Skip to main content

Violation

California Code § 87468.1(a)(9)Resident Communication Response

How CCLD inspectors cite this regulation, what providers do to stay clear of it, and where it appears in the public record.

Type B, generalAffects rcfe28 facilities cited in the last 90 days
ℹ️ Educational reference based on public CCLD inspection records. Not legal or compliance advice. Verify requirements with official sources. Full disclaimer →

Regulation text

What California Code § 87468.1(a)(9) actually says

California Code § 87468.1(a)(9)

To have communications to the licensee from their representatives answered promptly and appropriately.

From the field

What providers tell us about this citation

Based on community experience, not official guidance.

27 California RCFEs were cited for failing to respond promptly to resident communications. LPAs review complaint logs and communication records during inspections, particularly in San Diego County where 5 citations were issued. Establish a 48-hour response standard for all written communications and document every reply, because an unanswered family letter can trigger a Type B citation that stays on your public inspection record.

By the numbers

28*CCLD
facilities cited in the last 90 days

That is 1 in 500 facilities CCLD inspected.

SOURCE

*CCLD: California Community Care Licensing Divisionviolation_citationsUpdated weekly

16*CCLD
counties where this citation appeared

SOURCE

*CCLD: California Community Care Licensing Divisionviolation_citationsUpdated weekly

--*CCLD
rank among most-common citations

SOURCE

*CCLD: California Community Care Licensing Divisionviolation_citationsUpdated weekly

Trajectory
Steady

Last 90 days vs. previous 90 days.

28 facilities were cited for this in the last 90 days. See if yours is one of them.

Check a facility

What other providers do

Common practices to stay clear of Resident Communication Response

Common practices shared by providers. Confirm requirements with your licensing analyst.

Common practices

What to avoid

  • Delaying responses to family member emails or letters about resident care concerns
  • Treating representative communications as lower priority than direct resident requests
  • Providing vague or incomplete answers that do not address the specific concern raised by the resident or representative

Regional record

Where this citation appeared in the past 90 days

Citation counts and rates by California county, drawn from CCLD inspection records.

Regional citations for Resident Communication Response, last 90 days
CountyCitations
San Diego5
Orange3
Solano2
Alameda2
Los Angeles2
Santa Barbara2
Napa1
Marin1
Fresno1
Sonoma1

SOURCE

*CCLD: California Community Care Licensing Divisionviolation_citationsUpdated weekly

Public record

Check any facility for § 87468.1(a)(9)

Free public record. No account needed.

Check a facility

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Answers based on public CCLD data and regulation text. May not reflect recent changes.

What is a resident communication response violation in an RCFE?
A violation of Title 22, Section 87468.1(a)(9) occurs when an RCFE licensee fails to answer communications from residents or their representatives promptly and appropriately. This regulation protects residents' right to be heard and ensures their concerns about care, safety, or daily life at the facility are addressed without unreasonable delay. Prompt means within a timeframe appropriate to the urgency of the issue raised.
How common are resident communication violations in California assisted living?
According to CCLD inspection records, 27 California RCFEs received 30 citations for communication response failures across 16 counties, with all classified as Type B. San Diego County led with 5 citations, followed by Orange County at 3. This deficiency affected 0.20% of California RCFEs and often surfaces during complaint-driven inspections triggered by family members.
What happens if an RCFE is cited for not responding to resident communications?
This is a Type B citation, indicating a potential risk to residents if the pattern of non-responsiveness continues. The facility must submit a plan of correction describing how it will ensure timely responses going forward. Type B citations carry civil penalties and become part of your facility's public record. Repeated communication failures can contribute to a broader resident rights citation pattern that draws increased LPA scrutiny.
How do I fix or prevent a resident communication response citation?
Create a communication tracking system that logs every message from a resident or representative with the date received and the date answered. Set a facility policy requiring responses within 48 hours for written communications and same-day responses for verbal concerns. Assign a specific staff member to monitor incoming communications daily. LPAs will ask to see your communication log during inspections, so keep it current and complete.
Does a communication response violation affect my RCFE license?
Yes. CCLD tracks resident rights citations, including communication failures, against your facility license. While a single Type B citation may not trigger immediate licensing action, a pattern of unaddressed communications signals to CCLD that residents' rights are not being upheld. Consistent documentation of prompt responses protects your license and demonstrates respect for resident rights during annual inspections.

Related violations

Other citations in this regulation family

This information is educational and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed residential care compliance consultant for guidance specific to your facility. Citation data is sourced from California Community Care Licensing Division public records and is refreshed regularly.