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Full Text of SB2500  104th General Assembly

SB2500sam001 104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

Sen. Robert Peters

Filed: 4/3/2025

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 2500

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 2500 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Community Emergency Services and Support
5Act is amended by changing Sections 5, 15, 25, 30, 40, and 65
6as follows:
 
7    (50 ILCS 754/5)
8    Sec. 5. Findings. The General Assembly recognizes that the
9Illinois Department of Human Services Division of Mental
10Health is preparing to provide mobile mental and behavioral
11health services to all Illinoisans as part of the federally
12mandated adoption of the 9-8-8 phone number. The General
13Assembly also recognizes that many cities and some states have
14successfully established mobile emergency mental and
15behavioral health services as part of their emergency response
16system to support people who need such support and do not

 

 

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1present a threat of physical violence to the mobile mental
2health relief providers. In light of that experience, the
3General Assembly finds that in order to promote and protect
4the health, safety, and welfare of the public, it is necessary
5and in the public interest to provide emergency response, with
6or without medical transportation, to individuals requiring
7mental health or behavioral health services in a manner that
8is substantially equivalent to the response already provided
9to individuals who require emergency physical health care.
10    The General Assembly also recognizes the history of
11vulnerable populations being subject to unwarranted
12involuntary commitment or other human rights violations
13instead of receiving necessary care during acute crises which
14may contribute to an understandable apprehension of behavioral
15health services among individuals who have historically been
16subject to these practices. The General Assembly intends for
17the Mobile Mental Health Relief Providers regulated by this
18Act to assist with crises that do not rise to the level of
19involuntary commitment. However, the General Assembly also
20recognizes that Mobile Mental Health Relief Providers may,
21during the course of assisting with a crisis, encounter
22individuals who present an imminent threat of injury to
23themselves or others unless they receive assistance through
24the involuntary commitment process. This Act intends to
25balance concerns about misuse of the involuntary commitment
26process with the need for emergency care for individuals whose

 

 

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1crisis presents an imminent threat of injury.
2(Source: P.A. 102-580, eff. 1-1-22; 103-105, eff. 6-27-23.)
 
3    (50 ILCS 754/15)
4    Sec. 15. Definitions. As used in this Act:
5    "Chemical restraint" means any drug used for discipline or
6convenience and not required to treat medical symptoms.
7    "Community services" and "community-based mental or
8behavioral health services" include both public and private
9settings.
10    "Division of Mental Health" means the Division of Mental
11Health of the Department of Human Services.
12    "Emergency" means an emergent circumstance caused by a
13health condition, regardless of whether it is perceived as
14physical, mental, or behavioral in nature, for which an
15individual may require prompt care, support, or assessment at
16the individual's location.
17    "Mental or behavioral health" means any health condition
18involving changes in thinking, emotion, or behavior, and that
19the medical community treats as distinct from physical health
20care.
21    "Mobile mental health relief provider" means a person
22engaging with a member of the public to provide the mobile
23mental and behavioral service established in conjunction with
24the Division of Mental Health establishing the 9-8-8 emergency
25number. "Mobile mental health relief provider" does not

 

 

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1include a Paramedic (EMT-P) or EMT, as those terms are defined
2in the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act, unless
3that responding agency has agreed to provide a specialized
4response in accordance with the Division of Mental Health's
5services offered through its 9-8-8 number and has met all the
6requirements to offer that service through that system.
7    "Physical health" means a health condition that the
8medical community treats as distinct from mental or behavioral
9health care.
10    "Physical restraint" means any manual method or physical
11or mechanical device, material, or equipment attached or
12adjacent to an individual's body that the individual cannot
13easily remove and restricts freedom of movement or normal
14access to one's body. "Physical restraint" does not include a
15seat belt if it is used during transportation of an individual
16and the individual has access to the mechanism that releases
17the seat belt.
18    "Public safety answering point" or "PSAP" means the
19primary answering location of an emergency call that meets the
20appropriate standards of service and is responsible for
21receiving and processing those calls and events according to a
22specified operational policy a Public Safety Answering Point
23tele-communicator.
24    "Community services" and "community-based mental or
25behavioral health services" may include both public and
26private settings.

