Certificate of public need; relocation of nursing home beds. (SB1321)

Introduced By

Sen. Steve Newman (R-Forest)

Progress

Introduced
Passed Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Signed by Governor
Became Law

Description

Certificate of public need; relocation of nursing home beds.  Allows an entity that has relocated nursing home beds in certain circumstances and thereafter closed the facility to, within 36 months of such closure, relocate the remaining beds to another facility, either existing or new, under common ownership or control, without regard to the criteria set forth in this section. The bill allows the Commissioner to issue a certificate of public need for such relocation. The bill contains technical amendments. Read the Bill »

Outcome

Bill Has Passed

History

DateAction
01/12/2011Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/12/11 11102471D
01/12/2011Referred to Committee on Education and Health
01/18/2011Assigned Education sub: Health Licensing
01/27/2011Reported from Education and Health (14-Y 1-N) (see vote tally)
01/28/2011Passed by for the day
01/31/2011Constitutional reading dispensed (39-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
01/31/2011Impact statement from DPB (SB1321)
02/01/2011Read second time and engrossed
02/02/2011Read third time and passed Senate (38-Y 2-N) (see vote tally)
02/07/2011Placed on Calendar
02/07/2011Read first time
02/07/2011Referred to Committee on Health, Welfare and Institutions
02/10/2011Reported from Health, Welfare and Institutions (22-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/11/2011Read second time
02/14/2011Read third time
02/14/2011Passed House BLOCK VOTE (98-Y 0-N)
02/14/2011VOTE: BLOCK VOTE PASSAGE (98-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/16/2011Enrolled
02/16/2011Bill text as passed Senate and House (SB1321ER)
02/16/2011Impact statement from DPB (SB1321ER)
02/16/2011Signed by President
02/16/2011Signed by Speaker
03/15/2011G Approved by Governor-Chapter 181 (effective 7/1/11)
03/15/2011G Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0181)

Video

This bill was discussed on the floor of the General Assembly. Below is all of the video that we have of that discussion, 2 clips in all, totaling 1 minute.