1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to homelessness; amending s. 420.507, |
3 | F.S.; conforming a cross-reference; amending s. 420.621, |
4 | F.S.; revising, providing, and deleting definitions; |
5 | amending s. 420.622, F.S.; increasing and revising |
6 | membership on the Council on Homelessness; removing a |
7 | member from an obsolete organization; correcting the name |
8 | of a member organization on the council; revising the date |
9 | of an annual report; creating s. 420.6275, F.S.; creating |
10 | the Housing First program; providing legislative findings |
11 | and intent; providing methodology; providing components of |
12 | the program; providing that local continuums of care that |
13 | adopt the program be given funding priority; creating s. |
14 | 420.628, F.S.; providing legislative findings and intent |
15 | relating to young adults leaving foster care; amending s. |
16 | 1003.01, F.S.; revising a definition; amending ss. 1003.21 |
17 | and 1003.22, F.S.; conforming terminology; providing an |
18 | effective date. |
19 |
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20 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
21 |
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22 | Section 1. Paragraph (a) of subsection (22) of section |
23 | 420.507, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
24 | 420.507 Powers of the corporation.--The corporation shall |
25 | have all the powers necessary or convenient to carry out and |
26 | effectuate the purposes and provisions of this part, including |
27 | the following powers which are in addition to all other powers |
28 | granted by other provisions of this part: |
29 | (22) To develop and administer the State Apartment |
30 | Incentive Loan program. In developing and administering that |
31 | program, the corporation may: |
32 | (a) Make first, second, and other subordinated mortgage |
33 | loans including variable or fixed rate loans subject to |
34 | contingent interest for all State Apartment Incentive Loans |
35 | provided for in this chapter based upon available cash flow of |
36 | the projects. The corporation shall make loans exceeding 25 |
37 | percent of project cost available only to nonprofit |
38 | organizations and public bodies that which are able to secure |
39 | grants, donations of land, or contributions from other sources |
40 | and to projects meeting the criteria of subparagraph 1. Mortgage |
41 | loans shall be made available at the following rates of |
42 | interest: |
43 | 1. Zero to 3 percent interest for sponsors of projects |
44 | that set aside at least 80 percent of their total units for |
45 | residents qualifying as farmworkers as defined in this part, or |
46 | commercial fishing workers as defined in this part, or the |
47 | homeless as defined in s. 420.621 420.621(4) over the life of |
48 | the loan. |
49 | 2. Zero to 3 percent interest based on the pro rata share |
50 | of units set aside for homeless residents if the total of such |
51 | units is less than 80 percent of the units in the borrower's |
52 | project. |
53 | 3. One to 9 percent interest for sponsors of projects |
54 | targeted at populations other than farmworkers, commercial |
55 | fishing workers, or and the homeless. |
56 | Section 2. Section 420.621, Florida Statutes, is amended |
57 | to read: |
58 | 420.621 Definitions; ss. 420.621-420.627.--As used in ss. |
59 | 420.621-420.628 420.621-420.627, the term following terms shall |
60 | have the following meanings, unless the context otherwise |
61 | requires: |
62 | (1) "Continuum of care" means the community components |
63 | needed to organize and deliver housing and services to meet the |
64 | specific needs of people who are homeless as they move to stable |
65 | housing and maximum self-sufficiency. It includes action steps |
66 | to end homelessness and prevent a return to homelessness. |
67 | (2) "Council on Homelessness" means the council created in |
68 | s. 420.622. |
69 | (1) "AFDC" means Aid to Families with Dependent Children |
70 | as administered under chapter 409. |
71 | (3)(2) "Department" means the Department of Children and |
72 | Family Services. |
73 | (4)(3) "District" means a service district of the |
74 | department of Children and Family Services, as set forth in s. |
75 | 20.19. |
76 | (5)(4) "Homeless," applied to an individual, or |
77 | "individual experiencing homelessness" means "Homeless" refers |
78 | to an individual who lacks a fixed, regular, and adequate |
79 | nighttime residence and includes or an individual who has a |
80 | primary nighttime residence that is: |
81 | (a) Is sharing the housing of other persons due to loss of |
82 | housing, economic hardship, or a similar reason; |
83 | (b) Is living in a motel, hotel, travel trailer park, or |
84 | camping ground due to a lack of alternative adequate |
85 | accommodations; |
86 | (c) Is living in an emergency or transitional shelter; A |
87 | supervised publicly or privately operated shelter designed to |
