MN ST § 256.01
M.S.A. § 256.01
Minnesota Statutes Annotated Currentness
Public Welfare and Related Activities (Ch. 245-267)
Chapter 256 . Human Services
256.01.
Commissioner of human services; powers, duties
Subdivision
1. Powers transferred.
All the powers and duties now vested in or imposed upon the State Board
of Control by the laws of this state or by any law of the United States
are hereby transferred to, vested in, and imposed upon the commissioner
of human services, except the powers and duties otherwise specifically
transferred by Laws 1939, chapter 431, to other agencies. The commissioner
of human services is hereby constituted the "state agency" as defined by the Social Security Act of the United States
and the laws of this state.
Subd.
2. Specific powers. Subject to the provisions of section 241.021,
subdivision 2, the commissioner of
human services shall carry out the specific duties in paragraphs (a) through (cc):
(a)
Administer and supervise all forms
of public assistance provided for by state law and other welfare
activities or services as are vested in the commissioner. Administration
and supervision of human services activities or services includes, but
is not limited to, assuring timely and accurate
distribution of benefits, completeness of service, and quality program
management. In addition to administering and supervising human services
activities vested by law in the department, the commissioner shall have
the authority to:
(1)
require county agency participation
in training and technical assistance programs to promote compliance
with statutes, rules, federal laws, regulations, and policies governing
human services;
(2) monitor, on an ongoing basis,
the performance of county agencies in the operation
and administration of human services, enforce compliance with statutes,
rules, federal laws, regulations, and policies governing welfare
services and promote excellence of administration and program operation;
(3) develop a quality control program
or other monitoring program to review county performance and accuracy of benefit determinations;
(4)
require county agencies to make
an adjustment to the public assistance benefits issued to any
individual consistent with federal law and regulation and state law and
rule and to issue or recover benefits as appropriate;
(5)
delay or deny payment of all or
part of the state and federal share of benefits and administrative
reimbursement according to the procedures set forth in section 256.017;
(6) make contracts with and grants
to public and private agencies and organizations,
both profit and nonprofit, and individuals, using appropriated funds; and
(7)
enter into contractual agreements
with federally recognized Indian tribes with a reservation in Minnesota
to the extent necessary for the tribe to operate a federally approved
family assistance program or any other program under the supervision of
the commissioner. The commissioner shall consult
with the affected county or counties in the contractual agreement
negotiations, if the county or counties wish to be included, in order to
avoid the duplication of county and tribal assistance program services.
The commissioner may establish necessary accounts
for the purposes of receiving and disbursing funds as necessary for the
operation of the programs.
(b)
Inform county agencies, on a timely
basis, of changes in statute, rule, federal law, regulation, and policy
necessary to county agency administration of the programs.
(c)
Administer and supervise all child welfare activities; promote the
enforcement of laws protecting disabled, dependent, neglected and
delinquent children, and children born to mothers who were not married
to the children's fathers at the times of the conception
nor at the births of the children; license and supervise child-caring
and child-placing agencies and institutions; supervise the care of
children in boarding and foster homes or in private institutions; and
generally perform all functions relating to the field
of child welfare now vested in the State Board of Control.
(d)
Administer and supervise all noninstitutional
service to disabled persons, including those who are visually impaired,
hearing impaired, or physically impaired or otherwise disabled. The
commissioner may provide and contract for the care and treatment of
qualified indigent children in facilities other
than those located and available at state hospitals when it is not
feasible to provide the service in state hospitals.
(e) Assist and actively cooperate
with other departments, agencies and institutions, local, state, and federal, by performing services in conformity
with the purposes of Laws 1939, chapter
431.
(f)
Act as the agent of and cooperate
with the federal government in matters of mutual concern relative to
and in conformity with the provisions of Laws 1939, chapter 431,
including the administration of any federal funds granted to the state
to aid in the performance of any functions of the commissioner
as specified in Laws 1939, chapter 431, and including the promulgation
of rules making uniformly available medical care benefits to all
recipients of public assistance, at such times as the federal government
increases its participation in assistance expenditures
for medical care to recipients of public assistance, the cost thereof
to be borne in the same proportion as are grants of aid to said
recipients.
(g) Establish and maintain any administrative
units reasonably necessary for the performance of administrative functions common to all divisions of the department.
(h)
Act as designated guardian of both the estate and the person of all the
wards of the state of Minnesota, whether by operation of law or by an
order of court, without any further act or proceeding whatever, except
as to persons committed as developmentally
disabled. For children under the guardianship of the commissioner or a
tribe in Minnesota recognized by the Secretary of the Interior whose
interests would be best served by adoptive placement, the commissioner
may contract with a licensed child-placing agency
or a Minnesota tribal social services agency to provide adoption
services. A contract with a licensed child-placing agency must be
designed to supplement existing county efforts and may not replace
existing county programs or tribal social services, unless
the replacement is agreed to by the county board and the appropriate
exclusive bargaining representative, tribal governing body, or the
commissioner has evidence that child placements of the county continue
to be substantially below that of other counties.
Funds encumbered and obligated under an agreement for a specific child
shall remain available until the terms of the agreement are fulfilled or
the agreement is terminated.
(i) Act as coordinating referral and
informational center on requests for service for newly arrived immigrants coming to Minnesota.
(j)
The specific enumeration of powers and duties as hereinabove set forth
shall in no way be construed to be a limitation upon the general
transfer of powers herein contained.
(k)
Establish county, regional, or
statewide schedules of maximum fees and charges which may be paid by
county agencies for medical, dental, surgical, hospital, nursing and
nursing home care and medicine and medical supplies under all programs
of medical care provided by the state and for congregate
living care under the income maintenance programs.
(l)
Have the authority to conduct
and administer experimental projects to test methods and procedures of
administering assistance and services to recipients or potential
recipients of public welfare. To carry out such experimental
projects, it is further provided that the commissioner of
human services is authorized to waive the enforcement of existing
specific statutory program requirements, rules, and standards in one or
more counties. The order
establishing
the waiver shall provide
alternative methods and procedures of administration, shall not be in
conflict with the basic purposes, coverage, or benefits provided by law,
and in no event shall the duration of a project exceed four years. It
is further provided that no order establishing
an experimental project as authorized by the provisions of this section
shall become effective until the following conditions have been met:
(1)
the secretary of health and human
services of the United States has agreed, for the same project, to
waive state plan requirements relative to statewide uniformity; and
(2)
a comprehensive plan, including
estimated project costs, shall be approved by the Legislative Advisory
Commission and filed with the commissioner of administration.
(m) According to federal requirements,
establish procedures to be followed by local welfare boards in creating citizen advisory committees, including
procedures for selection of committee
members.
(n)
Allocate federal fiscal disallowances
or sanctions which are based on quality control error rates for the aid
to families with dependent children program formerly codified in
sections 256.72 to 256.87, medical assistance, or food stamp program in
the following manner:
(1)
one-half of the total amount of
the disallowance shall be borne by the county boards responsible for
administering the programs. For the medical assistance and the AFDC
program formerly codified in sections 256.72 to 256.87, disallowances
shall be shared by each county board in the same
proportion as that county's expenditures for the sanctioned program are
to the total of all counties' expenditures for the AFDC program
formerly codified in sections 256.72 to 256.87, and medical assistance
programs. For the food stamp program, sanctions shall
be shared by each county board, with 50 percent of the sanction being
distributed to each county in the same proportion as that county's
administrative costs for food stamps are to the total of all food stamp
administrative costs for all counties, and 50 percent
of the sanctions being
distributed
to each county in the same proportion as that county's value of food
stamp benefits issued are to the total of all benefits issued for all
counties. Each county shall pay its share of the disallowance to the
state of Minnesota. When a county fails to pay the
amount due hereunder, the commissioner may deduct the amount from
reimbursement otherwise due the county, or the attorney general, upon
the request of the commissioner, may institute civil action to recover
the amount due; and
(2)
notwithstanding the provisions
of clause (1), if the disallowance results from knowing noncompliance
by one or more counties with a specific program instruction, and that
knowing noncompliance is a matter of official county board record, the
commissioner may require payment or recover from
the county or counties, in the manner prescribed in clause (1), an
amount equal to the portion of the total disallowance which resulted
from the noncompliance, and may distribute the balance of the
disallowance according to clause (1).
(o) Develop and implement special
projects that maximize reimbursements and result in the recovery of money to the state. For the purpose of recovering
state
money, the commissioner may
enter into contracts with third parties. Any recoveries that result
from projects or contracts entered into under this paragraph shall be
deposited in the state treasury and credited to a special account until
the balance in the account reaches $1,000,000.
When the balance in the account exceeds $1,000,000, the excess shall be
transferred and credited to the general fund. All money in the account
is appropriated to the commissioner for the purposes of this paragraph.
(p)
Have the authority to make direct
payments to facilities providing shelter to women and their children
according to section 256D.05, subdivision 3. Upon the written request of
a shelter facility that has been denied payments under section 256D.05,
subdivision 3, the commissioner shall review
all relevant evidence and make a determination within 30 days of the
request for review regarding issuance of direct payments to the shelter
facility. Failure to act within 30 days shall be considered a
determination not to issue direct payments.
(q) Have the authority to establish
and enforce the following county reporting requirements:
(1)
the commissioner shall establish
fiscal and statistical reporting requirements necessary to account for
the expenditure of funds allocated to counties for human services
programs. When establishing financial and statistical reporting
requirements, the commissioner shall evaluate all reports,
in consultation with the counties, to determine if the reports can be
simplified or the number of reports can be reduced;
(2)
the county board shall submit
monthly or quarterly reports to the department as required by the
commissioner. Monthly reports are due no later than 15 working days
after the end of the month. Quarterly reports are due no later than 30
calendar days after the end of the quarter, unless
the commissioner determines that the deadline must be shortened to 20
calendar days to avoid jeopardizing compliance with federal deadlines or
risking a loss of federal funding. Only reports that are complete,
legible, and in the required format shall be accepted
by the commissioner;
(3)
if the required reports are not received by the deadlines established
in clause (2), the commissioner may delay payments and withhold funds
from the county board until the next reporting period. When the report
is needed to account for the use of federal funds
and the late report results in a reduction in federal funding, the
commissioner shall withhold from the county boards with late reports an
amount equal to the reduction in federal funding until full federal
funding is received;
(4)
a county board that submits reports
that are late, illegible, incomplete, or not in the required format for
two out of three consecutive reporting periods is considered
noncompliant. When a county board is found to be noncompliant, the
commissioner shall notify the county board of the reason
the county board is considered noncompliant and request that the county
board develop a corrective action plan stating how the county board
plans to correct the problem. The corrective action plan must be
submitted to the commissioner within 45 days after
the date the county board received notice of noncompliance;
(5)
the final deadline for fiscal reports or amendments to fiscal reports
is one year after the date the report was originally due. If the
commissioner does not receive a report by the final deadline, the county
board forfeits the funding associated with the report
for that reporting period and the county board must repay any funds
associated with the report received for that reporting period;
(6)
the commissioner may not delay
payments, withhold funds, or require repayment under clause (3) or (5)
if the county demonstrates that the commissioner failed to provide
appropriate forms, guidelines, and technical assistance to enable the
county to comply with the requirements. If the county
board disagrees with an action taken by the commissioner under clause
(3) or (5), the county board may appeal the action according to sections
14.57 to 14.69; and
(7) counties subject to withholding
of funds under clause (3) or forfeiture or repayment of funds under clause (5) shall not reduce or withhold benefits or
services to clients to cover costs
incurred due to actions taken by the commissioner under clause (3) or (5).
