Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
(1) Scope of Rule. This rule implements
Section 651.123, F.S., and applies to a
dispute between a resident and a provider except a dispute over increases in
monthly maintenance fees.
(2)
Definitions. The following definitions shall apply for purposes of this rule:
(a) "Administrator" means the entity
designated by contract with the Office to administer mediation conferences
under this rule. If an entity has not been designated, the Office will be the
administrator.
(b) "Approved," as
used in this rule with regard to approval of a mediator, means to designate
based upon successfully meeting the criteria set forth in Section
44.106, F.S., and the Florida
Rules of Certified and Court Appointed Mediators, or Section
627.745(3)(b),
F.S. Only approved mediators may mediate disputes under this rule.
(c) "Complainant" refers to the party
requesting mediation.
(d) "Office"
means the Office of Insurance Regulation.
(e) "Frivolous" means involving no
justiciable question and is readily recognizable as devoid of merit.
(f) "Provider" means the owner or operator
who undertakes to provide continuing care to a resident.
(g) "Resident" means a purchaser of or a
subscriber to a continuing care agreement or their nominee.
(h) "Respondent" refers to the party not
first requesting mediation.
(i)
"Service office" means a designated office of the Bureau of Outreach and
Education, Division of Insurance Consumer Services, Department of Financial
Services.
(3) Computation
of Time. In computing any period of time described by this rule, the day of the
act or event from which the designated period of time begins to run shall not
be included. The last day of the period so computed shall be included, unless
it is a Saturday, a Sunday, or a legal holiday. All time periods specified in
this rule refer to the number of calendar days, not business days, unless
otherwise specified in this rule.
(4) Service Offices. For disposition of
mediation conferences the State of Florida shall be divided among the following
designated service offices:
(a) Daytona Beach
Service Office shall be composed of the following counties: Flagler, Marion,
Putnam, and Volusia.
(b) Fort
Lauderdale Service Office shall be composed of Broward county.
(c) Fort Myers Service Office shall be
composed of the following counties: Charlotte, Collier, De Soto, Glades,
Hendry, Highlands, and Lee.
(d)
Jacksonville Service Office shall be composed of the following counties:
Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Dixie, Duval, Gilchrist, Hamilton,
Lafayette, Levy, Nassau, St. Johns, Suwannee, and Union.
(e) Miami Service Office shall be composed of
Dade and Monroe counties.
(f)
Orlando Service Office shall be composed of the following counties: Brevard,
Citrus, Lake, Orange, Osceola, Seminole, and Sumter.
(g) Pensacola Service Office shall be
composed of the following counties: Bay, Calhoun, Escambia, Gulf, Holmes,
Jackson, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Walton, and Washington.
(h) St. Petersburg Service Office shall be
composed of the following counties: Manatee, Pinellas, and Sarasota.
(i) Tallahassee Bureau of Consumer Assistance
Service Office shall be composed of the following counties: Gadsden, Franklin,
Jefferson, Leon, Liberty, Madison, Taylor, and Wakulla.
(j) Tampa Service Office shall be composed of
the following counties: Hardee, Hernando, Hillsborough, Pasco, and
Polk.
(k) West Palm Beach Service
Office shall be composed of the following counties: Indian River, Martin,
Okeechobee, Palm Beach, and St. Lucie.
(5) Request for Mediation. Upon the Office's
receipt of a complaint that is within the scope of this rule, the Office shall
furnish the provider (or the resident if the provider is the complainant) with
the details of the complaint. The resident and the provider shall have 21 days
from receipt of that notification within which to resolve the matter. For good
cause shown, the Office is authorized to extend this period for up to an
additional 14 days. Good cause in this instance includes unavailability of the
resident for health reasons, inability to contact the resident, or other
impediments to the resident's ability to resolve the matter which the resident
could not control and which cannot reasonably be remedied during the initial 21
day period. If the matter is not resolved within that period of time, the
provider shall immediately notify the Office, in writing, that the matter is
unresolved. A copy of that notification shall be furnished to the resident and
the resident shall be advised of his right to mediate the dispute if he elects
to do so. The cost of mediation shall normally be paid by the provider, except
for second and subsequent mediations which shall be allocated as set forth in
paragraph (9)(b). However, if the provider believes the complaint is frivolous,
the provider may include in its notification that the matter remains
unresolved, a written explanation as to why the provider believes the complaint
is frivolous. That explanation shall be supplied to the resident and the
resident shall be advised that, if he elects to mediate the complaint and the
mediator determines that his complaint is frivolous, the costs of the mediation
shall be charged to him and not to the provider.
