131021.
(a) The Legislature finds that having access to a statewide stockpile of personal protective equipment in the event of a pandemic or other health emergency is vital to the health and safety of its health care and essential workers, as well as the general population, which both relies on this workforce and is susceptible to disease transmission should members of this workforce needlessly be infected with transmissible disease.(b) The following definitions apply for purposes of this section:
(1) “Department” means the State Department of Public Health.
(2) “Office” means the Office of Emergency Services.
(3) “Essential workers” means primary and secondary school workers, workers at detention facilities, as defined in Section 9500 of the Penal Code, in-home support providers, childcare providers, government workers whose work with the public continues throughout the crisis, and workers in other positions that the State Public Health Officer or the Director of the Office of Emergency Services deems vital to public health and safety, as well as economic and national security.
(4) “Health care worker” means any worker who provides direct patient care and services directly supporting patient care, including, but not limited, to physicians, pharmacists, clinicians, nurses, aides, technicians, janitorial and housekeeping staff, food services workers, and nonmanagerial administrative staff.
(5) “Personal protective equipment”
or “PPE” means protective equipment for eyes, face, head, and extremities, protective clothing, respiratory devices, and protective shields and barriers, including, but not limited to, N95 and other filtering facepiece respirators, elastomeric air-purifying respirators with appropriate particulate filters or cartridges, powered air purifying respirators, disinfecting and sterilizing devices and supplies, medical gowns and apparel, face masks, surgical masks, face shields, gloves, shoe coverings, and the equipment identified by or otherwise necessary to comply with Section 5199 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.
(6) “Provider” means a licensed clinic, as described in Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 1200), an outpatient setting, as described in Chapter 1.3 (commencing with Section 1248) of, a health facility as described in Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 1250) of, or a county medical facility, as described in Chapter 2.5
(commencing with Section 1440) of, Division 2, a home health agency, a physician’s office, a professional medical corporation, a medical partnership, a medical foundation, a rural health clinic, as defined in Section 1395x(aa)(2) of Title 42 of the United States Code, or a federally qualified health center, as defined in Section 1395x(aa)(4) of Title 42 of the United States Code, and any other entity that provides medical services in California.
(7) “Stockpile” means the personal protective equipment stockpile created pursuant to subdivision (c).
(c)Within one year of the effective date of this section, the department and office, in coordination with other state agencies, shall establish a PPE stockpile, upon appropriation and as necessary.
(c) (1) On or before January 1, 2022, the department and office, in coordination with other state agencies, shall establish a PPE stockpile, upon appropriation and as necessary.
(2) The department may rotate PPE in the stockpile by selling the PPE to a nonprofit agency, local government, or provider. The department may rotate PPE in the stockpile by contracting to purchase PPE on behalf of a local government or provider. A nonprofit agency, local government, or provider that obtains PPE pursuant to this paragraph shall reimburse the department for the costs of the PPE.
(d) The department shall also establish guidelines for procurement, management, and distribution of
PPE from the department. The department and office shall consider the recommendations of the Personal Protective Equipment Advisory Committee created pursuant to subdivision (f) in developing these guidelines. At a minimum, the guidelines shall take into account all of the following:
(1) The various types of PPE that may be required during a pandemic or other health emergency.
(2) The shelf life of each type of PPE that may be obtained from the department and how to restock a portion of each type of PPE to ensure the procurements consist of unexpired PPE.
(3) The amount of each type of PPE that would be required for all health care workers and essential workers in the state during a 90-day pandemic or other health emergency.
(4) Lessons learned from
previous pandemics and state emergencies, including but not limited to, supply procurement, management, and distribution.
(5) Guidance on how to define essential workers based upon different hazards.
(6) Geographical distribution of PPE storage.
(7) Guidance on how to establish policies and standards for PPE surge capacity to ensure that workers have access to an adequate supply of PPE during a pandemic or other health emergency.
(8) The policies and funding that would be required for the state to establish a PPE stockpile.
(9) How distribution from any procurement shall be prioritized in the event that there is insufficient PPE to meet the needs of providers or employers of essential
workers, including consideration of the following:
(A) The provider or employer is in a location with a high share of low-income residents.
(B) The provider or employer is in a medically underserved area, as designated by the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration.
(C) The provider or employer disproportionately serves a medically underserved population, as designated by the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration.
(D) The provider or employer is in a county with a high infection rate or high hospitalization rate related to the declared emergency.
(e) The development of
the guidelines shall be informed by the recommendations of the Personal Protective Equipment Advisory Committee pursuant to subdivision (f). The guidelines shall not establish policies or standards that are less protective or prescriptive than any federal, state, or local law on PPE standards.
(f) The Personal Protective Equipment Advisory Committee is hereby established. The advisory committee shall consist of the following:
(1) One representative of an association representing multiple types of hospitals and health systems.
(2) One representative of an association representing skilled nursing facilities.
(3) One representative of an association representing primary care clinics.
(4) One
representative of a statewide association representing physicians.
(5) Two representatives of labor organizations that represent health care workers.
(6) Two representatives of labor organizations that represent essential workers, as defined by paragraph (3) of subdivision (b).
(7) One representative from the personal protective equipment manufacturing industry.
(8) One consumer representative.
(9) One representative from an association representing counties.
(10) One representative from the State Department of Public Health.
(11) One representative from the
Office of Emergency Services.
(12) One representative from the Emergency Medical Services Authority.
(13) One representative from the State Department of Social Services.
(g) The Director of the Office of Emergency Services or their designee shall appoint the representatives from paragraphs (1) through (9), inclusive.
(h) The Personal Protective Equipment Advisory Committee shall make recommendations to the office and department necessary to develop the guidelines required pursuant to subdivision (d).