Bill Text: MN SF2397 | 2013-2014 | 88th Legislature | Engrossed
Bill Title: Human services children and family services, health care, chemical and mental services, continuing care and operations obsolete provisions elimination; elderly waiver, alternative care program and mental health services for children provisions modifications
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2014-05-08 - HF substituted on General Orders HF2950 [SF2397 Detail]
Download: Minnesota-2013-SF2397-Engrossed.html
1.2relating to human services; removing obsolete provisions from statute and rule
1.3relating to children and family services, health care, chemical and mental health
1.4services, continuing care, and operations; modifying provisions governing
1.5the elderly waiver, the alternative care program, and mental health services
1.6for children; repealing provisions related to the Psychopathic Department
1.7of University of Minnesota Hospitals;amending Minnesota Statutes 2012,
1.8sections 13.46, subdivision 4; 245.4871, subdivisions 3, 6, 27; 245.4873,
1.9subdivision 2; 245.4874, subdivision 1; 245.4881, subdivisions 3, 4; 245.4882,
1.10subdivision 1; 245A.40, subdivision 8; 245C.04, subdivision 1; 245C.05,
1.11subdivision 5; 246.325; 254B.05, subdivision 2; 256.01, subdivision 14b;
1.12256.963, subdivision 2; 256.969, subdivision 9; 256B.0913, subdivisions 5a,
1.1314; 256B.0915, subdivisions 3c, 3d, 3f, 3g; 256B.0943, subdivisions 8, 10,
1.1412; 256B.69, subdivisions 2, 4b, 5, 5a, 5b, 6b, 6d, 17, 26, 29, 30; 256B.692,
1.15subdivisions 2, 5; 256D.02, subdivision 11; 256D.04; 256D.045; 256D.07;
1.16256I.04, subdivision 3; 256I.05, subdivision 1c; 256J.425, subdivision 4;
1.17518A.65; 595.06; 626.556, subdivision 3c; Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement,
1.18sections 245A.03, subdivision 7; 245A.40, subdivision 5; 245A.50, subdivision
1.193; 256B.0943, subdivisions 1, 2, 7; 256B.69, subdivisions 5c, 28; 256B.76,
1.20subdivision 4; 256D.02, subdivision 12a; 517.04; Laws 2013, chapter 108,
1.21article 3, section 48; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 119A.04,
1.22subdivision 1; 119B.035; 119B.09, subdivision 2; 119B.23; 119B.231; 119B.232;
1.23158.13; 158.14; 158.15; 158.16; 158.17; 158.18; 158.19; 245.0311; 245.0312;
1.24245.072; 245.4861; 245.487, subdivisions 4, 5; 245.4871, subdivisions 7, 11,
1.2518, 25; 245.4872; 245.4873, subdivisions 3, 6; 245.4875, subdivisions 3,
1.266, 7; 245.4883, subdivision 1; 245.490; 245.492, subdivisions 6, 8, 13, 19;
1.27245.4932, subdivisions 2, 3, 4; 245.4933; 245.494; 245.63; 245.652; 245.69,
1.28subdivision 1; 245.714; 245.715; 245.717; 245.718; 245.721; 245.77; 245.821;
1.29245.827; 245.981; 245A.02, subdivision 7b; 245A.09, subdivision 12; 245A.11,
1.30subdivision 5; 245A.655; 246.012; 246.0135; 246.016; 246.023, subdivision 1;
1.31246.16; 246.28; 246.71; 246.711; 246.712; 246.713; 246.714; 246.715; 246.716;
1.32246.717; 246.718; 246.719; 246.72; 246.721; 246.722; 251.045; 252.05; 252.07;
1.33252.09; 254.01; 254.03; 254.04; 254.06; 254.07; 254.09; 254.10; 254.11;
1.34254A.05, subdivision 1; 254A.07, subdivisions 1, 2; 254A.16, subdivision 1;
1.35254B.01, subdivision 1; 254B.04, subdivision 3; 256.01, subdivisions 3, 14,
1.3614a; 256.959; 256.964; 256.9691; 256.971; 256.975, subdivision 3; 256.9753,
1.37subdivision 4; 256.9792; 256B.04, subdivision 16; 256B.043; 256B.0656;
1.38256B.0657; 256B.075, subdivision 4; 256B.0757, subdivision 7; 256B.0913,
1.39subdivision 9; 256B.0916, subdivisions 6, 6a; 256B.0928; 256B.19, subdivision
2.13; 256B.431, subdivisions 28, 31, 33, 34, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 43; 256B.434,
2.2subdivision 19; 256B.440; 256B.441, subdivisions 46, 46a; 256B.491; 256B.501,
2.3subdivisions 3a, 3b, 3h, 3j, 3k, 3l, 5e; 256B.5016; 256B.503; 256B.53; 256B.69,
2.4subdivisions 5e, 6c, 24a; 256B.692, subdivision 10; 256D.02, subdivision
2.519; 256D.05, subdivision 4; 256D.46; 256I.05, subdivisions 1b, 5; 256I.07;
2.6256J.24, subdivision 10; 256K.35; 259.85, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5; 518A.53,
2.7subdivision 7; 518A.74; 626.557, subdivision 16; 626.5593; Minnesota Statutes
2.82013 Supplement, sections 246.0251; 254.05; 254B.13, subdivision 3; 256B.31;
2.9256B.501, subdivision 5b; 256C.05; 256C.29; 259.85, subdivision 1; Minnesota
2.10Rules, parts 9549.0020, subparts 2, 12, 13, 20, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 30, 31, 32, 33,
2.1134, 35, 36, 38, 41, 42, 43, 44, 46, 47; 9549.0030; 9549.0035, subparts 4, 5, 6;
2.129549.0036; 9549.0040; 9549.0041, subparts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,
2.1314, 15; 9549.0050; 9549.0051, subparts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14;
2.149549.0053; 9549.0054; 9549.0055, subpart 4; 9549.0056; 9549.0060, subparts 1,
2.152, 3, 8, 9, 12, 13; 9549.0061; 9549.0070, subparts 1, 4.
2.16BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
2.19 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256D.02, subdivision 11, is amended to
2.20read:
2.21 Subd. 11. State aid. "State aid" means state aid to county agencies for general
2.22assistanceand general assistance medical care expenditures as provided for in section
2.23256D.03
, subdivisions subdivision 2 and 3.
2.24 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256D.02, subdivision 12a,
2.25is amended to read:
2.26 Subd. 12a. Resident. (a) For purposes of eligibility for general assistanceand
2.27general assistance medical care, a person must be a resident of this state.
2.28(b) A "resident" is a person living in the state for at least 30 days with the intention of
2.29making the person's home here and not for any temporary purpose. Time spent in a shelter
2.30for battered women shall count toward satisfying the 30-day residency requirement. All
2.31applicants for these programs are required to demonstrate the requisite intent and can do
2.32so in any of the following ways:
2.33(1) by showing that the applicant maintains a residence at a verified address, other
2.34than a place of public accommodation. An applicant may verify a residence address by
2.35presenting a valid state driver's license, a state identification card, a voter registration card,
2.36a rent receipt, a statement by the landlord, apartment manager, or homeowner verifying
2.37that the individual is residing at the address, or other form of verification approved by
2.38the commissioner; or
3.1(2) by verifying residence according to Minnesota Rules, part 9500.1219, subpart
3.23, item C.
3.3(c) For general assistance, a county shall waive the 30-day residency requirement
3.4where unusual hardship would result from denial of general assistance. For purposes of
3.5this subdivision, "unusual hardship" means the applicant is without shelter or is without
3.6available resources for food.
3.7The county agency must report to the commissioner within 30 days on any waiver
3.8granted under this section. The county shall not deny an application solely because the
3.9applicant does not meet at least one of the criteria in this subdivision, but shall continue to
3.10process the application and leave the application pending until the residency requirement
3.11is met or until eligibility or ineligibility is established.
3.12(d) For purposes of paragraph (c), the following definitions apply (1) "metropolitan
3.13statistical area" is as defined by the United States Census Bureau; (2) "shelter" includes
3.14any shelter that is located within the metropolitan statistical area containing the county
3.15and for which the applicant is eligible, provided the applicant does not have to travel more
3.16than 20 miles to reach the shelter and has access to transportation to the shelter. Clause (2)
3.17does not apply to counties in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan statistical area.
3.18(e) Migrant workers as defined in section256J.08 and, until March 31, 1998, their
3.19immediate families are exempt from the residency requirements of this section, provided
3.20the migrant worker provides verification that the migrant family worked in this state
3.21within the last 12 months and earned at least $1,000 in gross wages during the time the
3.22migrant worker worked in this state.
3.23(f) For purposes of eligibility for emergency general assistance, the 30-day residency
3.24requirement under this section shall not be waived.
3.25(g) If any provision of this subdivision is enjoined from implementation or found
3.26unconstitutional by any court of competent jurisdiction, the remaining provisions shall
3.27remain valid and shall be given full effect.
3.28 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256D.04, is amended to read:
3.29256D.04 DUTIES OF THE COMMISSIONER.
3.30In addition to any other duties imposed by law, the commissioner shall:
3.31(1) supervise according to section256.01 the administration of general assistance
3.32and general assistance medical care by county agencies as provided in sections
256D.01 to
3.33256D.21
;
3.34(2) promulgate uniform rules consistent with law for carrying out and enforcing the
3.35provisions of sections256D.01 to
256D.21 , including section 256D.05, subdivision 3,
4.1and section
256.01, subdivision 2 , paragraph (16), to the end that general assistance may
4.2be administered as uniformly as possible throughout the state; rules shall be furnished
4.3immediately to all county agencies and other interested persons; in promulgating rules, the
4.4provisions of sections14.001 to
14.69 , shall apply;
4.5(3) allocate money appropriated for general assistanceand general assistance medical
4.6care to county agencies as provided in section
256D.03 , subdivisions subdivision 2 and 3;
4.7(4) accept and supervise the disbursement of any funds that may be provided by the
4.8federal government or from other sources for use in this state for general assistanceand
4.9general assistance medical care;
4.10(5) cooperate with other agencies including any agency of the United States or of
4.11another state in all matters concerning the powers and duties of the commissioner under
4.12sections256D.01 to
256D.21 ;
4.13(6) cooperate to the fullest extent with other public agencies empowered by law to
4.14provide vocational training, rehabilitation, or similar services;
4.15(7) gather and study current information and report at least annually to the governor
4.16on the nature and need for general assistanceand general assistance medical care, the
4.17amounts expended under the supervision of each county agency, and the activities of each
4.18county agency and publish such reports for the information of the public;
4.19(8) specify requirements for general assistanceand general assistance medical care
4.20 reports, including fiscal reports, according to section256.01, subdivision 2 , paragraph
4.21(17); and
4.22(9) ensure that every notice of eligibility for general assistance includes a notice that
4.23women who are pregnant may be eligible for medical assistance benefits.
4.24 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256D.045, is amended to read:
4.25256D.045 SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER REQUIRED.
4.26To be eligible for general assistance under sections256D.01 to
256D.21 , an individual
4.27must provide the individual's Social Security number to the county agency or submit proof
4.28that an application has been made.An individual who refuses to provide a Social Security
4.29number because of a well-established religious objection as described in Code of Federal
4.30Regulations, title 42, section 435.910, may be eligible for general assistance medical care
4.31under section
256D.03. The provisions of this section do not apply to the determination of
4.32eligibility for emergency general assistance under section256D.06, subdivision 2 . This
4.33provision applies to eligible children under the age of 18 effective July 1, 1997.
5.1 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256D.07, is amended to read:
5.2256D.07 TIME OF PAYMENT OF ASSISTANCE.
5.3An applicant for general assistanceor general assistance medical care authorized
5.4by section
256D.03, subdivision 3, shall be deemed eligible if the application and the
5.5verification of the statement on that application demonstrate that the applicant is within
5.6the eligibility criteria established by sections256D.01 to
256D.21 and any applicable rules
5.7of the commissioner. Any person requesting general assistanceor general assistance
5.8medical care shall be permitted by the county agency to make an application for assistance
5.9as soon as administratively possible and in no event later than the fourth day following
5.10the date on which assistance is first requested, and no county agency shall require that a
5.11person requesting assistance appear at the offices of the county agency more than once
5.12prior to the date on which the person is permitted to make the application. The application
5.13shall be in writing in the manner and upon the form prescribed by the commissioner
5.14and attested to by the oath of the applicant or in lieu thereof shall contain the following
5.15declaration which shall be signed by the applicant: "I declare that this application has
5.16been examined by me and to the best of my knowledge and belief is a true and correct
5.17statement of every material point." On the date that general assistance is first requested,
5.18the county agency shall inquire and determine whether the person requesting assistance
5.19is in immediate need of food, shelter, clothing, assistance for necessary transportation,
5.20or other emergency assistance pursuant to section256D.06, subdivision 2 . A person in
5.21need of emergency assistance shall be granted emergency assistance immediately, and
5.22necessary emergency assistance shall continue for up to 30 days following the date of
5.23application. A determination of an applicant's eligibility for general assistance shall be
5.24made by the county agency as soon as the required verifications are received by the county
5.25agency and in no event later than 30 days following the date that the application is made.
5.26Any verifications required of the applicant shall be reasonable, and the commissioner
5.27shall by rule establish reasonable verifications. General assistance shall be granted to an
5.28eligible applicant without the necessity of first securing action by the board of the county
5.29agency. The first month's grant must be computed to cover the time period starting with
5.30the date a signed application form is received by the county agency or from the date that
5.31the applicant meets all eligibility factors, whichever occurs later.
5.32If upon verification and due investigation it appears that the applicant provided
5.33false information and the false information materially affected the applicant's eligibility
5.34for general assistanceor general assistance medical care provided pursuant to section
5.35256D.03, subdivision 3, or the amount of the applicant's general assistance grant, the
5.36county agency may refer the matter to the county attorney. The county attorney may
6.1commence a criminal prosecution or a civil action for the recovery of any general
6.2assistance wrongfully received, or both.
6.3 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256I.04, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
6.4 Subd. 3. Moratorium on development of group residential housing beds. (a)
6.5County agencies shall not enter into agreements for new group residential housing beds
6.6with total rates in excess of the MSA equivalent rate except:
6.7(1) for group residential housing establishments licensed under Minnesota Rules,
6.8parts 9525.0215 to 9525.0355, provided the facility is needed to meet the census reduction
6.9targets for persons with developmental disabilities at regional treatment centers;
6.10(2) to ensure compliance with the federal Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
6.11alternative disposition plan requirements for inappropriately placed persons with
6.12developmental disabilities or mental illness;
6.13(3) (2) up to 80 beds in a single, specialized facility located in Hennepin County
6.14that will provide housing for chronic inebriates who are repetitive users of detoxification
6.15centers and are refused placement in emergency shelters because of their state of
6.16intoxication, and planning for the specialized facility must have been initiated before July
6.171, 1991, in anticipation of receiving a grant from the Housing Finance Agency under
6.18section462A.05, subdivision 20a , paragraph (b);
6.19(4) (3) notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision 2a, for up to 190 supportive
6.20housing units in Anoka, Dakota, Hennepin, or Ramsey County for homeless adults with a
6.21mental illness, a history of substance abuse, or human immunodeficiency virus or acquired
6.22immunodeficiency syndrome. For purposes of this section, "homeless adult" means a
6.23person who is living on the street or in a shelter or discharged from a regional treatment
6.24center, community hospital, or residential treatment program and has no appropriate
6.25housing available and lacks the resources and support necessary to access appropriate
6.26housing. At least 70 percent of the supportive housing units must serve homeless adults
6.27with mental illness, substance abuse problems, or human immunodeficiency virus or
6.28acquired immunodeficiency syndrome who are about to be or, within the previous six
6.29months, has been discharged from a regional treatment center, or a state-contracted
6.30psychiatric bed in a community hospital, or a residential mental health or chemical
6.31dependency treatment program. If a person meets the requirements of subdivision 1,
6.32paragraph (a), and receives a federal or state housing subsidy, the group residential housing
6.33rate for that person is limited to the supplementary rate under section256I.05, subdivision
6.341a , and is determined by subtracting the amount of the person's countable income that
6.35exceeds the MSA equivalent rate from the group residential housing supplementary rate.
7.1A resident in a demonstration project site who no longer participates in the demonstration
7.2program shall retain eligibility for a group residential housing payment in an amount
7.3determined under section256I.06, subdivision 8 , using the MSA equivalent rate. Service
7.4funding under section256I.05, subdivision 1a , will end June 30, 1997, if federal matching
7.5funds are available and the services can be provided through a managed care entity. If
7.6federal matching funds are not available, then service funding will continue under section
7.7256I.05, subdivision 1a
;
7.8(5) for group residential housing beds in settings meeting the requirements of
7.9subdivision 2a, clauses (1) and (3), which are used exclusively for recipients receiving
7.10home and community-based waiver services under sections
256B.0915,
256B.092,
7.11subdivision 5
,
256B.093, and
256B.49, and who resided in a nursing facility for the six
7.12months immediately prior to the month of entry into the group residential housing setting.
7.13The group residential housing rate for these beds must be set so that the monthly group
7.14residential housing payment for an individual occupying the bed when combined with the
7.15nonfederal share of services delivered under the waiver for that person does not exceed the
7.16nonfederal share of the monthly medical assistance payment made for the person to the
7.17nursing facility in which the person resided prior to entry into the group residential housing
7.18establishment. The rate may not exceed the MSA equivalent rate plus $426.37 for any case;
7.19(6) (4) for an additional two beds, resulting in a total of 32 beds, for a facility located
7.20in Hennepin County providing services for recovering and chemically dependent men that
7.21has had a group residential housing contract with the county and has been licensed as a
7.22board and lodge facility with special services since 1980;
7.23(7) (5) for a group residential housing provider located in the city of St. Cloud,
7.24or a county contiguous to the city of St. Cloud, that operates a 40-bed facility,
7.25that received financing through the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency Ending
7.26Long-Term Homelessness Initiative and serves chemically dependent clientele, providing
7.2724-hour-a-day supervision;
7.28(8) (6) for a new 65-bed facility in Crow Wing County that will serve chemically
7.29dependent persons, operated by a group residential housing provider that currently
7.30operates a 304-bed facility in Minneapolis, and a 44-bed facility in Duluth;
7.31(9) (7) for a group residential housing provider that operates two ten-bed facilities,
7.32one located in Hennepin County and one located in Ramsey County, that provide
7.33community support and 24-hour-a-day supervision to serve the mental health needs of
7.34individuals who have chronically lived unsheltered; and
8.1(10) (8) for a group residential facility in Hennepin County with a capacity of up to
8.248 beds that has been licensed since 1978 as a board and lodging facility and that until
8.3August 1, 2007, operated as a licensed chemical dependency treatment program.
8.4 (b) A county agency may enter into a group residential housing agreement for beds
8.5with rates in excess of the MSA equivalent rate in addition to those currently covered
8.6under a group residential housing agreement if the additional beds are only a replacement
8.7of beds with rates in excess of the MSA equivalent rate which have been made available
8.8due to closure of a setting, a change of licensure or certification which removes the beds
8.9from group residential housing payment, or as a result of the downsizing of a group
8.10residential housing setting. The transfer of available beds from one county to another can
8.11only occur by the agreement of both counties.
8.12 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256I.05, subdivision 1c, is amended to read:
8.13 Subd. 1c. Rate increases. A county agency may not increase the rates negotiated
8.14for group residential housing above those in effect on June 30, 1993, except as provided in
8.15paragraphs (a) to(g) (f).
8.16(a) A county may increase the rates for group residential housing settings to the MSA
8.17equivalent rate for those settings whose current rate is below the MSA equivalent rate.
8.18(b) A county agency may increase the rates for residents in adult foster care whose
8.19difficulty of care has increased. The total group residential housing rate for these residents
8.20must not exceed the maximum rate specified in subdivisions 1 and 1a. County agencies
8.21must not include nor increase group residential housing difficulty of care rates for adults in
8.22foster care whose difficulty of care is eligible for funding by home and community-based
8.23waiver programs under title XIX of the Social Security Act.
8.24(c) The room and board rates will be increased each year when the MSA equivalent
8.25rate is adjusted for SSI cost-of-living increases by the amount of the annual SSI increase,
8.26less the amount of the increase in the medical assistance personal needs allowance under
8.27section256B.35 .
8.28(d) When a group residential housing rate is used to pay for an individual's room
8.29and board, or other costs necessary to provide room and board, the rate payable to
8.30the residence must continue for up to 18 calendar days per incident that the person is
8.31temporarily absent from the residence, not to exceed 60 days in a calendar year, if the
8.32absence or absences have received the prior approval of the county agency's social service
8.33staff. Prior approval is not required for emergency absences due to crisis, illness, or injury.
8.34(e) For facilities meeting substantial change criteria within the prior year. Substantial
8.35change criteria exists if the group residential housing establishment experiences a 25
9.1percent increase or decrease in the total number of its beds, if the net cost of capital
9.2additions or improvements is in excess of 15 percent of the current market value of the
9.3residence, or if the residence physically moves, or changes its licensure, and incurs a
9.4resulting increase in operation and property costs.
9.5(f) Until June 30, 1994, a county agency may increase by up to five percent the total
9.6rate paid for recipients of assistance under sections256D.01 to
256D.21 or
256D.33 to
9.7256D.54
who reside in residences that are licensed by the commissioner of health as
9.8a boarding care home, but are not certified for the purposes of the medical assistance
9.9program. However, an increase under this clause must not exceed an amount equivalent to
9.1065 percent of the 1991 medical assistance reimbursement rate for nursing home resident
9.11class A, in the geographic grouping in which the facility is located, as established under
9.12Minnesota Rules, parts 9549.0050 to 9549.0058.
9.13(g) For the rate year beginning July 1, 1996, a county agency may increase the total
9.14rate paid for recipients of assistance under sections
256D.01 to
256D.21 or
256D.33 to
9.15256D.54 who reside in a residence that meets the following criteria:
9.16(1) it is licensed by the commissioner of health as a boarding care home;
9.17(2) it is not certified for the purposes of the medical assistance program;
9.18(3) at least 50 percent of its residents have a primary diagnosis of mental illness;
9.19(4) it has at least 17 beds; and
9.20(5) it provides medication administration to residents.
9.21The rate following an increase under this paragraph must not exceed an amount
9.22equivalent to the average 1995 medical assistance payment for nursing home resident
9.23class A under the age of 65, in the geographic grouping in which the facility is located, as
9.24established under Minnesota Rules, parts 9549.0010 to 9549.0080.
9.25 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256J.425, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
9.26 Subd. 4. Employed participants. (a) An assistance unit subject to the time limit
9.27under section256J.42, subdivision 1 , is eligible to receive assistance under a hardship
9.28extension if the participant who reached the time limit belongs to:
9.29(1) a one-parent assistance unit in which the participant is participating in work
9.30activities for at least 30 hours per week, of which an average of at least 25 hours per week
9.31every month are spent participating in employment;
9.32(2) a two-parent assistance unit in which the participants are participating in work
9.33activities for at least 55 hours per week, of which an average of at least 45 hours per week
9.34every month are spent participating in employment; or
10.1(3) an assistance unit in which a participant is participating in employment for fewer
10.2hours than those specified in clause (1), and the participant submits verification from a
10.3qualified professional, in a form acceptable to the commissioner, stating that the number
10.4of hours the participant may work is limited due to illness or disability, as long as the
10.5participant is participating in employment for at least the number of hours specified by the
10.6qualified professional. The participant must be following the treatment recommendations
10.7of the qualified professional providing the verification. The commissioner shall develop a
10.8form to be completed and signed by the qualified professional, documenting the diagnosis
10.9and any additional information necessary to document the functional limitations of the
10.10participant that limit work hours. If the participant is part of a two-parent assistance unit,
10.11the other parent must be treated as a one-parent assistance unit for purposes of meeting the
10.12work requirements under this subdivision.
10.13(b) For purposes of this section, employment means:
10.14(1) unsubsidized employment under section256J.49, subdivision 13 , clause (1);
10.15(2) subsidized employment under section256J.49, subdivision 13 , clause (2);
10.16(3) on-the-job training under section256J.49, subdivision 13 , clause (2);
10.17(4) an apprenticeship under section256J.49, subdivision 13 , clause (1);
10.18(5) supported work under section256J.49, subdivision 13 , clause (2);
10.19(6) a combination of clauses (1) to (5); or
10.20(7) child care under section256J.49, subdivision 13 , clause (7), if it is in combination
10.21with paid employment.
10.22(c) If a participant is complying with a child protection plan under chapter 260C,
10.23the number of hours required under the child protection plan count toward the number
10.24of hours required under this subdivision.
10.25(d) The county shall provide the opportunity for subsidized employment to
10.26participants needing that type of employment within available appropriations.
10.27(e) To be eligible for a hardship extension for employed participants under this
10.28subdivision, a participant must be in compliance for at least ten out of the 12 months
10.29the participant received MFIP immediately preceding the participant's 61st month on
10.30assistance. If ten or fewer months of eligibility for TANF assistance remain at the time the
10.31participant from another state applies for assistance, the participant must be in compliance
10.32every month.
10.33(f) The employment plan developed under section256J.521, subdivision 2 , for
10.34participants under this subdivision must contain at least the minimum number of hours
10.35specified in paragraph (a) for the purpose of meeting the requirements for an extension
10.36under this subdivision. The job counselor and the participant must sign the employment
11.1plan to indicate agreement between the job counselor and the participant on the contents
11.2of the plan.
11.3(g) Participants who fail to meet the requirements in paragraph (a), without good
11.4cause under section256J.57 , shall be sanctioned or permanently disqualified under
11.5subdivision 6. Good cause may only be granted for that portion of the month for which
11.6the good cause reason applies. Participants must meet all remaining requirements in the
11.7approved employment plan or be subject to sanction or permanent disqualification.
11.8(h) If the noncompliance with an employment plan is due to the involuntary loss of
11.9employment, the participant is exempt from the hourly employment requirement under
11.10this subdivision for one month. Participants must meet all remaining requirements in the
11.11approved employment plan or be subject to sanction or permanent disqualification.This
11.12exemption is available to each participant two times in a 12-month period.
11.13 Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 518A.65, is amended to read:
11.14518A.65 DRIVER'S LICENSE SUSPENSION.
11.15(a) Upon motion of an obligee, which has been properly served on the obligor and
11.16upon which there has been an opportunity for hearing, if a court finds that the obligor has
11.17been or may be issued a driver's license by the commissioner of public safety and the
11.18obligor is in arrears in court-ordered child support or maintenance payments, or both,
11.19in an amount equal to or greater than three times the obligor's total monthly support
11.20and maintenance payments and is not in compliance with a written payment agreement
11.21pursuant to section518A.69 that is approved by the court, a child support magistrate, or
11.22the public authority, the court shall order the commissioner of public safety to suspend the
11.23obligor's driver's license. The court's order must be stayed for 90 days in order to allow the
11.24obligor to execute a written payment agreement pursuant to section518A.69 . The payment
11.25agreement must be approved by either the court or the public authority responsible for
11.26child support enforcement. If the obligor has not executed or is not in compliance with
11.27a written payment agreement pursuant to section518A.69 after the 90 days expires, the
11.28court's order becomes effective and the commissioner of public safety shall suspend
11.29the obligor's driver's license. The remedy under this section is in addition to any other
11.30enforcement remedy available to the court. An obligee may not bring a motion under this
11.31paragraph within 12 months of a denial of a previous motion under this paragraph.
11.32(b) If a public authority responsible for child support enforcement determines that
11.33the obligor has been or may be issued a driver's license by the commissioner of public
11.34safety and the obligor is in arrears in court-ordered child support or maintenance payments
11.35or both in an amount equal to or greater than three times the obligor's total monthly support
12.1and maintenance payments and not in compliance with a written payment agreement
12.2pursuant to section518A.69 that is approved by the court, a child support magistrate, or
12.3the public authority, the public authority shall direct the commissioner of public safety to
12.4suspend the obligor's driver's license. The remedy under this section is in addition to any
12.5other enforcement remedy available to the public authority.
12.6(c) At least 90 days prior to notifying the commissioner of public safety according
12.7to paragraph (b), the public authority must mail a written notice to the obligor at the
12.8obligor's last known address, that it intends to seek suspension of the obligor's driver's
12.9license and that the obligor must request a hearing within 30 days in order to contest the
12.10suspension. If the obligor makes a written request for a hearing within 30 days of the date
12.11of the notice, a court hearing must be held. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the
12.12obligor must be served with 14 days' notice in writing specifying the time and place of the
12.13hearing and the allegations against the obligor. The notice must include information that
12.14apprises the obligor of the requirement to develop a written payment agreement that is
12.15approved by a court, a child support magistrate, or the public authority responsible for
12.16child support enforcement regarding child support, maintenance, and any arrearages in
12.17order to avoid license suspension. The notice may be served personally or by mail. If
12.18the public authority does not receive a request for a hearing within 30 days of the date
12.19of the notice, and the obligor does not execute a written payment agreement pursuant to
12.20section518A.69 that is approved by the public authority within 90 days of the date of the
12.21notice, the public authority shall direct the commissioner of public safety to suspend the
12.22obligor's driver's license under paragraph (b).
12.23(d) At a hearing requested by the obligor under paragraph (c), and on finding that
12.24the obligor is in arrears in court-ordered child support or maintenance payments or both
12.25in an amount equal to or greater than three times the obligor's total monthly support
12.26and maintenance payments, the district court or child support magistrate shall order the
12.27commissioner of public safety to suspend the obligor's driver's license or operating
12.28privileges unless the court or child support magistrate determines that the obligor has
12.29executed and is in compliance with a written payment agreement pursuant to section
12.30518A.69
that is approved by the court, a child support magistrate, or the public authority.
12.31(e) An obligor whose driver's license or operating privileges are suspended may:
12.32(1) provide proof to the public authority responsible for child support enforcement
12.33that the obligor is in compliance with all written payment agreements pursuant to section
12.34518A.69
;
12.35(2) bring a motion for reinstatement of the driver's license. At the hearing, if the
12.36court or child support magistrate orders reinstatement of the driver's license, the court or
13.1child support magistrate must establish a written payment agreement pursuant to section
13.2518A.69
; or
13.3(3) seek a limited license under section171.30 . A limited license issued to an obligor
13.4under section171.30 expires 90 days after the date it is issued.
13.5Within 15 days of the receipt of that proof or a court order, the public authority shall
13.6inform the commissioner of public safety that the obligor's driver's license or operating
13.7privileges should no longer be suspended.
13.8(f) On January 15, 1997, and every two years after that, the commissioner of human
13.9services shall submit a report to the legislature that identifies the following information
13.10relevant to the implementation of this section:
13.11(1) the number of child support obligors notified of an intent to suspend a driver's
13.12license;
13.13(2) the amount collected in payments from the child support obligors notified of an
13.14intent to suspend a driver's license;
13.15(3) the number of cases paid in full and payment agreements executed in response
13.16to notification of an intent to suspend a driver's license;
13.17(4) the number of cases in which there has been notification and no payments or
13.18payment agreements;
13.19(5) the number of driver's licenses suspended;
13.20(6) the cost of implementation and operation of the requirements of this section; and
13.21(7) the number of limited licenses issued and number of cases in which payment
13.22agreements are executed and cases are paid in full following issuance of a limited license.
13.23(g) (f) In addition to the criteria established under this section for the suspension of
13.24an obligor's driver's license, a court, a child support magistrate, or the public authority
13.25may direct the commissioner of public safety to suspend the license of a party who has
13.26failed, after receiving notice, to comply with a subpoena relating to a paternity or child
13.27support proceeding. Notice to an obligor of intent to suspend must be served by first class
13.28mail at the obligor's last known address. The notice must inform the obligor of the right to
13.29request a hearing. If the obligor makes a written request within ten days of the date of
13.30the hearing, a hearing must be held. At the hearing, the only issues to be considered are
13.31mistake of fact and whether the obligor received the subpoena.
13.32(h) (g) The license of an obligor who fails to remain in compliance with an
13.33approved written payment agreement may be suspended. Prior to suspending a license for
13.34noncompliance with an approved written payment agreement, the public authority must
13.35mail to the obligor's last known address a written notice that (1) the public authority
13.36intends to seek suspension of the obligor's driver's license under this paragraph, and (2)
14.1the obligor must request a hearing, within 30 days of the date of the notice, to contest the
14.2suspension. If, within 30 days of the date of the notice, the public authority does not
14.3receive a written request for a hearing and the obligor does not comply with an approved
14.4written payment agreement, the public authority must direct the Department of Public
14.5Safety to suspend the obligor's license under paragraph (b). If the obligor makes a written
14.6request for a hearing within 30 days of the date of the notice, a court hearing must be held.
14.7Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the obligor must be served with 14 days' notice in
14.8writing specifying the time and place of the hearing and the allegations against the obligor.
14.9The notice may be served personally or by mail at the obligor's last known address. If
14.10the obligor appears at the hearing and the court determines that the obligor has failed to
14.11comply with an approved written payment agreement, the court or public authority shall
14.12notify the Department of Public Safety to suspend the obligor's license under paragraph
14.13(b). If the obligor fails to appear at the hearing, the court or public authority must notify
14.14the Department of Public Safety to suspend the obligor's license under paragraph (b).
14.15 Sec. 10. Laws 2013, chapter 108, article 3, section 48, is amended to read:
14.16 Sec. 48. REPEALER.
14.17(a) Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256J.24, subdivision 6, is repealed January
14.181, 2015.
14.19(b) Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 609.093, is repealed effective the day following
14.20final enactment.
14.21 Sec. 11. TRANSITION; PROVISIONS GOVERNING PERFORMANCE BASE
14.22FUNDS.
14.23(a) Laws 2013, chapter 107, article 4, section 19, is repealed effective January 1, 2016.
14.24(b) Laws 2013, chapter 108, article 3, section 31, is effective January 1, 2016.
14.25 Sec. 12. REPEALER.
14.26(a) Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 119A.04, subdivision 1; 119B.035; 119B.09,
14.27subdivision 2; 119B.23; 119B.231; 119B.232; 256.01, subdivisions 3, 14, and 14a;
14.28256.9792; 256D.02, subdivision 19; 256D.05, subdivision 4; 256D.46; 256I.05,
14.29subdivisions 1b and 5; 256I.07; 256K.35; 259.85, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, and 5; 518A.53,
14.30subdivision 7; 518A.74; and 626.5593, are repealed.
14.31(b) Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256J.24, subdivision 10, is repealed effective
14.32October 1, 2014.
14.33(c) Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 259.85, subdivision 1, is repealed.
