Licensure of assisted living facilities; credit references. (HB202)
Introduced By
Del. John O'Bannon (R-Richmond)
Progress
✓ |
Introduced |
✓ |
Passed Committee |
✓ |
Passed House |
✓ |
Passed Senate |
✓ |
Signed by Governor |
☐ |
Became Law |
Description
Licensure of assisted living facilities; credit references. Updates requirements relating to applications for licensure as an assisted living facility, replacing the requirement for at least one letter of credit with the requirement for at least one credit reference. Read the Bill »
Outcome
Bill Has Passed
History
Date | Action |
---|---|
12/26/2013 | Committee |
12/26/2013 | Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/08/14 14101003D |
12/26/2013 | Referred to Committee on Health, Welfare and Institutions |
01/10/2014 | Impact statement from DPB (HB202) |
01/14/2014 | Reported from Health, Welfare and Institutions (22-Y 0-N) (see vote tally) |
01/15/2014 | Read first time |
01/16/2014 | Read second time and engrossed |
01/17/2014 | Read third time and passed House BLOCK VOTE (93-Y 0-N) |
01/17/2014 | VOTE: BLOCK VOTE PASSAGE (93-Y 0-N) (see vote tally) |
01/17/2014 | Reconsideration of passage agreed to by House |
01/17/2014 | Passed House BLOCK VOTE (96-Y 0-N) |
01/17/2014 | VOTE: BLOCK VOTE PASSAGE #2 (96-Y 0-N) (see vote tally) |
01/20/2014 | Constitutional reading dispensed |
01/20/2014 | Referred to Committee on Rehabilitation and Social Services |
02/14/2014 | Reported from Rehabilitation and Social Services (14-Y 0-N) |
02/17/2014 | Constitutional reading dispensed (40-Y 0-N) |
02/18/2014 | Read third time |
02/18/2014 | Passed Senate (40-Y 0-N) |
02/20/2014 | Enrolled |
02/20/2014 | Bill text as passed House and Senate (HB202ER) |
02/20/2014 | Impact statement from DPB (HB202ER) |
02/20/2014 | Signed by Speaker |
02/22/2014 | Signed by President |
03/05/2014 | G Approved by Governor-Chapter 118 (effective 7/1/14) |
03/05/2014 | G Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0118) |
Comments
This makes perfect sense, but who is enforcing our assisted living regulations?
Please google the notorious Scott Schuett for the long-running saga of Licensing's efforts to shut down the operator of six dangerous, filthy so-called assisted living facilities in the Hampton Roads area, with 400 victims. Despite at least three deaths and numerous serious injuries, it took over a year and a half, from March 5, 2012 to October 1, 2013 to shut these hellholes down.
Who put these helpless vulnerable victims in these appalling facilities? Our local social services and adult protective services workers, including the Virginia Beach Department of Human Services. Our local community services boards, including the Hampton-Newport News Community Services Board and the Western Tidewater Community Services Board. Our local public guardianship programs, including Jewish Family Service of Tidewater and Catholic Charities of Eastern Virginia public guardianship programs, in one case in direct violation of a court order.
Who represented Scott Schuett? In one case where a Williamsburg judge kicked Licensing out of court, Governor McDonnell's former law firm, Poole Mahoney, and former Delegate, now General District Court Judge, Sal Iaquinto.
Who paid for these victims to be dumped in these appalling facilities? The Commonwealth of Virginia, through the auxiliary grant program administered by the Virginia Department of Social Services. Ninety percent of Scott Schuett's 400 residents received auxiliary grant funds.
This is state-funded, state-sponsored abuse and neglect. This minor tweak of the Licensing requirements for assisted living facilities is a good idea as far as it goes, but it does not begin to scratch the surface of what needs to change to protect these helpless, vulnerable elderly and disabled citizens.