Dependency Court Proceedings.
Anyone, including the Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF), may file a petition in court alleging that a child should be a dependent of the state due to abandonment, abuse, neglect, or because there is no parent, guardian, or custodian capable of adequately caring for the child. For purposes of dependency court proceedings, the term "abandoned" means when the child's parent, guardian, or other custodian has expressed, either by statement or conduct, an intent to forego, for an extended period, parental rights or responsibilities despite an ability to exercise such rights and responsibilities.
These petitions must be verified and contain a statement of facts that constitute a dependency and the names and residence of the parents if known. When a child is taken into custody, the court is to hold a shelter care hearing within 72 hours. The primary purpose of the shelter care hearing is to determine whether the child can be immediately and safely returned home while the dependency case is being resolved. If a court determines that a child is dependent, the court will conduct periodic reviews and make determinations regarding the child's placement, provision of services by the DCYF, compliance of the parents, and whether progress has been made by the parents.
Candidate for Foster Care.
A child who is a candidate for foster care is a child who the DCYF identifies as being at imminent risk of entering foster care but who can remain safely in the child's home or in a kinship placement as long as services or programs that are necessary to prevent entry of the child into foster care are provided, and includes a child whose adoption or guardianship arrangement is at risk of a disruption or dissolution that would result in a foster care placement.
A child who is a candidate for foster care includes when:
Voluntary Placement Agreements.
The DCYF may enter into a voluntary placement agreement with a parent to place a child with a relative or in a licensed foster home when:
The Governor must maintain a Children and Youth Multisystem Care Coordinator (Care Coordinator) to serve as a state lead on addressing complex cases of children in crisis. The Care Coordinator must direct:
Additionally, the Care Coordinator must:
The term "child in crisis" is defined to mean a person under age 18 who is:
The Care Coordinator, in coordination with the DCYF, the Health Care Authority (HCA), the Office of Financial Management (OFM), and the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS), shall develop and implement a Team for the purpose of supporting and identifying appropriate services and living arrangements for a child in crisis, and that child's family, if appropriate. The Team must be implemented as soon as possible, but no later than January 1, 2024.
The Team's work is managed and directed by the Care Coordinator, working to quickly identify the appropriate services and living arrangements for a child in crisis. A Team must include:
In creating the Team, the Care Coordinator must develop and implement a system for:
The Team may provide assistance and support to a child in crisis, or the family of a child in crisis.
Individuals who may refer a child in crisis to the Team include:
By November 1, 2023, the Governor must provide an initial report to the Legislature describing the process of developing and implementing the Team created under this section, and must include a projection of when the Team process will be implemented. By November 1, 2024, the Governor shall provide a final report to the Legislature, including data and recommendations related to the Team.
The substitute bill requires that the Children and Youth Multisystem Care Coordinator (Care Coordinator) created in the underlying bill direct appropriate and timely action by state agencies to serve children in crisis.
The substitute bill requires that the Care Coordinator coordinate with:
The substitute bill adds a representative from a managed care organization and a youth behavioral health or inpatient navigator team to the list of people who can refer to the Team.
The substitute bill specifies in the catchall category of entities and individuals that the Care Coordinator may include in the Team that this may include governmental entities, managed care organizations, clinicians, and other service providers.
The substitute bill requires that the report required in the underlying bill regarding Teams include discussion regarding the implementation of youth behavioral health and inpatient navigator programs and their role in serving children in crisis.
(In support) Hospitals are where people go when there is an emergency. A child in crisis is also a family in crisis. A trip to the emergency room often provides relief. For some, that visit does not result in relief from a concrete medical issue. Finding the right support for a child and family in crisis is very challenging and very complex. Each child and family in this scenario has a unique story.
This bill is about helping to support families to allow children to safely discharge from hospitals.
There are about 15 to 200 children boarding in Washington hospitals.
This bill creates a multisystem response and a responsible entity for this issue.
A change in the interpretation of the abandonment statute, and not a change in the statute itself, has led to more children remaining in hospitals. Typically these children are connected to several state agencies.
Children are stuck in adult hospitals as well as the three children's hospitals in the state.
Seattle Children's Hospital has repeatedly had children remain in the hospital for as long as a year or two following a psychiatric admission. Prolonged stays in a hospital setting has a detrimental impact on a child's health.
There is currently minimal accountability for state services responsible for providing support for these children. The process created in this bill will allow agencies and providers to come together more effectively. It is critical that there is a process that makes agencies and providers come together more effectively to create a plan of services for children who no longer need to be hospitalized and have nowhere else to go.
Since 2021 Mary Bridge Hospital (Mary Bridge) has boarded over 23 children for over 600 days because their parents could not safely bring them home. These children have complex developmental challenges that overwhelm their families. In desperation, families bring their children to hospitals in hopes that their child will find an out-of-home placement to foster their child's recovery. No one agency can provide all that is necessary for kids to be healthy and well. The complexity of these cases led Mary Bridge to quickly understand that creating safe dispositions for kids stuck in hospitals requires a collective approach with funding from the Legislature for youth and inpatient navigators we developed regional multidisciplinary teams focused on complex and difficult to discharge patients. The Pierce County multidisciplinary team helped find the 23 children at Mary Bridge a way to return to the community with the appropriate services.
Some of these children spend their days in windowless hospital rooms for days on end. Imagine being in an 8 by 8 foot room with no windows for over a year. The only exercise the person gets is walking down the hallway. The individual listens to the trauma coming in and out of the hospital all day and eat cold grilled cheese sandwiches.
Some of the children who are boarding in hospitals require a higher level of care than can be provided at home, but that does not appear to exist in this state. There needs to be better places for children and families.
There are children in virtually every hospital across the state spending days, weeks, and even years unnecessarily.
The emergency rooms in hospitals are already overrun. These children do not have adequate therapy, especially when living in adult hospitals.
The resources should be spent helping get these children back in the community.
This bill is necessary for children and families across the state, particularly the children staying in nonpediatric hospitals that are not designed for their needs.
Children across the state have severe mental health needs. There is an increase in youth using fentanyl. Finding inpatient treatment centers is difficult.
One of the recommendations of the Developmental Disabilities Ombuds report is creating support navigating services. This bill would help build cross-system partnerships. This would be beneficial for building services to help support these children in crisis.
(Opposed) None.
The second substitute bill adds a null and void clause, making the act null and void if specific funding for the act is not provided in the omnibus appropriations act by June 30, 2023.
(In support) The bill creates a multisystem response to meet the needs of youth who are stuck in hospitals. There are inadequate community resources to support youth whose behaviors and needs exceed what their families can safely manage at home. The current process does not work. The bill allows every player to come to the table. There are both direct and indirect costs when children are stuck in hospitals. When pediatric emergency departments are constrained, children may be diverted to hospitals outside their community, or stay in adult facilities without access to pediatric behavioral health services.
(Opposed) Multiple systems for children in crisis already exist, including the juvenile criminal system and the Department of Children, Youth, and Families. Existing laws exclude parents from adolescent health care, and this bill could further cut parents out of the process. The bill expands the powers of the executive office, which could lead to abuse by ideologically-driven appointees. Language could be added to the bill to enhance the role of parents in the processes described in the bill. Language could be added to the bill clarifying whether members of the Rapid Care Team would be personally liable.