Bill Text: FL S0130 | 2021 | Regular Session | Comm Sub
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders
Spectrum:
Status: (Failed) 2021-04-30 - Died in Messages [S0130 Detail]
Download: Florida-2021-S0130-Comm_Sub.html
Bill Title: Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders
Spectrum:
Status: (Failed) 2021-04-30 - Died in Messages [S0130 Detail]
Download: Florida-2021-S0130-Comm_Sub.html
Florida Senate - 2021 CS for SB 130 By the Committee on Children, Families, and Elder Affairs; and Senators Rouson and Harrell 586-02353-21 2021130c1 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to mental health and substance use 3 disorders; amending s. 394.4573, F.S.; providing that 4 the use of peer specialists is an essential element of 5 a coordinated system of care in recovery from a 6 substance use disorder or mental illness; making a 7 technical change; amending s. 397.4073, F.S.; revising 8 background screening requirements for certain peer 9 specialists; revising authorizations relating to work 10 by applicants who have committed disqualifying 11 offenses; amending s. 397.417, F.S.; providing 12 legislative findings and intent; revising requirements 13 for certification as a peer specialist; requiring the 14 Department of Children and Families to develop a 15 training program for peer specialists and to give 16 preference to trainers who are certified peer 17 specialists; requiring the training program to 18 coincide with a competency exam and to be based on 19 current practice standards; requiring the department 20 to certify peer specialists, either directly or by 21 approving a third-party credentialing entity; 22 requiring that a person providing recovery support 23 services be certified or be supervised by a licensed 24 behavioral health care professional or a certified 25 peer specialist; authorizing the department, a 26 behavioral health managing entity, or the Medicaid 27 program to reimburse a peer specialist service as a 28 recovery service; encouraging Medicaid managed care 29 plans to use peer specialists in providing recovery 30 services; requiring peer specialists and certain 31 persons to meet the requirements of a background 32 screening as a condition of employment and continued 33 employment; requiring certain entities to forward 34 fingerprints to specified entities; requiring the 35 department to screen results to determine if the peer 36 specialist meets the certification requirements; 37 requiring that fees for state and federal fingerprint 38 processing be borne by the peer specialist applying 39 for employment; requiring that any arrest record 40 identified through background screening be reported to 41 the department; authorizing the department or certain 42 other agencies to contract with certain vendors for 43 fingerprinting; specifying requirements for vendors; 44 specifying disqualifying offenses for a peer 45 specialist who applies for certification; authorizing 46 a person who does not meet background screening 47 requirements to request an exemption from 48 disqualification from the department or the agency; 49 providing that a peer specialist certified as of the 50 effective date of this act is deemed to satisfy the 51 requirements of this act; providing an effective date. 52 53 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 54 55 Section 1. Paragraph (l) of subsection (2) and subsection 56 (3) of section 394.4573, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 57 394.4573 Coordinated system of care; annual assessment; 58 essential elements; measures of performance; system improvement 59 grants; reports.—On or before December 1 of each year, the 60 department shall submit to the Governor, the President of the 61 Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives an 62 assessment of the behavioral health services in this state. The 63 assessment shall consider, at a minimum, the extent to which 64 designated receiving systems function as no-wrong-door models, 65 the availability of treatment and recovery services that use 66 recovery-oriented and peer-involved approaches, the availability 67 of less-restrictive services, and the use of evidence-informed 68 practices. The assessment shall also consider the availability 69 of and access to coordinated specialty care programs and 70 identify any gaps in the availability of and access to such 71 programs in the state. The department’s assessment shall 72 consider, at a minimum, the needs assessments conducted by the 73 managing entities pursuant to s. 394.9082(5). Beginning in 2017, 74 the department shall compile and include in the report all plans 75 submitted by managing entities pursuant to s. 394.9082(8) and 76 the department’s