Texas 2023 88th Regular

Texas House Bill HB4049 Introduced / Bill

Filed 03/08/2023

                    88R1624 MLH-F
 By: Frank H.B. No. 4049


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the powers and duties of the Health and Human Services
 Commission and the transfer to the commission of certain powers and
 duties from the Department of Family and Protective Services.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Chapter 265, Family Code, is transferred to
 Title 9, Human Resources Code, redesignated as Chapter 137, Human
 Resources Code, and amended to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 137 [265]. FAMILY SUPPORT [PREVENTION AND EARLY
 INTERVENTION] SERVICES
 SUBCHAPTER A. FAMILY SUPPORT [PREVENTION AND EARLY INTERVENTION]
 SERVICES
 Sec. 137.001 [265.001].  DEFINITIONS. In this chapter:
 (1)  "At-risk family" means a family with at least one
 child and at least one of the following:
 (A)  a child in the family has been the subject of
 an investigation of abuse, neglect, or exploitation by the
 Department of Family and Protective Services;
 (B)  the family is experiencing conditions that
 increase the likelihood of involvement with the child welfare
 system, the criminal justice system, or the juvenile justice
 system; or
 (C)  the family is experiencing other conditions
 that threaten the self-sufficiency or stability of the family
 ["Department" means the Department of Family and Protective
 Services].
 (2)  "Commission" means the Health and Human Services
 Commission ["Division" means the prevention and early intervention
 services division within the department].
 (3)  "Executive commissioner" means the executive
 commissioner of the commission.
 (4)  "Family support ["Prevention and early
 intervention] services" means programs intended to provide [early]
 intervention and promote safety and stability for children and
 at-risk families [or prevent at-risk behaviors that lead to child
 abuse, delinquency, running away, truancy, and dropping out of
 school].
 Sec. 137.002 [265.002].  FAMILY SUPPORT [PREVENTION AND
 EARLY INTERVENTION] SERVICES [DIVISION]. (a) The commission
 [department] shall:
 (1)  administer contracts [operate a division] to
 provide family support services to [for] children and [in] at-risk
 [situations and for the] families;
 (2)  [of those children and to achieve the
 consolidation of prevention and early intervention services within
 the jurisdiction of a single agency in order to avoid fragmentation
 and duplication of services and to increase the accountability for
 the delivery and administration of these services. The division
 shall be called the prevention and early intervention services
 division and shall have the following duties:
 [(1)  to] plan, develop, and administer an integrated
 continuum of care system of programs providing family support
 services to at-risk families [a comprehensive and unified delivery
 system of prevention and early intervention services to children
 and their families in at-risk situations];
 (3)  administer the referral, coordination, and
 collaboration of family support services under this chapter with
 similar, existing programs the commission operates;
 (4)  [(2)  to] improve the responsiveness of family
 support services provided to [for at-risk] children and at-risk
 [their] families by facilitating greater coordination and
 flexibility in the use of funds by state and local service
 providers;
 (5)  [(3)  to] provide greater accountability for
 family support [prevention and early intervention] services in
 order to demonstrate the impact or public benefit of a program by
 adopting outcome measures; and
 (6)  [(4)  to] assist local communities in the
 coordination and development of family support [prevention and
 early intervention] services in order to maximize federal, state,
 and local resources.
 (b)  Family support services under this chapter are intended
 to:
 (1)  promote healthy outcomes and strengthen support
 systems for children and at-risk families;
 (2)  assist at-risk families in achieving
 self-sufficiency and stability;
 (3)  promote workforce participation; and
 (4)  prevent or reduce at-risk behaviors in children
 and at-risk families, including behaviors that may lead to:
 (A)  child abuse or neglect;
 (B)  delinquency, running away, truancy, dropping
 out of school, or substance abuse; or
 (C)  involvement with the child welfare system,
 the juvenile justice system, or the criminal justice system [The
 department's prevention and early intervention services division
 must be organizationally separate from the department's divisions
 performing child protective services and adult protective services
 functions].
 Sec. 137.003 [265.003].  COORDINATION [CONSOLIDATION] OF
 PROGRAMS. [(a)] In order to implement the duties provided in
 Section 137.002 [265.002], the commission [department] shall
 identify and coordinate with other [consolidate into the division]
 programs the commission operates with the goal of providing family
 support services [early intervention or prevention of at-risk
 behavior that leads to child abuse, delinquency, running away,
 truancy, and dropping out of school].
 [(b)  The division may provide additional prevention and
 early intervention services in accordance with Section 265.002.
