|
Public Act 100-1025 |
SB3023 Enrolled | LRB100 18060 MRW 33251 b |
|
|
AN ACT concerning substance use disorder treatment.
|
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
|
represented in the General Assembly:
|
Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Community-Law Enforcement Partnership for Deflection and |
Substance Use Disorder Treatment Act. |
Section 5. Purposes. The General Assembly hereby |
acknowledges that opioid use disorders, overdoses, and deaths |
in Illinois are persistent and growing concerns for Illinois |
communities. These concerns compound existing challenges to |
adequately address and manage substance use and mental health |
disorders. Law enforcement officers have a unique opportunity |
to facilitate connections to community-based behavioral health |
interventions that provide substance use treatment and can help |
save and restore lives; help reduce drug use, overdose |
incidence, criminal offending, and recidivism; and help |
prevent arrest and conviction records that destabilize health, |
families, and opportunities for community citizenship and |
self-sufficiency. These efforts are bolstered when pursued in |
partnership with licensed behavioral health treatment |
providers and community members or organizations. It is the |
intent of the General Assembly to authorize law enforcement to |
develop and implement collaborative deflection programs in |
|
Illinois that offer immediate pathways to substance use |
treatment and other services as an alternative to traditional |
case processing and involvement in the criminal justice system. |
Section 10. Definitions. In this Act:
|
"Case management" means those services which will assist |
persons in gaining access to needed social, educational, |
medical, substance use and mental health treatment, and other |
services.
|
"Community member or organization" means an individual |
volunteer, resident, public office, or a not-for-profit |
organization, religious institution, charitable organization, |
or other public body committed to the improvement of individual |
and family mental and physical well-being and the overall |
social welfare of the community, and may include persons with |
lived experience in recovery from substance use disorder, |
either themselves or as family members.
|
"Deflection program" means a program in which a peace |
officer or member of a law enforcement agency facilitates |
contact between an individual and a licensed substance use |
treatment provider or clinician for assessment and |
coordination of treatment planning. This facilitation includes |
defined criteria for eligibility and communication protocols |
agreed to by the law enforcement agency and the licensed |
treatment provider for the purpose of providing substance use |
treatment to those persons in lieu of arrest or further justice |
|
system involvement. Deflection programs may include, but are |
not limited to, the following types of responses: |
(1) a post-overdose deflection response initiated by a |
peace officer or law enforcement agency subsequent to |
emergency administration of medication to reverse an |
overdose, or in cases of severe substance use disorder with |
acute risk for overdose;
|
(2) a self-referral deflection response initiated by |
an individual by contacting a peace officer or law |
enforcement agency in the acknowledgment of their |
substance use or disorder;
|
(3) an active outreach deflection response initiated |
by a peace officer or law enforcement agency as a result of |
proactive identification of persons thought likely to have |
a substance use disorder;
|
(4) an officer prevention deflection response |
initiated by a peace officer or law enforcement agency in |
response to a community call when no criminal charges are |
present; and |
(5) an officer intervention deflection response when |
criminal charges are present but held in abeyance pending |
engagement with treatment.
|
"Law enforcement agency" means a municipal police |
department or county sheriff's office of this State, the |
Department of State Police, or other law enforcement agency |
whose officers, by statute, are granted and authorized to |
|
exercise powers similar to those conferred upon any peace |
officer employed by a law enforcement agency of this State.
|
"Licensed treatment provider" means an organization |
licensed by the Department of Human Services to perform an |
activity or service, or a coordinated range of those activities |
or services, as the Department of Human Services may establish |
by rule, such as the broad range of emergency, outpatient, |
intensive outpatient, and residential services and care, |
including assessment, diagnosis, case management, medical, |
psychiatric, psychological and social services, |
medication-assisted treatment, care and counseling, and |
recovery support, which may be extended to persons to assess or |
treat substance use disorder or to families of those persons.
|
"Peace officer" means any peace officer or member of any |
duly organized State, county, or municipal peace officer unit, |
any police force of another State, or any police force whose |
members, by statute, are granted and authorized to exercise |
powers similar to those conferred upon any peace officer |
employed by a law enforcement agency of this State.
|
"Substance use disorder" means a pattern of use of alcohol |
or other drugs leading to clinical or functional impairment, in |
accordance with the definition in the Diagnostic and |
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), or in any |
subsequent editions.
|
"Treatment" means the broad range of emergency, |
outpatient, intensive outpatient, and residential services and |
|
care (including assessment, diagnosis, case management, |
medical, psychiatric, psychological and social services, |
medication-assisted treatment, care and counseling, and |
recovery support) which may be extended to persons who have |
substance use disorders, persons with mental illness, or |
families of those persons.
|
Section 15. Authorization.
