S05179 Summary:

BILL NOS05179
 
SAME ASNo same as
 
SPONSORJOHNSON C
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd SS3616, 3614, 3602 & 2807-h, add SS3616-b, 3616-c, 3621-a, 3616-d, 3616-e & 3606-b, ren S3622 to be S3623, Pub Health L; amd SS367-c, 364 & 364-j, add S367-v, Soc Serv L; amd S6908, Ed L; add S97-jjjj, St Fin L; amd SS3221 & 4303, Ins L
 
Establishes the home care accessibility and efficiency improvement act.
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S05179 Actions:

BILL NOS05179
 
04/27/2009REFERRED TO HEALTH
01/06/2010REFERRED TO HEALTH
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S05179 Floor Votes:

There are no votes for this bill in this legislative session.
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S05179 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          5179
 
                               2009-2010 Regular Sessions
 
                    IN SENATE
 
                                     April 27, 2009
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  Sen.  C. JOHNSON  -- read twice and ordered printed, and
          when printed to be committed to the Committee on Health
 
        AN ACT to amend the public health law,  the  social  services  law,  the
          education  law,  the  insurance  law  and  the  state  finance law, in
          relation to  enacting  the  Home  Care  Accessibility  and  Efficiency

          Improvement Act (HCA-EIA)
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Short title. This act shall be known and may  be  cited  as
     2  the "Home Care Accessibility and Efficiency Improvement Act" (HCA-EIA).
     3    §  2. Section 3616 of the public health law is amended by adding a new
     4  subdivision 4 to read as follows:
     5    4. (a) The commissioner, in consultation with representatives of  home
     6  care  providers and consumers, shall establish an assessment instrument,
     7  or similarly purposed electronic data-set, for the purpose of  identify-
     8  ing:
     9    (i) patients' individualized home care services needs; and
    10    (ii)  based  on  these  needs, the home care program or programs which

    11  appear to most appropriately and cost-effectively  meet  each  patient's
    12  needs  and  to  which  a  referral  should  be made, consistent with the
    13  patient's consent.
    14    (b) Such assessment or data-set shall also distinguish,  for  purposes
    15  of  section thirty-six hundred sixteen-c of this article, those patients
    16  whose costs or service  use  exceed,  respectively,  one  hundred  fifty
    17  percent of the medical assistance rate for nursing home care on a month-
    18  ly  basis  in  the county in which the patient resides or sixty hours of
    19  personal care aide or home health aide services on a weekly basis.
    20    (c) The  instrument  or  data-set  shall  utilize  existing  federally
    21  required  assessment  instruments or data-sets so as not to duplicate or

    22  add to providers'  and  patients'  assessment  requirements,  and  shall
    23  replace  or  incorporate  any existing non-federally required assessment
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD11541-01-9

        S. 5179                             2
 
     1  for home care services, personal care services or services of a  managed
     2  long  term  care  plan  otherwise  required by the department, including
     3  instruments established by departmental rule, regulation or  administra-
     4  tive directive including the DMS-1, the Home Assessment Abstract and the
     5  Semi-annual Assessment of Members.

     6    (d)  The commissioner shall complete work on the assessment instrument
     7  or data-set sufficient to field test such instrument or data-set  by  no
     8  later  than  September  first, two thousand nine. The commissioner shall
     9  complete the field test and report the results to the governor  and  the
    10  legislature  by  no  later  than  December first, two thousand nine. The
    11  commissioner shall make any revisions to the instrument or data-set as a
    12  result of the field test and implement such instrument or data-set by no
    13  later than April first, two thousand ten. The commissioner shall  report
    14  to  the  governor and the legislature, by no later than September first,
    15  two thousand ten, on the initial experiences with the assessment instru-

    16  ment or data-set, including the ability of such instrument  or  data-set
    17  to  effectively  identify  patients'  needs  and identify those programs
    18  which most appropriately and cost-effectively meet patients' needs.
    19    (e) Beginning two years  after  the  date  of  implementation  of  the
    20  patient  assessment  developed pursuant to this subdivision, the commis-
    21  sioner, in consultation with representatives of home care providers  and
    22  consumers,  shall undertake a study of home care reimbursement under the
    23  medical assistance program. The study shall be based on the data derived
    24  pursuant to such patient assessment in combination with  an  examination
    25  of  provider  costs  reported for the provision of services on certified

    26  cost reports for the most recent year available. The study shall  deter-
    27  mine  whether alternate methods of reimbursement for such services would
    28  result in improved: adequacy of payment; patient access; quality of care
    29  and performance incentives;  recruitment  and  retention  of  personnel;
    30  provider financial stability; working capital for home care clinical and
    31  information  technology  infrastructure;  cost-effectiveness;  and  such
    32  other elements essential to the operation  and  delivery  of  home  care
    33  services  in  the  state.  Such  alternative  methods  shall provide for
    34  weighted reimbursement levels according to severity  and  complexity  of
    35  patient needs.
    36    The  commissioner,  following review and comment by representatives of

    37  home care providers and consumers, shall report to the governor and  the
    38  legislature on his or her findings resulting from such study.
    39    §  3.  Subdivision  1  of section 367-c of the social services law, as
    40  added by chapter 895 of the laws of 1977, is amended to read as follows:
    41    1. (a) If a long term home health care program as defined under  arti-
    42  cle  thirty-six  of  the  public  health  law  is provided in the social
    43  services district for which he has authority, the local social  services
    44  official,  before  he  authorizes care in a nursing home or intermediate
    45  care facility for a person  eligible  to  receive  services  under  this
    46  title,  shall  notify  the  person  in writing of the provisions of this
    47  section.
    48    (b) The department in consultation with representatives of  home  care

    49  providers,  consumers,  local departments of social services, hospitals,
    50  nursing homes and physicians, shall  prescribe  the  forms  and  related
    51  communications,  which  may be in electronic format, required to provide
    52  for this notification and the notification required pursuant to subdivi-
    53  sions two, three, five and six of this section, subject  to  the  avail-
    54  ability  of  services in the patient's area of residence. The department
    55  shall monitor local social services districts and other applicable enti-
    56  ties and procedures to ensure compliance with these requirements so that