evaluation of each plan. 77 (2) The essential elements of a coordinated system of care 78 include: 79 (l) Recovery support, including, but not limited to, the 80 use of peer specialists to assist in the individual’s recovery 81 from a substance use disorder or mental illness; support for 82 competitive employment, educational attainment, independent 83 living skills development, family support and education, 84 wellness management, and self-care;,and assistance in obtaining 85 housing that meets the individual’s needs. Such housing may 86 include mental health residential treatment facilities, limited 87 mental health assisted living facilities, adult family care 88 homes, and supportive housing. Housing provided using state 89 funds must provide a safe and decent environment free from abuse 90 and neglect. 91 (3)SYSTEM IMPROVEMENT GRANTS.—Subject to a specific 92 appropriation by the Legislature, the department may award 93 system improvement grants to managing entities based on a 94 detailed plan to enhance services in accordance with the no 95 wrong-door model as defined in subsection (1) and to address 96 specific needs identified in the assessment prepared by the 97 department pursuant to this section. Such a grant must be 98 awarded through a performance-based contract that links payments 99 to the documented and measurable achievement of system 100 improvements. 101 Section 2. Paragraphs (a) and (g) of subsection (1) of 102 section 397.4073, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 103 397.4073 Background checks of service provider personnel.— 104 (1) PERSONNEL BACKGROUND CHECKS; REQUIREMENTS AND 105 EXCEPTIONS.— 106 (a) For all individuals screened on or after July 1, 2021 1072019, background checks shall apply as follows: 108 1. All owners, directors, chief financial officers, and 109 clinical supervisors of service providers are subject to level 2 110 background screening as provided under s. 408.809 and chapter 111 435. Inmate substance abuse programs operated directly or under 112 contract with the Department of Corrections are exempt from this 113 requirement. 114 2. All service provider personnel who have direct contact 115 with children receiving services or with adults who are 116 developmentally disabled receiving services are subject to level 117 2 background screening as provided under s. 408.809 and chapter 118 435. 119 3. All peer specialists who have direct contact with 120 individuals receiving services are subject to a background 121 screening as provided in s. 397.417(5)level 2 background122screening as provided under s. 408.809 and chapter 435. 123 (g) If 5 years or more, or 3 years or more in the case of a 124 certified peer specialist or an individual seeking certification 125 as a peer specialist pursuant to s. 397.417, have elapsed since 126 an applicant for an exemption from disqualification has 127 completed or has been lawfully released from confinement, 128 supervision, or a nonmonetary condition imposed by a court for 129 the applicant’s most recent disqualifying offense, the applicant 130 may work with adults with substance use disorders, mental health 131 disorders, or co-occurring disorders under the supervision of 132 persons who meet all personnel requirements of this chapter for 133 up to 18090days after being notified of his or her 134 disqualification or until the department makes a final 135 determination regarding his or her request for an exemption from 136 disqualification, whichever is earlier. 137 Section 3. Section 397.417, Florida Statutes, is amended to 138 read: 139 397.417 Peer specialists.— 140 (1) LEGISLATIVE FINDINGS AND INTENT.— 141 (a) The Legislature finds that: 142 1. The ability to provide adequate behavioral health 143 services is limited by a shortage of professionals and 144 paraprofessionals. 145 2. The state is experiencing an increase in opioid 146 addictions, many of which prove fatal. 147 3. Peer specialists provide effective support services 148 because they share common life experiences with the persons they 149 assist. 150 4. Peer specialists promote a sense of community among 151 those in recovery. 152 5. Research has shown that peer support facilitates 153 recovery and reduces health care costs. 154 6. Persons who are otherwise qualified to serve as peer 155 specialists may have a criminal history that prevents them from 156 meeting background screening requirements. 157 (b) The Legislature intends to expand the use of peer 158 specialists as a cost-effective means of providing services. The 159 Legislature also intends to ensure that peer specialists meet 160 specified qualifications and modified background screening 161 requirements and are adequately reimbursed for their services. 