E2SSB 5943 -
By Committee on Early Learning & Children's Services
Strike everything after the enacting clause and insert the following:
"NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 The legislature finds that extensive
research conducted by the Washington state institute for public policy
demonstrates the potential for appreciable savings in the state's child
welfare budget by deploying a core set of evidence-based and promising
programs designed to strengthen families and prevent children from
entering the foster care system and reducing the length of stay for
children who do enter the system. The legislature further finds that
achieving improved outcomes for child safety and long-term family
strength and well-being requires renewed thinking and a greater
emphasis on expanding the capacity to deliver evidence-based and
promising prevention and intervention services, earlier positive
engagement with parents and children, more flexibility to focus on
timely permanency outcomes, and more effective utilization of community
resources and private partners. The legislature also finds that the
goal of achieving lasting change in the state's child welfare system
requires building and sustaining the serving capacity of prevention and
early intervention programs through the reinvestment of savings from
reduced foster care caseloads. The legislature further finds that
implementation of these reforms should be approached through
collaborative analysis and planning that includes the relevant state
agencies, Indian tribes and recognized Indian organizations, community
partners, and other stakeholders. The legislature intends to direct
the development of a plan for the first phase of implementation to
begin January 1, 2011.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 A new section is added to chapter 74.13 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The children's administration within the department shall
implement two demonstration reform initiatives utilizing performance-based contracts for an array of evidence-based and promising prevention
and intervention services for families who are at risk for an out-of-home placement or have a child in out-of-home care, and for children
who are awaiting adoption. Two sites shall be selected, one for each
of the following approaches to the implementation of performance-based
contracting:
(a) Performance-based contracts shall govern the delivery of all
child welfare services, including case management services; voluntary
and in-home services; out-of-home care services; and permanency
services relating to reunification, guardianship, adoption, and
preparation for independent living; and
(b) Performance-based contracts shall govern the delivery of child
welfare services to children and families, including voluntary and in-home services; out-of-home care services; and permanency services
relating to reunification, guardianship, adoption, and preparation for
independent living. Case management services shall continue to be the
responsibility of child welfare caseworkers employed by the children's
administration.
(2) The children's administration shall retain statewide
responsibility for:
(a) Child protection functions and services, including intake and
investigation of allegations of child abuse and neglect, emergency
shelter care functions under RCW 13.34.050, and referrals to
appropriate providers, services, or programs; and
(b) Licensing functions relating to child protection and child
welfare services, including licensing of foster family homes, group
homes, and other facilities serving children.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 A new section is added to chapter 74.13 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The performance contracting oversight committee is established
for the primary purpose of providing expertise, structure, guidance,
and oversight for the implementation of sections 1 through 5 of this
act. Membership of the committee shall include:
(a) Two representatives from private nonprofit agencies providing
child welfare services to children and families referred by the
department, including one representative of licensed child placing
agencies;
(b) The assistant secretary of the children's administration in the
department, who shall serve as cochair of the committee;
(c) One regional administrator and one area administrator in the
children's administration selected by the assistant secretary;
(d) The administrator for the division of licensed resources in the
children's administration;
(e) Two nationally recognized experts in performance-based
contracting;
(f) The attorney general or his or her designee;
(g) A representative of the collective bargaining unit that
represents the largest number of employees in the children's
administration;
(h) A representative from the office of the family and children's
ombudsman;
(i) Two representatives from the Indian policy advisory committee
convened by the department's office of Indian policy and support
services;
(j) Two currently elected or former superior court judges with
significant experience in dependency matters, selected by the superior
court judges' association;
(k) One representative from partners for our children affiliated
with the University of Washington school of social work, who shall
serve as cochair of the committee;
(l) Two members of the legislature, one from each chamber, selected
jointly by the speaker of the house of representatives and the
president of the senate; and
(m) A representative of foster care providers.
(2) The cochairs of the committee shall convene the first meeting
of the committee by June 15, 2009.
