S.B. No. 11
 
 
 
 
AN ACT
  relating to the provision of child protective services and other
  health and human services by certain state agencies or under
  contract with a state agency, including foster care, child
  protective, relative and kinship caregiver support, prevention and
  early intervention health care, and adoption services.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Section 71.004, Family Code, is amended to read
  as follows:
         Sec. 71.004.  FAMILY VIOLENCE.  "Family violence" means:
               (1)  an act by a member of a family or household against
  another member of the family or household that is intended to result
  in physical harm, bodily injury, assault, or sexual assault or that
  is a threat that reasonably places the member in fear of imminent
  physical harm, bodily injury, assault, or sexual assault, but does
  not include defensive measures to protect oneself;
               (2)  abuse, as that term is defined by Sections
  261.001(1)(C), (E), (G), (H), (I), (J), [and] (K), and (M), by a
  member of a family or household toward a child of the family or
  household; or
               (3)  dating violence, as that term is defined by
  Section 71.0021.
         SECTION 2.  Section 107.002(b-1), Family Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (b-1)  In addition to the duties required by Subsection (b),
  a guardian ad litem appointed for a child in a proceeding under
  Chapter 262 or 263 shall:
               (1)  review the medical care provided to the child;
  [and]
               (2)  in a developmentally appropriate manner, seek to
  elicit the child's opinion on the medical care provided; and
               (3)  for a child at least 16 years of age, ascertain
  whether the child has received the following documents:
                     (A)  a certified copy of the child's birth
  certificate;
                     (B)  a social security card or a replacement
  social security card;
                     (C)  a driver's license or personal
  identification certificate under Chapter 521, Transportation Code;
  and
                     (D)  any other personal document the Department of
  Family and Protective Services determines appropriate.
         SECTION 3.  Section 107.003(b), Family Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (b)  In addition to the duties required by Subsection (a), an
  attorney ad litem appointed for a child in a proceeding under
  Chapter 262 or 263 shall:
               (1)  review the medical care provided to the child;
               (2)  in a developmentally appropriate manner, seek to
  elicit the child's opinion on the medical care provided; and
               (3)  for a child at least 16 years of age:
                     (A) [,] advise the child of the child's right to
  request the court to authorize the child to consent to the child's
  own medical care under Section 266.010; and
                     (B)  ascertain whether the child has received the
  following documents:
                           (i)  a certified copy of the child's birth
  certificate;
                           (ii)  a social security card or a
  replacement social security card;
                           (iii)  a driver's license or personal
  identification certificate under Chapter 521, Transportation Code;
  and
                           (iv)  any other personal document the
  Department of Family and Protective Services determines
  appropriate.
         SECTION 4.  Section 162.005, Family Code, is amended by
  adding Subsection (c) to read as follows:
         (c)  The department shall ensure that each licensed
  child-placing agency, single source continuum contractor, or other
  person placing a child for adoption receives a copy of any portion
  of the report prepared by the department.
         SECTION 5.  Section 162.0062, Family Code, is amended by
  adding Subsections (a-1) and (c-1) to read as follows:
         (a-1)  If a child is placed with a prospective adoptive
  parent prior to adoption, the prospective adoptive parent is
  entitled to examine any record or other information relating to the
  child's health history, including the portion of the report
  prepared under Section 162.005 for the child that relates to the
  child's health.  The department, licensed child-placing agency,
  single source continuum contractor, or other person placing a child
  for adoption shall inform the prospective adoptive parent of the
  prospective adoptive parent's right to examine the records and
  other information relating to the child's health history.  The
  department, licensed child-placing agency, single source continuum
  contractor, or other person placing the child for adoption shall
  edit the records and information to protect the identity of the
  biological parents and any other person whose identity is
  confidential.
         (c-1)  If the prospective adoptive parents of a child
  indicate they want to proceed with the adoption under Subsection
  (c), the department, licensed child-placing agency, or single
  source continuum contractor shall provide the prospective adoptive
  parents with access to research regarding underlying health issues
  and other conditions of trauma that could impact child development
  and permanency.
         SECTION 6.  Section 162.007, Family Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (g) to read as
  follows:
         (a)  The health history of the child must include information
  about:
               (1)  the child's health status at the time of placement;
               (2)  the child's birth, neonatal, and other medical,
  psychological, psychiatric, and dental history information,
  including to the extent known by the department:
                     (A)  whether the child's birth mother consumed
  alcohol during pregnancy; and
                     (B)  whether the child has been diagnosed with
  fetal alcohol spectrum disorder;
               (3)  a record of immunizations for the child; and
               (4)  the available results of medical, psychological,
  psychiatric, and dental examinations of the child.
         (g)  In this section, "fetal alcohol spectrum disorder"
  means any of a group of conditions that can occur in a person whose
  mother consumed alcohol during pregnancy.
         SECTION 7.  Section 261.001, Family Code, is amended by
  amending Subdivisions (1), (4), and (5) and adding Subdivision (3)
  to read as follows:
               (1)  "Abuse" includes the following acts or omissions
  by a person:
                     (A)  mental or emotional injury to a child that
  results in an observable and material impairment in the child's
  growth, development, or psychological functioning;
                     (B)  causing or permitting the child to be in a
  situation in which the child sustains a mental or emotional injury
  that results in an observable and material impairment in the
  child's growth, development, or psychological functioning;
                     (C)  physical injury that results in substantial
  harm to the child, or the genuine threat of substantial harm from
  physical injury to the child, including an injury that is at
  variance with the history or explanation given and excluding an
  accident or reasonable discipline by a parent, guardian, or
  managing or possessory conservator that does not expose the child
  to a substantial risk of harm;
                     (D)  failure to make a reasonable effort to
  prevent an action by another person that results in physical injury
  that results in substantial harm to the child;
                     (E)  sexual conduct harmful to a child's mental,
  emotional, or physical welfare, including conduct that constitutes
  the offense of continuous sexual abuse of young child or children
  under Section 21.02, Penal Code, indecency with a child under
  Section 21.11, Penal Code, sexual assault under Section 22.011,
  Penal Code, or aggravated sexual assault under Section 22.021,
  Penal Code;
                     (F)  failure to make a reasonable effort to
  prevent sexual conduct harmful to a child;
                     (G)  compelling or encouraging the child to engage
  in sexual conduct as defined by Section 43.01, Penal Code,
  including compelling or encouraging the child in a manner that
  constitutes an offense of trafficking of persons under Section
  20A.02(a)(7) or (8), Penal Code, prostitution under Section
  43.02(b), Penal Code, or compelling prostitution under Section
  43.05(a)(2), Penal Code;
                     (H)  causing, permitting, encouraging, engaging
  in, or allowing the photographing, filming, or depicting of the
  child if the person knew or should have known that the resulting
  photograph, film, or depiction of the child is obscene as defined by
  Section 43.21, Penal Code, or pornographic;
                     (I)  the current use by a person of a controlled
  substance as defined by Chapter 481, Health and Safety Code, in a
  manner or to the extent that the use results in physical, mental, or
  emotional injury to a child;
                     (J)  causing, expressly permitting, or
  encouraging a child to use a controlled substance as defined by
  Chapter 481, Health and Safety Code;
                     (K)  causing, permitting, encouraging, engaging
  in, or allowing a sexual performance by a child as defined by
  Section 43.25, Penal Code; [or]
                     (L)  knowingly causing, permitting, encouraging,
  engaging in, or allowing a child to be trafficked in a manner
  punishable as an offense under Section 20A.02(a)(5), (6), (7), or
  (8), Penal Code, or the failure to make a reasonable effort to
  prevent a child from being trafficked in a manner punishable as an
  offense under any of those sections; or
                     (M)  forcing or coercing a child to enter into a
  marriage.
               (3)  "Exploitation" means the illegal or improper use
  of a child or of the resources of a child for monetary or personal
  benefit, profit, or gain by an employee, volunteer, or other
  individual working under the auspices of a facility or program as
  further described by rule or policy.
