By: Truitt, et al. (Senate Sponsor - Janek) H.B. No. 2572
(In the Senate - Received from the House May 11, 2005;
May 13, 2005, read first time and referred to Committee on Health
and Human Services; May 20, 2005, reported favorably, as amended,
by the following vote: Yeas 5, Nays 0; May 20, 2005, sent to
printer.)
COMMITTEE AMENDMENT NO. 1 By: Janek
Amend H.B. No. 2572 (House engrossment) as follows:
(1) Strike SECTION 7 and SECTION 8 of the bill (page 6, line
63, through page 8, line 14).
(2) Add the following SECTIONS to the bill, appropriately
numbered, and renumber subsequent SECTIONS accordingly:
SECTION __. Subchapter B, Chapter 533, Health and Safety
Code, is amended by adding Section 533.0357 to read as follows:
Sec. 533.0357. LOCAL AUTHORITY PARTNERSHIP DEVELOPMENT.
(a) The department shall encourage local authorities to develop
partnerships and greater coordination of services to persons who
have a physical illness as well as mental illness or chemical
dependency.
(b) At the request of a local authority, the department
shall approve a request for the development of an integrated
physical health and behavioral health service delivery model that
is developed in partnership with a public hospital, county health
department, or other governmental entity and that furthers the
following goals:
(1) establishing a health care services delivery
system that integrates primary health care services and behavioral
health care services delivery;
(2) involving consumers, families, and stakeholders
fully in the development of a system that is oriented toward
resiliency and recovery;
(3) protecting and enhancing the rights of people with
mental illness or substance abuse problems;
(4) enhancing the implementation of the resiliency and
disease management model for mental health services; and
(5) screening for co-occurring physical, mental, and
substance abuse disorders and treating persons with integrated
treatment strategies.
(c) A public hospital, county health department, or other
governmental entity acting under a contract with the Department of
State Health Services under this section may provide primary health
care services and behavioral health care services as necessary to
enhance the integration of physical and behavioral health care
services delivery in the separate service delivery area.
(d) A contract developed under this section must be a
performance-based contract that provides flexibility in the design
of the behavioral health care services delivery system while
assuring that the local authority will achieve improved performance
outcomes.
SECTION __. Subchapter B, Chapter 533, Health and Safety
Code, is amended by adding Section 533.0405 to read as follows:
Sec. 533.0405. RESOURCES FOR EMOTIONALLY DISTURBED
CHILDREN AND YOUTH. (a) The department shall ensure that local
authorities design systems of care resources for children with
serious emotional disturbances that recognize:
(1) the unique needs of those children;
(2) the various programs in this state through which a
child may be directed to the authority for services; and
(3) the various programs available to the child, the
child's family, and the authority through which the child and the
child's family may receive behavioral health services or other
services.
(b) A local authority shall develop formal partnerships and
coordinate with entities to ensure that a child with a serious
emotional disturbance receives the most appropriate and effective
care and services, to the extent possible.
(c) As appropriate, the authority shall use teams composed
of representatives of public and private service providers and
members of the child's family to develop individual and family
service plans that encompass, to the extent possible, appropriate
services and direct interagency and provider cooperation as
necessary to further the plans.
(d) This section does not affect a requirement of state or
federal law for informed parental consent before a child receives
or is assessed or is screened for health or mental health services.
SECTION __. (a) The legislature shall establish a joint
interim committee to study the local mental health and mental
retardation services delivery system and to develop
recommendations for improving the provision of services and
increasing the accountability for funds management in the system.
(b) The committee should consider whether the current local
system meets the following goals:
(1) improving the integration of services to persons
who have physical illness as well as mental illness or chemical
dependency and developing a continuum of services to all persons
who are aging or who have physical or cognitive disabilities; and
(2) allowing the appropriate level of flexibility
needed to meet unique community needs, while addressing state
requirements and ensuring an appropriate level of budget certainty
for the state.