(3) The committee shall develop the criteria for the implementation
of performance-based contracts at the demonstration sites in a manner
to minimize any potential loss of federal funds. The criteria must be
sufficient for the children's administration to develop requests for
proposal and must describe:
(a) The services to be delivered under the contracts in order to
assure providers have the flexibility to provide adequate, appropriate,
and relevant evidence-based and promising services to individual
children and families;
(b) The outcome measures to be used to evaluate performance under
the contracts and the tools to be utilized to collect and report data
on performance;
(c) The procedure for referring families to contracted providers,
including clear protocols for continued communication or coordination
between contracted providers and the children's administration, and
Indian tribes in order to assure child safety and well-being and to
promote the family's engagement;
(d) The rate structures of the contracts, including incentives and
reinvestments, if any, as well as how performance will be linked to
opportunities to bid on future contracts;
(e) A plan for communicating with the multiple child-serving
systems within the demonstration site regarding implementation of the
contracts, including clear descriptions of new roles and functions of
contracted case managers, where appropriate. The communication plan
shall include a process for early and ongoing communications throughout
the demonstration site, including a process for establishing and
maintaining communication with Indian tribes and organizations within
the demonstration site;
(f) Methods to be used for monitoring contract performance,
assuring quality of services, and ensuring compliance with state and
federal laws including, but not limited to, requirements tied to
federal funding for foster care, and the Indian child welfare act as
well as the related guidelines and protocols established between the
state and tribes;
(g) Estimates of start-up costs, including a discussion of how
those costs will be distributed under the contracts; and
(h) Recommendations for the distribution of legal and financial
risk and liability between the state and contracted partners.
(4) The criteria developed for the demonstration site described in
section 2(1)(b) of this act also shall include recommendations for the
optimum balance of shared responsibility for delivering child
protection services and child welfare services between the state and
community-based providers, including a description of the core
functions to be performed by each.
(5) The demonstration sites shall be selected by the committee and
shall include consideration of:
(a) The infrastructure and capacity of the site for delivering an
array of evidence-based and promising prevention and intervention
services, paying particular attention to the research developed by the
Washington state institute for public policy regarding preventing the
need for and reducing the duration of foster care placements;
(b) The willingness and ability of the site's community providers,
children's administration staff, and other stakeholders to effectively
collaborate in the development and implementation of performance-based
contracts for the delivery of child welfare services; and
(c) The existence of multidisciplinary or multisystem work on
performance improvement or reform efforts within the site that may
harmonize with or support the implementation of performance-based
contracts.
(6) After the sites have been selected, the committee shall convene
appropriate site transition teams to develop their respective
transition plans to implement the contracts. Site teams shall include
those persons identified by the assistant secretary and the executive
director as being essential to developing a comprehensive transition
plan.
(7) The committee shall select the demonstration sites and notify
the governor and the legislature of the site selections, and by
December 1, 2010, the committee shall brief the governor and the
legislature on the phased implementation plans for each site. The
phased implementation of contracts shall begin January 1, 2011.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4 A new section is added to chapter 74.13 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The assistant secretary of the children's administration and
the director of partners for our children, or their designees, shall
provide the governor, the appropriate committees of the legislature,
and the performance contracting oversight committee with:
(a) Periodic updates on the development of the transition plans via
electronically filed reports or in-person briefings, as convenient or
practicable; and
(b) Quarterly updates via electronically filed reports beginning
March 31, 2011, of the transition progress and operations at the
demonstration sites.
(2) Partners for our children shall evaluate the implementation and
operation of the demonstration sites and shall provide annual reports
to the performance contracting oversight committee, the legislature,
and the governor beginning January 1, 2013. The evaluation shall
analyze to what extent the reforms implemented in the demonstration
sites have resulted in improved outcomes for children and families,
increased efficiencies in the delivery of child welfare services, and
enhanced partnerships with community partners and stakeholders.
