January 27, 2026
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Minnesota weighs law to end assisted‑living ‘no touch’ policies

Elder advocates in Minnesota are drafting legislation that would curb or effectively ban 'no touch'/'no lift' policies in assisted‑living facilities — rules that tell staff to call 911 and not touch a resident who has fallen — after a Golden Valley case where 79‑year‑old Larry Thompson slowly suffocated while workers stood by. The FOX 9 investigation that exposed Thompson’s death now sits alongside national examples, including an Arizona law passed in 2021 that bars these policies and data from Oshkosh, Wisconsin, where the fire department has run more than 800 fall calls from assisted living since 2020 because staff are ordered not to lift residents or perform CPR. Wisconsin Rep. Lori Palmeri, whose own mother experienced such a policy, is preparing a package of bills that would require more staff training, fund mechanical lifts, and impose a statutory duty of care, moves Minnesota advocates are watching as they draft their own proposal. The assisted‑living industry has fought similar reforms elsewhere, arguing liability concerns, so a bruising fight at the Capitol is likely if Minnesota tries to force facilities to put hands on residents instead of handing them off to already‑stretched metro EMS crews. For Twin Cities families with parents in assisted living, this is the first concrete sign that the Thompson case could translate into law that governs how staff respond the next time an elder hits the floor in a Golden Valley or Eagan hallway.

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📌 Key Facts

  • Minnesota elder advocates are drafting state legislation targeting 'no touch'/'no lift' fall policies in assisted‑living facilities, in direct response to a Golden Valley neglect case where 79‑year‑old Larry Thompson died after staff did not assist him.
  • Wisconsin’s Oshkosh Fire Department has responded to more than 800 fall calls from assisted‑living facilities since 2020, many linked to policies that require staff to call 911 and 'stand by' without providing lifts or CPR.
  • Arizona passed a law in 2021 that effectively bans 'no lift' fall policies in assisted living, a reform the assisted‑living industry strongly opposed and is expected to resist in Minnesota as well.

📊 Relevant Data

Facilities implement no-lift policies in senior living facilities primarily due to liability concerns, such as the risk of further injuring residents or staff during lifting attempts, and to prevent staff injuries from manual handling.

Does your loved one's senior care facility have a “no lift” policy? — Law Serafini

In 2023, the unintentional fall death rate for adults aged 65 and older in the US was 69.9 per 100,000 population, with a higher rate for men (74.2 per 100,000) compared to women.

Unintentional Fall Deaths in Adults Age 65 and Older — CDC

The prevalence of falls among older adults in the US is higher among Multiracial (higher than average) and American Indian/Alaska Native (higher than average) groups compared to other racial groups, with 1 in 4 older adults overall reporting a fall.

Explore Falls - Age 65+ in the United States — America's Health Rankings

In a 2021 study, the prevalence of falls among older adults was 18.54% for Hispanics and 18.60% for Blacks, compared to lower rates for Whites, with population percentages: Hispanics about 19% of US population, Blacks 13.6%, Whites 58.9% (2023 Census estimates).

Racial and Ethnic Differences in Falls Among Older Adults — NIH

Approximately 50% to 75% of nursing home residents in the US fall annually, which is twice the rate for older adults living in the community.

Nursing Home Falls Cause Injury & Death - Get the Facts — Nursing Home Abuse Center

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January 27, 2026
10:31 PM
Senior living facilities ‘no lift’ policies could be banned by state laws
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Nathan.O'Neal@fox.com (Nathan O'Neal)