Bill Text: FL S0900 | 2021 | Regular Session | Engrossed


Bill Title: Child Welfare

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Failed) 2021-04-30 - Died in Messages; companion bill(s) passed, see CS/CS/SB 96 (Ch. 2021-170) [S0900 Detail]

Download: Florida-2021-S0900-Engrossed.html
       SB 900                                           First Engrossed
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       2021900e1
       
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to child welfare; amending s. 39.01,
    3         F.S.; defining the term “voluntary services”; amending
    4         s. 39.202, F.S.; expanding the list of entities that
    5         have access to child abuse records; amending s.
    6         39.302, F.S.; revising the authority of the Department
    7         of Children and Families to review reports for the
    8         purpose of employment screening; amending s. 409.1415,
    9         F.S.; revising requirements for certain employees of
   10         residential group homes; amending s. 409.1678, F.S.;
   11         revising certification requirements for safe foster
   12         homes; amending s. 409.175, F.S.; requiring
   13         assessments to be completed if the total number of
   14         children in a family foster home will exceed six,
   15         excluding the family’s own children, before placement
   16         of a child in a family foster home; requiring the
   17         department to adopt rules to establish eligibility
   18         criteria for requesting a waiver for such assessments
   19         and criteria to approve such waivers; providing an
   20         effective date.
   21          
   22  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   23  
   24         Section 1. Subsection (88) is added to section 39.01,
   25  Florida Statutes, to read:
   26         39.01 Definitions.—When used in this chapter, unless the
   27  context otherwise requires:
   28         (88)“Voluntary services” means social services and other
   29  preventive and rehabilitative services provided to the parent or
   30  legal custodian of the child or directly to the child, or
   31  services provided on behalf of the child, when a parent or legal
   32  custodian requests or voluntarily agrees to assistance.
   33         Section 2. Paragraphs (a) and (h) of subsection (2) of
   34  section 39.202, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
   35         39.202 Confidentiality of reports and records in cases of
   36  child abuse or neglect.—
   37         (2) Except as provided in subsection (4), access to such
   38  records, excluding the name of, or other identifying information
   39  with respect to, the reporter which shall be released only as
   40  provided in subsection (5), shall be granted only to the
   41  following persons, officials, and agencies:
   42         (a) Employees, authorized agents, or contract providers of
   43  the department, the Department of Health, the Agency for Persons
   44  with Disabilities, the Agency for Health Care Administration,
   45  the office of Early Learning, or county agencies responsible for
   46  carrying out:
   47         1. Child or adult protective investigations;
   48         2. Ongoing child or adult protective services;
   49         3. Early intervention and prevention services;
   50         4. Healthy Start services;
   51         5. Licensure or approval of adoptive homes, foster homes,
   52  child care facilities, facilities licensed under chapters 393
   53  and 394 chapter 393, family day care homes, providers who
   54  receive school readiness funding under part VI of chapter 1002,
   55  or other homes used to provide for the care and welfare of
   56  children;
   57         6. Employment screening for caregivers in residential group
   58  homes and facilities licensed under chapters 393, 394, and 409;
   59  or
   60         7. Services for victims of domestic violence when provided
   61  by certified domestic violence centers working at the
   62  department’s request as case consultants or with shared clients.
   63  
   64  Also, employees or agents of the Department of Juvenile Justice
   65  responsible for the provision of services to children, pursuant
   66  to chapters 984 and 985.
   67         (h) Any appropriate official of the department, the Agency
   68  for Health Care Administration, or the Agency for Persons with
   69  Disabilities who is responsible for:
   70         1. Administration or supervision of the department’s
   71  program for the prevention, investigation, or treatment of child
   72  abuse, abandonment, or neglect, or abuse, neglect, or
   73  exploitation of a vulnerable adult, when carrying out his or her
   74  official function;
   75         2. Taking appropriate administrative action concerning an
   76  employee of the department or the agency who is alleged to have
   77  perpetrated child abuse, abandonment, or neglect, or abuse,
   78  neglect, or exploitation of a vulnerable adult; or
   79         3. Employing and continuing employment of personnel of the
   80  department or the agency.
   81         Section 3. Paragraph (b) of subsection (7) of section
   82  39.302, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
   83         39.302 Protective investigations of institutional child
   84  abuse, abandonment, or neglect.—
   85         (7) When an investigation of institutional abuse, neglect,
   86  or abandonment is closed and a person is not identified as a
   87  caregiver responsible for the abuse, neglect, or abandonment
   88  alleged in the report, the fact that the person is named in some
   89  capacity in the report may not be used in any way to adversely
   90  affect the interests of that person. This prohibition applies to
   91  any use of the information in employment screening, licensing,
   92  child placement, adoption, or any other decisions by a private
   93  adoption agency or a state agency or its contracted providers.
