Bill Summaries: S361 HEALTHY NC. (NEW)

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  • Summary date: Jul 2 2020 - View Summary

    AN ACT TO ENACT THE PSYCHOLOGY INTERJURISDICTIONAL COMPACT, ALLOW LICENSED MARRIAGE AND FAMILY THERAPISTS TO CONDUCT FIRST-LEVEL COMMITMENT EXAMINATIONS, ELIMINATE REDUNDANCY IN ADULT CARE HOME INSPECTIONS, ENSURE THE PROPER ADMINISTRATION OF STEP THERAPY PROTOCOLS, AND CLARIFY THE USE OF CORONAVIRUS RELIEF FUNDS ALLOCATED TO THE NORTH CAROLINA COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER ASSOCIATION. SL 2020-82. Enacted July 1, 2020. Effective July 1, 2020, except as otherwise provided.


  • Summary date: Jun 26 2020 - View Summary

    Conference report #2 to the 6th edition makes the following changes.

    Part I.

    Changes the effective date of the provisions of Section 1, which recodifies several statutes and enacts Article 18H, Psychology Interjurisdictional Licensure Compact, GS Chapter 90, to March 1, 2021 (previously effective when at least seven states have enacted the Psychology Interjurisdictional Compact).

    Part II

    Changes the effective date of the proposed changes to GS 122C-263.1, allowing licensed marriage and family therapists to conduct first examinations for involuntary commitment, to October 1, 2020 (was effective October 1, 2019).

    Part IV

    Changes the effective date of the proposed changes to GS 58-3-221, regarding access to nonformulary and restricted access prescription drugs, to October 1, 2020 (was, October 1, 2019).

    Part V

    Amends subdivision 3.3(24) of SL 2020-4 (2020 COVID-19 Recovery Act) to expand the purposes for which funds allocated to the NC Community Health Center Association can be used to include offsetting five classes of costs incurred by member health centers related to the provision of patient care within the State to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. Makes technical changes. 

    Deletes the following previous Parts of the act: Part IV (regarding Lupus awareness and establishing a Lupus Advisory Council), Part Part VI (regarding coverage of orally administered anticancer drugs), Part VII (regarding Medicaid telemedicine policies), Part VIII (regarding access to telehealth services), and Part IX (establishing a Healthcare Solutions Task Force).

    Makes further technical changes. Makes conforming changes to the act's organization and changes the act's long title.

    Note: Conference report #1 was withdrawn 6/25/2020.


  • Summary date: Jun 24 2020 - View Summary

    Conference report to the 6th edition makes the following changes.

    Part I.

    Changes the effective date of the provisions of Section 1, which recodifies several statutes and enacts Article 18H, Psychology Interjurisdictional Licensure Compact, GS Chapter 90, to March 1, 2021 (previously effective when at least seven states have enacted the Psychology Interjurisdictional Compact).

    Part II

    Changes the effective date of the proposed changes to GS 122C-263.1, allowing licensed marriage and family therapists to conduct first examinations for involuntary commitment, to October 1, 2020 (was effective October 1, 2019).

    Part IV

    Changes the effective date of the proposed changes to GS 58-3-221, regarding access to nonformulary and restricted access prescription drugs, to October 1, 2020 (was, October 1, 2019).

    Part V

    Amends subdivision 3.3(24) of SL 2020-4 (2020 COVID-19 Recovery Act) to expand the purposes for which funds allocated to the NC Community Health Center Association can be used to include offsetting five classes of costs incurred by member health centers related to the provision of patient care within the State to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. Makes technical changes. 

    Part VI

    Amends GS 122C-268 to make clarifying changes and make language gender-neutral. Also mandates, rather than permits, the Attorney General to designate a staff attorney to represent the State's interest at any commitment hearing, rehearing, or supplemental hearing held in a place other than a State facility for individuals with mental illness or psychiatric service of UNC Hospital.

    Deletes the following previous Parts of the act: Part IV (regarding Lupus awareness and establishing a Lupus Advisory Council), Part Part VI (regarding coverage of orally administered anticancer drugs), Part VII (regarding Medicaid telemedicine policies), Part VIII (regarding access to telehealth services), and Part IX (establishing a Healthcare Solutions Task Force).

    Makes further technical changes. Makes conforming changes to the act's organization and changes the act's long title.


