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Public Act 101-0251 |
HB2152 Enrolled | LRB101 08528 AXK 53606 b |
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AN ACT concerning education.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Mental Health Early Action on Campus Act. |
Section 5. Intent. This Act is intended to address gaps in |
mental health services on college campuses across Illinois, |
including both 2-year and 4-year institutions, through |
training, peer support, and community-campus partnerships. |
Section 10. Findings. The General Assembly finds all of the |
following: |
(1) Mental health is a pressing and growing issue on |
college campuses across this State and the country. A |
recent national survey found that one in 4 college students |
are treated for or diagnosed with a mental health condition |
and one in 5 has considered suicide. |
(2) About 75% of all mental health conditions start by |
age 24, with higher rates of diagnosed disorders in |
college-aged students. College counseling center directors |
believe mental health conditions among students on their |
campuses are increasing, signaling a growing issue that |
must be addressed. |
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(3) Students who come from low-income households are |
more likely to have a mental health condition. |
(4) Between 2007 and 2017, the diagnosis rate of |
college students increased from 22% to 36%, indicating a |
higher need for services. Treatment rates over the same |
period increased by 15%. |
(5) Young adults are less likely to receive mental |
health support than any other age group. College campuses |
can play a big role in addressing this challenge. Over 70% |
of Illinois high school graduates enroll in a postsecondary |
program shortly after graduation. |
(6) College-aged students are more accepting of mental |
health services than the general population, but most |
struggle accessing them. An overwhelming 96% of college |
students reported they would provide support to peers whom |
they knew were thinking about suicide. |
(7) Many students lack knowledge of mental health signs |
and symptoms and do not know how to help or where to refer |
their friends for services. |
(8) Services offered by most college campuses are |
limited in scope and capacity, with 67% of campus |
counseling center directors saying that their campus |
psychiatric service capacity is inadequate or does not meet |
student demand. |
(9) Combined with a dearth of available services, the |
vast majority of students do not seek out services, and |
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many students who complete a suicide never received |
on-campus services. Paying for community-based services is |
an issue for about half of students. Combining insufficient |
on-campus services with unaffordable community resources |
leaves students on their own. |
Section 15. Purpose. The purpose of this Act is to |
accomplish all of the following: |
(1) Further identify students with mental health needs |
and connect them to services. |
(2) Increase access to support services on college |
campuses. |
(3) Increase access to clinical mental health services |
on college campuses and in the surrounding communities for |
college students. |
(4) Empower students through peer-to-peer support and |
training on identifying mental health needs and resources. |
(5) Reduce administrative policies that put an undue |
burden on students seeking leave for their mental health |
conditions through technical assistance and training. |
Section 20. Definitions. As used in this Act: |
"Advisor" means a staff member who provides academic, |
professional, and personal support to students. |
"Campus security" means a law enforcement officer who has |
completed his or her probationary period and is employed as a |
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security officer or campus police officer by a public college |
or university. |
"Linkage agreement" means a formal agreement between a |
public college or university and an off-campus mental health |
provider or agency. |
"Mental health condition" means a symptom consistent with a |
mental illness, as defined under Section 1-129 of the Mental |
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, or a diagnosed |
mental illness. |
"Public college or university" means any public community |
college subject to the Public Community College Act, the |
University of Illinois, Southern Illinois University, Chicago |
State University, Eastern Illinois University, Governors State |
University, Illinois State University, Northeastern Illinois |
University, Northern Illinois University, Western Illinois |
University, and any other public university, college, or |
community college now or hereafter established or authorized by |
the General Assembly. |
"Recovery model" means the model developed by the federal |
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration that |
defines the process of recovery and includes the 4 major |
dimensions that support a life in recovery, which are health, |
home, purpose, and community. |
"Resident assistant" means a student who is responsible for |
supervising and assisting other, typically younger, students |
who live in the same student housing facility. |
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"Telehealth" means the evaluation, diagnosis, or |
interpretation of electronically transmitted patient-specific |
data between a remote location and a licensed health care |
professional that generates interaction or treatment |
recommendations. "Telehealth" includes telemedicine and the |
delivery of health care services provided by an interactive |
telecommunications system, as defined in subsection (a) of |
Section 356z.22 of the Illinois Insurance Code. |
Section 25. Awareness. To raise mental health awareness on |
college campuses, each public college or university must do all |
of the following: |