 

 

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1    "Treatment relationship" means an active association with
2a mental or behavioral care provider able to respond in an
3appropriate amount of time to requests for care.
4(Source: P.A. 102-580, eff. 1-1-22; 103-105, eff. 6-27-23.)
 
5    (50 ILCS 754/25)
6    Sec. 25. State goals.
7    (a) 9-1-1 PSAPs, emergency services dispatched through
89-1-1 PSAPs, and the mobile mental and behavioral health
9service established by the Division of Mental Health must
10coordinate their services so that the State goals listed in
11this Section are achieved. Appropriate mobile response service
12for mental and behavioral health emergencies shall be
13available regardless of whether the initial contact was with
149-8-8, 9-1-1 or directly with an emergency service dispatched
15through 9-1-1. Appropriate mobile response services must:
16        (1) whenever possible, ensure that individuals
17    experiencing mental or behavioral health crises are
18    diverted from hospitalization or incarceration and are
19    instead linked with available appropriate community
20    services;
21        (2) include the option of on-site care if that type of
22    care is appropriate and does not override the care
23    decisions of the individual receiving care. Providing care
24    in the community, through methods like mobile crisis
25    units, is encouraged. If effective care is provided on

 

 

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1    site, and if it is consistent with the care decisions of
2    the individual receiving the care, further transportation
3    to other medical providers is not required by this Act;
4        (3) recommend appropriate referrals for available
5    community services if the individual receiving on-site
6    care is not already in a treatment relationship with a
7    service provider or is unsatisfied with their current
8    service providers. The referrals shall take into
9    consideration waiting lists and copayments, which may
10    present barriers to access; and
11        (4) subject to the care decisions of the individual
12    receiving care, coordinate provide transportation for any
13    individual experiencing a mental or behavioral health
14    emergency to the most integrated and least restrictive
15    setting feasible. A mobile crisis response team may
16    provide transportation if the mobile crisis response team
17    is appropriately equipped and staffed to do so.
18    Transportation shall be to the most integrated and least
19    restrictive setting appropriate in the community, such as
20    to the individual's home or chosen location, community
21    crisis respite centers, clinic settings, behavioral health
22    centers, or the offices of particular medical care
23    providers with existing treatment relationships to the
24    individual seeking care.
25    (b) Prioritize requests for emergency assistance. 9-1-1
26PSAPs, emergency services dispatched through 9-1-1 PSAPs, and

 

 

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1the mobile mental and behavioral health service established by
2the Division of Mental Health must provide guidance for
3prioritizing calls for assistance and maximum response time in
4relation to the type of emergency reported.
5    (c) Provide appropriate response times. From the time of
6first notification, 9-1-1 PSAPs, emergency services dispatched
7through 9-1-1 PSAPs, and the mobile mental and behavioral
8health service established by the Division of Mental Health
9must provide the response within response time appropriate to
10the care requirements of the individual with an emergency.
11    (d) Require appropriate mobile mental health relief
12provider training. Mobile mental health relief providers must
13have adequate training to address the needs of individuals
14experiencing a mental or behavioral health emergency. Adequate
15training at least includes:
16        (1) training in de-escalation techniques;
17        (2) knowledge of local community services and
18    supports; and
19        (3) training in respectful interaction with people
20    experiencing mental or behavioral health crises, including
21    the concepts of stigma and respectful language; .
22        (4) training in recognizing and working with people
23    with neurodivergent and developmental disability diagnoses
24    and in the techniques available to help stabilize and
25    connect them to further services; and
26        (5) training in the involuntary commitment process, in

 

 