162 (2) QUALIFICATIONS.— 163 (a) A person may seek certification as a peer specialist if 164 he or she has been in recovery from a substance use disorder or 165 mental illness for the past 2 years or if he or she is a family 166 member or caregiver of a person with a substance use disorder or 167 mental illness. 168 (b) To obtain certification as a peer specialist, a person 169 must complete the training program developed under subsection 170 (3), achieve a passing score on the competency exam described in 171 paragraph (3)(a), and meet the background screening requirements 172 specified in subsection (5). 173 (3) DUTIES OF THE DEPARTMENT.— 174 (a) The department shall develop a training program for 175 persons seeking certification as peer specialists. The 176 department must give preference to trainers who are certified 177 peer specialists. The training program must coincide with a 178 competency exam and be based on current practice standards. 179 (b) The department may certify peer specialists directly or 180 may approve one or more third-party credentialing entities for 181 the purposes of certifying peer specialists, approving training 182 programs for individuals seeking certification as peer 183 specialists, approving continuing education programs, and 184 establishing the minimum requirements and standards applicants 185 must meet to maintain certification. 186 (c) The department shall require that a person providing 187 recovery support services be certified; however, an individual 188 who is not certified may provide recovery support services as a 189 peer specialist for up to 1 year if he or she is working toward 190 certification and is supervised by a qualified professional or 191 by a certified peer specialist who has at least 2 years of full 192 time experience as a peer specialist at a licensed behavioral 193 health organization. 194 (4) PAYMENT.—Recovery support services may be reimbursed as 195 a recovery service through the department, a behavioral health 196 managing entity, or the Medicaid program. Medicaid managed care 197 plans are encouraged to use peer specialists in providing 198 recovery services. 199 (5) BACKGROUND SCREENING.— 200 (a) A peer specialist, or an individual who is working 201 toward certification and providing recovery support services as 202 provided in subsection (3), must have completed or have been 203 lawfully released from confinement, supervision, or any 204 nonmonetary condition imposed by the court for any felony and 205 must undergo a background screening as a condition of initial 206 and continued employment. The applicant must submit a full set 207 of fingerprints to the department or to a vendor, an entity, or 208 an agency that enters into an agreement with the Department of 209 Law Enforcement as provided in s. 943.053(13). The department, 210 vendor, entity, or agency shall forward the fingerprints to the 211 Department of Law Enforcement for state processing and the 212 Department of Law Enforcement shall forward the fingerprints to 213 the Federal Bureau of Investigation for national processing. The 214 department shall screen the results to determine if a peer 215 specialist meets certification requirements. The applicant is 216 responsible for all fees charged in connection with state and 217 federal fingerprint processing and retention. The state cost for 218 fingerprint processing shall be as provided in s. 943.053(3)(e) 219 for records provided to persons or entities other than those 220 specified as exceptions therein. Fingerprints submitted to the 221 Department of Law Enforcement pursuant to this paragraph shall 222 be retained as provided in s. 435.12 and, when the Department of 223 Law Enforcement begins participation in the program, enrolled in 224 the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s national retained 225 fingerprint arrest notification program, as provided in s. 226 943.05(4). Any arrest record identified must be reported to the 227 department. 228 (b) The department or the Agency for Health Care 229 Administration, as applicable, may contract with one or more 230 vendors to perform all or part of the electronic fingerprinting 231 pursuant to this section. Such contracts must ensure that the 232 owners and personnel of the vendor performing the electronic 233 fingerprinting are qualified and will ensure the integrity and 234 security of all personal identifying information. 