Florida 2023 2023 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H0143 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 04/23/2023

                    This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives. 
STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
 
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS  
 
BILL #: CS/CS/HB 143    Task Force on the Monitoring of Children in Out-of-Home Care 
SPONSOR(S): Justice Appropriations Subcommittee, Children, Families & Seniors Subcommittee, Williams 
TIED BILLS:   IDEN./SIM. BILLS: SB 204 
 
REFERENCE 	ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or 
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF 
1) Children, Families & Seniors Subcommittee 14 Y, 0 N Brazzell Brazzell 
2) Justice Appropriations Subcommittee 14 Y, 0 N, As CS Saag Keith 
3) Health & Human Services Committee 	Brazzell Calamas 
SUMMARY ANALYSIS 
Chapter 39, F.S., creates the dependency system charged with protecting child welfare. Florida’s dependency 
system identifies children and families in need of services through reports to the central abuse hotline and child 
protective investigations. The Department of Children and Families (DCF) and community-based care lead 
agencies (CBC’s) work with those families to address the problems endangering children, if possible. If the 
problems cannot be addressed, the child welfare system finds safe out-of-home placements for these children.  
 
The 2002 disappearance of Rilya Wilson raised national awareness of the problem of children becoming missing 
while under the care of child welfare agencies. Since then, Florida has enacted legislation and implemented 
policies intended to improve tracking of children in state care. Current law outlines reporting requirements when 
the whereabouts of a child involved with DCF becomes unknown and provides specific rulemaking authority for 
reporting, locating, recovering, and stabilizing such children and for preventing recurrence of such incidents.  
 
HB 143 creates the Task Force on the Monitoring of Children in Out-of-Home Care within the Florida Department 
of Law Enforcement (FDLE). The task force must identify and counter the root causes of why children go missing 
while in out-of-home care and ensure prompt and effective action is taken to address such causes. The bill 
requires the task force to examine and recommend improvements to current policies, procedures, programs, and 
initiatives to prevent children from going missing while in out-of-home care and to ensure that timely and 
comprehensive steps are taken to find children who are missing for any reason, including, but not limited to, 
running away, human trafficking, and abduction by or absconding with a parent or an individual who does not have 
care or custody of the child. 
 
The task force must be composed of 13 members, including, but not limited to, a representative from the Senate, 
the House of Representatives, DCF, FDLE, the Guardian ad Litem program, Safe Kids Florida within the 
Department of Health, and CBC’s.  
 
The bill requires DCF to submit monthly reports to the task force to assist it in fulfilling its duties. Additionally, the 
bill requires the Florida Institute for Child Welfare to conduct focus groups and individual interviews with current 
and former foster youth to consider why children seek to leave their placements and how to prevent children from 
leaving. 
 
The bill requires the task force to submit its findings and recommendations to the Governor, the President of the 
Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives by October 1, 2024. 
 
The bill includes a repeal date for the section creating the task force on June 30, 2025, unless reviewed and 
saved from repeal by the Legislature.  
 
The bill provides a nonrecurring appropriation of $140,076 from the Operating Trust Fund to FDLE for Fiscal Year 
2023-2024. See Fiscal Analysis & Economic Impact Statement.  
 
The bill has an effective date of July 1, 2023.  
   STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 	PAGE: 2 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
  
FULL ANALYSIS 
I.  SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS 
 
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES: 
Background 
 
Florida’s Child Welfare System 
 
Chapter 39, F.S., creates the dependency system charged with protecting child welfare. Florida’s 
dependency system identifies children and families in need of services through reports to the central 
abuse hotline and child protective investigations. The Department of Children and Families (DCF) and 
community-based care lead agencies (CBC’s) work with those families to address the problems 
endangering children, if possible. If the problems cannot be addressed, the child welfare system finds 
safe out-of-home placements for these children.  
 
