AMENDMENT TO THE REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER OF
EDUCATION
Pursuant to Education Law sections 101, 207 and
1004(1)
1. Section 246.3 of the Regulations of the
Commissioner of Education is amended, effective April 3, 2002, as
follows:
Section 246.3 Standards for Community Rehabilitation
Program Personnel.
All personnel employed by a community rehabilitation
program, whose duties include the provision of rehabilitation services
to individuals sponsored by the New York State Education Department,
Office of Vocational and Educational Services for Individuals with
Disabilities (VESID), shall meet the requirements specified for these or
equivalent titles in this section.
- Definitions. As used in this section:
(1) Agency means the New York State Education
Department.
(2) Bache1or’s degree. master’s degree or master’s
degree program means a degree from, or program of, a college or
university accredited by a regional or national accrediting organization
recognized by the United States Commissioner of Education, or the
programs of which have been registered by the State Education
Department.
(3) Community rehabilitation program means an
organization which is operated for the purpose of providing vocational
rehabilitation services to individuals with disabilities, and which
provides, singly or in combination, one or more of the following
services for individuals with disabilities:
(i) vocational rehabilitation services, which may
include, medical, psychological, social and vocational services;
(ii) testing, fitting or training in the use of
prosthetic and orthotic devices;
(iii) physical and occupational therapy;
(iv) speech and hearing therapy;
(v) psychological services;
(vi) evaluation of rehabilitation potential;
(vii) work adjustment;
(viii) vocational training for entry-level or career
advancement (in combination with other rehabilitation services);
(ix) evaluation or control of specific disabilities;
(x) orientation and mobility services and other
adjustment services to the blind;
(xi) supported employment services; and
(xii) placement services.
(b) Director of vocational rehabilitation services I.
(1) Individuals with this title shall be directly supervised by a
staff member who fully meets the standards for Director of vocational
rehabilitation II.
(2) Minimum qualifications. (i) a bachelor’s
degree; and
(ii) two years of professional experience in
rehabilitation.
(3) Requirements upon employment. The agency may
additionally require that the individual participate in specific
training programs particular to the responsibility and background of the
individual, and as provided by written statements prepared by the
agency.
(c) Director of vocational rehabilitation services II.
(1) Minimum qualifications:
(i) a bachelor’s degree and five years of
progressively increasing administrative responsibility in a
rehabilitation setting; or
(ii) a master’s degree in rehabilitation
counseling
and two years of progressively increasing
administrative responsibility in a rehabilitation setting; or
(iii) a combination of education and experience
which, in the judgment of the agency, is substantially equivalent to the
standards of this subdivision.
(2) Requirements upon employment. The agency may
additionally require that the individual participate in specific
training programs particular to the responsibility and background of the
individual, and as provided by written statements prepared by the
agency.
(d) Employment counselor-placement specialist I. (1)
Individuals with this title shall be directly supervised by an
employment counselor-placement specialist II who meets the
qualifications established by subdivision (e) of this section.
(2) Minimum qualifications:
(i) a bachelor’s degree and one year of experience
in rehabilitation placement or related fields, and enrollment in a
specialized course approved by the agency: or
(ii) a bachelor’s degree, enrollment in a
specialized course, and enrollment in a master’s degree program in
vocational rehabilitation counseling or evaluation or related areas; or
(iii) a combination of education and experience
which, in the judgment of the agency, is substantially equivalent to the
standards of this subdivision.
(e) Employment counselor-placement specialist 11. Minimum
qualifications:
(1) a bachelor’s degree; and
(2) three years of experience in employment
counseling, employment interviewing, personnel administration or
industrial relations, which included responsibility for placement; and
(3) one year of experience working with the
physically or mentally disabled: or
(4) a combination of education and specialized
experience which, in the judgment of the agency, is substantially
equivalent to the standards of this subdivision.
