Bill Text: GA SB375 | 2009-2010 | Regular Session | Engrossed
Bill Title: Behavorial Health/Developmental Disabilities; revise provisions
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 3-0)
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2010-03-30 - House Second Readers [SB375 Detail]
Download: Georgia-2009-SB375-Engrossed.html
10 SB
375/CSFA/2
Senate
Bill 375
By:
Senators Unterman of the 45th, Grant of the 25th and Goggans of the 7th
AS
PASSED SENATE
A
BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
AN ACT
To
amend Title 37 and various other titles of the Official Code of Georgia
Annotated, relating to mental health and other matters, so as to revise certain
provisions relating to the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities; to provide for service of notice against the department; to delete
an obsolete provision relating to the arrest of persons with contagious
diseases; to revise certain provisions relating to conviction data for
employment purposes; to delete a Code section relating to hearing rights for
revoked or suspended licenses, permits, or certificates; to correct a
cross-reference relating to a mental health law; to provide for additional
members of the Behavioral Health Coordinating Council; to revise a provision
relating to the duties and functions of regional planning boards; to provide for
continuances in court for board members attending meetings; to revise provisions
relating to disposition of a deprived child; to provide conditions for the
placement of a child following a termination order; to provide that certain
training relating to child abuse is conducted by the Office of the Child
Advocate for the Protection of Children; to provide for educational services for
children in the physical custody of the department; to provide for input by the
department in pilot projects to address at-risk students; to provide for medical
scholarships for applicants practicing in hospitals or facilities operated by or
under the jurisdiction of the department; to provide that mental health records
may be maintained in electronic format; to provide for liability coverage for
nonprofit agencies and their employees who have contracted with the department;
to provide that the commissioner of behavioral health and developmental
disabilities is a member of the Purchasing Advisory Council; to provide that the
commissioner of behavioral health and developmental disabilities is a member of
the State Use Council; to provide that there shall be a privilege to refuse to
disclose certain information related to certain research conducted by the
department; to amend an Act approved May 6, 2008 (Ga. L. 2008, p. 133), relating
to the office of disability services ombudsman; to provide for related matters;
to repeal conflicting laws; and for other purposes.
BE
IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:
SECTION
1.
Title
37 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to mental health, is
amended by adding a new Code section to Chapter 1, relating to general
provisions, to read as follows:
"37-1-6.
When
any action is brought against the department, the board, the commissioner, or
any employee or agent thereof or when any action is brought in which the
department could be held responsible for damages awarded in such action, it
shall be the duty of the plaintiff to provide for service of notice of the
pendency of such action by providing for service of process, issued from the
court in which the action is filed, upon the commissioner personally or upon a
person designated by the commissioner in writing to serve as agent for the
acceptance of such service of process. The service of process in such action
shall not be perfected until such process has been served as provided in this
Code section. The provisions of this Code section shall be cumulative of any
other requirements imposed by law for the service of process or
notice."
SECTION
2.
Said
title is further amended by revising paragraph (4) of subsection (a) of Code
Section 37-1-21, relating to institutional powers and duties, as
follows:
"(4)
To appoint police of such facilities, institutions, or programs who are
authorized, while on the grounds or in the buildings of the respective
facilities, institutions, or programs to make arrests with the same authority,
power, privilege, and duties as the sheriffs of the respective counties in which
such facilities, institutions, or programs are
situated.
If because of the contagious or infectious nature of the disease of persons
arrested facilities are not available for their detention, such police shall be
authorized to confine such persons within the respective facilities,
institutions, or programs pending trial as provided in other cases. After trial
and conviction of any such person, he or she shall be sentenced to serve his or
her term of sentence in the secured ward of the facility, institution, or
program; and"
SECTION
3.
Said
title is further amended by revising Code Section 37-1-28, relating to
conviction data for employment purposes for the Department of Behavioral Health
and Developmental Disabilities, as follows:
"37-1-28.
(a)
As used in this Code section, the term 'conviction data' means a record of a
finding or verdict of guilty or a plea of guilty or a plea of nolo contendere
with regard to any crime, regardless of whether an appeal of the conviction has
been sought.