(c) In developing recommendations for the improvement of
services delivery the committee should consider:
(1) the role of a community center and whether a
community center should be designated as a provider of public
safety net services for jail diversion services, crisis services,
certain community-oriented services, community hospital services,
or other services necessary to ensure the statewide availability of
services; and
(2) the findings and recommendations of the mental
health services task force as reported to the Senate Health and
Human Services interim committee of the 77th Legislature in March
2002 and the House Bill 1734 committee report from the 75th
Legislature, Regular Session, 1997.
(d) Not later than January 1, 2007, the committee shall
report its findings and recommendations to the governor, the
lieutenant governor, and the speaker of the house of
representatives.
(e) The lieutenant governor and the speaker of the house of
representatives shall determine the composition of the committee.
The committee must be composed of five members of the senate and
five members of the house of representatives. The presiding
officer of the committee must be a member designated from the
senate.
(f) This section expires September 1, 2007.
COMMITTEE AMENDMENT NO. 2 By: Janek
Amend H.B. No. 2572 (House engrossment) as follows:
(1) In the recital to SECTION 2 of the bill (page 3, line
25), strike ", (c),".
(2) In SECTION 2 of the bill, strike amended Section 533.035(c),
Health and Safety Code (page 3, line 65, through page 4, line 11).
(3) In SECTION 2 of the bill, strike amended Section
533.035(e), Health and Safety Code (page 4, line 12, through page 4,
line 23), and substitute the following:
(e) In assembling a network of service providers, a local
mental health [and mental retardation] authority may serve as a
qualified service provider only in accordance with Subsection (c)
and [of services only as a provider of last resort and only if the
authority demonstrates to the department that:
[(1)] the authority shall make [has made] every
reasonable attempt to solicit the development of an available and
appropriate provider base that is sufficient to meet the needs of
consumers in its service area[; and
[(2) there is not a willing provider of the relevant
services in the authority's service area or in the county where the
provision of the services is needed].
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
relating to the functions of local mental health and mental
retardation authorities.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
SECTION 1. Section 533.031, Health and Safety Code, is
amended by adding Subdivisions (4), (5), (6), and (7) to read as
follows:
(4) "Commission" means the Health and Human Services
Commission.
(5) "Executive commissioner" means the executive
commissioner of the Health and Human Services Commission.
(6) "ICF-MR and related waiver programs" includes
ICF-MR programs, home and community-based services, Texas home
living waiver services or another Medicaid program serving persons
with mental retardation.
(7) "Qualified service provider" means an entity that
meets requirements for service providers established by the
executive commissioner.
SECTION 2. Section 533.035, Health and Safety Code, is
amended by amending Subsections (a), (c), and (e) and adding
Subsections (b-1) and (e-1) to read as follows:
(a) The executive commissioner shall designate a local
mental health authority and a local mental retardation authority in
one or more local service areas. The executive commissioner
[board] may delegate to the local authorities the [board's]
authority and responsibility of the executive commissioner, the
commission, or a department of the commission related to [for the]
planning, policy development, coordination, including coordination
with criminal justice entities, resource allocation, and resource
development for and oversight of mental health and mental
retardation services in the most appropriate and available setting
to meet individual needs in that service area. The executive
commissioner may designate a single entity as the local mental
health authority and the local mental retardation authority for a
service area. In designating local authorities, the executive
commissioner may not decrease the number of local mental health
authorities or local mental retardation authorities from the number
that existed on January 1, 2005.
(b-1) This subsection expires September 1, 2007. Before the
department institutes a change in payment methodology, the
department shall:
(1) evaluate various forms of payment for services
including fee-for-service, case rate, capitation, and other
appropriate payment methods to determine the most cost-effective
and efficient form of payment for services;
(2) evaluate the effect of each proposed payment
methodology on:
(A) the availability of services in urban and
rural service areas;
(B) the availability of services for persons who
are indigent; and
(C) the cost certainty of the delivery of
Medicaid rehabilitation services;
(3) develop an implementation plan for the new payment
methodology that integrates the department's findings under
Subdivisions (1) and (2); and
(4) report the department's findings and the
implementation plan for a new payment methodology to the
legislature not later than January 1, 2007.
