[Repealed Effective 12/31/2025]
Within the amounts appropriated therefor, the state long-term care ombudsman program shall include services specifically designed to serve persons enrolled in managed long-term care plans or approved managed long-term care or operating demonstrations authorized under section forty-four hundred three-f of the public health law, and shall also review and respond to complaints relating to marketing practices by such plans and demonstrations.When the state ombudsman determines that a local long-term care ombudsman program does not meet the standards set forth in this section and in any related regulations, the state ombudsman , in coordination with the state office for the aging, may refuse, suspend, or remove the designation of the local ombudsmen entity. Prior to taking such action, the state ombudsman shall send to the affected local program a notice of the state ombudsman's intentions to refuse, suspend, or remove the designation; provided, however, if the state office for the aging is aware or becomes aware of evidence that the designation or continued designation of an entity to operate a long-term care ombudsman program would result in legal concerns or liability for the state office for the aging or the office of the state long-term care ombudsman, the state ombudsman will comply with the state office for the aging's determination that such designation should not be made or that such designation be refused, suspended, or removed.
and subject to any limitations identified in the older Americans act of 1965, as amended and the regulations promulgated thereunder as well as rules and regulations promulgated by the state office for the aging; provided, however, that upon consent of the resident, the ombudsman or state ombudsman shall immediately make such referral.
Record access.
An ombudsman and state ombudsman shall have access to:
N.Y. Elder Law § 218