(b)
The department may receive from any law enforcement agency conviction data that
is relevant to a person whom the
department,
or
its
contractors,
or a district or county health agency is
considering as a final selectee for employment in a position the duties of which
involve direct care, treatment, custodial responsibilities, or any combination
thereof for its clients. The department may also receive conviction data which
is relevant to a person whom the
department,
or
its
contractors,
or a district or county health agency is
considering as a final selectee for employment in a position if, in the judgment
of the employer, a final employment decision regarding the selectee can only be
made by a review of conviction data in relation to the particular duties of the
position and the security and safety of clients, the general public, or other
employees.
(c)
The department shall establish a uniform method of obtaining conviction data
under subsection (a) of this Code section which shall be applicable to the
department and its contractors. Such uniform method shall require the
submission to the Georgia Crime Information Center of fingerprints and the
records search fee in accordance with Code Section 35-3-35. Upon receipt
thereof, the Georgia Crime Information Center shall promptly transmit
fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for a search of bureau
records and an appropriate report and shall promptly conduct a search of its own
records and records to which it has access. After receiving the fingerprints
and fee, the Georgia Crime Information Center shall notify the department in
writing of any derogatory finding, including, but not limited to, any conviction
data regarding the fingerprint records check or if there is no such
finding.
(d)
All conviction data received shall be for the exclusive purpose of making
employment decisions or decisions concerning individuals in the care of the
department and shall be privileged and shall not be released or otherwise
disclosed to any other person or agency. Immediately following the employment
decisions or upon receipt of the conviction data, all such conviction data
collected by the department or its agent shall be maintained by the department
or agent pursuant to laws regarding and the rules or regulations of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation and the Georgia Crime Information Center, as is
applicable. Penalties for the unauthorized release or disclosure of any
conviction data shall be as prescribed pursuant to laws regarding and rules or
regulations of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Georgia Crime
Information Center, as is applicable.
(e)
The department may promulgate written rules and regulations to implement the
provisions of this Code section.
(f)
The department may receive from any law enforcement agency criminal history
information, including arrest and conviction data, and any and all other
information which it may be provided pursuant to state or federal law which is
relevant to any person in the care of the department. The department shall
establish a uniform method of obtaining criminal history information under this
subsection. Such method shall require the submission to the Georgia Crime
Information Center of fingerprints together with any required records search fee
in accordance with Code Section 35-3-35. Upon receipt thereof, the Georgia
Crime Information Center shall promptly transmit the fingerprints submitted by
the department to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for a search of bureau
records and an appropriate report and shall promptly conduct a search of its own
records and records to which it has access. Such method shall also permit the
submission of the names alone of such persons to the proper law enforcement
agency for a name based check of such person's criminal history information as
maintained by the Georgia Crime Information Center and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. In such circumstances, the department shall submit fingerprints
of those persons together with any required records search fee, to the Federal
Bureau of Investigation within 15 calendar days of the date of the name based
check on that person. The fingerprints shall be forwarded to the Federal Bureau
of Investigation through the Georgia Crime Information Center in accordance with
Code Section 35-3-35. Following the submission of such fingerprints, the
department may receive the criminal history information, including arrest and
conviction data, relevant to such person.
(g)(f)
The department shall be authorized to conduct a name or descriptor based check
of any person's criminal history information, including arrest and conviction
data, and other information from the Georgia Crime Information Center regarding
any adult person who provides care or is in contact with persons under the care
of the department without the consent of such person and without fingerprint
comparison to the fullest extent permissible by federal and state
law."
SECTION
4.
Said
title is further amended by revising Code Section 37-1-50, relating to necessity
of hearing, powers of hearing examiner, and qualification, as
follows:
"37-1-50.
(a)
No license, permit, or certificate or other similar right shall be revoked or
suspended without opportunity for a hearing as provided in Chapter 13 of Title
50, the 'Georgia Administrative Procedure Act.' Any such hearing or appeal
related thereto shall be conducted in accordance with such Act.
(b)
The department is authorized and empowered to employ and appoint hearing
examiners to conduct hearings, issue compulsory process, administer oaths, and
submit their findings and recommendations to the appointing agency; provided,
however, that any such examiner shall be a member of the State Bar of Georgia in
good standing.
Reserved."
SECTION
5.
