2012 -- S 2904 SUBSTITUTE A | |
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LC02404/SUB A | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
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IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
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JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2012 | |
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____________ | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO CRIMINAL PROCEDURE - NATIONAL CRIMINAL RECORDS CHECK | |
SYSTEM | |
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     Introduced By: Senator Michael J. McCaffrey | |
     Date Introduced: April 26, 2012 | |
     Referred To: Senate Judiciary | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1-1 |
     SECTION 1. Section 12-1-4 of the General Laws in Chapter 12-1 entitled "Identification |
1-2 |
and Apprehension of Criminals" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
1-3 |
     12-1-4. Division of criminal identification -- Chief and assistants. – (a) There shall be |
1-4 |
a division of criminal identification in the department of the attorney general to be in charge of a |
1-5 |
chief who shall be appointed by the attorney general to serve at the pleasure of the attorney |
1-6 |
general, and who shall devote all of his or her time to the duties of his or her office. The chief |
1-7 |
with the approval of the attorney general may appoint any assistants that he or she may deem |
1-8 |
necessary to carry out the work of the division, within the limits of any appropriation made for |
1-9 |
that purpose, and may with the approval of the attorney general discontinue the employment of |
1-10 |
any assistants at any time. The chief shall perform the functions required by the provisions of this |
1-11 |
chapter. In addition to availability of records to law enforcement agencies and officers, the |
1-12 |
records shall be made available to any attorney of record in any criminal action, and any officials |
1-13 |
of businesses which are required by federal or state law or regulation to effectuate a criminal |
1-14 |
background check of potential or prospective employees. The information shall be confidential |
1-15 |
and shall be used only by the employer for the employee's application of employment. |
1-16 |
     (b) The department of attorney general may establish and maintain an automated |
1-17 |
fingerprint identification system database that would allow the department to store and maintain |
1-18 |
all fingerprints submitted in accordance with a national criminal records check system. The |
1-19 |
automated fingerprint identification system database would provide for an automatic notification |
2-1 |
if and when a subsequent criminal arrest fingerprint card submitted into the system matches a set |
2-2 |
of fingerprints previously submitted in accordance with a national criminal records check. If the |
2-3 |
aforementioned arrest results in a conviction, the department shall immediately notify those |
2-4 |
individuals and entities with which that individual is associated, who are required to be notified of |
2-5 |
disqualifying information concerning national criminal records checks under these general laws. |
2-6 |
The information in the database established under this section is confidential and is not subject to |
2-7 |
disclosure under the access to public records act, chapter 2 of title 38 of the general laws. |
2-8 |
      (c) The department of the attorney general or the department of health shall maintain an |
2-9 |
electronic web-based system to assist facilities, licensed under chapters 23-17, 23-17.4, 23-17.7.1 |
2-10 |
or section 23-1-52, required to check relevant registries and conduct criminal records checks of |
2-11 |
direct patient access applicants. The department of the attorney general or the department of |
2-12 |
health shall provide for an automated notice, as authorized in subsection 12-1-4(b), to those |
2-13 |
facilities if a direct patient access employee is subsequently convicted of a disqualifying offense, |
2-14 |
as described in the relevant licensing statute. The department of the attorney general or the |
2-15 |
department of health may charge a facility a one-time set up fee of up to one hundred dollars |
2-16 |
($100) for access to the electronic web-based system under this section. |
2-17 |
      (d) The department of attorney general, the department of health, or an employer who |
2-18 |
disqualifies an applicant from employment or continued employment on the basis of a |
