Texas 2009 81st Regular

Texas House Bill HB3689 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    81R4916 KCR-D
 By: McClendon H.B. No. 3689


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to abolishing the Texas Youth Commission and the Texas
 Juvenile Probation Commission and transferring the powers and
 duties of those agencies to the newly created Texas Juvenile
 Justice Department and to the functions of the independent
 ombudsman for the Texas Youth Commission.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 ARTICLE 1. TEXAS JUVENILE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT; TEXAS YOUTH
 COMMISSION AND TEXAS JUVENILE PROBATION COMMISSION
 SECTION 1.001. The Human Resources Code is amended by
 adding Title 12 with a heading to read as follows:
 TITLE 12. JUVENILE JUSTICE SERVICES AND FACILITIES
 SECTION 1.002. Title 12, Human Resources Code, as added by
 this Act, is amended by adding Subtitle A to read as follows:
 SUBTITLE A. TEXAS JUVENILE JUSTICE BOARD AND TEXAS JUVENILE
 JUSTICE DEPARTMENT
 CHAPTER 201. GENERAL PROVISIONS
 Sec. 201.001. DEFINITIONS. (a) In this title:
 (1) "Board" means the Texas Juvenile Justice Board.
 (2)  "Child" means an individual 10 years of age or
 older and under 19 years of age who is committed to a secure
 post-adjudication facility operated by the department under
 Subtitle C.
 (3) "Court" means a juvenile court.
 (4)  "Department" means the Texas Juvenile Justice
 Department.
 (5)  "Executive director" means the executive director
 of the department.
 (6)  "Juvenile board" means a body established by law
 to provide juvenile probation services to a county.
 (7)  "State aid" means funds allocated by the
 department to a juvenile board to financially assist the juvenile
 board in achieving the purposes of this title and in conforming to
 the department's standards and policies.
 (a-1) A reference to the department:
 (1)  in Subtitle B means the Texas Juvenile Probation
 Commission;
 (2)  in Subtitle C means the Texas Youth Commission;
 and
 (3)  in any law other than Subtitle B or C means the
 Texas Juvenile Probation Commission or the Texas Youth Commission,
 as applicable in context.
 (a-2)  This subsection and Subsection (a-1) expire September
 1, 2010.
 (b)  Effective September 1, 2010, a reference in other law
 to:
 (1)  the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission means the
 department; or
 (2) the Texas Youth Commission means the department.
 CHAPTER 201A. TEMPORARY PROVISIONS
 SUBCHAPTER A.  TRANSITION TEAM
 Sec. 201A.001.  COMPOSITION OF TRANSITION TEAM; PRESIDING
 OFFICER. (a) The juvenile justice services and facilities
 transition team is composed of the following 11 members appointed
 by the governor:
 (1) a representative of the governor;
 (2)  the executive director of the Texas Juvenile
 Probation Commission;
 (3)  the executive commissioner of the Texas Youth
 Commission;
 (4)  a representative of the lieutenant governor,
 chosen from a list submitted to the governor by the lieutenant
 governor;
 (5)  a representative of the speaker of the house of
 representatives, chosen from a list submitted to the governor by
 the speaker;
 (6)  one member who represents the interests of a
 juvenile probation department that serves a county with a small
 population;
 (7)  one member who represents the interests of a
 juvenile probation department that serves a county with a medium
 population;
 (8)  one member who represents the interests of a
 juvenile probation department that serves a county with a large
 population;
 (9)  one member who represents the interests of
 juvenile offenders or the families of juvenile offenders;
 (10)  one member who represents an organization that
 advocates on behalf of juvenile offenders or the families of
 juvenile offenders; and
 (11)  one member who represents an organization that
 advocates on behalf of the victims of delinquent or criminal
 conduct.
 (b)  The governor shall make the appointments required by
 Subsection (a) as soon as possible after September 1, 2009.
 (c)  The transition team member who is appointed under
 Subsection (a)(1) serves as the presiding officer of the transition
 team.
 (d)  The transition team members appointed under Subsections
 (a)(2) and (3) remain on the transition team after August 31, 2009,
 regardless of the abolition of the agencies named in those
 subdivisions.
 Sec. 201A.002.  POWERS AND DUTIES. (a) After September 1,
 2009, and before September 1, 2010, the transition team shall
 coordinate and oversee the transition of services and facilities
 from the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission and the Texas Youth
 Commission to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department.
 (b)  After August 31, 2010, and before December 31, 2010, the
 transition team shall assist the Texas Juvenile Justice Department
 in implementing the transition of services and facilities from the
 Texas Juvenile Probation Commission and the Texas Youth Commission
 to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department.
 Sec. 201A.003.  ASSISTANCE. The following state agencies
 shall, on request, assist the transition team with the following
 matters:
 (1)  the Legislative Budget Board and the budget,
 planning, and policy division of the governor's office, with
 preparation of a suggested budget for the department;
 (2)  the Department of Information Resources, with the
 technological needs of the department;
 (3)  the office of the attorney general, with legal
 matters concerning the transition of services and facilities from
 the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission and the Texas Youth
 Commission to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department;
 (4)  the comptroller of public accounts, with suggested
 accounting practices for the department; and
 (5)  the Texas Facilities Commission, with assistance
 in efficiently using the office space in which the administrative
 offices of the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission and the Texas
 Youth Commission are located and, if necessary, locating additional
 office space for the administrative offices of the department.
 [Sections 201A.004-201A.050 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER B. JUVENILE JUSTICE IMPROVEMENT PLAN
 Sec. 201A.051. DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
 (1)  "Committee" means the juvenile justice
 improvement plan committee established under Section 201A.052.
 (2)  "Plan" means the comprehensive juvenile justice
 improvement plan developed by the committee under Section
 201A.053(a).
 Sec. 201A.052.  COMPOSITION OF COMMITTEE; PRESIDING
 OFFICERS. (a) The juvenile justice improvement plan committee is
 established.
 (b)  The executive commissioner of the Texas Youth
 Commission and the executive director of the Texas Juvenile
 Probation Commission are co-presiding officers of the committee.
 (c)  The executive commissioner of the Texas Youth
 Commission and the executive director of the Texas Juvenile
 Probation Commission shall each appoint four members to the
 committee. The executive commissioner and executive director shall
 each appoint:
 (1)  one committee member who represents the interests
 of a local juvenile probation department;
 (2)  one committee member who represents the interests
 of juvenile offenders;
 (3)  one committee member who represents the interests
 of the families of juvenile offenders; and
 (4)  one committee member who represents an
 organization that advocates on behalf of juvenile offenders, the
 families of juvenile offenders, or the victims of delinquent or
 criminal conduct.
 Sec. 201A.053.  DEVELOPMENT OF PLAN; SUBMISSION TO
 DEPARTMENT FOR ADOPTION. (a) Not later than June 1, 2010, the
 committee shall:
 (1)  develop a comprehensive juvenile justice
 improvement plan for fiscal years 2011-2015; and
 (2)  deliver a copy of the plan to and accept comments
 and review of the plan from:
 (A) the governor;
 (B) the lieutenant governor;
 (C)  the speaker of the house of representatives;
 and
 (D)  the Criminal Justice Legislative Oversight
 Committee.
 (b)  The committee is not obligated to make changes to the
 plan as a result of receiving review and comments under Subsection
 (a)(2).
 (c)  On or after September 1, 2010, as soon as possible after
 developing the plan under Subsection (a), the committee shall
 submit the plan to the department for adoption under Section
 203.013.
 Sec. 201A.054.  PLAN COMPONENT: JUVENILE JUSTICE
 FACILITIES. (a) The comprehensive juvenile justice improvement
 plan must include a master plan for the operation of secure
 correctional facilities under Subtitle C.  The committee shall
 evaluate state and county infrastructure to determine the number of
 beds needed in secure correctional facilities.
 (b)  The master plan developed under Subsection (a), taking
 into consideration the timing and cost of relocating or closing any
 facilities operated on September 1, 2009, by the Texas Youth
 Commission, must identify:
 (1)  which facilities, if any, operated by the Texas
 Youth Commission under Subtitle C should be closed; and
 (2)  which areas of the state, if any, lack a sufficient
 number of locally operated secure or nonsecure correctional
 facilities.
 (c)  The committee shall develop the master plan to achieve
 the following goals:
 (1)  to the maximum extent possible, reserving
 facilities operated by or under contract with the state for higher
 risk juveniles;
 (2)  increasing reliance on alternatives to secure
 placement, except when secure placement is necessary to address
 adequately a juvenile offender's treatment needs or prevent the
 juvenile offender from reoffending;
 (3)  serving juveniles in settings that are as close to
 the juveniles' homes as possible;
 (4)  using facility and program designs proven to be
 most effective in rehabilitating juveniles;
 (5)  locating facilities as geographically close as
 possible to necessary workforce and other services; and
 (6)  developing county centers or consortiums that
 enhance county collaboration.
 Sec. 201A.055.  PLAN COMPONENT: DATA SHARING. The
 comprehensive juvenile justice improvement plan must include a
 specific process and procedures for:
 (1)  developing common data systems between the
 department and:
 (A) local probation departments; and
 (B)  other agencies of this state that serve
 youth, including the Department of Family and Protective Services,
 the Department of State Health Services, the Health and Human
 Services Commission, and the Texas Education Agency; and
 (2)  to the maximum extent allowed by state and federal
 law, improving access to educational and mental health records for
 juveniles who are placed on probation or committed to the custody of
 the state.
 Sec. 201A.056.  PLAN COMPONENT: PROGRAMS, SERVICES, AND
 REENTRY PLANNING. The comprehensive juvenile justice improvement
 plan must include a specific process and procedures and, if
 appropriate, a policy for:
 (1)  routinely assessing the risk and needs of
 juveniles in this state who are placed on juvenile probation or
 committed to the custody of the state;
 (2)  developing or improving validated risks and needs
 assessments and policies to assess juveniles at crucial points in
 the juvenile justice system, including:
 (A) before adjudication of a juvenile's case;
 (B)  on commitment of a juvenile to the custody of
 the state; and
 (C)  at release from a correctional facility or on
 the termination of control by the state;
 (3)  ensuring that a juvenile's minimum length of stay
 and placement in a particular facility directly address the
 identified needs of the juvenile;
 (4)  establishing timelines to identify and implement
 state and local programs for community supervision, local
 placement, and state commitment that have proven to be effective;
 (5)  providing training concerning the programs
 described by Subdivision (4) to state and local personnel;
 (6)  improving reentry into the community for juveniles
 exiting the juvenile justice system at the state or local level;
 (7)  increasing the use of the Texas Correctional
 Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental Impairments, community
 resource coordination groups, and other community resources for
 juveniles on parole or probation; and
 (8)  ensuring that youth exiting state commitment or
 extended probation placements have the appropriate personal
 identification and service referrals to ensure the delivery of
 essential services, including mental health treatment, to them
 without delay on their return to the community.
 Sec. 201A.057.  PLAN COMPONENT: PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT.
 (a) The comprehensive juvenile justice improvement plan must
 include the development of a comprehensive system to measure the
 performance of the entire juvenile justice system in this state.
 The system must include performance measures that show the costs of
 different levels of supervision and treatment to enable
 identification of the most cost-effective programs.
 (b)  The committee shall consult with the Legislative Budget
 Board and the budget, planning, and policy division of the
 governor's office in developing the comprehensive system to measure
 performance under Subsection (a).
 [Sections 201A.058-201A.100 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER C. EXPIRATION
 Sec. 201A.101.  EXPIRATION. This chapter expires December
 31, 2015.
 CHAPTER 202. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS
 Sec. 202.001.  COMPOSITION OF BOARD; PRESIDING OFFICER. (a)
 The board is composed of the following 13 members appointed by the
 governor with the advice and consent of the senate:
 (1)  four members who are juvenile court judges or
 county commissioners;
 (2) one prosecutor in juvenile court;
 (3)  one chief juvenile probation officer of a juvenile
 probation department serving a county with a small population;
 (4)  one chief juvenile probation officer of a juvenile
 probation department serving a county with a medium population;
 (5)  one chief juvenile probation officer of a juvenile
 probation department serving a county with a large population;
 (6)  one treatment professional, who may be a mental
 health treatment professional;
 (7)  one educator, as that term is defined by Section
 5.001, Education Code;
 (8)  one member who represents an organization that
 advocates on behalf of juvenile offenders or victims of delinquent
 or criminal conduct; and
 (9)  two members of the public who are not employees of
 the criminal or juvenile justice system.
 (b)  Members serve staggered six-year terms, with the terms
 of four or five members expiring on February 1 of each odd-numbered
 year.
 (c)  The governor shall designate a member of the board as
 the presiding officer of the board to serve in that capacity at the
 pleasure of the governor.
 (d)  The governor shall make appointments to the board
 without regard to the race, color, disability, sex, religion, age,
 or national origin of the appointees.
 Sec. 202.002.  RESTRICTIONS ON BOARD MEMBERSHIP AND
 DEPARTMENT EMPLOYMENT.  (a)  A person may not be a public member of
 the board if the person or the person's spouse:
 (1)  is registered, certified, or licensed by a
 regulatory agency in the field of criminal or juvenile justice;
 (2)  is employed by or participates in the management
 of a business entity or other organization regulated by or
 receiving money from the department;
 (3)  owns or controls, directly or indirectly, more
 than a 10 percent interest in a business entity or other
 organization regulated by or receiving money from the department;
 or
 (4)  uses or receives a substantial amount of tangible
 goods, services, or money from the department, other than
 compensation or reimbursement authorized by law for board
 membership, attendance, or expenses.
 (b)  A person may not be a board member and may not be a
 department employee employed in a "bona fide executive,
 administrative, or professional capacity," as that phrase is used
 for purposes of establishing an exemption to the overtime
 provisions of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (29
 U.S.C. Section 201 et seq.), if:
 (1)  the person is an officer, employee, or paid
 consultant of a Texas trade association in the field of criminal or
 juvenile justice; or
 (2)  the person's spouse is an officer, manager, or paid
 consultant of a Texas trade association in the field of criminal or
 juvenile justice.
 (c)  A person may not be a board member or act as the general
 counsel to the board or the department if the person is required to
 register as a lobbyist under Chapter 305, Government Code, because
 of the person's activities for compensation on behalf of a
 profession related to the operation of the department.
 (d)  In this section, "Texas trade association" means a
 cooperative and voluntarily joined statewide association of
 business or professional competitors in this state designed to
 assist its members and its industry or profession in dealing with
 mutual business or professional problems and in promoting their
 common interest.
 Sec. 202.003.  PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO JUDICIAL MEMBERS.
 (a)  A judge's place on the board becomes vacant when the judge
 ceases to hold a judicial office.
 (b)  A judge's service on the board is an additional duty of
 office.
 (c)  At the time of appointment to the board, a judge must be
 a judge of:
 (1) a court designated as a juvenile court; or
 (2)  a court that is one of several courts that rotate
 being the juvenile court.
 Sec. 202.004.  REMOVAL OF BOARD MEMBERS. (a)  It is a ground
 for removal from the board if a member:
 (1)  does not have at the time of taking office the
 qualifications required by Sections 202.001 and 202.003;
 (2)  does not maintain during service on the board the
 qualifications required by Sections 202.001 and 202.003;
 (3)  is ineligible for membership under Section
 202.002;
 (4)  cannot, because of illness or disability,
 discharge the member's duties for a substantial part of the term;
 or
 (5)  is absent from more than half of the regularly
 scheduled board meetings that the member is eligible to attend
 during a calendar year unless the absence is excused by majority
 vote of the board.
 (b)  The validity of an action of the board is not affected by
 the fact that the action is taken when a ground for removal of a
 board member exists.
 (c)  If the executive director has knowledge that a potential
 ground for removal exists, the executive director shall notify the
 presiding officer of the board of the potential ground. The
 presiding officer shall then notify the governor and the attorney
 general that a potential ground for removal exists. If the
 potential ground for removal involves the presiding officer, the
 executive director shall notify the next highest ranking officer of
 the board, who shall then notify the governor and the attorney
 general that a potential ground for removal exists.
 Sec. 202.005.  BOARD MEMBER RECUSAL. (a)  A chief juvenile
 probation officer who is a board member shall avoid the appearance
 of a conflict of interest by not voting or participating in any
 decision by the board that directly benefits or penalizes or
 otherwise directly impacts the juvenile probation department over
 which the chief juvenile probation officer has authority.
 (b)  The board may adopt recusal requirements in addition to
 those described by Subsection (a), including requirements that are
 more restrictive than those described by Subsection (a).
 Sec. 202.006.  TRAINING FOR BOARD MEMBERS. (a)  A person who
 is appointed to and qualifies for office as a board member may not
 vote, deliberate, or be counted as a member in attendance at a
 meeting of the board until the person completes a training program
 that complies with this section.
 (b)  The training program must provide the person with
 information regarding:
 (1)  this chapter as it relates to the creation of the
 board and the department;
 (2)  the programs, functions, rules, and budget of the
 department;
 (3)  the results of the most recent formal audit of the
 department;
 (4)  the requirements of laws relating to open
 meetings, public information, administrative procedure, and
 conflicts of interest; and
 (5)  any applicable ethics policies adopted by the
 department or the Texas Ethics Commission.
 (c)  A person appointed to the board is entitled to
 reimbursement, as provided by the General Appropriations Act, for
 travel expenses incurred in attending the training program,
 regardless of whether attendance at the program occurs before or
 after the person qualifies for office.
 Sec. 202.007.  REIMBURSEMENT. A board member is not
 entitled to compensation for service on the board but is entitled to
 reimbursement for actual and necessary expenses incurred in
 performing official duties as a board member.
 Sec. 202.008.  MEETINGS; PUBLIC PARTICIPATION.  (a)  The
 board shall hold regular quarterly meetings on dates set by the
 board and special meetings at the call of the presiding officer.
 (b)  The board shall adopt rules regulating the board's
 proceedings.
 (c)  The board shall keep a public record of the board's
 decisions at the board's general office.
 (d)  The board shall develop and implement policies that
 provide the public with a reasonable opportunity to appear before
 the board and to speak on any issue under the jurisdiction of the
 department.
 Sec. 202.009.  AUDIT; AUTHORITY OF STATE AUDITOR.  (a)  The
 department is subject to audit by the state auditor in accordance
 with Chapter 321, Government Code.
 (b)  The state auditor, on request of the office of inspector
 general, may provide information or other assistance to the office
 of inspector general that the state auditor determines is
 appropriate.  The office of inspector general may coordinate with
 the state auditor to review or schedule a plan for an investigation
 under Subchapter C, Chapter 242, or share other information.
 (c)  The state auditor may access all information maintained
 by the office of inspector general, such as vouchers, electronic
 data, and internal records, including information that is otherwise
 confidential under law.  Information obtained by the state auditor
 under this subsection is confidential and is not subject to
 disclosure under Chapter 552, Government Code.
 (d)  Any provision of this title relating to the operations
 of the office of inspector general does not:
 (1)  supersede the authority of the state auditor to
 conduct an audit under Chapter 321, Government Code; or
 (2) prohibit the state auditor from:
 (A)  conducting an audit, investigation, or other
 review; or
 (B)  having full and complete access to all
 records and other information concerning the department, including
 any witness statement or electronic data, that the state auditor
 considers necessary for the audit, investigation, or review.
 Sec. 202.010.  SUNSET PROVISION.  The Texas Juvenile
 Justice Board and the Texas Juvenile Justice Department are subject
 to Chapter 325, Government Code (Texas Sunset Act).  Unless
 continued in existence as provided by that chapter, the board and
 the department are abolished September 1, 2015.
 CHAPTER 203. GENERAL POWERS AND DUTIES OF BOARD AND DEPARTMENT
 Sec. 203.001.  CONTROL OVER DEPARTMENT; PRIORITIZATION OF
 SERVICES. (a) The board is the governing body of the department
 and is responsible for the operations of the department.
 (b)  The board shall develop and implement policies that
 clearly separate the policymaking responsibilities of the board and
 the management responsibilities of the executive director and the
 staff of the department.
 (c)  A mission of the department is to achieve the goal of
 prioritizing the use of probation services for juveniles over the
 commitment of juveniles to state facilities.  The board shall
 develop and implement policies that prioritize the provision of:
 (1)  probation services under Subtitle B over
 commitment under Subtitle C; and
 (2)  funding and assistance to juvenile probation
 departments operated in accordance with Chapter 142.
 Sec. 203.002. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR. The board shall:
 (1)  employ an executive director to administer the
 department; and
 (2)  supervise the director's administration of the
 department.
 Sec. 203.003.  ACCESSIBILITY TO PROGRAMS AND FACILITIES.
 (a) The department shall comply with federal and state laws related
 to program and facility accessibility.
 (b)  The board shall prepare and maintain a written plan that
 describes how a person who does not speak English can be provided
 reasonable access to the department's programs and services.
 Sec. 203.004.  USE OF TECHNOLOGY. The board shall implement
 a policy requiring the department to use appropriate technological
 solutions to improve the department's ability to perform its
 functions.  The policy must ensure that the public is able to
 interact with the department on the Internet.
 Sec. 203.005.  NEGOTIATED RULEMAKING; ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE
 RESOLUTION.  (a)  The board shall develop and implement a policy to
 encourage the use of:
 (1)  negotiated rulemaking procedures under Chapter
 2008, Government Code, for the adoption of department rules; and
 (2)  appropriate alternative dispute resolution
 procedures under Chapter 2009, Government Code, to assist in the
 resolution of internal and external disputes under the department's
 jurisdiction.
 (b)  The department's procedures relating to alternative
 dispute resolution must conform, to the extent possible, to any
 model guidelines issued by the State Office of Administrative
 Hearings for the use of alternative dispute resolution by state
 agencies.
 (c) The board shall designate a trained person to:
 (1)  coordinate the implementation of the policy
 adopted under Subsection (a);
 (2)  serve as a resource for any training needed to
 implement the procedures for negotiated rulemaking or alternative
 dispute resolution; and
 (3)  collect data concerning the effectiveness of those
 procedures, as implemented by the department.
 Sec. 203.006.  GIFTS AND GRANTS.  (a)  The department may
 apply for and accept gifts and grants from any public or private
 source to use in maintaining and improving services provided under
 this title.
 (b)  The department shall deposit money received under this
 section in the state treasury. The department may use the money
 only to make payments of state aid under Subtitle B and to
 administer this title.
 Sec. 203.007. MEDICAID BENEFITS. The department shall:
 (1)  identify areas in which federal Medicaid program
 benefits could be used in a manner that is cost-effective for
 juveniles in the juvenile justice system;
 (2)  develop a program to encourage application for and
 receipt of Medicaid benefits;
 (3)  provide technical assistance to counties relating
 to eligibility for Medicaid benefits; and
 (4)  monitor the extent to which counties make use of
 Medicaid benefits.
 Sec. 203.008.  STUDIES; STATISTICAL RECORDS.  (a)  The
 department may conduct or participate in studies relating to
 corrections methods and systems and to treatment and therapy
 programs at the governor's request or on the department's own
 initiative.
 (b)  The department shall continuously study the problem of
 juvenile delinquency in this state and the effectiveness of
 services provided or regulated by the department under Subtitle B
 or C and shall report the department's findings to the governor and
 the legislature before each regular legislative session.
 (c)  The department shall keep records relating to juveniles
 within the juvenile justice system that participate in research
 programs or studies.
 (d)  The records must show, for each calendar quarter and for
 each calendar year:
 (1)  the number of juveniles participating in research
 programs or studies for the appropriate reporting period;
 (2)  the type of research program or study in which each
 juvenile is participating;
 (3)  the name of the principal investigator conducting
 the research program or study; and
 (4)  the entity sponsoring the research program or
 study.
 (e)  The department shall submit a report that contains the
 information in the records kept under Subsection (d) on or before
 the 15th day after the last day of the appropriate reporting period
 to the:
 (1) governor;
 (2) lieutenant governor;
 (3) speaker of the house of representatives; and
 (4)  members of the senate and house of
 representatives.
 (f)  A report submitted under this section is public
 information under Chapter 552, Government Code.
 Sec. 203.009.  AUTHORITY TO ISSUE SUBPOENA, ADMINISTER OATH,
 RECEIVE EVIDENCE, AND GATHER INFORMATION. (a)  In this section,
 "evidence" means any record, book, paper, document, data, or other
 evidence maintained by electronic or other means.
 (b)  The department may issue a subpoena requiring the
 attendance of a witness or the production of evidence that the
 department considers necessary for the investigation of:
 (1) abuse, neglect, or exploitation allegations;
 (2) complaints;
 (3)  financial and programmatic audits of juvenile
 probation programs, services, and facilities, including juvenile
 justice alternative education programs; or
 (4)  any other matter under the authority of the
 department, including a determination of treatment under Section
 244.005.
 (c)  The department may issue a subpoena under Subsection (b)
 only if the subpoena is signed by:
 (1)  the presiding officer of the board or, if the
 presiding officer is unavailable, the presiding officer's
 designee; and
 (2)  at least two other members of the board, including
 a board member who is a judge.
 (d)  Any peace officer, department investigator, other
 department official, or person authorized under Article 24.01, Code
 of Criminal Procedure, may serve the subpoena in the same manner
 that similar process in a court of record having original
 jurisdiction of criminal actions is served.
 (e)  A subpoena under this section shall be served and
 witness fees and mileage paid as in civil cases in the district
 court in the county to which the witness is called, unless the
 proceeding for which the service or payment is made is under Chapter
 2001, Government Code, in which case the service or payment shall be
 made as provided in that chapter.  Witnesses subpoenaed at the
 instance of the department shall be paid their fees and mileage by
 the department out of funds appropriated for that purpose.
 (f)  On application of the department, a court of record
 having original jurisdiction of criminal actions may compel the
 attendance of a witness, the production of material, or the giving
 of testimony before the department, by an attachment for contempt
 or in the same manner as the court may otherwise compel the
 production of evidence.
 (g)  The presiding officer or a member of the board may
 administer an oath to a witness in attendance before the department
 or before an authorized representative of the department.
 (h)  If a witness in attendance before the department or
 before an authorized representative refuses without reasonable
 cause to be examined or answer a legal or pertinent question, or to
 produce evidence when ordered by the commission, the department may
 apply to the district court for a rule or order returnable in not
 less than two or in more than five days, directing the witness to
 show cause before the judge why the witness should not be punished
 for contempt.  The department may apply to the district court of any
 county where the witness is in attendance, on proof by affidavit of
 the fact, unless the order of contempt is sought under Chapter 2001,
 Government Code, in which case the department shall apply to a
 district court of Travis County, as provided by that chapter.  On
 return of the order, the judge hearing the matter shall examine the
 witness under oath and the witness shall be given an opportunity to
 be heard.  If the judge determines that the witness has refused,
 without reasonable cause or legal excuse, to be examined or answer a
 legal or pertinent question, or to produce evidence that the
 witness was ordered to bring or produce, the judge may immediately
 find the witness in contempt of court.
 (i)  The department shall be granted access at any reasonable
 time to any evidence that is related to any matter the department or
 executive director considers necessary to administer the
 department's functions, powers, and duties.
 Sec. 203.010.  PUBLIC INTEREST INFORMATION.  The department
 shall prepare information of public interest describing the
 functions of the department and describing the procedures by which
 complaints are filed with and resolved by the department. The
 department shall make the information available to the general
 public and appropriate state agencies.