15.3 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256.963, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
15.4 Subd. 2. Evaluation.(a) The grantee must report to the commissioner on a quarterly
15.5basis the following information:
15.6 (1) the total number of appointments available for scheduling by specialty;
15.7 (2) the average length of time between scheduling and actual appointment;
15.8 (3) the total number of patients referred and whether the patient was insured or
15.9uninsured; and
15.10 (4) the total number of appointments resulting in visits completed and number of
15.11patients continuing services with the referring clinic.
15.12(b) The commissioner, in consultation with the Minnesota Hospital Association,
15.13shall conduct an evaluation of the emergency room diversion pilot project and submit the
15.14results to the legislature by January 15, 2009. The evaluation shall compare the number of
15.15nonemergency visits and repeat visits to hospital emergency rooms for the period before
15.16the commencement of the project and one year after the commencement, and an estimate
15.17of the costs saved from any documented reductions.
15.18 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256.969, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
15.19 Subd. 9. Disproportionate numbers of low-income patients served.(a) For
15.20admissions occurring on or after October 1, 1992, through December 31, 1992, the
15.21medical assistance disproportionate population adjustment shall comply with federal law
15.22and shall be paid to a hospital, excluding regional treatment centers and facilities of the
15.23federal Indian Health Service, with a medical assistance inpatient utilization rate in excess
15.24of the arithmetic mean. The adjustment must be determined as follows:
15.25(1) for a hospital with a medical assistance inpatient utilization rate above the
15.26arithmetic mean for all hospitals excluding regional treatment centers and facilities of the
15.27federal Indian Health Service but less than or equal to one standard deviation above the
15.28mean, the adjustment must be determined by multiplying the total of the operating and
15.29property payment rates by the difference between the hospital's actual medical assistance
15.30inpatient utilization rate and the arithmetic mean for all hospitals excluding regional
15.31treatment centers and facilities of the federal Indian Health Service; and
15.32(2) for a hospital with a medical assistance inpatient utilization rate above one
15.33standard deviation above the mean, the adjustment must be determined by multiplying
15.34the adjustment that would be determined under clause (1) for that hospital by 1.1. If
16.1federal matching funds are not available for all adjustments under this subdivision, the
16.2commissioner shall reduce payments on a pro rata basis so that all adjustments qualify for
16.3federal match. The commissioner may establish a separate disproportionate population
16.4operating payment rate adjustment under the general assistance medical care program.
16.5For purposes of this subdivision medical assistance does not include general assistance
16.6medical care. The commissioner shall report annually on the number of hospitals likely to
16.7receive the adjustment authorized by this paragraph. The commissioner shall specifically
16.8report on the adjustments received by public hospitals and public hospital corporations
16.9located in cities of the first class.
16.10(b) (a) For admissions occurring on or after July 1, 1993, the medical assistance
16.11disproportionate population adjustment shall comply with federal law and shall be paid to
16.12a hospital, excluding regional treatment centers and facilities of the federal Indian Health
16.13Service, with a medical assistance inpatient utilization rate in excess of the arithmetic
16.14mean. The adjustment must be determined as follows:
16.15 (1) for a hospital with a medical assistance inpatient utilization rate above the
16.16arithmetic mean for all hospitals excluding regional treatment centers and facilities of the
16.17federal Indian Health Service but less than or equal to one standard deviation above the
16.18mean, the adjustment must be determined by multiplying the total of the operating and
16.19property payment rates by the difference between the hospital's actual medical assistance
16.20inpatient utilization rate and the arithmetic mean for all hospitals excluding regional
16.21treatment centers and facilities of the federal Indian Health Service;
16.22 (2) for a hospital with a medical assistance inpatient utilization rate above one
16.23standard deviation above the mean, the adjustment must be determined by multiplying
16.24the adjustment that would be determined under clause (1) for that hospital by 1.1. The
16.25commissioner may establish a separate disproportionate population operating payment
16.26rate adjustment under the general assistance medical care program. For purposes of this
16.27subdivision, medical assistance does not include general assistance medical care. The
16.28commissioner shall report annually on the number of hospitals likely to receive the
16.29adjustment authorized by this paragraph. The commissioner shall specifically report on
16.30the adjustments received by public hospitals and public hospital corporations located
16.31in cities of the first class;
16.32 (3) for a hospital that had medical assistance fee-for-service payment volume during
16.33calendar year 1991 in excess of 13 percent of total medical assistance fee-for-service
16.34payment volume, a medical assistance disproportionate population adjustment shall be
16.35paid in addition to any other disproportionate payment due under this subdivision as
16.36follows: $1,515,000 due on the 15th of each month after noon, beginning July 15, 1995.
17.1For a hospital that had medical assistance fee-for-service payment volume during calendar
17.2year 1991 in excess of eight percent of total medical assistance fee-for-service payment
17.3volume and was the primary hospital affiliated with the University of Minnesota, a
17.4medical assistance disproportionate population adjustment shall be paid in addition to any
17.5other disproportionate payment due under this subdivision as follows: $505,000 due on
17.6the 15th of each month after noon, beginning July 15, 1995; and
17.7 (4) effective August 1, 2005, the payments inparagraph (b), clause (3), shall be
17.8reduced to zero.
17.9(c) (b) The commissioner shall adjust rates paid to a health maintenance organization
17.10under contract with the commissioner to reflect rate increases provided in paragraph(b)
17.11 (a), clauses (1) and (2), on a nondiscounted hospital-specific basis but shall not adjust
17.12those rates to reflect payments provided in paragraph (a), clause (3).
17.13(d) (c) If federal matching funds are not available for all adjustments under paragraph
17.14(b) (a), the commissioner shall reduce payments under paragraph (b) (a), clauses (1) and (2),
17.15on a pro rata basis so that all adjustments under paragraph(b) (a) qualify for federal match.
17.16(e) (d) For purposes of this subdivision, medical assistance does not include general
17.17assistance medical care.
17.18(f) (e) For hospital services occurring on or after July 1, 2005, to June 30, 2007:
17.19 (1) general assistance medical care expenditures for fee-for-service inpatient and
17.20outpatient hospital payments made by the department shall be considered Medicaid
17.21disproportionate share hospital payments, except as limited below:
17.22 (i) only the portion of Minnesota's disproportionate share hospital allotment under
17.23section 1923(f) of the Social Security Act that is not spent on the disproportionate
17.24population adjustments in paragraph(b) (a), clauses (1) and (2), may be used for general
17.25assistance medical care expenditures;
17.26 (ii) only those general assistance medical care expenditures made to hospitals that
17.27qualify for disproportionate share payments under section 1923 of the Social Security Act
17.28and the Medicaid state plan may be considered disproportionate share hospital payments;
17.29 (iii) only those general assistance medical care expenditures made to an individual
17.30hospital that would not cause the hospital to exceed its individual hospital limits under
17.31section 1923 of the Social Security Act may be considered; and
17.32 (iv) general assistance medical care expenditures may be considered only to the
17.33extent of Minnesota's aggregate allotment under section 1923 of the Social Security Act.
17.34All hospitals and prepaid health plans participating in general assistance medical care
17.35must provide any necessary expenditure, cost, and revenue information required by the
18.1commissioner as necessary for purposes of obtaining federal Medicaid matching funds for
18.2general assistance medical care expenditures; and
18.3 (2) certified public expenditures made by Hennepin County Medical Center shall
18.4be considered Medicaid disproportionate share hospital payments. Hennepin County
18.5and Hennepin County Medical Center shall report by June 15, 2007, on payments made
18.6beginning July 1, 2005, or another date specified by the commissioner, that may qualify
18.7for reimbursement under federal law. Based on these reports, the commissioner shall
18.8apply for federal matching funds.
18.9(g) (f) Upon federal approval of the related state plan amendment, paragraph (f) (e)
18.10 is effective retroactively from July 1, 2005, or the earliest effective date approved by the
18.11Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
18.12 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
18.13 Subd. 2. Definitions. For the purposes of this section, the following terms have
18.14the meanings given.
18.15(a) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of human services. For the
18.16remainder of this section, the commissioner's responsibilities for methods and policies
18.17for implementing the project will be proposed by the project advisory committees and
18.18approved by the commissioner.
18.19(b) "Demonstration provider" means a health maintenance organization, community
18.20integrated service network, or accountable provider network authorized and operating
18.21under chapter 62D, 62N, or 62T that participates in the demonstration project according
18.22to criteria, standards, methods, and other requirements established for the project and
18.23approved by the commissioner. For purposes of this section, a county board, or group of
18.24county boards operating under a joint powers agreement, is considered a demonstration
18.25provider if the county or group of county boards meets the requirements of section
18.26256B.692
. Notwithstanding the above, Itasca County may continue to participate as a
18.27demonstration provider until July 1, 2004.
18.28(c) "Eligible individuals" means those persons eligible for medical assistance
18.29benefits as defined in sections256B.055 ,
256B.056 , and
256B.06 .
18.30(d) "Limitation of choice" means suspending freedom of choice while allowing
18.31eligible individuals to choose among the demonstration providers.
18.32 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 4b, is amended to read:
18.33 Subd. 4b. Individualized education program and individualized family service
18.34plan services. The commissioner shall amend the federal waiver allowing the state
19.1to separate out individualized education program and individualized family service
19.2plan services for children enrolled in the prepaid medical assistance program and the
19.3MinnesotaCare program.Effective July 1, 1999, or upon federal approval, Medical
19.4assistance coverage of eligible individualized education program and individualized family
19.5service plan services shall not be included in the capitated services for children enrolled
19.6in health plans through the prepaid medical assistance program and the MinnesotaCare
19.7program.Upon federal approval, Local school districts shall bill the commissioner for
19.8these services, and claims shall be paid on a fee-for-service basis.
19.9 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
19.10 Subd. 5. Prospective per capita payment. The commissioner shall establish the
19.11method and amount of payments for services. The commissioner shall annually contract
19.12with demonstration providers to provide services consistent with these established
19.13methods and amounts for payment.
19.14If allowed by the commissioner, a demonstration provider may contract with an
19.15insurer, health care provider, nonprofit health service plan corporation, or the commissioner,
19.16to provide insurance or similar protection against the cost of care provided by the
19.17demonstration provider or to provide coverage against the risks incurred by demonstration
19.18providers under this section. The recipients enrolled with a demonstration provider are
19.19a permissible group under group insurance laws and chapter 62C, the Nonprofit Health
19.20Service Plan Corporations Act. Under this type of contract, the insurer or corporation may
19.21make benefit payments to a demonstration provider for services rendered or to be rendered
19.22to a recipient. Any insurer or nonprofit health service plan corporation licensed to do
19.23business in this state is authorized to provide this insurance or similar protection.
19.24Payments to providers participating in the project are exempt from the requirements
19.25of sections256.966 and
256B.03, subdivision 2 . The commissioner shall complete
19.26development of capitation rates for payments before delivery of services under this
19.27section is begun.For payments made during calendar year 1990 and later years, The
19.28commissioner shall contract with an independent actuary to establish prepayment rates.
19.29By January 15, 1996, the commissioner shall report to the legislature on the
19.30methodology used to allocate to participating counties available administrative
19.31reimbursement for advocacy and enrollment costs. The report shall reflect the
19.32commissioner's judgment as to the adequacy of the funds made available and of the
19.33methodology for equitable distribution of the funds. The commissioner must involve
19.34participating counties in the development of the report.
20.1Beginning July 1, 2004, the commissioner may include payments for elderly waiver
20.2services and 180 days of nursing home care in capitation payments for the prepaid medical
20.3assistance program for recipients age 65 and older.
20.4 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 5a, is amended to read:
20.5 Subd. 5a. Managed care contracts. (a) Managed care contracts under this section
20.6and section256L.12 shall be entered into or renewed on a calendar year basis beginning
20.7January 1, 1996. Managed care contracts which were in effect on June 30, 1995, and set to
20.8renew on July 1, 1995, shall be renewed for the period July 1, 1995 through December
20.931, 1995 at the same terms that were in effect on June 30, 1995. The commissioner may
20.10issue separate contracts with requirements specific to services to medical assistance
20.11recipients age 65 and older.
20.12 (b) A prepaid health plan providing covered health services for eligible persons
20.13pursuant to chapters 256B and 256L is responsible for complying with the terms of its
20.14contract with the commissioner. Requirements applicable to managed care programs
20.15under chapters 256B and 256L established after the effective date of a contract with the
20.16commissioner take effect when the contract is next issued or renewed.
20.17 (c)Effective for services rendered on or after January 1, 2003, The commissioner
20.18shall withhold five percent of managed care plan payments under this section and
20.19county-based purchasing plan payments under section256B.692 for the prepaid medical
20.20assistance program pending completion of performance targets. Each performance target
20.21must be quantifiable, objective, measurable, and reasonably attainable, except in the case
20.22of a performance target based on a federal or state law or rule. Criteria for assessment
20.23of each performance target must be outlined in writing prior to the contract effective
20.24date. Clinical or utilization performance targets and their related criteria must consider
20.25evidence-based research and reasonable interventions when available or applicable to the
20.26populations served, and must be developed with input from external clinical experts
20.27and stakeholders, including managed care plans, county-based purchasing plans, and
20.28providers. The managed care or county-based purchasing plan must demonstrate,
20.29to the commissioner's satisfaction, that the data submitted regarding attainment of
20.30the performance target is accurate. The commissioner shall periodically change the
20.31administrative measures used as performance targets in order to improve plan performance
20.32across a broader range of administrative services. The performance targets must include
20.33measurement of plan efforts to contain spending on health care services and administrative
20.34activities. The commissioner may adopt plan-specific performance targets that take into
20.35account factors affecting only one plan, including characteristics of the plan's enrollee
21.1population. The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than July of the following
21.2year if performance targets in the contract are achieved. The commissioner may exclude
21.3special demonstration projects under subdivision 23.
21.4(d) Effective for services rendered on or after January 1, 2009, through December
21.531, 2009, the commissioner shall withhold three percent of managed care plan payments
21.6under this section and county-based purchasing plan payments under section
256B.692
21.7for the prepaid medical assistance program. The withheld funds must be returned no
21.8sooner than July 1 and no later than July 31 of the following year. The commissioner may
21.9exclude special demonstration projects under subdivision 23.
21.10(e) Effective for services provided on or after January 1, 2010, (d) The commissioner
21.11shall require that managed care plans use the assessment and authorization processes,
21.12forms, timelines, standards, documentation, and data reporting requirements, protocols,
21.13billing processes, and policies consistent with medical assistance fee-for-service or the
21.14Department of Human Services contract requirements consistent with medical assistance
21.15fee-for-service or the Department of Human Services contract requirements for all
21.16personal care assistance services under section256B.0659 .
21.17(f) Effective for services rendered on or after January 1, 2010, through December
21.1831, 2010, the commissioner shall withhold 4.5 percent of managed care plan payments
21.19under this section and county-based purchasing plan payments under section
256B.692
21.20for the prepaid medical assistance program. The withheld funds must be returned no
21.21sooner than July 1 and no later than July 31 of the following year. The commissioner may
21.22exclude special demonstration projects under subdivision 23.
21.23(g) Effective for services rendered on or after January 1, 2011, through December
21.2431, 2011, the commissioner shall include as part of the performance targets described in
21.25paragraph (c) a reduction in the health plan's emergency room utilization rate for state
21.26health care program enrollees by a measurable rate of five percent from the plan's utilization
21.27rate for state health care program enrollees for the previous calendar year. (e) Effective for
21.28services rendered on or after January 1, 2012, the commissioner shall include as part of the
21.29performance targets described in paragraph (c) a reduction in the health plan's emergency
21.30department utilization rate for medical assistance and MinnesotaCare enrollees, as
21.31determined by the commissioner. For 2012, the reduction shall be based on the health plan's
21.32utilization in 2009. To earn the return of the withhold each subsequent year, the managed
21.33care plan or county-based purchasing plan must achieve a qualifying reduction of no less
21.34than ten percent of the plan's emergency department utilization rate for medical assistance
21.35and MinnesotaCare enrollees, excluding enrollees in programs described in subdivisions
21.3623 and 28, compared to the previous measurement year until the final performance target
22.1is reached. When measuring performance, the commissioner must consider the difference
22.2in health risk in a managed care or county-based purchasing plan's membership in the
22.3baseline year compared to the measurement year, and work with the managed care or
22.4county-based purchasing plan to account for differences that they agree are significant.
22.5The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than July 1 and no later than July 31
22.6of the following calendar year if the managed care plan or county-based purchasing plan
22.7demonstrates to the satisfaction of the commissioner that a reduction in the utilization rate
22.8was achieved. The commissioner shall structure the withhold so that the commissioner
22.9returns a portion of the withheld funds in amounts commensurate with achieved reductions
22.10in utilization less than the targeted amount.
22.11The withhold described in this paragraph shall continue for each consecutive contract
22.12period until the plan's emergency room utilization rate for state health care program
22.13enrollees is reduced by 25 percent of the plan's emergency room utilization rate for medical
22.14assistance and MinnesotaCare enrollees for calendar year 2009. Hospitals shall cooperate
22.15with the health plans in meeting this performance target and shall accept payment
22.16withholds that may be returned to the hospitals if the performance target is achieved.
22.17(h) (f) Effective for services rendered on or after January 1, 2012, the commissioner
22.18shall include as part of the performance targets described in paragraph (c) a reduction
22.19in the plan's hospitalization admission rate for medical assistance and MinnesotaCare
22.20enrollees, as determined by the commissioner. To earn the return of the withhold each
22.21year, the managed care plan or county-based purchasing plan must achieve a qualifying
22.22reduction of no less than five percent of the plan's hospital admission rate for medical
22.23assistance and MinnesotaCare enrollees, excluding enrollees in programs described in
22.24subdivisions 23 and 28, compared to the previous calendar year until the final performance
22.25target is reached. When measuring performance, the commissioner must consider the
22.26difference in health risk in a managed care or county-based purchasing plan's membership
22.27in the baseline year compared to the measurement year, and work with the managed care
22.28or county-based purchasing plan to account for differences that they agree are significant.
22.29The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than July 1 and no later than July
22.3031 of the following calendar year if the managed care plan or county-based purchasing
22.31plan demonstrates to the satisfaction of the commissioner that this reduction in the
22.32hospitalization rate was achieved. The commissioner shall structure the withhold so that
22.33the commissioner returns a portion of the withheld funds in amounts commensurate with
22.34achieved reductions in utilization less than the targeted amount.
22.35The withhold described in this paragraph shall continue until there is a 25 percent
22.36reduction in the hospital admission rate compared to the hospital admission rates in
23.1calendar year 2011, as determined by the commissioner. The hospital admissions in this
23.2performance target do not include the admissions applicable to the subsequent hospital
23.3admission performance target under paragraph(i) (g). Hospitals shall cooperate with the
23.4plans in meeting this performance target and shall accept payment withholds that may be
23.5returned to the hospitals if the performance target is achieved.
23.6(i) (g) Effective for services rendered on or after January 1, 2012, the commissioner
23.7shall include as part of the performance targets described in paragraph (c) a reduction in
23.8the plan's hospitalization admission rates for subsequent hospitalizations within 30 days of
23.9a previous hospitalization of a patient regardless of the reason, for medical assistance and
23.10MinnesotaCare enrollees, as determined by the commissioner. To earn the return of the
23.11withhold each year, the managed care plan or county-based purchasing plan must achieve
23.12a qualifying reduction of the subsequent hospitalization rate for medical assistance and
23.13MinnesotaCare enrollees, excluding enrollees in programs described in subdivisions 23
23.14and 28, of no less than five percent compared to the previous calendar year until the
23.15final performance target is reached.
23.16The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than July 1 and no later than July
23.1731 of the following calendar year if the managed care plan or county-based purchasing
23.18plan demonstrates to the satisfaction of the commissioner that a qualifying reduction in
23.19the subsequent hospitalization rate was achieved. The commissioner shall structure the
23.20withhold so that the commissioner returns a portion of the withheld funds in amounts
23.21commensurate with achieved reductions in utilization less than the targeted amount.
23.22The withhold described in this paragraph must continue for each consecutive
23.23contract period until the plan's subsequent hospitalization rate for medical assistance and
23.24MinnesotaCare enrollees, excluding enrollees in programs described in subdivisions 23
23.25and 28, is reduced by 25 percent of the plan's subsequent hospitalization rate for calendar
23.26year 2011. Hospitals shall cooperate with the plans in meeting this performance target and
23.27shall accept payment withholds that must be returned to the hospitals if the performance
23.28target is achieved.
23.29(j) Effective for services rendered on or after January 1, 2011, through December 31,
23.302011, the commissioner shall withhold 4.5 percent of managed care plan payments under
23.31this section and county-based purchasing plan payments under section
256B.692 for the
23.32prepaid medical assistance program. The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than
23.33July 1 and no later than July 31 of the following year. The commissioner may exclude
23.34special demonstration projects under subdivision 23.
23.35(k) Effective for services rendered on or after January 1, 2012, through December
23.3631, 2012, the commissioner shall withhold 4.5 percent of managed care plan payments
24.1under this section and county-based purchasing plan payments under section
256B.692
24.2for the prepaid medical assistance program. The withheld funds must be returned no
24.3sooner than July 1 and no later than July 31 of the following year. The commissioner may
24.4exclude special demonstration projects under subdivision 23.
24.5(l) (h) Effective for services rendered on or after January 1, 2013, through December
24.631, 2013, the commissioner shall withhold 4.5 percent of managed care plan payments
24.7under this section and county-based purchasing plan payments under section256B.692
24.8for the prepaid medical assistance program. The withheld funds must be returned no
24.9sooner than July 1 and no later than July 31 of the following year. The commissioner may
24.10exclude special demonstration projects under subdivision 23.
24.11(m) (i) Effective for services rendered on or after January 1, 2014, the commissioner
24.12shall withhold three percent of managed care plan payments under this section and
24.13county-based purchasing plan payments under section256B.692 for the prepaid medical
24.14assistance program. The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than July 1 and
24.15no later than July 31 of the following year. The commissioner may exclude special
24.16demonstration projects under subdivision 23.
24.17(n) (j) A managed care plan or a county-based purchasing plan under section
24.18256B.692
may include as admitted assets under section
62D.044 any amount withheld
24.19under this section that is reasonably expected to be returned.
24.20(o) (k) Contracts between the commissioner and a prepaid health plan are exempt
24.21from the set-aside and preference provisions of section16C.16, subdivisions 6 , paragraph
24.22(a), and 7.
24.23(p) (l) The return of the withhold under paragraphs (d), (f), and (j) to (m) (h) and (i)
24.24 is not subject to the requirements of paragraph (c).
24.25 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 5b, is amended to read:
24.26 Subd. 5b. Prospective reimbursement rates. (a) For prepaid medical assistance
24.27program contract rates set by the commissioner under subdivision 5and effective on or
24.28after January 1, 2003, capitation rates for nonmetropolitan counties shall on a weighted
24.29average be no less than 87 percent of the capitation rates for metropolitan counties,
24.30excluding Hennepin County. The commissioner shall make a pro rata adjustment in
24.31capitation rates paid to counties other than nonmetropolitan counties in order to make
24.32this provision budget neutral. The commissioner, in consultation with a health care
24.33actuary, shall evaluate the regional rate relationships based on actual health plan costs
24.34for Minnesota health care programs. The commissioner may establish, based on the
25.1actuary's recommendation, new rate regions that recognize metropolitan areas outside of
25.2the seven-county metropolitan area.
25.3(b) This subdivision shall not affect the nongeographically based risk adjusted rates
25.4established under section62Q.03, subdivision 5a .
25.5 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.69, subdivision 5c, is
25.6amended to read:
25.7 Subd. 5c. Medical education and research fund. (a) The commissioner of human
25.8services shall transfer each year to the medical education and research fund established
25.9under section62J.692 , an amount specified in this subdivision. The commissioner shall
25.10calculate the following:
25.11(1) an amount equal to the reduction in the prepaid medical assistance payments as
25.12specified in this clause.Until January 1, 2002, the county medical assistance capitation
25.13base rate prior to plan specific adjustments and after the regional rate adjustments under
25.14subdivision 5b is reduced 6.3 percent for Hennepin County, two percent for the remaining
25.15metropolitan counties, and no reduction for nonmetropolitan Minnesota counties; and
25.16 After January 1, 2002, the county medical assistance capitation base rate prior to plan
25.17specific adjustments is reduced 6.3 percent for Hennepin County, two percent for the
25.18remaining metropolitan counties, and 1.6 percent for nonmetropolitan Minnesota counties.
25.19Nursing facility and elderly waiver payments and demonstration project payments
25.20operating under subdivision 23 are excluded from this reduction. The amount calculated
25.21under this clause shall not be adjusted for periods already paid due to subsequent changes
25.22to the capitation payments;
25.23(2) beginning July 1, 2003, $4,314,000 from the capitation rates paid under this
25.24section;
25.25(3) beginning July 1, 2002, an additional $12,700,000 from the capitation rates
25.26paid under this section; and
25.27(4) beginning July 1, 2003, an additional $4,700,000 from the capitation rates paid
25.28under this section.
25.29(b) This subdivision shall be effective upon approval of a federal waiver which
25.30allows federal financial participation in the medical education and research fund. The
25.31amount specified under paragraph (a), clauses (1) to (4), shall not exceed the total amount
25.32transferred for fiscal year 2009. Any excess shall first reduce the amounts specified under
25.33paragraph (a), clauses (2) to (4). Any excess following this reduction shall proportionally
25.34reduce the amount specified under paragraph (a), clause (1).
26.1(c) Beginning September 1, 2011, of the amount in paragraph (a), the commissioner
26.2shall transfer $21,714,000 each fiscal year to the medical education and research fund.
26.3(d) Beginning September 1, 2011, of the amount in paragraph (a), following the
26.4transfer under paragraph (c), the commissioner shall transfer to the medical education
26.5research fund $23,936,000 in fiscal years 2012 and 2013 and $49,552,000 in fiscal year
26.62014 and thereafter.
26.7 Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 6b, is amended to read:
26.8 Subd. 6b. Home and community-based waiver services. (a) For individuals
26.9enrolled in the Minnesota senior health options project authorized under subdivision 23,
26.10elderly waiver services shall be covered according to the terms and conditions of the
26.11federal agreement governing that demonstration project.
26.12(b) For individuals under age 65 enrolled in demonstrations authorized under
26.13subdivision 23, home and community-based waiver services shall be covered according to
26.14the terms and conditions of the federal agreement governing that demonstration project.
26.15(c) The commissioner of human services shall issue requests for proposals for
26.16collaborative service models between counties and managed care organizations to
26.17integrate the home and community-based elderly waiver services and additional nursing
26.18home services into the prepaid medical assistance program.
26.19(d) Notwithstanding Minnesota Rules, part 9500.1457, subpart 1, item C, elderly
26.20waiver services shall be covered statewideno sooner than July 1, 2006, under the prepaid
26.21medical assistance program for all individuals who are eligible according to section
26.22256B.0915
. The commissioner may develop a schedule to phase in implementation of
26.23these waiver services, including collaborative service models under paragraph (c). The
26.24commissioner shall phase in implementation beginning with those counties participating
26.25under section256B.692 , and those counties where a viable collaborative service model
26.26has been developed. In consultation with counties and all managed care organizations
26.27that have expressed an interest in participating in collaborative service models, the
26.28commissioner shall evaluate the models. The commissioner shall consider the evaluation
26.29in selecting the most appropriate models for statewide implementation.
26.30 Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 6d, is amended to read:
26.31 Subd. 6d. Prescription drugs.Effective January 1, 2004, The commissioner
26.32may exclude or modify coverage for prescription drugs from the prepaid managed care
26.33contracts entered into under this section in order to increase savings to the state by
26.34collecting additional prescription drug rebates. The contracts must maintain incentives
27.1for the managed care plan to manage drug costs and utilization and may require that the
27.2managed care plans maintain an open drug formulary. In order to manage drug costs and
27.3utilization, the contracts may authorize the managed care plans to use preferred drug lists
27.4and prior authorization. This subdivision is contingent on federal approval of the managed
27.5care contract changes and the collection of additional prescription drug rebates.
27.6 Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 17, is amended to read:
27.7 Subd. 17. Continuation of prepaid medical assistance. The commissioner may
27.8continue the provisions of this sectionafter June 30, 1990, in any or all of the participating
27.9counties if necessary federal authority is granted. The commissioner may adopt permanent
27.10rules to continue prepaid medical assistance in these areas.
27.11 Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 26, is amended to read:
27.12 Subd. 26. American Indian recipients. (a)Beginning on or after January 1, 1999,
27.13 For American Indian recipients of medical assistance who are required to enroll with a
27.14demonstration provider under subdivision 4 or in a county-based purchasing entity, if
27.15applicable, under section256B.692 , medical assistance shall cover health care services
27.16provided at Indian health services facilities and facilities operated by a tribe or tribal
27.17organization under funding authorized by United States Code, title 25, sections 450f to
27.18450n, or title III of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act, Public
27.19Law 93-638, if those services would otherwise be covered under section256B.0625 .
27.20Payments for services provided under this subdivision shall be made on a fee-for-service
27.21basis, and may, at the option of the tribe or tribal organization, be made according to
27.22rates authorized under sections256.969, subdivision 16 , and
256B.0625, subdivision 34 .
27.23Implementation of this purchasing model is contingent on federal approval.
27.24(b) The commissioner of human services, in consultation with the tribal
27.25governments, shall develop a plan for tribes to assist in the enrollment process for
27.26American Indian recipients enrolled in the prepaid medical assistance program under
27.27this section. This plan also shall address how tribes will be included in ensuring the
27.28coordination of care for American Indian recipients between Indian health service or
27.29tribal providers and other providers.
27.30(c) For purposes of this subdivision, "American Indian" has the meaning given
27.31to persons to whom services will be provided for in Code of Federal Regulations, title
27.3242, section36.12 .
28.1 Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.69, subdivision 28,
28.2is amended to read:
28.3 Subd. 28. Medicare special needs plans; medical assistance basic health
28.4care. (a) The commissioner may contract with demonstration providers and current or
28.5former sponsors of qualified Medicare-approved special needs plans, to provide medical
28.6assistance basic health care services to persons with disabilities, including those with
28.7developmental disabilities. Basic health care services include:
28.8 (1) those services covered by the medical assistance state plan except for ICF/DD
28.9services, home and community-based waiver services, case management for persons with
28.10developmental disabilities under section256B.0625 , subdivision 20a, and personal care
28.11and certain home care services defined by the commissioner in consultation with the
28.12stakeholder group established under paragraph (d); and
28.13 (2) basic health care services may also include risk for up to 100 days of nursing
28.14facility services for persons who reside in a noninstitutional setting and home health
28.15services related to rehabilitation as defined by the commissioner after consultation with
28.16the stakeholder group.
28.17 The commissioner may exclude other medical assistance services from the basic
28.18health care benefit set. Enrollees in these plans can access any excluded services on the
28.19same basis as other medical assistance recipients who have not enrolled.
28.20 (b)Beginning January 1, 2007, The commissioner may contract with demonstration
28.21providers and current and former sponsors of qualified Medicare special needs plans, to
28.22provide basic health care services under medical assistance to persons who are dually
28.23eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid and those Social Security beneficiaries eligible
28.24for Medicaid but in the waiting period for Medicare. The commissioner shall consult with
28.25the stakeholder group under paragraph (d) in developing program specifications for these
28.26services.The commissioner shall report to the chairs of the house of representatives and
28.27senate committees with jurisdiction over health and human services policy and finance by
28.28February 1, 2007, on implementation of these programs and the need for increased funding
28.29for the ombudsman for managed care and other consumer assistance and protections
28.30needed due to enrollment in managed care of persons with disabilities. Payment for
28.31Medicaid services provided under this subdivision for the months of May and June will
28.32be made no earlier than July 1 of the same calendar year.
28.33 (c) Notwithstanding subdivision 4, beginning January 1, 2012, the commissioner
28.34shall enroll persons with disabilities in managed care under this section, unless the
28.35individual chooses to opt out of enrollment. The commissioner shall establish enrollment
28.36and opt out procedures consistent with applicable enrollment procedures under this section.
29.1 (d) The commissioner shall establish a state-level stakeholder group to provide
29.2advice on managed care programs for persons with disabilities, including both MnDHO
29.3and contracts with special needs plans that provide basic health care services as described
29.4in paragraphs (a) and (b). The stakeholder group shall provide advice on program
29.5expansions under this subdivision and subdivision 23, including:
29.6 (1) implementation efforts;
29.7 (2) consumer protections; and
29.8 (3) program specifications such as quality assurance measures, data collection and
29.9reporting, and evaluation of costs, quality, and results.
29.10 (e) Each plan under contract to provide medical assistance basic health care services
29.11shall establish a local or regional stakeholder group, including representatives of the
29.12counties covered by the plan, members, consumer advocates, and providers, for advice on
29.13issues that arise in the local or regional area.
29.14 (f) The commissioner is prohibited from providing the names of potential enrollees
29.15to health plans for marketing purposes. The commissioner shall mail no more than
29.16two sets of marketing materials per contract year to potential enrollees on behalf of
29.17health plans, at the health plan's request. The marketing materials shall be mailed by the
29.18commissioner within 30 days of receipt of these materials from the health plan. The health
29.19plans shall cover any costs incurred by the commissioner for mailing marketing materials.
29.20 Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 29, is amended to read:
29.21 Subd. 29. Prepaid health plan rates. In negotiatingthe prepaid health plan
29.22contract ratesfor services rendered on or after January 1, 2011, the commissioner of
29.23human services shall take into consideration, and the rates shall reflect, the anticipated
29.24savings in the medical assistance program due to extending medical assistance coverage to
29.25services provided in licensed birth centers, the anticipated use of these services within
29.26the medical assistance population, and the reduced medical assistance costs associated
29.27with the use of birth centers for normal, low-risk deliveries.
29.28 Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 30, is amended to read:
29.29 Subd. 30. Provision of required materials in alternative formats. (a) For the
29.30purposes of this subdivision, "alternative format" means a medium other than paper and
29.31"prepaid health plan" means managed care plans and county-based purchasing plans.
