Rhode Island 2025 Regular Session

Rhode Island Senate Bill S0677 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 03/07/2025

                             
 
 
 
2025 -- S 0677 
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LC001317 
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S T A T E O F R H O D E I S L A N D 
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY 
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2025 
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A N   A C T 
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- THE RHODE ISLAND FAMILY HOME -- 
VISITING ACT 
Introduced By: Senators Valverde, DiMario, Murray, DiPalma, Acosta, Zurier, 
McKenney, Mack, Lauria, and Quezada 
Date Introduced: March 07, 2025 
Referred To: Senate Finance 
 
 
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: 
SECTION 1. Legislative findings. 1 
The general assembly hereby finds that: 2 
(1) A child's first experiences and relationships set the foundation for development and 3 
learning that leads to success in school and in life. 4 
(2) Voluntary, high-quality home-visiting programs help families learn about and connect 5 
to essential resources, adjust to parenthood, build parenting skills, and address challenges 6 
commonly faced by young families. 7 
(3) For at least four (4) decades, Rhode Island’s First Connections program, overseen by 8 
the department of health, has been providing free, voluntary, statewide home-visiting to expectant 9 
mothers and families with newborns, infants, and toddlers, reaching about thirty-five percent (35%) 10 
of families with new babies. Families typically receive one to four (4) home visits.  11 
(4) Following the establishment of the federal Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home 12 
Visiting (MIECHV) program in 2010, Rhode Island expanded home-visiting services to fund 13 
implementation of Healthy Families America, Nurse-Family Partnership, and Parents as Teachers 14 
as nationally-recognized evidence-based program models that connect pregnant and parenting 15 
families with a designated support person who guides them through the early stages of raising a 16 
family. Home visiting is voluntary, free, and tailored to meet families where they are and help them 17 
achieve their goals to raise healthy, happy children. Each of these proven models is designed to 18   
 
 
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provide multi-year, consistent, flexible, relationship-based services to a family starting in the third 1 
trimester of pregnancy or soon after the birth of a child.  2 
(5) In 2022, the federal MIECHV funding was reauthorized and now includes a twenty-3 
five percent (25%) state match requirement to receive increased funds. In 2024 when the state 4 
match requirement went into effect, Rhode Island was one of only three (3) states and territories in 5 
the U.S. that did not meet the full federal match and was unable to draw down the full federal 6 
MIECHV grant. 7 
(6) In 2023, Rhode Island revised contracts with the evidence-based family home visiting 8 
providers and programs to implement Medicaid fee-for-service billing for each encounter for every 9 
mother or child who has Medicaid insurance. About eighty-five percent (85%) of families enrolled. 10 
Rhode Island reserved the federal MIECHV funding to pay for home visits for the fifteen percent 11 
(15%) of enrolled families and children who have commercial insurance or no insurance.  12 
(7) Between 2021 and 2024, the number of pregnant and parenting families enrolled in the 13 
evidence-based home-visiting programs in Rhode Island fell by thirty-seven percent (37%) due to 14 
staffing and financing challenges. In 2024 and 2025, four (4) agencies statewide stopped delivering 15 
one or more of the evidence-based program models due to increased fiscal challenges resulting 16 
from Medicaid fee-for-service billing.  17 
SECTION 2. Section 23-13.7-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-13.7 entitled "The 18 
Rhode Island Family Home-Visiting Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: 19 
23-13.7-2. Home-visiting system components. 20 
(a) The Rhode Island department of health shall coordinate the system of early childhood 21 
home-visiting services in Rhode Island and shall work with the department of human services and 22 
department of children, youth and families to identify effective, evidence-based, home-visiting 23 
models that meet the needs of vulnerable families with young children. 24 
(b) The Rhode Island department of health shall implement a statewide home-visiting 25 
system that uses evidence-based models proven to improve child and family outcomes. Evidence-26 
based, home-visiting programs must follow with fidelity a program model with comprehensive 27 
standards that ensure high-quality service delivery, use research-based curricula, and have 28 
demonstrated significant positive outcomes in at least two (2) of the following areas: 29 
(1) Improved prenatal, maternal, infant, or child health outcomes; 30 
(2) Improved safety and reduced child maltreatment and injury; 31 
(3) Improved family economic security and self-sufficiency; 32 
(4) Enhanced early childhood development (social-emotional, language, cognitive, 33 
physical) to improve children’s readiness to succeed in school. 34   
 
