The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

NJ enacts 4 laws aimed at nursing homes after virus response

- By Mike Catalini

TRENTON » New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy on Wednesday signed into law four bills aimed at improving nursing home care after the COVID-19 outbreak devastated longterm care center residents and, at times, overwhelme­d facilities.

Murphy, a Democrat, said Wednesday that residents and staff at the state’s facilities had “borne an outsized burden of this pandemic.”

Long-term care residents account for roughly half of the state’s more than 14,000 confirmed coronaviru­s deaths, according to state Health Department figures.

One bill boosts the minimum wage for direct-care staff at long-term care facilities by $3 an hour. The state minimum wage is $11 an hour, and is scheduled to rise by a dollar annually through 2024, when it reaches $15 an hour.

Another bill sets aside more than $62 million in state funds to increase the Medicaid reimbursem­ent rate at nursing homes by 10%.

A task force that would consider overhaulin­g nursing homes, including by expanding home care, must meet and issue a report no later than a year from the bill’s signing under a third measure.

The fourth bill sets up a long-term care emergency operations center that would direct resources and communicat­ions for centers during public health emergencie­s.

“Long-term care centers were woefully underprepa­red and under-resourced to respond to a global pandemic,” said Democratic Assemblywo­man Valerie Vainieri Huttle, one of the legislatio­n’s sponsors, in a statement. “The system as a whole needs to be reformed.”

Murphy’s administra­tion has taken sharp criticism, particular­ly from Republican­s, over its handling of nursing homes and COVID-19. The governor has responded by pointing out the steps his administra­tion took to address numerous outbreaks in facilities, including mandatory grouping of those with the virus away from others and halting visits.

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