(3) By December 31, 2013, the assistant secretary of the children's
administration and the executive director of partners for our children
shall provide the governor and the legislature with recommendations for
expansion and continued operation of the demonstration sites, including
recommendations for adjustments to operations based on experiences in
the demonstration sites.
(4) Based on the recommendations, the governor may direct the
children's administration to develop implementation plans and expand
the use of performance-based contracts according to the same standards
required for development of the demonstration sites as described in
this section, or may direct the demonstration to terminate. Any
expansion plans shall reflect the recommendations and lessons learned
from the evaluation of the demonstration sites.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 The department of social and health
services, the office of financial management, and the caseload forecast
council shall develop a proposal for submission to the legislature and
the governor for the reinvestment of savings in the demonstration sites
into evidence-based prevention and intervention programs designed to
prevent the need for or reduce the duration of foster care placements
in the demonstration sites. The proposal shall be consistent with the
proposed implementation plans developed under sections 2 and 3 of this
act and must be submitted to the legislature and the governor by
November 30, 2010, and shall include sufficient detail regarding
accounting, budgeting, and allocation or other procedures for
legislative consideration and approval.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 6 A new section is added to chapter 41.06 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The children's administration within the department of social
and health services may purchase child welfare services, including
services that have been customarily and historically provided by
employees in the classified service under this chapter, by contracting
with individuals, nonprofit organizations, businesses, employee
business units, or other entities if the following criteria are met:
(a) The invitation for bid or request for proposal contains
measurable standards for the performance of the contract;
(b) Employees in the classified service whose positions or work
would be displaced by the contract are provided an opportunity to offer
alternatives to purchasing services by contract and, if these
alternatives are not accepted, compete for the contract under
competitive contracting procedures in subsection (4) of this section;
(c) The contract with an entity other than an employee business
unit includes a provision requiring the entity to consider employment
of state employees who may be displaced by the contract; and
(d) The children's administration has established a contract
monitoring process to measure contract performance, costs, service
delivery quality, and other contract standards, and to cancel contracts
that do not meet those standards.
(2) Any provision contrary to or in conflict with this section in
any collective bargaining agreement in effect on the effective date of
this section, is not effective beyond the expiration date of the
agreement.
(3) Contracting for services that is expressly mandated by the
legislature or was authorized by law prior to the effective date of
this section, including contracts and agreements between public
entities, shall not be subject to the processes set forth in
subsections (1), (4), and (5) of this section.
(4) Competitive contracting shall be implemented as follows:
(a) At least ninety days prior to the date the children's
administration requests bids from private entities for a contract for
services provided by classified employees, the children's
administration shall notify the classified employees whose positions or
work would be displaced by the contract. The employees shall have
sixty days from the date of notification to offer alternatives to
purchasing services by contract, and the children's administration
shall consider the alternatives before requesting bids.
(b) If the employees decide to compete for the contract, they shall
notify the children's administration of their decision. Employees must
form one or more employee business units for the purpose of submitting
a bid or bids to perform the services.
(c) The director of personnel, with the advice and assistance of
the department of general administration, shall develop and make
available to employee business units training in the bidding process
and general bid preparation.
(d) The director of general administration, with the advice and
assistance of the department of personnel, shall, by rule, establish
procedures to ensure that bids are submitted and evaluated in a fair
and objective manner and that there exists a competitive market for the
service. Such rules shall include, but not be limited to: (i)
Prohibitions against participation in the bid evaluation process by
employees who prepared the business unit's bid or who perform any of
the services to be contracted; (ii) provisions to ensure no bidder
receives an advantage over other bidders and that bid requirements are
applied equitably to all parties; and (iii) procedures that require the
contracting agency to receive complaints regarding the bidding process
and to consider them before awarding the contract. Appeal of an
agency's actions under this subsection is an adjudicative proceeding
and subject to the applicable provisions of chapter 34.05 RCW, the
administrative procedure act, with the final decision to be rendered by
an administrative law judge assigned under chapter 34.12 RCW.
