Texas 2019 86th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB480 Introduced / Bill

Filed 01/28/2019

                    86R5119 MCK-D
 By: Watson S.B. No. 480


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the Preparation for Adult Living Program and other
 services for foster children transitioning to independent living.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 264.121, Family Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a), (a-3), (a-5), (e), (e-1), (e-2), and (g)
 and adding Subsections (a-7), (a-8), (e-3), (e-4), (e-5), and (e-6)
 to read as follows:
 (a)  The department shall address the unique challenges
 facing foster children in the conservatorship of the department who
 must transition to independent living by:
 (1)  expanding efforts to improve transition planning
 and increasing the availability of transitional family group
 decision-making to each [all] youth age 14 or older in the
 department's permanent managing conservatorship, including
 enrolling the youth in the Preparation for Adult Living Program as
 soon as possible after the youth reaches 14 years of [before the]
 age [of 16];
 (2)  making appropriate accommodations to address any
 barrier to participation in the Preparation for Adult Living
 Program for a youth who has a disability to allow the youth to
 meaningfully participate in the program and documenting the
 accommodations in the youth's case file;
 (3)  coordinating with the commission to obtain
 authority, to the extent allowed by federal law, the state Medicaid
 plan, the Title IV-E state plan, and any waiver or amendment to
 either plan, necessary to:
 (A)  extend foster care eligibility and
 transition services for youth up to age 21 and develop policy to
 permit eligible youth to return to foster care as necessary to
 achieve the goals of the Transitional Living Services Program; and
 (B)  extend Medicaid coverage for foster care
 youth and former foster care youth up to age 21 with a single
 application at the time the youth leaves foster care; and
 (4) [(3)]  entering into cooperative agreements with
 the Texas Workforce Commission and local workforce development
 boards to further the objectives of the Preparation for Adult
 Living Program. The department, the Texas Workforce Commission,
 and the local workforce development boards shall ensure that
 services are prioritized and targeted to meet the needs of foster
 care and former foster care children and that such services will
 include, where feasible, referrals for short-term stays for youth
 needing housing.
 (a-3)  The department shall conduct an independent living
 skills assessment for all youth in the department's conservatorship
 not later than the 45th day after the date the youth reaches 14 [who
 are 16] years of age. The department shall place the assessment
 results in each youth's case file [or older].
 (a-5)  The department shall annually update the assessment
 for each youth assessed under Subsection [Subsections] (a-3) [and
 (a-4)] to determine the independent living skills the youth learned
 during the preceding year to ensure that the department's
 obligation to prepare the youth for independent living has been
 met. The department shall conduct the annual update through the
 youth's plan of service in coordination with the youth, the youth's
 caseworker, the staff of the Preparation for Adult Living Program,
 and the youth's caregiver.
 (a-7)  Not later than the 45th day after the date a youth
 reaches 14 years of age, the department shall hold a transition
 planning meeting to prepare the youth's transition plan and assist
 the youth in developing skills to support the youth's specific
 strengths and address the youth's needs in preparation for
 independence. The department must hold additional transition
 planning meetings at least once every four months until the youth
 leaves foster care.
 (a-8)  The department shall ensure that before a youth leaves
 foster care, each youth who is 14 years of age or older has an e-mail
 address through which the youth may receive encrypted copies of
 personal documents and records.
 (e)  The department shall ensure that each youth, on or
 before the date on which the youth turns 16 years of age, acquires:
 (1)  a copy and a certified copy of the youth's birth
 certificate;
 (2)  [,] a social security card or replacement social
 security card, as appropriate;
 (3)  [, and] a personal identification certificate
 under Chapter 521, Transportation Code;
 (4)  a copy of the youth's most current high school
 transcript;
 (5)  a copy of the record of the youth's most recent
 physical medical examination and dental examinations;
 (6)  a copy of the youth's immunization record; and
 (7)  a copy of any identifying information the youth
 needs to enroll in Medicaid.
 (e-1)  The youth's caseworker shall assist the youth with
 developing a plan for keeping the documents described by Subsection
 (e) in a safe place.
 (e-2)  The youth and the youth's caseworker shall sign a
 document acknowledging the youth's receipt of the documents
 described by Subsection (e) and describing the youth's plan
 developed under Subsection (e-1) for keeping the documents in a
 safe place. The department shall place the acknowledgment in the
 youth's case file[, on or before the date on which the youth turns
 16 years of age].