Said
title is further amended by revising paragraph (2) of Code Section 37-1-70,
relating to definitions relative to inspection warrants, as
follows:
"(2)
'Mental health law' means Code Sections 37-3-7, 37-3-8, and
37-4-4
37-4-7,
Chapter 6 of this title, and any rule or regulation duly promulgated
thereunder."
SECTION
6.
Said
title is further amended by revising subsection (a) of Code Section 37-2-4,
relating to the Behavioral Health Coordinating Council, as follows:
"(a)
There is created the Behavioral Health Coordinating Council. The council shall
consist of the commissioner of behavioral health and developmental disabilities;
the commissioner of community health; the commissioner of human services; the
commissioner of juvenile justice; the commissioner of corrections;
the
commissioner of community affairs; the Commissioner of Labor; the State School
Superintendent; the chairperson of the State Board of Pardons and Paroles; the
ombudsman appointed pursuant to Code Section
37-2-32; an adult consumer of public
behavioral health services, appointed by the Governor; a family member of a
consumer of public behavioral health services, appointed by the Governor; a
parent of a child receiving public behavioral health services, appointed by the
Governor; a member of the House of Representatives, appointed by the Speaker of
the House of Representatives; and a member of the Senate, appointed by the
Lieutenant Governor."
SECTION
7.
Said
title is further amended by revising paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Code
Section 37-2-5.2, relating to the duties and functions of regional planning
boards, as follows:
"(1)
To prepare, in consultation with consumers and families, community programs,
hospitals, other public and private providers, its regional planning board, and
appropriate advisory and advocacy groups, an annual plan
for the
funding and provision of all
identifying
the needs and priorities for disability
services in the region. The plan shall be submitted to the department at a time
and in the manner specified by the department so as to ensure that the plan
is a basis
for
provides
information for the annual appropriations
request;"
SECTION
8.
Code
Section 37-3-1 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to
definitions relative to the examination and treatment for mental illness, is
amended by revising paragraph (16.1) as follows:
"(16.1)
'Traumatic brain injury' means a traumatic insult to the brain and its related
parts resulting in organic damage thereto which may cause physical,
intellectual, emotional, social, or vocational changes in a person. It shall
also be recognized that a person having a traumatic brain injury may have
organic damage or physical or social disorders, but for the purposes of this
chapter, traumatic brain injury shall not be considered mental illness
as defined
in paragraph (11) of this Code
section."
SECTION
9.
Code
Section 9-10-152 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to grounds
for continuance due to attendance at meeting of Board of Human Services, is
amended as follows:
"9-10-152.
Should
any member of the Board of Human Services
or the Board
of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities be engaged, at the time of
any meeting of the board, as counsel or party in any case pending in the courts
of this state and should the case be called for trial during the regular session
of the board, the absence of the member to attend the session shall be good
ground for a postponement or a continuance of the case until the session of the
board has come to an end."
SECTION
10.
Code
Section 15-11-55 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to
disposition of a deprived child, is amended by revising subparagraphs (a)(2)(B)
and (a)(2)(C) as follows:
"(B)
Except for dispositions pursuant to paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Code
Section 15-11-66 and Code Section 15-11-67,
before
transferring temporary legal custody in an order of disposition under this
paragraph a reasonably diligent search for
within 30 days
after the removal of a child from the custody of the parent or parents of the
child, the Department of Human Services shall exercise due diligence to
identify a parent or relative of the child
or other persons who have demonstrated an ongoing commitment to the child
shall be
conducted by the court and the Department of Human Services. Such search shall
be completed within 90 days from the date on which the child was removed from
the home.
All identified
adult relatives of the child, subject to exceptions due to family or domestic
violence, shall be provided with notice:
(i)
Specifying that the child has been or is being removed from parental
custody;
(ii)
Explaining the options the relative has to participate in the care and placement
of the child and any options that may be lost by failing to respond to the
notice;
(iii)
Describing the process for becoming an approved foster family home and the
additional services and supports available for children placed in approved
foster homes; and
(iv)
Describing any financial assistance for which the relative may be
eligible.
(C)
The results of such search
and
notification shall be documented in
writing and filed with the court
at
by
the time of the first review. During such
90
30
day period,
the court may
order that the child
may
be placed in the temporary legal custody of the Department of Human Services or
any other appropriate entity or person."
SECTION
11.
