Texas 2021 87th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1896 Comm Sub / Bill

Filed 05/19/2021

                    87R26692 MCK-D
 By: Kolkhorst S.B. No. 1896
 (Frank, Minjarez)
 Substitute the following for S.B. No. 1896:  No.


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the provision of health and human services by the
 Department of Family and Protective Services and the Health and
 Human Services Commission.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subchapter E, Chapter 263, Family Code, is
 amended by adding Section 263.409 to read as follows:
 Sec. 263.409.  FINAL NOTIFICATION OF BENEFITS RELATED TO
 KINSHIP VERIFICATION. Before a court enters a final order naming a
 relative or another adult with a longstanding and significant
 relationship with a foster child as the permanent managing
 conservator for the child, the court shall verify that:
 (1)  the individual was offered the opportunity to
 become verified by a licensed child-placing agency to qualify for
 permanency care assistance benefits under Subchapter K, Chapter
 264, and the individual declined the verification process and the
 permanency care assistance benefits; and
 (2)  the child-placing agency conducting the
 verification for the individual's permanency care assistance
 benefits has been notified of the individual's decision to decline
 the permanency care assistance benefits.
 SECTION 2.  Section 264.107(g), Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (g)  If the department or single source continuum contractor
 is unable to find an appropriate placement for a child, an employee
 of the department or contractor who has on file with the department
 or contractor, as applicable, a background and criminal history
 check may provide temporary emergency care for the child. The [An]
 employee may not provide emergency care under this subsection in
 the employee's residence. The department or contractor shall
 provide notice to the court for a child placed in temporary care
 under this subsection not later than the next business day after the
 date the child is placed in temporary care.
 SECTION 3.  Subchapter B, Chapter 264, Family Code, is
 amended by adding Sections 264.1071 and 264.1073 to read as
 follows:
 Sec. 264.1071.  OFFICE STAYS PROHIBITED. The department may
 not allow a child to stay overnight in a department office.
 Sec. 264.1073.  TREATMENT FOSTER CARE. The department and
 single source continuum contractors shall:
 (1)  lessen employment restrictions to allow single
 parents to participate in treatment foster care, when quality care
 is assured;
 (2)  expand the eligible age for treatment foster care
 to include children 10 years of age or older;
 (3)  prepare and plan for the subsequent placement not
 later than the 30th day after a child is placed in treatment foster
 care to assist in the transition to the least restrictive
 placement; and
 (4)  extend the length of time for a treatment foster
 care placement.
 SECTION 4.  Subchapter B, Chapter 264, Family Code, is
 amended by adding Section 264.117 to read as follows:
 Sec. 264.117.  MENTORS FOR FOSTER CHILDREN. (a)  The
 department and each single source continuum contractor in this
 state, in collaboration with local governmental entities and
 faith- and community-based organizations, shall examine the
 feasibility of designing a volunteer mentor program for children in
 congregate care settings.
 (b)  Not later than December 31, 2022, the department shall
 report its findings and recommendations for establishing a mentor
 program to the legislature.
 (c)  This section expires September 1, 2023.
 SECTION 5.  (a) Section 264.1261, Family Code, is amended by
 adding Subsections (b-1), (b-2), (b-3), and (b-4) to read as
 follows:
 (b-1)  Notwithstanding Section 264.0011, the Health and
 Human Services Commission, in collaboration with the department and
 each single source continuum contractor in this state, shall
 develop a plan to increase the placement capacity in each catchment
 area of the state with the goal of eliminating the need to place a
 child outside of the child's community. In developing the plan, the
 commission shall:
 (1)  evaluate whether contracting for additional
 capacity at residential treatment centers, facilities that provide
 mental inpatient or outpatient beds for crisis intervention and
 stabilization purposes only for children with severe behavioral
 health or mental health needs, and other potential temporary
 placement options provides the best methods for meeting capacity
 shortages; and
 (2)  make a recommendation to the department regarding
 contracting for additional capacity.
 (b-2)  A plan developed under Subsection (b-1) that includes
 the use of an inpatient or outpatient mental health facility must
 require the facility to discharge a child placed in the facility not
 later than 72 hours after the treating health care provider
 determines it is not medically necessary for the child to remain in
 the facility.
 (b-3)  The plan developed under Subsection (b-1) must
 include information and contingency plans to ensure adequate
 capacity in other facilities to meet placement needs when a
 facility is placed on probation.