2-19 |
disqualification notice as described in subsection 12-1-4(c) or of a criminal records check relating |
2-20 |
to disqualifying information shall not be liable for civil damages or subject to any claim, demand, |
2-21 |
cause of action, or proceeding of any nature as a result of the disqualification. |
2-22 |
     SECTION 2. Section 23-1-52 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-1 entitled "Department |
2-23 |
of Health" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
2-24 |
     23-1-52. Adult day care program licensure. – (a) The director is authorized and |
2-25 |
directed to establish a program for the licensure of adult day care programs. "Adult day care |
2-26 |
program" shall mean a comprehensive, nonresidential program designed to address the biological, |
2-27 |
psychological, and social needs of adults through individual plans of care that incorporate, as |
2-28 |
needed, a variety of health, social and related support services in a protective setting. The director |
2-29 |
is further authorized to promulgate regulations as he or she deems necessary to implement these |
2-30 |
provisions. |
2-31 |
     (b) Any person seeking employment in any adult day care facility licensed herein and |
2-32 |
having routine contact with an adult day care client or having access to such a client’s belongings |
2-33 |
or funds shall undergo a national criminal records check, which shall include fingerprints |
2-34 |
submitted to the federal bureau of investigation (FBI) by the bureau of criminal identification of |
3-1 |
the department of the attorney general or a designated vendor approved by the department of the |
3-2 |
attorney general. The national criminal records check shall be processed prior to or within one |
3-3 |
week of employment. All persons who, as of July 1, 2013, are already employed by an adult day |
3-4 |
care facility and all persons who, as of such date, already provide services under this section shall |
3-5 |
be exempted from the requirements of this section for purposes of their current employment only. |
3-6 |
     (1) The director may by rule, identify those positions requiring national criminal records |
3-7 |
checks. The employee, through the employer, shall apply to the bureau of criminal identification |
3-8 |
of the department of the attorney general for a national criminal records check. Upon the |
3-9 |
discovery of any disqualifying information as defined in sections 23-1-52(c) and in accordance |
3-10 |
with rules promulgated by the director, the bureau of criminal identification of the department of |
3-11 |
the attorney general shall inform the applicant in writing of the nature of the disqualifying |
3-12 |
information; and, without disclosing the nature of the disqualifying information, shall notify the |
3-13 |
employer in writing that disqualifying information has been discovered. |
3-14 |
     (2) An employee against whom disqualifying information has been found may provide a |
3-15 |
copy of the national criminal records check to the employer. The administrator shall make a |
3-16 |
judgment regarding the continued employment of the employee. |
3-17 |
     (3) In those situations in which no disqualifying information has been found, the bureau |
3-18 |
of criminal identification of the department of the attorney general shall inform the applicant and |
3-19 |
the employer in writing of this fact. |
3-20 |
     (4) The employer shall maintain on file, subject to inspection by the department of health, |
3-21 |
evidence that statewide criminal records checks have been initiated on all employees seeking |
3-22 |
employment between January 1, 2008 and June 30, 2013, and the results of the checks. The |
3-23 |
employer shall maintain on file, subject to inspection by the department, evidence that national |
3-24 |
criminal records checks have been initiated on all employees seeking employment on or after July |
3-25 |
1, 2013, and the results of those checks. Failure to maintain that evidence may be grounds to |
3-26 |
revoke the license or registration of the employer. |
3-27 |
     (5) The employee or employer shall be responsible for the cost of conducting the national |
3-28 |
criminal records check through the bureau of criminal identification of the department of the |
3-29 |
attorney general or a vendor designated by the department of the attorney general. |
3-30 |
     (c) Information produced by a national criminal records check pertaining to conviction, |
3-31 |
for the following crimes will result in a letter to the employee and employer disqualifying the |
