BILL REQ. #: S-1754.2
State of Washington | 60th Legislature | 2007 Regular Session |
Read first time 02/14/2007. Referred to Committee on Human Services & Corrections.
AN ACT Relating to detention of persons with a mental disorder or a chemical dependency; amending RCW 70.96B.010 and 70.96B.050; adding a new section to chapter 70.96B RCW; providing an expiration date; and declaring an emergency.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1 RCW 70.96B.010 and 2005 c 504 s 202 are each amended to
read as follows:
The definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter
unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Admission" or "admit" means a decision by a physician that a
person should be examined or treated as a patient in a hospital, an
evaluation and treatment facility, or other inpatient facility, or a
decision by a professional person in charge or his or her designee that
a person should be detained as a patient for evaluation and treatment
in a secure detoxification facility or other certified chemical
dependency provider.
(2) "Antipsychotic medications" means that class of drugs primarily
used to treat serious manifestations of mental illness associated with
thought disorders, which includes but is not limited to atypical
antipsychotic medications.
(3) "Approved treatment program" means a discrete program of
chemical dependency treatment provided by a treatment program certified
by the department as meeting standards adopted under chapter 70.96A
RCW.
(4) "Attending staff" means any person on the staff of a public or
private agency having responsibility for the care and treatment of a
patient.
(5) "Chemical dependency" means:
(a) Alcoholism;
(b) Drug addiction; or
(c) Dependence on alcohol and one or more other psychoactive
chemicals, as the context requires.
(6) "Chemical dependency professional" means a person certified as
a chemical dependency professional by the department of health under
chapter 18.205 RCW.
(7) "Commitment" means the determination by a court that a person
should be detained for a period of either evaluation or treatment, or
both, in an inpatient or a less restrictive setting.
(8) "Conditional release" means a revocable modification of a
commitment that may be revoked upon violation of any of its terms.
(9) "Custody" means involuntary detention under either chapter
71.05 or 70.96A RCW or this chapter, uninterrupted by any period of
unconditional release from commitment from a facility providing
involuntary care and treatment.
(10) "Department" means the department of social and health
services.
(11) "Designated chemical dependency specialist" or "specialist"
means a person designated by the county alcoholism and other drug
addiction program coordinator designated under RCW 70.96A.310 to
perform the commitment duties described in RCW 70.96A.140 and this
chapter, and qualified to do so by meeting standards adopted by the
department.
(12) "Designated crisis responder" means a person designated by the
county or regional support network to perform the duties specified in
this chapter.
(13) "Designated mental health professional" means a mental health
professional designated by the county or other authority authorized in
rule to perform the duties specified in this chapter.
(14) "Detention" or "detain" means the lawful confinement of a
person under this chapter, or chapter 70.96A or 71.05 RCW.
(15) "Developmental disabilities professional" means a person who
has specialized training and three years of experience in directly
treating or working with individuals with developmental disabilities
and is a psychiatrist, psychologist, or social worker, and such other
developmental disabilities professionals as may be defined by rules
adopted by the secretary.
(16) "Developmental disability" means that condition defined in RCW
71A.10.020.
(17) "Discharge" means the termination of facility authority. The
commitment may remain in place, be terminated, or be amended by court
order.
(18) "Evaluation and treatment facility" means any facility that
can provide directly, or by direct arrangement with other public or
private agencies, emergency evaluation and treatment, outpatient care,
and timely and appropriate inpatient care to persons suffering from a
mental disorder, and that is certified as such by the department. A
physically separate and separately operated portion of a state hospital
may be designated as an evaluation and treatment facility. A facility
that is part of, or operated by, the department or any federal agency
does not require certification. No correctional institution or
facility, or jail, may be an evaluation and treatment facility within
the meaning of this chapter.
(19) "Facility" means either an evaluation and treatment facility
or a secure detoxification facility.
(20) "Gravely disabled" means a condition in which a person, as a
result of a mental disorder, or as a result of the use of alcohol or
other psychoactive chemicals:
(a) Is in danger of serious physical harm resulting from a failure
to provide for his or her essential human needs of health or safety; or
(b) Manifests severe deterioration in routine functioning evidenced
by repeated and escalating loss of cognitive or volitional control over
his or her actions and is not receiving such care as is essential for
his or her health or safety.
(21) "History of one or more violent acts" refers to the period of
time ten years before the filing of a petition under this chapter, or
chapter 70.96A or 71.05 RCW, excluding any time spent, but not any
violent acts committed, in a mental health facility or a long-term
alcoholism or drug treatment facility, or in confinement as a result of
a criminal conviction.
(22) "Imminence" means the state or condition of being likely to
occur at any moment or near at hand, rather than distant or remote. A
designated crisis responder shall consider the potential likelihood of
relapse or decompensation subsequent to an interview and prior to
service of an order to appear in determining imminence.
