Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HB1099
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Full Text of HB1099  103rd General Assembly

HB1099 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY

  
  

 


 
103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2023 and 2024
HB1099

 

Introduced 1/12/2023, by Rep. Mary E. Flowers

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Children's Mental Health Local Collaborative Transformation Fund Act. Creates local children's mental health collaboratives. Defines "local children's mental health collaborative" as an entity formed by the agreement of representatives of the local system of care, including mental health services, social services, correctional services, education services, health services, and vocational services, for the purpose of developing and governing an integrated service system. Provides that, to qualify as a local children's mental health collaborative and be eligible to receive start-up funds, the representatives of the local system of care and nongovernmental entities (such as parents of children in the target population; parent and consumer organizations; community, civic, and religious organizations; private and nonprofit mental and physical health care providers; culturally specific organizations; local foundations; and businesses) or, at a minimum, one county, one school district or special education cooperative, one mental health entity, and one juvenile justice or juvenile corrections entity, must agree to the following: (1) to establish a local children's mental health collaborative and develop an integrated service system; (2) to commit resources to providing services through the local children's mental health collaborative; and (3) to develop a plan to contribute funds to the children's mental health collaborative. Effective January 1, 2024.


LRB103 04700 RJT 49709 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB1099LRB103 04700 RJT 49709 b

1    AN ACT concerning health.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Children's Mental Health Local Collaborative Transformation
6Fund Act.
 
7    Section 5. Purpose. The General Assembly finds that
8children with emotional disturbances or who are at risk of
9suffering those disturbances often require services from
10multiple service systems, including mental health, social
11services, education, corrections, juvenile court, health, and
12employment and economic development. To better meet the needs
13of these children, it is the intent of the General Assembly to
14establish an integrated children's mental health service
15system that:
16        (1) allows local-service decision makers to draw
17    funding from a single local source so that funds follow
18    clients and eliminates the need to match clients, funds,
19    services, and provider eligibilities;
20        (2) creates a local pool of State, local, and private
21    funds to procure greater medical assistance through
22    federal financial participation;
23        (3) improves the efficiency of use of existing

 

 

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1    resources;
2        (4) minimizes or eliminates the incentives for cost
3    and risk shifting; and
4        (5) increases the incentives for earlier
5    identification and intervention.
6    In developing this integrated service system, it is not
7the intent of the General Assembly to limit any rights
8available to children and their families through existing
9federal and State laws.
 
10    Section 10. Definitions. In this Act:
11    "Child" means a person under 18 years of age.
12    "Department" means the Department of Human Services.
13    "Emotional disturbance" means an organic disorder of the
14brain or a clinically significant disorder of thought, mood,
15perception, orientation, memory, or behavior that:
16        (1) is detailed in a diagnostic code list published by
17    the Secretary; and
18        (2) seriously limits a child's capacity to function in
19    primary aspects of daily living such as personal
20    relations, living arrangements, work, school, or
21    recreation.
22    "Emotional disturbance" is a generic term and is intended
23to reflect all categories of disorder described in the
24clinical code list published by the Secretary as usually first
25evident in childhood or adolescence.

 

 

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1    "Family" means a child and one or more of the following
2persons whose participation is necessary to accomplish the
3child's treatment goals:
4        (1) a person related to the child by blood, marriage,
5    or adoption;
6        (2) a person who is the child's foster parent or the
7    significant other of the child's foster parent; or
8        (3) a person who is the child's legal guardian or
9    custodian.
10    "Individualized rehabilitation services" means
11alternative, flexible, coordinated, and highly individualized
12services that are based on a multiagency plan of care. These
13services are designed to build on the strengths and respond to
14the needs identified in the child's multiagency assessment and
15to improve the child's ability to function in the home,
16school, and community. "Individualized rehabilitation
17services" may include, but is not limited to, residential
18services, respite services, services that assist the child or
19family in enrolling in or participating in recreational
20activities, assistance in purchasing otherwise unavailable
21items or services important to maintain a specific child in
22the family, and services that assist the child to participate
23in more traditional services and programs.
24    "Local collaborative transformation fund" means a pool of
25private resources and local, State, and federal resources
26consolidated at the local level, to accomplish locally

 

 