        S. 5179                             3
 
     1  persons are not discharged to, or otherwise admitted to, nursing facili-

     2  ties or other institutional settings without first being notified of the
     3  option for care at home and referred for assessment, provided  that  the
     4  person's physician deems that home care is an appropriate option for the
     5  person  and  the  person  desires such care. In addition, the department
     6  shall establish performance standards for local districts for such nurs-
     7  ing home diversion pursuant to this section  and  subparagraph  (ii)  of
     8  paragraph  (b-1)  of subdivision two of section three hundred sixty-four
     9  of this chapter.
    10    § 4. Section 367-c of the social services law is amended by  adding  a
    11  new subdivision 6-a to read as follows:
    12    6-a.  Notwithstanding  the provisions of subdivisions one through five

    13  of this section, and subject to federal financial participation, on  and
    14  after  April first, two thousand nine, the maximum budgeted expenditures
    15  for persons receiving care under the provisions of this section shall be
    16  as follows:
    17    (a) Total monthly expenditures made under  this  title  for  all  such
    18  persons  served by each provider of a long term home health care program
    19  shall not, based on reasonable expectations, exceed a maximum of  seven-
    20  ty-five percent of the average of the rates payable under this title for
    21  a  comparable  level of care in a nursing facility or a nursing facility
    22  for children, as applicable, for such persons within the social services
    23  district, when calculated over the same period;

    24    (b) Provided however that, subject to federal financial participation,
    25  in the case of persons with special  needs  as  defined  in  subdivision
    26  three  of  this  section,  such  maximum  aggregate expenditure shall be
    27  adjusted to reflect a limitation of one hundred percent  of  such  rates
    28  for the proportion of such persons; and
    29    (c)  Provided  further,  however,  that  subject  to federal financial
    30  participation the commissioner shall identify individuals  and/or  popu-
    31  lations  with  conditions  or  circumstances for whom exemption from the
    32  aggregate maximum expenditure limitations provided for pursuant to  this
    33  section  is  necessary to permit the most appropriate and cost-effective

    34  care of such individuals through the long term home health care program.
    35    § 5. Subdivision 2 of section  3616  of  the  public  health  law,  as
    36  amended  by  chapter  622  of  the  laws  of 1988, is amended to read as
    37  follows:
    38    2. Continued provision of a long term home health care  program,  AIDS
    39  home  care  program or certified home health agency services paid for by
    40  government funds shall be based upon a comprehensive assessment  of  the
    41  medical,  social  and  environmental  needs  of  the  recipient  of  the
    42  services. Such assessment shall be performed at least every one  hundred
    43  [twenty]  eighty  days  by  the provider of a long term home health care
    44  program, AIDS home care program or  the  certified  home  health  agency
    45  providing  services  for  the patient and the local department of social

    46  services, and shall be reviewed by a physician charged with the  respon-
    47  sibility by the commissioner. The commissioner shall prescribe the forms
    48  on which the assessment will be made.
    49    §  5-a.  Discontinuation  of  local social services districts' role in
    50  assessment and authorization for  home  care.  1.  The  commissioner  of
    51  health shall report to the governor and the legislature on the feasibil-
    52  ity,  appropriateness and cost-effectiveness of eliminating the involve-
    53  ment of local social services districts in the assessment  and  authori-
    54  zation  for  home care services, and consolidating such responsibilities
    55  within home care providers and programs as well  as  managed  long  term
    56  care plans, considering:

        S. 5179                             4
 
     1    (a) The capacity of the assessment implemented pursuant to subdivision

     2  5 of section 3616 of the public health law to identify patient needs and
     3  to direct referrals toward the most appropriate home care programs based
     4  on those needs;
     5    (b)  The  capacity  of  modifications to the reimbursement methodology
     6  recommended pursuant to paragraph (e) of such subdivision 5  to  provide
     7  for adequate cost controls;
     8    (c)  The capacity for adequate oversight of home care providers by the
     9  department of health given the  modification  of  the  local  districts'
    10  role;
    11    (d)  Duplicative expenses in the medical assistance expenditures asso-
    12  ciated with the local social services  district's  responsibilities  and
    13  the responsibilities of home care agencies, and the opportunity for cost
    14  savings  to  the  medical  assistance program by eliminating such dupli-
    15  cation;
    16    (e) Opportunity for more efficient and streamlined access to care  and

    17  more efficient use of home care personnel resources; and
    18    (f) Such other factors as the commissioner of health shall deem neces-
    19  sary to consider.
    20    2. As applicable, the report shall include a process and timetable for
    21  the  discontinuation  of local social services districts' involvement in
    22  home care services assessment and authorization.
    23    3. In the interim, in accordance with sections six and seven  of  this
    24  act,  the commissioner of health shall establish and enforce performance
    25  standards for local district responsibilities with regard to  home  care
    26  services.
    27    §  6.  Subdivision  2  of  section  364  of the social services law is
    28  amended by adding a new paragraph (b-1) to read as follows:
    29    (b-1) establishing, maintaining and auditing to ensure compliance with
    30  performance standards for local social services districts for any statu-

    31  torily required duties in the assessment and authorization of home  care
    32  services to ensure that:
    33    (i)  such  assessments and authorizations are timely and do not other-
    34  wise obstruct access to home care services or programs;
    35    (ii) local district performance does not result in  extended  hospital
    36  or  nursing  facility  stays or in avoidable nursing home placements and
    37  that local social services districts achieve and maintain  standards  in
    38  fulfillment  of  the  patient  notification  and  nursing home diversion
    39  provisions pursuant to subdivision one of section three  hundred  sixty-
    40  seven-c of this chapter;
    41    (iii)  determinations and directives by local districts are consistent
    42  with state requirements; and

    43    (iv) in the  case  of  personal  care  program  services,  that  local
    44  district  management of such services meets the department's performance
    45  goals for appropriateness and cost-effectiveness of services authorized.
    46    § 7. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of  law,  the  commis-
    47  sioner  shall  establish  annual  medical assistance savings targets for
    48  each local social services district based on the district's adherence to
    49  performance standards for nursing  home  avoidance  in  accordance  with
    50  subparagraph  (ii) of paragraph (b-1) of subdivision 2 of section 364 of
    51  the social services law and  the  district's  adherence  to  performance
    52  standards  for  personal  care  services  established in accordance with
    53  subparagraph (iv) of such paragraph (b-1). The department is  authorized

    54  to  audit  and  intercept  funds,  otherwise  payable  to a local social
    55  services district, for failure to meet the district's savings target, in

