Hurtado Introduces Legislation to Expand Residential Care Options for Low-Income Seniors

SACRAMENTO, CA – Senator Melissa Hurtado (D-Sanger) today introduced legislation to expand housing options for seniors and Californians who cannot live independently by allowing residential care facilities to use the In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) program to partially staff facilities that serve low-income elderly or disabled residents.

 

“California’s seniors and those living with disabilities have a right to live with dignity with quality housing and comprehensive care,” said Senator Hurtado. “Senate Bill 648 combines two successful programs in an innovative way in order to support the care of Californians who cannot live independently.”

 

In January, Senator Hurtado, the Chairperson of the Senate Human Services Committee, joined with Mark Ghaly, Secretary of the California Health and Human Services Agency, and Kim McCoy Wade, Director of the California Department of Aging, to unveil California’s first-ever Master Plan for Aging, a comprehensive framework that will prepare the state for significant demographic changes in the years ahead. Among the goals of the Plan is to provide more housing options of seniors.

 

SB 648 allows licensed Adult Residential Facilities (ARFs) and Residential Facilities for the Elderly (RCFEs) where more than 75 percent of residents receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and the California State Supplementary Payment (SSP) to utilize the IHSS program. IHSS would provide up to 60 hours of caregiving assistance per week. Recipient facilities will be required to reinvest their salary savings in facility maintenance, programming for residents or enhancing their staffing.

 

More than 200,000 Californians living in an ARF or RCFE depend on these facilities to provide 24-hour care and assistance for essential daily activities such as bathing, eating and transportation to medical appointments. Due to low reimbursement rates, many facilities are unwilling to take residents who receive SSI/SSP, potentially leaving some of the most vulnerable seniors without housing and care. In the past year, the capacity of SSI/SSP recipients to reside in ARFs and RCFEs has declined by about 2,000 and the number of low-income individuals who reside at ARFs and RCFEs has declined almost by 1,000. 

Media Contact: Jim.Evans@sen.ca.gov

 

About Senator Melissa Hurtado

Senator Melissa Hurtado represents a new generation of Latina leaders as the youngest woman ever elected to the California State Senate and a product of immigrant parents. Senator Hurtado represents the 14th Senate District and focuses on rural community issues that often go unheard — access to clean air and water, food insecurity and poverty, inequities in environmental policies, agriculture and access to health care. In July 2020, she was appointed to the national Biden Latino Leadership Committee alongside former Labor Secretary and current Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda Solis – the only two California Latinas on the Committee.

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