Bill Text: FL S1164 | 2016 | Regular Session | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Firesafety

Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (? 2-1)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2016-03-04 - Laid on Table, companion bill(s) passed, see CS/CS/HB 965 (Ch. 2016-92) [S1164 Detail]

Download: Florida-2016-S1164-Comm_Sub.html
       Florida Senate - 2016                      CS for CS for SB 1164
       
       
        
       By the Committees on Children, Families, and Elder Affairs; and
       Banking and Insurance; and Senator Legg
       
       586-03042-16                                          20161164c2
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to firesafety; amending s. 429.41,
    3         F.S.; requiring the State Fire Marshal to establish
    4         uniform firesafety standards for assisted living
    5         facilities; revising provisions relating to the
    6         minimum standards that must be adopted by the
    7         Department of Elderly Affairs for firesafety in
    8         assisted living facilities; clarifying the fees a
    9         utility may charge for the installation and
   10         maintenance of an automatic fire sprinkler system;
   11         providing an exemption from uniform firesafety code
   12         requirements for certain assisted living facilities;
   13         providing an effective date.
   14          
   15  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   16  
   17         Section 1. Subsection (1) of section 429.41, Florida
   18  Statutes, is amended to read:
   19         429.41 Rules establishing standards.—
   20         (1) It is the intent of the Legislature that rules
   21  published and enforced pursuant to this section shall include
   22  criteria by which a reasonable and consistent quality of
   23  resident care and quality of life may be ensured and the results
   24  of such resident care may be demonstrated. Such rules shall also
   25  ensure a safe and sanitary environment that is residential and
   26  noninstitutional in design or nature. It is further intended
   27  that reasonable efforts be made to accommodate the needs and
   28  preferences of residents to enhance the quality of life in a
   29  facility. Uniform firesafety standards for assisted living
   30  facilities shall be established by the State Fire Marshal
   31  pursuant to s. 633.206. The agency, in consultation with the
   32  department, may adopt rules to administer the requirements of
   33  part II of chapter 408. In order to provide safe and sanitary
   34  facilities and the highest quality of resident care
   35  accommodating the needs and preferences of residents, the
   36  department, in consultation with the agency, the Department of
   37  Children and Families, and the Department of Health, shall adopt
   38  rules, policies, and procedures to administer this part, which
   39  must include reasonable and fair minimum standards in relation
   40  to:
   41         (a) The requirements for and maintenance of facilities, not
   42  in conflict with chapter 553, relating to plumbing, heating,
   43  cooling, lighting, ventilation, living space, and other housing
   44  conditions, which will ensure the health, safety, and comfort of
   45  residents and protection from fire hazard, including adequate
   46  provisions for fire alarm and other fire protection suitable to
   47  the size of the structure. Uniform firesafety standards shall be
   48  established and enforced by the State Fire Marshal in
   49  cooperation with the agency, the department, and the Department
   50  of Health.
   51         1. Firesafety evacuation capability determination.—
   52         a.The National Fire Protection Association, NFPA 101A,
   53  Chapter 5, 1995 edition, shall be used for determining the
   54  ability of the residents, with or without staff assistance, to
   55  relocate from or within a licensed facility to a point of safety
   56  as provided in the fire codes adopted herein. An evacuation
   57  capability evaluation for initial licensure shall be conducted
   58  within 6 months after the date of licensure. For existing
   59  licensed facilities that are not equipped with an automatic fire
   60  sprinkler system, the administrator shall evaluate the
   61  evacuation capability of residents at least annually. The
   62  evacuation capability evaluation for each facility not equipped
   63  with an automatic fire sprinkler system shall be validated,
   64  without liability, by the State Fire Marshal, by the local fire
   65  marshal, or by the local authority having jurisdiction over
   66  firesafety, before the license renewal date. If the State Fire
   67  Marshal, local fire marshal, or local authority having
   68  jurisdiction over firesafety has reason to believe that the
   69  evacuation capability of a facility as reported by the
   70  administrator may have changed, it may, with assistance from the
   71  facility administrator, reevaluate the evacuation capability
   72  through timed exiting drills. Translation of timed fire exiting
   73  drills to evacuation capability may be determined:
   74         (I)Three minutes or less: prompt.
   75         (II)More than 3 minutes, but not more than 13 minutes:
   76  slow.
   77         (III)More than 13 minutes: impractical.