(f) Evaluator I. (1) Individuals with this title
shall be directly supervised by an evaluator II who meets the
qualifications established in this section.
(2) Minimum qualifications:
(i) a master’s degree in vocational rehabilitation
counseling or evaluation or related area such as personnel, counseling
and guidance, and enrollment in a short-term specialized course approved
by the agency; or
(ii) a bachelor’s degree, enrollment in a
specialized course, and enrollment in a master’s degree program in
vocational rehabilitation or related areas; or
(iii) a combination of education and experience
which, in the judgment of the agency, is substantially equivalent to the
standards of this subdivision.
(g) Evaluator II. Minimum qualifications:
(1) a master’s degree in vocational
rehabilitation or related area such as personnel, counseling,
guidance, and one year of experience in vocational rehabilitation or
other suitable fields;
(2) a bachelor’s degree and three years of
appropriate experience in such areas as industrial arts, occupational
therapy or rehabilitation counseling; or
(3) a combination of experience and training, such as
experience as evaluator in a community rehabilitation program; or
experience in industry and completion of specialized
rehabilitation-related courses which, in the judgement of the agency, is
substantially equivalent to the standards of this subdivision.
(h) Job Coach. Minimum qualifications for this title
shall be a combination of education and specialized experience, by which
the individual demonstrates experience, aptitude and ability to provide
direct assistance to persons in supported employment placements and to
their employer.
(i) Vocational rehabilitation counselor. Minimum
qualifications: (1) satisfaction of the requirements for eligibility to
take the New York State civil service examination for vocational
rehabilitation counselor; or
(2) certification as a rehabilitation counselor by
the Commission on Rehabilitation Counselor Certification; or
(3) satisfaction of the requirements for eligibility
to apply for such certification.
2. Section 246.6 of the Regulations of the
Commissioner of Education is amended, effective April3, 2002, as
follows:
§ 246.6 Provision of services by community
rehabilitation programs.
(a) Purpose. The purpose of this section is to
provide standards for the provision of services by community
rehabilitation programs.
(b) Definitions. As used in this section:
(1) Agency means the New York State Education
Department.
(2) Ancillary services means those aspects of an
individual’s program designed to support and enhance a basic
evaluation or training orientation of the program. Such ancillary
services include but are not necessarily limited to group, individual
and family counseling; remedial education; occupational therapy;
medical, psychological and other such services as may be specified by
the agency.
(3) Diagnostic vocational evaluation (DVE) means a
systematic appraisal and description of an individual’s employment
abilities, current levels of vocational performance, potential
vocational capabilities for a job, interests or other traits or
characteristics which relate to possible employment outcomes.
(4) Individual Plan for Employment (IPE) means a
program developed pursuant to section 247.11 of this Title.
(5) Job-placement and follow-up services means a
program of services, the purpose of which is to procure employment for
an individual which is consistent with the goals and training program of
the individual and the assurance of successful continuation of such
employment.
(6) Work Adjustment Training (WAT) means a program of
services which is consistent with the findings of the assessments of the
individual, implements the IPE, and leads toward an employment outcome.
(7) Community rehabilitation program means an
organization as defined in section 246.3(a)(3) of this Part.
(8) Special program means a short-term or part-time
program of service provided at a community rehabilitation program which
is deemed necessary by the agency for an individual and not otherwise
defined in this subdivision.
(9) Specialized vocational training means a
program of instruction which provides information and skills that are
essential for the performance of tasks involved in, or directly related
to, a specific occupation.
(10) Supported employment means paid competitive work
that offers ongoing support services in integrated settings for
individuals with the most significant disabilities. Supported employment
is intended for individuals for whom competitive employment has not
traditionally occurred or has been interrupted or intermittent as a
result of a most significant disability.
