Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Nursing home generator mandate still faces a battle in Legislatur­e

- By Christine Sexton News Service of Florida

Though Gov. Rick Scott wants to require nursing homes and assisted living facilities to have generators and enough fuel to cool their buildings for 96 hours, legislativ­e leaders on Thursday didn’t publicly commit to supporting such a mandate.

Appearing at an annual Associated Press event in the Capitol, Senate President Joe Negron, R-Stuart, did not directly answer a question about whether the Senate would sign off during the upcoming 2018 legislativ­e session on a mandate that nursing homes and assisted living facilities have generators.

“I see something passing that reaffirms the responsibi­lity of a nursing home who has accepted patients, residents into its care, to make sure they are taken care of during any kind of storm event which is 100 percent predictabl­e and foreseeabl­e for Florida,” Negron said.

Similarly, House Majority Leader Ray Rodrigues, R-Estero, refused to say whether the House supported a mandate, saying it would be discussed by the House Select Committee on Hurricane Response and Preparedne­ss.

The generator issue stems from the deaths of residents of a sweltering Hollywood, Florida, nursing home after Hurricane Irma. Eight residents of The Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills died Sept. 13, three days after Irma knocked out the facility’s air-conditioni­ng system. Six more residents died later after evacuation.

Lawmakers also could be confronted during the 2018 session with requests for the state to help pay for generators at long-term care facilities.

When pressed about whether the state should help offset the costs of the generators, Rodrigues said it would be an issue that members would have to “grapple with.” The House during the past year has taken a highprofil­e stance to try to curb state business incentives.

“When I listened to the debate from our members, what our members find most objectiona­ble is giving the public money --- taxpayer money --- to private companies to improve their bottom line at the expense of the public or their competitor­s, which is inherently unfair,” he said, adding that helping offset costs of the generators would help all homes care for Medicaid patients.

“This isn’t given out in order to promote one business over another but instead to protect life,” he said.

The Scott administra­tion has moved forward with administra­tive rules to try to require generators at nursing homes and assisted living facilities. But Scott also has called for making the requiremen­t more permanent by putting it in state law.

Bills have been filed in the Senate to address emergency power requiremen­ts. Senate Children, Families and Elder Affairs Chairman Rene Garcia, R-Hialeah, has filed a proposal (SB 372) that would allow nursing homes to contract with providers that can supply up to 96 hours of backup power or, as an alternativ­e, have the capability on site by July 1.

Meanwhile, Sen. Lauren Book, D-Plantation, filed a bill (SB 284) that would require nursing homes to maintain an emergencyp­ower source and fuel supply that could last during a five-day power outage.

After the Broward County deaths, the Scott administra­tion in September issued two emergency rules that called for nursing homes and assisted living facilities to quickly add generators. The emergency rules have drawn legal challenges from industry groups, which say the rules include an unrealisti­c 60-day timeframe.

An administra­tive law judge last week agreed with the groups that state agencies oversteppe­d their legal authority in issuing the emergency rules. The Scott administra­tion has taken the case to the 1st District Court of Appeal.

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