Colorado 2023 2023 Regular Session

Colorado House Bill HB1236 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 05/24/2023

                    Page 1 
May 24, 2023  HB 23-1236  
 
 
 Legislative Council Staff 
Nonpartisan Services for Colorado’s Legislature 
 
Final Fiscal Note  
   
 
Drafting Number: 
Prime Sponsors: 
LLS 23-0853  
Rep. Young; Amabile 
Sen. Kolker; Simpson  
Date: 
Bill Status: 
Fiscal Analyst: 
May 24, 2023 
Signed into Law 
Erin Reynolds | 303-866-4146 
erin.reynolds@coleg.gov  
Bill Topic: IMPLEMENTATION UP DATES TO BEHAVIORAL HEALTH ADMI NISTRATION 
Summary of  
Fiscal Impact: 
☐ State Revenue 
☒ State Expenditure 
☐ State Transfer 
☐ TABOR Refund 
☐ Local Government 
☐ Statutory Public Entity 
 
This bill delineates certain administrative responsibilities between the recently created 
Behavioral Health Administration and the Department of Human Services, and makes 
clarifications and modifications to the administration’s statute.  It shifts appropriations 
between the DHS and BHA and may increase state workload and future costs. 
Appropriation 
Summary: 
The bill requires and includes the reallocation of a $2.2 million appropriation.   
Fiscal Note 
Status: 
The fiscal note reflects the enacted bill.  
 
 
Table 1 
State Fiscal Impacts Under HB 23-1236 
 
  
Budget Year 
FY 2023-24 
Out Year 
FY 2024-25 
Revenue  	-       	-       
Expenditures
1
 	General Fund 	$0       	$0       
Transfers  	- 	-       
Other Budget Impacts  	-       	-       
1
 The bill requires the reallocation of a $2.2 million appropriation from the BHA to the DHS, resulting in no net change 
in state expenditures. See State Appropriations section. 
    Page 2 
May 24, 2023  HB 23-1236  
 
 
Summary of Legislation 
This bill delineates certain administrative responsibilities between the recently created Behavioral 
Health Administration (BHA) and the Department of Human Services (CDHS).  The bill also formally 
repeals the Office of Behavioral Health, which is now functioning as the recently renamed Office of 
Civil and Forensic Mental Health (OCFMH) in CDHS.  
 
Additionally, the bill makes the following clarifications and modifications, including but not limited 
to: 
 
 authorizing the BHA to seek, accept, and expend gifts, grants, or donations for the purpose of 
administering any behavioral health program and service; 
 
 requiring a behavioral health safety net provider to include services that address the necessary 
language and cultural barriers to serve communities of color and other underserved populations; 
 
 requiring the BHA to create a regional subcommittee structure as part of the behavioral health 
administrative services organization; 
 
 clarifying the role of the BHA and OCFMH in jail-based behavioral health services, including that 
the OCFMH is responsible for competency restoration and the BHA is the central organizing 
structure and responsible entity for the remaining jail-based behavioral health services; 
 
 requiring the BHA to provide, directly or through contract, care navigation services and align the 
services with the care coordination infrastructure;  
 
 continuously appropriating funding to the 988 crisis hotline cash fund; 
 
 expanding the rights of a person detained by a certified peace officer or emergency medical 
services provider and transported to an outpatient mental health facility or other facility to any 
person detained, whether or not the person is transported to a facility; 
 
 codifying that the BHA is a health oversight agency charged with overseeing the behavioral 
health-care system in Colorado and discharging the BHA's duties;  
 
 adding BHA representatives to serve on certain boards and commissions; 
 
 requiring the BHA to allocate funding to community-based behavioral health providers;  
 
 modifying timelines for licensing behavioral health entities; and  
 
 authorizing the BHA to revoke or not renew a behavioral health entity's license in certain 
circumstances. 
Background 
House Bill 21-1097 required the CDHS to submit a plan for the creation of the BHA.  The BHA was 
established in July 2022 within the Department of Human Services (DHS) upon the passage of 
House Bill 22-1278. 
   Page 3 
May 24, 2023  HB 23-1236  
 
 
State Revenue 
The bill may increase state revenue to the BHA from gifts, grants, and donations.  This funding is not 
subject to TABOR. 
State Expenditures 
The bill makes several clarifications and adjustments to the authority of the DHS and the BHA. Most 
of these changes, other than for jail-based competency services, do not require a change in 
appropriations, and overall there is no net change in state expenditures.  These changes are described 
below. 
 