(c) A local mental health and mental retardation authority,
with the department's approval, shall use the funds received under
Subsection (b) to ensure mental health, mental retardation, and
chemical dependency services are provided in the local service
area. The local authority shall consider public input, ultimate
cost-benefit, and client care issues to ensure consumer choice and
the best use of public money in:
(1) assembling a network of service providers; [and]
(2) making recommendations relating to the most
appropriate and available treatment alternatives for individuals
in need of mental health or mental retardation services; and
(3) determining whether the authority will provide the
service or contract with another organization to provide the
service.
(e) In assembling a network of service providers, a local
mental health [and mental retardation] authority may serve as a
qualified service provider only in accordance with Subsection (c)
[of services only as a provider of last resort and only if the
authority demonstrates to the department that:
[(1) the authority has made every reasonable attempt
to solicit the development of an available and appropriate provider
base that is sufficient to meet the needs of consumers in its
service area; and
[(2) there is not a willing provider of the relevant
services in the authority's service area or in the county where the
provision of the services is needed].
(e-1) A local mental retardation authority may serve as a
provider of ICF-MR and related waiver services only if:
(1) the authority complies with the limitations
prescribed by Section 533.0355(c); or
(2) the ICF-MR and related waiver services are
necessary to ensure the availability of services and the authority
demonstrates to the commission that there is not a willing ICF-MR
and related waiver service qualified service provider in the
authority's service area where the service is needed.
SECTION 3. Section 533.0355, Health and Safety Code, is
amended to read as follows:
Sec. 533.0355. LOCAL MENTAL RETARDATION AUTHORITY
RESPONSIBILITIES [ALLOCATION OF DUTIES] UNDER CERTAIN MEDICAID
[WAIVER] PROGRAMS. (a) The executive commissioner shall adopt
rules establishing the roles and responsibilities of local mental
retardation authorities [In this section, "waiver program" means
the local mental retardation authority waiver program established
under the state Medicaid program].
(b) In adopting rules under this section, the executive
commissioner must include rules regarding:
(1) access;
(2) intake;
(3) eligibility functions;
(4) enrollment, initial assessment, and service
authorization;
(5) utilization management;
(6) safety net functions, including crisis management
services and assistance in accessing facility–based care;
(7) service coordination functions;
(8) provision and oversight of state general revenue
services;
(9) local planning functions, including stakeholder
involvement, technical assistance and training, and provider
complaint and resolution processes; and
(10) processes to assure accountability in
performance, compliance, and monitoring. [A provider of services
under the waiver program shall:
[(1) develop a person-directed plan and an individual
program plan for each person who receives services from the
provider under the waiver program;
[(2) perform justification and implementation
functions for the plans described by Subdivision (1);
[(3) conduct case management under the waiver program,
other than case management under Subsection (c)(3), in accordance
with applicable state and federal laws; and
[(4) plan, coordinate, and review the provision of
services to all persons who receive services from the service
provider under the waiver program.]
(c) In determining eligibility under Subsection (b)(3), an
authority must offer a state school as an option among the
residential services available to an individual who is eligible for
those services and who meets the department's criteria for state
school admission, regardless of whether other residential services
are available to the individual. The community mental health and
mental retardation centers must document the number of individuals
who are eligible for state school services under the department's
criteria, the number of individuals who meet eligibility who are
requesting state school admissions, and the number of individuals
who meet eligibility criteria who are referred for state school
services. The Health and Human Services Commission will adopt
rules related to the performance criteria required of the community
mental health and mental retardation centers regarding the
provision of information related to services and referral for
services.