(r)
Allocate federal fiscal disallowances
or sanctions for audit exceptions when federal fiscal disallowances or
sanctions are based on a statewide random sample in direct proportion to
each county's claim for that period.
(s)
Be responsible for ensuring the
detection, prevention, investigation, and resolution of fraudulent
activities or behavior by applicants, recipients, and other participants
in the human services programs administered by the department.
(t)
Require county agencies to identify
overpayments, establish claims, and utilize all available and
cost-beneficial methodologies to collect and recover these overpayments
in the human services programs administered by the department.
(u)
Have the authority to administer a drug rebate program for drugs
purchased pursuant to the prescription drug program established under
section 256.955 after the beneficiary's satisfaction of any deductible
established in the program. The commissioner shall
require a rebate agreement from all manufacturers of covered drugs as
defined in section 256B. 0625, subdivision 13. Rebate agreements for
prescription drugs delivered on or after July 1, 2002, must include
rebates for individuals covered under the prescription
drug program who are under 65 years of age. For each drug, the amount
of the rebate shall be equal to the rebate as defined for purposes of
the federal rebate program in United States Code, title 42, section
1396r-8. The manufacturers must provide full payment
within 30 days of receipt of the state invoice for the rebate within
the terms and conditions used for the federal rebate program established
pursuant to section 1927 of title XIX of the Social Security Act.
The manufacturers must provide the
commissioner with any information necessary to verify the rebate
determined per drug. The rebate program shall utilize the terms and
conditions used for the federal rebate program established pursuant to
section 1927 of title XIX of the Social Security Act.
(v)
Have the authority to administer the federal drug rebate program for
drugs purchased under the medical assistance program as allowed by
section 1927 of title XIX of the Social Security Act and according to
the terms and conditions of section 1927. Rebates
shall be collected for all drugs that have been dispensed or
administered in an outpatient setting and that are from manufacturers
who have signed a rebate agreement with the United States Department of
Health and Human Services.
(w)
Have the authority to administer
a supplemental drug rebate program for drugs purchased under the
medical assistance program. The commissioner may enter into supplemental
rebate contracts with pharmaceutical manufacturers and may require
prior authorization for drugs that are from manufacturers
that have not signed a supplemental rebate contract. Prior
authorization of drugs shall be subject to the provisions of section
256B.0625, subdivision 13.
(x)
Operate the department's communication
systems account established in Laws 1993, First Special Session chapter
1, article 1, section 2, subdivision 2, to manage shared communication
costs necessary for the operation of the programs
the
commissioner supervises. A
communications account may also be established for each regional
treatment center which operates communications systems. Each
account must be used to manage shared communication costs necessary for
the operations of the programs the commissioner
supervises. The
commissioner may distribute the costs of operating and maintaining
communication systems to participants in a manner that reflects actual
usage. Costs may include acquisition, licensing, insurance,
maintenance, repair, staff time and other costs as determined
by the commissioner. Nonprofit organizations and state,
county, and local government agencies involved in the operation of
programs the commissioner supervises may participate in the use of the
department's communications technology and share in the cost
of operation. The commissioner may accept on behalf of the
state any gift, bequest, devise or personal property of any kind, or
money tendered to the state for any lawful purpose pertaining to the
communication activities of the department. Any money
received
for this purpose must be deposited in the department's communication
systems accounts. Money collected by the commissioner for
the use of communication systems must be deposited in the state
communication systems account and is appropriated to the commissioner
for purposes of this section.
(y)
Receive any federal matching money that is made available through the
medical assistance program for the consumer satisfaction survey. Any
federal money received for the survey is appropriated to the
commissioner for this purpose. The commissioner may expend
the federal money received for the consumer satisfaction survey in
either year of the biennium.
(z)
Designate community information
and referral call centers and incorporate cost reimbursement claims
from the designated community information and referral call centers into
the federal cost reimbursement claiming processes of the department
according to federal law, rule, and regulations.
Existing information and referral centers provided by Greater Twin
Cities United Way or existing call centers for which Greater Twin Cities
United Way has legal authority to represent, shall be included in these
designations upon review by the commissioner
and assurance that these services are accredited and in compliance with
national standards. Any reimbursement is appropriated to the
commissioner and all designated information and referral centers shall
receive payments according to normal department schedules
established by the commissioner upon final approval of allocation
methodologies from the United States Department of Health and Human
Services Division of Cost Allocation or
other appropriate authorities.
(aa)
Develop recommended standards
for foster care homes that address the components of specialized
therapeutic services to be provided by foster care homes with those
services.
(bb)
Authorize the method of payment
to or from the department as part of the human services programs
administered by the department. This authorization includes the receipt
or disbursement of funds held by the department in a fiduciary capacity
as part of the human services programs administered
by the department.
(cc)
Have the authority to administer
a drug rebate program for drugs purchased for persons eligible for
general assistance medical care under section 256D.03, subdivision 3.
For manufacturers that agree to participate in the general assistance
medical care rebate program, the commissioner shall
enter into a rebate agreement for covered drugs as defined in section
256B.0625,
subdivisions
13 and 13d. For each
drug, the amount of the rebate shall be equal to the rebate as defined
for purposes of the federal rebate program in United States Code, title
42, section 1396r-8. The manufacturers must provide payment within the
terms and conditions used for the federal
rebate program established under section 1927 of title XIX of the
Social Security Act. The rebate program shall utilize the terms and
conditions used for the federal rebate program established under section
1927 of title XIX of the Social Security Act.
Effective
January 1, 2006, drug coverage under general assistance medical care
shall be limited to those prescription drugs that:
(1) are covered under the medical
assistance program as described in section 256B.0625, subdivisions 13 and 13d; and
(2) are provided by manufacturers
that have fully executed general assistance medical care rebate agreements with the commissioner and comply with such
agreements.
Prescription drug coverage
under general assistance medical care shall conform to coverage under
the medical assistance program according to section 256B.0625,
subdivisions 13 to 13g.
The rebate revenues collected under the drug rebate program are deposited in the general fund.
Subd.
2a. Authorization for test sites for health care programs.
In coordination with the development and implementation of HealthMatch,
an automated eligibility system
for medical assistance, general assistance medical care, and
MinnesotaCare, the commissioner, in cooperation with county agencies, is
authorized to test and compare a variety of administrative models to
demonstrate and evaluate outcomes of integrating health
care program business processes and points of access. The models will
be evaluated for ease of enrollment for health care program applicants
and recipients and administrative efficiencies. Test sites will combine
the administration of all three programs and
will include both local county and centralized statewide customer
assistance. The duration of each approved test site shall be no more
than one
year. Based on the evaluation, the
commissioner shall recommend the most efficient and effective administrative model for statewide implementation.
Subd. 2b. Performance payments. The commissioner shall develop and implement a
pay-for-performance system to provide performance payments to eligible
medical groups
and clinics that demonstrate optimum care in serving individuals with
chronic diseases who are enrolled in health care programs administered
by the commissioner under chapters 256B, 256D, and 256L. The
commissioner may receive any federal matching money that
is made available through the medical assistance program for managed
care oversight contracted through vendors, including consumer surveys,
studies, and external quality reviews as required by the federal
Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Code of Federal Regulations,
title 42, part 438-managed care, subpart E-external quality
review. Any federal money received for managed care oversight
is appropriated to the commissioner for this purpose. The
commissioner may expend the federal money received in either year of the
biennium.
Subd.
3. Executive council, powers transferred. All the powers and duties now
vested
in or imposed upon the executive
council, or any other agency which may have succeeded to its authority,
relating to the administration and distribution of direct relief to the
indigent or destitute, including war veterans and their families and
dependents, are hereby transferred to, vested
in, and imposed upon the commissioner of human services.
Subd.
4. Duties as state agency. (a) The state agency shall:
(1) supervise the administration of
assistance to dependent children under Laws 1937, chapter 438, by the county agencies in an integrated program with other service for
dependent children maintained under the direction of the state agency;
(2)
establish adequate standards for
personnel employed by the counties and the state agency in the
administration of Laws 1937, chapter 438, and make the necessary rules
to maintain such standards;
(3)
prescribe the form of and print and supply to the county agencies
blanks for applications, reports, affidavits, and such other forms as it
may deem necessary and advisable;
(4)
cooperate with the federal government
and its public welfare agencies in any reasonable manner as may be
necessary to qualify for federal aid for temporary assistance for needy
families and in conformity with title I of Public Law 104-193, the
Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation
Act of 1996 [FN5]
and successor amendments,
including the making of such reports and such forms and containing such
information as the Federal Social Security Board may from time to time
require, and comply with such provisions as such board may from time to
time find necessary to assure the correctness
and verification of such reports;
(5) on or before October 1 in each
even-numbered year make a biennial report to the governor concerning the activities of the agency;
(6)
enter into agreements with other departments of the state as necessary to meet all requirements of the federal government; and
(7)
cooperate with the commissioner
of education to enforce the requirements for program integrity and
fraud prevention for investigation for child care assistance under
chapter 119B.
(b) The state agency may:
(1)
subpoena witnesses and administer
oaths, make rules, and take such action as may be necessary or
desirable for carrying out the provisions of Laws 1937, chapter 438. All
rules made by the state agency shall be binding on the counties and
shall be complied with by the respective county agencies;
(2) cooperate with other state agencies
in establishing reciprocal agreements in
instances where a child receiving Minnesota family investment program
assistance moves or contemplates moving into or out of the state, in
order that the child may continue to receive supervised aid from the
state moved from until the child has resided for
one year in the state moved to; and
(3)
administer oaths and affirmations,
take depositions, certify to official acts, and issue subpoenas to
compel the attendance of individuals and the production of documents and
other personal property necessary in connection with the administration
of programs administered by the Department of
Human Services.
(c)
The fees for service of a subpoena
in paragraph (b), clause (3), must be paid in the same manner as
prescribed by law for a service of process issued by a district court.
Witnesses must receive the same fees and mileage as in civil actions.
(d) The subpoena in paragraph (b),
clause (3), shall be enforceable through the district
court in the district where the subpoena is issued.
Subd.
4a. Technical assistance for immunization reminders.
The state agency shall provide appropriate technical assistance to
county agencies to develop methods to have
county financial workers remind and encourage recipients of aid to
families with dependent children, Minnesota family investment program,
the Minnesota family investment plan, medical assistance, family general
assistance, or food stamps or food support whose
assistance unit includes at least one child under the age of five to
have each young child immunized against childhood diseases. The state
agency must examine the feasibility of utilizing the capacity of a
statewide computer system to assist county agency
financial workers in performing this function at appropriate intervals.
Subd.