  • Summary date: Aug 8 2019 - View Summary

    House amendment to the 5th edition makes the following changes.

    Part III.

    Amends the proposed additions to GS 131D-2.11(a). Now provides that if the annual or biennial licensure inspection (was, annual inspection) of an adult care home is conducted separately from the inspection required every two years to determine compliance with physical plant and life-safety requirements, then the Division of Health Service Regulation (DHSR) cannot cite, as part of the annual or biennial licensure inspection, any non-compliance with any law or regulation that was cited during a physical plant and life-safety inspection (was, any violation of law that overlaps with an area addressed by the physical plant and life-safety inspection). Modifies and adds to the exceptions, allowing for DHSR to make the citation if, in consultation with the section within DHSR that conducts physical and life-safety inspections (section), either (1) the non-compliance with the law or regulation continues and the non-compliance constitutes a Type A1 Violation, a Type A2 Violation, or a Type B Violation, as specified in state law; (2) the facility has not submitted a plan of correction for the physical plant or life-safety citation that has been accepted by the section; or (3) the non-compliance with the physical plant or life-safety law and regulation cited by the section has not been corrected within the time frame allowed for correction or has increased in severity (previously, only provided a general exception to allow citation when failure to address the violation during the annual inspection would pose a risk to resident health or safety). Maintains the clarification that the new provisions do not prevent a licensing inspector from referring a concern about physical plant and life-safety requirements to the section. 


  • Summary date: Aug 7 2019 - View Summary

    House committee substitute to the 4th edition makes the following changes.

    Part VI. 

    Deletes the proposed provisions of new GS 58-3-282, concerning coverage for certain anticancer drugs, and instead provides the following provisions. Limits the scope of the statute to health benefit plans sold on the individual market that provide coverage for prescribed, orally administered anticancer drugs that are used to kill or slow the growth of cancerous cells and that provides coverage for intravenously administered or injected anticancer drugs. Prohibits health benefit plans from imposing a copayment, coinsurance percentage, or deductive or any combination thereof to the insured for oral originator oncology products that are greater than that charged to the insured for intravenously administered or injected anticancer drugs. Defines coinsurance percentage. Deems an insurer that limits the total amount paid by a covered person through all in-network, cost-sharing requirements to no more than $300 per filled prescription for any oral originator oncology product to be in compliance with the requirements. Defines cost-sharing requirements. Provides for the limit amount described to be indexed for subsequent years, as specified, and requires the price indexed maximum cost-sharing amount be posted by the Commissioner of Insurance by April 1 of each year, applicable to policies renewed and purchased the following calendar year. Exempts plans that do not meet the minimum essential coverage requirement of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, a grandfathered or transitional plan under the Affordable Care Act, a high deductible health benefit plan or policy qualified to be used in conjunction with a health savings account, a medical savings account, or other similar program authorized by specified federal law.

    Maintains that the provisions apply to insurance contracts issued, renewed, or amended on or after January 1, 2020, and that the statute will not become effective if it is determined by the federal government to create a  state-required benefit in excess of the essential health benefits pursuant to 45 C.F.R. 155.170(a)(3); if such a determination is made, then requires the Department of Insurance to notify the Revisor of Statutes. 

    Part IX.

    Increases the membership of the North Carolina Healthcare Solutions Task Force (Task Force) required to be convened by the North Carolina Area Health Education Centers Program. Adds two members from the medical school of a private institution of higher education, one each appointed by the President Pro Tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives. 

    Amends the act's short title.


  • Summary date: Aug 6 2019 - View Summary

    House committee substitute to the 3rd edition makes the following changes.

    Amends GS 122C-263.1 concerning who can perform first commitment exams, by adding that a licensed marriage and family therapist is not authorized to conduct the initial exam of an individual married to a patient of the licensed marriage and family therapist.

    Deletes the proposed changes to GS 90-270.54 and GS 90-270.57, which established a license to conduct first exams and the related application fee. 

    Adds the following provisions. 

    Part V.

