the individual by the case manager.
51.24The case manager may not delegate those aspects which require professional judgment
51.25including assessments, reassessments, and care coordinated services and support plan
51.26development. Lead agencies include counties, health plans, and federally recognized
51.27tribes who authorize services under this section.
51.28(b) The health plan shall provide or arrange to provide elderly waiver case
51.29management services in subdivision 1a, paragraph (g), as part of an integrated delivery
51.30system in accordance with contract requirements established by the commissioner related
51.31to provider standards and qualifications.

51.32    Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0915, subdivision 3c, is amended to
51.33read:
51.34    Subd. 3c. Service approval and contracting provisions. (a) Medical assistance
51.35funding for skilled nursing services, private duty nursing, home health aide, and personal
52.1care services for waiver recipients must be approved by the case manager and included in
52.2the individual care coordinated services and support plan.
52.3    (b) A lead agency is not required to contract with a provider of supplies and
52.4equipment if the monthly cost of the supplies and equipment is less than $250.

52.5    Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0915, subdivision 6, is amended to
52.6read:
52.7    Subd. 6. Implementation of care coordinated services and support plan. (a)
52.8Each elderly waiver client shall be provided a copy of a written care coordinated services
52.9and support plan that meets the requirements outlined in section 256B.0913, subdivision 8.
52.10The care plan must be implemented by the county of service when it is different than the
52.11county of financial responsibility. The county of service administering waivered services
52.12must notify the county of financial responsibility of the approved care plan. that:
52.13(1) is developed and signed by the recipient within ten working days after the case
52.14manager receives the community support plan from the certified assessor;
52.15(2) includes the results of the assessment information on the person's need for
52.16service and identification of service needs that will be or that are met by the person's
52.17relatives, friends, and others, as well as community services used by the general public;
52.18(3) reasonably ensures the health and safety of the recipient;
52.19(4) identifies the person's preferences for services as stated by the person or the
52.20person's legal guardian or conservator;
52.21(5) reflects the person's informed choice between institutional and community-based
52.22services, as well as choice of services, supports, and providers, including available case
52.23manager providers;
52.24(6) identifies long and short-range goals for the person;
52.25(7) identifies specific services and the amount, frequency, duration, and cost of the
52.26services to be provided to the person based on assessed needs, preferences, and available
52.27resources; and
52.28(8) includes information about the right to appeal decisions under section 256.045;
52.29(b) In developing the coordinated services and support plan, the case manager should
52.30also include the use of volunteers, religious organizations, social clubs, and civic and
52.31service organizations to support the individual in the community. The lead agency must be
52.32held harmless for damages or injuries sustained through the use of volunteers and agencies
52.33under this paragraph, including workers' compensation liability.

53.1    Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.0915, subdivision 10, is amended to
53.2read:
53.3    Subd. 10. Waiver payment rates; managed care organizations. The
53.4commissioner shall adjust the elderly waiver capitation payment rates for managed
53.5care organizations paid under section 256B.69, subdivisions 6a 6b and 23, to reflect the
53.6maximum service rate limits for customized living services and 24-hour customized
53.7living services under subdivisions 3e and 3h for the contract period beginning October
53.81, 2009. Medical assistance rates paid to customized living providers by managed
53.9care organizations under this section shall not exceed the maximum service rate limits
53.10determined by the commissioner under subdivisions 3e and 3h.

53.11    Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
53.12    Subdivision 1. County of financial responsibility; duties. Before any services
53.13shall be rendered to persons with developmental disabilities who are in need of social
53.14service and medical assistance, the county of financial responsibility shall conduct or
53.15arrange for a diagnostic evaluation in order to determine whether the person has or may
53.16have a developmental disability or has or may have a related condition. If the county
53.17of financial responsibility determines that the person has a developmental disability,
53.18the county shall inform the person of case management services available under this
53.19section. Except as provided in subdivision 1g or 4b, if a person is diagnosed as having a
53.20developmental disability, the county of financial responsibility shall conduct or arrange for
53.21a needs assessment by a certified assessor, and develop or arrange for an individual service
53.22a community support plan according to section 256B.0911, provide or arrange for ongoing
53.23case management services at the level identified in the individual service plan, provide
53.24or arrange for case management administration, and authorize services identified in the
53.25person's individual service coordinated services and support plan developed according to
53.26subdivision 1b. Diagnostic information, obtained by other providers or agencies, may be
53.27used by the county agency in determining eligibility for case management. Nothing in this
53.28section shall be construed as requiring: (1) assessment in areas agreed to as unnecessary
53.29by the case manager a certified assessor and the person, or the person's legal guardian or
53.30conservator, or the parent if the person is a minor, or (2) assessments in areas where there
53.31has been a functional assessment completed in the previous 12 months for which the
53.32case manager certified assessor and the person or person's guardian or conservator, or the
53.33parent if the person is a minor, agree that further assessment is not necessary. For persons
53.34under state guardianship, the case manager certified assessor shall seek authorization from
53.35the public guardianship office for waiving any assessment requirements. Assessments
54.1related to health, safety, and protection of the person for the purpose of identifying service
54.2type, amount, and frequency or assessments required to authorize services may not be
54.3waived. To the extent possible, for wards of the commissioner the county shall consider
54.4the opinions of the parent of the person with a developmental disability when developing
54.5the person's individual service community support plan and coordinated services and
54.6support plan.

54.7    Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 1a, is amended to
54.8read:
54.9    Subd. 1a. Case management administration and services. (a) The administrative
54.10functions of case management provided to or arranged for a person include: Each recipient
54.11of a home and community-based waiver shall be provided case management services by
54.12qualified vendors as described in the federally approved waiver application.
54.13(1) review of eligibility for services;
54.14(2) screening;
54.15(3) intake;
54.16(4) diagnosis;
54.17(5) the review and authorization of services based upon an individualized service
54.18plan; and
54.19(6) responding to requests for conciliation conferences and appeals according to
54.20section 256.045 made by the person, the person's legal guardian or conservator, or the
54.21parent if the person is a minor.
54.22(b) Case management service activities provided to or arranged for a person include:
54.23(1) development of the individual service coordinated services and support plan
54.24under subdivision 1b;
54.25(2) informing the individual or the individual's legal guardian or conservator, or
54.26parent if the person is a minor, of service options;
54.27(3) consulting with relevant medical experts or service providers;
54.28(4) assisting the person in the identification of potential providers;
54.29(5) assisting the person to access services and assisting in appeals under section
54.30256.045;
54.31(6) coordination of services, if coordination is not provided by another service
54.32provider;
54.33(7) evaluation and monitoring of the services identified in the coordinated services
54.34and support plan, which must incorporate at least one annual face-to-face visit by the case
54.35manager with each person; and
55.1(8) annual reviews of service plans and services provided review and provide the
55.2lead agency with recommendations for service authorization based upon the individual's
55.3needs identified in the coordinated services and support plan.
55.4(c) Case management administration and service activities that are provided to the
55.5person with a developmental disability shall be provided directly by county agencies or
55.6under contract. Case management services must be provided by a public or private agency
55.7that is enrolled as a medical assistance provider determined by the commissioner to meet
55.8all of the requirements in the approved federal waiver plans. Case management services
55.9must not be provided to a recipient by a private agency that has a financial interest in the
55.10provision of any other services included in the recipient's coordinated services and support
55.11plan. For purposes of this section, "private agency" means any agency that is not identified
55.12as a lead agency under section 256B.0911, subdivision 1a, paragraph (d).
55.13(d) Case managers are responsible for the administrative duties and service
55.14provisions listed in paragraphs (a) and (b). Case managers shall collaborate with
55.15consumers, families, legal representatives, and relevant medical experts and service
55.16providers in the development and annual review of the individualized service coordinated
55.17services and support plan and habilitation plans plan.
55.18(e) The Department of Human Services shall offer ongoing education in case
55.19management to case managers. Case managers shall receive no less than ten hours of case
55.20management education and disability-related training each year.

55.21    Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 1b, is amended to
55.22read:
55.23    Subd. 1b. Individual Coordinated service and support plan. The individual
55.24service plan must (a) Each recipient of home and community-based waivered services
55.25shall be provided a copy of the written coordinated service and support plan which:
55.26(1) is developed and signed by the recipient within ten working days after the case
55.27manager receives the community support plan from the certified assessor;
55.28(1) include (2) includes the results of the assessment information on the person's
55.29need for service, including identification of service needs that will be or that are met
55.30by the person's relatives, friends, and others, as well as community services used by
55.31the general public;
55.32(3) reasonably ensures the health and safety of the recipient;
55.33(2) identify (4) identifies the person's preferences for services as stated by the person,
55.34the person's legal guardian or conservator, or the parent if the person is a minor;
56.1(5) provides for an informed choice, as defined in section 256B.77, subdivision 2,
56.2paragraph (o), of service and support providers, and identifies all available options for
56.3case management services and providers;
56.4(3) identify (6) identifies long- and short-range goals for the person;
56.5(4) identify (7) identifies specific services and the amount and frequency of the
56.6services to be provided to the person based on assessed needs, preferences, and available
56.7resources. The individual service coordinated service and support plan shall also specify
56.8other services the person needs that are not available;
56.9(5) identify (8) identifies the need for an individual program plan to be developed
56.10by the provider according to the respective state and federal licensing and certification
56.11standards, and additional assessments to be completed or arranged by the provider after
56.12service initiation;
56.13(6) identify (9) identifies provider responsibilities to implement and make
56.14recommendations for modification to the individual service coordinated service and
56.15support plan;
56.16(7) include (10) includes notice of the right to request a conciliation conference or a
56.17hearing under section 256.045;
56.18(8) be (11) is agreed upon and signed by the person, the person's legal guardian
56.19or conservator, or the parent if the person is a minor, and the authorized county
56.20representative; and
56.21(9) be (12) is reviewed by a health professional if the person has overriding medical
56.22needs that impact the delivery of services.
56.23Service planning formats developed for interagency planning such as transition,
56.24vocational, and individual family service plans may be substituted for service planning
56.25formats developed by county agencies.
56.26(b) In developing the coordinated services and support plan, the case manager is
56.27encouraged to include the use of volunteers, religious organizations, social clubs, and civic
56.28and service organizations to support the individual in the community. The lead agency
56.29must be held harmless for damages or injuries sustained through the use of volunteers and
56.30agencies under this paragraph, including workers' compensation liability.