 (b-4)  The department and each single source continuum
 contractor shall contract with facilities for reserve beds to
 ensure the department may place each child in a facility if capacity
 is otherwise unavailable.
 (b)  Sections 264.1261(a) and (b), Family Code, as added by
 Chapter 822 (H.B. 1549), Acts of the 85th Legislature, Regular
 Session, 2017, are repealed.
 SECTION 6.  Section 264.152(4), Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (4)  "Community-based care" means the provision of
 child welfare services in accordance with state and federal child
 welfare goals by a community-based nonprofit or a local
 governmental entity under a contract that includes direct case
 management to:
 (A)  prevent entry into foster care;
 (B)  reunify and preserve families;
 (C)  ensure child safety, permanency, and
 well-being; and
 (D)  reduce future referrals of children or
 parents to the department [foster care redesign required by Chapter
 598 (S.B. 218), Acts of the 82nd Legislature, Regular Session,
 2011, as designed and implemented in accordance with the plan
 required by Section 264.153].
 SECTION 7.  Section 264.154, Family Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (c) to read as
 follows:
 (a)  To enter into a contract with the commission or
 department to serve as a single source continuum contractor to
 provide services under this subchapter [foster care service
 delivery], an entity must be:
 (1)  a nonprofit entity that has:
 (A)  an organizational mission focused on child
 welfare; and
 (B)  a majority of the entity's board members
 residing in this state; or
 (2)  a governmental entity.
 (c)  The department shall request local stakeholders in a
 catchment area, including those listed in Section 264.155(a)(8), to
 provide any necessary information about the catchment area that
 will assist the department in:
 (1)  preparing the department's request for bids,
 proposals, or other applicable expressions of interest to provide
 community-based care in the catchment area; and
 (2)  selecting a single source continuum contractor to
 provide community-based care in the catchment area.
 SECTION 8.  Section 264.155, Family Code, is amended to read
 as follows:
 Sec. 264.155.  REQUIRED CONTRACT PROVISIONS. (a)  A
 contract with a single source continuum contractor to provide
 community-based care services in a catchment area must include
 provisions that:
 (1)  establish a timeline for the implementation of
 community-based care in the catchment area, including a timeline
 for implementing:
 (A)  case management services for children,
 families, and relative and kinship caregivers receiving services in
 the catchment area; and
 (B)  family reunification support services to be
 provided after a child receiving services from the contractor is
 returned to the child's family;
 (2)  establish conditions for the single source
 continuum contractor's access to relevant department data and
 require the participation of the contractor in the data access and
 standards governance council created under Section 264.159;
 (3)  require the single source continuum contractor to
 create a single process for the training and use of alternative
 caregivers for all child-placing agencies in the catchment area to
 facilitate reciprocity of licenses for alternative caregivers
 between agencies, including respite and overnight care providers,
 as those terms are defined by department rule;
 (4)  require the single source continuum contractor to
 maintain a diverse network of service providers that offer a range
 of foster capacity options and that can accommodate children from
 diverse cultural backgrounds;
 (5)  allow the department to conduct a performance
 review of the contractor beginning 18 months after the contractor
 has begun providing case management and family reunification
 support services to all children and families in the catchment area
 and determine if the contractor has achieved any performance
 outcomes specified in the contract;
 (6)  following the review under Subdivision (5), allow
 the department to:
 (A)  impose financial penalties on the contractor
 for failing to meet any specified performance outcomes; or
 (B)  award financial incentives to the contractor
 for exceeding any specified performance outcomes;
 (7)  require the contractor to give preference for
 employment to employees of the department:
 (A)  whose position at the department is impacted
 by the implementation of community-based care; and
 (B)  who are considered by the department to be
 employees in good standing;
 (8)  require the contractor to provide preliminary and
 ongoing community engagement plans to ensure communication and
 collaboration with local stakeholders in the catchment area,
 including any of the following:
 (A)  community faith-based entities;
 (B)  the judiciary;
 (C)  court-appointed special advocates;
 (D)  child advocacy centers;
 (E)  service providers;
 (F)  foster families;
 (G)  biological parents;
 (H)  foster youth and former foster youth;
 (I)  relative or kinship caregivers;
 (J)  child welfare boards, if applicable;
 (K)  attorneys ad litem;
 (L)  attorneys that represent parents involved in
 suits filed by the department; and
 (M)  any other stakeholders, as determined by the
 contractor; and
 (9)  require that the contractor comply with any
 applicable court order issued by a court of competent jurisdiction
 in the case of a child for whom the contractor has assumed case
 management responsibilities or an order imposing a requirement on
 the department that relates to functions assumed by the contractor.
