7299.4.
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision in this chapter, each state agency shall conduct a language survey and develop and update an implementation plan that complies with the requirements of this chapter.(b) Each agency shall conduct a language survey of each of its statewide and local offices every two years to determine and provide all of the following:
(1) The name, position, and contact information of the employee designated by the agency responsible for complying with this chapter.
(2) The number of public contact positions in each statewide and local office.
(3) The number of qualified bilingual employees in public contact positions in each statewide and local office, and the languages they speak, other than English.
(4) The number and percentage of non-English-speaking people served by each statewide and local office, broken down by native language.
(5) The number of anticipated vacancies in public contact positions.
(6) Whether the use of other available options, including contracted telephone-based interpretation services, in addition to qualified bilingual persons in public contact positions, is serving the language needs of the people served by the agency.
(7) A list of all written materials that are required to be translated or otherwise
made accessible to non- or limited-English-speaking individuals by Sections 7295.2 and 7295.4.
(8) A list of materials identified in paragraph (7) that have been translated and languages into which they have been translated.
(9) The number of additional qualified bilingual public contact staff, if any, needed at each statewide and local office to comply with this chapter.
(10) A detailed description of the agency’s procedures for identifying written materials that are required to be translated.
(11) Each agency shall calculate the percentage of non-English-speaking people served by each statewide and local office by rounding the percentage arrived at to the nearest whole percentage point.
(12) A detailed description of the agency’s procedures for identifying language needs at statewide and local offices and assigning qualified bilingual staff to those offices.
(13) A detailed description of how the agency recruits qualified bilingual staff in statewide and local offices.
(14) A detailed description of any training the agency provides to its staff on the provision of services to non- or limited-English-speaking individuals, frequency of training, and date of most recent training.
(15) A detailed description of complaints regarding language access received by the agency and the agency’s procedures for accepting and resolving complaints of an alleged violation due to failure to make available translated documents or provide interpreter service through bilingual staff or contract services.
(16) A detailed description of how the agency complies with any federal or other state laws that require the provision of linguistically accessible services to the public.
(17) Any other relevant information requested by the Department of Human Resources.
(c) The language survey results and any additional information requested shall be reported in the form and at the time required by the Department of Human Resources, and delivered to the department not later than October 1 of every even-numbered year.
(d) Every odd-numbered year, each agency that served a substantial number of non-English-speaking people shall develop an implementation plan that provides a detailed description of how the agency plans to address any deficiencies in meeting the requirements
of this chapter, including, but not limited to, the failure to translate written materials or employ sufficient numbers of qualified bilingual employees in public contact positions at statewide and local offices, the proposed actions to be taken to address the deficiencies, and the proposed dates by when the deficiencies will be remedied.
(e) In developing its implementation plan, each state agency may rely upon data gathered from its most recent language survey.
(f) Each state agency shall submit its implementation plan to the Department of Human Resources no later than October 1 of each applicable year. The Department of Human Resources shall review each implementation plan, and, if it determines that the implementation plan fails to address the identified deficiencies, shall order the agency to supplement or make changes to its plan. A state agency that has been determined to
be deficient shall report to the Department of Human Resources every six months on its progress in addressing the identified deficiencies.
(g) If the Department of Human Resources determines that a state agency has not made reasonable progress toward complying with this chapter, the department shall issue orders that it deems appropriate to effectuate the purposes of this chapter.