56.31    Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 1e, is amended to
56.32read:
56.33    Subd. 1e. Coordination, evaluation, and monitoring of services. (a) If the
56.34individual service coordinated service and support plan identifies the need for individual
56.35program plans for authorized services, the case manager shall assure that individual
57.1program plans are developed by the providers according to clauses (2) to (5). The
57.2providers shall assure that the individual program plans:
57.3(1) are developed according to the respective state and federal licensing and
57.4certification requirements;
57.5(2) are designed to achieve the goals of the individual service coordinated service
57.6and support plan;
57.7(3) are consistent with other aspects of the individual service coordinated service
57.8and support plan;
57.9(4) assure the health and safety of the person; and
57.10(5) are developed with consistent and coordinated approaches to services among the
57.11various service providers.
57.12(b) The case manager shall monitor the provision of services:
57.13(1) to assure that the individual service coordinated service and support plan is
57.14being followed according to paragraph (a);
57.15(2) to identify any changes or modifications that might be needed in the individual
57.16service coordinated service and support plan, including changes resulting from
57.17recommendations of current service providers;
57.18(3) to determine if the person's legal rights are protected, and if not, notify the
57.19person's legal guardian or conservator, or the parent if the person is a minor, protection
57.20services, or licensing agencies as appropriate; and
57.21(4) to determine if the person, the person's legal guardian or conservator, or the
57.22parent if the person is a minor, is satisfied with the services provided.
57.23(c) If the provider fails to develop or carry out the individual program plan according
57.24to paragraph (a), the case manager shall notify the person's legal guardian or conservator,
57.25or the parent if the person is a minor, the provider, the respective licensing and certification
57.26agencies, and the county board where the services are being provided. In addition, the
57.27case manager shall identify other steps needed to assure the person receives the services
57.28identified in the individual service coordinated service and support plan.

57.29    Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 1g, is amended to
57.30read:
57.31    Subd. 1g. Conditions not requiring development of individual service
57.32coordinated service and support plan. Unless otherwise required by federal law, the
57.33county agency is not required to complete an individual service a coordinated service and
57.34support plan as defined in subdivision 1b for:
58.1(1) persons whose families are requesting respite care for their family member who
58.2resides with them, or whose families are requesting a family support grant and are not
58.3requesting purchase or arrangement of habilitative services; and
58.4(2) persons with developmental disabilities, living independently without authorized
58.5services or receiving funding for services at a rehabilitation facility as defined in section
58.6268A.01, subdivision 6 , and not in need of or requesting additional services.

58.7    Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
58.8    Subd. 2. Medical assistance. To assure quality case management to those persons
58.9who are eligible for medical assistance, the commissioner shall, upon request:
58.10(1) provide consultation on the case management process;
58.11(2) assist county agencies in the screening and annual reviews of clients review
58.12process to assure that appropriate levels of service are provided to persons;
58.13(3) provide consultation on service planning and development of services with
58.14appropriate options;
58.15(4) provide training and technical assistance to county case managers; and
58.16(5) authorize payment for medical assistance services according to this chapter
58.17and rules implementing it.

58.18    Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
58.19    Subd. 3. Authorization and termination of services. County agency case
58.20managers, under rules of the commissioner, shall authorize and terminate services of
58.21community and regional treatment center providers according to individual service
58.22support plans. Services provided to persons with developmental disabilities may only be
58.23authorized and terminated by case managers or certified assessors according to (1) rules of
58.24the commissioner and (2) the individual service support plan as defined in subdivision
58.251b and section 256B.0911. Medical assistance services not needed shall not be authorized
58.26by county agencies or funded by the commissioner. When purchasing or arranging for
58.27unlicensed respite care services for persons with overriding health needs, the county
58.28agency shall seek the advice of a health care professional in assessing provider staff
58.29training needs and skills necessary to meet the medical needs of the person.

58.30    Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
58.31    Subd. 5. Federal waivers. (a) The commissioner shall apply for any federal
58.32waivers necessary to secure, to the extent allowed by law, federal financial participation
58.33under United States Code, title 42, sections 1396 et seq., as amended, for the provision
59.1of services to persons who, in the absence of the services, would need the level of care
59.2provided in a regional treatment center or a community intermediate care facility for
59.3persons with developmental disabilities. The commissioner may seek amendments to the
59.4waivers or apply for additional waivers under United States Code, title 42, sections 1396
59.5et seq., as amended, to contain costs. The commissioner shall ensure that payment for
59.6the cost of providing home and community-based alternative services under the federal
59.7waiver plan shall not exceed the cost of intermediate care services including day training
59.8and habilitation services that would have been provided without the waivered services.
59.9The commissioner shall seek an amendment to the 1915c home and
59.10community-based waiver to allow properly licensed adult foster care homes to provide
59.11residential services to up to five individuals with developmental disabilities. If the
59.12amendment to the waiver is approved, adult foster care providers that can accommodate
59.13five individuals shall increase their capacity to five beds, provided the providers continue
59.14to meet all applicable licensing requirements.
59.15(b) The commissioner, in administering home and community-based waivers for
59.16persons with developmental disabilities, shall ensure that day services for eligible persons
59.17are not provided by the person's residential service provider, unless the person or the
59.18person's legal representative is offered a choice of providers and agrees in writing to
59.19provision of day services by the residential service provider. The individual service
59.20coordinated service and support plan for individuals who choose to have their residential
59.21service provider provide their day services must describe how health, safety, protection,
59.22and habilitation needs will be met, including how frequent and regular contact with
59.23persons other than the residential service provider will occur. The individualized service
59.24coordinated service and support plan must address the provision of services during the
59.25day outside the residence on weekdays.
59.26(c) When a county lead agency is evaluating denials, reductions, or terminations
59.27of home and community-based services under section 256B.0916 for an individual, the
59.28case manager lead agency shall offer to meet with the individual or the individual's
59.29guardian in order to discuss the prioritization of service needs within the individualized
59.30service coordinated service and support plan. The reduction in the authorized services
59.31for an individual due to changes in funding for waivered services may not exceed the
59.32amount needed to ensure medically necessary services to meet the individual's health,
59.33safety, and welfare.

59.34    Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
60.1    Subd. 7. Screening teams Assessments. (a) Assessments and reassessments shall
60.2be conducted by certified assessors according to section 256B.0911, and must incorporate
60.3appropriate referrals to determine eligibility for case management under subdivision 1a.
60.4(b) For persons with developmental disabilities, screening teams shall be established
60.5which a certified assessor shall evaluate the need for the level of care provided by
60.6residential-based habilitation services, residential services, training and habilitation
60.7services, and nursing facility services. The evaluation assessment shall address whether
60.8home and community-based services are appropriate for persons who are at risk of
60.9placement in an intermediate care facility for persons with developmental disabilities, or
60.10for whom there is reasonable indication that they might require this level of care. The
60.11screening team certified assessor shall make an evaluation of need within 60 working
60.12days of a request for service by a person with a developmental disability, and within
60.13five working days of an emergency admission of a person to an intermediate care
60.14facility for persons with developmental disabilities. The screening team shall consist of
60.15the case manager for persons with developmental disabilities, the person, the person's
60.16legal guardian or conservator, or the parent if the person is a minor, and a qualified
60.17developmental disability professional, as defined in the Code of Federal Regulations,
60.18title 42, section 483.430, as amended through June 3, 1988. The case manager may also
60.19act as the qualified developmental disability professional if the case manager meets
60.20the federal definition. County social service agencies may contract with a public or
60.21private agency or individual who is not a service provider for the person for the public
60.22guardianship representation required by the screening or individual service planning
60.23process. The contract shall be limited to public guardianship representation for the
60.24screening and individual service planning activities. The contract shall require compliance
60.25with the commissioner's instructions and may be for paid or voluntary services. For
60.26persons determined to have overriding health care needs and are seeking admission to a
60.27nursing facility or an ICF/MR, or seeking access to home and community-based waivered
60.28services, a registered nurse must be designated as either the case manager or the qualified
60.29developmental disability professional. For persons under the jurisdiction of a correctional
60.30agency, the case manager must consult with the corrections administrator regarding
60.31additional health, safety, and supervision needs. The case manager, with the concurrence
60.32of the person, the person's legal guardian or conservator, or the parent if the person is a
60.33minor, may invite other individuals to attend meetings of the screening team. No member
60.34of the screening team shall have any direct or indirect service provider interest in the case.
60.35Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring the screening team meeting to be
60.36separate from the service planning meeting.

61.1    Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
61.2    Subd. 8. Screening team Additional certified assessor duties. In addition to the
61.3responsibilities of certified assessors described in section 256B.0911, for persons with
61.4developmental disabilities, the screening team certified assessor shall:
61.5(1) review diagnostic data;
61.6(2) review health, social, and developmental assessment data using a uniform
61.7screening tool specified by the commissioner;
61.8(3) identify the level of services appropriate to maintain the person in the most
61.9normal and least restrictive setting that is consistent with the person's treatment needs;
61.10(4) (1) identify other noninstitutional public assistance or social service that may
61.11prevent or delay long-term residential placement;
61.12(5) (2) assess whether a person is in need of long-term residential care;
61.13(6) (3) make recommendations regarding placement and payment for: (i) social
61.14service or public assistance support, or both, to maintain a person in the person's own home
61.15or other place of residence; (ii) training and habilitation service, vocational rehabilitation,
61.16and employment training activities; (iii) community residential placement; (iv) regional
61.17treatment center placement; or (v) a home and community-based service alternative to
61.18community residential placement or regional treatment center placement;
61.19(7) (4) evaluate the availability, location, and quality of the services listed in clause
61.20(6) (3), including the impact of placement alternatives on the person's ability to maintain
61.21or improve existing patterns of contact and involvement with parents and other family
61.22members;
61.23(8) (5) identify the cost implications of recommendations in clause (6) (3); and
61.24(9) (6) make recommendations to a court as may be needed to assist the court in
61.25making decisions regarding commitment of persons with developmental disabilities; and
61.26(10) inform the person and the person's legal guardian or conservator, or the parent if
61.27the person is a minor, that appeal may be made to the commissioner pursuant to section
61.28256.045.

61.29    Sec. 33. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 8a, is amended to
61.30read:
61.31    Subd. 8a. County concurrence notification. (a) If the county of financial
61.32responsibility wishes to place a person in another county for services, the county of
61.33financial responsibility shall seek concurrence from notify the proposed county of service
61.34and the placement shall be made cooperatively between the two counties. Arrangements
61.35shall be made between the two counties for ongoing social service, including annual
62.1reviews of the person's individual service coordinated service and support plan. The county
62.2where services are provided may not make changes in the person's service coordinated
62.3service and support plan without approval by the county of financial responsibility.
62.4(b) When a person has been screened and authorized for services in an intermediate
62.5care facility for persons with developmental disabilities or for home and community-based
62.6services for persons with developmental disabilities, the case manager shall assist that
62.7person in identifying a service provider who is able to meet the needs of the person
62.8according to the person's individual service plan. If the identified service is to be provided
62.9in a county other than the county of financial responsibility, the county of financial
62.10responsibility shall request concurrence of the county where the person is requesting to
62.11receive the identified services. The county of service may refuse to concur shall notify
62.12the county of financial responsibility if:
62.13(1) it can demonstrate that the provider is unable to provide the services identified in
62.14the person's individual service plan as services that are needed and are to be provided; or
62.15(2), in the case of an intermediate care facility for persons with developmental
62.16disabilities, there has been no authorization for admission by the admission review team
62.17as required in section 256B.0926.
62.18(c) The county of service shall notify the county of financial responsibility of
62.19concurrence or refusal to concur any concerns about the chosen provider's capacity to
62.20meet the needs of the person seeking to move to residential services in another county no
62.21later than 20 working days following receipt of the written request notification. Unless
62.22other mutually acceptable arrangements are made by the involved county agencies, the
62.23county of financial responsibility is responsible for costs of social services and the costs
62.24associated with the development and maintenance of the placement. The county of
62.25service may request that the county of financial responsibility purchase case management
62.26services from the county of service or from a contracted provider of case management
62.27when the county of financial responsibility is not providing case management as defined
62.28in this section and rules adopted under this section, unless other mutually acceptable
62.29arrangements are made by the involved county agencies. Standards for payment limits
62.30under this section may be established by the commissioner. Financial disputes between
62.31counties shall be resolved as provided in section 256G.09. This subdivision also applies to
62.32home and community-based waiver services provided under section 256B.49.

