Assigned to HHS                                                                                                                     FOR COMMITTEE

 


 

 

 


ARIZONA STATE SENATE

Fifty-Fifth Legislature, Second Regular Session

 

FACT SHEET FOR h.b. 2609

 

ambulance services; service areas

Purpose

Modifies application and issuance procedures for certificates of necessity (CON) for ambulance services.

Background

The Department of Health Services (DHS) issues CONs to applicants who operate ambulance services if: 1) the ambulance service has at least one ambulance registered by DHS;
2) public necessity requires the service or any part of the proposed service; 3) the applicant is fit and proper to provide the service; and 4) the appropriate fees and bonds have been paid and filed. A CON includes a description of the ambulance service area, level and type of service, hours of operation, effective and expiration date and the legal name and address of the ambulance service. DHS prescribes rules for the operation of ambulance services that include requirements for issuing, amending, transferring, suspending or revoking a CON (A.R.S. §§ 36-2201; 36-2232; and
36-2233).

The Director of DHS (Director) is required to hold a public hearing on any proposed action related to rates, fares, charges, operating or response times, bases of operation or CONs. The Director is required to mail a notice of the hearing to every ambulance service in the affected area no more than 15 days before the hearing. Other persons determined to be interested in the hearing may also be mailed a notice (A.R.S. § 36-2234).

There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this legislation.

Provisions

1.   Requires DHS ambulance services rules to:

a)   ensure evidence-based quality patient care is the priority for decision-making; and

b)   review response times with the ambulance service and update the response times every six years based on, at a minimum, population density, geographic and medical considerations, and the financial impact on rates and charges.

2.   Allows a city, town, fire district or fire authority whose jurisdictional boundaries are within the service area of a CON to request one additional review each six-year period.

3.   Requires ambulance response times to begin tolling when the public safety answering point contacts an ambulance service for dispatch and to conclude when the ambulance service arrives at the dispatched location.

4.   Requires ambulance arrival times to be documented by the ambulance service using dispatch or global positioning system (GPS) data, or a combination of both, and kept on file.

5.   Requires response time data that is compliant with the Health Information Portability and Accountability Act to be filed with DHS.

6.   Directs DHS to make response time data publicly available on its website.

7.   Removes the requirement that DHS ambulance rules include a requirement that DHS regulate ambulance services in all matters affecting services to the public.

8.   Requires ambulance services to install and maintain GPS monitoring devices in each vehicle used for transport to record arrival times.

9.   Allows DHS to provide a waiver to the GPS device requirement to an ambulance service that is unable to meet the requirements.

10.  Directs ambulance services to maintain response records for three years and to provide records to DHS on request.

11.  Requires the Director, within 180 days of receipt of a CON application, to determine whether the CON is necessary and whether the applicant meets all requirements, excluding time given to the applicant to provide additional information.

12.  Stipulates that if the Director requests additional information after initial application review, the applicant is granted 30 business days to respond.

13.  Allows the Director, on request, to grant an additional 30 business days to an applicant that is requested to provide additional information.

14.  Removes the requirement that the Director issue a CON if an ambulance service has an existing CON issued for at least one ambulance.

15.  Removes the requirement that the Director require a public hearing on any proposed action related to rates, fares, operating or response times, bases of operation or CONs unless outlined exceptions apply.

16.  Allows any CON holder whose ambulance service area, in whole or in part, is within the affected service area of a new ambulance service to appeal the Director's determination within 30 days of the decision.

17.  Requires the Director, if an appeal is made, to require a public hearing to be held within 120 days of noticing the hearing.

18.  Specifies that the Director's decision to issue a new CON stands if no appeals are filed.

19.  Specifies that a municipality, fire district or fire authority whose jurisdictional boundaries intersect with the service area of a CON or licensed hospital is considered to be an interested party as a matter of law for purposes of CON appeals hearings.

20.  Requires all interested parties to be notified of any applications for a new or expanded CON within 15 days of each of the following:

a)   filing an application;

b)   completing the application; and

c)   decision by the Director.

21.  Reduces the maximum allowable length of a CON hearing from 10 days to 5 consecutive business days.

22.  Allows an administrative law judge to add up to five additional consecutive business days for a CON hearing, which must be calendared within 30 days of the end of the initial hearing.

23.  Specifies that the service area of a CON issued to a municipality, fire district, fire authority or other political subdivision is all of the geographic area within the boundaries of the jurisdiction, unless the CON includes an additional service area outside of the entity's jurisdictional boundaries.

24.  Stipulates that the boundaries of a CON are adjusted accordingly if a CON-issued municipality, fire district, fire authority or other political subdivision modifies its jurisdictional boundaries.

25.  Requires DHS, if the population of a service area changes, to conduct a review to determine whether adjustments must be made to the response times in the area, taking into consideration the impact on rates and charges.

26.  Allows the Director to extend the length of a temporary authority for ambulance services for one additional 90-day period.

27.  Requires an applicant for temporary authority of ambulance services to demonstrate that the provided services will be in appropriately equipped vehicles designed for patient transport and staffed with appropriately certified personnel for patient care.

28.  Exempts DHS from statutory rulemaking requirements for one year for purposes of modifying ambulance service rules.

29.  Makes technical and conforming changes.

30.  Becomes effective on the general effective date.

House Action

MAPS             2/14/22      DP     12-1-1-1

3rd Read          3/2/22                   56-0-3

Prepared by Senate Research

March 21, 2022

MM/sr