 
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(c) The Rhode Island department of health shall implement a system to identify and refer 1 
families prenatally, or as early after the birth of a child as possible, to voluntary, evidence-based, 2 
home-visiting programs. The referral system shall prioritize families for services based on risk 3 
factors known to impair child development, including: 4 
(1) Adolescent parent(s); 5 
(2) History of prenatal drug or alcohol abuse; 6 
(3) History of child maltreatment, domestic abuse, or other types of violence; 7 
(4) Incarcerated parent(s); 8 
(5) Reduced parental cognitive functioning or significant disability; 9 
(6) Insufficient financial resources to meet family needs; 10 
(7) History of homelessness; or 11 
(8) Other risk factors as determined by the department. 12 
(d) The Rhode Island department of health shall issue a state home-visiting report due 13 
annually by March 1 of each year that outlines the components of the state’s family home-visiting 14 
system, including state and federal funding amounts and sources. This report shall be shared with 15 
the general assembly and that shall be made publicly available on the department’s website. The 16 
report shall include: 17 
(1) The number of families served by First Connections, as defined by subsection (f) of 18 
this section, in each calendar year, and the number of families enrolled in each evidence-based 19 
family home-visiting model at a common point-in-time for each of the last five (5) years; and 20 
(2) Demographic data on families served; and 21 
(3) Duration of participation of families; and 22 
(4) Cross-departmental coordination; and 23 
(5) Outcomes related to prenatal, maternal, infant and child health, child maltreatment, 24 
family economic security, and child development and school readiness; and 25 
(6) An annual estimate of the number of children born to Rhode Island families who face 26 
significant risk factors known to impair child development, and a plan including the fiscal costs 27 
and benefits to gradually expand access to the existing evidence-based, family home-visiting 28 
programs in Rhode Island to all vulnerable families. The annual plan shall include a projected three 29 
(3) year estimate of the available federal MIECHV grant funds, the state match required to access 30 
the full federal MIECHV grant available, the projected Medicaid fee-for-service billing and/or 31 
other funding strategies to sustain the programs and to meet expansion targets. The annual plan 32 
shall be designed to maximize use of the federal MIECHV grant and ensure providers have 33 
adequate funds to recruit and retain qualified staff; 34   
 
 
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(7) The total annual federal MIECHV funding available, received, and spent by the state 1 
on direct home-visiting services by program model and the total spent on state administration for 2 
each of the last five (5) years; 3 
(8) The total annual funding for each program model by source of funding to include 4 
Medicaid fee-for-service state and federal funding, MIECHV federal funding, MIECHV state 5 
match funding, and any other funding by source for each of the last five (5) years for all models; 6 
(9) Implementation successes and challenges, including those related to funding, provider 7 
contracts, provider staffing and turnover, and family enrollment and retention; and 8 
(10) An analysis of how other states have combined Medicaid and MIECHV home-visiting 9 
grants to support and sustain home-visiting programs, including an analysis of how other states use 10 
Medicaid’s Targeted Case Management option. 11 
(e) State appropriations for this purpose shall be combined with federal dollars to fund the 12 
expansion of evidence-based, home-visiting programs, with the goal of offering the program to all 13 
the state’s pregnant and parenting teens; families with a history of involvement with the child 14 
welfare system; and other vulnerable families. 15 
(f) First Connections, as used in this section, means the state-run home-visiting program 16 
administered by the department's office of family visiting, and carried out by community nonprofit 17 
organizations. 18 
(g) Annually, the state shall allocate the minimum amount required to draw down 19 
maximum MIECHV federal dollars available for Rhode Island to the department, which shall be 20 
used for funding home-visiting services.  21 
SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. 22 
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EXPLANATION 
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL 
OF 
A N   A C T 
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- THE RHODE ISLAND FAMILY HOME -- 
VISITING ACT 
***
This act would change the department of health’s annual reporting requirements regarding 1 
the family home-visiting program. This act would also appropriate the minimum amount of general 2 
revenue to access the maximum amount of federal MIECHV funds and the department to spend all 3 
federally available funds. 4 
This act would take effect upon passage. 5 
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