(e) An employee business unit's bid must include the indirect
overhead costs of the function, including the cost of the employees'
salaries and benefits, rent, utilities, equipment, materials, and other
costs necessary to perform the function and attributed directly to the
function in question.
(f) The children's administration may contract with the department
of general administration to conduct the bidding process.
(5) As used in this section:
(a) "Children's administration" means the children's administration
within the department of social and health services.
(b) "Competitive contracting" means the process by which classified
employees of a department, agency, or institution of higher education
compete with businesses, individuals, nonprofit organizations, or other
entities for contracts authorized by subsection (1) of this section.
"Indirect overhead costs" means the pro rata share of existing agency
administrative salaries and benefits, and rent, equipment costs,
utilities, and materials associated with those administrative
functions.
(c) "Employee business unit" means a group of employees who perform
services to be contracted under this section and who submit a bid for
the performance of those services under subsection (4) of this section.
(d) "Indirect overhead costs" means the pro rata share of existing
agency administrative salaries and benefits, and rent, equipment costs,
utilities, and materials associated with those administrative
functions.
Sec. 7 RCW 41.06.142 and 2008 c 267 s 9 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) Any department, agency, or institution of higher education may
purchase services, including services that have been customarily and
historically provided by employees in the classified service under this
chapter, by contracting with individuals, nonprofit organizations,
businesses, employee business units, or other entities if the following
criteria are met:
(a) The invitation for bid or request for proposal contains
measurable standards for the performance of the contract;
(b) Employees in the classified service whose positions or work
would be displaced by the contract are provided an opportunity to offer
alternatives to purchasing services by contract and, if these
alternatives are not accepted, compete for the contract under
competitive contracting procedures in subsection (4) of this section;
(c) The contract with an entity other than an employee business
unit includes a provision requiring the entity to consider employment
of state employees who may be displaced by the contract;
(d) The department, agency, or institution of higher education has
established a contract monitoring process to measure contract
performance, costs, service delivery quality, and other contract
standards, and to cancel contracts that do not meet those standards;
and
(e) The department, agency, or institution of higher education has
determined that the contract results in savings or efficiency
improvements. The contracting agency must consider the consequences
and potential mitigation of improper or failed performance by the
contractor.
(2) Any provision contrary to or in conflict with this section in
any collective bargaining agreement in effect on July 1, 2005, is not
effective beyond the expiration date of the agreement.
(3) Contracting for services that is expressly mandated by the
legislature or was authorized by law prior to July 1, 2005, including
contracts and agreements between public entities, shall not be subject
to the processes set forth in subsections (1), (4), and (5) of this
section.
(4) Competitive contracting shall be implemented as follows:
(a) At least ninety days prior to the date the contracting agency
requests bids from private entities for a contract for services
provided by classified employees, the contracting agency shall notify
the classified employees whose positions or work would be displaced by
the contract. The employees shall have sixty days from the date of
notification to offer alternatives to purchasing services by contract,
and the agency shall consider the alternatives before requesting bids.
(b) If the employees decide to compete for the contract, they shall
notify the contracting agency of their decision. Employees must form
one or more employee business units for the purpose of submitting a bid
or bids to perform the services.
(c) The director of personnel, with the advice and assistance of
the department of general administration, shall develop and make
available to employee business units training in the bidding process
and general bid preparation.
(d) The director of general administration, with the advice and
assistance of the department of personnel, shall, by rule, establish
procedures to ensure that bids are submitted and evaluated in a fair
and objective manner and that there exists a competitive market for the
service. Such rules shall include, but not be limited to: (i)
Prohibitions against participation in the bid evaluation process by
employees who prepared the business unit's bid or who perform any of
the services to be contracted; (ii) provisions to ensure no bidder
receives an advantage over other bidders and that bid requirements are
applied equitably to all parties; and (iii) procedures that require the
contracting agency to receive complaints regarding the bidding process
and to consider them before awarding the contract. Appeal of an
agency's actions under this subsection is an adjudicative proceeding
and subject to the applicable provisions of chapter 34.05 RCW, the
administrative procedure act, with the final decision to be rendered by
an administrative law judge assigned under chapter 34.12 RCW.