(d) In establishing a local mental retardation authority's
role as a qualified service provider of ICF-MR and related waiver
programs under Section 533.035(e-1), the executive commissioner by
rule shall require the local mental retardation authority to:
(1) base the authority's provider capacity on the
authority's August 2004 enrollment levels for the waiver programs
the authority operates and, if the authority's enrollment levels
exceed those levels, to reduce the levels by voluntary attrition;
and
(2) base any increase in the authority's provider
capacity on:
(A) the authority's state-mandated conversion
from one Medicaid program to another Medicaid program allowing for
a permanent increase in the authority's provider capacity in
accordance with the number of persons who choose the authority as
their provider;
(B) the authority's voluntary conversion from
one Medicaid program to another Medicaid program allowing for a
temporary increase in the authority's provider capacity in
accordance with the number of persons who choose the authority as
their provider; or
(C) other extenuating circumstances that:
(i) are clearly defined in rules adopted by
the executive commissioner;
(ii) are monitored and approved by the
department; and
(iii) do not include increases resulting
from refinancing and do not include increases that unnecessarily
promote the authority's provider role over its role as a local
mental retardation authority [A local mental retardation authority
shall:
[(1) manage any waiting lists for services under the
waiver program;
[(2) perform functions relating to consumer choice and
enrollment for persons who receive services under the waiver
program; and
[(3) conduct case management under the waiver program
relating to funding disputes between a service provider and the
local mental retardation authority].
(e) In adopting a rule under this section, the executive
commissioner shall seek the participation of and comments from
local mental retardation authorities, providers, advocates, and
other interested stakeholders [(d) The department shall perform
all administrative functions under the waiver program that are not
assigned to a service provider under Subsection (b) or to a local
mental retardation authority under Subsection (c). Administrative
functions performed by the department include:
[(1) any surveying, certification, and utilization
review functions required under the waiver program; and
[(2) managing an appeals process relating to decisions
that affect a person receiving services under the waiver program].
(f) Any increase based on extenuating circumstances under
Subsection (d)(2)(C) is considered a temporary increase in the
local mental retardation authority's provider capacity [(e) The
department shall review:
[(1) screening and assessment of levels of care;
[(2) case management fees paid under the waiver
program to a community center; and
[(3) administrative fees paid under the waiver program
to a service provider].
(g) At least biennially, the department shall review and
determine the local mental retardation authority's status as a
qualified service provider in accordance with criteria that
includes the consideration of the authority's ability to assure the
availability of services in its area, including:
(1) program stability and viability;
(2) the number of other qualified service providers in
the area; and
(3) the geographical area in which the authority is
located [(f) The department shall perform any function relating
to inventory for persons who receive services under the waiver
program and agency planning assessments].
(h) The Department of Aging and Disability Services shall
ensure that local services delivered further the following goals:
(1) to provide individuals with the information,
skills, opportunities, and support to make informed decisions
regarding the services for which the individual is eligible;
(2) to respect the rights, needs, and preferences of
an individual receiving services; and
(3) to integrate individuals with mental retardation
and developmental disabilities into the community in accordance
with relevant independence promotion plans and permanency planning
laws.
[(g) The review required under Subsection (e) must include a
comparison of fees paid before the implementation of this section
with fees paid after the implementation of this section. The
department may adjust fees paid based on that review.
[(h) The department shall allocate the portion of the gross
reimbursement funds paid to a local authority and a service
provider for client services for the case management function in
accordance with this section and to the extent allowed by law.
[(i) The department may adopt rules governing the functions
of a local mental retardation authority or service provider under
this section.]
SECTION 4. Section 535.002(b), Health and Safety Code, is
amended to read as follows:
(b) If feasible and economical, the commission shall
[department may] use local mental health and mental retardation
authorities to implement this chapter. [However, the department
may not designate those local mental health and mental retardation
authorities as the sole providers of services if other providers
are available.]
