Bill Text: TX SB2287 | 2023-2024 | 88th Legislature | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Relating to the authority of a peace officer to apprehend a person for emergency detention and the authority of certain facilities and physicians to temporarily detain a person with mental illness.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 2-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2023-05-21 - Not again placed on intent calendar [SB2287 Detail]

Download: Texas-2023-SB2287-Comm_Sub.html
 
 
  By: West, LaMantia  S.B. No. 2287
         (In the Senate - Filed March 10, 2023; March 22, 2023, read
  first time and referred to Committee on Criminal Justice;
  May 15, 2023, reported adversely, with favorable Committee
  Substitute by the following vote:  Yeas 6, Nays 0; May 15, 2023,
  sent to printer.)
Click here to see the committee vote
 
  COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR S.B. No. 2287 By:  Flores
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
 
  relating to the authority of a peace officer to apprehend a person
  for emergency detention and the authority of certain facilities and
  physicians to temporarily detain a person with mental illness.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  The heading to Subchapter A, Chapter 573, Health
  and Safety Code, is amended to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER A.  APPREHENSION, [BY PEACE OFFICER OR] TRANSPORTATION,
  OR DETENTION WITHOUT JUDGE'S OR MAGISTRATE'S ORDER [FOR EMERGENCY
  DETENTION BY GUARDIAN]
         SECTION 2.  Section 573.001(a), Health and Safety Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
         (a)  A peace officer, without a warrant, may take a person
  into custody, regardless of the age or location of the person, if
  the officer:
               (1)  has reason to believe and does believe that:
                     (A)  the person is a person with mental illness;
  and
                     (B)  because of that mental illness there is a
  substantial risk of serious harm to the person or to others unless
  the person is immediately restrained; and
               (2)  believes that there is not sufficient time to
  obtain a warrant before taking the person into custody.
         SECTION 3.  Subchapter A, Chapter 573, Health and Safety
  Code, is amended by adding Section 573.006 to read as follows:
         Sec. 573.006.  TEMPORARY DETENTION IN CERTAIN FACILITIES.  
  (a)  In this section, "facility" means:
               (1)  an inpatient mental health facility other than a
  community center, a facility operated by or under contract with a
  community center, an entity that the executive commissioner
  designates to provide mental health services, a local mental health
  authority, or a facility operated by or under contract with a local
  mental health authority, unless the facility is licensed under
  Chapter 577;
               (2)  a hospital, or the emergency department of a
  hospital, licensed under Chapter 241; and
               (3)  a freestanding emergency medical care facility
  licensed under Chapter 254.
         (b)  The governing body of a facility may adopt and implement
  a written policy that provides for the facility or a physician at
  the facility to detain a person who voluntarily requested treatment
  from the facility or who lacks the capacity to consent to treatment,
  as provided by this section, if:
               (1)  the person expresses a desire to leave the
  facility or attempts to leave the facility before the examination
  or treatment is completed; and
               (2)  a physician at the facility:
                     (A)  has reason to believe and does believe that:
                           (i)  the person has a mental illness; and
                           (ii)  because of that mental illness there
  is a substantial risk of serious harm to the person or to others
  unless the person is immediately restrained; and
                     (B)  believes that there is not sufficient time to
  file an application for emergency detention or for an order of
  protective custody.
         (c)  A policy adopted and implemented by a facility under
  this section may not allow the facility or a physician at the
  facility to detain a person who has been transported to the facility
  for emergency detention under this chapter.
         (d)  A policy adopted and implemented by a facility under
  this section must require:
               (1)  the facility staff or the physician who intends to
  detain the person under the policy to notify the person of that
  intention;
               (2)  a physician to document a decision by the facility
  or the physician to detain a person under the policy and to place a
  notice of detention in the person's medical record that contains
  the same information as required in a peace officer's notification
  of detention under Section 573.002; and
               (3)  the period of a person's detention under the policy
  to be less than four hours following the time the person first
  expressed a desire to leave, or attempted to leave, the facility,
  and the facility or physician to release the person not later than
  the end of the four-hour period unless the facility staff or
  physician arranges for a peace officer to take the person into
  custody under Section 573.001 or an order of protective custody is
  issued.
         (e)  Detention of a person under a policy adopted and
  implemented by a facility under this section is not considered
  involuntary psychiatric hospitalization for purposes of Section
  411.172(e), Government Code.
         (f)  A physician, person, or facility that detains or does
  not detain a person under a policy adopted and implemented by a
  facility under this section and that acts in good faith and without
  malice is not civilly or criminally liable for that action.
         (g)  A facility is not civilly or criminally liable for the
  decision of the governing body of the facility to adopt or not to
  adopt a policy under this section.
         SECTION 4.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2023.
 
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