 (b)  A contract with a single source continuum contractor
 under this subchapter must be consistent with the requirements of
 applicable law and may only include terms authorized by the laws or
 rules of this state.
 (c)  In regions identified for implementing community-based
 care and in regions where community-based care has been
 implemented, a contractor may apply to the department for a waiver
 from any statutory and regulatory requirement to increase
 innovation and flexibility for achieving contractual performance
 outcomes.
 SECTION 9.  Sections 264.157(a), (b), and (c), Family Code,
 are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  Not later than the last day of the state fiscal biennium
 [December 31, 2019], the department shall:
 (1)  identify the [not more than eight] catchment areas
 in the state where the department will implement [that are best
 suited to implement] community-based care; and
 (2)  following the implementation of community-based
 care services in those catchment areas, retain an entity based in
 this state that is independent of the department to conduct an
 evaluation of [evaluate] the implementation process and the single
 source continuum contractor performance in each catchment area.
 (b)  Notwithstanding the process for the expansion of
 community-based care described in Subsection (a), [and in
 accordance with the community-based care implementation plan
 developed under Section 264.153, beginning September 1, 2017,] the
 department shall accept and evaluate unsolicited proposals [begin
 accepting applications] from entities based in this state to
 provide community-based care services in a geographic service
 [designated catchment] area where the department has not
 implemented community-based care. An entity that submits a proposal
 to provide community-based care services must ensure that it meets
 all criteria outlined by this subchapter and must demonstrate
 established connections to the area the entity proposes to
 serve. The Health and Human Services Commission in conjunction with
 the department shall adopt rules to ensure that proposals submitted
 under this subsection comply with state procurement laws and rules.
 (c)  In expanding community-based care, the department may
 change the geographic boundaries of catchment areas as necessary to
 align with specific communities or to enable satisfactory
 unsolicited proposals for community-based care services to be
 accepted and implemented.
 SECTION 10.  Section 264.158, Family Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (d) to read as follows:
 (d)  A single source continuum contractor may implement its
 own procedures to execute the department's statutory duties the
 contractor assumes and is not required to follow the department's
 procedures to execute the assumed department duties.
 SECTION 11.  Section 264.159, Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 264.159.  DATA ACCESS AND STANDARDS GOVERNANCE COUNCIL.
 (a)  The department shall create a data access and standards
 governance council to develop protocols for the interoperable
 electronic transfer of data from single source continuum
 contractors to the department to allow the contractors to perform
 case management functions and additional contracted services by the
 department.
 (b)  The council shall develop protocols for the access,
 management, and security of case data that is electronically shared
 between [by] a single source continuum contractor and [with] the
 department.
 (c)  The council shall develop protocols for the access,
 management, and security of data shared with an independent entity
 retained to conduct the independent evaluations required under this
 subchapter. The protocols shall ensure the entity has full,
 unrestricted access to all relevant data necessary to perform an
 evaluation.
 (d)  The council consists of single source continuum
 contractors with active contracts and department employees who
 provide data, legal, information technology, and child protective
 services. The council shall meet at least quarterly during each
 calendar year.
 SECTION 12.  Subchapter B-1, Chapter 264, Family Code, is
 amended by adding Sections 264.171 and 264.172 to read as follows:
 Sec. 264.171.  JOINT LEGISLATIVE OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE ON
 COMMUNITY-BASED CARE TRANSITION. (a) Notwithstanding Section
 264.0011, in this section:
 (1)  "Commission" means the Health and Human Services
 Commission.
 (2)  "Committee" means the Joint Legislative Oversight
 Committee on Community-Based Care Transition.
 (3)  "Department" means the Department of Family and
 Protective Services.
 (b)  The Joint Legislative Oversight Committee on
 Community-Based Care Transition is composed of six voting members
 as follows:
 (1)  three members of the senate, appointed by the
 lieutenant governor; and
 (2)  three members of the house of representatives,
 appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives.
 (c)  The lieutenant governor and speaker of the house of
 representatives shall each appoint a member described by Subsection
 (b)(1) or (2), respectively, to serve as joint chairs of the
 committee.
