HB 7173

1
A bill to be entitled
2An act relating to the welfare of children; amending s.
339.001, F.S.; providing additional purposes of ch. 39,
4F.S.; revising legislative intent; creating the Office of
5Child Abuse Prevention within the Executive Office of the
6Governor; directing the Governor to appoint a director of
7the office; providing duties and responsibilities of the
8director; providing procedures for evaluation of child
9abuse prevention programs; requiring a report to the
10Governor, Legislature, secretaries of certain state
11agencies, and certain committees of the Legislature;
12providing for information to be included in the report;
13providing for the development and implementation of a
14state plan for the coordination of child abuse prevention
15programs and services; establishing a Child Abuse
16Prevention Advisory Council; providing for membership,
17duties, and responsibilities; requiring requests for
18funding to be based on the state plan; providing for
19review and revision of the state plan; granting rulemaking
20authority to the Executive Office of the Governor;
21requiring the Legislature to evaluate the office by a
22specified date; amending s. 39.0014, F.S.; providing
23responsibilities of the office under ch. 39, F.S.;
24amending s. 39.01, F.S.; providing and revising
25definitions; amending s. 39.202, F.S.; providing access to
26records for agencies that provide early intervention and
27prevention services; amending ss. 39.0015, 39.013, and
2839.302, F.S.; conforming cross-references and terminology;
29amending s. 39.701, F.S.; requiring the court to issue an
30order that is separate from other judicial review orders;
31amending s. 402.164, F.S.; establishing legislative intent
32for the statewide and local advocacy councils; revising a
33definition; amending s. 402.165, F.S.; providing for
34termination of members of the statewide council; providing
35guidelines for selection of the executive director of the
36Florida Statewide Advocacy Council; establishing a process
37for investigating reports of abuse; revising council
38meeting requirements; providing requirements for
39interagency agreements; requiring interagency agreements
40to be renewed annually and submitted to the Governor by a
41specified date; providing additional requirements for the
42statewide council to petition the circuit court for access
43to certain records; amending s. 409.1451, F.S., relating
44to independent living transition services; revising
45eligibility requirements for certain young adults;
46revising duties of the Department of Children and Family
47Services regarding independent living transition services;
48including additional parties in the review of a child's
49academic performance; requiring the department or a
50community-based care lead agency under contract with the
51department to develop a plan for delivery of such
52services; requiring additional aftercare support services;
53providing additional qualifications to receive an award
54under the Road-to-Independence Program; deleting certain
55time restrictions for submitting applications; providing
56procedures for the payment of awards; requiring
57collaboration between certain parties in the development
58of a plan regarding the provision of transitional
59services; requiring a community-based care lead agency to
60develop a plan for purchase and delivery of such services
61and requiring department approval prior to implementation;
62requiring the department to submit a report annually to
63the Legislature on performance, oversight, and rule
64development; permitting the Independent Living Services
65Advisory Council to have access to certain data held by
66the department and certain agencies; amending s. 409.175,
67F.S.; revising the definition of the term "boarding
68school" to require such schools to meet certain standards
69within a specified timeframe; amending s. 409.903, F.S.;
70providing eligibility criteria for certain persons to
71qualify for medical assistance payments; creating s.
72743.045, F.S.; removing the disability of nonage for
73certain youth in the legal custody of the Department of
74Children and Family Services; amending s. 1009.25, F.S.;
75providing additional criteria for a student to qualify for
76an exemption from certain tuition and fees; providing a
77contingent effective date.
78
79Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
80
81     Section 1.  Subsections (1) and (6) of section 39.001,
82Florida Statutes, are amended, subsections (7) and (8) are
83renumbered as subsections (8) and (9) and amended, present
84subsection (9) is renumbered as subsection (10), and new
85subsections (7), (11), and (12) are added to that section, to
86read:
87     39.001  Purposes and intent; personnel standards and
88screening.--
89     (1)  PURPOSES OF CHAPTER.--The purposes of this chapter
90are:
91     (a)  To provide for the care, safety, and protection of
92children in an environment that fosters healthy social,
93emotional, intellectual, and physical development; to ensure
94secure and safe custody; and to promote the health and well-
95being of all children under the state's care; and to prevent the
96occurrence of child abuse, neglect, and abandonment.
97     (b)  To recognize that most families desire to be competent
98caregivers and providers for their children and that children
99achieve their greatest potential when families are able to
100support and nurture the growth and development of their
101children. Therefore, the Legislature finds that policies and
102procedures that provide for prevention and intervention through
103the department's child protection system should be based on the
104following principles:
105     1.  The health and safety of the children served shall be
106of paramount concern.
107     2.  The prevention and intervention should engage families
108in constructive, supportive, and nonadversarial relationships.
109     3.  The prevention and intervention should intrude as
110little as possible into the life of the family, be focused on
111clearly defined objectives, and take the most parsimonious path
112to remedy a family's problems.
113     4.  The prevention and intervention should be based upon
114outcome evaluation results that demonstrate success in
115protecting children and supporting families.
116     (c)  To provide a child protection system that reflects a
117partnership between the department, other agencies, and local
118communities.
119     (d)  To provide a child protection system that is sensitive
120to the social and cultural diversity of the state.
121     (e)  To provide procedures which allow the department to
122respond to reports of child abuse, abandonment, or neglect in
123the most efficient and effective manner that ensures the health
124and safety of children and the integrity of families.
125     (f)  To preserve and strengthen the child's family ties
126whenever possible, removing the child from parental custody only
127when his or her welfare cannot be adequately safeguarded without
128such removal.
129     (g)  To ensure that the parent or legal custodian from
130whose custody the child has been taken assists the department to
131the fullest extent possible in locating relatives suitable to
132serve as caregivers for the child.
133     (h)  To ensure that permanent placement with the biological
134or adoptive family is achieved as soon as possible for every
135child in foster care and that no child remains in foster care
136longer than 1 year.
137     (i)  To secure for the child, when removal of the child
138from his or her own family is necessary, custody, care, and
139discipline as nearly as possible equivalent to that which should
140have been given by the parents; and to ensure, in all cases in
141which a child must be removed from parental custody, that the
142child is placed in an approved relative home, licensed foster
143home, adoptive home, or independent living program that provides
144the most stable and potentially permanent living arrangement for
145the child, as determined by the court. All placements shall be
146in a safe environment where drugs and alcohol are not abused.
147     (j)  To ensure that, when reunification or adoption is not
148possible, the child will be prepared for alternative permanency
149goals or placements, to include, but not be limited to, long-
150term foster care, independent living, custody to a relative on a
151permanent basis with or without legal guardianship, or custody
152to a foster parent or legal custodian on a permanent basis with
153or without legal guardianship.
154     (k)  To make every possible effort, when two or more
155children who are in the care or under the supervision of the
156department are siblings, to place the siblings in the same home;
157and in the event of permanent placement of the siblings, to
158place them in the same adoptive home or, if the siblings are
159separated, to keep them in contact with each other.
160     (l)  To provide judicial and other procedures to assure due
161process through which children, parents, and guardians and other
162interested parties are assured fair hearings by a respectful and
163respected court or other tribunal and the recognition,
164protection, and enforcement of their constitutional and other
165legal rights, while ensuring that public safety interests and
166the authority and dignity of the courts are adequately
167protected.
168     (m)  To ensure that children under the jurisdiction of the
169courts are provided equal treatment with respect to goals,
170objectives, services, and case plans, without regard to the
171location of their placement. It is the further intent of the
172Legislature that, when children are removed from their homes,
173disruption to their education be minimized to the extent
174possible.
175     (n)  To create and maintain an integrated prevention
176framework that enables local communities, state agencies, and
177organizations to collaborate to implement efficient and properly
178applied evidence-based child abuse prevention practices.
179     (6)  LEGISLATIVE INTENT FOR THE PREVENTION OF ABUSE,
180ABANDONMENT, AND NEGLECT OF CHILDREN.--The incidence of known
181child abuse, abandonment, and neglect has increased rapidly over
182the past 5 years. The impact that abuse, abandonment, or neglect
183has on the victimized child, siblings, family structure, and
184inevitably on all citizens of the state has caused the
185Legislature to determine that the prevention of child abuse,
186abandonment, and neglect shall be a priority of this state. To
187further this end, it is the intent of the Legislature that an
188Office of Child Abuse Prevention be established a comprehensive
189approach for the prevention of abuse, abandonment, and neglect
190of children be developed for the state and that this planned,
191comprehensive approach be used as a basis for funding.
192     (7)  OFFICE OF CHILD ABUSE PREVENTION.--
193     (a)  For purposes of establishing a comprehensive statewide
194approach for the prevention of child abuse, abandonment, and
195neglect, the Office of Child Abuse Prevention is created within
196the Executive Office of the Governor. The Governor shall appoint
197a director for the office who shall be subject to confirmation
198by the Senate.
199     (b)  The director shall:
200     1.  Assist in developing rules pertaining to implementation
201of child abuse prevention efforts.
202     2.  Act as the Governor's liaison with state agencies,
203other state governments, and the public and private sectors on
204matters that relate to child abuse prevention.
205     3.  Work to secure funding and other support for the
206state's child abuse prevention efforts, including, but not
207limited to, establishing cooperative relationships among state
208and private agencies.
209     4.  Develop a strategic program and funding initiative that
210links the separate jurisdictional activities of state agencies
211with respect to child abuse prevention. The office may designate
212lead and contributing agencies to develop such initiatives.