62.33    Sec. 34. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
62.34    Subd. 9. Reimbursement. Payment for services shall not be provided to a
62.35service provider for any person placed in an intermediate care facility for persons with
63.1developmental disabilities prior to the person being screened by the screening team
63.2receiving an assessment by a certified assessor. The commissioner shall not deny
63.3reimbursement for: (1) a person admitted to an intermediate care facility for persons
63.4with developmental disabilities who is assessed to need long-term supportive services,
63.5if long-term supportive services other than intermediate care are not available in that
63.6community; (2) any person admitted to an intermediate care facility for persons with
63.7developmental disabilities under emergency circumstances; (3) any eligible person placed
63.8in the intermediate care facility for persons with developmental disabilities pending an
63.9appeal of the screening team's certified assessor's decision; or (4) any medical assistance
63.10recipient when, after full discussion of all appropriate alternatives including those that
63.11are expected to be less costly than intermediate care for persons with developmental
63.12disabilities, the person or the person's legal guardian or conservator, or the parent if the
63.13person is a minor, insists on intermediate care placement. The screening team certified
63.14assessor shall provide documentation that the most cost-effective alternatives available
63.15were offered to this individual or the individual's legal guardian or conservator.

63.16    Sec. 35. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.092, subdivision 11, is amended to
63.17read:
63.18    Subd. 11. Residential support services. (a) Upon federal approval, there is
63.19established a new service called residential support that is available on the community
63.20alternative care, community alternatives for disabled individuals, developmental
63.21disabilities, and traumatic brain injury waivers. Existing waiver service descriptions
63.22must be modified to the extent necessary to ensure there is no duplication between
63.23other services. Residential support services must be provided by vendors licensed as a
63.24community residential setting as defined in section 245A.11, subdivision 8.
63.25(b) Residential support services must meet the following criteria:
63.26(1) providers of residential support services must own or control the residential site;
63.27(2) the residential site must not be the primary residence of the license holder;
63.28(3) the residential site must have a designated program supervisor responsible for
63.29program oversight, development, and implementation of policies and procedures;
63.30(4) the provider of residential support services must provide supervision, training,
63.31and assistance as described in the person's community coordinated services and support
63.32plan; and
63.33(5) the provider of residential support services must meet the requirements of
63.34licensure and additional requirements of the person's community coordinated services and
63.35support plan.
64.1(c) Providers of residential support services that meet the definition in paragraph
64.2(a) must be registered using a process determined by the commissioner beginning July
64.31, 2009.

64.4    Sec. 36. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.49, subdivision 13, is amended to read:
64.5    Subd. 13. Case management. (a) Each recipient of a home and community-based
64.6waiver shall be provided case management services by qualified vendors as described
64.7in the federally approved waiver application. The case management service activities
64.8provided will must include:
64.9    (1) assessing the needs of the individual within 20 working days of a recipient's
64.10request;
64.11    (2) developing (1) finalizing the written individual service coordinated service and
64.12support plan within ten working days after the assessment is completed case manager
64.13receives the plan from the certified assessor;
64.14    (3) (2) informing the recipient or the recipient's legal guardian or conservator
64.15of service options;
64.16    (4) (3) assisting the recipient in the identification of potential service providers and
64.17available options for case management service and providers;
64.18    (5) (4) assisting the recipient to access services and assisting with appeals under
64.19section 256.045; and
64.20    (6) (5) coordinating, evaluating, and monitoring of the services identified in the
64.21service plan;.
64.22    (7) completing the annual reviews of the service plan; and
64.23    (8) informing the recipient or legal representative of the right to have assessments
64.24completed and service plans developed within specified time periods, and to appeal county
64.25action or inaction under section 256.045, subdivision 3, including the determination of
64.26nursing facility level of care.
64.27    (b) The case manager may delegate certain aspects of the case management service
64.28activities to another individual provided there is oversight by the case manager. The case
64.29manager may not delegate those aspects which require professional judgment including
64.30assessments, reassessments, and care plan development.:
64.31(1) finalizing the coordinated service and support plan;
64.32(2) ongoing assessment and monitoring of the person's needs and adequacy of the
64.33approved coordinated service and support plan; and
64.34(3) adjustments to the coordinated service and support plan.
65.1(c) Case management services must be provided by a public or private agency that
65.2is enrolled as a medical assistance provider determined by the commissioner to meet all
65.3of the requirements in the approved federal waiver plans. Case management services
65.4must not be provided to a recipient by a private agency that has any financial interest in
65.5the provision of any other services included in the recipient's coordinated services and
65.6support plan. For purposes of this section, "private agency" means any agency that is not
65.7identified as a lead agency under section 256B.0911, subdivision 1a, paragraph (d).

65.8    Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.49, subdivision 14, is amended to read:
65.9    Subd. 14. Assessment and reassessment. (a) Assessments of each recipient's
65.10strengths, informal support systems, and need for services shall be completed within
65.1120 working days of the recipient's request. Reassessment of each recipient's strengths,
65.12support systems, and need for services shall be conducted at least every 12 months and at
65.13other times when there has been a significant change in the recipient's functioning and
65.14reassessments shall be conducted by certified assessors according to section 256B.0911,
65.15subdivision 2b.
65.16(b) There must be a determination that the client requires a hospital level of care or a
65.17nursing facility level of care as defined in section 144.0724, subdivision 11, at initial and
65.18subsequent assessments to initiate and maintain participation in the waiver program.
65.19(c) Regardless of other assessments identified in section 144.0724, subdivision 4, as
65.20appropriate to determine nursing facility level of care for purposes of medical assistance
65.21payment for nursing facility services, only face-to-face assessments conducted according
65.22to section 256B.0911, subdivisions 3a, 3b, and 4d, that result in a hospital level of care
65.23determination or a nursing facility level of care determination must be accepted for
65.24purposes of initial and ongoing access to waiver services payment.
65.25(d) Persons with developmental disabilities who apply for services under the nursing
65.26facility level waiver programs shall be screened for the appropriate level of care according
65.27to section 256B.092.
65.28(e) (d) Recipients who are found eligible for home and community-based services
65.29under this section before their 65th birthday may remain eligible for these services after
65.30their 65th birthday if they continue to meet all other eligibility factors.

65.31    Sec. 38. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.49, subdivision 15, is amended to read:
65.32    Subd. 15. Individualized Coordinated service and support plan. (a) Each
65.33recipient of home and community-based waivered services shall be provided a copy of the
65.34written service coordinated service and support plan which:
66.1(1) is developed and signed by the recipient within ten working days of the
66.2completion of the assessment;
66.3(2) meets the assessed needs of the recipient;
66.4(3) reasonably ensures the health and safety of the recipient;
66.5(4) promotes independence;
66.6(5) allows for services to be provided in the most integrated settings; and
66.7(6) provides for an informed choice, as defined in section 256B.77, subdivision
66.82
, paragraph (p), of service and support providers meets the requirements in section
66.9256B.092, subdivision 1b.
66.10(b) When a county is evaluating denials, reductions, or terminations of home and
66.11community-based services under section 256B.49 for an individual, the case manager
66.12shall offer to meet with the individual or the individual's guardian in order to discuss the
66.13prioritization of service needs within the individualized service coordinated services and
66.14support plan. The reduction in the authorized services for an individual due to changes
66.15in funding for waivered services may not exceed the amount needed to ensure medically
66.16necessary services to meet the individual's health, safety, and welfare.

66.17    Sec. 39. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256G.02, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
66.18    Subd. 6. Excluded time. "Excluded time" means:
66.19(a) (1) any period an applicant spends in a hospital, sanitarium, nursing home,
66.20shelter other than an emergency shelter, halfway house, foster home, semi-independent
66.21living domicile or services program, residential facility offering care, board and lodging
66.22facility or other institution for the hospitalization or care of human beings, as defined in
66.23section 144.50, 144A.01, or 245A.02, subdivision 14; maternity home, battered women's
66.24shelter, or correctional facility; or any facility based on an emergency hold under sections
66.25253B.05, subdivisions 1 and 2 , and 253B.07, subdivision 6;
66.26(b) (2) any period an applicant spends on a placement basis in a training and
66.27habilitation program, including: a rehabilitation facility or work or employment program
66.28as defined in section 268A.01; or receiving personal care assistance services pursuant to
66.29section 256B.0659; semi-independent living services provided under section 252.275, and
66.30Minnesota Rules, parts 9525.0500 to 9525.0660; or day training and habilitation programs
66.31and assisted living services; and
66.32(c) (3) any placement for a person with an indeterminate commitment, including
66.33independent living.

67.1    Sec. 40. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FURTHER CASE MANAGEMENT
67.2REDESIGN.
67.3By February 1, 2012, the commissioner of human services shall develop a legislative
67.4report with specific recommendations and language for proposed legislation to be effective
67.5July 1, 2012, for the following:
67.6(a) definitions of service and consolidation of standards and rates to the extent
67.7appropriate for all types of medical assistance case management service services, including
67.8targeted case management under Minnesota Statutes, sections 256B.0621, 256B.0924, and
67.9256B.094, and all types of home and community-based waiver case management and case
67.10management under Minnesota Rules, parts 9525.0004 to 9525.0036. This work must be
67.11completed in collaboration with efforts under Minnesota Statutes, section 256B.4912;
67.12(b) recommendations on county of financial responsibility requirements and quality
67.13assurance measures for case management; and
67.14(c) identification of county administrative functions that may remain entwined in
67.15case management service delivery models.