(1) Develop and implement an annual student |
orientation session aimed at raising awareness about |
mental health conditions. |
(2) Assess courses and seminars available to students |
through their regular academic experiences and implement |
mental health awareness curricula if opportunities for |
integration exist. |
(3) Create and feature a page on its website or mobile |
application with information dedicated solely to the |
mental health resources available to students at the public |
college or university and in the surrounding community. |
(4) Distribute messages related to mental health |
resources that encourage help-seeking behavior through the |
online learning platform of the public college or |
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university during high stress periods of the academic year, |
including, but not limited to, midterm or final |
examinations. These stigma-reducing strategies must be |
based on documented best practices. |
(5) Three years after the effective date of this Act, |
implement an online screening tool to raise awareness and |
establish a mechanism to link or refer students of the |
public college or university to services. Screenings and |
resources must be available year round for students and, at |
a minimum, must (i) include validated screening tools for |
depression, an anxiety disorder, an eating disorder, |
substance use, alcohol-use disorder, post-traumatic stress |
disorder, and bipolar disorder, (ii) provide resources for |
immediate connection to services, if indicated, including |
emergency resources, (iii) provide general information |
about all mental health-related resources available to |
students of the public college or university, and (iv) |
function anonymously. |
(6) At least once per term and at times of high |
academic stress, including midterm or final examinations, |
provide students information regarding online screenings |
and resources. |
Section 30. Training. |
(a) The board of trustees of each public college or |
university must designate an expert panel to develop and |
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implement policies and procedures that (i) advise students, |
faculty, and staff on the proper procedures for identifying and |
addressing the needs of students exhibiting symptoms of mental |
health conditions, (ii) promote understanding of the rules of |
Section 504 of the federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the |
federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 to increase |
knowledge and understanding of student protections under the |
law, and (iii) provide training if appropriate. |
(b) The Technical Assistance Center under Section 45 shall |
set initial standards for policies and procedures referenced in |
subsection (a) to ensure statewide consistency. |
(c) All resident assistants in a student housing facility, |
advisors, and campus security of a public college or university |
must participate in a national Mental Health First Aid training |
course or a similar program prior to the commencement of their |
duties. Training must include the policies and procedures |
developed by the public college or university referenced under |
subsection (a). |
Section 35. Peer support. |
(a) Because peer support programs may be beneficial in |
improving the emotional well-being of the student population, |
each public college or university must develop and implement a |
peer support program utilizing student peers to support |
individuals living with mental health conditions on campus. |
Peer support programs may be housed within resident assistant |
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programs, counseling centers, or wellness centers on campus. |
(b) Peer support programs must utilize best practices for |
peer support, including, but not limited to: (i) utilizing the |
tenets of the recovery model for mental health, (ii) adequate |
planning and preparation, including standardizing guidance and |
practices, identifying needs of the target population, and |
aligning program goals to meet those needs, (iii) clearly |
articulating policies, especially around role boundaries and |
confidentiality, (iv) systematic screening with defined |
selection criteria for peer supporters, such as communication |
skills, leadership ability, character, previous experience or |
training, and ability to serve as a positive role model, (v) |
identifying benefits from peer status, such as experiential |
learning, social support, leadership, and improved |
self-confidence, (vi) continuing education for peer supporters |
to support each other and improve peer support skills, and |
(vii) flexibility in availability by offering services through |
drop-in immediate support and the ability to book appointments. |
Section 40. Local partnerships. |
(a) Each public college or university must form strategic |
partnerships with local mental health service providers to |
improve overall campus mental wellness and augment on-campus |
capacity. The strategic partnerships must include linkage |
agreements with off-campus mental health service providers |
that establish a foundation for referrals for students when |
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needs cannot be met on campus due to capacity or preference of |
the student. The strategic partnerships must also include (i) |
avenues for on-campus and off-campus mental health service |
providers to increase visibility to students via marketing and |
outreach, (ii) opportunities to engage the student body through |
student outreach initiatives like mindfulness workshops or |
campus-wide wellness fairs, and (iii) opportunities to support |
awareness and training requirements under this Act. |
(b) Through a combination of on-campus capacity, |
off-campus linkage agreements with mental health service |
providers, and contracted telehealth therapy services, each |
public college or university shall attempt to meet a benchmark |