|
(a) Any law enforcement agency may establish a deflection |
program subject to the provisions of this Act in partnership |
with one or more licensed providers of substance use disorder |
treatment services and one or more community members or |
organizations.
|
(b) The deflection program may involve a post-overdose |
deflection response, a self-referral deflection response, an |
active outreach deflection response, an officer prevention |
deflection response, or an officer intervention deflection |
response, or any combination of those.
|
(c) Nothing shall preclude the General Assembly from adding |
other responses to a deflection program, or preclude a law |
enforcement agency from developing a deflection program |
response based on a model unique and responsive to local |
issues, substance use or mental health needs, and partnerships, |
using sound and promising or evidence-based practices.
|
(c-5) Whenever appropriate and available, case management |
should be provided by a licensed treatment provider or other |
|
appropriate provider and may include peer recovery support |
approaches. |
(d) To receive funding for activities as described in |
Section 35 of this Act, planning for the deflection program |
shall include:
|
(1) the involvement of one or more licensed treatment |
programs and one or more community member or organization; |
and
|
(2) an agreement with the Illinois Criminal Justice |
Information Authority to collect and evaluate relevant |
statistical data related to the program, as established by |
the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority in |
paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of Section 25 of this Act.
|
Section 20. Procedure. The law enforcement agency, |
licensed treatment providers, and community members or |
organizations shall establish a local deflection program plan |
that includes protocols and procedures for participant |
identification, screening or assessment, treatment |
facilitation, reporting, and ongoing involvement of the law |
enforcement agency. Licensed substance use disorder treatment |
organizations shall adhere to 42 CFR Part 2 regarding |
confidentiality regulations for information exchange or |
release. Substance use disorder treatment services shall |
adhere to all regulations specified in Department of Human |
Services Administrative Rules, Parts 2060 and 2090. |
|
Section 25. Reporting and evaluation. |
(a) The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority, |
in conjunction with an association representing police chiefs |
and the Department of Human Services' Division of Substance Use |
Prevention and Recovery, shall within 6 months of the effective |
date of this Act: |
(1) develop a set of minimum data to be collected from |
each deflection program and reported annually, beginning |
one year after the effective date of this Act, by the |
Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority, |
including, but not limited to, demographic information on |
program participants, number of law enforcement encounters |
that result in a treatment referral, and time from law |
enforcement encounter to treatment engagement; and |
(2) develop a performance measurement system, |
including key performance indicators for deflection |
programs including, but not limited to, rate of treatment |
engagement at 30 days from the point of initial contact. |
Each program that receives funding for services under |
Section 35 of this Act shall include the performance |
measurement system in its local plan and report data |
quarterly to the Illinois Criminal Justice Information |
Authority for the purpose of evaluation of deflection |
programs in aggregate.
|
(b) The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority |
|
shall make statistical data collected under subsection (a) of |
this Section available to the Department of Human Services, |
Division of Substance Use Prevention and Recovery for inclusion |
in planning efforts for services to persons with criminal |
justice or law enforcement involvement. |
Section 30. Exemption from civil liability. The law |
enforcement agency or peace officer acting in good faith shall |
not, as the result of acts or omissions in providing services |
under Section 15 of this Act, be liable for civil damages, |
unless the acts or omissions constitute willful and wanton |
misconduct.
|
Section 35. Funding.
|
(a) The General Assembly may appropriate funds to the |
Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority for the |
purpose of funding law enforcement agencies for services |
provided by deflection program partners as part of deflection |
programs subject to subsection (d) of Section 15 of this Act.
|
(b) The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority |
may adopt guidelines and requirements to direct the |
distribution of funds for expenses related to deflection |
programs. Funding shall be made available to support both new |
and existing deflection programs in a broad spectrum of |
geographic regions in this State, including urban, suburban, |
and rural communities. Activities eligible for funding under |
|
this Act may include, but are not limited to, the following:
|
(1) activities related to program administration, |
coordination, or management, including, but not limited |
to, the development of collaborative partnerships with |
licensed treatment providers and community members or |
organizations; collection of program data; or monitoring |
of compliance with a local deflection program plan;
|
(2) case management including case management provided |
prior to assessment, diagnosis, and engagement in |
treatment, as well as assistance navigating and gaining |
access to various treatment modalities and support |
services;
|
(3) peer recovery or recovery support services that |
include the perspectives of persons with the experience of |
recovering from a substance use disorder, either |
themselves or as family members;
|
(4) transportation to a licensed treatment provider or |
other program partner location; |
(5) program evaluation activities. |
(c) Specific linkage agreements with recovery support |
services or self-help entities may be a requirement of the |
program services protocols. All deflection programs shall |
encourage the involvement of key family members and significant |
others as a part of a family-based approach to treatment. All |
deflection programs are encouraged to use evidence-based |
practices and outcome measures in the provision of substance |