 Sec. 203.011.  DEPARTMENT COMPLAINTS. (a) The department
 shall maintain a system to promptly and efficiently act on
 complaints filed with the department. The department shall
 maintain information about parties to the complaint, the subject
 matter of the complaint, a summary of the results of the review or
 investigation of the complaint, and the disposition of the
 complaint.
 (b)  The department shall make information available
 describing its procedures for complaint investigation and
 resolution.
 (c)  The department shall periodically notify the complaint
 parties of the status of the complaint until final disposition of
 the complaint.
 Sec. 203.012.  APPEALS FROM DECISION OF EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR.
 A juvenile probation department that is aggrieved by a decision of
 the executive director may appeal the executive director's decision
 to the board.  The decision of the board is final and cannot be
 appealed.
 Sec. 203.013.  JUVENILE JUSTICE IMPROVEMENT PLAN; ANNUAL
 REPORT. (a) As soon as possible after September 1 of each year, the
 department shall review, update, and adopt the juvenile justice
 improvement plan adopted by the department in the previous fiscal
 year.
 (b)  In updating the juvenile justice improvement plan under
 Subsection (a), the department shall have the following goals:
 (1)  to the maximum extent possible, reserving
 facilities operated by or under contract with the state for higher
 risk juveniles;
 (2)  increasing reliance on alternatives to secure
 placement, except when secure placement is necessary to address
 adequately a juvenile offender's treatment needs or prevent the
 juvenile offender from reoffending;
 (3)  serving juveniles in settings that are as close to
 the juveniles' homes as possible;
 (4)  using facility and program designs proven to be
 most effective in rehabilitating juveniles;
 (5)  locating facilities as geographically as close as
 possible to necessary workforce and other services; and
 (6)  developing county centers or consortiums that
 enhance county collaboration.
 (c)  The department shall make an annual implementation
 report to the governor, the lieutenant governor, the speaker of the
 house of representatives, and the Criminal Justice Legislative
 Oversight Committee concerning:
 (1)  the department's progress in implementing the
 juvenile justice improvement plan; and
 (2)  using the comprehensive system to measure
 performance incorporated into the juvenile justice improvement
 plan, the overall performance of the juvenile justice system in
 this state.
 (d)  The department shall submit the annual implementation
 report described by Subsection (c) on the following dates for the
 following periods:
 (1)  December 2012, for the period of September 1,
 2011, through August 31, 2012;
 (2)  December 2013, for the period of September 1,
 2012, through August 31, 2013;
 (3)  December 2014, for the period of September 1,
 2013, through August 31, 2014; and
 (4)  December 2015, for the period of September 1,
 2014, through August 31, 2015.
 (e)  As soon as possible after September 1, 2010, and not
 later than December 31, 2010, the department shall receive, amend,
 if necessary, and adopt the comprehensive juvenile justice
 improvement plan developed by the juvenile justice improvement plan
 committee under Subchapter B, Chapter 201A. This subsection
 expires December 31, 2010.
 (f) This section expires December 31, 2015.
 SECTION 1.003. Title 12, Human Resources Code, as added by
 this Act, is amended by adding Subtitle B with a heading to read as
 follows:
 SUBTITLE B. PROBATION SERVICES; PROBATION FACILITIES
 SECTION 1.004. Subchapters C, D, and E, Chapter 141, Human
 Resources Code, are transferred to Subtitle B, Title 12, Human
 Resources Code, as added by this Act, redesignated as Chapters 221,
 222, and 223, respectively, and amended to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 221. ASSISTANCE TO COUNTIES AND REGULATION OF JUVENILE
 BOARDS AND JUVENILE PROBATION DEPARTMENTS
 SUBCHAPTER A.  GENERAL PROVISIONS [SUBCHAPTER C. POWERS AND DUTIES
 OF COMMISSION]
 Sec. 221.001 [141.041]. PROVISION OF PROBATION AND DETENTION
 SERVICES. (a) The department [commission] shall assist counties in
 providing probation and juvenile detention services by encouraging
 the continued operation of county and multi-county juvenile boards
 or probation offices.
 (b) If a county discontinues the provision of juvenile
 probation services, the department [commission] may directly
 provide probation or detention services in the county.
 Sec. 221.002 [141.042]. GENERAL RULES GOVERNING JUVENILE
 BOARDS, PROBATION DEPARTMENTS, PROBATION OFFICERS, PROGRAMS, AND
 FACILITIES. (a) The department [commission] shall adopt reasonable
 rules that provide:
 (1) minimum standards for personnel, staffing, case
 loads, programs, facilities, record keeping, equipment, and other
 aspects of the operation of a juvenile board that are necessary to
 provide adequate and effective probation services;
 (2) a code of ethics for probation and detention
 officers and for the enforcement of that code;
 (3) appropriate educational, preservice and
 in-service training, and certification standards for probation and
 detention officers or court-supervised community-based program
 personnel;
 (4) minimum standards for public and private juvenile
 pre-adjudication secure detention facilities, public juvenile
 post-adjudication secure correctional facilities that are operated
 under the authority of a juvenile board, and private juvenile
 post-adjudication secure correctional facilities, except those
 facilities exempt from certification by Section 42.052(g); and
 (5) minimum standards for juvenile justice
 alternative education programs created under Section 37.011,
 Education Code, in collaboration and conjunction with the Texas
 Education Agency, or its designee.
 (b) In adopting the rules, the department [commission]
 shall consider local information and evidence gathered through
 public review and comment.
 (c) The department [commission] shall operate a statewide
 registry for all public and private juvenile pre-adjudication
 secure detention facilities and all public and private juvenile
 post-adjudication secure correctional facilities [except a
 facility operated or certified by the Texas Youth Commission].
 (d)  The rules adopted under Subsection (a) apply to all
 correctional facilities that accept only juveniles who are on
 probation, regardless of whether the facility is operated by or
 under contract with a juvenile board or by a private entity
 independent from and not under contract with a juvenile board.
 (e)  A juvenile board that does not accept state aid funding
 from the department under Section 223.001 shall report to the
 department each month on a form provided by the department the same
 data as that required of counties accepting state aid funding
 regarding juvenile justice activities under the jurisdiction of the
 juvenile board. If the department makes available free software to
 a juvenile board for the automation and tracking of juveniles under
 the jurisdiction of the juvenile board, the department may require
 the monthly report to be provided in an electronic format adopted by
 rule by the department.
 Sec. 221.003.  RULES CONCERNING MENTAL HEALTH SCREENING
 INSTRUMENT; ADMISSIBILITY OF STATEMENTS.  (a)  The department by
 rule shall require juvenile [(e) Juvenile] probation departments to
 [shall] use the mental health screening instrument selected by the
 department [commission] for the initial screening of children under
 the jurisdiction of probation departments who have been formally
 referred to a juvenile probation [the] department. The department
 [commission] shall give priority to training in the use of this
 instrument in any preservice or in-service training that the
 department [commission] provides for probation officers. The rules
 adopted by the department under this subsection must allow a [A]
 clinical assessment by a licensed mental health professional to
 [may] be substituted for the mental health screening instrument
 selected by the department [commission] if the clinical assessment
 is performed in the time prescribed by the department [commission].
 Juvenile probation departments shall report data from the use of
 the screening instrument or the clinical assessment to the
 department [commission] in a format and in the time prescribed by
 the department [commission].
 (b) [(g)] Any statement made by a child and any mental
 health data obtained from the child during the administration of
 the mental health screening instrument under this section is not
 admissible against the child at any other hearing. The person
 administering the mental health screening instrument shall inform
 the child that any statement made by the child and any mental health
 data obtained from the child during the administration of the
 instrument is not admissible against the child at any other
 hearing.
 [(h)     A juvenile board that does not accept state aid funding
 from the commission under Section 141.081 shall report to the
 commission each month on a form provided by the commission the same
 data as that required of counties accepting state aid funding
 regarding juvenile justice activities under the jurisdiction of the
 board. If the commission makes available free software to the board
 for the automation and tracking of juveniles under the jurisdiction
 of the board, the commission may require the monthly report to be
 provided in an electronic format adopted by rule by the
 commission.]
 Sec. 221.004 [141.0421]. STANDARDS RELATING TO LOCAL
 PROBATION DEPARTMENTS. (a) The department [commission] shall adopt
 rules that provide:
 (1) standards for the collection and reporting of
 information about juvenile offenders by local probation
 departments;
 (2) performance measures to determine the
 effectiveness of probation services provided by local probation
 departments; and
 (3) case management standards for all probation
 services provided by local probation departments.
 (b) The department [commission] shall monitor local
 probation departments for compliance with the standards and
 measures that the department [commission] adopts.
 (c) The department [commission] shall provide technical
 assistance to local probation departments to aid compliance with
 the standards and measures that the department [commission] adopts.
 Sec. 221.005 [141.043]. TRAINING AND ASSISTANCE TO LOCAL
 AUTHORITIES. The department [commission] shall provide
 educational training and technical assistance to counties,
 juvenile boards, and probation offices to:
 (1) promote compliance with the standards required
 under this chapter; and
 (2) assist the local authorities in improving the
 operation of probation, parole, and detention services.
 Sec. 221.006 [141.0431]. VIOLENCE PREVENTION AND CONFLICT
 RESOLUTION TRAINING. The department [commission] shall:
 (1) provide training on request to juvenile probation
 departments and juvenile boards in violence prevention and conflict
 resolution programs that include discussion of domestic violence
 and child abuse issues; and
 (2) encourage the inclusion of a violence prevention
 and conflict resolution program as a condition of probation.
 Sec. 221.007 [141.044]. JUVENILE BOARD RECORDS AND REPORTS.
 Each juvenile board in the state shall:
 (1) keep the financial, programmatic, and statistical
 records the department [commission] considers necessary; and
 (2) submit periodic financial, programmatic, and
 statistical reports to the department [commission] as required by
 the department [commission] and in the format specified by the
 department [commission], including electronic submission.
 [Sec.   141.045. GIFTS AND GRANTS. (a) The commission may
 apply for and accept gifts and grants from any public or private
 source to use in maintaining and improving probation services in
 the state.
 [(b)     The commission shall deposit money received under this
 section in the state treasury. The commission may use the money only
 to make payments of state aid under this chapter and to administer
 this chapter.]
 Sec. 221.008 [141.046]. INSPECTIONS AND AUDITS. (a) The
 department [commission] may inspect and evaluate a juvenile board
 and probation department and audit the juvenile board's [its]
 financial, programmatic, and statistical records at reasonable
 times to determine compliance with the department's [commission's]
 rules.
 (b) The department [commission] may inspect any program or
 facility that accepts only juveniles who are on probation operated:
 (1) on behalf of and under the authority of the
 juvenile board by the probation department, a governmental entity,
 or private vendor; or
 (2)  by a private entity independent from and not under
 contract with or on behalf of the juvenile board.
 [Sec.   141.0461.     AUTHORITY TO ISSUE SUBPOENA, ADMINISTER
 OATH, RECEIVE EVIDENCE, AND GATHER INFORMATION. (a) In this
 section, "evidence" means any record, book, paper, document, data,
 or other evidence maintained by electronic or other means.
 [(b)     The commission may issue a subpoena requiring the
 attendance of a witness or the production of evidence that the
 commission considers necessary for the investigation of:
 [(1) abuse, neglect, or exploitation allegations;
 [(2) complaints;
 [(3)     financial and programmatic audits of juvenile
 probation programs services and facilities, including juvenile
 justice alternative education programs; or
 [(4)     any matter under the authority of the
 commission.
 [(c)     The commission may issue a subpoena under Subsection
 (b) only if the subpoena is signed by:
 [(1)     the chairman of the commission or, if the
 chairman is unavailable, the vice-chairman of the commission; and
 [(2)     at least two other members of the commission,
 including a member who is a judge.
 [(d)     Any peace officer, commission investigator, other
 commission official, or person authorized under Article 24.01, Code
 of Criminal Procedure, may serve the subpoena in the same manner
 that similar process in a court of record having original
 jurisdiction of criminal actions is served.
 [(e)     A subpoena under this section shall be served and
 witness fees and mileage paid as in civil cases in the district
 court in the county to which the witness is called, unless the
 proceeding for which the service or payment is made is under Chapter
 2001, Government Code, in which case the service or payment shall be
 made as provided in that chapter. Witnesses subpoenaed at the
 instance of the commission shall be paid their fees and mileage by
 the commission out of funds appropriated for that purpose.
 [(f)     On application of the commission, a court of record
 having original jurisdiction of criminal actions may compel the
 attendance of a witness, the production of material, or the giving
 of testimony before the commission, by an attachment for contempt
 or in the same manner as the court may otherwise compel the
 production of evidence.
 [(g)     The chairman or another member of the commission may
 administer an oath to a witness in attendance before the commission
 or before an authorized representative of the commission.
 [(h)     If a witness in attendance before the commission or
 before an authorized representative refuses without reasonable
 cause to be examined or answer a legal or pertinent question, or to
 produce evidence when ordered by the commission, the commission
 may apply to the district court for a rule or order returnable in
 not less than two or in more than five days, directing the witness
 to show cause before the judge why the witness should not be
 punished for contempt. The commission may apply to the district
 court of any county where the witness is in attendance, on proof by
 affidavit of the fact, unless the order of contempt is sought under
 Chapter 2001, Government Code, in which case the commission shall
 apply to a district court of Travis County, as provided by that
 chapter. On return of the order, the judge hearing the matter shall
 examine the witness under oath and the witness shall be given an
 opportunity to be heard. If the judge determines that the witness
 has refused, without reasonable cause or legal excuse, to be
 examined or answer a legal or pertinent question, or to produce
 evidence that the witness was ordered to bring or produce, the judge
 may immediately find the witness in contempt of court.
 [(i)     The commission shall be granted access at any
 reasonable time to any evidence that is related to any matter the
 commission or executive director considers necessary to administer
 the commission's functions, powers, and duties.]
 Sec. 221.009 [141.047]. INTERAGENCY AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
 COOPERATION. (a) To improve probation services, the department
 [commission] may cooperate and contract with:
 (1) the federal government;
 (2) governmental agencies in this state and other
 states;
 (3) political subdivisions of the state; and
 (4) private agencies.
 (b) The executive director[, the executive commissioner of
 the Texas Youth Commission,] and the commissioners of education,
 mental health and mental retardation, and human services shall meet
 in Austin at least quarterly to:
 (1) discuss mutual problems;
 (2) resolve conflicts in providing services to
 juveniles; and
 (3) make recommendations to the governor and
 legislature.
 [Sec.   141.0471.     COORDINATED STRATEGIC PLAN FOR JUVENILE
 JUSTICE SYSTEM. (a) The commission and the Texas Youth Commission
 shall biennially develop a coordinated strategic plan which shall
 guide, but not substitute for, the strategic plans developed
 individually by the agencies.
 [(b) The plan shall:
 [(1) identify short-term and long-term policy goals;
 [(2)     identify time frames and strategies for meeting
 the goals identified under Subdivision (1);
 [(3)     estimate population projections, including
 projections of population characteristics;
 [(4)     estimate short-term and long-term capacity,
 programmatic, and funding needs;
 [(5)     describe intensive service and surveillance
 parole pilot programs to be jointly developed;
 [(6)     include an evaluation of aftercare services
 emphasizing concrete outcome measures, including recidivism and
 educational progress;
 [(7)     identify objective criteria for the various
 decision points throughout the continuum of juvenile justice
 services and sanctions to guard against disparate treatment of
 minority youth; and
 [(8)     identify cross-agency outcome measures by which
 to evaluate the effectiveness of the system generally.
 [(c)     The governing board of the Texas Juvenile Probation
 Commission and the executive commissioner of the Texas Youth
 Commission shall adopt the coordinated strategic plan on or before
 December 1st of each odd-numbered year, or before the adoption of
 the agency's individual strategic plan, whichever is earlier.
 [Sec.   141.048.     STUDIES. (a)    The commission may conduct or
 participate in studies relating to corrections methods and systems
 and to treatment and therapy programs at the governor's request or
 on its own motion.
 [(b)     The commission shall continuously study the
 effectiveness of probation services and shall report its findings
 to the governor and the legislature before each regular legislative
 session.
 [Sec.   141.0486.     REPORTING CONCERNING RESEARCH PROGRAMS OR
 STUDIES. (a)    The commission shall keep records relating to
 children within the juvenile probation system that participate in
 research programs or studies.
 [(b)     The records must show, for each calendar quarter and
 for each calendar year:
 [(1)     the number of children participating in research
 programs or studies for the appropriate reporting period;
 [(2)     the type of research program or study in which
 each child is participating;
 [(3)     the name of the principal investigator conducting
 the research program or study; and
 [(4)     the entity sponsoring the research program or
 study.
 [(c)     The commission shall submit a report that contains the
 information in the records kept under Subsection (b) on or before
 the 15th day after the last day of the appropriate reporting period
 to the:
 [(1) governor;
 [(2) lieutenant governor;
 [(3) speaker of the house of representatives; and
 [(4)     members of the senate and house of
 representatives.
 [(d)     A report submitted under this section is public
 information under Chapter 552, Government Code.]
 Sec. 221.010 [141.049]. COMPLAINTS RELATING TO JUVENILE
 BOARDS. (a) The department [commission] shall keep an information
 file about each complaint filed with the department [commission]
 relating to a juvenile board funded by the department [commission].
 The department [commission] shall investigate the allegations in
 the complaint and make a determination of whether there has been a
 violation of the department's [commission's] rules relating to
 juvenile probation programs, services, or facilities.
 (b) The department shall handle and dispose of complaints
 received under this section in the manner described by Section
 203.011 [If a written complaint is filed with the commission
 relating to a juvenile board funded by the commission, the
 commission, at least quarterly and until final disposition of the
 complaint, shall notify the complainant and the juvenile board of
 the status of the complaint unless notice would jeopardize an
 undercover investigation].
 Sec. 221.011.  INVESTIGATORS. (a)  The department may
 employ and commission investigators as peace officers for the
 purpose of investigating allegations of abuse, neglect, and
 exploitation in juvenile justice programs and facilities under
 Section 261.405, Family Code.
 (b)  Peace officers employed and commissioned under
 Subsection (a) must be certified by the Commission on Law
 Enforcement Officer Standards and Education under Chapter 1701,
 Occupations Code.
 Sec. 221.012.  DATA COLLECTION. (a)  The department shall
 collect comprehensive data concerning the outcomes of local
 probation programs throughout the state.
 (b) Data collected under Subsection (a) must include:
 (1)  a description of the types of programs and
 services offered by a juvenile probation department, including a
 description of the components of each program or service offered;
 and
 (2)  the rate at which juveniles who enter or complete
 juvenile probation are later committed to the custody of the state.
 Sec. 221.013.  ANNUAL REPORT ON ABUSE, NEGLECT, AND
 EXPLOITATION. (a) On September 1 of each year or as soon as
 possible after that date, the department shall prepare and deliver
 a report to the board concerning the final outcome of any complaint
 received under Section 261.405, Family Code, that concerns the
 abuse, neglect, or exploitation of a juvenile. The report must
 include a summary of the actions performed by the department and any
 applicable juvenile board or juvenile probation department in
 resolving the complaint.
 (b)  A report prepared under Subsection (a) is public
 information under Chapter 552, Government Code, only to the extent
 authorized by that chapter.
 [Sections 221.014-221.050 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER B. CONTRACT STANDARDS AND MONITORING
 Sec. 221.051 [141.050]. CONTRACT STANDARDS. (a) In each
 contract with counties for local probation services, the department
 [commission] shall include:
 (1) clearly defined contract goals, outputs, and
 measurable outcomes that relate directly to program objectives;
 (2) clearly defined sanctions or penalties for failure
 to comply with or perform contract terms or conditions; and
 (3) clearly specified accounting, reporting, and
 auditing requirements applicable to money received under the
 contract.
 (b) The department [commission] shall require each local
 juvenile probation department:
 (1) to include the provisions of Subsection (a) in its
 contracts with private service providers that involve the use of
 state funds; and
 (2) to use data relating to the performance of private
 service providers in prior contracts as a factor in selecting
 providers to receive contracts.
 (c)  On and after September 1, 2010, the department shall
 consider the past performance of a juvenile board when contracting
 with the juvenile board for local probation services other than
 basic probation services. In addition to the contract standards
 described by Subsection (a), a contract with a juvenile board for
 probation services other than basic probation services must:
 (1)  include specific performance targets for the
 juvenile board based on the juvenile board's historic performance
 of the services; and
 (2)  require a juvenile board to report on the juvenile
 board's success in meeting the performance targets described by
 Subdivision (1).
 (d)  Not later than September 1, 2010, the Texas Juvenile
 Probation Commission by rule shall establish the specific
 performance targets described by Subsection (c)(1) and define the
 types of contracts that are considered basic probation service
 contracts to which Subsection (c) does not apply. This subsection
 expires September 1, 2010.
 Sec. 221.052 [141.051]. CONTRACT MONITORING. The
 department [commission] shall establish a formal program to monitor
 contracts under Section 221.051 [141.050] made by the department
 [commission]. The department [commission] must:
 (1) monitor compliance with financial and performance
 requirements using a risk assessment methodology; and
 (2) obtain and evaluate program cost information to
 ensure that each cost, including an administrative cost, is
 reasonable and necessary to achieve program objectives.
 [Sec. 141.052. MEDICAID BENEFITS. The commission shall:
 [(1)     identify areas in which federal Medicaid program
 benefits could be used in a manner that is cost-effective for
 children in the juvenile justice system;
 [(2)     develop a program to encourage application for
 and receipt of Medicaid benefits;
 [(3)     provide technical assistance to counties
 relating to eligibility for Medicaid benefits; and
 [(4)     monitor the extent to which counties make use of
 Medicaid benefits.
 [Sec.   141.053. ACCESSIBILITY TO PROGRAMS AND FACILITIES.
 The commission shall comply with federal and state laws relating to
 program and facility accessibility. The executive director shall
 also prepare and maintain a written plan that describes how a person
 who does not speak English can be provided reasonable access to the
 commission's programs and services.]
 Sec. 221.053 [141.054]. CONTRACTS FOR OUT-OF-STATE
 JUVENILE INMATES. (a) The only entities other than the state
 authorized to operate a correctional facility to house in this
 state juvenile inmates convicted of offenses committed against the
 laws of another state of the United States are:
 (1) a county or municipality; and
 (2) a private vendor operating a correctional facility
 under a contract with a county or municipality.
 (b) The department [commission] shall develop rules,
 procedures, and minimum standards applicable to county or private
 correctional facilities housing out-of-state juvenile inmates. A
 contract made under Subsection (a) [of this section] shall require
 the county, municipality, or private vendor to operate the facility
 in compliance with minimum standards adopted by the department
 [commission].
 [Sec.   141.055. INVESTIGATORS. (a) The commission may employ
 and commission investigators as peace officers for the purpose of
 investigating allegations of abuse, neglect, and exploitation in
 juvenile justice programs and facilities under Section 261.405,
 Family Code.
 [(b)     Peace officers employed and commissioned under
 Subsection (a) must be certified by the Commission on Law
 Enforcement Officer Standards and Education under Chapter 1701,
 Occupations Code.]
 CHAPTER 222. STANDARDS FOR AND REGULATION OF CERTAIN [SUBCHAPTER
 D. PROVISIONS RELATING TO] JUVENILE [PROBATION] OFFICERS
 SUBCHAPTER A. STANDARDS FOR AND GENERAL REGULATION OF OFFICERS
 Sec. 222.001 [141.061]. MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR PROBATION
 OFFICERS. (a) To be eligible for appointment as a probation
 officer, a person who was not employed as a probation officer before
 September 1, 1981, must:
 (1) be of good moral character;
 (2) have acquired a bachelor's degree conferred by a
 college or university accredited by an accrediting organization
 recognized by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board;
 (3) have either:
 (A) one year of graduate study in criminology,
 corrections, counseling, law, social work, psychology, sociology,
 or other field of instruction approved by the department
 [commission]; or
 (B) one year of experience in full-time case
 work, counseling, or community or group work:
 (i) in a social service, community,
 corrections, or juvenile agency that deals with offenders or
 disadvantaged persons; and
 (ii) that the department [commission]
 determines provides the kind of experience necessary to meet this
 requirement;
 (4) have satisfactorily completed the course of
 preservice training or instruction and any continuing education
 required by the department [commission];
 (5) have passed the tests or examinations required by
 the department [commission]; and
 (6) possess the level of certification required by the
 department [commission].
 (b) The department [commission] by rule may authorize the
 waiver of the requirement of a year of graduate study or full-time
 employment experience if the authority responsible for employing
 the officer establishes to the satisfaction of the department
 [commission] that, after a diligent search, the authority cannot
 locate a person meeting that requirement to fill a job opening.
 (c) The department [commission] by rule may authorize the
 temporary employment of a person who has not completed a course of
 preservice training, passed the examination, or attained the
 required level of certification, contingent on the person meeting
 those requirements within the time specified by the department
 [commission].
 (d) A person must possess the level of training, experience,
 and certification required by the department [commission] to be
 eligible for employment in a probation office in a position
 supervising other probation officers. The department [commission]
 may require several levels of certification to reflect increasing
 levels of responsibility. A department [commission] rule relating
 to levels of certification does not affect the continued employment
 of a probation officer in a supervisory position if the person holds
 that position on the date on which the rule takes effect.
 (e) The department [commission] may waive any certification
 requirement, except a fee requirement, for an applicant who has a
 valid certification from another state that has certification
 requirements that are substantially equivalent to the requirements
 in this state.
 (f) The department [commission] may waive the degree
 accreditation requirement in Subsection (a)(2) if the applicant
 possesses a foreign or other degree that the department
 [commission] determines is the substantial equivalent of a
 bachelor's degree. The department [commission] shall adopt rules
 defining the procedures to be used to request a waiver of the
 accreditation requirement in Subsection (a)(2).
 Sec. 222.002 [141.0611]. MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR DETENTION
 OFFICERS. To be eligible for appointment as a detention officer, a
 person who was not employed as a detention officer before September
 1, 2005, must:
 (1) be of good moral character;
 (2) be at least 21 years of age;
 (3) have acquired a high school diploma or its
 equivalent;
 (4) have satisfactorily completed the course of
 preservice training or instruction and any continuing education
 required by the department [commission];
 (5) have passed the tests or examinations required by
 the department [commission]; and
 (6) possess the level of certification required by the
 department [commission].
 Sec. 222.003.  MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES OF
 NONSECURE CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES. (a)  The department by rule
 shall adopt certification standards for persons who are employed in
 nonsecure correctional facilities that accept only juveniles who
 are on probation, regardless of whether the facility is operated by
 or under contract with a governmental unit or by a private entity
 independent from and not under contract with a governmental unit.
 (b)  The certification standards adopted under Subsection
 (a) must be substantially similar to the certification requirements
 for detention officers under Section 222.002.
 Sec. 222.004.  PERSONS WHO MAY NOT ACT AS CHIEF
 ADMINISTRATIVE, JUVENILE PROBATION, OR DETENTION OFFICERS. (a)  A
 peace officer, prosecuting attorney, or other person who is
 employed by or who reports directly to a law enforcement or
 prosecution official may not act as a chief administrative,
 juvenile probation, or detention officer or be made responsible for
 supervising a juvenile on probation.