Code
Section 17-8-30 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to grounds
for continuances for party or party's counsel in attendance at meeting of Board
of Human Services, is amended as follows:
"17-8-30.
Should
any member of the Board of Human Services
or the Board
of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities be engaged at the time of any
meeting of the board as counsel or party in any case pending in the courts of
this state and should the case be called for trial during the regular session of
the board,
his
the
absence of the
member to attend the session shall be good
ground for a postponement or a continuance of the case until the session of the
board has ended."
SECTION
12.
Code
Section 19-15-2 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to child
abuse protocol committee, is amended by revising subsection (j) as
follows:
"(j)
By July 1, 2001, members of each protocol committee shall receive appropriate
training. As new members are appointed, they will also receive training within
12 months after their appointment. The
Department
of Human Services
Office of the
Child Advocate for the Protection of
Children shall provide such
training."
SECTION
13.
Code
Section 20-2-133 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to free
public instruction in elementary and secondary education, is amended as
follows:
"20-2-133.
(a)
Admission to the instructional programs funded under this article shall be free
to all eligible children and youth who enroll in such programs within the local
school system in which they reside and to children as provided in subsection (b)
of this Code section. Therefore, a local school system shall not charge
resident students tuition or fees, nor shall such students be required to
provide materials or equipment except for items specified by the State Board of
Education, as a condition of enrollment or full participation in any
instructional program. However, a local school system is authorized to charge
nonresident students tuition or fees or a combination thereof; provided,
however, that such charges to a student shall not exceed the average locally
financed per student cost for the preceding year, excluding the local five mill
share funds required pursuant to Code Section 20-2-164; provided, further, that
no child in a placement operated by the Department of Human Services
or the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities or for which payment is made
by the Department of Juvenile
Justice,
or
the Department of Human Services or any of its
divisions, or
the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities and no child who is in the
physical or legal custody of the Department of Juvenile
Justice,
or
under the care or physical or legal custody of the Department of Human Services
or any of its
divisions, or
under the physical custody of the Department of Behavioral Health and
Developmental Disabilities shall be
charged tuition, fees, or a combination thereof. A local school system is
further authorized to contract with a nonresident student's system of residence
for payment of tuition. The amount of tuition paid directly by the system of
residence shall be limited only by the terms of the contract between systems.
Local units of administration shall provide textbooks or any other reading
materials to each student enrolled in a class which has a course of study that
requires the use of such materials by the students.
(b)(1)
Any child, except a child in a youth development center as specifically provided
in this paragraph, who is in the physical or legal custody of the Department of
Juvenile Justice or the Department of Human Services, or in a placement operated
by the Department of Human Services
or the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities, or in a facility or
placement paid for by the Department of Juvenile
Justice,
or
the Department of Human Services or any of its
divisions, or
the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities and who is physically present
within the geographical area served by a local unit of administration for any
length of time is eligible for enrollment in the educational programs of that
local unit of administration; provided, however, that the child meets the age
eligibility requirements established by this article. The local unit of
administration of the school district in which such child is present shall be
responsible for the provision of all educational programs, including special
education and related services, at no charge as long as the child is physically
present in the school district. A child will be considered in the physical or
legal custody of the Department of Juvenile Justice or the Department of Human
Services or any of its divisions if custody has been awarded either temporarily
or permanently by court order or by voluntary agreement, or if the child has
been admitted or placed according to an individualized treatment or service plan
of the Department of Human Services.
A child will
be considered in a facility or placement paid for or operated by the Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities if the child has been
admitted or placed according to an individualized treatment or service plan of
the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities. No child in a youth
development center, regardless of his or her custody status, shall be eligible
for enrollment in the educational programs of the local unit of administration
of the school district in which that youth development center is located. No
child or youth in the custody of the Department of Corrections or the Department
of Juvenile Justice and confined in a facility as a result of a sentence imposed
by a court shall be eligible for enrollment in the educational programs of the
local unit of administration of the school district where such child or youth is
being held.
(2)
Except as otherwise provided in this Code section, placement in a facility by a
parent or by another local unit of administration shall not create an
obligation, financial or otherwise, on the part of the local unit of
administration in which the facility is located to educate the
child.
(3)
For any child described in paragraph (1) of this subsection, the custodian of or
placing agency for the child shall notify the appropriate local unit of
administration at least five days in advance of the move, when possible, when
the child is to be moved from one local unit of administration to
another.