               (4)  "Neglect":
                     (A)  includes:
                           (i)  the leaving of a child in a situation
  where the child would be exposed to a substantial risk of physical
  or mental harm, without arranging for necessary care for the child,
  and the demonstration of an intent not to return by a parent,
  guardian, or managing or possessory conservator of the child;
                           (ii)  the following acts or omissions by a
  person:
                                 (a)  placing a child in or failing to
  remove a child from a situation that a reasonable person would
  realize requires judgment or actions beyond the child's level of
  maturity, physical condition, or mental abilities and that results
  in bodily injury or a substantial risk of immediate harm to the
  child;
                                 (b)  failing to seek, obtain, or follow
  through with medical care for a child, with the failure resulting in
  or presenting a substantial risk of death, disfigurement, or bodily
  injury or with the failure resulting in an observable and material
  impairment to the growth, development, or functioning of the child;
                                 (c)  the failure to provide a child
  with food, clothing, or shelter necessary to sustain the life or
  health of the child, excluding failure caused primarily by
  financial inability unless relief services had been offered and
  refused;
                                 (d)  placing a child in or failing to
  remove the child from a situation in which the child would be
  exposed to a substantial risk of sexual conduct harmful to the
  child; or
                                 (e)  placing a child in or failing to
  remove the child from a situation in which the child would be
  exposed to acts or omissions that constitute abuse under
  Subdivision (1)(E), (F), (G), (H), or (K) committed against another
  child; [or]
                           (iii)  the failure by the person responsible
  for a child's care, custody, or welfare to permit the child to
  return to the child's home without arranging for the necessary care
  for the child after the child has been absent from the home for any
  reason, including having been in residential placement or having
  run away; or
                           (iv)  a negligent act or omission by an
  employee, volunteer, or other individual working under the auspices
  of a facility or program, including failure to comply with an
  individual treatment plan, plan of care, or individualized service
  plan, that causes or may cause substantial emotional harm or
  physical injury to, or the death of, a child served by the facility
  or program as further described by rule or policy; and
                     (B)  does not include the refusal by a person
  responsible for a child's care, custody, or welfare to permit the
  child to remain in or return to the child's home resulting in the
  placement of the child in the conservatorship of the department if:
                           (i)  the child has a severe emotional
  disturbance;
                           (ii)  the person's refusal is based solely on
  the person's inability to obtain mental health services necessary
  to protect the safety and well-being of the child; and
                           (iii)  the person has exhausted all
  reasonable means available to the person to obtain the mental
  health services described by Subparagraph (ii).
               (5)  "Person responsible for a child's care, custody,
  or welfare" means a person who traditionally is responsible for a
  child's care, custody, or welfare, including:
                     (A)  a parent, guardian, managing or possessory
  conservator, or foster parent of the child;
                     (B)  a member of the child's family or household
  as defined by Chapter 71;
                     (C)  a person with whom the child's parent
  cohabits;
                     (D)  school personnel or a volunteer at the
  child's school; [or]
                     (E)  personnel or a volunteer at a public or
  private child-care facility that provides services for the child or
  at a public or private residential institution or facility where
  the child resides; or
                     (F)  an employee, volunteer, or other person
  working under the supervision of a licensed or unlicensed
  child-care facility, including a family home, residential
  child-care facility, employer-based day-care facility, or shelter
  day-care facility, as those terms are defined in Chapter 42, Human
  Resources Code.
         SECTION 8.  Subchapter A, Chapter 261, Family Code, is
  amended by adding Section 261.004 to read as follows:
         Sec. 261.004.  TRACKING OF RECURRENCE OF CHILD ABUSE OR
  NEGLECT REPORTS. (a)  The department shall collect and monitor
  data regarding repeated reports of abuse or neglect:
               (1)  involving the same child, including reports of
  abuse or neglect of the child made while the child resided in other
  households and reports of abuse or neglect of the child by different
  alleged perpetrators made while the child resided in the same
  household; or
               (2)  by the same alleged perpetrator.
         (b)  In monitoring reports of abuse or neglect under
  Subsection (a), the department shall group together separate
  reports involving different children residing in the same
  household.
         (c)  The department shall consider any report collected
  under Subsection (a) involving any child or adult who is a part of a
  child's household when making case priority determinations or when
  conducting service or safety planning for the child or the child's
  family.
         SECTION 9.  Sections 261.301(b) and (c), Family Code, are
  amended to read as follows:
         (b)  A state agency shall investigate a report that alleges
  abuse, [or] neglect, or exploitation occurred in a facility
  operated, licensed, certified, or registered by that agency as
  provided by Subchapter E. In conducting an investigation for a
  facility operated, licensed, certified, registered, or listed by
  the department, the department shall perform the investigation as
  provided by:
               (1)  Subchapter E; and
               (2)  the Human Resources Code.
         (c)  The department is not required to investigate a report
  that alleges child abuse, [or] neglect, or exploitation by a person
  other than a person responsible for a child's care, custody, or
  welfare. The appropriate state or local law enforcement agency
  shall investigate that report if the agency determines an
  investigation should be conducted.
         SECTION 10.  Section 261.401(b), Family Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (b)  Except as provided by Section 261.404 of this code and
  Section 531.02013(1)(D), Government Code, a state agency that
  operates, licenses, certifies, registers, or lists a facility in
  which children are located or provides oversight of a program that
  serves children shall make a prompt, thorough investigation of a
  report that a child has been or may be abused, neglected, or
  exploited in the facility or program. The primary purpose of the
  investigation shall be the protection of the child.
         SECTION 11.  Sections 261.405(a) and (c), Family Code, are
  amended to read as follows:
         (a)  Notwithstanding Section 261.001, in [In] this section:
               (1)  "Abuse" means an intentional, knowing, or reckless
  act or omission by an employee, volunteer, or other individual
  working under the auspices of a facility or program that causes or
  may cause emotional harm or physical injury to, or the death of, a
  child served by the facility or program as further described by rule
  or policy.
               (2)  "Exploitation" means the illegal or improper use
  of a child or of the resources of a child for monetary or personal
  benefit, profit, or gain by an employee, volunteer, or other
  individual working under the auspices of a facility or program as
  further described by rule or policy.
               (3)  "Juvenile justice facility" means a facility
  operated wholly or partly by the juvenile board, by another
  governmental unit, or by a private vendor under a contract with the
  juvenile board, county, or other governmental unit that serves
  juveniles under juvenile court jurisdiction. The term includes:
                     (A)  a public or private juvenile
  pre-adjudication secure detention facility, including a holdover
  facility;
                     (B)  a public or private juvenile
  post-adjudication secure correctional facility except for a
  facility operated solely for children committed to the Texas
  Juvenile Justice Department; and
                     (C)  a public or private non-secure juvenile
  post-adjudication residential treatment facility that is not
  licensed by the Department of Family and Protective Services or the
  Department of State Health Services.
               (4) [(2)]  "Juvenile justice program" means a program
  or department operated wholly or partly by the juvenile board or by
  a private vendor under a contract with a juvenile board that serves
  juveniles under juvenile court jurisdiction. The term includes:
                     (A)  a juvenile justice alternative education
  program;
                     (B)  a non-residential program that serves
  juvenile offenders under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court;
  and
                     (C)  a juvenile probation department.
               (5)  "Neglect" means a negligent act or omission by an
  employee, volunteer, or other individual working under the auspices
  of a facility or program, including failure to comply with an
  individual treatment plan, plan of care, or individualized service
  plan, that causes or may cause substantial emotional harm or
  physical injury to, or the death of, a child served by the facility
  or program as further described by rule or policy.
         (c)  The Texas Juvenile Justice Department shall make a
  prompt, thorough [conduct an] investigation as provided by this
  chapter if that department receives a report of alleged abuse,
  neglect, or exploitation in any juvenile justice program or
  facility. The primary purpose of the investigation shall be the
  protection of the child.