67.16ARTICLE 4
67.17NURSING FACILITIES

67.18    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 144A.071, subdivision 3, is amended to
67.19read:
67.20    Subd. 3. Exceptions authorizing increase in beds; hardship areas. (a) The
67.21commissioner of health, in coordination with the commissioner of human services, may
67.22approve the addition of a new certified bed or the addition of a new licensed and Medicare
67.23and Medicaid-certified nursing home bed beds, under using the following conditions:
67.24criteria and process in this subdivision.
67.25(a) to license or certify a new bed in place of one decertified after July 1, 1993, as
67.26long as the number of certified plus newly certified or recertified beds does not exceed the
67.27number of beds licensed or certified on July 1, 1993, or to address an extreme hardship
67.28situation, in a particular county that, together with all contiguous Minnesota counties, has
67.29fewer nursing home beds per 1,000 elderly than the number that is ten percent higher than
67.30the national average of nursing home beds per 1,000 elderly individuals. For the purposes
67.31of this section, the national average of nursing home beds shall be the most recent figure
67.32that can be supplied by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the
67.33number of elderly in the county or the nation shall be determined by the most recent
67.34federal census or the most recent estimate of the state demographer as of July 1, of each
67.35year of persons age 65 and older, whichever is the most recent at the time of the request for
68.1replacement. An extreme hardship situation can only be found after the county documents
68.2the existence of unmet medical needs that cannot be addressed by any other alternatives;
68.3(b) The commissioner, in cooperation with the commissioner of human services,
68.4shall consider the following criteria when determining that an area of the state is a
68.5hardship area with regard to access to nursing facility services:
68.6(1) a low number of beds per 1,000 in a specified area using as a standard beds
68.7per 1,000 persons age 65 and older, in five-year age groups, using data from the most
68.8recent census and population projections, weighted by each group's most recent nursing
68.9home utilization, of the county at the 20th percentile, as determined by the commissioner
68.10of human services;
68.11(2) a high level of out-migration for nursing facility services associated with a
68.12described area from the county or counties of residence to other Minnesota counties, as
68.13determined by the commissioner of human services, using as a standard an amount greater
68.14than the out-migration of the county ranked at the 50th percentile;
68.15(3) an adequate level of availability of noninstitutional long-term care services
68.16measured as public spending for home and community-based long-term care services per
68.17individual age 65 and older, in five-year age groups, using data from the most recent
68.18census and population projections, weighted by each group's most recent nursing home
68.19utilization, as determined by the commissioner of human services, using as a standard an
68.20amount greater than the 50th percentile of counties;
68.21(4) there must be a declaration of hardship resulting from insufficient access to
68.22nursing home beds by local county agencies and area agencies on aging; and
68.23(5) other factors that may demonstrate the need to add new nursing facility beds.
68.24(c) On August 15 of odd-numbered years, the commissioner, in cooperation with
68.25the commissioner of human services, may publish in the State Register a request for
68.26information in which interested parties, using the data provided under section 144A.351,
68.27along with any other relevant data, demonstrate that a specified area is a hardship area
68.28with regard to access to nursing facility services. For a response to be considered, the
68.29commissioner must receive it by November 15. The commissioner shall make responses
68.30to the request for information available to the public and shall allow 30 days for comment.
68.31The commissioner shall review responses and comments and determine if any areas of
68.32the state are to be declared hardship areas.
68.33(d) For each designated hardship area determined in paragraph (c), the commissioner
68.34shall publish a request for proposals in accordance with section 144A.073 and Minnesota
68.35Rules, parts 4655.1070 to 4655.1098. The request for proposals must be published in the
68.36State Register by March 15 following receipt of responses to the request for information.
69.1The request for proposals must specify the number of new beds which may be added
69.2in the designated hardship area, which must not exceed the number which, if added to
69.3the existing number of beds in the area, including beds in layaway status, would have
69.4prevented it from being determined to be a hardship area under paragraph (b), clause
69.5(1). Beginning July 1, 2011, the number of new beds approved must not exceed 200
69.6beds statewide per biennium. After June 30, 2019, the number of new beds that may be
69.7approved in a biennium must not exceed 300 statewide. For a proposal to be considered,
69.8the commissioner must receive it within six months of the publication of the request for
69.9proposals. The commissioner shall review responses to the request for proposals and
69.10shall approve or disapprove each proposal by the following July 15, in accordance with
69.11section 144A.073 and Minnesota Rules, parts 4655.1070 to 4655.1098. The commissioner
69.12shall base approvals or disapprovals on a comparison and ranking of proposals using
69.13only the criteria in subdivision 4a. Approval of a proposal expires after 18 months
69.14unless the facility has added the new beds using existing space, subject to approval
69.15by the commissioner, or has commenced construction as defined in section 144A.071,
69.16subdivision 1a, paragraph (d). If fewer than 50 percent of the beds in a facility are newly
69.17licensed, after the beds have been added, the operating payment rates previously in effect
69.18shall remain. If 50 percent or more of the beds in a facility are newly licensed after the
69.19approved beds have been added, then determination of operating payment rates shall
69.20be done according to Minnesota Rules, part 9549.0057, using limits determined under
69.21section 256B.441. Determination of external fixed payment rates must be done according
69.22to section 256B.441, subdivision 53. Determinations of property payment rates for
69.23facilities with beds added under this subdivision must be done in the same manner as rate
69.24determinations resulting from projects approved and completed under section 144A.073.
69.25(b) to (e) The commissioner may:
69.26(1) certify or license new beds in a new facility that is to be operated by the
69.27commissioner of veterans affairs or when the costs of constructing and operating the new
69.28beds are to be reimbursed by the commissioner of veterans affairs or the United States
69.29Veterans Administration; and
69.30(c) to (2) license or certify beds in a facility that has been involuntarily delicensed or
69.31decertified for participation in the medical assistance program, provided that an application
69.32for relicensure or recertification is submitted to the commissioner by an organization that
69.33is not a related organization as defined in section 256B.441, subdivision 34, to the prior
69.34licensee within 120 days after delicensure or decertification;.
70.1(d) to certify two existing beds in a facility with 66 licensed beds on January 1, 1994,
70.2that had an average occupancy rate of 98 percent or higher in both calendar years 1992 and
70.31993, and which began construction of four attached assisted living units in April 1993; or
70.4(e) to certify four existing beds in a facility in Winona with 139 beds, of which 129
70.5beds are certified.

70.6    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 144A.073, subdivision 3c, is amended to read:
70.7    Subd. 3c. Cost neutral relocation projects. (a) Notwithstanding subdivision 3, the
70.8commissioner may at any time accept proposals, or amendments to proposals previously
70.9approved under this section, for relocations that are cost neutral with respect to state costs
70.10as defined in section 144A.071, subdivision 5a. The commissioner, in consultation with
70.11the commissioner of human services, shall evaluate proposals according to subdivision
70.124 4a, clauses (1), (2), (3), and (9) (4), (5), (6), and (8), and other criteria established in
70.13rule. or law. The commissioner of human services shall determine the allowable payment
70.14rates of the facility receiving the beds in accordance with section 256B.441, subdivision
70.1560. The commissioner shall approve or disapprove a project within 90 days. Proposals
70.16and amendments approved under this subdivision are not subject to the six-mile limit
70.17in subdivision 5, paragraph (e).
70.18    (b) For the purposes of paragraph (a), cost neutrality shall be measured over the first
70.19three 12-month periods of operation after completion of the project.

70.20    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 144A.073, is amended by adding a
70.21subdivision to read:
70.22    Subd. 4a. Criteria for review. In reviewing the application materials and submitted
70.23costs by an applicant to the moratorium process, the review panel shall consider the
70.24following criteria in recommending proposals:
70.25(1) the extent to which the proposed nursing home project is integrated with other
70.26health and long-term care services for older adults;
70.27(2) the extent to which the project provides for the complete replacement of an
70.28outdated physical plant;
70.29(3) the extent to which the project results in a reduction of nursing facility beds in an
70.30area that has a relatively high number of beds per thousand occupied by persons age 85
70.31and over;
70.32(4) the extent to which the project produces improvements in health, safety
70.33(including life safety code corrections), quality of life, and privacy of residents;
71.1(5) the extent to which, under the current facility ownership and management, the
71.2provider has shown the ability to provide good quality of care based on health-related
71.3findings on certification surveys, quality indicator scores, and quality-of-life scores,
71.4including those from the Minnesota nursing home report card;
71.5(6) the extent to which the project integrates the latest technology and design
71.6features in a way that improves the resident experience and improves the working
71.7environment for employees;
71.8(7) the extent to which the sustainability of the nursing facility can be demonstrated
71.9based on the need for services in the area and the proposed financing of the project; and
71.10(8) the extent to which the project provides or maintains access to nursing facility
71.11services needed in the community.

71.12    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 144D.08, is amended to read:
71.13144D.08 UNIFORM CONSUMER INFORMATION GUIDE.
71.14All housing with services establishments shall make available to all prospective
71.15and current residents information consistent with the uniform format and the required
71.16components adopted by the commissioner under section 144G.06. This section does not
71.17apply to an establishment registered under section 144D.025, serving the homeless.

71.18    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.19, subdivision 1e, is amended to read:
71.19    Subd. 1e. Additional local share of certain nursing facility costs. Beginning on
71.20the latter of January 1, 2011, or the first day of the month beginning no less than 45 days
71.21following federal approval, local government entities that own the physical plant or are
71.22the license holders of nursing facilities receiving rate adjustments under section 256B.441,
71.23subdivision 55a, shall be responsible for paying the portion of nonfederal costs calculated
71.24under section 256B.441, subdivision 55a, paragraph (d). This responsibility remains in
71.25effect through the day before the phase-in under section 256B.441, subdivision 55, is
71.26complete. Beginning the day when the phase-in under section 256B.441, subdivision 55,
71.27is complete, local government entities that own the physical plant or are the license holders
71.28of nursing facilities receiving rate adjustments under section 256B.441, subdivision 55a,
71.29shall be responsible for paying the portion of nonfederal costs calculated under section
71.30256B.441, subdivision 55a, paragraph (e). Payments of the nonfederal share shall be
71.31made monthly to the commissioner in amounts determined in accordance with section
71.32256B.441 , subdivision 55a, paragraph (d) (e). Payments for each month beginning in
71.33January 2011 through September 2015 on the effective date of the rate adjustment shall be
71.34due by the 15th day of the following month. If any provider obligated to pay an amount
72.1under this subdivision is more than two months 30 days delinquent in the timely payment
72.2of the monthly installment, the commissioner may withhold payments, penalties, and
72.3interest in accordance with the methods outlined in section 256.9657, subdivision 7a
72.4revoke participation under this subdivision and end payments determined under section
72.5256B.441, subdivision 55a, to the participating nursing facility effective on the first day
72.6of the month following the month in which such notice was mailed. In the event of
72.7revocation, any amounts paid by private residents under this subdivision for days of
72.8service on or after the first day of the month following the month in which such notice was
72.9mailed must be refunded.

72.10    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.431, subdivision 2t, is amended to read:
72.11    Subd. 2t. Payment limitation. For services rendered on or after July 1, 2003,
72.12for facilities reimbursed under this section or section 256B.434 chapter, the Medicaid
72.13program shall only pay a co-payment during a Medicare-covered skilled nursing facility
72.14stay if the Medicare rate less the resident's co-payment responsibility is less than the
72.15Medicaid RUG-III case-mix payment rate, or, beginning January 1, 2012, the Medicaid
72.16RUG-IV case-mix payment rate. The amount that shall be paid by the Medicaid program
72.17is equal to the amount by which the Medicaid RUG-III or RUG-IV case-mix payment
72.18rate exceeds the Medicare rate less the co-payment responsibility. Health plans paying
72.19for nursing home services under section 256B.69, subdivision 6a, may limit payments as
72.20allowed under this subdivision.

