REVISE CRIMINAL BACKGROUND CHECK

FOR HEALTH FACILITIES AND AGENCIES

Senate Bill 1161 (Substitute S-1)

Sponsor:  Sen. Patricia L. Birkholz

House Committee:  Senior Health, Security, and Retirement

Senate Committee:  Health Policy

Complete to4-14-08

A SUMMARY OF SENATE BILL 1161 AS PASSED BY THE SENATE3-25-08

The bill would amend the Public Health Code (MCL 333.20173a) to delay by one year the requirement that certain employees of specified types of health facilities and agencies provide the State Police with a set of fingerprints for a background check. 

The bill would also require the Department of Community Health and the Michigan State Police to "maintain," rather than develop and implement, an electronic web-based system to assist health facilities and agencies in identifying individuals who are convicted of offenses disqualifying them from employment.  The bill also makes a number of technical amendments to update the Code.

A package of bills enacted in 2006 requires, among other things, that applicants for employment in a variety of specified health facilities and agencies undergo criminal history checks before being employed.  Public Act 28 of 2006 (Senate Bill 621) put these requirements in place in the Public Health Code for a health care facility or agency that is a nursing home, county medical care facility, hospice, hospital that provides swing bed services, home for the aged, or home health agency.

Public Act 29 exempted individuals employed by or under contract to specified types of health care facilities and agencies as of the effective date of the act, which wasApril 1, 2006.  However, it required an exempt individual to provide the Department of State Police a set of fingerprints for background check purposes within 24 months.  Senate Bill 1161 would amend this provision and require an exempt individual to provide the fingerprints beginningApril 1, 2009 (a delay of one year). 

FISCAL IMPACT:  

The bill would delay the date upon which a person who was already employed, under contract, or had clinical privileges in a health facility or agency on April 1, 2006 (the effective date of the previous amendatory act) will have to submit fingerprints to the Department of State Police for inclusion in the fingerprint identification system established in the act.  Since the bill only delays but does not change the requirement, it would have no overall cost impact on the State or on local units of government.

                                                                                           Legislative Analyst:   E. Best

                                                                                                   Fiscal Analyst:   Robert Schneider

This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan House staff for use by House members in their deliberations, and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.