   78         b.The Office of the State Fire Marshal shall provide or
   79  cause the provision of training and education on the proper
   80  application of Chapter 5, NFPA 101A, 1995 edition, to its
   81  employees, to staff of the Agency for Health Care Administration
   82  who are responsible for regulating facilities under this part,
   83  and to local governmental inspectors. The Office of the State
   84  Fire Marshal shall provide or cause the provision of this
   85  training within its existing budget, but may charge a fee for
   86  this training to offset its costs. The initial training must be
   87  delivered within 6 months after July 1, 1995, and as needed
   88  thereafter.
   89         c.The Office of the State Fire Marshal, in cooperation
   90  with provider associations, shall provide or cause the provision
   91  of a training program designed to inform facility operators on
   92  how to properly review bid documents relating to the
   93  installation of automatic fire sprinklers. The Office of the
   94  State Fire Marshal shall provide or cause the provision of this
   95  training within its existing budget, but may charge a fee for
   96  this training to offset its costs. The initial training must be
   97  delivered within 6 months after July 1, 1995, and as needed
   98  thereafter.
   99         d.The administrator of a licensed facility shall sign an
  100  affidavit verifying the number of residents occupying the
  101  facility at the time of the evacuation capability evaluation.
  102         2. Firesafety requirements.—
  103         a. Except for the special applications provided herein,
  104  effective January 1, 1996, The National Fire Protection
  105  Association, Life Safety Code, NFPA 101 and 101A, current
  106  editions 1994 edition, Chapter 22 for new facilities and Chapter
  107  23 for existing facilities shall be used in determining the
  108  uniform firesafety fire code adopted applied by the State Fire
  109  Marshal for assisted living facilities, pursuant to s. 633.206.
  110         b.Any new facility, regardless of size, that applies for a
  111  license on or after January 1, 1996, must be equipped with an
  112  automatic fire sprinkler system. The exceptions as provided in
  113  s. 22-2.3.5.1, NFPA 101, 1994 edition, as adopted herein, apply
  114  to any new facility housing eight or fewer residents. On July 1,
  115  1995, local governmental entities responsible for the issuance
  116  of permits for construction shall inform, without liability, any
  117  facility whose permit for construction is obtained before
  118  January 1, 1996, of this automatic fire sprinkler requirement.
  119  As used in this part, the term “a new facility” does not mean an
  120  existing facility that has undergone change of ownership.
  121         c.Notwithstanding any provision of s. 633.206 or of the
  122  National Fire Protection Association, NFPA 101A, Chapter 5, 1995
  123  edition, to the contrary, any existing facility housing eight or
  124  fewer residents is not required to install an automatic fire
  125  sprinkler system, nor to comply with any other requirement in
  126  Chapter 23, NFPA 101, 1994 edition, that exceeds the firesafety
  127  requirements of NFPA 101, 1988 edition, that applies to this
  128  size facility, unless the facility has been classified as
  129  impractical to evacuate. Any existing facility housing eight or
  130  fewer residents that is classified as impractical to evacuate
  131  must install an automatic fire sprinkler system within the
  132  timeframes granted in this section.
  133         d.Any existing facility that is required to install an
  134  automatic fire sprinkler system under this paragraph need not
  135  meet other firesafety requirements of Chapter 23, NFPA 101, 1994
  136  edition, which exceed the provisions of NFPA 101, 1988 edition.
  137  The mandate contained in this paragraph which requires certain
  138  facilities to install an automatic fire sprinkler system
  139  supersedes any other requirement.
  140         e.This paragraph does not supersede the exceptions granted
  141  in NFPA 101, 1988 edition or 1994 edition.
  142         f.This paragraph does not exempt facilities from other
  143  firesafety provisions adopted under s. 633.206 and local
  144  building code requirements in effect before July 1, 1995.
  145         b.g. A local government or a utility may charge fees only
  146  in an amount not to exceed the actual expenses incurred by the
  147  local government or the utility relating to the installation and
  148  maintenance of an automatic fire sprinkler system in an existing
  149  and properly licensed assisted living facility structure as of
  150  January 1, 1996.
  151         h.If a licensed facility undergoes major reconstruction or
  152  addition to an existing building on or after January 1, 1996,
  153  the entire building must be equipped with an automatic fire
  154  sprinkler system. Major reconstruction of a building means
  155  repair or restoration that costs in excess of 50 percent of the
  156  value of the building as reported on the tax rolls, excluding
  157  land, before reconstruction. Multiple reconstruction projects
  158  within a 5-year period the total costs of which exceed 50
  159  percent of the initial value of the building when the first
  160  reconstruction project was permitted are to be considered as
  161  major reconstruction. Application for a permit for an automatic
  162  fire sprinkler system is required upon application for a permit
  163  for a reconstruction project that creates costs that go over the
  164  50-percent threshold.
