[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 153 (Tuesday, October 20, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H6983-H6984]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NURSING HOME ACCOUNTABILITY ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Walker) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WALKER. Mr. Speaker, we have a problem in making sure that all of
our senior adult population is treated with the utmost respect and
proper care.
HUD's Section 232 Program was intended to provide Federal loan
insurance for loans covering the needs of
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nursing homes and other elder-care facilities. However, while HUD
requires these applicants to submit their latest quality ratings, which
is a one-star to five-star rating from the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, or CMS, the quality rating is not a deciding factor.
This has allowed nursing homes that provide routinely poor care to
receive repeated taxpayer insurance loans. Among others, this is seen
in the rise in the number and volume of one-star facilities that
received HUD insurance each year from 2009 to 2012 but, also, in
reports over two decades from GAO's and HUD's inspectors general.
Clearly, HUD's steps haven't gone far enough to provide real reform
to ensure that taxpayer dollars do not go to nursing homes that
consistently provide poor care to our seniors and to our needy. We must
ensure that taxpayer support is going to nursing homes that provide
quality care for their residents, not to facilities that provide
continually deficient care.
By linking CMS' quality ratings to loan eligibility, the Nursing Home
Accountability Act ensures that new federally backed loans go to
nursing homes with a demonstrated commitment to quality care for their
residents.
Bottom line, what my bill states is this:
Under CMS' Five-Star Quality Rating System, if a nursing home
receives a rating of two stars or less for 30 consecutive months, the
nursing home will then be ineligible for any future section 232 loans.
After a nursing home becomes ineligible for future section 232 loans
under this Act, it can become eligible once more for future loans if
the facility maintains a rating of three stars or more for 30 months.
Regarding ratings, all nursing homes receive a blank slate when this
law is enacted, and HUD is allowed to continue to service previously
issued loans under this law.
I would also like to say thanks to our local FOX affiliate for
researching the gross mismanagement of Federal funds and bringing a
greater awareness of this important matter.
Overall, I look forward to opening the national conversation of how
we can better focus this program on the quality of care provided to our
seniors and to the needy.
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