3-32 |
applicant from employment: murder, voluntary manslaughter, involuntary manslaughter, first |
3-33 |
degree sexual assault, second degree sexual assault, third degree sexual assault, assault on persons |
3-34 |
sixty (60) years of age or older, assault with intent to commit specified felonies (murder, robbery, |
4-1 |
rape, burglary, or the abominable and detestable crimes against nature), felony assault, patient |
4-2 |
abuse, neglect or mistreatment of patients, burglary, first degree arson, robbery, felony drug |
4-3 |
offenses, felony obtaining money under false pretenses, felony embezzlement, abuse, neglect |
4-4 |
and/or exploitation of adults with severe impairments, exploitation of elders, felony larceny, or |
4-5 |
felony banking law violations, or a crime under section 1128(a) of the Social Security Act (42 |
4-6 |
U.S.C. section 1320a-7(a)). An employee against whom disqualifying information has been |
4-7 |
found may provide a copy of the national criminal records check to the employer who shall make |
4-8 |
a judgment regarding the continued employment of the employee. For purposes of this |
4-9 |
subsection, “conviction” means, in addition to judgments of conviction entered by a court |
4-10 |
subsequent to a finding of guilty or a plea of guilty, those instances where the defendant has |
4-11 |
entered a plea of nolo contendere and has received a sentence of probation and those instances |
4-12 |
where a defendant has entered into a deferred sentence agreement with the attorney general. |
4-13 |
     SECTION 3. Section 23-17-34 and 23-17-37 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-17 |
4-14 |
entitled "Licensing of Health Care Facilities" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
4-15 |
     23-17-34. Criminal records review -- Nursing facilities -- Home nursing care |
4-16 |
providers and home care providers. -- (a) Any person seeking employment in a nursing facility, |
4-17 |
a home nursing care provider, hospice provider or a home care provider which is or is required to |
4-18 |
be licensed, registered or certified with the department of health if that employment involves |
4-19 |
routine contact with a patient or resident without the presence of other employees, shall undergo a |
4-20 |
national criminal |
4-21 |
federal bureau of investigation (FBI) by the bureau of criminal identification of the department of |
4-22 |
the attorney general or a designated vendor approved by the department of the attorney general. |
4-23 |
The national criminal records check shall |
4-24 |
employment. |
4-25 |
|
4-26 |
covered facility or provider and all persons who, as of such date, already provide services under |
4-27 |
this chapter shall be exempted from the requirements of this section for purposes of their current |
4-28 |
employment only. |
4-29 |
      (b) The director of the department of health may by rule identify those positions |
4-30 |
requiring criminal |
4-31 |
shall apply to the bureau of criminal identification of the |
4-32 |
the attorney general for a |
4-33 |
|
4-34 |
in accordance with the rule promulgated by the director of health |
5-1 |
identification of the |
5-2 |
the applicant, in writing, of the nature of the disqualifying information; and, without disclosing |
5-3 |
the nature of the disqualifying information, will notify the employer, in writing, that disqualifying |
5-4 |
information has been discovered. |
5-5 |
      (c) An employee against whom disqualifying information has been found may |
5-6 |
|
5-7 |
employer who shall make a judgment regarding the continued employment of the employee. |
5-8 |
      (d) In those situations in which no disqualifying information has been found, the bureau |
5-9 |
of criminal identification of the |
5-10 |
shall inform the applicant and the employer, in writing, of this fact. |
5-11 |
      (e) The employer shall maintain on file, subject to inspection by the department of |
5-12 |
health, evidence that statewide criminal records checks have been initiated on all employees |
5-13 |
seeking employment |
5-14 |
checks. The employer shall maintain on file, subject to inspection by the department of health, |
5-15 |
evidence that national criminal records checks have been initiated on all employees seeking |
5-16 |
employment on or after July 1, 2013, and the results of those checks. Failure to maintain that |
5-17 |
evidence would be grounds to revoke the license or registration of the employer. |
5-18 |
      (f) |
5-19 |
|
5-20 |
|
5-21 |
the cost of conducting the national criminal records check through the bureau of criminal |
