Virginia Regulatory Town Hall
Agency
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services
 
Board
State Board of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services
 
Guidance Document Change: This is a new guidance document regarding the current requirement for 90 days of operating expenses per the Rules and Regulations for Licensing Providers by the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (12VAC35-105).
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9/3/19  11:12 am
Commenter: Betsy Schatz, Langley Residential Support Services

90 day reserve
 

Langley Residential Support Services has been a non-profit service provider for individuals with developmental disabilities in Virginia for over 30 years.  We are very concerned about the Guidance Document being proposed by DBHDS Office of Licensing as a Requirement for 90 Days of Operating Expenses.

We are specifically concerned about the statement ending the first paragraph:

"Therefore, both applicants for licensure and licensed providers must be able to provide proof, at any time when requested by a representative from the department, that they have sufficient funds for 90 days of operating expenses, whether in cash or in a line of credit."

We agree with the Virginia Network of Private Providers (Langley is a member) that this statement does not reflect the language of the regulation for which this document purports to provide guidance:

12VAC35-105-210 states "The provider shall document financial arrangements or a line of credit that are adequate to ensure maintenance of ongoing operations for at least 90 days on an ongoing basis.  The amount needed shall be based on a working budget showing projected revenue and expenses."

We feel that the proposed Guidance Document ignores this important phrase - projected revenue, which for non-profit providers is a key factor.  As a non-profit, our annual operating budget is based on continuing reliable revenue streams since we cannot afford to maintain 25% of our annual working budget as a surplus or untouched cash reserve while we are simultaneously managing our revenuers to meet ongoing and unforeseen needs.

This guidance to sequester funds is an overly restrictive barrier to non-profit agencies, which are partners with DBHDS to meet the needs of citizens with developmental disabilities.

Langley agrees with the comment posted by VNPP that we do not condone providers failing to meet their legal or financial obligations, BUT we are also very concerned that a strict application of the rule as interpreted above will cause undue hardship on Langley and other service providers and could even cause some to cease operations, at the same time that providers are partnering with DBHDS to increase community services for citizens with developmental disabilities.

Thank you for this opportunity to present our comments.

CommentID: 75887