DCF’s practice model is based on the safety of the child within the home by using in-home services, 
such as parenting coaching and counseling, to maintain and strengthen that child’s natural supports in 
his or her environment. The graph below shows the responses for children determined to be unsafe, 
depicting the percentage of such children placed in out-of-home placements, receiving services in the 
home or through family support services, which are offered to families on a voluntary basis, and 
receiving no services.
1
  
 
 
 
DCF contracts for case management, out-of-home services, and related services with CBC’s. The 
outsourced provision of child welfare services is intended to increase local community ownership of 
service delivery and design. CBC’s contract with a number of subcontractors for case management and 
direct care services to children and their families. There are 19 CBC’s statewide, which together serve 
the state’s 20 judicial circuits. 
 
DCF directly performs a number of child welfare functions, including operating the central abuse 
hotline, conducting child protective investigations, and providing children’s legal services.
2
 Ultimately, 
DCF is responsible for program oversight and the overall performance of the child welfare system.
3
 
 
                                                
1
 Florida Department of Children and Families, Child Welfare Dashboard, Post Investigation Services that Align with Safety 
Determination – Statewide, (Jan. 18, 2023), https://www.myflfamilies.com/service-programs/child-welfare/dashboard/ (last visited Mar. 
7, 2023). 
2
 Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability, Child Welfare System Performance Mixed in First Year of 
Statewide Community-Based Care, Report 06-50 (June 2006). 
3
 Id.  
49%
43%
0.6%
7%
Out-of-Home Care In-Home Care Family Support Services No Services
P ERCEN TAGE OF CHILDREN DETERMIN ED TO BE UN S AFE AT 
IN VES TIGATION CLOS URE BY P OS T IN VES TIGATION S ERVICES 
P ROVIDED  (JAN . 2023) STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 	PAGE: 3 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
  
 Out-of-Home Care 
When children cannot safely remain at home with parents, Florida’s child welfare system finds safe out-
of-home placements for such children. After an assessment to determine the most appropriate out-of-
home placement, a child may be placed with a relative, fictive kin, licensed foster parent, in a group 
home or residential setting.
4
 While in out-of-home care, the child and his or her parents receive 
services to address problems that led to the removal so that reunification or another permanency option 
may be reached as quickly as possible.
5
 The graph below shows the number of children in out-of-home 
care by placement type for the last 24 months, as of January 2023.
6
 
 
 
 
 Missing Children in DCF’s Custody  
 
The 2002 disappearance of Rilya Wilson
7
 raised national awareness of the problem of children 
becoming missing while under the care of child welfare agencies. Since then, Florida has enacted 
legislation and implemented policies to better monitor the location of children in state care.
8
  
 
In the wake of Rilya Wilson’s disappearance, at the direction of Governor Jeb Bush, DCF and the 
Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) teamed up to locate 393 missing children who were 
under DCF’s custody.
9
 The multi-agency, statewide effort was entitled “Operation SafeKids” 
(Operation). Seven Regional Child Location Strike Forces were created in each of FDLE’s seven 
regions. The results of the Operation included: 
                                                