72.21    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.438, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
72.22    Subdivision 1. Scope. This section establishes the method and criteria used to
72.23determine resident reimbursement classifications based upon the assessments of residents
72.24of nursing homes and boarding care homes whose payment rates are established under
72.25section 256B.431, 256B.434, or 256B.435 256B.441 or any other section. Resident
72.26reimbursement classifications shall be established according to the 34 group, resource
72.27utilization groups, version III or RUG-III model as described in section 144.0724.
72.28Reimbursement classifications established under this section shall be implemented
72.29after June 30, 2002, but no later than January 1, 2003. Reimbursement classifications
72.30established under this section shall be implemented no earlier than six weeks after the
72.31commissioner mails notices of payment rates to the facilities. Effective January 1, 2012,
72.32resident reimbursement classifications shall be established according to the 48 group,
72.33resource utilization groups, RUG-IV model under section 144.0724.

73.1    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.438, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
73.2    Subd. 3. Case mix indices. (a) The commissioner of human services shall assign a
73.3case mix index to each resident class based on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
73.4Services staff time measurement study and adjusted for Minnesota-specific wage indices.
73.5The case mix indices assigned to each resident class shall be published in the Minnesota
73.6State Register at least 120 days prior to the implementation of the 34 group, RUG-III
73.7resident classification system.
73.8(b) An index maximization approach shall be used to classify residents.
73.9(c) After implementation of the revised case mix system, the commissioner of
73.10human services may annually rebase case mix indices and base rates using more current
73.11data on average wage rates and staff time measurement studies. This rebasing shall be
73.12calculated under subdivision 7, paragraph (b). The commissioner shall publish in the
73.13Minnesota State Register adjusted case mix indices at least 45 days prior to the effective
73.14date of the adjusted case mix indices.
73.15(d) Upon implementation of the 48-group RUG-IV resident classification system, the
73.16commissioner of human services shall assign a case mix index to each resident class based
73.17on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services staff time measurement study. The
73.18case mix indices assigned to each resident class shall be published in the State Register at
73.19least 120 days prior to the implementation of the RUG-IV resident classification system.

73.20    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.438, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
73.21    Subd. 4. Resident assessment schedule. (a) Nursing facilities shall conduct and
73.22submit case mix assessments according to the schedule established by the commissioner
73.23of health under section 144.0724, subdivisions 4 and 5.
73.24(b) The resident reimbursement classifications established under section 144.0724,
73.25subdivision 3
, shall be effective the day of admission for new admission assessments.
73.26The effective date for significant change assessments shall be the assessment reference
73.27date. The effective date for annual and quarterly assessments shall be the first day of the
73.28month following assessment reference date.
73.29(c) Effective October 1, 2006, the commissioner shall rebase payment rates
73.30to account for the change in the resident assessment schedule in section 144.0724,
73.31subdivision 4, paragraph (b), clause (4), in a facility specific budget neutral manner,
73.32according to subdivision 7, paragraph (b).
73.33(d) Effective January 1, 2012, the commissioner shall determine payment rates
73.34to account for the transition to RUG-IV, in a facility-specific, revenue-neutral manner,
73.35according to subdivision 8, paragraph (b).

74.1    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.438, is amended by adding a
74.2subdivision to read:
74.3    Subd. 8. Rate determination upon transition to RUG-IV payment rates. (a) The
74.4commissioner of human services shall determine payment rates at the time of transition
74.5to the RUG-IV-based payment model in a facility-specific, revenue-neutral manner. To
74.6transition from the current calculation methodology to the RUG-IV-based methodology,
74.7nursing facilities shall report to the commissioner of human services the private pay
74.8and Medicaid resident days classified according to the categories defined in subdivision
74.93, paragraphs (a) and (d), for the six-month reporting period ending June 30, 2011. This
74.10report must be submitted to the commissioner, in a form prescribed by the commissioner,
74.11by August 15, 2011. The commissioner of human services shall use this data to compute
74.12the standardized days for the RUG-III and RUG-IV classification systems.
74.13(b) The commissioner of human services shall determine the case mix adjusted
74.14component for the January 1, 2012, rate as follows:
74.15(1) using the September 30, 2010, cost report, determine the case mix portion of the
74.16operating cost for each facility;
74.17(2) multiply the 36 operating payment rates in effect on December 31, 2011, by the
74.18number of private pay and Medicaid resident days assigned to each group for the reporting
74.19period ending June 30, 2011, and compute the total;
74.20(3) compute the product of the amounts in clauses (1) and (2);
74.21(4) determine the private pay and Medicaid RUG standardized days for the reporting
74.22period ending June 30, 2011, using the new indices calculated under subdivision 3,
74.23paragraph (d);
74.24(5) divide the amount determined in clause (3) by the amount in clause (4), which
74.25shall be the default rate (DDF) unadjusted case mix component of the rate under the
74.26RUG-IV method; and
74.27(6) determine the case mix adjusted component of each operating rate by multiplying
74.28the default rate (DDF) unadjusted case mix component by the case mix weight in
74.29subdivision 3, paragraph (d), for each RUG-IV group.
74.30(c) The noncase mix components will be allocated to each RUG group as a constant
74.31amount to determine the operating payment rate.

74.32    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.441, subdivision 55a, is amended to
74.33read:
74.34    Subd. 55a. Alternative to phase-in for publicly owned nursing facilities. (a) For
74.35operating payment rates implemented between January 1, 2011, and September 30, 2015,
75.1 the first day of the month beginning no less than 45 days following federal approval,
75.2and the day before the phase-in under subdivision 55 is complete, the commissioner
75.3shall allow nursing facilities whose physical plant is owned or whose license is held by a
75.4city, county, or hospital district to apply for a higher payment rate under this section if
75.5the local government entity agrees to pay a specified portion of the nonfederal share
75.6of medical assistance costs. Nursing facilities that apply shall be eligible to select an
75.7operating payment rate, with a weight of 1.00, up to the rate calculated in subdivision 54,
75.8without application of the phase-in under subdivision 55. The rates for the other RUG's
75.9levels RUGS shall be computed as provided under subdivision 54.
75.10(b) For operating payment rates implemented beginning the day when the phase-in
75.11under subdivision 55 is complete, the commissioner shall allow nursing facilities whose
75.12physical plant is owned or whose license is held by a city, county, or hospital district to
75.13apply for a higher payment rate under this section if the local government entity agrees
75.14to pay a specified portion of the nonfederal share of medical assistance costs. Nursing
75.15facilities that apply are eligible to select an operating payment rate, with a weight of 1.00,
75.16up to an amount determined by the commissioner to be allowable under the Medicare upper
75.17payment limit test. The rates for the other RUGS shall be computed under subdivision 54.
75.18(b) (c) Rates determined under this subdivision shall take effect beginning on the
75.19latter of January 1, 2011, or the first day of the month beginning no less than 45 days
75.20following federal approval, based on cost reports for the rate year ending September 30,
75.212009, and in future rate years, rates determined for nursing facilities participating under
75.22this subdivision shall take effect on October 1 of each year, based on the most recent
75.23available cost report.
75.24(c) (d) Eligible nursing facilities that wish to participate under this subdivision shall
75.25make an application to the commissioner by September 30, 2010, or by June 30 of any
75.26subsequent year. Participation under this subdivision is irrevocable. If paragraph (a) does
75.27not result in a rate greater than what would have been provided without application of this
75.28subdivision, a facility's rates shall be calculated as otherwise provided and no payment by
75.29the local government entity shall be required under paragraph (d).
75.30(d) (e) For each participating nursing facility, the public entity that owns the physical
75.31plant or is the license holder of the nursing facility shall pay to the state the entire
75.32nonfederal share of medical assistance payments received as a result of the difference
75.33between the nursing facility's payment rate under subdivision 54, paragraph (a) or (b),
75.34and the rates that the nursing facility would otherwise be paid without application of this
75.35subdivision under subdivision 54 or 55 as determined by the commissioner.
76.1(e) (f) The commissioner may, at any time, reduce the payments under this
76.2subdivision based on the commissioner's determination that the payments shall cause
76.3nursing facility rates to exceed the state's Medicare upper payment limit or any other
76.4federal limitation. If the commissioner determines a reduction is necessary, the
76.5commissioner shall reduce all payment rates for participating nursing facilities by a
76.6percentage applied to the amount of increase they would otherwise receive under this
76.7subdivision and shall notify participating facilities of the reductions. If payments to a
76.8nursing facility are reduced, payments under section 256B.19, subdivision 1e, shall be
76.9reduced accordingly.

76.10    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.441, is amended by adding a
76.11subdivision to read:
76.12    Subd. 60. Method for determining budget-neutral nursing facility rates for
76.13relocated beds. (a) Nursing facility rates for bed relocations must be calculated by
76.14comparing the estimated medical assistance costs prior to and after the proposed bed
76.15relocation using the calculations in this subdivision. All payment rates are based on a 1.0
76.16case mix level, with other case mix rates determined accordingly. Nursing facility beds
76.17on layaway status that are being moved must be included in the calculation for both the
76.18originating and receiving facility and treated as though they were in active status with the
76.19occupancy characteristics of the active beds of the originating facility.
76.20(b) Medical assistance costs of the beds in the originating nursing facilities must
76.21be calculated as follows:
76.22(1) multiply each originating facility's total payment rate for a RUGS weight of 1.0
76.23by the facility's percentage of medical assistance days on its most recent available cost
76.24report;
76.25(2) take the products in clause (1) and multiply by each facility's average case mix
76.26score for medical assistance residents on its most recent available cost report;
76.27(3) take the products in clause (2) and multiply by the number of beds being
76.28relocated, times 365; and
76.29(4) calculate the sum of the amounts determined in clause (3).
76.30(c) Medical assistance costs in the receiving facility, prior to the bed relocation, must
76.31be calculated as follows:
76.32(1) multiply the facility's total payment rate for a RUGS weight of 1.0 by the medical
76.33assistance days on the most recent cost report; and
76.34(2) multiply the product in clause (1) by the average case mix weight of medical
76.35assistance residents on the most recent cost report.
77.1(d) The commissioner shall determine the medical assistance costs prior to the bed
77.2relocation which must be the sum of the amounts determined in paragraphs (b) and (c).
77.3(e) The commissioner shall estimate the medical assistance costs after the bed
77.4relocation as follows:
77.5(1) estimate the medical assistance days in the receiving facility after the bed
77.6relocation. The commissioner may use the current medical assistance portion, or if data
77.7does not exist, may use the statewide average, or may use the provider's estimate of the
77.8medical assistance utilization of the relocated beds;
77.9(2) estimate the average case mix weight of medical assistance residents in the
77.10receiving facility after the bed relocation. The commissioner may use current average
77.11case mix weight or, if data does not exist, may use the statewide average, or may use the
77.12provider's estimate of the average case mix weight; and
77.13(3) multiply the amount determined in clause (1) by the amount determined in
77.14clause (2) by the total payment rate for a RUGS weight of 1.0 that is the highest rate of
77.15the facilities from which the relocated beds either originate or to which they are being
77.16relocated so long as that rate is associated with ten percent or more of the total number of
77.17beds to be in the receiving facility after the bed relocation.
77.18(f) If the amount determined in paragraph (e) is less than or equal to the amount
77.19determined in paragraph (d), the commissioner shall allow a total payment rate equal to
77.20the amount used in paragraph (e), clause (3).
77.21(g) If the amount determined in paragraph (e) is greater than the amount determined
77.22in paragraph (d), the commissioner shall allow a rate with a RUGS weight of 1.0 that
77.23when used in paragraph (e), clause (3), results in the amount determined in paragraph (e)
77.24being equal to the amount determined in paragraph (d).
77.25(h) If the commissioner relies upon provider estimates in paragraph (e), clause (1)
77.26or (2), then annually, for three years after the rates determined in this subdivision take
77.27effect, the commissioner shall determine the accuracy of the alternative factors of medical
77.28assistance case load and RUGS weight used in this subdivision and shall reduce the total
77.29payment rate for a RUGS weight of 1.0 if the factors used result in medical assistance
77.30costs exceeding the amount in paragraph (d). If the actual medical assistance costs exceed
77.31the estimates by more than five percent, the commissioner shall also recover the difference
77.32between the estimated costs in paragraph (e) and the actual costs according to section
77.33256B.0641. The commissioner may require submission of data from the receiving facility
77.34needed to implement this paragraph.
78.1(i) When beds approved for relocation are put into active service at the destination
78.2facility, rates determined in this subdivision must be adjusted by any adjustment amounts
78.3that were implemented after the date of the letter of approval.

