Amended in Senate April 11, 2013

Senate BillNo. 664


Introduced by Senator Yee

(Coauthor: Senator Wolk)

February 22, 2013


An act to amend Sectionsbegin delete 5348, 5349, 5813.5,end deletebegin insert 5348end insert andbegin delete 5892end deletebegin insert 5349end insert of the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to mentalbegin delete health, and making an appropriation thereforend deletebegin insert healthend insert.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SB 664, as amended, Yee. Mental health: Laura’sbegin delete Law: Mental Health Services Fund.end deletebegin insert Law.end insert

Existing law, known as Laura’s Law, until January 1, 2017, regulates designated assisted outpatient treatment services, which a county may choose to provide for its residents. To implement the program, the county board of supervisors is required to, by resolution, authorize the program and make a finding that no voluntary mental health program serving adults, and no children’s mental health program, may be reduced as a result of the program’s implementation. In a county where assisted outpatient treatment services are available, a person is authorized to receive specific mental health services pursuant to an order if requisite criteria are met, as specified.begin delete Under that law, a participating county is required to provide prescribed assisted outpatient services, including a service planning and delivery process that provides for services that are client-directed and employ psychosocial rehabilitation and recovery principles.end delete

This bill would no longer require a county to authorize the program by resolution and make those findings to implement the program. This bill would authorize a county to limit the number of persons to whom it provides assisted outpatient treatment services.

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Existing law contains provisions governing the operation and financing of community mental health services for the mentally disordered in every county through locally administered and locally controlled community mental health programs. Existing law, the Mental Health Services Act, an initiative measure enacted by the voters as Proposition 63 at the November 2, 2004, statewide general election, funds a system of county mental health plans for the provision of mental health services, as specified. The act establishes the Mental Health Services Fund, continuously appropriated to and administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, to fund specified county mental health programs, including programs funded under the Adult and Older Adult Mental Health System of Care Act. The Adult and Older Adult Mental Health System of Care Act establishes service standards that require, among other things, that a service planning and delivery process provides for services that are client-directed and employ psychosocial rehabilitation and recovery principles. The act authorizes the Legislature to clarify procedures and terms of the act by majority vote.

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This bill would make an appropriation by clarifying that mental health services provided under Laura’s Law may be provided pursuant to the procedures established by the Mental Health Services Act. This bill would make other conforming changes and delete obsolete provisions.

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Vote: majority. Appropriation: begin deleteyes end deletebegin insertnoend insert. Fiscal committee: begin deleteyes end deletebegin insertnoend insert. State-mandated local program: no.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P2    1

SECTION 1.  

Section 5348 of the Welfare and Institutions Code
2 is amended to read:

3

5348.  

(a) For purposes of subdivision (e) of Section 5346, a
4county that chooses to provide assisted outpatient treatment
5services pursuant to this article may limit the number of persons
6to whom it provides assisted outpatient treatment services, and
7shall offer assisted outpatient treatment services including, but not
8limited to, all of the following:

9(1) Community-based, mobile, multidisciplinary, highly trained
10mental health teams that use high staff-to-client ratios of no more
P3    1than 10 clients per team member for those subject to court-ordered
2services pursuant to Section 5346.

3(2) A service planning and delivery process that includes the
4following:

5(A) Determination of the numbers of persons to be served and
6the programs and services that will be provided to meet their needs.
7The local director of mental health shall consult with the sheriff,
8the police chief, the probation officer, the mental health board,
9contract agencies, and family, client, ethnic, and citizen
10constituency groups as determined by the director.

11(B) Plans for services, including outreach to families whose
12severely mentally ill adult is living with them, design of mental
13health services, coordination and access to medications, psychiatric
14and psychological services, substance abuse services, supportive
15housing or other housing assistance, vocational rehabilitation, and
16veterans’ services. Plans shall also contain evaluation strategies,
17which shall consider cultural, linguistic, gender, age, and special
18needs of minorities and those based on any characteristic listed or
19defined in Section 11135 of the Government Code in the target
20populations. Provision shall be made for staff with the cultural
21background and linguistic skills necessary to remove barriers to
22mental health services as a result of having
23limited-English-speaking ability and cultural differences.
24Recipients of outreach services may include families, the public,
25primary care physicians, and others who are likely to come into
26contact with individuals who may be suffering from an untreated
27severe mental illness who would be likely to become homeless if
28the illness continued to be untreated for a substantial period of
29time. Outreach to adults may include adults voluntarily or
30involuntarily hospitalized as a result of a severe mental illness.