5-22 |
identification of the department of the attorney general or a vendor designated by the department |
5-23 |
of the attorney general. |
5-24 |
     23-17-37. Disqualifying information. -- (a) Information produced by a criminal records |
5-25 |
review pertaining to conviction, for the following crimes will result in a letter to the employee |
5-26 |
and employer disqualifying the applicant from employment: murder, voluntary manslaughter, |
5-27 |
involuntary manslaughter, first degree sexual assault, second degree sexual assault, third degree |
5-28 |
sexual assault, assault on persons sixty (60) years of age or older, assault with intent to commit |
5-29 |
specified felonies (murder, robbery, rape, burglary, or the abominable and detestable crime |
5-30 |
against nature) felony assault, patient abuse, neglect or mistreatment of patients, burglary, first |
5-31 |
degree arson, robbery, felony drug offenses, felony obtaining money under false pretenses, felony |
5-32 |
embezzlement, abuse, neglect and/or exploitation of adults with severe impairments, exploitation |
5-33 |
of elders, felony larceny, or felony banking law violations or a crime under section 1128(a) of the |
5-34 |
social security act (42 U.S.C. section 1320a-7(a)). An employee against whom disqualifying |
6-1 |
information has been found may |
6-2 |
|
6-3 |
employment of the employee. |
6-4 |
      (b) For purposes of this section, "conviction" means, in addition to judgments of |
6-5 |
conviction entered by a court subsequent to a finding of guilty or a plea of guilty, those instances |
6-6 |
where the defendant has entered a plea of nolo contendere and has received a sentence of |
6-7 |
probation and those instances where a defendant has entered into a deferred sentence agreement |
6-8 |
with the attorney general. |
6-9 |
     SECTION 4. Chapter 23-17 of the General Laws entitled "Licensing of Health Care |
6-10 |
Facilities" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
6-11 |
     23-17-60. Criminal records review - long-term care hospital. -- (a) For the purposes of |
6-12 |
this section, a “long-term care hospital” shall mean a facility as described in 42 U.S.C. section |
6-13 |
1395ww(d)(1)(iv), which receives payment for inpatient services it provides to Medicare |
6-14 |
beneficiaries pursuant to 42 U.S.C. section 1395ww(m). |
6-15 |
     (b) Any person seeking employment in any long-term care hospital having routine |
6-16 |
contact with a long-term care hospital patient or having access to such a patient’s belongings or |
6-17 |
funds shall undergo a national criminal records check, which shall include fingerprints submitted |
6-18 |
to the federal bureau of investigation (FBI) by the bureau of criminal identification of the |
6-19 |
department of the attorney general or a designated vendor approved by the department of the |
6-20 |
attorney general. The national criminal records check shall be processed prior to or within one |
6-21 |
week of employment. All persons who, as of July 1, 2013, are already employed by a long-term |
6-22 |
care hospital and all persons who, as of such date, already provide services under this section |
6-23 |
shall be exempted from the requirements of this section for purposes of their current employment |
6-24 |
only. |
6-25 |
     (1) The director may by rule identify those positions requiring national criminal records |
6-26 |
checks. The employee, through the employer, shall apply to the bureau of criminal identification |
6-27 |
of the department of the attorney general for a national criminal records check. Upon the |
6-28 |
discovery of any disqualifying information as defined in subsection 23-17-60(c) and in |
6-29 |
accordance with the rule promulgated by the director, the bureau of criminal identification of the |
6-30 |
department of the attorney general shall inform the applicant in writing of the nature of the |
6-31 |
disqualifying information; and, without disclosing the nature of the disqualifying information, |
6-32 |
shall notify the employer in writing that disqualifying information has been discovered. |
6-33 |
     (2) An employee against whom disqualifying information has been found may provide a |
6-34 |
copy of the national criminal records report to the employer. The administrator shall make a |
7-1 |
judgment regarding the continued employment of the employee. |
7-2 |
     (3) In those situations in which no disqualifying information has been found, the bureau |
7-3 |
of criminal identification of the department of the attorney general shall inform the applicant and |