         SECTION 12.  Section 263.401, Family Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 263.401.  DISMISSAL AFTER ONE YEAR; NEW TRIALS;
  EXTENSION. (a)  Unless the court has commenced the trial on the
  merits or granted an extension under Subsection (b) or (b-1), on the
  first Monday after the first anniversary of the date the court
  rendered a temporary order appointing the department as temporary
  managing conservator, the court's jurisdiction over [court shall
  dismiss] the suit affecting the parent-child relationship filed by
  the department that requests termination of the parent-child
  relationship or requests that the department be named conservator
  of the child is terminated and the suit is automatically dismissed
  without a court order.
         (b)  Unless the court has commenced the trial on the merits,
  the court may not retain the suit on the court's docket after the
  time described by Subsection (a) unless the court finds that
  extraordinary circumstances necessitate the child remaining in the
  temporary managing conservatorship of the department and that
  continuing the appointment of the department as temporary managing
  conservator is in the best interest of the child. If the court
  makes those findings, the court may retain the suit on the court's
  docket for a period not to exceed 180 days after the time described
  by Subsection (a). If the court retains the suit on the court's
  docket, the court shall render an order in which the court:
               (1)  schedules the new date on which the suit will be
  automatically dismissed if the trial on the merits has not
  commenced, which date must be not later than the 180th day after the
  time described by Subsection (a);
               (2)  makes further temporary orders for the safety and
  welfare of the child as necessary to avoid further delay in
  resolving the suit; and
               (3)  sets the trial on the merits on a date not later
  than the date specified under Subdivision (1).
         (b-1)  If, after commencement of the initial trial on the
  merits within the time required by Subsection (a) or (b), the court
  grants a motion for a new trial or mistrial, or the case is remanded
  to the court by an appellate court following an appeal of the
  court's final order, the court shall retain the suit on the court's
  docket and render an order in which the court:
               (1)  schedules a new date on which the suit will be
  automatically dismissed if the new trial has not commenced, which
  must be a date not later than the 180th day after the date on which:
                     (A)  the motion for a new trial or mistrial is
  granted; or
                     (B)  the appellate court remanded the case;
               (2)  makes further temporary orders for the safety and
  welfare of the child as necessary to avoid further delay in
  resolving the suit; and
               (3)  sets the new trial on the merits for a date not
  later than the date specified under Subdivision (1).
         (c)  If the court grants an extension under Subsection (b) or
  (b-1) but does not commence the trial on the merits before the
  dismissal date, the court's jurisdiction over [court shall dismiss]
  the suit is terminated and the suit is automatically dismissed
  without a court order. The court may not grant an additional
  extension that extends the suit beyond the required date for
  dismissal under Subsection (b) or (b-1), as applicable.
         SECTION 13.  Section 263.402, Family Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 263.402.  LIMIT ON EXTENSION[; WAIVER]. [(a)]  The
  parties to a suit under this chapter may not extend the deadlines
  set by the court under this subchapter by agreement or otherwise.
         [(b)     A party to a suit under this chapter who fails to make a
  timely motion to dismiss the suit under this subchapter waives the
  right to object to the court's failure to dismiss the suit.   A
  motion to dismiss under this subsection is timely if the motion is
  made before the trial on the merits commences.]
         SECTION 14.  Section 264.018, Family Code, is amended by
  adding Subsections (d-1) and (d-2) to read as follows:
         (d-1)  Except as provided by Subsection (d-2), as soon as
  possible but not later than 24 hours after a change in placement of
  a child in the conservatorship of the department, the department
  shall give notice of the placement change to the managed care
  organization that contracts with the commission to provide health
  care services to the child under the STAR Health program.  The
  managed care organization shall give notice of the placement change
  to the primary care physician listed in the child's health passport
  before the end of the second business day after the day the
  organization receives the notification from the department.
         (d-2)  In this subsection, "catchment area" has the meaning
  assigned by Section 264.152.  In a catchment area in which
  community-based care has been implemented, the single source
  continuum contractor that has contracted with the commission to
  provide foster care services in that catchment area shall, as soon
  as possible but not later than 24 hours after a change in placement
  of a child in the conservatorship of the department, give notice of
  the placement change to the managed care organization that
  contracts with the commission to provide health care services to
  the child under the STAR Health program.  The managed care
  organization shall give notice of the placement change to the
  child's primary care physician in accordance with Subsection (d-1).
         SECTION 15.  (a)  Subchapter B, Chapter 264, Family Code, is
  amended by adding Section 264.1076 to read as follows:
         Sec. 264.1076.  MEDICAL EXAMINATION REQUIRED. (a)  This
  section applies only to a child who has been taken into the
  conservatorship of the department and remains in the
  conservatorship of the department for more than three business
  days.
         (b)  The department shall ensure that each child described by
  Subsection (a) receives an initial medical examination from a
  physician or other health care provider authorized under state law
  to conduct medical examinations not later than the end of the third
  business day after the date the child is removed from the child's
  home, if the child:
               (1)  is removed as the result of sexual abuse, physical
  abuse, or an obvious physical injury to the child; or
               (2)  has a chronic medical condition, a medically
  complex condition, or a diagnosed mental illness.
         (c)  Notwithstanding Subsection (b), the department shall
  ensure that any child who enters the conservatorship of the
  department receives any necessary emergency medical care as soon as
  possible.
         (d)  A physician or other health care provider conducting an
  examination under Subsection (b) may not administer a vaccination
  as part of the examination without parental consent, except that a
  physician or other health care provider may administer a tetanus
  vaccination to a child in a commercially available preparation if
  the physician or other health care provider determines that an
  emergency circumstance requires the administration of the
  vaccination.  The prohibition on the administration of a
  vaccination under this subsection does not apply after the
  department has been named managing conservator of the child after a
  hearing conducted under Subchapter C, Chapter 262.
         (e)  Whenever possible, the department shall schedule the
  medical examination for a child before the last business day of the
  appropriate time frame provided under Subsection (b).
         (f)  The department shall collaborate with the commission
  and selected physicians and other health care providers authorized
  under state law to conduct medical examinations to develop
  guidelines for the medical examination conducted under this
  section, including guidelines on the components to be included in
  the examination.  The guidelines developed under this subsection
  must provide assistance and guidance regarding:
               (1)  assessing a child for:
                     (A)  signs and symptoms of child abuse and
  neglect;
                     (B)  the presence of acute or chronic illness; and
                     (C)  signs of acute or severe mental health
  conditions;
               (2)  monitoring a child's adjustment to being in the
  conservatorship of the department;
               (3)  ensuring a child has necessary medical equipment
  and any medication prescribed to the child or needed by the child;
  and
               (4)  providing appropriate support and education to a
  child's caregivers.
         (g)  Notwithstanding any other law, the guidelines developed
  under Subsection (f) do not create a standard of care for a
  physician or other health care provider authorized under state law
  to conduct medical examinations, and a physician or other health
  care provider may not be subject to criminal, civil, or
  administrative penalty or civil liability for failure to adhere to
  the guidelines.
         (h)  The department shall make a good faith effort to contact
  a child's primary care physician to ensure continuity of care for
  the child regarding medication prescribed to the child and the
  treatment of any chronic medical condition.
         (i)  Not later than December 31, 2019, the department shall
  submit a report to the standing committees of the house of
  representatives and the senate with primary jurisdiction over child
  protective services and foster care evaluating the statewide
  implementation of the medical examination required by this section.
  The report must include the level of compliance with the
  requirements of this section in each region of the state.
         (b)  Section 264.1076, Family Code, as added by this section,
  applies only to a child who enters the conservatorship of the
  Department of Family and Protective Services on or after the
  effective date of this Act.  A child who enters the conservatorship
  of the Department of Family and Protective Services before the
  effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on the
  date the child entered the conservatorship of the department, and
  the former law is continued in effect for that purpose.