 (b)  For purposes of this section, a chief administrative
 officer, regardless of title, is the person who is:
 (1)  hired or appointed by or under contract with the
 juvenile board; and
 (2)  responsible for the oversight of the operations of
 the juvenile probation department or any juvenile justice program
 operated by or under the authority of the juvenile board.
 Sec. 222.005.  PROHIBITION ON CARRYING FIREARM. (a)  A
 juvenile probation, detention, or corrections officer may not carry
 a firearm in the course of the person's official duties.
 (b)  This section does not apply to an employee of the
 department who is exclusively employed at a facility under Subtitle
 C.
 Sec. 222.006.  PROBATION OFFICER:  COUNTY EMPLOYEE. A
 juvenile probation officer whose jurisdiction covers only one
 county is considered to be an employee of that county.
 [Sections 222.007-222.050 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER B. CERTIFICATION AND EXAMINATION
 Sec. 222.051 [141.062]. NOTICE OF CERTIFICATION
 EXAMINATION RESULTS. (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b) [of
 this section], the department [commission] shall notify each person
 taking a certification examination of the results of the
 examination not later than the 30th day after the date on which the
 examination is administered.
 (b) The department [commission] shall notify a person
 taking an examination graded or reviewed by a national testing
 service of the results not later than the 14th day after the date on
 which the department [commission] receives the results from the
 testing service.
 (c) If the notice of the examination results graded or
 reviewed by a national testing service will be delayed for longer
 than 90 days after the examination date, the department
 [commission] shall notify the person of the reason for the delay
 before that 90th day.
 Sec. 222.052 [141.063]. ANALYSIS OF EXAMINATION
 PERFORMANCE. The department [commission] shall furnish a person
 who fails a certification test administered under this chapter with
 an analysis of the person's performance on the examination if the
 person requests the analysis in writing.
 Sec. 222.053 [141.064]. REVOCATION OR SUSPENSION OF
 CERTIFICATION. (a) The department [commission] may revoke or
 suspend a certification, or reprimand a certified officer:
 (1) [,] for a violation of this chapter or a department
 [commission] rule; or
 (2)  if, under Subsection (c), a panel determines that
 the continued certification of the person threatens juveniles in
 the juvenile justice system.
 (b) The department may place on probation a person whose
 certification is suspended. If the suspension is probated, the
 department may require the person to:
 (1)  report regularly to the department on matters that
 are the basis of the probation; and
 (2)  continue or review professional education until
 the person attains a degree of skill satisfactory to the department
 in those areas that are the basis of the probation.
 (c)  The executive director may convene, in person or
 telephonically, a panel of three board members to determine if a
 person's continued certification threatens juveniles in the
 juvenile justice system. If the panel determines that the person's
 continued certification threatens juveniles in the juvenile
 justice system, the person's license is temporarily suspended until
 an administrative hearing is held as soon as possible under
 Subsection (d). The executive director may convene a panel under
 this subsection only if the danger posed by the person's continued
 certification is imminent.  The panel may hold a telephonic meeting
 only if immediate action is required and convening the panel at one
 location is inconvenient for any member of the panel.
 (d) A person is entitled to a hearing before the State
 Office of Administrative Hearings [commission or a hearings officer
 appointed by the commission] if the department [commission]
 proposes to suspend or revoke the person's certification.
 (e)  A person may appeal a ruling or order issued under this
 section to a district court in the county in which the person
 resides or in Travis County. The standard of review is under the
 substantial evidence rule. [The commission shall prescribe
 procedures by which each decision to suspend or revoke is made by or
 is appealable to the commission.
 [Sec.   141.065.     PERSONS WHO MAY NOT ACT AS CHIEF
 ADMINISTRATIVE, JUVENILE PROBATION, OR DETENTION OFFICERS. (a) A
 peace officer, prosecuting attorney, or other person who is
 employed by or who reports directly to a law enforcement or
 prosecution official may not act as a chief administrative,
 juvenile probation, or detention officer or be made responsible for
 supervising a juvenile on probation.
 [(b)     For purposes of this section, a chief administrative
 officer, regardless of title, is the person who is:
 [(1)     hired or appointed by or under contract with the
 juvenile board; and
 [(2)     responsible for the oversight of the operations
 of the juvenile probation department or any juvenile justice
 program operated by or under the authority of the juvenile board.
 [Sec.   141.066. PROHIBITION ON CARRYING FIREARM. (a) A
 juvenile probation, detention, or corrections officer may not carry
 a firearm in the course of the person's official duties.
 [(b)     This section does not apply to an employee of the Texas
 Youth Commission.
 [Sec.   141.067. PROBATION OFFICER: COUNTY EMPLOYEE. A
 juvenile probation officer whose jurisdiction covers only one
 county is considered to be an employee of that county.]
 CHAPTER 223 [SUBCHAPTER E]. STATE AID
 SUBCHAPTER A. GENERAL PROVISIONS
 Sec. 223.001 [141.081]. DETERMINATION OF AMOUNT OF STATE
 AID. (a) The department [commission] shall annually allocate funds
 for financial assistance to juvenile boards to provide juvenile
 services according to current estimates of the number of juveniles
 in each county and other factors the department [commission]
 determines are appropriate.
 (b) The legislature may appropriate the amount of state aid
 necessary to supplement local funds to maintain and improve
 statewide juvenile services that comply with department
 [commission] standards.
 (c) The department [commission] may set aside a portion of
 the funds appropriated to the department [commission] for state aid
 to fund programs designed to address special needs or projects of
 local juvenile boards.
 (d)  The department by rule shall establish one or more basic
 probation services funding formulas and one or more community
 corrections funding formulas. The funding formulas established
 under this subsection must include each grant for which the Texas
 Juvenile Probation Commission, on or before September 1, 2009,
 established an allocation formula.
 Sec. 223.002 [141.082]. MAINTENANCE OF LOCAL FINANCIAL
 SUPPORT. (a) To receive the full amount of state aid funds for
 which a juvenile board may be eligible, a juvenile board must
 demonstrate to the department's [commission's] satisfaction that
 the amount of local or county funds budgeted for juvenile services
 is at least equal to the amount spent, excluding construction and
 capital outlay expenses, for those services in the 1994 county
 fiscal year. The department [commission] may waive this requirement
 only if the juvenile board demonstrates to the department
 [commission] that unusual, catastrophic, or exceptional
 circumstances existed during the relevant year to affect adversely
 the level of county funding. If the required amount of local funding
 is not budgeted and the department [commission] does not grant a
 waiver, the department [commission] shall reduce the allocation of
 state aid funds to the juvenile board by the amount equal to the
 amount that the county funding is below the required funding.
 (b) For purposes of Subsection (a), the [The] amount spent
 on juvenile detention and correctional facilities is included in
 determining the amount of local or county funds. The amount spent
 for construction or renovation is not included.
 (c) The department [commission] must be satisfied at the end
 of each county fiscal year that the juvenile board actually spent
 local or county funds for juvenile services in the amount
 demonstrated to the department [commission] at the beginning of the
 fiscal year.
 (d) The department [commission] may require a rebate of
 state aid, or [may] withhold state aid to which the juvenile board
 would otherwise be entitled, as necessary to satisfy the
 requirement that a juvenile board spend funds as demonstrated.
 Sec. 223.003 [141.083]. SPECIAL RULES FOR MULTI-COUNTY
 JURISDICTIONS. If necessary, the department [commission] by rule
 may provide for:
 (1) the payment of compensation, insurance,
 retirement, fringe benefits, and related matters to a juvenile
 probation officer whose jurisdiction covers more than one county;
 (2) the centralization of administrative
 responsibility associated with the state aid program in a county
 included in a multi-county jurisdiction; and
 (3) the application of Section 223.001 [141.081 of
 this code] to a multi-county jurisdiction.
 Sec. 223.004 [141.084]. PAYMENT OF STATE AID. (a) When the
 department [commission] determines that a juvenile board complies
 with the department's [commission's] standards, the department
 [commission] shall submit to the comptroller a voucher for payment
 to a juvenile board of the amount of state aid to which the board is
 entitled.
 (b) The juvenile board's fiscal officer shall deposit all
 state aid received under this chapter in a special fund. The
 juvenile board may use the funds solely to provide juvenile
 probation services.
 (c) A juvenile board receiving state aid under this chapter
 is subject to audit by:
 (1) the Legislative Budget Board;
 (2) [,] the governor's budget, policy, and planning
 office;
 (3) [,] the state auditor; [,] and
 (4) the comptroller.
 (d) A juvenile board receiving state aid under this chapter
 shall submit reports as required by the department [commission].
 Sec. 223.005 [141.085]. REFUSAL, REDUCTION, OR SUSPENSION
 OF STATE AID. (a) The department [commission] may refuse, reduce,
 or suspend payment of state aid to:
 (1) a juvenile board that fails to comply with the
 department's [commission's] rules or fails to maintain local
 financial support; or
 (2) a county that fails to comply with the minimum
 standards provided under Section 221.002(a)(4) [141.042(a)(4)].
 (b) The department [commission] shall provide for notice
 and a hearing in a case in which the department [it] refuses,
 reduces, or suspends state aid.
 Sec. 223.006 [141.086]. FUNDING AND CONSTRUCTION OF
 POST-ADJUDICATION FACILITIES. (a) The department [commission] may
 provide state aid to a county to acquire, construct, and equip
 post-adjudication residential or day-treatment centers from money
 appropriated for those purposes. The facilities may be used for
 children who are placed on probation by a juvenile court under
 Section 54.04, Family Code, as an alternative to commitment to the
 facilities of the department [Texas Youth Commission].
 (b) State funds provided to counties under Subsection (a)
 must be matched by local funds equal to at least one-fourth of the
 state funds.
 (c) From money appropriated for construction of the
 facilities described by Subsection (a), the department
 [commission] shall contract with the Texas Department of Criminal
 Justice for construction management services, including:
 (1) evaluation of project plans and specifications;
 and
 (2) review and comment on the selection of architects
 and engineers, change orders, and sufficiency of project
 inspection.
 (d) On completion of the review of project plans and
 specifications under Subsection (c), the Texas Department of
 Criminal Justice shall issue a comprehensive report that states in
 detail the proposed cost of the project. The department
 [commission] shall use the report in making a comparative
 evaluation of proposed projects and shall give priority to the
 projects the department [commission] finds are the most effective
 and economical.
 (e) The department [commission] may not award money for a
 capital construction project for a facility under this section
 unless the department [commission] receives from the commissioners
 court of the county intending to use the facility a written
 commitment that the commissioners court has reviewed and accepted
 the conditions of the award. If more than one county intends to use
 the facility, the department [commission] must receive from each
 county a written commitment that the county will agree with the
 other counties to an interlocal contract to operate the facility in
 accordance with the conditions of the award.
 (f) A county receiving state aid under this section shall
 adhere to department [commission] standards for the construction
 and operation of a post-adjudication secure residential facility.
 (g) For a facility constructed under this section, not more
 than 25 percent of the operating costs of the facility may be
 reimbursed by the department [commission].
 (h) It is the intent of the legislature to appropriate the
 full amount of money authorized under Subsection (g).
 (i) [The commission shall conduct an annual audit of the
 operating costs for a fiscal year of a facility constructed under
 this section for each fiscal year through fiscal year 1999. The
 commission shall submit a report on the results of the audit to the
 Legislative Budget Board and the governor not later than the 60th
 day after the last day of the fiscal year covered by the audit.
 [(j)] In this section, "operating costs" means the
 operating costs of a facility at an 80-percent occupancy rate.
 [Sections 223.007-223.050 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER B.  COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS PILOT PROGRAMS
 Sec. 223.051.  ESTABLISHMENT OF COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS PILOT
 PROGRAMS.  The department shall establish guidelines for the
 implementation of community corrections pilot programs to provide
 an array of rehabilitation services for juvenile offenders,
 including juvenile delinquency prevention services and substance
 abuse and mental health treatment services.  Instead of ordering
 commitment to the department under Section 54.04(d)(2), Family
 Code, a juvenile court of a county that has established a community
 corrections pilot program under this section may require a child to
 participate in a community corrections pilot program if the child
 was found to have engaged in delinquent conduct that:
 (1)  violates a penal law of the grade of felony under
 Title 7, Penal Code, or Chapter 481, Health and Safety Code; and
 (2)  did not involve the use of force or the threat of
 force against another person, including the use or exhibition of a
 deadly weapon.
 Sec. 223.052.  GRANTS.  (a)  A juvenile board may apply to
 the department for a grant to implement a community corrections
 pilot program in the county.
 (b) The department shall adopt rules that:
 (1)  govern the administration and operation of a
 community corrections pilot program by a juvenile board; and
 (2)  establish a competitive process through which
 juvenile boards may apply to the department for a grant under this
 section.
 (c) The rules adopted under Subsection (b)(1) must:
 (1)  require a juvenile board that applies for a grant
 under this section to detail the manner in which the juvenile board
 intends to use any grant money the county receives;
 (2)  establish conditions that a county must meet in
 order to receive a grant under this section, including conditions
 related to:
 (A)  reduced commitment targets for the county
 that the juvenile board serves;
 (B)  specific performance measures by which a
 community corrections pilot program will be evaluated;
 (C) restrictions on the use of grant money; and
 (D)  any other standard condition the department
 requires; and
 (3)  require a juvenile board that receives a grant
 under this section and chooses to use the grant to contract for
 services to be provided under the community corrections pilot
 program to use a contracting process that is open to nonprofit,
 for-profit, and faith-based organizations that:
 (A)  demonstrate experience in effectively
 implementing juvenile delinquency prevention and juvenile
 treatment programs;
 (B)  demonstrate the ability to quantify the
 effectiveness of the programs; and
 (C)  provide innovative or specialized juvenile
 justice or family programs.
 Sec. 223.053.  FUNDING TO JUVENILE BOARDS.  (a) The
 department by rule shall establish a funding formula for juvenile
 boards implementing a community corrections pilot program. The
 formula must take into account:
 (1)  the average daily cost to the state of committing a
 juvenile to a facility operated by the department under Subtitle C;
 (2)  the average length of stay for a juvenile
 committed to a facility operated by the department under Subtitle
 C; and
 (3)  the projected yearly number of commitments for
 each county the juvenile board receiving the grant serves.
 (b)  The funding formula established under Subsection (a)
 may take into account any factor not described by Subsection (a)
 that the department determines is relevant, including the historic
 average annual number of referrals for a county and the population
 of a county.
 (c)  Except as otherwise provided by this subsection, the
 department shall distribute money for the community corrections
 pilot programs under this section in the same manner as other state
 aid is distributed under Subchapter A.  Costs associated with a
 child who is participating in the pilot program and who is committed
 to the department shall be subtracted from the juvenile board's
 pilot program allotment and transferred to an account in the
 general revenue fund for the operation of secure facilities under
 Subtitle C.  The amount of money to be subtracted from a juvenile
 board's allotment is computed on the average daily cost of
 committing a juvenile to a facility operated by the department
 under Subtitle C as provided by Subsection (a)(1).
 Sec. 223.054.  JUVENILE BOARD OBLIGATIONS.  A juvenile board
 that receives a grant under this subchapter:
 (1)  may not use these funds to supplant existing
 expenditures associated with programs, services, and residential
 placement of youth in the local juvenile probation departments;
 (2)  shall comply with all applicable department rules;
 and
 (3)  shall report on the use and evaluate the
 effectiveness of the program.
 Sec. 223.055.  RESERVE ACCOUNT. (a)  The department shall
 establish a reserve account through which a juvenile board
 receiving a grant under this subchapter may receive additional
 state aid if:
 (1)  the juvenile board encounters unforeseen
 circumstances that cause the board to exhaust completely the grant
 received under this subchapter; or
 (2)  other programs operated by the juvenile board are
 jeopardized by the juvenile board's lack of funding for the
 community corrections pilot program.
 (b)  The department shall adopt rules governing the use of
 the reserve account established under this section.
 Sec. 223.056.  REPORTS.  (a)  A juvenile board that receives
 a grant under this subchapter shall annually, and at the request of
 the executive director, report to the department concerning the
 implementation, cost-effectiveness, and success rate of a
 community corrections pilot program implemented under this
 subchapter.
 (b)  The department shall, not later than January 1 of each
 odd-numbered year, submit a report concerning the implementation,
 cost-effectiveness, and success rates of community corrections
 pilot programs implemented by juvenile boards under this subchapter
 to:
 (1) the governor;
 (2) the lieutenant governor;
 (3) the speaker of the house of representatives; and
 (4)  the standing committees in the senate and the
 house of representatives that have primary jurisdiction over the
 department.
 (c)  The report submitted under Subsection (b) must contain
 recommendations as to whether any of the community corrections
 pilot programs implemented by juvenile boards under this subchapter
 should be implemented on a statewide basis.
 Sec. 223.057.  TEMPORARY PROVISIONS. (a)  Notwithstanding
 Section 201.001(a-1), in this subchapter, "department" means the
 Texas Juvenile Probation Commission and the Texas Youth Commission.
 (b)  Not later than September 1, 2010, the Texas Juvenile
 Probation Commission and the Texas Youth Commission jointly shall:
 (1)  establish the guidelines described by Section
 223.051;
 (2)  adopt the rules required under Sections 223.052(b)
 and (c); and
 (3)  establish the funding formula described by Section
 223.053.
 (c)  The Texas Juvenile Justice Department shall begin
 awarding grants under this subchapter as soon as practicable on or
 after September 1, 2010.
 (d) This section expires September 1, 2010.
 SECTION 1.005. Title 12, Human Resources Code, as added by
 this Act, is amended by adding Subtitle C with a heading to read as
 follows:
 SUBTITLE C. SECURE FACILITIES
 SECTION 1.006. Subchapter G, Chapter 61, Human Resources
 Code, is transferred to Subtitle C, Title 12, Human Resources Code,
 as added by this Act, redesignated as Chapter 241, and amended to
 read as follows:
 CHAPTER 241. GENERAL [SUBCHAPTER G. MISCELLANEOUS] PROVISIONS
 Sec. 241.001 [61.091]. COOPERATION OF OTHER AGENCIES. To
 effectuate the purpose of this subtitle [chapter] and to make
 maximum use of existing facilities and personnel, all departments
 and agencies of the state and all officers and employees of the
 state, when requested by the department [commission], shall
 cooperate with the department [it] in all activities consistent
 with their proper functions.
 [Sec.     61.0911. COORDINATED STRATEGIC PLAN. The Texas
 Youth Commission shall biennially develop with the Texas Juvenile
 Probation Commission a coordinated strategic plan as required by
 Section 141.0471.]
 Sec. 241.002 [61.092]. NO FORFEITURE OF CERTAIN CIVIL
 RIGHTS. Commitment of a child to the custody of the department
 [commission] does not disqualify the child in any future
 examination, appointment, or application for public service under
 the government of the state or of any political subdivision of the
 state.
 [Sec.   61.093.     ESCAPE AND APPREHENSION. (a) If a child who
 has been committed to the commission and placed by it in any
 institution or facility has escaped or has been released under
 supervision and broken the conditions of release:
 [(1)     a sheriff, deputy sheriff, constable, or police
 officer may, without a warrant, arrest the child; or
 [(2)     a commission employee designated by the executive
 commissioner may, without a warrant or other order, take the child
 into the custody of the commission.
 [(b)     A child who is arrested or taken into custody under
 Subsection (a) may be detained in any suitable place, including an
 adult jail facility if the person is 17 years of age or older, until
 the child is returned to the custody of the commission or
 transported to a commission facility.
 [(c)     Notwithstanding Section 58.005, Family Code, the
 commission may disseminate to the public the following information
 relating to a child who has escaped from custody:
 [(1)     the child's name, including other names by which
 the child is known;
 [(2)     the child's physical description, including sex,
 weight, height, race, ethnicity, eye color, hair color, scars,
 marks, and tattoos;
 [(3) a photograph of the child; and
 [(4)     if necessary to protect the welfare of the
 community, any other information that reveals dangerous
 propensities of the child or expedites the apprehension of the
 child.
 [Sec.       61.0931. APPREHENSION SPECIALISTS. (a) The
 commission may employ and commission apprehension specialists as
 peace officers for the purpose of apprehending a child under
 Section 61.093.
 [(b)     Peace officers employed and commissioned under
 Subsection (a) must be certified by the Commission on Law
 Enforcement Officer Standards and Education under Chapter 415,
 Government Code.]
 Sec. 241.003 [61.094]. YOUTH DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL FUND. The
 youth development council fund exists in the treasury as a special
 fund for the purposes provided by law.
 Sec. 241.004 [61.095]. REQUEST FOR CERTAIN RECORDS. For
 the purpose of offering a record as evidence in the punishment phase
 of a criminal proceeding, a prosecuting attorney may obtain the
 record of a defendant's adjudication that is admissible under
 Section 3(a), Article 37.07, Code of Criminal Procedure, by
 submitting a request for the record to the department [commission].
 If the department [commission] has a record to which the
 prosecuting attorney is entitled under this section, the department
 [commission] shall furnish a copy of the record to the prosecuting
 attorney. Otherwise, the department [commission] shall notify the
 prosecuting attorney that the department [commission] does not have
 a record to which the attorney is entitled under this section.
 Sec. 241.005 [61.096]. LIABILITY OF VOLUNTEERS. (a) Except
 as provided by Subsection (b), a volunteer is not liable for damages
 arising from an act or omission that results in personal injury,
 death, or property damage if the act or omission is:
 (1) in the course and scope of the volunteer's duties
 as a volunteer; and
 (2) not intentional or grossly negligent.
 (b) A volunteer is liable for personal injury, death, or
 property damage proximately caused by an act or omission related to
 the operation or use of any motor-driven equipment to the extent of
 the greater of:
 (1) the amount of financial responsibility required
 for the motor-driven equipment, if any, under Chapter 601,
 Transportation Code; or
 (2) the amount of any liability insurance coverage
 that applies to the act or omission.
 (c) In this section, "volunteer" means an individual
 rendering services for or on behalf of the department [commission]
 who does not receive compensation in excess of reimbursement for
 expenses incurred.
 Sec. 241.006 [61.097]. APPLICATION OF LAW RELATING TO FREE
 EXERCISE OF RELIGION. For purposes of Chapter 110, Civil Practice
 and Remedies Code, an ordinance, rule, order, decision, or practice
 that applies to a person in the custody of a juvenile detention
 facility or other correctional facility operated by or under a
 contract with the department [commission], a county, or a juvenile
 probation department is presumed to be in furtherance of a
 compelling governmental interest and the least restrictive means of
 furthering that interest. The presumption may be rebutted.
 Sec. 241.007 [61.098]. CERTAIN CRIMES CONCERNING THE
 DEPARTMENT [COMMISSION]. (a) In this section, "special prosecution
 unit" means the special prosecution unit established under
 Subchapter E, Chapter 41, Government Code.
 (b) As appropriate, the district attorney, criminal
 district attorney, or county attorney representing the state in
 criminal matters before the district or inferior courts of the
 county who would otherwise represent the state in the prosecution
 of an offense or delinquent conduct concerning the department
 [commission] and described by Article 104.003(a), Code of Criminal
 Procedure, may request that the special prosecution unit prosecute
 the offense or delinquent conduct.
 (c) The office of inspector general operated under
 Subchapter C, Chapter 242, shall on a quarterly basis prepare and
 deliver to the board of directors of the special prosecution unit a
 report concerning:
 (1) any alleged criminal offense or delinquent conduct
 concerning the department [commission] and described by Article
 104.003(a), Code of Criminal Procedure, that occurred during the
 preceding calendar quarter; and
 (2) the disposition of any case involving a criminal
 offense or delinquent conduct concerning the department
 [commission] and described by Article 104.003(a), Code of Criminal
 Procedure, that occurred during the preceding calendar quarter.
 (d) Notwithstanding Subsection (c), the office of inspector
 general shall immediately provide the special prosecution unit with
 a report concerning an alleged criminal offense or delinquent
 conduct concerning the department [commission] and described by
 Article 104.003(a), Code of Criminal Procedure, if the chief
 inspector general reasonably believes the offense or conduct is
 particularly serious and egregious.
 (e) The chief inspector general of the office of inspector
 general, at the direction of the board of directors of the special
 prosecution unit, shall notify the foreman of the appropriate grand
 jury, in the manner provided by Article 20.09, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, if:
 (1) the chief inspector general receives credible
 evidence of illegal or improper conduct by department [commission]
 officers, employees, or contractors that the inspector general
 reasonably believes jeopardizes the health, safety, and welfare of
 children in the custody of the department [commission];
 (2) the chief inspector general reasonably believes
 the conduct:
 (A) could constitute an offense under Article
 104.003(a), Code of Criminal Procedure; and
 (B) involves the alleged physical or sexual abuse
 of a child in the custody of a department [commission] facility or
 an investigation related to the alleged abuse; and
 (3) the chief inspector general has reason to believe
 that information concerning the conduct has not previously been
 presented to the appropriate grand jury.
 Sec. 241.008 [61.099]. DUTY TO FILE COMPLAINT WITH LAW
 ENFORCEMENT AGENCY. If the executive director [commissioner] has
 reasonable cause to believe that a child in the custody of the
 department [commission] is the victim of a crime committed at a
 department [commission] facility operated under this subtitle, the
 executive director [commissioner] shall immediately file a
 complaint with the appropriate law enforcement agency.
 SECTION 1.007. Subchapters C, D, E, and F, Chapter 61, Human
 Resources Code, are transferred to Subtitle C, Title 12, Human
 Resources Code, as added by this Act, redesignated as Chapters 242,
 243, 244, and 245, respectively, and amended to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 242. OPERATION OF SECURE FACILITIES
 SUBCHAPTER A.  GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS [SUBCHAPTER C.
 POWERS AND DUTIES]
 Sec. 242.001.  ACCREDITATION BY AMERICAN CORRECTIONAL
 ASSOCIATION.  The department shall adopt and implement a plan for
 each correctional facility operated by or under contract with the
 department under this subtitle to be accredited by the American
 Correctional Association.
 Sec. 242.002.  STUDY OF TREATMENT METHODS; STATISTICAL
 RECORDS.  (a)  The department shall conduct continuing inquiry
 into the effectiveness of the treatment methods the department
 employs in the reformation of children. To this end, the department
 shall maintain a record of arrests and commitments of its wards
 subsequent to their discharge from the jurisdiction of the
 department and shall tabulate, analyze, and publish biennially the
 data for use in evaluating the relative merits of treatment
 methods.
 (b)  The department shall cooperate with courts and private
 and public agencies in the collection of statistics and information
 regarding juvenile delinquency, arrests made, complaints,
 informations, and petitions filed, and the dispositions made of
 them, and other information useful in determining the amount and
 causes of juvenile delinquency in this state.
 [Sec.   61.031.     CONTINUING STUDY.    The commission shall carry
 on a continuing study of the problem of juvenile delinquency in this
 state and shall seek to focus public attention on special solutions
 to this problem.]
 Sec. 242.003 [61.0315]. EVALUATION OF TREATMENT PROGRAMS;
 AVAILABILITY. (a) The department [commission] shall annually
 review the effectiveness of the department's [commission's]
 programs for the rehabilitation and reestablishment in society of
 children committed to the department [commission], including
 programs for sex offenders, capital offenders, children who are
 chemically dependent, emotionally disturbed children, and females.
