Kansas 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Kansas House Bill HB2353 Comm Sub / Analysis

                    SESSION OF 2024
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON HOUSE BILL NO. 2353
As Amended by House Committee on 
Corrections and Juvenile Justice
Brief*
HB 2353, as amended, would amend provisions in the 
Care and Treatment Act for Mentally Ill Persons (Act) to 
extend the time period a person may be held for treatment 
and to add conditions for which continued treatment may be 
ordered.
Time Extensions
Under continuing law, a court may, under certain 
circumstances, issues an ex parte emergency custody order 
set to expire at 5:00 p.m. the second day the court is open 
after the issuance. The bill would extend the expiration to the 
third day.
The bill would also extend the deadline for setting a 
hearing in response to a request for a temporary custody 
order or an emergency custody order that resulted from 
noncompliance with a patient's outpatient treatment order.
Finally, the bill would extend the time a court may order 
continued involuntary treatment of a person from three 
months to a maximum of six months in an initial order.
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*Supplemental notes are prepared by the Legislative Research 
Department and do not express legislative intent. The supplemental 
note and fiscal note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at 
http://www.kslegislature.org Outpatient Treatment Orders
Current law allows a court to order outpatient treatment 
in lieu of involuntary inpatient care and treatment if the court 
finds the patient, without treatment:
●Will meet the criteria for required inpatient care in 
the near future and is only likely to attend 
outpatient treatment under a court order; or
●Is likely to experience worsening symptoms caused 
by mental illness that would lead to the need for 
inpatient care and has previously refused mental 
health services in the community, due to their 
mental illness.
Additionally, continuing law allows a court order to state 
specific outpatient conditions to be followed by the patient, 
including directives and treatment required by the treating 
outpatient facility. The bill would require those directive and 
treatment plans to be provided to the court in writing within 
ten business days after the outpatient order is issued. Failure 
to provide such information to the court would not be 
considered grounds for dismissal of the order unless the 
failure was made in bad faith.
Technical Amendments
The bill would make various technical amendments to 
ensure consistency in statutory phrasing and to update 
statutory supplement references.
Background
The bill was requested for introduction by the House 
Committee on Judiciary by Representative S. Ruiz, on behalf 
of the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services 
(KDADS).
2- 2353 House Committee on Corrections and Juvenile Justice
In the House Committee hearing, proponent testimony 
was provided by representatives of the Association of 
Community Mental Health Centers of Kansas, Cicero Action, 
KDADS, and Mental Health America of the Heartland. The 
proponents stated the bill was requested in conjunction with a 
federal assisted outpatient treatment (AOT) grant. The 
proponents further stated the bill would ensure Kansans in 
need of care will receive needed services and that additional 
hold times would result in more time for evaluation and to 
develop discharge plans. It was also stated an amendment 
had been prepared with consultation amongst stakeholders 
that proposes alternative language regarding when a court 
may order outpatient treatment.
Written-only proponent testimony was provided by two 
district court judges; representatives of Bert Nash Community 
Mental Health Center, Disability Rights Center, Four County 
Mental Health Center, Johnson County Community Mental 
Health Center, Pawnee Mental Health Services; three 
representatives of National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) 
Kansas; and a representative of NAMI Topeka.
No other testimony was provided.
The bill, as introduced, would have added language to 
current law concerning outpatient treatment criteria. The 
House Committee replaced that language with alternative 
provisions that had been drafted by stakeholders. The House 
Committee also adopted a technical amendment to update 
statutory supplement references.
Fiscal Information
According to the fiscal note prepared by the Division of 
the Budget on the bill, as introduced, KDADS indicates the bill 
would not have a fiscal effect on agency operations. The 
increase to a 72-hour hold would increase treatment facility 
3- 2353 costs, but in the long term, those costs would be offset by 
alleviating pressure on the State Hospitals and providers.
The Office of Judicial Administration indicates the bill 
could have a fiscal effect on expenditures of the Judicial 
Branch, but until the courts have operated under the 
provisions of the bill, an accurate estimate of its fiscal effect 
cannot be determined. Any fiscal effect associated with the 
bill is not reflected in The FY 2024 Governor’s Budget Report.
The Kansas Association of Counties indicates 
enactment of the bill would have a fiscal effect on counties if 
there are higher costs for transporting individuals to and from 
treatment.
Mental illness; Care and Treatment Act for Mentally Ill persons; custody order; 
hearing; outpatient; inpatient; involuntary
4- 2353