(4)
When the custodian of or placing agency for any child notifies a local unit of
administration, as provided in paragraph (3) of this subsection, that the child
may become eligible for enrollment in the educational programs of a local unit
of administration, such local unit of administration shall request the transfer
of the educational records and Individualized Education Programs (IEP's) and all
education related evaluations, assessments, social histories, and observations
of the child from the appropriate local unit of administration no later than ten
days after receiving notification. Notwithstanding any other law to the
contrary, the custodian of the records has the obligation to transfer these
records and the local unit of administration has the right to receive, review,
and utilize these records. Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, upon
the request of a local unit of administration responsible for providing
educational services to a child described in paragraph (1) of this subsection,
the Department of Juvenile
Justice, the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities, or the Department of Human
Services shall furnish to the local unit of administration all medical and
educational records in the possession of the Department of Juvenile
Justice, the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities, or the Department of Human
Services pertaining to any such child, except where consent of a parent or legal
guardian is required in order to authorize the release of any of such records,
in which event the Department of Juvenile
Justice, the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities, or the Department of Human
Services shall obtain such consent from the parent or guardian prior to such
release.
(5)
Any local unit of administration which serves a child pursuant to paragraph (1)
of this subsection shall receive in the form of annual grants in state funding
for that child the difference between the actual state funds received for that
child pursuant to Code Section 20-2-161 and the reasonable and necessary
expenses incurred in educating that child, calculated pursuant to regulations
adopted by the State Board of Education. Each local board of education shall be
held harmless by the state from expending local funds for educating students
pursuant to this Code section; provided, however, that this shall only apply to
students who are unable to leave the facility in which they have been
placed.
(6)
Enrollment of an eligible child pursuant to this Code section shall be
effectuated in accordance with rules and regulations adopted by the State Board
of Education.
(7)
The Department of Education, the Department of Human Services, the Department of
Juvenile Justice,
the Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities, and the local units of
administration where Department of Education, Department of Juvenile Justice,
Department of
Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities, or Department of Human
Services placements, facilities, or contract facilities are located shall
jointly develop procedures binding on all agencies implementing the provisions
of this Code section applicable to children and youth in the physical or legal
custody of the Department of Juvenile Justice or under the care or physical or
legal custody of the Department of Human Services
or under the
physical custody of the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities."
SECTION
14.
Code
Section 20-2-250 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to projects
to improve effectiveness, is amended by revising subsection (d) as
follows:
"(d)(1)
In order to better address the needs of students at risk of failing to complete
their education, the State Board of Education shall approve pilot projects that
allow schools, clusters of schools, or school systems to decategorize funds
received under Code Section 20-2-161. The state board shall appoint an
interdisciplinary review panel consisting of students, parents, educators, and
representatives from business, the community,
and
the Department of Human
Services, and
the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities to evaluate all submitted
proposals and to submit appropriate recommendations to the state
board.
(2)
Pilot projects must meet the following criteria:
(A)
Address the needs of at-risk students who meet two or more of the criteria in
the definition of the at-risk student as approved by the State Board of
Education;
(B)
Develop a plan for such a pilot project using an interdisciplinary committee
composed of students, parents, educators, and representatives from business, the
community, the Department of Human Services,
the Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities, and others as
appropriate;
(C)
Ensure that the plan for the pilot project becomes a component of the local
strategic plan;
(D)
Provide for a program evaluation that specifies the goals of the program, the
means to achieve those goals, the reasons for any decategorization or combining
of program earnings to carry out those means, and objective and other criteria
to be met which will determine the success or failure of the new
programs;
(E)
No funds may be expended for any program or service explicitly excluded from the
full-time equivalent count in subsection (a) of Code Section 20-2-160, except
that such funds will be expended in conformity with the requirements for
expenditures of direct instructional costs under Code Section 20-2-167. Any
local plan approved by the board to combine program earnings for the purpose of
providing programs for at-risk students under this subsection must also conform
with the expenditure controls under Code Section 20-2-167 as modified by the new
program categories described in the local system's proposal to the board. In no
event will the aggregate funds expended for direct instructional costs be a
lower amount than would have been required under the original formula
calculations and expenditure requirements; and
(F)
No funds may be expended for transitional programs, such as transitional
kindergarten or first grade.