SECTION 5. (a) Sections 533.035(f) and (g), Health and
Safety Code, are repealed.
(b) Section 2.82A, Chapter 198, Acts of the 78th
Legislature, Regular Session, 2003, is repealed.
SECTION 6. Not later than January 1, 2007, the Health and
Human Services Commission shall submit a report to the governor,
lieutenant governor, and speaker of the house of representatives
that includes any information the commission finds relevant
regarding the implementation of Sections 535.035 and 535.0355,
Health and Safety Code, as amended by this Act, by local mental
retardation authorities.
SECTION 7. (a) The executive commissioner of the Health and
Human Services Commission shall establish a local mental
retardation authority task group to develop recommendations for the
legislature regarding innovative financing, fund management, and
local service delivery options for mental retardation services.
(b) The executive commissioner shall appoint:
(1) three representatives of each of the following
groups:
(A) consumer and advocacy organizations for
mental retardation services;
(B) private providers of mental retardation
services; and
(C) local mental retardation authorities;
(2) two county judges or their designees to represent
the Texas Association of Counties; and
(3) one county judge or the county judge's designee to
represent the Conference of Urban Counties.
(c) In developing recommendations, the task group shall
consider:
(1) consumer and family involvement in local service
delivery design and evaluation;
(2) the level of flexibility needed to meet unique
community needs;
(3) local mental retardation authority coordination
with state-operated inpatient resources, including state hospitals
and state schools;
(4) the anticipated effect of any proposed financing
or payment methodology on local control of funds, on local fund
contributions, the availability of services in urban and rural
service areas, and the availability of services for people who are
medically indigent;
(5) the assurance of budget certainty for the state;
and
(6) the role of a community center as a designated
provider of public safety net services for jail diversion services,
crisis services, certain community-oriented services, community
hospital services, and other services necessary to ensure the
statewide availability of community services.
(d) The task group shall submit a report regarding the task
group's recommendations to the governor, lieutenant governor,
speaker of the house of representatives, and legislature not later
than January 1, 2007.
(e) This section expires September 1, 2007.
SECTION 8. (a) The executive commissioner of the Health and
Human Services Commission shall establish a local mental health
authority task group to develop recommendations for the legislature
regarding innovative financing, fund management, and local service
delivery options for mental health services.
(b) The executive commissioner shall appoint:
(1) three representatives of each of the following
groups:
(A) consumer and advocacy organizations for
behavioral health services;
(B) private providers of behavioral health
services; and
(C) local mental health authorities;
(2) two county judges or their designees to represent
the Texas Association of Counties; and
(3) one county judge or the county judge's designee to
represent the Conference of Urban Counties.
(c) In developing recommendations, the task group shall
consider:
(1) consumer and family involvement in service
delivery design and evaluation;
(2) the level of flexibility needed to meet unique
community needs;
(3) local mental health authority coordination with
state-operated inpatient resources, including state hospitals and
state schools;
(4) the anticipated effect of any proposed financing
or payment methodology on local control of funds, on local fund
contributions, the availability of services in urban and rural
service areas, and the availability of services for people who are
medically indigent;
(5) the assurance of budget certainty for the state;
(6) the role of a community center as a designated
provider of public safety net services for jail diversion services,
crisis services, certain community-oriented services, community
hospital services, and other services necessary to ensure the
statewide availability of community services; and
(7) the findings and recommendations of the mental
health services task force as reported to the Senate Health and
Human Services interim committee of the 77th Legislature in March
2002 and the House Bill 1734 committee report from the 75th
Legislature, Regular Session, 1997.
(d) The task group shall submit a report regarding the task
group's recommendations to the governor, lieutenant governor,
speaker of the house of representatives, and legislature not later
than January 1, 2007.
(e) This section expires September 1, 2007.
SECTION 9. This Act takes effect September 1, 2005.
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