5. Gifts, contributions, pensions and benefits; acceptance.
The commissioner shall have the power and authority to accept in behalf
of the state contributions and
gifts for the use and benefit of children under the guardianship or
custody of the commissioner; the commissioner may also receive and
accept on behalf of such children, and on behalf of patients and
residents
at
the several state hospitals for
persons with mental illness or developmental disabilities during the
period of their hospitalization and while on provisional discharge
therefrom, money due and payable to them as old age and survivors
insurance benefits, veterans benefits, pensions or other
such monetary benefits. Such gifts, contributions, pensions and
benefits shall be deposited in and disbursed from the social welfare
fund provided for in sections 256.88 to 256.92.
Subd.
6. Advisory task forces.
The commissioner may appoint advisory task forces to provide
consultation on any of the programs under the commissioner's
administration
and supervision. A task force shall expire and the compensation, terms
of office and removal of members shall be as provided in section 15.059.
Notwithstanding section 15.059, the commissioner may pay a per diem of
$35 to consumers and family members whose
participation is needed in legislatively authorized state-level task
forces, and whose participation on the task force is not as a paid
representative of any agency, organization, or association.
Subd.
7. Special consultant on aging.
The commissioner of human services may appoint a special consultant on
aging in the classified service. Within the limits of appropriations
available therefor, the commissioner may appoint such other employees
in the classified service as the commissioner deems necessary to carry
out the purposes of Laws 1961, Chapter 466.
Such special consultant and staff
shall encourage cooperation among agencies, both public and private,
including the departments of the state government, in providing services
for the aging. They shall provide consultation to local social services
agencies in developing local services for
the aging, shall promote volunteer services programs and stimulate
public interest in the problem of the aging.
Subd.
8. County services coordinators.
Any county or group of counties acting through its or their local
social services agency or agencies may designate a county services
coordinator who shall coordinate services and activities, both public
and private, that may further the well being of the aging and meet their
social, psychological, physical and economic needs. The coordinator
shall perform such other duties as the agency
may direct to stimulate, demonstrate, initiate, and coordinate local
public, private, and voluntary services within
the
county dedicated to providing
the maximum opportunities for self help, independence, and productivity
of individuals concerned. The agency may appoint a citizens advisory
committee which shall advise the coordinator and the agency on the
development of services and perform such other functions
at the county level as are prescribed for the Minnesota Board on Aging
at the state level. The members shall serve without compensation.
Members of citizens advisory committees required by federal law for
programs for the aging who receive federal money in
payment for a portion of their actual expenses incurred in performance
of their duties may receive the remaining portion from state money
appropriated for programs for the aging.
Subd.
9. Staff assistance to the Minnesota Board on Aging. The board shall be provided staff assistance from the Department of Human Services through the special consultant
on aging, who shall serve as the executive secretary to the board and its committees.
Subd.
10. Authority to accept and disburse funds. The Minnesota Board on Aging is authorized to accept through the Department of Human Services grants, gifts,
and
bequests from public or private
sources for implementing programs and services on behalf of the aging,
and to disburse funds to public and private agencies for the purpose of
research, demonstration, planning, training, and service projects
pertaining to the state's aging citizens.
Subd.
11. Centralized disbursement system.
The state agency may establish a system for the centralized
disbursement of food coupons, assistance payments, and related
documents.
Benefits shall be issued by the state or county subject to section
256.017.
Subd.
11a. Contracting with financial institutions.
The state agency may contract with banks or other financial
institutions to provide services associated with the processing
of public assistance checks and may pay a service fee for these
services, provided the fee charged does not exceed the fee charged to
other customers of the institution for similar services.
Subd.
12. Child mortality review panel. (a) The commissioner shall establish a
child
mortality review panel to
review deaths of children in Minnesota, including deaths attributed to
maltreatment or in which maltreatment may be a contributing cause and to
review near fatalities as defined in section 626.556, subdivision
11d. The commissioners of health, education,
and public safety and the attorney general shall each designate a
representative to the child mortality review panel. Other
panel members shall be appointed by the commissioner, including a
board-certified pathologist and a physician who is a coroner or
a medical examiner. The purpose of the panel shall be to
make recommendations to the state and to county agencies for improving
the child protection system, including modifications in statute, rule,
policy, and procedure.
(b)
The commissioner may require a
county agency to establish a local child mortality review panel. The
commissioner may establish procedures for conducting local reviews and
may require that all professionals with knowledge of a child mortality
case participate in the local review. In this
section, "professional" means a person licensed to perform or a person
performing a specific service in the child protective service system.
"Professional" includes law enforcement personnel, social service agency
attorneys, educators,
and social service, health care,
and mental health care providers.
(c)
If the commissioner of human services
has reason to believe that a child's death was caused by maltreatment
or that maltreatment was a contributing cause, the commissioner has
access to not public data under chapter 13 maintained by state agencies,
statewide systems, or political subdivisions
that are related to the child's death or circumstances surrounding the
care of the child. The commissioner shall also have access to records of
private hospitals as necessary to carry out the duties prescribed by
this section. Access to data under this paragraph
is limited to police investigative data; autopsy records and coroner or
medical examiner investigative data; hospital, public health, or other
medical records of the child; hospital and other medical records of the
child's parent that relate to prenatal care;
and records created by social service agencies that provided services
to the child or family within three years preceding the child's death. A
state agency, statewide system, or political subdivision shall provide
the data upon request of the commissioner.
Not public data may be shared with members of the state or local child
mortality review panel in connection with an individual case.
(d)
Notwithstanding the data's classification in the possession of any
other agency, data acquired by a local or state child mortality review
panel in the exercise of its duties is protected nonpublic or
confidential data as defined in section 13.02, but may be
disclosed as necessary to carry out the purposes of the review panel.
The data is not subject to subpoena or discovery. The commissioner may
disclose conclusions of the review panel, but shall not disclose data
that was classified as confidential or private
data on decedents, under section 13.10, or private, confidential, or
protected nonpublic data in the disseminating agency, except that the
commissioner may disclose local social service agency data as provided
in section 626.556, subdivision 11d, on individual
cases involving a fatality or near fatality of a person served by the
local social service agency prior to the date of death.
(e)
A person attending a child mortality
review panel meeting shall not disclose what transpired at the meeting,
except to carry out the purposes of the mortality review panel. The
proceedings and records of the mortality review panel are protected
nonpublic data as defined in section 13.02, subdivision
13, and are not subject to discovery or introduction into evidence in
a civil or criminal action against a professional, the state or a
county agency, arising out of the matters the panel is reviewing.
Information, documents, and records otherwise available from other
sources are not immune from discovery or use in a civil or
criminal action solely because they were presented during proceedings
of the review panel. A person who presented information before the
review panel or who is a member of the panel shall not be prevented from
testifying about matters within the person's knowledge.
However, in a civil or criminal proceeding a person shall not be
questioned about the person's presentation of information to the review
panel or opinions formed by the person as a result of the review
meetings.
Subd.
13. Pilot project; protocols for persons lacking proficiency in English.
The commissioner of human services shall establish pilot projects in
Hennepin and Ramsey
Counties to provide language assistance to clients applying for or
receiving aid through the county social service agency. The projects
shall be designed to provide translation, in the five foreign languages
that are most common to applicants and recipients
in the pilot counties, to individuals lacking proficiency in English,
who are applying for or receiving assistance under any program
supervised by the commissioner of human services.
As
part of the project, the commissioner
shall ensure that the Combined Application Form (CAF) is available in
these five languages. The projects shall also provide language
assistance to individuals applying for or receiving aid under programs
which the department of human services operates jointly
with other executive branch agencies, including all work and training
programs operated under this chapter and chapter 256D. The purpose of
the pilot projects is to ensure that information regarding a program is
presented in translation to applicants for and
recipients of assistance who lack proficiency in English. In preparing
the protocols to be used in the pilot programs, the commissioner shall
seek input from the following groups: advocacy organizations that
represent non-English-speaking clients, county social
service agencies, legal advocacy groups, employment and training
providers, and other affected groups. The commissioner shall develop the
protocols by October 1, 1995, and shall implement them as soon as
feasible in the pilot counties. The commissioner shall
report to the legislature by February 1, 1996, on the protocols
developed, on the status of their implementation in the pilot counties,
and shall include recommendations for statewide implementation.
Subd.
14. Child welfare reform pilots. The commissioner of human services
shall
encourage local reforms in
the delivery of child welfare services and is authorized to approve
local pilot programs which focus on reforming the child protection and
child welfare systems in Minnesota. Authority to approve pilots includes
authority to waive existing state rules as needed
to accomplish reform efforts. Notwithstanding section 626.556,
subdivision 10, 10b, or 10d, the commissioner may authorize programs to
use alternative methods of investigating and assessing reports of child
maltreatment, provided that the programs comply with
the provisions of section 626.556 dealing with the rights of
individuals who are subjects of reports or investigations, including
notice and appeal rights and data practices requirements. Pilot programs
must be required to address responsibility for safety
and protection of children, be time limited, and include evaluation of
the pilot program.
Subd.
14a. Single benefit demonstration.
The commissioner may conduct a demonstration program under a federal
Title IV-E waiver to demonstrate the impact of a single benefit
level on the rate of permanency for children in long-term foster care
through transfer of permanent legal custody or adoption. The
commissioner of human services is authorized to waive enforcement of
related statutory program requirements, rules, and standards
in one or more counties
for the
purpose of this demonstration. The demonstration must
comply with the requirements of the secretary of health and human
services under federal waiver and be cost neutral to the state.
The
commissioner may measure cost neutrality to the state by the same
mechanism approved by the secretary of health and human services to
measure federal cost neutrality.
The commissioner is authorized to accept and administer county funds
and to transfer state and federal funds among the affected programs as
necessary for the conduct of the demonstration.
Subd.
14b. American Indian child welfare projects.
(a) The commissioner of human services may authorize projects to test
tribal delivery of child welfare services to American Indian children
and their parents and custodians living on the reservation. The
commissioner has authority to solicit and determine
which tribes may participate in a project. Grants may be issued to
Minnesota Indian tribes to support the projects. The commissioner may
waive existing state rules as needed to accomplish the projects.
Notwithstanding section 626.556, the commissioner may
authorize projects to use alternative methods of investigating
and assessing reports of child maltreatment, provided that the projects
comply with the provisions of section 626.556 dealing with the rights
of individuals who are subjects of reports or investigations, including
notice and appeal rights and data practices
requirements. The commissioner may seek any federal
approvals necessary to carry out the projects as well as seek and use
any funds available to the commissioner, including use of federal funds,
foundation funds, existing grant funds, and other funds.
The
commissioner is authorized to advance state funds as necessary to
operate the projects. Federal reimbursement applicable to the
projects is appropriated to the commissioner for the purposes of the
projects. The projects must be required to address
responsibility
for safety, permanency, and well-being of children.
(b)
For the purposes of this section,
"American Indian child" means a person under 18 years of age who is a
tribal member or eligible for membership in one of the tribes chosen for
a project under this subdivision and who is residing on the reservation
of that tribe.