 (d)  The committee shall meet at the call of the joint chairs
 and may consider public testimony.
 (e)  The committee may employ persons necessary to carry out
 this section through funds made available by the legislature.
 (f)  The committee shall monitor and report to the
 legislature on the following related to the implementation of
 community-based care:
 (1)  the funding of community-based care;
 (2)  the performance and outcomes of community-based
 care statewide and by region;
 (3)  statutory or regulatory barriers to the successful
 implementation of community-based care; and
 (4)  other challenges to the successful implementation
 of community-based care.
 (g)  The committee may request any relevant information from
 the commission, the department, or another relevant state agency,
 and the commission, department, or agency shall comply with the
 request, unless the provision of the information is prohibited by
 state or federal law.
 (h)  Not later than January 1 of each odd-numbered year, the
 committee shall submit a written report of the committee's findings
 and recommendations to the governor, the lieutenant governor, the
 speaker of the house of representatives, and each member of the
 standing committees of the senate and house of representatives
 having primary jurisdiction over child welfare issues.
 (i)  The committee shall monitor the continued
 implementation of community-based care and hold public hearings to
 receive comments from the public on the implementation of
 community-based care.
 Sec. 264.172.  OFFICE OF COMMUNITY-BASED CARE TRANSITION.
 (a) In this section:
 (1)  "Department" means the Department of Family and
 Protective Services.
 (2)  "Office" means the Office of Community-Based Care
 Transition created under this section.
 (b)  The Office of Community-Based Care Transition is a state
 agency independent of but administratively attached to the
 department.
 (c)  The office shall:
 (1)  assess catchment areas in this state where
 community-based care services may be implemented;
 (2)  develop a plan for implementing community-based
 care in each catchment area in this state, including the order in
 which community-based care will be implemented in each catchment
 area and a timeline for implementation;
 (3)  evaluate community-based care providers;
 (4)  contract, on behalf of the department, with
 community-based care providers to provide services in each
 catchment area in this state;
 (5)  measure contract performance of community-based
 care providers;
 (6)  provide contract oversight of community-based
 care providers;
 (7)  report outcomes of community-based care
 providers;
 (8)  identify the employees and other resources to be
 transferred to the community-based care provider to provide the
 necessary implementation, case management, operational, and
 administrative functions and outline the methodology for
 determining the employees and resources to be transferred;
 (9)  create a risk-sharing funding model that
 strategically and explicitly balances financial risk between this
 state and the community-based care provider and mitigates the
 financial effects of significant unforeseen changes in the
 community-based care provider's duties or the population of the
 region it serves; and
 (10)  require the annual review and adjustment of the
 funding based on updated cost and finance methodologies, including
 changes in policy, foster care rates, and regional service usage.
 (d)  The department shall provide any administrative support
 the office needs, and the department and the Health and Human
 Services Commission shall provide access to any information and
 legal counsel the office requires to implement community-based
 care.
 (e)  The governor shall appoint the director of the office to
 serve in that capacity at the pleasure of the governor. The
 director reports directly to the governor.
 (f)  The office shall report to the legislature at least once
 each calendar quarter regarding the implementation of
 community-based care in the state.
 (g)  A provision of this subchapter applicable to the
 department with respect to any duty assigned by this section to the
 office applies to the office in the same manner as the provision
 would apply to the department.
 (h)  Except as otherwise provided by this section, the
 department retains the powers and duties provided by this
 subchapter to the department.
 (i)  The office is abolished and this section expires on the
 date that community-based care is implemented in the last
 department region in this state.
 SECTION 13.  (a)  Subchapter A, Chapter 533, Government
 Code, is amended by adding Sections 533.00521 and 533.00522 to read
 as follows:
 Sec. 533.00521.  STAR HEALTH PROGRAM: HEALTH CARE FOR
 FOSTER CHILDREN.  (a)  The commission shall annually evaluate the
 use of benefits under the Medicaid program in the STAR Health
 program offered to children in foster care and provide
 recommendations to the Department of Family and Protective Services
 and each single source continuum contractor in this state to better
 coordinate the provision of health care and use of those benefits
 for children in foster care.