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1agreed-upon service goals for a target population.
2    "Integrated service system" means a coordinated set of
3procedures established by the local children's mental health
4collaborative for coordinating services and actions across
5categorical systems and agencies that results in:
6        (1) integrated funding;
7        (2) improved outreach, early identification, and
8    intervention across systems;
9        (3) strong collaboration between parents and
10    professionals in identifying children in the target
11    population, facilitating access to the integrated system,
12    and coordinating care and services for these children;
13        (4) a coordinated assessment process across systems
14    that determines which children need multiagency care
15    coordination and wraparound services;
16        (5) a multiagency plan of care; and
17        (6) individualized rehabilitation services.
18    "Local children's mental health collaborative" or
19"collaborative" means an entity formed by the agreement of
20representatives of the local system of care for the purpose of
21developing and governing an integrated service system.
22    "Local system of care" means a coordinated network of
23community-based services and supports designed to meet the
24challenges of children and youth with serious mental health
25needs and their families, including mental health services,
26social services, correctional services, education services,

 

 

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1health services, and vocational services. "Local system of
2care" includes partnerships of families, youth, public
3organizations, and private service providers that work to more
4effectively deliver mental health services and supports that
5build on the strengths of individuals and fully address
6children's and youths' needs.
7    "Mental health services" has the meaning ascribed to
8"mental health or developmental disability services" in
9Section 1-115 of the Mental Health and Developmental
10Disabilities Code. As used in Section 30, "mental health
11services" includes community-based, nonresidential services,
12which may include respite care, that are identified in the
13child's multiagency plan of care.
14    "Multiagency plan of care" means a written plan of
15intervention and integrated services developed by a
16multiagency team in conjunction with the child and family
17based on their unique strengths and needs as determined by a
18multiagency assessment. A "multiagency plan of care" must
19outline measurable client outcomes and specific services
20needed to attain these outcomes, the agencies responsible for
21providing the specified services, funding responsibilities,
22timelines, the judicial or administrative procedures needed to
23implement the plan of care, the agencies responsible for
24initiating these procedures and designate one person with lead
25responsibility for overseeing implementation of the plan.
26    "Respite care" means planned routine care to support the

 

 

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1continued residence of a child with emotional disturbance with
2the child's family or long-term primary caretaker.
3    "Secretary" means the Secretary of Human Services.
4    "Service delivery area" means the geographic area to be
5served by the local children's mental health collaborative and
6must include at a minimum a part of a county and school
7district or a special education cooperative.
8    "Target population" means children under 18 years of age
9with an emotional disturbance or who are at risk of suffering
10an emotional disturbance as evidenced by a behavior or
11condition that affects the child's ability to function in a
12primary aspect of daily living including personal relations,
13living arrangements, work, school, and recreation, and a child
14who can benefit from:
15        (1) multiagency service coordination and wraparound
16    services; or
17        (2) informal coordination of traditional mental health
18    services provided on a temporary basis.
19"Target population" also includes persons between the ages of
2018 and 21 who meet these criteria at the option of the local
21children's mental health collaborative.
 
22    Section 15. Local children's mental health collaborative.
23    (a) To qualify as a local children's mental health
24collaborative and be eligible to receive start-up funds, the
25representatives of a local system of care and nongovernmental

 

 

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1entities (such as parents of children in the target
2population; parent and consumer organizations; community,
3civic, and religious organizations; private and nonprofit
4mental and physical health care providers; culturally specific
5organizations; local foundations; and businesses, or, at a
6minimum, one county, one school district or special education
7cooperative, one mental-health entity, and one juvenile
8justice or juvenile corrections entity, must agree to the
9following:
10        (1) to establish a local children's mental health
11    collaborative and develop an integrated service system;
12        (2) to commit resources to providing services through
13    the local children's mental health cooperative; and
14        (3) to develop a plan to contribute funds to the
15    children's mental health collaborative.
16    (b) Two or more children's mental health collaboratives
17may consolidate decision making, pool resources, and
18collectively act on behalf of the individual collaboratives,
19based on a written agreement among the participating
20collaboratives.
21    (c) Each local children's mental health collaborative
22must:
23        (1) sign a collaborative agreement and provide the
24    Secretary with a copy of the signed agreement no later
25    than 10 days after formation;
26        (2) identify a service delivery area and an

 

 

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1    operational target population within that service delivery
2    area. The operational target population must be
3    economically and culturally representative of children in
4    the service delivery area to be served by the local
5    children's mental health collaborative. The size of the
6    operational target population must also be economically
7    viable for the service delivery area;
8        (3) seek to maximize federal revenues available to
9    serve children in the target population by designating
10    local expenditures for services for these children and
11    their families that can be matched with federal dollars;
12        (4) design, develop, and ensure implementation of an
13    integrated service system that meets the requirements for
14    State and federal reimbursement and develop interagency
15    agreements necessary to implement the system;
16        (5) expand membership to include representatives of
17    other services in the local system of care, including
18    prepaid health plans under contract with the Secretary to
19    serve the needs of children in the target population and
20    their families;
21        (6) create or designate a management structure for
22    fiscal and clinical responsibility and outcome evaluation;
23        (7) spend funds generated by the local children's
24    mental health collaborative as required in this Act;
25        (8) explore methods and recommend changes needed at
26    the State level to reduce duplication and promote

