1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to child protection; amending s. 39.01, |
3 | F.S.; redefining the terms "abandoned" and "harm"; |
4 | defining the term "child who has exhibited inappropriate |
5 | sexual behavior"; amending s. 39.0121, F.S.; authorizing |
6 | the Department of Children and Family Services to adopt |
7 | rules providing for locating and recovering missing |
8 | children who are involved with the department; providing |
9 | requirements for reports; amending s. 39.0138, F.S.; |
10 | requiring a criminal history check of persons being |
11 | considered for placement of a child to include a search of |
12 | the department's automated abuse information system; |
13 | authorizing the department to adopt rules establishing |
14 | standards for evaluating such information; creating s. |
15 | 39.0141, F.S.; requiring the department, the community- |
16 | based care provider, or sheriff's office to file a report |
17 | following a determination that a child involved with the |
18 | department is missing; amending s. 39.201, F.S.; revising |
19 | provisions relating to reporting child abuse, abandonment, |
20 | or neglect to the central abuse hotline to allow for |
21 | reports by fax or web-based report; amending s. 39.301, |
22 | F.S.; conforming provisions to changes made by the act; |
23 | providing certain exceptions to the requirements that a |
24 | child protective investigation be closed within 60 days; |
25 | amending s. 39.307, F.S.; revising provision relating to |
26 | the provision of services to a child in cases of child-on- |
27 | child sexual abuse to include a child who has exhibited |
28 | inappropriate sexual behavior; amending s. 39.401, F.S.; |
29 | requiring a law enforcement officer who takes a child into |
30 | custody to release such child to an adoptive parent of the |
31 | child's sibling; authorizing the department to release a |
32 | child awaiting a shelter hearing to an adoptive parent of |
33 | the child's sibling; requiring judicial approval for the |
34 | placement of a child with a nonrelative; amending s. |
35 | 39.502, F.S.; providing for notice to foster or |
36 | preadoptive parents of any hearings involving the child in |
37 | their care; amending s. 39.503, F.S.; revising the minimum |
38 | inquiries a petitioner for dependency or shelter must make |
39 | in trying to locate an identified parent or prospective |
40 | parent; amending s. 39.504, F.S.; revising procedures |
41 | related to injunctions issued to protect a child; |
42 | requiring that such injunctions remain in effect until |
43 | modified or dissolved by the court; amending s. 39.507, |
44 | F.S.; limiting a court to one order adjudicating |
45 | dependency; providing for supplemental findings; amending |
46 | s. 39.521, F.S.; providing an exception from the |
47 | requirement for a predisposition study in dependency |
48 | proceedings; conforming cross-references; authorizing the |
49 | court to place a dependent child with the adoptive parent |
50 | of the child's sibling if no fit parent is willing or |
51 | available to assume care and custody; amending s. 39.701, |
52 | F.S.; requiring that notice of a judicial review of a |
53 | child's status be served on certain persons regardless of |
54 | whether they attended a prior hearing at which the hearing |
55 | was announced; amending s. 39.8055, F.S.; revising |
56 | provisions relating to filing a petition to terminate |
57 | parental rights; expanding the grounds for terminating |
58 | parental rights to include conviction for the murder, |
59 | manslaughter, or conspiracy to murder another child of the |
60 | parent; amending s. 39.806, F.S.; adding additional |
61 | grounds for terminating parental rights; amending s. |
62 | 322.142, F.S.; authorizing the Department of Children and |
63 | Family Services to be provided copies of driver's license |
64 | files maintained by the Department of Highway Safety and |
65 | Motor Vehicles for the purpose of conducting protective |
66 | investigations; amending s. 402.401, F.S., relating to the |
67 | Florida Child Welfare Student Loan Forgiveness Program; |
68 | transferring administration of the program to the |
69 | Department of Children and Family Services; amending s. |
70 | 409.1671, F.S.; providing that a community-based provider |
71 | or a subcontractor of a community-based provider may |
72 | provide nonowned automobile liability coverage in lieu of |
73 | providing personal motor vehicle insurance; providing |
74 | terms, conditions, and applicability for nonowned |
75 | automobile insurance coverage; requiring a community-based |
76 | provider or a subcontractor of a community-based provider |
77 | to provide a minimum limit for nonowned automobile |
78 | insurance coverage; amending s. 409.175, F.S.; revising |
79 | requirements for licensure as a foster home or child- |
80 | caring agency; deleting the exemption from licensure for |
81 | persons who receive a child from the department; |
82 | clarifying that a permanent guardian is exempt from |
83 | licensure; amending s. 787.04, F.S.; prohibiting a person |
84 | from knowingly and willfully taking or removing a minor |
85 | from the state or concealing the location of a minor |
86 | during the pendency of a dependency proceeding or any |
87 | other action concerning alleged abuse or neglect of the |
88 | minor; amending s. 937.021, F.S.; requiring that a report |
89 | of a missing child made by the department, a community- |
90 | based care provider, or a sheriff's office be treated as a |
91 | missing child report filed by a parent or guardian; |
92 | prohibiting a law enforcement agency from requiring an |
93 | order that a child be taken into custody or any other such |
94 | order before accepting a missing child report for |
95 | investigation; amending chapter 2007-174, Laws of Florida; |
96 | extending the date for the repeal of provisions |
97 | authorizing the reorganization of the Department of |
98 | Children and Family Services; providing for retroactive |
99 | application; amending ss. 39.0015, 39.205, 39.302, |
100 | 39.6011, 39.811, 39.828, and 419.001, F.S.; conforming |
101 | cross-references; permitting the Legislative Budget |
102 | Commission to consider the approval of a budget amendment |
103 | meeting certain requirements requesting additional trust |
104 | fund authority for expenditures enhancing child protection |
105 | and adoption during fiscal year 2008-2009; providing |
106 | effective dates. |
107 |
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108 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
109 |
|
110 | Section 1. Subsection (1) and paragraphs (e) and (g) of |
111 | present subsection (31) of section 39.01, Florida Statutes, are |
112 | amended, present subsections (14) through (74) are renumbered as |
113 | subsections (15) through (75), respectively, and a new |
114 | subsection (14) is added to that section, to read: |
115 | 39.01 Definitions.--When used in this chapter, unless the |
116 | context otherwise requires: |
117 | (1) "Abandoned" or "abandonment" means a situation in |
118 | which the parent or legal custodian of a child or, in the |
119 | absence of a parent or legal custodian, the caregiver |
120 | responsible for the child's welfare, while being able, makes no |
121 | provision for the child's support and has failed to establish or |
122 | maintain a substantial and positive relationship with the child. |
123 | For purposes of this subsection, "establish or maintain a |
124 | substantial and positive relationship" includes, but is not |
125 | limited to, frequent and regular contact with the child through |
126 | frequent and regular visitation or frequent and regular |
127 | communication to or with the child, and the exercise of parental |
128 | rights and responsibilities. Marginal efforts and incidental or |
129 | token visits or communications are not sufficient to establish |
130 | or maintain a substantial and positive relationship with a |
131 | child. and makes no effort to communicate with the child, which |
132 | situation is sufficient to evince a willful rejection of |
133 | parental obligations. If the efforts of the parent or legal |
134 | custodian, or caregiver primarily responsible for the child's |
135 | welfare, to support and communicate with the child are, in the |
136 | opinion of the court, only marginal efforts that do not evince a |
137 | settled purpose to assume all parental duties, the court may |
138 | declare the child to be abandoned. The term "abandoned" does not |
139 | include an abandoned newborn infant as described in s. 383.50, a |
140 | "child in need of services" as defined in chapter 984, or a |
141 | "family in need of services" as defined in chapter 984. The |
142 | incarceration of a parent, legal custodian, or caregiver |
143 | responsible for a child's welfare may support a finding of |
144 | abandonment. |
145 | (14) "Child who has exhibited inappropriate sexual |
146 | behavior" means a child who is 12 years of age or younger and |
147 | who has been found by the department or the court to have |
148 | committed an inappropriate sexual act. |
149 | (32)(31) "Harm" to a child's health or welfare can occur |
150 | when any person: |
151 | (e) Abandons the child. Within the context of the |
152 | definition of "harm," the term "abandoned the child" or |
153 | "abandonment of the child" means a situation in which the parent |
154 | or legal custodian of a child or, in the absence of a parent or |
155 | legal custodian, the caregiver, while being able, makes no |
156 | provision for the child's support and has failed to establish or |
157 | maintain a substantial and positive relationship with the child. |
158 | For purposes of this paragraph, "establish or maintain a |
159 | substantial and positive relationship" includes, but is not |
160 | limited to, frequent and regular contact with the child through |
161 | frequent and regular visitation or frequent and regular |
162 | communication to or with the child, and the exercise of parental |
163 | rights and responsibilities. Marginal efforts and incidental or |
164 | token visits or communications are not sufficient to establish |
165 | or maintain a substantial and positive relationship with a child |
166 | "abandons the child" means that the parent or legal custodian of |
167 | a child or, in the absence of a parent or legal custodian, the |
168 | person responsible for the child's welfare, while being able, |
169 | makes no provision for the child's support and makes no effort |
170 | to communicate with the child, which situation is sufficient to |
171 | evince a willful rejection of parental obligation. If the |
172 | efforts of the parent or legal custodian or person primarily |
173 | responsible for the child's welfare to support and communicate |
174 | with the child are only marginal efforts that do not evince a |
175 | settled purpose to assume all parental duties, the child may be |
176 | determined to have been abandoned. The term "abandoned" does not |
177 | include an abandoned newborn infant as described in s. 383.50. |
178 | (g) Exposes a child to a controlled substance or alcohol. |
179 | Exposure to a controlled substance or alcohol is established by: |
