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Caregivers, Employers and Clients Lobby For Fair and Reasonable Laws

More than 300 caregivers, employers and clients flew to Sacramento on February 21st to encourage lawmakers to pass thoughtful, reasonable laws regarding home care for the disabled and elderly.

At the one day conference, members of the home care industry awarded Assembly Member Mariko Yamada (D-Davis) as Legislator of the Year for her efforts to introduce a cost-effective and reasonable bill that would regulate home care.  Her bill stalled in the Assembly despite its goals to protect seniors, employees and agencies from unscrupulous companies and the underground economy.

Lobby Day was organized by the California Association for Health Services at Home in direct response to two bills that threaten to vastly increase the cost of in home care.

  • Caregivers, Employees and Clients gather in Sacramento

The first is SB411, proposed by Senator Price and co-sponsored by the SEIU, a union that represents service workers.  SB411 would regulate home care, which most responsible home care agency owners support.  The problem with SB411 is that it would cost the cash-strapped California $25 million and would impose excessive regulatory costs onto home care agencies.

  • Lobby Day Attendees Working on Presentations to Legislators

For example, under SB411, home care workers would need to be “certified” annually before they could perform non-medical in home care such as meal preparation, assistance with bathing, dressing and safety monitoring.  This is a higher standard of regulation than for workers who currently provide certified nursing assistant services.  Plus, at a cost of $165 per employee, per year, this certification would lead to a “tax” on the average home care business of $20,000 – $50,000 per year, an excessive fee to do business in California.

While the concept of SB411 is good, the bill goes way to far and micromanages and overwhelms the home care owner.  In addition, it would require the names and places of employment of each caregiver be posted publicly online.  This would threaten caregiver privacy and make them easy targets of identity thieves.

When Georgetta, a home care worker for more than 20 years, heard that her name and employer would be publicly posted online, she responded, “That’s not safe,  I don’t want my information available like that.”

Equally troubling is AB889, proposed by Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco), that would end the personal care exemption for home care workers and would assume an employer is negligent if an employee files a worker’s compensation claim.  This would reverse the efforts California has made to decrease the amount of fraud and waste in the worker’s compensation system. It would also shorten worker’s hours, remove the paid meal times worker’s currently get with unpaid meal times and would increase the cost for seniors.

This bill does the opposite of what it intends.

Mr. Ammiano calls his bill the Domestic Worker’s Bill of Rights, and he is promoting it along with the union the AFL-CIO.   Mr. Ammiano cites wage and hour abuses in the domestic service industry as the need for the regulations.

Most responsible home care agencies agree that there are wage and hour abuses in domestic work, however those abuses tend to happen in private homes with workers who are not appropriately paid and do not have payroll taxes deducted.  Private workers in homes also do not have the protections of worker’s compensation insurance and employee bonding.  Adding new regulations to responsible home care agencies who already abide by the law and have appropriate protections would do nothing to stop the “door to door’ abuses in private homes.   All AB889 would do is add another layer of regulation that would fail to even touch the “underground economy” where payroll taxes are not paid and protections are not in place.

  • Reynolds stands next to the bronze bear outside the Governor’s office

Lauren Reynolds, Owner and founder of At Home Care Solution attended lobby day and had meetings with Assemblymember Ben Hueso (D-Chula Vista), his legislative analyst Maria Garcia and Julie Hopper, a staff member of Senator Mark Wyland, (R-Carlsbad).

Assemblymember Hueso and Garcia had a good understanding of SB411 and were very attentive and polite in hearing the concerns of Reynolds and another home care agency owner.

Julie Hopper also understood the proposed bills and was supportive of the CAHSAH group in their request for help to amend or defeat the bills.

CAHSAH supports regulations of the home care industry, but in the current business and economic climate in California, those regulations need to make financial senses or as the saying goes, the cure will be worse than the disease.

 

 

 

Hundreds of Home Care Owners/Employees Head to Sacramento to Lobby Against Harmful Legislation

On February 21, 2011, hundreds of employees and owners of home care agencies will gather in Sacramento to lobby against bills that threaten to drastically increase the costs seniors pay for in home care.  One bill, SB411, co-sponsored by the SEIU, the Service Employees International Union, and Senator Cullen Price,(D- Los Angeles) calls for licensing home care in California and also certification of home care aides.

While reputable home care companies, who are members of the California Association for Health Services at Home, support licensing the growing home care industry, they oppose this bill unless two very harmful provisions are amended.

First, SB 411 will require that employers pay for training for their employees, and then pay an annual fee of up to $180 per employee.  This is an exorbitant fee and it’s higher than any other fee we can think of imposed on companies in California.    This added expense to have an “annual” certification will cost the average home care agency an estimated $20,000 to $50,000 per year, an expense that will have to be passed onto consumers who already struggle to be able to afford care to stay in their homes.

Secondly, the bill will require all home care aides to have their names and where they work posted publicly on a website, which invades their privacy and threatens their personal safety.  In addition, it provides a launching pad for identity thieves who will already be able to gather a great deal about the home care workers.

One employee, Georgetta, a former nurse, said “that’s not safe; I don’t want anyone who goes online to know where I am working.”

Home care agency owners and their employees instead want to support licensing, but to have home care workers names and employers not posted publicly.

Also, it’s a waste of time and money to force companies to renew the certification of their employees “annually”.  A much better plan would be to have the certification revocable if there was any crime, similar to what happens with Certified Nursing Assistants and nurses.

On top of those two harmful provisions, SB 411 would cost the state an estimated $25 million dollars, at a time when the state is cutting services and grappling with a massive budget deficit.

A much lower cost option is AB 899.   The California Association for Health Services
at Home is supporting AB 899 by Assemblywoman Mariko Yamada (D-Davis), chair
of the Assembly Committee on Aging and Long Term Care.  It would license home care agencies and would not post employees names and placed of work online.

As the elderly population is expected to double over the next 20 years, costs must be controlled or seniors will be forced to find care in the underground economy, or worse, they’ll end up in nursing homes paid for by Medicaid.  We urge those who are concerned about these issues to contact their State Senator or Assembly member and urge no on SB 411, unless amended until it makes common and economic sense.