 (b)  In conducting the evaluation required under Subsection
 (a), the commission shall:
 (1)  collaborate with residential child-care providers
 regarding any unmet needs of children in foster care and the
 development of capacity for providing quality medical, behavioral
 health, and other services for children in foster care; and
 (2)  identify options to obtain federal matching funds
 under the Medical Assistance Program to pay for a safe home-like or
 community-based residential setting for a child in the
 conservatorship of the Department of Family and Protective
 Services:
 (A)  who is identified or diagnosed as having a
 serious behavioral or mental health condition that requires
 intensive treatment;
 (B)  who is identified as a victim of serious
 abuse or serious neglect;
 (C)  for whom a traditional substitute care
 placement contracted for or purchased by the department is not
 available or would further denigrate the child's behavioral or
 mental health condition; or
 (D)  for whom the department determines a safe
 home-like or community-based residential placement could stabilize
 the child's behavioral or mental health condition in order to
 return the child to a traditional substitute care placement.
 (c)  The commission shall report its findings to the standing
 committees of the senate and house of representatives having
 jurisdiction over the Department of Family and Protective Services.
 Sec. 533.00522.  STAR HEALTH PROGRAM: MENTAL HEALTH
 PROVIDERS. A contract between a Medicaid managed care organization
 and the commission for the organization to provide health care
 services to recipients under the STAR Health program must require
 the organization to ensure the organization maintains a network of
 mental and behavioral health providers, including child
 psychiatrists and other appropriate providers, in all Department of
 Family and Protective Services regions in this state, regardless of
 whether community-based care has been implemented in any region.
 (b)  The changes in law made by this section apply only to a
 contract for the provision of health care services under the STAR
 Health program between the Health and Human Services Commission and
 a Medicaid managed care organization under Chapter 533, Government
 Code, that is entered into, renewed, or extended on or after the
 effective date of this section.
 (c)  If before implementing Section 533.00522, Government
 Code, as added by this section, the Health and Human Services
 Commission determines that a waiver or authorization from a federal
 agency is necessary for implementation of that provision, the
 health and human services agency affected by the provision shall
 request the waiver or authorization and may delay implementing that
 provision until the waiver or authorization is granted.
 SECTION 14.  Section 2155.089(c), Government Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (c)  This section does not apply to:
 (1)  an enrollment contract described by 1 T.A.C.
 Section 391.183 as that section existed on September 1, 2015;
 (2)  a contract of the Employees Retirement System of
 Texas except for a contract with a nongovernmental entity for
 claims administration of a group health benefit plan under Subtitle
 H, Title 8, Insurance Code; [or]
 (3)  a contract entered into by:
 (A)  the comptroller under Section 2155.061; or
 (B)  the Department of Information Resources
 under Section 2157.068; or
 (4)  a child-specific contract entered into by the
 Department of Family and Protective Services for a child without
 placement.
 SECTION 15.  Section 2155.144(a), Government Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  This section applies only to the Health and Human
 Services Commission, [and to] each health and human services
 agency, and the Department of Family and Protective Services. For
 the purposes of this section, the Department of Family and
 Protective Services is considered a health and human services
 agency.
 SECTION 16.  Subchapter C, Chapter 40, Human Resources Code,
 is amended by adding Section 40.05291 to read as follows:
 Sec. 40.05291.  ELECTRONIC CASE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM. (a)  The
 department shall develop a plan to eliminate the department's use
 of paper case files and fully transition to an electronic case
 management system.
 (b)  The department shall implement a fully electronic case
 management system not later than September 1, 2023.
 (c)  This section expires September 1, 2025.
 SECTION 17.  Subchapter C, Chapter 40, Human Resources Code,
 is amended by adding Section 40.0583 to read as follows:
 Sec. 40.0583.  STATE AUDITOR REVIEW OF CONTRACTS. The state
 auditor shall annually review the department's performance-based
 contracts to determine whether the department is properly enforcing
 contract provisions with providers and to provide recommendations
 for improving department oversight and execution of contracts.
 SECTION 18.  Subchapter C, Chapter 40, Human Resources Code,
 is amended by adding Section 40.081 to read as follows:
 Sec. 40.081.  IMPLEMENTATION OF FEDERAL LAW. (a) In
 furtherance of department duties under Section 40.002(d), the
 department shall to the greatest extent possible develop capacity
 for placement settings that are eligible for federal financial
 participation under 42 U.S.C. Section 672, including settings:
 (1)  specializing in providing prenatal, postpartum,
 or parenting support for youth;
 (2)  providing high-quality residential care and
 supportive services to children and youth who this state has
 reasonable cause to believe are, or who are at risk of being, sex
 trafficking victims in accordance with 42 U.S.C. Section
 671(a)(9)(C);
 (3)  providing supervised independent living for young
 adults;
 (4)  offering residential family-based substance abuse
 treatment as described by 42 U.S.C. Section 672(j); and
 (5)  serving as a qualified residential treatment
 program.