  165         i.Any facility licensed before January 1, 1996, that is
  166  required to install an automatic fire sprinkler system shall
  167  ensure that the installation is completed within the following
  168  timeframes based upon evacuation capability of the facility as
  169  determined under subparagraph 1.:
  170         (I)Impractical evacuation capability, 24 months.
  171         (II)Slow evacuation capability, 48 months.
  172         (III)Prompt evacuation capability, 60 months.
  173  
  174  The beginning date from which the deadline for the automatic
  175  fire sprinkler installation requirement must be calculated is
  176  upon receipt of written notice from the local fire official that
  177  an automatic fire sprinkler system must be installed. The local
  178  fire official shall send a copy of the document indicating the
  179  requirement of a fire sprinkler system to the Agency for Health
  180  Care Administration.
  181         j.It is recognized that the installation of an automatic
  182  fire sprinkler system may create financial hardship for some
  183  facilities. The appropriate local fire official shall, without
  184  liability, grant two 1-year extensions to the timeframes for
  185  installation established herein, if an automatic fire sprinkler
  186  installation cost estimate and proof of denial from two
  187  financial institutions for a construction loan to install the
  188  automatic fire sprinkler system are submitted. However, for any
  189  facility with a class I or class II, or a history of uncorrected
  190  class III, firesafety deficiencies, an extension must not be
  191  granted. The local fire official shall send a copy of the
  192  document granting the time extension to the Agency for Health
  193  Care Administration.
  194         k.A facility owner whose facility is required to be
  195  equipped with an automatic fire sprinkler system under Chapter
  196  23, NFPA 101, 1994 edition, as adopted herein, must disclose to
  197  any potential buyer of the facility that an installation of an
  198  automatic fire sprinkler requirement exists. The sale of the
  199  facility does not alter the timeframe for the installation of
  200  the automatic fire sprinkler system.
  201         l.Existing facilities required to install an automatic
  202  fire sprinkler system as a result of construction-type
  203  restrictions in Chapter 23, NFPA 101, 1994 edition, as adopted
  204  herein, or evacuation capability requirements shall be notified
  205  by the local fire official in writing of the automatic fire
  206  sprinkler requirement, as well as the appropriate date for final
  207  compliance as provided in this subparagraph. The local fire
  208  official shall send a copy of the document to the Agency for
  209  Health Care Administration.
  210         m.Except in cases of life-threatening fire hazards, if an
  211  existing facility experiences a change in the evacuation
  212  capability, or if the local authority having jurisdiction
  213  identifies a construction-type restriction, such that an
  214  automatic fire sprinkler system is required, it shall be given
  215  time for installation as provided in this subparagraph.
  216  
  217  Facilities that are fully sprinkled and in compliance with other
  218  firesafety standards are not required to conduct more than one
  219  of the required fire drills between the hours of 11 p.m. and 7
  220  a.m., per year. In lieu of the remaining drills, staff
  221  responsible for residents during such hours may be required to
  222  participate in a mock drill that includes a review of evacuation
  223  procedures. Such standards must be included or referenced in the
  224  rules adopted by the State Fire Marshal. Pursuant to s.
  225  633.206(1)(b), the State Fire Marshal is the final
  226  administrative authority for firesafety standards established
  227  and enforced pursuant to this section.
  228         c. All licensed facilities must have an annual fire
  229  inspection conducted by the local fire marshal or authority
  230  having jurisdiction.
  231         d. An assisted living facility licensed before July 1,
  232  2016, is exempt from any requirement in the uniform firesafety
  233  code established and adopted pursuant to s. 633.206 by the State
  234  Fire Marshal for assisted living facilities which exceeds the
  235  firesafety requirements of NFPA 101, 1994 edition, Chapter 23,
  236  Existing Residential Board and Care Occupancies. However, a
  237  facility that undergoes building rehabilitation as described by
  238  the uniform firesafety code established by the State Fire
  239  Marshal must thereafter be in compliance with the uniform
  240  firesafety code in effect for assisted living facilities under
  241  sub-subparagraph a.
