HBA-MPM H.B. 1921 77(R) BILL ANALYSIS Office of House Bill AnalysisH.B. 1921 By: Maxey Human Services 7/10/2001 Enrolled BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services (PRS) provides adoption assistance to the adoptive parents of children who are adopted after having been in the conservatorship of Child Protective Services. This assistance includes Medicaid and a monthly adoption subsidy for the adoptive parents of children meeting special needs criteria. A child with special needs is one for whom the state has terminated the parental rights of a child's biological parents due to abuse or neglect and who, at the time of adoptive placement, is at least six years old, is two years old or older and a member of certain minority groups, is being adopted as part of a group of siblings, or has a verifiable physical, mental, or emotional handicap. These children often have needs that exceed those of children in other adoptive situations. These children and their adoptive families need continued adoption assistance to ensure that the child remains in school and the child's needs are met. State law authorizes PRS to pay foster care assistance for certain children after the child becomes 18 years of age. However, prior to the 77th Legislature, adoption assistance ended once a child turned 18. House Bill 1921 requires PRS to extend adoption assistance for children with special needs. RULEMAKING AUTHORITY It is the opinion of the Office of House Bill Analysis that this bill does not expressly delegate any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, department, agency, or institution. ANALYSIS House Bill 1921 amends the Family Code to require the Department of Protective and Regulatory Services (PRS), in accordance with PRS rules, to offer adoption assistance to adoptive parents of a child with special needs after a child's 18th birthday under an existing adoption assistance agreement between the adoptive parents and PRS until: _the first day of the month of the child's 21st birthday if PRS determines as provided by PRS rules that the child has a mental or physical disability that warrants the assistance, the child or child's adoptive parent has applied for federal benefits under the supplemental security income (SSI) program, and the child's adoptive parents are providing the child's financial support; or _if the child does not meet the above requirements the earlier of the date the child ceases to regularly attend high school or a vocational or technical program, the date the child obtains a high school diploma or high school equivalency certificate, the date the child's adoptive parents stop providing financial support to the child, or the first day of the month of the child's 19th birthday. H.B. 1921 authorizes PRS to conduct an assessment of the child's mental or physical disability or contract for the assessment to be conducted in order to determine the child's eligibility. PRS and any person with whom PRS contracts are required to inform the adoptive parent of the application requirements for federal benefits for the child under SSI, provide assistance to the parents and child in preparing the application, and provide ongoing consultation and guidance to the parents and child throughout the eligibility determination process. The bill provides that if the legislature does not appropriate sufficient money to provide assistance to all adoptive parents, PRS is required to provide assistance only to the adoptive parents of the children whose mental or physical disability warrants it until age 21. PRS is required to implement the extended adoption assistance only if the legislature appropriates money specifically for that purpose. EFFECTIVE DATE September 1, 2001.