        S. 5179                             5
 
     1  an amount up to the difference between the target and any savings toward
     2  the target that the district has achieved.
     3    §  8. The social services law is amended by adding a new section 367-v
     4  to read as follows:
     5     § 367-v. Benchmarks for personal care services. 1.  The  commissioner
     6  shall  establish  benchmarks for personal care services hours to promote
     7  the efficiency   and accessibility of such  services  and  to  eliminate
     8  unjustified variation in authorized hours.
     9    2.  Benchmarks  shall  initially  be  established based on the average

    10  authorized personal care hours per patient on a county-to-county  basis.
    11  In  establishing  and  applying  such benchmarks, the commissioner shall
    12  consider differences in local health delivery systems as well  as  other
    13  factors  which may result in justifiable variation. The commissioner may
    14  establish county peer groups for purposes of establishing regional aver-
    15  ages and may also utilize a methodology which selects an  average  at  a
    16  specified percentile.
    17    3.  Local  districts  shall  be monitored and annually compared to the
    18  established benchmarks for purposes of state share reimbursement.
    19    4. After initially establishing benchmarks based on  county  averages,
    20  the commissioner shall explore and report to the governor and the legis-

    21  lature  on  the  feasibility and advisability of establishing and imple-
    22  menting benchmarks based on case-sensitive criteria.
    23    § 9. Subdivision 1 of section  3614  of  the  public  health  law,  as
    24  amended  by  chapter  622  of  the  laws  of 1988, is amended to read as
    25  follows:
    26    1. No government agency shall purchase, pay for or make  reimbursement
    27  or grants-in-aid for services provided by a home care services agency, a
    28  provider  of  a  long  term home health care program or a provider of an
    29  AIDS home care program unless, at the time the services  were  provided,
    30  the  home care services agency possessed a valid certificate of approval
    31  or the provider of a long term home health care  program  or  AIDS  home
    32  care  program  had  been  authorized by the commissioner to provide such

    33  program.   However, contractual arrangements between  a  certified  home
    34  health agency, provider of a long term home health care program, provid-
    35  er  of an AIDS home care program, or government agency and any home care
    36  services agency shall not be prohibited,  provided  that  the  certified
    37  home  health  agency,  provider of a long term home health care program,
    38  provider of an AIDS home care program, or  government  agency  maintains
    39  full  responsibility for the plan of treatment and the care rendered and
    40  contracts are consistent with the terms provided for in section  thirty-
    41  six hundred sixteen-b of this article.
    42    §  10. The public health law is amended by adding a new section 3616-b
    43  to read as follows:
    44    § 3616-b. Contracts between home care services agencies. 1.  Contracts

    45  between  certified  home  health  agencies,  long  term home health care
    46  programs or AIDS home care programs  and  licensed  home  care  services
    47  agencies  for  the  provision  of home health aide or personal care aide
    48  services shall include but not be limited to the following assurances or
    49  provisions:
    50    (a) Audits by certified home health agencies, long  term  home  health
    51  care  programs  and  AIDS  home  care programs to ensure that contracted
    52  licensed home care services agencies are in compliance  with  contracted
    53  certified home health agency, long term home health care program or AIDS
    54  home  care  program  provider  policies  and  procedures,  and  contract
    55  requirements, as well as applicable federal and state laws; including:

        S. 5179                             6
 
     1    (i)  Onsite  audit  review  of  personnel  records,   paraprofessional
     2  profiles,  scheduling  coordinator  knowledge  of  patient  referral and
     3  contract guidelines and adherence to paraprofessional  visit  documenta-
     4  tion standards;
     5    (ii) Establishment of audit area thresholds and stipulation that fail-
     6  ure  to  achieve  the  established thresholds in any area will result in
     7  follow-up focused audits to ensure that there is improvement;
     8    (iii) Requirement for corrective  action  plans  when  the  contracted
     9  licensed home care services agency does not meet the established thresh-
    10  olds.
    11    (b) A call-in or other tracking system requiring that:

    12    (i)  Contracted licensed home care services agencies require home care
    13  aides to communicate telephonically,  electronically  or  through  other
    14  means for patient care visit verification;
    15    (ii)  The  tracking  system records the start of the visit, end of the
    16  visit and each of the specific tasks  performed  during  the  home  care
    17  aide's  visit  or the personal care aide's visit and, when new tasks are
    18  added to the tracking system, the contracted licensed home care services
    19  agencies are mandated to train all of their home care aides on  the  new
    20  tasks;
    21    (iii)  Billing  audits  are  conducted  regularly  at  each contracted
    22  licensed home care services agency to ensure compliance  with  standards

    23  for  patients  without  phones or for those situations when the tracking
    24  system is unavailable and a manual visit entry is required.
    25    (c) Training program audits, including:
    26    (i) Confirmation that the contracted licensed home care agency  train-
    27  ing  program is on the approved lists regularly published on the depart-
    28  ment's health provider network and/or the department of education;
    29    (ii) Examination of the program's most recent departmental survey  and
    30  any plan of correction;
    31    (iii) Audit of the administration of the contracted licensed home care
    32  agency  training program to ensure that such agencies have developed and
    33  are following policy and procedure as it relates to training certificate

    34  security and tracking and training program attendance;
    35    (iv) Requirement for contracted licensed  home  care  agency  contract
    36  managers  or  agency  administrators  to  attend,  on  a periodic basis,
    37  management meetings at the contracting  certified  home  health  agency,
    38  long  term home health care program or AIDS home care program related to
    39  the contracted services;
    40    (d) Training  programs  for  in-service  requirements  covering  state
    41  mandated  training  requirements and including those addressing priority
    42  areas related to quality of care, patient rehabilitation, reduced hospi-
    43  talization and infection control;
    44    (e) Performance review  and  improvement  process  of  the  contracted

    45  licensed  home care services agency, including performance monitoring at
    46  least biannually:
    47    (f) Visit verification system that includes a standardized process for
    48  visit verification through random attendance checks  via  telephone  and
    49  random visits to the home during home care aide service delivery;
    50    (g) Benchmarking for purposes of measurement and improvement of quali-
    51  ty care among contracted agencies;
    52    (h)  A  theft-investigation and repayment process to ensure consistent
    53  response to reports  of  theft  by  home  care  personnel,  including  a
    54  requirement  to  have a theft liaison to respond to agency-related theft
    55  allegations, and responsibility for cost sharing associated with  inves-
    56  tigations and repayment; and