  242         3. Resident elopement requirements.—Facilities are required
  243  to conduct a minimum of two resident elopement prevention and
  244  response drills per year. All administrators and direct care
  245  staff must participate in the drills which shall include a
  246  review of procedures to address resident elopement. Facilities
  247  must document the implementation of the drills and ensure that
  248  the drills are conducted in a manner consistent with the
  249  facility’s resident elopement policies and procedures.
  250         (b) The preparation and annual update of a comprehensive
  251  emergency management plan. Such standards must be included in
  252  the rules adopted by the department after consultation with the
  253  Division of Emergency Management. At a minimum, the rules must
  254  provide for plan components that address emergency evacuation
  255  transportation; adequate sheltering arrangements; postdisaster
  256  activities, including provision of emergency power, food, and
  257  water; postdisaster transportation; supplies; staffing;
  258  emergency equipment; individual identification of residents and
  259  transfer of records; communication with families; and responses
  260  to family inquiries. The comprehensive emergency management plan
  261  is subject to review and approval by the local emergency
  262  management agency. During its review, the local emergency
  263  management agency shall ensure that the following agencies, at a
  264  minimum, are given the opportunity to review the plan: the
  265  Department of Elderly Affairs, the Department of Health, the
  266  Agency for Health Care Administration, and the Division of
  267  Emergency Management. Also, appropriate volunteer organizations
  268  must be given the opportunity to review the plan. The local
  269  emergency management agency shall complete its review within 60
  270  days and either approve the plan or advise the facility of
  271  necessary revisions.
  272         (c) The number, training, and qualifications of all
  273  personnel having responsibility for the care of residents. The
  274  rules must require adequate staff to provide for the safety of
  275  all residents. Facilities licensed for 17 or more residents are
  276  required to maintain an alert staff for 24 hours per day.
  277         (d) All sanitary conditions within the facility and its
  278  surroundings which will ensure the health and comfort of
  279  residents. The rules must clearly delineate the responsibilities
  280  of the agency’s licensure and survey staff, the county health
  281  departments, and the local authority having jurisdiction over
  282  firesafety and ensure that inspections are not duplicative. The
  283  agency may collect fees for food service inspections conducted
  284  by the county health departments and transfer such fees to the
  285  Department of Health.
  286         (e) License application and license renewal, transfer of
  287  ownership, proper management of resident funds and personal
  288  property, surety bonds, resident contracts, refund policies,
  289  financial ability to operate, and facility and staff records.
  290         (f) Inspections, complaint investigations, moratoriums,
  291  classification of deficiencies, levying and enforcement of
  292  penalties, and use of income from fees and fines.
  293         (g) The enforcement of the resident bill of rights
  294  specified in s. 429.28.
  295         (h) The care and maintenance of residents, which must
  296  include, but is not limited to:
  297         1. The supervision of residents;
  298         2. The provision of personal services;
  299         3. The provision of, or arrangement for, social and leisure
  300  activities;
  301         4. The arrangement for appointments and transportation to
  302  appropriate medical, dental, nursing, or mental health services,
  303  as needed by residents;
  304         5. The management of medication;
  305         6. The nutritional needs of residents;
  306         7. Resident records; and
  307         8. Internal risk management and quality assurance.
  308         (i) Facilities holding a limited nursing, extended
  309  congregate care, or limited mental health license.
  310         (j) The establishment of specific criteria to define
  311  appropriateness of resident admission and continued residency in
  312  a facility holding a standard, limited nursing, extended
  313  congregate care, and limited mental health license.
  314         (k) The use of physical or chemical restraints. The use of
  315  physical restraints is limited to half-bed rails as prescribed
  316  and documented by the resident’s physician with the consent of
  317  the resident or, if applicable, the resident’s representative or
  318  designee or the resident’s surrogate, guardian, or attorney in
  319  fact. The use of chemical restraints is limited to prescribed
  320  dosages of medications authorized by the resident’s physician
  321  and must be consistent with the resident’s diagnosis. Residents
  322  who are receiving medications that can serve as chemical
  323  restraints must be evaluated by their physician at least
  324  annually to assess:
  325         1. The continued need for the medication.
  326         2. The level of the medication in the resident’s blood.
  327         3. The need for adjustments in the prescription.
  328         (l) The establishment of specific policies and procedures
  329  on resident elopement. Facilities shall conduct a minimum of two
  330  resident elopement drills each year. All administrators and
  331  direct care staff shall participate in the drills. Facilities
  332  shall document the drills.
  333         Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2016.

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