HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 1835        FILED ON: 1/18/2023

HOUSE  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  No. 2330

 

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts

_________________

PRESENTED BY:

Denise C. Garlick

_________________

To the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in General
Court assembled:

The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the adoption of the accompanying bill:

An Act requiring health care employers to develop and implement programs to prevent workplace violence.

_______________

PETITION OF:

 

Name:

District/Address:

Date Added:

Denise C. Garlick

13th Norfolk

1/18/2023

Christopher Hendricks

11th Bristol

1/24/2023

Rodney M. Elliott

16th Middlesex

1/26/2023

Peter Capano

11th Essex

1/26/2023

John H. Rogers

12th Norfolk

1/26/2023

Angelo J. Puppolo, Jr.

12th Hampden

1/26/2023

Patricia A. Duffy

5th Hampden

1/26/2023

Daniel J. Ryan

2nd Suffolk

1/26/2023

Josh S. Cutler

6th Plymouth

1/26/2023

Joseph W. McGonagle, Jr.

28th Middlesex

1/26/2023

David Henry Argosky LeBoeuf

17th Worcester

1/26/2023

Frank A. Moran

17th Essex

1/26/2023

Jeffrey N. Roy

10th Norfolk

1/26/2023

Adam J. Scanlon

14th Bristol

1/26/2023

Tram T. Nguyen

18th Essex

1/26/2023

Daniel M. Donahue

16th Worcester

1/26/2023

Natalie M. Higgins

4th Worcester

1/26/2023

Steven Ultrino

33rd Middlesex

1/26/2023

Gerard J. Cassidy

9th Plymouth

1/26/2023

Christopher J. Worrell

5th Suffolk

1/26/2023

Lindsay N. Sabadosa

1st Hampshire

1/26/2023

Erika Uyterhoeven

27th Middlesex

1/26/2023

Jack Patrick Lewis

7th Middlesex

1/26/2023

Carmine Lawrence Gentile

13th Middlesex

1/26/2023

David F. DeCoste

5th Plymouth

1/26/2023

Kevin G. Honan

17th Suffolk

1/26/2023

Patrick Joseph Kearney

4th Plymouth

1/27/2023

Bruce J. Ayers

1st Norfolk

1/30/2023

Adrianne Pusateri Ramos

14th Essex

1/30/2023

Simon Cataldo

14th Middlesex

1/30/2023

Marc R. Pacheco

Third Bristol and Plymouth

1/30/2023

Jessica Ann Giannino

16th Suffolk

1/30/2023

Manny Cruz

7th Essex

1/30/2023

Meghan K. Kilcoyne

12th Worcester

1/30/2023

Sean Garballey

23rd Middlesex

1/30/2023

Thomas M. Stanley

9th Middlesex

1/30/2023

Rob Consalvo

14th Suffolk

1/30/2023

Susannah M. Whipps

2nd Franklin

1/30/2023

James K. Hawkins

2nd Bristol

1/30/2023

Michael D. Brady

Second Plymouth and Norfolk

1/30/2023

Kate Donaghue

19th Worcester

1/30/2023

Carol A. Doherty

3rd Bristol

1/30/2023

Brian W. Murray

10th Worcester

1/30/2023

Rita A. Mendes

11th Plymouth

1/30/2023

Ryan M. Hamilton

15th Essex

1/31/2023

Michael P. Kushmerek

3rd Worcester

1/31/2023

Brian M. Ashe

2nd Hampden

1/31/2023

Tackey Chan

2nd Norfolk

1/31/2023

Samantha Montaño

15th Suffolk

1/31/2023

Susan Williams Gifford

2nd Plymouth

1/31/2023

Vanna Howard

17th Middlesex

1/31/2023

Alan Silvia

7th Bristol

1/31/2023

William C. Galvin

6th Norfolk

1/31/2023

Steven S. Howitt

4th Bristol

1/31/2023

Michelle M. DuBois

10th Plymouth

1/31/2023

Joseph D. McKenna

18th Worcester

1/31/2023

David Paul Linsky

5th Middlesex

2/1/2023

Kathleen R. LaNatra

12th Plymouth

2/1/2023

Hannah Kane

11th Worcester

2/1/2023

Thomas P. Walsh

12th Essex

2/2/2023

Margaret R. Scarsdale

1st Middlesex

2/3/2023

Jennifer Balinsky Armini

8th Essex

2/5/2023

Bud L. Williams

11th Hampden

2/6/2023

Adrian C. Madaro

1st Suffolk

2/6/2023

Jon Santiago

9th Suffolk

2/6/2023

Mary S. Keefe

15th Worcester

2/6/2023

Kimberly N. Ferguson

1st Worcester

2/7/2023

Paul McMurtry

11th Norfolk

2/8/2023

Colleen M. Garry

36th Middlesex

2/8/2023

Tricia Farley-Bouvier

2nd Berkshire

2/8/2023

Joan Meschino

3rd Plymouth

2/9/2023

Christine P. Barber

34th Middlesex

2/9/2023

James B. Eldridge

Middlesex and Worcester

2/13/2023

Bruce E. Tarr

