Texas Administrative Code
Title 26 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Part 1 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION
Chapter 965 - ELECTRONIC MONITORING IN AN INDIVIDUAL'S BEDROOM IN A STATE SUPPORTED LIVING CENTER
Section 965.5 - Annual Consent by a Roommate
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) An individual or an individual's legally authorized representative (LAR) who requests to conduct electronic monitoring in the individual's bedroom must obtain consent annually on behalf of any individual who shares a bedroom with the requesting individual, using the required Texas Health and Human Services (HHSC) form. To provide consent, the form must be signed and dated by a person described in subsection (b) of this section and given to the director of the facility in which the individual resides. If the person's consent is conditioned on a limitation, the limitation must be stated on the form.
(b) Consent to conduct electronic monitoring may be given:
(c) Except as provided in subsection (g) of this section, consent given in accordance with this section may be conditioned on:
(d) If an individual who has not yet consented to electronic monitoring moves into a bedroom in which electronic monitoring is being conducted, the electronic monitoring must cease until consent is obtained from or on behalf of the individual in accordance with this section.
(e) If more than a year has elapsed since consent was given by or on behalf of an individual who shares a bedroom with an individual conducting electronic monitoring, the electronic monitoring must cease until consent is obtained in accordance with this section.
(f) A facility must maintain a copy of the required HHSC form in the individual's active record of the individual consenting to electronic monitoring.
(g) Consent that is subject to a condition, as described in subsection (c) of this section, must not prevent a person from complying with this chapter or other law, including § 965.9(a) of this chapter (relating to Reporting Abuse, Neglect, and Exploitation). If a condition on consent would require a person to violate this chapter or other law, the consent is not valid.