        S. 5179                             7
 
     1    (i)  Provisions  for  payments between the certified home care agency,
     2  long term home health care program or AIDS home  care  program  and  the
     3  contracted licensed home care services agency that effectively allow for
     4  prompt payment according to negotiated contract payment terms.
     5    2. The commissioner shall consider agency caseload size in determining
     6  the  applicability to agencies of some or all of the requirements speci-
     7  fied in this section to the extent that the fulfillment of such require-
     8  ments would not be practicable or would be burdensome due to small agen-
     9  cy size.
    10    § 11. The public health law is amended by adding a new section  3616-c
    11  to read as follows:

    12    §  3616-c.  Targeted  intervention  to  patients  with  high cost/high
    13  service use. 1. The department shall assist, through shared  data,  best
    14  practices,  reimbursement  and  other means, certified home health agen-
    15  cies, long term home health care programs and  managed  long  term  care
    16  programs to improve and customize interventions relating to the care and
    17  management  of  populations  identified  pursuant  to section thirty-six
    18  hundred sixteen of this article in order to promote the highest quality,
    19  accessible and cost-effective care for such individuals.
    20    2. In addition, the department shall  assist  providers  to  undertake
    21  efforts  to  facilitate  collaboration between levels of care, including

    22  hospital, physician and home care, as well as fields of care,  including
    23  medical,  mental  health  and alcohol and drug treatment, to promote the
    24  coordinated management and care of such patients.
    25    3. As may be necessary  to  facilitate  the  enrollment  and  care  in
    26  programs  determined  by the assessment to be most appropriate and cost-
    27  effective to meet the needs of such patients, the department shall iden-
    28  tify program and system barriers to such enrollment and care  and  shall
    29  be  authorized  to  waive  provisions  of  this  chapter  and the social
    30  services law, as well as the respective regulation,  for  such  purpose.
    31  The department shall report to the legislature with regard to such waiv-

    32  ers  in  order  that the legislature may consider statutory revisions as
    33  necessary.
    34    4. To the extent that funds are made available therefor,  the  depart-
    35  ment shall make grants to facilitate the purposes of this section.
    36    §  12. Clause (iii) of paragraph a of subdivision 1 of section 6908 of
    37  the education law, as amended by chapter 160 of the  laws  of  2003,  is
    38  amended to read as follows:
    39    (iii)  the  providing  of  care  by  a person acting in the place of a
    40  person exempt under clause (i) of this  paragraph,  but  who  does  hold
    41  himself or herself out as one who accepts employment for performing such
    42  care,  where  nursing  services  are under the instruction of a licensed
    43  nurse, or under the instruction of a  patient  or  family  or  household

    44  member  determined by a registered professional nurse to be self-direct-
    45  ing and capable of providing such instruction, and any  remuneration  is
    46  provided under section three hundred sixty-five-f of the social services
    47  law  or  for  services  under  an entity certified, approved or licensed
    48  under article thirty-six of the public health law; or
    49    § 13. The public health law is amended by adding a new section  3621-a
    50  to read as follows:
    51    § 3621-a. Home telehealth medical assistance efficiency initiative. 1.
    52  The  commissioner  is hereby authorized and directed to establish a home
    53  telehealth care initiative for the purpose of applying such services  in
    54  a  manner  to  achieve  efficiencies  in the medical assistance program.

    55  Pursuant to such initiative, home telehealth services shall  be  applied
    56  in  techniques  and  to  targeted  populations  to  improve patient care

        S. 5179                             8
 
     1  management, treatment compliance, outcomes and/or prevention of  further
     2  illness  or  injury  so as to specifically reduce or offset the need for
     3  other, more costly medical assistance services.
     4    2.  The  commissioner  shall consult with representatives of home care
     5  providers, consumers and other individuals with expertise in home  tele-
     6  health  care  to determine the populations and/or conditions most likely
     7  to benefit and achieve cost-effective results pursuant to this  section,

     8  as  well  as  the  specific technology and approaches to home telehealth
     9  which constitute the best practices to employ for such goals.
    10    3. The commissioner shall expeditiously consider provider applications
    11  for participation in such initiative by home care agencies and programs.
    12    4. The  commissioner  shall  provide  reimbursement  to  participating
    13  providers  pursuant to subdivision three-a of section thirty-six hundred
    14  fourteen of this article and such  other  methods  as  the  commissioner
    15  deems  appropriate  to achieve the purposes of this section. The commis-
    16  sioner may also provide other positive financial incentives for provider
    17  participation in such initiative  including  grants  to  facilitate  the

    18  development and operation of such initiatives.
    19    §  14. The public health law is amended by adding a new section 3616-d
    20  to read as follows:
    21    § 3616-d. Low vision assessment and intervention. 1. There  is  hereby
    22  established  a  program  to assess home care patients for low vision and
    23  the need for intervention to enable their safe and  optimal  functioning
    24  at home, including their reduced risk of accidents, injury and preventa-
    25  ble  high  cost health services utilization, including institutionaliza-
    26  tion.
    27    2. Pursuant to such program, the commissioner  shall  incorporate,  as
    28  part  of  the basic home care assessment process, criteria for screening
    29  for low vision as well as criteria which indicate the  need  for  inter-

    30  vention.   In establishing such criteria, the commissioner shall consult
    31  with representatives of home  care  services  providers,  consumers  and
    32  professionals  with  expertise in the screening, diagnosis and treatment
    33  of vision loss and in vision rehabilitation.
    34    3. Upon a determination that intervention is warranted,  providers  of
    35  home  care  services  shall,  with  the patient's consent and subject to
    36  availability, arrange for the necessary services  with  agencies  estab-
    37  lished to assist the visually impaired. Such services shall be reflected
    38  within the patient's plan of care approved by the physician.
    39    4. The commissioner, in consultation with the aforementioned represen-

    40  tatives,  shall  issue any guidelines as may be reasonably necessary for
    41  the implementation of this program.
    42    § 15. Federal-state Medicare shared savings  partnership  program.  1.
    43  Notwithstanding  any  provision of law to the contrary, the commissioner
    44  of health shall seek federal approval for the establishment of a  feder-
    45  al-state Medicare shared savings partnership program. Such program shall
    46  provide  an  incentive through shared savings to the state for achieving
    47  federal cost-savings and efficiencies to Medicare, such as from  reduced
    48  expenditures  for  hospital  and  other  medical care, which result from
    49  state initiatives in the care and management of Medicare  beneficiaries.
    50  Such  incentive shall provide for a reinvestment of a proportion of such
    51  federal savings into the state's health care system.