First Essex and Middlesex

2/21/2023

Kate Lipper-Garabedian

32nd Middlesex

2/22/2023

Christopher Richard Flanagan

1st Barnstable

2/23/2023

James J. O'Day

14th Worcester

2/28/2023

Michelle L. Ciccolo

15th Middlesex

3/2/2023

Patrick M. O'Connor

First Plymouth and Norfolk

3/14/2023

Tommy Vitolo

15th Norfolk

3/30/2023

David T. Vieira

3rd Barnstable

5/8/2023

Steven George Xiarhos

5th Barnstable

5/8/2023

Jonathan D. Zlotnik

2nd Worcester

6/14/2023

Joan B. Lovely

Second Essex

7/17/2023

Priscila S. Sousa

6th Middlesex

8/16/2023

William F. MacGregor

10th Suffolk

10/6/2023

Brandy Fluker Oakley

12th Suffolk

11/3/2023

Christopher M. Markey

9th Bristol

12/6/2023

Andres X. Vargas

3rd Essex

3/14/2024

Sally P. Kerans

13th Essex

5/8/2024


HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 1835        FILED ON: 1/18/2023

HOUSE  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  No. 2330

By Representative Garlick of Needham, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No. 2330) of Denise C. Garlick and others relative to providing protections for health care employees who are victims of violence or assault and battery.  Public Safety and Homeland Security.

 

[SIMILAR MATTER FILED IN PREVIOUS SESSION
SEE HOUSE, NO. 4574 OF 2021-2022.]

 

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts

 

_______________

In the One Hundred and Ninety-Third General Court
(2023-2024)

_______________

 

An Act requiring health care employers to develop and implement programs to prevent workplace violence.

 

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
 

SECTION 1. Chapter 111 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2020 Official Edition, is hereby amended by adding the following section:-

Section 243. (a) As used in this section, the following words shall, unless the context clearly requires otherwise, have the following meanings:-

“Employee”, an individual employed by a health care employer.

“Health care employer”, any individual, partnership, association, corporation, trust or any person or group of persons operating a health care facility.

“Health care facility”, a hospital, licensed under section 51, the teaching hospital of the University of Massachusetts medical school, a medium-security state correctional facility for male inmates located in Plymouth county that is operated and maintained by a private company under contract with the department of correction, or any state acute care facility, non-acute care facility, continuing care facility and group homes operated, funded or subject to oversight by the department of public health, the department of mental health or the department of developmental services except a: (i) nursing home; (ii) rest home; (iii) clinic; (iv) mobile or portable clinic; (v) mobile or portable clinic satellite; (vi) certified home health agency; (vii) adult day health; (viii) hospice; (ix) hospice inpatient satellite; (x) ambulatory surgical center; (xi) renal dialysis; (xii) outpatient physical therapy and speech pathology; and (xiii) temporary nursing agency; provided that, a facility with more than 1 license or that is licensed to provide multiple services, shall be considered a health care facility if the facility is licensed in at least 1 of the included categories.

“Workplace Violence”, conduct at the work site that is: (i) an unpermitted or harmful touching of another person; (ii) an attempt or act to use some degree of physical force on another person; or (iii) engaging in conduct that could be reasonably perceived as an intent to touch without permission, use immediate physical force or injure a particular person now or in the future, that if carried out would constitute a crime, and causes another person to reasonably believe that the person has the intent and ability to carry out such conduct. 