 (b)  In developing capacity for settings described by
 Subsection (a)(2), the department shall:
 (1)  promote the use of nationally recognized tools
 such as the Commercial Sexual Exploitation-Identification Tool
 (CSE-IT) and any other indicated treatment models or best practices
 for the treatment and prevention of sex trafficking victimization;
 and
 (2)  use providers that:
 (A)  use a trauma-informed care model;
 (B)  have defined programming to address the
 specific needs of trafficking survivors and youth at risk of
 trafficking;
 (C)  have leadership and direct-care staff who
 have completed training regarding the specific needs of trafficking
 survivors and youth at risk of trafficking;
 (D)  have established policies and procedures to
 minimize risk to a child who is a victim of trafficking placed with
 the provider and other children placed with the provider, including
 risks related to running away from the placement or becoming a
 victim of trafficking; and
 (E)  provide case management services or contract
 with an entity in the geographic area of the provider to provide
 case management services to trafficking victims or potential
 victims.
 SECTION 19.  Subchapter B, Chapter 42, Human Resources Code,
 is amended by adding Section 42.026 to read as follows:
 Sec. 42.026.  ACCESS TO DATABASE. (a)  The commission shall
 make the child-care licensing division's searchable database
 accessible to commission and department investigators.
 (b)  The department shall make the department's searchable
 database accessible to commission and department investigators.
 SECTION 20.  Subchapter C, Chapter 42, Human Resources Code,
 is amended by adding Sections 42.0538 and 42.0583 to read as
 follows:
 Sec. 42.0538.  PROVISIONAL LICENSE FOR KINSHIP PROVIDER.
 (a)  The executive commissioner by rule shall allow a child-placing
 agency to issue a provisional license for a kinship provider, as
 defined by Section 264.851, Family Code, who meets the basic safety
 requirements provided by commission rule. A kinship provider
 issued a provisional license under this section shall complete all
 licensing requirements within the time provided by rule.
 (b)  The executive commissioner shall ensure that the
 implementation of this section does not reduce the amount of
 federal money available to this state.
 Sec. 42.0583.  IDENTIFYING AT-RISK PROVIDERS. (a)  The
 department shall use data analytics collected regarding
 residential child-care providers, including general residential
 operations providing treatment services to young adults with
 emotional disorders, to develop an early warning system to identify
 at-risk providers most in need of technical support and to promote
 corrective actions and minimize standard violations.
 (b)  The system developed under Subsection (a) must
 distinguish between different levels of risk using a multi-point
 severity scale. The department shall make information regarding the
 severity scale available to:
 (1)  the standing committees of the senate and the
 house of representatives with oversight of child-care facilities;
 and
 (2)  the public through the department's Internet
 website.
 SECTION 21.  Subchapter D, Chapter 42, Human Resources Code,
 is amended by adding Section 42.080 to read as follows:
 Sec. 42.080.  DISCIPLINARY ACTION PROHIBITED. The
 commission may not issue a citation to or take any other
 disciplinary action against a general residential operation or a
 child-placing agency for failing to employ a licensed child-care
 administrator or licensed child-placing administrator, as
 appropriate, if the operation or agency has:
 (1)  been without an administrator for less than 60
 days; and
 (2)  made substantial efforts to hire a qualified
 administrator.
 SECTION 22.  Subchapter H, Chapter 42, Human Resources Code,
 is amended by adding Sections 42.2541, 42.256, 42.257, 42.258,
 42.259, and 42.260 to read as follows:
 Sec. 42.2541.  IMPROVING EDUCATION SERVICES FOR CHILDREN.
 (a)  The department shall develop a strategic plan for improving the
 provision of educational services to children placed in a general
 residential operation.
 (b)  The department shall report to the Texas Education
 Agency the educational outcomes for children placed in a general
 residential operation.
 (c)  The department and the Texas Education Agency shall
 annually evaluate the educational outcomes for children placed in a
 general residential operation and adopt strategies and policies to
 improve the outcomes and standards.