(c)
In order to qualify for an American Indian child welfare project, a tribe
must:
(1) be one of the existing tribes
with reservation land in Minnesota;
(2) have a tribal court with jurisdiction
over child custody proceedings;
(3) have a substantial number of children
for whom determinations of maltreatment have occurred;
(4) have capacity to respond to reports
of abuse and neglect under section 626.556;
(5) provide a wide range of services
to families in need of child welfare services; and
(6)
have a tribal-state title IV-E agreement in effect.
(d)
Grants awarded under this section
may be used for the nonfederal costs of providing child welfare
services to American Indian children on the tribe's reservation,
including costs associated with:
(1) assessment and prevention of child
abuse and neglect;
(2) family preservation;
(3) facilitative, supportive, and
reunification services;
(4) out-of-home placement for children
removed from the home for child protective
purposes; and
(5)
other activities and services
approved by the commissioner that further the goals of providing
safety, permanency, and well-being of American Indian children.
(e)
When a tribe has initiated a project
and has been approved by the commissioner to assume child welfare
responsibilities for American Indian children of that tribe under this
section, the affected county social service agency is relieved of
responsibility for responding to reports of abuse and
neglect under section 626.556 for those children during the time within
which the tribal project is in effect and funded. The commissioner
shall work with tribes and affected counties to develop procedures for
data collection, evaluation, and clarification
of ongoing role and financial responsibilities of the county and tribe
for child welfare services prior to initiation of the project. Children
who have not been identified by the tribe as participating in the
project shall remain the responsibility of the
county. Nothing in this section shall alter responsibilities of the
county for law enforcement or court
services.
(f)
Participating tribes may conduct
children's mental health screenings under section 245.4874, subdivision
1, paragraph (a), clause (14), for children who are eligible for the
initiative and living on the reservation and who meet one of the
following criteria:
(1) the child must be receiving child
protective services;
(2) the child must be in foster care;
or
(3) the child's parents must have
had parental rights suspended or terminated.
Tribes
may access reimbursement from available state funds for conducting the
screenings. Nothing in this section shall alter responsibilities of the
county
for providing services under section
245.487.
(g)
Participating tribes may establish
a local child mortality review panel. In establishing a local child
mortality review panel, the tribe agrees to conduct local child
mortality reviews for child deaths or near-fatalities occurring on the
reservation under subdivision 12. Tribes with established
child mortality review panels shall have access to nonpublic data and
shall protect nonpublic data under subdivision 12, paragraphs (c) to
(e). The tribe shall provide written notice to the commissioner and
affected counties when a local child mortality review
panel has been established and shall provide data upon request of the
commissioner for purposes of sharing nonpublic data with members of the
state child mortality review panel in connection to an individual case.
(h)
The commissioner shall collect
information on outcomes relating to child safety, permanency, and
well-being of American Indian children who are served in the projects.
Participating tribes must provide information to the state in a format
and completeness deemed acceptable by the state
to meet state and federal reporting
requirements.
Subd.
15. Citizen review panels.
(a) The commissioner shall establish a minimum of three citizen review
panels to examine the policies and procedures of state and local
welfare agencies to evaluate the extent to which the agencies are
effectively discharging their child protection responsibilities. Local
social service agencies shall cooperate and work with the citizen review
panels. Where appropriate, the panels may examine
specific cases to evaluate the effectiveness of child protection
activities. The panels must examine the extent to which the state and
local agencies are meeting the requirements of the federal Child Abuse
Prevention and Treatment Act and the Reporting of Maltreatment
of Minors Act. The commissioner
may authorize mortality review panels or child protection teams to
carry out the duties of a citizen review panel if membership meets or is
expanded to meet the requirements of this section.
(b) The panel membership must include
volunteers who broadly represent the community in which the panel is established, including members who have
expertise
in the prevention and
treatment of child abuse and neglect, child protection advocates, and
representatives of the councils of color and ombudsperson for families.
(c)
A citizen review panel has access
to the following data for specific case review under this paragraph:
police investigative data; autopsy records and coroner or medical
examiner investigative data; hospital, public health, or other medical
records of the child; hospital and other medical records
of the child's parent that relate to prenatal care; records created by
social service agencies that provided services to the child or family;
and personnel data related to an employee's performance in discharging
child protection responsibilities. A state
agency, statewide system, or political subdivision shall provide the
data upon request of the commissioner. Not public data may be shared
with members of the state or local citizen review panel in connection
with an individual case.
(d) Notwithstanding the data's classification
in the possession of any other agency, data acquired by a local or state citizen review panel in the exercise
of
its duties are protected nonpublic
or confidential data as defined in section 13.02, but may be disclosed
as necessary to carry out the purposes of the review panel. The data are
not subject to subpoena or discovery. The commissioner may disclose
conclusions of the review panel, but may not
disclose data on individuals that were classified as confidential or
private data on individuals in the possession of the state agency,
statewide system, or political subdivision from which the data were
received, except that the commissioner may disclose
local social service agency data as provided in section 626.556,
subdivision 11d, on individual cases involving a fatality or near
fatality of a person served by the local social service agency prior to
the date of death.
(e)
A person attending a citizen review
panel meeting may not disclose what transpired at the meeting, except
to carry out the purposes of the review panel. The proceedings and
records of the review panel are protected nonpublic data as defined in
section 13.02, subdivision 13, and are not subject
to discovery or introduction into evidence in a civil or criminal
action against a professional, the state, or county agency arising out
of the matters the panel is reviewing. Information, documents, and
records otherwise available from
other
sources are not immune from
discovery or use in a civil or criminal action solely because they were
presented during proceedings of the review panel. A person who
presented information before the review panel or who is a member of the
panel is not prevented from testifying about matters
within the person's knowledge. However, in a civil or criminal
proceeding, a person must not be questioned about the person's
presentation of information to the review panel or opinions formed by
the person as a result of the review panel meetings.
Subd.
16. Information for persons with limited English-language proficiency.
By July 1, 1998, the commissioner shall implement a procedure for
public assistance applicants
and recipients to identify a language preference other than English in
order to receive information pertaining to the public assistance
programs in that preferred language.
Subd.
17. Appropriation transfers to be reported. When the commissioner transfers operational money between programs under section 16A.285, in addition to the requirements
of that section the commissioner must provide the chairs
of the legislative committees that have jurisdiction over the agency's
budget with sufficient detail to identify the account to which the money
was originally appropriated, and the account to which the money is
being transferred.
Subd.
18. Immigration status verifications.
(a) Notwithstanding any waiver of this requirement by the secretary of
the United States Department of Health and Human Services,
effective July 1, 2001, the commissioner shall utilize the Systematic
Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program to conduct
immigration status verifications:
(1) as required under United States
Code, title 8, section 1642;
(2)
for all applicants for food assistance
benefits, whether under the federal food stamp program, the MFIP or
work first program, or the Minnesota food assistance program;
(3)
for all applicants for general assistance medical care, except
assistance for an emergency medical condition, for immunization with
respect to an immunizable disease, or for testing and treatment of
symptoms of a communicable disease; and
(4)
for all applicants for general
assistance, Minnesota supplemental aid, MinnesotaCare, or group
residential housing, when the benefits provided by these programs would
fall under the definition of "federal public benefit" under United
States Code, title 8, section 1642, if federal funds
were used to pay for all or part of the benefits.
(b)
The commissioner shall comply
with the reporting requirements under United States Code, title 42,
section 611a, and any federal regulation or guidance adopted under that
law.
Subd.
18a. Public Assistance Reporting Information System. (a) Effective
October
1, 2009, the commissioner
shall comply with the federal requirements in Public Law 110-379 in
implementing the Public Assistance Reporting Information System (PARIS)
to determine eligibility for all individuals applying for:
(1) health care benefits under chapters
256B, 256D, and 256L; and
(2) public benefits under chapters
119B, 256D, and 256I, and the supplemental nutrition assistance program.
(b)
The commissioner shall determine
eligibility under paragraph (a) by performing data matches, including
matching with medical assistance, cash, child care, and supplemental
assistance programs operated by other states.
Subd.
18b. Protections for American Indians. Effective July 1, 2009, the commissioner shall comply with the federal requirements in the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of
2009, Public Law 111-5, section 5006, regarding American Indians.
Subd.
19. Grants for case management services to persons with HIV or AIDS. The commissioner may award grants to eligible vendors for the development, implementation, and
evaluation of case management services for individuals infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. HIV/ AIDS
case management services will be provided to increase access to cost
effective health care services, to reduce the risk of HIV transmission,
to ensure that basic client needs are met, and to increase client
access to needed community supports or services.
Subd.
20. Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency Act. (a) The commissioner shall act as the designated state agent for carrying out responsibilities required
under Title II of the federal Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency (CARE) Act. These responsibilities include:
(1)
coordinating statewide HIV/ AIDS needs assessment activities;
(2) developing the state's plan to
meet identified health and support service needs of people living with HIV/ AIDS;
(3) administering federal funds designed
to provide comprehensive health and support services to persons living with HIV/ AIDS;
(4) administering federal funds designated
for the AIDS drug assistance program (ADAP);
(5) collecting rebates from pharmaceutical
manufacturers on drugs purchased with federal ADAP funds; and
(6)
utilizing ADAP rebate funds in accordance with guidelines of the federal Health Resources and Services Administration.
(b)
Rebates collected under this subdivision
shall be deposited into the ADAP account in the special revenue fund
and are appropriated to the commissioner for purposes of this
subdivision.
Subd.
21. Interagency agreement with Department of Health.
The commissioner of human services shall amend the interagency
agreement with the commissioner of health to certify
nursing facilities for participation in the medical assistance program,
to require the commissioner of health, as a condition of the agreement,
to comply beginning July 1, 2005, with action plans included in the
annual survey and certification quality improvement
report required under section 144A.10, subdivision 17.
Subd.
22. Homeless services. The commissioner of human services may contract directly with nonprofit organizations providing homeless services in two or
more counties.
<Paragraph (e) provides that subd. 23 expires June 30, 2012.>
Subd.
23. Administrative simplification; county cost study.
(a) The commissioner shall establish and convene the first meeting of
an advisory committee to identify ways
to simplify and streamline human services laws and administrative
requirements. The advisory committee shall select its chair from its
membership at the first meeting.
(b)
The committee shall consist of
three senators appointed by the senate Subcommittee on Committees of
the Committee on Rules and Administration, three state representatives
appointed by the speaker of the house, and nine department staff and
county representatives appointed by the commissioner.
The appointments required under this paragraph must be completed by
September 1, 2007.
(c)
The committee shall discuss methods of reducing inconsistency between
programs and complexity within programs in order to improve
administrative efficiency and reduce the risk of recipient
noncompliance. Topics for discussion may include child support
enforcement,
adoption services, child care licensing, child care assistance, and
other programs. The state senators and state representatives on the
advisory committee, in consultation with the advisory committee, shall
report annually to the chairs of the legislative
committees and divisions with jurisdiction over the Department of Human
Services, beginning January 15, 2008, with recommendations developed by
the advisory group.
(d)
The commissioner, in consultation
with the advisory committee, shall study and report to the legislature
by January 15, 2009, on the transfer of any responsibilities between the
department and counties that would result in more efficient and
effective administration of human services programs.
(e) This subdivision expires on June
30, 2012.
Subd.
23a. Administration of publicly funded health care programs.