         (c)  The Department of Family and Protective Services shall
  implement Section 264.1076, Family Code, as added by this section,
  not later than December 31, 2018.
         SECTION 16.  (a)  Subchapter B, Chapter 264, Family Code, is
  amended by adding Section 264.1252 to read as follows:
         Sec. 264.1252.  FOSTER PARENT RECRUITMENT STUDY.  (a)  In
  this section, "young adult caregiver" means a person who:
               (1)  is at least 21 years of age but younger than 36
  years of age; and
               (2)  provides foster care for children who are 14 years
  of age and older.
         (b)  The department shall conduct a study on the feasibility
  of developing a program to recruit and provide training for young
  adult caregivers.
         (c)  The department shall complete the study not later than
  December 31, 2018.  In evaluating the feasibility of the program,
  the department shall consider methods to recruit young adult
  caregivers and the potential impact that the program will have on
  the foster children participating in the program, including whether
  the program may result in:
               (1)  increased placement stability;
               (2)  fewer behavioral issues;
               (3)  fewer instances of foster children running away
  from a placement;
               (4)  increased satisfactory academic progress in
  school;
               (5)  increased acquisition of independent living
  skills; and
               (6)  an improved sense of well-being.
         (d)  The department shall report the results of the study to
  the governor, lieutenant governor, speaker of the house of
  representatives, and members of the legislature as soon as possible
  after the study is completed.
         (e)  This section expires September 1, 2019.
         (b)  As soon as practicable after the effective date of this
  Act, the Department of Family and Protective Services shall begin
  the study required by Section 264.1252, Family Code, as added by
  this section.
         SECTION 17.  (a)  Subchapter B, Chapter 264, Family Code, is
  amended by adding Sections 264.1261 and 264.128 to read as follows:
         Sec. 264.1261.  FOSTER CARE CAPACITY NEEDS PLAN. (a)  In
  this section, "community-based care" has the meaning assigned by
  Section 264.152.
         (b)  Appropriate department management personnel from a
  child protective services region in which community-based care has
  not been implemented, in collaboration with foster care providers,
  faith-based entities, and child advocates in that region, shall use
  data collected by the department on foster care capacity needs and
  availability of each type of foster care and kinship placement in
  the region to create a plan to address the substitute care capacity
  needs in the region. The plan must identify both short-term and
  long-term goals and strategies for addressing those capacity needs.
         (c)  A foster care capacity needs plan developed under
  Subsection (b) must be:
               (1)  submitted to and approved by the commissioner; and
               (2)  updated annually.
         (d)  The department shall publish each initial foster care
  capacity needs plan and each annual update to a plan on the
  department's Internet website.
         Sec. 264.128.  SINGLE CHILD PLAN OF SERVICE INITIATIVE.
  (a)  In this section, "community-based care" has the meaning
  assigned by Section 264.152.
         (b)  In regions of the state where community-based care has
  not been implemented, the department shall:
               (1)  collaborate with child-placing agencies to
  implement the single child plan of service model developed under
  the single child plan of service initiative; and
               (2)  ensure that a single child plan of service is
  developed for each child in foster care in those regions.
         (b)  Notwithstanding Section 264.128(b), Family Code, as
  added by this section, the Department of Family and Protective
  Services shall develop and implement a single child plan of service
  for each child in foster care in a region of the state described by
  that section not later than September 1, 2017.
         SECTION 18.  (a)  Chapter 264, Family Code, is amended by
  adding Subchapter B-1 to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER B-1. COMMUNITY-BASED CARE
         Sec. 264.151.  LEGISLATIVE INTENT.  (a)  It is the intent of
  the legislature that the department contract with community-based
  nonprofit and local governmental entities that have the ability to
  provide child welfare services. The services provided by the
  entities must include direct case management to ensure child
  safety, permanency, and well-being, in accordance with state and
  federal child welfare goals.
         (b)  It is the intent of the legislature that the provision
  of community-based care for children be implemented with measurable
  goals relating to:
               (1)  the safety of children in placements;
               (2)  the placement of children in each child's home
  community;
               (3)  the provision of services to children in the least
  restrictive environment possible and, if possible, in a family home
  environment;
               (4)  minimal placement changes for children;
               (5)  the maintenance of contact between children and
  their families and other important persons;
               (6)  the placement of children with siblings;
               (7)  the provision of services that respect each
  child's culture;
               (8)  the preparation of children and youth in foster
  care for adulthood;
               (9)  the provision of opportunities, experiences, and
  activities for children and youth in foster care that are available
  to children and youth who are not in foster care;
               (10)  the participation by children and youth in making
  decisions relating to their own lives;
               (11)  the reunification of children with the biological
  parents of the children when possible; and
               (12)  the promotion of the placement of children with
  relative or kinship caregivers if reunification is not possible.
         Sec. 264.152.  DEFINITIONS. Except as otherwise provided,
  in this subchapter:
               (1)  "Alternative caregiver" means a person who is not
  the foster parent of the child and who provides temporary care for
  the child for more than 12 hours but less than 60 days.
               (2)  "Case management" means the provision of case
  management services to a child for whom the department has been
  appointed temporary or permanent managing conservator or to the
  child's family, a young adult in extended foster care, a relative or
  kinship caregiver, or a child who has been placed in the catchment
  area through the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children,
  and includes:
                     (A)  caseworker visits with the child;
                     (B)  family and caregiver visits;
                     (C)  convening and conducting permanency planning
  meetings;
                     (D)  the development and revision of child and
  family plans of service, including a permanency plan and goals for a
  child or young adult in care;
                     (E)  the coordination and monitoring of services
  required by the child and the child's family;
                     (F)  the assumption of court-related duties
  regarding the child, including:
                           (i)  providing any required notifications or
  consultations;
                           (ii)  preparing court reports;
                           (iii)  attending judicial and permanency
  hearings, trials, and mediations;
                           (iv)  complying with applicable court
  orders; and
                           (v)  ensuring the child is progressing
  toward the goal of permanency within state and federally mandated
  guidelines; and
                     (G)  any other function or service that the
  department determines necessary to allow a single source continuum
  contractor to assume responsibility for case management.
               (3)  "Catchment area" means a geographic service area
  for providing child protective services that is identified as part
  of community-based care.
               (4)  "Community-based care" means the 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.
         Sec. 264.154.  QUALIFICATIONS OF SINGLE SOURCE CONTINUUM
  CONTRACTOR; SELECTION. (a)  To enter into a contract with the
  commission or department to serve as a single source continuum
  contractor to provide foster care service delivery, an entity must
  be a nonprofit entity that has an organizational mission focused on
  child welfare or a governmental entity.
         (b)  In selecting a single source continuum contractor, the
  department shall consider whether a prospective contractor for a
  catchment area has demonstrated experience in providing services to
  children and families in the catchment area.
         Sec. 264.155.  REQUIRED CONTRACT PROVISIONS. 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.
         Sec. 264.156.  READINESS REVIEW PROCESS FOR COMMUNITY-BASED
  CARE CONTRACTOR. (a)  The department shall develop a formal review
  process to assess the ability of a single source continuum
  contractor to satisfy the responsibilities and administrative
  requirements of delivering foster care services and services for
  relative and kinship caregivers, including the contractor's
  ability to provide:
               (1)  case management services for children and
  families;
               (2)  evidence-based, promising practice, or
  evidence-informed supports for children and families; and
               (3)  sufficient available capacity for inpatient and
  outpatient services and supports for children at all service levels
  who have previously been placed in the catchment area.
         (b)  As part of the readiness review process, the single
  source continuum contractor must prepare a plan detailing the
  methods by which the contractor will avoid or eliminate conflicts
  of interest.  The department may not transfer services to the
  contractor until the department has determined the plan is
  adequate.
