SP0495
LD 1548
PUBLIC Law, Chapter 186

Signed on 2011-06-01 00:00:00.0 - First Regular Session - 125th Maine Legislature
 
 
Bill Tracking, Additional Documents Chamber Status

An Act To Update and Improve Maine's Laws Pertaining to the Rights of Persons with Intellectual Disabilities

Be it enacted by the People of the State of Maine as follows:

PART A

Sec. A-1. 22 MRSA §8101, sub-§4, ¶E,  as amended by PL 2007, c. 324, §13, is further amended to read:

E. A residential facility under Title 34-B, sections section 1431 and 5601.

Sec. A-2. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§1-B  is enacted to read:

1-B Behavior management.   "Behavior management" means systematic strategies to prevent the occurrence of challenging behavior or to keep the person or others safe by reducing the factors that lead to challenging behavior or otherwise limiting the person's ability to engage in challenging behavior.

Sec. A-3. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§1-C  is enacted to read:

1-C Behavior modification.   "Behavior modification" means teaching strategies, positive support and other interventions to support a person to learn alternatives to challenging behavior.

Sec. A-4. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§2,  as enacted by PL 1983, c. 459, §7 and amended by PL 2003, c. 689, Pt. B, §6, is repealed.

Sec. A-5. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§5-A,  as enacted by PL 1993, c. 326, §4, is amended to read:

5-A. Person receiving services.   "Person receiving services" means a person with mental retardation or autism receiving services from the bureau department or from an agency or facility licensed or funded to provide services to persons with mental retardation or autism except those presently serving sentences for crime.

Sec. A-6. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§5-B  is enacted to read:

5-B Provider.   "Provider" means an entity, organization or individual providing services to an adult with mental retardation or autism, funded in whole or in part or licensed or certified by the department.

Sec. A-7. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§6,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §5 and PL 2003, c. 689, Pt. B, §6, is repealed.

Sec. A-8. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§6-A  is enacted to read:

6-A Restraint.   "Restraint" means a mechanism or action that limits or controls a person's voluntary movement, deprives a person of the use of all or part of the person's body or maintains a person in an area against the person's will by another person's physical presence or coercion. "Restraint" does not include a prescribed therapeutic device or intervention or a safety device or practice.

Sec. A-9. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§6-B  is enacted to read:

6-B Safety device or practice.   "Safety device or practice" means a device or practice that has the effect of reducing or inhibiting a person's movement in any way but whose purpose is to maintain or ensure the safety of the person. "Safety device or practice" includes but is not limited to implements, garments, gates, barriers, locks or locking apparatuses, alarms, helmets, masks, gloves, straps, belts or protective gloves whose purpose is to maintain the safety of the person.

Sec. A-10. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§7,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §5, is further amended to read:

7. Seclusion.   "Seclusion" means the solitary placement , involuntary confinement for any period of time of a person receiving services in a locked room for any period of time or specific area from which egress is denied by a locking mechanism or barrier.

Sec. A-11. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§7-A,  as enacted by PL 1993, c. 326, §6, is amended to read:

7-A. Supports.   "Supports" are those means actions or that assistance that permits empowers a person with mental retardation or autism to carry out life activities as the person desires , build relationships and learn the skills necessary to meet the person's needs and desires.

Sec. A-12. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§7-B  is enacted to read:

7-B Therapeutic device or intervention.   "Therapeutic device or intervention" means an apparatus or activity prescribed by a qualified professional to achieve proper body position, balance or alignment or an action or apparatus that is designed to enhance sensory integration.

Sec. A-13. 34-B MRSA §5601, sub-§8,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §7, is further amended to read:

8. Treatment.   "Treatment" means the prevention , or amelioration or cure of physical and mental disabilities or illness of a person receiving services or any actions or services designed to assist the person to maximize the person's independence and potential.

Sec. A-14. 34-B MRSA §5603,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §8, is further amended to read:

§ 5603. Entitlement

Each person with mental retardation or autism is entitled to the rights enjoyed by citizens of the State and of the United States, unless some of these rights have been limited or suspended as the result of court guardianship proceedings by a court of competent jurisdiction.

1 Person committed to the commissioner.   The rights and basic protections set out in section 5605 of a person with mental retardation or autism who is committed to the commissioner as not criminally responsible pursuant to Title 15, section 103 or as incompetent to stand trial pursuant to Title 15, section 101-D may be limited or suspended only if the commissioner submits to the applicable court a written treatment plan that specifies each limitation of a right or basic protection and the treatment plan has been approved by the court.