(a) The commissioner of human services, in cooperation with the
representatives of county human services
agencies and with input from organizations that advocate on behalf of
families and children, shall develop a plan that, to the extent
feasible, seeks to align standards, income and asset methodologies, and
procedures for families and children under medical
assistance and MinnesotaCare. The commissioner shall evaluate the
impact of different approaches toward alignment on the number of
potential medical assistance and MinnesotaCare enrollees who are
families and children, and on administrative, health care, and
other costs to the state. The commissioner shall present
recommendations to the legislative committees with jurisdiction over
health care by September 15, 2010.
(b)
The commissioner shall report
in detail to the chair of the Health Care and Human Services Finance
Committee of the house of representatives and to the chair of the Health
and Human Services Division of the Finance Committee of the senate,
prior to entering into any contracts involving
counties for streamlined electronic
enrollment and eligibility determinations for publicly funded health
care programs, if such contracts would require payment from either the
general fund, or the health care access fund, as described in sections
295.58 and 297I.05.
Subd.
24. Disability linkage line.
The commissioner shall establish the disability linkage line, a
statewide consumer information, referral, and assistance system for
people
with disabilities and chronic illnesses that:
(1) provides information about state
and federal eligibility requirements, benefits, and service options;
(2) makes referrals to appropriate
support entities;
(3) delivers information and assistance
based on national and state standards;
(4)
assists people to make well-informed decisions; and
(5) supports the timely resolution
of service access and benefit issues.
Subd.
25. Nonstate funding for program costs.
Notwithstanding sections 16A.013 to 16A.016, the commissioner may
accept, on behalf of the state, additional funding from
sources other than state funds for the purpose of financing the cost of
assistance program grants or nongrant administration. All additional
funding is appropriated to the commissioner for use as designated by the
grantor of funding.
Subd.
26. Systems continuity.
In the event of disruption of technical systems or computer operations,
the commissioner may use available grant appropriations to ensure
continuity of payments for maintaining the health, safety, and
well-being of clients served by programs administered by the Department
of Human Services. Grant funds must be used in a manner consistent with
the original
intent of the appropriation.
Subd.
27. Application and renewal forms.
The commissioner shall make state health care program applications and
renewals available on the department's Web site in the most
common foreign languages.
Subd.
28. Statewide health information exchange. (a) The commissioner has the authority to join and participate as a member in a legal entity developing and operating a
statewide health information exchange that shall meet the following criteria:
(1) the legal entity must meet all
constitutional and statutory requirements to allow the commissioner to participate; and
(2) the commissioner or the commissioner's
designated representative must have the right to participate in the governance of the legal entity under the same
terms
and conditions and subject
to the same requirements as any other member in the legal entity and in
that role shall act to advance state interests and lessen the burdens
of government.
(b)
Notwithstanding chapter 16C, the
commissioner may pay the state's prorated share of development-related
expenses of the legal entity retroactively from October 29, 2007,
regardless of the date the commissioner joins the legal entity as a
member.
Subd.
29. State medical review team. (a) To ensure the timely processing of determinations of
disability by the commissioner's state medical review team under
sections
256B.055, subdivision 7, paragraph (b), 256B.057, subdivision 9,
paragraph (j), and 256B.055, subdivision 12, the commissioner shall
review all medical evidence submitted by county agencies with a referral
and seek additional information from providers, applicants,
and enrollees to support the determination of disability where
necessary. Disability shall be determined according to the
rules of title XVI and title XIX of the Social Security Act and pertinent rules and policies
of the Social Security Administration.
(b)
Prior to a denial or withdrawal
of a requested determination of disability due to insufficient
evidence, the commissioner shall (1) ensure that the missing evidence is
necessary and appropriate to a determination of disability, and (2)
assist applicants and enrollees to obtain the evidence,
including, but not limited to, medical examinations and electronic
medical records.
(c)
The commissioner shall provide
the chairs of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over health
and human services finance and budget the following information on the
activities of the state medical review team by February 1, 2010, and
annually thereafter:
(1) the number of applications to
the state medical review team that were denied, approved, or withdrawn;
(2)
the average length of time from receipt of the application to a decision;
(3) the number of appeals and appeal
results;
(4)
for applicants, their age, health
coverage at the time of application, hospitalization history within
three months of application, and whether an application for Social
Security or Supplemental Security Income benefits is pending; and
(5)
specific information on the medical
certification, licensure, or other credentials of the person or persons
performing the medical review determinations and length of time in that
position.
CREDIT(S)
Amended by Laws 1949, c. 40, § 1; Laws 1949,
c. 512, §§ 5, 6; Laws 1949, c. 618, § 1; Laws 1949, c. 704, § 1; Laws 1951, c. 330, § 1; Laws 1951, c. 403,
§
1; Laws 1951, c. 713, § 27, eff.
July 1, 1951; Laws 1953, c. 30, § 1; Laws 1953, c. 593, § 2; Laws 1955,
c. 534, § 1; Laws 1955, c. 627, § 1; Laws 1955, c. 847, § 21; Laws
1957, c. 287, § 3; Laws 1957, c. 641, § 1; Laws 1957, c. 762, §§ 1, 2;
Laws 1957, c. 791, § 1; Laws 1959, c. 43, § 1;
Laws 1959, c. 609, § 2; Laws 1961, c. 466, §§ 3 to 6; Laws 1963, c.
794, § 1; Laws 1967, c. 122, § 1, eff. March 31, 1967; Laws 1967, c.
148, § 2; Laws 1969, c. 365, § 1, eff. May 13, 1969; Laws 1969, c. 493, §
2, eff. May 21, 1969; Laws 1969, c. 703, § 1,
eff. May 25, 1969; Laws 1969, c. 1157, § 1, eff. June 10, 1969; Laws
1971, c. 24, § 26, eff. March 5, 1971; Laws 1973, c. 540, § 4; Laws
1973, c. 717, § 12, eff. Jan. 1, 1974; Laws 1974, c. 536, § 2; Laws
1975, c. 271, § 6; Laws 1975, c. 437, art. 2, § 1,
eff. Jan. 1, 1976; Laws 1976, c. 2, § 89; Laws 1976, c. 107, § 1; Laws
1976, c. 149, § 52, eff. July 1, 1976; Laws 1976, c. 163, § 55, eff.
July 1, 1976; Laws 1977, c. 400, § 1; Laws 1980, c. 357, § 21; Laws
1980, c. 618, § 8, eff. April 26, 1980; Laws 1983,
c. 7, § 3; Laws 1983, c. 10, § 1; Laws 1983, c. 243, § 5, subd. 3, eff.
June 2, 1983; Laws 1983, c. 312, art. 5, § 3, eff. June 10, 1983; Laws
1984, c. 654, art. 5, § 21, eff. May 3, 1984; Laws 1984, c. 654, art. 5,
§ 58; Laws 1985, c. 21, §§ 48, 49; Laws
1985, c. 248, § 70; Laws 1985, 1st Sp., c. 14, art. 9, § 15; Laws 1986,
c. 444; Laws 1987, c. 270, §
1;
Laws 1987, c. 343, § 1; Laws
1987, c. 403, art. 2, § 60; Laws 1987, c. 403, art. 3, § 2; Laws 1988,
c. 689, art. 2, § 121, eff. April 29, 1988; Laws 1988, c. 719, art. 8, §
1; Laws 1989, c. 89, § 5; Laws 1989, c. 209, art. 1, § 22; Laws 1989,
c. 282, art. 2, § 111; Laws 1989, c. 282,
art. 2, § 112, eff. June 2, 1989; Laws 1990, c. 568, art. 4, § 84; Laws
1991, c. 292, art. 3, § 6; Laws 1991, c. 292, art. 5, §§ 6, 7; Laws
1994, c. 631, § 31; Laws 1995, c. 178, art. 2, §§ 1, 2; Laws 1995, 1st
Sp., c. 3, art. 16, § 13, eff. Oct. 1, 1995;
Laws 1997, c. 7, art. 2, § 40; Laws 1997, c. 85, art. 4, § 8, eff. July
1, 1997; Laws 1997, c. 85, art 5, § 2, eff. July 1, 1997; Laws 1997, c.
203, art. 5, §§ 4, 5; Laws 1997, c. 225, art. 4, § 1; Laws 1998, c.
406, art. 1, §§ 8, 9, eff. April 21, 1998; Laws
1998, c. 407, art. 4, § 5, eff. April 22, 1998; Laws 1998, c. 407, art.
6, § 7, eff. April 22, 1998; Laws 1998, c. 407, art. 9, §§ 8, 9, eff.
April 22, 1998; Laws 1999, c. 159, §§ 33, 34; Laws 1999, c. 205, art. 1,
§ 48; Laws 1999, c. 216, art. 6, § 7; Laws
1999, c. 245, art. 1, §§ 16, 17; Laws 1999, c. 245, art. 5, § 19; Laws
2000, c. 488, art. 9, §§ 6, 36(a); Laws 2000, c. 488, art. 10, § 2; Laws
2001, c. 178, art. 1, § 2; Laws 2001, 1st Sp., c. 9, art. 2, § 6; Laws
2001, 1st Sp., c. 9, art. 3, § 8; Laws 2001,
1st Sp., c. 9, art. 10, §§ 1, 66; Laws
2002, c. 220, art. 15, § 4, eff. July 1, 2002; Laws 2002, c. 277, § 5;
Laws 2002, c. 375, art. 2, §§ 10, 11; Laws 2003, c. 130, § 12; Laws
2003, 1st Sp., c. 14, art. 1, § 106; Laws 2003, 1st Sp., c. 14, art. 12,
§ 2; Laws 2004, c. 247, § 4; Laws 2004, c. 288,
art. 3, § 19; Laws 2004, c. 288, art. 3, § 20, eff. May 29, 2004; Laws
2004, c. 288, art. 6, § 17; Laws 2005, c. 56, § 1; Laws 2005, 1st Sp.,
c. 4, art. 3, § 8, eff. Aug. 1, 2005; Laws 2005, 1st Sp., c. 4, art. 5, §
12, eff. Aug. 1, 2005; Laws 2005, 1st Sp.,
c. 4, art. 8, § 5, eff. Aug. 1, 2005; Laws 2005, 1st Sp., c. 4, art. 8,
§ 6; Laws 2006, c. 282, art. 16, § 5; Laws 2007, c. 147, art. 1, § 1,
eff. July 1, 2007; Laws 2007, c. 147, art. 2, §§ 15, 16, eff. July 1,
2007; Laws 2007, c. 147, art. 7, § 4, eff. July
1, 2007; Laws 2007, c. 147, art. 15, § 15, eff. July 1, 2007; Laws
2007, c. 147, art. 19, §§ 15, 16, eff. July 1, 2007; Laws
2008, c. 277, art. 1, § 32, eff. July 1,
2008; Laws
2008, c. 286, art. 1, § 1, eff. Aug. 1,
2008; Laws
2008, c. 326, art. 1, § 7, eff. July 1,
2008; Laws
2008, c. 358, art. 3, § 2, eff. July 1,
2008; Laws
2008, c. 361, art. 1, § 2, eff. Aug. 1,
2008; Laws
2009, c. 79, art. 5, § 5, eff. July 1,
2009; Laws
2009, c. 79, art. 5, § 6, eff. Oct. 1,
2009; Laws
2009, c. 79, art. 5, §§7, 77, eff. July 1,
2009; Laws
2009, c. 79, art. 8, § 12,
eff. July 1,
2009; Laws
2009, c. 163, art. 2, § 2, eff. Aug. 1,
2009; Laws
2009, c. 173, art. 1, § 12, eff. July 1,
2009.