    Amends GS 58-3-221(a), which requires an insurer to take four specified steps if the insurer maintains one or more closed formularies for or restricts access to covered prescription drugs or devices. Amends the statute to also make those required steps applicable to when an insurer requires an enrollee in a plan with an open or closed formulary to use a prescription drug or sequence of prescription drugs, other than the drug the enrollee's health care provider recommends, before the insurer provides coverage for the recommended prescription drug. Amends those four required steps as follows: (1) requires the insurer to develop the formularies or protocols and any restrictions on access to covered prescription drugs or devices in consultation with and with the approval of a pharmacy and therapeutics committee (was, develop the formulary or formualries and any restrictions on access to covered prescription drugs or devices in consultation with and with the approval of a pharmacy and therapeutics committee, which was required to include participating physicians licensed to practice medicine in this State); (2) requires the insurer to also make available any utilization management program indicators; (3) requires the insurer to update protocols based on a review of new evidence, research, and newly developed treatments (deletes requirement of establishing and maintaining an expeditious process or procedure for enrollees or enrollees' physicians to obtain coverage for a specific nonformulary drug or device determined to be medically necessary and appropriate by the enrolee's participating physician without prior approval from the insurer after the enrollee's participating physician makes the specified notifications about the formulary or drug; these provisions are moved to another part of the statute and amended as discussed below); and (4) requires an insurer, or a pharmacy benefits manger under contract with an insurer, to require that its pharmacy and therapeutics committee either meet the requirements for the specified conflict of interest or meet the accreditation standards of the specified Committee or another independent accrediting organization (deletes the requirement of providing coverage for a restricted access drug or device to an enrollee without requiring prior approval or use of a nonrestricted formulary drug if an enrollee's physician certifies in writing that the enrollee has previously used an alternative nonrestricted access drug or device and the alternative drug or device has been detrimental to the enrollee's health or has been ineffective in treating the same condition and, in the opinion of the prescribing physician, is likely to be detrimental to the enrollee's health or ineffective in treating the condition again).

    Moves and amends the provision related to the exception process as follows. Adds the requirement that the process or procedure be published on the insurer's website or in policies provided to health care providers. Now requires that an enrollee or the enrollee's prescribing provider be allowed to obtain, without penalty or additional cost-sharing beyond that provided for in the health benefit plan, coverage for a specific nonformulary drug or device or the drug requested by the prescribing provider, if it is determined to be medically necessary and appropriate by the enrollee's prescribing provider and the prescription drug is covered under the current health benefit plan. Requires an exception request to be granted if the prescribing provider's submitted justification and supporting clinical documentation are sufficient to demonstrate: (1) the enrollee has tried the alternate drug while covered by the current or previous health benefit plan; (2) the formulary or alternate drug has been ineffective in the treatment of the enrollee's disease or condition; (3) the formulary or alternate drug causes or is reasonably expected by the prescribing provider to cause a harmful or adverse clinical reaction in the enrollee; (4) either the drug is prescribed in accordance with any applicable clinical protocol of the insurer for the prescribing of the drug, or the drug has been approved as an exception to the clinical protocol pursuant to the insurer's exception procedure; or (5) the enrollee's prescribing provider certifies in writing that the enrollee has previously used an alternative nonrestricted access drug or device and the alternative drug or device has been detrimental to the enrollee's health or has been ineffective in treating the same condition and, in the opinion of the prescribing healthcare provider, is likely to be detrimental to the enrollee's health or ineffective in treating the condition again. 

    Adds that pharmaceutical drug samples or patient incentive programs are not to be considered trial and failure of a preferred prescription drug in lieu of trying the formulary-preferred prescription drug. Adds the following exception process requirements. Allows the insurer, health benefit plan, or utilization review organization to request relevant documentation from the patient or healthcare provider to support the request. Requires a licensed physician or licensed pharmacist to evaluate the clinical appropriateness of the request. Sets out the timelines for  the insurer to communicate to the enrollee's healthcare provider if additional information is required and for the insurer to communicate an exception request determination with the time limits dependent on whether the request is urgent. 

    Adds that the statute is not to be construed to prevent the health benefit plan from requiring an enrollee to try an A-rated generic equivalent drug or a biosimilar before covering the equivalent branded prescription drug.

    Effective October 1, 2019, and applies to insurance contracts issued, renewed, or amended on or after that date.

    Part VI. 

    Enacts new GS 58-3-282, concerning coverage for certain anticancer drugs, applicable to every health benefit plan offered by an insurer that provides coverage for prescribed, orally administered anticancer drugs used to kill or slow the growth of cancerous cells and that provides coverage for intravenously administered or injected anticancer drugs, requiring that such plans must provide coverage for prescribed, orally administered anticancer drugs on a basis no less favorable than the coverage provided for the intravenously administered or injected anticancer drug.