88 | provide temporary living accommodations, including welfare |
89 | hotels, congregate shelters, and transitional housing for the |
90 | mentally ill; |
91 | (b) An institution that provides a temporary residence for |
92 | individuals intended to be institutionalized; or |
93 | (d)(c) Has a primary nighttime residence that is a public |
94 | or private place not designed for, or ordinarily used as, a |
95 | regular sleeping accommodation for human beings; |
96 | (e) Is living in a car, park, public space, abandoned |
97 | building, bus or train station, or similar setting; or |
98 | (f) Is a migratory individual who qualifies as homeless |
99 | because he or she is living in circumstances described in |
100 | paragraphs (a)-(e). |
101 |
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102 | The terms do term does not refer to an any individual imprisoned |
103 | or otherwise detained pursuant to state or federal law or to |
104 | individuals or families who are sharing housing due to cultural |
105 | preferences, voluntary arrangements, or traditional networks of |
106 | support. The terms include an individual who has been released |
107 | from jail, prison, the juvenile justice system, the child |
108 | welfare system, a mental health and developmental disability |
109 | facility, a residential addiction treatment program, or a |
110 | hospital, for whom no subsequent residence has been identified, |
111 | and who lacks the resources and support network to obtain |
112 | housing. |
113 | (6)(5) "Local coalition for the homeless" means a |
114 | coalition established pursuant to s. 420.623. |
115 | (7)(6) "New and temporary homeless" means those |
116 | individuals or families who are homeless due to societal |
117 | external factors, such as unemployment or other loss of income, |
118 | personal or family-life crises, or the shortage of low-income |
119 | housing. |
120 | (8)(7) "State Office on Homelessness" means the state |
121 | office created in s. 420.622 "Secretary" means the secretary of |
122 | the Department of Children and Family Services. |
123 | Section 3. Subsections (2) and (9) of section 420.622, |
124 | Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
125 | 420.622 State Office on Homelessness; Council on |
126 | Homelessness.-- |
127 | (2) The Council on Homelessness is created to consist of a |
128 | 17-member 15-member council of public and private agency |
129 | representatives who shall develop policy and advise the State |
130 | Office on Homelessness. The council members shall be: the |
131 | Secretary of Children and Family Services, or his or her |
132 | designee; the Secretary of Community Affairs, or his or her |
133 | designee, to advise the council on issues related to rural |
134 | development; the State Surgeon General, or his or her designee; |
135 | the Executive Director of Veterans' Affairs, or his or her |
136 | designee; the Secretary of Corrections, or his or her designee; |
137 | the Secretary of Health Care Administration, or his or her |
138 | designee; the Commissioner of Education, or his or her designee; |
139 | the Director of Workforce Florida, Inc., or his or her designee; |
140 | one representative of the Florida Association of Counties; one |
141 | representative from the Florida League of Cities; one |
142 | representative of the Florida Coalition for Supportive Housing |
143 | Coalition; the Executive Director of the Florida Housing Finance |
144 | Corporation, or his or her designee; one representative of the |
145 | Florida Coalition for the Homeless; one representative of the |
146 | Florida State Rural Development Council; and four members |
147 | appointed by the Governor. The council members shall be |
148 | volunteer, nonpaid persons and shall be reimbursed for travel |
149 | expenses only. The appointed members of the council shall be |
150 | appointed to serve staggered 2-year terms, and the council shall |
151 | meet at least four times per year. The importance of minority, |
152 | gender, and geographic representation must be considered when |
153 | appointing members to the council. |
154 | (9) The council shall, by June 30 December 31 of each |
155 | year, beginning in 2010, issue to the Governor, the President of |
156 | the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the |
157 | Secretary of Children and Family Services an evaluation of the |
158 | executive director's performance in fulfilling the statutory |
159 | duties of the office, a report summarizing the council's |
160 | recommendations to the office and the corresponding actions |
161 | taken by the office, and any recommendations to the Legislature |
162 | for proposals to reduce homelessness in this state. |
163 | Section 4. Section 420.6275, Florida Statutes, is created |
164 | to read: |
165 | 420.6275 Housing First.-- |
166 | (1) LEGISLATIVE FINDINGS AND INTENT.-- |
167 | (a) The Legislature finds that many communities plan to |
168 | manage homelessness rather than plan to end it. |