 [Sec. 265.004.  USE OF EVIDENCE-BASED PROGRAMS FOR AT-RISK
 FAMILIES. (a) To the extent that money is appropriated for the
 purpose, the department shall fund evidence-based programs,
 including parenting education, home visitation, family support
 services, mentoring, positive youth development programs, and
 crisis counseling, offered by community-based organizations that
 are designed to prevent or ameliorate child abuse and neglect. The
 programs funded under this subsection may be offered by a child
 welfare board established under Section 264.005, a local
 governmental board granted the powers and duties of a child welfare
 board under state law, a children's advocacy center established
 under Section 264.402, or other persons determined appropriate by
 the department.
 [(a-1)  The department shall ensure that not less than 75
 percent of the money appropriated for parenting education programs
 under Subsection (a) funds evidence-based programs or practices
 described by Section 265.151(b) and that the remainder of that
 money funds promising programs or practices described by Section
 265.151(c) or evidence-informed programs or practices described by
 Section 265.151(d).
 [(a-2)  The department shall actively seek and apply for any
 available federal funds to support parenting education programs
 provided under this section.
 [(b)  The department shall place priority on programs that
 target children whose race or ethnicity is disproportionately
 represented in the child protective services system.
 [(c)  The department shall periodically evaluate the
 evidence-based abuse and neglect prevention programs to determine
 the continued effectiveness of the programs.
 [Sec. 265.0041.  COLLABORATION WITH INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER
 EDUCATION. (a) Subject to the availability of funds, the Health
 and Human Services Commission, on behalf of the department, shall
 enter into agreements with institutions of higher education to
 conduct efficacy reviews of any prevention and early intervention
 programs that have not previously been evaluated for effectiveness
 through a scientific research evaluation process.
 [(b)  Subject to the availability of funds, the department
 shall collaborate with an institution of higher education to create
 and track indicators of child well-being to determine the
 effectiveness of prevention and early intervention services.]
 Sec. 137.004 [265.005].  STRATEGIC PLAN. (a) The
 commission [department] shall develop and implement a five-year
 strategic plan for family support [prevention and early
 intervention] services. Not later than September 1 of the last
 fiscal year in each five-year period, the commission [department]
 shall issue a new strategic plan for the next five fiscal years
 beginning with the following fiscal year.
 (b)  A strategic plan required under this section must:
 (1)  identify methods to leverage other sources of
 funding or provide support for existing community-based
 [prevention] efforts to provide family support services;
 (2)  include a needs assessment that identifies
 programs to best target family support services to the needs of
 underserved [the highest risk] populations and geographic areas;
 (3)  identify [the goals and] priorities and specific
 commission actions to coordinate and provide family support
 services to children and at-risk families [for the department's
 overall prevention efforts];
 (4)  identify and report on specific outcome
 measurements by obtaining and reporting de-identified aggregate
 data, as permitted by other law, on the number of program
 participants who are:
 (A)  involved in the child welfare system, the
 juvenile justice system, or the criminal justice system;
 (B)  recipients of other services the commission
 offers; or
 (C)  listed in the central registry of the names
 of individuals found to have abused or neglected a child maintained
 under Section 261.002, Family Code [report the results of previous
 prevention efforts using available information in the plan];
 (5)  identify additional methods of measuring program
 effectiveness and results or outcomes;
 (6)  identify methods to collaborate with other state
 agencies on [prevention] efforts to provide family support
 services;
 (7)  identify specific strategies to implement the plan
 and to develop measures for reporting on the overall progress
 toward the plan's goals;
 (8)  [identify strategies and goals for increasing the
 number of families receiving prevention and early intervention
 services each year, subject to the availability of funds, to reach
 targets set by the department for providing services to families
 that are eligible to receive services through parental education,
 family support, and community-based programs financed with
 federal, state, local, or private resources; and
 [(9)]  identify specific strategies to increase local
 capacity for the delivery of family support [prevention and early
 intervention] services through collaboration with communities and
 stakeholders; and
 (9)  address methods for coordinating with other
 commission programs under Section 137.003.
 (c)  The commission [department] shall coordinate with
 interested parties and communities in developing the strategic plan
 under this section.
 (d)  The commission [department] shall annually review and
 appropriately update the strategic plan developed under this
 section.
 (e)  The commission [department] shall post the strategic
 plan developed under this section and any update to the plan on its
 Internet website.
 [Sec. 265.006.  PROHIBITION ON USE OF AGENCY NAME OR LOGO.
 The department may not allow the use of the department's name or
 identifying logo or insignia on forms or other materials related to
 the department's prevention and early intervention services that
 are:
 [(1)  provided by the department's contractors; or
 [(2)  distributed by the department's contractors to
 the department's clients.