31(C) Provision for services to meet the needs of persons who are
32physically disabled.

33(D) Provision for services to meet the special needs of older
34adults.

35(E) Provision for family support and consultation services,
36parenting support and consultation services, and peer support or
37self-help group support, where appropriate.

38(F) Provision for services to be client-directed and that employ
39psychosocial rehabilitation and recovery principles.

P4    1(G) Provision for psychiatric and psychological services that
2are integrated with other services and for psychiatric and
3psychological collaboration in overall service planning.

4(H) Provision for services specifically directed to seriously
5mentally ill young adults 25 years of age or younger who are
6homeless or at significant risk of becoming homeless. These
7provisions may include continuation of services that still would
8be received through other funds had eligibility not been terminated
9as a result of age.

10(I) Services reflecting special needs of women from diverse
11cultural backgrounds, including supportive housing that accepts
12children, personal services coordinator therapeutic treatment, and
13substance treatment programs that address gender-specific trauma
14and abuse in the lives of persons with mental illness, and vocational
15rehabilitation programs that offer job training programs free of
16gender bias and sensitive to the needs of women.

17(J) Provision for housing for clients that is immediate,
18transitional, permanent, or all of these.

19(K) Provision for clients who have been suffering from an
20untreated severe mental illness for less than one year, and who do
21not require the full range of services, but are at risk of becoming
22homeless unless a comprehensive individual and family support
23services plan is implemented. These clients shall be served in a
24manner that is designed to meet their needs.

25(3) Each client shall have a clearly designated mental health
26personal services coordinator who may be part of a
27multidisciplinary treatment team who is responsible for providing
28or assuring needed services. Responsibilities include complete
29assessment of the client’s needs, development of the client’s
30personal services plan, linkage with all appropriate community
31services, monitoring of the quality andbegin delete follow-throughend deletebegin insert follow
32throughend insert
of services, and necessary advocacy to ensure each client
33receives those services that are agreed to in the personal services
34plan. Each client shall participate in the development of his or her
35personal services plan, and responsible staff shall consult with the
36designated conservator, if one has been appointed, and, with the
37consent of the client, shall consult with the family and other
38significant persons as appropriate.

39(4) The individual personal services plan shall ensure that
40persons subject to assisted outpatient treatment programs receive
P5    1age-appropriate, gender-appropriate, and culturally appropriate
2services, to the extent feasible, that are designed to enable
3recipients to:

4(A) Live in the most independent, least restrictive housing
5feasible in the local community, and, for clients with children, to
6live in a supportive housing environment that strives for
7reunification with their children or assists clients in maintaining
8custody of their children as is appropriate.

9(B) Engage in the highest level of work or productive activity
10appropriate to their abilities and experience.

11(C) Create and maintain a support system consisting of friends,
12family, and participation in community activities.

13(D) Access an appropriate level of academic education or
14vocational training.

15(E) Obtain an adequate income.

16(F) Self-manage their illnesses and exert as much control as
17possible over both the day-to-day and long-term decisions that
18affect their lives.

19(G) Access necessary physical health care and maintain the best
20possible physical health.

21(H) Reduce or eliminate serious antisocial or criminal behavior,
22and thereby reduce or eliminate their contact with the criminal
23justice system.

24(I) Reduce or eliminate the distress caused by the symptoms of
25mental illness.

26(J) Have freedom from dangerous addictive substances.

27(5) The individual personal services plan shall describe the
28service array that meets the requirements of paragraph (4), and to
29the extent applicable to the individual, the requirements of
30paragraph (2).

31(b) A county that provides assisted outpatient treatment services
32pursuant to this article also shall offer the same services on a
33voluntary basis.

34(c) Involuntary medication shall not be allowed absent a separate
35order by the court pursuant to Sections 5332 to 5336, inclusive.

36(d) A county that operates an assisted outpatient treatment
37program pursuant to this article shall provide data to the State
38Department of Health Care Services and, based on the data, the
39department shall report to the Legislature on or before May 1 of
40each year in which the county provides services pursuant to this
P6    1article. The report shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of
2the effectiveness of the strategies employed by each program
3operated pursuant to this article in reducing homelessness and
4hospitalization of persons in the program and in reducing
5involvement with local law enforcement by persons in the program.
6The evaluation and report shall also include any other measures
7identified by the department regarding persons in the program and
8all of the following, based on information that is available:

9(1) The number of persons served by the program and, of those,
10the number who are able to maintain housing and the number who
11maintain contact with the treatment system.

12(2) The number of persons in the program with contacts with
13local law enforcement, and the extent to which local and state
14incarceration of persons in the program has been reduced or
15avoided.