 (b) On or before December 31 of each year, the department
 [commission] shall make a report on the effectiveness of the
 programs to the Legislative Budget Board.
 (c) The department [commission] shall offer or make
 available programs described by Subsection (a) in an adequate
 manner so that a child in the custody of the department [commission]
 receives appropriate rehabilitation services recommended for the
 child by the court committing the child to the department
 [commission].
 (d) If the department [commission] is unable to offer or
 make available programs described by Subsection (a) in the manner
 provided by Subsection (c), the department [commission] shall, not
 later than January 10 of each odd-numbered year, provide the
 standing committees of the senate and house of representatives with
 primary jurisdiction over matters concerning correctional
 facilities with a report explaining:
 (1) which programs are not offered or are unavailable;
 and
 (2) the reason the programs are not offered or are
 unavailable.
 (e) The department [commission] shall periodically review,
 document, and compare the accessibility and funding of treatment
 programs provided to female children committed to the department
 [commission] to the accessibility and funding of treatment provided
 to male children committed to the department [commission].
 [Sec.   61.032.     ADMINISTRATION OF INSTITUTIONS.    The
 commission shall administer the training, diagnostic treatment,
 and supervisory facilities and services of the state for children
 committed to the commission and shall manage and direct all
 institutions and training school facilities under the authority of
 the commission.]
 Sec. 242.004 [61.033]. ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT. The
 department [commission] shall prepare annually a complete and
 detailed written report accounting for all funds received and
 disbursed by the department under this subtitle [commission] during
 the preceding fiscal year. The annual report must meet the
 reporting requirements applicable to financial reporting provided
 in the General Appropriations Act.
 Sec. 242.005 [61.0331]. INTERNAL AUDIT; REPORT. (a) The
 department [commission] shall regularly conduct internal audits of
 the department [commission], including audits of:
 (1) correctional facilities operated by and under
 contract with the department under this subtitle [commission]; and
 (2) medical services provided to children in the
 custody of the department [commission].
 (b) The department [commission] shall on a quarterly basis
 report the results of the audits to:
 (1) the committees of the senate and house of
 representatives with primary jurisdiction over matters concerning
 correctional facilities; and
 (2) the state auditor.
 Sec. 242.006 [61.034]. POLICIES AND RULES. (a) The
 executive director [commissioner] is responsible for the adoption
 of all policies and shall make rules appropriate to the proper
 accomplishment of the department's [commission's] functions.
 (b) The executive director [commissioner] shall adopt rules
 for the government of the schools, facilities, and programs under
 the department's [commission's] authority under this subtitle and
 shall see that the schools, facilities, and programs are conducted
 according to law and to the executive director's [commissioner's]
 rules.
 (c) The purpose of the rules and of all education, work,
 training, discipline, and recreation adopted under this section[,]
 and of all other activities in the schools, facilities, and
 programs is to restore and increase the self-respect and
 self-reliance of the children [youth] under the authority of the
 department [commission] and to qualify those children [them] for
 good citizenship and honorable employment.
 Sec. 242.007 [61.0345.     MISSION STATEMENT.    The commission
 shall develop and adopt a statement regarding the role and mission
 of the commission.
 [Sec. 61.035]. EMPLOYEES. (a) Within the limits specified
 by legislative appropriation, the department [commission] may
 employ and compensate personnel necessary to carry out the
 department's [its] duties.
 (b) Except as otherwise provided by this subchapter
 [chapter], an employee of the department [commission] is employed
 on an at-will basis.
 (c) The department [commission] shall establish procedures
 and practices governing:
 (1) employment-related grievances submitted by
 department [commission] employees; and
 (2) disciplinary actions within the department
 [commission], including a procedure allowing a department
 [commission] employee to elect to participate in an independent
 dismissal mediation if the employee is recommended for dismissal.
 Sec. 242.008 [61.0351]. PROFESSIONAL INFORMATION FOR
 ADVISORY BOARD MEMBERS AND EMPLOYEES. The executive director
 [commissioner] shall provide to members of any applicable [the]
 advisory board and to department [commission] employees, as often
 as is necessary, information regarding qualifications [their
 qualification] for office or employment under this chapter and
 [their] responsibilities under applicable laws relating to
 standards of conduct for state officers or employees.
 [Sec.   61.0352.     DIVISION OF RESPONSIBILITY.    The executive
 commissioner shall develop and implement policies that clearly
 separate the policymaking responsibilities of the executive
 commissioner and the management responsibilities of the staff of
 the commission.]
 Sec. 242.009 [61.0353]. INTRA-AGENCY CAREER LADDER
 PROGRAM. The program shall require intra-agency posting of all
 positions concurrently with any public postings.
 Sec. 242.010 [61.0354]. JOB PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS. The
 executive director [commissioner] shall develop a system of annual
 performance evaluations that are based on documented employee
 performance. All merit pay for department [commission] employees
 must be based on the system established under this section.
 Sec. 242.011 [61.0355]. EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
 POLICY STATEMENT. (a) The executive director [commissioner] shall
 prepare and maintain a written policy statement to assure
 implementation of a program of equal employment opportunity under
 which all personnel transactions are made without regard to race,
 color, disability, sex, religion, age, or national origin. The
 policy statement shall include:
 (1) personnel policies, including policies relating
 to recruitment, evaluation, selection, appointment, training, and
 promotion of personnel that are in compliance with requirements of
 Chapter 21, Labor Code;
 (2) a comprehensive analysis of the department's
 [commission's] work force that meets federal or state laws, rules,
 and regulations and instructions promulgated directly from those
 laws, rules, and regulations;
 (3) procedures by which a determination can be made
 about the extent of underuse in the department's [commission's]
 work force of all persons of whom federal or state laws, rules, and
 regulations and instructions promulgated directly from those laws,
 rules, and regulations encourage a more equitable balance; and
 (4) reasonable methods to appropriately address those
 areas of underuse.
 (b) A policy statement prepared under Subsection (a) must
 cover an annual period, be updated annually, be reviewed by the
 Texas Workforce Commission [on Human Rights] for compliance with
 Subsection (a)(1), and be filed with the governor's office.
 (c) The governor's office shall deliver a biennial report to
 the legislature based on the information received under Subsection
 (b). The report may be made separately or as a part of other
 biennial reports made to the legislature.
 Sec. 242.012 [61.0356]. JUVENILE CORRECTIONAL OFFICERS;
 STAFFING. (a) In this section, "juvenile correctional officer"
 means a department [an] employee whose primary duties include [duty
 includes] the custodial supervision of children in the custody of
 the department [commission].
 (b) The department [commission] shall provide each juvenile
 correctional officer employed by the department [commission] with
 at least 300 hours of training, which must include on-the-job
 training, before the officer independently commences the officer's
 duties at the facility. The training must provide the officer with
 information and instruction related to the officer's duties,
 including information and instruction concerning:
 (1) the juvenile justice system of this state,
 including the juvenile correctional facility system;
 (2) security procedures;
 (3) the supervision of children committed to the
 department [commission];
 (4) signs of suicide risks and suicide precautions;
 (5) signs and symptoms of the abuse, assault, neglect,
 and exploitation of a child, including sexual abuse and sexual
 assault, and the manner in which to report the abuse, assault,
 neglect, or exploitation of a child;
 (6) the neurological, physical, and psychological
 development of adolescents;
 (7) department [commission] rules and regulations,
 including rules, regulations, and tactics concerning the use of
 force;
 (8) appropriate restraint techniques;
 (9) the Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003 (42 U.S.C.
 Section 15601, et seq.);
 (10) the rights and responsibilities of children in
 the custody of the department [commission];
 (11) interpersonal relationship skills;
 (12) the social and cultural lifestyles of children in
 the custody of the department [commission];
 (13) first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation;
 (14) counseling techniques;
 (15) conflict resolution and dispute mediation,
 including de-escalation techniques;
 (16) behavior management;
 (17) mental health issues; and
 (18) employee rights, employment discrimination, and
 sexual harassment.
 (c) The department [commission] may employ part-time
 juvenile correctional officers. A part-time juvenile correctional
 officer is subject to the training requirements of this section.
 (d) In each correctional facility operated by the
 department [commission] that has a dormitory, including an open-bay
 dormitory, the department [commission] must maintain a ratio of not
 less than one juvenile correctional officer performing direct
 supervisory duties for every 12 persons committed to the facility.
 (e) The department [commission] shall consider the age of a
 juvenile correctional officer or other department [commission]
 employee who performs direct supervisory duties when determining
 the placement of the officer or employee in a department
 [commission] facility so that, to the extent practicable, an
 officer or employee is not supervising a child who is not more than
 three years younger than the officer or employee or is otherwise a
 similar age to the officer or employee.
 (f) The department [commission] shall rotate the assignment
 of each juvenile correctional officer at an interval determined by
 the department [commission] so that a juvenile correctional officer
 is not assigned to the same station for an extended period of time.
 (g) The department [commission] shall ensure that at least
 one juvenile correctional officer is assigned to supervise in or
 near a classroom or other location in which children receive
 education services or training at the time the children are
 receiving the education services or training.
 (h) The department [commission] shall adopt rules necessary
 to administer this section.
 Sec. 242.013 [61.0357]. REQUIRED BACKGROUND AND CRIMINAL
 HISTORY CHECKS. (a) In this section, "national[:
 [(1)     "Department" means the Department of Public
 Safety.
 [(2) "National] criminal history record information"
 means criminal history record information obtained from the
 Department of Public Safety [department] under Subchapter F,
 Chapter 411, Government Code, and from the Federal Bureau of
 Investigation under Section 411.087, Government Code.
 (b) The executive director [commissioner] shall review the
 national criminal history record information, state criminal
 history record information maintained by the Department of Public
 Safety [department], and previous and current employment
 references of each person who:
 (1) is an employee, contractor, volunteer, ombudsman,
 or advocate working for the department [commission] or working in a
 department [commission] facility or a facility under contract with
 the department [commission];
 (2) provides direct delivery of services to children
 in the custody of the department [commission]; or
 (3) has access to records in department [commission]
 facilities or offices.
 (c) To enable the executive director [commissioner] to
 conduct the review, the department [commission] shall adopt rules
 requiring a person described by Subsection (b) to electronically
 provide the Department of Public Safety [department] with a
 complete set of the person's fingerprints in a form and of a quality
 acceptable to the Department of Public Safety [department] and the
 Federal Bureau of Investigation.
 (d) For each person described by Subsection (b), the
 executive director [commissioner] shall review on an annual basis
 the person's national criminal history record information.
 (e) The department [commission] shall ensure that the
 system used to check state criminal history record information
 maintained by the Department of Public Safety [department] is
 capable of providing real time arrest information.
 (f) The department [commission] by rule may require a person
 described by Subsection (b) to pay a fee related to the first
 national criminal history record information review conducted
 under this section. The amount of the fee may not exceed the
 administrative costs incurred by the department [commission] in
 conducting the initial review, including the costs of obtaining the
 person's fingerprints.
 (g) The department [commission] shall adopt rules necessary
 to administer this section.
 Sec. 242.014 [61.036]. COOPERATION WITH OTHER AGENCIES.
 (a) The department [commission] shall cooperate with all existing
 agencies and encourage the establishment of new programs, both
 local and statewide, the object of which is services to delinquent
 and predelinquent youth of this state.
 (b) The department [commission] may assist in developing,
 strengthening, and coordinating educational, welfare, health,
 recreational, and law-enforcement programs which have as their
 object the prevention of juvenile delinquency and crime.
 Sec. 242.015.  COMPLAINTS REGARDING FACILITIES OR SERVICES.
 (a)  The department shall keep a file about each written complaint
 that is filed with the department that relates to a facility
 operated or a service provided under this subtitle.
 (b)  The department shall keep a file about a complaint under
 Subsection (a), regardless of whether the person filing the
 complaint is:
 (1)  a child committed to or receiving services from
 the department;
 (2)  the parent or guardian of a child described by
 Subdivision (1); or
 (3)  a person other than a child described by
 Subdivision (1) or a parent or guardian described by Subdivision
 (2).
 (c)  The department shall handle and dispose of complaints
 received under Subsection (a) in the manner described by Section
 203.011.
 Sec. 242.016.  BIENNIAL BUDGET.  The executive director
 shall prepare a biennial budget of all funds necessary to be
 appropriated by the legislature to the department to carry out the
 purposes of this subtitle.  The budget shall be submitted and filed
 by the executive director in the form and manner and within the time
 prescribed by law.
 [Sections 242.017-242.050 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER B.  SECURE FACILITIES; SERVICES
 Sec. 242.051.  ADMINISTRATION OF INSTITUTIONS; CHARGE OF
 CHILDREN.  (a)  The department shall:
 (1)  administer the training, diagnostic treatment,
 and supervisory facilities and services of the state for children
 committed to the department; and
 (2)  manage and direct all institutions and training
 school facilities under the authority of the department.
 (b)  The department shall have general charge of and be
 responsible for the welfare, custody, and rehabilitation of the
 children in a school, facility, or program operated or funded by the
 department. The department shall seek to establish relationships
 and to organize a way of life that will meet the spiritual, moral,
 physical, emotional, intellectual, and social needs of the children
 under the department's care as those needs would be met in an
 adequate home.
 (c)  The department shall see that the buildings and premises
 are kept in good sanitary condition.
 Sec. 242.052.  BUILDINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS.  (a)  The
 department may design, construct, equip, furnish, and maintain
 buildings and improvements at facilities under the department's
 jurisdiction.
 (b)  The department may employ architects or engineers, or
 both, to prepare plans and specifications and to supervise the
 construction and improvements described by Subsection (a).
 (c)  The department shall promulgate rules relating to the
 award of contracts for the construction of buildings and
 improvements. The rules shall provide for the award of contracts
 for the construction of buildings and improvements to the qualified
 bidder making the lowest and best bid. A construction contract may
 not be awarded for a sum in excess of the amount of funds available
 for the project. The department may reject any and all bids
 submitted.
 (d)  If a project is financed wholly or partly by federal
 funds, any standards required by the enabling federal statute or
 required by the rules of the administering federal agency control
 over this section.
 (e)  The department may employ professional, technical, and
 clerical personnel to carry out the design and construction
 functions required by this section.
 Sec. 242.053 [61.037]. USE OF EXISTING INSTITUTIONS AND
 AGENCIES. (a) In carrying out the department's [its] duties, the
 department [commission] may make use of law-enforcement,
 detention, supervisory, medical, educational, correctional, and
 other facilities, institutions, and agencies in the state. This
 section does not authorize the department [commission] to assume
 control of any other agency, institution, or facility in the state,
 or to require any agency, institution, or facility to serve the
 department [commission] in a manner inconsistent with the [its]
 authority or function of the agency, institution, or facility or
 with any law or regulation governing the [its] activity of the
 agency, institution, or facility.
 (b) When funds are available for the purpose, the department
 [commission] may enter into agreements with appropriate public or
 private agencies for the separate care and treatment of persons
 subject to the control of the department [commission]. The
 department [commission] may not make use of any private institution
 or agency without its consent. The department [commission] shall
 make reasonable efforts to ensure that the expenditure of
 appropriations for the purchase of contract residential care for
 children, not including the purchase of care in foster family
 homes, be allocated to providers on a fixed monthly basis if that
 allocation [it] is cost-effective and the number, type, needs, and
 conditions of the children to be served is reasonably constant.
 (c) The department [commission] shall periodically inspect
 all public and private institutions and agencies whose facilities
 the department [it] is using. Every public and private institution
 and agency shall allow [afford to] the department [commission]
 reasonable opportunity to examine and consult with children who
 have been committed to the department [commission] and who are in
 the custody of the institution or agency.
 (d) Placement of a child in, or the release of a child by,
 any institution not operated by the department [commission] does
 not terminate the authority of the department [commission] over the
 child. No child placed in an institution or under an agency by the
 department [commission] may be released by the institution or
 agency without the approval of the department [commission].
 Sec. 242.054 [61.038]. HALFWAY HOUSE PROGRAM. (a) The
 department [commission] may not develop a halfway house to be
 operated by the department [commission] if an appropriate private
 halfway house program is contractually available and the costs
 under the contract are less than the costs would be if the
 department [commission] provided the services.
 (b) Before the department [commission] contracts for the
 development of a halfway house program, the department [commission]
 shall send prospective service providers a request for a proposal
 that identifies the program services desired, the population to be
 served, and potential locations for the program. The department
 [commission] shall select the service provider that submits the
 proposal that best meets the department's [commission's] needs
 according to standards established by the department [commission].
 If the department [commission] does not receive a proposal that
 meets its needs, the department [commission] may request funds from
 the legislature for the development of a halfway house to be
 operated by the department [commission].
 (c) This section does not apply to halfway houses operated
 by the department [commission] on September 1, 1987.
 Sec. 242.055 [61.0385]. CRISIS INTERVENTION AND
 ASSESSMENT CENTERS. The department [commission] may establish a
 children's crisis intervention and assessment center at a facility
 owned or operated by the department [commission]. The department
 [commission] may contract with another entity for the provision or
 use of services at the center.
 Sec. 242.056 [61.0386]. ADVOCACY AND SUPPORT GROUPS. (a)
 The department [commission] shall allow advocacy and support groups
 whose primary functions are to benefit children, inmates, girls and
 women, the mentally ill, or [and] victims of sexual assault to
 provide on-site information, support, and other services for
 children confined in department [commission] facilities.
 (b) The department [commission] shall adopt security and
 privacy procedures for advocacy and support groups that provide
 on-site information, support, and other services under this
 section. The security and privacy procedures may not be designed
 to deny an advocacy or support group access to children confined in
 department [commission] facilities.
 (c) The department [commission] shall adopt standards
 consistent with standards adopted by the Texas Department of
 Criminal Justice regarding the confidential correspondence of
 children confined in department [commission] facilities with
 external entities, including advocacy and support groups.
 Sec. 242.057 [61.039]. DEPARTMENT [COMMISSION] PROGRAMS.
 (a) The department [commission] shall develop and use standards
 based on performance to evaluate and compare programs operated by
 the department [commission].
 (b) When practicable and feasible, the department
 [commission] shall provide specific performance standards for a
 program serving 10 or more children through an agreement entered
 into under Section 242.053 [61.037 of this chapter]. In the
 performance standards, the department [commission] shall include
 outcome measures for evaluating the quality of services provided
 under the agreement.
 (c) For the purposes of comparison, the department
 [commission] shall use performance standards that are as consistent
 as practicable with those used to evaluate and compare programs
 operated by the department [commission], that measure the benefits
 and cost-effectiveness of the respective programs, and that measure
 the average length of stay and rate of recidivism of the children in
 the program.
 Sec. 242.058 [61.0395]. SERVICES FOR CHILDREN NOT
 COMMITTED TO THE DEPARTMENT [COMMISSION]. The department
 [commission] may provide services to a child not committed to the
 department [commission] if the department [commission] contracts
 with a local juvenile probation department, the Health and [Texas
 Department of] Human Services Commission, or the Department of
 Family and Protective [and Regulatory] Services to provide services
 to the child.
 Sec. 242.059 [61.040]. ADDITIONAL FACILITIES; PAROLE
 SUPERVISION. When funds are available, the department
 [commission] may:
 (1) establish and operate places for detention and
 diagnosis of children committed to it;
 (2) establish and operate additional treatment and
 training facilities, including forestry or parks-maintenance camps
 and ranches, necessary to classify and treat children committed to
 the department [commission] according to their needs;
 (3) establish active parole supervision to aid
 children given conditional release to find homes and employment and
 to become reestablished in the community; and
 (4) assist in establishing training facilities and
 programs owned and operated by private individuals or organizations
 which agree to provide services to children committed to the
 department [commission], including programs for children needing
 long-term residential care.
 Sec. 242.060 [61.0401]. COMPUTATION OF DAILY COSTS OF
 FACILITY. In computing the daily costs of a residential facility
 operated by the department [commission], the department
 [commission] shall use a standard method that is:
 (1) consistent with methods used by other state
 agencies; and
 (2) [that is] designed to reflect the actual cost to
 the state of operating the facility.
 Sec. 242.061 [61.041.     STUDY OF TREATMENT METHODS;
 STATISTICAL RECORDS.    (a)     The commission shall conduct continuing
 inquiry into the effectiveness of the treatment methods it employs
 in the reformation of children. To this end, the commission shall
 maintain a record of arrests and commitments of its wards
 subsequent to their discharge from the jurisdiction of the
 commission and shall tabulate, analyze, and publish biennially
 these data for use in evaluating the relative merits of treatment
 methods.
 [(b)     The commission shall cooperate with courts and private
 and public agencies in the collection of statistics and information
 regarding juvenile delinquency, arrests made, complaints,
 informations, and petitions filed, and the dispositions made of
 them, and other information useful in determining the amount and
 causes of juvenile delinquency in this state.
 [Sec. 61.042]. REFERRALS FROM FEDERAL COURT. The
 department [commission] may enter into agreements with the federal
 government to accept children from the federal court for an agreed
 compensation.
 Sec. 242.062 [61.0421.     PUBLIC INTEREST INFORMATION.    The
 commission shall prepare information of public interest describing
 the functions of the commission and describing the procedures by
 which complaints are filed with and resolved by the commission. The
 commission shall make the information available to the general
 public and appropriate state agencies.
 [Sec.     61.0422.     COMPLAINTS REGARDING SERVICES.    (a)     The
 commission shall keep a file about each written complaint filed
 with the commission by a person, other than a child receiving
 services from the commission or the child's parent or guardian,
 that the commission has authority to resolve. The commission shall
 provide to the person filing the complaint and the persons or
 entities complained about the commission's policies and procedures
 pertaining to complaint investigation and resolution. The
 commission, at least quarterly and until final disposition of the
 complaint, shall notify the person filing the complaint and the
 persons or entities complained about of the status of the complaint
 unless the notice would jeopardize an undercover investigation.
 [(b)     The commission shall keep information about each file
 required by Subsection (a). The information must include:
 [(1) the date the complaint is received;
 [(2) the name of the complainant;
 [(3) the subject matter of the complaint;
 [(4)     a record of all persons contacted in relation to
 the complaint;
 [(5)     a summary of the results of the review or
 investigation of the complaint; and
 [(6)     for complaints for which the commission took no
 action, an explanation of the reason the complaint was closed
 without action.
 [(c)     The commission shall keep information about each
 written complaint filed with the commission by a child receiving
 services from the commission or the child's parent or guardian. The
 information must include:
 [(1) the subject matter of the complaint;
 [(2)     a summary of the results of the review or
 investigation of the complaint; and
 [(3)     the period of time between the date the complaint
 is received and the date the complaint is closed.
 [Sec.   61.0423.     PUBLIC HEARINGS.    (a)    The executive
 commissioner shall develop and implement policies that provide the
 public with a reasonable opportunity to appear before the executive
 commissioner or the executive commissioner's designee and to speak
 on any issue under the jurisdiction of the commission.
 [(b)     The executive commissioner shall ensure that the
 location of public hearings held in accordance with this section is
 rotated between municipalities in which a commission facility is
 located or that are in proximity to a commission facility.
 [Sec.   61.043.     GIFTS; GRANTS.    The commission may accept
 gifts, grants, or donations of money or property from private
 sources to effectuate the purpose of this chapter. Donated funds
 shall be placed in the state treasury in a special fund called the
 Texas Youth Commission Fund and expended as other state money is
 expended, on warrants drawn by the comptroller on the order of the
 commission. At the end of each state fiscal year, any unexpended
 balance in the fund shall be carried over in the same fund.
 [Sec. 61.0431]. SPECIAL ACCOUNTS. (a) Proceeds from the
 operation of canteens and vending machines at facilities under the
 jurisdiction of the department [commission] shall be deposited to
 the credit of a special account in the General Revenue Fund called
 the canteen revolving fund. The proceeds shall be used to pay the
 actual expenses of maintaining and operating the canteens and
 vending machines.
 (b) Proceeds in excess of the amount required for the
 [those] expenses described by Subsection (a), donations for student
 activities, and proceeds from children's fundraising projects
 shall be deposited to the credit of a special account in the General
 Revenue Fund called the student benefit fund and may be used only
 to:
 (1) provide education, recreation, and entertainment
 to children committed to the department [commission]; or
 (2) reimburse children committed to the department
 [commission] for personal property lost or damaged as a result of
 negligence by the staff of the department [commission].
 (c) [(b)] Proceeds from shop projects at the facilities
 under the department's [commission's] jurisdiction shall be
 deposited to the credit of a special account in the General Revenue
 Fund called the vocational shop fund and may be used only to:
 (1) purchase and maintain parts, tools, and other
 supplies necessary for the shop projects; and
 (2) [to] compensate the students who participate in
 the projects.
 (d) [(c)] Registration fees from seminars and conferences
 conducted by the department [commission] shall be deposited to the
 credit of a special account in the General Revenue Fund called the
 conference account and may be used only to pay the costs of
 conducting seminars and conferences.
 (e) [(d)] Money in the special accounts described by this
 section is appropriated for the purposes indicated in this section
 and shall be expended on warrants drawn by the comptroller on the
 order of the department [commission].
 Sec. 242.063 [61.0432]. STUDENT TRUST FUND; CONTRABAND
 MONEY. (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b), money belonging
 to a child committed to the department [commission] in excess of the
 amount the department [commission] allows in a child's possession
 shall be deposited in a trust fund established by the facility
 operated by the department [commission] to which the child is
 assigned. The department [commission] shall adopt rules governing
 the administration of the trust fund.
 (b) Money possessed by a child committed to the department
 [commission] that is determined to be contraband money as defined
 by department [commission] rule shall be deposited in the student
 benefit fund described by Section 242.062(b) [61.0431]. The
 department [commission] shall notify each child committed to the
 department [commission] that the possession of contraband money is
 subject to confiscation by the department [commission] under this
 subsection.
 Sec. 242.064 [61.0433]. DEBIT CARD SUSPENSE ACCOUNTS. (a)
 The department [commission] may establish debit card suspense
 accounts necessary to operate magnetic debit card systems at
 facilities under the jurisdiction of the department [commission] to
 enable the students, employees, and visitors to make purchases of:
 (1) merchandise from vending machines or canteens
 within the facilities;
 (2) meals from cafeterias within the facilities; and
 (3) services that the facilities are authorized to
 provide.
 (b) Cash received from cash-to-card machines and amounts
 electronically transferred for card use from the students' trust
 fund accounts shall be deposited to debit card suspense accounts in
 local depositories and held pending card purchases.
 (c) Transfers of cash based on card use for purchases of
 merchandise or services shall be made from the debit card suspense
 accounts to the appropriate vendors and to accounts in the state
 treasury in accordance with laws governing receipt of state
 revenues.
 (d) Unused debit card balances shall be refunded to the card
 holders from the debit card suspense accounts.
 Sec. 242.065 [61.044.     BIENNIAL BUDGET.     The executive
 commissioner shall prepare a biennial budget of all funds necessary
 to be appropriated by the legislature to the commission to carry out
 the purposes of this chapter.     The budget shall be submitted and
 filed by the executive commissioner in the form and manner and
 within the time prescribed by law.