78.4    Sec. 13. REPEALER.
78.5Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 144A.073, subdivisions 4 and 5, are repealed.

78.6ARTICLE 5
78.7TECHNICAL

78.8    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 144A.071, subdivision 4a, is amended to
78.9read:
78.10    Subd. 4a. Exceptions for replacement beds. It is in the best interest of the state
78.11to ensure that nursing homes and boarding care homes continue to meet the physical
78.12plant licensing and certification requirements by permitting certain construction projects.
78.13Facilities should be maintained in condition to satisfy the physical and emotional needs
78.14of residents while allowing the state to maintain control over nursing home expenditure
78.15growth.
78.16    The commissioner of health in coordination with the commissioner of human
78.17services, may approve the renovation, replacement, upgrading, or relocation of a nursing
78.18home or boarding care home, under the following conditions:
78.19    (a) to license or certify beds in a new facility constructed to replace a facility or to
78.20make repairs in an existing facility that was destroyed or damaged after June 30, 1987, by
78.21fire, lightning, or other hazard provided:
78.22    (i) destruction was not caused by the intentional act of or at the direction of a
78.23controlling person of the facility;
78.24    (ii) at the time the facility was destroyed or damaged the controlling persons of the
78.25facility maintained insurance coverage for the type of hazard that occurred in an amount
78.26that a reasonable person would conclude was adequate;
78.27    (iii) the net proceeds from an insurance settlement for the damages caused by the
78.28hazard are applied to the cost of the new facility or repairs;
78.29    (iv) the new facility is constructed on the same site as the destroyed facility or on
78.30another site subject to the restrictions in section 144A.073, subdivision 5;
78.31    (v) (iv) the number of licensed and certified beds in the new facility does not exceed
78.32the number of licensed and certified beds in the destroyed facility; and
78.33    (vi) (v) the commissioner determines that the replacement beds are needed to
78.34prevent an inadequate supply of beds.
79.1Project construction costs incurred for repairs authorized under this clause shall not be
79.2considered in the dollar threshold amount defined in subdivision 2;
79.3    (b) to license or certify beds that are moved from one location to another within a
79.4nursing home facility, provided the total costs of remodeling performed in conjunction
79.5with the relocation of beds does not exceed $1,000,000;
79.6    (c) to license or certify beds in a project recommended for approval under section
79.7144A.073 ;
79.8    (d) to license or certify beds that are moved from an existing state nursing home to
79.9a different state facility, provided there is no net increase in the number of state nursing
79.10home beds;
79.11    (e) to certify and license as nursing home beds boarding care beds in a certified
79.12boarding care facility if the beds meet the standards for nursing home licensure, or in a
79.13facility that was granted an exception to the moratorium under section 144A.073, and if
79.14the cost of any remodeling of the facility does not exceed $1,000,000. If boarding care
79.15beds are licensed as nursing home beds, the number of boarding care beds in the facility
79.16must not increase beyond the number remaining at the time of the upgrade in licensure.
79.17The provisions contained in section 144A.073 regarding the upgrading of the facilities
79.18do not apply to facilities that satisfy these requirements;
79.19    (f) to license and certify up to 40 beds transferred from an existing facility owned and
79.20operated by the Amherst H. Wilder Foundation in the city of St. Paul to a new unit at the
79.21same location as the existing facility that will serve persons with Alzheimer's disease and
79.22other related disorders. The transfer of beds may occur gradually or in stages, provided
79.23the total number of beds transferred does not exceed 40. At the time of licensure and
79.24certification of a bed or beds in the new unit, the commissioner of health shall delicense
79.25and decertify the same number of beds in the existing facility. As a condition of receiving
79.26a license or certification under this clause, the facility must make a written commitment
79.27to the commissioner of human services that it will not seek to receive an increase in its
79.28property-related payment rate as a result of the transfers allowed under this paragraph;
79.29    (g) to license and certify nursing home beds to replace currently licensed and certified
79.30boarding care beds which may be located either in a remodeled or renovated boarding care
79.31or nursing home facility or in a remodeled, renovated, newly constructed, or replacement
79.32nursing home facility within the identifiable complex of health care facilities in which the
79.33currently licensed boarding care beds are presently located, provided that the number of
79.34boarding care beds in the facility or complex are decreased by the number to be licensed
79.35as nursing home beds and further provided that, if the total costs of new construction,
79.36replacement, remodeling, or renovation exceed ten percent of the appraised value of
80.1the facility or $200,000, whichever is less, the facility makes a written commitment to
80.2the commissioner of human services that it will not seek to receive an increase in its
80.3property-related payment rate by reason of the new construction, replacement, remodeling,
80.4or renovation. The provisions contained in section 144A.073 regarding the upgrading of
80.5facilities do not apply to facilities that satisfy these requirements;
80.6    (h) to license as a nursing home and certify as a nursing facility a facility that is
80.7licensed as a boarding care facility but not certified under the medical assistance program,
80.8but only if the commissioner of human services certifies to the commissioner of health that
80.9licensing the facility as a nursing home and certifying the facility as a nursing facility will
80.10result in a net annual savings to the state general fund of $200,000 or more;
80.11    (i) to certify, after September 30, 1992, and prior to July 1, 1993, existing nursing
80.12home beds in a facility that was licensed and in operation prior to January 1, 1992;
80.13    (j) to license and certify new nursing home beds to replace beds in a facility acquired
80.14by the Minneapolis Community Development Agency as part of redevelopment activities
80.15in a city of the first class, provided the new facility is located within three miles of the site
80.16of the old facility. Operating and property costs for the new facility must be determined
80.17and allowed under section 256B.431 or 256B.434;
80.18    (k) to license and certify up to 20 new nursing home beds in a community-operated
80.19hospital and attached convalescent and nursing care facility with 40 beds on April 21,
80.201991, that suspended operation of the hospital in April 1986. The commissioner of human
80.21services shall provide the facility with the same per diem property-related payment rate
80.22for each additional licensed and certified bed as it will receive for its existing 40 beds;
80.23    (l) to license or certify beds in renovation, replacement, or upgrading projects as
80.24defined in section 144A.073, subdivision 1, so long as the cumulative total costs of the
80.25facility's remodeling projects do not exceed $1,000,000;
80.26    (m) to license and certify beds that are moved from one location to another for the
80.27purposes of converting up to five four-bed wards to single or double occupancy rooms
80.28in a nursing home that, as of January 1, 1993, was county-owned and had a licensed
80.29capacity of 115 beds;
80.30    (n) to allow a facility that on April 16, 1993, was a 106-bed licensed and certified
80.31nursing facility located in Minneapolis to layaway all of its licensed and certified nursing
80.32home beds. These beds may be relicensed and recertified in a newly constructed teaching
80.33nursing home facility affiliated with a teaching hospital upon approval by the legislature.
80.34The proposal must be developed in consultation with the interagency committee on
80.35long-term care planning. The beds on layaway status shall have the same status as
81.1voluntarily delicensed and decertified beds, except that beds on layaway status remain
81.2subject to the surcharge in section 256.9657. This layaway provision expires July 1, 1998;
81.3    (o) to allow a project which will be completed in conjunction with an approved
81.4moratorium exception project for a nursing home in southern Cass County and which is
81.5directly related to that portion of the facility that must be repaired, renovated, or replaced,
81.6to correct an emergency plumbing problem for which a state correction order has been
81.7issued and which must be corrected by August 31, 1993;
81.8    (p) to allow a facility that on April 16, 1993, was a 368-bed licensed and certified
81.9nursing facility located in Minneapolis to layaway, upon 30 days prior written notice to
81.10the commissioner, up to 30 of the facility's licensed and certified beds by converting
81.11three-bed wards to single or double occupancy. Beds on layaway status shall have the
81.12same status as voluntarily delicensed and decertified beds except that beds on layaway
81.13status remain subject to the surcharge in section 256.9657, remain subject to the license
81.14application and renewal fees under section 144A.07 and shall be subject to a $100 per bed
81.15reactivation fee. In addition, at any time within three years of the effective date of the
81.16layaway, the beds on layaway status may be:
81.17    (1) relicensed and recertified upon relocation and reactivation of some or all of
81.18the beds to an existing licensed and certified facility or facilities located in Pine River,
81.19Brainerd, or International Falls; provided that the total project construction costs related to
81.20the relocation of beds from layaway status for any facility receiving relocated beds may
81.21not exceed the dollar threshold provided in subdivision 2 unless the construction project
81.22has been approved through the moratorium exception process under section 144A.073;
81.23    (2) relicensed and recertified, upon reactivation of some or all of the beds within the
81.24facility which placed the beds in layaway status, if the commissioner has determined a
81.25need for the reactivation of the beds on layaway status.
81.26    The property-related payment rate of a facility placing beds on layaway status
81.27must be adjusted by the incremental change in its rental per diem after recalculating the
81.28rental per diem as provided in section 256B.431, subdivision 3a, paragraph (c). The
81.29property-related payment rate for a facility relicensing and recertifying beds from layaway
81.30status must be adjusted by the incremental change in its rental per diem after recalculating
81.31its rental per diem using the number of beds after the relicensing to establish the facility's
81.32capacity day divisor, which shall be effective the first day of the month following the
81.33month in which the relicensing and recertification became effective. Any beds remaining
81.34on layaway status more than three years after the date the layaway status became effective
81.35must be removed from layaway status and immediately delicensed and decertified;
82.1    (q) to license and certify beds in a renovation and remodeling project to convert 12
82.2four-bed wards into 24 two-bed rooms, expand space, and add improvements in a nursing
82.3home that, as of January 1, 1994, met the following conditions: the nursing home was
82.4located in Ramsey County; had a licensed capacity of 154 beds; and had been ranked
82.5among the top 15 applicants by the 1993 moratorium exceptions advisory review panel.
82.6The total project construction cost estimate for this project must not exceed the cost
82.7estimate submitted in connection with the 1993 moratorium exception process;