29.32(b) A prepaid health plan may provide in an alternative format a provider directory
29.33and certificate of coverage, or materials otherwise required to be available in writing
30.1under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, section438.10 , or under the commissioner's
30.2contract with the prepaid health plan, if the following conditions are met:
30.3(1) the prepaid health plan, local agency, or commissioner, as applicable, informs the
30.4enrollee that:
30.5(i) an alternative format is available and the enrollee affirmatively requests of
30.6the prepaid health plan that the provider directory, certificate of coverage, or materials
30.7otherwise required under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, section438.10 , or under
30.8the commissioner's contract with the prepaid health plan be provided in an alternative
30.9format; and
30.10(ii) a record of the enrollee request is retained by the prepaid health plan in the
30.11form of written direction from the enrollee or a documented telephone call followed by a
30.12confirmation letter to the enrollee from the prepaid health plan that explains that the
30.13enrollee may change the request at any time;
30.14(2) the materials are sent to a secure electronic mailbox and are made available at a
30.15password-protected secure electronic Web site or on a data storage device if the materials
30.16contain enrollee data that is individually identifiable;
30.17(3) the enrollee is provided a customer service number on the enrollee's membership
30.18card that may be called to request a paper version of the materials provided in an
30.19alternative format; and
30.20(4) the materials provided in an alternative format meets all other requirements of
30.21the commissioner regarding content, size of the typeface, and any required time frames
30.22for distribution. "Required time frames for distribution" must permit sufficient time for
30.23prepaid health plans to distribute materials in alternative formats upon receipt of enrollees'
30.24requests for the materials.
30.25(c) A prepaid health plan may provide in an alternative format its primary care
30.26network list to the commissioner and to local agencies within its service area. The
30.27commissioner or local agency, as applicable, shall inform a potential enrollee of the
30.28availability of a prepaid health plan's primary care network list in an alternative format. If
30.29the potential enrollee requests an alternative format of the prepaid health plan's primary
30.30care network list, a record of that request shall be retained by the commissioner or local
30.31agency. The potential enrollee is permitted to withdraw the request at any time.
30.32The prepaid health plan shall submit sufficient paper versions of the primary
30.33care network list to the commissioner and to local agencies within its service area to
30.34accommodate potential enrollee requests for paper versions of the primary care network list.
30.35(d) A prepaid health plan may provide in an alternative format materials otherwise
30.36required to be available in writing under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, section
31.1438.10
, or under the commissioner's contract with the prepaid health plan, if the conditions
31.2of paragraphs (b), and (c), and (e), are met for persons who are eligible for enrollment in
31.3managed care.
31.4(e) The commissioner shall seek any federal Medicaid waivers within 90 days after
31.5the effective date of this subdivision that are necessary to provide alternative formats of
31.6required material to enrollees of prepaid health plans as authorized under this subdivision.
31.7(f) (e) The commissioner shall consult with managed care plans, county-based
31.8purchasing plans, counties, and other interested parties to determine how materials required
31.9to be made available to enrollees under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, section
31.10438.10
, or under the commissioner's contract with a prepaid health plan may be provided
31.11in an alternative format on the basis that the enrollee has not opted in to receive the
31.12alternative format. The commissioner shall consult with managed care plans, county-based
31.13purchasing plans, counties, and other interested parties to develop recommendations
31.14relating to the conditions that must be met for an opt-out process to be granted.
31.15 Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.692, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
31.16 Subd. 2. Duties of commissioner of health. (a) Notwithstanding chapters 62D and
31.1762N, a county that elects to purchase medical assistance in return for a fixed sum without
31.18regard to the frequency or extent of services furnished to any particular enrollee is not
31.19required to obtain a certificate of authority under chapter 62D or 62N. The county board
31.20of commissioners is the governing body of a county-based purchasing program. In a
31.21multicounty arrangement, the governing body is a joint powers board established under
31.22section471.59 .
31.23 (b) A county that elects to purchase medical assistance services under this section
31.24must satisfy the commissioner of health that the requirements for assurance of consumer
31.25protection, provider protection, and, effective January 1, 2010, fiscal solvency of chapter
31.2662D, applicable to health maintenance organizations will be met according to the
31.27following schedule:
31.28 (1) for a county-based purchasing plan approved on or before June 30, 2008, the
31.29plan must have in reserve:
31.30 (i) at least 50 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D as
31.31of January 1, 2010;
31.32 (ii) at least 75 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D as of
31.33January 1, 2011;
31.34 (iii) at least 87.5 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D as
31.35of January 1, 2012; and
32.1 (iv) at least 100 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D as
32.2of January 1, 2013; and
32.3 (2) for a county-based purchasing plan first approved after June 30, 2008, the plan
32.4must have in reserve:
32.5 (i) at least 50 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D at the
32.6time the plan begins enrolling enrollees;
32.7 (ii) at least 75 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D after
32.8the first full calendar year;
32.9 (iii) at least 87.5 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D after
32.10the second full calendar year; and
32.11 (iv) at least 100 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D after
32.12the third full calendar year.
32.13 (c) Until a plan is required to have reserves equaling at least 100 percent of the
32.14minimum amount required under chapter 62D, the plan may demonstrate its ability
32.15to cover any losses by satisfying the requirements of chapter 62N. A county-based
32.16purchasing plan must also assure the commissioner of health that the requirements of
32.17sections62J.041 ;
62J.48 ;
62J.71 to
62J.73 ;
62M.01 to
62M.16 ; all applicable provisions
32.18of chapter 62Q, including sections62Q.075 ;
62Q.1055 ;
62Q.106 ;
62Q.12 ;
62Q.135 ;
32.1962Q.14
;
62Q.145 ;
62Q.19 ;
62Q.23, paragraph (c) ;
62Q.43 ;
62Q.47 ;
62Q.50 ;
62Q.52 to
32.2062Q.56
;
62Q.58 ;
62Q.68 to
62Q.72 ; and
72A.201 will be met.
32.21 (d) All enforcement and rulemaking powers available under chapters 62D, 62J, 62M,
32.2262N, and 62Q are hereby granted to the commissioner of health with respect to counties
32.23that purchase medical assistance services under this section.
32.24 (e) The commissioner, in consultation with county government, shall develop
32.25administrative and financial reporting requirements for county-based purchasing programs
32.26relating to sections62D.041 ,
62D.042 ,
62D.045 ,
62D.08 ,
62N.28 ,
62N.29 , and
62N.31 ,
32.27and other sections as necessary, that are specific to county administrative, accounting, and
32.28reporting systems and consistent with other statutory requirements of counties.
32.29 (f) The commissioner shall collect from a county-based purchasing plan under
32.30this section the following fees:
32.31 (1) fees attributable to the costs of audits and other examinations of plan financial
32.32operations. These fees are subject to the provisions of Minnesota Rules, part 4685.2800,
32.33subpart 1, item F; and
32.34 (2) an annual fee of $21,500, to be paid by June 15 of each calendar year, beginning
32.35in calendar year 2009; and
33.1(3) for fiscal year 2009 only, a per-enrollee fee of 14.6 cents, based on the number of
33.2enrollees as of December 31, 2008.
33.3All fees collected under this paragraph shall be deposited in the state government special
33.4revenue fund.
33.5 Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.692, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
33.6 Subd. 5. County proposals. (a)On or before September 1, 1997, A county board
33.7that wishes to purchase or provide health care under this section must submit a preliminary
33.8proposal that substantially demonstrates the county's ability to meet all the requirements
33.9of this section in response to criteria for proposals issued by the departmenton or before
33.10July 1, 1997. Counties submitting preliminary proposals must establish a local planning
33.11process that involves input from medical assistance recipients, recipient advocates,
33.12providers and representatives of local school districts, labor, and tribal government to
33.13advise on the development of a final proposal and its implementation.
33.14(b) The county board must submit a final proposalon or before July 1, 1998, that
33.15demonstrates the ability to meet all the requirements of this section, including beginning
33.16enrollment on January 1, 1999, unless a delay has been granted under section
256B.69,
33.17subdivision 3a
, paragraph (g).
33.18(c)After January 1, 1999, For a county in which the prepaid medical assistance
33.19program is in existence, the county board must submit a preliminary proposal at least 15
33.20months prior to termination of health plan contracts in that county and a final proposal
33.21six months prior to the health plan contract termination date in order to begin enrollment
33.22after the termination. Nothing in this section shall impede or delay implementation or
33.23continuation of the prepaid medical assistance program in counties for which the board
33.24does not submit a proposal, or submits a proposal that is not in compliance with this section.
33.25(d) The commissioner is not required to terminate contracts for the prepaid medical
33.26assistance program that begin on or after September 1, 1997, in a county for which a
33.27county board has submitted a proposal under this paragraph, until two years have elapsed
33.28from the date of initial enrollment in the prepaid medical assistance program.
33.29 Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.76, subdivision 4, is
33.30amended to read:
33.31 Subd. 4. Critical access dental providers. (a) Effective for dental services
33.32rendered on or after January 1, 2002, the commissioner shall increase reimbursements
33.33to dentists and dental clinics deemed by the commissioner to be critical access dental
33.34providers. For dental services rendered on or after July 1, 2007, the commissioner shall
34.1increase reimbursement by 35 percent above the reimbursement rate that would otherwise
34.2be paid to the critical access dental provider. The commissioner shall pay the managed
34.3care plans and county-based purchasing plans in amounts sufficient to reflect increased
34.4reimbursements to critical access dental providers as approved by the commissioner.
34.5(b) The commissioner shall designate the following dentists and dental clinics as
34.6critical access dental providers:
34.7 (1) nonprofit community clinics that:
34.8(i) have nonprofit status in accordance with chapter 317A;
34.9(ii) have tax exempt status in accordance with the Internal Revenue Code, section
34.10501(c)(3);
34.11(iii) are established to provide oral health services to patients who are low income,
34.12uninsured, have special needs, and are underserved;
34.13(iv) have professional staff familiar with the cultural background of the clinic's
34.14patients;
34.15(v) charge for services on a sliding fee scale designed to provide assistance to
34.16low-income patients based on current poverty income guidelines and family size;
34.17(vi) do not restrict access or services because of a patient's financial limitations
34.18or public assistance status; and
34.19(vii) have free care available as needed;
34.20 (2) federally qualified health centers, rural health clinics, and public health clinics;
34.21 (3) city or county owned and operated hospital-based dental clinics;
34.22(4) a dental clinic or dental group owned and operated by a nonprofit corporation in
34.23accordance with chapter 317A with more than 10,000 patient encounters per year with
34.24patients who are uninsured or covered by medical assistance or MinnesotaCare;
34.25(5) a dental clinic owned and operated by the University of Minnesota or the
34.26Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system; and
34.27(6) private practicing dentists if:
34.28(i) the dentist's office is located within a health professional shortage area as defined
34.29under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, part 5, and United States Code, title 42,
34.30section 254E;
34.31(ii) more than 50 percent of the dentist's patient encounters per year are with patients
34.32who are uninsured or covered by medical assistance or MinnesotaCare;
34.33(iii) the dentist does not restrict access or services because of a patient's financial
34.34limitations or public assistance status; and
34.35(iv) the level of service provided by the dentist is critical to maintaining adequate
34.36levels of patient access within the service area in which the dentist operates.
35.1(c) A designated critical access clinic shall receive the reimbursement rate specified
35.2in paragraph (a) for dental services provided off site at a private dental office if the
35.3following requirements are met:
35.4(1) the designated critical access dental clinic is located within a health professional
35.5shortage area as defined under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, part 5, and United
35.6States Code, title 42, section 254E, and is located outside the seven-county metropolitan
35.7area;
35.8(2) the designated critical access dental clinic is not able to provide the service
35.9and refers the patient to the off-site dentist;
35.10(3) the service, if provided at the critical access dental clinic, would be reimbursed
35.11at the critical access reimbursement rate;
35.12(4) the dentist and allied dental professionals providing the services off site are
35.13licensed and in good standing under chapter 150A;
35.14(5) the dentist providing the services is enrolled as a medical assistance provider;
35.15(6) the critical access dental clinic submits the claim for services provided off site
35.16and receives the payment for the services; and
35.17(7) the critical access dental clinic maintains dental records for each claim submitted
35.18under this paragraph, including the name of the dentist, the off-site location, and the
35.19license number of the dentist and allied dental professionals providing the services.
35.20 Sec. 19. REPEALER.
35.21Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 256.959; 256.964; 256.9691; 256B.043;
35.22256B.075, subdivision 4; 256B.0757, subdivision 7; 256B.19, subdivision 3; 256B.53;
35.23256B.69, subdivisions 5e, 6c, and 24a; and 256B.692, subdivision 10, are repealed.
35.26 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4871, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
35.27 Subd. 3. Case management services. "Case management services" means activities
35.28that are coordinated with the family community support services and are designed to
35.29help the child with severe emotional disturbance and the child's family obtain needed
35.30mental health services, social services, educational services, health services, vocational
35.31services, recreational services, and related services in the areas of volunteer services,
35.32advocacy, transportation, and legal services. Case management services include assisting
35.33in obtaining a comprehensive diagnostic assessment,if needed, developing a functional
35.34assessment, developing an individual family community support plan, and assisting the
36.1child and the child's family in obtaining needed services by coordination with other
36.2agencies and assuring continuity of care. Case managers must assess and reassess the
36.3delivery, appropriateness, and effectiveness of services over time.
36.4 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4871, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
36.5 Subd. 6. Child with severe emotional disturbance. For purposes of eligibility for
36.6case management and family community support services, "child with severe emotional
36.7disturbance" means a child who has an emotional disturbance and who meets one of the
36.8following criteria:
36.9(1) the child has been admitted within the last three years or is at risk of being
36.10admitted to inpatient treatment or residential treatment for an emotional disturbance; or
36.11(2) the child is a Minnesota resident and is receiving inpatient treatment or
36.12residential treatment for an emotional disturbance through the interstate compact; or
36.13(3) the child has one of the following as determined by a mental health professional:
36.14(i) psychosis or a clinical depression; or
36.15(ii) risk of harming self or others as a result of an emotional disturbance; or
36.16(iii) psychopathological symptoms as a result of being a victim of physical or sexual
36.17abuse or of psychic trauma within the past year; or
36.18(4) the child, as a result of an emotional disturbance, has significantly impaired home,
36.19school, or community functioning that has lasted at least one year or that, in the written
36.20opinion of a mental health professional, presents substantial risk of lasting at least one year.
36.21The term "child with severe emotional disturbance" shall be used only for purposes
36.22of county eligibility determinations. In all other written and oral communications,
36.23case managers, mental health professionals, mental health practitioners, and all other
36.24providers of mental health services shall use the term "child eligible for mental health case
36.25management" in place of "child with severe emotional disturbance."
36.26 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4871, subdivision 27, is amended to read:
36.27 Subd. 27. Mental health professional. "Mental health professional" means a
36.28person providing clinical services in the diagnosis and treatment of children'semotional
36.29disorders mental illnesses or emotional disturbances. A mental health professional must
36.30have training and experience in working with children consistent with the age group to
36.31which the mental health professional is assigned. A mental health professional must be
36.32qualified in at least one of the following ways:
36.33 (1) in psychiatric nursing, the mental health professional must be a registered nurse
36.34who is licensed under sections148.171 to
148.285 and who is certified as a clinical
37.1specialist in child and adolescent psychiatric or mental health nursing by a national nurse
37.2certification organization or who has a master's degree in nursing or one of the behavioral
37.3sciences or related fields from an accredited college or university or its equivalent, with
37.4at least 4,000 hours of post-master's supervised experience in the delivery of clinical
37.5services in the treatment of mental illness;
37.6 (2) in clinical social work, the mental health professional must be a person licensed
37.7as an independent clinical social worker under chapter 148D, or a person with a master's
37.8degree in social work from an accredited college or university, with at least 4,000 hours of
37.9post-master's supervised experience in the delivery of clinical services in the treatment
37.10of mental disorders;
37.11 (3) in psychology, the mental health professional must be an individual licensed by
37.12the board of psychology under sections148.88 to
148.98 who has stated to the board of
37.13psychology competencies in the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders;
37.14 (4) in psychiatry, the mental health professional must be a physician licensed under
37.15chapter 147 and certified by the American board of psychiatry and neurology or eligible
37.16for board certification in psychiatry;
37.17 (5) in marriage and family therapy, the mental health professional must be a
37.18marriage and family therapist licensed under sections148B.29 to
148B.39 with at least
37.19two years of post-master's supervised experience in the delivery of clinical services in the
37.20treatment of mental disorders or emotional disturbances; or
37.21 (6) in licensed professional clinical counseling, the mental health professional shall
37.22be a licensed professional clinical counselor under section148B.5301 with at least 4,000
37.23hours of post-master's supervised experience in the delivery of clinical services in the
37.24treatment of mental disorders or emotional disturbances; or.
37.25(7) in allied fields, the mental health professional must be a person with a master's
37.26degree from an accredited college or university in one of the behavioral sciences or related
37.27fields, with at least 4,000 hours of post-master's supervised experience in the delivery of
37.28clinical services in the treatment of emotional disturbances.
37.29 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4873, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
37.30 Subd. 2. State level; coordination. The Children's Cabinet, under section4.045 , in
37.31consultation with a representative of the Minnesota District Judges Association Juvenile
37.32Committee, shall:
37.33(1) educate each agency about the policies, procedures, funding, and services for
37.34children with emotional disturbances of all agencies represented;
38.1(2) develop mechanisms for interagency coordination on behalf of children with
38.2emotional disturbances;
38.3(3) identify barriers including policies and procedures within all agencies represented
38.4that interfere with delivery of mental health services for children;
38.5(4) recommend policy and procedural changes needed to improve development and
38.6delivery of mental health services for children in the agency or agencies they represent; and
38.7(5) identify mechanisms for better use of federal and state funding in the delivery of
38.8mental health services for children; and.
38.9(6) perform the duties required under sections
245.494 to
245.495.
38.10 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4874, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
38.11 Subdivision 1. Duties of county board. (a) The county board must:
38.12 (1) develop a system of affordable and locally available children's mental health
38.13services according to sections245.487 to
245.4889 ;
38.14 (2) establish a mechanism providing for interagency coordination as specified in
38.15section245.4875, subdivision 6 ;
38.16 (3) consider the assessment of unmet needs in the county as reported by the local
38.17children's mental health advisory council under section245.4875, subdivision 5 , paragraph
38.18(b), clause (3). The county shall provide, upon request of the local children's mental health
38.19advisory council, readily available data to assist in the determination of unmet needs;
38.20 (4) assure that parents and providers in the county receive information about how to
38.21gain access to services provided according to sections245.487 to
245.4889 ;
38.22 (5) coordinate the delivery of children's mental health services with services provided
38.23by social services, education, corrections, health, and vocational agencies to improve the
38.24availability of mental health services to children and the cost-effectiveness of their delivery;
38.25 (6) assure that mental health services delivered according to sections245.487
38.26to
245.4889 are delivered expeditiously and are appropriate to the child's diagnostic
38.27assessment and individual treatment plan;
38.28(7) provide the community with information about predictors and symptoms of
38.29emotional disturbances and how to access children's mental health services according to
38.30sections
245.4877 and
245.4878;
38.31(8) (7) provide for case management services to each child with severe emotional
38.32disturbance according to sections245.486 ;
245.4871 , subdivisions 3 and 4; and
245.4881,
38.33subdivisions 1, 3, and 5 ;
39.1(9) (8) provide for screening of each child under section
245.4885 upon admission
39.2to a residential treatment facility, acute care hospital inpatient treatment, or informal
39.3admission to a regional treatment center;
39.4(10) (9) prudently administer grants and purchase-of-service contracts that the
39.5county board determines are necessary to fulfill its responsibilities under sections245.487
39.6to245.4889 ;
39.7(11) (10) assure that mental health professionals, mental health practitioners, and
39.8case managers employed by or under contract to the county to provide mental health
39.9services are qualified under section245.4871 ;
39.10(12) (11) assure that children's mental health services are coordinated with adult
39.11mental health services specified in sections245.461 to
245.486 so that a continuum of
39.12mental health services is available to serve persons with mental illness, regardless of
39.13the person's age;
39.14(13) (12) assure that culturally competent mental health consultants are used as
39.15necessary to assist the county board in assessing and providing appropriate treatment for
39.16children of cultural or racial minority heritage; and
39.17(14) (13) consistent with section
245.486 , arrange for or provide a children's mental
39.18health screening for:
39.19(i) a child receiving child protective services;
39.20(ii) a child in out-of-home placement;
39.21(iii) a child for whom parental rights have been terminated;
39.22(iv) a child found to be delinquent; or
39.23(v) a child found to have committed a juvenile petty offense for the third or
39.24subsequent time.
39.25A children's mental health screening is not required when a screening or diagnostic
39.26assessment has been performed within the previous 180 days, or the child is currently
39.27under the care of a mental health professional.
39.28(b) When a child is receiving protective services or is in out-of-home placement,
39.29the court or county agency must notify a parent or guardian whose parental rights have
39.30not been terminated of the potential mental health screening and the option to prevent the
39.31screening by notifying the court or county agency in writing.
39.32(c) When a child is found to be delinquent or a child is found to have committed a
39.33juvenile petty offense for the third or subsequent time, the court or county agency must
39.34obtain written informed consent from the parent or legal guardian before a screening is
39.35conducted unless the court, notwithstanding the parent's failure to consent, determines that
39.36the screening is in the child's best interest.
40.1(d) The screening shall be conducted with a screening instrument approved by
40.2the commissioner of human services according to criteria that are updated and issued
40.3annually to ensure that approved screening instruments are valid and useful for child
40.4welfare and juvenile justice populations. Screenings shall be conducted by a mental health
40.5practitioner as defined in section245.4871, subdivision 26 , or a probation officer or local
40.6social services agency staff person who is trained in the use of the screening instrument.
40.7Training in the use of the instrument shall include:
40.8(1) training in the administration of the instrument;
40.9(2) the interpretation of its validity given the child's current circumstances;
40.10(3) the state and federal data practices laws and confidentiality standards;
40.11(4) the parental consent requirement; and
40.12(5) providing respect for families and cultural values.
40.13If the screen indicates a need for assessment, the child's family, or if the family lacks
40.14mental health insurance, the local social services agency, in consultation with the child's
40.15family, shall have conducted a diagnostic assessment, including a functional assessment,
40.16as defined in section
245.4871 . The administration of the screening shall safeguard the
40.17privacy of children receiving the screening and their families and shall comply with the
40.18Minnesota Government Data Practices Act, chapter 13, and the federal Health Insurance
40.19Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191. Screening results shall be
40.20considered private dataand the commissioner shall not collect individual screening results.
40.21 (e) When the county board refers clients to providers of children's therapeutic
40.22services and supports under section256B.0943 , the county board must clearly identify
40.23the desired services components not covered under section256B.0943 and identify the
40.24reimbursement source for those requested services, the method of payment, and the
40.25payment rate to the provider.
40.26 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4881, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
40.27 Subd. 3. Duties of case manager. (a) Upon a determination of eligibility for case
40.28management services, the case manager shallcomplete a written functional assessment
40.29according to section
245.4871, subdivision 18. The case manager shall develop an
40.30individual family community support plan for a child as specified in subdivision 4, review
40.31the child's progress, and monitor the provision of services. If services are to be provided
40.32in a host county that is not the county of financial responsibility, the case manager shall
40.33consult with the host county and obtain a letter demonstrating the concurrence of the host
40.34county regarding the provision of services.
41.1(b) The case manager shall note in the child's record the services needed by the
41.2child and the child's family, the services requested by the family, services that are not
41.3available, and the unmet needs of the child and child's family. The case manager shall
41.4note this provision in the child's record.
41.5 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4881, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
41.6 Subd. 4. Individual family community support plan. (a) For each child, the case
41.7manager must develop an individual family community support plan that incorporates the
41.8child's individual treatment plan. The individual treatment plan may not be a substitute
41.9for the development of an individual family community support plan. The case manager
41.10is responsible for developing the individual family community support plan within 30
41.11days of intake based on a diagnostic assessmentand a functional assessment and for
41.12implementing and monitoring the delivery of services according to the individual family
41.13community support plan. The case manager must review the plan at least every 180
41.14calendar days after it is developed, unless the case manager has received a written request
41.15from the child's family or an advocate for the child for a review of the plan every 90
41.16days after it is developed. To the extent appropriate, the child with severe emotional
41.17disturbance, the child's family, advocates, service providers, and significant others must
41.18be involved in all phases of development and implementation of the individual family
41.19community support plan. Notwithstanding the lack of an individual family community
41.20support plan, the case manager shall assist the child and child's family in accessing the
41.21needed services listed in section245.4884, subdivision 1 .
41.22(b) The child's individual family community support plan must state:
41.23(1) the goals and expected outcomes of each service and criteria for evaluating the
41.24effectiveness and appropriateness of the service;
41.25(2) the activities for accomplishing each goal;
41.26(3) a schedule for each activity; and
41.27(4) the frequency of face-to-face contacts by the case manager, as appropriate to
41.28client need and the implementation of the individual family community support plan.
41.29 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4882, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
41.30 Subdivision 1. Availability of residential treatment services. County boards must
41.31provide or contract for enough residential treatment services to meet the needs of each
41.32child with severe emotional disturbance residing in the county and needing this level of
41.33care. Length of stay is based on the child's residential treatment need and shall be subject
41.34to the six-month review process established in section260C.203 , and for children in
42.1voluntary placement for treatment, the court review process in section260D.06 . Services
42.2must be appropriate to the child's age and treatment needs and must be made available as
42.3close to the county as possible. Residential treatment must be designed to:
42.4(1) prevent placement in settings that are more intensive, costly, or restrictive than
42.5necessary and appropriate to meet the child's needs;
42.6(2) (1) help the child improve family living and social interaction skills;
42.7(3) (2) help the child gain the necessary skills to return to the community;
42.8(4) (3) stabilize crisis admissions; and
42.9(5) (4) work with families throughout the placement to improve the ability of the
42.10families to care for children with severe emotional disturbance in the home.
42.11 Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 246.325, is amended to read:
42.12246.325 GARDEN OF REMEMBRANCE.
42.13The cemetery located on the grounds of the Cambridge State Hospital shall be
42.14known as the Garden of Remembrance.The commissioner of human services shall
42.15approve the wording and design for a sign at the cemetery indicating its name. The
42.16commissioner may approve a temporary sign before the permanent sign is completed and
42.17installed. All costs related to the sign must be paid with nonstate funds.
42.18 Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 254B.05, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
42.19 Subd. 2. Regulatory methods. (a) Where appropriate and feasible, the
42.20commissioner shall identify and implement alternative methods of regulation and
42.21enforcement to the extent authorized in this subdivision. These methods shall include:
42.22(1) expansion of the types and categories of licenses that may be granted;
42.23(2) when the standards of an independent accreditation body have been shown to
42.24predict compliance with the rules, the commissioner shall consider compliance with the
42.25accreditation standards to be equivalent to partial compliance with the rules; and
42.26(3) use of an abbreviated inspection that employs key standards that have been
42.27shown to predict full compliance with the rules.
42.28If the commissioner determines that the methods in clause (2) or (3) can be used in
42.29licensing a program, the commissioner may reduce any fee set under section
254B.03,
42.30subdivision 3
, by up to 50 percent.
42.31(b) The commissioner shall work with the commissioners of health, public
42.32safety, administration, and education in consolidating duplicative licensing and
42.33certification rules and standards if the commissioner determines that consolidation is
42.34administratively feasible, would significantly reduce the cost of licensing, and would
43.1not reduce the protection given to persons receiving services in licensed programs.
43.2Where administratively feasible and appropriate, the commissioner shall work with the
43.3commissioners of health, public safety, administration, and education in conducting joint
43.4agency inspections of programs.
43.5(c) The commissioner shall work with the commissioners of health, public safety,
43.6administration, and education in establishing a single point of application for applicants
43.7who are required to obtain concurrent licensure from more than one of the commissioners
43.8listed in this clause.
43.9 Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256.01, subdivision 14b, is amended to read:
43.10 Subd. 14b. American Indian child welfare projects. (a) The commissioner of
43.11human services may authorize projects to test tribal delivery of child welfare services to
43.12American Indian children and their parents and custodians living on the reservation.
43.13The commissioner has authority to solicit and determine which tribes may participate
43.14in a project. Grants may be issued to Minnesota Indian tribes to support the projects.
43.15The commissioner may waive existing state rules as needed to accomplish the projects.
43.16Notwithstanding section626.556 , the commissioner may authorize projects to use
43.17alternative methods of investigating and assessing reports of child maltreatment, provided
43.18that the projects comply with the provisions of section626.556 dealing with the rights
43.19of individuals who are subjects of reports or investigations, including notice and appeal
43.20rights and data practices requirements. The commissioner may seek any federal approvals
43.21necessary to carry out the projects as well as seek and use any funds available to the
43.22commissioner, including use of federal funds, foundation funds, existing grant funds,
43.23and other funds. The commissioner is authorized to advance state funds as necessary to
43.24operate the projects. Federal reimbursement applicable to the projects is appropriated
43.25to the commissioner for the purposes of the projects. The projects must be required to
43.26address responsibility for safety, permanency, and well-being of children.
43.27(b) For the purposes of this section, "American Indian child" means a person under 21
43.28years old and who is a tribal member or eligible for membership in one of the tribes chosen
43.29for a project under this subdivision and who is residing on the reservation of that tribe.
43.30(c) In order to qualify for an American Indian child welfare project, a tribe must:
43.31(1) be one of the existing tribes with reservation land in Minnesota;
43.32(2) have a tribal court with jurisdiction over child custody proceedings;
43.33(3) have a substantial number of children for whom determinations of maltreatment
43.34have occurred;
43.35(4) have capacity to respond to reports of abuse and neglect under section626.556 ;
44.1(5) provide a wide range of services to families in need of child welfare services; and
44.2(6) have a tribal-state title IV-E agreement in effect.
44.3(d) Grants awarded under this section may be used for the nonfederal costs of
44.4providing child welfare services to American Indian children on the tribe's reservation,
44.5including costs associated with:
44.6(1) assessment and prevention of child abuse and neglect;
44.7(2) family preservation;
44.8(3) facilitative, supportive, and reunification services;
44.9(4) out-of-home placement for children removed from the home for child protective
44.10purposes; and
44.11(5) other activities and services approved by the commissioner that further the goals
44.12of providing safety, permanency, and well-being of American Indian children.
44.13(e) When a tribe has initiated a project and has been approved by the commissioner
44.14to assume child welfare responsibilities for American Indian children of that tribe under
44.15this section, the affected county social service agency is relieved of responsibility for
44.16responding to reports of abuse and neglect under section626.556 for those children
44.17during the time within which the tribal project is in effect and funded. The commissioner
44.18shall work with tribes and affected counties to develop procedures for data collection,
44.19evaluation, and clarification of ongoing role and financial responsibilities of the county
44.20and tribe for child welfare services prior to initiation of the project. Children who have not
44.21been identified by the tribe as participating in the project shall remain the responsibility
44.22of the county. Nothing in this section shall alter responsibilities of the county for law
44.23enforcement or court services.
44.24(f) Participating tribes may conduct children's mental health screenings under section
44.25245.4874, subdivision 1
, paragraph (a), clause (14) (13), for children who are eligible for
44.26the initiative and living on the reservation and who meet one of the following criteria:
44.27(1) the child must be receiving child protective services;
44.28(2) the child must be in foster care; or
44.29(3) the child's parents must have had parental rights suspended or terminated.
44.30Tribes may access reimbursement from available state funds for conducting the screenings.
44.31Nothing in this section shall alter responsibilities of the county for providing services
44.32under section245.487 .
44.33(g) Participating tribes may establish a local child mortality review panel. In
44.34establishing a local child mortality review panel, the tribe agrees to conduct local child
44.35mortality reviews for child deaths or near-fatalities occurring on the reservation under
44.36subdivision 12. Tribes with established child mortality review panels shall have access
45.1to nonpublic data and shall protect nonpublic data under subdivision 12, paragraphs (c)
45.2to (e). The tribe shall provide written notice to the commissioner and affected counties
45.3when a local child mortality review panel has been established and shall provide data upon
45.4request of the commissioner for purposes of sharing nonpublic data with members of the
45.5state child mortality review panel in connection to an individual case.
45.6(h) The commissioner shall collect information on outcomes relating to child safety,
45.7permanency, and well-being of American Indian children who are served in the projects.
45.8Participating tribes must provide information to the state in a format and completeness
45.9deemed acceptable by the state to meet state and federal reporting requirements.
45.10 (i) In consultation with the White Earth Band, the commissioner shall develop
45.11and submit to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees
45.12with jurisdiction over health and human services a plan to transfer legal responsibility
45.13for providing child protective services to White Earth Band member children residing in
45.14Hennepin County to the White Earth Band. The plan shall include a financing proposal,
45.15definitions of key terms, statutory amendments required, and other provisions required to
45.16implement the plan. The commissioner shall submit the plan by January 15, 2012.
45.17 Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.0943, subdivision 1,
45.18is amended to read:
45.19 Subdivision 1. Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following terms have
45.20the meanings given them.
45.21(a) "Children's therapeutic services and supports" means the flexible package of
45.22mental health services for children who require varying therapeutic and rehabilitative
45.23levels of intervention. The services are time-limited interventions that are delivered using
45.24various treatment modalities and combinations of services designed to reach treatment
45.25outcomes identified in the individual treatment plan.
45.26(b) "Clinical supervision" means the overall responsibility of the mental health
45.27professional for the control and direction of individualized treatment planning, service
45.28delivery, and treatment review for each client. A mental health professional who is an
45.29enrolled Minnesota health care program provider accepts full professional responsibility
45.30for a supervisee's actions and decisions, instructs the supervisee in the supervisee's work,
45.31and oversees or directs the supervisee's work.
45.32(c) "County board" means the county board of commissioners or board established
45.33under sections402.01 to
402.10 or
471.59 .
45.34(d) "Crisis assistance" has the meaning given in section245.4871, subdivision 9a .
46.1(e) "Culturally competent provider" means a provider who understands and can
46.2utilize to a client's benefit the client's culture when providing services to the client. A
46.3provider may be culturally competent because the provider is of the same cultural or
46.4ethnic group as the client or the provider has developed the knowledge and skills through
46.5training and experience to provide services to culturally diverse clients.
46.6(f) "Day treatment program" for children means a site-based structured mental
46.7health program consisting ofgroup psychotherapy for more than three or more individuals
46.8andother intensive therapeutic services individual or group skills training provided by a
46.9multidisciplinary team, under the clinical supervision of a mental health professional.
46.10(g) "Diagnostic assessment" has the meaning given in Minnesota Rules, part
46.119505.0372, subpart 1.
46.12(h) "Direct service time" means the time that a mental health professional, mental
46.13health practitioner, or mental health behavioral aide spends face-to-face with a client
46.14and the client's family. Direct service time includes time in which the provider obtains
46.15a client's history or provides service components of children's therapeutic services and
46.16supports. Direct service time does not include time doing work before and after providing
46.17direct services, including scheduling, maintaining clinical records, consulting with others
46.18about the client's mental health status, preparing reports, receiving clinical supervision,
46.19and revising the client's individual treatment plan.