180 | 1. A test, administered at birth, which indicated that the |
181 | child's blood, urine, or meconium contained any amount of |
182 | alcohol or a controlled substance or metabolites of such |
183 | substances, the presence of which was not the result of medical |
184 | treatment administered to the mother or the newborn infant Use |
185 | by the mother of a controlled substance or alcohol during |
186 | pregnancy when the child, at birth, is demonstrably adversely |
187 | affected by such usage; or |
188 | 2. Evidence of extensive, abusive, and Continued chronic |
189 | and severe use of a controlled substance or alcohol by a parent |
190 | when the child is demonstrably adversely affected by such usage. |
191 |
|
192 | As used in this paragraph, the term "controlled substance" means |
193 | prescription drugs not prescribed for the parent or not |
194 | administered as prescribed and controlled substances as outlined |
195 | in Schedule I or Schedule II of s. 893.03. |
196 | Section 2. Subsection (16) is added to section 39.0121, |
197 | Florida Statutes, to read: |
198 | 39.0121 Specific rulemaking authority.--Pursuant to the |
199 | requirements of s. 120.536, the department is specifically |
200 | authorized to adopt, amend, and repeal administrative rules |
201 | which implement or interpret law or policy, or describe the |
202 | procedure and practice requirements necessary to implement this |
203 | chapter, including, but not limited to, the following: |
204 | (16) Provisions for reporting, locating, recovering, and |
205 | stabilizing children whose whereabouts become unknown while they |
206 | are involved with the department and for preventing recurrences |
207 | of such incidents. At a minimum, the rules must: |
208 | (a) Provide comprehensive, explicit, and consistent |
209 | guidelines to be followed by the department's employees and |
210 | contracted providers when the whereabouts of a child involved |
211 | with the department is unknown. |
212 | (b) Include criteria to determine when a child is missing |
213 | for purposes of making a report to a law enforcement agency, and |
214 | require that in all cases in which a law enforcement agency has |
215 | accepted a case for criminal investigation pursuant to s. |
216 | 39.301(2)(c) and the child's whereabouts are unknown, the child |
217 | shall be considered missing and a report made. |
218 | (c) Include steps to be taken by employees and contracted |
219 | providers to ensure and provide evidence that parents and |
220 | guardians have been advised of the requirements of s. 787.04(3) |
221 | and that violations are reported. |
222 | Section 3. Subsection (1) of section 39.0138, Florida |
223 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
224 | 39.0138 Criminal history records check; limit on placement |
225 | of a child.-- |
226 | (1) The department shall conduct a criminal history |
227 | records check on for all persons being considered by the |
228 | department for approval for placement of a child subject to a |
229 | placement decision under this chapter, including all nonrelative |
230 | placement decisions, all members of the household of the person |
231 | being considered, and frequent visitors to the household. For |
232 | purposes of this section, a criminal history records check may |
233 | include, but is not limited to, submission of fingerprints to |
234 | the Department of Law Enforcement for processing and forwarding |
235 | to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for state and national |
236 | criminal history information, and local criminal records checks |
237 | through local law enforcement agencies. A criminal history |
238 | records check must also include a search of the department's |
239 | automated abuse information system. The department shall |
240 | establish by rule standards for evaluating any information |
241 | contained in the automated system relating to a person who must |
242 | be screened for purposes of making a placement decision. |
243 | Section 4. Section 39.0141, Florida Statutes, is created |
244 | to read: |
245 | 39.0141 Missing children; report required.--Whenever the |
246 | whereabouts of a child involved with the department becomes |
247 | unknown, the department, the community-based care provider, or |
248 | the sheriff's office providing investigative services for the |
249 | department shall make reasonable efforts, as defined by rule, to |
250 | locate the child. If, pursuant to criteria established by rule, |
251 | the child is determined to be missing, the department, the |
252 | community-based care provider, or the sheriff's office shall |
253 | file a report that the child is missing in accordance with s. |
254 | 937.021. |
255 | Section 5. Subsections (2), (4), and (7) of section |
256 | 39.201, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
257 | 39.201 Mandatory reports of child abuse, abandonment, or |
258 | neglect; mandatory reports of death; central abuse hotline.-- |
259 | (2)(a) Each report of known or suspected child abuse, |
260 | abandonment, or neglect by a parent, legal custodian, caregiver, |
261 | or other person responsible for the child's welfare as defined |
262 | in this chapter, except those solely under s. 827.04(3), and |
263 | each report that a child is in need of supervision and care and |
264 | has no parent, legal custodian, or responsible adult relative |
265 | immediately known and available to provide supervision and care |
266 | shall be made immediately to the department's central abuse |
267 | hotline. Such reports may be made on the single statewide toll- |
268 | free telephone number or via fax or web-based report. Personnel |
269 | at the department's central abuse hotline shall determine if the |
270 | report received meets the statutory definition of child abuse, |
271 | abandonment, or neglect. Any report meeting one of these |
272 | definitions shall be accepted for the protective investigation |
273 | pursuant to part III of this chapter. |
274 | (b) If the report is of an instance of known or suspected |
275 | child abuse by someone other than a parent, legal custodian, |
276 | caregiver, or other person responsible for the child's welfare |
277 | as defined in this chapter, the report or call shall be |
278 | immediately electronically transferred to the appropriate county |
279 | sheriff's office by the central abuse hotline. |
280 | (c) If the report is of an instance of known or suspected |
281 | child abuse, abandonment, or neglect that occurred out of state |
282 | and the alleged perpetrator and the child alleged to be a victim |
283 | live out of state, the central abuse hotline shall not accept |
284 | the report or call for investigation, but shall transfer the |
285 | information on the report to the appropriate state. |
286 | (d) If the report is of an instance of known or suspected |
287 | child abuse involving impregnation of a child under 16 years of |
288 | age by a person 21 years of age or older solely under s. |
289 | 827.04(3), the report shall be made immediately to the |
290 | appropriate county sheriff's office or other appropriate law |
291 | enforcement agency. If the report is of an instance of known or |
292 | suspected child abuse solely under s. 827.04(3), the reporting |
293 | provisions of this subsection do not apply to health care |
294 | professionals or other persons who provide medical or counseling |
295 | services to pregnant children when such reporting would |
296 | interfere with the provision of medical services. |
297 | (e) Reports involving known or suspected institutional |
298 | child abuse or neglect shall be made and received in the same |
299 | manner as all other reports made pursuant to this section. |
300 | (f) Reports involving a known or suspected juvenile sexual |
301 | offender or a child who has exhibited inappropriate sexual |
302 | behavior shall be made and received by the department. |
303 | 1. The department shall determine the age of the alleged |
304 | juvenile sexual offender, if known. |
305 | 2. If When the alleged juvenile sexual offender is 12 |
306 | years of age or younger, the central abuse hotline shall |
307 | immediately electronically transfer the report or call to the |
308 | county sheriff's appropriate law enforcement agency office. The |
309 | department shall conduct an assessment and assist the family in |
310 | receiving appropriate services pursuant to s. 39.307, and send a |
311 | written report of the allegation to the appropriate county |
312 | sheriff's office within 48 hours after the initial report is |
313 | made to the central abuse hotline. |
314 | 3. If When the alleged juvenile sexual offender is 13 |
315 | years of age or older, the central abuse hotline department |
316 | shall immediately electronically transfer the report or call to |
317 | the appropriate county sheriff's office by the central abuse |
318 | hotline, and send a written report to the appropriate county |
319 | sheriff's office within 48 hours after the initial report to the |
320 | central abuse hotline. |
321 | (g) Reports involving abandoned newborn infants as |
322 | described in s. 383.50 shall be made and received by the |
323 | department. |
324 | 1. If the report is of an abandoned newborn infant as |
325 | described in s. 383.50 and there is no indication of abuse, |
326 | neglect, or abandonment other than that necessarily entailed in |
327 | the infant having been left at a hospital, emergency medical |
328 | services station, or fire station, the department shall provide |
329 | to the caller the name of a licensed child-placing agency on a |
330 | rotating basis from a list of licensed child-placing agencies |
331 | eligible and required to accept physical custody of and to place |
332 | newborn infants left at a hospital, emergency medical services |
333 | station, or fire station. The report shall not be considered a |
334 | report of abuse, neglect, or abandonment solely because the |
335 | infant has been left at a hospital, emergency medical services |
336 | station, or fire station pursuant to s. 383.50. |
337 | 2. If the call, fax, or web-based report includes caller |
338 | reports indications of abuse or neglect beyond that necessarily |
339 | entailed in the infant having been left at a hospital, emergency |
340 | medical services station, or fire station, the report shall be |
341 | considered as a report of abuse, neglect, or abandonment and |
342 | shall be subject to the requirements of s. 39.395 and all other |
343 | relevant provisions of this chapter, notwithstanding any |
344 | provisions of chapter 383. |
345 | (h) Hotline counselors shall receive periodic training in |
346 | encouraging reporters to provide their names when reporting |
347 | abuse, abandonment, or neglect. Callers shall be advised of the |
348 | confidentiality provisions of s. 39.202. The department shall |
349 | secure and install electronic equipment that automatically |
350 | provides to the hotline the number from which the call or fax is |
351 | placed or the Internet protocol (IP) address from which the |
352 | report is received. This number shall be entered into the report |
353 | of abuse, abandonment, or neglect and become a part of the |
