HOUSE BILL REPORT
HB 1663
As Reported by House Committee On:
Children & Family Services
Title: An act relating to development and funding of evidence-based prevention and intervention services.
Brief Description: Creating the prevention and intervention investment council.
Sponsors: Representatives Kagi, Dickerson, Darneille, Walsh, Roberts, McDonald, Pettigrew, McIntire, Tom, Hunter, Nixon, Clibborn, Santos, Rodne, Kenney and Simpson.
Brief History:
Children & Family Services: 2/10/05, 2/16/05 [DPS].
Brief Summary of Substitute Bill |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON CHILDREN & FAMILY SERVICES
Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 7 members: Representatives Kagi, Chair; Roberts, Vice Chair; Walsh, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Darneille, Dickerson, Haler and Pettigrew.
Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 2 members: Representatives Hinkle, Ranking Minority Member; and Dunn.
Staff: Cynthia Forland (786-7152).
Background:
As part of the 2003-05 state operating budget, the Washington State Institute for Public
Policy (WSIPP) was required to conduct research concerning the benefits and costs of
prevention and early intervention programs for children and youth. The WSIPP was required
to:
The WSIPP report, which was completed in September 2004, concluded that certain well-implemented prevention and early intervention programs for youth can achieve significantly more benefits than costs, and that taxpayers will be better off if investments are made in these successful research-based programs. The WSIPP report also found the following:
Based on these findings, the WSIPP concluded that in order to ensure the best possible return for Washington taxpayers the Legislature and Governor should:
effectiveness;
Summary of Substitute Bill:
Prevention and Intervention Investment Council
The Prevention and Intervention Investment Council (Council) is created to direct and
support the following:
In conducting its work, the Council must consult a broad range of available research,
including research conducted by the WSIPP on prevention and early intervention programs.
The Council is to consist of the following 10 members:
Evidence-Based Prevention and Intervention Programs
The Council is required to develop and maintain a defined menu of evidence-based
prevention and intervention programs that have been demonstrated to achieve significantly
more benefits than costs with respect to the two following outcomes:
The Council is also required to develop guidelines for implementation of the identified
programs, which address quality control, adherence to program design, monitoring, and
evaluation.
By July 1, 2006, the Council is required to identify additional outcomes for which it must
develop and maintain defined menus of evidence-based prevention and intervention programs
that have been demonstrated to achieve significantly more benefits than costs with respect to
those outcomes.
The Council must encourage public and private efforts to support training of state staff and
service providers and to expand capacity for the provision of theory-based, research-based,
and evidence-based prevention and intervention services.
Twenty percent of state spending for Alternate Response Systems, Family Preservation
Services, and Early Intervention Public Health Nurse Services must be spent on
evidence-based prevention and intervention programs identified by the Council to achieve
significantly more benefits than costs in reducing child abuse and reducing child neglect.
This funding must be limited to spending for services to families involved with the child
welfare system. With the approval of the Council, the DSHS may spend up to 10 percent of
the designated amount to meet costs of staffing, training, and information system changes
necessary to implement the bill.
Existing state entities that support prevention and intervention programs, including but not
limited to the Washington Council for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect, the Family
Policy Council, and the Governor's Juvenile Justice Advisory Committee, are required to
focus on funding sound, theory-based and research-based prevention and intervention
programs with the goal of expanding the number and type of available evidence-based
programs. These state entities must coordinate their activities with the activities of the
Council.
Further Duties of the Council
The Council is to employ an executive director who is exempt from the provisions of the
state Civil Service law. The council may fix the compensation of the executive director. The
executive director may employ such other staff as are necessary to carry out the purposes of
the bill.
The Council must create a Prevention and Intervention Investment Work Group to provide
technical support to the Council.
Members of the Council must be compensated as a class three group and reimbursed for
travel expenses in accordance with state law.
Definitions
The following definitions apply to the terms used in the bill:
Substitute Bill Compared to Original Bill:
The programs for which the Council is to direct and support ongoing research and evaluation
are expanded to include research-based prevention and intervention programs. The
programs that existing state entities, which support prevention and intervention programs, are
to focus on funding are also expanded to include research-based prevention and intervention
programs.
The membership of the Council is expanded to include the Secretary of the DOH.
The Council is required to encourage public and private efforts to support training of state
staff and service providers and to expand capacity for the provision of theory-based,
research-based, and evidence-based prevention and intervention services.
