BILL REQ. #: H-0870.3
State of Washington | 60th Legislature | 2007 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/25/2007. Referred to Committee on Early Learning & Children's Services.
AN ACT Relating to creating a domestic violence pilot program to colocate a domestic violence advocate in department of social and health services offices; adding a new section to chapter 74.13 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 74.13 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The department of social and health services shall create a
pilot program to place a domestic violence advocate and a specialized
domestic violence supervisor in a minimum of two division of children
and family services offices.
(2) The purpose of the program is to provide domestic violence
safety planning, advocacy, information, and support to adult victims of
domestic violence who are receiving services from the division of
children and family services offices, and to increase the capacity of
division of children and family services workers to identify and
respond effectively to domestic violence in their caseloads.
(3) The goals of the program are to:
(a) Increase the safety of children and adult victims of domestic
violence who are involved with the department's child protective
services division;
(b) Increase the adult domestic violence victim's understanding of
available domestic violence resources and supports;
(c) Increase the adult domestic violence victim's and the domestic
violence perpetrator's understanding of the effects of domestic
violence on children;
(d) Provide specialized supervision, consultation, and training to
child protective services social workers so that they may increase
their knowledge of domestic violence and practice skills for addressing
domestic violence in their caseloads, and provide safe, effective
responses for children and their families experiencing domestic
violence;
(e) Decrease the rate at which victims of domestic violence are
referred back to the division of children and family services;
(f) Decrease the number of children of domestic violence victims
that are placed in protective custody;
(g) Improve the ability of division of children and family services
social workers to accurately identify the full spectrum of abusive and
coercive tactics that are utilized by domestic violence perpetrators,
and their impact on children's safety and well-being, as well as the
way they disrupt or undermine the parenting practices of adult victims
of domestic violence;
(h) Improve the ability of the division of children and family
services social worker to identify the range of strategies employed by
adult domestic violence victims to support the safety and well-being of
their children;
(i) Increase the strategies available to division of children and
family services social workers to hold the domestic violence
perpetrator accountable for abusive and coercive behavior and its
adverse impact on children;
(j) Increase the ability of division of children and family
services social workers to accurately identify the domestic violence
perpetrator as the person responsible for the adverse impact of
domestic violence on children;
(k) Strengthen collaborations between department staff and
community providers and resources; and
(l) Conduct an evaluation of the program by comparing the outcomes
of the program offices to the outcomes of the two offices that do not
have the domestic violence advocate, and to develop a report of the
findings and recommendations that may be used to replicate the program
statewide.
(4) The department shall convene advisory groups at the program
sites to provide advice on the implementation and progress of the pilot
program. The advisory groups shall include representatives from a
local domestic violence agency, public health, domestic violence
perpetrator's treatment program, protection order programs, law
enforcement, and others who are appropriate for the advisory group.
(5) The department shall provide supervision at the program sites.
The supervisor will be selected in collaboration with the partnering
domestic violence agency and will provide supervision in accordance
with the goals of the program. The supervisor shall have formal
training and experience in domestic violence, and the supervisor's
duties will include the following:
(a) Ensuring that the domestic violence advocate has the support
necessary to implement advocate-specific portions of the program;
(b) Ensuring that children and family community services office
workers receive ongoing training regarding:
(i) Identifying indicators of domestic violence;
(ii) Interviewing techniques that do not increase the risk of
danger to the adult victim of domestic violence or the child;
(iii) Identifying protective behaviors that may reduce the risk of
harm to the adult victim or child;
(iv) Determining risks posed by an alleged domestic violence
perpetrator to the adult victim or child;
(v) Appropriate case investigation, documentation, and planning in
cases involving domestic violence that accurately hold domestic
violence perpetrators responsible for the adverse impacts of their
behavior on the children, increases children's and victim's safety,
identifies and builds on adult domestic violence victim's strengths,
and holds abusers accountable;
(vi) Engagement of perpetrators of domestic violence in
investigation, case planning, and supervision;
(c) Convening case staffings which include the domestic violence
advocate;
(d) Convening the program advisory group on a regular basis; and
(e) Providing consultation to the case workers regarding
appropriate interventions for the adult victim, the child, and the
alleged domestic violence perpetrator.
(6) The department shall utilize a request for proposal process and
shall select the pilot sites by September 2007. The request for
proposal shall require:
(a) The community-based domestic violence agency to have experience
providing domestic violence shelter or advocacy services under chapter
70.123 RCW, and experience working in a department community services
office for the purpose of providing domestic violence services to
clients seeking temporary assistance for needy families benefits.
