HB 0035B 2003
   
1 A bill to be entitled
2          An act relating to substance abuse treatment and
3    intervention; amending s. 39.001, F.S.; providing
4    additional legislative findings and purposes with respect
5    to the treatment of substance abuse; authorizing the court
6    to require certain persons to undergo treatment following
7    adjudication; amending ss. 39.402 and 39.407, F.S.;
8    authorizing the court to order specified persons to submit
9    to a substance abuse assessment upon a showing of good
10    cause in connection with a shelter hearing or petition for
11    dependency; authorizing sanctions for noncompliance;
12    amending ss. 39.507 and 39.521, F.S.; authorizing the
13    court to order specified persons to submit to a substance
14    abuse assessment as part of an adjudicatory order or
15    pursuant to a disposition hearing; requiring a showing of
16    good cause; authorizing the court to require participation
17    in a treatment-based drug court program; authorizing the
18    court to impose sanctions for noncompliance; amending s.
19    39.701, F.S.; authorizing the court to extend the time for
20    completing a case plan during judicial review, based upon
21    participation in a treatment-based drug court program;
22    amending s. 397.334, F.S.; revising legislative intent
23    with respect to treatment-based drug court programs to
24    reflect participation by community support agencies, the
25    Department of Education, and other individuals; including
26    post-adjudicatory programs as part of treatment-based drug
27    court programs; requiring each judicial circuit to
28    establish a position for a coordinator of the treatment-
29    based drug court program; requiring the chief judge of
30    each judicial circuit to appoint an advisory committee for
31    the treatment-based drug court program; providing for
32    membership of the committee; revising language with
33    respect to an annual report; amending s. 910.035, F.S.;
34    revising language with respect to conditions for the
35    transfer of a case in the drug court treatment program to
36    a county other than that in which the charge arose;
37    amending s. 948.08, F.S.; revising eligibility
38    requirements for participation in pretrial intervention
39    programs; authorizing the court to refer certain
40    defendants who are assessed with a substance abuse problem
41    to a pretrial intervention program with the approval of
42    the state attorney; deleting provisions authorizing
43    advisory committees for the district pretrial intervention
44    programs; amending s. 985.306, F.S.; revising eligibility
45    requirements for participation in delinquency pretrial
46    intervention programs; authorizing the court to refer
47    certain juveniles who are assessed as having a substance
48    abuse problem to a substance abuse education and treatment
49    intervention program; deleting provisions authorizing
50    advisory committees for the district delinquency pretrial
51    intervention program; providing for construction of the
52    act in pari materia with laws enacted during the 2003
53    Regular Session or the 2003 Special Session A of the
54    Legislature; providing an effective date.
55         
56          Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
57         
58          Section 1. Subsection (4) of section 39.001, Florida
59    Statutes, is amended to read:
60          39.001 Purposes and intent; personnel standards and
61    screening.--
62          (4) SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES.--
63          (a) The Legislature recognizes that substance abuse is a
64    primary cause of the dramatic rise in cases of child abuse and
65    neglect, immeasurably increases the complexity of cases in the
66    dependency system, severely compromises or destroys the ability
67    of parents to provide a safe and nurturing home for children,
68    and severely confounds the dependency system's ability to
69    protect children. The Legislature also recognizes that early
70    referral and comprehensive treatment can help combat substance
71    abuse in families and that treatment is cost-effective. The
72    Legislature further recognizes that treatment-based drug court
73    program models that integrate judicial supervision, treatment,
74    accountability, sanctions, and community support greatly
75    increase the effectiveness of substance abuse treatment and
76    reduce the number of cases of child abuse and neglect.
77          (b) The substance abuse treatment and family safety
78    programs of the Department of Children and Family Services have
79    identified the following goals for the state:
80          1. To ensure the safety of children.
81          2. To prevent and remediate the consequences of substance
82    abuse on families involved in protective supervision or foster
83    care and reduce substance abuse, including alcohol abuse, for
84    families who are at risk of being involved in protective
85    supervision or foster care.
86          3. To expedite permanency for children and reunify
87    healthy, intact families, when appropriate.
88          4. To support families in recovery.
89          (c)The Legislature finds that children in the care of the
90    state's dependency system need appropriate health care services,
91    that the impact of substance abuse on health indicates the need
92    for health care services to include substance abuse services to
93    children and parents where appropriate, and that it is in the
94    state's best interest that such children be provided the
95    services they need to enable them to become and remain
96    independent of state care. In order to provide these services,
97    the state's dependency system must have the ability to identify
98    and provide appropriate intervention and treatment for children
99    with personal or family-related substance abuse problems.
100          (d) It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage the
101    court to support the drug court program model by assessing
102    parents and children to identify and address substance abuse
103    problems as the court deems appropriate at every stage of the
104    dependency process. Participation in treatment, including a
105    treatment-based drug court program, may be required by the court
106    following adjudication. This subsection does not prevent a
107    child’s parents and, when appropriate, the legal custodian from
108    voluntarily entering treatment, including a treatment-based drug
109    court program, at the earliest stage of the process. Nothing in
110    this section precludes a court from ordering drug testing where
111    substance abuse is suspected to determine the safety of the
112    placement of a child with a caretaker.