    52    2. The commissioner of health shall provide at least  forty-five  days
    53  notice to the legislature prior to the submission of any formal proposal
    54  to federal officials for such program in order to afford the legislature
    55  an opportunity for input.

        S. 5179                             9
 
     1    § 16. The state finance law is amended by adding a new section 97-jjjj
     2  to read as follows:
     3    §  97-jjjj.  Federal-state Medicare shared savings partnership program
     4  fund. 1. There is hereby established in the sole custody  of  the  state
     5  comptroller  a  fund  to  be known as the "federal-state Medicare shared
     6  savings partnership program fund".
     7    2. The fund shall consist of those monies received  from  the  federal

     8  government  for savings achieved under the federal-state Medicare shared
     9  savings partnership program resulting from state initiatives in the care
    10  and management of Medicare beneficiaries.
    11    3. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, where and  to
    12  the  extent  that  federal  revenues or savings under subdivision two of
    13  this section are made available to the state, such revenues  or  savings
    14  shall be deposited in the fund which shall be used to support the health
    15  care system in the state.
    16    4.  All  monies  shall  remain in such fund unless otherwise disbursed
    17  pursuant to appropriation by the legislature.
    18    § 17. 1. Notwithstanding any provision of law  or  regulation  to  the

    19  contrary,  the commissioner of education, in consultation with the state
    20  board for nursing and the state  board  of  pharmacy,  shall  promulgate
    21  guidelines  which allow for the prefill of up to a fifteen day supply of
    22  medication prescribed by a physician or  other  authorized  practitioner
    23  and  provided  to  an  individual by a registered professional nurse for
    24  individuals receiving home care services ordered by an authorized  prac-
    25  titioner and provided under the supervision of a registered professional
    26  nurse.
    27    2.  The  commissioner  of  education,  in consultation with such state
    28  boards, shall examine the experiences pursuant to such  guidelines  and,
    29  on  or  before April 1, 2010, recommend to the governor and the legisla-
    30  ture any changes as may be necessary to this section.
    31    § 18. 1. The superintendent of insurance shall examine the feasibility

    32  and benefit of establishing a mechanism to ensure  voluntary  access  to
    33  long  term  care  insurance  coverage through the state's long term care
    34  insurance partnership program  for  individuals  unable  to  access  the
    35  voluntary  market. In conducting such examination, the superintendent of
    36  insurance shall consider similar mechanisms utilized by New  York  state
    37  or  other states to provide access to insurance coverage when the volun-
    38  tary market is inaccessible due to price or underwriting, including  the
    39  model  provided through the medical malpractice insurance program imple-
    40  mented by the state department of insurance.
    41    2. In considering the benefits of such a mechanism, the superintendent
    42  of insurance shall examine the  benefit  of  long  term  care  insurance
    43  access  for the potentially covered population as well as the benefit to

    44  the state's medical assistance program resulting from  the  increase  in
    45  private  financing  of such care through such mechanism. The superinten-
    46  dent of insurance shall also consider the impact of such a mechanism  on
    47  the  voluntary  long term care insurance market in the state. The super-
    48  intendent of insurance shall submit his written findings  and  proposals
    49  to the governor and the legislature no later than June 1, 2009.
    50    §  19. Subparagraphs (C), (D) and (E) of paragraph 1 of subsection (k)
    51  of section 3221 of the insurance  law,  subparagraphs  (C)  and  (D)  as
    52  amended  by  chapter  557  of  the  laws of 2000, are amended to read as
    53  follows:
    54    (C) Home care means the care and treatment of a covered person who  is
    55  under the care of a physician but only if hospitalization or confinement
    56  in  a  nursing  facility  as  defined in subchapter XVIII of the federal

        S. 5179                            10
 
     1  Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395 et seq, would otherwise have been
     2  required if home care was not provided, or if the provision of home care
     3  is necessary for the person's condition in order to prevent hospitaliza-
     4  tion  or  nursing  facility  confinement, and the plan covering the home
     5  health service is established and approved in writing by such physician.
     6    (D) Home care shall be  provided  by  an  agency  possessing  a  valid
     7  certificate of approval or license issued pursuant to article thirty-six
     8  of the public health law and shall consist of one or more of the follow-
     9  ing:
    10    (i) Part-time or intermittent home nursing care by or under the super-
    11  vision of a registered professional nurse (R.N.).

    12    (ii) Part-time or intermittent home health aide services which consist
    13  primarily of caring for the patient.
    14    (iii)  Physical,  occupational or speech therapy, social work, respir-
    15  atory therapy and nutritional counseling, if provided by the home health
    16  service or agency.
    17    (iv) Medical supplies, drugs and medications prescribed  by  a  physi-
    18  cian, and laboratory services by or on behalf of a certified home health
    19  agency  or  licensed  home care services agency to the extent such items
    20  would have been covered under the contract if  the  covered  person  had
    21  been  hospitalized  or confined in a skilled nursing facility as defined
    22  in subchapter XVIII of the federal Social Security  Act,  42  U.S.C.  §§
    23  1395 et seq.
    24    (E)  For  the purpose of determining the benefits for home care avail-

    25  able to a covered person, each visit by a member of  a  home  care  team
    26  shall  be  considered as one home care visit; the contract may contain a
    27  limitation on the number of home care visits, but not less than  [forty]
    28  one  hundred  four such visits in any calendar year or in any continuous
    29  period of twelve months, for each person  covered  under  the  contract;
    30  four  hours  of home health aide service shall be considered as one home
    31  care visit.
    32    § 20. Paragraph 3 of subsection (a) of section 4303 of  the  insurance
    33  law,  subparagraphs  (A),  (B)  and (C) as amended by chapter 557 of the
    34  laws of 2000 and subparagraph (D) as amended by chapter 21 of  the  laws
    35  of 1990, is amended to read as follows:
    36    (3)  For home care to residents in this state. Such home care coverage
    37  shall be included at the  inception  of  all  new  contracts  and,  with

    38  respect  to  all  other  contracts, added at any anniversary date of the
    39  contract subject to evidence  of  insurability.  Such  coverage  may  be
    40  subject  to an annual deductible of not more than fifty dollars for each
    41  covered person and may be  subject  to  a  coinsurance  provision  which
    42  provides  for  coverage  of  not  less  than seventy-five percent of the
    43  reasonable cost of services for which  payment  may  be  made.  No  such
    44  corporation need provide such coverage to persons eligible for medicare.
    45    (A)  Home  care  shall mean the care and treatment of a covered person
    46  who is under the care of a physician but only if:
    47    (i) hospitalization or confinement in a nursing facility as defined in
    48  subchapter XVIII of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §  1395  et  seq,
    49  would  otherwise have been required if home care was not provided, or if

    50  the provision of home care is necessary for the  person's  condition  in
    51  order to prevent hospitalization or nursing facility confinement, and
    52    (ii)  the  plan  covering  the  home health service is established and
    53  approved in writing by such physician.
    54    (B) Home care shall be  provided  by  an  agency  possessing  a  valid
    55  certificate of approval or license issued pursuant to article thirty-six
    56  of the public health law.

