Texas Administrative Code
Title 1 - ADMINISTRATION
Part 15 - TEXAS HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION
Chapter 392 - PURCHASE OF GOODS AND SERVICES FOR SPECIFIC HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION PROGRAMS
Subchapter D - DARS CONTRACT MANAGEMENT REQUIREMENT
Section 392.317 - Adverse Actions
Universal Citation: 1 TX Admin Code ยง 392.317
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) DARS or HHSC may impose an adverse action when the contractor fails to follow the terms of the contract or fails to comply with DARS or HHSC rules, policies, and procedures. DARS or HHSC may impose adverse actions for reasons including:
(1) DARS' or HHSC's determination that
consumer health and safety is jeopardized;
(2) the contractor's failure to comply with
its corrective action plan;
(3) the
contractor's failure to follow an agreed-upon audit resolution payment
plan;
(4) the contractor's failure
to submit an acceptable cost report, if applicable;
(5) the contractor's failure to comply with
the contract or program requirements;
(6) the contractor's failure to maintain a
current required license or the contractor allowing the expiration of any
required license, if applicable;
(7) the contractor's relocation to a new
facility address that does not have the appropriate license, if
applicable;
(8) the contractor's
exclusion from contracting with DARS, any health and human services program, or
the federal government; or
(9)
validated report(s) of abuse, neglect, or exploitation when the perpetrator is
an owner, employee, or volunteer who has direct access to consumers.
(b) Types of adverse actions may include:
(1) Recoupment. DARS or HHSC collects
money the contractor owes as the result of overpayments or other billing
irregularities.
(2) Vendor hold.
DARS or HHSC withholds the contractor's contract payments. DARS or HHSC may put
one or all of the contractor's contracts on vendor hold. The vendor hold is
released when DARS or HHSC determines that the contractor has resolved the
reason(s) for the hold. In addition to the reasons listed in subsection (a) of
this section, DARS or HHSC may place a vendor hold on the contractor's
contract(s):
(A) to recoup overpayments made
to the contractor; or
(B) to
recover any audit exceptions assessed against the contractor.
(3) Denial of claim. DARS or HHSC
denies payment in whole or part for a claim filed within program time
limits.
(4) Suspension of
subcontractor's participation or payments; termination of subcontract. DARS or
HHSC directs a contractor to suspend a subcontractor's participation, suspend a
subcontractor's payments, or terminate a subcontract.
(5) Involuntary contract termination. DARS or
HHSC may terminate a contract for cause by citing the contractor's failure to
comply with the terms of the contract or with DARS or HHSC rules, policies, and
procedures.
(6) Suspension. DARS or
HHSC temporarily suspends the contractor's right to conduct business with DARS.
The causes for and conditions of suspension are described in § 392.323 of
this subchapter (relating to Causes and Conditions of Suspension).
(7) Debarment. DARS or HHSC does not allow a
contractor to conduct business with DARS, in any capacity, for a certain period
of time. The causes for and conditions of debarment are described in §
392.321 of this subchapter (relating to Causes and Conditions of
Debarment).
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