113          (e)It is therefore the purpose of the Legislature to
114    provide authority for the state to contract with community
115    substance abuse treatment providers for the development and
116    operation of specialized support and overlay services for the
117    dependency system, which will be fully implemented and used
118    utilizedas resources permit.
119          (f) It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage the
120    Department of Children and Family Services, in conjunction with
121    community agencies; treatment-based facilities; facilities
122    dedicated to child welfare, child development, and mental health
123    services; the Department of Health; other similar agencies;
124    local governments; law enforcement agencies; and other
125    interested public or private sources to support the drug court
126    program model. Participation in the treatment-based drug court
127    program does not divest any public or private agency of its
128    responsibility for a child or adult, but enables these agencies
129    to better meet their needs through shared responsibility and
130    resources.
131          Section 2. Subsections (11) through (16) of section
132    39.402, Florida Statutes, are renumbered as subsections (12)
133    through (17), respectively, and a new subsection (11) is added
134    to said section, to read:
135          39.402 Placement in a shelter.--
136          (11) At the shelter hearing, if the mental or physical
137    condition of a child or the child's parent, caregiver, legal
138    custodian, or other person requesting custody of the child is in
139    controversy, the court may order the person to submit to a
140    substance abuse assessment or evaluation. The assessment or
141    evaluation must be administered by a qualified professional, as
142    defined in s. 397.311. The order may be made only upon good
143    cause shown and pursuant to the notice and procedures set forth
144    in the Florida Rules of Juvenile Procedure.
145          Section 3. Section 39.407, Florida Statutes, is amended to
146    read:
147          39.407 Medical, psychiatric, and psychological examination
148    and treatment of child; physical,or mental, or substance abuse
149    examination of parent or person requesting custody of child.--
150          (1) When any child is removed from the home and maintained
151    in an out-of-home placement, the department is authorized to
152    have a medical screening performed on the child without
153    authorization from the court and without consent from a parent
154    or legal custodian. Such medical screening shall be performed by
155    a licensed health care professional and shall be to examine the
156    child for injury, illness, and communicable diseases and to
157    determine the need for immunization. The department shall by
158    rule establish the invasiveness of the medical procedures
159    authorized to be performed under this subsection. In no case
160    does this subsection authorize the department to consent to
161    medical treatment for such children.
162          (2) When the department has performed the medical
163    screening authorized by subsection (1), or when it is otherwise
164    determined by a licensed health care professional that a child
165    who is in an out-of-home placement, but who has not been
166    committed to the department, is in need of medical treatment,
167    including the need for immunization, consent for medical
168    treatment shall be obtained in the following manner:
169          (a)1. Consent to medical treatment shall be obtained from
170    a parent or legal custodian of the child; or
171          2. A court order for such treatment shall be obtained.
172          (b) If a parent or legal custodian of the child is
173    unavailable and his or her whereabouts cannot be reasonably
174    ascertained, and it is after normal working hours so that a
175    court order cannot reasonably be obtained, an authorized agent
176    of the department shall have the authority to consent to
177    necessary medical treatment, including immunization, for the
178    child. The authority of the department to consent to medical
179    treatment in this circumstance shall be limited to the time
180    reasonably necessary to obtain court authorization.
181          (c) If a parent or legal custodian of the child is
182    available but refuses to consent to the necessary treatment,
183    including immunization, a court order shall be required unless
184    the situation meets the definition of an emergency in s. 743.064
185    or the treatment needed is related to suspected abuse,
186    abandonment, or neglect of the child by a parent, caregiver, or
187    legal custodian. In such case, the department shall have the
188    authority to consent to necessary medical treatment. This
189    authority is limited to the time reasonably necessary to obtain
190    court authorization.
191         
192          In no case shall the department consent to sterilization,
193    abortion, or termination of life support.
194          (3)(a) A judge may order a child in an out-of-home
195    placement to be examined by a licensed health care professional.
196          (b) The judge may also order such child to be evaluated by
197    a psychiatrist or a psychologist or, if a developmental
198    disability is suspected or alleged, by the developmental
199    disability diagnostic and evaluation team of the department. If
200    it is necessary to place a child in a residential facility for
201    such evaluation, the criteria and procedure established in s.
202    394.463(2) or chapter 393 shall be used, whichever is
203    applicable.
204          (c) The judge may also order such child to be evaluated by
205    a district school board educational needs assessment team. The
206    educational needs assessment provided by the district school
207    board educational needs assessment team shall include, but not
208    be limited to, reports of intelligence and achievement tests,
209    screening for learning disabilities and other handicaps, and
210    screening for the need for alternative education as defined in
211    s. 1001.42.