    Prohibits coverage for orally administered anticancer drugs from being subject to prior authorization, dollar limit, co-payment, coinsurance, deductible provision, or any other out-of-pocket expense that does not apply to intravenously administered or injected anticancer drugs.

    Prohibits achieving compliance by reclassifying drugs or increasing cost-sharing expenses imposed on anticancer drugs. Provides that if out-of-pocket expenses are increased for anticancer drugs then the same must also be applied to the majority of comparable medical or pharmaceutical benefits of the policy, contract, or plan.

    Applies to insurance contracts issued, renewed, or amended on or after January 1, 2020. Provides that the statute will not become effective if it is determined by the federal government to create a  state-required benefit that is in excess of the essential health benefits pursuant to 45 C.F.R. 155.170(a)(3); if such a determination is made, then requires the Department of Insurance to notify the Revisor of Statutes. 

    Part VII.

    Requires the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) to make six specified changes to the Medicaid and NC Health Choice Clinical Coverage Policy No. 1H, Telemedicine and Telepsychiatry, regarding reimbursement, referrals, delivery of services by phone or video cell phone, same-date billing, best practices, and inclusion in the coverage policy of certain behavioral health providers. Directs DHHS to expand the billing code set available for telemedicine and telepsychiatry to include most outpatient billing codes, but not to include group-type therapies other than family therapy. Changes become effective after the completion of the process for amending policy required under GS 108A-54.2 (procedures for changing medical policy in public assistance programs).

    Requires DHHS to submit to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services any waivers or amendments to the NC Medicaid State Plan necessary to implement this act.  

    Part VIII.

    Requires the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) to ensure that Medicaid and NC Health Choice coverage of telemedicine and telepsychiatry services are consistent with this section and requires amending Clinical Coverage Policy No: 1H as necessary. Requires using the term "telehealth" instead of  "telemedicine" in all clinical coverage policies. Defines telehealth for the purposes of Medicaid and NC Health Choice coverage, as the delivery of health care-related services by a Medicaid or NC Health Choice provider licensed in the State to a Medicaid or NC Health Choice recipient through one of the three specified types of communications and technologies. Specifies that telehealth does not include the delivery of services solely through electronic mail, text chat, or audio-communication unless either additional medical history and clinical information is communicated electronically between the provider and patient or the services delivered are behavioral health services. Specifies four actions that DHHS must take regarding Medicaid and NC Health Choice coverage of telehealth services, including promoting access to health care for Medicaid and NC Health Choice recipients through telehealth services. Prohibits DHHS from requiring seven specified items as a condition of coverage of telehealth services, including that a provider be part of a telehealth network in order to bill for Medicaid or NC Health Choice services, and that the Provider be physically present with the patient or client unless the provider determines it is medically necessary to perform the services in person. Requires DHHS to ensure that (1) Medicaid and NC Health Choice coverage and reimbursement for telehealth services are equivalent to the reimbursement and coverage for the same services if provided in person and (2) that any deductible, copayment, or coinsurance requirement is equivalent to the same service if it was provided to the patient in person. Requires DHHS to submit to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services any waivers or amendments to the NC Medicaid State Plan necessary to implement the above provisions. Requires DHHS by September 1, 2020, to report on changes, expected costs, savings, and outcomes of telehealth services to the specified NCGA committee and division.

    Enacts new GS 58-50-305 to prohibit a health benefit plan from excluding from coverage a covered health care service or procedure delivered by a preferred or contracted health professional to a covered patient as a telehealth service solely because the covered health care service or procedure is not provided through an in-person consultation. Allows a health benefit plan to require a deductible, a copayment, or coinsurance for a covered health care service or procedure delivered by a preferred or contracted health professional to a covered patient as a telehealth service. Prohibits the amount charged from exceeding the amount of the deductible, copayment, or coinsurance required for the covered health care service or procedure provided through an in-person consultation. Makes a conforming change to GS 135-48.51 to make new GS 58-50-305 applicable to the State Health Plan.

    Effective October 1, 2019.

    Part IX.

