Bill Text: TX HB1638 | 2019-2020 | 86th Legislature | Introduced


Bill Title: Relating to trauma-informed care for children in the conservatorship of the Department of Family and Protective Services and trauma-informed care training for certain department employees.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2019-03-04 - Referred to Human Services [HB1638 Detail]

Download: Texas-2019-HB1638-Introduced.html
  86R4841 MM-F
 
  By: Miller H.B. No. 1638
 
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to trauma-informed care for children in the
  conservatorship of the Department of Family and Protective Services
  and trauma-informed care training for certain department
  employees.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Section 264.015, Family Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsections (a-1) and (a-2) to
  read as follows:
         (a)  The department shall include at least eight hours of
  training in trauma-informed programs and services in any training
  the department provides to foster parents, adoptive parents, and
  kinship caregivers[, department caseworkers, and department
  supervisors].  The trauma-informed training required by this
  subsection must use a research-supported model and meet the
  requirements of the training required under Sections 40.104 and
  40.107, Human Resources Code.
         (a-1)  The department shall pay for the training provided
  under Subsection (a) [this subsection] with gifts, donations, and
  grants and any federal money available through the Fostering
  Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008 (Pub.
  L. No. 110-351). The department shall annually evaluate the
  effectiveness of the training provided under this subsection to
  ensure progress toward a trauma-informed system of care.
         (a-2)  The department may exempt from the training required
  by Subsection (a) any individual who submits proof to the
  department that the individual has received training that meets the
  requirements of Sections 40.104 and 40.107, Human Resources Code.
         SECTION 2.  Chapter 40, Human Resources Code, is amended by
  adding Subchapter D to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER D. TRAUMA-INFORMED CARE
         Sec. 40.101.  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
               (1)  "Trauma" means the range of maltreatment,
  interpersonal violence, abuse, assault, and neglect experiences
  encountered by children, adolescents, and adults, including:
                     (A)  physical, sexual, and emotional abuse;
                     (B)  interpersonal or relational trauma from
  abuse, neglect, maltreatment, and experiences that impact an
  individual's brain, biology, behavior, beliefs, or body;
                     (C)  community, peer, and school-based assault,
  molestation, and severe bullying;
                     (D)  severe physical, medical, and emotional
  neglect;
                     (E)  witnessing domestic violence;
                     (F)  the impact of abrupt separation, serious and
  pervasive disruptions in caregiving, and traumatic loss; and
                     (G)  experiences that are a consequence of
  historical, cultural, systemic, institutional, and
  multigenerational abuse.
               (2)  "Trauma-informed care," "trauma-informed
  program," or "trauma-informed service" means care or a program or
  service that is person-centered, avoids re-traumatization, and
  takes into account:
                     (A)  the impact that traumatic experiences have on
  the brain, biology, body, beliefs, and behavior;
                     (B)  the symptoms of trauma;
                     (C)  an individual's personal trauma history;
                     (D)  an individual's trauma triggers; and
                     (E)  methods for addressing the traumatized
  individual's needs by helping the individual feel safe, build
  relationships, and learn to regulate emotions.
         Sec. 40.102.  TRAUMA-INFORMED SYSTEM OF CARE.  (a)  The
  department shall ensure that the child protective services division
  of the department transitions to a trauma-informed system of care
  that:
               (1)  considers the impact of trauma, including the
  emotional, behavioral, and physical effect on individuals and the
  organizations, staff, and volunteers that work with those
  individuals;
               (2)  examines an individual's behavior in the context
  of coping strategies that are designed to survive adversity,
  including a response to primary and secondary trauma;
               (3)  understands that the need for a trauma-informed
  response is not limited to mental and behavioral health specialty
  services but is integral to all organizations and systems involved;
               (4)  understands that a pharmacological response or
  reducing the risk of repeat trauma alone cannot meet the needs of
  vulnerable individuals, and building relationships, community, and
  the feeling of safety are necessary for neuro-development and
  healing from trauma;
               (5)  recognizes the signs of trauma and consistently
  incorporates trauma screening and assessment into all aspects of
  work, including interactions with individuals, staff, volunteers,
  and organizations supporting those individuals;
               (6)  applies the principles of a trauma-informed
  approach to all areas of functioning, including:
                     (A)  staff and volunteer training on trauma and
  trauma-informed practices;
                     (B)  leadership that realizes the role of trauma
  in staff members and the individuals served; and
                     (C)  policies and practices that ensure the
  following are addressed:
                           (i)  a focus on the relational needs of
  individuals, with special attention toward building and
  strengthening secure attachments based on trust; and
                           (ii)  the creation of an environment of
  physical, social, and psychological safety that meets the
  individual's physiological needs that includes:
                                 (a)  good nutrition, adequate sleep,
  attention to sensory needs, and regular physical activity; and
                                 (b)  providing structured experiences
  and opportunities for empowerment and self-efficacy, enhancing
  emotional and behavioral self-regulation, mindful awareness, and
  the ability to use proactive strategies for behavioral change;
               (7)  avoids re-traumatization by recognizing how
  department practices such as placement disruptions, seclusion,
  restraints, and abrupt transitions can cause additional harm and
  interfere with healing;
               (8)  continually evaluates and improves methods,
  practices, and approaches; and
               (9)  builds resiliency in individuals and fosters the
  ability to understand and effectively model, practice, and
  implement characteristics of a secure person, including the ability
  to express the individual's own needs, give nurturing care, and ask
  for care.
