Texas 2025 89th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1164 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 04/11/2025

                    BILL ANALYSIS        Senate Research Center   S.B. 1164     89R5562 EAS-D   By: Zaffirini         Criminal Justice         4/11/2025         As Filed          AUTHOR'S / SPONSOR'S STATEMENT OF INTENT   The Texas Judicial Commission on Mental Health (JCMH) works with judges, law enforcement, healthcare professionals, and policymakers to develop legislative solutions that improve Texas' mental health system. Based on its findings, JCMH has proposed reforms to enhance emergency detention procedures, court-ordered mental health services, and law enforcement protocols to ensure better access to treatment and public safety.    Emergency detention, for instance, is a critical tool for diverting persons experiencing mental health crises from the criminal justice system, yet its application varies across the state. Currently, the emergency detention form required under the Health and Safety Code lacks necessary prompts, often leading to incomplete documentation regarding a person's mental illness, risk of harm, and need for temporary restraint. What's more, peace officers who transport persons under emergency detention without a warrant must remain at the facility, unlike those transporting persons under a judge's warrant, which creates inefficiencies in law enforcement resources. Also, the current venue statute for court-ordered mental health services is ambiguous, leading some counties to reject applications due to uncertainty over jurisdiction. Lastly, persons suffering from anosognosiaa condition where a person is unaware of their mental illnessoften do not receive treatment until they pose an imminent danger, limiting opportunities for earlier intervention.   To address these issues, S.B. 1164 would revise the emergency detention form to ensure peace officers provide complete information regarding mental illness, risk of harm, and restraint. The bill would also clarify that peace officers do not have to remain at the facility once they have completed the necessary documentation, aligning procedures with those for warrant-based detentions. What's more, S.B. 1164 would amend the venue statute to clearly allow applications for court-ordered mental health services to be filed in either the county where the person was apprehended or where they are located at the time of filing, ensuring consistent jurisdictional application. To improve care for persons with anosognosia, the bill would add this condition to the criteria for determining whether someone presents a substantial risk of serious harm, facilitating earlier intervention and treatment.   By improving emergency detention procedures, clarifying officer responsibilities, ensuring jurisdictional consistency, and expanding criteria for early intervention in severe mental health cases, S.B. 1164 would enhance the effectiveness of Texas' mental health system. These reforms would not only strengthen public safety and judicial efficiency but also provide persons experiencing mental health crises with better access to timely and appropriate care.   As proposed, S.B. 1164 amends current law relating to emergency detention of certain persons evidencing mental illness and to court-ordered inpatient and extended mental health services.   RULEMAKING AUTHORITY   This bill does not expressly grant any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, institution, or agency.   SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS   SECTION 1. Amends Section 573.001(b), Health and Safety Code, as follows:   (b) Provides that a substantial risk of serious harm to the person or others under Subsection (a)(1)(B) (relating to authorizing a peace officer to take a person into custody without a warrant if the officer has reason to believe and does believe that a person with a mental illness poses a substantial risk of serious harm to the person or others) may be demonstrated by evidence of severe emotional distress and deterioration in the person's mental condition, including the person's inability to recognize symptoms or appreciate the risks and benefits of treatment, to the extent that the person cannot remain at liberty.    SECTION 2. Amends the heading to Section 573.002, Health and Safety Code, to read as follows:   Sec. 573.002. PEACE OFFICER'S NOTIFICATION OF EMERGENCY DETENTION.    SECTION 3. Amends Section 573.002, Health and Safety Code, by amending Subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d) and adding Subsection (f), as follows:   (a) Requires a peace officer to immediately file with a facility a notification of emergency detention after transporting a person to that facility in accordance with Section 573.001 (Apprehension by Peace Officer Without Warrant). Makes a conforming change.    (b) Deletes existing text requiring that the notification of detention include a specific description of the risk of harm. Makes conforming and nonsubstantive changes.    (c) Makes a conforming change to this subsection.    (d) Requires the peace officer to provide the notification of emergency detention in substantially a certain form. Adds certain provisions regarding the person's behavior, medical history, and personal information and the peace officer to the form.    