         (c)  The department and commission must develop the review
  process under Subsection (a) before the department may expand
  community-based care outside of the initial catchment areas where
  community-based care has been implemented.
         (d)  If after conducting the review process developed under
  Subsection (a) the department determines that a single source
  continuum contractor is able to adequately deliver foster care
  services and services for relative and kinship caregivers in
  advance of the projected dates stated in the timeline included in
  the contract with the contractor, the department may adjust the
  timeline to allow for an earlier transition of service delivery to
  the contractor.
         Sec. 264.157.  EXPANSION OF COMMUNITY-BASED CARE. (a)  Not
  later than December 31, 2019, the department shall:
               (1)  identify not more than eight catchment areas in
  the state that are best suited to implement community-based care;
  and
               (2)  following the implementation of community-based
  care services in those catchment areas, evaluate the implementation
  process and 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
  begin accepting applications from entities to provide
  community-based care services in a designated catchment area.
         (c)  In expanding community-based care, the department may
  change the geographic boundaries of catchment areas as necessary to
  align with specific communities.
         (d)  The department shall ensure the continuity of services
  for children and families during the transition period to
  community-based care in a catchment area.
         Sec. 264.158.  TRANSFER OF CASE MANAGEMENT SERVICES TO
  SINGLE SOURCE CONTINUUM CONTRACTOR. (a)  In each initial catchment
  area where community-based care has been implemented or a contract
  with a single source continuum contractor has been executed before
  September 1, 2017, the department shall transfer to the single
  source continuum contractor providing foster care services in that
  area:
               (1)  the case management of children, relative and
  kinship caregivers, and families receiving services from that
  contractor; and
               (2)  family reunification support services to be
  provided after a child receiving services from the contractor is
  returned to the child's family for the period of time ordered by the
  court.
         (b)  The commission shall include a provision in a contract
  with a single source continuum contractor to provide foster care
  services and services for relative and kinship caregivers in a
  catchment area to which community-based care is expanded after
  September 1, 2017, that requires the transfer to the contractor of
  the provision of:
               (1)  the case management services for children,
  relative and kinship caregivers, and families in the catchment area
  where the contractor will be operating; and
               (2)  family reunification support services to be
  provided after a child receiving services from the contractor is
  returned to the child's family.
         (c)  The department shall collaborate with a single source
  continuum contractor to establish an initial case transfer planning
  team to:
               (1)  address any necessary data transfer;
               (2)  establish file transfer procedures; and
               (3)  notify relevant persons regarding the transfer of
  services to the contractor.
         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 electronic transfer
  of data from single source continuum contractors to the department
  to allow the contractors to perform case management functions.
         (b)  The council shall develop protocols for the access,
  management, and security of case data that is electronically shared
  by a single source continuum contractor with the department.
         Sec. 264.160.  LIABILITY INSURANCE REQUIREMENTS. A single
  source continuum contractor and any subcontractor of the single
  source continuum contractor providing community-based care
  services shall maintain minimum insurance coverage, as required in
  the contract with the department, to minimize the risk of
  insolvency and protect against damages.  The executive commissioner
  may adopt rules to implement this section.
         Sec. 264.161.  STATUTORY DUTIES ASSUMED BY CONTRACTOR.
  Except as provided by Section 264.163, a single source continuum
  contractor providing foster care services and services for relative
  and kinship caregivers in a catchment area must, either directly or
  through subcontractors, assume the statutory duties of the
  department in connection with the delivery of foster care services
  and services for relative and kinship caregivers in that catchment
  area.
         Sec. 264.162.  REVIEW OF CONTRACTOR PERFORMANCE. The
  department shall develop a formal review process to evaluate a
  single source continuum contractor's implementation of placement
  services and case management services in a catchment area.
         Sec. 264.163.  CONTINUING DUTIES OF DEPARTMENT. In a
  catchment area in which a single source continuum contractor is
  providing family-based safety services or community-based care
  services, legal representation of the department in an action under
  this code shall be provided in accordance with Section 264.009.
         Sec. 264.164.  CONFIDENTIALITY. (a)  The records of a
  single source continuum contractor relating to the provision of
  community-based care services in a catchment area are subject to
  Chapter 552, Government Code, in the same manner as the records of
  the department are subject to that chapter.
         (b)  Subchapter C, Chapter 261, regarding the
  confidentiality of certain case information, applies to the records
  of a single source continuum contractor in relation to the
  provision of services by the contractor.
         Sec. 264.165.  NOTICE REQUIRED FOR EARLY TERMINATION OF
  CONTRACT. (a)  A single source continuum contractor may terminate
  a contract entered into under this subchapter by providing notice
  to the department and the commission of the contractor's intent to
  terminate the contract not later than the 60th day before the date
  of the termination.
         (b)  The department may terminate a contract entered into
  with a single source continuum contractor under this subchapter by
  providing notice to the contractor of the department's intent to
  terminate the contract not later than the 30th day before the date
  of termination.
         Sec. 264.166.  CONTINGENCY PLAN IN EVENT OF EARLY CONTRACT
  TERMINATION. (a)  In each catchment area in which community-based
  care is implemented, the department shall create a contingency plan
  to ensure the continuity of services for children and families in
  the catchment area in the event of an early termination of the
  contract with the single source continuum contractor providing
  foster care services in that catchment area.
         (b)  To support each contingency plan, the single source
  continuum contractor providing foster care services in that
  catchment area, subject to approval by the department, shall
  develop a transfer plan to ensure the continuity of services for
  children and families in the catchment area in the event of an early
  termination of the contract with the department. The contractor
  shall submit an updated transfer plan each year and six months
  before the end of the contract period, including any extension. The
  department is not limited or restricted in requiring additional
  information from the contractor or requiring the contractor to
  modify the transfer plan as necessary.
         (c)  If a single source continuum contractor gives notice to
  the department of an early contract termination, the department may
  enter into a contract with a different contractor for the sole
  purpose of assuming the contract that is being terminated.
         Sec. 264.167.  ATTORNEY-CLIENT PRIVILEGE. An employee,
  agent, or representative of a single source continuum contractor is
  considered to be a client's representative of the department for
  purposes of the privilege under Rule 503, Texas Rules of Evidence,
  as that privilege applies to communications with a prosecuting
  attorney or other attorney representing the department, or the
  attorney's representatives, in a proceeding under this subtitle.
         Sec. 264.168.  REVIEW OF CONTRACTOR RECOMMENDATIONS BY
  DEPARTMENT. (a)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this
  subchapter governing the transfer of case management authority to a
  single source continuum contractor, the department may review,
  approve, or disapprove a contractor's recommendation with respect
  to a child's permanency goal.
         (b)  Subsection (a) may not be construed to limit or restrict
  the authority of the department to include necessary oversight
  measures and review processes to maintain compliance with federal
  and state requirements in a contract with a single source continuum
  contractor.
         (c)  The department shall develop an internal dispute
  resolution process to decide disagreements between a single source
  continuum contractor and the department.
         Sec. 264.169.  PILOT PROGRAM FOR FAMILY-BASED SAFETY
  SERVICES.  (a)  In this section, "case management services" means
  the direct delivery and coordination of a network of formal and
  informal activities and services in a catchment area where the
  department has entered into, or is in the process of entering into,
  a contract with a single source continuum contractor to provide
  family-based safety services and case management and includes:
               (1)  caseworker visits with the child and all
  caregivers;
               (2)  family visits;
               (3)  family group conferencing or family group
  decision-making;
               (4)  development of the family plan of service;
               (5)  monitoring, developing, securing, and
  coordinating services;
               (6)  evaluating the progress of children, caregivers,
  and families receiving services;
               (7)  assuring that the rights of children, caregivers,
  and families receiving services are protected;
               (8)  duties relating to family-based safety services
  ordered by a court, including:
                     (A)  providing any required notifications or
  consultations;
                     (B)  preparing court reports;
                     (C)  attending judicial hearings, trials, and
  mediations;
                     (D)  complying with applicable court orders; and
                     (E)  ensuring the child is progressing toward the
  goal of permanency within state and federally mandated guidelines;
  and
               (9)  any other function or service that the department
  determines is necessary to allow a single source continuum
  contractor to assume responsibility for case management.