 [Sec. 265.007.  IMPROVING PROVISION OF PREVENTION AND EARLY
 INTERVENTION SERVICES. (a) To improve the effectiveness and
 delivery of prevention and early intervention services, the
 department shall:
 [(1)  identify geographic areas that have a high need
 for prevention and early intervention services but do not have
 prevention and early intervention services available in the area or
 have only unevaluated prevention and early intervention services
 available in the area; and
 [(2)  develop strategies for community partners to:
 [(A)  improve the early recognition of child abuse
 or neglect;
 [(B)  improve the reporting of child abuse and
 neglect; and
 [(C)  reduce child fatalities.
 [(b)  The department may not use data gathered under this
 section to identify a specific family or individual.
 [Sec. 265.008.  EVALUATION OF PREVENTION AND EARLY
 INTERVENTION SERVICES. (a) The department may enter into
 agreements with institutions of higher education to conduct
 efficacy reviews of any prevention and early intervention services
 provided under this chapter that have not previously been evaluated
 for effectiveness in a research evaluation. The efficacy review
 shall include, when possible, a cost-benefit analysis of the
 program to the state and, when applicable, the return on investment
 of the program to the state.
 [(b)  The department may not enter into an agreement to
 conduct a program efficacy evaluation under this section unless:
 [(1)  the agreement with the institution of higher
 education is cost neutral; and
 [(2)  the department and institution of higher
 education conducting the evaluation under this section protect the
 identity of individuals who are receiving services from the
 department that are being evaluated.]
 SUBCHAPTER B. FAMILY SUPPORT SERVICES PROGRAMS FOR CHILD ABUSE AND
 NEGLECT [PRIMARY] PREVENTION [PROGRAMS]
 Sec. 137.051 [265.051].  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
 (1)  "Child abuse and neglect prevention" means family
 support services designed to prevent child abuse and neglect before
 the abuse or neglect occurs. The term includes infant mortality
 prevention education programs.
 (2)  "Children's trust fund" means a child abuse and
 neglect [primary] prevention program.
 [(2)  "Primary prevention" means services and
 activities available to the community at large or to families to
 prevent child abuse and neglect before it occurs. The term includes
 infant mortality prevention education programs.]
 (3)  "Operating fund" means the commission's
 [Department of Family and Protective Services] child abuse and
 neglect prevention operating fund account.
 (4)  "State agency" means a board, commission,
 department, office, or other state agency that:
 (A)  is in the executive branch of the state
 government;
 (B)  was created by the constitution or a statute
 of this state; and
 (C)  has statewide jurisdiction.
 (5)  "Trust fund" means the commission's child abuse
 and neglect prevention trust fund account.
 Sec. 137.052 [265.052].  CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT [PRIMARY]
 PREVENTION PROGRAMS. (a) The commission [department] shall
 operate the children's trust fund to:
 (1)  set policy, offer resources for community
 [primary] prevention programs, and provide information and
 education on family support services and prevention of child abuse
 and neglect;
 (2)  develop a state plan for expending funds for child
 abuse and neglect [primary] prevention programs that includes an
 annual schedule of transfers of trust fund money to the operating
 fund;
 (3)  develop eligibility criteria for applicants
 requesting funding for child abuse and neglect [primary] prevention
 programs; and
 (4)  establish funding priorities for child abuse and
 neglect [primary] prevention programs.
 (b)  The children's trust fund shall accommodate the
 commission's [department's] existing rules and policies in
 procuring, awarding, and monitoring contracts and grants.
 (c)  The commission [department] may:
 (1)  apply for and receive funds made available by the
 federal government or another public or private source for
 administering programs under this subchapter and for funding for
 child abuse and neglect [primary] prevention programs; and
 (2)  solicit donations for child abuse and neglect
 [primary] prevention programs.
 Sec. 137.053 [265.053].  ADMINISTRATIVE AND OTHER COSTS.
 (a) Administrative costs under this subchapter during any fiscal
 year may not exceed an amount equal to 50 percent of the interest
 credited to the trust fund during the preceding fiscal year.
 (b)  Funds expended under a special project grant from a
 governmental source or a nongovernmental source for public
 education or public awareness may not be counted as administrative
 costs for the purposes of this section.
 Sec. 137.054 [265.054].  CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT PREVENTION
 TRUST FUND ACCOUNT. (a) The child abuse and neglect prevention
 trust fund account is an account in the general revenue fund. Money
 in the trust fund is dedicated to child abuse and neglect [primary]
 prevention programs and family support services programs.
 (b)  The commission [department] may transfer money
 contained in the trust fund to the operating fund at any time.
 However, during a fiscal year the commission [department] may not
 transfer more than the amount appropriated for the operating fund
 for that fiscal year. Money transferred to the operating fund that
 was originally deposited to the credit of the trust fund under
 Section 118.022, Local Government Code, may be used only for child
 abuse and neglect [primary] prevention programs.
 (c)  Interest earned on the trust fund shall be credited to
 the trust fund.
 (d)  The trust fund is exempt from the application of Section
 403.095, Government Code.