4
 R. 65C-28.004, F.A.C. 
5
 Child Welfare Information Gateway, Out-of- Home Care Overview, 
https://www.childwelfare.gov/topics/outofhome/overview/#:~:text=Out%2Dof%2Dhome%20care%20is,to%20abuse%20and%2For%20n
eglect. (last visited Mar. 7, 2023). 
6
 Florida Department of Children and Families, Child Welfare Dashboard, Children in Out-of-Home Placements by Placement Type, 
https://www.myflfamilies.com/service-programs/child-welfare/dashboard/ (last visited Mar. 7, 2023). Licensed foster homes include 
relative and nonrelative placements that are licensed to care for a specific child, as well as traditional licensed family foster homes.  
7
 Four-year old Rilya Wilson went missing while in DCF’s custody after the termination of her mother’s parental rights. DCF did not 
discover her disappearance until two years later, when Rilya was not found living at the home of her caregiver. The Florida Legislature 
passed, and the Governor signed, a bill into law that created the Rilya Wilson Act. Section 39.604, F.S., requires a child from birth to 
the age of school entry, who is under court-ordered protective supervision or in out-of-home care and is enrolled in an early education 
or child care program, to attend the program 5 days a week unless the court grants an exemption.  
8
 Florida Senate, The Committee on Children, Families, and Elder Affairs, Missing Children, Interim Project Report 2008-106 (Oct. 
2007) https://www.flsenate.gov/UserContent/Committees/Publications/InterimWorkProgram/2008/pdf/2008-106cf.pdf (last visited Mar. 
7, 2023). 
9
 Florida Department of Law Enforcement and Florida Department of Children and Families, Operation SafeKids, Results, Findings & 
Recommendations (Dec. 17, 2002), https://popcenter.asu.edu/sites/default/files/problems/runaways/PDFs/FL%20DOC&F_2002.pdf 
(last visited Mar. 7, 2023).  
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
RelativeNon-RelativeGroup CareLicensed
Foster Home
Residential
Treatment
Center
Other
Children in Out-of-Home Care by Placement Type
(Jan. 2023) STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 	PAGE: 4 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
  
 
 292 (75%) children were located or cases were closed. 
 13 (3%) children aged out of care and were no longer under the custody of DCF but still had 
active cases with law enforcement.  
 88 (22%) children were not located and remained under active investigation by the local law 
enforcement agency and DCF. Of these, 20 were included in the Endangered/Parental 
Abduction/Involuntary group, and 68 were included in the Runaway group.
10
 
 
The table below includes the results of the Operation as of December 2002. 
  
Original 393 Missing Children (Dec. 10, 2002)
11
 
Category 
Missing 
at Start 
Located 
Emancipated 
(case open with 
law enforcement) 
Still missing 
(case open with 
DCF and law 
enforcement) 
Parental 31 21 	0 	10 
Involuntary 4 0 	0 	4 
Endangered 19 13 	0 	6 
Runaway 339 258 	13 	68 
TOTAL 393 292 	13 	88 
 
The children still classified as missing remained as active investigations with local law enforcement and 
DCF.
12
 The final report on the Operation included a variety a reasons children had not been located 
including:  
 
 Children hiding, as evidenced by those children who made non-traceable telephone contact with 
their case managers or non-custodial parent, advising of their well-being but indicating they will 
not disclose their whereabouts until reaching the age of 18.
13
  
 Parents fearing arrest or termination of their parental rights.
14
 
 
In addition to locating missing children, the Operation was required to implement standard procedures 
for opening missing person cases for every child discovered to be missing while in DCF’s custody.  
 
In 2008, Florida made additional changes to statute through HB 7077 which
15
:  
 
 Gave DCF rule-making authority for addressing missing children. The law directed DCF to 
promulgate rules to provide comprehensive, explicit and consistent guidelines for its employees 
and contracted providers. 
 Required DCF and its contracted providers to report a child as missing to the appropriate law 
enforcement agency, after making reasonable but unsuccessful efforts to locate the child and 
determining that it is necessary to report the child as missing. 
 Specified that a law enforcement agency must take reports of missing children not only from 
parents and guardians but also from DCF and its contracted providers.  
DCF requires caregivers, legal guardians, and child welfare professionals to immediately report a child 
missing to law enforcement when the child: 
 
 Is under the age of 13. 
 Has a physical or mental incapacity, or a developmental or behavioral challenge that renders 
the situation more dangerous than it would be for a child with more maturity or resources.  
 Is with others who may endanger his or her safety. 
                                                
10
 Id.  
11
 Id.  
12
 Id.  
13
 Id.  
14
 Id. 
15
 Chapter 2008-245, Laws of Fla.  STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 	PAGE: 5 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
  
