249H.7  Home and community-based services for seniors.

1.  Beginning October 1, 2000, the department of elder affairs, in consultation with the senior living coordinating unit, shall use funds appropriated from the senior living trust fund for activities related to the design, maintenance, or expansion of home and community-based services for seniors, including but not limited to adult day care, personal care, respite, homemaker, chore, and transportation services designed to promote the independence of and to delay the use of institutional care by seniors with low and moderate incomes. At any time that moneys are appropriated, the department of elder affairs, in consultation with the senior living coordinating unit, shall disburse the funds to the area agencies on aging.

2.  The department of elder affairs shall adopt rules, in consultation with the senior living coordinating unit and the area agencies on aging, pursuant to chapter 17A, to provide all of the following:

a. (1)  The criteria and process for disbursement of funds, appropriated in accordance with subsection 1, to area agencies on aging.

(2)  The criteria shall include, at a minimum, all of the following:

(a)  A distribution formula that triple weights all of the following:

(i)  Individuals seventy-five years of age and older.

(ii)  Individuals aged sixty and older who are members of a racial minority.

(iii)  Individuals sixty years of age and older who reside in rural areas as defined in the federal Older Americans Act.

(iv)  Individuals who are sixty years of age and older who have incomes at or below the poverty level as defined in the federal Older Americans Act.

(b)  A distribution formula that single weights individuals sixty years of age and older who do not meet the criteria specified in subparagraph subdivision (a).

b.  The criteria for long-term care providers to receive funding as subcontractors of the area agencies on aging.

c.  Other procedures the department of elder affairs deems necessary for the proper administration of this section, including but not limited to the submission of progress reports, on a bimonthly basis, to the senior living coordinating unit.

3.  This section does not create an entitlement to any funds available for disbursement under this section and the department of elder affairs may only disburse moneys to the extent funds are available and, within its discretion, to the extent requests for funding are approved.

4.  Long-term care providers that receive funding under this section shall submit annual reports to the appropriate area agency on aging. The department of elder affairs shall develop the report to be submitted, which shall include, but is not limited to, units of service provided, the number of service recipients, costs, and the number of units of service identified as necessitated but not provided.

5.  The department of elder affairs, in cooperation with the department of human services, shall provide annual reports to the governor and the general assembly concerning the impact of moneys disbursed under this section on the availability of long-term care services in Iowa. The reports shall include the types of services funded, the outcome of those services, and the number of individuals receiving those services.

Section History: Recent form

  2000 Acts, ch 1004, §7, 22

Footnotes

  Emergency rulemaking authority; 2000 Acts, ch 1004, §21


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