HB4739 98TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

  
  

 


 
98TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2013 and 2014
HB4739

 

Introduced , by Rep. Sara Feigenholtz

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Voluntary Placement for Children with Serious Mental Illnesses or Developmental Disabilities Act. Provides that the Department of Children and Family Services, the Division of Mental Health within the Department of Human Services, the Division of Developmental Disabilities within the Department of Human Services, and the Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall enter into an interagency agreement, the purpose of which is to prevent children in psychiatric lock-out from entering the child welfare system for a time-limited, out-of-home placement for treatment of the child's serious mental illness, serious emotional disturbance, or developmental disability when there is no evidence of abuse or neglect of the child, and place the child in a time-limited out-of-home placement under the most appropriate State agency. Provides that the Department of Children and Family Services shall establish a voluntary placement program, in which a child is voluntarily placed into the care of the Department of Children and Family Services under a voluntary placement agreement for the purpose of out-of-home placement of the child for the treatment of a serious mental illness, serious emotional disturbance, or developmental disability. Provides that the out-of-home placement may not exceed 180 days without juvenile court approval. Provides that the Department of Children and Family Services shall refer all cases voluntarily placed under the Act to the Community and Residential Services Authority for review as soon as the child is voluntarily placed to enable the Authority to annually review why cases were voluntarily placed in the Department of Children and Family Services rather than routed to a more appropriate agency for treating the child's disability.


LRB098 17877 RLC 53001 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB4739LRB098 17877 RLC 53001 b

1    AN ACT concerning children.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Voluntary Placement for Children with Serious Mental Illnesses
6or Developmental Disabilities Act.
 
7    Section 5. Purpose. It is becoming tragically more common
8for families with a child with a serious mental illness,
9serious emotional disturbance, or developmental disability to
10turn to the Department of Children and Family Services for
11time-limited out-of-home placement of the child when all
12avenues of effective, sustained treatment have been
13foreclosed. When a child enters the child welfare system under
14the Department of Children and Family Services solely to obtain
15treatment of the child's disability in an out-of-home
16placement, the child's parents are often forced to relinquish
17custody despite the absence of abuse or neglect, resulting in a
18legal separation of the family and an abuse and neglect
19investigation by the Department of Children and Family
20Services. This causes irreparable damage to the child and the
21family unit, and takes the Department of Children and Family
22Services resources away from its core mission of protecting
23abused and neglected children in this State. The child welfare

 

 

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1system is not the appropriate system of care for a child when
2there is no abuse or neglect. These children should be
3receiving services under the agency that provides care and
4treatment for their mental illness or developmental
5disability. Therefore, this Act: (1) requires the Department of
6Children and Family Services and other relevant State agencies
7to enter into an interagency agreement to route families who
8are undergoing a psychiatric lockout of a child, to the
9appropriate State agency that oversees the services that will
10treat the child's primary disability; and (2) enables families
11who are relegated to the child welfare system for out-of-home
12treatment of a serious mental illness, serious emotional
13disturbance, or developmental disability to remain intact
14while the child is in the out-of-home placement.
 
15    Section 10. Definition. As used in this Act:
16    "Children" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 5 of
17the Children and Family Services Act.
18    "Psychiatric lock-out" means when a parent or guardian
19refuses to take a child home from a psychiatric hospital or
20similar facility when the hospital or facility indicates the
21child can be treated at home and the parents or guardian refuse
22to take the child home because of a reasonable fear the child
23will harm himself or herself or other family members.
 
24    Section 15. Interagency agreement for children in

 

 

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1psychiatric lockout.
2    (a) The Department of Children and Family Services, the
3Division of Mental Health within the Department of Human
4Services, the Division of Developmental Disabilities within
5the Department of Human Services, and the Department of
6Healthcare and Family Services shall enter into an interagency
7agreement, the purpose of which, is to prevent children in
8psychiatric lock-out from entering the child welfare system for
9a time-limited, out-of-home placement for treatment of the
10child's serious mental illness, serious emotional disturbance,
11or developmental disability when there is no evidence of abuse
12or neglect by the child's parents or guardian, and place the
13child in a time-limited out-of-home placement under the most
14appropriate State agency.
15    (b) The interagency agreement shall include the criteria
16under the agency the child will receive time-limited
17out-of-home services (the Department of Children and Family
18Services, the Division of Mental Health within the Department
19of Human Services, the Division of Developmental Disabilities
20within the Department of Human Services, or the Department of
21Healthcare and Family Services) depending on the child's
22primary disability and the child's care needs, the process by
23which the child is placed under the care of the appropriate
24agency to treat the child's condition or conditions and each
25agency's responsibilities throughout this process, including
26budgetary responsibility.

 

 

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1    (c) An interagency agreement shall be executed within 6
2months after the effective date of this Act.
 