Sec. A-15. 34-B MRSA §5604, sub-§2,  as amended by PL 2007, c. 356, §23 and affected by §31, is further amended to read:

2. Independence and productivity.   Providing habilitation, education and other training to persons with mental retardation or autism that will maximize their each person's potential to lead an independent and productive lives life and that will afford opportunities for outward mobility from institutions full inclusion into the community where each person lives; and

Sec. A-16. 34-B MRSA §5604, sub-§4,  as enacted by PL 2007, c. 356, §23 and affected by §31, is repealed.

Sec. A-17. 34-B MRSA §5604,  as corrected by RR 2009, c. 1, §23, is amended by adding at the end 2 new paragraphs to read:

The rights and basic protections of a person with mental retardation or autism under section 5605 may not be restricted or waived by that person's guardian, except as permitted by rules adopted pursuant to this section.

The department has authority to adopt rules to implement this section. Rules adopted pursuant to this paragraph are routine technical rules as defined in Title 5, chapter 375, subchapter 2-A.

Sec. A-18. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§3,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §9, is further amended to read:

3. Communications.   A person with mental retardation or autism is entitled to private communications.
A. A person with mental retardation or autism is entitled to receive, send and mail sealed, unopened correspondence. A person who owns or is employed by a day facility or a residential facility is a provider may not delay, hold or censor any incoming or outgoing correspondence of any person with mental retardation or autism, nor may any such correspondence be opened without the consent of the person or the person's legal guardian.
B. A person with mental retardation or autism in a residential facility is entitled to reasonable opportunities for telephone and Internet communication.
C. A person with mental retardation or autism is entitled to an unrestricted right to visitations during reasonable hours , except that nothing in this provision may be construed to permit infringement upon others' rights to privacy unless this right has been restricted pursuant to rules adopted pursuant to section 5604.

Sec. A-19. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§5,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §9, is further amended to read:

5. Vote.   A person with mental retardation or autism may not be denied the right to vote for reasons of mental illness, as provided in the Constitution of Maine, Article II, Section 1, unless under guardianship.

Sec. A-20. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§6,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §9, is further amended to read:

6. Personal property.   A person with mental retardation or autism is entitled to the possession and use of that person's own clothing, personal effects and money, except that, when temporary custody of clothing or personal effects by a provider is necessary to protect the person or others from imminent injury , the chief administrator of a day facility or a residential facility may take temporary custody of clothing or personal effects, which the administrator shall immediately return when the emergency ends or unless this right has been restricted pursuant to rules adopted pursuant to section 5604.

Sec. A-21. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§7,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §9, is further amended to read:

7. Nutrition.   A person with mental retardation or autism in a residential facility is entitled to nutritious food in adequate quantities and meals may not be withheld for disciplinary reasons.

Sec. A-22. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§8, ¶C,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §9, is further amended to read:

C. Daily notation of medication received by each person with mental retardation or autism in a residential facility must be kept in the records of the person with mental retardation or autism.

Sec. A-23. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§8, ¶D,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §9, is further amended to read:

D.  Periodically, but no less frequently than every 6 months, the drug regimen of each person with mental retardation or autism in a residential facility must be reviewed by the attending a physician or other appropriate monitoring body, consistent with appropriate standards of medical practice.

Sec. A-24. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§8, ¶F,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §9, is repealed.

Sec. A-25. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§10,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §9, is further amended to read:

10. Social activity.   A person with mental retardation or autism is entitled to suitable opportunities for behavioral and leisure time activities that include social interaction in the community, as set out in section 5610. This right may be waived or restricted only under the rules adopted pursuant to section 5604 or pursuant to a treatment plan approved pursuant to section 5603, subsection 1.

Sec. A-26. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§12,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §9, is further amended to read:

12. Discipline.   Discipline of persons with mental retardation or autism is governed as follows.
A The chief administrative officer of each facility shall prepare a written statement of policies and procedures for the control and discipline of persons receiving services that is directed to the goal of maximizing the growth and development of persons receiving services.

(1) Persons receiving services are entitled to participate, as appropriate, in the formulation of the policies and procedures.