(b) Annually, each health care employer shall perform a facility specific risk assessment that includes, but is not limited to, the standards determined by the department. The facility specific risk assessment shall be done in cooperation with the employees of the health care employer and any labor organization or organizations representing the employees, examining all factors, which may put any of the employees at risk of workplace violence. The factors shall include, but not be limited to: (i) working in public settings; (ii) guarding or maintaining property or possessions; (iii) working in high-crime areas; (iv) working late night or early morning hours; (v) working alone or in small numbers; (vi) uncontrolled public access to the workplace; (vii) working in public areas where people are in crisis; (viii) working in areas where a patient or resident may exhibit violent behavior; (ix) working in areas with known security problems; and (x) working with insufficient qualified staff in 1 or more position titles to address foreseeable risk factors.

(c) Based on the findings of the risk assessment in subsection (b), the health care employer shall develop and implement a program to minimize the danger of workplace violence to employees, which shall include appropriate employee training, and a system for the ongoing reporting and monitoring of incidents and situations involving violence or the risk of violence. Employee training shall include, in addition to all employer training program policies, methods of reporting to appropriate public safety officials, bodies or agencies and processes necessary for the filing of criminal charges.

(d) Each health care employer shall develop a written violence prevention plan setting forth the employer’s workplace violence prevention plan. The health care employer shall make the plan available to each employee and provide the plan to any of its employees upon request. The health care employer shall provide the plan to any labor organization or organizations representing any of its employees. The plan shall include: (i) a list of those factors and circumstances that may pose a danger to employees; (ii) a description of the methods that the health care employer will use to alleviate hazards associated with each factor; including, but not limited to, employee training and any appropriate changes in job design, staffing, security, equipment or facilities; (iii) a post-incident debriefing process with affected staff; and (iv) a description of the reporting and monitoring system.

(e) Each health care employer shall designate a senior manager responsible for the development and support of an in-house crisis response team for employee-victims of workplace violence. Said team shall implement an assaulted staff action program that includes, but is not limited to, group crisis interventions, individual crisis counseling, staff victims’ support groups, employee victims’ family crisis intervention, peer-help and professional referrals.

(f) Any health care employer who violates any rule, regulation or requirement made by the department under authority hereof shall be punished by a fine of not more than $2,000 for each offense. The department or its representative or any aggrieved employee, any interested party or any officer of any labor union or association, whether incorporated or otherwise, may file a written complaint with the district court in the jurisdiction of which the violation occurs and shall promptly notify the attorney general in writing of such complaint. The attorney general, upon determination that there is a violation of any workplace standard relative to the protection of the occupational health and safety of employees or of any standard of requirement of licensure, may order any work site to be closed by way of the issuance of a cease and desist order enforceable in the appropriate courts of the commonwealth.

(g) No employee shall be penalized by a health care employer in any way as a result of such employee’s filing of a complaint or otherwise providing notice to the department in regard to the occupational health and safety of such employee or their fellow employees exposed to workplace violence risk factors.

(h) Not less than every 180 days, each health care employer shall submit a report, on a form prescribed by the commissioner of the department, of all incidents of workplace violence reported to the health care employer that occurred at the health care facility on an employee, an emergency medical technician, an ambulance operator or an ambulance attendant. The report shall be submitted to the department and the office of the district attorney for the county where the health care facility is located. Not more than 90 days after receiving the reports, the department shall make the aggregate data statewide and by county publicly available; provided that the department categorize the aggregate data by occupation and incident type.

SECTION 2. Chapter 149 of the General Laws is hereby amended by inserting after section 52E the following section:-

Section 52F. (a) For purposes of this section, the following words shall, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, have the following meanings:-

“Employee”, an individual employed by a health care employer.

“Health care employer”, any individual, partnership, association, corporation or, trust or any person or group of persons operating a health care facility.

“Health care facility”, a hospital, licensed under section 51, the teaching hospital of the University of Massachusetts medical school, a medium-security state correctional facility for male inmates located in Plymouth county that is operated and maintained by a private company under contract with the department of correction, or any state acute care facility, non-acute care facility, continuing care facility and group homes operated, funded or subject to oversight by the department of public health, the department of mental health or the department of developmental services except a: (i) nursing home; (ii) rest home; (iii) clinic; (iv) mobile or portable clinic; (v) mobile or portable clinic satellite; (vi) certified home health agency; (vii) adult day health; (viii) hospice; (ix) hospice inpatient satellite; (x) ambulatory surgical center; (xi) renal dialysis; (xii) outpatient physical therapy and speech pathology; and (xiii) temporary nursing agency; provided that, a facility with more than 1 license or that is licensed to provide multiple services, shall be considered a health care facility if the facility is licensed in at least 1 of the included categories.