   94         (b) Likewise, if a person is employed as a caregiver in a
   95  residential group home licensed under s. 409.175 and is named in
   96  any capacity in three or more reports within a 5-year period,
   97  the department may review all reports for the purposes of the
   98  employment screening required under s. 409.175(2)(m) s.
   99  409.1415(2)(c).
  100         Section 4. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section
  101  409.1415, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  102         409.1415 Parenting partnerships for children in out-of-home
  103  care.—
  104         (2) PARENTING PARTNERSHIPS.—
  105         (c) An employee of a residential group home must meet the
  106  background screening requirements under s. 39.0138 and the level
  107  2 screening standards for screening under chapter 435. An
  108  employee of a residential group home who works directly with a
  109  child as a caregiver must meet, at a minimum, the same
  110  education, and training, background, and other screening
  111  requirements as caregivers in family foster homes licensed as
  112  level II under s. 409.175(5).
  113         Section 5. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section
  114  409.1678, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  115         409.1678 Specialized residential options for children who
  116  are victims of commercial sexual exploitation.—
  117         (2) CERTIFICATION OF SAFE HOUSES AND SAFE FOSTER HOMES.—
  118         (c) To be certified, a safe house must hold a license as a
  119  residential child-caring agency, as defined in s. 409.175, and a
  120  safe foster home must hold a license as a family foster home, as
  121  defined in s. 409.175. A safe house or safe foster home must
  122  also:
  123         1. Use strength-based and trauma-informed approaches to
  124  care, to the extent possible and appropriate.
  125         2. Serve exclusively one sex.
  126         3. Group child victims of commercial sexual exploitation by
  127  age or maturity level.
  128         4. Care for child victims of commercial sexual exploitation
  129  in a manner that separates those children from children with
  130  other needs; however, this subparagraph does not apply to safe
  131  foster homes. Safe houses and safe foster homes may care for
  132  other populations if the children who have not experienced
  133  commercial sexual exploitation do not interact with children who
  134  have experienced commercial sexual exploitation.
  135         5. Have awake staff members on duty 24 hours a day, if a
  136  safe house.
  137         6. Provide appropriate security through facility design,
  138  hardware, technology, staffing, and siting, including, but not
  139  limited to, external video monitoring or door exit alarms, a
  140  high staff-to-client ratio, or being situated in a remote
  141  location that is isolated from major transportation centers and
  142  common trafficking areas.
  143         7. Meet other criteria established by department rule,
  144  which may include, but are not limited to, personnel
  145  qualifications, staffing ratios, and types of services offered.
  146         Section 6. Subsection (3) of section 409.175, Florida
  147  Statutes, is amended to read:
  148         409.175 Licensure of family foster homes, residential
  149  child-caring agencies, and child-placing agencies; public
  150  records exemption.—
  151         (3)(a) The total number of children placed in each family
  152  foster home shall be based on the recommendation of the
  153  department, or the community-based care lead agency where one is
  154  providing foster care and related services, based on the needs
  155  of each child in care, the ability of the foster family to meet
  156  the individual needs of each child, including any adoptive or
  157  biological children or young adults remaining in foster care
  158  living in the home, the amount of safe physical plant space, the
  159  ratio of active and appropriate adult supervision, and the
  160  background, experience, and skill of the family foster parents.
  161         (b) If the total number of children in a family foster home
  162  will exceed six, excluding five, including the family’s own
  163  children, an assessment of each child to be placed in the home
  164  must be completed by a family services counselor and approved in
  165  writing by the counselor’s supervisor prior to placement of any
  166  additional children in the home, except that, if the placement
  167  involves a child whose sibling is already in the home or a child
  168  who has been in placement in the home previously, the assessment
  169  must be completed within 72 hours after placement. The
  170  assessment must assess and document the mental, physical, and
  171  psychosocial needs of the child and recommend the maximum number
  172  of children in a family foster home that will allow the child’s
  173  needs to be met.
  174         (c) For any licensed family foster home, the
  175  appropriateness of the number of children in the home must be
  176  reassessed annually as part of the relicensure process. For a
  177  home with more than six five children, if it is determined by
  178  the licensure study at the time of relicensure that the total
  179  number of children in the home is appropriate and that there
  180  have been no substantive licensure violations and no indications
  181  of child maltreatment or child-on-child sexual abuse within the
  182  past 12 months, the relicensure of the home may shall not be
  183  denied based on the total number of children in the home.
  184         (d)The department shall adopt rules to establish
  185  eligibility criteria for requesting a waiver for assessments
  186  required under this subsection and criteria to approve such
  187  waivers.
  188         Section 7. This act shall take effect July 1, 2021.

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