 Is missing under circumstances inconsistent with established behaviors.
16
 
 
In all other situations, a report to law enforcement may be made at least four hours from the time the 
child is first discovered missing to actively search for and attempt to locate the child.
17
 After notifying 
law enforcement, the caregiver or legal guardian must immediately notify child welfare professionals 
that the child’s whereabouts are unknown. Child welfare professionals must make efforts to locate the 
child at least once a week until the child is located, reaches 18, or the child protective investigator has 
obtained sufficient information to close the investigation.
18
 
 
After DCF makes an initial missing child report to the appropriate local law enforcement agency, the law 
enforcement agency then enters the case into the Florida Crime Information Center (FCIC). This entry 
ensures all law enforcement and criminal justice professionals nationwide are notified of the Florida 
missing child. Additionally, DCF creates a record about the missing child in its case management 
system, Florida Safe Families Network (FSFN), as described below.
19
 
 
A DCF liaison co-located within FDLE’s Missing Endangered Persons Information Clearinghouse 
(MEPIC) quality controls the information in FSFN using internal DCF information and the missing child’s 
FCIC entry. This information is electronically transferred from the DCF liaison to members of MEPIC, 
who facilitate its entry into MEPIC’s Missing Persons Database (MPDB). In addition to populating a 
variety of Florida systems and access points to the information, MPDB also electronically transfers the 
information regarding the child to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC).
20
  
 
Florida law allows DCF and the law enforcement agency primarily responsible for investigating the 
incident to release information to the public when it believes the release of the information is likely to 
assist efforts in locating the child or to promote the safety or well-being of the child.
21
  
 
 Collection of Information  
FSFN is the state’s comprehensive, automated case management system that helps social workers 
manage foster care and adoption cases.
22
 FSFN serves as the statewide electronic case record for all 
child abuse investigations and case management activities in Florida. FSFN also captures information 
on missing children who are in the custody of DCF.
23
 This information includes:  
 
 When the child ran, if the child is missing due to running away. 
 Location from where the child ran, if the child is missing due to running away. 
 The child’s characteristics. 
 The child’s picture. 
 The police report number. 
 Any information on a companion or abductor. 
 A narrative of events or valuable information on occurrences before a child’s disappearance.  
FSFN activates an alert when a child is missing and captures the history of all missing child episodes 
entered into FSFN.
24
  
 
 Measures Regarding Children in the Child Welfare System Who Are Missing 
 
DCF publishes a monthly key indicators report on the overall performance of the child welfare system. 
The monthly report includes information on the average number of children categorized as missing 
                                                
16
 R. 65C-30.019(1)(a), F.A.C.  
17
 R. 65C-30.019(1)(b), F.A.C. 
18
 R. 65C-30.019(5), F.A.C.  
19
 Florida Department of Law Enforcement, 2023 FDLE Agency Bill Analysis for HB 143 (Jan. 17, 2023). 
20
 Id. 
21
 S. 39.202(4), F.S.  
22
 65C-38.001, F.A.C. 
23
 Florida Department of Children and Families, 2023 Agency Bill Analysis for HB 143 (Jan. 12, 2023). 
24
 Id.   STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 	PAGE: 6 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
  
while in DCF’s care, the timeliness of reports of missing children entered into FSFN, and whether 
missing child entries in FSFN were resolved within 3 days.
25
  
 
In December 2023, there were 197 children reported as missing from DCF’s care.
26
 The following graph 
shows the trend of reported missing children from FY 2016-17 to FY 2021-22. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The following graph provides information of the timeliness of reports entered into FSFN on missing 
children by CBC for November 2022.
27
  
 
                                                