    Requires the North Carolina Area Health Education Centers Program to convene a 15-member North Carolina Healthcare Solutions Task Force (Task Force) to make recommendations for innovative solutions to healthcare access issues in the state. Sets out membership requirements. Requires the North Carolina Area Health Education Centers to assist the Task Force by convening and facilitating meetings, providing necessary clerical and administrative support, and preparing the Task Force reports and providing technical assistance as appropriate. Requires the Task Force to conduct a 10-year, ongoing study of issues related to access to healthcare in North Carolina, with the work divided into two stages. Requires the first stage to identify metrics to provide an accurate assessment and measurement  of the state of access to healthcare in North Carolina, and the second stage to identify any issues relating to access to healthcare in North Carolina and to develop innovative solutions that will increase access to healthcare and improve the state of access to healthcare in North Carolina as measured by the identified metrics. Sets out additional requirements for the two stages. Requires the Task Force's first meeting to be convened by October 1, 2019. Requires the report on stage one to be submitted to the specified NCGA committee by April 1, 2021, with annual reports on stage two activities required beginning April 1, 2022, with subsequent reports submitted annually until April 1, 2030. Terminates the Task Force on the date it submits is final report in 2030.

    Amends the act's long title.


  • Summary date: Jun 26 2019 - View Summary

    Senate amendments make the following changes to the 2nd edition.

    Amendment #1 eliminates previous Part I, which amended Article 9, Certificate of Need, of GS Chapter 131E. Makes conforming organizational changes to the act.

    Amendment #2 adds a new Part to provide the following.

    Enacts new GS 103-15 designating May as Lupus Awareness Month.

    Enacts new Part 6A in Article 1B of GS Chapter 130A establishing the 15-member Lupus Advisory Council (Council). Sets out the Council's duties, including making recommendations to the Governor and the Secretary of Health and Human Services aimed at improving patient health status and examining the financing of, and access to, health services. Sets out Council membership and provisions for electing the chairperson, establishing a quorum, paying member expenses, and providing Council support.

    Makes conforming organizational changes to the act.


  • Summary date: Jun 12 2019 - View Summary

    Senate committee substitute to the 1st edition makes the following changes.

    Eliminates previous Part I, which required the Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Benefits (Division), to amend the North Carolina Innovations waiver to increase the number of slots available under the waiver by a maximum of 1,000 slots to be made available on January 1, 2020, and by a maximum of 1,000 slots to be made available on January 1, 2021. Eliminates the companion appropriation. Makes conforming organizational changes to the act.

    Eliminates the proposed repeal of GS Chapter 131E, Article 9 (Certificate of Need) and accompanying conforming changes to GS 6-19.1, GS 113A-12, GS 122C-23.1, GS 131E-13, GS 131E-136, GS 148-19.1, GS 130A-45.02, GS 150B-2, and GS 150B-21.1; conforming repeal of GS 143B-1292; and conforming changes to GS 58-50-61 and GS 58-55-35. Instead provides the following.

    Amends GS 131E-176, which sets outs defined terms applicable to Article 9, Certificate of Need. Amends bed capacity to specify space used exclusively for inpatient care at a health care facility. Modifies terms throughout to remove reference to "psychiatric facilities," "kidney disease treatment centers," "intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded," "chemical dependency treatment facilities," "diagnostic facilities," and "ambulatory surgical facilities." Amends health service facility to exclude a licensable facility as defined in GS 122C-3(14)b. Changes the terminology to "intermediate care facility for individuals with intellectual disabilities" (was, mentally retarded). Makes further technical, clarifying, and conforming changes.

    Amends GS 131E-177 to prohibit the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) from including policies or need determinations that limit the number of operating rooms in gastrointestinal endoscopy rooms in developing a State Medical Facilities Plan. Makes further technical and clarifying changes.

    Makes conforming changes to GS 131E-178, GS 131E-183, GS 131E-184, and GS 131E-186 to eliminate requirements related to certificates of need and review for ambulatory surgical facilities, psychiatric facilities, and nursing care or intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded.

    Amends GS 131E-181 to require certificate of need recipients to complete the project authorized by the certificate of need within two years after the decision to issue the certificate of need becomes final. Deems the certificate expired the day after the two-year time period if the project authorized is not completed. Directs DHHS to withdraw a certificate of need issued to any recipient that ceases operating the health service or health service facility included in that certificate of need for more than one year.

