BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



                                                                  AB 2668
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          CONCURRENCE IN SENATE AMENDMENTS
          AB 2668 (Quirk-Silva)
          As Amended  August 19, 2014
          Majority vote
           
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          |ASSEMBLY:  |61-14|(May 28, 2014)  |SENATE: |33-0 |(August 21,    |
          |           |     |                |        |     |2014)          |
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           Original Committee Reference:    HUM. S.  

           SUMMARY  :  Permits non-minor dependents (NMD) who are also  
          parents to enter into a parenting support plan, as specified.   
          Specifically,  this bill  :   

          1)Permits a parenting NMD who is participating in a supervised  
            independent living plan to enter into a parenting support  
            plan, which may be developed between the NMD, an identified  
            responsible adult, and a representative of the county child  
            welfare agency or probation department, as specified.

          2)Permits additional input to be provided by any other  
            individuals identified by the NMD, the other parent of the  
            child, or other extended family members. 

          3)Provides that the plan shall be developed as soon as is  
            practicably possible, and allows the plan to be amended with  
            additional stakeholder input, as requested by the NMD, if  
            those stakeholders are not available within the first 30 days  
            if the NMDs request to enter into the plan.  

          4)Requires the plan to be designed to preserve and strengthen  
            the NMD parent family unit, to assist the NMD parent in  
            providing a healthy and safe environment of his or her child,  
            and to support the NMD's educational and employment goals.

          5)Provides that the plan shall in no way limit the NMD parent's  
            legal right to make decisions regarding the care, custody and  
            control of the child. 

          6)Requires the plan to be written for the express purposes of  
            identifying additional parenting support to the NMD and shall  
            outline the responsibilities of how the identified responsible  
            adult will assist the NMD parent and the types of supportive  








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            services she or he will provide, as specified.

          7)Requires the plan to include, but not be limited to,  
            transportation to health care appointments, child care, and  
            school, as appropriate and providing child care and  
            babysitting. 

          8)Provides that the plan may not conflict with the NMD parent's  
            transitional independent living case plan.

          9)Requires an additional $200 per month to be paid to a NMD  
            parent who enters into a parenting support plan, contingent  
            upon the approval of the county child welfare agency.

          10)Beginning July 1, 2015, requires a person who wishes to  
            become an identified responsible adult to a NMD parent to  
            comply with all of the following requirements:

             a)   Meet the minimum criteria established by the Department  
               of Social Services (DSS), as specified.

             b)   Be at least 21 years of age.

             c)   Undergo a criminal records check and a Child Abuse  
               Central Index check.

          11)By February 1, 2015, requires DSS to convene a working group  
            to include specified stakeholders to develop an all-county  
            letter that specifies the minimum criteria a person must meet  
            in order to serve as an identified responsible adult to a NMD  
            parent.

          12)Requires DSS to issue the letter to all counties by June 30,  
            2015.

           The Senate amendments  :

          1)Make clarifying amendments to how an identified responsible  
            adult must undergo a criminal background check, as specified.

          2)Provide that the county child welfare agency has to approve of  
            the parenting support plan before the parenting NMD may  
            receive the additional $200 in supportive payments.

          3)Make other technical and clarifying changes.








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           AS PASSED BY THE ASSEMBLY  , this bill:

          1)Permitted a parenting NMD who is participating in a supervised  
            independent living plan to enter into a parenting support  
            plan, which may be developed between the NMD, an identified  
            responsible adult, and a representative of the county child  
            welfare agency or probation department, as specified.

          2)Provided that the plan shall in no way limit the NMD parent's  
            legal right to make decisions regarding the care, custody and  
            control of the child. 

          3)Required the plan to be written for the express purposes of  
            identifying additional parenting support to the NMD and shall  
            outline the responsibilities of how the identified responsible  
            adult will assist the NMD parent and the types of supportive  
            services she or he will provide, as specified.

          4)Required an additional $200 per month to be paid to a NMD  
            parent who enters into a parenting support plan, contingent  
            upon the approval of the county child welfare agency.

          5)Beginning July 1, 2015, required a person who wishes to become  
            an identified responsible adult to a NMD parent to undergo a  
            criminal background check.

          6)By February 1, 2015, required DSS to convene a working group  
            to include specified stakeholders to develop an all-county  
            letter that specifies the minimum criteria a person must meet  
            in order to serve as an identified responsible adult to a NMD  
            parent.
           

          FISCAL EFFECT  :  According to the Senate Appropriations  
          Committee:
           
          1)Near-term annual costs of about $60,000 to $75,000 (General  
            Fund) to provide an additional $200 monthly payment to 25 to  
            30 NMD parents residing in SILPs. 

          2)Unknown net future ongoing fiscal impact (General Fund) on  
            foster care placements of NMD parents, to the extent there is  
            a shift in NMD parent placements from whole foster family  
            homes to SILPs.








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          3)Potential minor ongoing increase in social worker activities  
            (General Fund) to participate in the development of NMD  
            parenting support plans.