235 (c) Vendors who submit fingerprints on behalf of employers 236 must: 237 1. Meet the requirements of s. 943.053; and 238 2. Have the ability to communicate electronically with the 239 state agency accepting screening results from the Department of 240 Law Enforcement and provide the applicant’s full first name, 241 middle initial, and last name; social security number or 242 individual taxpayer identification number; date of birth; 243 mailing address; sex; and race. 244 (d) The background screening conducted under this 245 subsection must ensure that a peer specialist has not, during 246 the previous 3 years, been arrested for and is awaiting final 247 disposition of, been found guilty of, regardless of 248 adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, 249 or been adjudicated delinquent and the record has not been 250 sealed or expunged for, any felony. 251 (e) The background screening conducted under this 252 subsection must ensure that a peer specialist has not been found 253 guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo 254 contendere or guilty to, or been adjudicated delinquent and the 255 record has not been sealed or expunged for, any offense 256 prohibited under any of the following state laws or similar laws 257 of another jurisdiction: 258 1. Section 393.135, relating to sexual misconduct with 259 certain developmentally disabled clients and reporting of such 260 sexual misconduct. 261 2. Section 394.4593, relating to sexual misconduct with 262 certain mental health patients and reporting of such sexual 263 misconduct. 264 3. Section 409.920, relating to Medicaid provider fraud, if 265 the offense was a felony of the first or second degree. 266 4. Section 415.111, relating to abuse, neglect, or 267 exploitation of vulnerable adults. 268 5. Any offense that constitutes domestic violence as 269 defined in s. 741.28. 270 6. Section 777.04, relating to attempts, solicitation, and 271 conspiracy to commit an offense listed in this paragraph. 272 7. Section 782.04, relating to murder. 273 8. Section 782.07, relating to manslaughter, aggravated 274 manslaughter of an elderly person or a disabled adult, 275 aggravated manslaughter of a child, or aggravated manslaughter 276 of an officer, a firefighter, an emergency medical technician, 277 or a paramedic. 278 9. Section 782.071, relating to vehicular homicide. 279 10. Section 782.09, relating to killing an unborn child by 280 injury to the mother. 281 11. Chapter 784, relating to assault, battery, and culpable 282 negligence, if the offense was a felony. 283 12. Section 787.01, relating to kidnapping. 284 13. Section 787.02, relating to false imprisonment. 285 14. Section 787.025, relating to luring or enticing a 286 child. 287 15. Section 787.04(2), relating to leading, taking, 288 enticing, or removing a minor beyond state limits, or concealing 289 the location of a minor, with criminal intent pending custody 290 proceedings. 291 16. Section 787.04(3), relating to leading, taking, 292 enticing, or removing a minor beyond state limits, or concealing 293 the location of a minor, with criminal intent pending dependency 294 proceedings or proceedings concerning alleged abuse or neglect 295 of a minor. 296 17. Section 790.115(1), relating to exhibiting firearms or 297 weapons within 1,000 feet of a school. 298 18. Section 790.115(2)(b), relating to possessing an 299 electric weapon or device, a destructive device, or any other 300 weapon on school property. 301 19. Section 794.011, relating to sexual battery. 302 20. Former s. 794.041, relating to prohibited acts of 303 persons in familial or custodial authority. 304 21. Section 794.05, relating to unlawful sexual activity 305 with certain minors. 306 22. Section 794.08, relating to female genital mutilation. 307 23. Section 796.07, relating to procuring another to commit 308 prostitution, except for those offenses expunged pursuant to s. 309 943.0583. 310 24. Section 798.02, relating to lewd and lascivious 311 behavior. 312 25. Chapter 800, relating to lewdness and indecent 313 exposure. 314 26. Section 806.01, relating to arson. 315 27. Section 810.02, relating to burglary, if the offense 316 was a felony of the first degree. 317 28. Section 810.14, relating to voyeurism, if the offense 318 was a felony. 319 29. Section 810.145, relating to video voyeurism, if the 320 offense was a felony. 321 30. Section 812.13, relating to robbery. 322 31. Section 812.131, relating to robbery by sudden 323 snatching. 324 32. Section 812.133, relating to carjacking. 325 33. Section 812.135, relating to home-invasion robbery. 326 34. Section 817.034, relating to communications fraud, if 327 the offense was a felony of the first degree. 328 35. Section 817.234, relating to false and fraudulent 329 insurance claims, if the offense was a felony of the first or 330 second degree. 331 36. Section 817.50, relating to fraudulently obtaining 332 goods or services from a health care provider and false reports 333 of a communicable disease. 