25
 Florida Department of Children and Families, Child Welfare Key Indicators Monthly Report (Dec. 2022), 
https://www2.myflfamilies.com/service-programs/child-welfare/kids/results-oriented-
accountability/performanceManagement/docs/KI_Monthly_Report_December%202022.pdf (last visited Mar. 7, 2023).  
26
 Id. at 57. 
27
 Id.  
0.40%
0.45%
0.50%
0.55%
0.60%
0.65%
0.70%
0.75%
100
120
140
160
180
200
220
240
260
280
300
79111357911135791113579111357911
2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21 2021-22
Average Percentage Missing In
-
Home and Out of Home Care 
Total 
Average Number Missing
Average Number of Children Categorized as Missing and Average Percentage of  Children 
Categorized as Missing 
from In-home and Out-of-Home Care Total 
Avg Missing	Avg Percentage
12 per. Mov. Avg. (Avg Missing) 12 per. Mov. Avg. (Avg Percentage) STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 	PAGE: 7 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
  
 
 
 
The graph below provides the percentage of missing child entries in FSFN that were resolved within 3 
days by CBC for November 2022.
28
 
 
 
Florida Institute for Child Welfare  
 
In 2014, the Legislature established the Florida Institute for Child Welfare (FICW) at the Florida State 
University College of Social Work. The Legislature created the FICW to provide research and 
evaluation that contributes to a more sustainable, accountable, and effective child welfare system. The 
purpose of the FICW is to advance the well-being of children and families by improving the 
                                                
28
 Id. at 58.  STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 	PAGE: 8 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
  
performance of child protection and child welfare services through research, policy analysis, evaluation, 
and leadership development.
29
 Current law requires the FICW to establish an affiliate network of public 
and private universities with accredited degrees in social work. All public universities with such 
programs in Florida are currently part of the network. In 2017, the FICW expanded its affiliate network 
to include research affiliates, and there are now over 50 research faculty affiliates. 
 
The FICW is statutorily mandated to: 
 
 Maintain a program of research contributing to the scientific knowledge related to child safety, 
permanency, and child and family well-being. 
 Advise DCF and other organizations about scientific evidence regarding child welfare practice, 
as well as management practices and administrative processes. 
 Assess performance of child welfare services based on specified outcome measures. 
 Evaluate training requirements for the child welfare workforce and the effectiveness of training.  
 Develop a program of training and consulting to assist organizations with employee retention. 
 Identify and communicate effective policies and promising practices.  
 Recommend improvements in the state’s child welfare system. 
 Submit annual reports to the Governor and Legislature. 
 
The FICW sponsors and supports interdisciplinary research projects and program evaluation initiatives 
that contribute to knowledge relevant to enhancing Florida’s child welfare outcomes.  
  
 
 
 
Task Forces, Councils, and Commissions 
 
Section 20.03, F.S., includes definitions related to organizational structure. It defines a “task force” as 
an advisory body created without specific statutory enactment for a time not to exceed 1 year or 
created by specific statutory enactment for a time not to exceed 3 years and appointed to study a 
specific problem and recommend a solution or policy alternative with respect to that problem. Its 
existence terminates upon the completion of its assignment.
30
 
 
Florida has established a number of task forces in the past related to child welfare. These have typically 
been created either by the Governor or DCF’s Secretary in response to a tragic incident involving a 
child under DCF’s custody. Examples of these include, in part: 
 
 The Nubia Report, the Investigative Panel’s Findings and Recommendations, 2011.
31
 
 Family Safety Quality Assurance Review of Courtney Alisa Clark, Initial Findings, 2007.
32
 
 Report of Gabriel Myers Work Group on Child-on-Child Sexual Abuse, 2010.
33
 
 Governor's Blue Ribbon Panel on Child Protection, 2003 (Rilya Wilson).
34
 
 
There is currently no task force that monitors children in out-of-home care.  
 