(2) Copies of the statement of policies and procedures must be given to each person receiving services and, if the person has been adjudged incompetent, to that person's parent or legal guardian.

(3) Copies of the statement of policies and procedures must be posted in each residential and day facility.

B. Corporal punishment or any form of inhumane discipline is not permitted.
C. Seclusion as a form of discipline is not permitted.
E A provider of residential services may establish house rules in a residential unit owned or operated by the provider. A person receiving services who resides in the unit is entitled to participate, as appropriate, in the formulation of the house rules. A house rule must be uniformly applied to all residents of the residential unit where the rules apply. A copy of the house rules must be posted in a residential unit where the rules apply and a copy of the rules must be given to all residents who receive services and, if any resident is under guardianship, to the guardian of the person receiving services.

Sec. A-27. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§13,  as amended by PL 2007, c. 356, §25 and affected by c. 695, Pt. D, §3, is further amended to read:

13. Behavioral support, modification and management.   Behavioral treatment Behavior modification and behavior management of and supports for a person with mental retardation or autism is are governed as follows.
A. A person with mental retardation or autism may not be subjected to a treatment behavior modification or behavior management program to eliminate dangerous or maladaptive behavior without first being examined assessed by a physician to rule out the possibility that the behavior is organically caused determine if the proposed program is medically contraindicated and that the dangerous or maladaptive behavior could not be better treated medically.
A-1.  Behavioral treatment Support programs may contain both behavior modification and behavior management components. Behavior modification components consist of interventions designed to assist a person with mental retardation or autism to learn to replace dangerous or maladaptive behavior with safer and more adaptive behavior. Behavior management components consist of systematic strategies to prevent the occurrence of dangerous or maladaptive behaviors by minimizing or eliminating environmental or other factors that cause those behaviors.
A-2 The following practices are prohibited as elements of behavior modification or behavior management programs:

(1) Seclusion;

(2) Corporal punishment;

(3) Actions or language intended to humble, dehumanize or degrade the person;

(4) Restraints that do not conform to rules adopted pursuant to this section;

(5) Totally enclosed cribs or beds; and

(6) Painful stimuli.

B.  Treatment Behavior modification and behavior management programs involving the use of noxious or painful stimuli or other aversive or severely intrusive techniques, as defined in department rules, may be used only to correct behavior more harmful than the treatment program to the person with mental retardation or autism than the program and only:

(1) On the recommendation of a physician, psychiatrist or psychologist the person's personal planning team;

(2) For an adult 18 years of age or older, with the approval, following a case-by-case review, of a review team composed of an advocate from the Office of Advocacy; a representative of designated by the Office of Adults with Cognitive and Physical Disabilities Disability Services; and a representative of designated by the Maine Developmental Services Oversight and Advisory Board; and

(3) For a child under 18 years of age, with the approval, following a case-by-case review, of a review team composed of an advocate from the Office of Advocacy, a team leader of the department's children's services division and the children's services medical director or the director's designee. Until rules are adopted by the department to govern behavioral treatment reviews for children, the team may not approve techniques any more aversive or intrusive than are permitted in rules adopted by the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services regarding treatment of children and youth in nonmedical community-based facilities funded under the Medicaid program.

The department may adopt rules as necessary to implement this paragraph. Rules adopted pursuant to this paragraph are routine technical rules as defined in Title 5, chapter 375, subchapter 2-A.

C Notwithstanding paragraph B, for a child under 18 years of age, treatment programs involving the use of seclusion or any noxious or painful stimuli, as defined in department rules, may not be approved.

Sec. A-28. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§14-A,  as enacted by PL 2007, c. 573, §2, is amended to read:

14-A. Restraints.  A person with mental retardation or autism is entitled to be free from a physical restraint unless:
A. The physical restraint is a short-term step to protect the person from imminent injury to that person or others; or
B. The physical restraint has been approved as a behavioral treatment behavior management program in accordance with this section.

A physical restraint may not be used as punishment, for the convenience of the staff or as a substitute for habilitative services. A physical restraint may impose only the least possible restriction consistent with its purpose and must be removed as soon as the threat of imminent injury ends. A physical restraint may not cause physical injury to the person receiving services and must be designed to allow the greatest possible comfort and safety. The use of totally enclosed cribs and barred enclosures is prohibited in all circumstances.

Daily records of the use of physical restraints identified in paragraph A must be kept, which may be accomplished by meeting reportable event requirements.