(e) An employee business unit's bid must include the fully
allocated costs of the service, including the cost of the employees'
salaries and benefits, space, equipment, materials, and other costs
necessary to perform the function. An employee business unit's cost
shall not include the state's indirect overhead costs unless those
costs can be attributed directly to the function in question and would
not exist if that function were not performed in state service.
(f) A department, agency, or institution of higher education may
contract with the department of general administration to conduct the
bidding process.
(5) As used in this section:
(a) "Employee business unit" means a group of employees who perform
services to be contracted under this section and who submit a bid for
the performance of those services under subsection (4) of this section.
(b) "Indirect overhead costs" means the pro rata share of existing
agency administrative salaries and benefits, and rent, equipment costs,
utilities, and materials associated with those administrative
functions.
(c) "Competitive contracting" means the process by which classified
employees of a department, agency, or institution of higher education
compete with businesses, individuals, nonprofit organizations, or other
entities for contracts authorized by subsection (1) of this section.
(6) The requirements of this section do not apply to RCW
74.13.031(5) and sections 1 through 6 of this act.
Sec. 8 RCW 74.13.020 and 1999 c 267 s 7 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) As used in Title 74 RCW, "child welfare services ((shall be
defined as public))" mean publicly provided or contracted social
services including adoption services which strengthen, supplement, or
substitute for, parental care and supervision for the purpose of:
(((1))) (a) Preventing or remedying, or assisting in the solution
of problems which may result in families in conflict, or the neglect,
abuse, exploitation, or criminal behavior of children;
(((2))) (b) Protecting and caring for dependent or neglected
children;
(((3))) (c) Assisting children who are in conflict with their
parents, and assisting parents who are in conflict with their children
with services designed to resolve such conflicts;
(((4))) (d) Protecting and promoting the welfare of children,
including the strengthening of their own homes where possible, or,
where needed;
(((5))) (e) Providing adequate care of children away from their
homes in foster family homes or day care or other child care agencies
or facilities.
((As used in)) (2) For purposes of this chapter((,)) and chapter
74.15 RCW:
(a) "Child" means a person less than eighteen years of age;
(b) "Department" means the department of social and health services
or a supervising agency with whom the department has contracted for the
provision of child welfare services under sections 1 through 6 of this
act.
(3) The department's duty to provide services to homeless families
with children is set forth in RCW 43.20A.790 and in appropriations
provided by the legislature for implementation of the plan.
Sec. 9 RCW 74.15.020 and 2007 c 412 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
For the purpose of this chapter and RCW 74.13.031, and unless
otherwise clearly indicated by the context thereof, the following terms
shall mean:
(1) "Agency" means any person, firm, partnership, association,
corporation, or facility which receives children, expectant mothers, or
persons with developmental disabilities for control, care, or
maintenance outside their own homes, or which places, arranges the
placement of, or assists in the placement of children, expectant
mothers, or persons with developmental disabilities for foster care or
placement of children for adoption, and shall include the following
irrespective of whether there is compensation to the agency or to the
children, expectant mothers or persons with developmental disabilities
for services rendered:
(a) "Child-placing agency" means an agency which places a child or
children for temporary care, continued care, or for adoption;
(b) "Community facility" means a group care facility operated for
the care of juveniles committed to the department under RCW 13.40.185.
