Exam QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS 2026 |
Adult Residential Facility Complete Q&A
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Section 1: California Code of Regulations (Title 22) - ARF Requirements
Questions 1-20
Question 1
According to Title 22, Division 6, Chapter 6, Article 1, Section 80001, what is the primary
purpose of an Adult Residential Facility (ARF)?
A. To provide skilled nursing care for elderly adults
B. To provide 24-hour non-medical care and supervision for adults unable to provide for their
own daily needs [CORRECT]
C. To serve as a temporary homeless shelter
D. To provide acute medical rehabilitation
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Title 22 Reference: Section 80001(a) - Definition of Adult Residential Facility
Why B is correct: Title 22 defines an ARF as "a facility that provides 24-hour non-medical care
and supervision for adults ages 18-59, or persons 60 and older if they entered the facility prior to
age 60, who are unable to provide for their own daily needs." The key elements are 24-hour care,
non-medical nature, and assistance with daily living activities.
Why A is incorrect: Skilled nursing care is provided by SNFs (Skilled Nursing Facilities), not
ARFs. ARFs are explicitly non-medical in nature.
Why C is incorrect: Homeless shelters provide temporary housing without the structured care,
supervision, and services required of ARFs.
Why D is incorrect: Acute medical rehabilitation requires medical licensure and clinical staff
beyond ARF scope.
,Practical Implication: The "non-medical" distinction is critical. ARFs cannot provide services
requiring nursing licensure (wound care, IV medications, tube feeding). Residents requiring such
care must be transferred to appropriate facilities.
Question 2
Under Title 22, Section 80022, what is the standard term of an ARF license?
A. 1 year
B. 2 years [CORRECT]
C. 3 years
D. 5 years
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Title 22 Reference: Section 80022 - License Period and Renewal
Why B is correct: California ARF licenses are issued for a period of two years from the date of
issuance. Licenses must be renewed prior to expiration, and renewal requires compliance with
continuing education requirements for administrators.
Why A is incorrect: Annual renewal is not required; this would create excessive administrative
burden.
Why C is incorrect: Three-year terms are used for some other healthcare facility types but not
ARFs.
Why D is incorrect: Five-year terms would reduce regulatory oversight frequency below
acceptable standards.
Practical Implication: Administrators must track license expiration dates (available on CCLD
website) and submit renewal applications 60-90 days before expiration. Operating with an
expired license constitutes unlicensed operation, a criminal offense.
Question 3
According to Title 22, Section 80024, how many days' advance notice must a licensee provide to
Community Care Licensing Division (CCLD) before voluntarily closing an ARF?
A. 10 days
B. 30 days [CORRECT]
C. 60 days
,D. 90 days
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Title 22 Reference: Section 80024 - Licensee's Responsibility to Notify Community Care
Licensing of Changes
Why B is correct: The licensee must provide at least 30 days' written notice before closing the
facility. This allows CCLD to conduct exit inspections, review resident transfer plans, and ensure
orderly closure protecting resident welfare.
Why A is incorrect: 10 days is insufficient for proper regulatory oversight and resident transition
planning.
Why C is incorrect: While 60 days might be preferable for large facilities, the statutory
requirement is 30 days.
Why D is incorrect: 90 days exceeds the regulatory requirement, though some facilities may
choose longer notice periods for operational reasons.
Practical Implication: Closure notice must include: (1) Proposed closure date, (2) Plan for
resident transfer/discharge, (3) Staff notification timeline, (4) Records disposition plan. Failure to
provide 30-day notice is a violation subject to citation.
Question 4
Under Title 22, Section 80072, which documents must be posted in a conspicuous location in the
ARF? (Select all that apply)
A. Current license certificate [CORRECT]
B. Current fire clearance from the local fire authority [CORRECT]
C. Resident rights information [CORRECT]
D. Administrator's personal home address
Correct Answer: A, B, C
Rationale:
Title 22 Reference: Section 80072 - Posting Requirements
Why A, B, and C are correct: Title 22 requires posting of: (1) License certificate (visible to
public), (2) Fire clearance (current), (3) Notice of resident rights, (4) Emergency disaster plan,
(5) Any special notices required by CCLD. These postings ensure transparency and resident
awareness.
, Why D is incorrect: Administrator personal information is not required posting and would violate
privacy/security. Contact information for the administrator's office is required, not home address.
Practical Implication: Postings must be in areas accessible to residents, families, and visitors—
typically lobby or dining area. Laminating documents preserves readability. Postings must be
updated immediately upon license renewal or fire clearance re-inspection.
Question 5
According to Title 22, Section 80019, what is the classification of a violation that "poses an
immediate threat to the health, safety, or personal rights of residents"?
A. Class A violation [CORRECT]
B. Class B violation
C. Class C violation
D. Technical violation
Correct Answer: A
Rationale:
Title 22 Reference: Section 80019 - Violation Classifications
Why A is correct: Class A violations are the most serious, defined as those posing "immediate
threat to health, safety, or personal rights." Examples include: abuse/neglect, inadequate
supervision, medication errors, fire safety hazards, or lack of working utilities. Civil penalties:
$150/day for first violation, $300/day for subsequent.
Why B is incorrect: Class B violations pose "potential threat" but not immediate danger (e.g.,
incomplete records, minor maintenance issues). Penalties: $100/day first, $200/day subsequent.
Why C is incorrect: Class C violations are minor with no immediate or potential threat (e.g.,
paperwork delays). Penalties: $50/day.
Why D is incorrect: "Technical violation" is not a classification in Title 22; all violations are
Class A, B, or C.
Practical Implication: Class A violations require immediate corrective action and may trigger
enhanced monitoring, administrative hearings, or license revocation. Administrators must
prioritize compliance in Class A areas.
Question 6
Under Title 22, Section 80020, what is the maximum civil penalty for a single Class A violation
that is not corrected within the specified time?