                                                
29
 S. 1004.615, F.S.  
30
 S. 20.30(8). F.S. 
31
 Lawrence, D., Martinez, R., and Sewell, J., The Nubia Report, The Investigative Panel’s Findings and Recommendations, 
https://www2.myflfamilies.com/service-programs/child-welfare/kids/publications/docs/taskforce/NubiasStory.pdf (last visited Mar. 7, 
2023). 
32
 Florida Department of Children and Families, Family Safety Quality Assurance Review of Courtney Alisa Clark, Initial Findings, 
https://www2.myflfamilies.com/service-programs/child-welfare/kids/publications/docs/taskforce/cclark_QA_Initial_Findings.pdf (last 
visited Mar. 7, 2023). 
33
 Florida Department of Children and Families, Report of Gabriel Myers Work Group on Child-on-Child Sexual Abuse, 
https://myflfamilies.com/sites/default/files/2022-12/Gabriel%20Myers%20COC%20Report%20May%2014%202010.pdf (last visited Mar. 
7, 2023). 
34
 Florida Department of Children and Families, Governor’s Blue Ribbon Panel on Child Protection, 
https://www2.myflfamilies.com/service-programs/child-welfare/kids/publications/docs/taskforce/BlueRibbonFinal110703.pdf (last visited 
Mar. 7, 2023).   STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 	PAGE: 9 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
  
Effect of Proposed Changes 
 
HB 143 creates the Task Force on the Monitoring of Children in Out-of-Home Care within FDLE. The 
task force is created to identify and counter the root causes of why children go missing while in out-of-
home care and to ensure prompt and effective action is taken to address such causes. The bill requires 
the task force to examine and recommend improvements to current policies, procedures, programs, 
and initiatives to prevent children from going missing while in out-of-home care and to ensure that 
timely and comprehensive steps are taken to find children who are missing for any reason, including, 
but not limited to, running away, human trafficking, and abduction by a parent or a person who does not 
have care or custody of the child. 
 
The task force must include the following 13 members: 
 
 A member of the Senate, appointed by the President of the Senate. 
 A member of the House of Representatives, appointed by the Speaker of the House of 
Representatives. 
 The Secretary of DCF, or designee.  
 The Secretary of the Department of Juvenile Justice, or designee.  
 The executive director of the Statewide Guardian ad Litem Office, or designee.  
 The executive director of FDLE, or designee. 
 A representative from Safe Kids Florida, appointed by the State Surgeon General. 
 A representative from the Statewide Council on Human Trafficking, appointed by the Attorney 
General. 
 A representative from a CBC that delivers child welfare services in a rural county, appointed by 
DCF’s Secretary. 
 A representative from a CBC that delivers child welfare services in an urban county, appointed 
by DCF’s Secretary. 
 A licensed foster parent, appointed by DCF’s Secretary.  
 A representative from a residential group care provider, appointed by DCF’s Secretary. 
 A young adult who aged out of the foster care system, appointed by DCF’s Secretary. 
 
The bill requires appointments by August 1, 2023. Each member serves at the pleasure of the 
appointing official, and a vacancy on the task force must be filled in the same manner as the original 
appointment. The members must elect a chair from among the members.  
 
The bill requires the task force to convene no later than September 1, 2023, and to meet monthly 
thereafter or upon call of the chair. The bill allows meetings to be held through teleconference or other 
electronic means.  
 
The bill requires the task force to: 
 
 Analyze statistical data regarding children in out-of-home care who are missing and the reasons 
why, if known. 
 Identify the root causes of why children go missing while in out-of-home care and how to 
prevent children from going missing while in out-of-home care. 
 Assess the relationship between children who go missing from out-of-home care and the risks of 
such children becoming victims of human trafficking. 
 Assess the comprehensiveness and effectiveness of existing policies and procedures for 
preventing children in out-of-home care from going missing, for promptly determining whether 
such children are missing, and for locating such children. 
 Evaluate the state’s approaches to reporting on the individual status of children missing from 
out-of-home care and the results of the efforts to locate such children, including, but not limited 
to, the use of technology, training, communication, and cooperation. 
 Measure the overall performance of efforts to locate and recover children missing from out-of-
home care, including, but not limited to, the communication and response between CBC’s, DCF, 
and other entities.   STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 	PAGE: 10 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
  
 Collaborate with the FICW to identify best practices used in other states for monitoring the 
location of children in out-of-home care who go missing, and evaluate whether such practices 
should be adopted in the state.  
 Submit recommendations to improve policies, procedures, and systems in the state, including, 
but not limited to, technology, training, communication, and cooperation, so all entities are 
effectively monitoring children in out-of-home care, responding appropriately when such children 
go missing, and preventing such children from going missing while in out-of-home care. 
 