 (e-3)  The department shall designate one or more employees
 in the Preparation for Adult Living Program as the contact person to
 assist a youth who has not been able to obtain the documents
 described by Subsection (e) [this subsection] in a timely manner
 from the youth's primary caseworker. The department shall ensure
 that:
 (1)  all youth who are age 16 or older are provided with
 the contact information for the designated employees; and
 (2)  a youth who misplaces a document provided under
 this subsection receives assistance in obtaining a replacement
 document or information on how to obtain a duplicate copy, as
 appropriate.
 (e-4)  Before a youth leaves foster care, the department
 shall take all reasonable measures, including completing an
 application for the youth, to assist the youth in obtaining
 Medicaid coverage, and shall document those measures in the youth's
 case file.
 (e-5) [(e-1)]  If, at the time a youth is discharged from
 foster care, the youth is at least 18 years of age or has had the
 disabilities of minority removed, the department shall provide to
 the youth, not later than the 30th day before the date the youth is
 discharged from foster care, the following information and
 documents unless the youth already has the information or document:
 (1)  the youth's birth certificate;
 (2)  the youth's immunization records;
 (3)  the information contained in the youth's health
 passport;
 (4)  a personal identification certificate under
 Chapter 521, Transportation Code;
 (5)  a social security card or a replacement social
 security card, if appropriate; [and]
 (6)  a copy of the youth's most current high school
 transcript; and
 (7)  proof of enrollment in Medicaid, if appropriate.
 (e-6) [(e-2)]  When providing a youth with a document
 required by Subsection (e-5) [(e-1)], the department shall provide
 the youth with a copy and a certified copy of the document or with
 the original document, as applicable.
 (g)  For a youth taking prescription medication, the
 department shall ensure that the youth's transition plan includes
 provisions to assist the youth in managing the use of the medication
 and in managing the child's long-term physical and mental health
 needs after leaving foster care, including:
 (1)  provisions that inform the youth about:
 (A) [(1)]  the use of the medication;
 (B) [(2)]  the resources that are available to
 assist the youth in managing the use of the medication; and
 (C) [(3)]  informed consent and the provision of
 medical care in accordance with Section 266.010(l); and
 (2)  for each youth who is 17 years of age or older and
 preparing to leave foster care, a program supervised by a health
 care professional to assist the youth with independently managing
 the youth's medication.
 SECTION 2.  Section 264.1211, Family Code, as added by
 Chapter 333 (H.B. 928), Acts of the 85th Legislature, Regular
 Session, 2017, is amended by adding Subsections (d) and (e) to read
 as follows:
 (d)  The department, in coordination with the Texas
 Education Agency and the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board,
 shall annually collect information regarding the utilization of
 tuition and fee waivers, including the number of foster children or
 former foster children who:
 (1)  are eligible for exemption from the payment of
 tuition and fees at an institution of higher education under
 Section 54.366, Education Code;
 (2)  receive information developed under Section
 54.366(b), Education Code; and
 (3)  are enrolled in an institution of higher education
 and are exempt from the payment of tuition and fees under Section
 54.366, Education Code.
 (e)  Not later than November 1 of each even-numbered year,
 the department shall prepare and submit a biennial report with the
 information collected under Subsection (d) to the standing
 committees of the senate and house of representatives with
 jurisdiction over child protective services.
 SECTION 3.  Subchapter B, Chapter 264, Family Code, is
 amended by adding Sections 264.1214, 264.1215, 264.1216, and
 264.1217 to read as follows:
 Sec. 264.1214.  EXPUNGEMENT OF CRIMINAL OR JUVENILE RECORDS.
 (a) The department shall ensure that the caseworker for a youth in
 the managing conservatorship of the department, in consultation
 with the youth's attorney ad litem, develops a plan to facilitate
 the sealing or expungement of any eligible criminal or juvenile
 records for offenses for which the youth was adjudicated or
 convicted before the date the youth ages out of care.
 (b)  The department shall record all actions taken under this
 section in the youth's case file.
 Sec. 264.1215.  PLAN FOR ACCESSING BENEFITS FOR YOUTH AGING
 OUT OF FOSTER CARE. Not later than the day a youth in the managing
 conservatorship of the department turns 18 years of age, the
 youth's caseworker shall create a plan detailing the steps the
 youth will take to access benefits for which the youth is eligible
 after the youth leaves foster care, including the transitional
 living allowance, Social Security Disability Insurance benefits,
 aftercare room and board assistance, and education and training
 vouchers. The caseworker shall document the plan in the youth's
 case file.