         (b)  The department may leverage outside resources and
  coordinate state resources toward implementing trauma-informed
  care for children who are in the department's conservatorship or
  receiving family-based safety services and shall:
               (1)  implement the transition to a trauma-informed
  system of care described by Subsection (a) for children in the
  department's conservatorship;
               (2)  ensure that all department employees who interact
  with or make decisions on behalf of children in the department's
  conservatorship receive appropriate trauma-informed care training;
  and
               (3)  adopt trauma-informed practices and policies to
  reduce:
                     (A)  the number of placement changes for children
  in the department's conservatorship;
                     (B)  foster parent turnover;
                     (C)  the number of children in the department's
  conservatorship who are unable to be placed with adoptive parents;
                     (D)  caseworker attrition;
                     (E)  the number of children in the department's
  conservatorship who run away from the child's placement;
                     (F)  the amount of psychotropic medications
  prescribed to children in the department's conservatorship;
                     (G)  the number of children in the department's
  conservatorship whose level of care increases;
                     (H)  the number of children in the department's
  conservatorship who are placed in psychiatric facilities or
  residential treatment centers;
                     (I)  the number of young adults who have
  difficulty functioning independently after transitioning out of
  the department's conservatorship; and
                     (J)  the amount of money that the state spends on
  services for adults who:
                           (i)  did not receive trauma-informed care
  when they were in the department's conservatorship; and 
                           (ii)  are unable to function independently
  as adults or are incarcerated or homeless.
         (c)  For purposes of providing any service to a child, the
  department shall presume that each child in the department's
  conservatorship has experienced trauma, may continue to experience
  trauma, and needs systems, practices, and policies that use
  trauma-informed care.
         (d)  This section may not be construed to:
               (1)  create a legal presumption against a parent in:
                     (A)  an investigation conducted by the department
  under Chapter 261, Family Code; or
                     (B)  a suit affecting the parent-child
  relationship under Chapter 262, Family Code; or
               (2)  relieve the department from any burden of proof
  required in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship under
  Chapter 262, Family Code.
         Sec. 40.103.  REGIONAL COORDINATORS. (a)  The department
  shall appoint at least two trauma-informed care coordinators in
  each department region who have substantial expertise and
  experience in at least one trauma-informed care model.
         (b)  In appointing trauma-informed care coordinators, the
  department shall ensure, if possible, that each coordinator
  appointed in a region represents a different trauma-informed care
  model.
         (c)  A trauma-informed care coordinator shall:
               (1)  organize and offer trauma-informed training; and 
               (2)  offer coaching and support regarding
  trauma-informed care within the coordinator's region.
         Sec. 40.104.  TRAUMA-INFORMED CARE TRAINING: DEPARTMENT
  EMPLOYEES. (a)  The department shall ensure that each department
  employee who interacts with or makes decisions on behalf of a child
  in the department's conservatorship receives trauma-informed care
  training that provides the employee with a foundational level of
  understanding of:
               (1)  trauma and adverse childhood experiences;
               (2)  the impact that trauma has on a child, including
  how trauma may affect a child's behavior;
               (3)  attachment and how a lack of attachment may affect
  a child;
               (4)  the role that trauma-informed care and services,
  including strategies and interventions that build connection,
  physical and psychological safety, and regulation of emotions, can
  have in helping a child build resiliency and overcome the effects of
  trauma and adverse childhood experiences;
               (5)  the importance of screening children for trauma
  and considering a child's trauma history in making decisions that
  affect the child;
               (6)  the risk of misdiagnosis and inappropriate use of
  psychotropic medication for the treatment of children who have
  experienced trauma;
               (7)  the potential for re-traumatization of children in
  the department's conservatorship;
               (8)  the importance of working with other systems to
  help a child receive trauma-informed care;
               (9)  the impact an adult's traumatic experiences can
  have on the adult's interactions with a child and ways to avoid
  secondary trauma; and
               (10)  the concepts, strategies, and skills most
  appropriate for each person's role in a child's life.