Deletes existing text from the form prohibiting a mental health facility or hospital emergency department from requiring a peace officer or emergency medical services personnel to execute any form other than the NotificationEmergency Detention form as a predicate to accepting for temporary admission a person detained by a peace officer under Section 573.001, Health and Safety Code, and transported by the officer under that section or by emergency medical services personnel of an emergency medical services provider at the request of the officer made in accordance with a memorandum of understanding.    (f) Provides that a peace officer who transports an apprehended person to a facility under Section 573.001(d)(1) (relating to requiring a peace officer who takes a person into custody to immediately transport the apprehended person to certain mental health facilities) or emergency medical services personnel of an emergency services provider who transports a person to a facility under Section 573.001(d)(2) (relating to requiring a peace officer to immediately transfer the apprehended person to emergency medical services personnel):   (1) is not required to remain at the facility while the apprehended person is medically screened or treated or while the person's insurance coverage is verified; and   (2) is authorized to leave the facility immediately after the person is taken into custody by appropriate facility staff and the notification of emergency detention required by Section 573.002 (Peace Officer's Notification of Detention) is provided to the facility.   SECTION 4. Amends Section 573.003(b), Health and Safety Code, to make a conforming change.    SECTION 5. Amends Section 573.012(c), Health and Safety Code, to make a conforming change.    SECTION 6. Amends Section 573.022(a), Health and Safety Code, to make a conforming change.    SECTION 7. Amends Section 574.001(b), Health and Safety Code, as follows:   (b) Requires that the application for court-ordered mental health services, except as provided by Subsection (f) (relating to authorizing an application in which the proposed patient is a child in custody of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department to be filed in the county in which the child's commitment was ordered), be filed with the county clerk in the county in which the proposed patient resides; is located at the time the application is filed, rather than is found; was apprehended under Chapter 573 (Emergency Detention); or is receiving mental health services by court order under Subchapter A (Apprehension by Peace Officer or Transportation for Emergency Detention by Guardian), Chapter 573. Makes nonsubstantive changes.    SECTION 8. Amends Section 574.011(a) and (d), Health and Safety Code, as follows:   (a) Requires that a certificate of medical examination for mental illness include certain information, including the examining physician's opinion that, as a result of the mental illness examined the person lacks the capacity to recognize they are experiencing symptoms of a serious mental illness and unable to make a rational and informed decision regarding voluntary mental health treatment; unable to appreciate the risks or benefits of mental health treatment or understand, use, weigh, or retain information relevant to making informed treatment decisions; and, in the absence of mental health treatment, likely to experience a relapse or deterioration of their mental or physical condition that would satisfy certain criteria. Makes nonsubstantive changes.    (d) Makes a conforming change to this subsection.    SECTION 9. Amends Section 574.022(b), Health and Safety Code, to make a conforming change.    SECTION 10. Amends Sections 574.034(a) and (d), Health and Safety Code, as follows:   (a) Provides that the judge is authorized to order a proposed patient to receive court-ordered temporary inpatient mental health services only if the judge or jury finds, from clear and convincing evidence, that:    (1) makes no change to this subdivision; and   (2) as a result of mental illness the proposed patient:   (A) makes no changes to this paragraph;   (B)-(C) makes nonsubstantive changes to these paragraphs; or    (D) lacks the capacity to recognize the proposed patient is experiencing symptoms of a serious mental illness and is:   (i) unable to make a rational and informed decision regarding voluntary inpatient mental health treatment;   (ii) unable to appreciate the risks or benefits of mental health treatment or understand, use, weigh, or retain information relevant to making informed treatment decisions; and   (iii) in the absence of court-ordered temporary inpatient mental health services, likely to experience a relapse or deterioration of the proposed patient's mental or physical condition that would satisfy certain criteria.   (d) Requires that the evidence, to be clear and convincing under Subsection (a), include expert testimony and, unless waived, evidence of a recent overt act or continuing pattern of behavior that tends to confirm certain risks, including the proposed patient's lack of capacity or inability to make or understand treatment decisions that will likely result in the deterioration of the proposed patient's mental or physical condition.    SECTION 11. Amends Sections 574.035(a) and (e), Health and Safety Code, to make conforming changes.    SECTION 12. Amends Section 574.064(a-1), Health and Safety Code, to make a conforming change.    SECTION 13. Makes application of Chapter 573, Health and Safety Code, as amended by this Act, prospective.    SECTION 14. Makes application of Chapter 574, Health and Safety code, as amended by this Act, prospective.    SECTION 15. Effective date: September 1, 2025.  