Behavioral Health Administration.  The bill makes the following programmatic clarifications and 
modifications in BHA, which do not require an adjustment in appropriations: 
 
 rolls care navigation services into care coordination;  
 makes the 988 Crisis Hotline Cash Fund continuously appropriated and removes the repeal date; 
and 
 requires funding to be allocated to community-based behavioral health providers in rural areas, 
which will utilize the BHA's discretionary direct-to-agency stimulus funding. 
 
Department of Human Services.  The bill’s delineation of authority for various programs codifies 
existing practice; no change in appropriations is required for these changes. 
 
Jail-based competency services (DHS and BHA). The bill’s clarification that the Competency 
Enhancement Program services are provided by the OCFMH requires a reallocation of $2,250,400 
General Fund from the Jail-based Behavioral Health Services line item in the Behavioral Health 
Administration budget to the Jail-based Competency Restoration Program line item in the OCFMH 
budget, which results in no net change in expenditures. 
 
Department of Law.  To the extent that the bill’s codification of the BHA as a health oversight agency 
as defined by federal law generates the need for legal support, those resources will be provided by 
the Department of Law; the fiscal note assumes existing BHA legal resources are sufficient. The bill 
also gives the BHA the ability to summarily suspend a behavioral health entity’s license to operate; 
which will require legal resources.  These will be addressed through the annual budget process as 
suspension activity is known. 
 
Department of Public Health and Environment.  The CDPHE is currently in its wind-down period 
of licensing of behavioral health entities; however, the bill extends this period. As such, it is assumed 
that CDPHE will be required to inspect, license, and enforce 20 facilities at an estimated cost of $67,300 
in FY 2023-24, and $7,600 in FY 2024-25.  The BHA will continue to provide financial support with 
Behavioral Health Entity Cash Fund and federal funding to CDPHE through the bill’s adjusted 
timeline within existing appropriations. Additionally, the bill minimally increases CDPHE workload 
to add a BHA representative to the Health Equity Commission, which is staffed by the Office of Health 
Equity.  
  Page 4 
May 24, 2023  HB 23-1236  
 
 
Department of Health Care Policy and Financing.  The bill may increase workload and potential 
costs in HCPF from the bill’s requirement to provide services that address the necessary language and 
cultural barriers to serve communities of color and other underserved populations, as well as data 
reporting on the usage of navigation services.  Resources will be addressed through the annual budget 
process as potential cost drivers are known. 
Effective Date 
The bill was signed into law by the Governor on May 16, 2023, and takes effect August 7, 2023, 
assuming no referendum petition is filed. 
State Appropriations 
For FY 2023-24, the bill requires and includes an increase of $2,250,400 General Fund to the Jail-based 
Competency Restoration Program line item in the Office of Civil and Forensic Mental Health in the 
DHS and a corresponding decrease in General Fund appropriations to the Jail-based Behavioral 
Health Services line item in the Behavioral Health Administration. 
Departmental Difference 
The CDPHE assumes it requires $67,289 in FY 2023-24, including spending authority of $51,500 from 
the Behavioral Health Entity Cash Fund and $15,789 from the General Fund, as well as $7,596 in 
FY 2024-25 from the cash fund, to manage behavioral health entity licensing. As discussed in the State 
Expenditures section, the fiscal note assumes that the BHA will continue to provide support to the 
CDPHE within its existing appropriations and no adjustment to state expenditures is required. 
State and Local Government Contacts 
Behavioral Health Administration  Counties 
Health Care Policy and Financing  Human Services 
Information Technology Law  
Personnel  Public Health and Environment 
Regulatory Agencies 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The revenue and expenditure impacts in this fiscal note represent changes from current law under the bill for each 
fiscal year.  For additional information about fiscal notes, please visit:  leg.colorado.gov/fiscalnotes.