ratio of one clinical, non-student staff member to 1,250 |
students. If linkage agreements are used, the agreements must |
include the capacity of students providers are expected to |
serve within the agency. Two years after the effective date of |
this Act, and once every 5 years thereafter, the Technical |
Assistance Center developed under Section 45 must propose to |
the General Assembly an updated ratio based on actual ratios in |
this State and any new information related to appropriate |
benchmarks for clinician-to-student ratios. The updated |
benchmark must represent a ratio of no less than one clinical, |
non-student staff member to 1,250 students. |
(c) Each public college or university must work with local |
resources, such as on-campus mental health counseling centers |
or wellness centers, local mental health service providers, or |
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non-providers, such as affiliates of the National Alliance on |
Mental Illness, and any other resources to meet the awareness |
and training requirements under Sections 25 and 30 of this Act. |
Section 45. Technical Assistance Center. The Board of |
Higher Education must develop a Technical Assistance Center |
that is responsible for all of the following: |
(1) Developing standardized policies for medical leave |
related to mental health conditions for students of a |
public college or university, which may be adopted by the |
public college or university. |
(2) Providing tailored support to public colleges or |
universities in reviewing policies related to students |
living with mental health conditions and their academic |
standing. |
(3) Establishing initial standards for policies and |
procedures under subsection (a) of Section 30. |
(4) Disseminating best practices around peer support |
programs, including widely accepted selection criteria for |
individuals serving in a peer support role. |
(5) Developing statewide standards and best practices |
for partnerships between local mental health agencies and |
college campuses across this State. |
(6) Collecting, analyzing, and disseminating data |
related to mental health needs and academic engagement |
across this State. |
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(7) Housing data collected by each public college or |
university related to Section 50 and analyzing and |
disseminating best practices to each public college or |
university and the public based on that data. |
(8) Monitoring and evaluating linkage agreements under |
Section 40 to ensure capacity is met by each public college |
or university. |
(9) Facilitating a learning community across all |
public colleges or universities to support capacity |
building and learning across those institutions. |
Section 50. Evaluation. Each public college or university |
must evaluate the following programs under this Act in the |
following manner: |
(1) Awareness and training programs under Sections 25 |
and 30 must be monitored for effectiveness and quality by |
the public college or university. Monitoring measures |
shall include, but are not limited to: (i) increased |
understanding of mental health conditions, (ii) reduced |
stigma toward mental health conditions, (iii) increased |
understanding of mental health resources available to |
students, (iv) increased understanding of resources for |
mental health emergencies available to students, and (v) |
viewing each mental health resource website or mobile |
application of the public college or university. |
(2) Peer support programs under Section 35 must be |
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monitored for effectiveness and quality by the public |
college or university. Monitoring measures shall include, |
but are not limited to: (i) improved symptomatology, (ii) |
if needed, connection to additional services, (iii) |
student satisfaction, (iv) wait time for drop-in |
appointments, (v) wait time for scheduled appointments, |
and (vi) satisfaction with the training curriculum for peer |
supporters. |
(3) Local partnership programs under Section 40 must be |
monitored for effectiveness and quality by the public |
college or university. Monitoring measures shall include, |
but are not limited to: (i) wait time for drop-in |
appointments for on-campus or off-campus telehealth |
therapy providers, (ii) wait time for scheduled |
appointments for on-campus or off-campus telehealth |
therapy providers, (iii) the ratio of clinical, |
non-student staff to student population and the number of |
linkage agreements and contracts in place based on student |
population, (iv) student satisfaction with on-campus or |
off-campus telehealth therapy providers, (v) range of |
treatment models offered to students, (vi) average length |
of stay in treatment, (vii) number and range of student |
outreach initiatives, such as telehealth mindfulness |
workshops or campus-wide wellness fairs, and (viii) number |
of students being served annually. |
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Section 55. Funding. This Act is subject to appropriation. |
The Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability, |
in conjunction with the Illinois Community College Board and |
the Board of Higher Education, must make recommendations to the |
General Assembly on the amounts necessary to implement this |
Act. The initial recommendation must be provided by the |
Commission no later than December 31, 2019. Any appropriation |
provided in advance of this initial recommendation may be used |
for planning purposes. No Section of this Act may be funded by |
student fees created on or after July 1, 2020. Public colleges |
or universities may seek federal funding or private grants, if |
available, to support the provisions of this Act.
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1, |
2020, except that Section 55 and this Section take effect upon |
becoming law.
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