(6) Mediators.
(a) Mediator Approval. The Bureau of Agent
& Agency Licensing, Department of Financial Services, shall approve as
mediators those persons who meet the qualifications set forth in Section
44.106, F.S., and the Florida
Rules of Certified and Court Appointed Mediators (5/28/92), which are
incorporated herein by reference, and from those mediators qualified to mediate
under Section 627.745(3)(b),
F.S. Persons wishing to be approved as mediators shall submit their
qualifications to the Bureau of Agent and Agency Licensing, Department of
Financial Services, 200 East Gaines Street, Tallahassee, FL 32399-0319, on Form
DFS-H2-591, "Application for Appointment as a Mediator," which is adopted and
incorporated by reference in subsection 69O-211.002(30), F.A.C.
(b) List of Approved Mediators. The Bureau of
Agent & Agency Licensing, Department of Financial Services, shall maintain
a list of all approved mediators, which list shall include the mediator's name,
address, telephone number, social security number, a listing of counties in
which each mediator is willing to mediate, and date of entry to the
list.
(c) Grouping of Assignments.
Requests for mediation will, if feasible, be grouped together and assigned to a
single mediator. A mediator will be assigned a maximum of four mediation
conferences under a single assignment.
(d) Procedure and Conduct. All mediation
conferences shall be conducted in accordance with this rule, the Florida Rules
for Certified and Court-Appointed Mediators as set forth in Rules
10.020-10.290, Florida Rules of Civil Procedure, as incorporated above, and
other consistent rules of conduct as promulgated by the Supreme Court of
Florida. Mediators shall have the same responsibilities to the Department as
they have to the courts under the Florida Rules for Certified and
Court-Appointed Mediators. The Florida Rules for Certified and Court-Appointed
Mediators shall be read in a manner consistent with this rule and any conflict
between this rule and the Florida Rules for Certified and Court-Appointed
Mediators shall be resolved in favor of this rule. The mediator may meet with
the parties separately, encourage meaningful communications and negotiations,
and otherwise assist the parties to arrive at a settlement. For purposes of
this mediation program, mediators shall have the immunity from suit provided to
mediators in Section 44.107, F.S. All communications
with the mediator shall be confidential. All statements made and documents
produced at a settlement conference constitute settlement negotiations in
anticipation of litigation. The mediation proceedings are confidential and
inadmissible in any subsequent adversarial proceeding.
(e) Complaints; Discipline. At any time a
party may move to disqualify a mediator for good cause. Good cause consists of
conflict of interest between a party and the mediator, that the mediator is
unable to handle the conference competently, or other reasons which would
reasonably be expected to impair the conference. Complaints concerning a
mediator shall be written and submitted to the Bureau of Consumer Assistance,
Department of Financial Services, 200 East Gaines Street, Tallahassee, Florida
32399-0322. The Department shall review the following grounds for discipline:
1. Alleged instances of dishonest,
incompetent, fraudulent, or unethical behavior on the part of a
mediator;
2. Instances in which the
mediator allegedly failed to promptly and completely respond to requests from
the Department and instances in which the actions or failure to act on the part
of the mediator violate this rule including the standards set forth in this
sub-section or are counter to the intent and purpose of this mediation program
or this rule;
3. Administrative
action by any other agency or body against the mediator, regardless of whether
the agency or body's regulation relates to mediation;
4. The mediator has been found guilty of or
pled guilty or nolo contendere to a felony or a crime punishable by
imprisonment of 1 year or more under the law of the United States of America or
of any state thereof or under the law of any other country, without regard to
whether a judgment of conviction has been entered by the court having
jurisdiction of such cases.