82.8    (r) to license and certify up to 117 beds that are relocated from a licensed and
82.9certified 138-bed nursing facility located in St. Paul to a hospital with 130 licensed
82.10hospital beds located in South St. Paul, provided that the nursing facility and hospital are
82.11owned by the same or a related organization and that prior to the date the relocation is
82.12completed the hospital ceases operation of its inpatient hospital services at that hospital.
82.13After relocation, the nursing facility's status under section 256B.431, subdivision 2j, shall
82.14be the same as it was prior to relocation. The nursing facility's property-related payment
82.15rate resulting from the project authorized in this paragraph shall become effective no
82.16earlier than April 1, 1996. For purposes of calculating the incremental change in the
82.17facility's rental per diem resulting from this project, the allowable appraised value of
82.18the nursing facility portion of the existing health care facility physical plant prior to the
82.19renovation and relocation may not exceed $2,490,000;
82.20    (s) to license and certify two beds in a facility to replace beds that were voluntarily
82.21delicensed and decertified on June 28, 1991;
82.22    (t) to allow 16 licensed and certified beds located on July 1, 1994, in a 142-bed
82.23nursing home and 21-bed boarding care home facility in Minneapolis, notwithstanding
82.24the licensure and certification after July 1, 1995, of the Minneapolis facility as a 147-bed
82.25nursing home facility after completion of a construction project approved in 1993 under
82.26section 144A.073, to be laid away upon 30 days' prior written notice to the commissioner.
82.27Beds on layaway status shall have the same status as voluntarily delicensed or decertified
82.28beds except that they shall remain subject to the surcharge in section 256.9657. The
82.2916 beds on layaway status may be relicensed as nursing home beds and recertified at
82.30any time within five years of the effective date of the layaway upon relocation of some
82.31or all of the beds to a licensed and certified facility located in Watertown, provided that
82.32the total project construction costs related to the relocation of beds from layaway status
82.33for the Watertown facility may not exceed the dollar threshold provided in subdivision
82.342 unless the construction project has been approved through the moratorium exception
82.35process under section 144A.073.
83.1    The property-related payment rate of the facility placing beds on layaway status
83.2must be adjusted by the incremental change in its rental per diem after recalculating the
83.3rental per diem as provided in section 256B.431, subdivision 3a, paragraph (c). The
83.4property-related payment rate for the facility relicensing and recertifying beds from
83.5layaway status must be adjusted by the incremental change in its rental per diem after
83.6recalculating its rental per diem using the number of beds after the relicensing to establish
83.7the facility's capacity day divisor, which shall be effective the first day of the month
83.8following the month in which the relicensing and recertification became effective. Any
83.9beds remaining on layaway status more than five years after the date the layaway status
83.10became effective must be removed from layaway status and immediately delicensed
83.11and decertified;
83.12    (u) to license and certify beds that are moved within an existing area of a facility or
83.13to a newly constructed addition which is built for the purpose of eliminating three- and
83.14four-bed rooms and adding space for dining, lounge areas, bathing rooms, and ancillary
83.15service areas in a nursing home that, as of January 1, 1995, was located in Fridley and had
83.16a licensed capacity of 129 beds;
83.17    (v) to relocate 36 beds in Crow Wing County and four beds from Hennepin County
83.18to a 160-bed facility in Crow Wing County, provided all the affected beds are under
83.19common ownership;
83.20    (w) to license and certify a total replacement project of up to 49 beds located in
83.21Norman County that are relocated from a nursing home destroyed by flood and whose
83.22residents were relocated to other nursing homes. The operating cost payment rates for
83.23the new nursing facility shall be determined based on the interim and settle-up payment
83.24provisions of Minnesota Rules, part 9549.0057, and the reimbursement provisions of
83.25section 256B.431, except that subdivision 26, paragraphs (a) and (b), shall not apply until
83.26the second rate year after the settle-up cost report is filed. Property-related reimbursement
83.27rates shall be determined under section 256B.431, taking into account any federal or state
83.28flood-related loans or grants provided to the facility;
83.29    (x) to license and certify a total replacement project of up to 129 beds located
83.30in Polk County that are relocated from a nursing home destroyed by flood and whose
83.31residents were relocated to other nursing homes. The operating cost payment rates for
83.32the new nursing facility shall be determined based on the interim and settle-up payment
83.33provisions of Minnesota Rules, part 9549.0057, and the reimbursement provisions of
83.34section 256B.431, except that subdivision 26, paragraphs (a) and (b), shall not apply until
83.35the second rate year after the settle-up cost report is filed. Property-related reimbursement
84.1rates shall be determined under section 256B.431, taking into account any federal or state
84.2flood-related loans or grants provided to the facility;
84.3    (y) to license and certify beds in a renovation and remodeling project to convert 13
84.4three-bed wards into 13 two-bed rooms and 13 single-bed rooms, expand space, and
84.5add improvements in a nursing home that, as of January 1, 1994, met the following
84.6conditions: the nursing home was located in Ramsey County, was not owned by a hospital
84.7corporation, had a licensed capacity of 64 beds, and had been ranked among the top 15
84.8applicants by the 1993 moratorium exceptions advisory review panel. The total project
84.9construction cost estimate for this project must not exceed the cost estimate submitted in
84.10connection with the 1993 moratorium exception process;
84.11    (z) to license and certify up to 150 nursing home beds to replace an existing 285
84.12bed nursing facility located in St. Paul. The replacement project shall include both the
84.13renovation of existing buildings and the construction of new facilities at the existing
84.14site. The reduction in the licensed capacity of the existing facility shall occur during the
84.15construction project as beds are taken out of service due to the construction process. Prior
84.16to the start of the construction process, the facility shall provide written information to the
84.17commissioner of health describing the process for bed reduction, plans for the relocation
84.18of residents, and the estimated construction schedule. The relocation of residents shall be
84.19in accordance with the provisions of law and rule;
84.20    (aa) to allow the commissioner of human services to license an additional 36 beds
84.21to provide residential services for the physically disabled under Minnesota Rules, parts
84.229570.2000 to 9570.3400, in a 198-bed nursing home located in Red Wing, provided that
84.23the total number of licensed and certified beds at the facility does not increase;
84.24    (bb) to license and certify a new facility in St. Louis County with 44 beds
84.25constructed to replace an existing facility in St. Louis County with 31 beds, which has
84.26resident rooms on two separate floors and an antiquated elevator that creates safety
84.27concerns for residents and prevents nonambulatory residents from residing on the second
84.28floor. The project shall include the elimination of three- and four-bed rooms;
84.29    (cc) to license and certify four beds in a 16-bed certified boarding care home in
84.30Minneapolis to replace beds that were voluntarily delicensed and decertified on or
84.31before March 31, 1992. The licensure and certification is conditional upon the facility
84.32periodically assessing and adjusting its resident mix and other factors which may
84.33contribute to a potential institution for mental disease declaration. The commissioner of
84.34human services shall retain the authority to audit the facility at any time and shall require
84.35the facility to comply with any requirements necessary to prevent an institution for mental
84.36disease declaration, including delicensure and decertification of beds, if necessary;
85.1    (dd) to license and certify 72 beds in an existing facility in Mille Lacs County with
85.280 beds as part of a renovation project. The renovation must include construction of
85.3an addition to accommodate ten residents with beginning and midstage dementia in a
85.4self-contained living unit; creation of three resident households where dining, activities,
85.5and support spaces are located near resident living quarters; designation of four beds
85.6for rehabilitation in a self-contained area; designation of 30 private rooms; and other
85.7improvements;
85.8    (ee) to license and certify beds in a facility that has undergone replacement or
85.9remodeling as part of a planned closure under section 256B.437;
85.10    (ff) to license and certify a total replacement project of up to 124 beds located
85.11in Wilkin County that are in need of relocation from a nursing home significantly
85.12damaged by flood. The operating cost payment rates for the new nursing facility shall
85.13be determined based on the interim and settle-up payment provisions of Minnesota
85.14Rules, part 9549.0057, and the reimbursement provisions of section 256B.431, except
85.15that section 256B.431, subdivision 26, paragraphs (a) and (b), shall not apply until the
85.16second rate year after the settle-up cost report is filed. Property-related reimbursement
85.17rates shall be determined under section 256B.431, taking into account any federal or state
85.18flood-related loans or grants provided to the facility;
85.19    (gg) to allow the commissioner of human services to license an additional nine beds
85.20to provide residential services for the physically disabled under Minnesota Rules, parts
85.219570.2000 to 9570.3400, in a 240-bed nursing home located in Duluth, provided that the
85.22total number of licensed and certified beds at the facility does not increase;
85.23    (hh) to license and certify up to 120 new nursing facility beds to replace beds in a
85.24facility in Anoka County, which was licensed for 98 beds as of July 1, 2000, provided the
85.25new facility is located within four miles of the existing facility and is in Anoka County.
85.26Operating and property rates shall be determined and allowed under section 256B.431 and
85.27Minnesota Rules, parts 9549.0010 to 9549.0080, or section 256B.434 or 256B.435. The
85.28provisions of section 256B.431, subdivision 26, paragraphs (a) and (b), do not apply until
85.29the second rate year following settle-up; or
85.30    (ii) to transfer up to 98 beds of a 129-licensed bed facility located in Anoka County
85.31that, as of March 25, 2001, is in the active process of closing, to a 122-licensed bed
85.32nonprofit nursing facility located in the city of Columbia Heights or its affiliate. The
85.33transfer is effective when the receiving facility notifies the commissioner in writing of the
85.34number of beds accepted. The commissioner shall place all transferred beds on layaway
85.35status held in the name of the receiving facility. The layaway adjustment provisions of
85.36section 256B.431, subdivision 30, do not apply to this layaway. The receiving facility
86.1may only remove the beds from layaway for recertification and relicensure at the receiving
86.2facility's current site, or at a newly constructed facility located in Anoka County. The
86.3receiving facility must receive statutory authorization before removing these beds from
86.4layaway status, or may remove these beds from layaway status if removal from layaway
86.5status is part of a moratorium exception project approved by the commissioner under
86.6section 144A.073.

