Dependency. The Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF) or any person may file a petition in court to determine if a child should be a dependent of the state due to abuse, neglect, or abandonment, or because there is no parent or custodian capable of caring for the child. If the court determines the child is dependent, the court conducts periodic reviews and makes determinations about the child's placement and the parent's progress in correcting parental deficiencies. Abandoned means when the child's parent, guardian, or other custodian has expressed, either by statement or conduct, an intent to forgo for an extended period, parental rights or responsibilities despite an ability to exercise such rights and responsibilities.
Foster Care. A child who is a candidate for foster care is a child who DCYF identifies as being at imminent risk of entering foster care but who can remain safely in the child's home or in a kinship placement as long as services or programs that are necessary to prevent entry of the child into foster care are provided. This includes a child whose adoption or guardianship arrangement is at risk of disruption or dissolution that would result in a foster care placement.
A child who is a candidate for foster care also includes circumstances when:
Voluntary Placement Agreements. DCYF may enter into a voluntary placement agreement with a parent to place a child with a relative or in a licensed foster home in the following circumstances:
Rapid Response Team. Legislation from 2022 requires DCYF, in coordination with the Office of Homeless Youth Prevention and Protection Programs (OHY), to develop and implement a rapid response team that appropriately responds to support youth and young adults exiting a publicly funded system of care. Publicly funded system of care includes the child welfare system, behavioral health system, the juvenile justice system, and programs administered by OHY. When developing the rapid response team, DCYF and OHY must develop and implement a system for:
The rapid response team can provide assistance and support to youth and young adults who are at risk of becoming homeless and who are exiting a publicly funded system of care with the goal of securing appropriate housing and other supports for the youth or young adult. If there is no housing identified for a youth or young adult upon exit, the rapid response team must meet before the youth or young adult transitions out of a publicly funded system of care. Specified individuals, including family members, advocates, educators, law enforcement officers, DCYF or OHY employees, and service providers, may refer a youth to the rapid response team.
Youth Behavioral Health and Inpatient Navigator Teams. The youth navigator program is a behavioral health care model funded through the Health Care Authority (HCA) that uses multidisciplinary teams to connect youth and families to the care and resources they need to address their complex behavioral health concerns.
The Governor must maintain a Children and Youth Multisystem Care Coordinator (care coordinator) to serve as the state lead on addressing complex cases of children in crisis. The care coordinator must:
The care coordinator, along with DCYF, HCA, Office of Financial Management (OFM), and the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS), must develop and implement a rapid care team to support and identify appropriate services and living arrangements for a child in crisis, and the family if appropriate. The rapid care team must be implemented as soon as possible, but no later than January 1, 2024, and is authorized to provide assistance and support to a child in crisis, or the family of a child in crisis.
When creating the rapid care team, the care coordinator must develop and implement a system for:
A rapid care team is a team whose work is managed and directed by the care coordinator, working to quickly identify the appropriate services and living arrangements for a child in crisis. The membership of the rapid care team must include:
A child in crisis may be referred to the rapid care team by:
A child in crisis is a person under the age of 18 who is:
By November 1, 2023, the Governor must provide an initial report to the Legislature describing the process of developing and implementing the rapid care team, and include a projection of when the rapid care team process will be implemented. By November 1, 2024, the Governor must provide a final report to the Legislature with certain data and recommendations on the rapid care team.
This act expires June 30, 2025.
PRO: This bill is about making sure families, state agencies, and communities are coming together for children with highly complex needs who are stuck in hospitals for long periods of time not because of medical need but because appropriate services are not available outside the hospital. This requires a lot of multisystem coordination that is not happening right now, and there needs to be an entity accountable to create a process for interagency communication to develop options for children with nowhere else to go. When a child is spending extensive time in the hospital and not getting the services they need, the child continues to decline physically and mentally, and the costs to the state and trauma for the child and family pile up. This is a critical time for a child's growth, learning, and social development, and children stuck in hospitals are not interacting with peers or siblings, accessing therapeutic services, or experiencing outdoor recreation. The state can do better by making sure the right people are in the room to problem solve, develop resources and agency responses, coordinate services early and quickly, and stop vulnerable kids from languishing in hospitals. This is part of the larger behavioral health vision and strategic plan that the state has been working to build up in recent years to create a continuum of care. The care coordinator will identify any gaps in services, and find solutions for kids in crisis right now.
There are children essentially stuck in hospitals across the state because of a lack of community resources and mental health services, and their behavioral needs exceed what their parents can handle. If the child is unable to return to the parent, the child stays in the hospital for weeks or months, or sometimes for as long as a year. This is more profound for children with developmental disabilities or intellectual disabilities, who tend to have longer length of stays. If the hospital does not have a children's psychiatric ward or children's behavioral expert on staff, the child is placed and boarded in an emergency room or adult medical ward for acute care, even though the child does not need hospitalization, which essentially results in solitary confinement for weeks and months when the family is unable to provide the level of care needed at home. There needs to be accountability and collaboration to make sure children with complex behavioral health needs can access more appropriate care in a timely manner.