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SB0794 • 2026

Agency for Persons with Disabilities

Agency for Persons with Disabilities

Labor
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Jones
Last action
2026-03-09
Official status
Senate - Laid on Table, refer to CS/CS/HB 565 -SJ 690
Effective date
Except as

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

Agency for Persons with Disabilities

Agency for Persons with Disabilities; Requiring level 2 employment screening for all employees of residential facilities and adult day training programs; providing background screening requirements for such employees; requiring the agency to solicit input and conduct publicly noticed hearings for a specified purpose in each service region; requiring the agency to use certain information to identify certain core competencies and performance metrics and make recommendations for standardizing assessments, etc.

What This Bill Does

  • Agency for Persons with Disabilities; Requiring level 2 employment screening for all employees of residential facilities and adult day training programs; providing background screening requirements for such employees; requiring the agency to solicit input and conduct publicly noticed hearings for a specified purpose in each service region; requiring the agency to use certain information to identify certain core competencies and performance metrics and make recommendations for standardizing assessments, etc.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

660070

Committee amendment S 794 Filed • Children, Families, and Elder Affairs (Jones)

Replaced by Committee Substitute 2/11/2026

Plain English: Florida Senate - 2026 COMMITTEE AMENDMENT Bill No.

  • Florida Senate - 2026 COMMITTEE AMENDMENT Bill No.
  • SB 794 Ì660070qÎ660070 LEGISLATIVE ACTION Senate .
  • House Comm: RCS .
  • 02/10/2026 .
539302

Committee amendment S 794 c1 • Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services (Jones)

Replaced by Committee Substitute 2/25/2026

Plain English: Florida Senate - 2026 COMMITTEE AMENDMENT Bill No.

  • Florida Senate - 2026 COMMITTEE AMENDMENT Bill No.
  • CS for SB 794 Ì539302zÎ539302 LEGISLATIVE ACTION Senate .
  • House Comm: RCS .
  • 02/25/2026 .

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-09 Senate

    • Read 2nd time -SJ 690 • Substituted CS/CS/HB 565 -SJ 690 • Laid on Table, refer to CS/CS/HB 565 -SJ 690

  2. 2026-03-04 Senate

    • Placed on Special Order Calendar, 03/09/26

  3. 2026-03-03 Senate

    • Placed on Calendar, on 2nd reading

  4. 2026-03-02 Senate

    • Favorable by- Fiscal Policy; YEAS 18 NAYS 0

  5. 2026-02-26 Senate

    • Pending reference review under Rule 4.7(2) - (Committee Substitute) • Now in Fiscal Policy • On Committee agenda-- Fiscal Policy, 03/02/26, 12:00 pm, 412 Knott Building • CS/CS by Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services read 1st time

  6. 2026-02-25 Senate

    • CS/CS by Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services; YEAS 8 NAYS 0

  7. 2026-02-20 Senate

    • On Committee agenda-- Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services, 02/25/26, 10:00 am, 412 Knott Building

  8. 2026-02-12 Senate

    • Now in Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services

  9. 2026-02-11 Senate

    • Pending reference review under Rule 4.7(2) - (Committee Substitute) • CS by Children, Families, and Elder Affairs read 1st time

  10. 2026-02-10 Senate

    • CS by Children, Families, and Elder Affairs; YEAS 6 NAYS 0

  11. 2026-02-05 Senate

    • On Committee agenda-- Children, Families, and Elder Affairs, 02/10/26, 12:00 pm, 301 Senate Building

  12. 2026-01-13 Senate

    • Introduced

  13. 2025-12-16 Senate

    • Referred to Children, Families, and Elder Affairs; Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services; Fiscal Policy

  14. 2025-12-08 Senate

    • Filed

Official Summary Text

Agency for Persons with Disabilities; Requiring level 2 employment screening for all employees of residential facilities and adult day training programs; providing background screening requirements for such employees; requiring the agency to solicit input and conduct publicly noticed hearings for a specified purpose in each service region; requiring the agency to use certain information to identify certain core competencies and performance metrics and make recommendations for standardizing assessments, etc.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Florida Senate
-
2026

CS for CS for SB 794

By
the Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services;
the Committee on Children, Families, and Elder Affairs; and
Senators Jones and Garcia

603-03212-26 2026794c2
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to the Agency for Persons with
3 Disabilities; amending s. 393.0655, F.S.; requiring
4 level 2 employment screening for all employees of
5 residential facilities and adult day training
6 programs; providing background screening requirements
7 for such employees; requiring the agency to contract
8 with a state university to develop and administer
9 certain surveys for a specified purpose; specifying
10 requirements for such surveys; requiring the state
11 university to submit a final report to the agency by a
12 specified date; requiring the agency to solicit input
13 and conduct publicly noticed hearings for a specified
14 purpose in each service region; requiring the agency
15 to conduct or contract for a gap analysis to make
16 certain assessments; requiring the agency to use
17 certain information to identify certain core
18 competencies and performance metrics and make
19 recommendations for standardizing assessments;
20 requiring the agency to submit a report of its
21 findings and recommendations to the Governor and the
22 Legislature by a specified date; amending s. 393.063,
23 F.S.; revising the definition of the term
24 “developmental disability”; defining the term “Tatton
25 Brown-Rahman syndrome”; providing effective dates.
26
27 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
28
29 Section 1. Subsection (1) of section 393.0655, Florida
30 Statutes, is amended to read:
31 393.0655 Screening of direct service providers.—
32 (1) MINIMUM STANDARDS.—The agency shall require level 2
33 employment screening pursuant to chapter 435 for direct service
34 providers who are unrelated to their clients, including support
35 coordinators, and
all employees