213     5.  Advise the Governor and the Legislature on child abuse
214trends in this state, the status of current child abuse
215prevention programs and services, the funding of those programs
216and services, and the status of the office with regard to the
217development and implementation of the state child abuse
218prevention strategy.
219     6.  Develop child abuse prevention public awareness
220campaigns to be implemented throughout the state.
221     (c)  The office is authorized and directed to:
222     1.  Oversee the preparation and implementation of the state
223plan established under subsection (8) and revise and update the
224state plan as necessary.
225     2.  Provide for or make available continuing professional
226education and training in the prevention of child abuse and
227neglect.
228     3.  Work to secure funding in the form of appropriations,
229gifts, and grants from the state, the Federal Government, and
230other public and private sources in order to ensure that
231sufficient funds are available for prevention efforts.
232     4.  Make recommendations pertaining to agreements or
233contracts for the establishment and development of:
234     a.  Programs and services for the prevention of child abuse
235and neglect.
236     b.  Training programs for the prevention of child abuse and
237neglect.
238     c.  Multidisciplinary and discipline-specific training
239programs for professionals with responsibilities affecting
240children, young adults, and families.
241     5.  Monitor, evaluate, and review the development and
242quality of local and statewide services and programs for the
243prevention of child abuse and neglect and shall publish and
244distribute an annual report of its findings on or before January
2451 of each year to the Governor, the Speaker of the House of
246Representatives, the President of the Senate, the secretary of
247each state agency affected by the report, and the appropriate
248substantive committees of the Legislature. The report shall
249include:
250     a.  A summary of the activities of the office.
251     b.  A summary detailing the demographic and geographic
252characteristics of families served by the prevention programs.
253     c.  Recommendations, by state agency, for the further
254development and improvement of services and programs for the
255prevention of child abuse and neglect.
256     d.  The budget requests and prevention program needs by
257state agency.
258     (8)(7)  PLAN FOR COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH.--
259     (a)  The office department shall develop a state plan for
260the prevention of abuse, abandonment, and neglect of children
261and shall submit the state plan to the Speaker of the House of
262Representatives, the President of the Senate, and the Governor
263no later than December 31, 2007 January 1, 1983. The Department
264of Children and Family Services, the Department of Corrections,
265the Department of Education, the Department of Health, the
266Department of Juvenile Justice, the Department of Law
267Enforcement, the Agency for Persons with Disabilities, and the
268Agency for Workforce Innovation The Department of Education and
269the Division of Children's Medical Services Prevention and
270Intervention of the Department of Health shall participate and
271fully cooperate in the development of the state plan at both the
272state and local levels. Furthermore, appropriate local agencies
273and organizations shall be provided an opportunity to
274participate in the development of the state plan at the local
275level. Appropriate local groups and organizations shall include,
276but not be limited to, community mental health centers; guardian
277ad litem programs for children under the circuit court; the
278school boards of the local school districts; the Florida local
279advocacy councils; community-based care lead agencies; private
280or public organizations or programs with recognized expertise in
281working with child abuse prevention programs for children and
282families; private or public organizations or programs with
283recognized expertise in working with children who are sexually
284abused, physically abused, emotionally abused, abandoned, or
285neglected and with expertise in working with the families of
286such children; private or public programs or organizations with
287expertise in maternal and infant health care; multidisciplinary
288child protection teams; child day care centers; law enforcement
289agencies;, and the circuit courts, when guardian ad litem
290programs are not available in the local area. The state plan to
291be provided to the Legislature and the Governor shall include,
292as a minimum, the information required of the various groups in
293paragraph (b).
294     (b)  The development of the comprehensive state plan shall
295be accomplished in the following manner:
296     1.  The office shall establish a Child Abuse Prevention
297Advisory Council composed of representatives from each state
298agency and appropriate local agencies and organizations
299specified in paragraph (a). The advisory council shall serve as
300the research arm of the office and The department shall
301establish an interprogram task force comprised of the Program
302Director for Family Safety, or a designee, a representative from
303the Child Care Services Program Office, a representative from
304the Family Safety Program Office, a representative from the
305Mental Health Program Office, a representative from the
306Substance Abuse Program Office, a representative from the
307Developmental Disabilities Program Office, and a representative
308from the Division of Children's Medical Services Prevention and
309Intervention of the Department of Health. Representatives of the
310Department of Law Enforcement and of the Department of Education
311shall serve as ex officio members of the interprogram task
312force. The interprogram task force shall be responsible for:
313     a.  Assisting in developing a plan of action for better
314coordination and integration of the goals, activities, and
315funding pertaining to the prevention of child abuse,
316abandonment, and neglect conducted by the office department in
317order to maximize staff and resources at the state level. The
318plan of action shall be included in the state plan.
319     b.  Assisting in providing a basic format to be utilized by
320the districts in the preparation of local plans of action in
321order to provide for uniformity in the district plans and to
322provide for greater ease in compiling information for the state
323plan.
324     c.  Providing the districts with technical assistance in
325the development of local plans of action, if requested.
326     d.  Assisting in examining the local plans to determine if
327all the requirements of the local plans have been met and, if
328they have not, informing the districts of the deficiencies and
329requesting the additional information needed.
330     e.  Assisting in preparing the state plan for submission to
331the Legislature and the Governor. Such preparation shall include
332the incorporation into the state plan collapsing of information
333obtained from the local plans, the cooperative plans with the
334members of the advisory council Department of Education, and the
335plan of action for coordination and integration of state
336departmental activities into one comprehensive plan. The state
337comprehensive plan shall include a section reflecting general
338conditions and needs, an analysis of variations based on
339population or geographic areas, identified problems, and
340recommendations for change. In essence, the state plan shall
341provide an analysis and summary of each element of the local
342plans to provide a statewide perspective. The state plan shall
343also include each separate local plan of action.
344     f.  Conducting a feasibility study on the establishment of
345a Children's Cabinet.
346     g.f.  Working with the specified state agency in fulfilling
347the requirements of subparagraphs 2., 3., 4., and 5.
348     2.  The office, the department, the Department of
349Education, and the Department of Health shall work together in
350developing ways to inform and instruct parents of school
351children and appropriate district school personnel in all school
352districts in the detection of child abuse, abandonment, and
353neglect and in the proper action that should be taken in a
354suspected case of child abuse, abandonment, or neglect, and in
355caring for a child's needs after a report is made. The plan for
356accomplishing this end shall be included in the state plan.
357     3.  The office, the department, the Department of Law
358Enforcement, and the Department of Health shall work together in
359developing ways to inform and instruct appropriate local law
360enforcement personnel in the detection of child abuse,
361abandonment, and neglect and in the proper action that should be
362taken in a suspected case of child abuse, abandonment, or
363neglect.
364     4.  Within existing appropriations, the office department
365shall work with other appropriate public and private agencies to
366emphasize efforts to educate the general public about the
367problem of and ways to detect child abuse, abandonment, and
368neglect and in the proper action that should be taken in a
369suspected case of child abuse, abandonment, or neglect. The plan
370for accomplishing this end shall be included in the state plan.
371     5.  The office, the department, the Department of
372Education, and the Department of Health shall work together on
373the enhancement or adaptation of curriculum materials to assist
374instructional personnel in providing instruction through a
375multidisciplinary approach on the identification, intervention,
376and prevention of child abuse, abandonment, and neglect. The
377curriculum materials shall be geared toward a sequential program
378of instruction at the four progressional levels, K-3, 4-6, 7-9,
379and 10-12. Strategies for encouraging all school districts to
380utilize the curriculum are to be included in the comprehensive
381state plan for the prevention of child abuse, abandonment, and
382neglect.
383     6.  Each district of the department shall develop a plan
384for its specific geographical area. The plan developed at the
385district level shall be submitted to the advisory council
386interprogram task force for utilization in preparing the state
387plan. The district local plan of action shall be prepared with
388the involvement and assistance of the local agencies and
389organizations listed in this paragraph (a), as well as
390representatives from those departmental district offices
391participating in the treatment and prevention of child abuse,
392abandonment, and neglect. In order to accomplish this, the
393office district administrator in each district shall establish a
394task force on the prevention of child abuse, abandonment, and
395neglect. The office district administrator shall appoint the
396members of the task force in accordance with the membership
397requirements of this section. The office In addition, the
398district administrator shall ensure that each subdistrict is
399represented on the task force; and, if the district does not
400have subdistricts, the district administrator shall ensure that
401both urban and rural areas are represented on the task force.
402The task force shall develop a written statement clearly
403identifying its operating procedures, purpose, overall
404responsibilities, and method of meeting responsibilities. The
405district plan of action to be prepared by the task force shall
406include, but shall not be limited to:
407     a.  Documentation of the magnitude of the problems of child
408abuse, including sexual abuse, physical abuse, and emotional
409abuse, and child abandonment and neglect in its geographical
410area.
411     b.  A description of programs currently serving abused,
412abandoned, and neglected children and their families and a
413description of programs for the prevention of child abuse,
414abandonment, and neglect, including information on the impact,
415cost-effectiveness, and sources of funding of such programs.
416     c.  A continuum of programs and services necessary for a
417comprehensive approach to the prevention of all types of child
418abuse, abandonment, and neglect as well as a brief description
419of such programs and services.
420     d.  A description, documentation, and priority ranking of
421local needs related to child abuse, abandonment, and neglect
422prevention based upon the continuum of programs and services.
423     e.  A plan for steps to be taken in meeting identified
424needs, including the coordination and integration of services to
425avoid unnecessary duplication and cost, and for alternative
426funding strategies for meeting needs through the reallocation of
427existing resources, utilization of volunteers, contracting with
428local universities for services, and local government or private
429agency funding.