354 | record of the report, but shall enjoy the same confidentiality |
355 | as provided to the identity of the reporter caller pursuant to |
356 | s. 39.202. |
357 | (i) The department shall voice-record all incoming or |
358 | outgoing calls that are received or placed by the central abuse |
359 | hotline which relate to suspected or known child abuse, neglect, |
360 | or abandonment. The department shall maintain an electronic copy |
361 | of each fax and web-based report. The recording or electronic |
362 | copy of each fax and web-based report shall become a part of the |
363 | record of the report but, notwithstanding s. 39.202, shall be |
364 | released in full only to law enforcement agencies and state |
365 | attorneys for the purpose of investigating and prosecuting |
366 | criminal charges pursuant to s. 39.205, or to employees of the |
367 | department for the purpose of investigating and seeking |
368 | administrative penalties pursuant to s. 39.206. Nothing in this |
369 | paragraph shall prohibit the use of the recordings, the |
370 | electronic copies of faxes, and web-based reports by hotline |
371 | staff for quality assurance and training. |
372 | (4) The department shall establish and maintain a central |
373 | abuse hotline to receive all reports made pursuant to this |
374 | section in writing, via fax, via web-based reporting, or through |
375 | a single statewide toll-free telephone number, which any person |
376 | may use to report known or suspected child abuse, abandonment, |
377 | or neglect at any hour of the day or night, any day of the week. |
378 | The central abuse hotline shall be operated in such a manner as |
379 | to enable the department to: |
380 | (a) Immediately identify and locate prior reports or cases |
381 | of child abuse, abandonment, or neglect through utilization of |
382 | the department's automated tracking system. |
383 | (b) Monitor and evaluate the effectiveness of the |
384 | department's program for reporting and investigating suspected |
385 | abuse, abandonment, or neglect of children through the |
386 | development and analysis of statistical and other information. |
387 | (c) Track critical steps in the investigative process to |
388 | ensure compliance with all requirements for any report of abuse, |
389 | abandonment, or neglect. |
390 | (d) Maintain and produce aggregate statistical reports |
391 | monitoring patterns of child abuse, child abandonment, and child |
392 | neglect. The department shall collect and analyze child-on-child |
393 | sexual abuse reports and include the information in aggregate |
394 | statistical reports. |
395 | (e) Serve as a resource for the evaluation, management, |
396 | and planning of preventive and remedial services for children |
397 | who have been subject to abuse, abandonment, or neglect. |
398 | (f) Initiate and enter into agreements with other states |
399 | for the purpose of gathering and sharing information contained |
400 | in reports on child maltreatment to further enhance programs for |
401 | the protection of children. |
402 | (7) On an ongoing basis, the department's quality |
403 | assurance program shall review calls, fax reports, and web-based |
404 | reports to the hotline involving three or more unaccepted |
405 | reports on a single child, where jurisdiction applies, in order |
406 | to detect such things as harassment and situations that warrant |
407 | an investigation because of the frequency or variety of the |
408 | source of the reports. The Program Director for Family Safety |
409 | may refer a case for investigation when it is determined, as a |
410 | result of this review, that an investigation may be warranted. |
411 | Section 6. Subsections (1) and (16) of section 39.301, |
412 | Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
413 | 39.301 Initiation of protective investigations.-- |
414 | (1) Upon receiving a an oral or written report of known or |
415 | suspected child abuse, abandonment, or neglect, or that a child |
416 | is in need of supervision and care and has no parent, legal |
417 | custodian, or responsible adult relative immediately known and |
418 | available to provide supervision and care, the central abuse |
419 | hotline shall determine if the report requires an immediate |
420 | onsite protective investigation. For reports requiring an |
421 | immediate onsite protective investigation, the central abuse |
422 | hotline shall immediately notify the department's designated |
423 | children and families district staff responsible for protective |
424 | investigations to ensure that an onsite investigation is |
425 | promptly initiated. For reports not requiring an immediate |
426 | onsite protective investigation, the central abuse hotline shall |
427 | notify the department's designated children and families |
428 | district staff responsible for protective investigations in |
429 | sufficient time to allow for an investigation. At the time of |
430 | notification of district staff with respect to the report, the |
431 | central abuse hotline shall also provide information to district |
432 | staff on any previous report concerning a subject of the present |
433 | report or any pertinent information relative to the present |
434 | report or any noted earlier reports. |
435 | (16) The department shall complete its protective |
436 | investigation within No later than 60 days after receiving the |
437 | initial report, unless: the local office of the department shall |
438 | complete its investigation. |
439 | (a) There is also an active, concurrent criminal |
440 | investigation that is continuing beyond the 60-day period and |
441 | the closure of the protective investigation may compromise |
442 | successful criminal prosecution of the child abuse or neglect |
443 | case, in which case the closure date shall coincide with the |
444 | closure date of the criminal investigation and any resulting |
445 | legal action. |
446 | (b) In child death cases, the final report of the medical |
447 | examiner is necessary for the department to close its |
448 | investigation, and the report has not been received within the |
449 | 60-day period, in which case the report closure date shall be |
450 | extended to accommodate to the report. |
451 | (c) A child who is necessary to an investigation has been |
452 | declared missing by the department, a law enforcement agency, or |
453 | a court, in which case the 60-day period shall be extended until |
454 | the child has been located or until sufficient information |
455 | exists to close the investigation despite the unknown location |
456 | of the child. |
457 | Section 7. Subsections (2), (3), (4), and (5) of section |
458 | 39.307, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
459 | 39.307 Reports of child-on-child sexual abuse.-- |
460 | (2) District staff, at a minimum, shall adhere to the |
461 | following procedures: |
462 | (a) The purpose of the response to a report alleging |
463 | juvenile sexual abuse behavior shall be explained to the |
464 | caregiver. |
465 | 1. The purpose of the response shall be explained in a |
466 | manner consistent with legislative purpose and intent provided |
467 | in this chapter. |
468 | 2. The name and office telephone number of the person |
469 | responding shall be provided to the caregiver of the alleged |
470 | juvenile sexual offender or child who has exhibited |
471 | inappropriate sexual behavior and the victim's caregiver. |
472 | 3. The possible consequences of the department's response, |
473 | including outcomes and services, shall be explained to the |
474 | caregiver of the alleged juvenile sexual offender or child who |
475 | has exhibited inappropriate sexual behavior and the victim's |
476 | family or caregiver. |
477 | (b) The caregiver of the alleged juvenile sexual offender |
478 | or child who has exhibited inappropriate sexual behavior and the |
479 | victim's caregiver of the victim shall be involved to the |
480 | fullest extent possible in determining the nature of the |
481 | allegation and the nature of any problem or risk to other |
482 | children. |
483 | (c) The assessment of risk and the perceived treatment |
484 | needs of the alleged juvenile sexual offender or child who has |
485 | exhibited inappropriate sexual behavior, the victim, and |
486 | respective caregivers shall be conducted by the district staff, |
487 | the child protection team of the Department of Health, and other |
488 | providers under contract with the department to provide services |
489 | to the caregiver of the alleged offender, the victim, and the |
490 | victim's caregiver. |
491 | (d) The assessment shall be conducted in a manner that is |
492 | sensitive to the social, economic, and cultural environment of |
493 | the family. |
494 | (e) If When necessary, the child protection team of the |
495 | Department of Health shall conduct a physical examination of the |
496 | victim, which is sufficient to meet forensic requirements. |
497 | (f) Based on the information obtained from the alleged |
498 | juvenile sexual offender or child who has exhibited |
499 | inappropriate sexual behavior, his or her the alleged juvenile |
500 | sexual offender's caregiver, the victim, and the victim's |
501 | caregiver, an assessment service and treatment needs report must |
502 | be completed within 7 days and, if needed, a case plan developed |
503 | within 30 days. |
504 | (g) The department shall classify the outcome of its |
505 | initial assessment of the report as follows: |
506 | 1. Report closed. Services were not offered to the alleged |
507 | juvenile sexual offender because the department determined that |
508 | there was no basis for intervention. |
509 | 2. Services accepted by alleged offender. Services were |
510 | offered to the alleged juvenile sexual offender or child who has |
511 | exhibited inappropriate sexual behavior and accepted by the |
512 | caregiver. |
513 | 3. Report closed. Services were offered to the alleged |
514 | juvenile sexual offender or child who has exhibited |
515 | inappropriate sexual behavior, but were rejected by the |
516 | caregiver. |
517 | 4. Notification to law enforcement. Either The risk to the |
518 | victim's safety and well-being cannot be reduced by the |
519 | provision of services or the caregiver family rejected services, |
520 | and notification of the alleged delinquent act or violation of |
521 | law to the appropriate law enforcement agency was initiated. |
522 | 5. Services accepted by victim. Services were offered to |
523 | the victim of the alleged juvenile sexual offender and accepted |
524 | by the caregiver. |
525 | 6. Report closed. Services were offered to the victim of |
526 | the alleged juvenile sexual offender, but were rejected by the |
527 | caregiver. |
528 | (3) If When services have been accepted by the alleged |
529 | juvenile sexual offender or child who has exhibited |
530 | inappropriate sexual behavior, the victim, and respective |
531 | caregivers or family, the department shall designate a case |
532 | manager and develop a specific case plan. |
533 | (a) Upon receipt of the plan, the caregiver or family |
534 | shall indicate its acceptance of the plan in writing. |
535 | (b) The case manager shall periodically review the |
536 | progress toward achieving the objectives of the plan in order |