212          (4) A judge may order a child in an out-of-home placement
213    to be treated by a licensed health care professional based on
214    evidence that the child should receive treatment. The judge may
215    also order such child to receive mental health or developmental
216    disabilities services from a psychiatrist, psychologist, or
217    other appropriate service provider. Except as provided in
218    subsection (5), if it is necessary to place the child in a
219    residential facility for such services, the procedures and
220    criteria established in s. 394.467 or chapter 393 shall be used,
221    whichever is applicable. A child may be provided developmental
222    disabilities or mental health services in emergency situations,
223    pursuant to the procedures and criteria contained in s.
224    394.463(1) or chapter 393, whichever is applicable.
225          (5) Children who are in the legal custody of the
226    department may be placed by the department, without prior
227    approval of the court, in a residential treatment center
228    licensed under s. 394.875 or a hospital licensed under chapter
229    395 for residential mental health treatment only pursuant to
230    this section or may be placed by the court in accordance with an
231    order of involuntary examination or involuntary placement
232    entered pursuant to s. 394.463 or s. 394.467. All children
233    placed in a residential treatment program under this subsection
234    must have a guardian ad litem appointed.
235          (a) As used in this subsection, the term:
236          1. "Residential treatment" means placement for
237    observation, diagnosis, or treatment of an emotional disturbance
238    in a residential treatment center licensed under s. 394.875 or a
239    hospital licensed under chapter 395.
240          2. "Least restrictive alternative" means the treatment and
241    conditions of treatment that, separately and in combination, are
242    no more intrusive or restrictive of freedom than reasonably
243    necessary to achieve a substantial therapeutic benefit or to
244    protect the child or adolescent or others from physical injury.
245          3. "Suitable for residential treatment" or "suitability"
246    means a determination concerning a child or adolescent with an
247    emotional disturbance as defined in s. 394.492(5) or a serious
248    emotional disturbance as defined in s. 394.492(6) that each of
249    the following criteria is met:
250          a. The child requires residential treatment.
251          b. The child is in need of a residential treatment program
252    and is expected to benefit from mental health treatment.
253          c. An appropriate, less restrictive alternative to
254    residential treatment is unavailable.
255          (b) Whenever the department believes that a child in its
256    legal custody is emotionally disturbed and may need residential
257    treatment, an examination and suitability assessment must be
258    conducted by a qualified evaluator who is appointed by the
259    Agency for Health Care Administration. This suitability
260    assessment must be completed before the placement of the child
261    in a residential treatment center for emotionally disturbed
262    children and adolescents or a hospital. The qualified evaluator
263    must be a psychiatrist or a psychologist licensed in Florida who
264    has at least 3 years of experience in the diagnosis and
265    treatment of serious emotional disturbances in children and
266    adolescents and who has no actual or perceived conflict of
267    interest with any inpatient facility or residential treatment
268    center or program.
269          (c) Before a child is admitted under this subsection, the
270    child shall be assessed for suitability for residential
271    treatment by a qualified evaluator who has conducted a personal
272    examination and assessment of the child and has made written
273    findings that:
274          1. The child appears to have an emotional disturbance
275    serious enough to require residential treatment and is
276    reasonably likely to benefit from the treatment.
277          2. The child has been provided with a clinically
278    appropriate explanation of the nature and purpose of the
279    treatment.
280          3. All available modalities of treatment less restrictive
281    than residential treatment have been considered, and a less
282    restrictive alternative that would offer comparable benefits to
283    the child is unavailable.
284         
285          A copy of the written findings of the evaluation and suitability
286    assessment must be provided to the department and to the
287    guardian ad litem, who shall have the opportunity to discuss the
288    findings with the evaluator.
289          (d) Immediately upon placing a child in a residential
290    treatment program under this section, the department must notify
291    the guardian ad litem and the court having jurisdiction over the
292    child and must provide the guardian ad litem and the court with
293    a copy of the assessment by the qualified evaluator.
294          (e) Within 10 days after the admission of a child to a
295    residential treatment program, the director of the residential
296    treatment program or the director's designee must ensure that an
297    individualized plan of treatment has been prepared by the
298    program and has been explained to the child, to the department,
299    and to the guardian ad litem, and submitted to the department.
300    The child must be involved in the preparation of the plan to the
301    maximum feasible extent consistent with his or her ability to
302    understand and participate, and the guardian ad litem and the
303    child's foster parents must be involved to the maximum extent
304    consistent with the child's treatment needs. The plan must
305    include a preliminary plan for residential treatment and
306    aftercare upon completion of residential treatment. The plan
307    must include specific behavioral and emotional goals against
308    which the success of the residential treatment may be measured.
309    A copy of the plan must be provided to the child, to the
310    guardian ad litem, and to the department.
311          (f) Within 30 days after admission, the residential
312    treatment program must review the appropriateness and
313    suitability of the child's placement in the program. The
314    residential treatment program must determine whether the child
315    is receiving benefit toward the treatment goals and whether the
316    child could be treated in a less restrictive treatment program.