 [Sec.   61.045.     OPERATIONS OF PROGRAMS AND FACILITIES.    (a)
 The commission shall have general charge of and be responsible for
 the welfare, custody, and rehabilitation of the children in a
 school, facility, or program operated or funded by the commission.
 The commission shall seek to establish relationships and to
 organize a way of life that will meet the spiritual, moral,
 physical, emotional, intellectual, and social needs of the children
 under its care as those needs would be met in an adequate home.
 [(b)     The commission shall see that the buildings and
 premises are kept in good sanitary order.
 [Sec.   61.0451.     OFFICE OF INSPECTOR GENERAL.    (a)    The office
 of inspector general is established at the commission for the
 purpose of investigating:
 [(1)     crimes committed by commission employees,
 including parole officers employed by or under a contract with the
 commission; and
 [(2)     crimes and delinquent conduct committed at a
 facility operated by the commission or at a residential facility
 operated by another entity under a contract with the commission.
 [(b)     The office of inspector general shall prepare and
 deliver a report concerning the results of any investigation
 conducted under this section to:
 [(1) the executive commissioner;
 [(2) the advisory board;
 [(3) the governor;
 [(4) the lieutenant governor;
 [(5) the speaker of the house of representatives;
 [(6)     the standing committees of the senate and house
 of representatives with primary jurisdiction over matters
 concerning correctional facilities;
 [(7) the special prosecution unit;
 [(8) the state auditor; and
 [(9)     any other appropriate state agency responsible
 for licensing or certifying commission employees or facilities.
 [(c)     The report prepared under Subsection (b) must include a
 summary of the actions performed by the office of inspector general
 in conducting the investigation, a statement of whether the
 investigation resulted in a finding that a criminal offense or
 delinquent conduct occurred, and a description of the finding.    The
 report is public information under Chapter 552, Government Code,
 only to the extent authorized under that chapter and other law.
 [(d)     The office of inspector general may employ and
 commission inspectors general as peace officers for the purpose of
 carrying out the duties described by this section.     An inspector
 general shall have all of the powers and duties given to peace
 officers under Article 2.13, Code of Criminal Procedure.
 [(e)     Peace officers employed and commissioned under
 Subsection (d) must:
 [(1)     be certified by the Commission on Law Enforcement
 Officer Standards and Education under Chapter 1701, Occupations
 Code; and
 [(2)     complete advanced courses relating to the duties
 of peace officers employed and commissioned under Subsection (d) as
 part of any continuing education requirements for the peace
 officers.
 [(f)     The executive commissioner shall select a commissioned
 peace officer as chief inspector general.     The chief inspector
 general is subject to the requirements of this section and may only
 be discharged for cause.
 [(g)     The chief inspector general shall on a quarterly basis
 prepare and deliver a report concerning the operations of the
 office of inspector general to:
 [(1) the executive commissioner;
 [(2) the advisory board;
 [(3) the governor;
 [(4) the lieutenant governor;
 [(5) the speaker of the house of representatives;
 [(6)     the standing committees of the senate and house
 of representatives with primary jurisdiction over correctional
 facilities;
 [(7) the state auditor; and
 [(8) the comptroller.
 [(h)     A report prepared under Subsection (g) is public
 information under Chapter 552, Government Code, to the extent
 authorized under that chapter and other law, and the commission
 shall publish the report on the commission's Internet website.    A
 report must be both aggregated and disaggregated by individual
 facility and include information relating to:
 [(1)     the types of investigations conducted by the
 office of inspector general, such as whether an investigation
 concerned narcotics or an alleged incident of sexual abuse;
 [(2)     the relationship of a victim to a perpetrator, if
 applicable; and
 [(3)     the number of investigations conducted
 concerning suicides, deaths, and hospitalizations of children in
 the custody of the commission.
 [(i)     The office of inspector general shall immediately
 report to the executive commissioner, the advisory board, the
 governor's general counsel, and the state auditor any particularly
 serious or flagrant problem concerning the administration of a
 commission program or operation or any interference by the
 executive commissioner or an employee of the commission with an
 investigation conducted by the office.
 [Sec.   61.0452.     TOLL-FREE NUMBER.    (a)    The commission shall
 establish a permanent, toll-free number for the purpose of
 receiving any information concerning the abuse, neglect, or
 exploitation of children in the custody of the commission.
 [(b) The office of inspector general shall ensure that:
 [(1)     the toll-free number is prominently displayed in
 each commission facility; and
 [(2)     children in the custody of the commission and
 commission employees have confidential access to telephones for the
 purpose of calling the toll-free number.
 [Sec. 61.046]. RELIGIOUS TRAINING. The department
 [commission] shall provide for the religious and spiritual training
 of children in its custody according to the children's individual
 choices.
 Sec. 242.066 [61.0461]. EMPLOYMENT OR DESIGNATION OF
 CHAPLAIN AT CERTAIN DEPARTMENT [COMMISSION] FACILITIES. The
 department [commission] shall ensure that a chaplain is employed or
 formally designated for each department [commission] correctional
 facility that is an institution.
 Sec. 242.067 [61.047]. VIOLENCE PREVENTION AND CONFLICT
 RESOLUTION EDUCATION. The department [commission] shall provide
 education in violence prevention and conflict resolution that
 includes discussion of domestic violence and child abuse issues to
 all children in its custody.
 Sec. 242.068 [61.048.     BUILDINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS.    (a)    The
 commission may design, construct, equip, furnish, and maintain
 buildings and improvements at facilities under its jurisdiction.
 The commission may employ architects or engineers, or both, to
 prepare plans and specifications and to supervise the construction
 and improvements. The commission shall promulgate rules relating
 to the award of contracts for the construction of buildings and
 improvements. The rules shall provide for the award of contracts
 for the construction of buildings and improvements to the qualified
 bidder making the lowest and best bid. A construction contract may
 not be awarded for a sum in excess of the amount of funds available
 for the project. The commission may reject any and all bids
 submitted.
 [(b)     If a project is financed in whole or in part by federal
 funds, any standards required by the enabling federal statute or
 required by the rules of the administering federal agency control
 over this section.
 [(c)     The commission may employ professional, technical, and
 clerical personnel to carry out the design and construction
 functions required by this section.
 [Sec. 61.050]. FIRE PROTECTION ACTIVITIES. (a) The
 department [commission] may perform fire protection, fire
 prevention, and fire suppression activities at department
 [commission] facilities.
 (b) The department [commission] may prescribe circumstances
 under which, for the benefit of the public safety and welfare,
 department [commission] employees using department [commission]
 equipment may assist municipal or volunteer fire departments in the
 performance of fire protection, fire prevention, or fire
 suppression activities near department [commission] facilities.
 Sec. 242.069 [61.051]. CLIENT SERVICE CONTRACT STANDARDS.
 In each contract for the purchase of residential program-related
 client services, the department [commission] shall include:
 (1) clearly defined contract goals, outputs, and
 measurable outcomes that relate directly to program objectives;
 (2) clearly defined sanctions or penalties for failure
 to comply with or perform contract terms or conditions; and
 (3) clearly specified accounting, reporting, and
 auditing requirements applicable to money received under the
 contract.
 Sec. 242.070 [61.052]. CONTRACT MONITORING. The
 department [commission] shall establish a formal program to monitor
 residential program-related client services contracts made by the
 department [commission]. The department [commission] must:
 (1) monitor compliance with financial and performance
 requirements using a risk assessment methodology; and
 (2) obtain and evaluate program cost information to
 ensure that each cost, including an administrative cost, is
 reasonable and necessary to achieve program objectives.
 Sec. 242.071 [61.053.     MEDICAID BENEFITS.    The commission
 shall apply for benefits under the federal Medicaid program if
 application is cost effective in reducing health care costs
 incurred by the commission.
 [Sec. 61.054]. SALE OR LICENSE OF TREATMENT PROGRAMS. (a)
 The department [commission] may sell or license to an individual or
 a private or public entity the right to use a treatment program
 developed by the department [commission].
 (b) Proceeds from the sale or license of a treatment program
 shall be deposited to the credit of the fund that provided the money
 to finance the development of the treatment program.
 (c) At the end of each fiscal year, any unexpended proceeds
 from the sale or license of a treatment program shall be carried
 over to the next fiscal year to the credit of the fund that provided
 the money to finance the development of the treatment program.
 [Sections 242.072-242.100 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER C.  ABUSE OR CRIMES COMMITTED AT DEPARTMENT
 FACILITIES OR BY DEPARTMENT EMPLOYEES
 Sec. 242.101 [61.055]. ZERO-TOLERANCE POLICY. (a) The
 department [commission] shall adopt and enforce a zero-tolerance
 policy concerning the detection, prevention, and punishment of the
 sexual abuse, including consensual sexual contact, of children in
 the custody of the department [commission].
 (b) The department [commission] shall establish standards
 for reporting and collecting data on the sexual abuse of children in
 the custody of the department [commission].
 (c) The department [commission] shall establish a procedure
 for children in the custody of the department [commission] and
 department [commission] employees to report incidents of sexual
 abuse involving a child in the custody of the department
 [commission]. The procedure must designate a person employed at
 the department [commission] facility in which the abuse is alleged
 to have occurred as well as a person who is employed at the
 department's [commission's] headquarters to whom a person may
 report an incident of sexual abuse.
 (d) The department [commission] shall prominently display
 the following notice in the office of the chief administrator of
 each department [commission] facility, the employees' break room of
 each department [commission] facility, the cafeteria of each
 department [commission] facility, and at least six additional
 locations in each department [commission] facility:
 THE TEXAS LEGISLATURE HAS ADOPTED A ZERO-TOLERANCE POLICY
 REGARDING THE SEXUAL ABUSE, INCLUDING CONSENSUAL SEXUAL CONTACT, OF
 A CHILD IN THE CUSTODY OF THE DEPARTMENT [COMMISSION]. ANY SUCH
 VIOLATION MUST BE REPORTED TO __________.
 Sec. 242.102.  OFFICE OF INSPECTOR GENERAL ESTABLISHED.  The
 office of inspector general is established at the department for
 the purpose of investigating:
 (1)  crimes committed by department employees,
 including parole officers employed by or under a contract with the
 department; and
 (2)  crimes and delinquent conduct committed at a
 facility operated by the department or at a residential facility
 operated by another entity under a contract with the department.
 Sec. 242.103.  CERTAIN REPORTS REQUIRED. (a)  The office of
 inspector general shall prepare and deliver a report concerning the
 results of any investigation conducted under this subchapter to:
 (1) the executive director;
 (2) any applicable advisory board to the department;
 (3) the governor;
 (4) the lieutenant governor;
 (5) the speaker of the house of representatives;
 (6)  the standing committees of the senate and house of
 representatives with primary jurisdiction over matters concerning
 correctional facilities;
 (7) the special prosecution unit;
 (8) the state auditor; and
 (9)  any other appropriate state agency responsible for
 licensing or certifying department employees or facilities.
 (b)  The report prepared under Subsection (a) must include a
 summary of the actions performed by the office of inspector general
 in conducting the investigation, a statement of whether the
 investigation resulted in a finding that a criminal offense or
 delinquent conduct occurred, and a description of the finding.
 (c)  A report prepared under Subsection (a) is public
 information under Chapter 552, Government Code, only to the extent
 authorized under that chapter and other law.
 Sec. 242.104.  EMPLOYMENT OF PEACE OFFICERS BY OFFICE OF
 INSPECTOR GENERAL. (a)  The office of inspector general may employ
 and commission inspectors general as peace officers for the purpose
 of carrying out the duties described by this section.  An inspector
 general shall have all of the powers and duties given to peace
 officers under Article 2.13, Code of Criminal Procedure.
 (b)  Peace officers employed and commissioned under
 Subsection (a) must:
 (1)  be certified by the Department on Law Enforcement
 Officer Standards and Education under Chapter 1701, Occupations
 Code; and
 (2)  complete advanced courses relating to the duties
 of peace officers employed and commissioned under Subsection (a) as
 part of any continuing education requirements for the peace
 officers.
 Sec. 242.105.  CHIEF INSPECTOR GENERAL; SELECTION AND
 DUTIES. (a)  The executive director shall select a commissioned
 peace officer as chief inspector general.  The chief inspector
 general is subject to the requirements of Section 242.104 and may
 only be discharged for cause.
 (b)  The chief inspector general shall on a quarterly basis
 prepare and deliver a report concerning the operations of the
 office of inspector general to:
 (1) the executive director;
 (2) any applicable advisory board to the department;
 (3) the governor;
 (4) the lieutenant governor;
 (5) the speaker of the house of representatives;
 (6)  the standing committees of the senate and house of
 representatives with primary jurisdiction over correctional
 facilities;
 (7) the state auditor; and
 (8) the comptroller.
 (c)  A report prepared under Subsection (b) is public
 information under Chapter 552, Government Code, to the extent
 authorized under that chapter and other law, and the department
 shall publish the report on the department's Internet website.
 (d)  A report prepared under Subsection (b) must be both
 aggregated and disaggregated by individual facility and include
 information relating to:
 (1)  the types of investigations conducted by the
 office of inspector general, such as whether an investigation
 concerned narcotics or an alleged incident of sexual abuse;
 (2)  the relationship of a victim to a perpetrator, if
 applicable; and
 (3)  the number of investigations conducted concerning
 suicides, deaths, and hospitalizations of children in the custody
 of the department.
 (e)  The office of inspector general shall immediately
 report to the executive director, any applicable advisory board to
 the department, the governor's general counsel, and the state
 auditor any particularly serious or flagrant problem concerning the
 administration of a department program or operation or any
 interference by the executive director or an employee of the
 department with an investigation conducted by the office.
 Sec. 242.106.  TOLL-FREE NUMBER.  (a)  The department shall
 establish a permanent, toll-free number for the purpose of
 receiving any information concerning the abuse, neglect, or
 exploitation of children in the custody of the department.
 (b) The office of inspector general shall ensure that:
 (1)  the toll-free number is prominently displayed in
 each department facility; and
 (2)  children in the custody of the department and
 department employees have confidential access to telephones for the
 purpose of calling the toll-free number.
 CHAPTER 243 [SUBCHAPTER D]. ADMISSION AND COMMITMENT; ESCAPE
 SUBCHAPTER A.  ADMISSION AND COMMITMENT
 Sec. 243.001 [61.061]. PLACEMENT IN DEPARTMENT
 [COMMISSION] FACILITIES. (a) The department [commission] may not
 assign a child younger than 15 years of age to the same correctional
 facility dormitory as a person who is at least 17 years of age
 unless the department [commission] determines that the placement is
 necessary to ensure the safety of children in the custody of the
 department [commission]. This subsection does not apply to a
 dormitory that is used exclusively for short-term assessment and
 orientation purposes.
 (b) The department [commission] by rule shall adopt
 scheduling, housing, and placement procedures for the purpose of
 protecting vulnerable children in the custody of the department
 [commission]. The procedures must address the age, physical
 condition, and treatment needs of a child as well as any other
 relevant factor.
 (c) The department [commission] shall consider the
 proximity of the residence of a child's family in determining the
 appropriate department [commission] facility in which to place a
 child.
 Sec. 243.002 [61.062]. ESTABLISHMENT OF MINIMUM LENGTH OF
 STAY. (a) The department [commission] shall establish a minimum
 length of stay for each child committed to the department
 [commission] without a determinate sentence.
 (b) In establishing a minimum length of stay for a child,
 the department [commission] shall consider:
 (1) the nature of and seriousness of the conduct
 engaged in by the child; and
 (2) the danger the child poses to the community.
 Sec. 243.003 [61.064]. CONVEYANCE OF CHILD TO DEPARTMENT
 [COMMISSION]. (a) When a child is to be conveyed to a facility
 designated by the department [commission], the juvenile court shall
 assign an officer or other suitable person to accompany the child.
 The person assigned to accompany a female must be a woman.
 (b) The cost of conveying the child shall be paid by the
 county from which the child is committed, except that[. However,]
 no compensation shall be allowed other than [except] for the actual
 and necessary expenses of the child and the person accompanying the
 child.
 Sec. 243.004 [61.065]. NOTIFICATION AND DUTY TO FURNISH
 INFORMATION. (a) When a juvenile court commits a child to the
 department [commission], the court shall forward to the department
 [commission] a certified copy of the order of commitment.
 (b) The court, the probation officer, the prosecuting and
 police authorities, the school authorities, and other public
 officials shall make available to the department [commission] all
 pertinent information in their possession regarding the case.
 (c) If requested by the department [commission], the
 reports required by this section shall be made on forms furnished by
 the department [commission] or according to an outline furnished by
 the department [commission].
 Sec. 243.005 [61.0651]. INFORMATION PROVIDED BY COMMITTING
 COURT. In addition to the information provided under Section
 243.004 [61.065], a court that commits a child to the department
 [commission] shall provide the department [commission] with a copy
 of the following documents:
 (1) the petition and the adjudication and disposition
 orders for the child, including the child's thumbprint;
 (2) if the commitment is a result of revocation of
 probation, a copy of the conditions of probation and the revocation
 order;
 (3) the social history report for the child;
 (4) any psychological or psychiatric reports
 concerning the child;
 (5) the contact information sheet for the child's
 parents or guardian;
 (6) any law enforcement incident reports concerning
 the offense for which the child is committed;
 (7) any sex offender registration information
 concerning the child;
 (8) any juvenile probation department progress
 reports concerning the child;
 (9) any assessment documents concerning the child;
 (10) the computerized referral and case history for
 the child, including case disposition;
 (11) the child's birth certificate;
 (12) the child's social security number or social
 security card, if available;
 (13) the name, address, and telephone number of the
 court administrator in the committing county;
 (14) Title IV-E eligibility screening information for
 the child, if available;
 (15) the address in the committing county for
 forwarding funds collected to which the committing county is
 entitled;
 (16) any of the child's school or immunization records
 that the committing county possesses;
 (17) any victim information concerning the case for
 which the child is committed; and
 (18) any of the child's pertinent medical records that
 the committing court possesses.
 Sec. 243.006.  INFORMATION PROVIDED TO CONVICTING
 COURT.  (a)  At the request of a court that commits a child to the
 department, the department shall provide the court with periodic
 updates on the progress the child is making while committed to the
 department.
 (b)  A report provided under Subsection (a) may include any
 information the department determines to be relevant in evaluating
 the child's progress, including, as applicable, information
 concerning the child's treatment, education, and health.
 (c)  A report provided under this section may not include
 information that is protected from disclosure under state or
 federal law.
 Sec. 243.007 [61.066]. COMMITMENT RECORDS. A commitment
 to the department [commission] may not be received in evidence or
 used in any way in any proceedings in any court except in:
 (1) subsequent proceedings under Title 3 of the Family
 Code against the same child;
 (2) imposing sentence in any criminal proceedings
 against the same person; or
 (3) subsequent civil commitment proceedings under
 Chapter 841, Health and Safety Code, regarding the same person.
 [Sections 243.008-243.050 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER B.  ESCAPE AND VIOLATION OF RELEASE CONDITIONS
 Sec. 243.051.  APPREHENSION AFTER ESCAPE OR VIOLATION OF
 RELEASE CONDITIONS.  (a)  If a child who has been committed to the
 department and placed by the department in any institution or
 facility has escaped or has been released under supervision and
 broken the conditions of release:
 (1)  a sheriff, deputy sheriff, constable, or police
 officer may, without a warrant, arrest the child; or
 (2)  a department employee designated by the executive
 director may, without a warrant or other order, take the child into
 the custody of the department.
 (b)  A child who is arrested or taken into custody under
 Subsection (a) may be detained in any suitable place, including an
 adult jail facility if the person is 17 years of age or older, until
 the child is returned to the custody of the department or
 transported to a department facility.
 (c)  Notwithstanding Section 58.005, Family Code, the
 department may disseminate to the public the following information
 relating to a child who has escaped from custody:
 (1)  the child's name, including other names by which
 the child is known;
 (2)  the child's physical description, including sex,
 weight, height, race, ethnicity, eye color, hair color, scars,
 marks, and tattoos;
 (3) a photograph of the child; and
 (4)  if necessary to protect the welfare of the
 community, any other information that reveals dangerous
 propensities of the child or expedites the apprehension of the
 child.
 Sec. 243.052.  APPREHENSION SPECIALISTS.  (a)  The
 department may employ and commission apprehension specialists as
 peace officers for the purpose of apprehending a child under
 Section 243.051.
 (b)  Peace officers employed and commissioned under
 Subsection (a) must be certified by the Texas Commission on Law
 Enforcement Officer Standards and Education under Chapter 1701,
 Occupations Code.
 CHAPTER 244 [SUBCHAPTER E]. CARE AND TREATMENT OF CHILDREN
 SUBCHAPTER A. GENERAL CARE AND TREATMENT OF CHILDREN
 Sec. 244.001 [61.071]. INITIAL EXAMINATION. (a) The
 department [commission] shall examine and make a study of each
 child committed to it as soon as possible after commitment. The
 study shall be made according to rules established by the
 department [commission] and shall include:
 (1) long-term planning for the child; and
 (2) consideration of the child's medical, substance
 abuse, and treatment history, including the child's psychiatric
 history and substance abuse history.
 (b) For a child for whom a minimum length of stay is
 established under Section 243.002 [61.062] of one year or longer,
 the initial examination must include a comprehensive psychiatric
 evaluation.
 (c) The department [commission] shall administer
 comprehensive psychological assessments to a child as part of the
 child's initial examination, including assessments designed to
 identify whether a child is in need of a psychiatric
 evaluation. If the results of a child's psychological assessments
 indicate that the child is in need of a psychiatric evaluation, the
 department [commission] shall as soon as practicable conduct a
 psychiatric evaluation of the child.
 Sec. 244.002 [61.0711.     HEALTH CARE DELIVERY SYSTEM.    (a)
 In providing medical care, behavioral health care, or
 rehabilitation services, the commission shall integrate the
 provision of those services in an integrated comprehensive delivery
 system.
 [(b)     The delivery system may be used to deliver any medical,
 behavioral health, or rehabilitation services provided to a child
 in the custody of the commission, including:
 [(1) health care;
 [(2) dental care;
 [(3) behavioral health care;
 [(4) substance abuse treatment;
 [(5) nutrition;
 [(6) programming;
 [(7) case management; and
 [(8)     general rehabilitation services, including
 educational, spiritual, daily living, recreational, and security
 services.
 [Sec. 61.072]. REEXAMINATION. (a) The department
 [commission] shall periodically reexamine each child under its
 control, except those on release under supervision or in foster
 homes, for the purpose of determining whether a rehabilitation plan
 made by the department [commission] concerning the child should be
 modified or continued.
 (b) The reexamination [examination] must include a study of
 all current circumstances of a child's personal and family
 situation and an evaluation of the progress made by the child since
 the child's last examination.
 (c) The reexamination [examination] of a child may be made
 as frequently as the department [commission] considers necessary,
 but shall be made at intervals not exceeding six months.
 Sec. 244.003 [61.073]. RECORDS OF EXAMINATIONS AND
 TREATMENT. (a) The department [commission] shall keep written
 records of all examinations and conclusions based on them and of all
 orders concerning the disposition or treatment of each child
 subject to its control.
 (b) Except as provided by Section 243.051(c) [61.093(c)],
 these records and all other information concerning a child,
 including personally identifiable information, are not public and
 are available only according to the provisions of Section 58.005,
 Family Code, Section 244.051 [61.0731, Human Resources Code], and
 Chapter 61, Code of Criminal Procedure.
 Sec. 244.004 [61.0731.     INFORMATION AVAILABLE TO CHILDREN,
 PARENTS, AND OTHERS.     (a)     In the interest of achieving the purpose
 of the commission and protecting the public, the commission may
 disclose records and other information concerning a child to the
 child and the child's parent or guardian only if disclosure would
 not materially harm the treatment and rehabilitation of the child
 and would not substantially decrease the likelihood of the
 commission receiving information from the same or similar sources
 in the future. Information concerning a person who is age 18 or
 older may not be disclosed to the person's parent or guardian
 without the person's consent.
 [(b)     The commission may disclose information regarding a
 child's location and committing court to a person having a
 legitimate need for the information.
 [(c)     The commission may disclose to a peace officer or law
 enforcement agency images of children recorded by an electronic
 recording device and incident reporting and investigation
 documents containing the names of children if the information is
 relevant to the investigation of a criminal offense alleged to have
 occurred in a facility operated by or under contract with the
 commission.
 [Sec. 61.074]. FAILURE TO EXAMINE OR REEXAMINE. (a)
 Failure of the department [commission] to examine or reexamine a
 child as required by this subchapter [chapter] does not entitle the
 child to be discharged from the control of the department
 [commission], but the child may petition the committing court for
 discharge.
 (b) After due notice to the department [commission], the
 committing court shall discharge the child from the control of the
 department [commission] unless the department [commission]
 satisfies the court that further control is necessary.
 Sec. 244.005 [61.075]. DETERMINATION OF TREATMENT. When
 a child has been committed to the department [commission], the
 department [commission] may:
 (1) permit the child liberty under supervision and on
 conditions the department [it] believes conducive to acceptable
 behavior;
 (2) order the child's confinement under conditions the
 department [it] believes best designed for the child's welfare and
 the interests of the public;
 (3) order reconfinement or renewed release as often as
 conditions indicate to be desirable;
 (4) revoke or modify any order of the department
 [commission] affecting a child, except an order of final discharge,
 as often as conditions indicate; or
 (5) discharge the child from control when the
 department [it] is satisfied that discharge will best serve the
 child's welfare and the protection of the public.
 Sec. 244.006 [61.0751.     SUBPOENAS.    (a)     A hearings
 examiner appointed by the commission may issue a subpoena requiring
 the attendance of a witness or the production of any record, book,
 paper, or document the hearings examiner considers necessary for a
 determination of treatment under Section 61.075.
 [(b)     The hearings examiner may sign a subpoena and
 administer an oath.
 [(c)     A peace officer, apprehension specialist, parole
 officer, or other commission official may serve the subpoena in the
 same manner as similar process in a court of record having original
 jurisdiction of criminal actions is served.
 [(d)     A person who testifies falsely, fails to appear when
 subpoenaed, or fails or refuses to produce material under the
 subpoena is subject to the same orders and penalties to which a
 person taking those actions before a court is subject.
 [(e)     On application of the commission, a court of record
 having original jurisdiction of criminal actions may compel the
 attendance of a witness, the production of material, or the giving
 of testimony before the hearings examiner, by an attachment for
 contempt or in the same manner as the court may otherwise compel the
 production of evidence.
 [Sec. 61.076]. TYPE OF TREATMENT PERMITTED. (a) As a
 means of correcting the socially harmful tendencies of a child
 committed to the department [it], the department [commission] may:
 (1) require the child to participate in moral,
 academic, vocational, physical, and correctional training and
 activities;
 (2) require the modes of life and conduct that seem
 best adapted to fit the child for return to full liberty without
 danger to the public;
 (3) provide any medical or psychiatric treatment that
 is necessary; and
 (4) place physically fit children in
 parks-maintenance camps, forestry camps, or ranches owned by the
 state or the United States and require the performance of suitable
 conservation and maintenance work.
 (b) The dominant purpose of placing children in camps is to
 benefit and rehabilitate the children rather than to make the camps
 self-sustaining. Children placed in camps may not be exploited.