(b) The agency must be willing to commit to the following:
(i) Involvement in the program for the duration of the program;
(ii) Providing the employees who will be the domestic violence
victim advocates located at the department offices;
(iii) Agree to supervise and support the advocates placed into the
department offices;
(iv) Collaborate with the division of children and family services
program supervisor at each site; and
(v) Participate in the evaluation of the pilot program.
(c) The domestic violence advocate shall provide the following
services while colocated at the department office:
(i) Provide on-site education, consultation, and support to
division of children and family services staff to meet the needs of the
children and families involved in domestic violence situations on
subjects including, but not limited to:
(A) Identifying indicators of domestic violence;
(B) Interviewing techniques that do not increase the risk of danger
to the adult victim of domestic violence or the child;
(C) Identifying protective behaviors that may reduce the risk of
harm to the adult victim or the child;
(D) Determining risks posed by an alleged domestic violence
perpetrator to the adult victim or the child; and
(E) How to refer victims to a domestic violence advocate;
(ii) Provide advocacy services to facilitate linkage to appropriate
community supports for families receiving services from division of
children and family services offices; and
(iii) Participating in child protective services unit meetings,
case reviews, or child protection team meetings, for families with
identified domestic violence concerns.
(7) Provision of services by a domestic violence advocate under
this section does not waive or diminish the confidential or privileged
nature of communications between a victim of domestic violence and
advocate pursuant to RCW 5.60.060, 70.123.075, or 70.123.076.
(8) The program shall be evaluated to determine the outcomes of the
program.
(a) The department shall utilize the services of an evaluator from
a university or other organization who has expertise in evaluating the
division of children and family services and expertise in domestic
violence and child maltreatment issues of children and families. The
department shall select the evaluator by September 2007.
(b) Beginning in October 2007, the evaluator shall conduct a
preprogram assessment. The evaluator shall assess and compare the
program sites to two additional divisions of children and family
services offices selected as comparison sites. The comparison sites
shall not have a domestic violence advocate colocated at the site.
(c) The evaluator shall collect and assess data from the program
and nonprogram comparison sites to determine the following outcomes:
(i) Changes to the rate of being referred back to child protective
services intake for domestic violence related concerns;
(ii) Whether there are documented safety assessments that identify
domestic violence safety risk factors for the children and the adult
victim of domestic violence;
(iii) Whether there are documented service plans with strategies
that address and mitigate identified domestic violence safety risks;
(iv) Whether there is an increase in the ability of the adult
victims of domestic violence, as well as the perpetrator of domestic
violence, to identify safety risks and adverse impacts of domestic
violence on the children;
(v) Whether there is an increase in the adult domestic violence
victim's access to resources available to them within the community to
increase the safety and security for themselves and the children;
(vi) Whether there is an increase in the ability of the perpetrator
of domestic violence to identify and understand the adverse impact of
the abusive and coercive domestic violence behaviors on their children;
(vii) Changes to the rate of children of adult domestic violence
victims placed into protective custody in the program offices compared
to the comparison sites at the end of the three-year pilot program
period;
(viii) Whether there is an increase in the knowledge of division of
children and family services caseworkers regarding response to domestic
violence in the child protective services caseload and changes in
practice;
(ix) Whether the capacity of the social worker to accurately
identify domestic violence perpetrators as responsible for the negative
consequences of domestic violence increases and is reflected through
case plans, who is the target of investigations, and against whom
findings are made; and
(x) Whether the focus on the perpetrator will cause division of
children and family services social workers to develop service plans
and strategies for the perpetrator with the aim of reducing child
neglect or abuse risks caused by the perpetrator's domestic violence
behaviors.
(d)(i) The evaluator shall use the results of the evaluation to
identify the effectiveness of the program including effectiveness of
training, consultation, and advocacy services, changes in social worker
practices, improvements in services to families, barriers to
implementing program services, and service gaps for families affected
by domestic violence.
(ii) The evaluation shall include recommendations to the department
for improving domestic violence responses in other division of children
and family services community offices of Washington state.
(e) The evaluator shall report the findings of the program to the
appropriate committees of the legislature by December 1, 2010.
(9) The pilot program shall begin in January 2008.
(10) This section expires January 1, 2011.