(c) Standards. Community Rehabilitation Programs
shall comply with the following standards in providing services to the
agency:
(1) Diagnostic vocational evaluation (DVE). (i)
Content. The DVE program and subsequent report shall include, but need
not be limited to, the following information relating to the individual:
(a) intellectual capacity and emotional stability;
(b) physical and psychomotor capacities;
(c) interests, attitudes and aptitudes;
(d) personal, social and work history;
(e) work skills and work tolerance;
(f) work habits, including attendance, punctuality,
concentration and interpersonal skills
(g) mobility, communication, hygiene and other
activities of daily living which relate directly and specifically to
work or the ability to perform work;
(h) job seeking and job retention skills;
(i) potential to benefit from further services which
are specifically identified;
(j) possible job objectives;
(k) recommendations for future services which may
include immediate job placement or a program of WAT or other services;
(l) indication of the extent of the individual’s
involvement in development of the DVE program;
(m) indication of use of appropriate adaptive
assessment tools and methods with individuals having sensory,
communication or other functional impairments which might invalidate
otherwise standardized procedures;
(n) potential job placements for the individual based
upon opportunities in the labor market and upon the individual’s
unique strengths, resources, priorities, concerns, abilities,
capabilities, interests, and informed choice; and
(o) assurance that a variety of tasks and work
settings for situational assessment are available and sufficient to meet
the needs of the individual; whenever appropriate, the DVE shall make
use of:
(1) work samples which shall include
standardization as to materials, administration and scoring, competitive
norms, and reliability and validity indicators; and/or
(2) simulated job stations which must include an
evaluation of the individual’s performances against competitive
industrial or business standards.
(ii) The agency may, at its discretion, establish
special evaluation programs designed to meet those assessment needs of
the individual which are not met in DVE programs.
(2) Trial Work Experience (TWE) - prior to any
determination by the agency that an individual with a disability is
incapable of benefiting from vocational rehabilitation services in terms
of an employment outcome because of the severity of that individual’s
disability, the agency must conduct an exploration of the individual’s
abilities, capabilities, and capacity to perform in realistic work
situations to determine whether or not there is clear and convincing
evidence to support such a determination. Trial work experience may
include supported employment, on-the-job training and other experiences
using realistic work settings. It must include the following:
(a) adherence to the written plan for trial work.
(b) assessment of the individual’s capacity to
perform in work situations in the most integrated setting possible
consistent with informed choice.
(c) trial work experiences.
(3) Work Adjustment Training (WAT). (i) Content.
The WAT program shall include components for the satisfactory
development of the following individual capacities to enable that
individual to engage in employment:
(a) physical capacity. including general work
stamina;
(b) psychomotor skills, including eye-hand
coordination in the use of tools and equipment;
(c) interpersonal and communication skills;
(d) work habits;
(e) job seeking and job retention skills;
(f) appropriate dress and grooming;
(g) production skills;
(h) knowledge and awareness of time and attendance
rules, payroll deductions and safety procedures;
(i) span of attention and concentration;
(j) travel skills;
(k) cognitive remediation;
(l) specific occupational skills;
(m) employment skills;
(n) other work-related skills, such as counting and
measuring; and
(o) direct assistance in securing and retaining
employment, including job searching, placement and follow-up services.
(ii) Community rehabilitation programs shall submit
individualized reports concerning the individual’s WAT program. Such
reports shall indicate the type of services provided and the individual’s
progress toward the employment outcome specified in the IPE, shall be in
a format approved by the agency, and shall be submitted at intervals
designated by the agency.
(iii) The agency may, at its discretion, require the
provision of such ancillary services as it deems appropriate to
individual needs and circumstances.
(4) Job-placement and follow-up services. (i)
Content. Job-placement and follow-up services shall include the
following minimum components:
(a) maintenance of active contact with employers to
develop and identify job opportunities for individuals with
disabilities;
(b) provision of employment and employment related
counseling for placement candidates; such counseling shall include all
information relevant to specific job openings such as job duties, skills
needed, hours, wages, transportation, benefits advisement, and working
conditions;
(c) on-site consultation with the potential employers
to develop and identify job opportunities for individuals with
disabilities; and
(d) maintenance of contact with employer and the
individual for a sufficient length of time, based upon that individual’s
needs, to assure adequate job adjustment and retention.
