By: Talarico H.B. No. 4356
 
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to the dissolution of the Texas Juvenile Justice
  Department and the creation of the Office of Youth Safety and
  Rehabilitation.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  The heading to Subtitle A, Title 12, Human
  Resources Code, is amended to read as follows:
  SUBTITLE A. OFFICE OF YOUTH SAFETY AND REHABILITATION [TEXAS
  JUVENILE JUSTICE BOARD AND TEXAS JUVENILE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT]
         SECTION 2.  Subtitle A, Title 12, Human Resources Code, is
  amended by adding Chapter 201A to read as follows:
  CHAPTER 201A. OFFICE OF YOUTH SAFETY AND REHABILITATION
         Sec. 201A.001.  DEFINITIONS. (a)  In this chapter:
               (1)  "Board" means the Board of Youth Safety and
  Rehabilitation.
               (2)  "Child" means an individual:
                     (A)  10 years of age or older and younger than 18
  years of age who is under the jurisdiction of a juvenile court; or
                     (B)  10 years of age or older and younger than 19
  years of age who is committed to the custody of the office under
  Title 3, Family Code.
               (3)  "Office" means the Office of Youth Safety and
  Rehabilitation.
         (b)  A reference in other law to the Texas Juvenile Justice
  Department means the office.
         Sec. 201A.002.  OFFICE OF YOUTH SAFETY AND REHABILITATION.
  The executive commissioner of the Health and Human Services
  Commission shall maintain an Office of Youth Safety and
  Rehabilitation within the commission with the goal of:
               (1)  promoting trauma-responsive and culturally
  informed services for children engaging in delinquent conduct in a
  manner that supports the child's successful transition to
  adulthood; and
               (2)  ensuring children become responsible, thriving,
  and engaged members of their communities.
         Sec. 201A.003.  RESPONSIBILITIES OF OFFICE. The office is
  responsible for:
               (1)  managing and allocating recouped funding to
  community-based service providers;
               (2)  providing technical assistance to develop and
  expand local diversion opportunities to meet the various needs of
  children who have engaged in delinquent conduct, including sex
  offender, substance abuse, mental health treatment, and in-school
  diversion and prevention programs;
               (3)  acting as a financial and administrative
  intermediary entity between state and local organizations and
  county agencies to distribute state and other grants and resources;
  and
               (4)  overseeing the use of the funding described by
  Subdivision (3) throughout this state to assist in the development
  of infrastructure for local programs focusing on children.
         Sec. 201A.004.  ANNUAL REPORT REQUIRED. The office shall
  annually submit a report to the governor and each member of the
  legislature.  The report must:
               (1)  describe outcomes achieved by the office in the
  preceding year;
               (2)  detail the work completed by the office in the
  preceding year, including any new services or programs offered by
  the office;
               (3)  evaluate the efficacy of current programs offered
  locally to children;
               (4)  identify and recommend policies for improved
  outcomes and integrated programs and services to best support
  children outside of detention facilities; and
               (5)  identify and disseminate best practices to help
  inform restorative practices, including education, diversion,
  reentry, religious, and victim services.
         Sec. 201A.005.  BOARD; FUNDING PRIORITIES.  (a)  The board is
  the governing body of the office and is responsible for the
  operations of the office.
         (b)  The board shall develop and implement policies that
  clearly separate the policymaking responsibilities of the board and
  the management responsibilities of the presiding officer and the
  staff of the office.
         (c)  The board shall establish funding priorities for
  services that support the goals of the office and that do not
  provide incentives to detain children.
         Sec. 201A.006.  COMPOSITION OF BOARD; PRESIDING OFFICER.  
  (a) The board is composed of the following 19 members or their
  designees:
               (1)  the executive commissioner of the Health and Human
  Services Commission;
               (2)  the chief officer of the Medicaid and CHIP
  services department of the Health and Human Services Commission;
               (3)  the deputy executive commissioner of the
  Intellectual and Developmental Disability and Behavioral Health
  Services Department;
               (4)  the director of the Early Childhood Education
  Division at the Texas Education Agency;
               (5)  the following members appointed by the governor:
                     (A)  a member of the judiciary;
                     (B)  an attorney with experience in defending
  civil rights cases;
                     (C)  a member of the Texas Judicial Commission on
  Mental Health;
                     (D)  a faculty member from the medical school at
  The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio;
                     (E)  a licensed trauma-informed youth counselor;
                     (F)  an education advocate;
                     (G)  two culturally responsive juvenile justice
  advocates;
                     (H)  a culturally responsive youth mental health
  advocate;
                     (I)  a harm reduction advocate; and
                     (J)  a representative of the Texas Correctional
  Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental Impairments; and
               (6)  the following members appointed by the governor
  from recommendations made by the presiding officer:
                     (A)  a child welfare advocate;
                     (B)  two youth advocates; and
                     (C)  two individuals formerly committed to a
  juvenile detention facility who can serve as a credible messenger
  for detained youth.