Laws 1939, chapter 431, was entitled, "An act relating to the organization and administration of the state government, appropriating money therefor, prescribing penalties for violations, and repealing Mason's Minnesota Statutes of 1927, Sections 2317 and 2318, and other acts and parts of acts inconsistent herewith." For distribution in Minnesota Statutes Annotated, see Tables, volumes 43 and 43A.
42 U.S.C.A. § 301 et seq. 42 U.S.C.A. § 1396r Laws 1937, chapter 438, was entitled, "An act to promote the public welfare by providing aid to dependent children, and repealing and amending certain laws relating thereto." For distribution in Minnesota Statutes Annotated, see Tables, volume 43. Public Law Number 104-193 is the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996. Title I of the Act is found throughout titles 7, 8, 20, 26, 29, and 42 of U.S.C.A.
Laws 1961, chapter 466, entitled in part, "An act relating to the aging; creating a governor's citizens council on aging ...", enacted § 256.975 and in § 256.01 amended subds. 7 and 8 and added subds. 9 and 10.
42 U.S.C.A. § 5101 et seq.
M.S.A. § 626.556.
42 U.S.C.A. § 300ff et seq.
42 U.S.C.A. §§ 1381 et seq., 1396 et seq.
HISTORICAL AND STATUTORY NOTES
2007 Main Volume
Derivation:
Laws 1943, c. 612, §§ 1, 2.
Laws 1943, c. 570, § 1.
Laws 1943, c. 177, § 1.
Laws 1943, c. 7, § 1.
St.Supp.1940, §§ 3199-102, 8688-4.
Laws 1939, c. 431, art. 7, § 2.
Laws 1937, c. 438, § 2.
Laws
1949, c. 40, § 1, in subd. 2 in par. (2), relating to director of
social welfare administration and supervision of all child welfare
activities, included the power to
designate county welfare boards to act as the agent of the director of
social welfare in the placement of wards in adoptive homes or for foster
care. The changes made by Laws 1949, c. 40, § 1, did appear in St.1949,
but were not reflected in the text as subsequently
amended in 1951.
Laws
1949, c. 512, §§ 5 and 6, in subd. 1 added "for all purposes except
those relating to mental health or mental hygiene" to the end of subd.
1; and in subd. 2 rewrote
par. (3) which formerly read:
"(3)
Administer and supervise all mental
hygiene work involving persons not in a state institution. The
authority and power conferred by this subdivision does not extend to
administration or supervision of state institutions of mental hygiene
nor to patients therein during the period of actual confinement,
nor to mental testing, or to persons feebleminded, epileptic, or
mentally ill on parole from state institutions."
As rewritten by Laws 1949, c. 512, § 6, this par. (3) of subd. 2 read:
"(3) Administer and supervise mental hygiene work involving children under his guardianship who are not in a state institution."
The
changes made by Laws 1949, c. 512, §§ 5 and 6, did appear in St.1949,
but were not reflected in the text as subsequently amended in 1951.
Laws 1949, c. 618, § 1, in subd. 2 rewrote par. (6) which formerly read:
"(6)
Act as the agent of and cooperate with the federal government in
matters of mutual concern relative to and in conformity with the
provisions of Laws 1939, Chapter 431,
including the administration of any federal funds granted to the
state to aid in the performance of any functions of the director as
specified in Laws 1939, Chapter 431, and including the promulgation of
rules and regulations making uniformly available medical care benefits
to all recipients of public assistance at such
time as the federal government increases its participation in
assistance expenditures for medical care to recipients of public
assistance, the cost thereof to be borne in the same proportion as are
the grants of aid to said recipients."
As rewritten by Laws 1949, c. 618, § 1, this par. (6) of subd. 2 read:
"(6)
a. Act as the agent of and cooperate with the federal government in
matters of mutual concern relative to and in conformity with the
provisions of Laws 1939, Chapter
431, including the administration of any federal funds granted to the
state to aid in the performance of any functions of the director as
specified in Laws 1939, Chapter 431.
"b.
Enter into contracts and agreements with the federal government,
through its appropriate agency or instrumentality, whereby the State of
Minnesota shall receive federal
grants-in-aid or other benefits for public assistance or public welfare
purposes under any act or acts of Congress heretofore or hereafter
enacted; provided that in a grant-in-aid program established by rule and
regulation
of the director of social
welfare the cost of such a program, in excess of federal fund shall be
paid three-fourths from county funds and one-fourth from state funds.
"c.
Cooperate with the federal government in carrying out the purpose of
any federal act pertaining to public assistance or welfare service and
in other matters of mutual
concern."
The
changes made by Laws 1949, c. 618, § 1, did appear in St.1949, but were
not reflected in the text as subsequently amended in 1951.
Laws
1949, c. 704, § 1, in subd. 2 in par. (2), relating to director of
social welfare administration and supervision of all child welfare
activities, deleted "private" preceding
"child-caring", added par. (12) regarding the director of social
welfare acting as coordinator of the program for displaced persons for a
specified period, and redesignated former par. (12) as par. (13). The
changes made by Laws 1949, c. 704, § 1, did not
appear in St.1949.
Laws
1951, c. 330, § 1, added subd. 5 regarding the power and authority of
the director to accept contributions and gifts for the use and benefit
of children under guardianship
or custody of the director of social welfare.
Laws
1951, c. 403, § 1, in subd. 2 added
a par. (12) identical to that added by Laws 1949, c. 704, § 1 regarding
the director of social welfare acting as coordinator of the program for
displaced persons, except that the specified period of time differed;
Laws 1949, c. 704, § 1 made par. (12) applicable
for the period beginning July 1, 1949 and ending June 30, 1951, while
Laws 1951, c. 403, § 1 made par. (12) applicable for the period
beginning July 1, 1951 and ending June 30, 1953. Laws 1951, c. 403, § 1,
also redesignated former par. (12) as par. (13),
as had Laws 1949, c. 704, § 1.
The
text of subd. 2 amended by Laws 1951, c. 403, § 1, purporting to be
Minnesota Statutes 1949, § 256.01, did not show any of the changes made
by Laws 1949, c. 40, § 1,
Laws 1949, c. 512, §§ 5 and 6, or Laws 1949, c. 618, § 1. The deletion
of "private" preceding "child-caring" in par. (2) of subd. 2 by Laws
1949, c. 704, § 1, was reflected.
Laws
1951, c. 713, § 27, in subd. 2 in par. (11), relating to the transfer
of powers and duties of the director of public institutions with
reference to the state sanatorium
of consumptives to the director of social welfare, added the sentence
providing that the director of social welfare shall appoint the
superintendent of the state sanatorium but shall not have the power to
fix his
salary. In making this amendment
Laws 1951, c. 713, § 27 did not show the entire text of subd. 2, but showed only par. (11) of subd. 2.
Laws 1953, c. 30, § 1, in subd. 2 rewrote par. (12) which, as contained in Laws 1951, c. 403, § 1, read:
"(12) Act as coordinator of the program for displaced persons for the period beginning July 1, 1951, and ending June 30, 1953."
Laws
1953, c. 593, § 2, which enacted § 245.04 (repealed) transferred to,
vested in, and imposed upon the commissioner of public welfare all
powers and duties now vested
in or imposed upon the director and division of social welfare and the
director and division of public institutions, and constituted the
commissioner of public welfare as the "state agency" as defined by the
social security act of the United States.
Laws 1955, c. 534, § 1, added subd. 6 regarding commissioner appointment of citizen advisory committees.
Laws
1955, c. 627, § 1, in subd. 2 added pars. (14) and (15) regarding
establishment of schedules of maximum fees and charges for medical,
dental,
etc.
care and supplies, and regarding
the prohibition of payment for non-emergency medical, dental, etc. care
and supplies without prior authorization for the care, respectively.
Laws 1955, c. 847, § 21, in subd. 4 rewrote par. (7) which formerly read:
"(7)
Make an annual report to the governor not later than four months after
the close of each fiscal year showing for such year the total amount
paid under Laws 1937, Chapter
438; the total number of persons assisted, and such other particulars
as it may deem advisable."
Laws
1957, c. 287, § 3, instructed the revisor of statutes to substitute
"Minnesota State Sanatorium" for "state sanatorium for consumptives".
Laws 1957, c. 641, § 1, rewrote subd. 5 which formerly read:
"The
commissioner shall have the power and authority to accept in behalf of
the state contributions and gifts, not exceeding $200 at one time from
one person, for the use
and benefit of children under the guardianship or custody of the
commissioner. Such gifts or contributions shall be deposited in and
disbursed from the social welfare fund provided for in sections 256.88
to 256.92."
Laws 1957, c. 762, §§ 1 and 2, added subds.
7 and 8 regarding appointment of a special assistant on aging and designation of county services coordinators, respectively.
Laws 1957, c. 791, § 1, in subd. 2 rewrote par. (15) which formerly read:
"(15)
Require that county welfare boards shall not pay for non-emergency
medical, dental, surgical, hospital, nursing, or licensed nursing home
care or medicine and medical
supplies under the categorical aid programs unless the board has given
prior authorization for the care."
Laws
1959, c. 43, § 1, in subd. 5 deleted a limitation of "not exceeding
$200.00 at one time from one person" upon the power of the commissioner
to accept contributions and
gifts.
Laws
1959, c. 609, § 1, in subd. 2 in par. (1), regarding commissioner of
public welfare administration and supervision of all forms of public
assistance in the state, deleted
"relief to veterans" from the list of forms of public assistance to be
administered and supervised by the commissioner of public welfare,
deleted former par. (3), redesignated former pars. (4) to (15) as
pars. (3) to (14) respectively,
and therein rewrote newly designated par. (3). Prior to their respective deletion and rewriting, former pars. (3) and (4) read:
"(3)
Administer and supervise all mental hygiene work involving persons not
in a state institution. The authority and power conferred by this
subdivision does not extend
to administration or supervision of state institutions of mental
hygiene nor to patients therein during the period of actual confinement,
nor to mental testing, or to persons feebleminded, epileptic, or
mentally ill on parole from state institutions.
"(4)
Administer and supervise all non-institutional services to the
handicapped persons, including the blind, the deaf, the tubercular, the
crippled, and otherwise handicapped
persons. The authority and power conferred by this subdivision shall
include such non-institutional services to the handicapped as are now
authorized to be performed by the state board of control and by the
division of the deaf of the state industrial commission."
The
1961 amendment rewrote subds. 7 and 8; and added subds. 9 and 10
regarding staff assistance to the council on aging and commissioner
authority to accept grants and gifts
for programs and services in behalf of the aging, respectively.
Prior to revision subds. 7 and 8 read:
"Subd.