(23) "Intoxicated person" means a person whose mental or physical
functioning is substantially impaired as a result of the use of alcohol
or other psychoactive chemicals.
(((23))) (24) "Judicial commitment" means a commitment by a court
under this chapter.
(((24))) (25) "Licensed physician" means a person licensed to
practice medicine or osteopathic medicine and surgery in the state of
Washington.
(((25))) (26) "Likelihood of serious harm" means:
(a) A substantial risk that:
(i) Physical harm will be inflicted by a person upon his or her own
person, as evidenced by threats or attempts to commit suicide or
inflict physical harm on oneself;
(ii) Physical harm will be inflicted by a person upon another, as
evidenced by behavior that has caused such harm or that places another
person or persons in reasonable fear of sustaining such harm; or
(iii) Physical harm will be inflicted by a person upon the property
of others, as evidenced by behavior that has caused substantial loss or
damage to the property of others; or
(b) The person has threatened the physical safety of another and
has a history of one or more violent acts.
(((26))) (27) "Mental disorder" means any organic, mental, or
emotional impairment that has substantial adverse effects on a person's
cognitive or volitional functions.
(((27))) (28) "Mental health professional" means a psychiatrist,
psychologist, psychiatric nurse, or social worker, and such other
mental health professionals as may be defined by rules adopted by the
secretary under the authority of chapter 71.05 RCW.
(((28))) (29) "Peace officer" means a law enforcement official of
a public agency or governmental unit, and includes persons specifically
given peace officer powers by any state law, local ordinance, or
judicial order of appointment.
(((29))) (30) "Person in charge" means a physician or chemical
dependency counselor as defined in rule by the department, who is
empowered by a certified treatment program with authority to make
assessment, admission, continuing care, and discharge decisions on
behalf of the certified program.
(((30))) (31) "Private agency" means any person, partnership,
corporation, or association that is not a public agency, whether or not
financed in whole or in part by public funds, that constitutes an
evaluation and treatment facility or private institution, or hospital,
or approved treatment program, that is conducted for, or includes a
department or ward conducted for, the care and treatment of persons who
are mentally ill and/or chemically dependent.
(((31))) (32) "Professional person" means a mental health
professional or chemical dependency professional and shall also mean a
physician, registered nurse, and such others as may be defined by rules
adopted by the secretary pursuant to the provisions of this chapter.
(((32))) (33) "Psychiatrist" means a person having a license as a
physician and surgeon in this state who has in addition completed three
years of graduate training in psychiatry in a program approved by the
American medical association or the American osteopathic association
and is certified or eligible to be certified by the American board of
psychiatry and neurology.
(((33))) (34) "Psychologist" means a person who has been licensed
as a psychologist under chapter 18.83 RCW.
(((34))) (35) "Public agency" means any evaluation and treatment
facility or institution, or hospital, or approved treatment program
that is conducted for, or includes a department or ward conducted for,
the care and treatment of persons who are mentally ill and/or
chemically dependent, if the agency is operated directly by federal,
state, county, or municipal government, or a combination of such
governments.
(((35))) (36) "Registration records" means all the records of the
department, regional support networks, treatment facilities, and other
persons providing services to the department, county departments, or
facilities which identify persons who are receiving or who at any time
have received services for mental illness.
(((36))) (37) "Release" means legal termination of the commitment
under chapter 70.96A or 71.05 RCW or this chapter.
(((37))) (38) "Secretary" means the secretary of the department or
the secretary's designee.
(((38))) (39) "Secure detoxification facility" means a facility
operated by either a public or private agency or by the program of an
agency that serves the purpose of providing evaluation and assessment,
and acute and/or subacute detoxification services for intoxicated
persons and includes security measures sufficient to protect the
patients, staff, and community.
(((39))) (40) "Social worker" means a person with a master's or
further advanced degree from an accredited school of social work or a
degree deemed equivalent under rules adopted by the secretary.
(((40))) (41) "Treatment records" means registration records and
all other records concerning persons who are receiving or who at any
time have received services for mental illness, which are maintained by
the department, by regional support networks and their staffs, and by
treatment facilities. Treatment records do not include notes or
records maintained for personal use by a person providing treatment
services for the department, regional support networks, or a treatment
facility if the notes or records are not available to others.
(((41))) (42) "Violent act" means behavior that resulted in
homicide, attempted suicide, nonfatal injuries, or substantial damage
to property.