317    The residential treatment program shall prepare a written report
318    of its findings and submit the report to the guardian ad litem
319    and to the department. The department must submit the report to
320    the court. The report must include a discharge plan for the
321    child. The residential treatment program must continue to
322    evaluate the child's treatment progress every 30 days thereafter
323    and must include its findings in a written report submitted to
324    the department. The department may not reimburse a facility
325    until the facility has submitted every written report that is
326    due.
327          (g)1. The department must submit, at the beginning of each
328    month, to the court having jurisdiction over the child, a
329    written report regarding the child's progress toward achieving
330    the goals specified in the individualized plan of treatment.
331          2. The court must conduct a hearing to review the status
332    of the child's residential treatment plan no later than 3 months
333    after the child's admission to the residential treatment
334    program. An independent review of the child's progress toward
335    achieving the goals and objectives of the treatment plan must be
336    completed by a qualified evaluator and submitted to the court
337    before its 3-month review.
338          3. For any child in residential treatment at the time a
339    judicial review is held pursuant to s. 39.701, the child's
340    continued placement in residential treatment must be a subject
341    of the judicial review.
342          4. If at any time the court determines that the child is
343    not suitable for continued residential treatment, the court
344    shall order the department to place the child in the least
345    restrictive setting that is best suited to meet his or her
346    needs.
347          (h) After the initial 3-month review, the court must
348    conduct a review of the child's residential treatment plan every
349    90 days.
350          (i) The department must adopt rules for implementing
351    timeframes for the completion of suitability assessments by
352    qualified evaluators and a procedure that includes timeframes
353    for completing the 3-month independent review by the qualified
354    evaluators of the child's progress toward achieving the goals
355    and objectives of the treatment plan which review must be
356    submitted to the court. The Agency for Health Care
357    Administration must adopt rules for the registration of
358    qualified evaluators, the procedure for selecting the evaluators
359    to conduct the reviews required under this section, and a
360    reasonable, cost-efficient fee schedule for qualified
361    evaluators.
362          (6) When a child is in an out-of-home placement, a
363    licensed health care professional shall be immediately called if
364    there are indications of physical injury or illness, or the
365    child shall be taken to the nearest available hospital for
366    emergency care.
367          (7) Except as otherwise provided herein, nothing in this
368    section shall be deemed to eliminate the right of a parent,
369    legal custodian, or the child to consent to examination or
370    treatment for the child.
371          (8) Except as otherwise provided herein, nothing in this
372    section shall be deemed to alter the provisions of s. 743.064.
373          (9) A court shall not be precluded from ordering services
374    or treatment to be provided to the child by a duly accredited
375    practitioner who relies solely on spiritual means for healing in
376    accordance with the tenets and practices of a church or
377    religious organization, when required by the child's health and
378    when requested by the child.
379          (10) Nothing in this section shall be construed to
380    authorize the permanent sterilization of the child unless such
381    sterilization is the result of or incidental to medically
382    necessary treatment to protect or preserve the life of the
383    child.
384          (11) For the purpose of obtaining an evaluation or
385    examination, or receiving treatment as authorized pursuant to
386    this section, no child alleged to be or found to be dependent
387    shall be placed in a detention home or other program used
388    primarily for the care and custody of children alleged or found
389    to have committed delinquent acts.
390          (12) The parents or legal custodian of a child in an out-
391    of-home placement remain financially responsible for the cost of
392    medical treatment provided to the child even if either one or
393    both of the parents or if the legal custodian did not consent to
394    the medical treatment. After a hearing, the court may order the
395    parents or legal custodian, if found able to do so, to reimburse
396    the department or other provider of medical services for
397    treatment provided.
398          (13) Nothing in this section alters the authority of the
399    department to consent to medical treatment for a dependent child
400    when the child has been committed to the department and the
401    department has become the legal custodian of the child.
402          (14) At any time after the filing of a shelter petition or
403    petition for dependency, when the mental or physical condition,
404    including the blood group, of a parent, caregiver, legal
405    custodian, or other person requesting custody of a child is in
406    controversy, the court may order the person to submit to a
407    physical or mental examination by a qualified professional. The
408    order may be made only upon good cause shown and pursuant to
409    notice and procedures as set forth by the Florida Rules of
410    Juvenile Procedure.
411          (15) At any time after a shelter petition or petition for
412    dependency is filed, if the mental or physical condition of a
413    child or the child's parent, caregiver, legal custodian, or
414    other person requesting custody of the child is in controversy,
415    the court, if it has not already done so, may order the person
416    to submit to a substance abuse assessment and evaluation. The
417    assessment or evaluation must be administered by a qualified
418    professional, as defined in s. 397.311. The order may be made
419    only upon good cause shown and pursuant to the notice and
420    procedures set forth in the Florida Rules of Juvenile Procedure.