(b) A health care employer shall permit an employee to take up to 7 days of leave from work in any 12 month period if: (i) the employee is a victim of an assault or assault and battery which occurred in the line of duty and (ii) the employee uses the leave to seek or obtain victim services or legal assistance; obtain a protective order from a court; appear in court or before a grand jury; meet with a district attorney or other law enforcement official; or to address other legal issues directly related to the assault or assault and battery.

(c) The leave taken pursuant to subsection (b) shall be paid.

(d) A health care employer may require an employee to provide documentation evidencing that the employee is a victim of assault or assault and battery sustained in the line of duty and that the leave taken is consistent with the conditions of subsection (b). An employee shall provide such documentation to the health care employer within 5 business days after the health care employer requests documentation relative to the employee’s absence.

(e) An employee seeking leave from work pursuant to subsection (b) shall provide advance notice of the leave to the employer in accordance with the employer's leave policy; provided, however, that if an employee is absent on an unauthorized basis, the health care employer shall not take any negative action against the employee if the employee, within 30 days from the unauthorized absence or within 30 days from the last unauthorized absence in the instance of consecutive days of unauthorized absences, provides documentation that the unauthorized absence meets the criteria of subsection (b).

(f) All information related to the employee's leave taken pursuant to this section shall be kept confidential by the health care employer and shall not be disclosed, except to the extent that disclosure is: (i) requested or consented to, in writing, by the employee; (ii) ordered to be released by a court of competent jurisdiction; (iii) required by federal or state law; (iv) required in the course of an investigation authorized by law enforcement, including, but not limited to, an investigation by the attorney general; or (v) necessary to protect the safety of the employee or others employed at the workplace.

(g) No health care employer shall require an employee to exhaust all annual leave, vacation leave, personal leave or sick leave available to the employee prior to requesting or taking leave under this section.

(h) No health care employer shall coerce, interfere with, restrain or deny the exercise of, or any attempt to exercise, any rights provided by this section or to make leave requested or taken hereunder contingent upon whether or not the victim maintains contact with the alleged abuser.

(i) No health care employer shall discharge or in any other manner discriminate against an employee for exercising the employee’s rights under this section. An employee who takes leave under this section shall not lose any employment benefit accrued prior to the date on which the leave taken under this section commenced as a result of taking said leave. Upon the employee’s return from said leave, the employee shall be entitled to restoration to the employee’s original job or to an equivalent position.

(j) Each health care employer shall post in a conspicuous place within the health care facility a notice prepared or approved by the department indicating the rights and responsibilities provided by this section. The notice shall be issued in English, Spanish, Chinese, Haitian Creole, Italian, Portuguese, Vietnamese, Laotian, Khmer, Russian and any other language that is the primary language of at least 10,000 or ½ of one per cent of all residents of the commonwealth. The required workplace notice shall be in English and each language other than English which is the primary language of 5 or more employees or self-employed individuals of that workplace, if such notice is available from the department. Each health care employer shall notify each employee not more than 30 days from the beginning date of the employee’s employment, the rights and responsibilities provided by this section, including those related to notification requirements and confidentiality.

(k) This section shall not be construed to exempt an employer from complying with chapter 258B, section 14B of chapter 268 or any other general or special law or to limit the rights of any employee under said chapter 258B, said section 14B of chapter 268 or any other general or special law.

SECTION 3. Section 13I of chapter 265 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2020 Official Edition, is hereby amended by adding the following paragraph:-

Any emergency medical technician, ambulance operator, ambulance attendant or a health care provider as defined in section 240 of chapter 111, who is the victim of assault or assault and battery at a health care facility, as such term is defined in said section 240, in the line of duty shall be given the option of providing the address of the health care facility where the assault or assault and battery occurred or of the labor organization in which they are a member in good standing. In instances where the address of the health care facility is used or labor organization to which the employee is a member in good standing, the health care facility or labor organization shall ensure that the individual receives any documents pertaining to the assault or assault and battery within 24 hours of receipt by the health care facility or labor organization. The health care facility or labor organization shall demonstrate that it has provided any and all documentation by obtaining a signature from the individual acknowledging receipt.

SECTION 4. The commissioner of public health shall adopt rules and regulations within 180 days of enactment of this act necessary to implement and enforce the purposes of section 240 of chapter 111 of the General Laws.