Sec. 2 RCW 70.96B.050 and 2005 c 504 s 206 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1)(((a))) When a designated crisis responder receives information
alleging that a person, as a result of a mental disorder, chemical
dependency disorder, or both, presents a likelihood of serious harm or
is gravely disabled, the designated crisis responder may, after
investigation and evaluation of the specific facts alleged and of the
reliability and credibility of any person providing information to
initiate detention, if satisfied that the allegations are true and that
the person will not voluntarily seek appropriate treatment, file a
petition for initial detention. Before filing the petition, the
designated crisis responder must personally interview the person,
unless the person refuses an interview, and determine whether the
person will voluntarily receive appropriate evaluation and treatment at
either an evaluation and treatment facility, a detoxification facility,
or other certified chemical dependency provider.
(((b)(i)(A) Whenever it appears, by petition for initial detention,
to the satisfaction of a judge of the superior court that a person
presents as a result of a mental disorder, a likelihood of serious
harm, or is gravely disabled, and that the person has refused or failed
to accept appropriate evaluation and treatment voluntarily, the judge
may issue an order requiring the person to appear within twenty-four
hours after service of the order at a designated evaluation and
treatment facility for not more than a seventy-two hour evaluation and
treatment period; or)) (2)(a) An order to detain to an evaluation and treatment
facility, a detoxification facility, or other certified chemical
dependency provider for not more than a seventy-two hour evaluation and
treatment period may be issued by a judge upon request of a designated
crisis responder: (i) Whenever it appears to the satisfaction of a
judge of the superior court, district court, or other court permitted
by court rule, that there is probable cause to support the petition,
and (ii) that the person has refused or failed to accept appropriate
evaluation and treatment voluntarily.
(B) Whenever it appears, by petition for initial detention, to the
satisfaction of a judge of the superior court, district court, or other
court permitted by court rule, that a person presents as a result of a
chemical dependency, a likelihood of serious harm, or is gravely
disabled, and that the person has refused or failed to accept
appropriate evaluation and treatment voluntarily, the judge may issue
an order requiring the person to appear within twenty-four hours after
service of the order at a secure detoxification facility or other
certified chemical dependency provider for not more than a seventy-two
hour evaluation and treatment period.
(ii) The order issued under this subsection (1)(b) shall state the
address of the evaluation and treatment facility, secure detoxification
facility, or other certified chemical dependency provider to which the
person is to report; whether the required seventy-two hour evaluation
and treatment services may be delivered on an outpatient or inpatient
basis; and that if the person named in the order fails to appear at the
evaluation and treatment facility, secure detoxification facility, or
other certified chemical dependency provider at or before the date and
time stated in the order, the person may be involuntarily taken into
custody for evaluation and treatment. The order shall also designate
retained counsel or, if counsel is appointed from a list provided by
the court, the name, business address, and telephone number of the
attorney appointed to represent the person.
(c)
(b) The petition for initial detention, signed under penalty of
perjury or sworn telephonic testimony, may be considered by the court
in determining whether there are sufficient grounds for issuing the
order.
(c) The order shall designate retained counsel or, if counsel is
appointed from a list provided by the court, the name, business
address, and telephone number of the attorney appointed to represent
the person.
(3) The designated crisis responder shall then serve or cause to be
served on such person, his or her guardian, and conservator, if any, a
copy of the order to appear, together with a notice of rights and a
petition for initial detention. After service on the person, the
designated crisis responder shall file the return of service in court
and provide copies of all papers in the court file to the evaluation
and treatment facility or secure detoxification facility and the
designated attorney. The designated crisis responder shall notify the
court and the prosecuting attorney that a probable cause hearing will
be held within seventy-two hours of the date and time of outpatient
evaluation or admission to the evaluation and treatment facility,
secure detoxification facility, or other certified chemical dependency
provider. The person ((shall be permitted to remain in his or her home
or other place of his or her choosing before the time of evaluation and
shall be permitted to)) may be accompanied by one or more of his or her
relatives, friends, an attorney, a personal physician, or other
professional or religious advisor to the place of evaluation. An
attorney accompanying the person to the place of evaluation shall be
permitted to be present during the admission evaluation. Any other
person accompanying the person may be present during the admission
evaluation. The facility may exclude the person if his or her presence
would present a safety risk, delay the proceedings, or otherwise
interfere with the evaluation.
(((d) If the person ordered to appear does appear on or before the
date and time specified, the evaluation and treatment facility, secure
detoxification facility, or other certified chemical dependency
provider may admit the person as required by subsection (3) of this
section or may provide treatment on an outpatient basis. If the person
ordered to appear fails to appear on or before the date and time
specified, the evaluation and treatment facility, secure detoxification
facility, or other certified chemical dependency provider shall
immediately notify))
(4) The designated crisis responder ((who)) may notify a peace
officer to take the person or cause the person to be taken into custody
and placed in an evaluation and treatment facility, a secure
detoxification facility, or other certified chemical dependency
provider. ((Should the designated crisis responder notify a peace
officer authorizing the officer to take a person into custody under
this subsection, the designated crisis responder shall file with the
court a copy of the authorization and a notice of detention.)) At the
time the person is taken into custody there shall commence to be served
on the person, his or her guardian, and conservator, if any, a copy of
the original order together with a notice of detention, a notice of
rights, and a petition for initial detention.
