State Sen. Karin Housley, R-St. Mary’s Point, is chairwoman of the Senate Aging and Long-Term Care Policy committee and has championed elder care-protection legislation this session. |
There’s an understandable sense of accomplishment in the voice of Sen. Karin Housley, R-St. Marys Point, as she talks about the elder care-protection legislation she worked on doggedly this session.
After the Star Tribune’s “Left to Suffer” series
detailed late last year the heartbreaking sexual assaults and other
abuse suffered by older adults in facilities entrusted with their care,
the Minnesota Legislature clearly had to act this session. That mission
was underscored by two well-researched reports outlining gaps in
oversight and consumer protections — particularly for assisted-living
facilities — from the respected Office of the Legislative Auditor and a consumer work group convened by Gov. Mark Dayton.
To the
Legislature’s credit, lawmakers made elder care a priority in the House
and Senate. In the waning days of the 2018 session, Housley’s Senate bill
offers the strongest reforms in elder care legislation that remains
viable, particularly in regard to licensing assisted-living facilities.
It ought to be sailing toward a floor vote instead of languishing in
committee.
“This is
my passion,” said Housley, who also is running for U.S. Senate. While
her bill doesn’t check off every reform proposed by the governor’s
consumer group, it clearly heeds the concerns raised there. The bill,
which kept improving as the session went on, also reflects exceptional
bipartisan Senate teamwork, with Sens. Michelle Fischbach,
R-Paynesville, and Tony Lourey, DFL-Kerrick, meriting praise.
With the
bill unfortunately stalled over funding to implement reforms, it
especially would be valuable for Fischbach, who is also the state’s
lieutenant governor, to ramp up her public advocacy even more to bring
the legislation, along with adequate state dollars, to the floor. And
then shepherd it through the conference committee process, where some
lawmakers may be inclined to support the less robust House reforms.
Fischbach is one of the state’s most influential abortion opponents. Her
powerful pro-life voice, wielded on behalf of those on the other end of
the age spectrum, would be formidable.
The
Minnesota nursing home and senior care industry deserves credit for
backing a variety of reforms and acknowledging the need to modernize the
assisted-living regulatory framework. While the state’s main trade
group argues that the House bill offers up solid solutions, the Senate
bill is nevertheless superior.
One key
advantage: It offers a surer path to licensure for the state’s
assisted-living residences. With far more Minnesotans living in these
facilities than in nursing homes — about 60,000 vs. fewer than 28,000 —
it’s time to license these facilities as many other states do. The
Senate legislation, like the House bill, calls for a work group to study
and outline a new licensing framework. The difference: The Senate bill
authorizes state health officials to move forward if the Legislature
doesn’t act on these recommendations.
The Senate
bill also provides consumer safeguards, such as protections from
“unfair or arbitrary” evictions and the right to place a camera in a
private room, that the House bill does not.
The Star
Tribune series spurred the resignation of former state Health
Commissioner Ed Ehlinger in December and substantive improvements to
handle the maltreatment complaints lodged with the agency. Progress is
being made, but work is needed elsewhere — a point hammered home by the
legislative auditor’s report — to prevent abuse in the first place.
Full Article & Source:
Why is the bill offering the most robust protections for Minnesota seniors stalled at Capitol?
1 comment:
Minnesota is getting a bad reputation with all the elder abuse and nursing home abuse documented in article after article. You'd think they'd do better.
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