 Sec. 264.1216.  DRIVER'S EDUCATION. Subject to this
 section, the department shall develop a plan to ensure driver's
 education classes are provided to each youth in the managing
 conservatorship of the department who satisfies the minimum age
 requirements to receive a learner license and chooses to take
 driver's education. The department is not required to provide a
 driver's education class to a youth who is not physically,
 developmentally, or medically able to safely participate in
 driver's education.
 Sec. 264.1217.  HOUSING FOR HOMELESS YOUTH AGING OUT OF
 FOSTER CARE. (a) The department shall ensure that homeless youth
 who have aged out of foster care receive aftercare housing and other
 benefits under the Preparation for Adult Living Program for not
 less than six months while the youth is actively seeking employment
 or prevocational or vocational training services or other
 educational services.
 (b)  For a youth who will voluntarily enter extended foster
 care on the youth's 18th birthday, the youth's caseworker shall, not
 later than six months before the youth's 18th birthday, complete
 any necessary paperwork to ensure the youth has housing on the date
 the youth enters extended foster care. Not later than the 90th day
 before the youth's 18th birthday, the caseworker shall review the
 qualifications and requirements for the youth's housing.
 (c)  If a youth intends to continue living with the youth's
 substitute care provider after the youth's 18th birthday, the
 department shall waive any background check otherwise required for
 the youth to remain living with the substitute care provider.
 (d)  For a youth who continues living with the youth's
 substitute care provider after the youth's 18th birthday, the youth
 may share a bedroom with another youth who is 16 years of age or
 older provided the age difference between the youths does not
 exceed two years.
 (e)  A substitute care provider who prohibits a youth from
 living in the facility after the youth's 18th birthday shall notify
 the youth and the youth's caseworker of that fact in writing not
 later than:
 (1)  the 90th day before the youth's 18th birthday if
 the facility is a foster home; and
 (2)  six months before the youth's 18th birthday if the
 facility is a residential treatment center or cottage home.
 (f)  The department shall assist youth living in supervised
 independent living program arrangements to develop a rental history
 by allowing the youth to cosign the lease for the youth's housing
 provided the property owner does not object.
 (g)  The department by rule shall establish a protocol that
 may be implemented for a youth to prevent the youth from aging out
 of a residential treatment center. The protocol must be
 implemented not later than the youth's 17th birthday.
 (h)  The department annually shall conduct a study to:
 (1)  determine the number of youth in voluntary
 extended foster care who are unable to obtain housing as part of the
 supervised independent living program;
 (2)  determine the type of housing the youth are trying
 to obtain; and
 (3)  analyze the housing options available for the
 youth.
 SECTION 4.  Section 264.125, Family Code, is amended by
 adding Subsections (e) and (f) to read as follows:
 (e)  The department shall include a provision in each
 contract with a residential child-care facility with which children
 in the conservatorship of the department are placed that requires
 the facility to provide those children with age-appropriate
 normalcy activities and experiential life skills.
 (f)  Not later than the December 1 of each year, the
 department shall submit to the lieutenant governor, speaker of the
 house of representatives, and chairs of the standing committees of
 the senate and house of representatives having primary jurisdiction
 over child protection issues a report containing information
 relating to normalcy activities and experiential life skills
 provided to children in the conservatorship of the department.
 SECTION 5.  Subchapter A, Chapter 191, Health and Safety
 Code, is amended by adding Section 191.0049 to read as follows:
 Sec. 191.0049.  BIRTH RECORD ISSUED TO FOSTER CHILD OR YOUTH
 OR HOMELESS OR UNACCOMPANIED YOUTH. On request of a child or youth
 described by this section, the state registrar, a local registrar,
 or a county clerk shall issue, without fee or parental consent, a
 certified copy of the child's or youth's birth record to:
 (1)  a homeless child or youth or an unaccompanied
 youth as those terms are defined by 42 U.S.C. Section 11434a;
 (2)  a child in the managing conservatorship of the
 Department of Family and Protective Services; and
 (3)  a young adult who:
 (A)  is at least 18 years of age, but younger than
 21 years of age; and
 (B)  resides in a foster care placement, the cost
 of which is paid by the Department of Family and Protective
 Services.