A county detention facility that houses juveniles committed to the
department under RCW 13.40.185 pursuant to a contract with the
department is not a community facility;
(c) "Crisis residential center" means an agency which is a
temporary protective residential facility operated to perform the
duties specified in chapter 13.32A RCW, in the manner provided in RCW
74.13.032 through 74.13.036;
(d) "Emergency respite center" is an agency that may be commonly
known as a crisis nursery, that provides emergency and crisis care for
up to seventy-two hours to children who have been admitted by their
parents or guardians to prevent abuse or neglect. Emergency respite
centers may operate for up to twenty-four hours a day, and for up to
seven days a week. Emergency respite centers may provide care for
children ages birth through seventeen, and for persons eighteen through
twenty with developmental disabilities who are admitted with a sibling
or siblings through age seventeen. Emergency respite centers may not
substitute for crisis residential centers or HOPE centers, or any other
services defined under this section, and may not substitute for
services which are required under chapter 13.32A or 13.34 RCW;
(e) "Foster-family home" means an agency which regularly provides
care on a twenty-four hour basis to one or more children, expectant
mothers, or persons with developmental disabilities in the family abode
of the person or persons under whose direct care and supervision the
child, expectant mother, or person with a developmental disability is
placed;
(f) "Group-care facility" means an agency, other than a foster-family home, which is maintained and operated for the care of a group
of children on a twenty-four hour basis;
(g) "HOPE center" means an agency licensed by the secretary to
provide temporary residential placement and other services to street
youth. A street youth may remain in a HOPE center for thirty days
while services are arranged and permanent placement is coordinated. No
street youth may stay longer than thirty days unless approved by the
department and any additional days approved by the department must be
based on the unavailability of a long-term placement option. A street
youth whose parent wants him or her returned to home may remain in a
HOPE center until his or her parent arranges return of the youth, not
longer. All other street youth must have court approval under chapter
13.34 or 13.32A RCW to remain in a HOPE center up to thirty days;
(h) "Maternity service" means an agency which provides or arranges
for care or services to expectant mothers, before or during
confinement, or which provides care as needed to mothers and their
infants after confinement;
(i) "Responsible living skills program" means an agency licensed by
the secretary that provides residential and transitional living
services to persons ages sixteen to eighteen who are dependent under
chapter 13.34 RCW and who have been unable to live in his or her
legally authorized residence and, as a result, the minor lived outdoors
or in another unsafe location not intended for occupancy by the minor.
Dependent minors ages fourteen and fifteen may be eligible if no other
placement alternative is available and the department approves the
placement;
(j) "Service provider" means the entity that operates a community
facility.
(2) "Agency" shall not include the following:
(a) Persons related to the child, expectant mother, or person with
developmental disability in the following ways:
(i) Any blood relative, including those of half-blood, and
including first cousins, second cousins, nephews or nieces, and persons
of preceding generations as denoted by prefixes of grand, great, or
great-great;
(ii) Stepfather, stepmother, stepbrother, and stepsister;
(iii) A person who legally adopts a child or the child's parent as
well as the natural and other legally adopted children of such persons,
and other relatives of the adoptive parents in accordance with state
law;
(iv) Spouses of any persons named in (i), (ii), or (iii) of this
subsection (2)(a), even after the marriage is terminated;
(v) Relatives, as named in (i), (ii), (iii), or (iv) of this
subsection (2)(a), of any half sibling of the child; or
(vi) Extended family members, as defined by the law or custom of
the Indian child's tribe or, in the absence of such law or custom, a
person who has reached the age of eighteen and who is the Indian
child's grandparent, aunt or uncle, brother or sister, brother-in-law
or sister-in-law, niece or nephew, first or second cousin, or
stepparent who provides care in the family abode on a twenty-four-hour
basis to an Indian child as defined in 25 U.S.C. Sec. 1903(4);
(b) Persons who are legal guardians of the child, expectant mother,
or persons with developmental disabilities;
(c) Persons who care for a neighbor's or friend's child or
children, with or without compensation, where the parent and person
providing care on a twenty-four-hour basis have agreed to the placement
in writing and the state is not providing any payment for the care;
(d) A person, partnership, corporation, or other entity that
provides placement or similar services to exchange students or