3    Section 20. Voluntary placement of children with a serious
4mental illness, serious emotional disturbance, or
5developmental disability.
6    (a) The Department of Children and Family Services shall
7establish a voluntary placement program, in which a child is
8voluntarily placed into the care of the Department of Children
9and Family Services under a voluntary placement agreement for
10the purpose of out-of-home placement of the child for the
11treatment of a serious mental illness, serious emotional
12disturbance, or developmental disability.
13    (b) The Department of Children and Family Services shall
14make reasonable efforts with the child's parents or legal
15guardian to prevent an out-of-home placement prior to entering
16into a voluntary placement agreement, including working with
17the family to secure services through the Division of Mental
18Health, the Division of Developmental Disabilities, the
19Department of Healthcare and Family Services, or other
20appropriate State or local agency.
21    (c) The Department of Children and Family Services is
22prohibited from seeking legal custody of a child under
23voluntary placement if the child has a serious mental illness,
24serious emotional disturbance, or developmental disability and
25the purpose of the voluntary placement is to obtain treatment

 

 

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1or care related to the child's disability in the out-of-home
2placement.
3    (d) The Department of Children and Family Services shall
4adopt rules to implement the voluntary placement program,
5including, but not limited to:
6        (1) the voluntary placement agreement process;
7        (2) assessing the voluntary placement agreement;
8        (3) outlining parental or guardian rights and
9    responsibilities for children voluntarily placed under
10    this Act to maximize parental or guardian participation in
11    the child's recovery and family reunification as soon as is
12    best for the child, including but not limited to, parental
13    or guardian involvement in the child's care,
14    decision-making authority, involvement in care planning
15    meetings, maintenance of health care coverage, and
16    reasonable child support;
17        (4) juvenile court requirements for children under a
18    voluntary placement agreement to ensure Title IV-E of the
19    federal Social Security Act reimbursement when applicable;
20        (5) terminating a voluntary placement agreement;
21        (6) administrative issues and reporting requirements;
22    and
23        (7) any other rules necessary to implement a voluntary
24    placement program to carry out this Act.
25    (e) The out-of-home placement may not exceed 180 days
26without juvenile court approval. A child may remain in an

 

 

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1out-of-home placement under a voluntary placement agreement
2under this Act for more than 180 days only if the child's
3disability necessitates care or treatment in the out-of-home
4placement and a juvenile court finds that continuation of the
5placement is in the best interests of the child. Rules shall
6set the interval for which juvenile court approval is needed
7beyond 180 days.
8    (f) Abandonment at a psychiatric hospital or similar
9facility shall not constitute grounds for a finding of abuse or
10neglect under certain circumstances. If a parent or guardian
11refuses to take a child home from a psychiatric hospital or
12other similar facility that indicates the child can be treated
13at home and the parents or guardian report they are unable or
14unwilling to take the child home because of a reasonable fear
15for the safety of the child or other family members, the
16Department of Children and Family Services shall determine
17whether the alleged fear is reasonable under the circumstances.
18If it is determined to be reasonable, the Department of
19Children and Family Services shall not use the circumstances as
20a basis for an indicated finding of abuse or neglect.
21    (g) The inability of a parent to care for a child with a
22serious mental illness, serious emotional disturbance, or
23developmental disability shall not in itself be the basis for a
24finding of abuse or neglect.
25    (h) Exception to reporting on the State Central Register
26for Child Abuse and Neglect. Parents or guardians who refuse to

 

 

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1take a child home from a psychiatric hospital or other similar
2facility because of a reasonable fear for the safety of the
3child or other family member shall not be placed on the State
4Central Register for Child Abuse and Neglect if the Department
5of Children and Family Services has determined that the fear
6was reasonable.
7    (i) A State employee or agent shall not communicate to a
8parent in any manner that the State will provide different or
9additional mental health services of any kind to that parent's
10child if the child is found to be dependent or neglected or if
11the parent surrenders custody of that child to the State.
12    (j) Annual review by the Community and Residential Services
13Authority. The Department of Children and Family Services shall
14refer all cases voluntarily placed under this Act to the
15Community and Residential Services Authority for review as soon
16as the child is voluntarily placed to enable the Authority to
17annually review why cases were voluntarily placed in the
18Department of Children and Family Services rather than a more
19appropriate agency for treating the child's disability. The
20Community and Residential Services Authority shall submit an
21annual report to the General Assembly on whether the number of
22cases voluntarily placed during the year were appropriate cases
23for voluntarily placement, why placement under the Division of
24Mental Health, the Division of Developmental Disabilities, and
25the Department of Healthcare and Family Services did not occur
26and recommendations for reducing the number of voluntary

 

 

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1placements for purposes of treatment of a serious mental
2illness, serious emotional disturbance, or developmental
3disability.