 Sec. 244.007 [61.0761]. FAMILY PROGRAMS. The department
 [commission] shall develop programs that encourage family
 involvement in the rehabilitation of the child.
 Sec. 244.008 [61.0762]. INFANT CARE AND PARENTING
 PROGRAM. (a) In this section, "child" means the child of a person
 who is committed to the department [commission].
 (b) The department [commission] may establish child care
 and parenting programs for persons committed to the department
 [commission] who are parents.
 (c) The department [commission] may permit a mother to have
 possession of her child in a residential program that has an infant
 care and parenting program or to have possession of her child in a
 department-funded [commission-funded] independent living
 residence for up to six months if:
 (1) the child's father or another relative or guardian
 of the child agrees in advance of the child's placement with the
 child's mother to assume possession of the child immediately upon
 notice by the department [commission] to do so;
 (2) the child's parents and any other person having a
 duty of support acknowledge that by permitting the mother to have
 possession of the child while the mother is confined in a
 residential facility or placed in an independent living residence,
 the department [commission] assumes no responsibility for the
 child's care beyond the responsibility of care that is ordinarily
 due the child's mother and the reasonable accommodations that are
 necessary for the mother's care of her child;
 (3) the child's parents and any other person having a
 duty of support agree to indemnify and hold the department
 [commission] harmless from any claims that may be made against the
 department [commission] for the child's support, including medical
 support; and
 (4) the department [commission] determines that the
 placement is in the best interest of both the mother and her child.
 Sec. 244.009.  HEALTH CARE DELIVERY SYSTEM.  (a)  In
 providing medical care, behavioral health care, or rehabilitation
 services, the department shall integrate the provision of those
 services in an integrated comprehensive delivery system.
 (b)  The delivery system may be used to deliver any medical,
 behavioral health, or rehabilitation services provided to a child
 in the custody of the department, including:
 (1) health care;
 (2) dental care;
 (3) behavioral health care;
 (4) substance abuse treatment;
 (5) nutrition;
 (6) programming;
 (7) case management; and
 (8)  general rehabilitation services, including
 educational, spiritual, daily living, recreational, and security
 services.
 Sec. 244.010 [61.0763.     RIGHTS OF PARENTS.     (a)     The
 commission, in consultation with advocacy and support groups such
 as those described in Section 61.0386(a), shall develop a parent's
 bill of rights for distribution to the parent or guardian of a child
 who is under 18 years of age and committed to the commission.    The
 parent's bill of rights must include:
 [(1)     a description of the commission's grievance
 policies and procedures, including contact information for the
 office of inspector general and the office of the independent
 ombudsman established under Chapter 64;
 [(2)     a list of possible incidents that require
 parental notification;
 [(3)     policies concerning visits and telephone
 conversations with a child committed to the commission;
 [(4)     a description of commission caseworker
 responsibilities;
 [(5)     a statement that the commission caseworker
 assigned to a child may assist the child's parent or guardian in
 obtaining information and services from the commission and other
 resources concerning:
 [(A)     counseling, including substance abuse and
 mental health counseling;
 [(B)     assistance programs, including financial
 and travel assistance programs for visiting a child committed to
 the commission;
 [(C) workforce preparedness programs;
 [(D) parenting programs; and
 [(E) commission seminars; and
 [(6)     information concerning the indeterminate
 sentencing structure at the commission, an explanation of reasons
 that a child's commitment at the commission could be extended, and
 an explanation of the review process under Sections 61.0815 and
 61.0816 for a child committed to the commission without a
 determinate sentence.
 [(b)     Not later than 48 hours after the time a child is
 admitted to a commission facility, the commission shall mail to the
 child's parent or guardian at the last known address of the parent
 or guardian:
 [(1) the parent's bill of rights; and
 [(2)     the contact information of the commission
 caseworker assigned to the child.
 [(c)     The commission shall on a quarterly basis provide to
 the parent, guardian, or designated advocate of a child who is in
 the custody of the commission a report concerning the progress of
 the child at the commission, including:
 [(1)     the academic and behavioral progress of the
 child; and
 [(2)     the results of any reexamination of the child
 conducted under Section 61.072.
 [(d)     The commission shall ensure that written information
 provided to a parent or guardian regarding the rights of a child in
 the custody of the commission or the rights of a child's parent or
 guardian, including the parent's bill of rights, is clear and easy
 to understand.
 [Sec.     61.0763.     REPORTING CONCERNING RESEARCH PROGRAMS OR
 STUDIES.     (a)     The commission shall keep records relating to
 children committed to it that participate in research programs or
 studies.
 [(b)     The records must show, for each calendar quarter and
 for each calendar year:
 [(1)     the number of children participating in research
 programs or studies for the appropriate reporting period;
 [(2)     the type of research program or study in which
 each child is participating;
 [(3)     the name of the principal investigator conducting
 the research program or study; and
 [(4)     the entity sponsoring the research program or
 study.
 [(c)     The commission shall submit a report that contains the
 information in the records kept under Subsection (b) on or before
 the 15th day after the last day of the appropriate reporting period
 to the:
 [(1) governor;
 [(2) lieutenant governor;
 [(3) speaker of the house of representatives; and
 [(4) members of the legislature.
 [(d)     A report submitted under this section is public
 information under Chapter 552, Government Code.
 [Sec. 61.0764]. DEPARTMENT [COMMISSION] CASEWORKERS. (a)
 The department [commission] shall assign a caseworker to a child
 committed to the department [commission]. A department
 [commission] caseworker shall:
 (1) explore family issues and needs with the parent or
 guardian of a child committed to the department [commission];
 (2) as needed, provide the parent or guardian of a
 child committed to the department [commission] with information
 concerning programs and services provided by the department
 [commission] or another resource; and
 (3) perform other duties required by the department
 [commission].
 (b) A department [commission] caseworker shall:
 (1) at least once a month, attempt to contact the
 child's parent or guardian by phone, in person while the parent or
 guardian is visiting the facility, or, if necessary, by mail;
 (2) if unsuccessful in contacting the child's parent
 or guardian under Subdivision (1), attempt at least one additional
 time each month to contact the child's parent or guardian; and
 (3) document successful as well as unsuccessful
 attempts to contact the child's parent or guardian.
 (c) To the extent practicable, a caseworker or another
 facility administrator shall attempt to communicate with a parent
 or guardian who does not speak English in the language of choice of
 the parent or guardian.
 Sec. 244.011 [61.077]. CHILDREN WITH MENTAL ILLNESS OR
 MENTAL RETARDATION. (a) The department [commission] shall accept
 a child committed to the department [commission] who is mentally
 ill or mentally retarded.
 (b) Unless a child is committed to the department
 [commission] under a determinate sentence under Section
 54.04(d)(3), 54.04(m), or 54.05(f), Family Code, the department
 [commission] shall discharge a child who is mentally ill or
 mentally retarded from its custody if:
 (1) the child has completed the minimum length of stay
 for the child's committing offense; and
 (2) the department [commission] determines that the
 child is unable to progress in the department's [commission's]
 rehabilitation programs because of the child's mental illness or
 mental retardation.
 (c) If a child who is discharged from the department
 [commission] under Subsection (b) as a result of mental illness is
 not receiving court-ordered mental health services, the child's
 discharge is effective on the earlier of:
 (1) the date the court enters an order regarding an
 application for mental health services filed under Section
 244.012(b) [61.0772(b)]; or
 (2) the 30th day after the date the application is
 filed.
 (d) If a child who is discharged from the department
 [commission] under Subsection (b) as a result of mental illness is
 receiving court-ordered mental health services, the child's
 discharge from the department [commission] is effective
 immediately. If the child is receiving mental health services
 outside the child's home county, the department [commission] shall
 notify the mental health authority located in that county of the
 discharge not later than the 30th day after the date that the
 child's discharge is effective.
 (e) If a child who is discharged from the department
 [commission] under Subsection (b) as a result of mental retardation
 is not receiving mental retardation services, the child's discharge
 is effective on the earlier of:
 (1) the date the court enters an order regarding an
 application for mental retardation services filed under Section
 244.012(c) [61.0772(c)]; or
 (2) the 30th day after the date that the application is
 filed.
 (f) If a child who is discharged from the department
 [commission] under Subsection (b) as a result of mental retardation
 is receiving mental retardation services, the child's discharge
 from the department [commission] is effective immediately.
 Sec. 244.012 [61.0772]. EXAMINATION BEFORE DISCHARGE.
 (a) The department [commission] shall establish a system that
 identifies children in the department's [commission's] custody who
 are mentally ill or mentally retarded.
 (b) Before a child who is identified as mentally ill is
 discharged from the department's [commission's] custody under
 Section 244.011(b) [61.077(b)], a department [commission]
 psychiatrist shall examine the child. The department [commission]
 shall refer a child requiring outpatient psychiatric treatment to
 the appropriate mental health authority. For a child requiring
 inpatient psychiatric treatment, the department [commission] shall
 file a sworn application for court-ordered mental health services,
 as provided in Subchapter C, Chapter 574, Health and Safety Code,
 if:
 (1) the child is not receiving court-ordered mental
 health services; and
 (2) the psychiatrist who examined the child determines
 that the child is mentally ill and the child meets at least one of
 the criteria listed in Section 574.034, Health and Safety Code.
 (c) Before a child who is identified as mentally retarded
 under Chapter 593, Health and Safety Code, is discharged from the
 department's [commission's] custody under Section 244.011(b)
 [61.077(b)], the department [commission] shall refer the child for
 mental retardation services if the child is not receiving mental
 retardation services.
 Sec. 244.013 [61.078]. NOTICE OF PENDING DISCHARGE. As
 soon as practicable after the department [commission] makes a
 decision to discharge a child or authorize the child's absence from
 the department's [its] custody, the department [commission] shall
 give notice of the department's [its] decision to the juvenile
 court and the office of the prosecuting attorney of the county in
 which the adjudication that the child engaged in delinquent conduct
 was made.
 Sec. 244.014 [61.079]. REFERRAL OF VIOLENT AND HABITUAL
 OFFENDERS FOR TRANSFER. (a) After a child sentenced to commitment
 under Section 54.04(d)(3), 54.04(m), or 54.05(f), Family Code,
 becomes 16 years of age but before the child becomes 19 years of
 age, the department [commission] may refer the child to the
 juvenile court that entered the order of commitment for approval of
 the child's transfer to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice
 for confinement if:
 (1) the child has not completed the sentence; and
 (2) the child's conduct, regardless of whether the
 child was released under supervision under Section 245.051
 [61.081], indicates that the welfare of the community requires the
 transfer.
 (b) The department [commission] shall cooperate with the
 court on any proceeding on the transfer of the child.
 (c) If a child is released under supervision, a juvenile
 court adjudication that the child engaged in delinquent conduct
 constituting a felony offense, a criminal court conviction of the
 child for a felony offense, or a determination under Section
 244.005(4) [61.075(4)] revoking the child's release under
 supervision is required before referral of the child to the
 juvenile court under Subsection (a).
 Sec. 244.015 [61.0791]. EVALUATION OF CERTAIN CHILDREN
 SERVING DETERMINATE SENTENCES. (a) When a child who is sentenced
 to commitment under Section 54.04(d)(3), 54.04(m), or 54.05(f),
 Family Code, becomes 18 years of age, the department [commission]
 shall evaluate whether the child is in need of additional services
 that can be completed in the six-month period after the child's 18th
 birthday to prepare the child for release from the custody of the
 department [commission] or transfer to the Texas Department of
 Criminal Justice.
 (b) This section does not apply to a child who is released
 from the custody of the department [commission] or who is
 transferred to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice before the
 child's 18th birthday.
 [Sections 244.016-244.050 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER B. PROVISION OF CERTAIN INFORMATION; RIGHTS OF PARENTS
 Sec. 244.051.  INFORMATION AVAILABLE TO CHILDREN, PARENTS,
 AND OTHERS.  (a) In the interest of achieving the purpose of the
 department and protecting the public, the department may disclose
 records and other information concerning a child to the child and
 the child's parent or guardian only if disclosure would not
 materially harm the treatment and rehabilitation of the child and
 would not substantially decrease the likelihood of the department
 receiving information from the same or similar sources in the
 future. Information concerning a person who is 18 years of age or
 older may not be disclosed to the person's parent or guardian
 without the person's consent.
 (b)  The department may disclose information regarding a
 child's location and committing court to a person having a
 legitimate need for the information.
 (c)  The department may disclose to a peace officer or law
 enforcement agency images of children recorded by an electronic
 recording device and incident reporting and investigation
 documents containing the names of children if the information is
 relevant to the investigation of a criminal offense alleged to have
 occurred in a facility operated by or under contract with the
 department.
 Sec. 244.052.  RIGHTS OF PARENTS.  (a)  The department, in
 consultation with advocacy and support groups such as those
 described in Section 242.056(a), shall develop a parent's bill of
 rights for distribution to the parent or guardian of a child who is
 under 18 years of age and committed to the department.  The parent's
 bill of rights must include:
 (1)  a description of the department's grievance
 policies and procedures, including contact information for the
 office of inspector general and the office of the independent
 ombudsman established under Chapter 64;
 (2)  a list of possible incidents that require parental
 notification;
 (3)  policies concerning visits and telephone
 conversations with a child committed to the department;
 (4)  a description of department caseworker
 responsibilities;
 (5)  a statement that the department caseworker
 assigned to a child may assist the child's parent or guardian in
 obtaining information and services from the department and other
 resources concerning:
 (A)  counseling, including substance abuse and
 mental health counseling;
 (B)  assistance programs, including financial and
 travel assistance programs for visiting a child committed to the
 department;
 (C) workforce preparedness programs;
 (D) parenting programs; and
 (E) department seminars; and
 (6)  information concerning the indeterminate
 sentencing structure at the department, an explanation of reasons
 that a child's commitment at the department could be extended, and
 an explanation of the review process under Sections 245.101 and
 245.104 for a child committed to the department without a
 determinate sentence.
 (b)  Not later than 48 hours after the time a child is
 admitted to a department facility, the department shall mail to the
 child's parent or guardian at the last known address of the parent
 or guardian:
 (1) the parent's bill of rights; and
 (2)  the contact information of the department
 caseworker assigned to the child.
 (c)  The department shall on a quarterly basis provide to the
 parent, guardian, or designated advocate of a child who is in the
 custody of the department a report concerning the progress of the
 child at the department, including:
 (1)  the academic and behavioral progress of the child;
 and
 (2)  the results of any reexamination of the child
 conducted under Section 244.002.
 (d)  The department shall ensure that written information
 provided to a parent or guardian regarding the rights of a child in
 the custody of the department or the rights of a child's parent or
 guardian, including the parent's bill of rights, is clear and easy
 to understand.
 CHAPTER 245 [SUBCHAPTER F]. RELEASE
 SUBCHAPTER A. GENERAL PROVISIONS
 Sec. 245.001.  PAROLE OFFICERS; PAROLE MANAGEMENT.  (a) The
 department may employ parole officers to investigate, place,
 supervise, and direct the activities of a parolee to ensure the
 parolee's adjustment to society in accordance with the rules
 adopted by the department.
 (b)  Parole officers may work with local organizations,
 clubs, and agencies to formulate plans and procedures for the
 prevention of juvenile delinquency.
 (c)  The department shall develop a management system for
 parole services that objectively measures and provides for:
 (1)  the systematic examination of children's needs and
 the development of treatment plans to address those needs;
 (2)  the evaluation of homes, foster homes, and public
 and private institutions as constructive parole placements;
 (3)  the classification of children based on the level
 of children's needs and the degree of risk presented to the public;
 (4)  the objective measurement of parole officer
 workloads; and
 (5)  the gathering and analysis of information related
 to the effectiveness of parole services and to future parole
 requirements.
 Sec. 245.002.  REENTRY AND REINTEGRATION PLAN.  (a)  The
 department shall develop a reentry and reintegration plan for each
 child committed to the custody of the department.  The plan for a
 child must be designed to ensure that the child receives an
 extensive continuity of care in services from the time the child is
 committed to the department to the time of the child's final
 discharge from the department.  The plan for a child must include,
 as applicable:
 (1) housing assistance;
 (2)  a step-down program, such as placement in a
 halfway house;
 (3) family counseling;
 (4) academic and vocational mentoring;
 (5)  trauma counseling for a child who is a victim of
 abuse while in the custody of the department; and
 (6)  other specialized treatment services appropriate
 for the child.
 (b)  If a program or service in the child's reentry and
 reintegration plan is not available at the time the child is to be
 released, the department shall find a suitable alternative program
 or service so that the child's release is not postponed.
 Sec. 245.003.  CONTRACTS WITH COUNTIES.  (a)  The department
 may make a contract with a county to use the services of the
 county's juvenile probation department for the supervision of
 children within the county who are on furlough from a department
 facility or who are released under supervision from a department
 facility.
 (b)  Payments under a contract described by Subsection (a)
 shall be made to the county treasurer on a quarterly schedule.
 (c)  The department may not pay a county for supervision of a
 child for any time after the child:
 (1) is discharged from the department's custody;
 (2) is returned to a department facility; or
 (3)  transfers the child's residence to another county
 or state.
 (d)  A county that has a contract with the department must
 report to the department on the status and progress of each child
 for whom the county is receiving payments. The reports shall be
 made at the time and in the manner specified by the contract.
 [Sections 245.004-245.050 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER B.  AUTHORITY TO RELEASE; RESUMPTION OF CARE
 Sec. 245.051 [61.081]. RELEASE UNDER SUPERVISION. (a) The
 department [commission] may release under supervision any child in
 the department's [its] custody and place the child in the child's
 [his or her] home or in any situation or family approved by the
 department [commission]. Prior to placing a child in the child's
 [his or her] home, the department [commission] shall evaluate the
 home setting to determine the level of supervision and quality of
 care that is available in the home.
 (b) [Subject to legislative appropriation, the commission
 may employ parole officers to investigate, place, supervise, and
 direct the activities of a parolee to ensure the parolee's
 adjustment to society in accordance with the rules adopted by the
 commission.
 [(c)     Parole officers may work with local organizations,
 clubs, and agencies to formulate plans and procedures for the
 prevention of juvenile delinquency.
 [(d)     The commission may resume the care and custody of any
 child released under supervision at any time before the final
 discharge of the child.
 [(e)] Not later than 10 days before the day the department
 [commission] releases a child under this section, the department
 [commission] shall give notice of the release to the juvenile court
 and the office of the prosecuting attorney of the county in which
 the adjudication that the child engaged in delinquent conduct was
 made.
 (c) [(f)] If a child is committed to the department
 [commission] under a determinate sentence under Section
 54.04(d)(3), Section 54.04(m), or Section 54.05(f), Family Code,
 the department [commission] may not release the child under
 supervision without approval of the juvenile court that entered the
 order of commitment unless the child has served at least:
 (1) 10 years, if the child was sentenced to commitment
 for conduct constituting capital murder;
 (2) 3 years, if the child was sentenced to commitment
 for conduct constituting an aggravated controlled substance felony
 or a felony of the first degree;
 (3) 2 years, if the child was sentenced to commitment
 for conduct constituting a felony of the second degree; or
 (4) 1 year, if the child was sentenced to commitment
 for conduct constituting a felony of the third degree.
 (d) [(g)] The department [commission] may request the
 approval of the court under this section at any time.
 (e)  The department may resume the care and custody of any
 child released under supervision at any time before the final
 discharge of the child.
 (f) [(h)] If the department [commission] finds that a child
 has violated an order under which the child is released under
 supervision, on notice by any reasonable method to all persons
 affected, the department [commission] may order the child:
 (1) to return to an institution;
 (2) if the violation resulted in property damage or
 personal injury:
 (A) to make full or partial restitution to the
 victim of the offense; or
 (B) if the child is financially unable to make
 full or partial restitution, to perform services for a charitable
 or educational institution; or
 (3) to comply with any other conditions the department
 [commission] considers appropriate.
 (g) [(i)] Notwithstanding Subsection (c) [(f)], if a child
 is committed to the department [commission] under a determinate
 sentence under Section 54.04(d)(3), Section 54.04(m), or Section
 54.05(f), Family Code, the department [commission] may release the
 child under supervision without approval of the juvenile court that
 entered the order of commitment if not more than nine months remain
 before the child's discharge under Section 245.151(b) [61.084(b)].
 Sec. 245.052 [61.0811.     PAROLE MANAGEMENT.    The commission
 shall develop a management system for parole services that
 objectively measures and provides for:
 [(1)     the systematic examination of children's needs
 and the development of treatment plans to address those needs;
 [(2)     the evaluation of homes, foster homes, and public
 and private institutions as constructive parole placements;
 [(3)     the classification of children based on the level
 of children's needs and the degree of risk presented to the public;
 [(4)     the objective measurement of parole officer
 workloads; and
 [(5)     the gathering and analysis of information related
 to the effectiveness of parole services and to future parole
 requirements.
 [Sec. 61.0812]. SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT [FOR SUBSTANCE
 ABUSE]. Subject to an express appropriation to fund the treatment
 programs required by this section, the department [commission] may
 not release a child under supervision or parole a child if:
 (1) the child has a substance abuse problem, including
 the use of a controlled substance, hazardous inhalable substances,
 or alcohol habitually; and
 (2) the child has not completed a treatment program
 for the problem.
 Sec. 245.053 [61.0813]. SEX OFFENDER COUNSELING AND
 TREATMENT. (a) Before releasing a child described by Subsection
 (b) under supervision, the department [commission]:
 (1) may require as a condition of release that the
 child:
 (A) attend psychological counseling sessions for
 sex offenders as provided by Subsection (e); and
 (B) submit to a polygraph examination as provided
 by Subsection (f) for purposes of evaluating the child's treatment
 progress; and
 (2) shall require as a condition of release that the
 child:
 (A) register under Chapter 62, Code of Criminal
 Procedure; and
 (B) submit a blood sample or other specimen to
 the Department of Public Safety under Subchapter G, Chapter 411,
 Government Code, for the purpose of creating a DNA record of the
 child, unless the child has already submitted the required specimen
 under other state law.
 (b) This section applies to a child adjudicated for engaging
 in delinquent conduct constituting an offense for which the child
 is required to register as a sex offender under Chapter 62, Code of
 Criminal Procedure.
 (c) Psychological counseling required as a condition of
 release under Subsection (a) must be with an individual or
 organization that:
 (1) provides sex offender treatment or counseling;
 (2) is specified by the department [commission]; and
 (3) meets minimum standards of counseling established
 by the department [commission].
 (d) A polygraph examination required as a condition of
 release under Subsection (a) must be administered by an individual
 who is:
 (1) specified by the department [commission]; and
 (2) licensed as a polygraph examiner under Chapter
 1703, Occupations Code.
 (e) In addition to specifying a sex offender treatment
 provider to provide counseling to a child described by Subsection
 (b), the department [commission] shall:
 (1) establish with the cooperation of the treatment
 provider the date, time, and place of the first counseling session
 between the child and the treatment provider;
 (2) notify the child and the treatment provider before
 the release of the child of the date, time, and place of the first
 counseling session between the child and the treatment provider;
 and
 (3) require the treatment provider to notify the
 department [commission] immediately if the child fails to attend
 any scheduled counseling session.
 (f) If the department [commission] specifies a polygraph
 examiner under Subsection (d) to administer a polygraph examination
 to a child, the department [commission] shall arrange for a
 polygraph examination to be administered to the child:
 (1) not later than the 60th day after the date the
 child attends the first counseling session established under
 Subsection (e); and
 (2) after the initial polygraph examination, as
 required by Subdivision (1), on the request of the treatment
 provider specified under Subsection (c).
 (g) If the department [commission] requires as a condition
 of release that a child attend psychological counseling under
 Subsection (a), the department [commission] shall notify the court
 that committed the child to the department [commission]. After
 receiving notification from the department [commission] under this
 subsection, the court may order the parent or guardian of the child
 to:
 (1) attend four sessions of instruction with an
 individual or organization specified by the department
 [commission] relating to:
 (A) sexual offenses;
 (B) family communication skills;
 (C) sex offender treatment;
 (D) victims' rights;
 (E) parental supervision; and
 (F) appropriate sexual behavior; and
 (2) during the time the child attends psychological
 counseling, participate in monthly treatment groups conducted by
 the child's treatment provider relating to the child's
 psychological counseling.
 (h) A court that orders a parent or guardian of a child to
 attend instructional sessions and participate in treatment groups
 under Subsection (g) shall require:
 (1) the individual or organization specified by the
 department [commission] under Subsection (g) to notify the court
 immediately if the parent or guardian fails to attend any scheduled
 instructional session; and
 (2) the child's treatment provider specified under
 Subsection (c) to notify the court immediately if the parent or
 guardian fails to attend a session in which the parent or guardian
 is required to participate in a scheduled treatment group.
 (i) If the department [commission] requires as a condition
 of release that a child attend psychological counseling under
 Subsection (a), the department [commission] may, before the date
 the period of release ends, petition the appropriate court to
 request the court to extend the period of release for an additional
 period necessary to complete the required counseling as determined
 by the treatment provider, except that the release period may not be
 extended to a date after the date of the child's 18th birthday.
 Sec. 245.054.  INFORMATION PROVIDED TO COURT BEFORE RELEASE.
 (a) In addition to providing the court with notice of release of a
 child under Section 245.051(b), not later than the 90th day before
 the date the department releases the child, the department shall
 provide the court that committed the child to the department:
 (1)  a copy of the child's reentry and reintegration
 plan developed under Section 245.002; and
 (2)  a report concerning the progress the child has
 made while committed to the department.
 (b)  If, on release, the department places a child in a
 county other than the county served by the court that committed the
 child to the department, the department shall provide the
 information described by Subsection (a) to both the committing
 court and the juvenile court in the county where the child is placed
 after release.
 [Sections 245.055-245.100 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER C.  MINIMUM LENGTH OF STAY; EXTENSION ORDERS
 Sec. 245.101 [61.0814.     REENTRY AND REINTEGRATION PLAN.    (a)
 The commission shall develop a reentry and reintegration plan for
 each child committed to the custody of the commission.    The plan for
 a child must be designed to ensure that the child receives an
 extensive continuity of care in services from the time the child is
 committed to the commission to the time of the child's final
 discharge from the commission.    The plan for a child must include,
 as applicable:
 [(1) housing assistance;
 [(2)     a step-down program, such as placement in a
 halfway house;
 [(3) family counseling;
 [(4) academic and vocational mentoring;
 [(5)     trauma counseling for a child who is a victim of
 abuse while in the custody of the commission; and
 [(6)     other specialized treatment services appropriate
 for the child.
 [(b)     If a program or service in the child's reentry and
 reintegration plan is not available at the time the child is to be
 released, the commission shall find a suitable alternative program
 or service so that the child's release is not postponed.
 [Sec. 61.0815]. COMPLETION OF MINIMUM LENGTH OF STAY;
 PANEL. (a) After a child who is committed to the department
 [commission] without a determinate sentence completes the minimum
 length of stay established by the department [commission] for the
 child under Section 243.002 [61.062], the department [commission]
 shall, in the manner provided by this section:
 (1) discharge the child from the custody of the
 department [commission];
 (2) release the child under supervision under Section
 245.051 [61.081]; or
 (3) extend the length of the child's stay in the
 custody of the department [commission].
