Dependency Court Proceedings. Anyone, including the Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF), may file a petition in court alleging a child should be a dependent of the state due to abuse, neglect, or because there is no parent, guardian, or custodian capable of adequately caring for the child. If a court subsequently determines a child is dependent, the court will conduct periodic reviews and make determinations regarding the child's placement, provision of services by DCYF, compliance of the parents, and whether progress has been made by the parents.
Shared Planning Meetings. DCYF must convene a shared planning meeting that includes a number of agencies including the Department of Social and Health Services' Developmental Disability Administration (DDA) for dependent youth ages 17 to 17.5 who will be aging out of foster care to develop a transition plan. If these youth qualify for DDA services, DCYF must direct these youth to apply for services and provide assistance in the application process.
Developmental Disabilities Administration. DDA assists individuals with developmental disabilities and their families to obtain services and support based on individual preferences, capabilities, and needs. While some DDA clients live in residential habilitation centers, an institutional setting, most clients live in the community.
Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) waivers are designed to allow DDA clients who live in community settings to receive the same level of services they would receive in an institutional setting. DDA offers services under five Medicaid HCBS waivers. To be eligible for a HCBS waiver, the individual must:
The waiver services provided to DDA clients are designed to promote everyday activities, routines, and relationships common to most citizens, and they include employment services and community access services, which are contracted with counties.
It is the stated intent of the Legislature to reduce, in the most cost-effective way, the number of former foster care youth with developmental disabilities discharged into homelessness or inappropriately placed in hospitals.
Shared Planning Meetings. For youth who are in an open dependency proceeding and the DCYF caseworker believes may be eligible for services administered by DDA, DCYF is to convene a shared planning meeting that includes representatives from DDA and the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation when the youth is between the ages of 16 and 16.5. This meeting may include:
DCYF is to collaborate with DDA to determine the number of enrolled clients of the DDA ages 16 through 21 years old who are functionally eligible for Medicaid waiver services, who are also defined as dependent children, and who may exit dependency proceeding after reaching the maximum ages for dependent children.
DDA must give priority for Medicaid waivers to eligible individuals who exited a dependency proceeding within the last two years when there is funded capacity for those waivers.
By November 15th annually, DCYF is to submit a report to the appropriate committees of the Legislature that provides the number of children and youth identified under this act, and other relevant information related to best serving these youth.
PRO: This bill seeks to make sure that kids with developmental disabilities in foster care do not fall through the cracks as they age out of dependency. Many of these kids are the same ones who end up abandoned in hospital, have hotel stays, or stay at a DCYF office. It is expensive to serve these youth when all the services are through DCYF but if the kids were receiving services from DDA, that cost is shared. We need data to know where the kids are. We want to do transitional planning earlier to prevent the kids from ending up homeless as kids exiting foster care do not necessarily have adult support. For DDA you have to opt-in for services. Youth do not always know what saying no to services means so having DCYF and DDA work together so the kids have a better idea of what agreeing to or declining services means. We have the highest case management load in the country—75 to 1, we need intensive case management to work with these youth to ensure they do not become homeless. One-third of young people who experience placement instability are developmentally disabled. Young people with developmental disabilities have slipped through the cracks for too long, they are over represented in prisons and in homelessness. This bill compliments and reinforces the goal of past legislation ensuring that children do not exit a system of care into homelessness.