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1    identification of situations that meet the standards for
2    involuntary commitment, and in cultural competencies and
3    social biases to guard against any group being
4    disproportionately subjected to the involuntary commitment
5    process or the use of the process not warranted under the
6    legal standard for involuntary commitment.
7    (e) Require minimum team staffing. The Division of Mental
8Health, in consultation with the Regional Advisory Committees
9created in Section 40, shall determine the appropriate
10credentials for the mental health providers responding to
11calls, including to what extent the mobile mental health
12relief providers must have certain credentials and licensing,
13and to what extent the mobile mental health relief providers
14can be peer support professionals.
15    (f) Require training from individuals with lived
16experience. Training shall be provided by individuals with
17lived experience to the extent available.
18    (g) Adopt guidelines directing referral to restrictive
19care settings. Mobile mental health relief providers must have
20guidelines to follow when considering whether to refer an
21individual to more restrictive forms of care, like emergency
22room or hospital settings.
23    (h) Specify regional best practices. Mobile mental health
24relief providers providing these services must do so
25consistently with best practices, which include respecting the
26care choices of the individuals receiving assistance. Regional

 

 

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1best practices may be broken down into sub-regions, as
2appropriate to reflect local resources and conditions. With
3the agreement of the impacted EMS Regions, providers of
4emergency response to physical emergencies may participate in
5another EMS Region for mental and behavioral response, if that
6participation shall provide a better service to individuals
7experiencing a mental or behavioral health emergency.
8    (i) Adopt system for directing care in advance of an
9emergency. The Division of Mental Health shall select and
10publicly identify a system that allows individuals who
11voluntarily chose to do so to provide confidential advanced
12care directions to individuals providing services under this
13Act. No system for providing advanced care direction may be
14implemented unless the Division of Mental Health approves it
15as confidential, available to individuals at all economic
16levels, and non-stigmatizing. The Division of Mental Health
17may defer this requirement for providing a system for advanced
18care direction if it determines that no existing systems can
19currently meet these requirements.
20    (j) Train dispatching staff. The personnel staffing 9-1-1,
213-1-1, or other emergency response intake systems must be
22provided with adequate training to assess whether coordinating
23with 9-8-8 is appropriate.
24    (k) Establish protocol for emergency responder
25coordination. The Division of Mental Health shall establish a
26protocol for mobile mental health relief providers, law

 

 

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1enforcement, and fire and ambulance services to request
2assistance from each other, and train these groups on the
3protocol.
4    (l) Integrate law enforcement. The Division of Mental
5Health shall provide for law enforcement to request mobile
6mental health relief provider assistance whenever law
7enforcement engages an individual appropriate for services
8under this Act. If law enforcement would typically request EMS
9assistance when it encounters an individual with a physical
10health emergency, law enforcement shall similarly dispatch
11mental or behavioral health personnel or medical
12transportation when it encounters an individual in a mental or
13behavioral health emergency.
14(Source: P.A. 102-580, eff. 1-1-22; 103-105, eff. 6-27-23.)
 
15    (50 ILCS 754/30)
16    Sec. 30. State prohibitions. 9-1-1 PSAPs, emergency
17services dispatched through 9-1-1 PSAPs, and the mobile mental
18and behavioral health service established by the Division of
19Mental Health must coordinate their services so that, based on
20the information provided to them, the following State
21prohibitions are avoided:
22    (a) Law enforcement responsibility for providing mental
23and behavioral health care. In any area where mobile mental
24health relief providers are available for dispatch, law
25enforcement shall not be dispatched to respond to an

 

 

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1individual requiring mental or behavioral health care unless
2that individual is (i) involved in a suspected violation of
3the criminal laws of this State, or (ii) presents a threat of
4physical injury to self or others. Mobile mental health relief
5providers are not considered available for dispatch under this
6Section if 9-8-8 reports that it cannot dispatch appropriate
7service within the maximum response times established by each
8Regional Advisory Committee under Section 45.
9        (1) Standing on its own or in combination with each
10    other, the fact that an individual is experiencing a
11    mental or behavioral health emergency, or has a mental
12    health, behavioral health, or other diagnosis, is not
13    sufficient to justify an assessment that the individual is
14    a threat of physical injury to self or others, or requires
15    a law enforcement response to a request for emergency
16    response or medical transportation.
17        (2) If, based on its assessment of the threat to
18    public safety, law enforcement would not accompany medical
19    transportation responding to a physical health emergency,
20    unless requested by mobile mental health relief providers,
21    law enforcement may not accompany emergency response or
22    medical transportation personnel responding to a mental or
23    behavioral health emergency that presents an equivalent
24    level of threat to self or public safety.
25        (3) Without regard to an assessment of threat to self
26    or threat to public safety, law enforcement may station

