BILL NUMBER: SB 484	INTRODUCED
	BILL TEXT


INTRODUCED BY   Senator Beall
   (Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Chiu)
   (Coauthors: Senators Mitchell and Monning)

                        FEBRUARY 26, 2015

   An act to amend Section 1536 of, and to add Section 1538.8 to, the
Health and Safety Code, and to amend Section 11469 of the Welfare
and Institutions Code, relating to juveniles.


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 484, as introduced, Beall. Juveniles.
   (1) The California Community Care Facilities Act provides for the
licensure and regulation of community care facilities, including
foster family homes and group homes, by the State Department of
Social Services. A violation of this act is a misdemeanor.
   Existing law requires the department director, at least annually,
to publish and make available to interested persons a list covering
all licensed community care facilities, except as specified, and the
services for which each facility has been licensed or issued a
special permit.
   This bill would require the department director to include in that
list specified information regarding administering psychotropic
medications to children in those facilities. The bill would also
require the department, if it determines based on that information
that a facility is administering psychotropic medications to children
at a rate exceeding the average authorization for all group homes,
to inspect that facility at least once a year to examine specified
factors that contribute to the high utilization of psychotropic
medications. The bill would require an inspected facility to submit
to the department, within 60 days of that inspection, a corrective
action plan including steps the facility shall take to reduce the
utilization of psychotropic medications. The bill would require the
department to monitor the facility's implementation of that plan and
make a report, as provided. Because this bill would create a new
crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
   (2) Existing law requires the department, on or before January 1,
2016, in consultation with specified associations and other
stakeholders, to develop additional performance standards and outcome
measures that require group homes to implement programs and services
to minimize law enforcement contacts with minors in group homes or
under supervision of group home staff.
   This bill would require the department, on or before January 1,
2017, in consultation with specified associations and other
stakeholders, to develop additional performance standards and outcome
measures that require group homes to implement programs and services
to reduce utilization of psychotropic medications for children in
group homes. The bill would also delete an obsolete provision.
   (3) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse
local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the
state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that
reimbursement.
   This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this
act for a specified reason.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: yes.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Section 1536 of the Health and Safety Code is amended
to read:
   1536.  (a) (1) At least annually, the director shall publish and
make available to interested persons a list or lists covering all
licensed community care facilities, other than foster family homes
and certified family homes of foster family agencies providing
24-hour care for six or fewer foster children, and the services for
which each facility has been licensed or issued a special permit.
   (2) For a group home, transitional housing placement provider,
community treatment facility, or runaway and homeless youth shelter,
the list shall include  both   all  of the
following:
   (A) The number of licensing complaints, types of complaint, and
outcomes of complaints, including citations, fines, exclusion orders,
license suspensions, revocations, and surrenders.
   (B) The number, types, and outcomes of law enforcement contacts
made by the facility staff or children, as reported pursuant to
subdivision (a) of Section 1538.7. 
   (C) The number of children administered psychotropic medications
in the facility, and all off the following information pertaining to
those children:  
   (1) The number of children for whom the juvenile court
preauthorized the administration of the psychotropic medication.
 
   (2) The number of children administered psychotropic medication on
an emergency basis.  
   (3) The number of those children who are 6 to 11 years of age,
inclusive.  
   (4) The number of those children who are 12 to 17 years of age,
inclusive.  
   (5) The number of children administered an antipsychotic, mood
stabilizing, or antidepressant medication.  
   (6) The number of children administered two or more drugs from the
same class, including, but not limited to, antidepressants,
antipsychotics, antianxiety medications.  
   (7) The number of children administered two, three, four, or more
psychotropic medications concurrently.  
   (8) The number of children administered one or more medications
for longer than 90 days.  
   (9) The number of children terminated from the program due to the
child's refusal to take psychotropic medication. 
   (b) Subject to subdivision (c), to encourage the recruitment of
foster family homes and certified family homes of foster family
agencies, protect their personal privacy, and to preserve the
security and confidentiality of the placements in the homes, the
names, addresses, and other identifying information of facilities
licensed as foster family homes and certified family homes of foster
family agencies providing 24-hour care for six or fewer children
shall be considered personal information for purposes of the
Information Practices Act of 1977 (Chapter 1 (commencing with Section
1798) of Title 1.8 of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code). This
information shall not be disclosed by any state or local agency
pursuant to the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5
(commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the
Government Code), except as necessary for administering the licensing
program, facilitating the placement of children in these facilities,
and providing names and addresses only to bona fide professional
foster parent organizations upon request.
   (c) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), the department, a county, or
a foster family agency may request information from, or divulge
information to, the department, a county, or a foster family agency,
regarding a prospective certified parent, foster parent, or relative
caregiver for the purpose of, and as necessary to, conduct a
reference check to determine whether it is safe and appropriate to
license, certify, or approve an applicant to be a certified parent,
foster parent, or relative caregiver.
   (d) The department may issue a citation and, after the issuance of
that citation, may assess a civil penalty of fifty dollars ($50) per
day for each instance of a foster family agency's failure to provide
the department with the information required by subdivision (h) of
Section 88061 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations.
   (e) The Legislature encourages the department, when funds are
available for this purpose, to develop a database that would include
all of the following information:
   (1) Monthly reports by a foster family agency regarding family
homes.
   (2) A log of family homes certified and decertified, provided by a
foster family agency to the department.
   (3) Notification by a foster family agency to the department
informing the department of a foster family agency's determination to
decertify a certified family home due to any of the following
actions by the certified family parent:
   (A) Violating licensing rules and regulations.
   (B) Aiding, abetting, or permitting the violation of licensing
rules and regulations.
   (C) Conducting oneself in a way that is inimical to the health,
morals, welfare, or safety of a child placed in that certified family
home.
   (D) Being convicted of a crime while a certified family parent.
   (E) Knowingly allowing any child to have illegal drugs or alcohol.