7-4 |
the employer in writing of this fact. |
7-5 |
     (4) The employer shall maintain on file, subject to inspection by the department, evidence |
7-6 |
that statewide criminal records checks have been initiated on all employees seeking employment |
7-7 |
between October 1, 1991 and June 30, 2013, and the results of the checks. The employer shall |
7-8 |
maintain on file, subject to inspection by the department, evidence that national criminal records |
7-9 |
checks have been initiated on all employees seeking employment on or after July 1, 2013, and the |
7-10 |
results of those checks. Failure to maintain that evidence would be grounds to revoke the license |
7-11 |
or registration of the employer. |
7-12 |
     (5) The employee or employer shall be responsible for the cost of conducting the national |
7-13 |
criminal records check through the bureau of criminal identification of the department of the |
7-14 |
attorney general or a vendor designated by the department of the attorney general. |
7-15 |
     (c) Information produced by a national criminal records check pertaining to conviction, |
7-16 |
for the following crimes will result in a letter to the employee and employer disqualifying the |
7-17 |
applicant from employment: murder, voluntary manslaughter, involuntary manslaughter, first |
7-18 |
degree sexual assault, second degree sexual assault, third degree sexual assault, assault on persons |
7-19 |
sixty (60) years of age or older, assault with intent to commit specified felonies (murder, robbery, |
7-20 |
rape, burglary, or the abominable and detestable crimes against nature), felony assault, patient |
7-21 |
abuse, neglect or mistreatment of patients, burglary, first degree arson, robbery, felony drug |
7-22 |
offenses, felony obtaining money under false pretenses, felony embezzlement, abuse, neglect |
7-23 |
and/or exploitation of adults with severe impairments, exploitation of elders, felony larceny, or |
7-24 |
felony banking law violations, or a crime under section 1128(a) of the Social Security Act (42 |
7-25 |
U.S.C. section 1320a-7(a)). An employee against whom disqualifying information has been |
7-26 |
found may provide a copy of the national criminal records check to the employer who shall make |
7-27 |
a judgment regarding the continued employment of the employee. For purposes of this |
7-28 |
subsection, “conviction” means, in addition to judgments of conviction entered by a court |
7-29 |
subsequent to a finding of guilty or a plea of guilty, those instances where the defendant has |
7-30 |
entered a plea of nolo contendere and has received a sentence of probation and those instances |
7-31 |
where a defendant has entered into a deferred sentence agreement with the attorney general. |
7-32 |
     SECTION 5. Section 23-17.4-27 and 23-17.4-30 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-17.4 |
7-33 |
entitled "Assisted Living Residence Licensing Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
8-34 |
     23-17.4-27. Criminal records review. -- (a) Any person seeking employment in any |
8-35 |
assisted living residence licensed under this act and having routine contact with a resident or |
8-36 |
having access to a resident's belongings or funds shall undergo a national criminal |
8-37 |
records check, which shall include fingerprints submitted to the federal bureau of investigation |
8-38 |
(FBI) by the bureau of criminal identification of the department of the attorney general or a |
8-39 |
designated vendor approved by the department of the attorney general. The national criminal |
8-40 |
records check shall |
8-41 |
|
8-42 |
|
8-43 |
and all persons who, as of such date, already provide services under this chapter, shall be |
8-44 |
exempted from the requirements of this section for purposes of their current employment only. |
8-45 |
      (b) The director of the department of health may by rule identify those positions |
8-46 |
requiring national criminal |
8-47 |
shall apply to the bureau of criminal identification of the |
8-48 |
the attorney general for a |
8-49 |
|
8-50 |
and in accordance with the rule promulgated by the director of health, the bureau of criminal |
8-51 |
identification of the |
8-52 |
the applicant in writing of the nature of the disqualifying information; and, without disclosing the |
8-53 |
nature of the disqualifying information, will notify the employer in writing that disqualifying |
8-54 |
information has been discovered. |
8-55 |
      (c) An employee against whom disqualifying information has been found may |
