Bill Text: VA SB317 | 2017 | Regular Session | Prefiled
Bill Title: Veterans Docket Act; established, report.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2016-12-02 - Left in Courts of Justice [SB317 Detail]
Download: Virginia-2017-SB317-Prefiled.html
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That §2.2-2001.1 of the Code of Virginia is amended and reenacted and that the Code of Virginia is amended by adding a section numbered 18.2-254.2 as follows:
§2.2-2001.1. Program for mental health and rehabilitative services.
The Department, in cooperation with the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services and the Department for Aging and Rehabilitative Services, shall establish a program to monitor and coordinate mental health and rehabilitative services support for Virginia veterans and members of the Virginia National Guard and Virginia residents in the Armed Forces Reserves not in active federal service. The program shall also support family members affected by covered military members' service and deployments. The purpose of the program is to ensure that adequate and timely assessment, treatment, and support are available to veterans, service members, and affected family members.
The program shall facilitate support for covered individuals to provide timely assessment and treatment for stress-related injuries and traumatic brain injuries resulting from military service, and subject to the availability of public and private funds appropriated for them, case management services, outpatient, family support, and other appropriate behavioral health and brain injury services necessary to provide individual services and support.
The program shall cooperate with localities that may establish
special treatment procedures for veterans and active military service members
such as authorized by §§9.1-173 and 9.1-174.
The program shall also cooperate and coordinate with
localities that have established veterans
dockets pursuant to §18.2-254.2. To facilitate local involvement and flexibility in
responding to the problem of crime in local communities and to effectively
treat, counsel, rehabilitate, and supervise veterans and active military
service members who are offenders or defendants in the criminal justice system
and who need access to proper treatment for mental illness including major
depression, alcohol or drug abuse, post traumatic stress disorder, traumatic
brain injury or a combination of these, any city, county, or combination
thereof, may develop, establish, and maintain policies, procedures, and
treatment services for all such offenders who are convicted and sentenced for
misdemeanors or felonies that are not felony acts of violence, as defined in §
19.2-297.1. Such policies, procedures, and treatment services shall be designed
to provide:
1. Coordination of
treatment and counseling services available to the criminal justice system case
processing;
2. Enhanced public
safety through offender supervision, counseling, and treatment;
3. Prompt
identification and placement of eligible participants;
4. Access to a
continuum of treatment, rehabilitation, and counseling services in
collaboration with such care providers as are willing and able to provide the
services needed;
5. Where appropriate,
verified participant abstinence through frequent alcohol and other drug
testing;
6. Prompt response to
participants' noncompliance with program requirements;
7. Ongoing monitoring
and evaluation of program effectiveness and efficiency;
8. Ongoing education
and training in support of program effectiveness and efficiency;
9. Ongoing
collaboration among public agencies, community-based organizations and the U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs health care networks, the Veterans Benefits
Administration, volunteer veteran mentors, and veterans and military family
support organizations; and
10. The creation of a
veterans and military service members' advisory council to provide input on the
operations of such programs. The council shall include individuals responsible
for the criminal justice procedures program along with veterans and, if
available, active military service members.
§18.2-254.2. Veterans Docket Act.
A. This section shall be known and may be cited as the "Veterans Docket Act."
B. The General Assembly recognizes the critical need to promote public safety and reduce recidivism by addressing substance abuse, mental illness, issues unique to military service experienced by Virginia veterans and members of the Virginia National Guard and Virginia residents in the Armed Forces Reserves not in active federal service. It is the intention of the General Assembly to enhance public safety by facilitating the creation of veterans dockets to accomplish this purpose.
C. The goals of veterans dockets shall include (i) reducing recidivism; (ii) increasing personal, familial, and societal accountability among offenders through ongoing judicial intervention; (iii) reducing substance abuse, while addressing mental illness and other conditions that contribute to criminal behavior and recidivism; (iv) promoting law-abiding behavior and successful reentry of offenders following incarceration; and (v) promoting effective planning and use of resources within the criminal justice system and community agencies. Veterans dockets promote outcomes that will benefit not only the offender, but society as well.
D. Veterans dockets are specialized criminal court dockets within the existing structure of Virginia's court system that enable the judiciary to manage its workload more efficiently. Under the leadership and regular interaction of presiding judges, and through voluntary offender participation, veterans dockets shall address underlying offender needs and conditions that contribute to criminal behavior. Such needs and conditions shall include, but not be limited to, veteran's status, mental illness, and societal reentry. Veterans dockets shall employ evidence-based practices to enhance public safety, reduce recidivism, ensure offender accountability, and promote offender rehabilitation in the community. Local officials shall complete a planning process recognized by the state veterans docket advisory committee before establishing a veterans docket program.