managers and supervisors
of
36 residential facilities or adult day training programs licensed
37 under this chapter and any other persons, including volunteers,
38 who provide care or services, who have access to a client’s
39 living areas, or who have access to a client’s funds or personal
40 property. Background screening
for all employees
must include
41 employment history checks as provided in s. 435.03(1) and local
42 criminal records checks through local law enforcement agencies.
43 (a) A volunteer who assists on an intermittent basis for
44 less than 10 hours per month does not have to be screened if a
45 person who meets the screening requirement of this section is
46 always present and has the volunteer within his or her line of
47 sight.
48 (b) Licensed physicians, nurses, or other professionals
49 licensed and regulated by the Department of Health are not
50 subject to background screening pursuant to this section if they
51 are providing a service that is within their scope of licensed
52 practice.
53 (c) A person selected by the family or the individual with
54 developmental disabilities and paid by the family or the
55 individual to provide supports or services is not required to
56 have a background screening under this section.
57 (d) Persons 12 years of age or older, including family
58 members, residing with a direct services provider who provides
59 services to clients in his or her own place of residence are
60 subject to background screening; however, such persons who are
61 12 to 18 years of age shall be screened for delinquency records
62 only.
63 Section 2.
(1)(a)

For purposes of enhancing the quality,

64
capacity, and consistency of waiver support coordination

65
services, the Agency for Persons with Disabilities shall

66
contract with a state university to develop and administer

67
surveys regarding waiver support coordination services. The

68
university shall administer surveys to owners and operators of

69
all qualified organizations in this state; support coordinators

70
currently employed by a qualified organization; and iBudget

71
clients and their parents, caregivers, or legal guardians.

72
1.

The surveys must, at a minimum, solicit data and input

73
regarding:

74
a.

The quality, consistency, and accessibility of services

75
provided by support coordinators.

76
b.

Attributes and behaviors that define high-quality

77
support coordination.

78
c.

Best practices and areas for improvement.

79
d.

Quantitative and qualitative metrics suitable for

80
assessing support coordinator performance.

81
e.

Any other factors deemed pertinent by the university or

82
the agency to improve service delivery.

83
2.

Surveys of qualified organizations must also

84
specifically address:

85
a.

Professional and educational prerequisites established

86
by the organization for employment as a support coordinator.

87
b.

Methods used to assess core competencies.

88
c.

The efficacy of the mentoring program required under s.

89
393.0663(2)(b), Florida Statutes.

90
d.

Operational and systemic challenges with recruitment and

91
retention of qualified support coordinators.

92
3.

Surveys of individual waiver support coordinators must

93
also specifically address:

94
a.

Individual caseload ratios, capacity, and geographic

95
service areas.

96
b.

The efficacy of the mentoring program required under s.

97
393.0663(2)(b), Florida Statutes.

98
c.

Operational and systemic challenges to delivery of

99
effective support coordination.

100
4.

Surveys of iBudget clients and their parents,

101
caregivers, or legal guardians must also specifically address

102
satisfaction with support coordination services.

103
(b)

By October 1, 2026, the state university shall submit a

104
final report to the agency, including a compilation and analysis

105
of the survey results.

106
(2)

The agency shall solicit input on enhancing support

107
coordinator quality, capacity, and consistency from the whole

108
community of waiver program stakeholders, and shall conduct at

109
least one publicly noticed hearing for this purpose in each

110
service region.

111
(3)

The agency shall conduct or contract for a gap analysis

112
to assess the geographic distribution and caseload capacity of

113
waiver support coordinators across this state.

114
(4)

Using the information gathered under this section, the

115
agency shall identify specific core competencies for waiver

116
support coordinators, identify specific performance metrics to

117
assess those core competencies, and make recommendations on how

118
to standardize their assessment. By February 15, 2027, the

119
agency shall submit a report to the Governor, the President of

120
the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives on

121
its findings and recommendations, and include the full report

122
submitted by the state university under subsection (1).

123
(5)

This section shall take effect upon this act becoming a

124
law.

125 Section 3. Present subsections (46) and (47) of section
126 393.063, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as subsections (47)
127 and (48), respectively, a new subsection (46) is added to that
128 section, and subsection (11) of that section is amended, to
129 read:
130 393.063 Definitions.—For the purposes of this chapter, the
131 term:
132 (11) “Developmental disability” means a disorder or
133 syndrome that is attributable to intellectual disability,
134 cerebral palsy, autism, spina bifida, Down syndrome, Phelan
135 McDermid syndrome,
or
Prader-Willi syndrome
, or Tatton-Brown

136
Rahman syndrome
; that manifests before the age of 18; and that
137 constitutes a substantial handicap that can reasonably be
138 expected to continue indefinitely.
139
(46)

“Tatton-Brown-Rahman syndrome” means a disorder caused

140
by a mutation in the DNMT3A gene typified by mild to severe

141
intellectual disability; macrocephaly; stature and weight that

142
are greater than or equal to two or more standard deviations

143
above the mean for the person’s age and sex; and any of the

144
following features presenting in infancy, childhood, or

145
adolescence:

146
(a)

Mild facial dysmorphism.

147
(b)

Joint hypermobility.

148
(c)

Hypotonia.

149
(d)

Kyphoscoliosis.

150
(e)

Seizures.

151
(f)

Cryptorchidism.

152
(g)

Deficits in behavior.

153
(h)

Hematologic malignancies.

154 Section 4. Except as otherwise expressly provided in this
155 act and except for this section, which shall take effect upon
156 this act becoming a law, this act shall take effect July 1,
157 2026.