8-56 |
|
8-57 |
employer. The administrator shall make a judgment regarding the continued employment of the |
8-58 |
employee. |
8-59 |
      (d) In those situations in which no disqualifying information has been found, the bureau |
8-60 |
of criminal identification (BCI) of the |
8-61 |
general shall inform the applicant and the employer in writing of this fact. |
8-62 |
      (e) The employer shall maintain on file, subject to inspection by the department of |
8-63 |
health, evidence that statewide criminal records checks have been initiated on all employees |
8-64 |
seeking employment |
8-65 |
checks. The employer shall maintain on file, subject to inspection by the department of health, |
8-66 |
evidence that national criminal records checks have been initiated on all employees seeking |
8-67 |
employment on or after July 1, 2013, and the results of those checks. Failure to maintain that |
8-68 |
evidence would he grounds to revoke the license or registration of the employer. |
9-1 |
      (f) |
9-2 |
|
9-3 |
|
9-4 |
be responsible for the cost of conducting the national criminal records check through the bureau |
9-5 |
of criminal identification of the department of the attorney general or a vendor designated by the |
9-6 |
department of the attorney general. |
9-7 |
     23-17.4-30. Disqualifying information. -- (a) Information produced by a criminal |
9-8 |
records review pertaining to conviction, for the following crimes will result in a letter to the |
9-9 |
employee and employer disqualifying the applicant from employment: murder, voluntary |
9-10 |
manslaughter, involuntary manslaughter, first degree sexual assault, second degree sexual assault, |
9-11 |
third degree sexual assault, assault on persons sixty (60) years of age or older, assault with intent |
9-12 |
to commit specified felonies (murder, robbery, rape, burglary, or the abominable and detestable |
9-13 |
crime against nature) felony assault, patient abuse, neglect or mistreatment of patients, burglary, |
9-14 |
first degree arson, robbery, felony drug offenses, felony obtaining money under false pretenses, |
9-15 |
felony embezzlement, abuse, neglect and/or exploitation of adults with severe impairments, |
9-16 |
exploitation of elders, felony larceny or felony banking law violations or a crime under section |
9-17 |
1128(a) of the social security act (42 U.S.C. section 1320a-7(a)). An employee against whom |
9-18 |
disqualifying information has been found may |
9-19 |
|
9-20 |
the continued employment of the employee. |
9-21 |
      (b) For purposes of this section, "conviction" means, in addition to judgments of |
9-22 |
conviction entered by a court subsequent to a finding of guilty or a plea of guilty, those instances |
9-23 |
where the defendant has entered a plea of nolo contendere and has received a sentence of |
9-24 |
probation and those instances where a defendant has entered into a deferred sentence agreement |
9-25 |
with the attorney general. |
9-26 |
     SECTION 6. Section 23-17.7.1-17 and 23-17.7.1-20 of the General Laws in Chapter 23- |
9-27 |
17.7.1 entitled "Licensing of Nursing Service Agencies" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
9-28 |
     23-17.7.1-17. Criminal records review. -- (a) Any person seeking employment in a |
9-29 |
facility which is or is required to be licensed or registered with the department of health if that |
9-30 |
employment involves routine contact with a patient or resident without the presence of other |
9-31 |
employees, shall undergo a national criminal |
9-32 |
fingerprints submitted to the federal bureau of investigation (FBI) by the bureau of criminal |
9-33 |
identification of the department of the attorney general or a designated vendor approved by the |
9-34 |
department of the attorney general. The national criminal records check shall be initiated prior to, |
10-1 |
or within one week of, employment. |
10-2 |
|
10-3 |
already employed by a covered facility and all persons who, as of such date, already provide |
10-4 |
services under this chapter shall be exempt from the requirements of this section for purposes of |
10-5 |
their current employment only. |
10-6 |
      (b) The director of the department of health may, by rule, identify those positions |
10-7 |
requiring national criminal |
10-8 |
shall apply to the bureau of criminal identification of the |
10-9 |
the attorney general for a |
10-10 |
|
10-11 |
and in accordance with the rule promulgated by the director of the department of health, the |
10-12 |
bureau of criminal identification of the |
10-13 |