7. Special assistant on aging. The commissioner of public welfare may
appoint and fix the salary of a special assistant on aging in the
unclassified service and a
clerk-steno in the classified service. Such special assistant shall
encourage cooperation among agencies, both public and private, including
the departments of the state government, in providing services for the
aging. He shall provide consultation to county
welfare boards in developing local services for the aging, shall
promote volunteer services programs and stimulate public interest in the
problems of the aging. He shall serve as executive secretary to the
advisory committee on aging.
"Subd.
8. County services coordinators. The county welfare board of any county
may designate a county services coordinator who shall coordinate
services and activities, both
public and private, that may further the well being of the aging and
meet their social, psychological, physical and economic needs, and shall
perform such other duties as the board may direct. The board may
appoint a citizens advisory committee which shall
advise the coordinator and the board on the developments of services,
the members of which shall serve without compensation."
The 1963 amendment in subd. 4 added par.
(8) regarding state agency power to enter into agreements with other state departments to meet federal government requirements.
Laws
1967, c. 122, § 1, in subd. 2 deleted former par. (14) which provided
that the commissioner of public welfare require that county welfare
boards not pay for non-emergency
surgical, hospital, or licensed nursing home care under categorical aid
programs unless the board has given prior authorization, and authorize
county welfare boards to require prior authorization for non-emergency
medical, dental or nursing care or medicine
and medical supplies.
Laws
1967, c. 148, § 2, instructed the revisor of statutes to substitute
"Minnesota Veterans Home" or "veterans home" for "Minnesota Soldiers
Home" or "soldiers home".
Laws
1969, c. 365, § 1, in subd. 2 added par. (14) [redesignated by the
revisor of statutes as par. (15) in St.1969] requiring the commissioner
of public welfare in accordance
with federal requirements to establish procedures to be followed by
county welfare boards in creating citizen advisory committees including
member selection procedures.
Laws 1969, c. 493, § 2, in subd. 2 in the
introductory paragraph inserted reference to being subject to § 242.021, subd. 2.
Laws
1969, c. 703, § 1, added par. (14) giving the commissioner of public
welfare authority to conduct administer experimental projects to test
the administering of assistance
and services to recipients or potential recipients of public welfare.
Laws
1969, c. 1157, § 1, in subd. 7 permitted the appointment of a special
consultant on aging in the classified service, formerly in the
unclassified service, and deleted
a provision permitting the commissioner of welfare to fix the salary of
the special consultant.
The
1971 amendment, a revisor's corrections bill, corrected the erroneous
reference in the introductory paragraph of subd. 2, substituting §
241.021, subd. 2 for § 242.021,
subd. 2.
Laws
1973, c. 540, § 4, in subd. 2 in par. (3), regarding commissioner of
public welfare administration and supervision of all non-institutional
service to handicapped persons,
substituted "at state hospitals when it is not feasible to provide such
service in state hospitals" for "at the Gillette state hospital
for crippled children when it is
not feasible to provide such service in that hospital".
Laws
1973, c. 717, § 12, in subd. 2 in par. (1) provided for commissioner of
public welfare administration and supervision of all forms of public
assistance "provided for
by state law", replacing a listing of forms public assistance which
read "in the state including general relief, relief to transients and
state homeless, old age assistance, aid to dependent children, aid to
the blind and otherwise handicapped persons", deleted
a former par. (8) which required the establishment within the
department of the commissioner of public welfare a bureau of old age
assistance, of aid to dependent children, and a bureau of child welfare,
redesignated former pars. (9) to (15) as pars. (8) to
(14) respectively, and in newly designated par. (12), regarding
commissioner of public welfare establishment of schedules of maximum
fees and charges for medical, dental, etc., care and supplies,
substituted "under the medical assistance program" for "under
the categorical aid programs".
The 1974 amendment rewrote subd. 10 which formerly read:
"The
commissioner of public welfare is authorized to accept financial
grants, gifts, and bequests from public or private sources for the
program and services
in
behalf of the aging and to disburse
such funds to public or private agencies for the purpose of research,
demonstration, and service projects pertaining to the state's aging
citizens."
Laws
1975, c. 271, § 6, instructed the revisor of statutes the substitute
the new names for the state agencies, boards, commissions, committees,
authorities, and councils
listed in Laws 1975, c. 271, §§ 3 to 5.
Laws 1975, c. 271, § 7, provided:
"This
act is effective July 1, 1975. Until such time as the state agencies
whose names have been changed by this act are able to economically make
all changes in designation
required by this act, they may continue to use their present
designations, but the use of those designations shall not extend beyond
the first Monday in January 1978."
Laws
1975, c. 437, art. 2, § 1, in subd. 2 in par. (4), regarding
commissioner of public welfare performance of services in conformity
with the purposes of Laws 1939, chapter
431, deleted ", including the establishment of an efficient working
relationship with the director of institutions relating to the care and
supervision of individuals both prior to and after departure from
institutions
under
the supervision of said director
of institutions" following "Laws 1939, chapter 431", in par. (12),
regarding commissioner of public welfare establishment of maximum fees
and charges for medical, dental, etc. care and supplies, deleted "by
county welfare boards" following "charges which may
be paid" and substituted "under all programs of medical care provided
by the state" for "under the medical assistance program", in par. (14)
regarding commissioner establishment of procedures to be followed in
creating citizen advisory committees, substituted
"local welfare boards" for "county welfare boards", and added par. (15)
regarding promulgation by rule and regulation of standards of
administration to be applied by local welfare boards administering
listed programs, and par. (16) regarding development of
a plan and report to the 1976 legislature on methods by which the
payment and administration of all income maintenance programs could be
assumed by the state department of public welfare.
Laws
1976, c. 2, § 89, a revisor's corrections will, in subd. 2, par. (3),
relating to commissioner administration and supervision of all
non-institutional service to handicapped
persons, instructed the insertion of "Minnesota Statutes 1971,"
following "in" and preceding "section".
Laws 1976, c. 107, § 1, in subd. 2 in the introductory paragraph deleted
"Minnesota
Statutes 1967" preceding
"section 241.021 subdivision 2", in par. (1), regarding commissioner
administration and supervision of public assistance, deleted a sentence
providing that nothing herein shall transfer from the veterans home
board any of its present rights, powers, or duties,
all of which shall continue to be exercised by the board, in par. (3),
regarding commissioner administration and supervision of all
non-institutional service to handicapped persons, deleted a reference to
§ 250.02, in par. (12), regarding commissioner establishment
of maximum fees and charges for medical, dental, etc., care and
supplies, inserted "by local agencies" and "and for congregate living
care under the income maintenance programs", and throughout deleted
references to regulations in the phrase "rules and regulations".
Laws 1976, c. 149, § 52, rewrote subd. 6 which formerly read:
"The
commissioner may appoint citizen advisory committees to consult with
him on any of the programs under his administration and supervision.
Within the limit of the appropriations
provided the commissioner may authorize the reimbursement of advisory
committee members for expenses incurred in the performance of their
duties."
Laws 1976, c. 163, § 55, in subd. 8 added the sentence providing that members
of
citizens programs for the aging
who receive federal money for a portion of actual expenses may receive
the remaining portion from state money appropriated for programs for the
aging.
The 1977 amendment added subd. 11 regarding establishment of a centralized disbursement system.
Laws
1980, c. 357, § 21, in subd. 2 in par. (8), constituting the
commissioner as guardian of all state wards and certain others,
substituted "mentally retarded" for "feeble-minded",
deleted former par. (9) providing that all powers and duties of the
director of public institutions with reference to the Minnesota state
sanatorium were transferred to the commissioner of public welfare, and
requiring the commissioner to appoint the superintendent
of the Minnesota state sanatorium but providing that the commissioner
did not have the power to fix his salary, redesignated former pars. (10)
to (15) as pars. (9) to (14), and deleted a former par. (16) which
required the commissioner to develop a plan and
report to the 1976 legislature on methods by which the payment and
administration of all income maintenance programs could be assumed by
the state department of public welfare.
Laws 1980, c. 618, § 8, amended subd. 2 as amended by Laws 1980, c. 357, § 21,
by rewriting par. (14) [formerly
par. (15) ] which formerly read:
"(14)
Promulgate, by rule, standards of administration to be applied by local
welfare boards administering state and county financed programs of
medical assistance pursuant
performance shall be deducted from administrative reimbursement
otherwise due the county."
Laws
1980, c. 618, § 27, provided in part that "Unless otherwise provided
within the section, each section of this act is effective on the
effective date of the act amended
by that section."
Laws 1983, c. 7, § 3, in subd. 2 rewrote pars. (1), (2), (3), (7), and (8) which formerly read:
"(1)
Administer and supervise all forms of public assistance provided for by
state law and other welfare activities or services as may from time to
time be vested in the
commissioner.
"(2)
Administer and supervise all child welfare activities; promote the
enforcement of laws protecting defective, illegitimate, dependent,
neglected and delinquent children;
license and supervise child-caring and child-placing agencies
and institutions; supervise the care of children in boarding and foster
homes or in private institutions; and generally perform all functions
relating to the field of child welfare now vested in the state board of
control.
"(3)
Administer and supervise all non-institutional service to handicapped
persons, including the blind, the deaf, the tuberculous, the crippled,
and otherwise handicapped
persons. The authority and power conferred by this subdivision shall
include the authority and power to provide and contract for the care and
treatment of qualified indigent children in facilities other than those
located and available at state hospitals when
it is not feasible to provide the service in state hospitals."
"(7)
Administer and supervise any additional welfare activities and services
as may, from time to time, hereafter be vested by law in the state
department.
"(8)
The commissioner is hereby specifically constituted as guardian of both
the estate and the person of all the wards of the state of Minnesota
and other persons the guardianship
of whom has been heretofore vested in the state board of control,
whether by operation of law or by an order of court, without any further
act or proceeding whatever, except as to persons committed as mentally
retarded
or epileptic. All of said
guardianships, and the funds and property of the same, are hereby
transferred to and vested in said commissioner, and said commissioner is
hereby constituted a legal entity and is hereby empowered to act as
guardian under any laws of this state heretofore
conferring such powers upon the state board of control."
Laws
1983, c. 10, § 1, instructed the revisor of statutes to change
"epileptic" to "person having epilepsy" or similar terminology.
Laws
1983, c. 243, § 5, subd. 3, amended subd. 2 as amended by Laws 1983, c.
7, § 3, by substituting in par. (2), regarding commissioner
administration and supervision of
all child welfare activities, "nor at the births" for "and births".
Laws 1983, c. 312, art. 5, § 3, in subd. 2 rewrote par. (14) which formerly read:
"(14)
Promulgate, by rule, standards of administration to be applied by local
welfare boards administering state and county financed programs of
medical assistance pursuant
to chapter 256B, general relief medical care pursuant to section
256D.02, subdivision 4 and medical, hospital, and surgical care for
persons
eligible for general assistance
pursuant to chapter 256D, or for indigent persons whose costs of
hospitalization are paid pursuant to sections 261.21 to 261.232. The
rules shall specify a uniform standard of performance and a tolerated
error rate, but shall not specify the minimum number
of personnel to be employed by a local agency if the agency operates at
the specified standard of performance or at or below the tolerated
error rate. The commissioner may deduct from the earned administrative
reimbursements of a county a penalty for the county's
failure to comply with the standards of administration. The penalty
shall be fixed by the commissioner as a percentage of the
overexpenditure caused by improper administration, beyond an initial
tolerated amount of overexpenditure. In the event that fiscal
sanctions are imposed by the federal government because of improper
administration of the programs, one half of the amount of the sanctions
attributable to local agency performance shall be deducted from
administrative reimbursement otherwise due the county."