430     f.  A description of barriers to the accomplishment of a
431comprehensive approach to the prevention of child abuse,
432abandonment, and neglect.
433     g.  Recommendations for changes that can be accomplished
434only at the state program level or by legislative action.
435     (9)(8)  FUNDING AND SUBSEQUENT PLANS.--
436     (a)  All budget requests submitted by the office, the
437department, the Department of Health, the Department of
438Education, the Department of Juvenile Justice, the Department of
439Corrections, the Agency for Persons with Disabilities, the
440Agency for Workforce Innovation, or any other agency to the
441Legislature for funding of efforts for the prevention of child
442abuse, abandonment, and neglect shall be based on the state plan
443developed pursuant to this section.
444     (b)  The office department at the state and district levels
445and the other agencies and organizations listed in paragraph
446(8)(a) (7)(a) shall readdress the state plan and make necessary
447revisions every 5 years, at a minimum. Such revisions shall be
448submitted to the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the
449President of the Senate no later than June 30 of each year
450divisible by 5. At least biennially, the office shall review the
451state plan and make any necessary revisions based on changing
452needs and program evaluation results. An annual progress report
453shall be submitted to update the state plan in the years between
454the 5-year intervals. In order to avoid duplication of effort,
455these required plans may be made a part of or merged with other
456plans required by either the state or Federal Government, so
457long as the portions of the other state or Federal Government
458plan that constitute the state plan for the prevention of child
459abuse, abandonment, and neglect are clearly identified as such
460and are provided to the Speaker of the House of Representatives
461and the President of the Senate as required above.
462     (11)  RULEMAKING.--The Executive Office of the Governor
463shall adopt rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54 to
464implement the provisions of this section.
465     (12)  EVALUATION.--By February 1, 2009, the Legislature
466shall evaluate the office and determine whether it should
467continue to be housed in the Executive Office of the Governor or
468transferred to a state agency.
469     Section 2.  Section 39.0014, Florida Statutes, is amended
470to read:
471     39.0014  Responsibilities of public agencies.--All state,
472county, and local agencies shall cooperate, assist, and provide
473information to the Office of Child Abuse Prevention and the
474department as will enable them it to fulfill their its
475responsibilities under this chapter.
476     Section 3.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (3) of section
47739.0015, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
478     39.0015  Child abuse prevention training in the district
479school system.--
480     (3)  DEFINITIONS.--As used in this section:
481     (b)  "Child abuse" means those acts as defined in ss.
48239.01(1), (2), (30), (43), (45), (53) (52), and (64) (63),
483827.04, and 984.03(1), (2), and (37).
484     Section 4.  Subsections (47) through (72) of section 39.01,
485Florida Statutes, are renumbered as subsections (48) through
486(73), present subsections (10) and (47) are amended, and a new
487subsection (47) is added to that section, to read:
488     39.01  Definitions.--When used in this chapter, unless the
489context otherwise requires:
490     (10)  "Caregiver" means the parent, legal custodian, adult
491household member, or other person responsible for a child's
492welfare as defined in subsection (48) (47).
493     (47)  "Office" means the Office of Child Abuse Prevention
494within the Executive Office of the Governor.
495     (48)(47)  "Other person responsible for a child's welfare"
496includes the child's legal guardian, legal custodian, or foster
497parent; an employee of any a private school, public or private
498child day care center, residential home, institution, facility,
499or agency; or any other person legally responsible for the
500child's welfare in a residential setting; and also includes an
501adult sitter or relative entrusted with a child's care. For the
502purpose of departmental investigative jurisdiction, this
503definition does not include law enforcement officers, or
504employees of municipal or county detention facilities or the
505Department of Corrections, while acting in an official capacity.
506     Section 5.  Subsection (2) of section 39.013, Florida
507Statutes, is amended to read:
508     39.013  Procedures and jurisdiction; right to counsel.--
509     (2)  The circuit court shall have exclusive original
510jurisdiction of all proceedings under this chapter, of a child
511voluntarily placed with a licensed child-caring agency, a
512licensed child-placing agency, or the department, and of the
513adoption of children whose parental rights have been terminated
514under this chapter. Jurisdiction attaches when the initial
515shelter petition, dependency petition, or termination of
516parental rights petition is filed or when a child is taken into
517the custody of the department. The circuit court may assume
518jurisdiction over any such proceeding regardless of whether the
519child was in the physical custody of both parents, was in the
520sole legal or physical custody of only one parent, caregiver, or
521some other person, or was in the physical or legal custody of no
522person when the event or condition occurred that brought the
523child to the attention of the court. When the court obtains
524jurisdiction of any child who has been found to be dependent,
525the court shall retain jurisdiction, unless relinquished by its
526order, until the child reaches 18 years of age. However, if a
527youth petitions the court at any time before his or her 19th
528birthday requesting the court's continued jurisdiction, the
529juvenile court may retain jurisdiction under this chapter for a
530period not to exceed 1 year following the youth's 18th birthday
531for the purpose of determining whether appropriate aftercare
532support, Road-to-Independence Program Scholarship, transitional
533support, mental health, and developmental disability services,
534to the extent otherwise authorized by law, have been provided to
535the formerly dependent child who was in the legal custody of the
536department immediately before his or her 18th birthday. If a
537petition for special immigrant juvenile status and an
538application for adjustment of status have been filed on behalf
539of a foster child and the petition and application have not been
540granted by the time the child reaches 18 years of age, the court
541may retain jurisdiction over the dependency case solely for the
542purpose of allowing the continued consideration of the petition
543and application by federal authorities. Review hearings for the
544child shall be set solely for the purpose of determining the
545status of the petition and application. The court's jurisdiction
546terminates upon the final decision of the federal authorities.
547Retention of jurisdiction in this instance does not affect the
548services available to a young adult under s. 409.1451. The court
549may not retain jurisdiction of the case after the immigrant
550child's 22nd birthday.
551     Section 6.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
55239.202, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
553     39.202  Confidentiality of reports and records in cases of
554child abuse or neglect.--
555     (2)  Except as provided in subsection (4), access to such
556records, excluding the name of the reporter which shall be
557released only as provided in subsection (5), shall be granted
558only to the following persons, officials, and agencies:
559     (a)  Employees, authorized agents, or contract providers of
560the department, the Department of Health, or county agencies
561responsible for carrying out:
562     1.  Child or adult protective investigations;
563     2.  Ongoing child or adult protective services;
564     3.  Early intervention and prevention services;
565     4.3.  Healthy Start services; or
566     5.4.  Licensure or approval of adoptive homes, foster
567homes, or child care facilities, or family day care homes or
568informal child care providers who receive subsidized child care
569funding, or other homes used to provide for the care and welfare
570of children; or.
571     6.5.  Services for victims of domestic violence when
572provided by certified domestic violence centers working at the
573department's request as case consultants or with shared clients.
574
575Also, employees or agents of the Department of Juvenile Justice
576responsible for the provision of services to children, pursuant
577to chapters 984 and 985.
578     Section 7.  Subsection (1) of section 39.302, Florida
579Statutes, is amended to read:
580     39.302  Protective investigations of institutional child
581abuse, abandonment, or neglect.--
582     (1)  The department shall conduct a child protective
583investigation of each report of institutional child abuse,
584abandonment, or neglect. Upon receipt of a report that alleges
585that an employee or agent of the department, or any other entity
586or person covered by s. 39.01(31) or (48) (47), acting in an
587official capacity, has committed an act of child abuse,
588abandonment, or neglect, the department shall initiate a child
589protective investigation within the timeframe established by the
590central abuse hotline pursuant to s. 39.201(5) and orally notify
591the appropriate state attorney, law enforcement agency, and
592licensing agency. These agencies shall immediately conduct a
593joint investigation, unless independent investigations are more
594feasible. When conducting investigations onsite or having face-
595to-face interviews with the child, such investigation visits
596shall be unannounced unless it is determined by the department
597or its agent that such unannounced visits would threaten the
598safety of the child. When a facility is exempt from licensing,
599the department shall inform the owner or operator of the
600facility of the report. Each agency conducting a joint
601investigation shall be entitled to full access to the
602information gathered by the department in the course of the
603investigation. A protective investigation must include an onsite
604visit of the child's place of residence. In all cases, the
605department shall make a full written report to the state
606attorney within 3 working days after making the oral report. A
607criminal investigation shall be coordinated, whenever possible,
608with the child protective investigation of the department. Any
609interested person who has information regarding the offenses
610described in this subsection may forward a statement to the
611state attorney as to whether prosecution is warranted and
612appropriate. Within 15 days after the completion of the
613investigation, the state attorney shall report the findings to
614the department and shall include in such report a determination
615of whether or not prosecution is justified and appropriate in
616view of the circumstances of the specific case.
617     Section 8.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (6) of section
61839.701, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
619     39.701  Judicial review.--
620     (6)(a)  In addition to paragraphs (1)(a) and (2)(a), the
621court shall hold a judicial review hearing within 90 days after
622a youth's 17th birthday. The court shall also issue an order,
623separate from the order on judicial review, that the disability
624of nonage of the youth has been removed pursuant to s. 743.045.