 (b) The department [commission] by rule shall establish a
 panel whose function is to review and determine whether a child who
 has completed the child's minimum length of stay should be
 discharged from the custody of the department [commission] as
 provided by Subsection (a)(1), be released under supervision under
 Section 245.051 [61.081] as provided by Subsection (a)(2), or
 remain in the custody of the department [commission] for an
 additional period of time as provided by Subsection (a)(3).
 (c) The executive director [commissioner] shall determine
 the size of the panel described by Subsection (b) and the length of
 the members' terms of service on the panel. The panel must consist
 of an odd number of members and the terms of the panel's members
 must last for at least two years. The executive director
 [commissioner] shall adopt policies that ensure the transparency,
 consistency, and objectivity of the panel's composition,
 procedures, and decisions. The executive director [commissioner]
 shall appoint persons to serve as members of the panel. A person
 appointed to the panel must be a department [commission] employee
 who works at the department's [commission's] central office. A
 member of the panel may not be involved in any supervisory decisions
 concerning children in the custody of the department [commission].
 Sec. 245.102. EXTENSION ORDER. (a) A [(d) The] panel may
 extend the length of the child's stay as provided by Section
 245.101(a)(3) [Subsection (a)(3)] only if the panel determines by
 majority vote and on the basis of clear and convincing evidence
 that:
 (1) the child is in need of additional rehabilitation
 from the department; [commission] and
 (2) [that] the department [commission] will provide
 the most suitable environment for that rehabilitation.
 (b) In extending the length of a child's stay, the panel
 must specify the additional period of time that the child is to
 remain in the custody of the department [commission] and must
 conduct an additional review and determination as provided by this
 section on the child's completion of the additional term of stay.
 (c) If the panel determines that the child's length of stay
 should not be extended, the department [commission] must discharge
 the child from the custody of the department [commission] as
 provided by Section 245.101(a)(1) [Subsection (a)(1)] or release
 the child under supervision under Section 245.051 [Section 61.081]
 as provided by Section 245.101(a)(2) [Subsection (a)(2)].
 Sec. 245.103.  STATISTICS AND REPORTS CONCERNING EXTENSION
 ORDERS.  (a) [(e)] The department [commission] shall maintain
 statistics of the number of extensions granted by a [the] panel
 under Section 245.102. The statistics must include aggregated
 information concerning:
 (1) the race, age, sex, specialized treatment needs,
 and county of origin for each child for whom an extension order is
 requested;
 (2) the facility in which the child is confined; and
 (3) if applicable, any allegations concerning the
 abuse, mistreatment, or neglect of the child, aggregated by the
 type of misconduct to which the child was subjected.
 (b) [(f)] To the extent authorized under law, the
 statistics maintained under Subsection (a) [(e)] are public
 information under Chapter 552, Government Code, and the department
 [commission] shall post the statistics on the department's
 [commission's] Internet website.
 (c) The department [commission] shall prepare and deliver
 to the standing committees of the senate and house of
 representatives with primary jurisdiction over matters concerning
 correctional facilities a report concerning the statistics
 maintained under Subsection (a) [(e)].
 (d) [(g)] The department [commission] shall provide a
 report to the parent, guardian, or designated advocate of a child
 whose length of stay is extended under this section explaining the
 panel's reason for the extension.
 Sec. 245.104 [61.0816]. REQUEST FOR RECONSIDERATION OF
 EXTENSION ORDER. (a) The department [commission] by rule shall
 establish a process to request the reconsideration of an extension
 order issued by a [the] panel [established] under Section 245.102
 [61.0815].
 (b) The process to request reconsideration must provide
 that:
 (1) a child, a parent, guardian, or designated
 advocate of a child, an employee of the department [commission], or
 a person who provides volunteer services at a department
 [commission] facility may submit a request for reconsideration of
 an extension order;
 (2) the person submitting the request for
 reconsideration of an extension order must state in the request the
 reason for the request;
 (3) after receiving a request for reconsideration of
 an extension order, the panel shall reconsider an extension order
 that:
 (A) extends the child's stay in the custody of
 the department [commission] by six months or more; or
 (B) combined with previous extension orders will
 result in an extension of the child's stay in the custody of the
 department [commission] by six months or more;
 (4) the panel's reconsideration of an extension order
 includes consideration of the information submitted in the request;
 and
 (5) the panel shall send a written reply to the child,
 the parent, guardian, or designated advocate of the child, and the
 person who made the request for reconsideration of an extension
 order that includes an explanation of the panel's decision after
 reconsidering the extension order, including an indication that the
 panel has considered the information submitted in the request.
 (c) The department [commission] shall create a form for a
 request for reconsideration of an extension order that is clear and
 easy to understand. The department [commission] shall ensure that
 a child may request assistance in completing a request for
 reconsideration of an extension order.
 Sec. 245.105.  STATISTICS AND REPORTS CONCERNING
 RECONSIDERATIONS OF EXTENSION ORDERS.  (a) [(d)] The department
 [commission] shall maintain statistics of the number of requests
 for reconsideration of an extension order that are submitted under
 Section 245.104 and the action taken on reconsideration of the
 extension order. The statistics must include aggregated
 information concerning:
 (1) the race, age, sex, specialized treatment needs,
 and county of origin for each child for whom a request for
 reconsideration of an extension order is submitted;
 (2) whether a request for reconsideration of an
 extension order results in:
 (A) a discharge or release under supervision; or
 (B) the original extension order being upheld;
 (3) the facility in which the child is confined; and
 (4) if applicable, any allegations concerning the
 abuse, mistreatment, or neglect of the child, aggregated by the
 type of misconduct to which the child was subjected.
 (b) [(e)] To the extent authorized under law, the
 statistics maintained under Subsection (a) [(d)] are public
 information under Chapter 552, Government Code, and the department
 [commission] shall post the statistics on the department's
 [commission's] Internet website.
 (c) The department [commission] shall prepare and deliver
 to the standing committees of the senate and house of
 representatives with primary jurisdiction over matters concerning
 correctional facilities a report concerning the statistics
 maintained under Subsection (a) [(d)].
 Sec. 245.106 [61.082]. TRANSPORTATION, CLOTHING, MONEY.
 The department [commission] shall ensure that each child it
 releases under supervision has:
 (1) suitable clothing;
 (2) [,] transportation to his or her home or to the
 county in which a suitable home or employment has been found; [,]
 and
 (3) money in an amount authorized by the rules of the
 department [commission].
 [Sections 245.107-245.150 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER D.  TERMINATION OF CONTROL
 Sec. 245.151 [61.083.     CONTRACTS WITH COUNTIES.    (a)    The
 commission may make a contract with a county to use the services of
 the county's juvenile probation department for the supervision of
 children within the county who are on furlough from a commission
 facility or who are released under supervision from a commission
 facility.
 [(b)     The payments shall be made to the county treasurer on a
 quarterly schedule.
 [(c)     The commission may not pay a county for supervision of
 a child for any time after the child:
 [(1) is discharged from the commission's custody;
 [(2) is returned to a commission facility; or
 [(3)     transfers his or her residence to another county
 or state.
 [(d)     A county that has a contract with the commission must
 report to the commission on the status and progress of each child
 for whom the county is receiving payments. The reports shall be
 made at the time and in the manner specified by the contract.
 [Sec. 61.084]. TERMINATION OF CONTROL. (a) Except as
 provided by Subsections (b) and (c), if a person is committed to the
 department [commission] under a determinate sentence under Section
 54.04(d)(3), Section 54.04(m), or Section 54.05(f), Family Code,
 the department [commission] may not discharge the person from its
 custody.
 (b) The department [commission] shall discharge without a
 court hearing a person committed to the department [it] for a
 determinate sentence under Section 54.04(d)(3), Section 54.04(m),
 or Section 54.05(f), Family Code, who has not been transferred to
 the [institutional division of the] Texas Department of Criminal
 Justice under a court order on the date that the time spent by the
 person in detention in connection with the committing case plus the
 time spent at the department [Texas Youth Commission] under the
 order of commitment equals the period of the sentence.
 (c) The department [commission] shall transfer to the
 [institutional division of the] Texas Department of Criminal
 Justice a person who is the subject of an order under Section
 54.11(i)(2), Family Code, transferring the person to the custody of
 [the institutional division of] the Texas Department of Criminal
 Justice for the completion of the person's sentence.
 (d) [(e)] Except as provided by Subsection (e) [(g)], the
 department [commission] shall discharge from its custody a person
 not already discharged on the person's 19th birthday.
 (e) [(g)] The department [commission] shall transfer a
 person who has been sentenced under a determinate sentence to
 commitment under Section 54.04(d)(3), 54.04(m), or 54.05(f),
 Family Code, or who has been returned to the department
 [commission] under Section 54.11(i)(1), Family Code, to the custody
 of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice on the person's 19th
 birthday, if the person has not already been discharged or
 transferred, to serve the remainder of the person's sentence on
 parole as provided by Section 508.156, Government Code.
 Sec. 245.152 [61.0841]. DETERMINATE SENTENCE PAROLE. (a)
 Not later than the 90th day before the date the department
 [commission] transfers a person to the custody of the Texas
 Department of Criminal Justice for release on parole under Section
 245.051(c) [61.081(f)] or 245.151(e) [61.084(g)], the department
 [commission] shall submit to the Texas Department of Criminal
 Justice [department] all pertinent information relating to the
 person, including:
 (1) the juvenile court judgment;
 (2) the circumstances of the person's offense;
 (3) the person's previous social history and juvenile
 court records;
 (4) the person's physical and mental health record;
 (5) a record of the person's conduct, employment
 history, and attitude while committed to the department
 [commission];
 (6) a record of the sentence time served by the person
 at the department [commission] and in a juvenile detention facility
 in connection with the conduct for which the person was
 adjudicated; and
 (7) any written comments or information provided by
 the department [commission], local officials, family members of the
 person, victims of the offense, or the general public.
 (b) The department [commission] shall provide instruction
 for parole officers of the parole [pardons and paroles] division
 relating to juvenile programs at the department [commission]. The
 department [commission] and the pardons and paroles division shall
 enter into a memorandum of understanding relating to the
 administration of this subsection.
 (c) The Texas Department of Criminal Justice shall grant
 credit for sentence time served by a person at the department
 [commission] and in a juvenile detention facility, as recorded by
 the department [commission] under Subsection (a)(6), in computing
 the person's eligibility for parole and discharge from the
 department.
 SECTION 1.008. Subchapters H and I, Chapter 61, Human
 Resources Code, are transferred to Subtitle C, Title 12, Human
 Resources Code, as added by this Act, redesignated as Chapter 246,
 and amended to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 246. MISCELLANEOUS PROGRAMS
 SUBCHAPTER A [H]. YOUTH BOOT CAMP PROGRAMS
 Sec. 246.001 [61.101]. YOUTH BOOT CAMP PROGRAMS. (a) The
 department [commission] may establish a youth boot camp program and
 may employ necessary personnel to operate the youth boot camps.
 (b) The department [commission, in consultation with the
 Texas Juvenile Probation Commission,] shall develop guidelines for
 a program of physical and correctional training and military-style
 discipline for children placed in youth boot camps operated by
 local probation departments for violating the conditions of release
 under supervision or parole under Chapter 245 [Section 61.081].
 (c) The department [commission] shall develop a program of
 physical and correctional training and military-style discipline
 for children committed to the department [commission] who are
 placed in youth boot camps or other department [commission]
 facilities.
 (d) The department [commission] shall adopt rules of
 conduct for children participating in the program under this
 section.
 SUBCHAPTER B [I]. INDUSTRIES PROGRAM
 Sec. 246.051 [61.121]. PURPOSE; IMPLEMENTATION. The
 purposes of the department [commission] industries program are:
 (1) to provide adequate employment and vocational
 training for children; and
 (2) to develop and expand public and private
 department [commission] industries.
 Sec. 246.052 [61.122]. ADVISORY COMMITTEE. (a) A
 department [commission] industries advisory committee is created
 consisting of nine members appointed by the department
 [commission].
 (b) Members serve staggered three-year terms, with the
 terms of three members expiring February 1 of each odd-numbered
 year.
 (c) In making appointments under this section, the
 department [commission] shall endeavor to include representatives
 of industries appropriate for hiring children committed to the
 department [commission].
 Sec. 246.053 [61.123]. PAY AND DISTRIBUTION OF PAY. The
 department [commission] shall apportion wages earned by a child
 working under the industries program in amounts determined at the
 discretion of the department [commission], in the following
 priority:
 (1) a person to whom the child has been ordered by a
 court or to whom the child has agreed to pay restitution;
 (2) a person to whom the child has been ordered by a
 court to pay child support;
 (3) the compensation to victims of crime fund or the
 compensation to victims of crime auxiliary fund; and
 (4) the child's student account.
 Sec. 246.054 [61.124]. INDUSTRIES FUND. (a) A Texas
 Juvenile Justice Department [Youth Commission] industries program
 fund is created in the state treasury.
 (b) Proceeds from the operation of the industries program
 shall be deposited in the fund.
 (c) Money from the fund may be appropriated only for use by
 the department [commission] for the administration of this
 subchapter.
 [(d)     Sections 403.094 and 403.095, Government Code, do not
 apply to the fund.]
 Sec. 246.055 [61.125]. CONTRACTS. To encourage the
 development and expansion of the industries program, the department
 [commission] may enter into necessary contracts related to the
 program.
 Sec. 246.056 [61.126]. DONATIONS. The industries program
 may be financed through contributions donated for this purpose by
 private businesses contracting with the department [commission].
 Sec. 246.057 [61.127]. GRANTS. (a) The department
 [commission] may accept a grant for the vocational rehabilitation
 of children.
 (b) The department [commission] shall maintain a record of
 the receipt and disbursement of a grant and shall annually report to
 the lieutenant governor and the speaker of the house of
 representatives on the administration of grant funds.
 Sec. 246.058 [61.128]. LEASE OF LAND. (a) The department
 [commission] may lease land owned by the department [commission] to
 a private business to expand and develop the industries program.
 (b) The term of the lease may not exceed 20 years.
 (c) The business must lease the land at fair market value.
 (d) The business may construct a new facility on the land or
 convert an existing facility.
 Sec. 246.059 [Sec.   61.129.     CERTIFICATION FOR FRANCHISE
 CREDIT.    The commission shall prepare and issue a certification
 that a corporation requires for the franchise tax credit for wages
 paid as provided by Subchapter M, Chapter 171, Tax Code.
 [Sec. 61.130]. OPTIONAL AD VALOREM TAX ABATEMENT. (a) A
 business contracting with the department [commission] may enter
 into an ad valorem tax abatement agreement under Subchapters B and
 C, Chapter 312, Tax Code, with the governing body of the
 municipality and county in which the business is located.
 (b) If an area in which businesses contracting with the
 department [commission] under this subchapter is designated as a
 reinvestment zone under Chapter 312, Tax Code, the area satisfies
 Section 312.202(a)(6), Tax Code, in that the area would be
 reasonably likely as a result of the designation to contribute to
 the retention or expansion of primary employment or to attract
 major investment in the zone that would be a benefit to the property
 and that would contribute to the economic development of the entity
 designating the area as a reinvestment zone.
 SECTION 1.009. Title 12, Human Resources Code, as added by
 this Act, is amended by adding Subtitle D with a heading to read as
 follows:
 SUBTITLE D.  INDEPENDENT OMBUDSMAN
 SECTION 1.010. Chapter 64, Human Resources Code, is
 transferred to Subtitle D, Title 12, Human Resources Code, as added
 by this Act, redesignated as Chapter 261, and amended to read as
 follows:
 CHAPTER 261 [64]. [OFFICE OF] INDEPENDENT OMBUDSMAN
 [OF THE TEXAS YOUTH COMMISSION]
 SUBCHAPTER A. GENERAL PROVISIONS
 Sec. 261.001 [64.001]. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter:
 (1) ["Commission" means the Texas Youth Commission.
 [(2)] "Independent ombudsman" means the individual
 who has been appointed under this chapter to the office of
 independent ombudsman.
 (2) [(3)] "Office" means the office of independent
 ombudsman created under this chapter.
 Sec. 261.002 [64.002]. ESTABLISHMENT; PURPOSE. The office
 of independent ombudsman is a state agency established for the
 purpose of investigating, evaluating, and securing the rights of
 the children committed to the department [commission], including a
 child released under supervision before final discharge.
 Sec. 261.003 [64.003]. INDEPENDENCE. (a) The independent
 ombudsman in the performance of its duties and powers under this
 chapter acts independently of the department [commission].
 (b) Funding for the independent ombudsman is appropriated
 separately from funding for the department [commission].
 SUBCHAPTER B. APPOINTMENT AND MANAGEMENT OF OFFICE
 Sec. 261.051 [64.051]. APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT
 OMBUDSMAN. (a) The governor shall appoint the independent
 ombudsman with the advice and consent of the senate for a term of
 two years, expiring February 1 of odd-numbered years.
 (b) A person appointed as independent ombudsman is eligible
 for reappointment but may not serve more than three terms in that
 capacity.
 Sec. 261.052 [64.052]. ASSISTANTS. The independent
 ombudsman may hire assistants to perform, under the direction of
 the independent ombudsman, the same duties and exercise the same
 powers as the independent ombudsman.
 Sec. 261.053 [64.053]. CONFLICT OF INTEREST. (a) A person
 may not serve as independent ombudsman or as an assistant to the
 independent ombudsman if the person or the person's spouse:
 (1) is employed by or participates in the management
 of a business entity or other organization receiving funds from the
 department [commission];
 (2) owns or controls, directly or indirectly, any
 interest in a business entity or other organization receiving funds
 from the department [commission]; or
 (3) uses or receives any amount of tangible goods,
 services, or funds from the department [commission].
 (b) A person may not serve as independent ombudsman or as an
 assistant to the independent ombudsman if the person or the
 person's spouse is required to register as a lobbyist under Chapter
 305, Government Code, because of the person's activities for
 compensation on behalf of a profession related to the operation of
 the department [commission].
 (c) A person may not serve as independent ombudsman or as an
 assistant to the independent ombudsman if the person or the
 person's spouse is an officer, employee, manager, or paid
 consultant of a Texas trade association in the field of criminal or
 juvenile justice.
 (d) For the purposes of this section, a Texas trade
 association is a nonprofit, cooperative, and voluntarily joined
 association of business or professional competitors in this state
 designed to assist its members and its industry or profession in
 dealing with mutual business or professional problems and in
 promoting their common interest.
 Sec. 261.054 [64.054]. SUNSET PROVISION. The office is
 subject to review under Chapter 325, Government Code (Texas Sunset
 Act), but is not abolished under that chapter. The office shall be
 reviewed during the periods in which the Texas Juvenile Justice
 Department or its successor agency is [state agencies abolished in
 2009 and every 12th year after 2009 are] reviewed.
 Sec. 261.055 [64.055]. REPORT. (a) The independent
 ombudsman shall submit on a quarterly basis to the governor, the
 lieutenant governor, the state auditor, and each member of the
 legislature a report that is both aggregated and disaggregated by
 individual facility and describes:
 (1) the work of the independent ombudsman;
 (2) the results of any review or investigation
 undertaken by the independent ombudsman, including reviews or
 investigation of services contracted by the department
 [commission]; and
 (3) any recommendations that the independent
 ombudsman has in relation to the duties of the independent
 ombudsman.
 (b) The independent ombudsman shall immediately report to
 the governor, the lieutenant governor, the speaker of the house of
 representatives, the state auditor, and the office of the inspector
 general of the department [commission] any particularly serious or
 flagrant:
 (1) case of abuse or injury of a child committed to the
 department [commission];
 (2) problem concerning the administration of a
 department [commission] program or operation;
 (3) problem concerning the delivery of services in a
 facility operated by or under contract with the department
 [commission]; or
 (4) interference by the department [commission] with
 an investigation conducted by the office.
 Sec. 261.056 [64.056]. COMMUNICATION AND CONFIDENTIALITY.
 (a) The department [commission] shall allow any child committed to
 the department [commission] to communicate with the independent
 ombudsman or an assistant to the ombudsman. The communication:
 (1) may be in person, by mail, or by any other means;
 and
 (2) is confidential and privileged.
 (b) The records of the independent ombudsman are
 confidential, except that the independent ombudsman shall:
 (1) share with the office of inspector general of the
 department [commission] a communication with a child that may
 involve the abuse or neglect of the child; and
 (2) disclose its nonprivileged records if required by
 a court order on a showing of good cause.
 (c) The independent ombudsman may make reports relating to
 an investigation public after the investigation is complete but
 only if the names of all children, parents, and employees are
 redacted from the report and remain confidential.
 (d) The name, address, or other personally identifiable
 information of a person who files a complaint with the office of
 independent ombudsman, information generated by the office of
 independent ombudsman in the course of an investigation, and
 confidential records obtained by the office of independent
 ombudsman are confidential and not subject to disclosure under
 Chapter 552, Government Code, except that the information and
 records, other than confidential information and records
 concerning a pending law enforcement investigation or criminal
 action, may be disclosed to the appropriate person if the office
 determines that disclosure is:
 (1) in the general public interest;
 (2) necessary to enable the office to perform the
 responsibilities provided under this section; or
 (3) necessary to identify, prevent, or treat the abuse
 or neglect of a child.
 Sec. 261.057 [64.057]. PROMOTION OF AWARENESS OF OFFICE.
 The independent ombudsman shall promote awareness among the public
 and the children committed to the department [commission] of:
 (1) how the office may be contacted;
 (2) the purpose of the office; and
 (3) the services the office provides.
 Sec. 261.058 [64.058]. RULEMAKING AUTHORITY. (a) The
 office by rule shall establish policies and procedures for the
 operations of the office of independent ombudsman.
 (b)  The office and the department shall adopt rules
 necessary to implement Section 261.060, including rules that:
 (1)  identify which reports of the office are subject
 to review and comment by the department before publication; and
 (2)  establish procedures for the department to review
 and comment on the reports, including procedures for the department
 to expedite or eliminate review of and comment on a report due to an
 emergency or a serious or flagrant circumstance described by
 Section 261.055(b).
 (c)  Notwithstanding Section 201.001(a-1), the Texas Youth
 Commission and the office shall jointly adopt the rules required
 under Subsection (b) not later than March 1, 2010. This subsection
 expires September 1, 2010.
 Sec. 261.059 [64.059]. AUTHORITY OF STATE AUDITOR. The
 office is subject to audit by the state auditor in accordance with
 Chapter 321, Government Code.
 Sec. 261.060.  REVIEW AND FORMAT OF REPORTS. (a)  The office
 shall accept, both before and after publication, comments from the
 department concerning the following types of reports published by
 the office under this chapter:
 (1)  the office's quarterly report under Section
 261.055(a);
 (2)  reports concerning serious or flagrant
 circumstances under Section 261.055(b); and
 (3)  any other formal reports containing findings and
 making recommendations concerning systemic issues that affect the
 department.
 (b)  The department may not submit comments under Subsection
 (a) after the 30th day after the date the report on which the
 department is commenting is published.
 (c)  The office shall ensure that reports described by
 Subsection (a) are in a format to which the department can easily
 respond.
 (d)  After receipt of comments under this section, the office
 is not obligated to change any report or change the manner in which
 the office performs the duties of the office.
 Sec. 261.061.  COMPLAINTS. (a) The office shall maintain a
 system to promptly and efficiently act on complaints filed with the
 office that relate to the operations or staff of the office. The
 office shall maintain information about parties to the complaint,
 the subject matter of the complaint, a summary of the results of the
 review or investigation of the complaint, and its disposition.
 (b)  The office shall make information available describing
 its procedures for complaint investigation and resolution.
 (c)  The office shall periodically notify the complaint
 parties of the status of the complaint until final disposition.
 SUBCHAPTER C. DUTIES AND POWERS
 Sec. 261.101 [64.101]. DUTIES AND POWERS. (a) The
 independent ombudsman shall:
 (1) review the procedures established by the
 department [commission] and evaluate the delivery of services to
 children to ensure that the rights of children are fully observed;
 (2) review complaints filed with the independent
 ombudsman concerning the actions of the department [commission] and
 investigate each complaint in which it appears that a child may be
 in need of assistance from the independent ombudsman;
 (3) conduct investigations of complaints, other than
 complaints alleging criminal behavior, if the office determines
 that:
 (A) a child committed to the department
 [commission] or the child's family may be in need of assistance from
 the office; or
 (B) a systemic issue in the department's
 [commission's] provision of services is raised by a complaint;
 (4) review or inspect periodically the facilities and
 procedures of any institution or residence in which a child has been
 placed by the department [commission], whether public or private,
 to ensure that the rights of children are fully observed;
 (5) provide assistance to a child or family who the
 independent ombudsman determines is in need of assistance,
 including advocating with an agency, provider, or other person in
 the best interests of the child;
 (6) review court orders as necessary to fulfill its
 duties;
 (7) recommend changes in any procedure relating to the
 treatment of children committed to the department [commission];
 (8) make appropriate referrals under any of the duties
 and powers listed in this subsection; and
 (9) supervise assistants who are serving as advocates
 in their representation of children committed to the department
 [commission] in internal administrative and disciplinary hearings.
 (b) The independent ombudsman may apprise persons who are
 interested in a child's welfare of the rights of the child.
 (c) To assess if a child's rights have been violated, the
 independent ombudsman may, in any matter that does not involve
 alleged criminal behavior, contact or consult with an
 administrator, employee, child, parent, expert, or any other
 individual in the course of its investigation or to secure
 information.
 (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter,
 the independent ombudsman may not investigate alleged criminal
 behavior.
 (e)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter,
 the powers of the office are limited to facilities operated and
 services provided by the department under Subtitle C.
 Sec. 261.102 [64.102]. TREATMENT OF DEPARTMENT
 [COMMISSION] EMPLOYEES WHO COOPERATE WITH INDEPENDENT OMBUDSMAN.
 The department [commission] may not discharge or in any manner
 discriminate or retaliate against an employee who in good faith
 makes a complaint to the office of independent ombudsman or
 cooperates with the office in an investigation.
 Sec. 261.103 [64.103]. TRAINING. The independent
 ombudsman shall attend annual sessions, including the training
 curriculum for juvenile correctional officers required under
 Section 242.012 [61.0356], and may participate in other appropriate
 professional training.
 Sec. 261.104.  MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING. (a) The office
 and the department shall enter into a memorandum of understanding
 concerning:
 (1)  the most efficient manner in which to share
 information with one another; and
 (2)  the procedures for handling overlapping
 monitoring duties and activities performed by the office and the
 department.
 (b)  The memorandum of understanding entered into under
 Subsection (a), at a minimum, must:
 (1)  address the interaction of the office with that
 portion of the department that conducts an internal audit under
 Section 242.005;
 (2)  address communication between the office and the
 department concerning individual situations involving children
 committed to the department and how those situations will be
 documented and handled;
 (3)  contain guidelines on the office's role in
 relevant working groups and policy development decisions at the
 department;
 (4)  ensure opportunities for sharing information
 between the office and the department for the purposes of assuring
 quality and improving programming within the department; and
 (5)  recognize the independence of the office and the
 office's right to withhold confidential information from the
 department.
 (c)  Notwithstanding Section 201.001(a-1), the Texas Youth
 Commission and the office shall adopt the memorandum of
 understanding required by this section not later than March 1,
 2010. This subsection expires September 1, 2010.
 SUBCHAPTER D. ACCESS TO INFORMATION
 Sec. 261.151 [64.151]. ACCESS TO INFORMATION OF
 GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES. (a) The department [commission] shall
 allow the independent ombudsman access to its records relating to
 the children committed to the department [commission].