46.20(i) "Direction of mental health behavioral aide" means the activities of a mental
46.21health professional or mental health practitioner in guiding the mental health behavioral
46.22aide in providing services to a client. The direction of a mental health behavioral aide
46.23must be based on the client's individualized treatment plan and meet the requirements in
46.24subdivision 6, paragraph (b), clause (5).
46.25(j) "Emotional disturbance" has the meaning given in section245.4871, subdivision
46.2615 . For persons at least age 18 but under age 21, mental illness has the meaning given in
46.27section245.462, subdivision 20 , paragraph (a).
46.28(k) "Individual behavioral plan" means a plan of intervention, treatment, and
46.29services for a child written by a mental health professional or mental health practitioner,
46.30under the clinical supervision of a mental health professional, to guide the work of the
46.31mental health behavioral aide.
46.32(l) "Individual treatment plan" has the meaning given in section245.4871,
46.33subdivision 21 .
46.34(m) "Mental health behavioral aide services" means medically necessary one-on-one
46.35activities performed by a trained paraprofessional to assist a child retain or generalize
46.36psychosocial skills as taught by a mental health professional or mental health practitioner
47.1and as described in the child's individual treatment plan and individual behavior plan.
47.2Activities involve working directly with the child or child's family as provided in
47.3subdivision 9, paragraph (b), clause (4).
47.4(n) "Mental health practitioner" means an individual as defined in section245.4871 ,
47.5subdivision 26.
47.6(o) "Mental health professional" means an individual as defined in section245.4871,
47.7subdivision 27 , clauses (1) to (6), or tribal vendor as defined in section
256B.02,
47.8subdivision 7 , paragraph (b).
47.9 (p) "Mental health service plan development" includes:
47.10 (1) the development, review, and revision of a child's individual treatment plan,
47.11as provided in Minnesota Rules, part 9505.0371, subpart 7, including involvement of
47.12the client or client's parents, primary caregiver, or other person authorized to consent to
47.13mental health services for the client, and including arrangement of treatment and support
47.14activities specified in the individual treatment plan; and
47.15 (2) administering standardized outcome measurement instruments, determined
47.16and updated by the commissioner, as periodically needed to evaluate the effectiveness
47.17of treatment for children receiving clinical services and reporting outcome measures,
47.18as required by the commissioner.
47.19(q) "Skills training" means individual, family, or group training, delivered by or
47.20under the direction of a mental health professional, designed to facilitate the acquisition
47.21of psychosocial skills that are medically necessary to rehabilitate the child to an
47.22age-appropriate developmental trajectory heretofore disrupted by a psychiatric illness
47.23or to self-monitor, compensate for, cope with, counteract, or replace skills deficits or
47.24maladaptive skills acquired over the course of a psychiatric illness. Skills training is
47.25subject to the following requirements:
47.26(1) a mental health professional or a mental health practitioner must provide skills
47.27training;
47.28(2) the child must always be present during skills training; however, a brief absence
47.29of the child for no more than ten percent of the session unit may be allowed to redirect or
47.30instruct family members;
47.31(3) skills training delivered to children or their families must be targeted to the
47.32specific deficits or maladaptations of the child's mental health disorder and must be
47.33prescribed in the child's individual treatment plan;
47.34(4) skills training delivered to the child's family must teach skills needed by parents
47.35to enhance the child's skill development and to help the child use in daily life the skills
48.1previously taught by a mental health professional or mental health practitioner and to
48.2develop or maintain a home environment that supports the child's progressive use skills;
48.3(5) group skills training may be provided to multiple recipients who, because of the
48.4nature of their emotional, behavioral, or social dysfunction, can derive mutual benefit from
48.5interaction in a group setting, which must be staffed as follows:
48.6(i) one mental health professional or one mental health practitioner under supervision
48.7of a licensed mental health professional must work with a group of four to eight clients; or
48.8(ii) two mental health professionals or two mental health practitioners under
48.9supervision of a licensed mental health professional, or one professional plus one
48.10practitioner must work with a group of nine to 12 clients.
48.11 Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.0943, subdivision 2,
48.12is amended to read:
48.13 Subd. 2. Covered service components of children's therapeutic services and
48.14supports. (a) Subject to federal approval, medical assistance covers medically necessary
48.15children's therapeutic services and supports as defined in this section that an eligible
48.16provider entity certified under subdivision 4 provides to a client eligible under subdivision
48.173.
48.18(b) The service components of children's therapeutic services and supports are:
48.19(1)individual patient or family member, family, psychotherapy for crisis, and group
48.20psychotherapy;
48.21(2) individual, family, or group skills training provided by a mental health
48.22professional or mental health practitioner;
48.23(3) crisis assistance;
48.24(4) mental health behavioral aide services;
48.25(5) direction of a mental health behavioral aide;
48.26(6) mental health service plan development; and
48.27(7)clinical care consultation under section
256B.0625, subdivision 62; children's
48.28day treatment.
48.29(8) family psychoeducation under section
256B.0625, subdivision 61; and
48.30(9) services provided by a family peer specialist under section
256B.0616.
48.31(c) Service components in paragraph (b) may be combined to constitute therapeutic
48.32programs, including day treatment programs and therapeutic preschool programs.
48.33EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
49.1 Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.0943, subdivision 7,
49.2is amended to read:
49.3 Subd. 7. Qualifications of individual and team providers. (a) An individual
49.4or team provider working within the scope of the provider's practice or qualifications
49.5may provide service components of children's therapeutic services and supports that are
49.6identified as medically necessary in a client's individual treatment plan.
49.7(b) An individual provider must be qualified as:
49.8(1) a mental health professional as defined in subdivision 1, paragraph (n); or
49.9(2) a mental health practitioneras defined in section
245.4871, subdivision 26 or
49.10clinical trainee. The mental health practitioner or clinical trainee must work under the
49.11clinical supervision of a mental health professional; or
49.12(3) a mental health behavioral aide working under the clinical supervision of
49.13a mental health professional to implement the rehabilitative mental health services
49.14previously introduced by a mental health professional or practitioner and identified in the
49.15client's individual treatment plan and individual behavior plan.
49.16(A) A level I mental health behavioral aide must:
49.17(i) be at least 18 years old;
49.18(ii) have a high school diploma or general equivalency diploma (GED) or two years
49.19of experience as a primary caregiver to a child with severe emotional disturbance within
49.20the previous ten years; and
49.21(iii) meet preservice and continuing education requirements under subdivision 8.
49.22(B) A level II mental health behavioral aide must:
49.23(i) be at least 18 years old;
49.24(ii) have an associate or bachelor's degree or 4,000 hours of experience in delivering
49.25clinical services in the treatment of mental illness concerning children or adolescents or
49.26complete a certificate program established under subdivision 8a; and
49.27(iii) meet preservice and continuing education requirements in subdivision 8.
49.28(c) A preschool program multidisciplinary team must include at least one mental
49.29health professional and one or more of the following individuals under the clinical
49.30supervision of a mental health professional:
49.31(i) a mental health practitioner; or
49.32(ii) a program person, including a teacher, assistant teacher, or aide, who meets the
49.33qualifications and training standards of a level I mental health behavioral aide.
49.34(d) (c) A day treatment multidisciplinary team must include at least one mental
49.35health professional or clinical trainee and one mental health practitioner.
49.36EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
50.1 Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0943, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
50.2 Subd. 8. Required preservice and continuing education. (a) A provider entity
50.3shall establish a plan to provide preservice and continuing education for staff. The plan
50.4must clearly describe the type of training necessary to maintain current skills and obtain
50.5new skills and that relates to the provider entity's goals and objectives for services offered.
50.6 (b) A provider that employs a mental health behavioral aide under this section must
50.7require the mental health behavioral aide to complete 30 hours of preservice training. The
50.8preservice training must includetopics specified in Minnesota Rules, part 9535.4068,
50.9subparts 1 and 2, and parent team training. The preservice training must include 15 hours
50.10of in-person training of a mental health behavioral aide in mental health services delivery
50.11and eight hours of parent team training. Curricula for parent team training must be
50.12approved in advance by the commissioner. Components of parent team training include:
50.13 (1) partnering with parents;
50.14 (2) fundamentals of family support;
50.15 (3) fundamentals of policy and decision making;
50.16 (4) defining equal partnership;
50.17 (5) complexities of the parent and service provider partnership in multiple service
50.18delivery systems due to system strengths and weaknesses;
50.19 (6) sibling impacts;
50.20 (7) support networks; and
50.21 (8) community resources.
50.22 (c) A provider entity that employs a mental health practitioner and a mental health
50.23behavioral aide to provide children's therapeutic services and supports under this section
50.24must require the mental health practitioner and mental health behavioral aide to complete
50.2520 hours of continuing education every two calendar years. The continuing education
50.26must be related to serving the needs of a child with emotional disturbance in the child's
50.27home environment and the child's family.The topics covered in orientation and training
50.28must conform to Minnesota Rules, part 9535.4068.
50.29 (d) The provider entity must document the mental health practitioner's or mental
50.30health behavioral aide's annual completion of the required continuing education. The
50.31documentation must include the date, subject, and number of hours of the continuing
50.32education, and attendance records, as verified by the staff member's signature, job
50.33title, and the instructor's name. The provider entity must keep documentation for each
50.34employee, including records of attendance at professional workshops and conferences,
50.35at a central location and in the employee's personnel file.
50.36EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
51.1 Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0943, subdivision 10, is amended to
51.2read:
51.3 Subd. 10. Service authorization.The commissioner shall publish in the State
51.4Register a list of health services that require prior authorization, as well as the criteria
51.5and standards used to select health services on the list. The list and the criteria and
51.6standards used to formulate the list are not subject to the requirements of sections
14.001
51.7 to
14.69. The commissioner's decision on whether prior authorization is required for a
51.8health service is not subject to administrative appeal. Children's therapeutic services and
51.9supports are subject to authorization criteria and standards published by the commissioner
51.10according to section 256B.0625, subdivision 25.
51.11EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
51.12 Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0943, subdivision 12, is amended to
51.13read:
51.14 Subd. 12. Excluded services. The following services are not eligible for medical
51.15assistance payment as children's therapeutic services and supports:
51.16 (1) service components of children's therapeutic services and supports simultaneously
51.17provided by more than one provider entity unless prior authorization is obtained;
51.18 (2) treatment by multiple providers within the same agency at the same clock time;
51.19(3) children's therapeutic services and supports provided in violation of medical
51.20assistance policy in Minnesota Rules, part 9505.0220;
51.21 (4) mental health behavioral aide services provided by a personal care assistant who
51.22is not qualified as a mental health behavioral aide and employed by a certified children's
51.23therapeutic services and supports provider entity;
51.24 (5) service components of CTSS that are the responsibility of a residential or
51.25program license holder, including foster care providers under the terms of a service
51.26agreement or administrative rules governing licensure; and
51.27 (6) adjunctive activities that may be offered by a provider entity but are not
51.28otherwise covered by medical assistance, including:
51.29 (i) a service that is primarily recreation oriented or that is provided in a setting that
51.30is not medically supervised. This includes sports activities, exercise groups, activities
51.31such as craft hours, leisure time, social hours, meal or snack time, trips to community
51.32activities, and tours;
51.33 (ii) a social or educational service that does not have or cannot reasonably be
51.34expected to have a therapeutic outcome related to the client's emotional disturbance;
52.1(iii) consultation with other providers or service agency staff about the care or
52.2progress of a client;
52.3(iv) (iii) prevention or education programs provided to the community; and
52.4(v) (iv) treatment for clients with primary diagnoses of alcohol or other drug abuse;
52.5and.
52.6(7) activities that are not direct service time.
52.7EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
52.8 Sec. 18. REPEALER.
52.9(a) Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 245.0311; 245.0312; 245.4861; 245.487,
52.10subdivisions 4 and 5; 245.4871, subdivisions 7, 11, 18, and 25; 245.4872; 245.4873,
52.11subdivisions 3 and 6; 245.4875, subdivisions 3, 6, and 7; 245.4883, subdivision 1;
52.12245.490; 245.492, subdivisions 6, 8, 13, and 19; 245.4932, subdivisions 2, 3, and 4;
52.13245.4933; 245.494; 245.63; 245.652; 245.69, subdivision 1; 245.714; 245.715; 245.717;
52.14245.718; 245.721; 245.77; 245.821; 245.827; 245.981; 246.012; 246.0135; 246.016;
52.15246.023, subdivision 1; 246.16; 246.28; 246.71; 246.711; 246.712; 246.713; 246.714;
52.16246.715; 246.716; 246.717; 246.718; 246.719; 246.72; 246.721; 246.722; 251.045;
52.17252.05; 252.07; 252.09; 254.01; 254.03; 254.04; 254.06; 254.07; 254.09; 254.10; 254.11;
52.18254A.05, subdivision 1; 254A.07, subdivisions 1 and 2; 254A.16, subdivision 1; 254B.01,
52.19subdivision 1; and 254B.04, subdivision 3, are repealed.
52.20(b) Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, sections 246.0251; 254.05; and 254B.13,
52.21subdivision 3, are repealed.
52.24 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0913, subdivision 5a, is amended to
52.25read:
52.26 Subd. 5a. Services; service definitions; service standards. (a) Unless specified in
52.27statute, the services, service definitions, and standards for alternative care services shall
52.28be the same as the services, service definitions, and standards specified in the federally
52.29approved elderly waiver plan, except alternative care does not cover transitional support
52.30services, assisted living services, adult foster care services, and residential care and
52.31benefits defined under section256B.0625 that meet primary and acute health care needs.
52.32 (b) The lead agency must ensure that the funds are not used to supplant or
52.33supplement services available through other public assistance or services programs,
53.1including supplementation of client co-pays, deductibles, premiums, or other cost-sharing
53.2arrangements for health-related benefits and services or entitlement programs and services
53.3that are available to the person, but in which they have elected not to enroll. The
53.4lead agency must ensure that the benefit department recovery system in the Medicaid
53.5Management Information System (MMIS) has the necessary information on any other
53.6health insurance or third-party insurance policy to which the client may have access.For a
53.7provider of supplies and equipment when the monthly cost of the supplies and equipment
53.8is less than $250, persons or agencies must be employed by or under a contract with the
53.9lead agency or the public health nursing agency of the local board of health in order to
53.10receive funding under the alternative care program. Supplies and equipment may be
53.11purchased from a vendor not certified to participate in the Medicaid program if the cost for
53.12the item is less than that of a Medicaid vendor.
53.13 (c) Personal care services must meet the service standards defined in the federally
53.14approved elderly waiver plan, except that a lead agency maycontract with authorize
53.15services to be provided by a client's relative who meets the relative hardship waiver
53.16requirements or a relative who meets the criteria and is also the responsible party under
53.17an individual service plan that ensures the client's health and safety and supervision of
53.18the personal care services by a qualified professional as defined in section256B.0625,
53.19subdivision 19c . Relative hardship is established by the lead agency when the client's care
53.20causes a relative caregiver to do any of the following: resign from a paying job, reduce
53.21work hours resulting in lost wages, obtain a leave of absence resulting in lost wages, incur
53.22substantial client-related expenses, provide services to address authorized, unstaffed direct
53.23care time, or meet special needs of the client unmet in the formal service plan.
53.24 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0913, subdivision 14, is amended to read:
53.25 Subd. 14. Provider requirements, payment, and rate adjustments. (a) Unless
53.26otherwise specified in statute, providers must be enrolled as Minnesota health care
53.27program providers and abide by the requirements for provider participation according to
53.28Minnesota Rules, part 9505.0195.
53.29 (b) Payment for provided alternative care services as approved by the client's
53.30case manager shall occur through the invoice processing procedures of the department's
53.31Medicaid Management Information System (MMIS). To receive payment, the lead agency
53.32or vendor must submit invoices within 12 months following the date of service. The lead
53.33agency and its vendorsunder contract shall not be reimbursed for services which exceed
53.34the county allocation. Service rates are governed by section 256B.0915, subdivision 3g.
54.1(c) The lead agency shall negotiate individual rates with vendors and may authorize
54.2service payment for actual costs up to the county's current approved rate. Notwithstanding
54.3any other rule or statutory provision to the contrary, the commissioner shall not be
54.4authorized to increase rates by an annual inflation factor, unless so authorized by the
54.5legislature. To improve access to community services and eliminate payment disparities
54.6between the alternative care program and the elderly waiver program, the commissioner
54.7shall establish statewide maximum service rate limits and eliminate county-specific
54.8service rate limits.
54.9(1) Effective July 1, 2001, for service rate limits, except those in subdivision 5,
54.10paragraphs (d) and (i), the rate limit for each service shall be the greater of the alternative
54.11care statewide maximum rate or the elderly waiver statewide maximum rate.
54.12(2) Lead agencies may negotiate individual service rates with vendors for actual
54.13costs up to the statewide maximum service rate limit.
54.14 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0915, subdivision 3c, is amended to read:
54.15 Subd. 3c. Service approvaland contracting provisions. (a) Medical assistance
54.16funding for skilled nursing services, private duty nursing, home health aide, and personal
54.17care services for waiver recipients must be approved by the case manager and included in
54.18the coordinated service and support plan.
54.19(b) A lead agency is not required to contract with a provider of supplies and
54.20equipment if the monthly cost of the supplies and equipment is less than $250.
54.21 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0915, subdivision 3d, is amended to read:
54.22 Subd. 3d. Adult foster care rate. The adult foster care rateshall be considered a
54.23difficulty of care payment and shall not include room and board. The adult foster care
54.24service rate shall be negotiated between the lead agency and the foster care provider. The
54.25elderly waiver payment for the foster care service in combination with the payment for
54.26all other elderly waiver services, including case management, must not exceed the limit
54.27specified in subdivision 3a, paragraph (a).
54.28 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0915, subdivision 3f, is amended to read:
54.29 Subd. 3f.Individual service rates Payments for services; expenditure forecasts.
54.30 (a)The lead agency shall negotiate individual service rates with vendors and may
54.31authorize payment for actual costs up to the lead agency's current approved rate. Persons
54.32or agencies must be employed by or under a contract with the lead agency or the public
54.33health nursing agency of the local board of health in order to receive funding under the
55.1elderly waiver program, except as a provider of supplies and equipment when the monthly
55.2cost of the supplies and equipment is less than $250. Lead agencies shall authorize
55.3payments for services in accordance with the payment rates and limits published annually
55.4by the commissioner.
55.5 (b) Reimbursement for the medical assistance recipients under the approved waiver
55.6shall be made from the medical assistance account through the invoice processing
55.7procedures of the department's Medicaid Management Information System (MMIS),
55.8only with the approval of the client's case manager. The budget for the state share of the
55.9Medicaid expenditures shall be forecasted with the medical assistance budget, and shall
55.10be consistent with the approved waiver.
55.11 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0915, subdivision 3g, is amended to read:
55.12 Subd. 3g. Service rate limits; state assumption of costs. (a) To improve access
55.13to community services and eliminate payment disparities between the alternative care
55.14program and the elderly waiver, the commissioner shall establish statewidemaximum
55.15 service rate limits and eliminate lead agency-specific service rate limits.
55.16 (b) Effective July 1, 2001, for statewide service rate limits, except those described
55.17or defined in subdivisions 3dand, 3e, and 3h, the statewide service rate limit for each
55.18service shall be the greater of the alternative care statewidemaximum rate or the elderly
55.19waiver statewidemaximum rate.
55.20(c) Lead agencies may negotiate individual service rates with vendors for actual
55.21costs up to the statewide maximum service rate limit.
55.22 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 517.04, is amended to read:
55.23517.04 PERSONS AUTHORIZED TO PERFORM CIVIL MARRIAGES.
55.24Civil marriages may be solemnized throughout the state by an individual who has
55.25attained the age of 21 years and is a judge of a court of record, a retired judge of a court
55.26of record, a court administrator, a retired court administrator with the approval of the
55.27chief judge of the judicial district, a former court commissioner who is employed by the
55.28court system or is acting pursuant to an order of the chief judge of the commissioner's
55.29judicial district,the residential school administrators of the Minnesota State Academy
55.30for the Deaf and the Minnesota State Academy for the Blind, a licensed or ordained
55.31minister of any religious denomination, or by any mode recognized in section517.18 . For
55.32purposes of this section, a court of record includes the Office of Administrative Hearings
55.33under section14.48 .
56.1 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 595.06, is amended to read:
56.2595.06 CAPACITY OF WITNESS.
56.3Whenan infant, or a person apparently of weak intellect, is produced as a witness,
56.4the court may examine theinfant or witness person to ascertain capacity, and whether the
56.5person understands the nature and obligations of an oath, and the court may inquire of any
56.6person what peculiar ceremonies the person deems most obligatory in taking an oath.
56.7 Sec. 9. REPEALER.
56.8(a) Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 158.13; 158.14; 158.15; 158.16; 158.17;
56.9158.18; 158.19; 245.072; 256.971; 256.975, subdivision 3; 256.9753, subdivision 4;
56.10256B.04, subdivision 16; 256B.0656; 256B.0657; 256B.0913, subdivision 9; 256B.0916,
56.11subdivisions 6 and 6a; 256B.0928; 256B.431, subdivisions 28, 31, 33, 34, 37, 38, 39, 40,
56.1241, and 43; 256B.434, subdivision 19; 256B.440; 256B.441, subdivisions 46 and 46a;
56.13256B.491; 256B.501, subdivisions 3a, 3b, 3h, 3j, 3k, 3l, and 5e; 256B.5016; 256B.503;
56.14and 626.557, subdivision 16, are repealed.
56.15(b) Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, sections 256B.31; 256B.501, subdivision
56.165b; 256C.05; and 256C.29, are repealed.
56.17(c) Minnesota Rules, parts 9549.0020, subparts 2, 12, 13, 20, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 30,
56.1831, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 38, 41, 42, 43, 44, 46, and 47; 9549.0030; 9549.0035, subparts 4, 5,
56.19and 6; 9549.0036; 9549.0040; 9549.0041, subparts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,
56.2014, and 15; 9549.0050; 9549.0051, subparts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and 14;
56.219549.0053; 9549.0054; 9549.0055, subpart 4; 9549.0056; 9549.0060, subparts 1, 2, 3, 8,
56.229, 12, and 13; 9549.0061; and 9549.0070, subparts 1 and 4, are repealed.
56.25 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 13.46, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
56.26 Subd. 4. Licensing data. (a) As used in this subdivision:
56.27 (1) "licensing data" are all data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated by the
56.28welfare system pertaining to persons licensed or registered or who apply for licensure
56.29or registration or who formerly were licensed or registered under the authority of the
56.30commissioner of human services;
56.31 (2) "client" means a person who is receiving services from a licensee or from an
56.32applicant for licensure; and
57.1 (3) "personal and personal financial data" are Social Security numbers, identity
57.2of and letters of reference, insurance information, reports from the Bureau of Criminal
57.3Apprehension, health examination reports, and social/home studies.
57.4 (b)(1)(i) Except as provided in paragraph (c), the following data on applicants,
57.5license holders, and former licensees are public: name, address, telephone number of
57.6licensees, date of receipt of a completed application, dates of licensure, licensed capacity,
57.7type of client preferred, variances granted, record of training and education in child care
57.8and child development, type of dwelling, name and relationship of other family members,
57.9previous license history, class of license, the existence and status of complaints, and the
57.10number of serious injuries to or deaths of individuals in the licensed program as reported
57.11to the commissioner of human services, the local social services agency, or any other
57.12county welfare agency. For purposes of this clause, a serious injury is one that is treated
57.13by a physician.
57.14(ii) When a correction order, an order to forfeit a fine, an order of license suspension,
57.15an order of temporary immediate suspension, an order of license revocation, an order
57.16of license denial, or an order of conditional license has been issued, or a complaint is
57.17resolved, the following data on current and former licensees and applicants are public: the
57.18substance and investigative findings of the licensing or maltreatment complaint, licensing
57.19violation, or substantiated maltreatment; the record of informal resolution of a licensing
57.20violation; orders of hearing; findings of fact; conclusions of law; specifications of the final
57.21correction order, fine, suspension, temporary immediate suspension, revocation, denial, or
57.22conditional license contained in the record of licensing action; whether a fine has been
57.23paid; and the status of any appeal of these actions.
57.24(iii) When a license denial under section245A.05 or a sanction under section
57.25245A.07
is based on a determination that the license holder or applicant is responsible for
57.26maltreatment under section626.556 or
626.557 , the identity of the applicant or license
57.27holder as the individual responsible for maltreatment is public data at the time of the
57.28issuance of the license denial or sanction.
57.29(iv) When a license denial under section245A.05 or a sanction under section
57.30245A.07
is based on a determination that the license holder or applicant is disqualified
57.31under chapter 245C, the identity of the license holder or applicant as the disqualified
57.32individual and the reason for the disqualification are public data at the time of the
57.33issuance of the licensing sanction or denial. If the applicant or license holder requests
57.34reconsideration of the disqualification and the disqualification is affirmed, the reason for
57.35the disqualification and the reason to not set aside the disqualification are public data.
58.1(2) Notwithstanding sections
626.556, subdivision 11, and
626.557, subdivision 12b,
58.2when any person subject to disqualification under section
245C.14 in connection with a
58.3license to provide family day care for children, child care center services, foster care for
58.4children in the provider's home, or foster care or day care services for adults in the provider's
58.5home is a substantiated perpetrator of maltreatment, and the substantiated maltreatment is
58.6a reason for a licensing action, the identity of the substantiated perpetrator of maltreatment
58.7is public data. For purposes of this clause, a person is a substantiated perpetrator if the
58.8maltreatment determination has been upheld under section
256.045;
626.556, subdivision
58.910i
;
626.557, subdivision 9d; or chapter 14, or if an individual or facility has not timely
58.10exercised appeal rights under these sections, except as provided under clause (1).
58.11(3) (2) For applicants who withdraw their application prior to licensure or denial of
58.12a license, the following data are public: the name of the applicant, the city and county
58.13in which the applicant was seeking licensure, the dates of the commissioner's receipt of
58.14the initial application and completed application, the type of license sought, and the date
58.15of withdrawal of the application.
58.16(4) (3) For applicants who are denied a license, the following data are public: the
58.17name and address of the applicant, the city and county in which the applicant was seeking
58.18licensure, the dates of the commissioner's receipt of the initial application and completed
58.19application, the type of license sought, the date of denial of the application, the nature of
58.20the basis for the denial, the record of informal resolution of a denial, orders of hearings,
58.21findings of fact, conclusions of law, specifications of the final order of denial, and the
58.22status of any appeal of the denial.
58.23(5) The following data on persons subject to disqualification under section
245C.14 in
58.24connection with a license to provide family day care for children, child care center services,
58.25foster care for children in the provider's home, or foster care or day care services for adults
58.26in the provider's home, are public: the nature of any disqualification set aside under section
58.27245C.22, subdivisions 2 and 4, and the reasons for setting aside the disqualification; the
58.28nature of any disqualification for which a variance was granted under sections
245A.04,
58.29subdivision 9
; and
245C.30, and the reasons for granting any variance under section
58.30245A.04, subdivision 9; and, if applicable, the disclosure that any person subject to
58.31a background study under section
245C.03, subdivision 1, has successfully passed a
58.32background study. If a licensing sanction under section
245A.07, or a license denial under
58.33section
245A.05, is based on a determination that an individual subject to disqualification
58.34under chapter 245C is disqualified, the disqualification as a basis for the licensing sanction
58.35or denial is public data. As specified in clause (1), item (iv), if the disqualified individual
58.36is the license holder or applicant, the identity of the license holder or applicant and the
59.1reason for the disqualification are public data; and, if the license holder or applicant
59.2requested reconsideration of the disqualification and the disqualification is affirmed, the
59.3reason for the disqualification and the reason to not set aside the disqualification are
59.4public data. If the disqualified individual is an individual other than the license holder or
59.5applicant, the identity of the disqualified individual shall remain private data.
59.6(6) (4) When maltreatment is substantiated under section
626.556 or
626.557 and
59.7the victim and the substantiated perpetrator are affiliated with a program licensed under
59.8chapter 245A, the commissioner of human services, local social services agency, or
59.9county welfare agency may inform the license holder where the maltreatment occurred of
59.10the identity of the substantiated perpetrator and the victim.
59.11(7) (5) Notwithstanding clause (1), for child foster care, only the name of the license
59.12holder and the status of the license are public if the county attorney has requested that data
59.13otherwise classified as public data under clause (1) be considered private data based on the
59.14best interests of a child in placement in a licensed program.
59.15 (c) The following are private data on individuals under section13.02, subdivision
59.1612 , or nonpublic data under section
13.02, subdivision 9 : personal and personal financial
59.17data on family day care program and family foster care program applicants and licensees
59.18and their family members who provide services under the license.
59.19 (d) The following are private data on individuals: the identity of persons who have
59.20made reports concerning licensees or applicants that appear in inactive investigative data,
59.21and the records of clients or employees of the licensee or applicant for licensure whose
59.22records are received by the licensing agency for purposes of review or in anticipation of a
59.23contested matter. The names of reporters of complaints or alleged violations of licensing
59.24standards under chapters 245A, 245B, 245C, and applicable rules and alleged maltreatment
59.25under sections626.556 and
626.557 , are confidential data and may be disclosed only as
59.26provided in section626.556, subdivision 11 , or
626.557, subdivision 12b .
59.27 (e) Data classified as private, confidential, nonpublic, or protected nonpublic under
59.28this subdivision become public data if submitted to a court or administrative law judge as
59.29part of a disciplinary proceeding in which there is a public hearing concerning a license
59.30which has been suspended, immediately suspended, revoked, or denied.
59.31 (f) Data generated in the course of licensing investigations that relate to an alleged
59.32violation of law are investigative data under subdivision 3.
59.33 (g) Data that are not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under
59.34this subdivision that relate to or are derived from a report as defined in section626.556,
59.35subdivision 2 , or
626.5572, subdivision 18 , are subject to the destruction provisions of
59.36sections626.556, subdivision 11c , and
626.557, subdivision 12b .
60.1 (h) Upon request, not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under
60.2this subdivision that relate to or are derived from a report of substantiated maltreatment as
60.3defined in section626.556 or
626.557 may be exchanged with the Department of Health
60.4for purposes of completing background studies pursuant to section144.057 and with
60.5the Department of Corrections for purposes of completing background studies pursuant
60.6to section241.021 .
60.7 (i) Data on individuals collected according to licensing activities under chapters
60.8245A and 245C, data on individuals collected by the commissioner of human services
60.9according to investigations under chapters 245A, 245B, and 245C, and sections626.556
60.10and626.557 may be shared with the Department of Human Rights, the Department
60.11of Health, the Department of Corrections, the ombudsman for mental health and
60.12developmental disabilities, and the individual's professional regulatory board when there
60.13is reason to believe that laws or standards under the jurisdiction of those agencies may
60.14have been violated or the information may otherwise be relevant to the board's regulatory
60.15jurisdiction. Background study data on an individual who is the subject of a background
60.16study under chapter 245C for a licensed service for which the commissioner of human
60.17services is the license holder may be shared with the commissioner and the commissioner's
60.18delegate by the licensing division. Unless otherwise specified in this chapter, the identity
60.19of a reporter of alleged maltreatment or licensing violations may not be disclosed.
60.20 (j) In addition to the notice of determinations required under section626.556,
60.21subdivision 10f , if the commissioner or the local social services agency has determined
60.22that an individual is a substantiated perpetrator of maltreatment of a child based on sexual
60.23abuse, as defined in section626.556, subdivision 2 , and the commissioner or local social
60.24services agency knows that the individual is a person responsible for a child's care in
60.25another facility, the commissioner or local social services agency shall notify the head
60.26of that facility of this determination. The notification must include an explanation of the
60.27individual's available appeal rights and the status of any appeal. If a notice is given under
60.28this paragraph, the government entity making the notification shall provide a copy of the
60.29notice to the individual who is the subject of the notice.
60.30 (k) All not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under this
60.31subdivision and subdivision 3 may be exchanged between the Department of Human
60.32Services, Licensing Division, and the Department of Corrections for purposes of
60.33regulating services for which the Department of Human Services and the Department
60.34of Corrections have regulatory authority.
61.1 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 245A.03, subdivision 7, is
61.2amended to read:
61.3 Subd. 7. Licensing moratorium. (a) The commissioner shall not issue an initial
61.4license for child foster care licensed under Minnesota Rules, parts 2960.3000 to 2960.3340,
61.5or adult foster care licensed under Minnesota Rules, parts 9555.5105 to 9555.6265, under
61.6this chapter for a physical location that will not be the primary residence of the license
61.7holder for the entire period of licensure. If a license is issued during this moratorium, and
61.8the license holder changes the license holder's primary residence away from the physical
61.9location of the foster care license, the commissioner shall revoke the license according
61.10to section245A.07 . The commissioner shall not issue an initial license for a community
61.11residential setting licensed under chapter 245D. Exceptions to the moratorium include:
61.12(1) foster care settings that are required to be registered under chapter 144D;
61.13(2) foster care licenses replacing foster care licenses in existence on May 15, 2009, or
61.14community residential setting licenses replacing adult foster care licenses in existence on
61.15December 31, 2013, and determined to be needed by the commissioner under paragraph (b);
61.16(3) new foster care licenses or community residential setting licenses determined to
61.17be needed by the commissioner under paragraph (b) for the closure of a nursing facility,
61.18ICF/DD, or regional treatment center; restructuring of state-operated services that limits
61.19the capacity of state-operated facilities; or allowing movement to the community for
61.20people who no longer require the level of care provided in state-operated facilities as
61.21provided under section256B.092 , subdivision 13, or
256B.49, subdivision 24 ;
61.22(4) new foster care licenses or community residential setting licenses determined
61.23to be needed by the commissioner under paragraph (b) for persons requiring hospital
61.24level care; or
61.25(5) new foster care licenses or community residential setting licenses determined to
61.26be needed by the commissioner for the transition of people from personal care assistance
61.27to the home and community-based services.
61.28(b) The commissioner shall determine the need for newly licensed foster care
61.29homes or community residential settings as defined under this subdivision. As part of the
61.30determination, the commissioner shall consider the availability of foster care capacity in
61.31the area in which the licensee seeks to operate, and the recommendation of the local
61.32county board. The determination by the commissioner must be final. A determination of
61.33need is not required for a change in ownership at the same address.