169 | (b) The Legislature also finds that for most of the past |
170 | two decades, public and private solutions to homelessness have |
171 | focused on providing individuals and families who are |
172 | experiencing homelessness with emergency shelter, transitional |
173 | housing, or a combination of both. While emergency shelter |
174 | programs may provide critical access to services for individuals |
175 | and families in crisis, they often fail to address their long- |
176 | term needs. |
177 | (c) The Legislature further finds that Housing First is an |
178 | alternative approach to the current system of emergency shelter |
179 | or transitional housing which tends to reduce the length of time |
180 | of homelessness and has proven to be cost-effective. |
181 | (d) It is therefore the intent of the Legislature to |
182 | encourage homeless continuums of care to adopt the Housing First |
183 | approach to ending homelessness for individuals and families. |
184 | (2) HOUSING FIRST METHODOLOGY.-- |
185 | (a) The Housing First approach to homelessness differs |
186 | from traditional approaches by providing housing assistance, |
187 | case management, and support services responsive to individual |
188 | or family needs after housing is obtained. By using this |
189 | approach when appropriate, communities can significantly reduce |
190 | the amount of time that individuals and families are homeless |
191 | and prevent further episodes of homelessness. Housing First |
192 | emphasizes that social services provided to enhance individual |
193 | and family well-being can be more effective when people are in |
194 | their own home, and: |
195 | 1. The housing is not time-limited. |
196 | 2. The housing is not contingent on compliance with |
197 | services. Instead, participants must comply with a standard |
198 | lease agreement and are provided with the services and support |
199 | that are necessary to help them do so successfully. |
200 | 3. A background check and any rehabilitation necessary to |
201 | combat an addiction related to alcoholism or substance abuse has |
202 | been completed by the individual for whom assistance or support |
203 | services are provided. |
204 | (b) The Housing First approach addresses the societal |
205 | causes of homelessness and advocates for the immediate return of |
206 | individuals and families into housing and communities. Housing |
207 | First provides a critical link between the emergency and |
208 | transitional housing system and community-based social service, |
209 | educational, and health care organizations and consists of four |
210 | components: |
211 | 1. Crisis intervention and short-term stabilization. |
212 | 2. Screening, intake, and needs assessment. |
213 | 3. Provision of housing resources. |
214 | 4. Provision of case management. |
215 | Section 5. Section 420.628, Florida Statutes, is created |
216 | to read: |
217 | 420.628 Young adults leaving foster care; legislative |
218 | findings.-- |
219 | (1) The Legislature finds that the transition from |
220 | childhood to adulthood is filled with opportunity and risk. Most |
221 | young people who receive adequate support make this transition |
222 | successfully and become healthy adults who are prepared for work |
223 | and are able to become responsible, fulfilled members of their |
224 | families and communities. |
225 | (2) The Legislature finds that there are also many young |
226 | people who enter adulthood without the knowledge, skills, |
227 | attitudes, habits, and relationships that enable them to be |
228 | productive members of society. Those young people who, through |
229 | no fault of their own, live in foster families, group homes, and |
230 | institutions are among those at greatest risk. |
231 | (3) The Legislature finds that these young people face |
232 | numerous barriers to a successful transition to adulthood. Those |
233 | barriers include changes in foster care placements and schools, |
234 | limited opportunities for participation in age-appropriate |
235 | activities, and the inability to achieve economic stability, |
236 | make connections with permanent supportive adults or family, and |
237 | access housing. The main barriers to safe and affordable housing |
238 | for youth who leave foster care due to age are cost, lack of |
239 | availability, the unwillingness of many landlords to rent to |
240 | them, and their own lack of knowledge about how to be good |
241 | tenants. |
242 | (4) The Legislature also finds that young adults who |
243 | emancipate from the child welfare system are at risk of becoming |
244 | homeless and those who were formerly in foster care are |
245 | disproportionately represented in the homeless population. Only |
246 | about two-fifths of eligible young people receive independent |
247 | living services and, of those who do, few receive adequate |
248 | housing assistance. Without the stability of safe housing, other |
249 | services, training, and opportunities may not be effective. |
