If you missed the more stringent hospice regulations signed into law in California this fall, now’s a good time to review them. Assembly Bill No. 2673 enacted on Sept. 29 contains a number of changes, including a prohibition on transferring hospice licenses for five years after issuance; broader surveying practices including surveying 5 percent of new hospices annually; more extensive personnel information requirements for applicants; and updated moratorium dates, note attorneys Leslie Levinson, Danielle Tangorre, and Erin Howard with law firm Robinson & Cole. “The signing of this Bill continues California’s trend of increasing Department oversight on hospice agencies and demonstrates the continued need to focus on compliance with these evolving laws and regulations,” Levinson, Tangorre, and Howard say in new online analysis.