    Further amends GS 131E-184 regarding exemptions from certificate of need review. Adds new subsection (i) to require DHHS to exempt from certificate of need review the development, acquisition, construction, expansion, or replacement of a health service facility or health service that obtained certificate of need approval prior to October 1, 2019, as: an ambulatory surgical facility, including an ambulatory surgical facility with one or more operating rooms or gastrointestinal endoscopy procedure rooms; a diagnostic center; kidney disease treatment center, including freestanding dialysis units; chemical dependency treatment facility; intermediate care for individuals with intellectual disabilities; psychiatric hospital; or any other licensable facility, as defined. 

    Adds new subsection (j) to require DHHS to exempt from certificate of need review the establishment of a home health agency by a licensed continuing care retirement community to provide home health care services to one or more residents of the retirement community who have entered into a contract with the retirement community to receive continuing care services with lodging. Requires the continuing care retirement community to obtain a certificate of need if developing or offering services to any individual not a resident of the retirement community under a contract to receive continuing care services with lodging. Explicitly does not exempt from the State's home health agency licensure and certification requirements a continuing care retirement community that has been exempted from certificate of need review for the provision of home health services to one or more residents pursuant to new subsection (j). Provides that new subsection (j) applies to continuing care retirement communities engaged in the direct provision of home health services on or after October 1, 2019.

    Amends GS 131E-188, concerning administrative and judicial review. Removes reference to the term 'affected person.' Instead entitles any proponent of an application that was reviewed with the application for the certificate of need to a contested case hearing. Authorizes the Court of Appeals to award all costs for judicial review to the prevailing party, as described. Increases the maximum secured bond required to be deposited by the appellant with the Clerk of the Court of Appeals for appeals of a final decision granting a certificate of need, allowing up to $500,000 rather than $300,000 in the court's discretion.

    Amends GS 131E-147 regarding ambulatory surgical facility licensure requirements, to prohibit DHHS from issuing or renewing a license to operate an ambulatory surgical facility developed, acquired, or replaced on or after October 1, 2019, unless the application meets four criteria. Requires: (1) a commitment that the Medicare allowable amount for self-pay and Medicaid surgical cases, minus collected revenue, will be at least 4% of the total revenue collected for all surgical cases performed; (2) a commitment to report case numbers in specified payer categories; and (3) a commitment to report utilization and payment data for services provided to the statewide processor, as specified.

    Makes conforming repeals in GS 131E-175 (legislative findings).

    Effective October 1, 2019.

    Maintains the recodification of Article 18A (Psychology Practice Act) of GS Chapter 90 as Article 18G, and enactment of  Article 18H, Psychology Interjurisdictional Licensure Compact, in GS Chapter 90.

    Enacts GS 90-270.54(a1) to require the NC Marriage and Family Therapy Licensure Board to issue licenses for marriage and family therapists to conduct involuntary commitment first examinations if they meet the specified licensure requirements and pay a $10 fee. Amends GS 90-270.57 to establish the $10 fee. Applies to applications submitted on or after October 1, 2019.

    Eliminates all provisions of the previous Part V, amending GS 131E-138, which created an exemption from home care agency licensure requirements when home care services are provided to participants of the Program for All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly through an organization that has a valid program agreement with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Divisions of Health Benefits of the Department of Health and Human Services. Eliminates all accompanying proposed changes to GS Chapter 131D. 


  • Summary date: Mar 26 2019 - View Summary

    Part I.

    Requires the Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Benefits (Division), to amend the North Carolina Innovations waiver to increase the number of slots available under the waiver by a maximum of 1,000 slots to be made available on January 1, 2020, and by a maximum of 1,000 slots to be made available on January 1, 2021.

    Appropriates $10,250,000 in recurring funds for 2019-20 and $30,750,000 in recurring funds for 2020-21 fiscal year from the General Fund to the Division to be used to fund these additional slots.

    Part II.

    Repeals GS Chapter 131E, Article 9 (Certificate of Need). Makes conforming changes to GS 6-19.1, GS 113A-12, GS 122C-23.1, GS 131E-13, GS 131E-136, GS 148-19.1, GS 130A-45.02, GS 150B-2, and GS 150B-21.1; makes conforming repeals of GS 143B-1292. Makes further conforming changes to GS 58-50-61 (defining health service facility as it was defined in the repealed Article) and GS 58-55-35 (defining hospice and intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded as they were defined in the repealed Article).

    Effective January 1, 2020.

    Part III.

    Recodifies Article 18A (Psychology Practice Act) of GS Chapter 90 as Article 18G.

