The News-Times

Nursing home task force set up

Will study sex offenders in long-term care facilities

- By Dave Altimari

The state Senate late Wednesday passed a bill to establish a task force to study the placement of registered sex offenders in longterm care facilities, following an incident last year in which a Massachuse­tts man allegedly sexually assaulted a nurse at an East Windsor facility.

The task force is a compromise after the initial bill, proposed by State Sen. Saud Anwar, D-South Windsor, drew heated opposition at a public hearing. The initial bill would have required long-term care facilities to check if prospectiv­e residents have a criminal history or are on the sex offender registry before they are admitted.

The task force will study “the impacts of residents with such status for both their own and environmen­tal health and well-being,” Anwar said in a statement. Anwar's district includes the Fresh River Healthcare Center, where the incident occurred last May.

“After the serious incident that occurred in an East Windsor nursing home last year, it is imperative that we take action to prevent and better understand the consequenc­es of sex offenders in longterm care homes,” Anwar said.

“There is a loophole in state law where registered sex offenders' status is not reported if they are transferre­d to state long-term care facilities from other states. This is the first step toward closing this loophole and making these facilities safe for all residing there.”

Last May, Miguel Lopez, a convicted rapist and a registered sex offender in Massachuse­tts with a warrant out for his arrest at the time, allegedly locked a female employee in his room at the nursing home and tried to force her to perform oral sex.

Fresh River officials sent Lopez back to Massachuse­tts the same day that the incident occurred. He was eventually arrested on a warrant by East Windsor police and charged with attempted firstdegre­e sexual assault, third-degree sexual assault and first-degree unlawful restraint. He is being held on $300,000 bail. His next court appearance is April 29.

Lopez wasn't known to local police at the time he was admitted to Fresh River Healthcare because of a loophole in Connecticu­t's sex offender laws, which do not require nursing home operators to inform state police when they admit a registered sex offender from another state into one of their facilities.

The law currently places the burden on sex offenders themselves to register, but Anwar's initial bill would hold the nursing home providers more accountabl­e by requiring them to determine if any potential resident is a registered sex offender by seeking a criminal background check through the state Department of Public Health.

Anwar's initial bill would have barred long-term care facilities from admitting people with a “disqualify­ing offense” without a waiver. The disqualify­ing offenses listed in the bill ranged from assault, rape and kidnapping to burglary, criminal mischief and trespassin­g.

But Anwar's proposal drew criticism from several different organizati­ons as a knee-jerk reaction to one incident.

Mag Morelli, president of LeadingAge Connecticu­t, an associatio­n representi­ng not-for-profit provider organizati­ons serving older adults, told the Public Health Committee that “from an implementa­tion perspectiv­e, this proposal raises numerous concerns.”

“It appears that the facility will be barred from admitting an applicant until it receives notificati­on of the background check from DPH. It is unclear how long an available bed might need to be held open for the duration of a background check,” Morelli said.

“Moreover, many applicants on waiting lists will need to be rechecked each time a bed becomes available, given that a prior background check only remains effective for one month. While there are exceptions for short term rehab admissions, or for conditiona­l admissions of 60 days or less, these situations will be affected by the discharge and eviction limitation­s discussed above,” Morelli said.

It was Morelli who initially suggested the idea of a work group or task force to evaluate and address the concerns.

At one point during the public hearing on the original bill, Anwar and Cindy Prizio, executive director One Standard of Justice, an advocate for restorativ­e justice practices and a critic of the sex offender registry, got into a heated argument after she called it “a public policy disaster in the making” during her testimony.

“Please don't allow one sensationa­l crime to turn good intentions into bad policy,” Prizio said. “We all want to protect our vulnerable population­s. OSJ stands ready to provide help to the committee in developing an effective solution.”

Prizio said there's no “need to create a new bill every time there is an isolated high-profile incident” and that the bill is unfair to a class of people who already have had their rights “sucked dry by the system.”

Prizio endorsed Morelli's suggestion of convening a work group to study the issue.

The new version of the bill orders that the task force will study the “means of ensuring resident and employee health and safety with a resident appearing in state or national sex offender databases, including the impact they would have on the facility environmen­t; the impact of offender registry databases on individual­s; and any necessary legislativ­e changes to ensure health and safety of all parties involved.”

The task force would need to release a report to the General Assembly by the end of 2022.

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