If the Department determines that any of the above grounds
exist, the Department shall institute proceedings in accordance with Chapter
120, F.S., to rescind the approval of the mediator to handle any mediation or
arbitration program sponsored by the
Department.
(7) Mediation Conference.
(a) Location. The mediation conference shall
be held at a location reasonably specified by the administrator or mediator in
a letter to the parties prior to the conference. The location of the conference
will be based upon convenience to the parties or a party, or the underlying
circumstances of the particular mediation. The Department will make available
conference rooms at its various service offices throughout the state for
possible use. Before scheduling a mediation conference the administrator or
mediator may contact the service office administrator to determine the
availability of service office facilities to accommodate the mediation
conference. If no facilities are available at the service office for the
particular mediation conference then the service office administrator will
designate an alternative location, if available, for the mediation conference.
If the parties determine that the assigned conference location is inconvenient
or impractical, the parties and the administrator or mediator may agree to
conduct the mediation conference at an alternative location. The administrator
or mediator will notify the parties and the Department of the exact time, date,
and location of the conference.
(b)
Timing and Continuances. The mediation conference shall be held as scheduled by
the administrator or the mediator. Upon application by any party to the
administrator or mediator for a continuance, the administrator or mediator
shall, for good cause shown or if neither party objects, grant a continuance
and shall notify all parties of the date and place of the rescheduled
conference. Good cause includes severe illness, injury, or other emergency
which could not be controlled by the party and cannot reasonably be remedied by
the party prior to the conference by providing a replacement representative or
otherwise. Also, good cause includes the necessity of obtaining additional
information, securing the attendance of a necessary professional, or the
avoidance of significant financial hardship. If the resident demonstrates to
the administrator or mediator, the need for an expedited mediation conference
due to an undue hardship, the conference shall be conducted at the earliest
date convenient to all of the parties and the administrator or mediator. Undue
hardship will be demonstrated when holding the conference on a non-expedited
basis would interfere with or contradict the treatment of a severe illness or
injury, substantially impair a party's ability to assert their position at the
conference, result in significant financial hardship, or other reasonably
justified grounds.
(c) Attendance.
The complainant and respondent shall attend the mediation conference and be
fully authorized to make an agreement to completely resolve the claim. All
corporate parties who are complainants or respondents shall attend the
conference in the person of a corporate representative who has full knowledge
of the facts of the dispute and is fully authorized to make an agreement to
completely resolve the dispute.
(d)
Good Faith Negotiation. The participants are to negotiate in good faith to
attempt to resolve the dispute, however there is no requirement that the
dispute must be resolved in mediation.
(8) Disbursement of Costs.
(a) Before the date set for the conference
the provider or the resident as described in paragraph (9)(b), shall pay to the
administrator the costs of mediation which shall not exceed $250, $50 of which
shall be deposited in the Chief Financial Officer's Regulatory Trust Fund to
defer Department costs. The mediator's fee shall be affected as follows:
1. Completed Mediation Conference. If the
mediation conference is held, the mediator shall receive the mediator's full
fee.
2. Cancellation More Than 3
Days Before Conference. If a mediation conference is cancelled by a party for
reason of settlement or for any other reason more than 3 business days before
the scheduled conference date, the parties shall notify the administrator and
the mediator upon cancellation. In this case the parties shall not be
responsible for the mediator's fee, and the provider shall pay the mediator's
and the administrator's fee for any rescheduled conference to resolve the
dispute.
3. Cancellation Within 3
Days of Conference. If the parties cancel the mediation within 3 days of the
scheduled mediation conference, the provider shall pay $50 to compensate the
mediator.