 

 

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1    personnel so that they can rapidly respond to requests for
2    assistance from mobile mental health relief providers if
3    law enforcement does not interfere with the provision of
4    emergency response or transportation services. To the
5    extent practical, not interfering with services includes
6    remaining sufficiently distant from or out of sight of the
7    individual receiving care so that law enforcement presence
8    is unlikely to escalate the emergency.
9    (b) Mobile mental health relief provider involvement in
10involuntary commitment. Mobile mental health relief providers
11may participate in the involuntary commitment process only to
12the extent permitted under the Mental Health and Developmental
13Disabilities Code. The Division of Behavioral Health shall, in
14consultation with each Regional Advisory Committee, as
15appropriate, monitor the use of involuntary commitment under
16this Act and provide systemic recommendations to improve
17outcomes for those subject to commitment. In order to maintain
18the appropriate care relationship, mobile mental health relief
19providers shall not in any way assist in the involuntary
20commitment of an individual beyond (i) reporting to their
21dispatching entity or to law enforcement that they believe the
22situation requires assistance the mobile mental health relief
23providers are not permitted to provide under this Section;
24(ii) providing witness statements; and (iii) fulfilling
25reporting requirements the mobile mental health relief
26providers may have under their professional ethical

 

 

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1obligations or laws of this State. This prohibition shall not
2interfere with any mobile mental health relief provider's
3ability to provide physical or mental health care.
4    (c) Use of law enforcement for transportation. In any area
5where mobile mental health relief providers are available for
6dispatch, unless requested by mobile mental health relief
7providers, law enforcement shall not be used to provide
8transportation to access mental or behavioral health care, or
9travel between mental or behavioral health care providers,
10except where (i) no alternative is available; (ii) the
11individual requests transportation from law enforcement and
12law enforcement mutually agrees to provide transportation; or
13(iii) the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code
14requires or permits law enforcement to provide transportation.
15    (d) Reduction of educational institution obligations. The
16services coordinated under this Act may not be used to replace
17any service an educational institution is required to provide
18to a student. It shall not substitute for appropriate special
19education and related services that schools are required to
20provide by any law.
21    (e) This Section is operative beginning on the date the 3
22conditions in Section 65 are met or July 1, 2025, whichever is
23earlier.
24(Source: P.A. 102-580, eff. 1-1-22; 103-105, eff. 6-27-23;
25103-645, eff. 7-1-24.)
 

 

 

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1    (50 ILCS 754/40)
2    Sec. 40. Statewide Advisory Committee.
3    (a) The Division of Mental Health shall establish a
4Statewide Advisory Committee to review and make
5recommendations for aspects of coordinating 9-1-1 and the
69-8-8 mobile mental health response system most appropriately
7addressed on a State level.
8    (b) Issues to be addressed by the Statewide Advisory
9Committee include, but are not limited to, addressing changes
10necessary in 9-1-1 call taking protocols and scripts used in
119-1-1 PSAPs where those protocols and scripts are based on or
12otherwise dependent on national providers for their operation.
13    (c) The Statewide Advisory Committee shall recommend a
14system for gathering data related to the coordination of the
159-1-1 and 9-8-8 systems for purposes of allowing the parties
16to make ongoing improvements in that system. As practical, the
17system shall attempt to determine issues, which may include,
18but are not limited to including, but not limited to:
19        (1) the volume of calls coordinated between 9-1-1 and
20    9-8-8;
21        (2) the volume of referrals from other first
22    responders to 9-8-8;
23        (3) the volume and type of calls deemed appropriate
24    for referral to 9-8-8 but could not be served by 9-8-8
25    because of capacity restrictions or other reasons;
26        (4) the appropriate information to improve