537 | to: |
538 | 1. Make adjustments to the plan or take additional action |
539 | as provided in this part; or |
540 | 2. Terminate the case if when indicated by successful or |
541 | substantial achievement of the objectives of the plan. |
542 | (4) Services provided to the alleged juvenile sexual |
543 | offender or child who has exhibited inappropriate sexual |
544 | behavior, the victim, and respective caregivers or family must |
545 | be voluntary and of necessary duration. |
546 | (5)(4) If In the event the family or caregiver of the |
547 | alleged juvenile sexual offender or child who has exhibited |
548 | inappropriate sexual behavior fails to adequately participate or |
549 | allow for the adequate participation of the child juvenile |
550 | sexual offender in the services or treatment delineated in the |
551 | case plan, the case manager may recommend that the department: |
552 | (a) Close the case; |
553 | (b) Refer the case to mediation or arbitration, if |
554 | available; or |
555 | (c) Notify the appropriate law enforcement agency of |
556 | failure to comply. |
557 | (5) Services to the alleged juvenile sexual offender, the |
558 | victim, and respective caregivers or family under this section |
559 | shall be voluntary and of necessary duration. |
560 | Section 8. Subsections (2) and (3) of section 39.401, |
561 | Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection (5) is added to |
562 | that section, to read: |
563 | 39.401 Taking a child alleged to be dependent into |
564 | custody; law enforcement officers and authorized agents of the |
565 | department.-- |
566 | (2) If the law enforcement officer takes the child into |
567 | custody, that officer shall: |
568 | (a) Release the child to: |
569 | 1. The parent or legal custodian of the child; |
570 | 2. A responsible adult approved by the court when limited |
571 | to temporary emergency situations; |
572 | 3. A responsible adult relative or the adoptive parent of |
573 | the child's sibling who shall be given priority consideration |
574 | over a nonrelative placement when this is in the best interests |
575 | of the child; or |
576 | 4. A responsible adult approved by the department; or |
577 | (b) Deliver the child to an authorized agent of the |
578 | department, stating the facts by reason of which the child was |
579 | taken into custody and sufficient information to establish |
580 | probable cause that the child is abandoned, abused, or |
581 | neglected, or otherwise dependent. |
582 |
|
583 | For cases involving allegations of abandonment, abuse, or |
584 | neglect, or other dependency cases, within 3 days after such |
585 | release or within 3 days after delivering the child to an |
586 | authorized agent of the department, the law enforcement officer |
587 | who took the child into custody shall make a full written report |
588 | to the department. |
589 | (3) If the child is taken into custody by, or is delivered |
590 | to, an authorized agent of the department, the authorized agent |
591 | shall review the facts supporting the removal with an attorney |
592 | representing the department. The purpose of the this review is |
593 | shall be to determine whether there is probable cause exists for |
594 | the filing of a shelter petition. |
595 | (a) If the facts are not sufficient to support the filing |
596 | of a shelter petition, the child shall immediately be returned |
597 | to the custody of the parent or legal custodian. |
598 | (b) If the facts are sufficient to support the filing of |
599 | the shelter petition and the child has not been returned to the |
600 | custody of the parent or legal custodian, the department shall |
601 | file the petition and schedule a hearing, and the attorney |
602 | representing the department shall request that a shelter hearing |
603 | be held within as quickly as possible, not to exceed 24 hours |
604 | after the removal of the child. While awaiting the shelter |
605 | hearing, the authorized agent of the department may place the |
606 | child in licensed shelter care or may release the child to a |
607 | parent or legal custodian or responsible adult relative or the |
608 | adoptive parent of the child's sibling who shall be given |
609 | priority consideration over a licensed placement, or a |
610 | responsible adult approved by the department if when this is in |
611 | the best interests of the child. Any Placement of a child which |
612 | is not in a licensed shelter must be preceded by a criminal |
613 | history records check as required under s. 39.0138 local and |
614 | state criminal records check, as well as a search of the |
615 | department's automated abuse information system, on all members |
616 | of the household, to assess the child's safety within the home. |
617 | In addition, the department may authorize placement of a |
618 | housekeeper/homemaker in the home of a child alleged to be |
619 | dependent until the parent or legal custodian assumes care of |
620 | the child. |
621 | (5) Judicial review and approval is required within 24 |
622 | hours after placement for all nonrelative placements. A |
623 | nonrelative placement must be for a specific and predetermined |
624 | period of time, not to exceed 12 months, and shall be reviewed |
625 | by the court at least every 6 months. If the nonrelative |
626 | placement continues for longer than 12 months, the department |
627 | shall request the court to establish permanent guardianship or |
628 | require that the nonrelative seek licensure as a foster care |
629 | provider within 30 days after the court decision. Failure to |
630 | establish permanent guardianship or obtain licensure does not |
631 | require the court to change a child's placement unless it is in |
632 | the best interest of the child to do so. |
633 | Section 9. Subsection (17) of section 39.502, Florida |
634 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
635 | 39.502 Notice, process, and service.-- |
636 | (17) The parent or legal custodian of the child, the |
637 | attorney for the department, the guardian ad litem, the foster |
638 | or preadoptive parents, and all other parties and participants |
639 | shall be given reasonable notice of all proceedings and hearings |
640 | provided for under this part. All foster or preadoptive parents |
641 | must be provided with at least 72 hours' notice, verbally or in |
642 | writing, of all proceedings or hearings relating to children in |
643 | their care or children they are seeking to adopt to ensure the |
644 | ability to provide input to the court. |
645 | Section 10. Subsection (6) of section 39.503, Florida |
646 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
647 | 39.503 Identity or location of parent unknown; special |
648 | procedures.-- |
649 | (6) The diligent search required by subsection (5) must |
650 | include, at a minimum, inquiries of all relatives of the parent |
651 | or prospective parent made known to the petitioner, inquiries of |
652 | all offices of program areas of the department likely to have |
653 | information about the parent or prospective parent, inquiries of |
654 | other state and federal agencies likely to have information |
655 | about the parent or prospective parent, inquiries of appropriate |
656 | utility and postal providers, a thorough search of at least one |
657 | electronic database specifically designed for locating persons, |
658 | and inquiries of appropriate law enforcement agencies. Pursuant |
659 | to s. 453 of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. s. 653(c)(4), |
660 | the department, as the state agency administering Titles IV-B |
661 | and IV-E of the act, shall be provided access to the federal and |
662 | state parent locator service for diligent search activities. |
663 | Section 11. Section 39.504, Florida Statutes, is amended |
664 | to read: |
665 | 39.504 Injunction pending disposition of petition; |
666 | penalty.-- |
667 | (1)(a) At any time after a protective investigation has |
668 | been initiated pursuant to part III of this chapter When a |
669 | petition for shelter placement or a petition for dependency has |
670 | been filed or when a child has been taken into custody and |
671 | reasonable cause, as defined in paragraph (b), exists, the |
672 | court, upon the request of the department, a law enforcement |
673 | officer, the state attorney, or other responsible person, or |
674 | upon its own motion, may, if there is reasonable cause, shall |
675 | have the authority to issue an injunction to prevent any act of |
676 | child abuse or any unlawful sexual offense involving a child. |
677 | (b) Reasonable cause for the issuance of an injunction |
678 | exists if there is evidence of child abuse or an unlawful sexual |
679 | offense involving a child or if there is a reasonable likelihood |
680 | of such abuse or offense occurring based upon a recent overt act |
681 | or failure to act. |
682 | (2) Notice shall be provided to the parties as set forth |
683 | in the Florida Rules of Juvenile Procedure, unless the child is |
684 | reported to be in imminent danger, in which case the court may |
685 | issue an injunction immediately. A judge may issue an emergency |
686 | injunction pursuant to this section without notice if at times |
687 | when the court is closed for the transaction of judicial |
688 | business. If When such an immediate injunction is issued, the |
689 | court must shall hold a hearing on the next day of judicial |
690 | business either to dissolve the injunction or to continue or |
691 | modify it in accordance with the other provisions of this |
692 | section. |
693 | (3)(a) If In every instance in which an injunction is |
694 | issued under this section, the primary purpose of the injunction |
695 | must be shall be primarily to protect and promote the best |
696 | interests of the child, taking the preservation of the child's |
697 | immediate family into consideration. The effective period of the |
698 | injunction shall be determined by the court, except that the |
699 | injunction will expire at the time of the disposition of the |
700 | petition for shelter placement or dependency. |
701 | (a)(b) The injunction shall apply to the alleged or actual |
702 | offender in a case of child abuse or acts of domestic violence |
703 | an unlawful sexual offense involving a child. The conditions of |
704 | the injunction shall be determined by the court, which |
705 | conditions may include ordering the alleged or actual offender |
706 | to: |
707 | 1. Refrain from further abuse or acts of domestic violence |
708 | unlawful sexual activity involving a child. |
709 | 2. Participate in a specialized treatment program. |
710 | 3. Limit contact or communication with the child victim, |
711 | other children in the home, or any other child. |
712 | 4. Refrain from contacting the child at home, school, |
713 | work, or wherever the child may be found. |
714 | 5. Have limited or supervised visitation with the child. |
715 | 6. Pay temporary support for the child or other family |
716 | members; the costs of medical, psychiatric, and psychological |
717 | treatment for the child victim incurred as a result of the |
718 | offenses; and similar costs for other family members. |