625The court and shall continue to hold timely judicial review
626hearings thereafter. In addition, the court may review the
627status of the child more frequently during the year prior to the
628youth's 18th birthday if necessary. At each review held under
629this subsection, in addition to any information or report
630provided to the court, the foster parent, legal custodian,
631guardian ad litem, and the child shall be given the opportunity
632to address the court with any information relevant to the
633child's best interests, particularly as it relates to
634independent living transition services. In addition to any
635information or report provided to the court, the department
636shall include in its judicial review social study report written
637verification that the child:
638     1.  Has been provided with a current Medicaid card and has
639been provided all necessary information concerning the Medicaid
640program sufficient to prepare the youth to apply for coverage
641upon reaching age 18, if such application would be appropriate.
642     2.  Has been provided with a certified copy of his or her
643birth certificate and, if the child does not have a valid
644driver's license, a Florida identification card issued under s.
645322.051.
646     3.  Has been provided information relating to Social
647Security Insurance benefits if the child is eligible for these
648benefits. If the child has received these benefits and they are
649being held in trust for the child, a full accounting of those
650funds must be provided and the child must be informed about how
651to access those funds.
652     4.  Has been provided with information and training related
653to budgeting skills, interviewing skills, and parenting skills.
654     5.  Has been provided with all relevant information related
655to the Road-to-Independence Program Scholarship, including, but
656not limited to, eligibility requirements, forms necessary to
657apply, and assistance in completing the forms. The child shall
658also be informed that, if he or she is eligible for the Road-to-
659Independence Scholarship Program, he or she may reside with the
660licensed foster family or group care provider with whom the
661child was residing at the time of attaining his or her 18th
662birthday or may reside in another licensed foster home or with a
663group care provider arranged by the department.
664     6.  Has an open bank account, or has identification
665necessary to open an account, and has been provided with
666essential banking skills.
667     7.  Has been provided with information on public assistance
668and how to apply.
669     8.  Has been provided a clear understanding of where he or
670she will be living on his or her 18th birthday, how living
671expenses will be paid, and what educational program or school he
672or she will be enrolled in.
673     9.  Has been provided with notice of the youth's right to
674petition for the court's continuing jurisdiction for 1 year
675after the youth's 18th birthday as specified in s. 39.013(2) and
676with information on how to obtain access to the court.
677     10.  Has been encouraged to attend all judicial review
678hearings occurring after his or her 17th birthday.
679     Section 9.  Subsection (1) and paragraph (b) of subsection
680(2) of section 402.164, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
681     402.164  Legislative intent; definitions.--
682     (1)(a)  It is the intent of the Legislature to use citizen
683volunteers as members of the Florida Statewide Advocacy Council
684and the Florida local advocacy councils, and to have volunteers
685operate a network of councils that shall, without interference
686by an executive agency, undertake to discover, monitor,
687investigate, and determine the presence of conditions or
688individuals that constitute a threat to the rights, health,
689safety, or welfare of persons who receive services from state
690agencies.
691     (b)  It is the further intent of the Legislature that the
692monitoring and investigation shall safeguard the health, safety,
693and welfare of consumers of services provided by these state
694agencies.
695     (c)  It is the further intent of the Legislature that state
696agencies cooperate with the councils in forming interagency
697agreements to provide the councils with authorized client
698records so that the councils may monitor services and
699investigate claims.
700     (2)  As used in ss. 402.164-402.167, the term:
701     (b)  "Client" means a client of the Agency for Persons with
702Disabilities, the Agency for Health Care Administration, the
703Department of Children and Family Services, or the Department of
704Elderly Affairs, as defined in s. 393.063, s. 394.67, s.
705397.311, or s. 400.960, a forensic client or client as defined
706in s. 916.106, a child or youth as defined in s. 39.01, a child
707as defined in s. 827.01, a family as defined in s. 414.0252, a
708participant as defined in s. 400.551, a resident as defined in
709s. 400.402, a Medicaid recipient or recipient as defined in s.
710409.901, a child receiving child care as defined in s. 402.302,
711a disabled adult as defined in s. 410.032 or s. 410.603, or a
712victim as defined in s. 39.01 or s. 415.102 as each definition
713applies within its respective chapter.
714     Section 10.  Subsections (2), (5), and (7) and paragraph
715(a) of subsection (8) of section 402.165, Florida Statutes, are
716amended to read:
717     402.165  Florida Statewide Advocacy Council; confidential
718records and meetings.--
719     (2)  Members of the statewide council shall be appointed to
720serve terms of 4 years, subject to termination at the pleasure
721of the Governor prior to expiration of such period. A member may
722not serve more than two full consecutive terms.
723     (5)(a)  Members of the statewide council shall receive no
724compensation, but are entitled to be reimbursed for per diem and
725travel expenses in accordance with s. 112.061.
726     (b)  The Governor shall select an executive director who
727shall serve at the pleasure of the Governor and shall perform
728the duties delegated to him or her by the council. The
729compensation of the executive director and staff shall be
730established in accordance with the rules of the Selected Exempt
731Service. The Governor shall give priority consideration in the
732selection of an executive director to an individual with
733professional expertise in research design, statistical analysis,
734or agency evaluation and analysis.
735     (c)  The council may apply for, receive, and accept grants,
736gifts, donations, bequests, and other payments including money
737or property, real or personal, tangible or intangible, and
738service from any governmental or other public or private entity
739or person and make arrangements as to the use of same.
740     (d)  The statewide council shall annually prepare a budget
741request that, after it is approved by the council, shall be
742submitted to the Governor. The budget shall include a request
743for funds to carry out the activities of the statewide council
744and the local councils.
745     (7)  The responsibilities of the statewide council include,
746but are not limited to:
747     (a)  Serving as an independent third-party mechanism for
748protecting the constitutional and human rights of clients within
749programs or facilities operated, funded, or contracted by any
750state agency that provides client services.
751     (b)  Monitoring, by site visit and through access to
752records, the delivery and use of services, programs, or
753facilities operated, funded, or contracted by any state agency
754that provides client services, for the purpose of preventing
755abuse or deprivation of the constitutional and human rights of
756clients. The statewide council may conduct an unannounced site
757visit or monitoring visit that involves the inspection of
758records if the visit is conditioned upon a complaint. A
759complaint may be generated by the council itself, after
760consulting with the Governor's office, if information from any
761state agency that provides client services or from other sources
762indicates a situation at the program or facility that indicates
763possible abuse or neglect or deprivation of the constitutional
764and human rights of clients. The statewide council shall
765establish and follow uniform criteria for the review of
766information and generation of complaints. The statewide council
767shall develop a written protocol for all complaints it generates
768to provide the Governor's office with information including the
769nature of the abuse or neglect, the agencies involved, the
770populations or numbers of individuals affected, the types of
771records necessary to complete the investigation, and a strategy
772for approaching the problem. Routine program monitoring and
773reviews that do not require an examination of records may be
774made unannounced.
775     (c)  Receiving, investigating, and resolving reports of
776abuse or deprivation of constitutional and human rights referred
777to the statewide council by a local council. If a matter
778constitutes a threat to the life, safety, or health of clients
779or is multiservice-area in scope, the statewide council may
780exercise its powers without the necessity of a referral from a
781local council.
782     (d)  Reviewing existing programs or services and new or
783revised programs of the state agencies that provide client
784services and making recommendations as to how the rights of
785clients are affected.
786     (e)  Submitting an annual report to the Legislature, no
787later than December 30 of each calendar year, concerning
788activities, recommendations, and complaints reviewed or
789developed by the council during the year.
790     (f)  Conducting meetings at least once six times a year at
791the call of the chair and at other times at the call of the
792Governor or by written request of eight six members of the
793council, including the executive director.
794     (g)  Developing and adopting uniform procedures to be used
795to carry out the purpose and responsibilities of the statewide
796council and the local councils.
797     (h)  Supervising the operations of the local councils and
798monitoring the performance and activities of all local councils
799and providing technical assistance to members of local councils.
800     (i)  Providing for the development and presentation of a
801standardized training program for members of local councils.
802     (j)  Developing and maintaining interagency agreements
803between the council and the state agencies providing client
804services. The interagency agreements shall address the
805coordination of efforts and identify the roles and
806responsibilities of the statewide and local councils and each
807agency in fulfillment of their responsibilities, including
808access to records. The interagency agreements shall explicitly
809define a process that the statewide and local councils shall use
810to request records from the agency and shall define a process
811for appeal when disputes about access to records arise between
812agency staff and council members. Interagency agreements shall
813be renewed annually and shall be completed and reported to the
814Governor no later than February 1.
815     (8)(a)  In the performance of its duties, the statewide
816council shall have:
817     1.  Authority to receive, investigate, seek to conciliate,
818hold hearings on, and act on complaints that allege any abuse or
819deprivation of constitutional or human rights of persons who
820receive client services from any state agency.
821     2.  Access to all client records, files, and reports from
822any program, service, or facility that is operated, funded, or
823contracted by any state agency that provides client services and
824any records that are material to its investigation and are in
825the custody of any other agency or department of government. The
826council's investigation or monitoring shall not impede or
827obstruct matters under investigation by law enforcement agencies
828or judicial authorities. Access shall not be granted if a
829specific procedure or prohibition for reviewing records is
830required by federal law and regulation that supersedes state
831law. Access shall not be granted to the records of a private
832licensed practitioner who is providing services outside the
833state agency, or outside a state facility, and whose client is
834competent and refuses disclosure.
835     3.  Standing to petition the circuit court for access to
836client records that are confidential as specified by law. The
837petition shall be filed with notice and opportunity to be heard
838by the state agency and shall state the specific reasons for
839which the council is seeking access and the intended use of such
840information. The circuit court may authorize council access to
841the records upon a finding that access is directly related to an
842investigation regarding the possible deprivation of
843constitutional or human rights or the abuse of a client.