        S. 5179                            11
 
     1    (C) Home care shall consist of one or more of the following:
     2    (i) part-time or intermittent home nursing care by or under the super-
     3  vision of a registered professional nurse (R.N.),
     4    (ii) part-time or intermittent home health aide services which consist
     5  primarily of caring for the patient,

     6    (iii)  physical,  occupational or speech therapy, social work, respir-
     7  atory therapy and nutritional counseling, if provided by the home health
     8  service or agency, and
     9    (iv) medical supplies, drugs and medications prescribed  by  a  physi-
    10  cian, and laboratory services by or on behalf of a certified home health
    11  agency  or  licensed  home care services agency to the extent such items
    12  would have been covered or provided under the contract  if  the  covered
    13  person  had  been hospitalized or confined in a skilled nursing facility
    14  as defined in subchapter XVIII of the Social Security Act, 42  U.S.C.  §
    15  1395 et seq.
    16    (D)  For  the purpose of determining the benefits for home care avail-
    17  able to a covered person, each visit by a member of  a  home  care  team
    18  shall  be  considered as one home care visit. The contract may contain a

    19  limitation on the number of home care visits, but not less than  [forty]
    20  one  hundred  four such visits in any calendar year or in any continuous
    21  period of twelve months, for each covered person.  Four  hours  of  home
    22  health  aide  service  shall be considered as one home care visit. Every
    23  contract issued by a hospital  service  corporation  or  health  service
    24  corporation  which  provides coverage supplementing part A and part B of
    25  subchapter XVIII of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §  1395  et  seq,
    26  must  make  available and, if requested by a subscriber holding a direct
    27  payment contract or by all subscribers in a group remittance group or by
    28  the contract holder in the case of group contracts  issued  pursuant  to
    29  section four thousand three hundred five of this article, provide cover-

    30  age of supplemental home care visits beyond those provided by part A and
    31  part  B,  sufficient  to  produce an aggregate coverage of three hundred
    32  sixty-five home care visits per contract year. Such  coverage  shall  be
    33  provided pursuant to regulations prescribed by the superintendent. Writ-
    34  ten  notice  of  the availability of such coverage shall be delivered to
    35  the group remitting agent or group contract holder prior to inception of
    36  such contract and annually thereafter[, except that  this  notice  shall
    37  not  be  required where a policy covers two hundred or more employees or
    38  where the benefit structure was the  subject  of  collective  bargaining
    39  affecting persons who are employed in more than one state.
    40    The provisions of this subsection shall not apply to a contract issued

    41  pursuant  to  section  four  thousand three hundred five of this article
    42  which covers persons employed in more than  one  state  or  the  benefit
    43  structure  of  which  was the subject of collective bargaining affecting
    44  persons who are employed in more than one state].
    45    § 21. Paragraph c of subdivision 8  of  section  3602  of  the  public
    46  health law, as amended by chapter 622 of the laws of 1988, is amended to
    47  read as follows:
    48    c.  Approved long term home health care program providers may include,
    49  as part of their long term home health care program,  upon  approval  by
    50  the  commissioner,  a discrete AIDS home care program as defined in this
    51  section; such providers may also  coordinate  with  a  hospice  approved
    52  under  article  forty  of  this chapter for the provision of hospice and

    53  palliative care services in conjunction with the long term  home  health
    54  care program.
    55    §  22. The public health law is amended by adding a new section 3616-e
    56  to read as follows:

        S. 5179                            12
 
     1    § 3616-e. Collaborative care of self-directing patients. 1.   Notwith-
     2  standing  any  inconsistent  provision  of this chapter or section three
     3  hundred sixty-five-f of the social services law related to the  consumer
     4  directed  personal assistance program, any certified home health agency,
     5  long  term home health care program or managed long term care plan oper-
     6  ating pursuant to this chapter shall be permitted to collaborate for the

     7  provision of patient care with  consumer  directed  personal  assistance
     8  providers.
     9    2.  Any services provided by a certified home health agency, long term
    10  home health care program or managed long term care  plan  to  a  patient
    11  collaboratively  served  with  a  consumer  directed personal assistance
    12  program provider shall not be  duplicative.  The  provider  of  consumer
    13  directed  personal  assistance services together with the self-directing
    14  patient or directing caregiver shall, consistent with the provisions  of
    15  section  three  hundred  sixty-five-f  of  the  social  services law, be
    16  responsible for any consumer directed personal assistance services  that
    17  are  provided.  The  certified home health agency, long term home health

    18  care program or managed long term care plan shall be responsible for all
    19  other services as required pursuant to this article and the  regulations
    20  of the department.
    21    3.  The  commissioner  is authorized to promulgate such regulations or
    22  guidelines as may be necessary to ensure the appropriateness of  medical
    23  assistance expenditures pursuant to this section.
    24    §  23.  Notwithstanding  any  provision  of  law  or regulation to the
    25  contrary, the commissioner  of  health  shall  establish  procedures  to
    26  permit  long  term  home  health  care  programs  and providers of other
    27  services covered pursuant to  federal  waivers  or  which  provide  case
    28  management services to collaborate to jointly serve individuals when the
    29  services  of  both  entities  are necessary to meet such an individual's

    30  needs; provided, however, that the two entities shall maintain  distinct
    31  yet  coordinated  service and case management responsibilities and shall
    32  not duplicate benefits.
    33    § 24. The commissioner of health shall provide that  as  part  of  the
    34  terms of the department of health's contracts for managed long term care
    35  plans and Medicaid Advantage Plus plans that such plans shall be permit-
    36  ted  to  contract  with providers of long term home health care programs
    37  for the provision of home and community based  services  to  the  plan's
    38  enrollees.    Notwithstanding  any provision of law or regulation to the
    39  contrary, the commissioner  may  waive  the  patient  service  budgeting
    40  requirements  and expenditure limits applicable to the care of long term
    41  home health care program patients in order to avoid conflict  or  dupli-