          4)One-time costs (General Fund) to DSS to convene the work group  
            and develop minimum criteria for identified responsible  
            adults.

          5)Negligible costs (Special Fund) to the Department of Justice  
            for background checks of identified responsible adults, to be  
            offset by the authority to charge fees.

          6)Unknown, potential ongoing increase in DSS or county child  
            welfare agency and county probation department administrative  
            costs (General Fund) for screening and oversight of identified  
            responsible adults. Costs would be dependent on the criteria  
            developed by the workgroup. 

           COMMENTS  :    

          California Fostering Connections to Success Act of 2010 (FCSA):   
          AB 12 (Beall) Chapter 559, Statutes of 2010, was a landmark  
          piece of child welfare legislation in California opting the  
          state into two provisions of the federal Fostering Connections  
          to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008 (Fostering  
          Connections Act) (Public Law 110-351).  Specifically, the  
          California Fostering Connections to Success Act: 

          1)Re-enacted California's existing state and county-funded  
            Kinship Guardianship Assistance Payment program to align it  
            with new federal requirements and allow the state to bring  
            federal financial participation into our kinship guardian  
            assistance program for the first time; and, 

          2)Provides transitional foster care support to qualifying foster  
            youth ages 18 to 21, phased-in over three years, beginning in  
            2012.

          The goal of AB 12 is to assist foster youth, or "non-minor  
          dependents" as they are referred to in statute, in their  
          transition to adulthood by providing them with the opportunity  
          to create a case plan alongside their case worker tailored to  
          their individual needs, which charts the course towards  
          independence through incremental levels of responsibility.  It  








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          is a voluntary program grounded in evidence of how the option of  
          continued support to age 21 can counter the dismal outcomes  
          faced by youth who are forced to leave the foster care system at  
          age 18, including high rates of homelessness, incarceration,  
          reliance on public assistance, teen pregnancy, and low rates of  
          high school and postsecondary graduation.  

          In essence, AB 12 seeks to mirror the type of continued guidance  
          and assistance most young adults receive from their parents and  
          families in their late teens and early twenties.  Following this  
          paradigm, AB 12 provides nonminors with the option to petition  
          to reenter care if they opt-out of extended care and want to  
          return before age 21, provided they meet the eligibility  
          criteria set forth in federal and state law.

          In order to be eligible to continue foster care benefits up to  
          age 21, a non-minor dependent youth must:  continue under the  
          jurisdiction of the juvenile court; sign a mutual agreement  
          which commits both the nonminor and the placing agency to  
          certain responsibilities; reside in an approved, supervised  
          placement; work alongside their caseworker to prepare and  
          participate in their transitional independent living case plan;  
          and have their status reviewed every six months.  In addition,  
          pursuant to the federal Fostering Connections Act, a youth must  
          meet one of the following five work or education-related  
          eligibility criteria:

          1)Is completing secondary education or a program leading to an  
            equivalent credential;

          2)Is enrolled in an institution which provides postsecondary or  
            vocational education;

          3)Is participating in a program or activity designed to promote,  
            or remove barriers to employment;

          4)Is employed for at least 80 hours per month; or

          5)Is incapable of doing any of the activities described above  
            due to a medical condition.
           
           Need for the bill:  Stating the need for the bill, the author  
          writes:

               Young parents in the foster care system face both the  








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               challenges of being in foster care as well as the  
               challenges of being a young, usually single, parent.   
               Studies of both groups have found that they will  
               experience higher than average rates of poverty and  
               unemployment and low educational attainment.

               A 2013 Conrad N. Hilton Foundation study revealed that  
               the rates of abuse and neglect among children born to  
               teens with a history of maltreatment are two to three  
               times higher than the rates of children whose teen  
               mothers had no child welfare involvement.  This  
               underscores the need to provide young parents in  
               foster care with adequate support and services to  
               overcome the challenges they face, and to preserve and  
               strengthen the family unit.  
               The issue of parenting youth in foster care has become  
               more pressing with the implementation of extended  
               foster care in California.  The foundation study  
               estimated that as many as one in three female youth  
               may be parenting by the time they exit the foster care  
               system on their 21st birthday.

               Additionally, there are new placement options  
               available to non-minor dependents remaining in  
               extended foster care, known as a Supervised  
               Independent Living Placement (SILP), which enables  
               them to live without a caregiver in an apartment,  
               rented room, dorm room, etc.  While SILP's provide  
               youth with the independence and autonomy to properly  
               prepare for life after foster care, an unintended  
               shortcoming is the lack of support for custodial  
               parenting non-minor dependents.

               Unlike most young parents, foster youth who become  
               parents at an early age typically cannot turn to their  
               own parents for emotional support, daily or even  
               occasional assistance most young parents receive from  
               their families.  Consequently, these young parents are  
               often completely on their own as they struggle to  
               balance work, school, and parenting responsibilities.   
               Not surprisingly this stress, lack of resources, and  
               simple lack of experience makes these young parents  
               vulnerable and high risk for poor outcomes.

           








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          Analysis Prepared by  :    Chris Reefe / HUM. S. / (916) 319-2089 


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