Code of Maine Rules
10 - DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
144 - DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES - GENERAL
Chapter 128 - RULES GOVERNING THE MAINE REGISTRY OF CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANTS
Section 144-128-4 - Complaint Investigations, Substantiated Findings, Petitions, and Appeals
Universal Citation: 10 ME Code Rules ยง 144-128-4
Current through 2024-38, September 18, 2024
A. Complaint Investigations, Substantiated Findings and Appeals for C.N.A.s and D.C.W.s
1.
Complaint investigation. The
Department may investigate complaints and allegations against certified nursing
assistants or registered direct care workers of abuse, neglect, exploitation or
misappropriation of property of a client, patient or resident. These
investigations may not duplicate similar investigations the Department
initiates under separate regulations.
2.
Decision. After an
investigation, the Department shall issue a written decision that the
allegation of abuse, neglect, exploitation or misappropriation of property of a
client, patient or resident is unsubstantiated or substantiated. Each
allegation of abuse, neglect or misappropriation of property must be considered
separately. The written decision must include at least the following
information:
a. Whether the allegation is
unsubstantiated or substantiated;
b. A description of the factors supporting a
substantial finding;
c. If an
annotation of a substantiated finding is entered on the Registry;
d. A description of the employment
prohibition, if any;
e. Notice of
the right to appeal the Department's decision;
f. That if they do not request a hearing
within 30 days, they will be annotated in the Registry and will be barred from
working as a C.N.A. or D.C.W.; and
g. That appeals should be sent to the
Division of Licensing and Certification, Maine Department of Health and Human
Services.
3.
Right
to hearing, Appeal
a. If the
individual requests a hearing, that hearing will be held in accordance with
10-144 C.M.R. Ch. 1, Administrative Hearings Regulations. The
issue at hearing shall be whether the Department was correct in deciding that
the individual abused, neglected or misappropriated the property of a patient,
client, or resident.
b. If the
final decision after hearing is that the finding is substantiated, the
substantiation will be annotated in the Registry, unless the individual appeals
the decision to Superior Court. If the finding is appealed, the substantiation
will not be annotated unless the final result of the court appeal is in the
Department's favor.
B. C.N.A. petitions
1.
Petition for reinstatement.
After removal from the active Registry list for fraudulent or deceitful
application or renewal, a C.N.A. may petition the Department for reinstatement
no sooner than 12 months after the removal date was documented on the Registry.
The Department will deny the petition if removal from the Registry was based on
more than one application or renewal that resulted in findings of
misrepresentation, deceit, or fraud while on the Registry or while pending
before the Registry. Reinstatement is subject to the following:
a. The removal was based on only one
application or renewal that resulted in a finding of misrepresentation, deceit
or fraud; and
b. The reinstatement
petition includes a new, updated application for placement on the
Registry.
2.
Petition for removal of an annotation of a substantiated finding of
neglect under certain circumstances. A C.N.A. may petition the
Department to remove an annotation of neglect no sooner than 12 months after
the date the neglect finding was documented on the Registry, in accordance with
42 U.S.C. §§
1395i-3 and
1396r. Substantiated findings of
abuse or the misappropriation of property of a patient, client or resident may
not be petitioned, in accordance with
22
MRS §1812-G(13).
Removal of the annotation of neglect is subject to the following:
a. The annotation of neglect was a one-time
occurrence and the employment and personal history of the C.N.A. does not
reflect a pattern of abusive behavior or neglect; and
b. The C.N.A. submits a department-approved
petition form to the Department that includes a short, clear statement by the
C.N.A. that contains the reasons why the C.N.A. is eligible to have the neglect
finding removed from the Registry. The Department will then forward those
petitions to the licensing or investigative entity that reported the finding to
the Department, so that the licensing or investigative agency may review and
approve or deny the petition.
3.
Petition for removal of an
employment ban; criminal conviction. A C.N.A. may petition the
Department for early removal of an employment ban in accordance with
22
MRS §1812-G(6)(D).
a. Prior to the expiration of an employment
ban under Section 3(A), an individual may petition the department for removal
of an employment ban that is based on a disqualifying criminal conviction.