421          Section 4. Subsection (9) is added to section 39.507,
422    Florida Statutes, to read:
423          39.507 Adjudicatory hearings; orders of adjudication.--
424          (9) If the mental or physical condition of a child or the
425    child's parent, caregiver, legal custodian, or other person
426    requesting custody of the child is in controversy, the court, if
427    it has not already done so, may require the person to submit to
428    a substance abuse assessment or evaluation. The assessment or
429    evaluation must be administered by a qualified professional, as
430    defined in s. 397.311. The court may also require such person to
431    participate in and comply with treatment and services identified
432    as necessary, including, when appropriate and available,
433    participation and compliance with a treatment-based drug court
434    program. The court, including the treatment-based drug court
435    program, shall oversee the progress and compliance with
436    treatment by the child or the child's parent, legal custodian,
437    caregiver, or other person requesting custody of the child, and
438    shall impose appropriate available sanctions for noncompliance
439    upon the child's parent, legal custodian, caregiver, or other
440    person requesting custody of the child. Any order entered under
441    this subsection may be made only upon good cause shown and
442    pursuant to the notice and procedures set forth in the Florida
443    Rules of Juvenile Procedure.
444          Section 5. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section
445    39.521, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
446          39.521 Disposition hearings; powers of disposition.--
447          (1) A disposition hearing shall be conducted by the court,
448    if the court finds that the facts alleged in the petition for
449    dependency were proven in the adjudicatory hearing, or if the
450    parents or legal custodians have consented to the finding of
451    dependency or admitted the allegations in the petition, have
452    failed to appear for the arraignment hearing after proper
453    notice, or have not been located despite a diligent search
454    having been conducted.
455          (b) When any child is adjudicated by a court to be
456    dependent, the court having jurisdiction of the child has the
457    power by order to:
458          1. Require, if the court has not already done so, a child
459    or the child's parent, caregiver, legal custodian, or other
460    person requesting custody of the child to submit to a substance
461    abuse assessment or evaluation when such person's mental or
462    physical condition is in controversy. The assessment or
463    evaluation must be administered by a qualified professional, as
464    defined in s. 397.311. The court may also require such person to
465    participate in treatment and services identified as necessary,
466    including participation and compliance with a treatment-based
467    drug court program, when appropriate and if available. The
468    court, including the treatment-based drug court program, shall
469    oversee the progress and compliance with treatment by the child
470    or the child's parent, legal custodian, caregiver, or other
471    person requesting custody of the child, and shall impose
472    appropriate available sanctions for noncompliance upon the
473    child's parent, legal custodian, caregiver, or other person
474    requesting custody of the child. Any order entered under this
475    paragraph may be made only upon good cause shown and pursuant to
476    the notice and procedures set forth in the Florida Rules of
477    Juvenile Procedurethe parent and, when appropriate, the legal
478    custodian and the child, to participate in treatment and
479    services identified as necessary.
480          2. Require, if the court deems necessary, the parties to
481    participate in dependency mediation.
482          3. Require placement of the child either under the
483    protective supervision of an authorized agent of the department
484    in the home of one or both of the child's parents or in the home
485    of a relative of the child or another adult approved by the
486    court, or in the custody of the department. Protective
487    supervision continues until the court terminates it or until the
488    child reaches the age of 18, whichever date is first. Protective
489    supervision shall be terminated by the court whenever the court
490    determines that permanency has been achieved for the child,
491    whether with a parent, another relative, or a legal custodian,
492    and that protective supervision is no longer needed. The
493    termination of supervision may be with or without retaining
494    jurisdiction, at the court's discretion, and shall in either
495    case be considered a permanency option for the child. The order
496    terminating supervision by the department shall set forth the
497    powers of the custodian of the child and shall include the
498    powers ordinarily granted to a guardian of the person of a minor
499    unless otherwise specified. Upon the court's termination of
500    supervision by the department, no further judicial reviews are
501    required, so long as permanency has been established for the
502    child.
503          Section 6. Paragraph (d) of subsection (8) of section
504    39.701, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
505          39.701 Judicial review.--
506          (8)
507          (d) The court may extend the time limitation of the case
508    plan, or may modify the terms of the plan, which, in addition to
509    other modifications, may include a requirement that the parent,
510    foster parent, or legal custodian participate in a treatment-
511    based drug court program,based upon information provided by the
512    social service agency, and the guardian ad litem, if one has
513    been appointed, the parent or parents, and the foster parents or
514    legal custodian, and any other competent information on record
515    demonstrating the need for the amendment. If the court extends
516    the time limitation of the case plan, the court must make
517    specific findings concerning the frequency of past parent-child
518    visitation, if any, and the court may authorize the expansion or
519    restriction of future visitation. Modifications to the plan must
520    be handled as prescribed in s. 39.601. Any extension of a case
521    plan must comply with the time requirements and other
522    requirements specified by this chapter.
