Bill Text: CA SB65 | 2023-2024 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Behavioral Health Continuum Infrastructure Program.
Sponsorship: Partisan Bill (Republican 3)
Status: (Failed) 2024-02-01 - Returned to Secretary of Senate pursuant to Joint Rule 56. [SB65 Detail]
Download: California-2023-SB65-Introduced.html
CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE—
2023–2024 REGULAR SESSION
Senate Bill
No. 65
| Introduced by Senator Ochoa Bogh (Coauthors: Senators Grove and Jones) |
January 04, 2023 |
An act to amend Section 5960.05 of, and to add Section 5960.41 to, the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to behavioral health, and making an appropriation therefor.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 65, as introduced, Ochoa Bogh.
Behavioral Health Continuum Infrastructure Program.
Existing law authorizes the State Department of Health Care Services to, subject to an appropriation, establish a Behavioral Health Continuum Infrastructure Program. Existing law authorizes the department, pursuant to this program, to award competitive grants to qualified entities to construct, acquire, and rehabilitate real estate assets or to invest in needed mobile crisis infrastructure to expand the community continuum of behavioral health treatment resources to build or expand the capacity of various treatment and rehabilitation options for persons with behavioral health disorders, as specified.
This bill would authorize the department, in awarding the above-described grants, to give preference to qualified entities that are intending to place their projects in specified facilities or properties. The bill would appropriate $1,000,000,000 from
the General Fund to the department for the purpose of implementing the Behavioral Health Continuum Infrastructure Program, for encumbrance during the 2023–24 to 2025–26, inclusive, fiscal years.
Digest Key
Vote: 2/3 Appropriation: YES Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NOBill Text
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
SECTION 1.
Section 5960.05 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:5960.05.
(a) If the department establishes the program pursuant to this chapter, the department may award competitive grants to qualified entities to construct, acquire, and rehabilitate real estate assets or to invest in needed mobile crisis infrastructure to expand the community continuum of behavioral health treatment resources to build new capacity or expand existing capacity for short-term crisis stabilization, acute and subacute care, crisis residential, community-based mental health residential, substance use disorder residential, peer respite, mobile crisis, community and outpatient behavioral health services, and other clinically enriched longer term treatment and rehabilitation options for persons with behavioral health disorders in the least restrictive and least costly setting.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to subdivision (a), the department may give a preference to qualified entities that are intending to place their projects in any of the following facilities or properties:
(1) Recently closed hospitals.
(2) Recently closed skilled nursing facilities.
(3) Unused
city, county, or state properties.
(4) Facilities that are colocated or near state or local housing program sites.
(5) Recently closed or unused city or county jail facilities.
(c) For purposes of this section, “recently closed hospitals” means hospitals that have been closed for at least two years.