16(3) The number of persons in the program participating in
17employment services programs, including competitive employment.

18(4) The days of hospitalization of persons in the program that
19have been reduced or avoided.

20(5) Adherence to prescribed treatment by persons in the program.

21(6) Other indicators of successful engagement, if any, by persons
22in the program.

23(7) Victimization of persons in the program.

24(8) Violent behavior of persons in the program.

25(9) Substance abuse by persons in the program.

26(10) Type, intensity, and frequency of treatment of persons in
27the program.

28(11) Extent to which enforcement mechanisms are used by the
29program, when applicable.

30(12) Social functioning of persons in the program.

31(13) Skills in independent living of persons in the program.

32(14) Satisfaction with program services both by those receiving
33them and by their families, when relevant.

34

SEC. 2.  

Section 5349 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is
35amended to read:

36

5349.  

Compliance with this section shall be monitored by the
37State Department of Health Care Services as part of its review and
38approval of county performance contracts.

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39

SEC. 3.  

Section 5813.5 of the Welfare and Institutions Code
40 is amended to read:

P7    1

5813.5.  

Subject to the availability of funds from the Mental
2Health Services Fund, the state shall distribute funds for the
3provision of services under Sections 5347, 5348, 5801, 5802, and
45806 to county mental health programs. Services shall be available
5to adults and seniors with severe illnesses who meet the eligibility
6criteria in subdivisions (b) and (c) of Section 5600.3. For purposes
7of the Mental Health Services Act, seniors means older adult
8persons identified in this part.

9(a) Funding shall be provided at sufficient levels to ensure that
10counties can provide each adult and senior served pursuant to this
11part with the medically necessary mental health services,
12medications, and supportive services set forth in the applicable
13treatment plan.

14(b) The funding shall only cover the portions of those costs of
15services that cannot be paid for with other funds including other
16mental health funds, public and private insurance, and other local,
17state, and federal funds.

18(c) Each county mental health programs plan shall provide for
19services in accordance with the system of care for adults and
20seniors who meet the eligibility criteria in subdivisions (b) and (c)
21of Section 5600.3.

22(d) Planning for services shall be consistent with the philosophy,
23principles, and practices of the Recovery Vision for mental health
24consumers:

25(1) To promote concepts key to the recovery for individuals
26who have mental illness: hope, personal empowerment, respect,
27social connections, self-responsibility, and self-determination.

28(2) To promote consumer-operated services as a way to support
29recovery.

30(3) To reflect the cultural, ethnic, and racial diversity of mental
31health consumers.

32(4) To plan for each consumer’s individual needs.

33(e) The plan for each county mental health program shall
34indicate, subject to the availability of funds as determined by Part
354.5 (commencing with Section 5890) of this division, and other
36funds available for mental health services, adults and seniors with
37a severe mental illness being served by this program are either
38receiving services from this program or have a mental illness that
39is not sufficiently severe to require the level of services required
40of this program.

P8    1(f) Each county plan and annual update pursuant to Section
25847 shall consider ways to provide services similar to those
3established pursuant to the Mentally Ill Offender Crime Reduction
4Grant Program. Funds shall not be used to pay for persons
5incarcerated in state prison or parolees from state prisons. Funds
6may be used to provide persons with assisted outpatient treatment
7services, as defined in Section 5345.

8(g) The department shall contract for services with county
9mental health programs pursuant to Section 5897. After January
101, 2005, the term “grant” as used in Sections 5814 and 5814.5
11means a contract described in this subdivision.

12

SEC. 4.  

Section 5892 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is
13amended to read:

14

5892.  

(a) In order to promote efficient implementation of the
15Mental Health Services Act, the county shall use funds distributed
16from the Mental Health Services Fund as follows:

17(1) In 2005-06, 2006-07, and in 2007-08 10 percent shall be
18placed in a trust fund to be expended for education and training
19programs pursuant to Part 3.1 (commencing with Section 5820)
20of this division.

21(2) In 2005-06, 2006-07 and in 2007-08 10 percent for capital
22facilities and technological needs distributed to counties in
23accordance with a formula developed in consultation with the
24California Mental Health Directors Association to implement plans
25developed pursuant to Section 5847.

26(3) Twenty percent of funds distributed to the counties pursuant
27to subdivision (c) of Section 5891 shall be used for prevention and
28early intervention programs in accordance with Part 3.6
29(commencing with Section 5840) of this division.