 

 

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1    coordination between 9-1-1 and 9-8-8; and
2        (5) the appropriate information to improve the 9-8-8
3    system, if the information is most appropriately gathered
4    at the 9-1-1 PSAPs; and .
5        (6) the number of instances of mobile mental health
6    relief providers initiating petitions for involuntary
7    commitment, broken down by county and contracting entity
8    employing the petitioning mobile mental health relief
9    providers and the aggregate demographic data of the
10    individuals subject to those petitions.
11    (d) The Statewide Advisory Committee shall consist of:
12        (1) the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator, ex officio;
13        (2) one representative designated by the Illinois
14    Chapter of National Emergency Number Association (NENA);
15        (3) one representative designated by the Illinois
16    Chapter of Association of Public Safety Communications
17    Officials (APCO);
18        (4) one representative of the Division of Mental
19    Health;
20        (5) one representative of the Illinois Department of
21    Public Health;
22        (6) one representative of a statewide organization of
23    EMS responders;
24        (7) one representative of a statewide organization of
25    fire chiefs;
26        (8) two representatives of statewide organizations of

 

 

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1    law enforcement;
2        (9) two representatives of mental health, behavioral
3    health, or substance abuse providers; and
4        (10) four representatives of advocacy organizations
5    either led by or consisting primarily of individuals with
6    intellectual or developmental disabilities, individuals
7    with behavioral disabilities, or individuals with lived
8    experience.
9    (e) The members of the Statewide Advisory Committee, other
10than the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator, shall be appointed by
11the Secretary of Human Services.
12    (f) The Statewide Advisory Committee shall continue to
13meet until this Act has been fully implemented, as determined
14by the Division of Mental Health, and mobile mental health
15relief providers are available in all parts of Illinois. The
16Division of Mental Health may reconvene the Statewide Advisory
17Committee at its discretion after full implementation of this
18Act.
19(Source: P.A. 102-580, eff. 1-1-22; 103-105, eff. 6-27-23.)
 
20    (50 ILCS 754/65)
21    Sec. 65. PSAP and emergency service dispatched through a
229-1-1 PSAP; coordination of activities with mobile and
23behavioral health services.
24    (a) Each 9-1-1 PSAP and emergency service dispatched
25through a 9-1-1 PSAP must begin coordinating its activities

 

 

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1with the mobile mental and behavioral health services
2established by the Division of Mental Health once all 3 of the
3following conditions are met, but not later than July 1, 2027
42025:
5        (1) the Statewide Committee has negotiated useful
6    protocol and 9-1-1 operator script adjustments with the
7    contracted services providing these tools to 9-1-1 PSAPs
8    operating in Illinois;
9        (2) the appropriate Regional Advisory Committee has
10    completed design of the specific 9-1-1 PSAP's process for
11    coordinating activities with the mobile mental and
12    behavioral health service; and
13        (3) the mobile mental and behavioral health service is
14    available in their jurisdiction.
15    (b) To achieve the conditions of subsection (a) by July 1,
162027, the following activities shall be completed:
17        (1) No later than June 30, 2025, pilot testing of the
18    revised protocols;
19        (2) No later than June 30, 2026:
20            (A) assessment and evaluation of the pilots;
21            (B) revisions, as needed, of protocols and
22        operations based on assessment and evaluation of the
23        pilots;
24            (C) implementation of revised protocols at pilot
25        sites; and
26            (D) implementation of revised protocols by PSAPs

 

 

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1        who are ready to implement, otherwise known as early
2        adopters; and
3        (3) No later than June 30, 2027, implementation of
4    revised protocols by all remaining PSAPs, including any
5    PSAPs that previously cited financial barriers to updating
6    systems.
7(Source: P.A. 102-580, eff. 1-1-22; 102-1109, eff. 12-21-22;
8103-105, eff. 6-27-23; 103-645, eff. 7-1-24.)
 
9    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
10becoming law.".