Noboru 
Kawamoto, 94, and his wife of 67 years, Elaine, 88, will continue to 
live in care homes miles apart in Windward Oahu       after the state 
Legislature was unable to pass legislation to allow them to live in the 
same home.
Noboru 
Kawamoto, who must live in a community care foster family home because 
of his health, pays for his care without using       Medicaid. Elaine 
Kawamoto also pays for her care without Medicaid. They are called 
private-pay individuals.
The problem is that state law does not allow two private-pay individuals to live in one community care foster family home.
House Bill 600 would have allowed that to happen for two years until the
 Health Department came up with rules, but the measure       failed to 
clear conference committee and is dead for this year.
The Kawamotos, who attended Friday's conference committee meeting, were devastated that the bill did not pass.
After 
lobbying throughout the legislative session, Noboru Kawamoto thought 
the measure would pass to help not only them,       but other couples in
 the same situation.
"I thought that was a sure thing," Kawamoto said in a somber tone shortly after Friday's meeting.
A veteran 
of the 100th Battalion, 442nd Regimental Combat Team, who served in 
World War II, Kawamoto resides in a community       care foster family 
home in Kane- ohe. Elaine Kawamoto lives in an adult residential care 
home in Punaluu.
Last 
fall, Noboru Kawamoto was hospitalized after he became ill with a 
urinary tract infection. He then suffered a stroke,       leaving him 
weak on his right side.
Kawamoto, who has to use a wheelchair, also has polyneuropathy, a degenerative disease that affects the peripheral nerves.
His wife,
 who also uses a wheelchair, had suffered from congestive heart failure 
and a series of ailments. Their son, Norman,       drives her to 
Kaneohe on the weekends so the couple can spend time together.
Norman 
Kawamoto said he too was shocked by the deferral. "I just couldn't 
believe it," he said. "My dad, you could just see       the hurt in his 
eyes."
He described how much his parents miss each other.
"Just simply being together and eating together is a joy for them," he said.
The bill 
is still alive in conference committee, and action possibly could be 
taken in the next legislative session. Under       state law, only one 
private-pay individual and two Medicaid recipients can reside in the 
same community foster family home.
Sen. 
Suzanne Chun Oakland (D, Downtown-Nuuanu-Liliha) said, "I'm hoping we 
can work during the interim with the departments       of Health and 
Human Services, see if they can actually draw up rules, because that 
takes quite a while."
Keith 
Ridley, chief of the Department of Health's Office of Health Care 
Assurance, which licenses long-term care facilities,       said, "We'll 
still continue to work with legislators as well as the Department of 
Human Services on how we can make this work."
Ridley 
said there were options such as adult residential care homes or expanded
 adult residential care homes that are available       to couples who 
are private-pay individuals like the Kawamotos.
But 
Norman Kawamoto said his father underwent a medical evaluation in an 
attempt to live in the same adult residential care       home as his 
wife and was rejected because of the level of care he needed. The care 
home would have to add more staff to care       for Noboru Kawamoto, 
said his son.
 
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