(ii) Job-placement and follow-up services shall be
provided in a manner consistent with the following standards:
(a) Job-placement may be made at the conclusion of
the DVE process, or at any point during the WAT process.
(b) The planned placement shall be consistent with
the employment outcome of the IPE.
(c) Placement of an individual in a specific
occupation and at a specific job site shall require full involvement of
and prior approval by the agency.
(d) The community rehabilitation program may close a
case as successfully employed only after the individual has remained in
continuous employment for a minimum of 90 days.
(e) Community rehabilitation programs shall submit to
the agency placement and follow-up reports in a format and at intervals
specified by the agency.
(5) Specialized vocational training. (i) Content.
(a) The specialized vocational training program shall
be operated in conjunction with a specific curriculum of training
services which has received the prior approval of the agency. Such
program shall be individualized and shall follow a reporting format
specified by the agency.
(b) Training shall lead to placement in a specific
job category.
(c) The specialized vocational training program shall
include regular contacts with potential employers in the community and
shall make use of transitional employment, consisting of short-term
progressive on-the-job experiences, and on-site training where
appropriate.
(d) Prior to an individual’s entry into a
specialized vocational training program, the suitability of such
training for that individual shall be demonstrated by agency assessments
and the findings and recommendations contained in the DVE report, IPE,
Trial Work Experience or WAT progress reports.
(e) The provisions of paragraphs (3) and (4) of this
subdivision applicable to WAT and to job-placement and follow-up shall
also apply to specialized vocational training.
(6) Special programs. Where existing programs do not
meet individual needs, special programs may be established.
(i) Content. Such programs shall be conducted in
accordance with the provisions of this paragraph.
(a) Prior to entrance of individuals into special
programs, it shall be demonstrated, based on assessment by the agency
counselor, supported by findings and recommendations, that involvement
in the program is warranted and is consistent with the IPE.
(b) Reporting shall follow schedules and formats
prescribed by the agency.
(c) The agency may impose such additional
requirements as are necessary to assure the completion of the goals of
each special program.
(7) Supported Employment Services. (i) Community
rehabilitation programs will have the following responsibilities:
(a) actively involve consumers and their designated
representatives in assessment, planning, and decision-making throughout
the service delivery process;
(b) consider both the individual’s and employer's
satisfaction with the nature and frequency of the program's services and
with the job placement itself;
(c) through a consumer centered decision making
process, pursue the goals detailed in the IPE by using supported
employment resources to the best advantage of the individual;
(d) report in a timely fashion as required to the
agency on programmatic and fiscal details; and
(e) deliver supported employment services in
accordance with Federal and State standards and any additional
contractual obligations unique to the funding sources.
(ii) Eligibility for Supported Employment Services.
Supported Employment services may be provided to any individual who is
determined eligible for vocational rehabilitation services and who meets
the criteria stated below as documented in the agency case record:
(a) has a most significant disability;
(b) has not traditionally participated in competitive
employment or whose employment has been interrupted or intermittent as a
result of a significant disability;
(c) has had a comprehensive assessment of
rehabilitation needs which identifies Supported Employment as the
appropriate vocational objective and has:
- the ability to engage in a vocational process leading to
supported employment;
- a need for ongoing support services in order to perform
and sustain competitive work;
- the ability to work in a supported employment setting;
and
- met the criteria for extended service funding.
(iii) Required features for agency supported
employment programs. All supported employment programs funded by agency
resources are required to comply with applicable regulations and
guidelines, and to have the following characteristics, unless
differences are specifically described in the approved agency contract.