61.34(c) When an adult resident served by the program moves out of a foster home
61.35that is not the primary residence of the license holder according to section256B.49,
61.36subdivision 15 , paragraph (f), or the adult community residential setting, the county
62.1shall immediately inform the Department of Human Services Licensing Division. The
62.2department shall decrease the statewide licensed capacity for adult foster care settings
62.3where the physical location is not the primary residence of the license holder, or for adult
62.4community residential settings, if the voluntary changes described in paragraph (e) are
62.5not sufficient to meet the savings required by reductions in licensed bed capacity under
62.6Laws 2011, First Special Session chapter 9, article 7, sections 1 and 40, paragraph (f),
62.7and maintain statewide long-term care residential services capacity within budgetary
62.8limits. Implementation of the statewide licensed capacity reduction shall begin on July
62.91, 2013. The commissioner shall delicense up to 128 beds by June 30, 2014, using the
62.10needs determination process. Under this paragraph, the commissioner has the authority
62.11to reduce unused licensed capacity of a current foster care program, or the community
62.12residential settings, to accomplish the consolidation or closure of settings. Under this
62.13paragraph, the commissioner has the authority to manage statewide capacity, including
62.14adjusting the capacity available to each county and adjusting statewide available capacity,
62.15to meet the statewide needs identified through the process in paragraph (e). A decreased
62.16licensed capacity according to this paragraph is not subject to appeal under this chapter.
62.17(d) Residential settings that would otherwise be subject to the decreased license
62.18capacity established in paragraph (c) shall be exemptunder the following circumstances:
62.19(1) until August 1, 2013, the license holder's beds occupied by residents whose
62.20primary diagnosis is mental illness and the license holder is:
62.21(i) a provider of assertive community treatment (ACT) or adult rehabilitative mental
62.22health services (ARMHS) as defined in section
256B.0623;
62.23(ii) a mental health center certified under Minnesota Rules, parts 9520.0750 to
62.249520.0870;
62.25(iii) a mental health clinic certified under Minnesota Rules, parts 9520.0750 to
62.269520.0870; or
62.27(iv) a provider of intensive residential treatment services (IRTS) licensed under
62.28Minnesota Rules, parts 9520.0500 to 9520.0670; or
62.29(2) if the license holder's beds are occupied by residents whose primary diagnosis is
62.30mental illness and the license holder is certified under the requirements in subdivision 6a
62.31or section245D.33 .
62.32(e) A resource need determination process, managed at the state level, using the
62.33available reports required by section144A.351 , and other data and information shall
62.34be used to determine where the reduced capacity required under paragraph (c) will be
62.35implemented. The commissioner shall consult with the stakeholders described in section
62.36144A.351
, and employ a variety of methods to improve the state's capacity to meet
63.1long-term care service needs within budgetary limits, including seeking proposals from
63.2service providers or lead agencies to change service type, capacity, or location to improve
63.3services, increase the independence of residents, and better meet needs identified by the
63.4long-term care services reports and statewide data and information. By February 1, 2013,
63.5and August 1, 2014, and each following year, the commissioner shall provide information
63.6and data on the overall capacity of licensed long-term care services, actions taken under
63.7this subdivision to manage statewide long-term care services and supports resources, and
63.8any recommendations for change to the legislative committees with jurisdiction over
63.9health and human services budget.
63.10 (f) At the time of application and reapplication for licensure, the applicant and the
63.11license holder that are subject to the moratorium or an exclusion established in paragraph
63.12(a) are required to inform the commissioner whether the physical location where the foster
63.13care will be provided is or will be the primary residence of the license holder for the entire
63.14period of licensure. If the primary residence of the applicant or license holder changes, the
63.15applicant or license holder must notify the commissioner immediately. The commissioner
63.16shall print on the foster care license certificate whether or not the physical location is the
63.17primary residence of the license holder.
63.18 (g) License holders of foster care homes identified under paragraph (f) that are not
63.19the primary residence of the license holder and that also provide services in the foster care
63.20home that are covered by a federally approved home and community-based services
63.21waiver, as authorized under section256B.0915 ,
256B.092 , or
256B.49 , must inform the
63.22human services licensing division that the license holder provides or intends to provide
63.23these waiver-funded services.
63.24 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 245A.40, subdivision 5, is
63.25amended to read:
63.26 Subd. 5. Sudden unexpected infant death and abusive head trauma training. (a)
63.27License holders must document that before staff persons and volunteers care for infants,
63.28they are instructed on the standards in section245A.1435 and receive training on reducing
63.29the risk of sudden unexpected infant death. In addition, license holders must document
63.30that before staff persons care for infants or children under school age, they receive training
63.31on the risk of abusive head trauma from shaking infants and young children. The training
63.32in this subdivision may be provided as orientation training under subdivision 1 and
63.33in-service training under subdivision 7.
63.34 (b) Sudden unexpected infant death reduction training required under this
63.35subdivision must be at least one-half hour in length and must be completed at least once
64.1every year. At a minimum, the training must address the risk factors related to sudden
64.2unexpected infant death, means of reducing the risk of sudden unexpected infant death in
64.3child care, and license holder communication with parents regarding reducing the risk of
64.4sudden unexpected infant death.
64.5 (c) Abusive head trauma training under this subdivision must be at least one-half
64.6hour in length and must be completed at least once every year. At a minimum, the training
64.7must address the risk factors related to shaking infants and young children, means to
64.8reduce the risk of abusive head trauma in child care, and license holder communication
64.9with parents regarding reducing the risk of abusive head trauma.
64.10(d) The commissioner shall make available for viewing a video presentation on the
64.11dangers associated with shaking infants and young children. The video presentation must
64.12be part of the orientation and annual in-service training of licensed child care center
64.13staff persons caring for children under school age. The commissioner shall provide to
64.14child care providers and interested individuals, at cost, copies of a video approved by the
64.15commissioner of health under section
144.574 on the dangers associated with shaking
64.16infants and young children.
64.17 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245A.40, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
64.18 Subd. 8. Cultural dynamics and disabilities training for child care providers.
64.19 (a) The training required of licensed child care center staff must include training in the
64.20cultural dynamics of early childhood development and child care. The cultural dynamics
64.21and disabilities training and skills development of child care providers must be designed
64.22to achieve outcomes for providers of child care that include, but are not limited to:
64.23 (1) an understanding and support of the importance of culture and differences in
64.24ability in children's identity development;
64.25 (2) understanding the importance of awareness of cultural differences and
64.26similarities in working with children and their families;
64.27 (3) understanding and support of the needs of families and children with differences
64.28in ability;
64.29 (4) developing skills to help children develop unbiased attitudes about cultural
64.30differences and differences in ability;
64.31 (5) developing skills in culturally appropriate caregiving; and
64.32 (6) developing skills in appropriate caregiving for children of different abilities.
64.33(b) Curriculum for cultural dynamics and disability training shall be approved by
64.34the commissioner.
65.1(c) The commissioner shall amend current rules relating to the training of the
65.2licensed child care center staff to require cultural dynamics training. Timelines established
65.3in the rule amendments for complying with the cultural dynamics training requirements
65.4must be based on the commissioner's determination that curriculum materials and trainers
65.5are available statewide.
65.6(d) (b) For programs caring for children with special needs, the license holder shall
65.7ensure that any additional staff training required by the child's individual child care
65.8program plan required under Minnesota Rules, part 9503.0065, subpart 3, is provided.
65.9 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 245A.50, subdivision 3, is
65.10amended to read:
65.11 Subd. 3. First aid. (a) When children are present in a family child care home
65.12governed by Minnesota Rules, parts 9502.0315 to 9502.0445, at least one staff person
65.13must be present in the home who has been trained in first aid. The first aid training must
65.14have been provided by an individual approved to provide first aid instruction. First aid
65.15training may be less than eight hours and persons qualified to provide first aid training
65.16include individuals approved as first aid instructors. First aid training must be repeated
65.17every two years.
65.18 (b) A family child care provider is exempt from the first aid training requirements
65.19under this subdivision related to any substitute caregiver who provides less than 30 hours
65.20of care during any 12-month period.
65.21(c) Video training reviewed and approved by the county licensing agency satisfies
65.22the training requirement of this subdivision.
65.23 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245C.04, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
65.24 Subdivision 1. Licensed programs. (a) The commissioner shall conduct a
65.25background study of an individual required to be studied under section245C.03,
65.26subdivision 1 , at least upon application for initial license for all license types.
65.27 (b) The commissioner shall conduct a background study of an individual required
65.28to be studied under section245C.03, subdivision 1 , at reapplication for a license for
65.29family child care.
65.30 (c) The commissioner is not required to conduct a study of an individual at the time
65.31of reapplication for a license if the individual's background study was completed by the
65.32commissioner of human servicesfor an adult foster care license holder that is also: and
65.33(1) registered under chapter 144D; or
66.1(2) licensed to provide home and community-based services to people with
66.2disabilities at the foster care location and the license holder does not reside in the foster
66.3care residence; and
66.4(3) the following conditions are met:
66.5(i) (1) a study of the individual was conducted either at the time of initial licensure
66.6or when the individual became affiliated with the license holder;
66.7(ii) (2) the individual has been continuously affiliated with the license holder since
66.8the last study was conducted; and
66.9(iii) (3) the last study of the individual was conducted on or after October 1, 1995.
66.10(d) From July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2009, the commissioner of human services shall
66.11conduct a study of an individual required to be studied under section
245C.03, at the
66.12time of reapplication for a child foster care license. The county or private agency shall
66.13collect and forward to the commissioner the information required under section
245C.05,
66.14subdivisions 1, paragraphs (a) and (b), and 5, paragraphs (a) and (b). The background
66.15study conducted by the commissioner of human services under this paragraph must
66.16include a review of the information required under section
245C.08, subdivisions 1,
66.17paragraph (a), clauses (1) to (5), 3, and 4.
66.18(e) (d) The commissioner of human services shall conduct a background study
66.19of an individual specified under section245C.03, subdivision 1 , paragraph (a), clauses
66.20(2) to (6), who is newly affiliated with a child foster care license holder. The county or
66.21private agency shall collect and forward to the commissioner the information required
66.22under section245C.05, subdivisions 1 and 5. The background study conducted by the
66.23commissioner of human services under this paragraph must include a review of the
66.24information required under section245C.08, subdivisions 1 , 3, and 4.
66.25(f) From January 1, 2010, to December 31, 2012, unless otherwise specified in
66.26paragraph (c), the commissioner shall conduct a study of an individual required to
66.27be studied under section
245C.03 at the time of reapplication for an adult foster care
66.28or family adult day services license: (1) the county shall collect and forward to the
66.29commissioner the information required under section
245C.05, subdivision 1, paragraphs
66.30(a) and (b), and subdivision 5, paragraphs (a) and (b), for background studies conducted
66.31by the commissioner for all family adult day services and for adult foster care when
66.32the adult foster care license holder resides in the adult foster care or family adult day
66.33services residence; (2) the license holder shall collect and forward to the commissioner
66.34the information required under section
245C.05, subdivisions 1, paragraphs (a) and (b);
66.35and 5, paragraphs (a) and (b), for background studies conducted by the commissioner for
66.36adult foster care when the license holder does not reside in the adult foster care residence;
67.1and (3) the background study conducted by the commissioner under this paragraph must
67.2include a review of the information required under section
245C.08, subdivision 1,
67.3paragraph (a), clauses (1) to (5), and subdivisions 3 and 4.
67.4(g) (e) The commissioner shall conduct a background study of an individual
67.5specified under section245C.03, subdivision 1 , paragraph (a), clauses (2) to (6), who is
67.6newly affiliated with an adult foster care or family adult day services license holder: (1)
67.7the county shall collect and forward to the commissioner the information required under
67.8section245C.05, subdivision 1 , paragraphs (a) and (b), and subdivision 5, paragraphs (a)
67.9and (b), for background studies conducted by the commissioner for all family adult day
67.10services and for adult foster care when the adult foster care license holder resides in
67.11the adult foster care residence; (2) the license holder shall collect and forward to the
67.12commissioner the information required under section245C.05, subdivisions 1 , paragraphs
67.13(a) and (b); and 5, paragraphs (a) and (b), for background studies conducted by the
67.14commissioner for adult foster care when the license holder does not reside in the adult
67.15foster care residence; and (3) the background study conducted by the commissioner under
67.16this paragraph must include a review of the information required under section245C.08,
67.17subdivision 1 , paragraph (a), and subdivisions 3 and 4.
67.18(h) (f) Applicants for licensure, license holders, and other entities as provided in
67.19this chapter must submit completed background study forms to the commissioner before
67.20individuals specified in section245C.03, subdivision 1 , begin positions allowing direct
67.21contact in any licensed program.
67.22(i) (g) A license holder must initiate a new background study through the
67.23commissioner's online background study system when:
67.24 (1) an individual returns to a position requiring a background study following an
67.25absence of 90 or more consecutive days; or
67.26 (2) a program that discontinued providing licensed direct contact services for 90 or
67.27more consecutive days begins to provide direct contact licensed services again.
67.28 The license holder shall maintain a copy of the notification provided to
67.29the commissioner under this paragraph in the program's files. If the individual's
67.30disqualification was previously set aside for the license holder's program and the new
67.31background study results in no new information that indicates the individual may pose a
67.32risk of harm to persons receiving services from the license holder, the previous set-aside
67.33shall remain in effect.
67.34(j) (h) For purposes of this section, a physician licensed under chapter 147 is
67.35considered to be continuously affiliated upon the license holder's receipt from the
67.36commissioner of health or human services of the physician's background study results.
68.1(k) (i) For purposes of family child care, a substitute caregiver must receive repeat
68.2background studies at the time of each license renewal.
68.3 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245C.05, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
68.4 Subd. 5. Fingerprints. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (c), for any background
68.5study completed under this chapter, when the commissioner has reasonable cause to
68.6believe that further pertinent information may exist on the subject of the background
68.7study, the subject shall provide the commissioner with a set of classifiable fingerprints
68.8obtained from an authorized agency.
68.9 (b) For purposes of requiring fingerprints, the commissioner has reasonable cause
68.10when, but not limited to, the:
68.11 (1) information from the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension indicates that the subject
68.12is a multistate offender;
68.13 (2) information from the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension indicates that multistate
68.14offender status is undetermined; or
68.15 (3) commissioner has received a report from the subject or a third party indicating
68.16that the subject has a criminal history in a jurisdiction other than Minnesota.
68.17 (c)Except as specified under section
245C.04, subdivision 1, paragraph (d), For
68.18background studies conducted by the commissioner for child foster care or adoptions,
68.19the subject of the background study, who is 18 years of age or older, shall provide the
68.20commissioner with a set of classifiable fingerprints obtained from an authorized agency.
68.21 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 626.556, subdivision 3c, is amended to read:
68.22 Subd. 3c. Local welfare agency, Department of Human Services or Department
68.23of Health responsible for assessing or investigating reports of maltreatment. (a)
68.24The county local welfare agency is the agency responsible for assessing or investigating
68.25allegations of maltreatment in child foster care, family child care, legally unlicensed
68.26child care, juvenile correctional facilities licensed under section 241.021 located in the
68.27local welfare agency's county, and reports involving children served by an unlicensed
68.28personal care provider organization under section256B.0659 . Copies of findings related
68.29to personal care provider organizations under section256B.0659 must be forwarded to
68.30the Department of Human Services provider enrollment.
68.31(b) The Department of Human Services is the agency responsible for assessing or
68.32investigating allegations of maltreatment in facilities licensed under chapters 245A and
68.33245B, except for child foster care and family child care.
69.1(c) The Department of Health is the agency responsible for assessing or investigating
69.2allegations of child maltreatment in facilities licensed under sections 144.50 to 144.58
69.3and144A.46 .
69.4(d) The commissioners of human services, public safety, and education must
69.5jointly submit a written report by January 15, 2007, to the education policy and finance
69.6committees of the legislature recommending the most efficient and effective allocation
69.7of agency responsibility for assessing or investigating reports of maltreatment and must
69.8specifically address allegations of maltreatment that currently are not the responsibility
69.9of a designated agency.
69.10 Sec. 9. REVISOR'S INSTRUCTION.
69.11The revisor of statutes shall make necessary technical cross-reference changes in
69.12Minnesota Statutes and Minnesota Rules to conform with the sections and parts repealed
69.13in articles 1 to 5.
69.14 Sec. 10. REPEALER.
69.15Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 245A.02, subdivision 7b; 245A.09, subdivision
69.1612; 245A.11, subdivision 5; and 245A.655, are repealed.
1.3relating to children and family services, health care, chemical and mental health
1.4services, continuing care, and operations; modifying provisions governing
1.5the elderly waiver, the alternative care program, and mental health services
1.6for children; repealing provisions related to the Psychopathic Department
1.7of University of Minnesota Hospitals;amending Minnesota Statutes 2012,
1.8sections 13.46, subdivision 4; 245.4871, subdivisions 3, 6, 27; 245.4873,
1.9subdivision 2; 245.4874, subdivision 1; 245.4881, subdivisions 3, 4; 245.4882,
1.10subdivision 1; 245A.40, subdivision 8; 245C.04, subdivision 1; 245C.05,
1.11subdivision 5; 246.325; 254B.05, subdivision 2; 256.01, subdivision 14b;
1.12256.963, subdivision 2; 256.969, subdivision 9; 256B.0913, subdivisions 5a,
1.1314; 256B.0915, subdivisions 3c, 3d, 3f, 3g; 256B.0943, subdivisions 8, 10,
1.1412; 256B.69, subdivisions 2, 4b, 5, 5a, 5b, 6b, 6d, 17, 26, 29, 30; 256B.692,
1.15subdivisions 2, 5; 256D.02, subdivision 11; 256D.04; 256D.045; 256D.07;
1.16256I.04, subdivision 3; 256I.05, subdivision 1c; 256J.425, subdivision 4;
1.17518A.65; 595.06; 626.556, subdivision 3c; Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement,
1.18sections 245A.03, subdivision 7; 245A.40, subdivision 5; 245A.50, subdivision
1.193; 256B.0943, subdivisions 1, 2, 7; 256B.69, subdivisions 5c, 28; 256B.76,
1.20subdivision 4; 256D.02, subdivision 12a; 517.04; Laws 2013, chapter 108,
1.21article 3, section 48; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 119A.04,
1.22subdivision 1; 119B.035; 119B.09, subdivision 2; 119B.23; 119B.231; 119B.232;
1.23158.13; 158.14; 158.15; 158.16; 158.17; 158.18; 158.19; 245.0311; 245.0312;
1.24245.072; 245.4861; 245.487, subdivisions 4, 5; 245.4871, subdivisions 7, 11,
1.2518, 25; 245.4872; 245.4873, subdivisions 3, 6; 245.4875, subdivisions 3,
1.266, 7; 245.4883, subdivision 1; 245.490; 245.492, subdivisions 6, 8, 13, 19;
1.27245.4932, subdivisions 2, 3, 4; 245.4933; 245.494; 245.63; 245.652; 245.69,
1.28subdivision 1; 245.714; 245.715; 245.717; 245.718; 245.721; 245.77; 245.821;
1.29245.827; 245.981; 245A.02, subdivision 7b; 245A.09, subdivision 12; 245A.11,
1.30subdivision 5; 245A.655; 246.012; 246.0135; 246.016; 246.023, subdivision 1;
1.31246.16; 246.28; 246.71; 246.711; 246.712; 246.713; 246.714; 246.715; 246.716;
1.32246.717; 246.718; 246.719; 246.72; 246.721; 246.722; 251.045; 252.05; 252.07;
1.33252.09; 254.01; 254.03; 254.04; 254.06; 254.07; 254.09; 254.10; 254.11;
1.34254A.05, subdivision 1; 254A.07, subdivisions 1, 2; 254A.16, subdivision 1;
1.35254B.01, subdivision 1; 254B.04, subdivision 3; 256.01, subdivisions 3, 14,
1.3614a; 256.959; 256.964; 256.9691; 256.971; 256.975, subdivision 3; 256.9753,
1.37subdivision 4; 256.9792; 256B.04, subdivision 16; 256B.043; 256B.0656;
1.38256B.0657; 256B.075, subdivision 4; 256B.0757, subdivision 7; 256B.0913,
1.39subdivision 9; 256B.0916, subdivisions 6, 6a; 256B.0928; 256B.19, subdivision
2.13; 256B.431, subdivisions 28, 31, 33, 34, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 43; 256B.434,
2.2subdivision 19; 256B.440; 256B.441, subdivisions 46, 46a; 256B.491; 256B.501,
2.3subdivisions 3a, 3b, 3h, 3j, 3k, 3l, 5e; 256B.5016; 256B.503; 256B.53; 256B.69,
2.4subdivisions 5e, 6c, 24a; 256B.692, subdivision 10; 256D.02, subdivision
2.519; 256D.05, subdivision 4; 256D.46; 256I.05, subdivisions 1b, 5; 256I.07;
2.6256J.24, subdivision 10; 256K.35; 259.85, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5; 518A.53,
2.7subdivision 7; 518A.74; 626.557, subdivision 16; 626.5593; Minnesota Statutes
2.82013 Supplement, sections 246.0251; 254.05; 254B.13, subdivision 3; 256B.31;
2.9256B.501, subdivision 5b; 256C.05; 256C.29; 259.85, subdivision 1; Minnesota
2.10Rules, parts 9549.0020, subparts 2, 12, 13, 20, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 30, 31, 32, 33,
2.1134, 35, 36, 38, 41, 42, 43, 44, 46, 47; 9549.0030; 9549.0035, subparts 4, 5, 6;
2.129549.0036; 9549.0040; 9549.0041, subparts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,
2.1314, 15; 9549.0050; 9549.0051, subparts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14;
2.149549.0053; 9549.0054; 9549.0055, subpart 4; 9549.0056; 9549.0060, subparts 1,
2.152, 3, 8, 9, 12, 13; 9549.0061; 9549.0070, subparts 1, 4.
2.16BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
2.19 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256D.02, subdivision 11, is amended to
2.20read:
2.21 Subd. 11. State aid. "State aid" means state aid to county agencies for general
2.22assistance
2.24 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256D.02, subdivision 12a,
2.25is amended to read:
2.26 Subd. 12a. Resident. (a) For purposes of eligibility for general assistance
2.27
2.28(b) A "resident" is a person living in the state for at least 30 days with the intention of
2.29making the person's home here and not for any temporary purpose. Time spent in a shelter
2.30for battered women shall count toward satisfying the 30-day residency requirement. All
2.31applicants for these programs are required to demonstrate the requisite intent and can do
2.32so in any of the following ways:
2.33(1) by showing that the applicant maintains a residence at a verified address, other
2.34than a place of public accommodation. An applicant may verify a residence address by
2.35presenting a valid state driver's license, a state identification card, a voter registration card,
2.36a rent receipt, a statement by the landlord, apartment manager, or homeowner verifying
2.37that the individual is residing at the address, or other form of verification approved by
2.38the commissioner; or
3.1(2) by verifying residence according to Minnesota Rules, part 9500.1219, subpart
3.23, item C.
3.3(c) For general assistance, a county shall waive the 30-day residency requirement
3.4where unusual hardship would result from denial of general assistance. For purposes of
3.5this subdivision, "unusual hardship" means the applicant is without shelter or is without
3.6available resources for food.
3.7The county agency must report to the commissioner within 30 days on any waiver
3.8granted under this section. The county shall not deny an application solely because the
3.9applicant does not meet at least one of the criteria in this subdivision, but shall continue to
3.10process the application and leave the application pending until the residency requirement
3.11is met or until eligibility or ineligibility is established.
3.12(d) For purposes of paragraph (c), the following definitions apply (1) "metropolitan
3.13statistical area" is as defined by the United States Census Bureau; (2) "shelter" includes
3.14any shelter that is located within the metropolitan statistical area containing the county
3.15and for which the applicant is eligible, provided the applicant does not have to travel more
3.16than 20 miles to reach the shelter and has access to transportation to the shelter. Clause (2)
3.17does not apply to counties in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan statistical area.
3.18(e) Migrant workers as defined in section
3.19
3.20the migrant worker provides verification that the migrant family worked in this state
3.21within the last 12 months and earned at least $1,000 in gross wages during the time the
3.22migrant worker worked in this state.
3.23(f) For purposes of eligibility for emergency general assistance, the 30-day residency
3.24requirement under this section shall not be waived.
3.25(g) If any provision of this subdivision is enjoined from implementation or found
3.26unconstitutional by any court of competent jurisdiction, the remaining provisions shall
3.27remain valid and shall be given full effect.
3.28 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256D.04, is amended to read:
3.29256D.04 DUTIES OF THE COMMISSIONER.
3.30In addition to any other duties imposed by law, the commissioner shall:
3.31(1) supervise according to section
3.32
3.34(2) promulgate uniform rules consistent with law for carrying out and enforcing the
3.35provisions of sections
4.1
4.2be administered as uniformly as possible throughout the state; rules shall be furnished
4.3immediately to all county agencies and other interested persons; in promulgating rules, the
4.4provisions of sections
4.5(3) allocate money appropriated for general assistance
4.6
4.7(4) accept and supervise the disbursement of any funds that may be provided by the
4.8federal government or from other sources for use in this state for general assistance
4.9
4.10(5) cooperate with other agencies including any agency of the United States or of
4.11another state in all matters concerning the powers and duties of the commissioner under
4.12sections
4.13(6) cooperate to the fullest extent with other public agencies empowered by law to
4.14provide vocational training, rehabilitation, or similar services;
4.15(7) gather and study current information and report at least annually to the governor
4.16on the nature and need for general assistance
4.17amounts expended under the supervision of each county agency, and the activities of each
4.18county agency and publish such reports for the information of the public;
4.19(8) specify requirements for general assistance
4.20 reports, including fiscal reports, according to section
4.21(17); and
4.22(9) ensure that every notice of eligibility for general assistance includes a notice that
4.23women who are pregnant may be eligible for medical assistance benefits.
4.24 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256D.045, is amended to read:
4.25256D.045 SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER REQUIRED.
4.26To be eligible for general assistance under sections
4.27must provide the individual's Social Security number to the county agency or submit proof
4.28that an application has been made.
4.29
4.30
4.31
4.32eligibility for emergency general assistance under section
4.33provision applies to eligible children under the age of 18 effective July 1, 1997.
5.1 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256D.07, is amended to read:
5.2256D.07 TIME OF PAYMENT OF ASSISTANCE.
5.3An applicant for general assistance
5.4
5.5verification of the statement on that application demonstrate that the applicant is within
5.6the eligibility criteria established by sections
5.7of the commissioner. Any person requesting general assistance
5.8
5.9as soon as administratively possible and in no event later than the fourth day following
5.10the date on which assistance is first requested, and no county agency shall require that a
5.11person requesting assistance appear at the offices of the county agency more than once
5.12prior to the date on which the person is permitted to make the application. The application
5.13shall be in writing in the manner and upon the form prescribed by the commissioner
5.14and attested to by the oath of the applicant or in lieu thereof shall contain the following
5.15declaration which shall be signed by the applicant: "I declare that this application has
5.16been examined by me and to the best of my knowledge and belief is a true and correct
5.17statement of every material point." On the date that general assistance is first requested,
5.18the county agency shall inquire and determine whether the person requesting assistance
5.19is in immediate need of food, shelter, clothing, assistance for necessary transportation,
5.20or other emergency assistance pursuant to section
5.21need of emergency assistance shall be granted emergency assistance immediately, and
5.22necessary emergency assistance shall continue for up to 30 days following the date of
5.23application. A determination of an applicant's eligibility for general assistance shall be
5.24made by the county agency as soon as the required verifications are received by the county
5.25agency and in no event later than 30 days following the date that the application is made.
5.26Any verifications required of the applicant shall be reasonable, and the commissioner
5.27shall by rule establish reasonable verifications. General assistance shall be granted to an
5.28eligible applicant without the necessity of first securing action by the board of the county
5.29agency. The first month's grant must be computed to cover the time period starting with
5.30the date a signed application form is received by the county agency or from the date that
5.31the applicant meets all eligibility factors, whichever occurs later.
5.32If upon verification and due investigation it appears that the applicant provided
5.33false information and the false information materially affected the applicant's eligibility
5.34for general assistance
5.35
5.36county agency may refer the matter to the county attorney. The county attorney may
6.1commence a criminal prosecution or a civil action for the recovery of any general
6.2assistance wrongfully received, or both.
6.3 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256I.04, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
6.4 Subd. 3. Moratorium on development of group residential housing beds. (a)
6.5County agencies shall not enter into agreements for new group residential housing beds
6.6with total rates in excess of the MSA equivalent rate except:
6.7(1) for group residential housing establishments licensed under Minnesota Rules,
6.8parts 9525.0215 to 9525.0355, provided the facility is needed to meet the census reduction
6.9targets for persons with developmental disabilities at regional treatment centers;
6.10
6.11
6.12
6.13
6.14that will provide housing for chronic inebriates who are repetitive users of detoxification
6.15centers and are refused placement in emergency shelters because of their state of
6.16intoxication, and planning for the specialized facility must have been initiated before July
6.171, 1991, in anticipation of receiving a grant from the Housing Finance Agency under
6.18section
6.19
6.20housing units in Anoka, Dakota, Hennepin, or Ramsey County for homeless adults with a
6.21mental illness, a history of substance abuse, or human immunodeficiency virus or acquired
6.22immunodeficiency syndrome. For purposes of this section, "homeless adult" means a
6.23person who is living on the street or in a shelter or discharged from a regional treatment
6.24center, community hospital, or residential treatment program and has no appropriate
6.25housing available and lacks the resources and support necessary to access appropriate
6.26housing. At least 70 percent of the supportive housing units must serve homeless adults
6.27with mental illness, substance abuse problems, or human immunodeficiency virus or
6.28acquired immunodeficiency syndrome who are about to be or, within the previous six
6.29months, has been discharged from a regional treatment center, or a state-contracted
6.30psychiatric bed in a community hospital, or a residential mental health or chemical
6.31dependency treatment program. If a person meets the requirements of subdivision 1,
6.32paragraph (a), and receives a federal or state housing subsidy, the group residential housing
6.33rate for that person is limited to the supplementary rate under section
6.341a
6.35exceeds the MSA equivalent rate from the group residential housing supplementary rate.
7.1A resident in a demonstration project site who no longer participates in the demonstration
7.2program shall retain eligibility for a group residential housing payment in an amount
7.3determined under section
7.4funding under section
7.5funds are available and the services can be provided through a managed care entity. If
7.6federal matching funds are not available, then service funding will continue under section
7.8
7.9
7.10
7.11
7.12
7.13
7.14
7.15
7.16
7.17
7.18
7.19
7.20in Hennepin County providing services for recovering and chemically dependent men that
7.21has had a group residential housing contract with the county and has been licensed as a
7.22board and lodge facility with special services since 1980;
7.23
7.24or a county contiguous to the city of St. Cloud, that operates a 40-bed facility,
7.25that received financing through the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency Ending
7.26Long-Term Homelessness Initiative and serves chemically dependent clientele, providing
7.2724-hour-a-day supervision;
7.28
7.29dependent persons, operated by a group residential housing provider that currently
7.30operates a 304-bed facility in Minneapolis, and a 44-bed facility in Duluth;
7.31
7.32one located in Hennepin County and one located in Ramsey County, that provide
7.33community support and 24-hour-a-day supervision to serve the mental health needs of
7.34individuals who have chronically lived unsheltered; and
8.1
8.248 beds that has been licensed since 1978 as a board and lodging facility and that until
8.3August 1, 2007, operated as a licensed chemical dependency treatment program.
8.4 (b) A county agency may enter into a group residential housing agreement for beds
8.5with rates in excess of the MSA equivalent rate in addition to those currently covered
8.6under a group residential housing agreement if the additional beds are only a replacement
8.7of beds with rates in excess of the MSA equivalent rate which have been made available
8.8due to closure of a setting, a change of licensure or certification which removes the beds
8.9from group residential housing payment, or as a result of the downsizing of a group
8.10residential housing setting. The transfer of available beds from one county to another can
8.11only occur by the agreement of both counties.
8.12 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256I.05, subdivision 1c, is amended to read:
8.13 Subd. 1c. Rate increases. A county agency may not increase the rates negotiated
8.14for group residential housing above those in effect on June 30, 1993, except as provided in
8.15paragraphs (a) to
8.16(a) A county may increase the rates for group residential housing settings to the MSA
8.17equivalent rate for those settings whose current rate is below the MSA equivalent rate.
8.18(b) A county agency may increase the rates for residents in adult foster care whose
8.19difficulty of care has increased. The total group residential housing rate for these residents
8.20must not exceed the maximum rate specified in subdivisions 1 and 1a. County agencies
8.21must not include nor increase group residential housing difficulty of care rates for adults in
8.22foster care whose difficulty of care is eligible for funding by home and community-based
8.23waiver programs under title XIX of the Social Security Act.
8.24(c) The room and board rates will be increased each year when the MSA equivalent
8.25rate is adjusted for SSI cost-of-living increases by the amount of the annual SSI increase,
8.26less the amount of the increase in the medical assistance personal needs allowance under
8.27section
8.28(d) When a group residential housing rate is used to pay for an individual's room
8.29and board, or other costs necessary to provide room and board, the rate payable to
8.30the residence must continue for up to 18 calendar days per incident that the person is
8.31temporarily absent from the residence, not to exceed 60 days in a calendar year, if the
8.32absence or absences have received the prior approval of the county agency's social service
8.33staff. Prior approval is not required for emergency absences due to crisis, illness, or injury.
8.34(e) For facilities meeting substantial change criteria within the prior year. Substantial
8.35change criteria exists if the group residential housing establishment experiences a 25
9.1percent increase or decrease in the total number of its beds, if the net cost of capital
9.2additions or improvements is in excess of 15 percent of the current market value of the
9.3residence, or if the residence physically moves, or changes its licensure, and incurs a
9.4resulting increase in operation and property costs.
9.5(f) Until June 30, 1994, a county agency may increase by up to five percent the total
9.6rate paid for recipients of assistance under sections
9.8a boarding care home, but are not certified for the purposes of the medical assistance
9.9program. However, an increase under this clause must not exceed an amount equivalent to
9.1065 percent of the 1991 medical assistance reimbursement rate for nursing home resident
9.11class A, in the geographic grouping in which the facility is located, as established under
9.12Minnesota Rules, parts 9549.0050 to 9549.0058.
9.13
9.14
9.15
9.16
9.17
9.18
9.19
9.20
9.21
9.22
9.23
9.24
9.25 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256J.425, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
9.26 Subd. 4. Employed participants. (a) An assistance unit subject to the time limit
9.27under section
9.28extension if the participant who reached the time limit belongs to:
9.29(1) a one-parent assistance unit in which the participant is participating in work
9.30activities for at least 30 hours per week, of which an average of at least 25 hours per week
9.31every month are spent participating in employment;
9.32(2) a two-parent assistance unit in which the participants are participating in work
9.33activities for at least 55 hours per week, of which an average of at least 45 hours per week
9.34every month are spent participating in employment; or
10.1(3) an assistance unit in which a participant is participating in employment for fewer
10.2hours than those specified in clause (1), and the participant submits verification from a
10.3qualified professional, in a form acceptable to the commissioner, stating that the number
10.4of hours the participant may work is limited due to illness or disability, as long as the
10.5participant is participating in employment for at least the number of hours specified by the
10.6qualified professional. The participant must be following the treatment recommendations
10.7of the qualified professional providing the verification. The commissioner shall develop a
10.8form to be completed and signed by the qualified professional, documenting the diagnosis
10.9and any additional information necessary to document the functional limitations of the
10.10participant that limit work hours. If the participant is part of a two-parent assistance unit,
10.11the other parent must be treated as a one-parent assistance unit for purposes of meeting the
10.12work requirements under this subdivision.