    42  cation with the capitation provisions of managed long term care plans or
    43  Medicaid Advantage Plus plans.
    44    §  25.  Paragraph  (c) of subdivision 3 of section 364-j of the social
    45  services law is amended by adding a new subparagraph (vii)  to  read  as
    46  follows:
    47    (vii)  a person receiving services provided by a long term home health
    48  care program.
    49    § 26. Subparagraph (ix) of paragraph (e) of subdivision 3  of  section
    50  364-j  of the social services law, as amended by chapter 648 of the laws
    51  of 1999, is amended to read as follows:
    52    (ix) HIV COBRA case management; [and]
    53    § 27. Subparagraph (x) of paragraph (e) of subdivision  3  of  section
    54  364-j  of the social services law, as amended by chapter 648 of the laws
    55  of 1999, is renumbered (xi) and a new subparagraph (x) is added to  read
    56  as follows:

        S. 5179                            13
 
     1    (x) services provided pursuant to a long term home health care program
     2  pursuant  to  article  thirty-six  of  the public health law and section
     3  three hundred sixty-seven-c of this title; and
     4    §  28.  Subparagraph  (i) of paragraph (d) of subdivision 3 of section
     5  364-j of the social services law, as amended by section 67 of part A  of
     6  chapter 1 of the laws of 2002, is amended to read as follows:
     7    (i)  [a  person receiving services provided by a long term home health
     8  care program, or] a person receiving inpatient services in a state-oper-
     9  ated psychiatric facility or a residential treatment facility for  chil-
    10  dren and youth;
    11    § 29. Subdivisions 1 and 3 of section 2807-h of the public health law,

    12  as  amended  by  chapter 255 of the laws of 1994, are amended to read as
    13  follows:
    14    1. The commissioner shall authorize health occupation development  and
    15  workplace  demonstration  programs  and is directed to make rate adjust-
    16  ments, subject to the availability of funds therefor, to cover the costs
    17  of such programs; provided that the commissioner may also authorize such
    18  programs without such rate adjustments, upon application  by  providers,
    19  to  promote  the health occupation development and workplace improvement
    20  purposes specified in this section.   Providers shall  be  eligible  for
    21  rate adjustments to develop, implement and evaluate programs to test new
    22  models  of  organization  and  delivery  of services, and the use of new
    23  technologies to improve  efficiency,  utilization  and  productivity  of

    24  existing  health  care personnel; to reduce time that patient care staff
    25  spend meeting documentation requirements; and to improve the recruitment
    26  and retention of health personnel. Eligible providers shall consult with
    27  staff, professional associations, unions and  other  affected  organiza-
    28  tions in the development of proposals. The commissioner is authorized to
    29  waive,  modify  or  suspend the respective provisions of rules and regu-
    30  lations promulgated pursuant to this chapter or the social services  law
    31  if the commissioner determines that such waiver, modification or suspen-
    32  sion  is  necessary for the successful implementation of a demonstration
    33  program and provided that the commissioner determines that  the  health,
    34  safety  and  general  welfare of people receiving health care under such
    35  demonstration program will not be impaired as a result of  such  waiver,

    36  modification  or  suspension.  The  commissioner  shall consult with the
    37  professional associations appropriate to the rule or regulation proposed
    38  for waiver, modification or suspension prior to approval or  disapproval
    39  of  the  program. Such waiver, modification or suspension may be granted
    40  for up to two years, or such  longer  period  as  may  be  necessary  to
    41  support  the  purposes of the demonstration program.  Waivers, modifica-
    42  tions and suspensions granted under this subdivision must be specific to
    43  the program approved by this subdivision.
    44    3. The commissioner shall conduct evaluations of the health occupation
    45  development and workplace demonstration programs and  shall  report  his
    46  findings  to  the  governor  and  the  chairs of the senate and assembly
    47  committees on health. Such evaluations shall include an  examination  of

    48  the  effectiveness  of  the program to improve productivity, efficiency,
    49  development and utilization of personnel. Such report shall  be  due  on
    50  April  thirtieth,  nineteen  hundred  ninety-five, on January first, two
    51  thousand eleven, and biennially thereafter. To  facilitate  the  commis-
    52  sioner's  evaluations and reports, providers implementing health occupa-
    53  tion development and workplace demonstration programs shall examine  the
    54  effectiveness  of  their  program  and  report  their experiences to the
    55  commissioner.

        S. 5179                            14
 
     1    § 30. Subdivision 6 of section 3614  of  the  public  health  law,  as
     2  amended  by  chapter  255  of  the  laws  of 1994, is amended to read as
     3  follows:

     4    6.  Subject to the [availability of funds] provisions of section twen-
     5  ty-eight hundred seven-h of this chapter, the commissioner shall author-
     6  ize health occupation development and workplace  demonstration  programs
     7  [pursuant  to  the provisions of section twenty-eight hundred seven-h of
     8  this chapter] for certified home health agencies, long term home  health
     9  care  programs  [and],  AIDS  home  care programs and licensed home care
    10  services agencies, and,  subject  to  the  availability  of  funds,  the
    11  commissioner  is  hereby  directed to make rate adjustments to cover the
    12  cost of such programs.
    13    § 31. The public health law is amended by adding a new section  3606-b
    14  to read as follows:

    15    §  3606-b.  Special  provisions  for  establishment or construction of
    16  certified home health agencies and long term home health care  programs.
    17  1.  Priority  establishment and construction. Applications for home care
    18  construction or establishment shall be processed as a  priority  by  the
    19  department,  the  state  hospital  review  and  planning council and the
    20  public health council, as applicable, when the application is:
    21    (a) Filed for an expansion of a long term  home  health  care  program
    22  when the applicant's patient census is at seventy-five percent of capac-
    23  ity  or  greater,  notwithstanding the census to capacity ratio of other
    24  providers in the service area;
    25    (b) Filed by an applicant to meet  an  expanded  need  for  home  care