(3)
The state board shall give priority to proposed pilot projects that focus on
interagency cooperation and the joint provision of services.
(4)
All pilot projects shall be reviewed annually by the state board to ensure that
they are meeting the goals and objectives outlined in their plan. Pilot
projects that are no longer achieving their goals and objectives shall be
discontinued by the state board.
(5)
The pilot projects shall report annually to the Appropriations Committees of the
House of Representatives and the Senate, the House Education Committee, and the
Senate Education and Youth Committee."
SECTION
15.
Code
Section 20-3-513 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to
determination of amount of medical scholarships by the State Medical Education
Board, is amended as follows:
"20-3-513.
Students
whose applications are approved shall receive a loan or scholarship in an amount
to be determined by the State Medical Education Board to defray the tuition and
other expenses of the applicant in an accredited four-year medical school in the
United States which has received accreditation or provisional accreditation by
the Liaison Committee on Medical Education of the American Medical Association
or the Bureau of Professional Education of the American Osteopathic Association
for a program in medical education designed to qualify the graduate for
licensure by the Georgia Composite Medical Board. The loans and scholarships
shall be paid in such manner as the State Medical Education Board shall
determine and may be prorated so as to pay to the medical college or school to
which any applicant is admitted such funds as are required by that college or
school with the balance being paid directly to the applicant; all of which shall
be under such terms and conditions as may be provided under rules and
regulations of the State Medical Education Board. The loans or scholarships to
be granted to each applicant shall be based upon the condition that the full
amount of the loans or scholarships shall be repaid to the State of Georgia in
services to be rendered by the applicant by practicing his or her profession in
a State Medical Education Board approved rural county in Georgia of 35,000
population or less according to the United States decennial census of 1990 or
any future such census or at any hospital or facility operated by or under the
jurisdiction of the Department of Community Health
or the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities or at any facility operated
by or under the jurisdiction of the Department of Corrections or at any facility
operated by or under the jurisdiction of the Department of Juvenile Justice.
For each year of practicing his or her profession in such State Medical
Education Board approved location, the applicant shall receive credit for the
amount of the scholarship received during any one year in medical school, with
the interest due on such amount."
SECTION
16.
Code
Section 31-33-4 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to mental
health records, is amended as follows:
"31-33-4.
The
provisions of this
chapter,
except as otherwise provided in Code Sections 31-33-7 and
31-33-8, shall not apply to psychiatric,
psychological, or other mental health records of a patient."
SECTION
17.
Code
Section 31-33-8 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to
electronic records, is amended as follows:
"31-33-8.
(a)
Notwithstanding any other provision of the law to the contrary, any provider
may, in its sole discretion, create, maintain, transmit, receive, and store
records in an electronic format within the meaning of Code Section 10-12-2 and
may, in its sole discretion, temporarily or permanently convert records into an
electronic format.
(b)
A provider shall not be required to maintain separate tangible copies of
electronically stored records.
(c)
The other provisions of this chapter shall apply to electronic records to the
same extent as those provisions apply to tangible records.
(d)
This Code section is subject to all applicable federal laws governing the
security and confidentiality of a patient's personal health
information.
(d)(e)
A tangible copy of a record reproduced from an electronically stored record
shall be considered an original for purposes of providing copies to patients or
other authorized parties and for introduction of the records into evidence in
administrative or court proceedings.
(e)(f)
Except as provided otherwise under federal law, upon receiving a request for a
copy of a record from a patient or an authorized person under Code Section
31-33-3, a provider shall provide copies of the record in either tangible or
electronically stored form.
(g)
Subsections (a), (b), (d) and (e) of this Code section shall apply to
psychiatric, psychological, or other mental health records of a
patient."
SECTION
18.
Code
Section 45-9-4 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to the
commissioner of administrative services to purchase insurance or indemnity
contracts, is amended by revising subsection (g) as follows:
"(g)
The policy of insurance provided for in this Code section may also provide
liability coverage to nonprofit agencies and their employees, which agencies
have contracted with the Department of Juvenile Justice, the Department of
Transportation,
the Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities, or the Department of Human
Services to furnish certain services; provided, however, that such liability
coverage shall be limited to damages arising out of the authorized use of a
state-owned vehicle or a vehicle funded pursuant to subsection (a) of Code
Section 49-2-13.1 by an employee of such nonprofit agency during the course of
such person's employment with such nonprofit agency and the cost of such
insurance furnished to any such nonprofit agency and its employees shall be
allocated to and paid by such agency before any coverage shall be effective.