10.13(b) For purposes of this section, employment means:
10.14(1) unsubsidized employment under section
10.15(2) subsidized employment under section
10.16(3) on-the-job training under section
10.17(4) an apprenticeship under section
10.18(5) supported work under section
10.19(6) a combination of clauses (1) to (5); or
10.20(7) child care under section
10.21with paid employment.
10.22(c) If a participant is complying with a child protection plan under chapter 260C,
10.23the number of hours required under the child protection plan count toward the number
10.24of hours required under this subdivision.
10.25(d) The county shall provide the opportunity for subsidized employment to
10.26participants needing that type of employment within available appropriations.
10.27(e) To be eligible for a hardship extension for employed participants under this
10.28subdivision, a participant must be in compliance for at least ten out of the 12 months
10.29the participant received MFIP immediately preceding the participant's 61st month on
10.30assistance. If ten or fewer months of eligibility for TANF assistance remain at the time the
10.31participant from another state applies for assistance, the participant must be in compliance
10.32every month.
10.33(f) The employment plan developed under section
10.34participants under this subdivision must contain at least the minimum number of hours
10.35specified in paragraph (a) for the purpose of meeting the requirements for an extension
10.36under this subdivision. The job counselor and the participant must sign the employment
11.1plan to indicate agreement between the job counselor and the participant on the contents
11.2of the plan.
11.3(g) Participants who fail to meet the requirements in paragraph (a), without good
11.4cause under section
11.5subdivision 6. Good cause may only be granted for that portion of the month for which
11.6the good cause reason applies. Participants must meet all remaining requirements in the
11.7approved employment plan or be subject to sanction or permanent disqualification.
11.8(h) If the noncompliance with an employment plan is due to the involuntary loss of
11.9employment, the participant is exempt from the hourly employment requirement under
11.10this subdivision for one month. Participants must meet all remaining requirements in the
11.11approved employment plan or be subject to sanction or permanent disqualification.
11.12
11.13 Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 518A.65, is amended to read:
11.14518A.65 DRIVER'S LICENSE SUSPENSION.
11.15(a) Upon motion of an obligee, which has been properly served on the obligor and
11.16upon which there has been an opportunity for hearing, if a court finds that the obligor has
11.17been or may be issued a driver's license by the commissioner of public safety and the
11.18obligor is in arrears in court-ordered child support or maintenance payments, or both,
11.19in an amount equal to or greater than three times the obligor's total monthly support
11.20and maintenance payments and is not in compliance with a written payment agreement
11.21pursuant to section
11.22the public authority, the court shall order the commissioner of public safety to suspend the
11.23obligor's driver's license. The court's order must be stayed for 90 days in order to allow the
11.24obligor to execute a written payment agreement pursuant to section
11.25agreement must be approved by either the court or the public authority responsible for
11.26child support enforcement. If the obligor has not executed or is not in compliance with
11.27a written payment agreement pursuant to section
11.28court's order becomes effective and the commissioner of public safety shall suspend
11.29the obligor's driver's license. The remedy under this section is in addition to any other
11.30enforcement remedy available to the court. An obligee may not bring a motion under this
11.31paragraph within 12 months of a denial of a previous motion under this paragraph.
11.32(b) If a public authority responsible for child support enforcement determines that
11.33the obligor has been or may be issued a driver's license by the commissioner of public
11.34safety and the obligor is in arrears in court-ordered child support or maintenance payments
11.35or both in an amount equal to or greater than three times the obligor's total monthly support
12.1and maintenance payments and not in compliance with a written payment agreement
12.2pursuant to section
12.3the public authority, the public authority shall direct the commissioner of public safety to
12.4suspend the obligor's driver's license. The remedy under this section is in addition to any
12.5other enforcement remedy available to the public authority.
12.6(c) At least 90 days prior to notifying the commissioner of public safety according
12.7to paragraph (b), the public authority must mail a written notice to the obligor at the
12.8obligor's last known address, that it intends to seek suspension of the obligor's driver's
12.9license and that the obligor must request a hearing within 30 days in order to contest the
12.10suspension. If the obligor makes a written request for a hearing within 30 days of the date
12.11of the notice, a court hearing must be held. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the
12.12obligor must be served with 14 days' notice in writing specifying the time and place of the
12.13hearing and the allegations against the obligor. The notice must include information that
12.14apprises the obligor of the requirement to develop a written payment agreement that is
12.15approved by a court, a child support magistrate, or the public authority responsible for
12.16child support enforcement regarding child support, maintenance, and any arrearages in
12.17order to avoid license suspension. The notice may be served personally or by mail. If
12.18the public authority does not receive a request for a hearing within 30 days of the date
12.19of the notice, and the obligor does not execute a written payment agreement pursuant to
12.20section
12.21notice, the public authority shall direct the commissioner of public safety to suspend the
12.22obligor's driver's license under paragraph (b).
12.23(d) At a hearing requested by the obligor under paragraph (c), and on finding that
12.24the obligor is in arrears in court-ordered child support or maintenance payments or both
12.25in an amount equal to or greater than three times the obligor's total monthly support
12.26and maintenance payments, the district court or child support magistrate shall order the
12.27commissioner of public safety to suspend the obligor's driver's license or operating
12.28privileges unless the court or child support magistrate determines that the obligor has
12.29executed and is in compliance with a written payment agreement pursuant to section
12.31(e) An obligor whose driver's license or operating privileges are suspended may:
12.32(1) provide proof to the public authority responsible for child support enforcement
12.33that the obligor is in compliance with all written payment agreements pursuant to section
12.35(2) bring a motion for reinstatement of the driver's license. At the hearing, if the
12.36court or child support magistrate orders reinstatement of the driver's license, the court or
13.1child support magistrate must establish a written payment agreement pursuant to section
13.3(3) seek a limited license under section
13.4under section
13.5Within 15 days of the receipt of that proof or a court order, the public authority shall
13.6inform the commissioner of public safety that the obligor's driver's license or operating
13.7privileges should no longer be suspended.
13.8
13.9
13.10
13.11
13.12
13.13
13.14
13.15
13.16
13.17
13.18
13.19
13.20
13.21
13.22
13.23
13.24an obligor's driver's license, a court, a child support magistrate, or the public authority
13.25may direct the commissioner of public safety to suspend the license of a party who has
13.26failed, after receiving notice, to comply with a subpoena relating to a paternity or child
13.27support proceeding. Notice to an obligor of intent to suspend must be served by first class
13.28mail at the obligor's last known address. The notice must inform the obligor of the right to
13.29request a hearing. If the obligor makes a written request within ten days of the date of
13.30the hearing, a hearing must be held. At the hearing, the only issues to be considered are
13.31mistake of fact and whether the obligor received the subpoena.
13.32
13.33approved written payment agreement may be suspended. Prior to suspending a license for
13.34noncompliance with an approved written payment agreement, the public authority must
13.35mail to the obligor's last known address a written notice that (1) the public authority
13.36intends to seek suspension of the obligor's driver's license under this paragraph, and (2)
14.1the obligor must request a hearing, within 30 days of the date of the notice, to contest the
14.2suspension. If, within 30 days of the date of the notice, the public authority does not
14.3receive a written request for a hearing and the obligor does not comply with an approved
14.4written payment agreement, the public authority must direct the Department of Public
14.5Safety to suspend the obligor's license under paragraph (b). If the obligor makes a written
14.6request for a hearing within 30 days of the date of the notice, a court hearing must be held.
14.7Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the obligor must be served with 14 days' notice in
14.8writing specifying the time and place of the hearing and the allegations against the obligor.
14.9The notice may be served personally or by mail at the obligor's last known address. If
14.10the obligor appears at the hearing and the court determines that the obligor has failed to
14.11comply with an approved written payment agreement, the court or public authority shall
14.12notify the Department of Public Safety to suspend the obligor's license under paragraph
14.13(b). If the obligor fails to appear at the hearing, the court or public authority must notify
14.14the Department of Public Safety to suspend the obligor's license under paragraph (b).
14.15 Sec. 10. Laws 2013, chapter 108, article 3, section 48, is amended to read:
14.16 Sec. 48. REPEALER.
14.17(a) Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256J.24, subdivision 6, is repealed January
14.181, 2015.
14.19(b) Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 609.093, is repealed effective the day following
14.20final enactment.
14.21 Sec. 11. TRANSITION; PROVISIONS GOVERNING PERFORMANCE BASE
14.22FUNDS.
14.23(a) Laws 2013, chapter 107, article 4, section 19, is repealed effective January 1, 2016.
14.24(b) Laws 2013, chapter 108, article 3, section 31, is effective January 1, 2016.
14.25 Sec. 12. REPEALER.
14.26(a) Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 119A.04, subdivision 1; 119B.035; 119B.09,
14.27subdivision 2; 119B.23; 119B.231; 119B.232; 256.01, subdivisions 3, 14, and 14a;
14.28256.9792; 256D.02, subdivision 19; 256D.05, subdivision 4; 256D.46; 256I.05,
14.29subdivisions 1b and 5; 256I.07; 256K.35; 259.85, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, and 5; 518A.53,
14.30subdivision 7; 518A.74; and 626.5593, are repealed.
14.31(b) Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256J.24, subdivision 10, is repealed effective
14.32October 1, 2014.
14.33(c) Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 259.85, subdivision 1, is repealed.
15.3 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256.963, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
15.4 Subd. 2. Evaluation.
15.5basis the following information:
15.6 (1) the total number of appointments available for scheduling by specialty;
15.7 (2) the average length of time between scheduling and actual appointment;
15.8 (3) the total number of patients referred and whether the patient was insured or
15.9uninsured; and
15.10 (4) the total number of appointments resulting in visits completed and number of
15.11patients continuing services with the referring clinic.
15.12
15.13
15.14
15.15
15.16
15.17
15.18 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256.969, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
15.19 Subd. 9. Disproportionate numbers of low-income patients served.
15.20
15.21
15.22
15.23
15.24
15.25
15.26
15.27
15.28
15.29
15.30
15.31
15.32
15.33
15.34
16.1
16.2
16.3
16.4
16.5
16.6
16.7
16.8
16.9
16.10
16.11disproportionate population adjustment shall comply with federal law and shall be paid to
16.12a hospital, excluding regional treatment centers and facilities of the federal Indian Health
16.13Service, with a medical assistance inpatient utilization rate in excess of the arithmetic
16.14mean. The adjustment must be determined as follows:
16.15 (1) for a hospital with a medical assistance inpatient utilization rate above the
16.16arithmetic mean for all hospitals excluding regional treatment centers and facilities of the
16.17federal Indian Health Service but less than or equal to one standard deviation above the
16.18mean, the adjustment must be determined by multiplying the total of the operating and
16.19property payment rates by the difference between the hospital's actual medical assistance
16.20inpatient utilization rate and the arithmetic mean for all hospitals excluding regional
16.21treatment centers and facilities of the federal Indian Health Service;
16.22 (2) for a hospital with a medical assistance inpatient utilization rate above one
16.23standard deviation above the mean, the adjustment must be determined by multiplying
16.24the adjustment that would be determined under clause (1) for that hospital by 1.1. The
16.25commissioner may establish a separate disproportionate population operating payment
16.26rate adjustment under the general assistance medical care program. For purposes of this
16.27subdivision, medical assistance does not include general assistance medical care. The
16.28commissioner shall report annually on the number of hospitals likely to receive the
16.29adjustment authorized by this paragraph. The commissioner shall specifically report on
16.30the adjustments received by public hospitals and public hospital corporations located
16.31in cities of the first class;
16.32 (3) for a hospital that had medical assistance fee-for-service payment volume during
16.33calendar year 1991 in excess of 13 percent of total medical assistance fee-for-service
16.34payment volume, a medical assistance disproportionate population adjustment shall be
16.35paid in addition to any other disproportionate payment due under this subdivision as
16.36follows: $1,515,000 due on the 15th of each month after noon, beginning July 15, 1995.
17.1For a hospital that had medical assistance fee-for-service payment volume during calendar
17.2year 1991 in excess of eight percent of total medical assistance fee-for-service payment
17.3volume and was the primary hospital affiliated with the University of Minnesota, a
17.4medical assistance disproportionate population adjustment shall be paid in addition to any
17.5other disproportionate payment due under this subdivision as follows: $505,000 due on
17.6the 15th of each month after noon, beginning July 15, 1995; and
17.7 (4) effective August 1, 2005, the payments in
17.8reduced to zero.
17.9
17.10under contract with the commissioner to reflect rate increases provided in paragraph
17.11 (a), clauses (1) and (2), on a nondiscounted hospital-specific basis but shall not adjust
17.12those rates to reflect payments provided in paragraph (a), clause (3).
17.13
17.14
17.15on a pro rata basis so that all adjustments under paragraph
17.16
17.17assistance medical care.
17.18
17.19 (1) general assistance medical care expenditures for fee-for-service inpatient and
17.20outpatient hospital payments made by the department shall be considered Medicaid
17.21disproportionate share hospital payments, except as limited below:
17.22 (i) only the portion of Minnesota's disproportionate share hospital allotment under
17.23section 1923(f) of the Social Security Act that is not spent on the disproportionate
17.24population adjustments in paragraph
17.25assistance medical care expenditures;
17.26 (ii) only those general assistance medical care expenditures made to hospitals that
17.27qualify for disproportionate share payments under section 1923 of the Social Security Act
17.28and the Medicaid state plan may be considered disproportionate share hospital payments;
17.29 (iii) only those general assistance medical care expenditures made to an individual
17.30hospital that would not cause the hospital to exceed its individual hospital limits under
17.31section 1923 of the Social Security Act may be considered; and
17.32 (iv) general assistance medical care expenditures may be considered only to the
17.33extent of Minnesota's aggregate allotment under section 1923 of the Social Security Act.
17.34All hospitals and prepaid health plans participating in general assistance medical care
17.35must provide any necessary expenditure, cost, and revenue information required by the
18.1commissioner as necessary for purposes of obtaining federal Medicaid matching funds for
18.2general assistance medical care expenditures; and
18.3 (2) certified public expenditures made by Hennepin County Medical Center shall
18.4be considered Medicaid disproportionate share hospital payments. Hennepin County
18.5and Hennepin County Medical Center shall report by June 15, 2007, on payments made
18.6beginning July 1, 2005, or another date specified by the commissioner, that may qualify
18.7for reimbursement under federal law. Based on these reports, the commissioner shall
18.8apply for federal matching funds.
18.9
18.10 is effective retroactively from July 1, 2005, or the earliest effective date approved by the
18.11Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
18.12 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
18.13 Subd. 2. Definitions. For the purposes of this section, the following terms have
18.14the meanings given.
18.15(a) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of human services. For the
18.16remainder of this section, the commissioner's responsibilities for methods and policies
18.17for implementing the project will be proposed by the project advisory committees and
18.18approved by the commissioner.
18.19(b) "Demonstration provider" means a health maintenance organization, community
18.20integrated service network, or accountable provider network authorized and operating
18.21under chapter 62D, 62N, or 62T that participates in the demonstration project according
18.22to criteria, standards, methods, and other requirements established for the project and
18.23approved by the commissioner. For purposes of this section, a county board, or group of
18.24county boards operating under a joint powers agreement, is considered a demonstration
18.25provider if the county or group of county boards meets the requirements of section
18.27
18.28(c) "Eligible individuals" means those persons eligible for medical assistance
18.29benefits as defined in sections
18.30(d) "Limitation of choice" means suspending freedom of choice while allowing
18.31eligible individuals to choose among the demonstration providers.
18.32 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 4b, is amended to read:
18.33 Subd. 4b. Individualized education program and individualized family service
18.34plan services. The commissioner shall amend the federal waiver allowing the state
19.1to separate out individualized education program and individualized family service
19.2plan services for children enrolled in the prepaid medical assistance program and the
19.3MinnesotaCare program.
19.4assistance coverage of eligible individualized education program and individualized family
19.5service plan services shall not be included in the capitated services for children enrolled
19.6in health plans through the prepaid medical assistance program and the MinnesotaCare
19.7program.
19.8these services, and claims shall be paid on a fee-for-service basis.
19.9 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
19.10 Subd. 5. Prospective per capita payment. The commissioner shall establish the
19.11method and amount of payments for services. The commissioner shall annually contract
19.12with demonstration providers to provide services consistent with these established
19.13methods and amounts for payment.
19.14If allowed by the commissioner, a demonstration provider may contract with an
19.15insurer, health care provider, nonprofit health service plan corporation, or the commissioner,
19.16to provide insurance or similar protection against the cost of care provided by the
19.17demonstration provider or to provide coverage against the risks incurred by demonstration
19.18providers under this section. The recipients enrolled with a demonstration provider are
19.19a permissible group under group insurance laws and chapter 62C, the Nonprofit Health
19.20Service Plan Corporations Act. Under this type of contract, the insurer or corporation may
19.21make benefit payments to a demonstration provider for services rendered or to be rendered
19.22to a recipient. Any insurer or nonprofit health service plan corporation licensed to do
19.23business in this state is authorized to provide this insurance or similar protection.
19.24Payments to providers participating in the project are exempt from the requirements
19.25of sections
19.26development of capitation rates for payments before delivery of services under this
19.27section is begun.
19.28commissioner shall contract with an independent actuary to establish prepayment rates.
19.29
19.30
19.31
19.32
19.33
19.34
20.1Beginning July 1, 2004, the commissioner may include payments for elderly waiver
20.2services and 180 days of nursing home care in capitation payments for the prepaid medical
20.3assistance program for recipients age 65 and older.
20.4 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 5a, is amended to read:
20.5 Subd. 5a. Managed care contracts. (a) Managed care contracts under this section
20.6and section
20.7
20.8
20.9
20.10issue separate contracts with requirements specific to services to medical assistance
20.11recipients age 65 and older.
20.12 (b) A prepaid health plan providing covered health services for eligible persons
20.13pursuant to chapters 256B and 256L is responsible for complying with the terms of its
20.14contract with the commissioner. Requirements applicable to managed care programs
20.15under chapters 256B and 256L established after the effective date of a contract with the
20.16commissioner take effect when the contract is next issued or renewed.
20.17 (c)
20.18shall withhold five percent of managed care plan payments under this section and
20.19county-based purchasing plan payments under section
20.20assistance program pending completion of performance targets. Each performance target
20.21must be quantifiable, objective, measurable, and reasonably attainable, except in the case
20.22of a performance target based on a federal or state law or rule. Criteria for assessment
20.23of each performance target must be outlined in writing prior to the contract effective
20.24date. Clinical or utilization performance targets and their related criteria must consider
20.25evidence-based research and reasonable interventions when available or applicable to the
20.26populations served, and must be developed with input from external clinical experts
20.27and stakeholders, including managed care plans, county-based purchasing plans, and
20.28providers. The managed care or county-based purchasing plan must demonstrate,
20.29to the commissioner's satisfaction, that the data submitted regarding attainment of
20.30the performance target is accurate. The commissioner shall periodically change the
20.31administrative measures used as performance targets in order to improve plan performance
20.32across a broader range of administrative services. The performance targets must include
20.33measurement of plan efforts to contain spending on health care services and administrative
20.34activities. The commissioner may adopt plan-specific performance targets that take into
20.35account factors affecting only one plan, including characteristics of the plan's enrollee
21.1population. The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than July of the following
21.2year if performance targets in the contract are achieved. The commissioner may exclude
21.3special demonstration projects under subdivision 23.
21.4
21.5
21.6
21.7
21.8
21.9
21.10
21.11shall require that managed care plans use the assessment and authorization processes,
21.12forms, timelines, standards, documentation, and data reporting requirements, protocols,
21.13billing processes, and policies consistent with medical assistance fee-for-service or the
21.14Department of Human Services contract requirements consistent with medical assistance
21.15fee-for-service or the Department of Human Services contract requirements for all
21.16personal care assistance services under section
21.17
21.18
21.19
21.20
21.21
21.22
21.23
21.24
21.25
21.26
21.27
21.28services rendered on or after January 1, 2012, the commissioner shall include as part of the
21.29performance targets described in paragraph (c) a reduction in the health plan's emergency
21.30department utilization rate for medical assistance and MinnesotaCare enrollees, as
21.31determined by the commissioner. For 2012, the reduction shall be based on the health plan's
21.32utilization in 2009. To earn the return of the withhold each subsequent year, the managed
21.33care plan or county-based purchasing plan must achieve a qualifying reduction of no less
21.34than ten percent of the plan's emergency department utilization rate for medical assistance
21.35and MinnesotaCare enrollees, excluding enrollees in programs described in subdivisions
21.3623 and 28, compared to the previous measurement year until the final performance target
22.1is reached. When measuring performance, the commissioner must consider the difference
22.2in health risk in a managed care or county-based purchasing plan's membership in the
22.3baseline year compared to the measurement year, and work with the managed care or
22.4county-based purchasing plan to account for differences that they agree are significant.
22.5The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than July 1 and no later than July 31
22.6of the following calendar year if the managed care plan or county-based purchasing plan
22.7demonstrates to the satisfaction of the commissioner that a reduction in the utilization rate
22.8was achieved. The commissioner shall structure the withhold so that the commissioner
22.9returns a portion of the withheld funds in amounts commensurate with achieved reductions
22.10in utilization less than the targeted amount.
22.11The withhold described in this paragraph shall continue for each consecutive contract
22.12period until the plan's emergency room utilization rate for state health care program
22.13enrollees is reduced by 25 percent of the plan's emergency room utilization rate for medical
22.14assistance and MinnesotaCare enrollees for calendar year 2009. Hospitals shall cooperate
22.15with the health plans in meeting this performance target and shall accept payment
22.16withholds that may be returned to the hospitals if the performance target is achieved.
22.17
22.18shall include as part of the performance targets described in paragraph (c) a reduction
22.19in the plan's hospitalization admission rate for medical assistance and MinnesotaCare
22.20enrollees, as determined by the commissioner. To earn the return of the withhold each
22.21year, the managed care plan or county-based purchasing plan must achieve a qualifying
22.22reduction of no less than five percent of the plan's hospital admission rate for medical
22.23assistance and MinnesotaCare enrollees, excluding enrollees in programs described in
22.24subdivisions 23 and 28, compared to the previous calendar year until the final performance
22.25target is reached. When measuring performance, the commissioner must consider the
22.26difference in health risk in a managed care or county-based purchasing plan's membership
22.27in the baseline year compared to the measurement year, and work with the managed care
22.28or county-based purchasing plan to account for differences that they agree are significant.
22.29The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than July 1 and no later than July
22.3031 of the following calendar year if the managed care plan or county-based purchasing
22.31plan demonstrates to the satisfaction of the commissioner that this reduction in the
22.32hospitalization rate was achieved. The commissioner shall structure the withhold so that
22.33the commissioner returns a portion of the withheld funds in amounts commensurate with
22.34achieved reductions in utilization less than the targeted amount.
22.35The withhold described in this paragraph shall continue until there is a 25 percent
22.36reduction in the hospital admission rate compared to the hospital admission rates in
23.1calendar year 2011, as determined by the commissioner. The hospital admissions in this
23.2performance target do not include the admissions applicable to the subsequent hospital
23.3admission performance target under paragraph
23.4plans in meeting this performance target and shall accept payment withholds that may be
23.5returned to the hospitals if the performance target is achieved.
23.6
23.7shall include as part of the performance targets described in paragraph (c) a reduction in
23.8the plan's hospitalization admission rates for subsequent hospitalizations within 30 days of
23.9a previous hospitalization of a patient regardless of the reason, for medical assistance and
23.10MinnesotaCare enrollees, as determined by the commissioner. To earn the return of the
23.11withhold each year, the managed care plan or county-based purchasing plan must achieve
23.12a qualifying reduction of the subsequent hospitalization rate for medical assistance and
23.13MinnesotaCare enrollees, excluding enrollees in programs described in subdivisions 23
23.14and 28, of no less than five percent compared to the previous calendar year until the
23.15final performance target is reached.
23.16The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than July 1 and no later than July
23.1731 of the following calendar year if the managed care plan or county-based purchasing
23.18plan demonstrates to the satisfaction of the commissioner that a qualifying reduction in
23.19the subsequent hospitalization rate was achieved. The commissioner shall structure the
23.20withhold so that the commissioner returns a portion of the withheld funds in amounts
23.21commensurate with achieved reductions in utilization less than the targeted amount.
23.22The withhold described in this paragraph must continue for each consecutive
23.23contract period until the plan's subsequent hospitalization rate for medical assistance and
23.24MinnesotaCare enrollees, excluding enrollees in programs described in subdivisions 23
23.25and 28, is reduced by 25 percent of the plan's subsequent hospitalization rate for calendar
23.26year 2011. Hospitals shall cooperate with the plans in meeting this performance target and
23.27shall accept payment withholds that must be returned to the hospitals if the performance
23.28target is achieved.
23.29
23.30
23.31
23.32
23.33
23.34
23.35
23.36
24.1
24.2
24.3
24.4
24.5
24.631, 2013, the commissioner shall withhold 4.5 percent of managed care plan payments
24.7under this section and county-based purchasing plan payments under section
24.9sooner than July 1 and no later than July 31 of the following year. The commissioner may
24.10exclude special demonstration projects under subdivision 23.
24.11
24.12shall withhold three percent of managed care plan payments under this section and
24.13county-based purchasing plan payments under section
24.14assistance program. The withheld funds must be returned no sooner than July 1 and
24.15no later than July 31 of the following year. The commissioner may exclude special
24.16demonstration projects under subdivision 23.
24.17
24.19under this section that is reasonably expected to be returned.
24.20
24.21from the set-aside and preference provisions of section
24.22(a), and 7.
24.23
24.24 is not subject to the requirements of paragraph (c).
24.25 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 5b, is amended to read:
24.26 Subd. 5b. Prospective reimbursement rates. (a) For prepaid medical assistance
24.27program contract rates set by the commissioner under subdivision 5
24.28
24.29average be no less than 87 percent of the capitation rates for metropolitan counties,
24.30excluding Hennepin County. The commissioner shall make a pro rata adjustment in
24.31capitation rates paid to counties other than nonmetropolitan counties in order to make
24.32this provision budget neutral. The commissioner, in consultation with a health care
24.33actuary, shall evaluate the regional rate relationships based on actual health plan costs
24.34for Minnesota health care programs. The commissioner may establish, based on the
25.1actuary's recommendation, new rate regions that recognize metropolitan areas outside of
25.2the seven-county metropolitan area.
25.3(b) This subdivision shall not affect the nongeographically based risk adjusted rates
25.4established under section
25.5 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.69, subdivision 5c, is
25.6amended to read:
25.7 Subd. 5c. Medical education and research fund. (a) The commissioner of human
25.8services shall transfer each year to the medical education and research fund established
25.9under section
25.10calculate the following:
25.11(1) an amount equal to the reduction in the prepaid medical assistance payments as
25.12specified in this clause.
25.13
25.14
25.15
25.16 After January 1, 2002, the county medical assistance capitation base rate prior to plan
25.17specific adjustments is reduced 6.3 percent for Hennepin County, two percent for the
25.18remaining metropolitan counties, and 1.6 percent for nonmetropolitan Minnesota counties.
25.19Nursing facility and elderly waiver payments and demonstration project payments
25.20operating under subdivision 23 are excluded from this reduction. The amount calculated
25.21under this clause shall not be adjusted for periods already paid due to subsequent changes
25.22to the capitation payments;
25.23(2) beginning July 1, 2003, $4,314,000 from the capitation rates paid under this
25.24section;
25.25(3) beginning July 1, 2002, an additional $12,700,000 from the capitation rates
25.26paid under this section; and
25.27(4) beginning July 1, 2003, an additional $4,700,000 from the capitation rates paid
25.28under this section.
25.29(b) This subdivision shall be effective upon approval of a federal waiver which
25.30allows federal financial participation in the medical education and research fund. The
25.31amount specified under paragraph (a), clauses (1) to (4), shall not exceed the total amount
25.32transferred for fiscal year 2009. Any excess shall first reduce the amounts specified under
25.33paragraph (a), clauses (2) to (4). Any excess following this reduction shall proportionally
25.34reduce the amount specified under paragraph (a), clause (1).
26.1(c) Beginning September 1, 2011, of the amount in paragraph (a), the commissioner
26.2shall transfer $21,714,000 each fiscal year to the medical education and research fund.
26.3(d) Beginning September 1, 2011, of the amount in paragraph (a), following the
26.4transfer under paragraph (c), the commissioner shall transfer to the medical education
26.5research fund $23,936,000 in fiscal years 2012 and 2013 and $49,552,000 in fiscal year
26.62014 and thereafter.
26.7 Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 6b, is amended to read:
26.8 Subd. 6b. Home and community-based waiver services. (a) For individuals
26.9enrolled in the Minnesota senior health options project authorized under subdivision 23,
26.10elderly waiver services shall be covered according to the terms and conditions of the
26.11federal agreement governing that demonstration project.
26.12(b) For individuals under age 65 enrolled in demonstrations authorized under
26.13subdivision 23, home and community-based waiver services shall be covered according to
26.14the terms and conditions of the federal agreement governing that demonstration project.
26.15(c) The commissioner of human services shall issue requests for proposals for
26.16collaborative service models between counties and managed care organizations to
26.17integrate the home and community-based elderly waiver services and additional nursing
26.18home services into the prepaid medical assistance program.
26.19(d) Notwithstanding Minnesota Rules, part 9500.1457, subpart 1, item C, elderly
26.20waiver services shall be covered statewide
26.21medical assistance program for all individuals who are eligible according to section
26.23these waiver services, including collaborative service models under paragraph (c). The
26.24commissioner shall phase in implementation beginning with those counties participating
26.25under section
26.26has been developed. In consultation with counties and all managed care organizations
26.27that have expressed an interest in participating in collaborative service models, the
26.28commissioner shall evaluate the models. The commissioner shall consider the evaluation
26.29in selecting the most appropriate models for statewide implementation.
26.30 Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 6d, is amended to read:
26.31 Subd. 6d. Prescription drugs.
26.32may exclude or modify coverage for prescription drugs from the prepaid managed care
26.33contracts entered into under this section in order to increase savings to the state by
26.34collecting additional prescription drug rebates. The contracts must maintain incentives
27.1for the managed care plan to manage drug costs and utilization and may require that the
27.2managed care plans maintain an open drug formulary. In order to manage drug costs and
27.3utilization, the contracts may authorize the managed care plans to use preferred drug lists
27.4and prior authorization. This subdivision is contingent on federal approval of the managed
27.5care contract changes and the collection of additional prescription drug rebates.
27.6 Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 17, is amended to read:
27.7 Subd. 17. Continuation of prepaid medical assistance. The commissioner may
27.8continue the provisions of this section
27.9counties if necessary federal authority is granted. The commissioner may adopt permanent
27.10rules to continue prepaid medical assistance in these areas.
27.11 Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 26, is amended to read:
27.12 Subd. 26. American Indian recipients. (a)
27.13 For American Indian recipients of medical assistance who are required to enroll with a
27.14demonstration provider under subdivision 4 or in a county-based purchasing entity, if
27.15applicable, under section
27.16provided at Indian health services facilities and facilities operated by a tribe or tribal
27.17organization under funding authorized by United States Code, title 25, sections 450f to
27.18450n, or title III of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act, Public
27.19Law 93-638, if those services would otherwise be covered under section
27.20Payments for services provided under this subdivision shall be made on a fee-for-service
27.21basis, and may, at the option of the tribe or tribal organization, be made according to
27.22rates authorized under sections
27.23Implementation of this purchasing model is contingent on federal approval.
27.24(b) The commissioner of human services, in consultation with the tribal
27.25governments, shall develop a plan for tribes to assist in the enrollment process for
27.26American Indian recipients enrolled in the prepaid medical assistance program under
27.27this section. This plan also shall address how tribes will be included in ensuring the
27.28coordination of care for American Indian recipients between Indian health service or
27.29tribal providers and other providers.
27.30(c) For purposes of this subdivision, "American Indian" has the meaning given
27.31to persons to whom services will be provided for in Code of Federal Regulations, title
27.3242, section
28.1 Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.69, subdivision 28,
28.2is amended to read:
28.3 Subd. 28. Medicare special needs plans; medical assistance basic health
28.4care. (a) The commissioner may contract with demonstration providers and current or
28.5former sponsors of qualified Medicare-approved special needs plans, to provide medical
28.6assistance basic health care services to persons with disabilities, including those with
28.7developmental disabilities. Basic health care services include:
28.8 (1) those services covered by the medical assistance state plan except for ICF/DD
28.9services, home and community-based waiver services, case management for persons with
28.10developmental disabilities under section
28.11and certain home care services defined by the commissioner in consultation with the
28.12stakeholder group established under paragraph (d); and
28.13 (2) basic health care services may also include risk for up to 100 days of nursing
28.14facility services for persons who reside in a noninstitutional setting and home health
28.15services related to rehabilitation as defined by the commissioner after consultation with
28.16the stakeholder group.
28.17 The commissioner may exclude other medical assistance services from the basic
28.18health care benefit set. Enrollees in these plans can access any excluded services on the
28.19same basis as other medical assistance recipients who have not enrolled.
28.20 (b)
28.21providers and current and former sponsors of qualified Medicare special needs plans, to
28.22provide basic health care services under medical assistance to persons who are dually
28.23eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid and those Social Security beneficiaries eligible
28.24for Medicaid but in the waiting period for Medicare. The commissioner shall consult with
28.25the stakeholder group under paragraph (d) in developing program specifications for these
28.26services.
28.27
28.28
28.29
28.30
28.31Medicaid services provided under this subdivision for the months of May and June will
28.32be made no earlier than July 1 of the same calendar year.
28.33 (c) Notwithstanding subdivision 4, beginning January 1, 2012, the commissioner
28.34shall enroll persons with disabilities in managed care under this section, unless the
28.35individual chooses to opt out of enrollment. The commissioner shall establish enrollment
28.36and opt out procedures consistent with applicable enrollment procedures under this section.