 Sec. 42.256.  TREATMENT MODEL.  (a)  Each general
 residential operation providing treatment services shall, on
 issuance of an initial or renewal license under this chapter,
 submit to the commission information on the operation's treatment
 model.  A general residential operation that contracts with the
 department to provide residential care for children in foster care
 shall submit information on the operation's treatment model to the
 department on execution and renewal of a contract.
 (b)  The operation shall annually assess the overall
 effectiveness of the model adopted under this section.
 (c)  The treatment model must address all aspects related to
 children's care, including children's therapeutic needs.  The model
 shall include:
 (1)  the manner in which treatment goals will be
 individualized and identified for each child;
 (2)  the method the operation will use to measure the
 effectiveness of each treatment goal for the child;
 (3)  the actions the operation will take if the
 treatment goals are not met; and
 (4)  the method the operation will use to monitor and
 evaluate the effectiveness of the treatment model.
 (d)  A general residential operation may change a treatment
 model adopted under this section after notifying the commission of
 the change and submitting the new treatment model to the
 commission.
 (e)  The executive commissioner may adopt rules to implement
 this section.
 (f)  The general residential operation shall adopt policies
 and procedures to implement the treatment model.
 Sec. 42.257.  EVALUATION OF PLACEMENTS. (a)  A general
 residential operation that considers accepting a child's placement
 with the operation shall evaluate the proposed placement on the
 following criteria:
 (1)  whether the child meets the operation's admission
 criteria;
 (2)  whether the child would benefit from the treatment
 model implemented at the operation; and
 (3)  whether the operation has the staff and resources
 to meet the child's needs considering the other children at the
 operation and the other children's needs.
 (b)  A general residential operation shall ensure that the
 evaluation under Subsection (a) does not delay the timely placement
 of a child.
 Sec. 42.258.  LIMIT ON PLACEMENTS FOR NEW FACILITY. If the
 department or a single source continuum contractor contracts with a
 general residential operation providing treatment services to
 place children with the operation before the operation is licensed,
 the contract must limit the number of children that may be placed at
 the operation each month and limit the number of children with a
 service level of specialized, intense, or intense plus until the
 operation exhibits sustained compliance with the licensing
 standards.
 Sec. 42.259.  TRANSITION PLANS. A general residential
 operation shall develop a transition plan for each child who has
 been placed at the operation for longer than six months.
 Sec. 42.260.  TELEHEALTH PILOT PROGRAM. The commission in
 coordination with the department and single source continuum
 contractors shall establish guidelines in the STAR Health program
 to improve the use of telehealth services to provide and enhance
 mental health and behavioral health care for children placed in the
 managing conservatorship of the state.
 SECTION 23.  Section 43.0081, Human Resources Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 43.0081.  PROVISIONAL LICENSE. (a) The commission
 [department] may issue a provisional child-care administrator's
 license to:
 (1)  an applicant licensed in another state who applies
 for a license in this state if the applicant[. An applicant for a
 provisional license under this section must]:
 (A)  is [(1) be] licensed in good standing as a
 child-care administrator for at least two years in another state,
 the District of Columbia, a foreign country, or a territory of the
 United States that has licensing requirements that are
 substantially equivalent to the requirements of this chapter;
 (B)  has [(2) have] passed a national or other
 examination recognized by the commission [department] that
 demonstrates competence in the field of child-care administration;
 and
 (C)  is [(3) be] sponsored by a person licensed by
 the commission [department] under this chapter with whom the
 provisional license holder may practice under this section; and
 (2)  an applicant who:
 (A)  otherwise qualifies for a license but does
 not meet the experience requirement in Section 43.004(a)(4); and
 (B)  complies with any additional requirement
 established by rule under Subsection (e).
 (b)  The commission [department] may waive the requirement
 of Subsection (a)(1)(C) [(a)(3)] for an applicant if the commission
 [department] determines that compliance with that paragraph
 [subsection] constitutes a hardship to the applicant.
 (c)  A provisional license under Subsection (a)(1) is valid
 until the date the commission [department] approves or denies the
 provisional license holder's application for a license. The
 commission [department] shall issue a license under this chapter to
 the provisional license holder described by Subsection (a)(1) if:
 (1)  the provisional license holder passes the
 examination required by Section 43.004;
 (2)  the commission [department] verifies that the
 provisional license holder has the academic and experience
 requirements for a license under this chapter; and
 (3)  the provisional license holder satisfies any other
 license requirements under this chapter.