 (e)  All marriage license fees and other fees collected for
 and deposited in the trust fund and interest earned on the trust
 fund balance shall be appropriated each biennium only to the
 operating fund for child abuse and neglect [primary] prevention
 programs and family support services programs.
 Sec. 137.055 [265.055].  COMMISSION [DEPARTMENT] OPERATING
 FUND ACCOUNT. (a) The operating fund is an account in the general
 revenue fund.
 (b)  Administrative and other costs allowed in Section
 137.053 [265.053] shall be taken from the operating fund. The
 commission [department] may transfer funds contained in the
 operating fund to the trust fund at any time.
 (c)  The legislature may appropriate the money in the
 operating fund to carry out the provisions of this subchapter.
 (d)  The operating fund is exempt from the application of
 Section 403.095, Government Code.
 [Sec. 265.056.  CONTRIBUTIONS. (a) The department may
 solicit contributions from any appropriate source.
 [(b)  Any other contributions for child abuse and neglect
 primary prevention or other prevention and early intervention
 programs shall be deposited into a separate designated fund in the
 state treasury and shall be used for that designated purpose.
 [(c)  A person may contribute funds to either the trust fund,
 the operating fund, or a fund designated by the department for a
 specific child abuse and neglect primary prevention or other
 prevention or early intervention purpose.
 [(d)  If a person designates that a contribution is intended
 as a donation to a specific fund, the contribution shall be
 deposited in the designated fund.]
 Sec. 137.056 [265.057].  COMMUNITY YOUTH DEVELOPMENT
 GRANTS. (a) Subject to available funding, the commission
 [department] shall award community youth development grants to
 communities identified by incidence of crime. The commission
 [department] shall give priority in awarding grants under this
 section to areas of the state in which there is a high incidence of
 juvenile crime.
 (b)  The purpose of a grant under this section is to assist a
 community in alleviating conditions in the family and community
 that lead to juvenile crime.
 SUBCHAPTER C. NURSE-FAMILY PARTNERSHIP COMPETITIVE GRANT PROGRAM
 Sec. 137.101 [265.101].  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
 (1)  "Competitive grant program" means the
 nurse-family partnership competitive grant program established
 under this subchapter.
 (2)  "Partnership program" means a nurse-family
 partnership program.
 Sec. 137.102 [265.102].  OPERATION OF NURSE-FAMILY
 PARTNERSHIP COMPETITIVE GRANT PROGRAM. (a) The commission
 [department] shall operate a nurse-family partnership competitive
 grant program for [through which] the commission to [department
 will] award grants for the implementation of nurse-family
 partnership programs, or the expansion of existing programs, and
 for the operation of those programs for a period of not less than
 two years.
 (b)  The commission [department] shall award grants under
 the program to applicants, including applicants operating existing
 programs, in a manner that ensures that the partnership programs
 collectively[:
 [(1)]  operate in multiple communities that are
 geographically distributed throughout this state[; and
 [(2)  provide program services to approximately 2,000
 families].
 Sec. 137.103 [265.103].  PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS.
 A partnership program funded through a grant awarded under this
 subchapter must:
 (1)  strictly adhere to the program model developed by
 the Nurse-Family Partnership National Service Office, including
 any clinical, programmatic, and data collection requirements of
 that model;
 (2)  require that registered nurses regularly visit the
 homes of low-income, first-time mothers participating in the
 program to provide services designed to:
 (A)  improve pregnancy outcomes;
 (B)  improve child health and development;
 (C)  improve family economic self-sufficiency and
 stability; [and]
 (D)  reduce the incidence of child abuse and
 neglect;
 (E)  increase workforce participation; and
 (F)  reduce reliance on state and federal public
 assistance programs;
 (3)  require that nurses who provide services through
 the program:
 (A)  receive training from the office of the
 attorney general at least once each year on procedures by which a
 person may voluntarily acknowledge the paternity of a child and on
 the availability of child support services from the office;
 (B)  provide a mother with information about the
 rights, responsibilities, and benefits of establishing the
 paternity of her child, if appropriate;
 (C)  provide assistance to a mother and the
 alleged father of her child if the mother and alleged father seek to
 voluntarily acknowledge paternity of the child, if appropriate; and
 (D)  provide information to a mother about the
 availability of child support services from the office of the
 attorney general; and
 (4)  require that the regular nurse visits described by
 Subdivision (2) begin not later than a mother's 28th week of
 gestation and end when her child reaches two years of age.
 Sec. 137.104 [265.104].  APPLICATION. (a) A public or
 private entity, including a county, municipality, or other
 political subdivision of this state, may apply for a grant under
 this subchapter.
 (b)  To apply for a grant, an applicant must submit a written
 application to the commission [department] on a form prescribed by
 the commission [department] in consultation with the Nurse-Family
 Partnership National Service Office.
