Connecticut 2022 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05419 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 07/19/2022

                    O F F I C E O F L E G I S L A T I V E R E S E A R C H 
P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 
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PA 22-69—HB 5419 
Public Health Committee 
 
AN ACT CONCERNING THE DEPARTMENT OF MENTAL HEALTH 
AND ADDICTION SERVICES' RECOMMENDATIONS REGARDING 
REGIONAL BEHAVIORAL HEALTH ACTION ORGANIZATIONS 
 
SUMMARY: In 2017 and 2018, the Department of Mental Health and Addiction 
Services (DMHAS) reorganized existing Regional Action Councils, which focused 
on substance abuse prevention, and Regional Mental Health Boards. DMHAS 
replaced them with five Regional Behavioral Health Action Organizations 
(RBHAOs), one for each of the state’s designated mental health regions. 
This act codifies existing practice by allowing the DMHAS commissioner to 
contract with one or more nonprofit organizations to operate as RBHAOs (one for 
each of the state’s mental health regions) and repeals the laws that established the 
prior councils and boards. It requires each RBHAO to serve as a strategic 
community partner responsible for (1) behavioral health planning, education, and 
promotion; (2) coordinating behavioral health issues prevention; and (3) advocacy 
for behavioral health needs and services within its mental health region. The act 
gives the RBHAOs certain duties and, in doing so, requires them to solicit advice 
and input from the community.  
The act also makes several corresponding statutory changes to effectuate the 
transfer of duties from the prior boards and councils to the RBHAOs. For example, 
it requires the RBHAOs, rather than the boards or councils as applicable, to (1) 
designate individuals to serve on certain entities and (2) consult with DMHAS on 
the department’s development of the state’s substance abuse prevention and 
treatment plan. 
The act makes other related changes, such as (1) as of October 1, 2022, reducing 
the membership of the state’s Board of Mental Health and Addiction Services and 
making other changes affecting the board (§ 4) and (2) specifying that 51 to 60% 
of the total catchment area council membership must be people with lived 
experience of a behavioral health disorder, not just consumers generally (§ 9). 
(These councils study and evaluate the delivery of mental health services in their 
respective areas.) 
The act also makes related minor, technical, and conforming changes. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage, except the provisions on the Board of Mental 
Health and Addiction Services take effect October 1, 2022. 
  
§ 1 — RBHAO DUTIES 
 
The act requires each RBHAO to fulfill the following duties within its mental 
health region: 
1. assess the behavioral health needs of children, adolescents, and adults and  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
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engage with stakeholders to identify needs, problems, barriers, and gaps in 
the behavioral health service continuum; 
2. enhance local community capacity to understand and address problem 
gambling; 
3. raise awareness of and advocate to the public for mental health promotion 
and substance abuse prevention, treatment, and recovery; 
4. receive and expand federal, state, and local funds and leverage funds to 
support behavioral health promotion, prevention, treatment, and recovery 
activities; 
5. serve on local, regional, and state advisory and planning bodies; 
6. within available appropriations, provide training in administering opioid 
antagonists (e.g., Narcan) and distribute them to communities; 
7. report community needs, program review findings, and conclusions 
annually to the relevant local, regional, and state stakeholders with 
recommendations to establish, modify, or expand behavioral health 
services; and 
8. serve as the regional partner responsible for coordinating and aligning 
federal, state, regional, and local behavioral health initiatives. 
The act requires each RBHAO, in fulfilling these duties, to solicit advice from 
community members, who must at least include the following:  
1. elected officials;  
2. parents, and youths;  
3. faith-based, youth-serving, educational, and media organizations;  
4. law enforcement professionals or organizations;  
5. health care professionals and behavioral health treatment providers;  
6. people with lived experience of behavioral health issues and their family 
members;  
7. businesses and civic or fraternal groups; and  
8. other interested people or organizations. 
 
§§ 2-30 — CORRESPONDING STATUTORY CHANGES AND TRANSFER OF 
DUTIES 
 
The act makes several changes throughout the statutes to effectuate the transfer 
of duties from Regional Action Councils and Regional Mental Health Boards to 
RBHAOs. It replaces several statutory references to the councils or boards with 
references to RBHAOs, and transfers several of their duties to the RBHAOs. These 
include, among other things: 
1. submitting a plan to the Department of Public Health (DPH), with specified 
information, before receiving state funds for tobacco education, reduction, 
or prevention efforts (§ 2); 
2. consulting with the DMHAS commissioner on certain matters, such as the 
commissioner’s triennial update of a comprehensive plan for substance 
abuse prevention, treatment, and reduction (§ 3); 
3. reviewing applications (along with DMHAS) and making recommendations 
when a hospital, municipality, or nonprofit organization applies for  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
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DMHAS funds to establish, expand, or maintain psychiatric or mental 
health services (§ 6);  
4. receiving reports and recommendations from the catchment area councils 
(§ 9); and 
5. entering into agreements with DMHAS to provide services for chronic 
gamblers (§ 10). 
Under prior law, applicants for a DPH license to operate a community residence 
for up to eight adults with mental illness had to send a copy of the application to 
the Regional Mental Health Board as well as DPH. The act removes references to 
the board for this purpose and does not require applicants to send a copy to the 
RBHAO (§ 12). 
 
Board of Mental Health and Addiction Services (§ 4) 
 
Starting October 1, 2022, the act makes several changes to the membership of 
the state’s Board of Mental Health and Addiction Services. Specifically, it removes 
from the board the following members generally designated by the Regional Action 
Councils and Regional Mental Health Boards repealed by the act: 
1. the chairpersons of the boards and one designee of each board; 
2. two designees from each of the five subregions represented by the councils; 
3. one designee from each mental health region, representing individuals with 
psychiatric disabilities, selected by the boards in collaboration with 
advocacy groups; and  
4. one designee from each of the five subregions represented by the councils, 
representing individuals recovering from substance use disorders and 
selected by the councils in collaboration with advocacy groups. 
The act replaces these members with five appointed by the DMHAS 
commissioner, each representing an RBHAO, and makes conforming changes. 
The act also makes certain substantive and minor changes to the qualifications 
for the governor’s 19 appointees to the board, as shown in the table below.  
 
Governor’s Appointees to Board of Mental Health and Addiction Services 
Qualifications Under Prior Law Qualifications Under the Act      
Starting October 1, 2022 
Five with experience in the field of 
substance use disorders  
Five with lived experience with 
substance use disorders 
Five from the mental health community Five with lived experience with a mental 
health diagnosis 
Three state-licensed physicians with 
experience in psychiatry 
 
Two state-licensed psychologists 
Five state-licensed behavioral health 
practitioners 
 
Two people representing families of 
individuals with behavioral health 
disorders (formerly psychiatric 
disabilities) 
 
Same as prior law 
 
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Qualifications Under Prior Law Qualifications Under the Act      
Starting October 1, 2022 
Two people representing families of 
individuals recovering from substance 
use disorders 
 
The act also requires the governor to appoint a board chairperson from among 
the members.