         (b)  The department shall develop and implement in two child
  protective services regions of the state a pilot program under
  which the commission contracts with a single nonprofit entity that
  has an organizational mission focused on child welfare or a
  governmental entity in each region to provide family-based safety
  services and case management for children and families receiving
  family-based safety services.  The contract must include a
  transition plan for the provision of services that ensures the
  continuity of services for children and families in the selected
  regions.
         (c)  The contract with an entity must include
  performance-based provisions that require the entity to achieve the
  following outcomes for families receiving services from the entity:
               (1)  a decrease in recidivism;
               (2)  an increase in protective factors; and
               (3)  any other performance-based outcome specified by
  the department.
         (d)  The commission may only contract for implementation of
  the pilot program with entities that the department considers to
  have the capacity to provide, either directly or through
  subcontractors, an array of evidence-based, promising practice, or
  evidence-informed services and support programs to children and
  families in the selected child protective services regions.
         (e)  The contracted entity must perform all statutory duties
  of the department in connection with the delivery of the services
  specified in Subsection (b).
         (f)  The contracted entity must give preference for
  employment to employees of the department:
               (1)  whose position at the department is impacted by
  the implementation of community-based care; and
               (2)  who are considered by the department to be
  employees in good standing.
         (g)  Not later than December 31, 2018, the department shall
  report to the appropriate standing committees of the legislature
  having jurisdiction over child protective services and foster care
  matters on the progress of the pilot program. The report must
  include:
               (1)  an evaluation of each contracted entity's success
  in achieving the outcomes described by Subsection (c); and
               (2)  a recommendation as to whether the pilot program
  should be continued, expanded, or terminated.
         (b)  Section 264.126, Family Code, is transferred to
  Subchapter B-1, Chapter 264, Family Code, as added by this section,
  redesignated as Section 264.153, Family Code, and amended to read
  as follows:
         Sec. 264.153 [264.126].  COMMUNITY-BASED CARE [REDESIGN]
  IMPLEMENTATION PLAN. (a)  The department shall develop and
  maintain a plan for implementing community-based [the foster] care
  [redesign required by Chapter 598 (S.B. 218), Acts of the 82nd
  Legislature, Regular Session, 2011]. The plan must:
               (1)  describe the department's expectations, goals, and
  approach to implementing community-based [foster] care [redesign];
               (2)  include a timeline for implementing
  community-based [the foster] care [redesign] throughout this
  state, any limitations related to the implementation, and a
  progressive intervention plan and a contingency plan to provide
  continuity of the delivery of foster care services and services for
  relative and kinship caregivers [service delivery] if a contract
  with a single source continuum contractor ends prematurely;
               (3)  delineate and define the case management roles and
  responsibilities of the department and the department's
  contractors and the duties, employees, and related funding that
  will be transferred to the contractor by the department;
               (4)  identify any training needs and include long-range
  and continuous plans for training and cross-training staff,
  including plans to train caseworkers using the standardized
  curriculum created by the human trafficking prevention task force
  under Section 402.035(d)(6), Government Code, as that section
  existed on August 31, 2017;
               (5)  include a plan for evaluating the costs and tasks
  associated with each contract procurement, including the initial
  and ongoing contract costs for the department and contractor;
               (6)  include the department's contract monitoring
  approach and a plan for evaluating the performance of each
  contractor and the community-based [foster] care [redesign] system
  as a whole that includes an independent evaluation of each
  contractor's processes and fiscal and qualitative outcomes; and
               (7)  include a report on transition issues resulting
  from implementation of community-based [the foster] care
  [redesign].
         (b)  The department shall annually:
               (1)  update the implementation plan developed under
  this section and post the updated plan on the department's Internet
  website; and
               (2)  post on the department's Internet website the
  progress the department has made toward its goals for implementing
  community-based [the foster] care [redesign].
         (c)  Section 264.154, Family Code, as added by this section,
  applies only to a contract entered into with a single source
  continuum contractor on or after the effective date of this
  section.
         SECTION 19.  (a)  Subchapter C, Chapter 264, Family Code, is
  amended by adding Section 264.2042 to read as follows:
         Sec. 264.2042.  GRANTS FOR FAITH-BASED COMMUNITY
  COLLABORATIVE PROGRAMS. (a)  Using available funds or private
  donations, the governor shall establish and administer an
  innovation grant program to award grants to support faith-based
  community programs that collaborate with the department and the
  commission to improve foster care and the placement of children in
  foster care.
         (b)  A faith-based community program is eligible for a grant
  under this section if:
               (1)  the effectiveness of the program is supported by
  empirical evidence; and
               (2)  the program has demonstrated the ability to build
  connections between faith-based, secular, and government
  stakeholders.
         (c)  The regional director for the department in the region
  where a grant recipient program is located, or the regional
  director's designee, shall serve as the liaison between the
  department and the program for collaborative purposes. For a
  program that operates in a larger region, the department may
  designate a liaison in each county where the program is operating.
  The department or the commission may not direct or manage the
  operation of the program.
         (d)  The initial duration of a grant under this section is
  two years. The governor may renew a grant awarded to a program
  under this section if funds are available and the governor
  determines that the program is successful.
         (e)  The governor may not award to a program grants under
  this section totaling more than $300,000.
         (f)  The governor shall adopt rules to implement the grant
  program created under this section.
         (b)  As soon as practicable after the effective date of this
  section, the governor shall adopt rules for the implementation and
  administration of the innovation grant program established under
  Section 264.2042, Family Code, as added by this Act, and begin to
  award grants under the program.
         SECTION 20.  Subchapter A, Chapter 265, Family Code, is
  amended by adding Section 265.0041 to read as follows:
         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.
         SECTION 21.  Section 265.005(b), Family Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (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;
               (2)  include a needs assessment that identifies
  programs to best target the needs of the highest risk populations
  and geographic areas;
               (3)  identify the goals and priorities for the
  department's overall prevention efforts;
               (4)  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; [and]
               (7)  identify specific strategies to implement the plan
  and to develop measures for reporting on the overall progress
  toward the plan's goals; and
               (8)  identify specific strategies to increase local
  capacity for the delivery of prevention and early intervention
  services through collaboration with communities and stakeholders.
         SECTION 22.  Section 266.012, Family Code, is amended by
  adding Subsection (c) to read as follows:
         (c)  A single source continuum contractor under Subchapter
  B-1, Chapter 264, providing therapeutic foster care services to a
  child shall ensure that the child receives a comprehensive
  assessment under this section at least once every 90 days.
         SECTION 23.  (a)  Section 531.02013, Government Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
         Sec. 531.02013.  FUNCTIONS REMAINING WITH CERTAIN AGENCIES.  
  The following functions are not subject to transfer under Sections
  531.0201 and 531.02011:
               (1)  the functions of the Department of Family and
  Protective Services, including the statewide intake of reports and
  other information, related to the following:
                     (A)  child protective services, including
  services that are required by federal law to be provided by this
  state's child welfare agency;
                     (B)  adult protective services, other than
  investigations of the alleged abuse, neglect, or exploitation of an
  elderly person or person with a disability:
                           (i)  in a facility operated, or in a facility
  or by a person licensed, certified, or registered, by a state
  agency; or
                           (ii)  by a provider that has contracted to
  provide home and community-based services; [and]
                     (C)  prevention and early intervention services;
  and
                     (D)  investigations of alleged abuse, neglect, or
  exploitation occurring at a child-care facility, as that term is
  defined in Section 40.042, Human Resources Code; and
               (2)  the public health functions of the Department of
  State Health Services, including health care data collection and
  maintenance of the Texas Health Care Information Collection
  program.
