Texas 2013 83rd Regular

Texas House Bill HB1633 Comm Sub / Bill

                    By: Dukes H.B. No. 1633
 Substitute the following for H.B. No. 1633:
 By:  Raymond C.S.H.B. No. 1633


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to creating an advisory committee to study child abuse and
 neglect fatalities.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  PROTECT OUR KIDS COMMISSION. (a) The Protect Our
 Kids Commission is composed of the following members:
 (1)  six members appointed by the governor;
 (2)  three members appointed by the lieutenant
 governor;
 (3)  three members appointed by the speaker of the
 house of representatives;
 (4)  one member with experience in behavioral health
 and substance abuse appointed by the Commissioner of the Department
 of State Health Services;
 (5)  one member who represents the Department of Family
 and Protective Services appointed by the commissioner of the
 department; and
 (6)  one member who represents the Office of Title V and
 Family Health of the Department of State Health Services appointed
 by the office director.
 (b)  The appropriate appointing authority shall appoint the
 members to the commission not later than December 31, 2013.
 SECTION 2.  QUALIFICATIONS.  Each member appointed to the
 commission must have experience in one or more of the following
 areas:
 (1)  child welfare administration;
 (2)  child welfare research;
 (3)  child development;
 (4)  legislation, including legislation involving
 child welfare matters;
 (5)  trauma and crisis intervention;
 (6)  pediatrics;
 (7)  psychology and mental health;
 (8)  emergency medicine;
 (9)  neonatology;
 (10)  forensic pathology or medical investigation of
 injury and fatality;
 (11)  social work, with field experience;
 (12)  child protective services, with field
 experience;
 (13)  law enforcement, with experience handling child
 abuse and neglect matters;
 (14)  civil law, with experience handling child abuse
 and neglect matters;
 (15)  criminal law, with experience handling child
 abuse and neglect matters;
 (16)  substance abuse treatment;
 (17)  provision of services to families who had a child
 die of sudden infant death syndrome;
 (18)  provision of services to or advocacy for victims
 of family violence;
 (19)  service on a task force for reducing child abuse
 and neglect and improving child welfare;
 (20)  education at an elementary school or secondary
 school;
 (21)  education at an institution of higher education;
 (22)  epidemiology; or
 (23)  computer science or software engineering, with a
 background in interoperability standards.
 SECTION 3.  DIVERSITY OF QUALIFICATIONS.  In making
 appointments to the commission, each appointing authority shall
 make every effort to select individuals:
 (1)  whose qualifications are not already represented
 by other members of the commission; and
 (2)  who reflect the geographical, cultural, racial,
 and ethnic diversity of the state.
 SECTION 4.  PRESIDING OFFICER. The governor shall designate
 one of the governor's appointees as presiding officer of the
 commission.
 SECTION 5.  VACANCY. A vacancy on the commission shall be
 filled in the same manner as the original appointment.
 SECTION 6.  MEETINGS. (a) Not later than the 30th day after
 the date on which a majority of the members of the commission have
 been appointed, the commission shall hold its first meeting.
 (b)  The commission shall meet at least once each calendar
 quarter and at other times as necessary at the call of the presiding
 officer.
 (c)  The commission may take testimony and receive evidence
 the commission considers advisable to carry out its duties.
 SECTION 7.  COMPENSATION. Members of the commission serve
 without compensation and are not entitled to reimbursement for
 expenses.
 SECTION 8.  DUTIES OF COMMISSION. The commission shall
 study the relationship between child protective services and child
 welfare services and the rate of child abuse and neglect
 fatalities. As part of the study, the commission shall:
 (1)  evaluate current programs and prevention efforts,
 and recommend a comprehensive statewide strategy to reduce and
 prevent fatalities from child abuse and neglect; and
 (2)  review:
 (A)  current research, including the National
 Survey of Child and Adolescent Well-Being and research and
 recommendations from the United States Government Accountability
 Office, to identify lessons, solutions, and needed improvements
 related to reducing fatalities from child abuse and neglect;
 (B)  the effectiveness of child protective
 services and child welfare services in preventing child fatalities
 that are intentionally caused or that occur due to negligence,
 neglect, or a failure to exercise proper care;
 (C)  the effectiveness of the Department of Family
 and Protective Services' policies and systems aimed at collecting
 accurate, uniform data on child fatalities in a coordinated
 fashion, including the identification of the most and least
 effective policies and systems in practice;
 (D)  any existing barriers to preventing
 fatalities from child abuse and neglect, and how to improve child
 welfare outcomes;
 (E)  trends in demographic and other risk factors
 that may predict or that are related to child abuse, including age
 of the child, child behavior, family structure, parental stress,
 and poverty;
 (F)  methods of prioritizing child abuse and
 neglect prevention for families with the highest need; and
 (G)  methods of improving data collection and use,
 including increasing interoperability among state, local, and
 other data systems.
 SECTION 9.  RECOMMENDATIONS. The commission shall:
 (1)  identify promising practices and evidence-based
 strategies to address and reduce fatalities from child abuse and
 neglect;
 (2)  develop recommendations and identify resources
 necessary to reduce fatalities from child abuse and neglect for
 implementation by state and local agencies and private sector and
 nonprofit organizations, including recommendations to implement a
 comprehensive statewide strategy for reducing those fatalities;
 (3)  develop guidelines for ensuring that each county
 in the state is covered by a child fatality review team created
 under Subchapter F, Chapter 264, Family Code, and provide specific
 recommendations for a child fatality review team investigating a
 child fatality that is caused by abuse or neglect; and
 (4)  develop guidelines for the types of information
 that should be tracked to improve interventions to prevent
 fatalities from child abuse and neglect.
 SECTION 10.  GIFTS.  The commission may accept gifts and
 grants of money, property, and services from any source to be used
 to conduct a function of the commission.
 SECTION 11.  REPORT. Not later than December 1, 2015, the
 commission shall submit to the governor, lieutenant governor, and
 speaker of the house of representatives a report containing:
 (1)  the commission's findings and recommendations;
 (2)  a complete explanation of each of the commission's
 recommendations;
 (3)  proposed legislation necessary to implement the
 recommendations made in the report; and
 (4)  any administrative recommendations proposed by
 the commission.
 SECTION 12.  APPLICATION OF LAW GOVERNING ADVISORY
 COMMITTEES. The commission is not subject to Chapter 2110,
 Government Code.
 SECTION 13.  EXPIRATION DATE. The Protect Our Kids
 Commission is abolished and this Act expires December 31, 2015.
 SECTION 14.  EFFECTIVE DATE. This Act takes effect
 September 1, 2013.