Bill Text: FL S1366 | 2011 | Regular Session | Enrolled
Bill Title: Child Welfare/Mental Health/Substance Abuse
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2011-05-04 - Ordered enrolled -SJ 851 [S1366 Detail]
Download: Florida-2011-S1366-Enrolled.html
ENROLLED 2011 Legislature CS for CS for SB 1366, 1st Engrossed 20111366er 1 2 An act relating to administrative monitoring of 3 providers of child welfare services, mental health 4 services, and substance abuse services; amending s. 5 402.7306, F.S.; defining the term “mental health and 6 substance abuse service provider” as it relates to the 7 monitoring of providers of child welfare services, 8 mental health services, and substance abuse services; 9 requiring the Department of Children and Family 10 Services, the Department of Health, the Agency for 11 Persons with Disabilities, the Agency for Health Care 12 Administration, community-based care lead agencies, 13 managing entities, and agencies that have contracted 14 with monitoring agents to adopt certain revised 15 policies for the administrative monitoring of child 16 welfare service providers, mental health service 17 providers, and substance abuse service providers; 18 conforming provisions to changes made by the act; 19 limiting the frequency of required administrative, 20 licensure, and programmatic monitoring for mental 21 health service providers and substance abuse service 22 providers that are accredited by specified entities; 23 providing certain exception to the limitations on 24 monitoring; requiring that the corporate, fiscal, and 25 administrative records of mental health service 26 providers and substance abuse service providers be 27 included in a consolidated data warehouse and archive; 28 providing an effective date. 29 30 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 31 32 Section 1. Section 402.7306, Florida Statutes, is amended 33 to read: 34 402.7306 Administrative monitoring offorchild welfare 35 providers, and administrative, licensure, and programmatic 36 monitoring of mental health and substance abuse service 37 providers.—The Department of Children and Family Services, the 38 Department of Health, the Agency for Persons with Disabilities, 39 the Agency for Health Care Administration,andcommunity-based 40 care lead agencies, managing entities as defined in s. 394.9082, 41 and agencies who have contracted with monitoring agents shall 42 identify and implement changes that improve the efficiency of 43 administrative monitoring of child welfare services, and the 44 administrative, licensure, and programmatic monitoring of mental 45 health and substance abuse service providers. For the purpose of 46 this section, the term “mental health and substance abuse 47 service provider” means a provider who provides services to this 48 state’s priority population as defined in s. 394.674. To assist 49 with that goal, each such agency shall adopt the following 50 policies: 51 (1) Limit administrative monitoring to once every 3 years 52 if the child welfare provider is accredited by the Joint 53 Commissionon Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, the 54 Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities, or the 55 Council on Accreditationof Children and Family Services. If the 56 accrediting body does not require documentation that the state 57 agency requires, that documentation shall be requested by the 58 state agency and may be posted by the service provider on the 59 data warehouse for the agency’s review. Notwithstanding the 60 survey or inspection of an accrediting organization specified in 61 this subsection, an agency specified in and subject to this 62 section may continue to monitor the service provider as 63 necessary with respect to: 64 (a) Ensuring that services for which the agency is paying 65 are being provided. 66 (b) Investigating complaints or suspected problems and 67 monitoring the service provider’s compliance with any resulting 68 negotiated terms and conditions, including provisions relating 69 to consent decrees that are unique to a specific service and are 70 not statements of general applicability. 71 (c) Ensuring compliance with federal and state laws, 72 federal regulations, or state rules if such monitoring does not 73 duplicate the accrediting organization’s review pursuant to 74 accreditation standards. 75 76 Medicaid certification and precertification reviews are exempt 77 from this subsection to ensure Medicaid compliance. 78 (2) Limit administrative, licensure, and programmatic 79 monitoring to once every 3 years if the mental health or 80 substance abuse service provider is accredited by the Joint 81 Commission, the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation 82 Facilities, or the Council on Accreditation. If the services 83 being monitored are not the services for which the provider is 84 accredited, the limitations of this subsection do not apply. If 85 the accrediting body does not require documentation that the 86 state agency requires, that documentation, except documentation 87 relating to licensure applications and fees, must be requested 88 by the state agency and may be posted by the service provider on 89 the data warehouse for the agency’s review. Notwithstanding the 90 survey or inspection of an accrediting organization specified in 91 this subsection, an agency specified in and subject to this 92 section may continue to monitor the service provider as 93 necessary with respect to: 94 (a) Ensuring that services for which the agency is paying 95 are being provided. 96 (b) Investigating complaints, identifying problems that 97 would affect the safety or viability of the service provider, 98 and monitoring the service provider’s compliance with any 99 resulting negotiated terms and conditions, including provisions 100 relating to consent decrees that are unique to a specific 101 service and are not statements of general applicability. 102 (c) Ensuring compliance with federal and state laws, 103 federal regulations, or state rules if such monitoring does not 104 duplicate the accrediting organization’s review pursuant to 105 accreditation standards. 106 107 Federal certification and precertification reviews are exempt 108 from this subsection to ensure Medicaid compliance. 109 (3)(2)Allow private sector development and implementation 110 of an Internet-based, secure, and consolidated data warehouse 111 and archive for maintaining corporate, fiscal, and 112 administrative records of child welfare, mental health, or 113 substance abuse service providers. A service provider shall 114 ensure that the data is up to date and accessible to the 115 applicable agency under this section and the appropriate agency 116 subcontractor. A service provider shall submit any revised, 117 updated information to the data warehouse within 10 business 118 days after receiving the request. An agency that conducts 119 administrative monitoring of child welfare, mental health, or 120 substance abuse service providers under this section must use 121 the data warehouse for document requests. If the information 122 provided to the agency by the provider’s data warehouse is not 123 current or is unavailable from the data warehouse and archive, 124 the agency may contact the service provider directly. A service 125 provider that fails to comply with an agency’s requested 126 documents may be subject to a site visit to ensure compliance. 127 Access to the data warehouse must be provided without charge to 128 an applicable agency under this section. At a minimum, the 129 records must include the service provider’s: 130 (a) Articles of incorporation. 131 (b) Bylaws. 132 (c) Governing board and committee minutes. 133 (d) Financial audits. 134 (e) Expenditure reports. 135 (f) Compliance audits. 136 (g) Organizational charts. 137 (h) Governing board membership information. 138 (i) Human resource policies and procedures. 139 (j) Staff credentials. 140 (k) Monitoring procedures, including tools and schedules. 141 (l) Procurement and contracting policies and procedures. 142 (m) Monitoring reports. 143 Section 2. This act shall take effect upon becoming a law.