 (c)  The application [prescribed by the department] must:
 (1)  require the applicant to provide data on the
 number of low-income, first-time mothers residing in the community
 in which the applicant proposes to operate or expand a partnership
 program and provide a description of existing services available to
 those mothers;
 (2)  describe the ongoing monitoring and evaluation
 process to which a grant recipient is subject under Section 137.107
 [265.109], including the recipient's obligation to collect and
 provide information requested by the commission [department] under
 Section 137.107(c) [265.109(c)]; and
 (3)  require the applicant to provide other relevant
 information as determined by the commission [department].
 [Sec. 265.105.  ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS IN AWARDING
 GRANTS. In addition to the factors described by Sections
 265.102(b) and 265.103, in determining whether to award a grant to
 an applicant under this subchapter, the department shall consider:
 [(1)  the demonstrated need for a partnership program
 in the community in which the applicant proposes to operate or
 expand the program, which may be determined by considering:
 [(A)  the poverty rate, the crime rate, the number
 of births to Medicaid recipients, the rate of poor birth outcomes,
 and the incidence of child abuse and neglect during a prescribed
 period in the community; and
 [(B)  the need to enhance school readiness in the
 community;
 [(2)  the applicant's ability to participate in ongoing
 monitoring and performance evaluations under Section 265.109,
 including the applicant's ability to collect and provide
 information requested by the department under Section 265.109(c);
 [(3)  the applicant's ability to adhere to the
 partnership program standards adopted under Section 265.106;
 [(4)  the applicant's ability to develop broad-based
 community support for implementing or expanding a partnership
 program, as applicable; and
 [(5)  the applicant's history of developing and
 sustaining innovative, high-quality programs that meet the needs of
 families and communities.]
 Sec. 137.105 [265.106].  PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM STANDARDS.
 The executive commissioner[, with the assistance of the
 Nurse-Family Partnership National Service Office,] shall adopt
 standards for the partnership programs funded under this
 subchapter. The standards must be consistent with [adhere to] the
 Nurse-Family Partnership National Service Office program model
 standards and guidelines that were developed in multiple,
 randomized clinical trials and have been tested and replicated in
 multiple communities.
 Sec. 137.106 [265.107].  USE OF AWARDED GRANT FUNDS. The
 grant funds awarded under this subchapter may be used only to cover
 costs related to implementing or expanding and operating a
 partnership program, including costs related to:
 (1)  administering the program;
 (2)  training and managing registered nurses who
 participate in the program;
 (3)  paying the salaries and expenses of registered
 nurses who participate in the program;
 (4)  paying for facilities and equipment for the
 program; and
 (5)  paying for services provided by the Nurse-Family
 Partnership National Service Office to ensure a grant recipient
 adheres to the organization's program model.
 [Sec. 265.108.  STATE NURSE CONSULTANT. Using money
 appropriated for the competitive grant program, the department
 shall hire or contract with a state nurse consultant to assist grant
 recipients with implementing or expanding and operating the
 partnership programs in the applicable communities.]
 Sec. 137.107 [265.109].  PROGRAM MONITORING AND EVALUATION;
 ANNUAL COMMITTEE REPORTS. (a) The commission [department, with
 the assistance of the Nurse-Family Partnership National Service
 Office,] shall:
 (1)  adopt performance indicators that are designed to
 measure a grant recipient's performance with respect to the
 partnership program standards adopted by the commissioner under
 Section 137.105 [265.106];
 (2)  use the performance indicators to continuously
 monitor and formally evaluate on an annual basis the performance of
 each grant recipient; and
 (3)  prepare and submit an annual report, not later
 than December 1 of each year, to the Senate Health and Human
 Services Committee, or its successor, and the House Human Services
 Committee, or its successor, regarding the performance of each
 grant recipient during the preceding state fiscal year with respect
 to providing partnership program services.
 (b)  The report required under Subsection (a)(3) must
 include:
 (1)  the number of:
 (A)  low-income, first-time mothers to whom each
 grant recipient provided partnership program services and, of that
 number, the number of mothers who established the paternity of an
 alleged father as a result of services provided under the program;
 (B)  mothers who married the father or reside in
 the same household with the father;
 (C)  mothers who have previous involvement with
 the child welfare system, the criminal justice system, or the
 juvenile justice system; and
 (D)  mothers who receive other services from the
 commission;
 (2)  the extent to which each grant recipient made
 regular visits to mothers during the period described by Section
 137.103(4) [265.103(4)]; and
 (3)  the extent to which each grant recipient adhered
 to the Nurse-Family Partnership National Service Office's program
 model, including the extent to which registered nurses:
 (A)  conducted home visitations comparable in
 frequency, duration, and content to those delivered in Nurse-Family
 Partnership National Service Office clinical trials; and
 (B)  assessed the health and well-being of mothers
 and children participating in the partnership programs in
 accordance with indicators of maternal, child, and family health
 defined by the [department in consultation with the] Nurse-Family
 Partnership National Service Office and required by the commission.