    Enacts new Article 18H, Psychology Interjurisdictional Licensure Compact, in GS Chapter 90. Sets out six purposes and objectives of the Psychology Interjurisdictional Licensure Compact (Compact), including increasing public access to professional psychological services by allowing telepsychological practice across state lines and temporary in-person, face-to-face services into a state in which the psychologist is not licensed to practice and enhancing the states’ ability to protect public health and safety. Defines terms that are used in the Article, including telepsychology, which is defined as the provision of psychological services using telecommunication technologies.

    Specifies that the home state is a compact state where a psychologist is licensed to practice psychology. Allows a psychologist to hold one or more compact state licenses at a time and allows a compact state to require a psychologist not previously licensed in a compact state to obtain and retain a license to practice in the compact state under circumstances not allowed by the Authority to Practice Interjurisdictional Telepsychology under the terms of the Compact. Also allows a compact state to require a psychologist to obtain and retain a license to be authorized to practice in a compact state under circumstances not authorized by Temporary Authorization to Practice under the Compact terms. Temporary Authorization to Practice is a licensed psychologist’s authority to conduct temporary in-person, face-to-face practice, within the limits authorized under the Compact, in another compact state. Temporary in-person, face-to-face practice is where a psychologist is physically present (not through the use of telecommunications technologies) in the distant state to provide for the practice of psychology for 30 days within a calendar year and based on notification to the distant state. Sets out five conditions that must be met in order for a home state’s license to authorize a psychologist to practice in a receiving state (defined as a compact state where the client/patient is physically located when the telepsychological services are delivered), including that the compact state has a mechanism in place for receiving and investigating complaints about licensed individuals and the compact state complies with the bylaws and rules of the Psychology Interjurisdictional Compact Commission (Commission). Sets out five similar conditions that must be met in order for a home state’s license to grant Temporary Authorization to Practice to a psychologist in a distant state.

    Establishes requirements that psychologists licensed to practice in a compact state must meet in order to exercise the Authority to Practice Interjurisdictional Telepsychology (defined as a licensed psychologist’s authority to practice telepsychology, within the limits authorized under the Compact, in another compact state), including holding a graduate degree in psychology that meets specified criteria; possessing a current, full, and unrestricted license to practice in a home state that is also a compact state; and having no criminal record history reported on an identity history summary that violates Commission rules. Provides that the home state maintains authority over the license of any psychologist practicing into a receiving state and makes a psychologist practicing into a receiving state subject to the receiving state’s scope of practice. Prohibits a psychologist from practicing telepsychology in a compact state if the psychologist’s license is restricted, suspended, or otherwise limited.

    Establishes requirements that psychologists licensed to practice in a compact state must meet in order to exercise the Temporary Authorization to Practice, including holding a graduate degree in psychology that meets specified criteria; possessing a current, full, and unrestricted license to practice in a home state that is also a compact state; and having no criminal record history that violates Commission rules. Requires a psychologist practicing in a distant state under the Temporary Authorization to Practice to practice within the scope of practice authorized by the distant state; psychologists practicing in a distant state are subject to the distant state’s authority and law. Prohibits a psychologist from practicing telepsychology in a compact state if the psychologist’s license is restricted, suspended, or otherwise limited.

    Allows a psychologist to practice in a receiving state only in the performance of the scope of practice for psychology as assigned by the appropriate state psychology regulatory authority and under the following circumstances: (1) the psychologist initiates a client/patient contact in a home state via telecommunications technologies with a client/patient in a receiving state or (2) other conditions regarding telepsychology as determined by Commission rules.

    Sets out conditions under which a home state or receiving state may take adverse action against a psychologist and the procedures that are to be followed.

    Sets out additional authority granted to a compact state’s psychology regulatory authority, including issuing cease and desist and/or injunctive relief orders to revoke a psychologist’s Authority to Practice Interjurisdictional Telepsychology and/or Temporary Authorization to Practice.

    Requires the Commission to develop and maintain a coordinated licensure information system (coordinated database) and reporting system that contains licensure and disciplinary action information on all psychologists to whom the Compact is applicable. Sets out information that compact states must provide to the coordinated database. Sets out additional procedures for not sharing designated information and expunging information in the coordinated database.