844Original client files, agency records, and reports may not be
845removed from a state agency, but copies must be provided to the
846council and the local councils at the agency's expense. Under no
847circumstance shall the council have access to confidential
848adoption records once the adoption is finalized by a court in
849accordance with ss. 39.0132, 63.022, and 63.162. Upon completion
850of a general investigation of practices and procedures of a
851state agency, the statewide council shall report its findings to
852that agency.
853     Section 11.  Section 409.1451, Florida Statutes, is amended
854to read:
855     409.1451  Independent living transition services.--
856     (1)  SYSTEM OF SERVICES.--
857     (a)  The Department of Children and Family Services, its
858agents, or community-based providers operating pursuant to s.
859409.1671 shall administer a system of independent living
860transition services to enable older children in foster care and
861young adults who exit foster care at age 18 to make the
862transition to self-sufficiency as adults.
863     (b)  The goals of independent living transition services
864are to assist older children in foster care and young adults who
865were formerly in foster care to obtain life skills and education
866for independent living and employment, to have a quality of life
867appropriate for their age, and to assume personal responsibility
868for becoming self-sufficient adults.
869     (c)  State funds for foster care or federal funds shall be
870used to establish a continuum of services for eligible children
871in foster care and eligible young adults who were formerly in
872foster care which accomplish the goals for the system of
873independent living transition services by providing services for
874foster children, pursuant to subsection (4), and services for
875young adults who were formerly in foster care, pursuant to
876subsection (5).
877     (d)  For children in foster care, independent living
878transition services are not an alternative to adoption.
879Independent living transition services may occur concurrently
880with continued efforts to locate and achieve placement in
881adoptive families for older children in foster care.
882     (2)  ELIGIBILITY.--
883     (a)  The department shall serve children who have reached
88413 years of age but are not yet 18 years of age and who are in
885foster care by providing services pursuant to subsection (4).
886Children to be served must meet the eligibility requirements set
887forth for specific services as provided in this section.
888     (b)  The department shall serve young adults who have
889reached 18 years of age or were placed with a court-approved
890nonrelative or guardian after reaching 16 years of age and have
891spent a minimum of 6 months in foster care but are not yet 23
892years of age and who were in foster care when they turned 18
893years of age by providing services pursuant to subsection (5).
894Young adults are not entitled to be served but must meet the
895eligibility requirements set forth for specific services in this
896section.
897     (3)  PREPARATION FOR INDEPENDENT LIVING.--
898     (a)  It is the intent of the Legislature for the Department
899of Children and Family Services to assist older children in
900foster care and young adults who exit foster care at age 18 in
901making the transition to independent living and self-sufficiency
902as adults. The department shall provide such children and young
903adults with opportunities to participate in life skills
904activities in their foster families and communities which are
905reasonable and appropriate for their respective ages or for any
906special needs they may have, and shall provide them with
907services to build life the skills and increase their ability to
908live independently and become self-sufficient. To support the
909provision of opportunities for participation in age-appropriate
910life skills activities, the department shall:
911     1.  Develop a list of age-appropriate activities and
912responsibilities to be offered to all children involved in
913independent living transition services and their foster parents.
914     2.  Provide training for staff and foster parents to
915address the issues of older children in foster care in
916transitioning to adulthood, which shall include information on
917high school completion, grant applications, vocational school
918opportunities, supporting education and employment
919opportunities, and providing opportunities to participate in
920appropriate daily activities.
921     3.  Develop procedures to maximize the authority of foster
922parents or caregivers to approve participation in age-
923appropriate activities of children in their care. The age-
924appropriate activities and the authority of the foster parent or
925caregiver shall be developed into a written plan that the foster
926parent or caregiver, the child, and the case manager all develop
927together, sign, and follow. This plan must include specific
928goals and objectives and be reviewed and updated no less than
929quarterly.
930     4.  Provide opportunities for older children in foster care
931to interact with mentors.
932     5.  Develop and implement procedures for older children to
933directly access and manage the personal allowance they receive
934from the department in order to learn responsibility and
935participate in age-appropriate life skills activities to the
936extent feasible.
937     6.  Make a good faith effort to fully explain, prior to
938execution of any signature, if required, any document, report,
939form, or other record, whether written or electronic, presented
940to a child or young adult pursuant to this chapter and allow for
941the recipient to ask any appropriate questions necessary to
942fully understand the document. It shall be the responsibility of
943the person presenting the document to the child or young adult
944to comply with this subparagraph.
945     (b)  It is further the intent of the Legislature that each
946child in foster care, his or her foster parents, if applicable,
947and the department or community-based provider set early
948achievement and career goals for the child's postsecondary
949educational and work experience. The department and community-
950based providers shall implement the model set forth in this
951paragraph to help ensure that children in foster care are ready
952for postsecondary education and the workplace.
953     1.  For children in foster care who have reached 13 years
954of age, entering the 9th grade, their foster parents, and the
955department or community-based provider shall ensure that the
956child's case plan includes an educational and career path be
957active participants in choosing a post-high school goal based
958upon both the abilities and interests of each child. The child,
959the foster parents, and a teacher or other school staff member
960shall be included to the fullest extent possible in developing
961the path. The path shall be reviewed at each judicial hearing as
962part of the case plan and goal shall accommodate the needs of
963children served in exceptional education programs to the extent
964appropriate for each individual. Such children may continue to
965follow the courses outlined in the district school board student
966progression plan. Children in foster care, with the assistance
967of their foster parents, and the department or community-based
968provider shall choose one of the following postsecondary goals:
969     a.  Attending a 4-year college or university, a community
970college plus university, or a military academy;
971     b.  Receiving a 2-year postsecondary degree;
972     c.  Attaining a postsecondary career and technical
973certificate or credential; or
974     d.  Beginning immediate employment, including
975apprenticeship, after completion of a high school diploma or its
976equivalent, or enlisting in the military.
977     2.  In order to assist the child in foster care in
978achieving his or her chosen goal, the department or community-
979based provider shall, with the participation of the child and
980foster parents, identify:
981     a.  The core courses necessary to qualify for a chosen
982goal.
983     b.  Any elective courses which would provide additional
984help in reaching a chosen goal.
985     c.  The grade point requirement and any additional
986information necessary to achieve a specific goal.
987     d.  A teacher, other school staff member, employee of the
988department or community-based care provider, or community
989volunteer who would be willing to work with the child as an
990academic advocate or mentor if foster parent involvement is
991insufficient or unavailable.
992     3.  In order to complement educational goals, the
993department and community-based providers are encouraged to form
994partnerships with the business community to support internships,
995apprenticeships, or other work-related opportunities.
996     4.  The department and community-based providers shall
997ensure that children in foster care and their foster parents are
998made aware of the postsecondary goals available and shall assist
999in identifying the coursework necessary to enable the child to
1000reach the chosen goal.
1001     (c)  All children in foster care and young adults formerly
1002in foster care are encouraged to take part in learning
1003opportunities that result from participation in community
1004service activities.
1005     (d)  Children in foster care and young adults formerly in
1006foster care shall be provided with the opportunity to change
1007from one postsecondary goal to another, and each postsecondary
1008goal shall allow for changes in each individual's needs and
1009preferences. Any change, particularly a change that will result
1010in additional time required to achieve a goal, shall be made
1011with the guidance and assistance of the department or community-
1012based provider.
1013     (4)  SERVICES FOR CHILDREN IN FOSTER CARE.--The department
1014shall provide the following transition to independence services
1015to children in foster care who meet prescribed conditions and
1016are determined eligible by the department. The service
1017categories available to children in foster care which facilitate
1018successful transition into adulthood are:
1019     (a)  Preindependent living services.--
1020     1.  Preindependent living services include, but are not
1021limited to, life skills training, educational field trips, and
1022conferences. The specific services to be provided to a child
1023shall be determined using a preindependent living assessment.
1024     2.  A child who has reached 13 years of age but is not yet
102515 years of age who is in foster care is eligible for such
1026services.
1027     3.  The department shall conduct an annual staffing for
1028each child who has reached 13 years of age but is not yet 15
1029years of age to ensure that the preindependent living training
1030and services to be provided as determined by the preindependent
1031living assessment are being received and to evaluate the
1032progress of the child in developing the needed independent
1033living skills.
1034     4.  At the first annual staffing that occurs following a
1035child's 14th birthday, and at each subsequent staffing, the
1036department or community-based provider shall ensure that the
1037child's case plan includes an educational and career path based
1038upon both the abilities and interests of each child and shall
1039provide to each child detailed personalized information on
1040services provided by the Road-to-Independence Scholarship
1041Program, including requirements for eligibility; on other
1042grants, scholarships, and waivers that are available and should
1043be sought by the child with assistance from the department,
1044including, but not limited to, the Bright Futures Scholarship
1045Program, as provided in ss. 1009.53-1009.538; on application
1046deadlines; and on grade requirements for such programs.
1047     5.  Information related to both the preindependent living
1048assessment and all staffings, which shall be reduced to writing
1049and signed by the child participant, shall be included as a part
1050of the written report required to be provided to the court at
1051each judicial review held pursuant to s. 39.701.
1052     (b)  Life skills services.--
1053     1.  Life skills services may include, but are not limited
1054to, independent living skills training, including training to
1055develop banking and budgeting skills, interviewing skills,
1056parenting skills, and time management or organizational skills,
1057educational support, employment training, and counseling.