         (b)  Notwithstanding any provision of Subchapter A-1,
  Chapter 531, Government Code, or any other law, the responsibility
  for conducting investigations of reports of abuse, neglect, or
  exploitation occurring at a child-care facility, as that term is
  defined in Section 40.042, Human Resources Code, as added by this
  Act, may not be transferred to the Health and Human Services
  Commission and remains the responsibility of the Department of
  Family and Protective Services.
         (c)  As soon as possible after the effective date of this
  section, the commissioner of the Department of Family and
  Protective Services shall transfer the responsibility for
  conducting investigations of reports of abuse, neglect, or
  exploitation occurring at a child-care facility, as that term is
  defined in Section 40.042, Human Resources Code, as added by this
  Act, to the child protective services division of the department.  
  The commissioner shall transfer appropriate investigators and
  staff as necessary to implement this section.
         (d)  This section takes effect immediately if this Act
  receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members of each house, as
  provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this
  Act does not receive the vote necessary for this section to take
  immediate effect, this section takes effect on the 91st day after
  the last day of the legislative session.
         SECTION 24.  (a)  Subchapter A, Chapter 533, Government
  Code, is amended by adding Section 533.0054 to read as follows:
         Sec. 533.0054.  HEALTH SCREENING REQUIREMENTS FOR ENROLLEE
  UNDER STAR HEALTH PROGRAM. (a)  A managed care organization that
  contracts with the commission to provide health care services to
  recipients under the STAR Health program must ensure that enrollees
  receive a complete early and periodic screening, diagnosis, and
  treatment checkup in accordance with the requirements specified in
  the contract between the managed care organization and the
  commission.
         (b)  The commission shall include a provision in a contract
  with a managed care organization to provide health care services to
  recipients under the STAR Health program specifying progressive
  monetary penalties for the organization's failure to comply with
  Subsection (a).
         (b)  The Health and Human Services Commission shall, in a
  contract for the provision of health care services under the STAR
  Health program between the commission and a managed care
  organization under Chapter 533, Government Code, that is entered
  into, renewed, or extended on or after the effective date of this
  section, require that the managed care organization comply with
  Section 533.0054, Government Code, as added by this section.
         (c)  The Health and Human Services Commission may not impose
  a monetary penalty for noncompliance with a contract provision
  described by Section 533.0054(b), Government Code, as added by this
  section, until September 1, 2018.
         (d)  If before implementing Section 533.0054, 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
  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 25.  (a)  Subchapter A, Chapter 533, Government
  Code, is amended by adding Section 533.0056 to read as follows:
         Sec. 533.0056.  STAR HEALTH PROGRAM:  NOTIFICATION OF
  PLACEMENT CHANGE.  A contract between a 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 continuity of care for a child whose
  placement has changed by:
               (1)  notifying each specialist treating the child of
  the placement change; and
               (2)  coordinating the transition of care from the
  child's previous treating primary care physician and treating
  specialists to the child's new treating primary care physician and
  treating specialists, if any.
         (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 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 533.0056, 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 26.  (a)  Subchapter B, Chapter 40, Human Resources
  Code, is amended by adding Sections 40.039, 40.040, 40.041, and
  40.042 to read as follows:
         Sec. 40.039.  REVIEW OF RECORDS RETENTION POLICY. The
  department shall periodically review the department's records
  retention policy with respect to case and intake records relating
  to department functions.  The department shall make changes to the
  policy consistent with the records retention schedule submitted
  under Section 441.185, Government Code, that are necessary to
  improve case prioritization and the routing of cases to the
  appropriate division of the department.  The department may adopt
  rules necessary to implement this section.
         Sec. 40.040.  CASE MANAGEMENT VENDOR QUALITY OVERSIGHT AND
  ASSURANCE DIVISION; MONITORING OF CONTRACT ADHERENCE. (a)  In this
  section, "case management," "catchment area," and "community-based
  care" have the meanings assigned by Section 264.152, Family Code.
         (b)  The department shall create within the department the
  case management services vendor quality oversight and assurance
  division. The division shall:
               (1)  oversee quality and ensure accountability of any
  vendor that provides community-based care and full case management
  services for the department under community-based care;
               (2)  conduct assessments on the fiscal and qualitative
  performance of any vendor that provides foster care services for
  the department under community-based care;
               (3)  create and administer a dispute resolution process
  to resolve conflicts between vendors that contract with the
  department to provide foster care services under community-based
  care and any subcontractor of a vendor; and
               (4)  monitor the transfer from the department to a
  vendor of full case management services for children and families
  receiving services from the vendor, including any transfer
  occurring under a pilot program.
         (c)  The commission shall contract with an outside vendor
  with expertise in quality assurance to develop, in coordination
  with the department, a contract monitoring system and standards for
  the continuous monitoring of the adherence of a vendor providing
  foster care services under community-based care to the terms of the
  contract entered into by the vendor and the commission.  The
  standards must include performance benchmarks relating to the
  provision of case management services in the catchment area where
  the vendor operates.
         (d)  The division shall collect and analyze data comparing
  outcomes on performance measures between catchment areas where
  community-based care has been implemented and regions where
  community-based care has not been implemented.
         Sec. 40.041.  OFFICE OF DATA ANALYTICS. The department
  shall create an office of data analytics.  The office shall report
  to the deputy commissioner and may perform any of the following
  functions, as determined by the department:
               (1)  monitor management trends;
               (2)  analyze employee exit surveys and interviews;
               (3)  evaluate the effectiveness of employee retention
  efforts, including merit pay;
               (4)  create and manage a system for handling employee
  complaints submitted by the employee outside of an employee's
  direct chain of command, including anonymous complaints;
               (5)  monitor and provide reports to department
  management personnel on:
                     (A)  employee complaint data and trends in
  employee complaints;
                     (B)  compliance with annual department
  performance evaluation requirements; and
                     (C)  the department's use of positive performance
  levels for employees;
               (6)  track employee tenure and internal employee
  transfers within both the child protective services division and
  the department;
               (7)  use data analytics to predict workforce shortages
  and identify areas of the department with high rates of employee
  turnover, and develop a process to inform the deputy commissioner
  and other appropriate staff regarding the office's findings;
               (8)  create and monitor reports on key metrics of
  agency performance;
               (9)  analyze available data, including data on employee
  training, for historical and predictive department trends; and
               (10)  conduct any other data analysis the department
  determines to be appropriate for improving performance, meeting the
  department's current business needs, or fulfilling the powers and
  duties of the department.
         Sec. 40.042.  INVESTIGATIONS OF CHILD ABUSE, NEGLECT, AND
  EXPLOITATION.  (a)  In this section, "child-care facility"
  includes a facility, licensed or unlicensed child-care facility,
  family home, residential child-care facility, employer-based
  day-care facility, or shelter day-care facility, as those terms are
  defined in Chapter 42.
         (b)  For all investigations of child abuse, neglect, or
  exploitation conducted by the child protective services division of
  the department, the department shall adopt the definitions of
  abuse, neglect, and exploitation provided in Section 261.001,
  Family Code.
         (c)  The department shall establish standardized policies to
  be used during investigations.
         (d)  The commissioner shall establish units within the child
  protective services division of the department to specialize in
  investigating allegations of child abuse, neglect, and
  exploitation occurring at a child-care facility.
         (e)  The department may require that investigators who
  specialize in allegations of child abuse, neglect, and exploitation
  occurring at child-care facilities receive ongoing training on the
  minimum licensing standards for any facilities that are applicable
  to the investigator's specialization.
         (f)  After an investigation of abuse, neglect, or
  exploitation occurring at a child-care facility, the department
  shall provide the state agency responsible for regulating the
  facility with access to any information relating to the
  department's investigation.  Providing access to confidential
  information under this subsection does not constitute a waiver of
  confidentiality.
         (g)  The department may adopt rules to implement this
  section.