30(4) The expenditure for prevention and early intervention may
31be increased in any county in which the department determines
32that the increase will decrease the need and cost for additional
33services to severely mentally ill persons in that county by an
34amount at least commensurate with the proposed increase.

35(5) The balance of funds shall be distributed to county mental
36health programs for services to persons with severe mental illnesses
37pursuant to Part 4 (commencing with Section 5850), for the
38children’s system of care, Part 3 (commencing with Section 5800),
39for the adult and older adult system of care, and Sections 5347 and
405348.

P9    1(6) Five percent of the total funding for each county mental
2health program for Part 3 (commencing with Section 5800), Part
33.6 (commencing with Section 5840), and Part 4 (commencing
4with Section 5850) of this division, shall be utilized for innovative
5programs in accordance with Sections 5830, 5847, and 5848.

6(b) In any year after 2007-08, programs for services pursuant
7to Part 3 (commencing with Section 5800), and Part 4
8(commencing with Section 5850) of this division may include
9funds for technological needs and capital facilities, human resource
10needs, and a prudent reserve to ensure services do not have to be
11significantly reduced in years in which revenues are below the
12average of previous years. The total allocation for purposes
13authorized by this subdivision shall not exceed 20 percent of the
14average amount of funds allocated to that county for the previous
15five years pursuant to this section.

16(c) The allocations pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) shall
17include funding for annual planning costs pursuant to Section 5848.
18The total of these costs shall not exceed 5 percent of the total of
19annual revenues received for the fund. The planning costs shall
20include funds for county mental health programs to pay for the
21costs of consumers, family members, and other stakeholders to
22participate in the planning process and for the planning and
23implementation required for private provider contracts to be
24significantly expanded to provide additional services pursuant to
25Part 3 (commencing with Section 5800), and Part 4 (commencing
26with Section 5850) of this division.

27(d) Prior to making the allocations pursuant to subdivisions (a),
28(b), and (c), funds shall be reserved for the costs for the State
29Department of Health Care Services, the California Mental Health
30Planning Council, the Office of Statewide Health Planning and
31Development, the Mental Health Services Oversight and
32Accountability Commission, the State Department of Public Health,
33and any other state agency to implement all duties pursuant to the
34programs set forth in this section. These costs shall not exceed 3.5
35percent of the total of annual revenues received for the fund. The
36administrative costs shall include funds to assist consumers and
37family members to ensure the appropriate state and county agencies
38give full consideration to concerns about quality, structure of
39service delivery, or access to services. The amounts allocated for
40administration shall include amounts sufficient to ensure adequate
P10   1research and evaluation regarding the effectiveness of services
2being provided and achievement of the outcome measures set forth
3in Part 3 (commencing with Section 5800), Part 3.6 (commencing
4with Section 5840), and Part 4 (commencing with Section 5850)
5of this division. The amount of funds available for the purposes
6of this subdivision in any fiscal year shall be subject to
7appropriation in the annual Budget Act.

8(e) In 2004-05 funds shall be allocated as follows:

9(1) Forty-five percent for education and training pursuant to
10Part 3.1 (commencing with Section 5820) of this division.

11(2) Forty-five percent for capital facilities and technology needs
12in the manner specified by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a).

13(3) Five percent for local planning in the manner specified in
14subdivision (c).

15(4) Five percent for state implementation in the manner specified
16in subdivision (d).

17(f) Each county shall place all funds received from the State
18Mental Health Services Fund in a local Mental Health Services
19Fund. The Local Mental Health Services Fund balance shall be
20invested consistent with other county funds and the interest earned
21on the investments shall be transferred into the fund. The earnings
22on investment of these funds shall be available for distribution
23from the fund in future years.

24(g) All expenditures for county mental health programs shall
25be consistent with a currently approved plan or update pursuant
26to Section 5847.

27(h) Other than funds placed in a reserve in accordance with an
28approved plan, any funds allocated to a county which have not
29been spent for their authorized purpose within three years shall
30revert to the state to be deposited into the fund and available for
31other counties in future years, provided however, that funds for
32capital facilities, technological needs, or education and training
33may be retained for up to 10 years before reverting to the fund.

34(i) If there are still additional revenues available in the fund
35after the Mental Health Services Oversight and Accountability
36Commission has determined there are prudent reserves and no
37unmet needs for any of the programs funded pursuant to this
38section, including all purposes of the Prevention and Early
39Intervention Program, the commission shall develop a plan for
40expenditures of these revenues to further the purposes of this act
P11   1and the Legislature may appropriate these funds for any purpose
2consistent with the commission’s adopted plan which furthers the
3purposes of this act.

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