1058Children receiving these services should also be provided with
1059information related to social security insurance benefits and
1060public assistance. The specific services to be provided to a
1061child shall be determined using an independent life skills
1062assessment.
1063     2.  A child who has reached 15 years of age but is not yet
106418 years of age who is in foster care is eligible for such
1065services.
1066     3.  The department shall conduct a staffing at least once
1067every 6 months for each child who has reached 15 years of age
1068but is not yet 18 years of age to ensure that the appropriate
1069independent living training and services as determined by the
1070independent life skills assessment are being received and to
1071evaluate the progress of the child in developing the needed
1072independent living skills.
1073     4.  The department shall provide to each child in foster
1074care during the calendar month following the child's 17th
1075birthday an independent living assessment to determine the
1076child's skills and abilities to live independently and become
1077self-sufficient. Based on the results of the independent living
1078assessment, services and training shall be provided in order for
1079the child to develop the necessary skills and abilities prior to
1080the child's 18th birthday.
1081     5.  Information related to both the independent life skills
1082assessment and all staffings, which shall be reduced to writing
1083and signed by the child participant, shall be included as a part
1084of the written report required to be provided to the court at
1085each judicial review held pursuant to s. 39.701.
1086     (c)  Subsidized independent living services.--
1087     1.  Subsidized independent living services are living
1088arrangements that allow the child to live independently of the
1089daily care and supervision of an adult in a setting that is not
1090required to be licensed under s. 409.175.
1091     2.  A child who has reached 16 years of age but is not yet
109218 years of age is eligible for such services if he or she:
1093     a.  Is adjudicated dependent under chapter 39; has been
1094placed in licensed out-of-home care for at least 6 months prior
1095to entering subsidized independent living; and has a permanency
1096goal of adoption, independent living, or long-term licensed
1097care; and
1098     b.  Is able to demonstrate independent living skills, as
1099determined by the department, using established procedures and
1100assessments.
1101     3.  Independent living arrangements established for a child
1102must be part of an overall plan leading to the total
1103independence of the child from the department's supervision. The
1104plan must include, but need not be limited to, a description of
1105the skills of the child and a plan for learning additional
1106identified skills; the behavior that the child has exhibited
1107which indicates an ability to be responsible and a plan for
1108developing additional responsibilities, as appropriate; a plan
1109for future educational, vocational, and training skills; present
1110financial and budgeting capabilities and a plan for improving
1111resources and ability; a description of the proposed residence;
1112documentation that the child understands the specific
1113consequences of his or her conduct in the independent living
1114program; documentation of proposed services to be provided by
1115the department and other agencies, including the type of service
1116and the nature and frequency of contact; and a plan for
1117maintaining or developing relationships with the family, other
1118adults, friends, and the community, as appropriate.
1119     4.  Subsidy payments in an amount established by the
1120department may be made directly to a child under the direct
1121supervision of a caseworker or other responsible adult approved
1122by the department.
1123     (5)  SERVICES FOR YOUNG ADULTS FORMERLY IN FOSTER
1124CARE.--Based on the availability of funds, the department shall
1125provide or arrange for the following services to young adults
1126formerly in foster care who meet the prescribed conditions and
1127are determined eligible by the department. The department, or a
1128community-based care lead agency when the agency is under
1129contract with the department to provide the services described
1130under this subsection, shall develop a plan to implement those
1131services. A plan shall be developed for each community-based
1132care service area in the state. Each plan that is developed by a
1133community-based care lead agency shall be submitted to the
1134department. Each plan shall include the number of young adults
1135to be served each month of the fiscal year and specify the
1136number of young adults who will reach 18 years of age who will
1137be eligible for the plan and the number of young adults who will
1138reach 23 years of age and will be ineligible for the plan or who
1139are otherwise ineligible during each month of the fiscal year;
1140staffing requirements and all related costs to administer the
1141services and program; expenditures to or on behalf of the
1142eligible recipients; costs of services provided to young adults
1143through an approved plan for housing, transportation, and
1144employment; reconciliation of these expenses and any additional
1145related costs with the funds allocated for these services; and
1146an explanation of and a plan to resolve any shortages or
1147surpluses in order to end the fiscal year with a balanced
1148budget. The categories of services available to assist a young
1149adult formerly in foster care to achieve independence are:
1150     (a)  Aftercare support services.--
1151     1.  Aftercare support services are available to assist
1152young adults who were formerly in foster care in their efforts
1153to continue to develop the skills and abilities necessary for
1154independent living. The aftercare support services available
1155include, but are not limited to, the following:
1156     a.  Mentoring and tutoring.
1157     b.  Mental health services and substance abuse counseling.
1158     c.  Life skills classes, including credit management and
1159preventive health activities.
1160     d.  Parenting classes.
1161     e.  Job and career skills training.
1162     f.  Counselor consultations.
1163     g.  Temporary financial assistance.
1164     h.  Financial literacy skills training.
1165
1166The specific services to be provided under this subparagraph
1167shall be determined by an aftercare services assessment and may
1168be provided by the department or through referrals in the
1169community.
1170     2.  Temporary assistance provided to prevent homelessness
1171shall be provided as expeditiously as possible and within the
1172limitations defined by the department.
1173     3.2.  A young adult who has reached 18 years of age but is
1174not yet 23 years of age who leaves foster care at 18 years of
1175age but who requests services prior to reaching 23 years of age
1176is eligible for such services.
1177     (b)  Road-to-Independence Scholarship Program.--
1178     1.  The Road-to-Independence Scholarship Program is
1179intended to help eligible students who are former foster
1180children in this state to receive the educational and vocational
1181training needed to achieve independence. The amount of the award
1182shall be based on the living and educational needs of the young
1183adult and may be up to, but may not exceed, the amount of
1184earnings that the student would have been eligible to earn
1185working a 40-hour-a-week federal minimum wage job.
1186     2.  A young adult who has reached 18 years of age but is
1187not yet 21 years of age is eligible for the initial award, and a
1188young adult under 23 years of age is eligible for renewal
1189awards, if he or she:
1190     a.  Was a dependent child, under chapter 39, and was living
1191in licensed foster care or in subsidized independent living at
1192the time of his or her 18th birthday or is currently in licensed
1193foster care or subsidized independent living, was adopted from
1194foster care after reaching 16 years of age, or, after spending
1195at least 6 months in the custody of the department after
1196reaching 16 years of age, was placed in a guardianship by the
1197court;
1198     b.  Spent at least 6 months living in foster care before
1199reaching his or her 18th birthday;
1200     c.  Is a resident of this state as defined in s. 1009.40;
1201and
1202     d.  Meets one of the following qualifications:
1203     (I)  Has earned a standard high school diploma or its
1204equivalent as described in s. 1003.43 or s. 1003.435, or has
1205earned a special diploma or special certificate of completion as
1206described in s. 1003.438, and has been admitted for full-time
1207enrollment in an eligible postsecondary education institution as
1208defined in s. 1009.533;
1209     (II)  Is enrolled full time in an accredited high school;
1210or
1211     (III)  Is enrolled full time in an accredited adult
1212education program designed to provide the student with a high
1213school diploma or its equivalent.
1214     3.  A young adult applying for the a Road-to-Independence
1215Program Scholarship must apply for any other grants and
1216scholarships for which he or she may qualify. The department
1217shall assist the young adult in the application process and may
1218use the federal financial aid grant process to determine the
1219funding needs of the young adult.
1220     4.  An award shall be available to a young adult who is
1221considered a full-time student or its equivalent by the
1222educational institution in which he or she is enrolled, unless
1223that young adult has a recognized disability preventing full-
1224time attendance. The amount of the award, whether it is being
1225used by a young adult working toward completion of a high school
1226diploma or its equivalent or working toward completion of a
1227postsecondary education program, shall be determined based on an
1228assessment of the funding needs of the young adult. This
1229assessment must consider the young adult's living and
1230educational costs and other grants, scholarships, waivers,
1231earnings, and other income to be received by the young adult. An
1232award shall be available only to the extent that other grants
1233and scholarships are not sufficient to meet the living and
1234educational needs of the young adult, but an award may not be
1235less than $25 in order to maintain Medicaid eligibility for the
1236young adult as provided in s. 409.903.
1237     5.  The amount of the award may be disregarded for purposes
1238of determining the eligibility for, or the amount of, any other
1239federal or federally supported assistance.
1240     6.5.a.  The department must advertise the criteria,
1241application procedures, and availability of the program to:
1242     (I)  Children and young adults in, leaving, or formerly in
1243foster care.
1244     (II)  Case managers.
1245     (III)  Guidance and family services counselors.
1246     (IV)  Principals or other relevant school administrators.
1247     (V)  Guardians ad litem.
1248     (VI)  Foster parents. and must ensure that the children and
1249young adults leaving foster care, foster parents, or family
1250services counselors are informed of the availability of the
1251program and the application procedures.
1252     b.  A young adult must apply for the initial award during
1253the 6 months immediately preceding his or her 18th birthday, and
1254the department shall provide assistance with the application
1255process. A young adult who fails to make an initial application,
1256but who otherwise meets the criteria for an initial award, may
1257make one application for the initial award if the application is
1258made before the young adult's 21st birthday. If the young adult
1259does not apply for an initial award before his or her 18th
1260birthday, the department shall inform that young adult of the
1261opportunity to apply before turning 21 years of age.
1262     b.c.  If funding for the program is available, The
1263department shall issue awards from the scholarship program for
1264each young adult who meets all the requirements of the program
1265to the extent funding is available.