29.1 (d) The commissioner shall establish a state-level stakeholder group to provide
29.2advice on managed care programs for persons with disabilities, including both MnDHO
29.3and contracts with special needs plans that provide basic health care services as described
29.4in paragraphs (a) and (b). The stakeholder group shall provide advice on program
29.5expansions under this subdivision and subdivision 23, including:
29.6 (1) implementation efforts;
29.7 (2) consumer protections; and
29.8 (3) program specifications such as quality assurance measures, data collection and
29.9reporting, and evaluation of costs, quality, and results.
29.10 (e) Each plan under contract to provide medical assistance basic health care services
29.11shall establish a local or regional stakeholder group, including representatives of the
29.12counties covered by the plan, members, consumer advocates, and providers, for advice on
29.13issues that arise in the local or regional area.
29.14 (f) The commissioner is prohibited from providing the names of potential enrollees
29.15to health plans for marketing purposes. The commissioner shall mail no more than
29.16two sets of marketing materials per contract year to potential enrollees on behalf of
29.17health plans, at the health plan's request. The marketing materials shall be mailed by the
29.18commissioner within 30 days of receipt of these materials from the health plan. The health
29.19plans shall cover any costs incurred by the commissioner for mailing marketing materials.
29.20 Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 29, is amended to read:
29.21 Subd. 29. Prepaid health plan rates. In negotiating
29.22contract rates
29.23human services shall take into consideration, and the rates shall reflect, the anticipated
29.24savings in the medical assistance program due to extending medical assistance coverage to
29.25services provided in licensed birth centers, the anticipated use of these services within
29.26the medical assistance population, and the reduced medical assistance costs associated
29.27with the use of birth centers for normal, low-risk deliveries.
29.28 Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.69, subdivision 30, is amended to read:
29.29 Subd. 30. Provision of required materials in alternative formats. (a) For the
29.30purposes of this subdivision, "alternative format" means a medium other than paper and
29.31"prepaid health plan" means managed care plans and county-based purchasing plans.
29.32(b) A prepaid health plan may provide in an alternative format a provider directory
29.33and certificate of coverage, or materials otherwise required to be available in writing
30.1under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, section
30.2contract with the prepaid health plan, if the following conditions are met:
30.3(1) the prepaid health plan, local agency, or commissioner, as applicable, informs the
30.4enrollee that:
30.5(i) an alternative format is available and the enrollee affirmatively requests of
30.6the prepaid health plan that the provider directory, certificate of coverage, or materials
30.7otherwise required under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, section
30.8the commissioner's contract with the prepaid health plan be provided in an alternative
30.9format; and
30.10(ii) a record of the enrollee request is retained by the prepaid health plan in the
30.11form of written direction from the enrollee or a documented telephone call followed by a
30.12confirmation letter to the enrollee from the prepaid health plan that explains that the
30.13enrollee may change the request at any time;
30.14(2) the materials are sent to a secure electronic mailbox and are made available at a
30.15password-protected secure electronic Web site or on a data storage device if the materials
30.16contain enrollee data that is individually identifiable;
30.17(3) the enrollee is provided a customer service number on the enrollee's membership
30.18card that may be called to request a paper version of the materials provided in an
30.19alternative format; and
30.20(4) the materials provided in an alternative format meets all other requirements of
30.21the commissioner regarding content, size of the typeface, and any required time frames
30.22for distribution. "Required time frames for distribution" must permit sufficient time for
30.23prepaid health plans to distribute materials in alternative formats upon receipt of enrollees'
30.24requests for the materials.
30.25(c) A prepaid health plan may provide in an alternative format its primary care
30.26network list to the commissioner and to local agencies within its service area. The
30.27commissioner or local agency, as applicable, shall inform a potential enrollee of the
30.28availability of a prepaid health plan's primary care network list in an alternative format. If
30.29the potential enrollee requests an alternative format of the prepaid health plan's primary
30.30care network list, a record of that request shall be retained by the commissioner or local
30.31agency. The potential enrollee is permitted to withdraw the request at any time.
30.32The prepaid health plan shall submit sufficient paper versions of the primary
30.33care network list to the commissioner and to local agencies within its service area to
30.34accommodate potential enrollee requests for paper versions of the primary care network list.
30.35(d) A prepaid health plan may provide in an alternative format materials otherwise
30.36required to be available in writing under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, section
31.2of paragraphs (b)
31.3managed care.
31.4
31.5
31.6
31.7
31.8purchasing plans, counties, and other interested parties to determine how materials required
31.9to be made available to enrollees under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, section
31.11in an alternative format on the basis that the enrollee has not opted in to receive the
31.12alternative format. The commissioner shall consult with managed care plans, county-based
31.13purchasing plans, counties, and other interested parties to develop recommendations
31.14relating to the conditions that must be met for an opt-out process to be granted.
31.15 Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.692, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
31.16 Subd. 2. Duties of commissioner of health. (a) Notwithstanding chapters 62D and
31.1762N, a county that elects to purchase medical assistance in return for a fixed sum without
31.18regard to the frequency or extent of services furnished to any particular enrollee is not
31.19required to obtain a certificate of authority under chapter 62D or 62N. The county board
31.20of commissioners is the governing body of a county-based purchasing program. In a
31.21multicounty arrangement, the governing body is a joint powers board established under
31.22section
31.23 (b) A county that elects to purchase medical assistance services under this section
31.24must satisfy the commissioner of health that the requirements for assurance of consumer
31.25protection, provider protection, and
31.2662D, applicable to health maintenance organizations will be met according to the
31.27following schedule:
31.28 (1) for a county-based purchasing plan approved on or before June 30, 2008, the
31.29plan must have in reserve:
31.30 (i) at least 50 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D as
31.31of January 1, 2010;
31.32 (ii) at least 75 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D as of
31.33January 1, 2011;
31.34 (iii) at least 87.5 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D as
31.35of January 1, 2012; and
32.1 (iv) at least 100 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D as
32.2of January 1, 2013; and
32.3 (2) for a county-based purchasing plan first approved after June 30, 2008, the plan
32.4must have in reserve:
32.5 (i) at least 50 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D at the
32.6time the plan begins enrolling enrollees;
32.7 (ii) at least 75 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D after
32.8the first full calendar year;
32.9 (iii) at least 87.5 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D after
32.10the second full calendar year; and
32.11 (iv) at least 100 percent of the minimum amount required under chapter 62D after
32.12the third full calendar year.
32.13 (c) Until a plan is required to have reserves equaling at least 100 percent of the
32.14minimum amount required under chapter 62D, the plan may demonstrate its ability
32.15to cover any losses by satisfying the requirements of chapter 62N. A county-based
32.16purchasing plan must also assure the commissioner of health that the requirements of
32.17sections
32.18of chapter 62Q, including sections
32.21 (d) All enforcement and rulemaking powers available under chapters 62D, 62J, 62M,
32.2262N, and 62Q are hereby granted to the commissioner of health with respect to counties
32.23that purchase medical assistance services under this section.
32.24 (e) The commissioner, in consultation with county government, shall develop
32.25administrative and financial reporting requirements for county-based purchasing programs
32.26relating to sections
32.27and other sections as necessary, that are specific to county administrative, accounting, and
32.28reporting systems and consistent with other statutory requirements of counties.
32.29 (f) The commissioner shall collect from a county-based purchasing plan under
32.30this section the following fees:
32.31 (1) fees attributable to the costs of audits and other examinations of plan financial
32.32operations. These fees are subject to the provisions of Minnesota Rules, part 4685.2800,
32.33subpart 1, item F; and
32.34 (2) an annual fee of $21,500, to be paid by June 15 of each calendar year
32.35
33.1
33.2
33.3All fees collected under this paragraph shall be deposited in the state government special
33.4revenue fund.
33.5 Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.692, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
33.6 Subd. 5. County proposals. (a)
33.7that wishes to purchase or provide health care under this section must submit a preliminary
33.8proposal that substantially demonstrates the county's ability to meet all the requirements
33.9of this section in response to criteria for proposals issued by the department
33.10
33.11process that involves input from medical assistance recipients, recipient advocates,
33.12providers and representatives of local school districts, labor, and tribal government to
33.13advise on the development of a final proposal and its implementation.
33.14(b) The county board must submit a final proposal
33.15demonstrates the ability to meet all the requirements of this section
33.16
33.17
33.18(c)
33.19program is in existence, the county board must submit a preliminary proposal at least 15
33.20months prior to termination of health plan contracts in that county and a final proposal
33.21six months prior to the health plan contract termination date in order to begin enrollment
33.22after the termination. Nothing in this section shall impede or delay implementation or
33.23continuation of the prepaid medical assistance program in counties for which the board
33.24does not submit a proposal, or submits a proposal that is not in compliance with this section.
33.25
33.26
33.27
33.28
33.29 Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.76, subdivision 4, is
33.30amended to read:
33.31 Subd. 4. Critical access dental providers. (a) Effective for dental services
33.32rendered on or after January 1, 2002, the commissioner shall increase reimbursements
33.33to dentists and dental clinics deemed by the commissioner to be critical access dental
33.34providers. For dental services rendered on or after July 1, 2007, the commissioner shall
34.1increase reimbursement by 35 percent above the reimbursement rate that would otherwise
34.2be paid to the critical access dental provider. The commissioner shall pay the managed
34.3care plans and county-based purchasing plans in amounts sufficient to reflect increased
34.4reimbursements to critical access dental providers as approved by the commissioner.
34.5(b) The commissioner shall designate the following dentists and dental clinics as
34.6critical access dental providers:
34.7 (1) nonprofit community clinics that:
34.8(i) have nonprofit status in accordance with chapter 317A;
34.9(ii) have tax exempt status in accordance with the Internal Revenue Code, section
34.10501(c)(3);
34.11(iii) are established to provide oral health services to patients who are low income,
34.12uninsured, have special needs, and are underserved;
34.13(iv) have professional staff familiar with the cultural background of the clinic's
34.14patients;
34.15(v) charge for services on a sliding fee scale designed to provide assistance to
34.16low-income patients based on current poverty income guidelines and family size;
34.17(vi) do not restrict access or services because of a patient's financial limitations
34.18or public assistance status; and
34.19(vii) have free care available as needed;
34.20 (2) federally qualified health centers, rural health clinics, and public health clinics;
34.21 (3) city or county owned and operated hospital-based dental clinics;
34.22(4) a dental clinic or dental group owned and operated by a nonprofit corporation in
34.23accordance with chapter 317A with more than 10,000 patient encounters per year with
34.24patients who are uninsured or covered by medical assistance or MinnesotaCare;
34.25(5) a dental clinic owned and operated by the University of Minnesota or the
34.26Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system; and
34.27(6) private practicing dentists if:
34.28(i) the dentist's office is located within a health professional shortage area as defined
34.29under Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, part 5, and United States Code, title 42,
34.30section 254E;
34.31(ii) more than 50 percent of the dentist's patient encounters per year are with patients
34.32who are uninsured or covered by medical assistance or MinnesotaCare;
34.33(iii) the dentist does not restrict access or services because of a patient's financial
34.34limitations or public assistance status; and
34.35(iv) the level of service provided by the dentist is critical to maintaining adequate
34.36levels of patient access within the service area in which the dentist operates.
35.1
35.2
35.3
35.4
35.5
35.6
35.7
35.8
35.9
35.10
35.11
35.12
35.13
35.14
35.15
35.16
35.17
35.18
35.19
35.20 Sec. 19. REPEALER.
35.21Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 256.959; 256.964; 256.9691; 256B.043;
35.22256B.075, subdivision 4; 256B.0757, subdivision 7; 256B.19, subdivision 3; 256B.53;
35.23256B.69, subdivisions 5e, 6c, and 24a; and 256B.692, subdivision 10, are repealed.
35.26 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4871, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
35.27 Subd. 3. Case management services. "Case management services" means activities
35.28that are coordinated with the family community support services and are designed to
35.29help the child with severe emotional disturbance and the child's family obtain needed
35.30mental health services, social services, educational services, health services, vocational
35.31services, recreational services, and related services in the areas of volunteer services,
35.32advocacy, transportation, and legal services. Case management services include assisting
35.33in obtaining a comprehensive diagnostic assessment,
35.34
36.1child and the child's family in obtaining needed services by coordination with other
36.2agencies and assuring continuity of care. Case managers must assess and reassess the
36.3delivery, appropriateness, and effectiveness of services over time.
36.4 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4871, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
36.5 Subd. 6. Child with severe emotional disturbance. For purposes of eligibility for
36.6case management and family community support services, "child with severe emotional
36.7disturbance" means a child who has an emotional disturbance and who meets one of the
36.8following criteria:
36.9(1) the child has been admitted within the last three years or is at risk of being
36.10admitted to inpatient treatment or residential treatment for an emotional disturbance; or
36.11(2) the child is a Minnesota resident and is receiving inpatient treatment or
36.12residential treatment for an emotional disturbance through the interstate compact; or
36.13(3) the child has one of the following as determined by a mental health professional:
36.14(i) psychosis or a clinical depression; or
36.15(ii) risk of harming self or others as a result of an emotional disturbance; or
36.16(iii) psychopathological symptoms as a result of being a victim of physical or sexual
36.17abuse or of psychic trauma within the past year; or
36.18(4) the child, as a result of an emotional disturbance, has significantly impaired home,
36.19school, or community functioning that has lasted at least one year or that, in the written
36.20opinion of a mental health professional, presents substantial risk of lasting at least one year.
36.21
36.22
36.23
36.24
36.25
36.26 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4871, subdivision 27, is amended to read:
36.27 Subd. 27. Mental health professional. "Mental health professional" means a
36.28person providing clinical services in the diagnosis and treatment of children's
36.29
36.30have training and experience in working with children consistent with the age group to
36.31which the mental health professional is assigned. A mental health professional must be
36.32qualified in at least one of the following ways:
36.33 (1) in psychiatric nursing, the mental health professional must be a registered nurse
36.34who is licensed under sections
37.1specialist in child and adolescent psychiatric or mental health nursing by a national nurse
37.2certification organization or who has a master's degree in nursing or one of the behavioral
37.3sciences or related fields from an accredited college or university or its equivalent, with
37.4at least 4,000 hours of post-master's supervised experience in the delivery of clinical
37.5services in the treatment of mental illness;
37.6 (2) in clinical social work, the mental health professional must be a person licensed
37.7as an independent clinical social worker under chapter 148D, or a person with a master's
37.8degree in social work from an accredited college or university, with at least 4,000 hours of
37.9post-master's supervised experience in the delivery of clinical services in the treatment
37.10of mental disorders;
37.11 (3) in psychology, the mental health professional must be an individual licensed by
37.12the board of psychology under sections
37.13psychology competencies in the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders;
37.14 (4) in psychiatry, the mental health professional must be a physician licensed under
37.15chapter 147 and certified by the American board of psychiatry and neurology or eligible
37.16for board certification in psychiatry;
37.17 (5) in marriage and family therapy, the mental health professional must be a
37.18marriage and family therapist licensed under sections
37.19two years of post-master's supervised experience in the delivery of clinical services in the
37.20treatment of mental disorders or emotional disturbances; or
37.21 (6) in licensed professional clinical counseling, the mental health professional shall
37.22be a licensed professional clinical counselor under section
37.23hours of post-master's supervised experience in the delivery of clinical services in the
37.24treatment of mental disorders or emotional disturbances
37.25
37.26
37.27
37.28
37.29 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4873, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
37.30 Subd. 2. State level; coordination. The Children's Cabinet, under section
37.31consultation with a representative of the Minnesota District Judges Association Juvenile
37.32Committee, shall:
37.33(1) educate each agency about the policies, procedures, funding, and services for
37.34children with emotional disturbances of all agencies represented;
38.1(2) develop mechanisms for interagency coordination on behalf of children with
38.2emotional disturbances;
38.3(3) identify barriers including policies and procedures within all agencies represented
38.4that interfere with delivery of mental health services for children;
38.5(4) recommend policy and procedural changes needed to improve development and
38.6delivery of mental health services for children in the agency or agencies they represent; and
38.7(5) identify mechanisms for better use of federal and state funding in the delivery of
38.8mental health services for children
38.9
38.10 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4874, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
38.11 Subdivision 1. Duties of county board. (a) The county board must:
38.12 (1) develop a system of affordable and locally available children's mental health
38.13services according to sections
38.14 (2) establish a mechanism providing for interagency coordination as specified in
38.15section
38.16 (3) consider the assessment of unmet needs in the county as reported by the local
38.17children's mental health advisory council under section
38.18(b), clause (3). The county shall provide, upon request of the local children's mental health
38.19advisory council, readily available data to assist in the determination of unmet needs;
38.20 (4) assure that parents and providers in the county receive information about how to
38.21gain access to services provided according to sections
38.22 (5) coordinate the delivery of children's mental health services with services provided
38.23by social services, education, corrections, health, and vocational agencies to improve the
38.24availability of mental health services to children and the cost-effectiveness of their delivery;
38.25 (6) assure that mental health services delivered according to sections
38.27assessment and individual treatment plan;
38.28
38.29
38.30
38.31
38.32disturbance according to sections
38.33subdivisions 1, 3, and 5
39.1
39.2to a residential treatment facility, acute care hospital inpatient treatment, or informal
39.3admission to a regional treatment center;
39.4
39.5county board determines are necessary to fulfill its responsibilities under sections
39.6to
39.7
39.8case managers employed by or under contract to the county to provide mental health
39.9services are qualified under section
39.10
39.11mental health services specified in sections
39.12mental health services is available to serve persons with mental illness, regardless of
39.13the person's age;
39.14
39.15necessary to assist the county board in assessing and providing appropriate treatment for
39.16children of cultural or racial minority heritage; and
39.17
39.18health screening for:
39.19(i) a child receiving child protective services;
39.20(ii) a child in out-of-home placement;
39.21(iii) a child for whom parental rights have been terminated;
39.22(iv) a child found to be delinquent; or
39.23(v) a child found to have committed a juvenile petty offense for the third or
39.24subsequent time.
39.25A children's mental health screening is not required when a screening or diagnostic
39.26assessment has been performed within the previous 180 days, or the child is currently
39.27under the care of a mental health professional.
39.28(b) When a child is receiving protective services or is in out-of-home placement,
39.29the court or county agency must notify a parent or guardian whose parental rights have
39.30not been terminated of the potential mental health screening and the option to prevent the
39.31screening by notifying the court or county agency in writing.
39.32(c) When a child is found to be delinquent or a child is found to have committed a
39.33juvenile petty offense for the third or subsequent time, the court or county agency must
39.34obtain written informed consent from the parent or legal guardian before a screening is
39.35conducted unless the court, notwithstanding the parent's failure to consent, determines that
39.36the screening is in the child's best interest.
40.1(d) The screening shall be conducted with a screening instrument approved by
40.2the commissioner of human services according to criteria that are updated and issued
40.3annually to ensure that approved screening instruments are valid and useful for child
40.4welfare and juvenile justice populations. Screenings shall be conducted by a mental health
40.5practitioner as defined in section
40.6social services agency staff person who is trained in the use of the screening instrument.
40.7Training in the use of the instrument shall include:
40.8(1) training in the administration of the instrument;
40.9(2) the interpretation of its validity given the child's current circumstances;
40.10(3) the state and federal data practices laws and confidentiality standards;
40.11(4) the parental consent requirement; and
40.12(5) providing respect for families and cultural values.
40.13If the screen indicates a need for assessment, the child's family, or if the family lacks
40.14mental health insurance, the local social services agency, in consultation with the child's
40.15family, shall have conducted a diagnostic assessment, including a functional assessment
40.16
40.17privacy of children receiving the screening and their families and shall comply with the
40.18Minnesota Government Data Practices Act, chapter 13, and the federal Health Insurance
40.19Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191. Screening results shall be
40.20considered private data
40.21 (e) When the county board refers clients to providers of children's therapeutic
40.22services and supports under section
40.23the desired services components not covered under section
40.24reimbursement source for those requested services, the method of payment, and the
40.25payment rate to the provider.
40.26 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4881, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
40.27 Subd. 3. Duties of case manager. (a) Upon a determination of eligibility for case
40.28management services, the case manager shall
40.29
40.30individual family community support plan for a child as specified in subdivision 4, review
40.31the child's progress, and monitor the provision of services. If services are to be provided
40.32in a host county that is not the county of financial responsibility, the case manager shall
40.33consult with the host county and obtain a letter demonstrating the concurrence of the host
40.34county regarding the provision of services.
41.1(b) The case manager shall note in the child's record the services needed by the
41.2child and the child's family, the services requested by the family, services that are not
41.3available, and the unmet needs of the child and child's family. The case manager shall
41.4note this provision in the child's record.
41.5 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4881, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
41.6 Subd. 4. Individual family community support plan. (a) For each child, the case
41.7manager must develop an individual family community support plan that incorporates the
41.8child's individual treatment plan. The individual treatment plan may not be a substitute
41.9for the development of an individual family community support plan. The case manager
41.10is responsible for developing the individual family community support plan within 30
41.11days of intake based on a diagnostic assessment
41.12implementing and monitoring the delivery of services according to the individual family
41.13community support plan. The case manager must review the plan at least every 180
41.14calendar days after it is developed, unless the case manager has received a written request
41.15from the child's family or an advocate for the child for a review of the plan every 90
41.16days after it is developed. To the extent appropriate, the child with severe emotional
41.17disturbance, the child's family, advocates, service providers, and significant others must
41.18be involved in all phases of development and implementation of the individual family
41.19community support plan. Notwithstanding the lack of an individual family community
41.20support plan, the case manager shall assist the child and child's family in accessing the
41.21needed services listed in section
41.22(b) The child's individual family community support plan must state:
41.23(1) the goals and expected outcomes of each service and criteria for evaluating the
41.24effectiveness and appropriateness of the service;
41.25(2) the activities for accomplishing each goal;
41.26(3) a schedule for each activity; and
41.27(4) the frequency of face-to-face contacts by the case manager, as appropriate to
41.28client need and the implementation of the individual family community support plan.
41.29 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245.4882, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
41.30 Subdivision 1. Availability of residential treatment services. County boards must
41.31provide or contract for enough residential treatment services to meet the needs of each
41.32child with severe emotional disturbance residing in the county and needing this level of
41.33care. Length of stay is based on the child's residential treatment need and shall be subject
41.34to the six-month review process established in section
42.1voluntary placement for treatment, the court review process in section
42.2must be appropriate to the child's age and treatment needs and must be made available as
42.3close to the county as possible. Residential treatment must be designed to:
42.4
42.5
42.6
42.7
42.8
42.9
42.10families to care for children with severe emotional disturbance in the home.
42.11 Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 246.325, is amended to read:
42.12246.325 GARDEN OF REMEMBRANCE.
42.13The cemetery located on the grounds of the Cambridge State Hospital shall be
42.14known as the Garden of Remembrance.
42.15
42.16
42.17
42.18 Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 254B.05, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
42.19 Subd. 2. Regulatory methods. (a) Where appropriate and feasible, the
42.20commissioner shall identify and implement alternative methods of regulation and
42.21enforcement to the extent authorized in this subdivision. These methods shall include:
42.22(1) expansion of the types and categories of licenses that may be granted;
42.23(2) when the standards of an independent accreditation body have been shown to
42.24predict compliance with the rules, the commissioner shall consider compliance with the
42.25accreditation standards to be equivalent to partial compliance with the rules; and
42.26(3) use of an abbreviated inspection that employs key standards that have been
42.27shown to predict full compliance with the rules.
42.28
42.29
42.30
42.31(b) The commissioner shall work with the commissioners of health, public
42.32safety, administration, and education in consolidating duplicative licensing and
42.33certification rules and standards if the commissioner determines that consolidation is
42.34administratively feasible, would significantly reduce the cost of licensing, and would
43.1not reduce the protection given to persons receiving services in licensed programs.
43.2Where administratively feasible and appropriate, the commissioner shall work with the
43.3commissioners of health, public safety, administration, and education in conducting joint
43.4agency inspections of programs.
43.5(c) The commissioner shall work with the commissioners of health, public safety,
43.6administration, and education in establishing a single point of application for applicants
43.7who are required to obtain concurrent licensure from more than one of the commissioners
43.8listed in this clause.
43.9 Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256.01, subdivision 14b, is amended to read:
43.10 Subd. 14b. American Indian child welfare projects. (a) The commissioner of
43.11human services may authorize projects to test tribal delivery of child welfare services to
43.12American Indian children and their parents and custodians living on the reservation.
43.13The commissioner has authority to solicit and determine which tribes may participate
43.14in a project. Grants may be issued to Minnesota Indian tribes to support the projects.
43.15The commissioner may waive existing state rules as needed to accomplish the projects.
43.16Notwithstanding section
43.17alternative methods of investigating and assessing reports of child maltreatment, provided
43.18that the projects comply with the provisions of section
43.19of individuals who are subjects of reports or investigations, including notice and appeal
43.20rights and data practices requirements. The commissioner may seek any federal approvals
43.21necessary to carry out the projects as well as seek and use any funds available to the
43.22commissioner, including use of federal funds, foundation funds, existing grant funds,
43.23and other funds. The commissioner is authorized to advance state funds as necessary to
43.24operate the projects. Federal reimbursement applicable to the projects is appropriated
43.25to the commissioner for the purposes of the projects. The projects must be required to
43.26address responsibility for safety, permanency, and well-being of children.
43.27(b) For the purposes of this section, "American Indian child" means a person under 21
43.28years old and who is a tribal member or eligible for membership in one of the tribes chosen
43.29for a project under this subdivision and who is residing on the reservation of that tribe.
43.30(c) In order to qualify for an American Indian child welfare project, a tribe must:
43.31(1) be one of the existing tribes with reservation land in Minnesota;
43.32(2) have a tribal court with jurisdiction over child custody proceedings;
43.33(3) have a substantial number of children for whom determinations of maltreatment
43.34have occurred;
43.35(4) have capacity to respond to reports of abuse and neglect under section
44.1(5) provide a wide range of services to families in need of child welfare services; and
44.2(6) have a tribal-state title IV-E agreement in effect.
44.3(d) Grants awarded under this section may be used for the nonfederal costs of
44.4providing child welfare services to American Indian children on the tribe's reservation,
44.5including costs associated with:
44.6(1) assessment and prevention of child abuse and neglect;
44.7(2) family preservation;
44.8(3) facilitative, supportive, and reunification services;
44.9(4) out-of-home placement for children removed from the home for child protective
44.10purposes; and
44.11(5) other activities and services approved by the commissioner that further the goals
44.12of providing safety, permanency, and well-being of American Indian children.
44.13(e) When a tribe has initiated a project and has been approved by the commissioner
44.14to assume child welfare responsibilities for American Indian children of that tribe under
44.15this section, the affected county social service agency is relieved of responsibility for
44.16responding to reports of abuse and neglect under section
44.17during the time within which the tribal project is in effect and funded. The commissioner
44.18shall work with tribes and affected counties to develop procedures for data collection,
44.19evaluation, and clarification of ongoing role and financial responsibilities of the county
44.20and tribe for child welfare services prior to initiation of the project. Children who have not
44.21been identified by the tribe as participating in the project shall remain the responsibility
44.22of the county. Nothing in this section shall alter responsibilities of the county for law
44.23enforcement or court services.
44.24(f) Participating tribes may conduct children's mental health screenings under section
44.26the initiative and living on the reservation and who meet one of the following criteria:
44.27(1) the child must be receiving child protective services;
44.28(2) the child must be in foster care; or
44.29(3) the child's parents must have had parental rights suspended or terminated.
44.30Tribes may access reimbursement from available state funds for conducting the screenings.
44.31Nothing in this section shall alter responsibilities of the county for providing services
44.32under section
44.33(g) Participating tribes may establish a local child mortality review panel. In
44.34establishing a local child mortality review panel, the tribe agrees to conduct local child
44.35mortality reviews for child deaths or near-fatalities occurring on the reservation under
44.36subdivision 12. Tribes with established child mortality review panels shall have access
45.1to nonpublic data and shall protect nonpublic data under subdivision 12, paragraphs (c)
45.2to (e). The tribe shall provide written notice to the commissioner and affected counties
45.3when a local child mortality review panel has been established and shall provide data upon
45.4request of the commissioner for purposes of sharing nonpublic data with members of the
45.5state child mortality review panel in connection to an individual case.
45.6(h) The commissioner shall collect information on outcomes relating to child safety,
45.7permanency, and well-being of American Indian children who are served in the projects.
45.8Participating tribes must provide information to the state in a format and completeness
45.9deemed acceptable by the state to meet state and federal reporting requirements.
45.10 (i) In consultation with the White Earth Band, the commissioner shall develop
45.11and submit to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees
45.12with jurisdiction over health and human services a plan to transfer legal responsibility
45.13for providing child protective services to White Earth Band member children residing in
45.14Hennepin County to the White Earth Band. The plan shall include a financing proposal,
45.15definitions of key terms, statutory amendments required, and other provisions required to
45.16implement the plan. The commissioner shall submit the plan by January 15, 2012.
45.17 Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.0943, subdivision 1,
45.18is amended to read:
45.19 Subdivision 1. Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following terms have
45.20the meanings given them.
45.21(a) "Children's therapeutic services and supports" means the flexible package of
45.22mental health services for children who require varying therapeutic and rehabilitative
45.23levels of intervention. The services are time-limited interventions that are delivered using
45.24various treatment modalities and combinations of services designed to reach treatment
45.25outcomes identified in the individual treatment plan.
45.26(b) "Clinical supervision" means the overall responsibility of the mental health
45.27professional for the control and direction of individualized treatment planning, service
45.28delivery, and treatment review for each client. A mental health professional who is an
45.29enrolled Minnesota health care program provider accepts full professional responsibility
45.30for a supervisee's actions and decisions, instructs the supervisee in the supervisee's work,
45.31and oversees or directs the supervisee's work.
45.32(c) "County board" means the county board of commissioners or board established
45.33under sections
45.34(d) "Crisis assistance" has the meaning given in section
46.1(e) "Culturally competent provider" means a provider who understands and can
46.2utilize to a client's benefit the client's culture when providing services to the client. A
46.3provider may be culturally competent because the provider is of the same cultural or
46.4ethnic group as the client or the provider has developed the knowledge and skills through
46.5training and experience to provide services to culturally diverse clients.
46.6(f) "Day treatment program" for children means a site-based structured mental
46.7health program consisting of
46.8and
46.9multidisciplinary team, under the clinical supervision of a mental health professional.
46.10(g) "Diagnostic assessment" has the meaning given in Minnesota Rules, part
46.119505.0372, subpart 1.
46.12(h) "Direct service time" means the time that a mental health professional, mental
46.13health practitioner, or mental health behavioral aide spends face-to-face with a client
46.14and the client's family. Direct service time includes time in which the provider obtains
46.15a client's history or provides service components of children's therapeutic services and
46.16supports. Direct service time does not include time doing work before and after providing
46.17direct services, including scheduling, maintaining clinical records, consulting with others
46.18about the client's mental health status, preparing reports, receiving clinical supervision,
46.19and revising the client's individual treatment plan.
46.20(i) "Direction of mental health behavioral aide" means the activities of a mental
46.21health professional or mental health practitioner in guiding the mental health behavioral
46.22aide in providing services to a client. The direction of a mental health behavioral aide
46.23must be based on the client's individualized treatment plan and meet the requirements in
46.24subdivision 6, paragraph (b), clause (5).
46.25(j) "Emotional disturbance" has the meaning given in section
46.2615
46.27section
46.28(k) "Individual behavioral plan" means a plan of intervention, treatment, and
46.29services for a child written by a mental health professional or mental health practitioner,
46.30under the clinical supervision of a mental health professional, to guide the work of the
46.31mental health behavioral aide.
46.32(l) "Individual treatment plan" has the meaning given in section
46.33subdivision 21
46.34(m) "Mental health behavioral aide services" means medically necessary one-on-one
46.35activities performed by a trained paraprofessional to assist a child retain or generalize
46.36psychosocial skills as taught by a mental health professional or mental health practitioner
47.1and as described in the child's individual treatment plan and individual behavior plan.
47.2Activities involve working directly with the child or child's family as provided in
47.3subdivision 9, paragraph (b), clause (4).
47.4(n) "Mental health practitioner" means an individual as defined in section
47.5subdivision 26.
47.6(o) "Mental health professional" means an individual as defined in section
47.7subdivision 27
47.8subdivision 7
47.9 (p) "Mental health service plan development" includes:
47.10 (1) the development, review, and revision of a child's individual treatment plan,
47.11as provided in Minnesota Rules, part 9505.0371, subpart 7, including involvement of
47.12the client or client's parents, primary caregiver, or other person authorized to consent to
47.13mental health services for the client, and including arrangement of treatment and support
47.14activities specified in the individual treatment plan; and
47.15 (2) administering standardized outcome measurement instruments, determined
47.16and updated by the commissioner, as periodically needed to evaluate the effectiveness
47.17of treatment for children receiving clinical services and reporting outcome measures,
47.18as required by the commissioner.
47.19(q) "Skills training" means individual, family, or group training, delivered by or
47.20under the direction of a mental health professional, designed to facilitate the acquisition
47.21of psychosocial skills that are medically necessary to rehabilitate the child to an
47.22age-appropriate developmental trajectory heretofore disrupted by a psychiatric illness
47.23or to self-monitor, compensate for, cope with, counteract, or replace skills deficits or
47.24maladaptive skills acquired over the course of a psychiatric illness. Skills training is
47.25subject to the following requirements:
47.26(1) a mental health professional or a mental health practitioner must provide skills
47.27training;
47.28(2) the child must always be present during skills training; however, a brief absence
47.29of the child for no more than ten percent of the session unit may be allowed to redirect or
47.30instruct family members;
47.31(3) skills training delivered to children or their families must be targeted to the
47.32specific deficits or maladaptations of the child's mental health disorder and must be
47.33prescribed in the child's individual treatment plan;
47.34(4) skills training delivered to the child's family must teach skills needed by parents
47.35to enhance the child's skill development and to help the child use in daily life the skills
48.1previously taught by a mental health professional or mental health practitioner and to
48.2develop or maintain a home environment that supports the child's progressive use skills;
48.3(5) group skills training may be provided to multiple recipients who, because of the
48.4nature of their emotional, behavioral, or social dysfunction, can derive mutual benefit from
48.5interaction in a group setting, which must be staffed as follows:
48.6(i) one mental health professional or one mental health practitioner under supervision
48.7of a licensed mental health professional must work with a group of four to eight clients; or
48.8(ii) two mental health professionals or two mental health practitioners under
48.9supervision of a licensed mental health professional, or one professional plus one
48.10practitioner must work with a group of nine to 12 clients.
48.11 Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.0943, subdivision 2,
48.12is amended to read:
48.13 Subd. 2. Covered service components of children's therapeutic services and
48.14supports. (a) Subject to federal approval, medical assistance covers medically necessary
48.15children's therapeutic services and supports as defined in this section that an eligible
48.16provider entity certified under subdivision 4 provides to a client eligible under subdivision
48.173.