 (c)  On request, each grant recipient shall timely collect
 and provide data and any other information required by the
 commission [department] to monitor and evaluate the recipient or to
 prepare the report required by this section.
 Sec. 137.108 [265.110].  COMPETITIVE GRANT PROGRAM FUNDING.
 (a) The commission [department] shall actively seek and apply for
 any available federal funds, including federal Medicaid and
 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) funds, to assist in
 financing the competitive grant program established under this
 subchapter.
 (b)  The commission [department] may use appropriated funds
 from the state government and may accept gifts, donations, and
 grants of money from the federal government, local governments,
 private corporations, or other persons to assist in financing the
 competitive grant program.
 SUBCHAPTER D. EVIDENCE-BASED PROGRAMS AND PRACTICES
 Sec. 137.151 [265.151].  REQUIREMENTS FOR PROGRAMS AND
 PRACTICES ON EVIDENCE-BASED SPECTRUM. (a) [(b)] An evidence-based
 program or practice is a program or practice that:
 (1)  is research-based and grounded in relevant,
 empirical knowledge and program-determined outcomes;
 (2)  has comprehensive standards ensuring the highest
 quality service delivery with continuous improvement in the quality
 of service delivery;
 (3)  has demonstrated significant positive outcomes;
 (4)  has been evaluated by at least one rigorous,
 random, controlled research trial across heterogeneous populations
 or communities with research results that have been published in a
 peer-reviewed journal;
 (5)  substantially complies with a program or practice
 manual or design that specifies the purpose, outcomes, duration,
 and frequency of the program or practice services;
 (6)  employs well-trained and competent staff and
 provides continual relevant professional development opportunities
 to the staff; and
 (7)  is associated with an organization in this state,
 a national organization, an institution of higher education, or a
 national or state public health institute.
 (b) [(c)]  A promising program or practice is a program or
 practice that:
 (1)  has an active impact evaluation of the program or
 practice or demonstrates a schedule for implementing an active
 impact evaluation of the program or practice;
 (2)  has been evaluated by at least one outcome-based
 study demonstrating effectiveness or random, controlled trial in a
 homogeneous sample;
 (3)  substantially complies with a program or practice
 manual or design that specifies the purpose, outcomes, duration,
 and frequency of the program or practice services;
 (4)  employs well-trained and competent staff and
 provides continual relevant professional development opportunities
 to the staff; and
 (5)  is research-based and grounded in relevant,
 empirical knowledge and program- or practice-determined outcomes.
 (c) [(d)]  An evidence-informed program or practice is a
 program or practice that:
 (1)  combines well-researched interventions with
 clinical experience and ethics, and client preferences and culture,
 to guide and inform the delivery of treatments and services;
 (2)  has an active impact evaluation of the program or
 practice or demonstrates a schedule for implementing an active
 impact evaluation of the program or practice;
 (3)  substantially complies with a program or practice
 manual or design that specifies the purpose, outcome, duration, and
 frequency of the program or practice services; and
 (4)  employs well-trained and competent staff and
 provides continual relevant professional development opportunities
 to the staff.
 Sec. 137.152 [265.152].  OUTCOMES OF EVIDENCE-BASED FAMILY
 SUPPORT SERVICES [PREVENTION AND EARLY INTERVENTION] PROGRAMS AND
 PRACTICES. The commission [department] shall ensure that a family
 support services [prevention and early intervention] program or
 practice provided under this subchapter achieves favorable
 behavioral outcomes in at least two of the following areas:
 (1)  improved cognitive development of children;
 (2)  increased readiness for and participation and
 performance in school;
 (3)  reduced child abuse, neglect, and injury;
 (4)  improved child safety;
 (5)  improved social-emotional development of children
 and youth;
 (6)  increased protective factors, including
 nurturing, bonding, and other parenting skills;
 (7)  improved family economic self-sufficiency;
 (8)  reduced parental or youth involvement with the
 criminal justice system; and
 (9)  increased paternal involvement and support.
 Sec. 137.153 [265.153].  EVALUATION OF FAMILY SUPPORT
 SERVICES [PREVENTION AND EARLY INTERVENTION] PROGRAMS AND
 PRACTICES. (a) The commission [department] shall adopt outcome
 indicators to measure the effectiveness of family support services
 [prevention and early intervention] programs and practices
 provided under this subchapter in achieving desired outcomes.
 (b)  The commission [department] may work directly with the
 model developer of a family support services [prevention and early
 intervention] program or practice to identify appropriate outcome
 indicators for the program or practice and to ensure that the
 program or practice substantially complies with the model.