1266     c.d.  An award shall be issued at the time the eligible
1267student reaches 18 years of age.
1268     d.e.  A young adult who is eligible for the Road-to-
1269Independence Program, transitional support services, or
1270aftercare services and who so desires shall be allowed to reside
1271with the licensed foster family or group care provider with whom
1272he or she was residing at the time of attaining his or her 18th
1273birthday or to reside in another licensed foster home or with a
1274group care provider arranged by the department.
1275     e.f.  If the award recipient transfers from one eligible
1276institution to another and continues to meet eligibility
1277requirements, the award must be transferred with the recipient.
1278     f.g.  Scholarship Funds awarded to any eligible young adult
1279under this program are in addition to any other services or
1280funds provided to the young adult by the department through
1281transitional support services or aftercare services its
1282independent living transition services.
1283     g.h.  The department shall provide information concerning
1284young adults receiving funding through the Road-to-Independence
1285Program Scholarship to the Department of Education for inclusion
1286in the student financial assistance database, as provided in s.
12871009.94.
1288     h.i.  Scholarship Funds are intended to help eligible young
1289adults students who are former foster children in this state to
1290receive the educational and vocational training needed to become
1291independent and self-supporting. The funds shall be terminated
1292when the young adult has attained one of four postsecondary
1293goals under subsection (3) or reaches 23 years of age, whichever
1294occurs earlier. In order to initiate postsecondary education, to
1295allow for a change in career goal, or to obtain additional
1296skills in the same educational or vocational area, a young adult
1297may earn no more than two diplomas, certificates, or
1298credentials. A young adult attaining an associate of arts or
1299associate of science degree shall be permitted to work toward
1300completion of a bachelor of arts or a bachelor of science degree
1301or an equivalent undergraduate degree. Road-to-Independence
1302Program Scholarship funds may not be used for education or
1303training after a young adult has attained a bachelor of arts or
1304a bachelor of science degree or an equivalent undergraduate
1305degree.
1306     i.j.  The department shall evaluate and renew each award
1307annually during the 90-day period before the young adult's
1308birthday. In order to be eligible for a renewal award for the
1309subsequent year, the young adult must:
1310     (I)  Complete the number of hours, or the equivalent
1311considered full time by the educational institution, unless that
1312young adult has a recognized disability preventing full-time
1313attendance, in the last academic year in which the young adult
1314earned an award a scholarship, except for a young adult who
1315meets the requirements of s. 1009.41.
1316     (II)  Maintain appropriate progress as required by the
1317educational institution, except that, if the young adult's
1318progress is insufficient to renew the award scholarship at any
1319time during the eligibility period, the young adult may restore
1320eligibility by improving his or her progress to the required
1321level.
1322     j.k.  Scholarship Funds may be terminated during the
1323interim between an award and the evaluation for a renewal award
1324if the department determines that the award recipient is no
1325longer enrolled in an educational institution as defined in sub-
1326subparagraph 2.d., or is no longer a state resident. The
1327department shall notify a recipient student who is terminated
1328and inform the recipient student of his or her right to appeal.
1329     k.l.  An award recipient who does not qualify for a renewal
1330award or who chooses not to renew the award may subsequently
1331apply for reinstatement. An application for reinstatement must
1332be made before the young adult reaches 23 years of age, and a
1333student may not apply for reinstatement more than once. In order
1334to be eligible for reinstatement, the young adult must meet the
1335eligibility criteria and the criteria for award renewal for the
1336scholarship program.
1337     (c)  Transitional support services.--
1338     1.  In addition to any services provided through aftercare
1339support or the Road-to-Independence Program Scholarship, a young
1340adult formerly in foster care may receive other appropriate
1341short-term funding and services, which may include financial,
1342housing, counseling, employment, education, mental health,
1343disability, and other services, if the young adult demonstrates
1344that the services are critical to the young adult's own efforts
1345to achieve self-sufficiency and to develop a personal support
1346system. The department or community-based care provider shall
1347work with the young adult in developing a joint transition plan
1348that is consistent with a needs assessment identifying the
1349specific need for transitional services to support the young
1350adult's own efforts. The young adult must have specific tasks to
1351complete or maintain included in the plan and be accountable for
1352the completion of or making progress towards the completion of
1353these tasks. If the young adult and the department or community-
1354based care provider cannot come to agreement regarding any part
1355of the plan, the young adult may access a grievance process to
1356its full extent in an effort to resolve the disagreement.
1357     2.  A young adult formerly in foster care is eligible to
1358apply for transitional support services if he or she has reached
135918 years of age but is not yet 23 years of age, was a dependent
1360child pursuant to chapter 39, was living in licensed foster care
1361or in subsidized independent living at the time of his or her
136218th birthday, and had spent at least 6 months living in foster
1363care before that date.
1364     3.  If at any time the services are no longer critical to
1365the young adult's own efforts to achieve self-sufficiency and to
1366develop a personal support system, they shall be terminated.
1367     (d)  Payment of aftercare, Road-to-Independence Program
1368scholarship, or transitional support funds.--
1369     1.  Payment of aftercare, Road-to-Independence Program
1370scholarship, or transitional support funds shall be made
1371directly to the recipient unless the recipient requests in
1372writing to the community-based care lead agency, or the
1373department, that the payments or a portion of the payments be
1374made directly on the recipient's behalf in order to secure
1375services such as housing, counseling, education, or employment
1376training as part of the young adult's own efforts to achieve
1377self-sufficiency.
1378     2.  After the completion of aftercare support services that
1379satisfy the requirements of sub-subparagraph (a)1.h., payment of
1380awards under the Road-to-Independence Program shall be made by
1381direct deposit to the recipient, unless the recipient requests
1382in writing to the community-based care lead agency or the
1383department that:
1384     a.  The payments be made directly to the recipient by check
1385or warrant;
1386     b.  The payments or a portion of the payments be made
1387directly on the recipient's behalf to institutions the recipient
1388is attending to maintain eligibility under this section; or
1389     c.  The payments be made on a two-party check to a business
1390or landlord for a legitimate expense, whether reimbursed or not.
1391A legitimate expense for the purposes of this sub-subparagraph
1392shall include automobile repair or maintenance expenses;
1393educational, job, or training expenses; and costs incurred,
1394except legal costs, fines, or penalties, when applying for or
1395executing a rental agreement for the purposes of securing a home
1396or residence.
1397     3.  The community-based care lead agency may purchase
1398housing, transportation, or employment services to ensure the
1399availability and affordability of specific transitional services
1400thereby allowing an eligible young adult to utilize these
1401services in lieu of receiving a direct payment. Prior to
1402purchasing such services, the community-based care lead agency
1403must have a plan approved by the department describing the
1404services to be purchased, the rationale for purchasing the
1405services, and a specific range of expenses for each service that
1406is less than the cost of purchasing the service by an individual
1407young adult. The plan must include a description of the
1408transition of a young adult using these services into
1409independence and a timeframe for achievement of independence. An
1410eligible young adult who prefers a direct payment shall receive
1411such payment. The plan must be reviewed annually and evaluated
1412for cost-efficiency and for effectiveness in assisting young
1413adults in achieving independence, preventing homelessness among
1414young adults, and enabling young adults to earn a livable wage
1415in a permanent employment situation.
1416     4.  The young adult who resides with a foster family may
1417not be included as a child in calculating any licensing
1418restriction on the number of children in the foster home.
1419     (e)  Appeals process.--
1420     1.  The Department of Children and Family Services shall
1421adopt by rule a procedure by which a young adult may appeal an
1422eligibility determination or the department's failure to provide
1423aftercare, Road-to-Independence Program scholarship, or
1424transitional support services, or the termination of such
1425services, if such funds are available.
1426     2.  The procedure developed by the department must be
1427readily available to young adults, must provide timely
1428decisions, and must provide for an appeal to the Secretary of
1429Children and Family Services. The decision of the secretary
1430constitutes final agency action and is reviewable by the court
1431as provided in s. 120.68.
1432     (6)  ACCOUNTABILITY.--The department shall develop outcome
1433measures for the program and other performance measures in order
1434to maintain oversight of the program. The department shall
1435prepare a report on the outcome measures and the department's
1436oversight activities and submit the report to the President of
1437the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the
1438committees with jurisdiction over issues relating to children
1439and families in the Senate and the House of Representatives no
1440later than January 31 of each year. The report must include:
1441     (a)  An analysis of performance on the outcome measures
1442developed under this section reported for each community-based
1443care lead agency and compared with the performance of the
1444department on the same measures.
1445     (b)  A description of the department's oversight of the
1446program, including, by lead agency, any programmatic or fiscal
1447deficiencies found, corrective actions required, and current
1448status of compliance.
1449     (c)  Any rules adopted or proposed under this section since
1450the last report. For the purposes of the first report, any rules
1451adopted or proposed under this section must be included.
1452     (7)  INDEPENDENT LIVING SERVICES ADVISORY COUNCIL.--The
1453Secretary of Children and Family Services shall establish the
1454Independent Living Services Advisory Council for the purpose of
1455reviewing and making recommendations concerning the
1456implementation and operation of the independent living
1457transition services. This advisory council shall continue to
1458function as specified in this subsection until the Legislature
1459determines that the advisory council can no longer provide a
1460valuable contribution to the department's efforts to achieve the
1461goals of the independent living transition services.