719 | 7. Vacate the home in which the child resides. |
720 | (b)(c) If the intent of the injunction is to protect the |
721 | child from domestic violence, the conditions may also include: |
722 | 1. Awarding the exclusive use and possession of the |
723 | dwelling to the caregiver or excluding the alleged or actual |
724 | offender from the residence of the caregiver. |
725 | 2. Awarding temporary custody of the child to the |
726 | caregiver. |
727 | 3. Establishing temporary support for the child. At any |
728 | time prior to the disposition of the petition, the alleged or |
729 | actual offender may offer the court evidence of changed |
730 | circumstances as a ground to dissolve or modify the injunction. |
731 |
|
732 | This paragraph does not preclude the adult victim of domestic |
733 | violence from seeking protection under s. 741.30. |
734 | (c) The terms of the injunction shall remain in effect |
735 | until modified or dissolved by the court. The petitioner, |
736 | respondent, or caregiver may move at any time to modify or |
737 | dissolve the injunction. The injunction is valid and enforceable |
738 | in all counties in the state. |
739 | (4) Service of process on the respondent shall be carried |
740 | out pursuant to s. 741.30. The department shall deliver a copy |
741 | of any injunction issued pursuant to this section shall be |
742 | delivered to the protected party, or to a parent, or caregiver, |
743 | or individual acting in the place of a parent who is not the |
744 | respondent, and to any law enforcement agency having |
745 | jurisdiction to enforce such injunction. Law enforcement |
746 | officers may exercise their arrest powers as provided in s. |
747 | 901.15(6) to enforce the terms of the injunction. Upon delivery |
748 | of the injunction to the appropriate law enforcement agency, the |
749 | agency shall have the duty and responsibility to enforce the |
750 | injunction. |
751 | (5) Any person who fails to comply with an injunction |
752 | issued pursuant to this section commits is guilty of a |
753 | misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as provided in s. |
754 | 775.082 or s. 775.083. |
755 | Section 12. Subsection (7) of section 39.507, Florida |
756 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
757 | 39.507 Adjudicatory hearings; orders of adjudication.-- |
758 | (7)(a) For as long as a court maintains jurisdiction over |
759 | a dependency case, only one order adjudicating each child in the |
760 | case dependent shall be entered. This order establishes the |
761 | legal status of the child for purposes of proceedings under this |
762 | chapter and may be based on the conduct of one parent, both |
763 | parents, or a legal custodian. |
764 | (b) However, the court must determine whether each parent |
765 | or legal custodian identified in the case abused, abandoned, or |
766 | neglected the child in a subsequent evidentiary hearing. If the |
767 | evidentiary hearing is conducted subsequent to the adjudication |
768 | of the child, the court shall supplement the adjudicatory order, |
769 | disposition order, and the case plan, as necessary. With the |
770 | exception of proceedings pursuant to s. 39.811, the child's |
771 | dependency status may not be retried or readjudicated. |
772 | (c) If a court adjudicates a child dependent and the child |
773 | is in out-of-home care, the court shall inquire of the parent or |
774 | parents whether the parents have relatives who might be |
775 | considered as a placement for the child. The court shall advise |
776 | the parents that, if the parents fail to substantially comply |
777 | with the case plan, their parental rights may be terminated and |
778 | that the child's out-of-home placement may become permanent. The |
779 | parent or parents shall provide to the court and all parties |
780 | identification and location information of the relatives. |
781 | Section 13. Paragraphs (a) and (f) of subsection (1) and |
782 | paragraph (c) of subsection (3) of section 39.521, Florida |
783 | Statutes, are amended to read: |
784 | 39.521 Disposition hearings; powers of disposition.-- |
785 | (1) A disposition hearing shall be conducted by the court, |
786 | if the court finds that the facts alleged in the petition for |
787 | dependency were proven in the adjudicatory hearing, or if the |
788 | parents or legal custodians have consented to the finding of |
789 | dependency or admitted the allegations in the petition, have |
790 | failed to appear for the arraignment hearing after proper |
791 | notice, or have not been located despite a diligent search |
792 | having been conducted. |
793 | (a) A written case plan and a predisposition study |
794 | prepared by an authorized agent of the department must be filed |
795 | with the court, and served upon the parents of the child, |
796 | provided to the representative of the guardian ad litem program, |
797 | if the program has been appointed, and provided to all other |
798 | parties, not less than 72 hours before the disposition hearing. |
799 | All such case plans must be approved by the court. If the court |
800 | does not approve the case plan at the disposition hearing, the |
801 | court must set a hearing within 30 days after the disposition |
802 | hearing to review and approve the case plan. The court may grant |
803 | an exception to the requirement for a predisposition study by |
804 | separate order or within the judge's order of disposition upon |
805 | finding that all the family and child information required by |
806 | subsection (2) is available in other documents filed with the |
807 | court. |
808 | (f) If the court places the child in an out-of-home |
809 | placement, the disposition order must include a written |
810 | determination that the child cannot safely remain at home with |
811 | reunification or family preservation services and that removal |
812 | of the child is necessary to protect the child. If the child is |
813 | has been removed before the disposition hearing, the order must |
814 | also include a written determination as to whether, after |
815 | removal, the department has made a reasonable effort to reunify |
816 | the parent and child, if reasonable efforts are required. |
817 | Reasonable efforts to reunify are not required if the court |
818 | finds has found that any of the acts listed in s. 39.806(1)(f)- |
819 | (l) s. 39.806(1)(f)-(i) have occurred. The department has the |
820 | burden of demonstrating that it has made reasonable efforts |
821 | under this paragraph. |
822 | 1. For the purposes of this paragraph, the term |
823 | "reasonable effort" means the exercise of reasonable diligence |
824 | and care by the department to provide the services ordered by |
825 | the court or delineated in the case plan. |
826 | 2. In support of its determination as to whether |
827 | reasonable efforts have been made, the court shall: |
828 | a. Enter written findings as to whether or not prevention |
829 | or reunification efforts were indicated. |
830 | b. If prevention or reunification efforts were indicated, |
831 | include a brief written description of what appropriate and |
832 | available prevention and reunification efforts were made. |
833 | c. Indicate in writing why further efforts could or could |
834 | not have prevented or shortened the separation of the parent and |
835 | child. |
836 | 3. A court may find that the department has made a |
837 | reasonable effort to prevent or eliminate the need for removal |
838 | if: |
839 | a. The first contact of the department with the family |
840 | occurs during an emergency; |
841 | b. The appraisal by the department of the home situation |
842 | indicates that it presents a substantial and immediate danger to |
843 | the child's safety or physical, mental, or emotional health |
844 | which cannot be mitigated by the provision of preventive |
845 | services; |
846 | c. The child cannot safely remain at home, either because |
847 | there are no preventive services that can ensure the health and |
848 | safety of the child or, even with appropriate and available |
849 | services being provided, the health and safety of the child |
850 | cannot be ensured; or |
851 | d. The parent is alleged to have committed any of the acts |
852 | listed as grounds for expedited termination of parental rights |
853 | under s. 39.806(1)(f)-(l) in s. 39.806(1)(f)-(i). |
854 | 4. A reasonable effort by the department for reunification |
855 | of the parent and child has been made if the appraisal of the |
856 | home situation by the department indicates that the severity of |
857 | the conditions of dependency is such that reunification efforts |
858 | are inappropriate. The department has the burden of |
859 | demonstrating to the court that reunification efforts were |
860 | inappropriate. |
861 | 5. If the court finds that the prevention or reunification |
862 | effort of the department would not have permitted the child to |
863 | remain safely at home, the court may commit the child to the |
864 | temporary legal custody of the department or take any other |
865 | action authorized by this chapter. |
866 | (3) When any child is adjudicated by a court to be |
867 | dependent, the court shall determine the appropriate placement |
868 | for the child as follows: |
869 | (c) If no fit parent is willing or available to assume |
870 | care and custody of the child, place the child in the temporary |
871 | legal custody of an adult relative, the adoptive parent of the |
872 | child's sibling, or another other adult approved by the court |
873 | who is willing to care for the child, under the protective |
874 | supervision of the department. The department must supervise |
875 | this placement until the child reaches permanency status in this |
876 | home, and in no case for a period of less than 6 months. |
877 | Permanency in a relative placement shall be by adoption, long- |
878 | term custody, or guardianship. |
879 |
|
880 | Protective supervision continues until the court terminates it |
881 | or until the child reaches the age of 18, whichever date is |
882 | first. Protective supervision shall be terminated by the court |
883 | whenever the court determines that permanency has been achieved |
884 | for the child, whether with a parent, another relative, or a |
885 | legal custodian, and that protective supervision is no longer |
886 | needed. The termination of supervision may be with or without |
887 | retaining jurisdiction, at the court's discretion, and shall in |
888 | either case be considered a permanency option for the child. The |
889 | order terminating supervision by the department shall set forth |
890 | the powers of the custodian of the child and shall include the |
891 | powers ordinarily granted to a guardian of the person of a minor |
892 | unless otherwise specified. Upon the court's termination of |
893 | supervision by the department, no further judicial reviews are |
894 | required, so long as permanency has been established for the |
895 | child. |
896 | Section 14. Subsection (5) of section 39.701, Florida |
897 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
898 | 39.701 Judicial review.-- |
899 | (5) Notice of a judicial review hearing or a citizen |
900 | review panel hearing, and a copy of the motion for judicial |