         (b)  Board members serve staggered six-year terms, with the
  terms of six or seven members expiring on February 1 of each
  odd-numbered year.
         (c)  The governor shall designate a member of the board as
  the presiding officer to serve in that capacity at the pleasure of
  the governor.
         Sec. 201A.006.  PLAN. (a)  The office shall develop and
  adopt a plan to improve the juvenile justice system under the
  authority of the office.
         (b)  The plan must include a detailed list of procedures and
  strategies to:
               (1)  not later than September 1, 2026:
                     (A)  end commitments of children to any of the
  five secure juvenile detention facilities operated by the Texas
  Juvenile Justice Department;
                     (B)  significantly reduce the population of
  children currently committed to each of the five secure juvenile
  detention facilities operated by the Texas Juvenile Justice
  Department;
                     (C)  establish infrastructure in each county in
  this state to provide alternative services related to delinquency
  prevention and intervention, including alternative evidence-based
  safe, local, supportive placements for children who cannot stay at
  home;
                     (D)  establish secure placement options for
  children in cases where the court finds that the offender presents a
  serious security risk of harm to self or others;
                     (E)  increase local, evidence-based delinquency
  responses and interventions in communities and schools; and
                     (F)  end racial and disability disparities for
  children in the juvenile justice system; and
               (2)  not later than September 1, 2030, complete a
  staggered closure of the five secure juvenile detention facilities
  operated by the Texas Juvenile Justice Department.
         (c)  In developing the plan, the office shall consult with
  experts and interested parties, including juvenile probation
  departments.
         (d)  Not later than January 1, 2025, the office shall submit
  a copy of the plan to the governor, the lieutenant governor, the
  speaker of the house of representatives, and each member of the
  legislature.
         (e)  This section expires September 1, 2030.
         Sec. 201A.007.  SUNSET PROVISION. The office is subject to
  Chapter 325, Government Code (Texas Sunset Act).  Unless continued
  in existence as provided by that chapter, the board and office are
  abolished September 1, 2030.
         SECTION 3.  (a)  Chapters 201, 202, and 203, Human Resources
  Code, are repealed.
         SECTION 4.  (a) The Texas Juvenile Justice Department is
  abolished but continues in existence until September 1, 2030, for
  the sole purpose of transferring obligations, property, rights,
  powers, grants, and duties to the Office of Youth Safety and
  Rehabilitation. The Office of Youth Safety and Rehabilitation
  assumes any remaining obligations, property, rights, powers, and
  duties of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department as they exist
  immediately before September 1, 2030.  All unexpended funds under
  the management of the Texas Juvenile Justice Board of the Texas
  Juvenile Justice Department as provided by Chapter 203, Human
  Resources Code, as that chapter existed immediately before the
  effective date of this Act, are transferred to the Office of Youth
  Safety and Rehabilitation for the purpose of administering duties
  under Chapter 201A, Human Resources Code, as added by this Act.
         (b)  The Texas Juvenile Justice Department and the Office of
  Youth Safety and Rehabilitation shall, in consultation with
  appropriate state entities, ensure that the transfer of the
  obligations, property, rights, powers, and duties of the Texas
  Juvenile Justice Department to the Office of Youth Safety and
  Rehabilitation is completed not later than September 1, 2030.
         (c)  All rules of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department are
  continued in effect as rules of the Office of Youth Safety and
  Rehabilitation until superseded by a rule of the Office of Youth
  Safety and Rehabilitation.  An authorization issued by the Texas
  Juvenile Justice Department is continued in effect as provided by
  the law in effect immediately before the effective date of this Act.  
  An authorization pending on the effective date of this Act is
  continued without change in status after the effective date of this
  Act.  A complaint, investigation, or other proceeding pending on
  the effective date of this Act is continued without change in status
  after the effective date of this Act.
         (d)  Unless the context indicates otherwise, a reference to
  the Texas Juvenile Justice Department in a law or administrative
  rule means the Office of Youth Safety and Rehabilitation.
         SECTION 5.  Not later than the 60th day after the effective
  date of this Act, the governor shall appoint members to the Board of
  Youth Safety and Rehabilitation in accordance with Section
  201A.006, Human Resources Code, as added by this Act. In appointing
  the initial members of the board under this section, the governor
  shall designate six members for terms expiring February 1, 2025,
  six members for terms expiring February 1, 2027, and seven members
  for terms expiring February 1, 2029.
         SECTION 6.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2023.