1462     (a)  Specifically, the advisory council shall assess the
1463implementation and operation of the system of independent living
1464transition services and advise the department on actions that
1465would improve the ability of the independent living transition
1466services to meet the established goals. The advisory council
1467shall keep the department informed of problems being experienced
1468with the services, barriers to the effective and efficient
1469integration of services and support across systems, and
1470successes that the system of independent living transition
1471services has achieved. The department shall consider, but is not
1472required to implement, the recommendations of the advisory
1473council.
1474     (b)  The advisory council shall report to the appropriate
1475substantive committees of the Senate and the House of
1476Representatives on the status of the implementation of the
1477system of independent living transition services; efforts to
1478publicize the availability of aftercare support services, the
1479Road-to-Independence Scholarship Program, and transitional
1480support services; specific barriers to financial aid created by
1481the scholarship and possible solutions; the success of the
1482services; problems identified; recommendations for department or
1483legislative action; and the department's implementation of the
1484recommendations contained in the Independent Living Services
1485Integration Workgroup Report submitted to the Senate and the
1486House substantive committees December 31, 2002. This advisory
1487council report shall be submitted by December 31 of each year
1488that the council is in existence and shall be accompanied by a
1489report from the department which identifies the recommendations
1490of the advisory council and either describes the department's
1491actions to implement these recommendations or provides the
1492department's rationale for not implementing the recommendations.
1493     (c)  Members of the advisory council shall be appointed by
1494the secretary of the department. The membership of the advisory
1495council must include, at a minimum, representatives from the
1496headquarters and district offices of the Department of Children
1497and Family Services, community-based care lead agencies, the
1498Agency for Workforce Innovation, the Department of Education,
1499the Agency for Health Care Administration, the State Youth
1500Advisory Board, Workforce Florida, Inc., the Statewide Guardian
1501Ad Litem Office, foster parents, recipients of Road-to-
1502Independence Program funding, and advocates for foster children.
1503The secretary shall determine the length of the term to be
1504served by each member appointed to the advisory council, which
1505may not exceed 4 years.
1506     (d)  The Department of Children and Family Services shall
1507provide administrative support to the Independent Living
1508Services Advisory Council to accomplish its assigned tasks. The
1509advisory council shall be afforded access to all appropriate
1510data from the department, each community-based care lead agency,
1511and other relevant agencies in order to accomplish the tasks set
1512forth in this section. The data collected may not include any
1513information that would identify a specific child or young adult.
1514     (8)  PERSONAL PROPERTY.--Property acquired on behalf of
1515clients of this program shall become the personal property of
1516the clients and is not subject to the requirements of chapter
1517273 relating to state-owned tangible personal property. Such
1518property continues to be subject to applicable federal laws.
1519     (9)  MEDICAL ASSISTANCE FOR YOUNG ADULTS FORMERLY IN FOSTER
1520CARE.--The department shall enroll in the Florida KidCare
1521program, outside the open enrollment period, each young adult
1522who is eligible as described in paragraph (2)(b) and who has not
1523yet reached his or her 19th birthday.
1524     (a)  A young adult who was formerly in foster care at the
1525time of his or her 18th birthday and who is 18 years of age but
1526not yet 19, shall pay the premium for the Florida KidCare
1527program as required in s. 409.814.
1528     (b)  A young adult who has health insurance coverage from a
1529third party through his or her employer or who is eligible for
1530Medicaid is not eligible for enrollment under this subsection.
1531     (10)  RULEMAKING.--The department shall adopt by rule
1532procedures to administer this section, including balancing the
1533goals of normalcy and safety for the youth and providing the
1534caregivers with as much flexibility as possible to enable the
1535youth to participate in normal life experiences. The department
1536shall not adopt rules relating to reductions in scholarship
1537awards. The department shall engage in appropriate planning to
1538prevent, to the extent possible, a reduction in scholarship
1539awards after issuance.
1540     Section 12.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section
1541409.175, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
1542     409.175  Licensure of family foster homes, residential
1543child-caring agencies, and child-placing agencies; public
1544records exemption.--
1545     (2)  As used in this section, the term:
1546     (b)  "Boarding school" means a school which is accredited
1547by the Florida Council of Independent Schools or the Southern
1548Association of Colleges and Schools; which is accredited by the
1549Council on Accreditation, the Commission on Accreditation of
1550Rehabilitation Facilities, or the Coalition for Residential
1551Education; and which is registered with the Department of
1552Education as a school. Its program must follow established
1553school schedules, with holiday breaks and summer recesses in
1554accordance with other public and private school programs. The
1555children in residence must customarily return to their family
1556homes or legal guardians during school breaks and must not be in
1557residence year-round, except that this provision does not apply
1558to foreign students. The parents of these children retain
1559custody and planning and financial responsibility. A boarding
1560school currently in existence and a boarding school opening and
1561seeking accreditation has 3 years to comply with the
1562requirements of this paragraph. A boarding school must provide
1563proof of accreditation or documentation of the accreditation
1564process upon request. A boarding school that cannot produce the
1565required documentation or that has not registered with the
1566Department of Education shall be considered to be providing
1567residential group care without a license. The department may
1568impose administrative sanctions or seek civil remedies as
1569provided under paragraph (11)(a).
1570     Section 13.  Subsection (4) of section 409.903, Florida
1571Statutes, is amended to read:
1572     409.903  Mandatory payments for eligible persons.--The
1573agency shall make payments for medical assistance and related
1574services on behalf of the following persons who the department,
1575or the Social Security Administration by contract with the
1576Department of Children and Family Services, determines to be
1577eligible, subject to the income, assets, and categorical
1578eligibility tests set forth in federal and state law. Payment on
1579behalf of these Medicaid eligible persons is subject to the
1580availability of moneys and any limitations established by the
1581General Appropriations Act or chapter 216.
1582     (4)  A child who is eligible under Title IV-E of the Social
1583Security Act for subsidized board payments, foster care, or
1584adoption subsidies, and a child for whom the state has assumed
1585temporary or permanent responsibility and who does not qualify
1586for Title IV-E assistance but is in foster care, shelter or
1587emergency shelter care, or subsidized adoption. This category
1588includes a young adult who is eligible to receive services under
1589s. 409.1451(5), until the young adult reaches 20 years of age,
1590without regard to any income, resource, or categorical
1591eligibility test that is otherwise required. This category also
1592includes a person who as a child who was eligible under Title
1593IV-E of the Social Security Act for foster care or the state-
1594provided foster care, who exited foster care due to attaining
1595the age of 18 years, and who is a participant in the has been
1596awarded a Road-to-Independence Program Scholarship.
1597     Section 14.  Section 743.045, Florida Statutes, is created
1598to read:
1599     743.045  Removal of disabilities of minors; executing
1600contracts for a residential lease.--For the sole purpose of
1601ensuring that a youth in foster care will be able to execute a
1602contract for the lease of residential property upon the youth's
160318th birthday, the disability of nonage of minors is removed for
1604all youth who have reached 17 years of age, have been
1605adjudicated dependent, and are in the legal custody of the
1606Department of Children and Family Services through foster care
1607or subsidized independent living. These youth are authorized to
1608make and execute contracts, releases, and all other instruments
1609necessary for the purpose of entering into a contract for the
1610lease of residential property upon the youth's 18th birthday.
1611The contracts or other instruments made by the youth shall have
1612the same effect as though they were the obligations of persons
1613who were not minors. A youth seeking to enter into such lease
1614contracts or execute other necessary instruments that are
1615incidental to entering into a lease must present an order from a
1616court of competent jurisdiction removing the disabilities of
1617nonage of the minor under this section.
1618     Section 15.  Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section
16191009.25, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
1620     1009.25  Fee exemptions.--
1621     (2)  The following students are exempt from the payment of
1622tuition and fees, including lab fees, at a school district that
1623provides postsecondary career programs, community college, or
1624state university:
1625     (c)  A student who the state has determined is eligible for
1626the Road-to-Independence Scholarship, regardless of whether an
1627award is issued or not, or a student who is or was at the time
1628he or she reached 18 years of age in the custody of the
1629Department of Children and Family Services or a relative under
1630s. 39.5085, or who is adopted from the Department of Children
1631and Family Services after May 5, 1997, or who, after spending at
1632least 6 months in the custody of the department after reaching
163316 years of age, was placed in a guardianship by the court. Such
1634exemption includes fees associated with enrollment in career-
1635preparatory instruction and completion of the college-level
1636communication and computation skills testing program. Such an
1637exemption is available to any student who was in the custody of
1638a relative under s. 39.5085 at the time he or she reached 18
1639years of age or was adopted from the Department of Children and
1640Family Services after May 5, 1997; however, the exemption
1641remains valid for no more than 4 years after the date of
1642graduation from high school.
1643     Section 16.  For fiscal year 2006-2007, the sum of $243,557
1644is appropriated from the General Revenue Fund to the Executive
1645Office of the Governor for the establishment of the Office of
1646Child Abuse Prevention, the sum of $236,376 is appropriated from
1647the General Revenue Fund to the Department of Children and
1648Family Services to handle the increased workload as a result of
1649the mandatory reporting requirement for public school personnel,
1650and the sum of $2,802,522 is appropriated from the General
1651Revenue Fund and the sum of $3,994,766 is appropriated from the
1652Medical Care Trust Fund to the Agency for Health Care
1653Administration to fund the Medicaid expansion.
1654     Section 17.  This act shall take effect July 1, 2006,
1655except that s. 409.1451(2) and (5)(b)2.a., Florida
1656Statutes, as amended by this act, shall take effect only if a
1657specific appropriation to fund the provisions of those sections
1658is made in the General Appropriations Act for fiscal year 2006-
16592007.


CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.