 (c)  The commission [department] shall develop internal
 processes to share information with family support services
 [prevention and early intervention service] providers to assist the
 commission [department] in analyzing the performance of the
 programs or practices.
 (d)  The commission [department] shall use information
 obtained under this section to:
 (1)  monitor family support services [prevention and
 early intervention] programs and practices;
 (2)  continually improve the quality of the programs
 and practices; and
 (3)  evaluate the effectiveness of the programs and
 practices.
 [Sec. 265.154.  REPORTS TO LEGISLATURE. (a) Not later than
 December 1 of each even-numbered year, the department shall prepare
 and submit a report on state-funded prevention and early
 intervention programs and practices to the standing committees of
 the senate and house of representatives with jurisdiction over
 child protective services.
 [(b)  A report submitted under this section must include:
 [(1)  a description of the prevention and early
 intervention programs and practices implemented and of the models
 associated with the programs and practices;
 [(2)  information on the families served by the
 programs and practices, including the number of families served and
 their demographic information;
 [(3)  the goals and achieved outcomes of the
 implemented programs and practices;
 [(4)  information on the cost for each family served,
 including any available third-party return-on-investment analysis;
 and
 [(5)  information explaining the percentage of money
 spent on evidence-based programs and practices, on promising
 programs and practices, and on evidence-informed programs and
 practices.]
 Sec. 137.154  [265.155].  RULES. The executive
 commissioner [of the department] may adopt rules as necessary to
 implement this subchapter.
 SECTION 2.  Section 261.002, Family Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (d) to read as follows:
 (d)  The department shall provide the Health and Human
 Services Commission with access to the central registry as
 necessary for the commission to perform its duties under Section
 137.004, Human Resources Code.
 SECTION 3.  Section 40.0025(b), Human Resources Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (b)  In accordance with Subchapter A-1, Chapter 531,
 Government Code, and notwithstanding any other law, the department
 performs only functions, including the statewide intake of reports
 and other information, related to the following services:
 (1)  child protective services, including services
 that are required by federal law to be provided by this state's
 child welfare agency;
 (2)  adult protective services, other than
 investigations of the alleged abuse, neglect, or exploitation of an
 elderly person or person with a disability:
 (A)  in a facility operated, or in a facility or by
 a person licensed, certified, or registered, by a state agency; or
 (B)  by a provider that has contracted to provide
 home and community-based services; and
 (3)  family support [prevention and early
 intervention] services functions, including:
 (A)  family support [prevention and early
 intervention] services as defined under Section 137.001 [265.001,
 Family Code]; and
 (B)  programs that:
 (i)  provide parent education;
 (ii)  promote healthier parent-child
 relationships; or
 (iii)  prevent family violence.
 SECTION 4.  Subtitle B, Title 2, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by adding Chapter 54 to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 54. TEXAS PREGNANCY AND PARENTING SUPPORT NETWORK
 Sec. 54.001.  DEFINITIONS. In this chapter:
 (1)  "Abortion" has the meaning assigned by Section
 245.002.
 (2)  "Network contractor" means a person who contracts
 with the commission to provide or coordinate the provision of
 services under this chapter.
 Sec. 54.002.  ESTABLISHMENT. (a) The commission shall
 establish the Texas Pregnancy and Parenting Support Network to:
 (1)  promote healthy pregnancy and childbirth;
 (2)  increase access to resources that promote family
 and child development;
 (3)  encourage family formation; and
 (4)  increase the number of families who achieve
 economic self-sufficiency.
 (b)  The commission shall establish a statewide network of
 service providers, including pregnancy support centers, adoption
 assistance providers, and maternity homes, to provide the services
 described by Section 54.003. The commission may contract with the
 service providers to provide the services in accordance with this
 chapter.
 Sec. 54.003.  SERVICES. (a) Using the statewide network of
 service providers established under Section 54.002, the commission
 shall ensure that services described by this chapter are available
 throughout this state.
 (b)  Services provided through the network include:
 (1)  counseling and mentoring on pregnancy, education,
 parenting skills, adoption services, life skills, and employment
 readiness topics;
 (2)  care coordination for prenatal services,
 including connecting participants to health services provided
 through the network;
 (3)  educational materials and information about
 pregnancy, parenting, and adoption services;
 (4)  referrals to governmental and social service
 programs, including child care, transportation, housing, and state
 and federal benefit programs;
 (5)  classes on life skills, personal finance,
 parenthood, stress management, job training, job readiness, job
 placement, and educational attainment;
 (6)  provision of supplies for infant care and
 pregnancy, including car seats, cribs, maternity clothes, infant
 diapers, and formula; and
 (7)  housing and support services in maternity homes.
 (c)  The commission or network contractors may not provide
 family planning services through the network.