    26  created  by  an agency or facility closure or service capacity reduction
    27  impacting the need for home care;
    28    (c) Filed pursuant to the rural home care flexibility program pursuant
    29  to section thirty-six hundred twenty-two of this article; or
    30    (d) Filed pursuant to such other criteria as the  commissioner  deter-
    31  mines meet the need for priority consideration.
    32    2.  Facilitation of multilevel service providers. (a) The commissioner
    33  shall encourage and facilitate the provision of home  care  services  by
    34  multilevel  service  providers  for the purposes of promoting efficiency
    35  and continuity of care. For purposes of this section, multilevel service
    36  providers shall mean providers with existing approval or  licensure  for

    37  two  or  more  operating  certificates pursuant to article twenty-eight,
    38  thirty-six or forty of this chapter which include a general hospital,  a
    39  nursing  facility,  a  certified  home  health  agency, a long term home
    40  health care program, a hospice or a managed long term care plan.
    41    (b) The provision of home care by multilevel service providers may  be
    42  through direct means or through the formation of networks or other clin-
    43  ical or corporate affiliations among existing providers.
    44    (c)  The  department and, as applicable, the state hospital review and
    45  planning council and the public health council, shall be  authorized  to
    46  give  priority  consideration  in or otherwise modify the certificate of

    47  need process, expand long term home health care program capacity, insti-
    48  tute positive financial incentives or take such other steps that fulfill
    49  the purposes of this section in facilitating efficiency  and  continuity
    50  of care through multilevel service providers.
    51    §  32. Section 3622 of the public health law, as renumbered by section
    52  22 of part C of chapter 58 of the laws of 2004,  is  renumbered  section
    53  3623 and a new section 3622 is added to read as follows:
    54    §  3622.  Rural  home  health  flexibility program. 1. The legislature
    55  finds and declares that the provision and accessibility of  home  health
    56  care  and  long  term  home  health care program services in rural areas

        S. 5179                            15
 

     1  necessitates regulatory flexibility in order for limited resources to be
     2  best utilized and maximized to meet the health care needs of rural citi-
     3  zens and to promote the efficiency of the delivery of services in  rural
     4  areas.  The legislature therefore establishes a rural home health flexi-
     5  bility program for such purposes.
     6    2. Pursuant  to  the  purposes  of  this  section,  the  commissioner,
     7  notwithstanding  any  inconsistent provision of law or regulation, shall
     8  consider for approval proposals  from  providers  operating  under  this
     9  article and serving rural counties to:
    10    (a) Create and operate a long term home health care program which does
    11  not  provide  all  the required services specified in regulations of the

    12  department, provided that:
    13    (i) there is demonstrated need for such program in the  service  area;
    14  and
    15    (ii) the applicant to provide such program demonstrates to the commis-
    16  sioner's  satisfaction  that  such  applicant has made, and continues to
    17  make, all appropriate efforts to provide all required services but  that
    18  the  lack  of  available  health personnel within the service area is an
    19  obstacle;
    20    (b) Establish or operate a certified home health agency or  long  term
    21  home  health  care  program  which serves a geographic area less than an
    22  entire planning area when:
    23    (i) no other provider otherwise serves the entire planning area;

    24    (ii) collaborative approaches to the service of citizens in the  plan-
    25  ning area is appropriate for feasibility and efficiency; and
    26    (iii)  the department is satisfied that such collaboration will result
    27  in accessible and economically-feasible  services  within  the  planning
    28  area;
    29    (c) Qualify for home telehealth reimbursement, or for the provision of
    30  telemedicine  services,  pursuant to this article when all of the condi-
    31  tions ordinarily required for such reimbursement or services are  unable
    32  to  be  met,  provided that the applicant demonstrates, and continues to
    33  undertake, best efforts to meet such requirements and that  the  quality
    34  or safety of patient care will not be diminished as a result;

    35    (d)  Be exempted from the applicability of new regulatory requirements
    36  that are identified as burdensome to rural providers by  the  department
    37  in  its  small business, regulatory impact or rural flexibility analyses
    38  filed in accordance with the state administrative procedure act; and
    39    (e) Receive approval for  such  other  areas  of  flexibility  as  the
    40  commissioner  deems appropriate to the purposes of this section, includ-
    41  ing proposals to enhance the administration,  services  and  quality  of
    42  care provided by a home care agency or program, provided that such flex-
    43  ibility does not compromise the quality and safety of services provided.
    44    3. In effectuating the provisions of subparagraph (e) of this section,

    45  the commissioner shall convene a temporary workgroup comprised of repre-
    46  sentatives of certified home health agencies, long term home health care
    47  programs  and  licensed  home care services agencies serving rural coun-
    48  ties, as well as rural consumers and rural workforce representatives, to
    49  assist in identifying additional areas for flexibility  in  the  depart-
    50  ment's  rules,  regulations  and administrative requirements, consistent
    51  with the purposes of this section.
    52    § 33. This act shall take effect immediately, provided that:
    53    1. section ten of this act shall take effect January 1, 2010  or  upon
    54  the  renewal date of contacts regulated pursuant to such section, which-
    55  ever is later;

        S. 5179                            16
 

     1    2. sections nineteen and twenty of this act shall take effect  January
     2  1,  2010  or  upon  the  renewal date of contracts or policies regulated
     3  pursuant to such sections;
     4    3.  the amendments to section 364-j of the social services law made by
     5  sections twenty-five, twenty-six, twenty-seven and twenty-eight of  this
     6  act  shall  not affect the repeal of such section and shall be deemed to
     7  repeal therewith;
     8    4. the amendments to subdivisions 1 and 3 of  section  2807-h  of  the
     9  public  health  law,  made  by section twenty-nine of this act shall not
    10  affect the expiration of such subdivisions and shall be deemed to expire
    11  therewith;
    12    5. the amendments to subdivision 6  of  section  3614  of  the  public
    13  health law made by section thirty of this act shall not affect the expi-
    14  ration of such subdivision and shall be deemed to expire therewith; and

    15    6.  for  purposes  of  section  ten  of  this act, the commissioner of
    16  health, and for purposes of sections nineteen and twenty  of  this  act,
    17  the superintendent of insurance shall notify the legislative bill draft-
    18  ing  commission  of  the  renewal  date of such contracts or policies in
    19  order that the commission may maintain an accurate and timely  effective
    20  data  base  of the official text of the laws of the state of New York in
    21  furtherance of effectuating the provisions of section 44 of the legisla-
    22  tive law and section 70-b of the public officers law.
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