86.7    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 144A.071, subdivision 5a, is amended to read:
86.8    Subd. 5a. Cost estimate of a moratorium exception project. (a) For the
86.9purposes of this section and section 144A.073, the cost estimate of a moratorium
86.10exception project shall include the effects of the proposed project on the costs of the state
86.11subsidy for community-based services, nursing services, and housing in institutional
86.12and noninstitutional settings. The commissioner of health, in cooperation with the
86.13commissioner of human services, shall define the method for estimating these costs in the
86.14permanent rule implementing section 144A.073. The commissioner of human services
86.15shall prepare an estimate of the total state annual long-term costs of each moratorium
86.16exception proposal.
86.17(b) The interest rate to be used for estimating the cost of each moratorium exception
86.18project proposal shall be the lesser of either the prime rate plus two percentage points, or
86.19the posted yield for standard conventional fixed rate mortgages of the Federal Home Loan
86.20Mortgage Corporation plus two percentage points as published in the Wall Street Journal
86.21and in effect 56 days prior to the application deadline. If the applicant's proposal uses this
86.22interest rate, the commissioner of human services, in determining the facility's actual
86.23property-related payment rate to be established upon completion of the project must use
86.24the actual interest rate obtained by the facility for the project's permanent financing up to
86.25the maximum permitted under subdivision 6 Minnesota Rules, part 9549.0060, subpart 6.
86.26The applicant may choose an alternate interest rate for estimating the project's cost.
86.27If the applicant makes this election, the commissioner of human services, in determining
86.28the facility's actual property-related payment rate to be established upon completion of the
86.29project, must use the lesser of the actual interest rate obtained for the project's permanent
86.30financing or the interest rate which was used to estimate the proposal's project cost. For
86.31succeeding rate years, the applicant is at risk for financing costs in excess of the interest
86.32rate selected.

86.33    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256B.431, subdivision 26, is amended to read:
87.1    Subd. 26. Changes to nursing facility reimbursement beginning July 1, 1997.
87.2The nursing facility reimbursement changes in paragraphs (a) to (e) shall apply in the
87.3sequence specified in Minnesota Rules, parts 9549.0010 to 9549.0080, and this section,
87.4beginning July 1, 1997.
87.5(a) For rate years beginning on or after July 1, 1997, the commissioner shall limit a
87.6nursing facility's allowable operating per diem for each case mix category for each rate
87.7year. The commissioner shall group nursing facilities into two groups, freestanding and
87.8nonfreestanding, within each geographic group, using their operating cost per diem for
87.9the case mix A classification. A nonfreestanding nursing facility is a nursing facility
87.10whose other operating cost per diem is subject to the hospital attached, short length of
87.11stay, or the rule 80 limits. All other nursing facilities shall be considered freestanding
87.12nursing facilities. The commissioner shall then array all nursing facilities in each grouping
87.13by their allowable case mix A operating cost per diem. In calculating a nursing facility's
87.14operating cost per diem for this purpose, the commissioner shall exclude the raw food
87.15cost per diem related to providing special diets that are based on religious beliefs, as
87.16determined in subdivision 2b, paragraph (h). For those nursing facilities in each grouping
87.17whose case mix A operating cost per diem:
87.18(1) is at or below the median of the array, the commissioner shall limit the nursing
87.19facility's allowable operating cost per diem for each case mix category to the lesser of
87.20the prior reporting year's allowable operating cost per diem as specified in Laws 1996,
87.21chapter 451, article 3, section 11, paragraph (h), plus the inflation factor as established
87.22in paragraph (d), clause (2), increased by two percentage points, or the current reporting
87.23year's corresponding allowable operating cost per diem; or
87.24(2) is above the median of the array, the commissioner shall limit the nursing
87.25facility's allowable operating cost per diem for each case mix category to the lesser of
87.26the prior reporting year's allowable operating cost per diem as specified in Laws 1996,
87.27chapter 451, article 3, section 11, paragraph (h), plus the inflation factor as established
87.28in paragraph (d), clause (2), increased by one percentage point, or the current reporting
87.29year's corresponding allowable operating cost per diem.
87.30For purposes of paragraph (a), if a nursing facility reports on its cost report a
87.31reduction in cost due to a refund or credit for a rate year beginning on or after July 1, 1998,
87.32the commissioner shall increase that facility's spend-up limit for the rate year following
87.33the current rate year by the amount of the cost reduction divided by its resident days for
87.34the reporting year preceding the rate year in which the adjustment is to be made.
87.35(b) For rate years beginning on or after July 1, 1997, the commissioner shall limit the
87.36allowable operating cost per diem for high cost nursing facilities. After application of the
88.1limits in paragraph (a) to each nursing facility's operating cost per diem, the commissioner
88.2shall group nursing facilities into two groups, freestanding or nonfreestanding, within each
88.3geographic group. A nonfreestanding nursing facility is a nursing facility whose other
88.4operating cost per diem are subject to hospital attached, short length of stay, or rule 80
88.5limits. All other nursing facilities shall be considered freestanding nursing facilities. The
88.6commissioner shall then array all nursing facilities within each grouping by their allowable
88.7case mix A operating cost per diem. In calculating a nursing facility's operating cost per
88.8diem for this purpose, the commissioner shall exclude the raw food cost per diem related to
88.9providing special diets that are based on religious beliefs, as determined in subdivision 2b,
88.10paragraph (h). For those nursing facilities in each grouping whose case mix A operating
88.11cost per diem exceeds 1.0 standard deviation above the median, the commissioner shall
88.12reduce their allowable operating cost per diem by three percent. For those nursing
88.13facilities in each grouping whose case mix A operating cost per diem exceeds 0.5 standard
88.14deviation above the median but is less than or equal to 1.0 standard deviation above the
88.15median, the commissioner shall reduce their allowable operating cost per diem by two
88.16percent. However, in no case shall a nursing facility's operating cost per diem be reduced
88.17below its grouping's limit established at 0.5 standard deviations above the median.
88.18(c) For rate years beginning on or after July 1, 1997, the commissioner shall
88.19determine a nursing facility's efficiency incentive by first computing the allowable
88.20difference, which is the lesser of $4.50 or the amount by which the facility's other
88.21operating cost limit exceeds its nonadjusted other operating cost per diem for that rate
88.22year. The commissioner shall compute the efficiency incentive by:
88.23(1) subtracting the allowable difference from $4.50 and dividing the result by $4.50;
88.24(2) multiplying 0.20 by the ratio resulting from clause (1), and then;
88.25(3) adding 0.50 to the result from clause (2); and
88.26(4) multiplying the result from clause (3) times the allowable difference.
88.27The nursing facility's efficiency incentive payment shall be the lesser of $2.25 or the
88.28product obtained in clause (4).
88.29(d) For rate years beginning on or after July 1, 1997, the forecasted price index for
88.30a nursing facility's allowable operating cost per diem shall be determined under clauses
88.31(1) and (2) using the change in the Consumer Price Index-All Items (United States city
88.32average) (CPI-U) as forecasted by Data Resources, Inc. The commissioner shall use the
88.33indices as forecasted in the fourth quarter of the calendar year preceding the rate year,
88.34subject to subdivision 2l, paragraph (c).
89.1(1) The CPI-U forecasted index for allowable operating cost per diem shall be based
89.2on the 21-month period from the midpoint of the nursing facility's reporting year to the
89.3midpoint of the rate year following the reporting year.
89.4(2) For rate years beginning on or after July 1, 1997, the forecasted index for
89.5operating cost limits referred to in subdivision 21, paragraph (b), shall be based on
89.6the CPI-U for the 12-month period between the midpoints of the two reporting years
89.7preceding the rate year.
89.8(e) After applying these provisions for the respective rate years, the commissioner
89.9shall index these allowable operating cost per diem by the inflation factor provided for in
89.10paragraph (d), clause (1), and add the nursing facility's efficiency incentive as computed in
89.11paragraph (c).
89.12(f) For the rate years beginning on July 1, 1997, July 1, 1998, and July 1, 1999, a
89.13nursing facility licensed for 40 beds effective May 1, 1992, with a subsequent increase of
89.1420 Medicare/Medicaid certified beds, effective January 26, 1993, in accordance with an
89.15increase in licensure is exempt from paragraphs (a) and (b).
89.16(g) For a nursing facility whose construction project was authorized according to
89.17section 144A.073, subdivision 5, paragraph (g), the operating cost payment rates for
89.18the new location shall be determined based on Minnesota Rules, part 9549.0057. The
89.19relocation allowed under section 144A.073, subdivision 5, paragraph (g), and the rate
89.20determination allowed under this paragraph must meet the cost neutrality requirements
89.21of section 144A.073, subdivision 3c. Paragraphs (a) and (b) shall not apply until the
89.22second rate year after the settle-up cost report is filed. Notwithstanding subdivision 2b,
89.23paragraph (g), real estate taxes and special assessments payable by the new location, a
89.24501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation, shall be included in the payment rates determined under
89.25this subdivision for all subsequent rate years.
89.26(h) (g) For the rate year beginning July 1, 1997, the commissioner shall compute
89.27the payment rate for a nursing facility licensed for 94 beds on September 30, 1996,
89.28that applied in October 1993 for approval of a total replacement under the moratorium
89.29exception process in section 144A.073, and completed the approved replacement in June
89.301995, with other operating cost spend-up limit under paragraph (a), increased by $3.98,
89.31and after computing the facility's payment rate according to this section, the commissioner
89.32shall make a one-year positive rate adjustment of $3.19 for operating costs related to the
89.33newly constructed total replacement, without application of paragraphs (a) and (b). The
89.34facility's per diem, before the $3.19 adjustment, shall be used as the prior reporting year's
89.35allowable operating cost per diem for payment rate calculation for the rate year beginning
90.1July 1, 1998. A facility described in this paragraph is exempt from paragraph (b) for the
90.2rate years beginning July 1, 1997, and July 1, 1998.
90.3(i) (h) For the purpose of applying the limit stated in paragraph (a), a nursing facility
90.4in Kandiyohi County licensed for 86 beds that was granted hospital-attached status on
90.5December 1, 1994, shall have the prior year's allowable care-related per diem increased
90.6by $3.207 and the prior year's other operating cost per diem increased by $4.777 before
90.7adding the inflation in paragraph (d), clause (2), for the rate year beginning on July 1, 1997.
90.8(j) (i) For the purpose of applying the limit stated in paragraph (a), a 117 bed nursing
90.9facility located in Pine County shall have the prior year's allowable other operating cost
90.10per diem increased by $1.50 before adding the inflation in paragraph (d), clause (2), for
90.11the rate year beginning on July 1, 1997.
90.12(k) (j) For the purpose of applying the limit under paragraph (a), a nursing facility in
90.13Hibbing licensed for 192 beds shall have the prior year's allowable other operating cost
90.14per diem increased by $2.67 before adding the inflation in paragraph (d), clause (2),
90.15for the rate year beginning July 1, 1997.
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