The bill requires FICW to conduct focus groups or individual interviews with children in out-of-home 
care and young adults who were formerly in out-of-home care to assist the task force in fulfilling its 
duties. The focus groups or individual interviews must, at a minimum, consider the reasons why such 
children seek to leave their out-of-home placement, identify opportunities and resources to assist and 
prevent children from leaving their placements, and to facilitate the return of such missing children. The 
bill requires the FICW to submit the findings from the focus groups and individual interviews to the task 
force by April 1, 2024.  
 
The bill requires DCF to provide monthly reports to the task force until October 1, 2024. The monthly 
reports must, at a minimum, address the number and percentage of children in out-of-home care who 
have been reported missing, the reasons why such children are missing, if known, and the length of 
time between when such children are reported missing and their recovery or return. The monthly 
reports must categorize the required data by age, county, CBC, and reason, if known. 
 
The task force must submit a report with its findings and recommendations to the Governor, the 
President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives by October 1, 2024. 
 
The bill includes a repeal date for the section creating the task force on June 30, 2025, unless reviewed 
and saved from repeal by the Legislature.  
 
The bill provides an appropriation of $140,076 in nonrecurring funds from the Operating Trust Fund to 
FDLE for Fiscal Year 2023-2024 to provide administrative and staff support services relating to the task 
force. 
 
The bill provides an effective date of July 1, 2022.  
 
B. SECTION DIRECTORY: 
Section 1: Creating s. 39.4093, F.S., relating to the Task Force on the Monitoring of Children in Out-of-
Home Care. 
Section 2: Provides an appropriation.. 
Section 3: Provides an effective date. 
 
II.  FISCAL ANALYSIS & ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT 
 
A. FISCAL IMPACT ON STATE GOVERNMENT: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None. 
2. Expenditures: 
The bill provides an appropriation of $140,076 in nonrecurring funds from the Operating Trust Fund 
to FDLE for Fiscal Year 2023-2024 to provide administrative and staff support services relating to 
the task force. 
 
B. FISCAL IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: 
 
1. Revenues:  STORAGE NAME: h0143d.HHS 	PAGE: 11 
DATE: 4/23/2023 
  
None. 
2. Expenditures: 
None. 
 
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR: 
None. 
 
D. FISCAL COMMENTS: 
None. 
 
III.  COMMENTS 
 
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES: 
 
 1. Applicability of Municipality/County Mandates Provision: 
Not applicable. The bill does not appear to effect county or municipal governments. 
 2. Other: 
None 
 
B. RULE-MAKING AUTHORITY: 
The bill does not require rulemaking to implement its provisions.  
 
C. DRAFTING ISSUES OR OTHER COMMENTS: 
None. 
IV. AMENDMENTS/COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE CHANGES 
On February 22, 2023, the Children, Families, and Seniors Subcommittee adopted an amendment and 
reported the bill favorably as a committee substitute. The amendment allows the Florida Institute for 
Child Welfare to conduct individual interviews with children and young adults who have been involved 
in the child welfare system as part of the research support for the task force. 
 
On March 15, 2023, the Justice Appropriations Subcommittee adopted an amendment and reported the 
bill favorably as a committee substitute. The amendment appropriates the nonrecurring sum of 
$140,076 from the Operating Trust Fund to FDLE for Fiscal Year 2023-24. The funds are appropriated 
for the purpose of providing administrative and staff support services to implement provisions of the bill. 
 
This analysis is drafted to the committee substitute as passed by the Justice Appropriations 
Subcommittee.