901 | review, if any, must be served by the clerk of the court upon |
902 | all of the following persons, if available to be served, |
903 | regardless of whether the person was present at the previous |
904 | hearing at which the date, time, and location of the hearing was |
905 | announced: |
906 | (a) The social service agency charged with the supervision |
907 | of care, custody, or guardianship of the child, if that agency |
908 | is not the movant. |
909 | (b) The foster parent or legal custodian in whose home the |
910 | child resides. |
911 | (c) The parents. |
912 | (d) The guardian ad litem for the child, or the |
913 | representative of the guardian ad litem program if the program |
914 | has been appointed. |
915 | (e) The attorney for the child. |
916 | (f) The child, if the child is 13 years of age or older. |
917 | (g)(e) Any preadoptive parent. |
918 | (h)(f) Such other persons as the court may in its |
919 | discretion direct. |
920 |
|
921 | Service of notice is not required on any of the persons listed |
922 | in paragraphs (a)-(f) if the person was present at the previous |
923 | hearing during which the date, time, and location of the hearing |
924 | was announced. |
925 | Section 15. Subsection (1) of section 39.8055, Florida |
926 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
927 | 39.8055 Requirement to file a petition to terminate |
928 | parental rights; exceptions.-- |
929 | (1) The department shall file a petition to terminate |
930 | parental rights within 60 days after any of the following if: |
931 | (a) At the time of the 12-month judicial review hearing, a |
932 | child is not returned to the physical custody of the parents; |
933 | (b) A petition for termination of parental rights has not |
934 | otherwise been filed, and the child has been in out-of-home care |
935 | under the responsibility of the state for 12 15 of the most |
936 | recent 22 months, calculated on a cumulative basis, but not |
937 | including any trial home visits or time during which the child |
938 | was a runaway; |
939 | (c) A parent has been convicted of the murder of the other |
940 | parent, manslaughter of the other parent, aiding or abetting the |
941 | murder, or conspiracy or solicitation to murder the other parent |
942 | or another child of the parent, or a felony battery that |
943 | resulted in serious bodily injury to the child or to another any |
944 | other child of the parent; or |
945 | (d) A court determines that reasonable efforts to reunify |
946 | the child and parent are not required. |
947 | Section 16. Paragraphs (e) through (h) of subsection (1) |
948 | of section 39.806, Florida Statutes, are amended, paragraphs |
949 | (j), (k), and (l) are added to that subsection, and subsections |
950 | (2), (3), and (4) of that section are amended, to read: |
951 | 39.806 Grounds for termination of parental rights.-- |
952 | (1) Grounds for the termination of parental rights may be |
953 | established under any of the following circumstances: |
954 | (e) When a child has been adjudicated dependent, a case |
955 | plan has been filed with the court, and: |
956 | 1. The child continues to be abused, neglected, or |
957 | abandoned by the parent or parents. In this case, The failure of |
958 | the parent or parents to substantially comply with the case plan |
959 | for a period of 9 12 months after an adjudication of the child |
960 | as a dependent child or the child's placement into shelter care, |
961 | whichever occurs came first, constitutes evidence of continuing |
962 | abuse, neglect, or abandonment unless the failure to |
963 | substantially comply with the case plan was due either to the |
964 | parent's lack of financial resources of the parents or to the |
965 | failure of the department to make reasonable efforts to reunify |
966 | the parent and child. The 9-month 12-month period begins to run |
967 | only after the child's placement into shelter care or the entry |
968 | of a disposition order placing the custody of the child with the |
969 | department or a person other than the parent and the court's |
970 | approval by the court of a case plan having the with a goal of |
971 | reunification with the parent, whichever occurs came first; or |
972 | 2. The parent or parents have has materially breached the |
973 | case plan by making it unlikely that he or she will be able to |
974 | substantially comply with the case plan before the time for |
975 | compliance expires. Time is of the essence for permanency of |
976 | children in the dependency system. In order to prove the parent |
977 | or parents have has materially breached the case plan, the court |
978 | must find by clear and convincing evidence that the parent or |
979 | parents are is unlikely or unable to substantially comply with |
980 | the case plan before time expires to comply with the case plan |
981 | expires. |
982 | (f) When The parent or parents engaged in egregious |
983 | conduct or had the opportunity and capability to prevent and |
984 | knowingly failed to prevent egregious conduct that threatens the |
985 | life, safety, or physical, mental, or emotional health of the |
986 | child or the child's sibling. |
987 | 1. As used in this subsection, the term "sibling" means |
988 | another child who resides with or is cared for by the parent or |
989 | parents regardless of whether the child is related legally or by |
990 | consanguinity. |
991 | 2. As used in this subsection, the term "egregious |
992 | conduct" means abuse, abandonment, neglect, or any other conduct |
993 | of the parent or parents that is deplorable, flagrant, or |
994 | outrageous by a normal standard of conduct. Egregious conduct |
995 | may include an act or omission that occurred only once but was |
996 | of such intensity, magnitude, or severity as to endanger the |
997 | life of the child. |
998 | (g) When The parent or parents have subjected the child or |
999 | another child to aggravated child abuse as defined in s. 827.03, |
1000 | sexual battery or sexual abuse as defined in s. 39.01, or |
1001 | chronic abuse. |
1002 | (h) When The parent or parents have committed the murder, |
1003 | manslaughter, aiding or abetting the murder, or conspiracy or |
1004 | solicitation to murder the other parent or another child, or a |
1005 | felony battery that resulted in serious bodily injury to the |
1006 | child or to another child committed murder or voluntary |
1007 | manslaughter of another child, or a felony assault that results |
1008 | in serious bodily injury to the child or another child, or aided |
1009 | or abetted, attempted, conspired, or solicited to commit such a |
1010 | murder or voluntary manslaughter or felony assault. |
1011 | (i) When The parental rights of the parent to a sibling of |
1012 | the child have been terminated involuntarily. |
1013 | (j) The parent or parents have a history of extensive, |
1014 | abusive, and chronic use of alcohol or a controlled substance |
1015 | which renders them incapable of caring for the child, and have |
1016 | refused or failed to complete available treatment for such use |
1017 | during the 3-year period immediately preceding the filing of the |
1018 | petition for termination of parental rights. |
1019 | (k) A test administered at birth that indicated that the |
1020 | child's blood, urine, or meconium contained any amount of |
1021 | alcohol or a controlled substance or metabolites of such |
1022 | substances, the presence of which was not the result of medical |
1023 | treatment administered to the mother or the newborn infant, and |
1024 | the biological mother of the child is the biological mother of |
1025 | at least one other child who was adjudicated dependent after a |
1026 | finding of harm to the child's health or welfare due to exposure |
1027 | to a controlled substance or alcohol as defined in s. |
1028 | 39.01(31)(g), after which the biological mother had the |
1029 | opportunity to participate in substance abuse treatment. |
1030 | (l) On three or more occasions the child or another child |
1031 | of the parent or parents has been placed in out-of-home care |
1032 | pursuant to this chapter, and the conditions that led to the |
1033 | child's out-of-home placement were caused by the parent or |
1034 | parents. |
1035 | (2) Reasonable efforts to preserve and reunify families |
1036 | are not required if a court of competent jurisdiction has |
1037 | determined that any of the events described in paragraphs |
1038 | (1)(e)-(l) (1)(e)-(i) have occurred. |
1039 | (3) If When a petition for termination of parental rights |
1040 | is filed under subsection (1), a separate petition for |
1041 | dependency need not be filed and the department need not offer |
1042 | the parents a case plan having with a goal of reunification, but |
1043 | may instead file with the court a case plan having with a goal |
1044 | of termination of parental rights to allow continuation of |
1045 | services until the termination is granted or until further |
1046 | orders of the court are issued. |
1047 | (4) If When an expedited termination of parental rights |
1048 | petition is filed, reasonable efforts shall be made to place the |
1049 | child in a timely manner in accordance with the permanency plan, |
1050 | and to complete whatever steps are necessary to finalize the |
1051 | permanent placement of the child. |
1052 | Section 17. Subsection (4) of section 322.142, Florida |
1053 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1054 | 322.142 Color photographic or digital imaged licenses.-- |
1055 | (4) The department may maintain a film negative or print |
1056 | file. The department shall maintain a record of the digital |
1057 | image and signature of the licensees, together with other data |
1058 | required by the department for identification and retrieval. |
1059 | Reproductions from the file or digital record are exempt from |
1060 | the provisions of s. 119.07(1) and shall be made and issued only |
1061 | for departmental administrative purposes; for the issuance of |
1062 | duplicate licenses; in response to law enforcement agency |
1063 | requests; to the Department of State pursuant to an interagency |
1064 | agreement to facilitate determinations of eligibility of voter |
1065 | registration applicants and registered voters in accordance with |
1066 | ss. 98.045 and 98.075; to the Department of Revenue pursuant to |
1067 | an interagency agreement for use in establishing paternity and |
1068 | establishing, modifying, or enforcing support obligations in |
1069 | Title IV-D cases; to the Department of Children and Family |
1070 | Services pursuant to an interagency agreement to conduct |
1071 | protective investigations under part III of chapter 39; or to |
1072 | the Department of Financial Services pursuant to an interagency |
1073 | agreement to facilitate the location of owners of unclaimed |
1074 | property, the validation of unclaimed property claims, and the |
1075 | identification of fraudulent or false claims, and are exempt |
1076 | from the provisions of s. 119.07(1). |
1077 | Section 18. Section 402.401, Florida Statutes, is amended |
1078 | to read: |
1079 | 402.401 Florida Child Welfare Student Loan Forgiveness |
1080 | Program.-- |
