Texas 2023 - 88th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2473 Latest Draft

Bill / Engrossed Version Filed 04/24/2023

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                            By: Bucy, Capriglione, Rose, Klick, Lujan, H.B. No. 2473
 et al.


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to improvements to the Texas Information and Referral
 Network.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 531.0312, Government Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsections (f) and (g) to read
 as follows:
 (a)  The Texas Information and Referral Network at the
 commission is the program responsible for the development,
 coordination, and implementation of a statewide information and
 referral network that integrates existing community-based
 structures with state and local agencies. The network must:
 (1)  include information relating to transportation
 services provided to clients of state and local agencies;
 (2)  be capable of assisting with statewide disaster
 response and emergency management, including through the use of
 interstate agreements with out-of-state call centers to ensure
 preparedness and responsiveness;
 (3)  include technology capable of communicating with
 clients of state and local agencies using one-way and two-way
 electronic text messaging to:
 (A)  enhance client access to information and
 referral services;
 (B)  decrease client wait times;
 (C)  improve customer service; and
 (D)  disseminate information to clients in a
 timely manner; [and]
 (4)  include a publicly accessible Internet-based
 system to provide real-time, searchable data about [the location
 and number of] clients of state and local agencies using the system,
 including:
 (A)  the number of clients;
 (B)  the location of clients;
 (C)  [and] the types of requests made by [the]
 clients; and
 (D)  aggregated, de-identified demographic
 information regarding the clients and client households served by
 the network, including, if the information is volunteered by the
 clients after the clients have been given an opportunity to provide
 informed and explicit consent:
 (i)  the gender, race, and ethnicity of each
 client; and
 (ii)  whether the client or a member of the
 client's household is:
 (a)  a veteran;
 (b)  involved in the criminal justice
 system;
 (c)  pregnant; or
 (d)  the caregiver to a child who is
 five years of age or younger or a kinship caregiver;
 (5)  use a standardized screening tool to identify the
 nonmedical drivers of health for all clients who provide informed
 and explicit consent to be screened using the screening tool;
 (6)  provide enhanced navigation services under a level
 of care three (LOC-3) as prescribed by the Department of State
 Health Services' Texas Resilience and Recovery Utilization
 Management Guidelines in order to:
 (A)  better address complex client needs; and
 (B)  collaborate with community partners;
 (7)  be capable of providing closed-loop referrals to
 support clients and track referral outcomes;
 (8)  exchange resource data with external partners,
 including vendors, through data sharing agreements for the purposes
 of:
 (A)  connecting clients to a requested service;
 (B)  addressing nonmedical drivers of health; and
 (C)  decreasing redundancies in the health and
 human services system;
 (9)  comply with all applicable state and federal laws
 relating to protecting the privacy of each client's health and
 personal information, including the Health Insurance Portability
 and Accountability Act of 1996 (42 U.S.C. Section 1320d et seq.);
 (10)  be part of a national repository of information
 and referral programs and services that provides the most updated
 information about programs and services available at the local,
 regional, state, and national levels; and
 (11)  be capable of providing backup information and
 referrals during a statewide disaster or system malfunction.
 (f)  Health care systems and managed care organizations may
 partner and enter into agreements with the commission and area
 information centers to share data using the Texas Information and
 Referral Network to:
 (1)  facilitate client care coordination; and
 (2)  address nonmedical drivers of health, including
 housing, transportation, food, and financial assistance programs.
 (g)  Not later than December 31 of each even-numbered year,
 the commission shall:
 (1)  prepare and submit a report to the governor, the
 lieutenant governor, and the speaker of the house of
 representatives that:
 (A)  summarizes the Texas Information and
 Referral Network's operations, including the effectiveness of the
 network and any improvements made to the network, during the
 preceding two state fiscal years;
 (B)  identifies existing needs and gaps in
 services in communities in this state that could be addressed
 through additional improvements to the network; and
 (C)  provides recommendations for improving the
 network, including recommendations for improving data privacy and
 client experience; and
 (2)  make the report publicly available on:
 (A)  the commission's Internet website; and
 (B)  the Texas Information and Referral Network
 Internet site established under Section 531.0313.
 SECTION 2.  Subchapter B, Chapter 531, Government Code, is
 amended by adding Section 531.03121 to read as follows:
 Sec. 531.03121.  AREA INFORMATION CENTERS:  ACCREDITATION
 REQUIRED. An area information center that contracts with the
 commission to provide Texas Information and Referral Network
 operations must be accredited by a nationally recognized
 accreditation organization.
 SECTION 3.  Sections 531.0313(a) and (b), Government Code,
 are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The Texas Information and Referral Network may develop
 an Internet site to provide information to the public regarding the
 health and human services provided by public or private entities
 throughout the state. An Internet site developed under this
 section must be user-friendly and regularly updated to ensure the
 Internet site's interface supports the navigation needs of the
 site's users.
 (b)  The material in the Texas Information and Referral
 Network Internet site must be:
 (1)  geographically indexed and designed to inform an
 individual about the health and human services provided in the area
 where the individual lives; [. The material must be]
 (2)  further indexed by type of service provided within
 each geographic area; and
 (3)  organized in such a way that the public can search
 and navigate through the Internet site with ease.
 SECTION 4.  If before implementing any provision of this Act
 a state agency determines that a waiver or authorization from a
 federal agency is necessary for implementation of that provision,
 the 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 5.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2023.