Oklahoma 2025 2025 Regular Session

Oklahoma House Bill HB2361 Amended / Bill

Filed 04/08/2025

                     
 
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SENATE FLOOR VERSION 
April 7, 2025 
 
 
ENGROSSED HOUSE 
BILL NO. 2361 	By: Hill, Gise, Pae, and Munson 
of the House 
 
  and 
 
  Daniels of the Senate 
 
 
 
 
 
An Act relating to children; amending 10A O.S. 2021, 
Section 1-9-107, which relates to the Successful 
Adulthood Act; providing documents certain children 
leaving foster care shall be provided; providing that 
certain documents be given to individuals being 
released from the custody of the Office of Juvenile 
Affairs; providing for codification; and providing an 
effective date. 
 
 
 
 
BE IT ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA: 
SECTION 1.     AMENDATORY     10A O.S. 2021, Section 1 -9-107, is 
amended to read as follows: 
Section 1-9-107.  A.  This section shall be known and may be 
cited as the "Successful Adulthood Act". 
B.  The purpose of the Successful Adulthood Act shall be: 
1.  To ensure that eligible individuals, who have been or are in 
the foster care program of the Department of Human Services or a 
federally recognized Indian tribe wit h whom the Department has a 
contract, due to abuse or neglect, receive the protection and   
 
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support necessary to allow those individuals to become self -reliant 
and productive citizens through the provision of requisite services 
that include, but are not limi ted to, transitional planning, 
housing, medical coverage, and education; provided, that eligibility 
for tuition waivers shall be as set forth in Section 3230 of Title 
70 of the Oklahoma Statutes; 
2.  To break the cycle of abuse and neglect that obligates t he 
state to assume custody of children; and 
3.  To help children who have experienced foster care at age 
fourteen (14) or older achieve meaningful permanent connections with 
a caring adult. 
C.  An individual is eligible to receive services for the 
transition of the child to a successful adulthood from the age of 
fourteen (14) until the age of eighteen (18), during the time the 
individual is in the custody of the Department or a federally 
recognized Indian tribe and in an out -of-home placement. 
D.  The permanency plan for the child in transition to a 
successful adulthood shall be developed in consultation with the 
child and, at the option of the child, with up to two members of the 
permanency planning team to be chosen by the child, excluding the 
foster parent and caseworker for the child, subject to the following 
provisions: 
1.  One individual selected by the child may be designated to be 
the advisor and, as necessary, advocate of the child, with respect   
 
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to the application of the reasonable and prudent parent standard to 
the child; and 
2.  The Department may reject an individual selected by the 
child to be a member of the permanency planning team at any time if 
the Department has good cause to believe that the selected 
individual would not act in the best inte rests of the child. 
E.  1.  Each child in foster care under the responsibility of 
the Department or a federally recognized Indian tribe and in an out -
of-home placement, who has attained fourteen (14) years of age shall 
be given a written Notice of Rights t hat describes the following 
specific rights of the child: 
a. the rights of the child with respect to education, 
health, visitation, and court participation, 
b. the right to be provided with the documents specified 
in subsection F of this section, and 
c. the right to stay safe and avoid exploitation. 
2.  The child shall sign an acknowledgment stating that the 
child has been provided with a copy of the Notice of Rights and that 
the rights described in the notice have been explained to the child 
in an age-appropriate way. 
F. A child about to leave foster care by reason of having 
attained eighteen (18) years of age and who has been in foster care 
for at least six (6) months shall be given the following documents 
pertaining to the child:   
 
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1.  An official or certi fied copy of the United States birth 
certificate; 
2.  A Social Security card issued by the Commissioner of Social 
Security; 
3.  Health insurance information Information about how to obtain 
health insurance; 
4.  A copy of the medical records of the child; 
5.  A state-issued driver license or identification card; and 
6.  Official documentation necessary to show that the child was 
previously in foster care ; and 
7.  Any educational transcripts, diplomas, or professional 
certificates earned while in the custody of the Department of Human 
Services. 
G.  Successful adulthood services may continue to the age of 
twenty-one (21), provided the individual is in the custody of the 
Department or a federally recognized Indian tribe due to abuse or 
neglect and is in an out -of-home placement at the time of the 
individual's sixteenth birthday. 
H.  Individuals who are sixteen (16) years of age or older, who 
have been released from the custody of the Department or federally 
recognized Indian tribe due to the entry of an adoption decree or 
guardianship order are eligible to receive successful adulthood 
services until the age of twenty -one (21).   
 
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I.  Individuals who are eligible for services pursuant to the 
Successful Adulthood Act and who are between eighteen (18) and 
twenty-one (21) years of age shall be eligible for Medicaid 
coverage, provided such individuals were also in the custody of the 
Department or a federally recognized Indian tribe on the date they 
reached eighteen (18) years of age and meet Medicaid financial 
eligibility guidelines. 
J.  The Department, in conjunction with the Oklahoma State 
Regents for Higher Education, shall provide parents and legal 
guardians of foster youth with information on the Oklahoma Higher 
Learning Access Program (OHLAP) including, but not limite d to, 
eligibility, application guidelines, academic requirements, and any 
other information required by the Oklahoma Higher Learning Access 
Act for participation in the Program. 
SECTION 2.     NEW LAW     A new section of law to be codified 
in the Oklahoma Statutes as Section 2 -7-621 of Title 10A, unless 
there is created a duplication in numbering, reads as follows: 
A person who has been placed in the custody of the Office of 
Juvenile Affairs, who has attained eighteen (18) years of age, and 
who is being released from the custody of the Office of Juvenile 
Affairs with a plan to re -enter the community as a resident of the 
state shall be given the following documents pertaining to the 
person upon release:   
 
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1.  An official or certified copy of th e United States birth 
certificate; 
2.  A Social Security card issued by the Commissioner of Social 
Security; 
3.  Information about how to obtain health insurance and 
personal medical records; 
4.  A state-issued driver license or identification card; and 
5. Any educational transcripts, diplomas, or professional 
certificates earned while in the custody of the Office of Juvenile 
Affairs. 
SECTION 3.  This act shall become effective November 1, 2025. 
COMMITTEE REPORT BY: COMMITTEE ON HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES 
April 7, 2025 - DO PASS