 (d)  For a provisional license holder described by
 Subsection (a)(1), the commission shall [The department must]
 complete the processing of a provisional license holder's
 application for a license not later than the 180th day after the
 date the provisional license is issued.  The commission
 [department] may extend the 180-day limit if the results of the
 license holder's examination have not been received by the
 commission [department].
 (e)  The executive commissioner by rule may establish
 additional requirements for the issuance of a provisional
 child-care administrator's license under Subsection (a)(2)(A) as
 the executive commissioner determines appropriate.
 SECTION 24.  The following provisions are repealed:
 (1)  Section 264.156(c), Family Code;
 (2)  Section 264.169, Family Code; and
 (3)  Section 40.0581(f), Human Resources Code.
 SECTION 25.  (a) The Health and Human Services Commission,
 in collaboration with the Department of Family and Protective
 Services, shall review the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
 Services' Integrated Care for Kids (InCK) Model to determine
 whether implementing the model could benefit children in this
 state, including children enrolled in the STAR Health Medicaid
 managed care program.
 (b)  Not later than December 1, 2022, the Health and Human
 Services Commission shall report its findings to the governor and
 legislature.
 (c)  This section expires September 1, 2023.
 SECTION 26.  Not later than December 1, 2022, the Department
 of Family and Protective Services shall provide the legislature
 with options for conducting:
 (1)  independent administrative reviews of department
 investigations of licensed residential child-care facilities; and
 (2)  independent appeals of determinations from those
 investigations.
 SECTION 27.  (a)  The Department of Family and Protective
 Services shall:
 (1)  study extending permanency care assistance
 benefits to individuals who are not relatives of a foster child and
 who do not have a longstanding and significant relationship with
 the foster child before the child enters foster care; and
 (2)  assess the potential impact and favorable
 permanency outcomes for children who might otherwise remain in
 foster care for long periods or have managing conservatorship of
 the child transferred without any benefits to the caregiver.
 (b)  Not later than December 31, 2022, the Department of
 Family and Protective Services shall submit a report to the
 legislature on the results of the study and assessment conducted
 under this section and recommendations for further action based on
 the study and assessment.
 (c)  This section expires September 1, 2023.
 SECTION 28.  Not later than January 1, 2025, the Department
 of Family and Protective Services shall:
 (1)  transition the family-based safety services
 program to evidence-based programs under the Family First
 Prevention Services Act (Title VII, Div. E, Pub. L. No. 115-123);
 (2)  develop an implementation plan for the transition
 of services; and
 (3)  develop community referrals to existing
 prevention and early intervention programs.
 SECTION 29.  The executive commissioner of the Health and
 Human Services Commission shall adopt minimum standards related to
 continuum-of-care operations, cottage home operations, and
 specialized child-care homes as provided by Section 42.042, Human
 Resources Code, as amended by Chapter 317 (H.B. 7), Acts of the 85th
 Legislature, Regular Session, 2017, as soon as practicable after
 the effective date of this Act but not later than January 1, 2024.
 SECTION 30.  The Health and Human Services Commission and
 the Department of Family and Protective Services shall jointly
 evaluate the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (Pub. L.
 116-260), to determine methods for maximizing this state's receipt
 of federal funds to provide foster youth transition planning to
 adulthood and additional services for foster youth and young adults
 in extended foster care.
 SECTION 31.  (a)  As soon as practicable after the effective
 date of this Act but not later than October 15, 2021, the governor
 shall appoint the director of the Office of Community-Based Care
 Transition as required by Section 264.172, Family Code, as added by
 this Act.
 (b)  As soon as practicable after the effective date of this
 Act, the Department of Family and Protective Services shall
 transfer all money, contracts, leases, property, and obligations
 related to the powers and duties of the Office of Community-Based
 Care Transition to that office.
 SECTION 32.  The Office of Community-Based Care Transition,
 the Department of Family and Protective Services, and the Health
 and Human Services Commission are required to implement this Act
 only if the legislature appropriates money specifically for that
 purpose. If the legislature does not appropriate money
 specifically for that purpose, the Office of Community-Based Care
 Transition, the Department of Family and Protective Services, and
 the Health and Human Services Commission may, but are not required
 to, implement this Act using other appropriations available for the
 purpose.
 SECTION 33.  This Act takes effect immediately if it
 receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each
 house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.
 If this Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate
 effect, this Act takes effect September 1, 2021.