Laws
1984, c. 654, art. 5, § 21, in subd. 2 added par. (15) regarding
commissioner development and implementation of special projects that
maximize reimbursements and result
in recovery of money to the state.
Laws 1984, c. 654, art. 5, § 58, instructed the revisor of statutes to change
commissioner or department of "public
welfare" to commissioner or department of "human services".
Laws
1985, c. 21, §§ 48 and 49, in subd. 2, in par. (3), regarding
commissioner administration and supervision of all noninstitutional
service to handicapped persons, inserted
", including those who are visually impaired, hearing impaired, or
physically impaired or otherwise handicapped", and in par. (8),
constituting the commissioner as guardian of all state wards and certain
others, deleted "or having epilepsy" after "mentally
retarded"; and in subd. 5 substituted "patients and residents at the
several state hospitals for persons with mental illness or mental
retardation" for "patients at the several state institutions for the
mentally ill, the mentally retarded, or persons having
epilepsy".
Laws
1985, c. 248, § 70, instructed the revisor of statutes to delete
references to regulations when referring to administrative rules adopted
on the state level and replace
them with references to rules, and in the phrase "rules and
regulations" delete "and regulations".
Laws
1985, 1st Sp., c. 14, art. 9, § 15, in subd. 4 added par. (8) regarding
preparation and submission of a plan to the full productivity and
opportunity
coordinator and renumbered former
par. (8) as par. (9).
Laws
1985, 1st Sp., c. 14, art. 9, § 79, subds. 1 and 3, provide in part
that § 15 of art. 9 is effective August 1, 1985, except that:
[Subd.
1] "(a) departments or agencies whose functions, powers, or duties are
transferred to the department of jobs and training or are repealed by
this article, or in which
positions are abolished by this article, shall exercise those
functions, powers, or duties and retain those positions until the
commissioner of jobs and training notifies the commissioner of
administration that the department of jobs and training is ready
to begin operation; and
"(b)
a new program established by this article is not effective until the
full productivity and opportunity coordinator and the commissioner of
jobs and training have been
appointed and have taken office."
"Subd. 3. Notwithstanding subdivision 1, all sections of this article must be effective by October 1, 1985."
Laws 1986, c. 444, authorized the removal of nonsubstantive gender specific references.
Laws 1987, c. 270, § 1, in subd. 2 added
par. (16) relating to authorizing the commissioner to make direct payments to shelter facilities.
Laws
1987, c. 343, § 1, in subd. 2 in par. (14), regarding commissioner
allocation of federal fiscal disallowances or sanctions based on quality
control error rates for certain
programs, rewrote par. (a) which formerly read:
"(a)
One-half of the total amount of the disallowance shall be borne by the
county boards responsible for administering the programs and shall be
shared by each county board
in the same proportion as that county's expenditures for the sanctioned
program are to the total of all counties' expenditures for that
program. Each county shall pay its share of the disallowance to the
state of Minnesota. When a county fails to pay the amount
due hereunder, the commissioner may deduct the amount from
reimbursement otherwise due the county, or the attorney general, upon
the request of the commissioner, may institute civil action to recover
the amount due."
Laws 1987, c. 343, § 2, provides:
"Section 1 is effective for all sanction payments made after January 1, 1988."
Laws 1987, c. 403, art. 2, § 60, revised
par. (8) of subd. 4 which previously read:
"(8)
prepare a plan and submit it to the full productivity and opportunity
coordinator in each even-numbered year, according to standards
established by the coordinator,
for use in developing a biennial statewide employment and training
plan; and."
Laws
1987, c. 403, art. 3, § 2, in subd. 2 in par. (12), regarding
commissioner authority to conduct and administer experimental projects
to test methods and procedures of
administering assistance and services to recipients or potential
recipients of public welfare, increased from two years to four years the
maximum duration of a project.
Laws
1988, c. 689, art. 2, § 121, in subd. 4, deleted par. (8), relating to
the design, development, and administration of an intake, referral, and
inventory system to provide
access to employment opportunities and public and private services, and
redesignated former par. (9) as par. (8).
Laws 1988, c. 719, art 8, § 1, in subd. 2 in par. (1) provided that
administration
and supervision of
human services activities and services includes assuring timely and
accurate distribution of benefits, completeness of service, and quality
program management, and added the list of functions the commissioner has
authority to perform, added par. (2) requiring
the commissioner to timely inform local agencies of law, rule,
regulation, and policy changes, designated former pars. (2) to (6) as
pars. (3) to (7), respectively, and deleted a former par. (7) requiring
the commissioner to administer and supervise any additional
welfare activities and services as are vested by law in the department.
Laws
1988, c. 719, art. 8, § 37 provides in part that § 1 (amending subd. 2)
is effective January 1, 1990, except as provided in § 34. Laws 1988, c.
719, art. 8, § 34 provides:
"$1,655,500 is appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of human services for the purposes indicated.
"(a) $990,000 is for the county incentive fund, to be available until June 30, 1991.
"(b) $110,000 is available beginning June 1, 1989, to convert county food stamp
quality control staff to state employment.
"(c)
$555,500 is available beginning January 1, 1990, to implement state
financing of income maintenance benefits as contained in this article by
monitoring local agency
performance in administering the income maintenance programs, providing
technical assistance and program support, and reviewing local agency
exceptions to compliance actions."
Laws
1989, c. 89, § 5 in subd. 2 added par. (17) regarding commissioner
authority to establish and enforce listed county reporting requirements.
Laws
1989, c. 209, was a revisor's instruction correcting erroneous,
ambiguous, and omitted text and obsolete references; eliminating certain
redundant, conflicting, and
superseded provisions; and making miscellaneous technical corrections
to statutes and other laws. Article 1, § 22 of this act substituted, in
subd. 2, par. (16), "256D.05" for "256.05".
Laws
1989, c. 282, art. 2, §§ 111, 112, in subd. 2 added par. (17)
[redesignated by the revisor of statutes as par. (18)], relating to
commissioner allocation of federal
fiscal disallowances; and added subd. 12, establishing a child
mortality review panel.
Laws
1990, c. 568, art. 4, § 84, in part,
directed the revisor of statutes to substitute "county agency" or
"county agencies" for "local agency" or "local agencies" wherever they
appear in chapters 256 and 256D.
Laws
1991, c. 292, art. 3, § 6, increased from $400,000 to $1,000,000 the
account balance limits in subd. 2, par. (15) regarding commissioner
development and implementation
of special projects that maximize reimbursements and result in money
recovery.
Laws
1991, c. 292, art. 5, § 85, subd. 3, provides in part that §§ 6 and 7
are effective June 5, 1991, except as indicated in § 9 (amending §
256.025, subd. 1).
Laws
1991, c. 292, art. 5, §§ 6, 7, rewrote subd. 11; and added subd. 11a
relating to state agency contracting with banks or other financial
institutions. Prior to revision
subd. 11 read:
"The
state agency may establish a system for the centralized disbursement of
(1) assistance payments to recipients of aid to families with dependent
children, (2) emergency
assistance payments to needy families with dependent children
as defined in Minnesota Statutes 1976, Section 256.12, and (3) the
benefit documents for food stamp recipients. The state agency shall
adopt rules and set guidelines for the operation of the statewide
system. If required by federal law or regulations promulgated
thereunder, or by state law, or by rule of the state agency, each
county shall pay to the state treasurer that portion of assistance for
which the county is responsible. The commissioner shall designate the
date on which a centralized disbursement system shall
be established in any designated geographic area in the state and after
that date Minnesota Statutes, Sections 256.81, Clause (2); 256.82; and
256.871, Subdivision 1, shall be superseded by this section as to any
county agency in the designated area. Federal
funds available for administrative reimbursement shall be disbursed
between the state and local welfare agencies on the same basis that
reimbursements are earned."
Laws
1994, c. 631, § 31, par. (b), instructed the revisor of statutes to
change "county welfare board" and "county welfare department" to "local
social services agency".
Laws
1995, c. 178, art. 2, §§ 1 and 2, added subd. 4a, relating to technical
assistance to county agencies for immunization reminders, and subd. 13,
relating to pilot projects
to assist persons lacking proficiency in english.
Laws 1995, 1st Sp., c. 3, art. 16, § 13,
provides in part:
"The
revisor of statutes shall identify in Minnesota Statutes and Minnesota
Rules all references to the commissioner of education and the department
of education and shall
make the following terminology changes:
"(1) all references to the commissioner of education shall be changed to the commissioner of children, families, and learning;
"(2) all references to the department of education shall be changed to the department of children, families, and learning;
"(3)
all references involving the commissioner of education shall be
rewritten to give all relevant responsibilities or authorities to the
commissioner of children, families,
and learning; and
"(4)
all references to the programs being transferred to the department of
children, families, and learning to reflect that those programs are
under the jurisdiction of the
commissioner of children, families, and learning."
Laws 1997, c. 7, art. 2, § 72, provides
in part that § 40 (amending subd. 2) is effective retroactive to October 15, 1995.
Laws
1998, c. 406, art. 1, § 37, provides that the amendments to Minnesota
Statutes in Laws 1998, chapter 406, article 1, prevail over any
inconsistent amendments to the
same statutes contained in Laws 1998, chapter 407.
Laws 1998, c. 406, art. 1, § 37, provides:
"The
amendments to Minnesota Statutes in this article prevail over any
inconsistent amendments to the same statutes contained in 1998 S.F. No.
3346 [Laws 1998, c. 407], if
enacted."
Laws
2001, 1st. Sp., c. 9, art. 2, § 6, also provides in part that the
amendment of subd. 2 is effective 30 days following June 30, 2001.
Laws
2001, 1st Sp., c. 9, art. 10, § 66, directed the revisor of statutes to
change all references to Minnesota Family Investment Program-Statewide
(MFIP-S) to Minnesota
Family Investment Program (MFIP).
Laws 2002, c. 379, art. 1, § 113, provides:
"2001
First Special Session Senate File
No. 4, as passed by the senate and the house of representatives on
Friday, June 29, 2001, and subsequently published as Laws 2001, First
Special Session chapter 9, is reenacted. Its provisions are effective on
the dates originally provided in the bill."
Laws
2004, c. 288, art. 3, § 20, adding subd. 22, also provided that the
addition of subd. 22 was effective immediately following final
enactment. The governor approved Laws
2004, c. 288 on May 29, 2004.
Laws
2005, 1st Sp., c. 4, art. 8, § 6, adding subd. 2a, also provided that
subd. 2a was effective retroactively from July 1, 2005.
M. S. A. § 256.01, MN ST § 256.01
Current with laws of the 2010 Regular
and First Special
Sessions effective through June 30,
2010