334 37. Section 817.505, relating to patient brokering. 335 38. Section 817.568, relating to fraudulent use of personal 336 identification, if the offense was a felony of the first or 337 second degree. 338 39. Section 825.102, relating to abuse, aggravated abuse, 339 or neglect of an elderly person or a disabled adult. 340 40. Section 825.1025, relating to lewd or lascivious 341 offenses committed upon or in the presence of an elderly person 342 or a disabled person. 343 41. Section 825.103, relating to exploitation of an elderly 344 person or a disabled adult, if the offense was a felony. 345 42. Section 826.04, relating to incest. 346 43. Section 827.03, relating to child abuse, aggravated 347 child abuse, or neglect of a child. 348 44. Section 827.04, relating to contributing to the 349 delinquency or dependency of a child. 350 45. Former s. 827.05, relating to negligent treatment of 351 children. 352 46. Section 827.071, relating to sexual performance by a 353 child. 354 47. Section 831.30, relating to fraud in obtaining 355 medicinal drugs. 356 48. Section 831.31, relating to sale, manufacture, 357 delivery, possession with intent to sell, manufacture, or 358 deliver of any counterfeit controlled substance, if the offense 359 was a felony. 360 49. Section 843.01, relating to resisting arrest with 361 violence. 362 50. Section 843.025, relating to depriving a law 363 enforcement, correctional, or correctional probation officer of 364 the means of protection or communication. 365 51. Section 843.12, relating to aiding in an escape. 366 52. Section 843.13, relating to aiding in the escape of 367 juvenile inmates of correctional institutions. 368 53. Chapter 847, relating to obscenity. 369 54. Section 874.05, relating to encouraging or recruiting 370 another to join a criminal gang. 371 55. Chapter 893, relating to drug abuse prevention and 372 control, if the offense was a felony of the second degree or 373 greater severity. 374 56. Section 895.03, relating to racketeering and collection 375 of unlawful debts. 376 57. Section 896.101, relating to the Florida Money 377 Laundering Act. 378 58. Section 916.1075, relating to sexual misconduct with 379 certain forensic clients and reporting of such sexual 380 misconduct. 381 59. Section 944.35(3), relating to inflicting cruel or 382 inhuman treatment on an inmate resulting in great bodily harm. 383 60. Section 944.40, relating to escape. 384 61. Section 944.46, relating to harboring, concealing, or 385 aiding an escaped prisoner. 386 62. Section 944.47, relating to introduction of contraband 387 into a correctional institution. 388 63. Section 985.701, relating to sexual misconduct in 389 juvenile justice programs. 390 64. Section 985.711, relating to introduction of contraband 391 into a detention facility. 392 (6) EXEMPTION REQUESTS.—A person who wishes to become a 393 peer specialist and is disqualified under subsection (5) may 394 request an exemption from disqualification pursuant to s. 435.07 395 from the department or the Agency for Health Care 396 Administration, as applicable. 397 (7) GRANDFATHER CLAUSE.—A peer specialist certified as of 398 the effective date of this act is deemed to satisfy the 399 requirements of this act 400(1) An individual may seek certification as a peer401specialist if he or she has been in recovery from a substance402use disorder or mental illness for at least 2 years, or if he or403she has at least 2 years of experience as a family member or404caregiver of a person with a substance use disorder or mental405illness. 406(2) The department shall approve one or more third-party407credentialing entities for the purposes of certifying peer408specialists, approving training programs for individuals seeking409certification as peer specialists, approving continuing410education programs, and establishing the minimum requirements411and standards that applicants must achieve to maintain412certification. To obtain approval, the third-party credentialing413entity must demonstrate compliance with nationally recognized414standards for developing and administering professional415certification programs to certify peer specialists.416(3) An individual providing department-funded recovery417support services as a peer specialist shall be certified418pursuant to subsection (2). An individual who is not certified419may provide recovery support services as a peer specialist for420up to 1 year if he or she is working toward certification and is421supervised by a qualified professional or by a certified peer422specialist who has at least 3 years of full-time experience as a423peer specialist at a licensed behavioral health organization.424 Section 4. This act shall take effect July 1, 2021.