1081 | (1) There is created the Florida Child Welfare Student |
1082 | Loan Forgiveness Program to be administered by the Department of |
1083 | Children and Family Services Education. The program shall |
1084 | provide loan reimbursement assistance to eligible employees in |
1085 | child welfare positions that are critical to the department's |
1086 | mission, as determined by the department, and that are within |
1087 | the department, sheriff's offices, or contracted community-based |
1088 | care agencies students for upper-division undergraduate and |
1089 | graduate study. The primary purpose of the program is to attract |
1090 | capable and promising students to the child welfare profession, |
1091 | increase employment and retention of individuals who are working |
1092 | towards or who have received either a bachelor's degree or a |
1093 | master's degree in social work, or any human services subject |
1094 | area that qualifies the individual for employment as a family |
1095 | services worker, and provide opportunities for persons making |
1096 | midcareer decisions to enter the child welfare profession. The |
1097 | State Board of Education shall adopt rules necessary to |
1098 | administer the program. |
1099 | (2)(a) To be eligible for a program loan, the employee's |
1100 | outstanding student loans may not be in a default status. a |
1101 | candidate shall: |
1102 | 1. Be a full-time student at the upper-division |
1103 | undergraduate or graduate level in a social work program |
1104 | approved by the Council on Social Work Education leading to |
1105 | either a bachelor's degree or a master's degree in social work |
1106 | or an accredited human services degree program. |
1107 | 2. Have declared an intent to work in child welfare for at |
1108 | least the number of years for which a forgivable loan is |
1109 | received at the Department of Children and Family Services or |
1110 | its successor, or with an eligible lead community-based provider |
1111 | as defined in s. 409.1671. |
1112 | 3. If applying for an undergraduate forgivable loan, have |
1113 | maintained a minimum cumulative grade point average of at least |
1114 | a 2.5 on a 4.0 scale for all undergraduate work. Renewal |
1115 | applicants for undergraduate loans shall have maintained a |
1116 | minimum cumulative grade point average of at least a 2.5 on a |
1117 | 4.0 scale for all undergraduate work and have earned at least 12 |
1118 | semester credits per term, or the equivalent. |
1119 | 4. If applying for a graduate forgivable loan, have |
1120 | maintained an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at |
1121 | least a 3.0 on a 4.0 scale or have attained a Graduate Record |
1122 | Examination score of at least 1,000. Renewal applicants for |
1123 | graduate loans shall have maintained a minimum cumulative grade |
1124 | point average of at least a 3.0 on a 4.0 scale for all graduate |
1125 | work and have earned at least 9 semester credits per term, or |
1126 | the equivalent. |
1127 | (b) An undergraduate forgivable loan may be awarded for 2 |
1128 | undergraduate years, not to exceed $4,000 per year. |
1129 | (c) A graduate forgivable loan may be awarded for 2 |
1130 | graduate years, not to exceed $8,000 per year. In addition to |
1131 | meeting criteria specified in paragraph (a), a loan recipient at |
1132 | the graduate level shall: |
1133 | 1. Hold a bachelor's degree from a school or department of |
1134 | social work at any college or university accredited by the |
1135 | Council on Social Work Education, or hold a degree in a human |
1136 | services field from an accredited college or university. |
1137 | 2. Not have received an undergraduate forgivable loan as |
1138 | provided for in paragraph (b). |
1139 | (d) The State Board of Education shall adopt by rule |
1140 | repayment schedules and applicable interest rates under ss. |
1141 | 1009.82 and 1009.95. A forgivable loan must be repaid within 10 |
1142 | years after completion of a program of studies. |
1143 | 1. Credit for repayment of an undergraduate or graduate |
1144 | forgivable loan shall be in an amount not to exceed $4,000 in |
1145 | loan principal plus applicable accrued interest for each full |
1146 | year of eligible service in the child welfare profession. |
1147 | 2. Any forgivable loan recipient who fails to work at the |
1148 | Department of Children and Family Services or its successor, or |
1149 | with an eligible lead community-based provider as defined in s. |
1150 | 409.1671, is responsible for repaying the loan plus accrued |
1151 | interest at 8 percent annually. |
1152 | 3. Forgivable loan recipients may receive loan repayment |
1153 | credit for child welfare service rendered at any time during the |
1154 | scheduled repayment period. However, such repayment credit shall |
1155 | be applicable only to the current principal and accrued interest |
1156 | balance that remains at the time the repayment credit is earned. |
1157 | No loan recipient shall be reimbursed for previous cash payments |
1158 | of principal and interest. |
1159 | (3) This section shall be implemented only as specifically |
1160 | funded. |
1161 | Section 19. Paragraphs (h) and (j) of subsection (1) of |
1162 | section 409.1671, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
1163 | 409.1671 Foster care and related services; outsourcing.-- |
1164 | (1) |
1165 | (h) Other than an entity to which s. 768.28 applies, any |
1166 | eligible lead community-based provider, as defined in paragraph |
1167 | (e), or its employees or officers, except as otherwise provided |
1168 | in paragraph (i), must, as a part of its contract, obtain a |
1169 | minimum of $1 million per claim/$3 million per incident in |
1170 | general liability insurance coverage. The eligible lead |
1171 | community-based provider must also require that staff who |
1172 | transport client children and families in their personal |
1173 | automobiles in order to carry out their job responsibilities |
1174 | obtain minimum bodily injury liability insurance in the amount |
1175 | of $100,000 per claim, $300,000 per incident, on their personal |
1176 | automobiles. In lieu of personal motor vehicle insurance, the |
1177 | lead community-based provider's casualty, liability, or motor |
1178 | vehicle insurance carrier may provide nonowned automobile |
1179 | liability coverage. This insurance provides liability insurance |
1180 | for automobiles that the provider uses in connection with the |
1181 | provider's business but does not own, lease, rent, or borrow. |
1182 | This coverage includes automobiles owned by the employees of the |
1183 | provider or a member of the employee's household but only while |
1184 | the automobiles are used in connection with the provider's |
1185 | business. The nonowned automobile coverage for the provider |
1186 | applies as excess coverage over any other collectible insurance. |
1187 | The personal automobile policy for the employee of the provider |
1188 | shall be primary insurance and the nonowned automobile coverage |
1189 | of the provider acts as excess insurance to the primary |
1190 | insurance. The provider shall provide a minimum limit of $1 |
1191 | million in nonowned automobile coverage. In any tort action |
1192 | brought against such an eligible lead community-based provider |
1193 | or employee, net economic damages shall be limited to $1 million |
1194 | per liability claim and $100,000 per automobile claim, |
1195 | including, but not limited to, past and future medical expenses, |
1196 | wage loss, and loss of earning capacity, offset by any |
1197 | collateral source payment paid or payable. In any tort action |
1198 | brought against such an eligible lead community-based provider, |
1199 | noneconomic damages shall be limited to $200,000 per claim. A |
1200 | claims bill may be brought on behalf of a claimant pursuant to |
1201 | s. 768.28 for any amount exceeding the limits specified in this |
1202 | paragraph. Any offset of collateral source payments made as of |
1203 | the date of the settlement or judgment shall be in accordance |
1204 | with s. 768.76. The lead community-based provider shall not be |
1205 | liable in tort for the acts or omissions of its subcontractors |
1206 | or the officers, agents, or employees of its subcontractors. |
1207 | (j) Any subcontractor of an eligible lead community-based |
1208 | provider, as defined in paragraph (e), which is a direct |
1209 | provider of foster care and related services to children and |
1210 | families, and its employees or officers, except as otherwise |
1211 | provided in paragraph (i), must, as a part of its contract, |
1212 | obtain a minimum of $1 million per claim/$3 million per incident |
1213 | in general liability insurance coverage. The subcontractor of an |
1214 | eligible lead community-based provider must also require that |
1215 | staff who transport client children and families in their |
1216 | personal automobiles in order to carry out their job |
1217 | responsibilities obtain minimum bodily injury liability |
1218 | insurance in the amount of $100,000 per claim, $300,000 per |
1219 | incident, on their personal automobiles. In lieu of personal |
1220 | motor vehicle insurance, the subcontractor's casualty, |
1221 | liability, or motor vehicle insurance carrier may provide |
1222 | nonowned automobile liability coverage. This insurance provides |
1223 | liability insurance for automobiles that the subcontractor uses |
1224 | in connection with the subcontractor's business but does not |
1225 | own, lease, rent, or borrow. This coverage includes automobiles |
1226 | owned by the employees of the subcontractor or a member of the |
1227 | employee's household but only while the automobiles are used in |
1228 | connection with the subcontractor's business. The nonowned |
1229 | automobile coverage for the subcontractor applies as excess |
1230 | coverage over any other collectible insurance. The personal |
1231 | automobile policy for the employee of the subcontractor shall be |
1232 | primary insurance and the nonowned automobile coverage of the |
1233 | subcontractor acts as excess insurance to the primary insurance. |
1234 | The subcontractor shall provide a minimum limit of $1 million in |
1235 | nonowned automobile coverage. In any tort action brought against |
1236 | such subcontractor or employee, net economic damages shall be |
1237 | limited to $1 million per liability claim and $100,000 per |
1238 | automobile claim, including, but not limited to, past and future |
1239 | medical expenses, wage loss, and loss of earning capacity, |
1240 | offset by any collateral source payment paid or payable. In any |
1241 | tort action brought against such subcontractor, noneconomic |
1242 | damages shall be limited to $200,000 per claim. A claims bill |
1243 | may be brought on behalf of a claimant pursuant to s. 768.28 for |
1244 | any amount exceeding the limits specified in this paragraph. Any |
1245 | offset of collateral source payments made as of the date of the |
1246 | settlement or judgment shall be in accordance with s. 768.76. |
1247 | Section 20. Paragraph (a) of subsection (4) of section |
1248 | 409.175, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1249 | 409.175 Licensure of family foster homes, residential |