(((2) If a designated crisis responder receives information
alleging that a person, as the result of:))
(a) A mental disorder, presents an imminent likelihood of serious
harm, or is in imminent danger because of being gravely disabled, after
investigation and evaluation of the specific facts alleged and of the
reliability and credibility of the person or persons providing the
information if any, the designated crisis responder may take the
person, or cause by oral or written order the person to be taken into
emergency custody in an evaluation and treatment facility for not more
than seventy-two hours as described in this chapter; or
(b) Chemical dependency, presents an imminent likelihood of serious
harm, or is in imminent danger because of being gravely disabled, after
investigation and evaluation of the specific facts alleged and of the
reliability and credibility of the person or persons providing the
information if any, the designated crisis responder may take the
person, or cause by oral or written order the person to be taken into
emergency custody in a secure detoxification facility for not more than
seventy-two hours as described in this chapter.
(3) If the designated crisis responder petitions for detention of
a person whose actions constitute a likelihood of serious harm, or who
is gravely disabled, the evaluation and treatment facility, the secure
detoxification facility, or other certified chemical dependency
provider providing seventy-two hour evaluation and treatment must
immediately accept on a provisional basis the petition and the person.
The evaluation and treatment facility, the secure detoxification
facility, or other certified chemical dependency provider shall then
evaluate the person's condition and admit, detain, transfer, or
discharge such person in accordance with this chapter. The facility
shall notify in writing the court and the designated crisis responder
of the date and time of the initial detention of each person
involuntarily detained so that a probable cause hearing will be held no
later than seventy-two hours after detention.
(4) A peace officer may, without prior notice of the proceedings
provided for in subsection (1) of this section, take or cause the
person to be taken into custody and immediately delivered to an
evaluation and treatment facility, secure detoxification facility,
other certified chemical dependency treatment provider only pursuant to
subsections (1)(d) and (2) of this section.
(5) Nothing in this chapter limits the power of a peace officer to
take a person into custody and immediately deliver the person to the
emergency department of a local hospital or to a detoxification
facility.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 A new section is added to chapter 70.96B RCW
to read as follows:
(1) If a designated crisis responder receives information alleging
that a person, as the result of:
(a) A mental disorder, presents an imminent likelihood of serious
harm, or is in imminent danger because of being gravely disabled, after
investigation and evaluation of the specific facts alleged and of the
reliability and credibility of the person or persons providing the
information if any, the designated crisis responder may take the
person, or cause by oral or written order the person to be taken into
emergency custody in an evaluation and treatment facility for not more
than seventy-two hours as described in this chapter; or
(b) Chemical dependency, presents an imminent likelihood of serious
harm, or is in imminent danger because of being gravely disabled, after
investigation and evaluation of the specific facts alleged and of the
reliability and credibility of the person or persons providing the
information if any, the designated crisis responder may take the
person, or cause by oral or written order the person to be taken into
emergency custody in a secure detoxification facility for not more than
seventy-two hours as described in this chapter.
(2) The evaluation and treatment facility, the secure
detoxification facility, or other certified chemical dependency
provider shall then evaluate the person's condition and admit, detain,
transfer, or discharge such person in accordance with this chapter.
The facility shall notify in writing the court and the designated
crisis responder of the date and time of the initial detention of each
person involuntarily detained so that a probable cause hearing will be
held no later than seventy-two hours after detention.
(3) A peace officer may take or cause the person to be taken into
custody and immediately delivered to an evaluation and treatment
facility, secure detoxification facility, or other certified chemical
dependency treatment provider: (a) Pursuant to this section; or (b)
when he or she has reasonable cause to believe that such person, as a
result of a mental disorder or chemical dependency, presents an
imminent likelihood of serious harm, or is in imminent danger because
of being gravely disabled. An individual brought to a facility by a
peace officer may be held for up to twelve hours: PROVIDED, That the
individual is examined by a designated crisis responder within three
hours of arrival. Within twelve hours of arrival the designated crisis
responder must determine whether the individual meets detention
criteria. If the individual is detained, the designated mental health
professional shall file a petition for detention or supplemental
petition as appropriate and commence service on the designated attorney
for the detained person.
(4) Nothing in this chapter limits the power of a peace officer to
take a person into custody and immediately deliver the person to the
emergency department of a local hospital or to a detoxification
facility.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4 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.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 Sections 1 through 3 of this act expire July
1, 2008.