1 Tex. Admin. Code § 393.3 - Informal Dispute Resolution for Texas Home Living and Home and Community-based Service Providers
(a) The Texas
Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) provides an informal dispute
resolution (IDR) process for Texas Home Living (TxHmL) and Home and
Community-based Service (HCS) providers (hereinafter referred to collectively
as "provider") through which a provider may dispute violations cited against
that provider by the State survey agency.
(b) The HHSC IDR Department must receive a
provider's written request for an IDR no later than the tenth calendar day
after the provider's receipt of the official Statement of Licensing Violations
from the State survey agency, or its designee. The provider must submit its
written request for an IDR on the form designated for that purpose by HHSC.
HHSC makes that form publicly available, e.g., maintained on the HHSC
website.
(c) Within three business
days of its receipt of the provider's written request for an IDR, HHSC notifies
the provider and the State survey agency of its receipt of the
request.
(d) Within five calendar
days of HHSC's receipt of the provider's request for an IDR, HHSC must receive
from the provider the provider's rebuttal letter and attached supporting
documentation. The rebuttal letter must contain:
(1) a list of the violations disputed (only
those violations listed on the IDR request form and addressed in the rebuttal
letter and supporting documentation are reviewed);
(2) the reason or reasons each violation is
disputed; and
(3) the outcome
desired by the provider for each disputed violation.
(e) The provider submits its supporting
documentation or information in the following format:
(1) organize the attachments by violation and
cross-reference to the disputed violation in the rebuttal letter;
(2) ensure all information is labeled and
legible;
(3) highlight information
relevant to the disputed violation, such as a particular portion of a
narrative;
(4) describe the
relevance of the documentation or information to the disputed violation;
and
(5) do not de-identify
documents that name individuals referenced in disputed violations.
(f) If the provider substantially
complies with the procedures set out in subsections (d) and (e) of this
section, HHSC proceeds with its review of the provider's IDR request.
(g) It is the provider's responsibility to
present sufficient credible information to HHSC to support the outcome
requested by the provider.
(h)
Possible outcomes of an IDR for TxHmL and HCS are:
(1) a determination that there is
insufficient evidence to sustain a violation;
(2) a determination that there is
insufficient evidence to sustain a portion of or a finding of a
violation;
(3) a determination that
there is sufficient evidence to sustain a violation;
(4) a determination that there is
insufficient evidence to sustain the violation as cited but that there is
sufficient evidence to sustain a different violation;
(5) a determination that there is
insufficient evidence to sustain the severity and scope assessment but that
there is sufficient evidence to sustain a reduced severity and scope assessment
(for Immediate Threat only); or
(6)
a determination that there is sufficient evidence to sustain the severity and
scope assessment as cited.
(i) HHSC will not conduct an IDR based on
alleged surveyor misconduct, alleged State survey agency failure to comply with
survey protocol, complaints about existing federal or State standards, or
attempts to clear previously corrected citations.
(j) Upon receipt of the provider's IDR
request, the State survey agency must submit the following to HHSC:
(1) resident identifier list; and
(2) Automated Survey Processing Environment
(ASPEN) event ID number.
(k) HHSC makes all information related to an
IDR request that it receives from either the provider or the State survey
agency available to the opposing party. Parties have until the end of the
second business day after receipt of such shared IDR information to respond to
HHSC about that information. HHSC shares any such responses with the opposing
party.
(l) HHSC may request
additional information from the provider or the State survey agency. HHSC
notifies both parties of the request for additional information and that they
have until the end of the second business day after notification to respond to
the request. HHSC provides opposing parties with copies of any such response
submitted to HHSC.
(m) All
responses to shared information as described in subsections (j) and (l) of this
section must be received no later than the tenth calendar day after the
provider's rebuttal letter and supporting documentation are
submitted.
(n) Ex parte
communications by the provider or by the State survey agency with HHSC
personnel conducting the IDR are prohibited.
(o) A provider may participate in an IDR
conference provided that the provider requested an IDR conference on the IDR
request form.
(p) HHSC, or its
designee, schedules the IDR conference on or before the 22nd calendar day after
HHSC received the IDR request. If the provider is unable to participate on the
scheduled date, the IDR conference is cancelled, and the IDR continues as
though no conference had been requested.
(q) The IDR conference is an opportunity for
an eligible provider to present important information previously submitted in
the provider's rebuttal letter or responses to shared information. The provider
and the State survey agency may attend any IDR conference, but neither party
may present information that was not previously included in the Statement of
Licensing Violations, submitted in the provider's rebuttal letter, or responses
to shared information as set forth in subsections (j), (k), and (l) of this
section.
(r) HHSC completes the IDR
no later than the 30th calendar day after its receipt of the provider's written
request. The IDR recommendation shall be in writing, address all the issues
raised by the provider, and explain the rationale for the
recommendation.
(s) The time frames
designated in the IDR process shall be computed in accordance with Texas
Government Code §
311.014.
(t) HHSC may issue and enforce operating
procedures concerning the IDR process and the conduct of IDR participants. IDR
participants must comply with any such procedures. HHSC may deny an IDR request
if the information submitted is incorrect, incomplete, or otherwise not in
compliance with applicable HHSC operating procedures.
(u) The State survey agency may revise an IDR
recommendation as a result of a review and subsequent determination that the
IDR recommendation may violate a federal law, regulation, or State of Texas
rule.
(v) HHSC may contract with an
appropriate disinterested organization to adjudicate disputes between a
provider and the State survey agency. Texas Government Code §
2009.053 does not
apply to the selection of an appropriate disinterested organization. For
purposes of this section, a reference to HHSC with respect to HHSC's role in
the IDR process includes an organization with which HHSC has contracted for the
purpose of performing IDR, and a contracted organization is bound by the same
requirements to which HHSC is bound for the purposes of conducting an IDR. The
results of an IDR conducted by a contracted organization serve only as a
recommendation to the State survey Agency. The State survey Agency maintains
responsibility for and makes final IDR decisions.
Notes
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