general will inform the applicant, in writing, of the nature of the disqualifying information; and, |
10-14 |
without disclosing the nature of the disqualifying information, will notify the employer, in |
10-15 |
writing, that disqualifying information has been discovered. |
10-16 |
      (c) An employee against whom disqualifying information under section 23-17.7.1-20(b) |
10-17 |
has been found may |
10-18 |
|
10-19 |
employment of the employee. |
10-20 |
      (d) In those situations in which no disqualifying information has been found, the bureau |
10-21 |
of criminal identification of the |
10-22 |
shall inform the applicant and the employer, in writing, of this fact. |
10-23 |
      (e) The employer shall maintain on file, subject to inspection by the department of |
10-24 |
health, evidence that criminal records checks have been initiated on all employees seeking |
10-25 |
employment between October 1, 1991 and June 30, 2013, and the results of the checks. The |
10-26 |
employer shall maintain on file, subject to inspection by the department of health, evidence that |
10-27 |
national criminal records checks have been initiated on all employees seeking employment on or |
10-28 |
after July 1, 2013, and the results of those checks. Failure to maintain that evidence would be |
10-29 |
grounds to revoke the license or registration of the employer. |
10-30 |
      (f) |
10-31 |
|
10-32 |
|
10-33 |
employer shall be responsible for the cost of conducting the national criminal records check |
10-34 |
through the bureau of criminal identification of the department of the attorney general or a vendor |
11-1 |
designated by the department of the attorney general. |
11-2 |
     23-17.7.1-20. Disqualifying information. -- (a) Information produced by a criminal |
11-3 |
records review pertaining to conviction, for the following crimes will result in a letter to the |
11-4 |
employee and employer disqualifying the applicant from the employment: murder, voluntary |
11-5 |
manslaughter, involuntary manslaughter, first degree sexual assault, second degree sexual assault, |
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third degree sexual assault, assault on persons sixty (60) years of age or older, assault with intent |
11-7 |
to commit specified felonies (murder, robbery, rape, burglary, or the abominable and detestable |
11-8 |
crime against nature), felony assault, patient abuse, neglect or mistreatment of patients, first |
11-9 |
degree arson, robbery, felony drug offenses, felony obtaining money under false pretenses, felony |
11-10 |
embezzlement, abuse, neglect, and/or exploitation of adults with severe impairments, exploitation |
11-11 |
of elders, felony larceny, or felony banking law violations or a crime under section 1128(a) of the |
11-12 |
social security act (42 U.S.C. section 1320a-7(a)). |
11-13 |
      (b) Information produced by a national criminal records |
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convictions for crimes other than those listed in subsection (a) of this section shall entitle, but not |
11-15 |
obligate the employer to decline to hire the applicant. An employee against whom conviction |
11-16 |
information related to this subsection has been found may |
11-17 |
national criminal |
11-18 |
determination regarding the continued employment of the employee. |
11-19 |
      (c) For purposes of this section "conviction" means, in addition to judgments of |
11-20 |
conviction entered by a court subsequent to a finding of guilty or a plea of guilty, those instances |
11-21 |
where the defendant has entered a plea of nolo contendere and has received a sentence of |
11-22 |
probation and those instances where a defendant has entered into a deferred sentence agreement |
11-23 |
with the attorney general. |
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     SECTION 7. The act shall take effect on July 1, 2013. |
      | |
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LC02404/SUB A | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO CRIMINAL PROCEDURE - NATIONAL CRIMINAL RECORDS CHECK | |
SYSTEM | |
*** | |
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     This act would expand the type of criminal records check required for persons applying |
12-2 |
to be direct patient access employees in a long-term facility or provider. |
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     This act would take effect on July 1, 2013. |
      | |
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LC02404/SUB A | |
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