The licensing regulations have consistently prioritized risk management over the individual’s right to dignity of risk. While the CMS HCBS rights were an important counterweight to this tendency, the state continues to implement/propose regulations that impinge upon the human/HCBS rights of individuals and their perception of service quality with little balancing in their continuing drive to institutionalize the home. Specific concerns in this draft proposal:
Postings – 106 – 400; 410; 510; 380 and probably a few others I missed, require postings of various information, to be added to the wall postings already required by previous regulations; some of the required postings are multiple pages in length and cumulatively these postings will take up large sections of wall with framed narratives that definitively invoke the perception of an institution and undermine the perception of a home. These provisions would also impinge upon an individual’s HCBS right to decorate common areas in their home according to their preferences, as each of the state requirements squeeze out space/ opportunities for inclusions by individuals who reside in that home. We currently make all this information and much more readily available to any individual via free access, supported review and training on our policy and procedure manual at any time upon request and this has been effective in relaying the information. If the state does not want to remove these entirely, at the very least, all of these postings could be reduced to a single frame wall posting indicating where and how the information can be accessed which would effectively serve the purpose of the regulation without creating another unfunded mandate, institutionalizing the home and generating risk to the rights of individuals served.
On a separate topic – numerous provisions in the proposed regulations require the provider to notify DBHDS/OL (often in writing) of various changes, actions or updates which is all fine and good – however, the regulation should specifically include to whom, how this notification will be provided and should require a written response to provide documented verification for the provider that the notification was received and in the case of changes (policies, procedures, practice etc.) verification that these changes were approved and if not what would need to be changed to gain approval. Past efforts to submit and elicit approval for various changes have been very problematic, and in some cases policies that appear to have been approved by DBDHS can become violations when a new licensing specialist comes on board.