With the approval of the Council, the DSHS may spend up to 10 percent of the amount
identified in the bill, for funding evidence-based prevention and intervention programs
identified by the Council, to meet costs of staffing, training, and information system changes
necessary to implement the bill.
The following definitions are provided for the terms used in the bill:
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date of Substitute Bill: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: : (In support of original bill) Over the last several years, we have looked at
evidence-based practice, at what the research says and how we can best move forward as a
state to implement evidence-based practice. We have found that there is very little research
in the areas of child abuse and child neglect. We have decided to take a more conservative
approach to this, following the example of the Juvenile Rehabilitation Administration in
shifting funds to evidence-based programs. We need to make sure that our child welfare
funding is increasingly going to evidence-based programs. This is a very exciting direction.
The use of evidence-based practices clearly delivers positive outcomes for the families served
in the child welfare system. The Children's Administration is working with providers to
encourage the use of research-based practices. The entire DSHS has made a commitment to
move towards evidence-based practice. Hopefully the Council will consider adopting a
unified tiered definition of evidence-based practice, such as the Children's Administration,
the Juvenile Justice Administration, and the Health and Rehabilitative Services
Administration have developed. This type of legislation is very cutting edge for child
welfare. There is a great deal of interest across the country in promoting evidence-based
practice in child welfare. It is appreciated that the bill recognizes a range of research and
research-supported programs. It is pleasing to see the legislative interest in prevention
programs, and particularly pleasing to see the inclusion of theory-based programs in the bill.
Some innovative programs that are not strictly evidence-based have been very effective.
Hopefully the current work of Washington Council for the Prevention of Child Abuse and
Neglect (WCPCAN), the Family Policy Council and the Community Networks, and
Governor's Juvenile Justice Advisory Committee is recognized and supported rather than
create duplicative systems. The WSIPP report clearly stated that prevention works, that
prevention pays. This bill is a very, very good next step towards making sure that we are
putting some money into evidence-based programs, and then expanding the list of programs
that achieve the outcomes that we want. This bill is such a great step forward for children
and families of this state. This bill takes the first steps to move appropriate services to
evidence-based practices, creates an investment council to ensure accountability, and does
not take away needed services from those already in the child welfare system. This bill spells
the beginning of a new form of strategic investment in state-sponsored services and creates
new opportunities for collaboration with not-for-profit partners in moving effective services
forward.
(With comments) It is pleasing to see prevention and intervention, rather than prevention and
early intervention, identified in the bill. We need to bring good practice into the rear end of
the system, so that savings can be realized that can be invested in prevention and early
intervention services. Hopefully this will lead to evidence-based foster care, such as
therapeutic foster care, and evidence-based services for the parents of children coming into
foster care. The processes outlined in the bill are elegant and are going to take a long time.
The Children's Administration is already partnering with private agencies to bring some of
the WSIPP programs to child welfare clients right now. We should ensure that the Children's
Administration can access some of the dollars identified in the bill to continue
evidence-based practices that are already underway without waiting for the Council to finish
its work.
(Neutral) Investing in programs proven to be cost-effective, programs that have this type of
research behind them, is strongly supported. Investing in promising programs that are
theory-based and are achieving documented positive outcomes, but may not have benefitted
from control group research, is also supported. The balance that is struck in the bill between
these proven and promising programs is appreciated. The identification of small agencies
like WCPCAN where evaluation and outcome measurement are a priority as the place where
funding of innovative and promising programs should occur is also appreciated.
Research-based programs are often very expensive to implement, and many
community-based agencies cannot afford the up-front and ongoing training and
implementation costs associated with these programs. The effectiveness of many
research-based programs with diverse populations is unclear. There are various types of
credible research, and some programs cannot be evaluated in the way detailed by the WSIPP
and some benefits cannot be monetized using the WSIPP cost-benefit model. More experts
in the field of prevention and early intervention should be on the Council itself or on the
technical work group. Entities like WCPCAN should also be included on the Council or the
technical work group.
Testimony Against: None.
Persons Testifying: : (In support of original bill) Representative Kagi, prime sponsor; Uma
Ahluwalia, Department of Social and Health Services; Gail Gosney, Thurston Community
Network; Laurie Lippold, Children's Home Society; and Thomas Rembiesa, Ruth Dykeman
Children's Center.
(With comments on original bill) Charlotte Booth, Institute for Family Development.
(Neutral on original bill) Joan Sharp, Washington Council for the Prevention of Child Abuse
and Neglect.