 (b) The Department of Public Safety shall allow the
 independent ombudsman access to the juvenile justice information
 system established under Subchapter B, Chapter 58, Family Code.
 (c) A local law enforcement agency shall allow the
 independent ombudsman access to its records relating to any child
 in the care or custody of the department [commission].
 Sec. 261.152 [64.152]. ACCESS TO INFORMATION OF PRIVATE
 ENTITIES. The independent ombudsman shall have access to the
 records of a private entity that relate to a child committed to the
 department [commission].
 SECTION 1.011. Section 61.012(e), Human Resources Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (e) This section expires September 1, 2010 [2009].
 SECTION 1.012. Section 61.0121(f), Human Resources Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (f) This section expires September 1, 2010 [2009].
 SECTION 1.013. Section 61.0123(d), Human Resources Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (d) This section expires September 1, 2010 [2009].
 SECTION 1.014. Section 61.013(h), Human Resources Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (h) This section expires September 1, 2010 [2009].
 SECTION 1.015. Section 61.019(c), Human Resources Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (c) This section expires September 1, 2010 [2009].
 SECTION 1.016. Section 61.020, Human Resources Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 61.020. SUNSET PROVISION. The Texas Youth Commission
 [is subject to Chapter 325, Government Code (Texas Sunset Act).
 Unless continued in existence as provided by that chapter, the
 commission] is abolished on September 1, 2010, and this section
 [chapter] expires September 1, 2010 [2009].
 SECTION 1.017. Section 141.012, Human Resources Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 141.012. SUNSET PROVISION. The Texas Juvenile
 Probation Commission [is subject to Chapter 325, Government Code
 (Texas Sunset Act). Unless continued in existence as provided by
 that chapter, the commission] is abolished on September 1, 2010,
 and this section [chapter] expires September 1, 2010 [2009].
 SECTION 1.018. Section 61.024, Human Resources Code, is
 repealed.
 ARTICLE 2. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
 SECTION 2.001. Section 51.02, Family Code, is amended by
 adding Subdivision (8-a) to read as follows:
 (8-a)  "Nonsecure correctional facility" means a
 facility, other than a secure correctional facility, that accepts
 only juveniles who are on probation, regardless of whether the
 facility is operated by or under contract with a governmental unit,
 as defined by Section 101.001, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, or
 independently from and not under contract with a governmental unit.
 SECTION 2.002. Chapter 51, Family Code, is amended by
 adding Section 51.126 to read as follows:
 Sec. 51.126.  NONSECURE CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES. (a)  In
 each county, each judge of the juvenile court and a majority of the
 members of the juvenile board shall personally inspect, at least
 annually, all nonsecure correctional facilities that are not
 operated by the Texas Juvenile Justice Department and that are
 located in the county and shall certify in writing to the
 authorities responsible for operating and giving financial support
 to the facilities and to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department that
 the facility or facilities are suitable or unsuitable for the
 confinement of children.  In determining whether a facility is
 suitable or unsuitable for the confinement of children, the
 juvenile court judges and juvenile board members shall consider:
 (1)  current monitoring and inspection reports and any
 noncompliance citation reports issued by the Texas Juvenile Justice
 Department, including the report provided under Subsection (b), and
 the status of any required corrective actions; and
 (2)  the other factors described under Sections
 51.12(c)(2)-(7).
 (b)  The Texas Juvenile Justice Department shall annually
 inspect each nonsecure correctional facility that is not operated
 by that department.  The Texas Juvenile Justice Department shall
 provide a report to each juvenile court judge presiding in the same
 county as an inspected facility indicating whether the facility is
 suitable or unsuitable for the confinement of children in
 accordance with minimum professional standards for the confinement
 of children in nonsecure confinement promulgated by the Texas
 Juvenile Justice Department or, at the election of the juvenile
 board of the county in which the facility is located, the current
 standards promulgated by the American Correctional Association.
 (c)  A governmental unit or private entity that operates or
 contracts for the operation of a juvenile nonsecure correctional
 facility in this state under Subsection (a), except for a facility
 operated by or under contract with the Texas Juvenile Justice
 Department, shall:
 (1)  register the facility annually with the Texas
 Juvenile Justice Department; and
 (2)  adhere to all applicable minimum standards for the
 facility.
 (d)  The Texas Juvenile Justice Department may deny,
 suspend, or revoke the registration of any facility required to
 register under Subsection (c) if the facility fails to:
 (1)  adhere to all applicable minimum standards for the
 facility; or
 (2)  timely correct any notice of noncompliance with
 minimum standards.
 (e)  In this section, "Texas Juvenile Justice Department"
 means the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission. This subsection
 expires September 1, 2010.
 SECTION 2.003. Chapter 614, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by adding Section 614.018 to read as follows:
 Sec. 614.018.  CONTINUITY OF CARE FOR JUVENILES WITH MENTAL
 IMPAIRMENTS.  (a)  The Texas Juvenile Justice Department, the
 Department of Public Safety, the Department of State Health
 Services, the Department of Aging and Disability Services, the
 Department of Family and Protective Services, the Texas Education
 Agency, and local juvenile probation departments shall adopt a
 memorandum of understanding that establishes their respective
 responsibilities to institute a continuity of care and service
 program for juveniles with mental impairments in the juvenile
 justice system.  The office shall coordinate and monitor the
 development and implementation of the memorandum of understanding.
 (b)  The memorandum of understanding must establish methods
 for:
 (1)  identifying juveniles with mental impairments in
 the juvenile justice system and collecting and reporting relevant
 data to the office;
 (2)  developing interagency rules, policies, and
 procedures for the coordination of care of and the exchange of
 information on juveniles with mental impairments who are committed
 to or treated, served, or supervised by the Texas Juvenile Justice
 Department, the Department of Public Safety, the Department of
 State Health Services, the Department of Family and Protective
 Services, the Department of Aging and Disability Services, the
 Texas Education Agency, local juvenile probation departments,
 local mental health or mental retardation authorities, and
 independent school districts; and
 (3)  identifying the services needed by juveniles with
 mental impairments in the juvenile justice system.
 (c)  For purposes of this section, "continuity of care and
 service program" includes:
 (1)  identifying the medical, psychiatric, or
 psychological care or treatment needs and educational or
 rehabilitative service needs of a juvenile with mental impairments
 in the juvenile justice system;
 (2)  developing a plan for meeting the needs identified
 under Subdivision (1); and
 (3)  coordinating the provision of continual
 treatment, care, and services throughout the juvenile justice
 system to juveniles with mental impairments.
 SECTION 2.004. Sections 614.017(a) and (b), Health and
 Safety Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a) An agency shall:
 (1) accept information relating to a special needs
 offender or a juvenile with a mental impairment that is sent to the
 agency to serve the purposes of continuity of care and services
 regardless of whether other state law makes that information
 confidential; and
 (2) disclose information relating to a special needs
 offender or a juvenile with a mental impairment, including
 information about the offender's or juvenile's identity, needs,
 treatment, social, criminal, and vocational history, supervision
 status and compliance with conditions of supervision, and medical
 and mental health history, if the disclosure serves the purposes of
 continuity of care and services.
 (b) Information obtained under this section may not be used
 as evidence in any juvenile or criminal proceeding, unless obtained
 and introduced by other lawful evidentiary means.
 SECTION 2.005. Section 614.017(c), Health and Safety Code,
 is amended by amending Subdivision (1) and adding Subdivision (3)
 to read as follows:
 (1) "Agency" includes any of the following entities
 and individuals, a person with an agency relationship with one of
 the following entities or individuals, and a person who contracts
 with one or more of the following entities or individuals:
 (A) the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and
 the Correctional Managed Health Care Committee;
 (B) the Board of Pardons and Paroles;
 (C) the Department of State Health Services;
 (D) the Texas Juvenile Justice Department
 [Probation Commission];
 [(E) the Texas Youth Commission;]
 (E) [(F)] the Department of Assistive and
 Rehabilitative Services;
 (F) [(G)] the Texas Education Agency;
 (G) [(H)] the Commission on Jail Standards;
 (H) [(I)] the Department of Aging and Disability
 Services;
 (I) [(J)] the Texas School for the Blind and
 Visually Impaired;
 (J) [(K)] community supervision and corrections
 departments and local juvenile probation departments;
 (K) [(L)] personal bond pretrial release offices
 established under Article 17.42, Code of Criminal Procedure;
 (L) [(M)] local jails regulated by the
 Commission on Jail Standards;
 (M) [(N)] a municipal or county health
 department;
 (N) [(O)] a hospital district;
 (O) [(P)] a judge of this state with jurisdiction
 over juvenile or criminal cases;
 (P) [(Q)] an attorney who is appointed or
 retained to represent a special needs offender or a juvenile with a
 mental impairment;
 (Q) [(R)] the Health and Human Services
 Commission;
 (R) [(S)] the Department of Information
 Resources; [and]
 (S) [(T)] the bureau of identification and
 records of the Department of Public Safety, for the sole purpose of
 providing real-time, contemporaneous identification of individuals
 in the Department of State Health Services client data base; and
 (T)  the Department of Family and Protective
 Services.
 (3)  "Juvenile with a mental impairment" means a
 juvenile with a mental impairment in the juvenile justice system.
 SECTION 2.006. Section 614.009, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 614.009. BIENNIAL REPORT. Not later than February 1
 of each odd-numbered year, the office shall present to the board and
 file with the governor, lieutenant governor, and speaker of the
 house of representatives a report giving the details of the
 office's activities during the preceding biennium. The report must
 include:
 (1) an evaluation of any demonstration project
 undertaken by the office;
 (2) an evaluation of the progress made by the office
 toward developing a plan for meeting the treatment, rehabilitative,
 and educational needs of offenders with special needs;
 (3) recommendations of the office made in accordance
 with Section 614.007(5);
 (4) an evaluation of the development and
 implementation of the continuity of care and service programs
 established under Sections 614.013, 614.014, 614.015, [and]
 614.016, and 614.018, changes in rules, policies, or procedures
 relating to the programs, future plans for the programs, and any
 recommendations for legislation; and
 (5) any other recommendations that the office
 considers appropriate.
 ARTICLE 3. CONFORMING AMENDMENTS
 SECTION 3.001. Article 2.12, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 2.12. WHO ARE PEACE OFFICERS. The following are peace
 officers:
 (1) sheriffs, their deputies, and those reserve
 deputies who hold a permanent peace officer license issued under
 Chapter 1701, Occupations Code;
 (2) constables, deputy constables, and those reserve
 deputy constables who hold a permanent peace officer license issued
 under Chapter 1701, Occupations Code;
 (3) marshals or police officers of an incorporated
 city, town, or village, and those reserve municipal police officers
 who hold a permanent peace officer license issued under Chapter
 1701, Occupations Code;
 (4) rangers and officers commissioned by the Public
 Safety Commission and the Director of the Department of Public
 Safety;
 (5) investigators of the district attorneys', criminal
 district attorneys', and county attorneys' offices;
 (6) law enforcement agents of the Texas Alcoholic
 Beverage Commission;
 (7) each member of an arson investigating unit
 commissioned by a city, a county, or the state;
 (8) officers commissioned under Section 37.081,
 Education Code, or Subchapter E, Chapter 51, Education Code;
 (9) officers commissioned by the General Services
 Commission;
 (10) law enforcement officers commissioned by the
 Parks and Wildlife Commission;
 (11) airport police officers commissioned by a city
 with a population of more than 1.18 million that operates an airport
 that serves commercial air carriers;
 (12) airport security personnel commissioned as peace
 officers by the governing body of any political subdivision of this
 state, other than a city described by Subdivision (11), that
 operates an airport that serves commercial air carriers;
 (13) municipal park and recreational patrolmen and
 security officers;
 (14) security officers and investigators commissioned
 as peace officers by the comptroller;
 (15) officers commissioned by a water control and
 improvement district under Section 49.216, Water Code;
 (16) officers commissioned by a board of trustees
 under Chapter 54, Transportation Code;
 (17) investigators commissioned by the Texas Medical
 Board;
 (18) officers commissioned by the board of managers of
 the Dallas County Hospital District, the Tarrant County Hospital
 District, or the Bexar County Hospital District under Section
 281.057, Health and Safety Code;
 (19) county park rangers commissioned under
 Subchapter E, Chapter 351, Local Government Code;
 (20) investigators employed by the Texas Racing
 Commission;
 (21) officers commissioned under Chapter 554,
 Occupations Code;
 (22) officers commissioned by the governing body of a
 metropolitan rapid transit authority under Section 451.108,
 Transportation Code, or by a regional transportation authority
 under Section 452.110, Transportation Code;
 (23) investigators commissioned by the attorney
 general under Section 402.009, Government Code;
 (24) security officers and investigators commissioned
 as peace officers under Chapter 466, Government Code;
 (25) an officer employed by the Department of State
 Health Services under Section 431.2471, Health and Safety Code;
 (26) officers appointed by an appellate court under
 Subchapter F, Chapter 53, Government Code;
 (27) officers commissioned by the state fire marshal
 under Chapter 417, Government Code;
 (28) an investigator commissioned by the commissioner
 of insurance under Section 701.104, Insurance Code;
 (29) apprehension specialists and inspectors general
 commissioned by the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Texas Youth
 Commission] as officers under Sections 242.104 and 243.052 [61.0451
 and 61.0931], Human Resources Code;
 (30) officers appointed by the inspector general of
 the Texas Department of Criminal Justice under Section 493.019,
 Government Code;
 (31) investigators commissioned by the Commission on
 Law Enforcement Officer Standards and Education under Section
 1701.160, Occupations Code;
 (32) commission investigators commissioned by the
 Texas Private Security Board under Section 1702.061(f),
 Occupations Code;
 (33) the fire marshal and any officers, inspectors, or
 investigators commissioned by an emergency services district under
 Chapter 775, Health and Safety Code;
 (34) officers commissioned by the State Board of
 Dental Examiners under Section 254.013, Occupations Code, subject
 to the limitations imposed by that section; and
 (35) investigators commissioned by the Texas Juvenile
 Justice Department [Probation Commission] as officers under
 Section 221.011 [141.055], Human Resources Code.
 SECTION 3.002. Section 51.13(c), Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (c) A child may not be committed or transferred to a penal
 institution or other facility used primarily for the execution of
 sentences of persons convicted of crime, except:
 (1) for temporary detention in a jail or lockup
 pending juvenile court hearing or disposition under conditions
 meeting the requirements of Section 51.12 of this code;
 (2) after transfer for prosecution in criminal court
 under Section 54.02 of this code; or
 (3) after transfer from the Texas Juvenile Justice
 Department [Youth Commission] under Section 245.151(c) [61.084],
 Human Resources Code.
 SECTION 3.003. Section 51.21(a), Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (a) A probation department that administers the mental
 health screening instrument or clinical assessment required by
 Section 221.003 [141.042(e)], Human Resources Code, shall refer the
 child to the local mental health authority for assessment and
 evaluation if:
 (1) the child's scores on the screening instrument or
 clinical assessment indicate a need for further mental health
 assessment and evaluation; and
 (2) the department and child do not have access to an
 internal, contract, or private mental health professional.
 SECTION 3.004. Section 53.045(d), Family Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (d) If the grand jury approves of the petition, the fact of
 approval shall be certified to the juvenile court, and the
 certification shall be entered in the record of the case. For the
 purpose of the transfer of a child to the Texas Department of
 Criminal Justice as provided by Section 245.151(c) [61.084(c)],
 Human Resources Code, a juvenile court petition approved by a grand
 jury under this section is an indictment presented by the grand
 jury.
 SECTION 3.005. Sections 54.11(a), (h), (i), and (j), Family
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a) On receipt of a referral under Section 244.014(a)
 [61.079(a)], Human Resources Code, for the transfer to the
 [institutional division of the] Texas Department of Criminal
 Justice of a person committed to the Texas Juvenile Justice
 Department [Youth Commission] under Section 54.04(d)(3), 54.04(m),
 or 54.05(f), or on receipt of a request by the Texas Juvenile
 Justice Department [commission] under Section 245.051(d)
 [61.081(g)], Human Resources Code, for approval of the release
 under supervision of a person committed to the Texas Juvenile
 Justice Department [commission] under Section 54.04(d)(3),
 54.04(m), or 54.05(f), the court shall set a time and place for a
 hearing on the release of the person.
 (h) The hearing on a person who is referred for transfer
 under Section 244.014(a) [61.079(a)], Human Resources Code, shall
 be held not later than the 60th day after the date the court
 receives the referral.
 (i) On conclusion of the hearing on a person who is referred
 for transfer under Section 244.014(a) [61.079(a)], Human Resources
 Code, the court may order:
 (1) the return of the person to the Texas Juvenile
 Justice Department [Youth Commission]; or
 (2) the transfer of the person to the custody of the
 [institutional division of the] Texas Department of Criminal
 Justice for the completion of the person's sentence.
 (j) On conclusion of the hearing on a person who is referred
 for release under supervision under Section 245.051(c)
 [61.081(f)], Human Resources Code, the court may order the return
 of the person to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Youth
 Commission]:
 (1) with approval for the release of the person under
 supervision; or
 (2) without approval for the release of the person
 under supervision.
 SECTION 3.006. Section 58.003(g-1), Family Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (g-1) Any records collected or maintained by the Texas
 Juvenile Justice Department [Probation Commission], including
 statistical data submitted under Section 221.007 [141.044], Human
 Resources Code, are not subject to a sealing order issued under this
 section.
 SECTION 3.007. Section 58.0072(b), Family Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b) Juvenile justice information consists of information of
 the type described by Section 58.104, including statistical data in
 any form or medium collected, maintained, or submitted to the Texas
 Juvenile Justice Department [Probation Commission] under Section
 221.007 [141.044], Human Resources Code.
 SECTION 3.008. Section 41.310(b), Government Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (b) In addition to the duties prescribed by Subsection (a),
 the counsellor shall on a quarterly basis provide the board of
 directors and the standing committees of the senate and house of
 representatives with primary jurisdiction over matters concerning
 correctional facilities with a report concerning offenses or
 delinquent conduct prosecuted by the unit on receiving a request
 for assistance under Section 241.007 [61.098], Human Resources
 Code, or a request for assistance otherwise from a prosecuting
 attorney. A report under this subsection is public information
 under Chapter 552, Government Code, and the board of directors
 shall request that the commission publish the report on the
 commission's Internet website. A report must be both aggregated
 and disaggregated by individual facility and include information
 relating to:
 (1) the number of requests for assistance received
 under Section 241.007 [61.098], Human Resources Code, and requests
 for assistance otherwise received from prosecuting attorneys;
 (2) the number of cases investigated and the number of
 cases prosecuted;
 (3) the types and outcomes of cases prosecuted, such
 as whether the case concerned narcotics or an alleged incident of
 sexual abuse; and
 (4) the relationship of a victim to a perpetrator, if
 applicable.
 SECTION 3.009. Section 411.1141(a), Government Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (a) The Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Youth
 Commission] is entitled to obtain from the department criminal
 history record information maintained by the department that
 relates to a person described by Section 242.013(b) [61.0357(b)],
 Human Resources Code.
 SECTION 3.010. Section 493.017(d), Government Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (d) A sex offender correction program that provides
 counseling sessions for a child who is released under supervision
 under Section 245.053 [61.0813], Human Resources Code, shall report
 to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Youth Commission], not
 later than the 15th day of each month, the following information
 about the child:
 (1) the total number of counseling sessions attended
 by the child during the preceding month; and
 (2) if during the preceding month the child terminates
 participation in the program before completing counseling, the
 reason for the child's termination of counseling or that the reason
 for the termination of counseling is unknown.
 SECTION 3.011. Section 499.053, Government Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 Sec. 499.053. TRANSFERS FROM TEXAS JUVENILE JUSTICE
 DEPARTMENT [YOUTH COMMISSION]. (a) The department [institutional
 division] shall accept persons transferred to the department
 [division] from the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Youth
 Commission] under Section 245.151 [61.084], Human Resources Code.
 (b) A person transferred to the department [institutional
 division] from the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Youth
 Commission] is entitled to credit on the person's sentence for the
 time served in the custody of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department
 [youth commission].
 (c) All laws relating to good conduct time and eligibility
 for release on parole or mandatory supervision apply to a person
 transferred to the department [institutional division] by the Texas
 Juvenile Justice Department [youth commission] as if the time the
 person was detained in a detention facility and the time the person
 served in the custody of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department
 [youth commission] was time served in the custody of the department
 [division].
 (d) A person transferred from the Texas Juvenile Justice
 Department [Youth Commission] for the offense of capital murder
 shall become eligible for parole as provided in Section 508.145(d)
 for an offense listed in Section 3g, Article 42.12, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, or an offense for which a deadly weapon finding has been
 made.
 SECTION 3.012. Section 508.156(a), Government Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (a) Before the release of a person who is transferred under
 Section 245.051(c) [61.081(f)] or 245.151(e) [61.084(g)], Human
 Resources Code, to the department [division] for release on parole,
 a parole panel shall review the person's records and may interview
 the person or any other person the panel considers necessary to
 determine the conditions of parole. The panel may impose any
 reasonable condition of parole on the person that the panel may
 impose on an adult inmate under this chapter.
 SECTION 3.013. Section 152.0007(b), Human Resources Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (b) The board may establish guidelines for the initial
 assessment of a child by the juvenile probation department. The
 guidelines shall provide a means for assessing a child's mental
 health status, family background, and level of education. The
 guidelines shall assist the probation department in determining
 whether a comprehensive psychological evaluation of the child
 should be conducted. The board shall require that probation
 department personnel use assessment information compiled by the
 child's school, if the information is available, before conducting
 a comprehensive psychological evaluation of the child. The board
 may adopt all or part of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department's
 [Juvenile Probation Commission's] minimum standards for assessment
 under Section 221.002 [141.042] in complying with this subsection.
 SECTION 3.014. Sections 152.0011(b) and (c), Human
 Resources Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (b) The juvenile board or local probation department may
 contract with a private vendor for the financing, construction,
 operation, maintenance, or management of a youth boot camp in the
 same manner as the state. [The juvenile board may not award a
 contract under this subsection unless the board requests proposals
 and receives a proposal that meets or exceeds, in addition to
 requirements specified in the request for proposals, the
 requirements specified in Section 141.0434.]
 (c) A juvenile board youth boot camp must offer a program
 that complies with the requirements of the youth boot camps set
 forth in Section 246.001 [141.0432].
 SECTION 3.015. Section 152.0301(f), Human Resources Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (f) The juvenile board shall ensure that the chief juvenile
 officer and fiscal officer:
 (1) keep the financial and statistical records and
 submit reports to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Probation
 Commission] as prescribed by Section 221.007 [141.044]; and
 (2) submit periodic financial and statistical reports
 to the county commissioners court.
 SECTION 3.016. Section 152.0791(g), Human Resources Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (g) The juvenile board shall ensure that the chief juvenile
 officer and fiscal officer:
 (1) keep the financial and statistical records and
 submit reports to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Probation
 Commission] as prescribed by Section 221.007 [141.044]; and
 (2) submit periodic financial and statistical reports
 to the commissioners courts.
 SECTION 3.017. Section 152.1371(f), Human Resources Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (f) The juvenile board shall ensure that the chief juvenile
 officer and fiscal officer:
 (1) keep the financial and statistical records and
 submit reports to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Probation
 Commission] as prescribed by Section 221.007 [141.044]; and
 (2) submit periodic financial and statistical reports
 to the county commissioners court.
 SECTION 3.018. Section 152.1431(f), Human Resources Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (f) The juvenile board shall ensure that the chief juvenile
 officer and fiscal officer:
 (1) keep the financial and statistical records and
 submit reports to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Probation
 Commission] as prescribed by Section 221.007 [141.044]; and
 (2) submit periodic financial and statistical reports
 to the county commissioners court.
 SECTION 3.019. Section 152.2511(f), Human Resources Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (f) The juvenile board shall ensure that the chief juvenile
 officer and fiscal officer:
 (1) keep the financial and statistical records and
 submit reports to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department [Probation
 Commission] as prescribed by Section 221.007 [141.044]; and
 (2) submit periodic financial and statistical reports
 to the county commissioners court.
 ARTICLE 4. TRANSITION AND EFFECTIVE DATE
 SECTION 4.001. (a) Effective September 1, 2010,
 Subchapters A and B, Chapter 61, Human Resources Code, as amended by
 this Act, and Subchapters A and B, Chapter 141, Human Resources
 Code, as amended by this Act, are repealed.
 (b) Effective September 1, 2010, the Texas Youth Commission
 and the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission are abolished and the
 powers and duties of those agencies are transferred to the Texas
 Juvenile Justice Board and the Texas Juvenile Justice Department in
 accordance with Title 12, Human Resources Code, as added by this
 Act.
 SECTION 4.002. (a) On September 1, 2010, or as soon as is
 possible after that date, the Texas Juvenile Justice Board shall
 adopt a comprehensive plan to ensure the smooth transition of all
 programs operated by the Texas Youth Commission and the Texas
 Juvenile Probation Commission before September 1, 2010, from those
 agencies to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department.
 (b) All money, records, property, and equipment in the
 possession of the Texas Youth Commission or the Texas Juvenile
 Probation Commission on September 1, 2010, shall be transferred to
 the possession of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department on
 September 1, 2010, or as soon as possible after that date.
 (c) Effective September 1, 2010, a rule adopted by the Texas
 Youth Commission or the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission is a
 rule of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department until and unless that
 department amends or repeals the rule.
 (d) Effective September 1, 2010, a memorandum of
 understanding entered into by the Texas Youth Commission or the
 Texas Juvenile Probation Commission is binding against the Texas
 Juvenile Justice Department to the same extent that the memorandum
 bound the agency that entered into the memorandum of understanding,
 until and unless the department enters into a new memorandum of
 understanding that modifies the department's responsibilities.
 SECTION 4.003. Unless another provision of this Act
 specifically provides otherwise, the Texas Youth Commission and the
 Texas Juvenile Probation Commission, as applicable, shall
 implement each change in law made by this Act, including adopting
 any necessary or required rule, not later than September 1, 2010.
 SECTION 4.004. (a) The validity of a disposition of a child
 under Title 3, Family Code, made before, on, or after the effective
 date of this Act is not affected solely because:
 (1) the terms of the disposition refer to the Texas
 Youth Commission or the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission; and
 (2) during the time for the disposition is in effect,
 the Texas Youth Commission or the Texas Juvenile Probation
 Commission cease to exist and their powers and duties are
 transferred, as provided by this Act, to the Texas Juvenile Justice
 Department.
 (b) The action of a juvenile probation department taken in
 relation to a child before, on, or after the effective date of this
 Act is not affected solely because:
 (1) the terms of the action refer to the Texas Youth
 Commission or the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission; and
 (2) during the time for the action is in effect, the
 Texas Youth Commission or the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission
 cease to exist and their powers and duties are transferred, as
 provided by this Act, to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department.
 (c) The changes in law made by this Act to Title 3, Family
 Code, are not substantive in nature and apply to conduct by a child
 that occurs before, on, or after the effective date of this Act.
 SECTION 4.005. This Act takes effect September 1, 2009.