Daily records of the use of physical restraints identified in paragraph B must be kept, and a summary of the daily records pertaining to the person must be made available for review by the person's planning team, as defined in section 5461, subsection 8-C, on a schedule determined by the team. The review by the personal planning team may occur no less frequently than quarterly. The summary of the daily records must state the type of physical restraint used, the duration of the use and the reasons for the use. A monthly summary of all daily records pertaining to all persons must be relayed to the Office of Advocacy.

Sec. A-29. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§14-B,  as enacted by PL 2007, c. 573, §3, is repealed.

Sec. A-30. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§14-C,  as enacted by PL 2007, c. 573, §4, is repealed.

Sec. A-31. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§15, ¶B,  as amended by PL 1987, c. 769, Pt. A, §129, is further amended to read:

B. The commissioner is entitled to have access to the records of a day facility or a residential facility provider if necessary to carry out the statutory functions of the commissioner's office.

Sec. A-32. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§16  is enacted to read:

16 Therapeutic devices or interventions.   Therapeutic devices or interventions must be prescriptively designed by a qualified professional and applied with concern for principles of good body alignment and circulation and allowance for change of position. The department may adopt rules concerning the use of therapeutic devices or interventions. Rules adopted pursuant to this subsection are routine technical rules as defined in Title 5, chapter 375, subchapter 2-A.

Sec. A-33. 34-B MRSA §5605, sub-§17  is enacted to read:

17 Safety devices and practices.   A safety device or practice must be prescribed by a physician. A safety device must be designed and applied with concern for principles of good body alignment and circulation and allowance for change of position. The department may adopt rules concerning the use and approval of safety devices or practices. Rules adopted pursuant to this subsection are routine technical rules as defined in Title 5, chapter 375, subchapter 2-A.

Sec. A-34. 34-B MRSA §5605,  as amended by PL 2009, c. 100, §1, is further amended by adding at the end a new paragraph to read:

The department may adopt rules as necessary to implement this section. Rules adopted pursuant to this paragraph are routine technical rules as defined in Title 5, chapter 375, subchapter 2-A.

Sec. A-35. 34-B MRSA §5607, sub-§2,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §11, is further amended to read:

2. Posting requirement.   A copy of this subchapter must be posted in by each residential and day facility provider.

Sec. A-36. 34-B MRSA §5608,  as amended by PL 1993, c. 326, §12 and c. 410, Pt. CCC, §42, is further amended to read:

§ 5608. Residential council

Upon request of a person receiving services, the chief administrative officer of a residential facility provider shall initiate and develop offer an opportunity to a person receiving services from the provider to organize a program of government residential council to hear the views and represent the interests of all persons receiving services at from the facility provider.

1. Composition.   The government residential council of the persons receiving services must be composed of residents elected by other residents and staff advisors skilled in the administration of community organizations. The residential council may include allies elected by the residents.
2. Duties.   The government of the persons receiving services residential council shall work closely with the division Office of Adults with Cognitive and Physical Disability Services and the Office of Advocacy to promote the interests and welfare of all residents in the facility persons receiving services from the provider.

PART B

Sec. B-1. Develop recommendations for changes in statutory language. The Department of Health and Human Services and the Maine Developmental Disabilities Council, with the assistance of the Revisor of Statutes, shall review the Maine Revised Statutes to identify those sections that use the term "mental retardation" or the term "mentally retarded" and develop recommendations for removal of the terms or substitutions of language that reflect the recommendations of the respectful language working group in the report submitted by the Maine Developmental Disabilities Council to the Joint Standing Committee on Health and Human Services pursuant to Resolve 2007, chapter 62. The department and the council shall invite the participation of the Disability Rights Center in the development of those recommendations.

Sec. B-2. Report and recommendations. By December 7, 2011, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Maine Developmental Disabilities Council shall submit a report, including proposed legislation, to the Joint Standing Committee on Health and Human Services regarding recommended changes for the Maine Revised Statutes.

Sec. B-3. Authority for legislation. After receipt and review of the recommendations submitted pursuant to section 2, the Joint Standing Committee on Health and Human Services may submit legislation to the Second Regular Session of the 125th Legislature to implement the recommendations.

Effective 90 days following adjournment of the 125th Legislature, First Regular Session, unless otherwise indicated.


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