 

 

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1    coordination of services, including the use of uniform
2    forms for reporting, billing, and planning of services;
3        (9) submit its integrated service system design to the
4    Department for approval within one year after notifying
5    the Secretary of its formation;
6        (10) provide an annual report and the collaborative's
7    planned timeline to expand its operational target
8    population to the Department; and
9        (11) expand its operational target population.
10    (d) The members of a local children's mental health
11collaborative may share data on persons being served by the
12collaborative or its members if the person gives written,
13informed consent and the information sharing is necessary in
14order for the collaborative to carry out its duties under this
15Act. Data on persons shared under this subsection retain the
16original classification as to each member of the collaborative
17with whom the data is shared. If a federal law or regulation
18impedes information sharing that is necessary in order for a
19collaborative to carry out duties under this Act, the
20appropriate State agencies shall attempt to obtain a waiver or
21exemption from the applicable law or regulation.
 
22    Section 20. Integrated service system. The integrated
23service system established by the local children's mental
24health collaborative must:
25        (1) include a process for communicating to agencies in

 

 

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1    the local system of care eligibility criteria for services
2    received through the local children's mental health
3    collaborative and a process for determining eligibility,
4    and the process shall place strong emphasis on outreach to
5    families, respecting the family role in identifying
6    children in need and valuing families as partners;
7        (2) include measurable outcomes, timelines for
8    evaluating progress, and mechanisms for quality assurance
9    and appeals;
10        (3) involve the family and, when appropriate, the
11    child in developing multiagency service plans to the
12    extent required by law;
13        (4) meet all standards and provide all mental health
14    services as required in this Act, and ensure that the
15    services provided are culturally appropriate;
16        (5) spend funds generated by the local children's
17    mental health collaborative as required in this Act; and
18        (6) encourage public-private partnerships to increase
19    efficiency, reduce redundancy, and promote quality of
20    care.
21    Children served by the integrated service system must be
22economically and culturally representative of children in the
23service delivery area.
 
24    Section 25. Revenue enhancement; local collaborative
25transformation fund.

 

 

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1    (a) A children's mental health collaborative has the
2following authority and responsibilities regarding federal
3revenue enhancement:
4        (1) the collaborative must establish a local
5    collaborative transformation fund;
6        (2) the collaborative shall designate a lead county or
7    other qualified entity as the fiscal agency for reporting,
8    claiming, and receiving payments;
9        (3) the collaborative or lead county may enter into
10    subcontracts with other counties, school districts,
11    special education cooperatives, municipalities, and other
12    public and nonprofit entities for purposes of identifying
13    and claiming eligible expenditures to enhance federal
14    reimbursement;
15        (4) the collaborative shall use any enhanced revenue
16    attributable to the activities of the collaborative,
17    including administrative and service revenue, solely to
18    provide mental health services or to expand the
19    operational target population, and the lead county or
20    other qualified entity may not use enhanced federal
21    revenue for any other purpose;
22        (5) the collaborative or lead county must develop and
23    maintain an accounting and financial management system
24    adequate to support all claims for federal reimbursement,
25    including a clear audit trail and any provisions specified
26    in the contract with the Secretary;

 

 

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1        (6) the collaborative or its members may elect to pay
2    the nonfederal share of the medical assistance costs for
3    services designated by the collaborative; and
4        (7) the lead county or other qualified entity may not
5    use federal funds or local funds designated as matching
6    for other federal funds to provide the nonfederal share of
7    medical assistance.
8    (b) A children's mental health local collaborative
9transformation fund established under this Act must be used to
10develop and support the integrated mental health service
11system. The fund shall be used to help the local children's
12mental health collaborative to serve the mental health needs
13of children in the target population by allowing the local
14children's mental health collaboratives to develop and
15implement an integrated service system.
 
16    Section 30. Additional federal revenues. Each local
17children's mental health collaborative shall report
18expenditures eligible for federal reimbursement in a manner
19prescribed by the Secretary. The Secretary shall pay all funds
20earned by each local children's mental health collaborative to
21the collaborative. Each local children's mental health
22collaborative must use these funds to expand the operational
23target population or to develop or provide mental health
24services through the local integrated service system to
25children in the target population. Funds may not be used to

 

 

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1supplant funding for services to children in the target
2population.
 
3    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect on
4January 1, 2024.