48.18(b) The service components of children's therapeutic services and supports are:
48.19(1)
48.20psychotherapy;
48.21(2) individual, family, or group skills training provided by a mental health
48.22professional or mental health practitioner;
48.23(3) crisis assistance;
48.24(4) mental health behavioral aide services;
48.25(5) direction of a mental health behavioral aide;
48.26(6) mental health service plan development; and
48.27(7)
48.28day treatment.
48.29
48.30
48.31
48.32
48.33EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
49.1 Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 256B.0943, subdivision 7,
49.2is amended to read:
49.3 Subd. 7. Qualifications of individual and team providers. (a) An individual
49.4or team provider working within the scope of the provider's practice or qualifications
49.5may provide service components of children's therapeutic services and supports that are
49.6identified as medically necessary in a client's individual treatment plan.
49.7(b) An individual provider must be qualified as:
49.8(1) a mental health professional as defined in subdivision 1, paragraph (n); or
49.9(2) a mental health practitioner
49.10clinical trainee. The mental health practitioner or clinical trainee must work under the
49.11clinical supervision of a mental health professional; or
49.12(3) a mental health behavioral aide working under the clinical supervision of
49.13a mental health professional to implement the rehabilitative mental health services
49.14previously introduced by a mental health professional or practitioner and identified in the
49.15client's individual treatment plan and individual behavior plan.
49.16(A) A level I mental health behavioral aide must:
49.17(i) be at least 18 years old;
49.18(ii) have a high school diploma or general equivalency diploma (GED) or two years
49.19of experience as a primary caregiver to a child with severe emotional disturbance within
49.20the previous ten years; and
49.21(iii) meet preservice and continuing education requirements under subdivision 8.
49.22(B) A level II mental health behavioral aide must:
49.23(i) be at least 18 years old;
49.24(ii) have an associate or bachelor's degree or 4,000 hours of experience in delivering
49.25clinical services in the treatment of mental illness concerning children or adolescents or
49.26complete a certificate program established under subdivision 8a; and
49.27(iii) meet preservice and continuing education requirements in subdivision 8.
49.28
49.29
49.30
49.31
49.32
49.33
49.34
49.35health professional or clinical trainee and one mental health practitioner.
49.36EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
50.1 Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0943, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
50.2 Subd. 8. Required preservice and continuing education. (a) A provider entity
50.3shall establish a plan to provide preservice and continuing education for staff. The plan
50.4must clearly describe the type of training necessary to maintain current skills and obtain
50.5new skills and that relates to the provider entity's goals and objectives for services offered.
50.6 (b) A provider that employs a mental health behavioral aide under this section must
50.7require the mental health behavioral aide to complete 30 hours of preservice training. The
50.8preservice training must include
50.9
50.10of in-person training of a mental health behavioral aide in mental health services delivery
50.11and eight hours of parent team training. Curricula for parent team training must be
50.12approved in advance by the commissioner. Components of parent team training include:
50.13 (1) partnering with parents;
50.14 (2) fundamentals of family support;
50.15 (3) fundamentals of policy and decision making;
50.16 (4) defining equal partnership;
50.17 (5) complexities of the parent and service provider partnership in multiple service
50.18delivery systems due to system strengths and weaknesses;
50.19 (6) sibling impacts;
50.20 (7) support networks; and
50.21 (8) community resources.
50.22 (c) A provider entity that employs a mental health practitioner and a mental health
50.23behavioral aide to provide children's therapeutic services and supports under this section
50.24must require the mental health practitioner and mental health behavioral aide to complete
50.2520 hours of continuing education every two calendar years. The continuing education
50.26must be related to serving the needs of a child with emotional disturbance in the child's
50.27home environment and the child's family.
50.28
50.29 (d) The provider entity must document the mental health practitioner's or mental
50.30health behavioral aide's annual completion of the required continuing education. The
50.31documentation must include the date, subject, and number of hours of the continuing
50.32education, and attendance records, as verified by the staff member's signature, job
50.33title, and the instructor's name. The provider entity must keep documentation for each
50.34employee, including records of attendance at professional workshops and conferences,
50.35at a central location and in the employee's personnel file.
50.36EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
51.1 Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0943, subdivision 10, is amended to
51.2read:
51.3 Subd. 10. Service authorization.
51.4
51.5
51.6
51.8
51.9supports are subject to authorization criteria and standards published by the commissioner
51.10according to section 256B.0625, subdivision 25.
51.11EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
51.12 Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0943, subdivision 12, is amended to
51.13read:
51.14 Subd. 12. Excluded services. The following services are not eligible for medical
51.15assistance payment as children's therapeutic services and supports:
51.16 (1) service components of children's therapeutic services and supports simultaneously
51.17provided by more than one provider entity unless prior authorization is obtained;
51.18 (2) treatment by multiple providers within the same agency at the same clock time;
51.19(3) children's therapeutic services and supports provided in violation of medical
51.20assistance policy in Minnesota Rules, part 9505.0220;
51.21 (4) mental health behavioral aide services provided by a personal care assistant who
51.22is not qualified as a mental health behavioral aide and employed by a certified children's
51.23therapeutic services and supports provider entity;
51.24 (5) service components of CTSS that are the responsibility of a residential or
51.25program license holder, including foster care providers under the terms of a service
51.26agreement or administrative rules governing licensure; and
51.27 (6) adjunctive activities that may be offered by a provider entity but are not
51.28otherwise covered by medical assistance, including:
51.29 (i) a service that is primarily recreation oriented or that is provided in a setting that
51.30is not medically supervised. This includes sports activities, exercise groups, activities
51.31such as craft hours, leisure time, social hours, meal or snack time, trips to community
51.32activities, and tours;
51.33 (ii) a social or educational service that does not have or cannot reasonably be
51.34expected to have a therapeutic outcome related to the client's emotional disturbance;
52.1
52.2
52.3
52.4
52.5
52.6
52.7EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
52.8 Sec. 18. REPEALER.
52.9(a) Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 245.0311; 245.0312; 245.4861; 245.487,
52.10subdivisions 4 and 5; 245.4871, subdivisions 7, 11, 18, and 25; 245.4872; 245.4873,
52.11subdivisions 3 and 6; 245.4875, subdivisions 3, 6, and 7; 245.4883, subdivision 1;
52.12245.490; 245.492, subdivisions 6, 8, 13, and 19; 245.4932, subdivisions 2, 3, and 4;
52.13245.4933; 245.494; 245.63; 245.652; 245.69, subdivision 1; 245.714; 245.715; 245.717;
52.14245.718; 245.721; 245.77; 245.821; 245.827; 245.981; 246.012; 246.0135; 246.016;
52.15246.023, subdivision 1; 246.16; 246.28; 246.71; 246.711; 246.712; 246.713; 246.714;
52.16246.715; 246.716; 246.717; 246.718; 246.719; 246.72; 246.721; 246.722; 251.045;
52.17252.05; 252.07; 252.09; 254.01; 254.03; 254.04; 254.06; 254.07; 254.09; 254.10; 254.11;
52.18254A.05, subdivision 1; 254A.07, subdivisions 1 and 2; 254A.16, subdivision 1; 254B.01,
52.19subdivision 1; and 254B.04, subdivision 3, are repealed.
52.20(b) Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, sections 246.0251; 254.05; and 254B.13,
52.21subdivision 3, are repealed.
52.24 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0913, subdivision 5a, is amended to
52.25read:
52.26 Subd. 5a. Services; service definitions; service standards. (a) Unless specified in
52.27statute, the services, service definitions, and standards for alternative care services shall
52.28be the same as the services, service definitions, and standards specified in the federally
52.29approved elderly waiver plan, except alternative care does not cover transitional support
52.30services, assisted living services, adult foster care services, and residential care and
52.31benefits defined under section
52.32 (b) The lead agency must ensure that the funds are not used to supplant or
52.33supplement services available through other public assistance or services programs,
53.1including supplementation of client co-pays, deductibles, premiums, or other cost-sharing
53.2arrangements for health-related benefits and services or entitlement programs and services
53.3that are available to the person, but in which they have elected not to enroll. The
53.4lead agency must ensure that the benefit department recovery system in the Medicaid
53.5Management Information System (MMIS) has the necessary information on any other
53.6health insurance or third-party insurance policy to which the client may have access.
53.7
53.8
53.9
53.10
53.11purchased from a vendor not certified to participate in the Medicaid program if the cost for
53.12the item is less than that of a Medicaid vendor.
53.13 (c) Personal care services must meet the service standards defined in the federally
53.14approved elderly waiver plan, except that a lead agency may
53.15services to be provided by a client's relative who meets the relative hardship waiver
53.16requirements or a relative who meets the criteria and is also the responsible party under
53.17an individual service plan that ensures the client's health and safety and supervision of
53.18the personal care services by a qualified professional as defined in section
53.19subdivision 19c
53.20causes a relative caregiver to do any of the following: resign from a paying job, reduce
53.21work hours resulting in lost wages, obtain a leave of absence resulting in lost wages, incur
53.22substantial client-related expenses, provide services to address authorized, unstaffed direct
53.23care time, or meet special needs of the client unmet in the formal service plan.
53.24 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0913, subdivision 14, is amended to read:
53.25 Subd. 14. Provider requirements, payment, and rate adjustments. (a) Unless
53.26otherwise specified in statute, providers must be enrolled as Minnesota health care
53.27program providers and abide by the requirements for provider participation according to
53.28Minnesota Rules, part 9505.0195.
53.29 (b) Payment for provided alternative care services as approved by the client's
53.30case manager shall occur through the invoice processing procedures of the department's
53.31Medicaid Management Information System (MMIS). To receive payment, the lead agency
53.32or vendor must submit invoices within 12 months following the date of service. The lead
53.33agency and its vendors
53.34the county allocation. Service rates are governed by section 256B.0915, subdivision 3g.
54.1
54.2
54.3
54.4
54.5
54.6
54.7
54.8
54.9
54.10
54.11
54.12
54.13
54.14 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0915, subdivision 3c, is amended to read:
54.15 Subd. 3c. Service approval
54.16funding for skilled nursing services, private duty nursing, home health aide, and personal
54.17care services for waiver recipients must be approved by the case manager and included in
54.18the coordinated service and support plan.
54.19
54.20
54.21 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0915, subdivision 3d, is amended to read:
54.22 Subd. 3d. Adult foster care rate. The adult foster care rate
54.23
54.24
54.25elderly waiver payment for the foster care service in combination with the payment for
54.26all other elderly waiver services, including case management, must not exceed the limit
54.27specified in subdivision 3a, paragraph (a).
54.28 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0915, subdivision 3f, is amended to read:
54.29 Subd. 3f.
54.30 (a)
54.31
54.32
54.33
55.1
55.2
55.3payments for services in accordance with the payment rates and limits published annually
55.4by the commissioner.
55.5 (b) Reimbursement for the medical assistance recipients under the approved waiver
55.6shall be made from the medical assistance account through the invoice processing
55.7procedures of the department's Medicaid Management Information System (MMIS),
55.8only with the approval of the client's case manager. The budget for the state share of the
55.9Medicaid expenditures shall be forecasted with the medical assistance budget, and shall
55.10be consistent with the approved waiver.
55.11 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 256B.0915, subdivision 3g, is amended to read:
55.12 Subd. 3g. Service rate limits; state assumption of costs. (a) To improve access
55.13to community services and eliminate payment disparities between the alternative care
55.14program and the elderly waiver, the commissioner shall establish statewide
55.15 service rate limits and eliminate lead agency-specific service rate limits.
55.16 (b) Effective July 1, 2001, for statewide service rate limits, except those described
55.17or defined in subdivisions 3d
55.18service shall be the greater of the alternative care statewide
55.19waiver statewide
55.20
55.21
55.22 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 517.04, is amended to read:
55.23517.04 PERSONS AUTHORIZED TO PERFORM CIVIL MARRIAGES.
55.24Civil marriages may be solemnized throughout the state by an individual who has
55.25attained the age of 21 years and is a judge of a court of record, a retired judge of a court
55.26of record, a court administrator, a retired court administrator with the approval of the
55.27chief judge of the judicial district, a former court commissioner who is employed by the
55.28court system or is acting pursuant to an order of the chief judge of the commissioner's
55.29judicial district,
55.30
55.31minister of any religious denomination, or by any mode recognized in section
55.32purposes of this section, a court of record includes the Office of Administrative Hearings
55.33under section
56.1 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 595.06, is amended to read:
56.2595.06 CAPACITY OF WITNESS.
56.3When
56.4the court may examine the
56.5person understands the nature and obligations of an oath, and the court may inquire of any
56.6person what peculiar ceremonies the person deems most obligatory in taking an oath.
56.7 Sec. 9. REPEALER.
56.8(a) Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 158.13; 158.14; 158.15; 158.16; 158.17;
56.9158.18; 158.19; 245.072; 256.971; 256.975, subdivision 3; 256.9753, subdivision 4;
56.10256B.04, subdivision 16; 256B.0656; 256B.0657; 256B.0913, subdivision 9; 256B.0916,
56.11subdivisions 6 and 6a; 256B.0928; 256B.431, subdivisions 28, 31, 33, 34, 37, 38, 39, 40,
56.1241, and 43; 256B.434, subdivision 19; 256B.440; 256B.441, subdivisions 46 and 46a;
56.13256B.491; 256B.501, subdivisions 3a, 3b, 3h, 3j, 3k, 3l, and 5e; 256B.5016; 256B.503;
56.14and 626.557, subdivision 16, are repealed.
56.15(b) Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, sections 256B.31; 256B.501, subdivision
56.165b; 256C.05; and 256C.29, are repealed.
56.17(c) Minnesota Rules, parts 9549.0020, subparts 2, 12, 13, 20, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 30,
56.1831, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 38, 41, 42, 43, 44, 46, and 47; 9549.0030; 9549.0035, subparts 4, 5,
56.19and 6; 9549.0036; 9549.0040; 9549.0041, subparts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,
56.2014, and 15; 9549.0050; 9549.0051, subparts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and 14;
56.219549.0053; 9549.0054; 9549.0055, subpart 4; 9549.0056; 9549.0060, subparts 1, 2, 3, 8,
56.229, 12, and 13; 9549.0061; and 9549.0070, subparts 1 and 4, are repealed.
56.25 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 13.46, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
56.26 Subd. 4. Licensing data. (a) As used in this subdivision:
56.27 (1) "licensing data" are all data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated by the
56.28welfare system pertaining to persons licensed or registered or who apply for licensure
56.29or registration or who formerly were licensed or registered under the authority of the
56.30commissioner of human services;
56.31 (2) "client" means a person who is receiving services from a licensee or from an
56.32applicant for licensure; and
57.1 (3) "personal and personal financial data" are Social Security numbers, identity
57.2of and letters of reference, insurance information, reports from the Bureau of Criminal
57.3Apprehension, health examination reports, and social/home studies.
57.4 (b)(1)(i) Except as provided in paragraph (c), the following data on applicants,
57.5license holders, and former licensees are public: name, address, telephone number of
57.6licensees, date of receipt of a completed application, dates of licensure, licensed capacity,
57.7type of client preferred, variances granted, record of training and education in child care
57.8and child development, type of dwelling, name and relationship of other family members,
57.9previous license history, class of license, the existence and status of complaints, and the
57.10number of serious injuries to or deaths of individuals in the licensed program as reported
57.11to the commissioner of human services, the local social services agency, or any other
57.12county welfare agency. For purposes of this clause, a serious injury is one that is treated
57.13by a physician.
57.14(ii) When a correction order, an order to forfeit a fine, an order of license suspension,
57.15an order of temporary immediate suspension, an order of license revocation, an order
57.16of license denial, or an order of conditional license has been issued, or a complaint is
57.17resolved, the following data on current and former licensees and applicants are public: the
57.18substance and investigative findings of the licensing or maltreatment complaint, licensing
57.19violation, or substantiated maltreatment; the record of informal resolution of a licensing
57.20violation; orders of hearing; findings of fact; conclusions of law; specifications of the final
57.21correction order, fine, suspension, temporary immediate suspension, revocation, denial, or
57.22conditional license contained in the record of licensing action; whether a fine has been
57.23paid; and the status of any appeal of these actions.
57.24(iii) When a license denial under section
57.26maltreatment under section
57.27holder as the individual responsible for maltreatment is public data at the time of the
57.28issuance of the license denial or sanction.
57.29(iv) When a license denial under section
57.31under chapter 245C, the identity of the license holder or applicant as the disqualified
57.32individual and the reason for the disqualification are public data at the time of the
57.33issuance of the licensing sanction or denial. If the applicant or license holder requests
57.34reconsideration of the disqualification and the disqualification is affirmed, the reason for
57.35the disqualification and the reason to not set aside the disqualification are public data.
58.1
58.2
58.3
58.4
58.5
58.6
58.7
58.8
58.9
58.10
58.11
58.12a license, the following data are public: the name of the applicant, the city and county
58.13in which the applicant was seeking licensure, the dates of the commissioner's receipt of
58.14the initial application and completed application, the type of license sought, and the date
58.15of withdrawal of the application.
58.16
58.17name and address of the applicant, the city and county in which the applicant was seeking
58.18licensure, the dates of the commissioner's receipt of the initial application and completed
58.19application, the type of license sought, the date of denial of the application, the nature of
58.20the basis for the denial, the record of informal resolution of a denial, orders of hearings,
58.21findings of fact, conclusions of law, specifications of the final order of denial, and the
58.22status of any appeal of the denial.
58.23
58.24
58.25
58.26
58.27
58.28
58.29
58.30
58.31
58.32
58.33
58.34
58.35
58.36
59.1
59.2
59.3
59.4
59.5
59.6
59.7the victim and the substantiated perpetrator are affiliated with a program licensed under
59.8chapter 245A, the commissioner of human services, local social services agency, or
59.9county welfare agency may inform the license holder where the maltreatment occurred of
59.10the identity of the substantiated perpetrator and the victim.
59.11
59.12holder and the status of the license are public if the county attorney has requested that data
59.13otherwise classified as public data under clause (1) be considered private data based on the
59.14best interests of a child in placement in a licensed program.
59.15 (c) The following are private data on individuals under section
59.1612
59.17data on family day care program and family foster care program applicants and licensees
59.18and their family members who provide services under the license.
59.19 (d) The following are private data on individuals: the identity of persons who have
59.20made reports concerning licensees or applicants that appear in inactive investigative data,
59.21and the records of clients or employees of the licensee or applicant for licensure whose
59.22records are received by the licensing agency for purposes of review or in anticipation of a
59.23contested matter. The names of reporters of complaints or alleged violations of licensing
59.24standards under chapters 245A, 245B, 245C, and applicable rules and alleged maltreatment
59.25under sections
59.26provided in section
59.27 (e) Data classified as private, confidential, nonpublic, or protected nonpublic under
59.28this subdivision become public data if submitted to a court or administrative law judge as
59.29part of a disciplinary proceeding in which there is a public hearing concerning a license
59.30which has been suspended, immediately suspended, revoked, or denied.
59.31 (f) Data generated in the course of licensing investigations that relate to an alleged
59.32violation of law are investigative data under subdivision 3.
59.33 (g) Data that are not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under
59.34this subdivision that relate to or are derived from a report as defined in section
59.35subdivision 2
59.36sections
60.1 (h) Upon request, not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under
60.2this subdivision that relate to or are derived from a report of substantiated maltreatment as
60.3defined in section
60.4for purposes of completing background studies pursuant to section
60.5the Department of Corrections for purposes of completing background studies pursuant
60.6to section
60.7 (i) Data on individuals collected according to licensing activities under chapters
60.8245A and 245C, data on individuals collected by the commissioner of human services
60.9according to investigations under chapters 245A, 245B, and 245C, and sections
60.10and
60.11of Health, the Department of Corrections, the ombudsman for mental health and
60.12developmental disabilities, and the individual's professional regulatory board when there
60.13is reason to believe that laws or standards under the jurisdiction of those agencies may
60.14have been violated or the information may otherwise be relevant to the board's regulatory
60.15jurisdiction. Background study data on an individual who is the subject of a background
60.16study under chapter 245C for a licensed service for which the commissioner of human
60.17services is the license holder may be shared with the commissioner and the commissioner's
60.18delegate by the licensing division. Unless otherwise specified in this chapter, the identity
60.19of a reporter of alleged maltreatment or licensing violations may not be disclosed.
60.20 (j) In addition to the notice of determinations required under section
60.21subdivision 10f
60.22that an individual is a substantiated perpetrator of maltreatment of a child based on sexual
60.23abuse, as defined in section
60.24services agency knows that the individual is a person responsible for a child's care in
60.25another facility, the commissioner or local social services agency shall notify the head
60.26of that facility of this determination. The notification must include an explanation of the
60.27individual's available appeal rights and the status of any appeal. If a notice is given under
60.28this paragraph, the government entity making the notification shall provide a copy of the
60.29notice to the individual who is the subject of the notice.
60.30 (k) All not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under this
60.31subdivision and subdivision 3 may be exchanged between the Department of Human
60.32Services, Licensing Division, and the Department of Corrections for purposes of
60.33regulating services for which the Department of Human Services and the Department
60.34of Corrections have regulatory authority.
61.1 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 245A.03, subdivision 7, is
61.2amended to read:
61.3 Subd. 7. Licensing moratorium. (a) The commissioner shall not issue an initial
61.4license for child foster care licensed under Minnesota Rules, parts 2960.3000 to 2960.3340,
61.5or adult foster care licensed under Minnesota Rules, parts 9555.5105 to 9555.6265, under
61.6this chapter for a physical location that will not be the primary residence of the license
61.7holder for the entire period of licensure. If a license is issued during this moratorium, and
61.8the license holder changes the license holder's primary residence away from the physical
61.9location of the foster care license, the commissioner shall revoke the license according
61.10to section
61.11residential setting licensed under chapter 245D. Exceptions to the moratorium include:
61.12(1) foster care settings that are required to be registered under chapter 144D;
61.13(2) foster care licenses replacing foster care licenses in existence on May 15, 2009, or
61.14community residential setting licenses replacing adult foster care licenses in existence on
61.15December 31, 2013, and determined to be needed by the commissioner under paragraph (b);
61.16(3) new foster care licenses or community residential setting licenses determined to
61.17be needed by the commissioner under paragraph (b) for the closure of a nursing facility,
61.18ICF/DD, or regional treatment center; restructuring of state-operated services that limits
61.19the capacity of state-operated facilities; or allowing movement to the community for
61.20people who no longer require the level of care provided in state-operated facilities as
61.21provided under section
61.22(4) new foster care licenses or community residential setting licenses determined
61.23to be needed by the commissioner under paragraph (b) for persons requiring hospital
61.24level care; or
61.25(5) new foster care licenses or community residential setting licenses determined to
61.26be needed by the commissioner for the transition of people from personal care assistance
61.27to the home and community-based services.
61.28(b) The commissioner shall determine the need for newly licensed foster care
61.29homes or community residential settings as defined under this subdivision. As part of the
61.30determination, the commissioner shall consider the availability of foster care capacity in
61.31the area in which the licensee seeks to operate, and the recommendation of the local
61.32county board. The determination by the commissioner must be final. A determination of
61.33need is not required for a change in ownership at the same address.
61.34(c) When an adult resident served by the program moves out of a foster home
61.35that is not the primary residence of the license holder according to section
61.36subdivision 15
62.1shall immediately inform the Department of Human Services Licensing Division. The
62.2department shall decrease the statewide licensed capacity for adult foster care settings
62.3where the physical location is not the primary residence of the license holder, or for adult
62.4community residential settings, if the voluntary changes described in paragraph (e) are
62.5not sufficient to meet the savings required by reductions in licensed bed capacity under
62.6Laws 2011, First Special Session chapter 9, article 7, sections 1 and 40, paragraph (f),
62.7and maintain statewide long-term care residential services capacity within budgetary
62.8limits. Implementation of the statewide licensed capacity reduction shall begin on July
62.91, 2013. The commissioner shall delicense up to 128 beds by June 30, 2014, using the
62.10needs determination process. Under this paragraph, the commissioner has the authority
62.11to reduce unused licensed capacity of a current foster care program, or the community
62.12residential settings, to accomplish the consolidation or closure of settings. Under this
62.13paragraph, the commissioner has the authority to manage statewide capacity, including
62.14adjusting the capacity available to each county and adjusting statewide available capacity,
62.15to meet the statewide needs identified through the process in paragraph (e). A decreased
62.16licensed capacity according to this paragraph is not subject to appeal under this chapter.
62.17(d) Residential settings that would otherwise be subject to the decreased license
62.18capacity established in paragraph (c) shall be exempt
62.19
62.20
62.21
62.22
62.23
62.24
62.25
62.26
62.27
62.28
62.29
62.30mental illness and the license holder is certified under the requirements in subdivision 6a
62.31or section
62.32(e) A resource need determination process, managed at the state level, using the
62.33available reports required by section
62.34be used to determine where the reduced capacity required under paragraph (c) will be
62.35implemented. The commissioner shall consult with the stakeholders described in section
63.1long-term care service needs within budgetary limits, including seeking proposals from
63.2service providers or lead agencies to change service type, capacity, or location to improve
63.3services, increase the independence of residents, and better meet needs identified by the
63.4long-term care services reports and statewide data and information. By February 1, 2013,
63.5and August 1, 2014, and each following year, the commissioner shall provide information
63.6and data on the overall capacity of licensed long-term care services, actions taken under
63.7this subdivision to manage statewide long-term care services and supports resources, and
63.8any recommendations for change to the legislative committees with jurisdiction over
63.9health and human services budget.
63.10 (f) At the time of application and reapplication for licensure, the applicant and the
63.11license holder that are subject to the moratorium or an exclusion established in paragraph
63.12(a) are required to inform the commissioner whether the physical location where the foster
63.13care will be provided is or will be the primary residence of the license holder for the entire
63.14period of licensure. If the primary residence of the applicant or license holder changes, the
63.15applicant or license holder must notify the commissioner immediately. The commissioner
63.16shall print on the foster care license certificate whether or not the physical location is the
63.17primary residence of the license holder.
63.18 (g) License holders of foster care homes identified under paragraph (f) that are not
63.19the primary residence of the license holder and that also provide services in the foster care
63.20home that are covered by a federally approved home and community-based services
63.21waiver, as authorized under section
63.22human services licensing division that the license holder provides or intends to provide
63.23these waiver-funded services.
63.24 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 245A.40, subdivision 5, is
63.25amended to read:
63.26 Subd. 5. Sudden unexpected infant death and abusive head trauma training. (a)
63.27License holders must document that before staff persons and volunteers care for infants,
63.28they are instructed on the standards in section
63.29the risk of sudden unexpected infant death. In addition, license holders must document
63.30that before staff persons care for infants or children under school age, they receive training
63.31on the risk of abusive head trauma from shaking infants and young children. The training
63.32in this subdivision may be provided as orientation training under subdivision 1 and
63.33in-service training under subdivision 7.
63.34 (b) Sudden unexpected infant death reduction training required under this
63.35subdivision must be at least one-half hour in length and must be completed at least once
64.1every year. At a minimum, the training must address the risk factors related to sudden
64.2unexpected infant death, means of reducing the risk of sudden unexpected infant death in
64.3child care, and license holder communication with parents regarding reducing the risk of
64.4sudden unexpected infant death.
64.5 (c) Abusive head trauma training under this subdivision must be at least one-half
64.6hour in length and must be completed at least once every year. At a minimum, the training
64.7must address the risk factors related to shaking infants and young children, means to
64.8reduce the risk of abusive head trauma in child care, and license holder communication
64.9with parents regarding reducing the risk of abusive head trauma.
64.10
64.11
64.12
64.13
64.14
64.15
64.16
64.17 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245A.40, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
64.18 Subd. 8. Cultural dynamics and disabilities training for child care providers.
64.19 (a) The training required of licensed child care center staff must include training in the
64.20cultural dynamics of early childhood development and child care. The cultural dynamics
64.21and disabilities training and skills development of child care providers must be designed
64.22to achieve outcomes for providers of child care that include, but are not limited to:
64.23 (1) an understanding and support of the importance of culture and differences in
64.24ability in children's identity development;
64.25 (2) understanding the importance of awareness of cultural differences and
64.26similarities in working with children and their families;
64.27 (3) understanding and support of the needs of families and children with differences
64.28in ability;
64.29 (4) developing skills to help children develop unbiased attitudes about cultural
64.30differences and differences in ability;
64.31 (5) developing skills in culturally appropriate caregiving; and
64.32 (6) developing skills in appropriate caregiving for children of different abilities.
64.33
64.34
65.1
65.2
65.3
65.4
65.5
65.6
65.7ensure that any additional staff training required by the child's individual child care
65.8program plan required under Minnesota Rules, part 9503.0065, subpart 3, is provided.
65.9 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 245A.50, subdivision 3, is
65.10amended to read:
65.11 Subd. 3. First aid. (a) When children are present in a family child care home
65.12governed by Minnesota Rules, parts 9502.0315 to 9502.0445, at least one staff person
65.13must be present in the home who has been trained in first aid. The first aid training must
65.14have been provided by an individual approved to provide first aid instruction. First aid
65.15training may be less than eight hours and persons qualified to provide first aid training
65.16include individuals approved as first aid instructors. First aid training must be repeated
65.17every two years.
65.18 (b) A family child care provider is exempt from the first aid training requirements
65.19under this subdivision related to any substitute caregiver who provides less than 30 hours
65.20of care during any 12-month period.
65.21
65.22
65.23 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245C.04, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
65.24 Subdivision 1. Licensed programs. (a) The commissioner shall conduct a
65.25background study of an individual required to be studied under section
65.26subdivision 1
65.27 (b) The commissioner shall conduct a background study of an individual required
65.28to be studied under section
65.29family child care.
65.30 (c) The commissioner is not required to conduct a study of an individual at the time
65.31of reapplication for a license if the individual's background study was completed by the
65.32commissioner of human services
65.33
66.1
66.2
66.3
66.4
66.5
66.6or when the individual became affiliated with the license holder;
66.7
66.8the last study was conducted; and
66.9
66.10
66.11
66.12
66.13
66.14
66.15
66.16
66.17
66.18
66.19of an individual specified under section
66.20(2) to (6), who is newly affiliated with a child foster care license holder. The county or
66.21private agency shall collect and forward to the commissioner the information required
66.22under section
66.23commissioner of human services under this paragraph must include a review of the
66.24information required under section
66.25
66.26
66.27
66.28
66.29
66.30
66.31
66.32
66.33
66.34
66.35
66.36
67.1
67.2
67.3
67.4
67.5specified under section
67.6newly affiliated with an adult foster care or family adult day services license holder: (1)
67.7the county shall collect and forward to the commissioner the information required under
67.8section
67.9and (b), for background studies conducted by the commissioner for all family adult day
67.10services and for adult foster care when the adult foster care license holder resides in
67.11the adult foster care residence; (2) the license holder shall collect and forward to the
67.12commissioner the information required under section
67.13(a) and (b); and 5, paragraphs (a) and (b), for background studies conducted by the
67.14commissioner for adult foster care when the license holder does not reside in the adult
67.15foster care residence; and (3) the background study conducted by the commissioner under
67.16this paragraph must include a review of the information required under section
67.17subdivision 1
67.18
67.19this chapter must submit completed background study forms to the commissioner before
67.20individuals specified in section
67.21contact in any licensed program.
67.22
67.23commissioner's online background study system when:
67.24 (1) an individual returns to a position requiring a background study following an
67.25absence of 90 or more consecutive days; or
67.26 (2) a program that discontinued providing licensed direct contact services for 90 or
67.27more consecutive days begins to provide direct contact licensed services again.
67.28 The license holder shall maintain a copy of the notification provided to
67.29the commissioner under this paragraph in the program's files. If the individual's
67.30disqualification was previously set aside for the license holder's program and the new
67.31background study results in no new information that indicates the individual may pose a
67.32risk of harm to persons receiving services from the license holder, the previous set-aside
67.33shall remain in effect.
67.34
67.35considered to be continuously affiliated upon the license holder's receipt from the
67.36commissioner of health or human services of the physician's background study results.
68.1
68.2background studies at the time of each license renewal.
68.3 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 245C.05, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
68.4 Subd. 5. Fingerprints. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (c), for any background
68.5study completed under this chapter, when the commissioner has reasonable cause to
68.6believe that further pertinent information may exist on the subject of the background
68.7study, the subject shall provide the commissioner with a set of classifiable fingerprints
68.8obtained from an authorized agency.
68.9 (b) For purposes of requiring fingerprints, the commissioner has reasonable cause
68.10when, but not limited to, the:
68.11 (1) information from the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension indicates that the subject
68.12is a multistate offender;
68.13 (2) information from the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension indicates that multistate
68.14offender status is undetermined; or
68.15 (3) commissioner has received a report from the subject or a third party indicating
68.16that the subject has a criminal history in a jurisdiction other than Minnesota.
68.17 (c)
68.18background studies conducted by the commissioner for child foster care or adoptions,
68.19the subject of the background study, who is 18 years of age or older, shall provide the
68.20commissioner with a set of classifiable fingerprints obtained from an authorized agency.
68.21 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 626.556, subdivision 3c, is amended to read:
68.22 Subd. 3c. Local welfare agency, Department of Human Services or Department
68.23of Health responsible for assessing or investigating reports of maltreatment. (a)
68.24The county local welfare agency is the agency responsible for assessing or investigating
68.25allegations of maltreatment in child foster care, family child care, legally unlicensed
68.26child care, juvenile correctional facilities licensed under section 241.021 located in the
68.27local welfare agency's county, and reports involving children served by an unlicensed
68.28personal care provider organization under section
68.29to personal care provider organizations under section
68.30the Department of Human Services provider enrollment.
68.31(b) The Department of Human Services is the agency responsible for assessing or
68.32investigating allegations of maltreatment in facilities licensed under chapters 245A and
68.33245B, except for child foster care and family child care.
69.1(c) The Department of Health is the agency responsible for assessing or investigating
69.2allegations of child maltreatment in facilities licensed under sections 144.50 to 144.58
69.3and
69.4
69.5
69.6
69.7
69.8
69.9
69.10 Sec. 9. REVISOR'S INSTRUCTION.
69.11The revisor of statutes shall make necessary technical cross-reference changes in
69.12Minnesota Statutes and Minnesota Rules to conform with the sections and parts repealed
69.13in articles 1 to 5.
69.14 Sec. 10. REPEALER.
69.15Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 245A.02, subdivision 7b; 245A.09, subdivision
69.1612; 245A.11, subdivision 5; and 245A.655, are repealed.