For the purpose of this Code section, 'nonprofit agency' means any nonprofit or
charitable organization, association, corporation, partnership, or other entity
registered pursuant to Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue
Code."
SECTION
19.
Code
Section 50-5-69 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to purchases
without competitive bidding, is amended by revising subsection (a) as
follows:
"(a)
If the needed supplies, materials, equipment, or service can reasonably be
expected to be acquired for less than $5,000.00 and is not available on state
contracts or through statutorily required sources, the purchase may be
effectuated without competitive bidding. The commissioner of administrative
services may by rule and regulation authorize the various offices, agencies,
departments, boards, bureaus, commissions, institutions, authorities, or other
entities of the state to make purchases in their own behalf and may provide the
circumstances and conditions under which such purchases may be effected. In
order to assist and advise the commissioner of administrative services in making
determinations to allow offices, agencies, departments, boards, bureaus,
commissions, institutions, authorities, or other entities of the state to make
purchases in their own behalf, there is created a Purchasing Advisory Council
consisting of the executive director of the Georgia Technology Authority or his
or her designee; the director of the Office of Planning and Budget or his or her
designee; the chancellor of the University System of Georgia or his or her
designee; the commissioner of technical and adult education or his or her
designee; the commissioner of transportation or his or her designee; the
Secretary of State or his or her designee; the commissioner of human services or
his or her designee; the commissioner of community health or his or her
designee; the
commissioner of behavioral health and developmental disabilities or his or her
designee; and one member to be appointed
by the Governor. The commissioner of administrative services shall promulgate
the necessary rules and regulations governing meetings of such council and the
method and manner in which such council will assist and advise the commissioner
of administrative services."
SECTION
20.
Code
Section 50-5-135 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to the
creation of the State Use Council, is amended by revising subsections (a) and
(b) as follows:
"(a)
There is created the State Use Council, hereafter referred to as the council.
The council shall be composed of
15
16
members as follows:
(1)
The commissioner of administrative services or his or her designee;
(2)
The commissioner of human services or his or her designee;
(2.1)
The commissioner of behavioral health and developmental disabilities or his or
her designee;
(3)
The commissioner of community affairs or his or her designee;
(4)
The commissioner of corrections or his or her designee;
(5)
Five members appointed by the Governor who shall represent the business
community of the state;
(6)
Three members appointed by the Governor who shall represent a broad spectrum of
persons with disabilities; and
(7)
Three members appointed by the Governor who shall represent the interest of
organizations representative of persons with disabilities.
(b)
Initially, the
nine
eleven
members appointed pursuant to paragraphs (5) through (7) in subsection (a) of
this Code section shall serve staggered terms of office as follows:
three
four
members for two years,
three
four
members for three years, and three members for four years. Thereafter, each
member shall serve for a term of four years. Such members shall serve until the
appointment and qualification of their successors. The members appointed by the
Governor shall be selected from the state at large but shall be representative
of all of the geographic areas of the state."
SECTION
21.
Code
Section 50-18-72 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to when
public disclosure under open records laws is not required, is amended by
revising paragraph (2) of subsection (c) as follows:
"(2)
All state officers and employees shall have a privilege to refuse to disclose
the identity or personally identifiable information of any person participating
in research on commercial, scientific, technical, medical, scholarly, or
artistic issues conducted by the Department of Community
Health, the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Disabilities, or a state institution of
higher education whether sponsored by the institution alone or in conjunction
with a governmental body or private entity. Personally identifiable information
shall mean any information which if disclosed might reasonably reveal the
identity of such person including but not limited to the person's name, address,
and social security number. The identity of such informant shall not be
admissible in evidence in any court of the state unless the court finds that the
identity of the informant already has been disclosed
otherwise."
SECTION
22.
An
Act approved May 6, 2008 (Ga. L. 2008, p. 133), is amended by repealing Section
4 of such Act in its entirety.
SECTION
23.
All
laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are repealed.