 Sec. 54.004.  ELIGIBILITY. Network services are available
 to a resident of this state who is:
 (1)  a pregnant woman;
 (2)  the biological father of an unborn child;
 (3)  the biological parent of a child who is 36 months
 of age or younger;
 (4)  an adoptive parent of a child who is 36 months of
 age or younger;
 (5)  an approved adoptive parent of an unborn child;
 (6)  a former participant who has experienced the loss
 of a child;
 (7)  a parent or legal guardian of a pregnant minor who
 is a network client;
 (8)  a network client who is the parent, legal
 guardian, or adult caregiver of a child who is 36 months of age or
 younger; and
 (9)  a parent who experienced a miscarriage or loss of a
 child not more than 90 days before the parent begins participation
 in the services offered through the network.
 Sec. 54.005.  PROVISION OF SERVICES. The commission and its
 network contractors shall contract with service providers to assess
 the needs of the participants and implement a plan to provide
 services to address the participants' most critical needs.
 Sec. 54.006.  PERFORMANCE OUTCOMES. (a) The commission and
 its network contractors may contract only with service providers
 whose performance outcomes include:
 (1)  improving healthy pregnancy and childbirth
 outcomes;
 (2)  improving child health and psychological
 development;
 (3)  assisting families in achieving economic
 self-sufficiency and stability;
 (4)  increasing workforce participation;
 (5)  reducing reliance on state and federal public
 assistance programs; and
 (6)  promoting marriage and family formation for
 participating parents.
 (b)  The commission shall identify indicators to measure the
 performance outcomes under Subsection (a) and require periodic
 reporting on the outcomes by network contractors and participating
 service providers.
 Sec. 54.007.  IMPACT EVALUATION. (a) The commission shall
 periodically conduct impact evaluations to measure the effects of
 services on participants receiving services through the network and
 to report on measured performance outcomes.
 (b)  The commission shall contract with an external third
 party to perform impact evaluations under this chapter.
 (c)  The commission shall coordinate with network
 contractors in selecting the impact evaluator. The evaluator must
 have a demonstrated history in evaluating social services programs
 using an integrated holistic impact approach and data modeling.
 (d)  The commission may not use more than three percent of
 funding allocated to the network to procure the services of an
 evaluator under this section.
 (e)  The commission may not enter into an interagency
 agreement to conduct an evaluation under this section.
 Sec. 54.008.  REPORTS; AUDITS. (a) The commission shall
 compile reports provided by network contractors and service
 providers under Section 54.006 and audit a sampling of the reports
 to ensure validity.
 (b)  The commission shall annually issue a report that
 includes:
 (1)  the total number of network contractors and
 service providers, sorted by geographical region served;
 (2)  the total number of individuals served by each
 provider, sorted by age and sex;
 (3)  the total amount of expenditures, sorted by method
 of finance;
 (4)  the value of the contracts with each network
 contractor and service provider;
 (5)  any outcome measures reported to the commission by
 network contractors and service providers;
 (6)  any performance outcomes reported to the
 commission under Section 54.006; and
 (7)  the results of any impact evaluation conducted
 under Section 54.007.
 Sec. 54.009.  RULES. (a) The executive commissioner may
 adopt rules to implement this chapter.
 (b)  The executive commissioner may not adopt a rule that
 violates Chapter 110, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, or Chapter
 45, Human Resources Code.
 Sec. 54.010.  FUNDING. (a) The commission shall, to the
 greatest extent possible, seek federal, governmental, and private
 funding to supplement and match funding provided through the
 network.
 (b)  The commission or a service provider may not:
 (1)  use funding provided through the network to
 perform, induce, assist, or refer an abortion; or
 (2)  grant funds to an abortion provider or an
 affiliate of an abortion provider.
 SECTION 5.  Section 118.022(b), Local Government Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (b)  The comptroller shall deposit the money received under
 Subsection (a)(1) to the credit of the child abuse and neglect
 prevention trust fund account established under Section 137.054
 [40.105], Human Resources Code.
 SECTION 6.  (a) On September 1, 2024, all powers, duties,
 functions, programs, employees, administrative support services,
 contracts, property, records, and other resources necessary to
 comply with this Act are transferred from the Department of Family
 and Protective Services to the Health and Human Services
 Commission, including the operating fund and trust fund under
 Subchapter B, Chapter 137, Human Resources Code, as amended by this
 Act.
 (b)  The Health and Human Services Commission shall, not
 later than September 1, 2025, develop and implement its initial
 five-year strategic plan under Section 137.004, Human Resources
 Code, as amended by this Act. The initial plan must additionally
 include plans to develop and implement the system of family support
 programs under Section 137.002(a)(2), Human Resources Code, as
 amended by this Act.
 SECTION 7.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2023.