WEST virginia Legislature
2016 regular session
Introduced
House Bill 4044
By delegates Stansbury, householder, Ellington, Summers, rohrbach, weld, miller, hanshaw, westfall, white, b and perdue
[Introduced January
18, 2016; Referred
to the Select Committee on Prevention and Treatment of Substance Abuse then
Finance.]
A BILL to amend the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, by adding thereto a new article, designated §16-2A-1, §16-2A-2, §16-2A-3, §16-2A-4, §16-2A-5 and §16-2A-6, all relating to the creation of the Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Recovery Fund Act to provide funding for drug addiction prevention and treatment not otherwise covered by legislative appropriations, Medicare, Medicaid or private insurance; and West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources administering the fund.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended by adding thereto a new article, designated §16-2A-1, §16-2A-2, §16-2A-3, §16-2A-4, §16-2A-5 and §16-2A-6, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 2A. THE RYAN BROWN ADDICTION PREVENTION AND RECOVERY FUND ACT.
§16-2A-1. Short title.
This article shall be known as the Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Recovery Fund Act.
§16-2A-2. Legislative findings.
The Legislature finds that substance abuse is at a crisis stage in West Virginia, with this state leading the nation in overdose deaths. Most of these fatalities have resulted from prescription drugs and outnumber deaths related to heroin and cocaine combined. Opioid prescribing rates in West Virginia are among the highest in the United States. West Virginia has almost three times the rate for the rest of the nation. Cocaine and crack cocaine contribute to the state’s drug abuse problem, but are not as pronounced as the abuse involving the clandestine manufacture of methamphetamine, which has tripled over the last several years, and the cultivation and consumption of marihuana. Drug abuse contributes to cause lost productivity in private jobs and industry, increased cost of medical treatment and increased court costs in criminal procedures.
§16-2A-3. Purpose.
The purpose of this article is to establish a fund to provide for drug addiction prevention and treatment not otherwise covered by legislative appropriations, Medicare, Medicaid or private insurance.
§16-2A-4. Rules; definitions.
The Director of The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources shall propose rules for legislative approval in accordance with article three, chapter twenty-nine of this code, which rules shall include pertinent definitions for addiction and prevention and treatment of drug and alcohol addiction and dependency applicable to the purposes of this article.
§16-2A-5. Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Recovery Fund.
There is hereby established in the treasury a separate, interest bearing, special revenue account to be known as “The Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Recovery Fund” to make available resources for prevention and recovery programs not otherwise covered under current state or federal addiction prevention and recovery programs. Resources shall be made available to nonprofit organizations for adult and child addiction prevention programs. Resources shall also be made available to private and public addiction treatment facilities and health care providers for inpatient or outpatient addiction treatment. At least twenty percent of the fund’s resources must be spent on prevention. The special revenue account shall consist of funds from federal Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grants (SABG), gifts, income from the investment of moneys held in the special revenue account, and all other sums available for deposit to the special revenue account from any source, public or private.
§16-2A-6. Administration of the Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Recovery Fund.
(a) The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources shall:
(1) Administer the Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Recovery Fund and allocate moneys for prevention education and treatment, with at least twenty percent going towards prevention. The department shall ensure that at least $1 million is contributed to the fund annually through a combination of grants, gifts and reallocation of other department moneys.
(2) Be responsible for all SABG and other federal block grant applications necessary to maintain the annual $1 million contribution.
(3) Establish guidelines for eligibility for funding consistent with this article, promote the availability of the funding statewide, provide technical assistance to applicants, evaluate applicants, determine allowable expenses and disburse funding.
(4) Establish monitoring and accountability mechanisms for programs and individuals receiving assistance.
(5) Ensure that funds are disbursed in accordance with the rules set out by Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration for receiving SABG.
(6) Annually post on its website and report to the Legislature on the expenditure of the program fund, including the total amount distributed, the types of programs and individuals that received funding, the amount each received and the results achieved.
(b) The department shall create eligibility guidelines consistent with this article. To qualify for prevention education funding, the applicant may be a nonprofit trained and certified to provide addiction prevention education. To qualify for addiction recovery funding, the applicant may not be eligible for Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance or any other state or federal funding sources.
(c) Addiction recovery funds will be paid directly to the treatment provider on behalf of the individual receiving treatment.
(d) For-profit methadone treatment facilities are not eligible for addiction recovery funds.
(e) Medication assisted treatment will only qualify for recovery funds if the planned course of treatment is twenty-four months or less. Recovery funds are not available for indefinite medication assisted treatment.
(f) Priority for funding will be given to:
(1) Intravenous drug users;
(2). HIV+, AIDS or HCV+ individuals;
(3) Pregnant women and women with dependent children;
(4) Veterans;
(5) Persons with criminal justice involvement; and
(6) Short-term grants to established nonprofit recovery programs for the purchase and rehabilitation of properties to be used as recovery centers, sober living homes or other facilities used for addiction prevention, education and addiction recovery.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to create “The Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Recovery Fund Act” to provide funding for drug addiction prevention and treatment not otherwise covered by legislative appropriations, Medicare, Medicaid or private insurance. The bill provides that the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources administer the fund and be responsible for creating guidelines for the operation of the fund.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from a heading or the present law and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.