(a) Programs must be explicitly designed to serve
those people with the most significant disabilities who, by the nature
of their vocational impairments, require the availability of (a)
intervention and advocacy on their behalf with employers, coworkers, and
families to ease their integration into the workforce, and (b) ongoing
support services over an extended period of time to maintain their
employment.
(b) The program must include the provision of
assistance necessary to maintain the person in employment, with no end
date or time limit placed on this assistance.
(c) Persons with significant disabilities must be
integrated into a work force of persons without disabilities.
(d) Programs offering supported employment provide
intensive and extended services including, but not limited to:
community-based assessment, job development and placement, job site
training, advocacy, ongoing and related necessary supports.
(1) Intensive services are provided to the
individual both
on and off the job site as frequently as necessary to
teach performance of the duties as required by the employer and to
foster social integration skills.
(2) Supported employment requires extended services
beyond
the time limited resource capability of the
vocational rehabilitation program.
(3) Community rehabilitation programs will provide
information regarding the funding source for each individual’s
extended services program.
(8) Standards for all community rehabilitation
programs. (i) The community rehabilitation program shall comply with all
applicable regulations of the Commissioner of Education and all
applicable Federal, State and local laws.
(ii) All programs designed to serve agency sponsored
individuals shall be established only with prior agency approval.
(iii) Individual records. The community
rehabilitation program shall maintain individual case records and
reporting systems necessary to meet all applicable professional,
administrative and legal requirements and the requirements of this
subparagraph.
(a) There shall be a single case record for each
individual entering any program in the community rehabilitation program.
(b) The case record shall contain case
identification, referral, history and diagnostic data.
(c) The case record shall provide sufficient
information to allow the agency to assess the progress and current
status of the individual in the community rehabilitation program, and
shall indicate the involvement of that individual in developing his or
her rehabilitation program.
(iv) Financial records. The community rehabilitation
program shall conduct its financial operations in compliance with all
legal requirements and shall operate under an annual budget approved by
its governing body.
(a) The community rehabilitation program’s
financial statement shall be prepared annually no later than 90 days
after the close of the program’s fiscal year. Such financial statement
shall be examined and certified by an independent licensed accountant
who is qualified to express an opinion on the accuracy and fairness of
the statement. The governing body of the program shall review and act
upon the recommendation of such accountant, and the statement shall be
made available to the agency, upon request, no later than 30 days after
the completion of the statement.
(b) Generally accepted accounting principles shall be
employed and organized so that charges for services or products may be
based upon their actual cost.
(1) Where fees for service are charged to other than
individuals sponsored by the agency, the community rehabilitation
program shall furnish to the agency a list of such rates charged to
other agencies or to private purchasers of services. The rate charged
the agency shall not exceed the lowest rate charged to such other
agencies or private purchasers of services.
(2) The community rehabilitation program shall
maintain financial records which enable the agency to determine the
proportion of program income used for direct services and the proportion
used for indirect or administrative costs.
(3) The community rehabilitation program shall
maintain a separate account for each special project.
(4) The community rehabilitation program shall
maintain financial records which allow the agency to identify costs and
revenue for each program or service (DVE, WAT, and/or any special
program or project).
(v) Accessibility and nondiscrimination. Each
community rehabilitation program shall comply with the accessibility and
nondiscrimination standards set forth in federal and state law. The
agency may deny funding to and refuse to contract with any community
rehabilitation program which fails to comply with such provisions.
(vi) Safety.
(a) The community rehabilitation program shall assure
that every individual served receives services in an environment that is
free of recognized health and safety hazards.
(b) With respect to substances which have been
identified by federal or state agencies to be toxic or hazardous, but
for which no level of safe exposure to such substances has been
determined, the program shall not permit the use or storage of such
substances within its premises.
(c) In situations in which a community rehabilitation
program uses locations, other than those of the program, for job trials,
for transitional employment, or for any other purpose, it shall assure
that such location is in compliance with the provisions of this
subparagraph.