    Provides for the creation of a joint public agency by the compact states to be known as the Psychology Interjurisdictional Compact Commission (Commission). Sets out requirements for Commission membership, voting, and meetings, which are to occur at least once during each calendar year. Requires the Commission to prescribe bylaws and/or rules to govern its conduct. Establishes the Commission’s 14 powers, including bringing and prosecuting legal proceedings or actions in the name of the Commission; borrowing, accepting, or contracting for services of personnel; disposing of any property; and establishing a budget and making expenditures. Sets out requirements for the Executive Board, made up of six elected officers. Sets out provisions governing the financing of the Commission. Provides for qualified immunity, defense, and indemnification of Commission members, officers, the executive director, employees, and representatives.

    Establishes criteria that must be met and procedures that must be followed when the Commission exercises its rule-making powers. Provides that if a majority of the legislatures of the compact states reject a rule by enactment of a statute or resolution in the same manner used to adopt the Compact, then the rule has no further force and effect in any compact state. Includes situations when public hearing requirements must be met before a rule or amendment is adopted. Sets out conditions for adoption of emergency rules.

    Requires the executive, legislative, and judicial branches in each compact state to enforce the Compact and gives the Compact’s provisions and rules standing as statutory law. Sets out actions that are taken when a compact state has defaulted in the performance of its obligations or responsibilities, including termination of membership only after all other means of securing compliance have been exhausted. Provides for dispute resolution upon request by a compact state. Requires the Commission to enforce Compact provisions and rules and sets out further enforcement requirements.

    Provides that the Compact comes into effect on the date on which the Compact is enacted into law in the seventh compact state. Any state that joins after the initial adoption of the rules will be subject to the rules as they exist on the date on which the Compact becomes law in that state. Sets out provisions governing withdrawing from the Compact. Allows the Compact to be amended by the compact states.

    The above provisions are effective when at least seven states have enacted the PSYPACT. Requires the North Carolina Psychology Board to report to the Revisor of Statutes when the Compact has been enacted by the seven member states.

    Part IV.

    Amends GS 122C-263.1(a), which sets criteria for the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) to individually certify certain health, mental health, and substance abuse professionals to perform the first commitment examinations for involuntary commitment of individuals with mental illness or substance use disorders required by law. Expands upon those eligible classes of providers to also include a licensed marriage and family therapist. Provides that certification of a licensed marriage and family therapist under the statute does not authorize the therapist to expand the therapist's scope of practice. Makes technical changes. Effective October 1, 2019.

    Part V.

    Amends GS 131E-138, which sets out licensure requirements for home care agencies to create an exemption when home care services are provided to participants of the Program for All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly through an organization that has a valid program agreement with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Divisions of Health Benefits of the Department of Health and Human Services. Amends GS 131D-2.1 to amend the definitions of adult care home, assisted living residence, and multiunit assisted housing with service to include those residences that provide the specified services with a Program for All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly organization that has a valid program agreement with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Division of Health Benefits of the Department of Health and Human Services. Makes conforming, clarifying, and technical changes.

    Amends GS 131D-2.2, which prohibits multiunit assisted housing with service from caring for individuals with the specified conditions or needs to prohibit caring for individuals who require maximum physical assistance as documented by a uniform assessment instrument, unless the individual is enrolled in the Program for All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly, or the physician determines otherwise (was, only if the physician determines otherwise). Further amends the statute to give the resident of an assisted living facility the right to select the Program for All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly as the resident's health care provider without jeopardizing residence in the facility.  

    Amends GS 131D-2.16 to require that the Medical Care Commission consider, when adopting rules, the need to ensure comparable quality of services, whether these services are provided by the listed entities or a Program for All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly organization that has a valid program agreement with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Division of Health Benefits of the Department of Health and Human Services.

    Amends GS 131D-6 concerning the certification of adult day care programs by exempting from the statute a Program for All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly organization that has a valid program agreement with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Division of Health Benefits of the Department of Health and Human Services.

    Effective October 1, 2019.

    Part VI.

    Amends GS 131D-2.11 by adding that if the annual inspection of an adult care home is conducted separately from the inspection required every two years to determine compliance with physical plant and life-safety requirements, the Division of Health Service Regulation must not cite, as part of the annual inspection, any violation that overlaps with an area addressed by the physical plant and life-safety inspection, unless failure to address the violation poses a risk to resident health or safety. 

    Part VII.

    Includes a severability clause.