4. Cancellation Due To
Absence. Failure of a party to arrive at the mediation conference within 30
minutes of the conference's starting time shall be considered an absence. In
the event of an absence, the provider shall pay $50 to compensate the mediator.
Payment shall be as follows:
a. If the
resident fails to appear at the conference, the resident shall pay the
provider's actual cash outlays incurred in attending the conference and the
conference shall be rescheduled upon the resident's payment of the mediator's
and the administrator's fee for the rescheduled conference.
b. If the provider fails to appear at the
conference, the provider shall pay the resident's actual cash outlays incurred
in attending the conference and shall pay the mediator's and the
administrator's fee for the rescheduled conference. If a provider fails to
appear at conferences with such frequency as to evidence a general business
practice of failure to appear, the provider shall be subject to penalty,
including revocation, suspension, or fine. Such suspension of a provider's
certificate of authority shall be for a period of 1 year. An administrative
fine shall be in the amount of $1,000 per violation in cases of non-willfull
violation, and $10,000 per violation in cases of a knowing and willful
violation. The department will mitigate these penalties based upon the
following factors: Solvency of the facility, best interests of or potential
harm to the residents, and willfulness of the
violation.
(b)
Any disputes regarding the amount of disbursement of funds shall be resolved by
the Department.
(c) Except as
provided in subparagraph (8)(a)4., any expenses associated with the mediation
conference, such as travel, telephone, postage, meals, lodging, facilities, and
other related expenses, shall be borne by the party, mediator or other person
incurring the expense.
(d) The
Department reserves the right to reduce fees based on consumer surveys and cost
analysis.
(9)
Post-Mediation.
(a) At the conclusion of the
mediation conference, the mediator will file with the administrator a
mediator's status report indicating whether or not the parties reached a
settlement. In the event a settlement is financial, the resident shall have 3
business days from the time he receives any final settlement check or draft to
rescind the settlement provided that the resident has not negotiated any check
or draft disbursed to him or her for the disputed matters as a result of the
conference. If a settlement agreement is reached and not rescinded within 3
business days as set forth above, it shall act as a final determination of the
specific issues that were presented at the conference. If the provider included
in its notice that the matter remained unresolved due to a charge that the
complaint was frivolous and an explanation supporting that charge, the mediator
shall include in his status report a determination as to whether or not that is
the case. If so, the costs of the mediation shall be paid by the complainant.
If not, the costs of the mediation shall be paid by the provider unless it is a
second or subsequent mediation, in which case the costs shall be allocated as
set forth in paragraph (9)(b).
(b)
If a resident elects more than one mediation hereunder in any 12 month period,
the cost of the second and all subsequent mediations in that 12 month period
shall be borne by the resident. If a resident elects more than three mediations
hereunder in any time period, the cost of the fourth and all subsequent
mediations shall be borne equally by the resident and the provider. When this
reallocation of the costs of mediation applies to a second or subsequent
complaint from a resident, the provider may waive said reallocation of costs
and choose to pay the costs of mediation itself. If the provider chooses not to
waive that reallocation of costs, the provider shall include in its
notification to the administrator that the matter remains unresolved, a list of
the resident's previous mediations hereunder, and a statement that the cost of
this mediation and subsequent mediations if applicable, is to be paid, in whole
or in part as the case may be, by the resident. A copy thereof shall be
furnished to the complaining resident prior to or along with the notice to the
resident of his right to elect mediation. Failure to timely provide said copy
to the complaining resident shall be deemed a waiver by the provider of said
reallocation of costs and a decision to pay the costs of mediation
itself.
(10) Arbitration.
Any portion of a dispute which qualifies for mediation under this rule and is
not settled through mediation may be submitted by a party to binding
arbitration under Rule
69O-193.063, F.A.C., if all
parties agree in advance to be bound by the arbitrated
result.
Rulemaking Authority 624.308(1), 651.015(3) FS. Law
Implemented 624.307(1), 651.106, 651.107, 651.108, 651.123
FS.
New 7-7-94, Formerly
4-193.062.