Florida 2024 2024 Regular Session

Florida Senate Bill S1394 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 01/24/2024

                    The Florida Senate 
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT 
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.) 
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Children, Families, and Elder Affairs  
 
BILL: CS/SB 1394 
INTRODUCER:  Children, Families, and Elder Affairs and Senator Gruters 
SUBJECT:  Mental Health 
DATE: January 24, 2024 
 
 ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR  REFERENCE  	ACTION 
1. Hall  Tuszynski CF Fav/CS 
2.     AHS   
3.     FP  
 
Please see Section IX. for Additional Information: 
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE - Substantial Changes 
 
I. Summary: 
CS/SB 1394 requires the Department of Children and Families to contract with managing entities 
to place crisis counselors from community mental health centers within local law enforcement 
agencies. These crisis counselors to conduct follow-up contacts with children, adolescents, and 
adults who have been involuntarily committed under the Baker Act by a law enforcement officer 
and provide follow-up care to individuals in the community that law enforcement has identified 
as needing additional mental health support. 
 
The bill details what services the community mobile support team is required to offer and also 
details the requirements of a community mental health center contracted by the managing entity. 
 
The bill has an indeterminate, but likely significant, negative fiscal impact on state government.  
 
The bill provides an effective date of July 1, 2024. 
II. Present Situation: 
Mental Health and Mental Illness 
Mental Health is a state of well-being in which the individual realizes his or her own abilities can 
cope with normal stresses of life, can work productively and fruitfully, and is able to contribute 
REVISED:   BILL: CS/SB 1394   	Page 2 
 
to his or her community.
1
 The primary indicators used to evaluate an individual’s mental health 
are:
2
 
 Emotional well-being: perceived life satisfaction, happiness, cheerfulness, peacefulness; 
 Psychological well-being: self-acceptance, personal growth including openness to new 
experiences, optimism, hopefulness, purpose in life, control of one’s environment, 
spirituality, self-direction, and positive relationships; and 
 Social well-being: social acceptance, beliefs in the potential of people and society as a 
whole, personal self-worth and usefulness to society, sense of community. 
 
Mental illness is collectively all diagnosable mental disorders or health conditions that are 
characterized by alterations in thinking, mood or behavior (or some combination thereof) 
associated with distress or impaired functioning.
3
 Thus, mental health refers to an individual’s 
mental state of well-being whereas mental illness signifies an alteration of that well-being. 
Mental illness affects millions of people in the United States each year. More than one in five 
adults lives with a mental illness.
4
 Young adults aged 18-25 had the highest prevalence of any 
mental illness
5
 (33.7%) compared to adults aged 26-49 (28.1%) and aged 50 and older (15.0%).
6
 
 
Mental Health Safety Net Services 
The Department of Children and Families (DCF) administers a statewide system of safety-net 
services for substance abuse and mental health (SAMH) prevention, treatment and recovery for 
children and adults who are otherwise unable to obtain these services. SAMH programs include a 
range of prevention, acute interventions (e.g., crisis stabilization), residential treatment, 
transitional housing, outpatient treatment, and recovery support services. Services are provided 
based upon state and federally-established priority populations. 
 
Behavioral Health Managing Entities 
In 2001, the Legislature authorized DCF to implement and pilot behavioral health managing 
entities (ME) as the management structure for the delivery of local mental health and substance 
abuse services.
7
 In 2008, the Legislature authorized DCF to implement MEs statewide.
8
 MEs 
were fully implemented statewide in 2013, serving all geographic regions. 
 
DCF currently contracts with seven MEs for behavioral health services throughout the state. 
These entities do not provide direct services; rather, they allow the DCF’s funding to be tailored 
                                                
1
 World Health Organization, Mental Health: Strengthening Our Response, https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-
sheets/detail/mental-health-strengthening-our-response (last visited January 20, 2024). 
2
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Mental Health Basics, http://medbox.iiab.me/modules/en-
cdc/www.cdc.gov/mentalhealth/basics.htm (last visited January 20, 2024). 
3
 Id. 
4
 National Institute of Mental Health, Mental Illness, https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/statistics/mental-illness (last visited 
January 20, 2024). 
5
 Any mental illness (AMI) is defined as a mental, behavioral, or emotional disorder. AMI can vary in impact, ranging from 
no impairment to mild, moderate, and even severe impairment (e.g., individuals with serious mental illness). 
6
 National Institute of Mental Health (NIH), Mental Illness, https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/statistics/mental-illness (last 
visited January 20, 2024). 
7
 Ch. 2001-191, Laws of Fla. 
8
 Ch. 2008-243, Laws of Fla.  BILL: CS/SB 1394   	Page 3 
 
to the specific behavioral health needs of various regions of the state. The regions are as 
follows:
9
 
 
 
 
Coordinated System of Care 
Managing entities are required to promote the development and implementation of a coordinated 
system of care.
10
 A coordinated system of care means a full array of behavioral and related 
services in a region or community offered by all service providers, providing service under 
contract with a managing entity or by another method of community partnership or mutual 
agreement.
11
 A community or region provides a coordinated system of care for those with a 
mental illness or substance abuse disorder through a no-wrong-door model, to the extent allowed 
by available resources. MEs must submit detailed plans to enhance crisis services based on the 
                                                