523          Section 7. Section 397.334, Florida Statutes, is amended
524    to read:
525          397.334 Treatment-based drug court programs.--
526          (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to implement
527    treatment-based drug court programs in each judicial circuit in
528    an effort to reduce crime and recidivism, abuse and neglect
529    cases, and family dysfunction by breaking the cycle of
530    addiction,which is the most predominant cause of cases entering
531    the justice system. The Legislature recognizes that the
532    integration of judicial supervision, treatment, accountability,
533    and sanctions, and community supportgreatly increases the
534    effectiveness of substance abuse treatment. The Legislature
535    also seeks to ensure that there is a coordinated, integrated,
536    and multidisciplinary response to the substance abuse problem in
537    this state, with special attention given to the creation of
538    creating partnerships amongbetween the public, community,and
539    private sectors and to the coordinated, supported, and
540    integrated delivery of multiple-system services for substance
541    abusers, including a multiagencyteam approach to service
542    delivery and aftercare services.
543          (2) Each judicial circuit shall establish a model of a
544    treatment-based drug court program under which persons in the
545    justice system assessed with a substance abuse problem will be
546    processed in such a manner as to appropriately address the
547    severity of the identified substance abuse problem through
548    treatment servicesplanstailored to the individual needs of the
549    participant. These treatment-based drug court program models may
550    be established in the misdemeanor, felony, family, delinquency,
551    and dependency divisions of the judicial circuits. It is the
552    intent of the Legislature to encourage the Department of
553    Corrections, the Department of Children and Family Services, the
554    Department of Juvenile Justice, the Department of Health, the
555    Department of Law Enforcement, the Department of Education, and
556    other such otheragencies, local governments, law enforcement
557    agencies, and other interested public or private sources, and
558    individualsto support the creation and establishment of these
559    problem-solving court programs. Participation in the treatment-
560    based drug court programs does not divest any public or private
561    agency of its responsibility for a child or adult, but enables
562    allowsthese agencies to better meet their needs through shared
563    responsibility and resources.
564          (3) The treatment-based drug court programs shall include
565    therapeutic jurisprudence and restorative justiceprinciples and
566    adhere to the following 10 key components, recognized by the
567    Drug Courts Program Office of the Office of Justice Programs of
568    the United States Department of Justice and adopted by the
569    Florida Supreme Court Treatment-Based Drug Court Steering
570    Committee:
571          (a) Drug court programs integrate alcohol and other drug
572    treatment services with justice system case processing.
573          (b) Using a nonadversarial approach, prosecution and
574    defense counsel promote public safety while protecting
575    participants' due process rights.
576          (c) Eligible participants are identified early and
577    promptly placed in the drug court program.
578          (d) Drug court programs provide access to a continuum of
579    alcohol, drug, and other related treatment and rehabilitation
580    services.
581          (e) Abstinence is monitored by frequent testing for
582    alcohol and other drugs.
583          (f) A coordinated strategy governs drug court program
584    responses to participants' compliance.
585          (g) Ongoing judicial interaction with each drug court
586    program participant is essential.
587          (h) Monitoring and evaluation measure the achievement of
588    program goals and gauge program effectiveness.
589          (i) Continuing interdisciplinary education promotes
590    effective drug court program planning, implementation, and
591    operations.
592          (j) Forging partnerships among drug court programs, public
593    agencies, and community-based organizations generates local
594    support and enhances drug court program effectiveness.
595          (4) Treatment-based drug court programs may include
596    pretrial intervention programs as provided in ss. 948.08,
597    948.16, and 985.306, post adjudicatory programs, and the
598    monitoring of sentenced offenders through a treatment-based drug
599    court program. Supervision may also be provided for offenders
600    who transfer from jail or a prison-based treatment program into
601    the community.
602          (5) Contingent upon an annual appropriation by the
603    Legislature, each judicial circuit shall establish, at a
604    minimum, one coordinator position for the treatment-based drug
605    court program within the state courts system to coordinate the
606    responsibilities of the participating agencies and service
607    providers. Each coordinator shall provide direct support to the
608    treatment-based drug court program by providing coordination
609    between the multidisciplinary team and the judiciary, providing
610    case management, monitoring compliance of the participants in
611    the treatment-based drug court program with court requirements,
612    and providing program evaluation and accountability.
613          (6)(5)(a) The Florida Association of Drug Court Program
614    Professionals is created. The membership of the association may
615    consist of treatment-baseddrug court program practitioners who
616    comprise the multidisciplinary treatment-baseddrug court
617    program team, including, but not limited to, judges, state
618    attorneys, defense counsel, drug courtprogram coordinators,
619    probation officers, law enforcement officers, community
620    representatives,members of the academic community, and
621    treatment professionals. Membership in the association shall be
622    voluntary.
623          (b) The association shall annually elect a chair whose
624    duty is to solicit recommendations from members on issues
625    relating to the expansion, operation, and institutionalization
626    of treatment-baseddrug court programs. The chair is
627    responsible for providing the association's recommendations
628    together with a report each year, on or before October 1, to the
629    appropriate Supreme Court committee or personnel of the Office
630    of the State Courts AdministratorSupreme Court Treatment-Based
631    Drug Court Steering Committee, and shall submit a report each
632    year, on or before October 1, to the steering committee.