international student exchange visitors or persons who have the care of
an exchange student in their home;
(e) A person, partnership, corporation, or other entity that
provides placement or similar services to international children who
have entered the country by obtaining visas that meet the criteria for
medical care as established by the United States immigration and
naturalization service, or persons who have the care of such an
international child in their home;
(f) Schools, including boarding schools, which are engaged
primarily in education, operate on a definite school year schedule,
follow a stated academic curriculum, accept only school-age children
and do not accept custody of children;
(g) Hospitals licensed pursuant to chapter 70.41 RCW when
performing functions defined in chapter 70.41 RCW, nursing homes
licensed under chapter 18.51 RCW and boarding homes licensed under
chapter 18.20 RCW;
(h) Licensed physicians or lawyers;
(i) Facilities approved and certified under chapter 71A.22 RCW;
(j) Any agency having been in operation in this state ten years
prior to June 8, 1967, and not seeking or accepting moneys or
assistance from any state or federal agency, and is supported in part
by an endowment or trust fund;
(k) Persons who have a child in their home for purposes of
adoption, if the child was placed in such home by a licensed child-placing agency, an authorized public or tribal agency or court or if a
replacement report has been filed under chapter 26.33 RCW and the
placement has been approved by the court;
(l) An agency operated by any unit of local, state, or federal
government or an agency licensed by an Indian tribe pursuant to RCW
74.15.190;
(m) A maximum or medium security program for juvenile offenders
operated by or under contract with the department;
(n) An agency located on a federal military reservation, except
where the military authorities request that such agency be subject to
the licensing requirements of this chapter.
(3) "Department" means the state department of social and health
services or a supervising agency with whom the department has
contracted for the provision of child welfare services under sections
1 through 6 of this act. For the purposes of child protective services
and licensing, "department" means only the department of social and
health services.
(4) "Family child care licensee" means a person who: (a) Provides
regularly scheduled care for a child or children in the home of the
provider for periods of less than twenty-four hours or, if necessary
due to the nature of the parent's work, for periods equal to or greater
than twenty-four hours; (b) does not receive child care subsidies; and
(c) is licensed by the state under RCW 74.15.030.
(5) "Juvenile" means a person under the age of twenty-one who has
been sentenced to a term of confinement under the supervision of the
department under RCW 13.40.185.
(6) "Probationary license" means a license issued as a disciplinary
measure to an agency that has previously been issued a full license but
is out of compliance with licensing standards.
(7) "Requirement" means any rule, regulation, or standard of care
to be maintained by an agency.
(8) "Secretary" means the secretary of social and health services.
(9) "Street youth" means a person under the age of eighteen who
lives outdoors or in another unsafe location not intended for occupancy
by the minor and who is not residing with his or her parent or at his
or her legally authorized residence.
(10) "Supervising agency" means a private nonprofit agency licensed
by the state or an Indian tribe with whom the department has contracted
under sections 1 through 6 of this act for the provision of child
welfare services. In no case may a supervising agency be contracted to
license persons or facilities under this title or to provide child
protective services.
(11) "Transitional living services" means at a minimum, to the
extent funds are available, the following:
(a) Educational services, including basic literacy and
computational skills training, either in local alternative or public
high schools or in a high school equivalency program that leads to
obtaining a high school equivalency degree;
(b) Assistance and counseling related to obtaining vocational
training or higher education, job readiness, job search assistance, and
placement programs;
(c) Counseling and instruction in life skills such as money
management, home management, consumer skills, parenting, health care,
access to community resources, and transportation and housing options;
(d) Individual and group counseling; and
(e) Establishing networks with federal agencies and state and local
organizations such as the United States department of labor, employment
and training administration programs including the job training
partnership act which administers private industry councils and the job
corps; vocational rehabilitation; and volunteer programs.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 10 Section 3 of this act is necessary for the
immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety, or
support of the state government and its existing public institutions,
and takes effect immediately."
Correct the title.