9
 DCF, Managing Entities, https://www.myflfamilies.com/services/samh/providers/managing-entities (last visited January 20, 
2024). 
10
 Section 394.9082(5)(d), F.S. 
11
 Section 394.4573(1)(c), F.S.  BILL: CS/SB 1394   	Page 4 
 
no-wrong-door model or to meet specific needs identified in DCF’s assessment of behavioral 
health services in this state.
12
 DCF must use performance-based contracts to awards grants.
13
 
 
There are several essential elements, which make up a coordinated system of care, including:
14
 
 Community interventions; 
 Case management; 
 Care coordination; 
 Outpatient services; 
 Residential services; 
 Hospital inpatient care; 
 Aftercare and post-discharge services; 
 Medication assisted treatment and medication management; and 
 Recovery support. 
 
A coordinated system of care must include, but is not limited to, the following array of 
services:
15
 
 Prevention services; 
 Home-based services; 
 School-based services; 
 Family therapy; 
 Respite services; 
 Outpatient treatment; 
 Crisis stabilization; 
 Therapeutic foster care; 
 Residential treatment; 
 Inpatient hospitalization; 
 Care management; 
 Services for victims of sex offenses; 
 Transitional services; and 
 Trauma-informed services for children who have suffered sexual exploitation.  
 
The Baker Act 
The Florida Mental Health Act, commonly referred to as the Baker Act, was enacted in 1971 to 
revise the state’s mental health commitment laws.
16
 The Act includes legal procedures for mental 
health examination and treatment, including voluntary and involuntary examinations. It, 
additionally, protects the rights of all individuals examined or treated for mental illness in 
Florida.
17
  
 
                                                
12
 Id. 
13
 Id. 
14
 Section 394.4573(2), F.S. 
15
 Section 394.495(4), F.S. 
16
 The Baker Act is contained in Part I of Ch. 394, F.S. 
17
 Section 394.459, F.S.  BILL: CS/SB 1394   	Page 5 
 
Receiving Facilities 
Individuals in an acute mental or behavioral health crisis may require emergency treatment to 
stabilize their condition. Emergency mental health examination and stabilization services may be 
provided on a voluntary or involuntary basis.
18
 Individuals receiving services on an involuntary 
basis must be taken to a facility that has been designated by DCF as a receiving facility. 
 
Receiving facilities, often referred to as Baker Act receiving facilities, are public or private 
facilities designated by DCF to receive and hold or refer, as appropriate, involuntary patients 
under emergency conditions for mental health or substance abuse evaluation and to provide 
treatment or transportation to the appropriate service provider.
19
 A public receiving facility is a 
facility that has contracted with a managing entity to provide mental health services to all 
persons, regardless of their ability to pay, and is receiving state funds for such purpose.
20
 Funds 
appropriated for Baker Act services may only be used to pay for services diagnostically and 
financially eligible persons, or those who are acutely ill, in need of mental health services, and 
the least able to pay.
21
 
 
Crisis Stabilization Units  
Crisis Stabilization Units (CSUs) are public receiving facilities that receive state funding and 
provide a less intensive and less costly alternative to inpatient psychiatric hospitalization for 
individuals presenting as acutely mentally ill. CSUs screen, assess, and admit individuals 
brought to the unit under the Baker Act, as well as those individuals who voluntarily present 
themselves, for short-term services. CSUs provide services 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 
through a team of mental health professionals. The purpose of the CSU is to examine, stabilize, 
and redirect people to the most appropriate and least restrictive treatment settings, consistent 
with their mental health needs.
22
 Individuals often enter the public mental health system through 
CSUs.  
 
Involuntary Examination 
An involuntary examination is required if there is reason to believe that the person has a mental 
illness and, because of his or her mental illness, has refused voluntary examination, is likely to 
refuse to care for him or herself to the extent that such refusal threatens to cause substantial harm 
to that person’s well-being, and such harm is unavoidable through the help of willing family 
members or friends, or will cause serious bodily harm to him or herself or others in the near 
future based on recent behavior.
23
 
 
An involuntary examination may be initiated by: 
 A court entering an ex parte order stating that a person appears to meet the criteria for 
involuntary examination, based on sworn testimony;
24
 or 
                                                
18
 Section 394.4625 and 394.463, F.S. 
19
 Section 394.455(40), F.S. This term does not include a county jail. 
20
 Section 394.455(38), F.S. 
21
 R. 65E-5.400(2), F.A.C. 
22
 Section 394.875, F.S. 
23
 Section 394.463(1), F.S. 
24
 Section 394.463(2)(a)1., F.S. The order of the court must be made a part of the patient’s clinical record.  BILL: CS/SB 1394   	Page 6 
 
