Showing posts with label House Bill 600. Show all posts
Showing posts with label House Bill 600. Show all posts

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Kaneohe Neighborhood Board Urges Governor To Intervene For Elderly Couple

The Kaneohe Neighborhood Board has approved a resolution urging Gov. David Ige to help an elderly married couple live together in a local care home. 
The resolution asks the governor to intervene in an issue that the 2015 Legislature was unable to resolve. House Bill 600 would have allowed couples like Noboru and Elaine Kawamoto to use their own funds to live in a state-subsidized care home. The Kawamotos, who have been married 67 years, do not qualify for Medicaid but are willing to pay for their care from their own funds.
State law prohibits subsidized care homes from accepting more than one private-pay client from a family at a time. Unfortunately, the House bill did not receive approval and was carried over to the 2016 Legislature. 

Read the full text of the resolution 

Resolution to urge Governor David Ige to step in and request that the Department of Health act administratively to provide a waiver or exception in the Kawamoto case, allowing them to reunite in their preferred care home and live out their lives together.

WHEREAS, Noboru and Elaine Kawamoto, a married couple, want to live together in a Community Care Family Foster Home (CCFFH) of their choice; and 
WHEREAS, current State of Hawaii regulation limits a CCFFH to three residents, two of whom must be Medicaid recipients; and 
WHEREAS, that requirement prevents a private pay married couple from living together in the same CCFFH, and HB600 will allow for a married couple to live together in the same CCFFH; and 
WHEREAS, this bill, HB600, was already passed into law in 2009 as a demonstration project, it was passed into law as SB190 on April 22, 2009; unfortunately it had a sunset date attached so it expired in April, 2011; and 
WHEREAS, SB190 was a successful demonstration project that allowed a Hilo couple to live out their years a Community Care Family Foster Home of their choice; and 
WHEREAS, the Department of Health and the Department of Human Services support this measure along with both conference committee chairs; and 
WHEREAS, HB600 did not receive a release from Finance and/or Ways and Means Committee; and 
WHEREAS, HB600 is still alive and is carried over into conference committee for the 2016 legislative session and is expected to pass out of conference committee; and 
WHEREAS, the passing of SB190 proves that this act did not jeopardize the receipt of any federal aid, nor did this act conflict with any allocation of any federal funds to the State of Hawaii; and 
WHEREAS, marriage is a fundamental right and no law should separate a married couple; and 
WHEREAS, Mr. & Mrs. Kawamoto should have the option of living together in a Community Care Family Foster Home; and 
NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the Kaneohe Neighborhood Board No. 30 strongly urges Governor David Ige of the State of Hawaii to step in and request that the 
Department of Health act administratively to provide a waiver or exception to Mr. & Mrs. Kawamoto and the care home of their choice, allowing them to reunite and live out their lives together; and 
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this resolution be transmitted to the Honorable Governor David Ige, Senate President Ronald D. Kouchi, Senator Suzanne Chun Oakland, Representative Dee Morikawa, Representative Ken Ito, Representative Jarrett Keohokalole, and Senator Jill N. Tokuda.  
Adopted by the Kaneohe Neighborhood Board No. 30 on Thursday, May 21, 2015.



Mo Radke, Chair

Monday, May 18, 2015

Kaneohe Neighborhood Board To Discuss Care Options For Elderly Residents

A wide range of community concerns will be on the table when the Kaneohe Neighborhood Board holds its May meeting.

Among the key items on the meeting agenda is House Bill 600, which would have made it easier for elderly married couples to use their own funds to live together in some state-subsidized care homes. State rules limit the number of private-pay clients who can live in such homes in order to protect spots for clients who are covered by Medicaid.

Changing the rules would have allowed a couple who have been married for 67 years and need 24-hour assistance, to live together in a care home in Kaneohe. However, the House bill died in the waning days of the legislative session.


Also on the agenda:


  • A review of a master plan for the Hawaii State Hospital. The hospital, which sits next to Windward Community College, houses patients who have been ordered into care by a court. The hospital has dealt with overcrowding and related problems for several years.
  • A review of legislation that will make it easier for neighborhood board members to attend public meetings without violating the state Sunshine Law. Senate Bill 419 has passed the Legislature and has been sent to the governor.
  • Committee reports on the Haiku Stairs and the Hawaii Hazards Awareness and Resilience Program (HHARP).
  • Discussion of homeless issues along Pahia Road, problems with imu smoke in the Pu'ohala Village area and the lack of a children's swimming program at Kaneohe's public pool.

Come Join Us:


The Neighborhood Board will meet at 7 p.m., Thursday, May 21, at Benjamin Parker Elementary School, 45-259 Waikalua Road. Participation by community members is encouraged