Nevada 2023 Regular Session

Nevada Assembly Bill AB136

Introduced
2/9/23  
Refer
2/9/23  
Report Pass
3/27/23  
Engrossed
4/3/23  
Refer
4/3/23  
Report Pass
5/11/23  
Enrolled
5/23/23  
Chaptered
5/24/23  

Caption

Requires certain facilities to be licensed as child care institutions. (BDR 38-326)

Impact

The implementation of AB136 will alter state laws concerning child welfare significantly. By amending the definition of a child care institution to include QRTPs, the bill establishes that all such entities must meet licensing requirements which correspond with federal guidelines set forth in various U.S. Codes. As a result, governmental entities within Nevada will become eligible to receive federal financial contributions for placing children in these regulated programs, potentially increasing the funding available for child welfare initiatives.

Summary

Assembly Bill No. 136 aims to regulate qualified residential treatment programs (QRTPs) for children by classifying them as child care institutions. This classification requires all such programs—regardless of the number of children they serve—to obtain a license from the Division of Public and Behavioral Health. The bill addresses existing legislation that already mandates larger child care institutions to be licensed, thereby extending regulation to smaller facilities that may often be overlooked. The intention is to ensure that all children in QRTPs receive consistent care and regulatory oversight, which is aligned with federal standards for child welfare.

Contention

While the bill has garnered support for tightening regulations in the interest of child welfare, there are concerns regarding its implementation. Some stakeholders argue that the licensing requirement could impose an undue burden on smaller facilities, potentially leading to program closures rather than enhancements in care. Furthermore, there are discussions around the timeline for compliance, as Section 2 allows certain QRTPs that were operational before January 1, 2024, to continue functioning without a license until July 1, 2024, raising questions about the effectiveness of the enforcement period and the readiness of many facilities to comply with more stringent regulations.

Companion Bills

No companion bills found.

Previously Filed As

NV AB463

Revises provisions governing child care facilities and certain child care programs. (BDR 38-1083)

NV AB238

Establishes provisions relating to commercially sexually exploited children. (BDR 38-323)

NV SB278

Revises provisions governing child care. (BDR 32-290)

NV SB516

Update licensing requirements for facilities licensed by the department of public health and human services

NV SB1208

Relating to the licensing of certain facilities, homes, and agencies that provide child-care services.

NV HB4093

Relating to the licensing of certain facilities, homes, and agencies that provide child-care services.

NV AB226

Children’s crisis psychiatric residential treatment facilities.

NV AB148

Revises provisions relating to child welfare. (BDR 4-671)

NV SB1351

Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act

NV SB248

Child-care facilities, Dept of Human Resources, require DHR to revise certain standards regulating child-care facilities, requires DHR to adopt rules, Sec. 38-7-22 added; Secs. 38-7-2, 38-7-3, 38-7-5, 38-7-7, 38-7-12, 38-7-13, 38-7-14, 38-7-20, 38-13-4 am'd.

Similar Bills

CA SB476

Short-term residential therapeutic programs.

CA AB226

Children’s crisis psychiatric residential treatment facilities.

CO HB1375

Child Residential Treatment And Runaway Youth

CA AB2121

Substance use disorder treatment: licensing.

CA AB501

Mental health: community care facilities.

CA AB808

Foster youth.

NH SB498

Relative to the department of health and human services, division for children, youth and families.