1250 | child-caring agencies, and child-placing agencies; public |
1251 | records exemption.-- |
1252 | (4)(a) A person, family foster home, or residential child- |
1253 | caring agency may shall not provide receive a child for |
1254 | continuing full-time child care or custody unless such person, |
1255 | home, or agency has first procured a license from the department |
1256 | to provide such care. This requirement does not apply to a |
1257 | person who is a relative of the child by blood, marriage, or |
1258 | adoption, or to a permanent legal guardian established under s. |
1259 | 39.6221, a person who has received the child from the |
1260 | department, a licensed child-placing agency, or an intermediary |
1261 | for the purposes of adoption pursuant to chapter 63. |
1262 | Section 21. Subsection (3) of section 787.04, Florida |
1263 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1264 | 787.04 Removing minors from state or concealing minors |
1265 | contrary to state agency order or court order.-- |
1266 | (3) It is unlawful for any person, with criminal intent, |
1267 | to knowingly and willfully lead, take, entice, or remove a minor |
1268 | beyond the limits of this state, or to knowingly and willfully |
1269 | conceal the location of a minor, during the pendency of a |
1270 | dependency proceeding affecting such minor or during the |
1271 | pendency of any investigation, action, or proceeding concerning |
1272 | the alleged abuse or neglect of such minor, after having |
1273 | received actual or constructive notice of the pendency of such |
1274 | investigation, action, or proceeding and without the permission |
1275 | of the state agency or court in which the investigation, action, |
1276 | or proceeding is pending. |
1277 | Section 22. Subsection (1) of section 937.021, Florida |
1278 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1279 | 937.021 Missing child reports.-- |
1280 | (1) Upon the filing of a police report that a child is |
1281 | missing by the parent or guardian, the Department of Children |
1282 | and Family Services, a community-based care provider, or a |
1283 | sheriff's office providing investigative services for the |
1284 | department, the law enforcement agency receiving the report |
1285 | shall immediately inform all on-duty law enforcement officers of |
1286 | the existence of the missing child report, communicate the |
1287 | report to every other law enforcement agency having jurisdiction |
1288 | in the county, and transmit the report for inclusion within the |
1289 | Florida Crime Information Center computer. A law enforcement |
1290 | agency may not require a reporter to present an order that a |
1291 | child be taken into custody or any other such order before |
1292 | accepting a report that a child is missing. |
1293 | Section 23. Effective upon this act becoming a law and |
1294 | operating retroactively to June 29, 2008, subsection (3) of |
1295 | section 1 of chapter 2007-174, Laws of Florida, is amended to |
1296 | read: |
1297 | (3) This section expires June 30, 2009 2008. |
1298 | Section 24. Paragraph (b) of subsection (3) of section |
1299 | 39.0015, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1300 | 39.0015 Child abuse prevention training in the district |
1301 | school system.-- |
1302 | (3) DEFINITIONS.--As used in this section: |
1303 | (b) "Child abuse" means abandonment, abuse, harm, mental |
1304 | injury, neglect, physical injury, or sexual abuse of a child as |
1305 | those terms are defined in s. 39.01 those acts as defined in ss. |
1306 | 39.01(1), (2), (31), (41), (43), (55), and (66), 827.04, and |
1307 | 984.03 984.03(1), (2), and (37). |
1308 | Section 25. Subsection (5) of section 39.205, Florida |
1309 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1310 | 39.205 Penalties relating to reporting of child abuse, |
1311 | abandonment, or neglect.-- |
1312 | (5) If the department or its authorized agent has |
1313 | determined after its investigation that a report is false, the |
1314 | department shall, with the consent of the alleged perpetrator, |
1315 | refer the report to the local law enforcement agency having |
1316 | jurisdiction for an investigation to determine whether |
1317 | sufficient evidence exists to refer the case for prosecution for |
1318 | filing a false report as defined in s. 39.01 s. 39.01(28). |
1319 | During the pendency of the investigation by the local law |
1320 | enforcement agency, the department must notify the local law |
1321 | enforcement agency of, and the local law enforcement agency must |
1322 | respond to, all subsequent reports concerning children in that |
1323 | same family in accordance with s. 39.301. If the law enforcement |
1324 | agency believes that there are indicators of abuse, abandonment, |
1325 | or neglect, it must immediately notify the department, which |
1326 | must ensure assure the safety of the children. If the law |
1327 | enforcement agency finds sufficient evidence for prosecution for |
1328 | filing a false report, it must refer the case to the appropriate |
1329 | state attorney for prosecution. |
1330 | Section 26. Subsection (1) of section 39.302, Florida |
1331 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1332 | 39.302 Protective investigations of institutional child |
1333 | abuse, abandonment, or neglect.-- |
1334 | (1) The department shall conduct a child protective |
1335 | investigation of each report of institutional child abuse, |
1336 | abandonment, or neglect. Upon receipt of a report that alleges |
1337 | that an employee or agent of the department, or any other entity |
1338 | or person covered by s. 39.01(33) or (47) s. 39.01(32) or (46), |
1339 | acting in an official capacity, has committed an act of child |
1340 | abuse, abandonment, or neglect, the department shall initiate a |
1341 | child protective investigation within the timeframe established |
1342 | by the central abuse hotline under s. 39.201(5) and orally |
1343 | notify the appropriate state attorney, law enforcement agency, |
1344 | and licensing agency, which. These agencies shall immediately |
1345 | conduct a joint investigation, unless independent investigations |
1346 | are more feasible. When conducting investigations onsite or |
1347 | having face-to-face interviews with the child, such |
1348 | investigation visits shall be unannounced unless it is |
1349 | determined by the department or its agent that the unannounced |
1350 | visits would threaten the safety of the child. If When a |
1351 | facility is exempt from licensing, the department shall inform |
1352 | the owner or operator of the facility of the report. Each agency |
1353 | conducting a joint investigation is entitled to full access to |
1354 | the information gathered by the department in the course of the |
1355 | investigation. A protective investigation must include an onsite |
1356 | visit of the child's place of residence. In all cases, The |
1357 | department shall make a full written report to the state |
1358 | attorney within 3 working days after making the oral report. A |
1359 | criminal investigation shall be coordinated, whenever possible, |
1360 | with the child protective investigation of the department. Any |
1361 | interested person who has information regarding the offenses |
1362 | described in this subsection may forward a statement to the |
1363 | state attorney as to whether prosecution is warranted and |
1364 | appropriate. Within 15 days after the completion of the |
1365 | investigation, the state attorney shall report the findings to |
1366 | the department and shall include in the report a determination |
1367 | of whether or not prosecution is justified and appropriate in |
1368 | view of the circumstances of the specific case. |
1369 | Section 27. Paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection (2) of |
1370 | section 39.6011, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
1371 | 39.6011 Case plan development.-- |
1372 | (2) The case plan must be written simply and clearly in |
1373 | English and, if English is not the principal language of the |
1374 | child's parent, to the extent possible in the parent's principal |
1375 | language. Each case plan must contain: |
1376 | (b) The permanency goal as defined in s. 39.01(51). |
1377 | (c) If concurrent planning is being used, a description of |
1378 | the permanency goal of reunification with the parent or legal |
1379 | custodian in addition to a description of one of the remaining |
1380 | permanency goals described in s. 39.01 s. 39.01(51). |
1381 | Section 28. Paragraph (e) of subsection (6) of section |
1382 | 39.811, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1383 | 39.811 Powers of disposition; order of disposition.-- |
1384 | (6) The parental rights of one parent may be severed |
1385 | without severing the parental rights of the other parent only |
1386 | under the following circumstances: |
1387 | (e) If the parent whose rights are being terminated meets |
1388 | any of the criteria specified in s. 39.806(1)(d) and (f)-(l) |
1389 | (f)-(i). |
1390 | Section 29. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section |
1391 | 39.828, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1392 | 39.828 Grounds for appointment of a guardian advocate.-- |
1393 | (1) The court shall appoint the person named in the |
1394 | petition as a guardian advocate with all the powers and duties |
1395 | specified in s. 39.829 for an initial term of 1 year upon a |
1396 | finding that: |
1397 | (a) The child named in the petition is or was a drug |
1398 | dependent newborn as described in s. 39.01(32)(g) s. |
1399 | 39.01(31)(g); |
1400 | Section 30. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section |
1401 | 419.001, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1402 | 419.001 Site selection of community residential homes.-- |
1403 | (1) For the purposes of this section, the following |
1404 | definitions shall apply: |
1405 | (d) "Resident" means any of the following: a frail elder |
1406 | as defined in s. 429.65; a physically disabled or handicapped |
1407 | person as defined in s. 760.22(7)(a); a developmentally disabled |
1408 | person as defined in s. 393.063; a nondangerous mentally ill |
1409 | person as defined in s. 394.455(18); or a child who is found to |
1410 | be dependent as defined in s. 39.01 or s.984.03, or a child in |
1411 | need of services as defined in s. 984.03 s. 39.01(14), s. |
1412 | 984.03(9) or (12), or s. 985.03. |
1413 | Section 31. (1) Notwithstanding the provisions of s. |
1414 | 216.181(2)(f), Florida Statutes, the Legislative Budget |
1415 | Commission may consider the approval of a budget amendment for |
1416 | fiscal year 2008-2009 appropriations only, recommended by the |
1417 | Executive Office of the Governor and submitted by the Department |
1418 | of Children and Family Services, requesting additional trust |
1419 | fund authority for expenditures enhancing child protection and |
1420 | adoption. |
1421 | (2) This section is effective upon becoming a law. |
1422 | Section 32. Except as otherwise expressly provided in this |
1423 | act and except for this section, which shall take effect upon |
1424 | becoming a law, this act shall take effect July 1, 2008. |