         (b)  A department employee who submits proof to the
  department that the employee has completed a training program
  provided by another entity that meets the requirements described by
  Subsection (a) satisfies the training requirements of this section.
         Sec. 40.105.  TRAUMA-INFORMED CARE TRAINING: ADMINISTRATIVE
  EMPLOYEES.  (a)  In addition to the training required by Section
  40.104, the department shall ensure that each department employee
  who makes decisions on behalf of the department regarding the
  department's organization, policy goals, and funding receives
  training that teaches the employee to:
               (1)  support staff who provide trauma-informed care to
  children and families;
               (2)  create organizational change to reduce
  traumatizing practices and policies;
               (3)  identify and address practices or policies that
  have a disproportionate or disparate impact on children who have
  experienced trauma within diverse populations; and
               (4)  minimize secondary trauma for staff.
         (b)  The total amount of training under Section 40.104 and
  this section must be at least eight hours.
         (c)  A department employee who submits proof to the
  department that the employee has completed a training program
  provided by another entity that meets the requirements described by
  Subsection (a) satisfies the training requirements of this section.
         Sec. 40.106.  TRAUMA-INFORMED CARE TRAINING: REGIONAL
  DIRECTORS AND SUPERVISORS. (a) In addition to the training
  required by Section 40.104, the department shall ensure that each
  department employee who serves as a regional director or mid-level
  supervisor receives training that gives the employee the ability to
  apply and teach to others how to:
               (1)  understand the difference between wilful
  disobedience and trauma-induced behavior for a child who has
  experienced trauma;
               (2)  recognize trauma triggers;
               (3)  identify practices and policies that may
  re-traumatize children;
               (4)  identify appropriate treatments and
  non-pharmacological interventions for children who have
  experienced trauma;
               (5)  work with other staff, organizations, and
  individuals to create a culture of trauma-informed care;
               (6)  learn and practice strategies that promote a
  child's healing;
               (7)  advocate, as appropriate, on behalf of a child to
  ensure that the child has access to trauma-informed care;
               (8)  effectively model trauma-informed strategies with
  clients, as appropriate; and
               (9)  recognize the effects of secondary trauma and the
  need for self-care.
         (b)  The total amount of training under Section 40.104 and
  this section must be at least eight hours.
         (c)  The department shall provide to employees described by
  Subsection (a) access to ongoing coaching regarding implementing
  and using trauma-informed care principles to respond to the needs
  of a child in the department's conservatorship.
         (d)  A department employee who submits proof to the
  department that the employee has completed a training program
  provided by another entity that meets the requirements described by
  Subsection (a) satisfies the training requirements of this section.
         Sec. 40.107.  TRAUMA-INFORMED CARE TRAINING: CASEWORKERS
  AND INVESTIGATORS. (a) In addition to the training required by
  Section 40.104, the department shall ensure that each department
  employee who serves as a caseworker or investigator receives
  training that uses a research-supported, interactive
  problem-solving model to give employees the ability to:
               (1)  understand the difference between wilful
  disobedience and trauma-induced behavior for a child who has
  experienced trauma;
               (2)  recognize trauma triggers;
               (3)  identify practices that may re-traumatize
  children;
               (4)  learn and practice strategies and interventions
  that promote a child's healing;
               (5)  through case study, scripted practice, role-play
  activities, analysis, or facilitated discussion about experiences,
  gain mastery of strategies and interventions that guide daily
  interactions with a child who has experienced trauma;
               (6)  collaborate with other professionals or
  caregivers to identify solutions to problems that arise because of
  a child's trauma; and
               (7)  recognize effects of secondary trauma and the need
  for self-care.
         (b)  The total amount of training under Section 40.104 and
  this section must be at least 24 hours.
         (c)  The department shall provide to employees described by
  Subsection (a) access to ongoing coaching regarding implementing
  and using trauma-informed care principles to respond to the needs
  of a child in the department's conservatorship.
         (d)  A department employee who submits proof to the
  department that the employee has completed a training program
  provided by another entity that meets the requirements described by
  Subsection (a) satisfies the training requirements of this section.
         Sec. 40.108.  SPECIFIC MODEL NOT REQUIRED. The training
  requirements of this subchapter do not require the use of any
  specific training model or program.
         SECTION 3.  Section 264.015(b), Family Code, is repealed.
         SECTION 4.  The Department of Family and Protective Services
  shall provide the training required by Subchapter D, Chapter 40,
  Human Resources Code, as added by this Act, to the employees in two
  or three department regions each fiscal year. The department shall
  complete the training in all of the department's regions not later
  than September 1, 2023.
         SECTION 5.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2019.
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