E. Administrative oversight of implementation of the Veterans Docket Act shall be conducted by the Supreme Court of Virginia. The Supreme Court of Virginia shall be responsible for (i) providing oversight of the distribution of funds for veterans dockets; (ii) providing technical assistance to veterans dockets; (iii) providing training to judges who preside over veterans dockets; (iv) providing training to the providers of administrative, case management, and treatment services to veterans dockets; and (v) monitoring the completion of evaluations of the effectiveness and efficiency of veterans dockets in the Commonwealth.
F. A state veterans docket advisory committee shall be established in the judicial branch. The committee shall be chaired by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia, who shall appoint a vice-chair to act in his absence. The membership of the committee shall include a problem-solving circuit court judge, a problem-solving general district court judge, a problem-solving juvenile and domestic relations district court judge, the Executive Secretary of the Supreme Court or his designee, the Governor or his designee, and a representative from each of the following entities: the Commonwealth's Attorneys' Services Council, the Virginia Court Clerks' Association, the Virginia Indigent Defense Commission, the Department of Veterans Services, the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services, and a local community-based probation and pretrial services agency.
G. Each jurisdiction or combination of jurisdictions that intends to establish a veterans docket or continue the operation of an existing veterans docket shall establish a local veterans docket advisory committee. Each local veterans docket advisory committee shall ensure quality, efficiency, and fairness in the planning, implementation, and operation of the veterans docket that serves the jurisdiction or combination of jurisdictions. Advisory committee membership may include, but shall not be limited to, the following persons or their designees: (i) the veterans docket judge; (ii) the attorney for the Commonwealth or, where applicable, the city or county attorney who has responsibility for the prosecution of misdemeanor offenses; (iii) the public defender or a member of the local criminal defense bar in jurisdictions in which there is no public defender; (iv) the clerk of the court in which the veterans docket is located; (v) a representative of the Virginia Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice, or both, from the local office that serves the jurisdiction or combination of jurisdictions; (vi) a representative of a local community-based probation and pretrial services agency; (vii) a local law-enforcement officer; (viii) a representative of the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services or a representative of local treatment providers; (ix) a representative of the local community services board; (x) the veterans docket administrator; (xi) a representative of the Department of Social Services; (xii) a liaison representative of the Department of Veterans Services; (xiii) a public health official; (xiv) the county administrator or city manager; and (xv) any other persons selected by the local veterans docket advisory committee.
H. Each local veterans docket advisory committee shall establish criteria for the eligibility and participation of offenders who have been determined to have addiction, mental illness, societal reentry difficulties, or other issues stemming from military service. Subject to the provisions of this section, neither the establishment of a veterans docket nor anything in this section shall be construed as limiting the discretion of the attorney for the Commonwealth to prosecute any criminal case arising therein that he deems advisable to prosecute, except to the extent that the participating attorney for the Commonwealth agrees to do so. No adult offender who has been convicted of an act of violence, as defined in §19.2-297.l, within the preceding 10 years, and no juvenile offender who has previously been adjudicated not innocent of any such offense within the preceding 10 years, shall be eligible to participate in any veterans docket established or continued in operation pursuant to this section.
I. Each local veterans docket advisory committee shall establish policies and procedures for the operation of the docket to attain the following goals: (i) effective integration of appropriate treatment services with criminal justice system case processing; (ii) enhanced public safety through intensive offender supervision and treatment; (iii) prompt identification and placement of eligible participants; (iv) efficient access to a continuum of related treatment and rehabilitation services; (v) verified participant abstinence through frequent alcohol and other drug testing, where applicable; (vi) prompt response to participants' noncompliance with program requirements through a coordinated strategy; (vii) ongoing judicial interaction with each veterans docket participant; (viii) ongoing monitoring and evaluation of program effectiveness and efficiency; (ix) ongoing interdisciplinary education and training in support of program effectiveness and efficiency; and (x) ongoing collaboration among veterans dockets, public agencies, and community-based organizations to enhance program effectiveness and efficiency.
J. Participation by an offender in a veterans docket shall be voluntary and made pursuant only to a written agreement entered into by and between the offender and the Commonwealth with the concurrence of the court.
K. Each offender shall contribute to the cost of the treatment he receives while participating in a veterans docket pursuant to guidelines developed by the local veterans docket advisory committee.
L. Nothing contained in this section shall confer a right or an expectation of a right to treatment for an offender or be construed as requiring a local veterans docket advisory committee to accept for participation every offender.
M. The Office of the Executive Secretary shall, with the assistance of the state veterans docket advisory committee, develop a statewide evaluation model and conduct ongoing evaluations of the effectiveness and efficiency of all veterans dockets. The Executive Secretary shall submit an annual report of these evaluations to the General Assembly by December 1 of each year. The annual report shall be submitted as a report document as provided in the procedures of the Division of Legislative Automated Systems for the processing of legislative documents and reports and shall be posted on the General Assembly's website. Each local veterans docket advisory committee shall submit evaluative reports to the Office of the Executive Secretary as requested.