633          (7) The chief judge of each judicial circuit may appoint
634    an advisory committee for the treatment-based drug court
635    program. The committee shall be composed of the chief judge, or
636    his or her designee, who shall serve as chair; the judge of the
637    treatment-based drug court program, if not otherwise designated
638    by the chief judge as his or her designee; the state attorney,
639    or his or her designee; the public defender, or his or her
640    designee; the treatment-based drug court program coordinators;
641    community representatives; and any other persons the chair finds
642    are appropriate.
643          Section 8. Subsection (5) of section 910.035, Florida
644    Statutes, is amended to read:
645          910.035 Transfer from county for plea and sentence.--
646          (5) Any person eligible for participation in a drug court
647    treatment program pursuant to s. 948.08(6) may be eligible to
648    have the case transferred to a county other than that in which
649    the charge arose if the drug court program agrees and if the
650    following conditions are met:
651          (a) The authorized representative of the drug court
652    program of the county requesting to transfer the case shall
653    consult with the authorized representative of the drug court
654    program in the county to which transfer is desired.
655          (b) If approval for transfer is received from all parties,
656    the trial court shall accept a plea of nolo contendere andenter
657    a transfer order directing the clerk to transfer the case to the
658    county which has accepted the defendant into its drug court
659    program.
660          (c) The transfer order shall include a copy of the
661    probable cause affidavit; any charging documents in the case;
662    all reports, witness statements, test results, evidence lists,
663    and other documents in the case; the defendant's mailing address
664    and phone number; and the defendant's written consent to abide
665    by the rules and procedures of the receiving county's drug court
666    program.
667          (d) After the transfer takes place, the clerk shall set
668    the matter for a hearing before the drug court program judge and
669    the court shall ensure the defendant's entry into the drug court
670    program.
671          (e) Upon successful completion of the drug court program,
672    the jurisdiction to which the case has been transferred shall
673    dispose of the case pursuant to s. 948.08(6). If the defendant
674    does not complete the drug court program successfully, the
675    jurisdiction to which the case has been transferred shall
676    dispose of the case within the guidelines of the Criminal
677    Punishment Codecase shall be prosecuted as determined by the
678    state attorneys of the sending and receiving counties.
679          Section 9. Subsections (6), (7), and (8) of section
680    948.08, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
681          948.08 Pretrial intervention program.--
682          (6)(a) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, a
683    person who is charged with a felony of the second or third
684    degree for purchase or possession of a controlled substance
685    under chapter 893, prostitution, tampering with evidence,
686    solicitation for purchase of a controlled substance, or
687    obtaining a prescription by fraud; who has not been charged with
688    a crime involving violence, including, but not limited to,
689    murder, sexual battery, robbery, carjacking, home-invasion
690    robbery, or any other crime involving violence; and who has not
691    previously been convicted of a felony nor been admitted to a
692    felony pretrial program referred to in this sectionis eligible
693    for admission into a pretrial substance abuse education and
694    treatment intervention program approved by the chief judge of
695    the circuit, for a period of not less than 1 year in duration,
696    upon motion of either party or the court's own motion, except:
697          1. If a defendant was previously offered admission to a
698    pretrial substance abuse education and treatment intervention
699    program at any time prior to trial and the defendant rejected
700    that offer on the record, then the court or the state attorney
701    may deny the defendant's admission to such a program.
702          1.2.If the state attorney believes that the facts and
703    circumstances of the case suggest the defendant's involvement in
704    the dealing and selling of controlled substances, the court
705    shall hold a preadmission hearing. If the state attorney
706    establishes, by a preponderance of the evidence at such hearing,
707    that the defendant was involved in the dealing or selling of
708    controlled substances, the court shall deny the defendant's
709    admission into a pretrial intervention program.
710          2. A defendant assessed with a substance abuse problem who
711    is charged for the first time with a nonviolent third degree
712    felony and a defendant assessed with a substance abuse problem
713    who has previously been convicted of a nonviolent third degree
714    felony who is charged with a second or subsequent nonviolent
715    third degree felony may, with the approval of the state
716    attorney, be referred to the program outlined in this
717    subsection. Upon successful completion of the program, the
718    defendant is entitled to dismissal of the pending charge
719    involving a nonviolent third degree felony.
720          (b) At the end of the pretrial intervention period, the
721    court shall consider the recommendation of the administrator
722    pursuant to subsection (5) and the recommendation of the state
723    attorney as to disposition of the pending charges. The court
724    shall determine, by written finding, whether the defendant has
725    successfully completed the pretrial intervention program.
726          (c)1. If the court finds that the defendant has not
727    successfully completed the pretrial intervention program, the
728    court may order the person to continue in education and
729    treatment or order that the charges revert to normal channels
730    for prosecution.