 A physician, clinical psychologist, psychiatric nurse, an autonomous advanced practice 
registered nurse, mental health counselor, marriage and family therapist, or clinical social 
worker executing a certificate stating that he or she has examined a person within the 
preceding 48 hours and finds that the person appears to meet the criteria for involuntary 
examination, including a statement of the professional’s observations supporting such 
conclusion.
25
 
 
Unlike the discretion afforded courts and medical professionals, current law mandates that law 
enforcement officers must initiate an involuntary examination of a person who appears to meet 
the criteria by taking him or her into custody and delivering or having the person delivered to a 
receiving facility for examination.
26
  
 
Under the Baker Act, a receiving facility has up to 72 hours to examine an involuntary patient.
27
 
During those 72 hours, an involuntary patient must be examined to determine if the criteria for 
involuntary services are met.
28
 Within that 72-hour examination period, one of the following 
must happen:
29
 
 The patient must be released, unless he or she is charged with a crime, in which case, law 
enforcement will assume custody; 
 The patient must be released for voluntary outpatient treatment; 
 The patient, unless charged with a crime, must give express and informed consent to be 
placed and admitted as a voluntary patient; or 
 A petition for involuntary placement must be filed in circuit court for involuntary 
outpatient or inpatient treatment.  
III. Effect of Proposed Changes: 
Section 1 of the bill amends s. 394.495, F.S., to require the DCF to contract with MEs 
throughout the state for community mobile support teams to place crisis counselors from 
community mental health centers within local law enforcement agencies. These crisis counselors 
are to conduct follow-up contacts with children, adolescents, and adults who have been 
involuntarily committed under the Baker Act by a law enforcement officer.  
 
The bill provides the goal of the partnership is to reduce recidivism of law enforcement Baker 
Act commitments, reduce the time burden of law enforcement completing follow-up work with 
individuals after they have been subject to treatment under the Baker Act, provide additional 
crisis intervention services, engage individuals in ongoing mental health care, and provide a 
source for mental health crisis intervention other than law enforcement.  
 
The bill requires a crisis counselor to, at a minimum: 
 Provide follow-up care to individuals in the community that law enforcement has 
identified as needing additional mental health support. 
                                                
25
 Section 394.463(2)(a)3., F.S. The report and certificate must be made a part of the patient’s clinical record.  
26
 Section 394.463(2)(a)2., F.S.  
27
 Section 394.463(2)(g), F.S. 
28
 Section 394.463(2)(f), F.S. 
29
 Section 394.463(2)(g), F.S.  BILL: CS/SB 1394   	Page 7 
 
 Conduct home visits to assist individuals in connecting with appropriate aftercare 
services in his or her community following his or her discharge from a Baker Act 
receiving facility. 
 Provide support to aid a person during the transition period his or her release from 
commitment under the Baker Act to connection with aftercare services. 
 Provide brief crisis counseling and assessment for additional needs. 
 
The bill requires a community mobile support team to offer, at a minimum, the following 
services: 
 Crisis assessment. 
 Community-based crisis counseling. 
 In-person, follow-up care after involuntary commitment under the Baker Act by a law 
enforcement officer. 
 Assistance with accessing and engaging in aftercare services. 
 Assistance with obtaining other necessary community resources to maintain stability. 
 Coordination of safety planning.   
 
The bill requires the community mental health center contracted by the managing entity to, at a 
minimum: 
 Collaborate with local law enforcement offices in the planning, development, and 
program evaluation processes. 
 Require that services are available seven days a week. 
 Establish independent response protocols and memoranda of understanding with local 
law enforcement agencies. 
 
Section 2 of the bill provides an effective date of July 1, 2024. 
IV. Constitutional Issues: 
A. Municipality/County Mandates Restrictions: 
None. 
B. Public Records/Open Meetings Issues: 
None. 
C. Trust Funds Restrictions: 
None. 
D. State Tax or Fee Increases: 
None. 
E. Other Constitutional Issues: 
None.  BILL: CS/SB 1394   	Page 8 
 
V. Fiscal Impact Statement: 
A. Tax/Fee Issues: 
None. 
B. Private Sector Impact: 
None. 
C. Government Sector Impact: 
There is an indeterminate, but likely significant, negative fiscal impact on state 
government. The language would require contracts between MEs and community mental 
health centers to employ specific people to perform the duties detailed within the bill. 
VI. Technical Deficiencies: 
None. 
VII. Related Issues: 
None. 
VIII. Statutes Affected: 
This bill substantially amends section 394.495 of the Florida Statutes.  
IX. Additional Information: 
A. Committee Substitute – Statement of Substantial Changes: 
(Summarizing differences between the Committee Substitute and the prior version of the bill.) 
None. 
B. Amendments: 
CS by Children, Families, and Elder Affairs January 23, 2024: 
The committee substitute makes the following changes: 
 Requires the community mobile support team crisis counselor to provide follow-
up care to individuals in the community that law enforcement has identified as 
needing additional mental health support. 
 Details what services the community mobile support team is required to offer. 
 Details the requirements of a community mental health center contracted by the 
managing entity. 
This Senate Bill Analysis does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill’s introducer or the Florida Senate.