BILL ANALYSIS

 

 

Senate Research Center S.B. 1164
89R5562 EAS-D By: Zaffirini
 Criminal Justice
 4/11/2025
 As Filed

Senate Research Center

S.B. 1164

89R5562 EAS-D

By: Zaffirini

 

Criminal Justice

 

4/11/2025

 

As Filed

 

 

 

AUTHOR'S / SPONSOR'S STATEMENT OF INTENT

 

The Texas Judicial Commission on Mental Health (JCMH) works with judges, law enforcement, healthcare professionals, and policymakers to develop legislative solutions that improve Texas' mental health system. Based on its findings, JCMH has proposed reforms to enhance emergency detention procedures, court-ordered mental health services, and law enforcement protocols to ensure better access to treatment and public safety. 

 

Emergency detention, for instance, is a critical tool for diverting persons experiencing mental health crises from the criminal justice system, yet its application varies across the state. Currently, the emergency detention form required under the Health and Safety Code lacks necessary prompts, often leading to incomplete documentation regarding a person's mental illness, risk of harm, and need for temporary restraint. What's more, peace officers who transport persons under emergency detention without a warrant must remain at the facility, unlike those transporting persons under a judge's warrant, which creates inefficiencies in law enforcement resources. Also, the current venue statute for court-ordered mental health services is ambiguous, leading some counties to reject applications due to uncertainty over jurisdiction. Lastly, persons suffering from anosognosiaa condition where a person is unaware of their mental illnessoften do not receive treatment until they pose an imminent danger, limiting opportunities for earlier intervention.

 

To address these issues, S.B. 1164 would revise the emergency detention form to ensure peace officers provide complete information regarding mental illness, risk of harm, and restraint. The bill would also clarify that peace officers do not have to remain at the facility once they have completed the necessary documentation, aligning procedures with those for warrant-based detentions. What's more, S.B. 1164 would amend the venue statute to clearly allow applications for court-ordered mental health services to be filed in either the county where the person was apprehended or where they are located at the time of filing, ensuring consistent jurisdictional application. To improve care for persons with anosognosia, the bill would add this condition to the criteria for determining whether someone presents a substantial risk of serious harm, facilitating earlier intervention and treatment.

 

By improving emergency detention procedures, clarifying officer responsibilities, ensuring jurisdictional consistency, and expanding criteria for early intervention in severe mental health cases, S.B. 1164 would enhance the effectiveness of Texas' mental health system. These reforms would not only strengthen public safety and judicial efficiency but also provide persons experiencing mental health crises with better access to timely and appropriate care.

 

As proposed, S.B. 1164 amends current law relating to emergency detention of certain persons evidencing mental illness and to court-ordered inpatient and extended mental health services.

 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY

 

This bill does not expressly grant any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, institution, or agency.

 

SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS

 

SECTION 1. Amends Section 573.001(b), Health and Safety Code, as follows:

 

(b) Provides that a substantial risk of serious harm to the person or others under Subsection (a)(1)(B) (relating to authorizing a peace officer to take a person into custody without a warrant if the officer has reason to believe and does believe that a person with a mental illness poses a substantial risk of serious harm to the person or others) may be demonstrated by evidence of severe emotional distress and deterioration in the person's mental condition, including the person's inability to recognize symptoms or appreciate the risks and benefits of treatment, to the extent that the person cannot remain at liberty. 

 

SECTION 2. Amends the heading to Section 573.002, Health and Safety Code, to read as follows:

 

Sec. 573.002. PEACE OFFICER'S NOTIFICATION OF EMERGENCY DETENTION. 

 

SECTION 3. Amends Section 573.002, Health and Safety Code, by amending Subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d) and adding Subsection (f), as follows:

 

(a) Requires a peace officer to immediately file with a facility a notification of emergency detention after transporting a person to that facility in accordance with Section 573.001 (Apprehension by Peace Officer Without Warrant). Makes a conforming change. 

 

(b) Deletes existing text requiring that the notification of detention include a specific description of the risk of harm. Makes conforming and nonsubstantive changes. 

 

(c) Makes a conforming change to this subsection. 

 

(d) Requires the peace officer to provide the notification of emergency detention in substantially a certain form. Adds certain provisions regarding the person's behavior, medical history, and personal information and the peace officer to the form. 

 

Deletes existing text from the form prohibiting a mental health facility or hospital emergency department from requiring a peace officer or emergency medical services personnel to execute any form other than the NotificationEmergency Detention form as a predicate to accepting for temporary admission a person detained by a peace officer under Section 573.001, Health and Safety Code, and transported by the officer under that section or by emergency medical services personnel of an emergency medical services provider at the request of the officer made in accordance with a memorandum of understanding. 

