CERTIFICATION OF ENROLLMENT

SUBSTITUTE HOUSE BILL 2657



62nd Legislature
2012 Regular Session

Passed by the House February 9, 2012
  Yeas 97   Nays 0


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Speaker of the House of Representatives


Passed by the Senate February 29, 2012
  Yeas 49   Nays 0



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President of the Senate
CERTIFICATE

I, Barbara Baker, Chief Clerk of the House of Representatives of the State of Washington, do hereby certify that the attached is SUBSTITUTE HOUSE BILL 2657 as passed by the House of Representatives and the Senate on the dates hereon set forth.



________________________________________    
Chief Clerk
Approved 









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Governor of the State of Washington
FILED







Secretary of State
State of Washington


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SUBSTITUTE HOUSE BILL 2657
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Passed Legislature - 2012 Regular Session
State of Washington62nd Legislature2012 Regular Session

By House Health & Human Services Appropriations & Oversight (originally sponsored by Representatives Roberts, Kagi, Maxwell, and Kenney)

READ FIRST TIME 02/06/12.   



     AN ACT Relating to adoption support expenditures; adding new sections to chapter 74.13A RCW; adding a new section to chapter 71.36 RCW; and providing an expiration date.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

NEW SECTION.  Sec. 1   A new section is added to chapter 74.13A RCW to read as follows:
     The legislature finds that the current state adoption support policy to encourage, within available funds, the adoption of certain hard to place children, has expedited permanency for children who are unable to reunify with their family and has resulted in savings otherwise spent on foster care.
     The legislature also finds that current economic conditions have reduced state funds available for many critical programs. The legislature further finds that adoption support expenditures continue to increase. Given these realities, the legislature finds there is a need to control adoption support costs without adversely impacting permanency for state dependent children.
     The legislature acknowledges that the best way to reduce adoption support and foster care expenditures is to safely prevent children from entering the foster care system. However, the legislature also finds that the recent prospective reduction to adoption support payments set forth in chapter 50, Laws of 2011 1st sp. sess. has not, to date, adversely impacted permanency for foster children in need of adoptive homes.
     Therefore, the legislature intends to continue the adoption assistance rate reduction beyond the period set forth in the operating budget, while focusing on sustainable long-term efforts to prevent children from entering the foster care system, such as pursuing a potential federal Title IV-E waiver, which if granted, would allow Washington to reinvest dollars otherwise spent on foster care in prevention programs.
     The legislature also finds that many adoptive parents spend adoption support payments on additional mental health services for adoptive children that are not currently covered by existing public programs. The legislature intends to offset adoption support payment expenditures by facilitating efforts to improve the access and quality of existing mental health services for adoptive families in the long term.

NEW SECTION.  Sec. 2   A new section is added to chapter 74.13A RCW to read as follows:
     (1) To ensure expenditures continue to remain within available funds as required by RCW 74.13A.005 and 74.13A.020, the secretary shall not set the amount of any adoption assistance payment or payments, made pursuant to RCW 26.33.320 and 74.13A.005 through 74.13A.080, to more than eighty percent of the foster care maintenance payment for that child had he or she remained in a foster family home during the same period. This subsection applies prospectively to adoption assistance agreements established on or after July 1, 2013.
     (2) The department must establish a central unit of adoption support negotiators to help ensure consistent negotiation of adoption support agreements that will balance the needs of adoptive families with the state's need to remain fiscally responsible.     
     (3) The department must request, in writing, that adoptive families with existing adoption support contracts renegotiate their contracts to establish lower adoption assistance payments if it is fiscally feasible for the family to do so. The department shall explain that adoption support contracts may be renegotiated as needs arise.

NEW SECTION.  Sec. 3   A new section is added to chapter 71.36 RCW to read as follows:
     (1) The department of social and health services, division of behavioral health and recovery, shall convene a work group as part of its children's mental health redesign process, to develop recommendations to better address the mental health service needs of adoptive families and reduce the need for adoptive families to spend adoption support payments on mental health services for their adoptive children. In developing recommendations, the work group should assess:
     (a) The mental health service needs of children in adoption support households;
     (b) Existing service and provider capacity to meet the identified needs of children in adoption support households; and
     (c) Additional provider training, consultation or capacity necessary to meet unmet service needs, and increase the use of appropriate evidence-based practices.
     (2) The work group must include, but is not limited to, representatives from the department of social and health services children's administration, the health care authority, the University of Washington department of psychiatry, the children's mental health evidence-based practice institute, regional support networks, mental health service providers, health plans, primary care providers, tribes, adoptive families, and representatives from other relevant organizations as needed. The work group shall issue its recommendations to the legislature no later than December 15, 2012.
     (3) This section expires August 1, 2013.

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