   (F) Committing an act of child abuse or neglect or an act of
violence against another person.
  SEC. 2.  Section 1538.8 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to
read:
   1538.8.  (a) If the department, based upon the information
gathered pursuant to Section 1536, determines that the children and
adolescents in a facility are administered psychotropic medications
at a rate that exceeds the average authorization for all group homes,
the department shall inspect the facility at least once a year to
examine the policies, procedures, practices, child-to-staff ratios,
staff training, and other factors that the department determines
contribute to the high utilization of psychotropic medications.
   (b) A facility inspected pursuant to subdivision (a) shall submit
to the department a corrective action plan within 60 days of that
inspection. The plan shall address the steps that the facility shall
take to reduce the utilization of psychotropic medications among
residents.
   (c) The department shall monitor a facility's implementation of
its corrective action plan to determine both of the following:
   (1) Whether the facility has reduced the rate at which residents
are administered psychotropic medications, and, if so, the percentage
decrease in the administration of those medications.
   (2) Whether and to what extent alternative, less invasive
treatments are being provided to residents.
   (d) Following an inspection pursuant to subdivision (a), the
Community Care Licensing Division shall provide a report to the
department's Children and Family Services Division and to any other
public agency that has certified the facility's program or any
component of the facility's program, including, but not limited to,
the State Department of Health Care Services, which certifies group
homes pursuant to Section 4096.5 of the Welfare and Institutions
Code.
  SEC. 3.  Section 11469 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is
amended to read:
   11469.  (a) The department, in consultation with group home
providers, the County Welfare Directors Association, the Chief
Probation Officers of California, the California Mental Health
Directors Association, and the State Department of Health Care
Services, shall develop performance standards and outcome measures
for determining the effectiveness of the care and supervision, as
defined in subdivision (b) of Section 11460, provided by group homes
under the AFDC-FC program pursuant to Sections 11460 and 11462. These
standards shall be designed to measure group home program
performance for the client group that the group home program is
designed to serve.
   (1) The performance standards and outcome measures shall be
designed to measure the performance of group home programs in areas
over which the programs have some degree of influence, and in other
areas of measurable program performance that the department can
demonstrate are areas over which group home programs have meaningful
managerial or administrative influence.
   (2) These standards and outcome measures shall include, but are
not limited to, the effectiveness of services provided by each group
home program, and the extent to which the services provided by the
group home assist in obtaining the child welfare case plan objectives
for the child.
   (3) In addition, when the group home provider has identified as
part of its program for licensing, ratesetting, or county placement
purposes, or has included as a part of a child's case plan by mutual
agreement between the group home and the placing agency, specific
mental health, education, medical, and other child-related services,
the performance standards and outcome measures may also measure the
effectiveness of those services.
   (b) Regulations regarding the implementation of the group home
performance standards system required by this section shall be
adopted no later than one year prior to implementation. The
regulations shall specify both the performance standards system and
the manner by which the AFDC-FC rate of a group home program shall be
adjusted if performance standards are not met.
   (c) Except as provided in subdivision (d), effective July 1, 1995,
group home performance standards shall be implemented. Any group
home program not meeting the performance standards shall have its
AFDC-FC rate, set pursuant to Section 11462, adjusted according to
the regulations required by this section.
   (d)  Effective July 1, 1995, group   A 
 group  home  programs   program 
shall be classified at rate classification level 13 or 14 only if all
of the following are met:
   (1) The program generates the requisite number of points for rate
classification level 13 or 14.
   (2) The program only accepts children with special treatment needs
as determined through the assessment process pursuant to paragraph
(2) of subdivision (a) of Section 11462.01.
   (3) The program meets the performance standards designed pursuant
to this section.
   (e) Notwithstanding subdivision (c), the group home program
performance standards system shall not be implemented prior to the
implementation of the AFDC-FC performance standards system.
   (f)  By   On or before  January 1, 2016,
the department, in consultation with the County Welfare Directors
Association, the Chief Probation Officers of California, the
California Mental Health Directors Association, research entities,
foster youth  and   ,  advocates for foster
youth, foster care provider business entities organized and operated
on a nonprofit basis, Indian tribes, and other stakeholders, shall
develop additional performance standards and outcome measures that
require group homes to implement programs and services to minimize
law enforcement contacts and delinquency petition filings arising
from incidents of allegedly unlawful behavior by minors occurring in
group homes or under the supervision of group home staff, including
individualized behavior management programs, emergency intervention
plans, and conflict resolution processes. 
   (g) On or before January 1, 2017, the department, in consultation
with the County Welfare Directors Association, the Chief Probation
Officers of California, the California Mental Health Directors
Association, research entities, foster youth, advocates for foster
youth, foster care provider business entities organized and operated
on a nonprofit basis, Indian tribes, and other stakeholders, shall
develop additional performance standards and outcome measures that
require group homes to implement programs and services to reduce the
utilization of psychotropic medications for children in group homes,
including individualized behavior management programs, emergency
intervention plans, and conflict resolution processes. 
  SEC. 4.  No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the
Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the
meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
Constitution.