Unless otherwise prohibited, removal of the employment ban allows the
individual to work as a certified nursing assistant or a direct care
worker.
b. No sooner than 5 years
after an individual is discharged from the legal restraints imposed by the
criminal conviction, an individual may petition the department for removal of a
10-year employment ban.
c. No
sooner than 15 years after an individual is discharged from the legal
restraints imposed by the criminal conviction, an individual may petition the
department for removal of a 30-year employment ban.
d. The Department will assess factors
including, but not limited to, the risk of reoffending and the conduct of the
petitioner since the conviction in the determination to approve or deny the
petition.
e. A petition for removal
of an employment ban submitted by a certified nursing assistant or a registered
direct care worker must be denied if the conduct that led to the conviction
would have resulted in a lifetime ban, if that conduct had been investigated as
a complaint that resulted in a substantiated finding.
f. When the Department grants a petition for
removal of an employment ban, the individual, unless otherwise prohibited, may
work as a certified nursing assistant or a direct care worker. The notation of
the criminal conviction remains on the registry.
C. D.C.W. petitions
1.
Petition for removal of a notation
of a substantiated finding. A D.C.W. may petition the Department to
remove a notation of a substantiated finding of neglect no sooner than 12
months after the date the finding was documented on the Registry. The
Department will approve or deny the petition by considering the following
factors:
a. The finding was a one-time
occurrence and the employment and personal history of the D.C.W. does not
reflect a pattern of neglect; and
b. The D.C.W. submitted a Department-approved
petition form that included a short, clear statement by the D.C.W. that
contains the reasons why the D.C.W. is eligible for removal from the Registry.
The form must include the following:
i. The
employment and personal history of the D.C.W. does not reflect a pattern of
neglect;
ii. The action leading to
the original finding was a one-time occurrence; and
iii. The action leading to the finding did
not result in serious harm to an individual in care or a criminal conviction.
2.
Petition for removal of an employment ban due to criminal
conviction. Petitions for the removal of an employment ban must be made
in accordance with
22
MRS §1812-G(6)(D).The
Department will respond to a petition in accordance with rule adopted under
22 MRS
§9054.
3.
Retention of information.
Information resulting in annotation remains on the Registry permanently, unless
documentation demonstrates that the annotated D.C.W. was listed in error, the
individual's conviction was overturned in a court of law, or the Department is
notified of the individual's death. In order to assert that the substantiated
finding was made in error, the D.C.W. must provide evidence to the Department
that could not have been presented at the original hearing or that is new
evidence.
D. Any petition for removal of an employment ban due to criminal conviction. Prior to the expiration of an employment ban under Section 3(A), an individual may petition the department for removal of an employment ban that is based on a disqualifying criminal conviction.
1. An
individual may petition the department for removal of:
a. A 5-year employment ban, no sooner than 2
1/2 years after an individual is discharged from the legal restraints imposed
by the criminal conviction;
b. A
10-year employment ban, no sooner than 5 years after an individual is
discharged from the legal restraints imposed by the criminal conviction;
and
c. A 30-year employment ban, no
sooner than 15 years after an individual is discharged from the legal
restraints imposed by the criminal conviction.
2. Removal of the employment ban will be
based upon assessment of the risk of reoffending and the conduct of the
petitioner since the conviction, and the petitioner meets the burden of proof
that there exists sufficient rehabilitation to warrant the public
trust.
3. A petition for removal of
an employment ban, submitted by a certified nursing assistant or a registered
direct care worker, will be denied if the conduct that led to the conviction
would have resulted in a substantiated finding of abuse, neglect, or the
misappropriation of property of a client, patient or resident and no proof is
provided that the conviction was caused by factors beyond person's
control.
4. When the department
grants a petition for removal of an employment ban, the individual, unless
otherwise prohibited, may work as a certified nursing assistant or a direct
care worker. The notation of the criminal conviction remains on the
Registry.
E. Appeals
1.
C.N.A. right to
appeal. A C.N.A. may request an administrative hearing to appeal the
following Departmental decisions:
a. Denial
of an application or renewal for placement on the C.N.A. Registry;
b. Removal from the active C.N.A. Registry
list; or
c. Denial of a petition
for removal of an employment ban.
2.
D.C.W. right to appeal. An
annotated D.C.W. may appeal the denial of a petition.
3.
Administrative hearing . A
C.N.A. or D.C.W. may submit a written request for a hearing and must specify
the reason for the appeal. This hearing request must be mailed to the
Department within 10 days from receipt of the Department's decision to take one
of the actions listed in Section 4C(1) or (2) above. The administrative hearing
process is governed by the Maine Administrative Procedure Act
at 5 MRS Ch. 375 and the Department's Administrative Hearings
Regulations (10-144 CMR Ch.1) .
4.
Judicial review. A person who
is aggrieved by a final agency action may be entitled to judicial review in the
Superior Court.
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