 

(f) Provides that a peace officer who transports an apprehended person to a facility under Section 573.001(d)(1) (relating to requiring a peace officer who takes a person into custody to immediately transport the apprehended person to certain mental health facilities) or emergency medical services personnel of an emergency services provider who transports a person to a facility under Section 573.001(d)(2) (relating to requiring a peace officer to immediately transfer the apprehended person to emergency medical services personnel):

 

(1) is not required to remain at the facility while the apprehended person is medically screened or treated or while the person's insurance coverage is verified; and

 

(2) is authorized to leave the facility immediately after the person is taken into custody by appropriate facility staff and the notification of emergency detention required by Section 573.002 (Peace Officer's Notification of Detention) is provided to the facility.

 

SECTION 4. Amends Section 573.003(b), Health and Safety Code, to make a conforming change. 

 

SECTION 5. Amends Section 573.012(c), Health and Safety Code, to make a conforming change. 

 

SECTION 6. Amends Section 573.022(a), Health and Safety Code, to make a conforming change. 

 

SECTION 7. Amends Section 574.001(b), Health and Safety Code, as follows:

 

(b) Requires that the application for court-ordered mental health services, except as provided by Subsection (f) (relating to authorizing an application in which the proposed patient is a child in custody of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department to be filed in the county in which the child's commitment was ordered), be filed with the county clerk in the county in which the proposed patient resides; is located at the time the application is filed, rather than is found; was apprehended under Chapter 573 (Emergency Detention); or is receiving mental health services by court order under Subchapter A (Apprehension by Peace Officer or Transportation for Emergency Detention by Guardian), Chapter 573. Makes nonsubstantive changes. 

 

SECTION 8. Amends Section 574.011(a) and (d), Health and Safety Code, as follows:

 

(a) Requires that a certificate of medical examination for mental illness include certain information, including the examining physician's opinion that, as a result of the mental illness examined the person lacks the capacity to recognize they are experiencing symptoms of a serious mental illness and unable to make a rational and informed decision regarding voluntary mental health treatment; unable to appreciate the risks or benefits of mental health treatment or understand, use, weigh, or retain information relevant to making informed treatment decisions; and, in the absence of mental health treatment, likely to experience a relapse or deterioration of their mental or physical condition that would satisfy certain criteria. Makes nonsubstantive changes. 

 

(d) Makes a conforming change to this subsection. 

 

SECTION 9. Amends Section 574.022(b), Health and Safety Code, to make a conforming change. 

 

SECTION 10. Amends Sections 574.034(a) and (d), Health and Safety Code, as follows:

 

(a) Provides that the judge is authorized to order a proposed patient to receive court-ordered temporary inpatient mental health services only if the judge or jury finds, from clear and convincing evidence, that: 

 

(1) makes no change to this subdivision; and

 

(2) as a result of mental illness the proposed patient:

 

(A) makes no changes to this paragraph;

 

(B)-(C) makes nonsubstantive changes to these paragraphs; or 

 

(D) lacks the capacity to recognize the proposed patient is experiencing symptoms of a serious mental illness and is:

 

(i) unable to make a rational and informed decision regarding voluntary inpatient mental health treatment;

 

(ii) unable to appreciate the risks or benefits of mental health treatment or understand, use, weigh, or retain information relevant to making informed treatment decisions; and

 

(iii) in the absence of court-ordered temporary inpatient mental health services, likely to experience a relapse or deterioration of the proposed patient's mental or physical condition that would satisfy certain criteria.

 

(d) Requires that the evidence, to be clear and convincing under Subsection (a), include expert testimony and, unless waived, evidence of a recent overt act or continuing pattern of behavior that tends to confirm certain risks, including the proposed patient's lack of capacity or inability to make or understand treatment decisions that will likely result in the deterioration of the proposed patient's mental or physical condition. 

 

SECTION 11. Amends Sections 574.035(a) and (e), Health and Safety Code, to make conforming changes. 

 

SECTION 12. Amends Section 574.064(a-1), Health and Safety Code, to make a conforming change. 

 

SECTION 13. Makes application of Chapter 573, Health and Safety Code, as amended by this Act, prospective. 

 

SECTION 14. Makes application of Chapter 574, Health and Safety code, as amended by this Act, prospective. 

 

SECTION 15. Effective date: September 1, 2025.