         (b)  As soon as possible after the effective date of this
  Act, the commissioner of the Department of Family and Protective
  Services shall establish the office of data analytics required by
  Section 40.041, Human Resources Code, as added by this section.  The
  commissioner and the executive commissioner of the Health and Human
  Services Commission shall transfer appropriate staff as necessary
  to conduct the duties of the office.
         (c)  The Department of Family and Protective Services must
  implement the standardized definitions and policies required under
  Sections 40.042(b) and (c), Human Resources Code, as added by this
  Act, not later than December 1, 2017.
         SECTION 27.  (a)  Section 40.058(f), Human Resources Code,
  is amended to read as follows:
         (f)  A contract for residential child-care services provided
  by a general residential operation or by a child-placing agency
  must include provisions that:
               (1)  enable the department and commission to monitor
  the effectiveness of the services;
               (2)  specify performance outcomes, financial penalties
  for failing to meet any specified performance outcomes, and
  financial incentives for exceeding any specified performance
  outcomes;
               (3)  authorize the department or commission to
  terminate the contract or impose monetary sanctions for a violation
  of a provision of the contract that specifies performance criteria
  or for underperformance in meeting any specified performance
  outcomes;
               (4)  authorize the department or commission, an agent
  of the department or commission, and the state auditor to inspect
  all books, records, and files maintained by a contractor relating
  to the contract; and
               (5)  are necessary, as determined by the department or
  commission, to ensure accountability for the delivery of services
  and for the expenditure of public funds.
         (b)  The Health and Human Services Commission shall, in a
  contract for residential child-care services between the
  commission and a general residential operation or child-placing
  agency that is entered into on or after the effective date of this
  section, including a renewal contract, include the provisions
  required by Section 40.058(f), Human Resources Code, as amended by
  this section.
         (c)  The Health and Human Services Commission shall seek to
  amend contracts for residential child-care services entered into
  with general residential operations or child-placing agencies
  before the effective date of this section to include the provisions
  required by Section 40.058(f), Human Resources Code, as amended by
  this section.
         (d)  The Department of Family and Protective Services and the
  Health and Human Services Commission may not impose a financial
  penalty against a general residential operation or child-placing
  agency under a contract provision described by Section 40.058(f)(2)
  or (3), Human Resources Code, as amended by this section, until
  September 1, 2018.
         SECTION 28.  (a)  Subchapter C, Chapter 40, Human Resources
  Code, is amended by adding Section 40.0581 to read as follows:
         Sec. 40.0581.  PERFORMANCE MEASURES FOR CERTAIN SERVICE
  PROVIDER CONTRACTS. (a)  The commission, in collaboration with the
  department, shall contract with a vendor or enter into an agreement
  with an institution of higher education to develop, in coordination
  with the department, performance quality metrics for family-based
  safety services and post-adoption support services providers.  The
  quality metrics must be included in each contract with those
  providers.
         (b)  Each provider whose contract with the commission to
  provide department services includes the quality metrics developed
  under Subsection (a) must prepare and submit to the department a
  report each calendar quarter regarding the provider's performance
  based on the quality metrics.
         (c)  The commissioner shall compile a summary of all reports
  prepared and submitted to the department by family-based safety
  services providers as required by Subsection (b) and distribute the
  summary to appropriate family-based safety services caseworkers
  and child protective services region management once each calendar
  quarter.
         (d)  The commissioner shall compile a summary of all reports
  prepared and submitted to the department by post-adoption support
  services providers as required by Subsection (b) and distribute the
  summary to appropriate conservatorship and adoption caseworkers
  and child protective services region management.
         (e)  The department shall make the summaries prepared under
  Subsections (c) and (d) available to families that are receiving
  family-based safety services and to adoptive families.
         (f)  This section does not apply to a provider that has
  entered into a contract with the commission to provide family-based
  safety services under Section 264.169, Family Code.
         (b)  The quality metrics required by Section 40.0581, Human
  Resources Code, as added by this section, must be developed not
  later than September 1, 2018, and included in any contract,
  including a renewal contract, entered into by the Health and Human
  Services Commission with a family-based safety services provider or
  a post-adoption support services provider on or after January 1,
  2019, except as provided by Section 40.0581(f), Human Resources
  Code, as added by this section.
         SECTION 29.  Section 42.002(23), Human Resources Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
               (23)  "Other maltreatment" means:
                     (A)  abuse, as defined by Section 261.001 [or
  261.401], Family Code; or
                     (B)  neglect, as defined by Section 261.001 [or
  261.401], Family Code.
         SECTION 30.  (a)  Subchapter C, Chapter 42, Human Resources
  Code, is amended by adding Section 42.0432 to read as follows:
         Sec. 42.0432.  HEALTH SCREENING REQUIREMENTS FOR CHILD
  PLACED WITH CHILD-PLACING AGENCY. (a)  A child-placing agency or
  general residential operation that contracts with the department to
  provide services must ensure that the children that are in the
  managing conservatorship of the department and are placed with the
  child-placing agency or general residential operation receive a
  complete early and periodic screening, diagnosis, and treatment
  checkup in accordance with the requirements specified in the
  contract between the child-placing agency or general residential
  operation and the department.
         (b)  The commission shall include a provision in a contract
  with a child-placing agency or general residential operation
  specifying progressive monetary penalties for the child-placing
  agency's or general residential operation's failure to comply with
  Subsection (a).
         (b)  A child-placing agency or general residential operation
  that contracts to provide services for the Department of Family and
  Protective Services must comply with the requirements of Section
  42.0432, Human Resources Code, as added by this section, not later
  than August 31, 2018. The department and the Health and Human
  Services Commission may not impose a monetary penalty for
  noncompliance with a contract provision described by that section
  until September 1, 2018.
         SECTION 31.  Section 42.044(c-1), Human Resources Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
         (c-1)  The department:
               (1)  shall investigate a listed family home if the
  department receives a complaint that:
                     (A)  a child in the home has been abused or
  neglected, as defined by Section 261.001 [261.401], Family Code; or
                     (B)  otherwise alleges an immediate risk of danger
  to the health or safety of a child being cared for in the home; and
               (2)  may investigate a listed family home to ensure
  that the home is providing care for compensation to not more than
  three children, excluding children who are related to the
  caretaker.
         SECTION 32.  Section 261.401(a), Family Code, is repealed.
         SECTION 33.  The changes in law made by this Act to Section
  263.401, Family Code, apply only to a suit affecting the
  parent-child relationship filed on or after the effective date of
  this Act. A suit affecting the parent-child relationship filed
  before the effective date of this Act is governed by the law in
  effect on the date the suit was filed, and the former law is
  continued in effect for that purpose.
         SECTION 34.  Except as otherwise provided by this Act, this
  Act takes effect September 1, 2017.
 
 
 
 
 
 
  ______________________________ ______________________________
     President of the Senate Speaker of the House     
 
         I hereby certify that S.B. No. 11 passed the Senate on
  March 1, 2017, by the following vote:  Yeas 31, Nays 0;
  May 25, 2017, Senate refused to concur in House amendments and
  requested appointment of Conference Committee; May 26, 2017, House
  granted request of the Senate; May 28, 2017, Senate adopted
  Conference Committee Report by the following vote:  Yeas 31,
  Nays 0.
 
 
  ______________________________
  Secretary of the Senate    
 
         I hereby certify that S.B. No. 11 passed the House, with
  amendments, on May 19, 2017, by the following vote:  Yeas 109,
  Nays 34, one present not voting; May 26, 2017, House granted
  request of the Senate for appointment of Conference Committee;
  May 28, 2017, House adopted Conference Committee Report by the
  following vote:  Yeas 107, Nays 41, one present not voting.
 
 
  ______________________________
  Chief Clerk of the House   
 
 
 
  Approved:
 
  ______________________________ 
             Date
 
 
  ______________________________ 
            Governor