731          2. The court shall dismiss the charges upon a finding that
732    the defendant has successfully completed the pretrial
733    intervention program.
734          (d) Any entity, whether public or private, providing a
735    pretrial substance abuse education and treatment intervention
736    program under this subsection must contract with the county or
737    appropriate governmental entity, and the terms of the contract
738    must include, but need not be limited to, the requirements
739    established for private entities under s. 948.15(3).
740          (7) The chief judge in each circuit may appoint an
741    advisory committee for the pretrial intervention program
742    composed of the chief judge or his or her designee, who shall
743    serve as chair; the state attorney, the public defender, and the
744    program administrator, or their designees; and such other
745    persons as the chair deems appropriate. The advisory committee
746    may not designate any defendant eligible for a pretrial
747    intervention program for any offense that is not listed under
748    paragraph (6)(a) without the state attorney's recommendation and
749    approval. The committee may also include persons representing
750    any other agencies to which persons released to the pretrial
751    intervention program may be referred.
752          (7)(8)The department may contract for the services and
753    facilities necessary to operate pretrial intervention programs.
754          Section 10. Section 985.306, Florida Statutes, is amended
755    to read:
756          985.306 Delinquency pretrial intervention program.--
757          (1)(a)Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
758    contrary, a child who is charged under chapter 893 with a
759    misdemeanor; afelony of the second or third degree for purchase
760    or possession of a controlled substance under chapter 893;
761    tampering with evidence; solicitation for purchase of a
762    controlled substance; or obtaining a prescription by fraud, and
763    who has not previously been adjudicated for a felony nor been
764    admitted to a delinquency pretrial intervention program under
765    this section, is eligible for admission into a delinquency
766    pretrial substance abuse education and treatment intervention
767    program approved by the chief judge or alternative sanctions
768    coordinator of the circuit to the extent that funded programs
769    are available, for a period based on the program requirements
770    and the treatment services that are suitable for the offenderof
771    not less than 1 year in duration, upon motion of either party or
772    the court's own motion, except:.
773          (a)If the state attorney believes that the facts and
774    circumstances of the case suggest the child's involvement in the
775    dealing and selling of controlled substances, the court shall
776    hold a preadmission hearing. If the state attorney establishes
777    by a preponderance of the evidence at such hearing that the
778    child was involved in the dealing and selling of controlled
779    substances, the court shall deny the child's admission into a
780    delinquency pretrial intervention program.
781          (b) A child assessed with a substance abuse problem who is
782    charged for the first time with a nonviolent third degree felony
783    and a child assessed with a substance abuse problem who has
784    previously been adjudicated guilty of or delinquent for a
785    nonviolent third degree felony who is charged with a second or
786    subsequent nonviolent third degree felony may, with the approval
787    of the state attorney, be referred to the program outlined in
788    this subsection. Upon successful completion of the program, the
789    child is entitled to dismissal of the pending charge as provided
790    in paragraph (3)(b).
791          (2)(b)At the end of the delinquency pretrial intervention
792    period, the court shall consider the recommendation of the state
793    attorney and the program administrator as to disposition of the
794    pending charges. The court shall determine, by written finding,
795    whether the child has successfully completed the delinquency
796    pretrial intervention program.
797          (3)(a)(c)1.If the court finds that the child has not
798    successfully completed the delinquency pretrial intervention
799    program, the court may order the child to continue in an
800    education, treatment, or urine monitoring program if resources
801    and funding are available or order that the charges revert to
802    normal channels for prosecution.
803          (b)2.The court may dismiss the charges upon a finding
804    that the child has successfully completed the delinquency
805    pretrial intervention program.
806          (4)(d)Any entity, whether public or private, providing
807    pretrial substance abuse education, treatment intervention, and
808    a urine monitoring program under this section must contract with
809    the county or appropriate governmental entity, and the terms of
810    the contract must include, but need not be limited to, the
811    requirements established for private entities under s.
812    948.15(3). It is the intent of the Legislature that public or
813    private entities providing substance abuse education and
814    treatment intervention programs involve the active participation
815    of parents, schools, churches, businesses, law enforcement
816    agencies, and the department or its contract providers.
817          (2) The chief judge in each circuit may appoint an
818    advisory committee for the delinquency pretrial intervention
819    program composed of the chief judge or designee, who shall serve
820    as chair; the state attorney, the public defender, and the
821    program administrator, or their designees; and such other
822    persons as the chair deems appropriate. The committee may also
823    include persons representing any other agencies to which
824    children released to the delinquency pretrial intervention
825    program may be referred.
826          Section 11. If any law amended by this act was also
827    amended by a law enacted at the 2003 Regular Session of the
828    Legislature or at the 2003 Special Session A of the Legislature,
829    such laws shall be construed as if they had been enacted at the
830    same session of the Legislature, and full effect shall be given
831    to each if possible.
832          Section 12. This act shall take effect July 1, 2003 , or
833    upon becoming a law, whichever occurs later.