 SECTION 6.  Subchapter E, Chapter 521, Transportation Code,
 is amended by adding Section 521.1015 to read as follows:
 Sec. 521.1015.  PERSONAL IDENTIFICATION CERTIFICATE ISSUED
 TO FOSTER CHILD OR YOUTH, HOMELESS CHILD OR YOUTH, OR UNACCOMPANIED
 YOUTH. (a) In this section:
 (1)  "Foster child or youth" means:
 (A)  a child in the managing conservatorship of
 the Department of Family and Protective Services; or
 (B)  a young adult who:
 (i)  is at least 18 years of age, but younger
 than 21 years of age; and
 (ii)  resides in a foster care placement,
 the cost of which is paid by the Department of Family and Protective
 Services.
 (2)  "Homeless child or youth" has the meaning assigned
 by 42 U.S.C. Section 11434a.
 (3)  "Unaccompanied youth" has the meaning assigned by
 42 U.S.C. Section 11434a.
 (b)  This section applies to the application for a personal
 identification certificate only for a foster child or youth, a
 homeless child or youth, or an unaccompanied youth.
 (c)  Notwithstanding Section 521.101, Section 521.1426, or
 any other provision of this chapter, a child or youth described by
 Subsection (b) may, in applying for a personal identification
 certificate:
 (1)  provide a copy of the child's or youth's birth
 certificate as proof of the child's or youth's identity and United
 States citizenship, as applicable; and
 (2)  if the child or youth does not have a residence or
 domicile:
 (A)  provide a letter certifying the child or
 youth is a homeless child or youth or an unaccompanied youth issued
 by:
 (i)  the school district in which the child
 or youth is enrolled;
 (ii)  the director of an emergency shelter
 or transitional housing program funded by the United States
 Department of Housing and Urban Development; or
 (iii)  the director of:
 (a)  a basic center for runaway and
 homeless youth; or
 (b)  a transitional living program; or
 (B)  use the address of the regional office where
 the Department of Family and Protective Services caseworker for the
 child or youth is based.
 (d)  A child or youth described by Subsection (b) may apply
 for and the department may issue a personal identification
 certificate without the signature or presence of or permission from
 a parent or guardian of the child or youth.
 (e)  A child or youth described by Subsection (b) is exempt
 from the payment of any fee for the issuance of a personal
 identification certificate under this chapter.
 SECTION 7.  Section 521.1811, Transportation Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 521.1811.  WAIVER OF FEES FOR FOSTER CHILD OR YOUTH,
 HOMELESS CHILD OR YOUTH, OR UNACCOMPANIED [CARE] YOUTH. A person is
 exempt from the payment of any fee for the issuance of a driver's
 license, as provided under this chapter, if that person is:
 (1)  younger than 18 years of age and in the managing
 conservatorship of the Department of Family and Protective
 Services; [or]
 (2)  at least 18 years of age, but younger than 21 years
 of age, and resides in a foster care placement, the cost of which is
 paid by the Department of Family and Protective Services; or
 (3)  a homeless child or youth or an unaccompanied
 youth as those terms are defined by 42 U.S.C. Section 11434a.
 SECTION 8.  Sections 264.121(a-4) and (a-6), Family Code,
 are repealed.
 SECTION 9.  (a)  As soon as practicable after the effective
 date of this Act, the Department of Family and Protective Services
 shall identify all youth in the department's conservatorship who
 are 14 years of age or older who have not:
 (1)  received a life skills assessment or a Circles of
 Support or Transition Plan Meeting; or
 (2)  had the youth's transition plan updated:
 (A)  within the preceding six months if the youth
 is 16 years of age or older; or
 (B)  within the preceding 12 months if the youth
 is 14 years of age or older.
 (b)  The Department of Family and Protective Services shall
 ensure that all youth who have been identified under Subsection (a)
 of this section immediately receive the required services.
 SECTION 10.  As soon as practicable after the effective date
 of this Act, the Department of Family and Protective Services shall
 identify each youth in the department's permanent managing
 conservatorship who has not been assigned an attorney ad litem and
 request the court to appoint an attorney ad litem for the youth.
 SECTION 11.  Not later than November 1, 2020, the Department
 of Family and Protective Services shall submit to the standing
 committees of the senate and house of representatives with
 jurisdiction over child protective services the initial report
 required by Section 264.1211(e), Family Code, as added by this Act.
 SECTION 12.  The changes in law made by this Act to Chapter
 191, Health and Safety Code, and Chapter 521, Transportation Code,
 apply to an application for a driver's license, personal
 identification certificate, or birth record submitted on or after
 the effective date of this Act. An application for a driver's
 license, personal identification certificate, or birth record
 submitted before the effective date of this Act is governed by the
 law in effect on the date the application was submitted, and the
 former law is continued in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 13.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2019.