250 | (5) The Legislature further finds that research on young |
251 | people who emancipate from foster care suggests a nexus between |
252 | foster care involvement and later episodes of homelessness and |
253 | that interventions in the foster care system might help to |
254 | prevent homelessness. Responding to the needs of young people |
255 | leaving the foster care system with developmentally appropriate |
256 | supportive housing models organized in a continuum of decreasing |
257 | supervision may increase their ability to live independently. |
258 | (6) It is therefore the intent of the Legislature to |
259 | encourage the Department of Children and Family Services, its |
260 | agents, and community-based care providers operating pursuant to |
261 | s. 409.1671 to develop and implement procedures designed to |
262 | reduce the number of young adults who become homeless after |
263 | leaving the child welfare system. |
264 | Section 6. Subsection (12) of section 1003.01, Florida |
265 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
266 | 1003.01 Definitions.--As used in this chapter, the term: |
267 | (12) "Children and youths who are experiencing |
268 | homelessness," for programs authorized under subtitle B, |
269 | Education for Homeless Children and Youths, of Title VII of the |
270 | McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, 42 U.S.C. ss. 11431 et |
271 | seq., means children and youths who lack a fixed, regular, and |
272 | adequate nighttime residence, and includes: |
273 | (a) Children and youths who are sharing the housing of |
274 | other persons due to loss of housing, economic hardship, or a |
275 | similar reason; are living in motels, hotels, travel trailer |
276 | parks, or camping grounds due to the lack of alternative |
277 | adequate accommodations; are living in emergency or transitional |
278 | shelters; are abandoned in hospitals; or are awaiting foster |
279 | care placement. |
280 | (b) Children and youths who have a primary nighttime |
281 | residence that is a public or private place not designed for or |
282 | ordinarily used as a regular sleeping accommodation for human |
283 | beings. |
284 | (c) Children and youths who are living in cars, parks, |
285 | public spaces, abandoned buildings, bus or train stations, or |
286 | similar settings. |
287 | (d) Migratory children who are living in circumstances |
288 | described in paragraphs (a)-(c). "Homeless child" means: |
289 | (a) One who lacks a fixed, regular nighttime residence; |
290 | (b) One who has a primary nighttime residence that is: |
291 | 1. A supervised publicly or privately operated shelter |
292 | designed to provide temporary living accommodations, including |
293 | welfare hotels, congregate shelters, and transitional housing |
294 | for the mentally ill; |
295 | 2. An institution that provides a temporary residence for |
296 | individuals intended to be institutionalized; or |
297 | 3. A public or private place not designed for, or |
298 | ordinarily used as, a regular sleeping accommodation for human |
299 | beings; or |
300 | (c) One who temporarily resides with an adult other than |
301 | his or her parent because the parent is suffering financial |
302 | hardship. |
303 | |
304 | A child who is imprisoned, detained, or in the custody of the |
305 | state pursuant to a state or federal law is not a homeless |
306 | child. |
307 | Section 7. Paragraph (f) of subsection (1) and paragraph |
308 | (g) of subsection (4) of section 1003.21, Florida Statutes, are |
309 | amended to read: |
310 | 1003.21 School attendance.-- |
311 | (1) |
312 | (f) Children and youths who are experiencing homelessness |
313 | Homeless children, as defined in s. 1003.01, must have access to |
314 | a free public education and must be admitted to school in the |
315 | school district in which they or their families live. School |
316 | districts shall assist such homeless children in meeting to meet |
317 | the requirements of subsection (4) and s. 1003.22, as well as |
318 | local requirements for documentation. |
319 | (4) Before admitting a child to kindergarten, the |
320 | principal shall require evidence that the child has attained the |
321 | age at which he or she should be admitted in accordance with the |
322 | provisions of subparagraph (1)(a)2. The district school |
323 | superintendent may require evidence of the age of any child whom |
324 | he or she believes to be within the limits of compulsory |
325 | attendance as provided for by law. If the first prescribed |
326 | evidence is not available, the next evidence obtainable in the |
327 | order set forth below shall be accepted: |
328 | (g) If none of these evidences can be produced, an |
329 | affidavit of age sworn to by the parent, accompanied by a |
330 | certificate of age signed by a public health officer or by a |
331 | public school physician, or, if neither of these are not is |
332 | available in the county, by a licensed practicing physician |
333 | designated by the district school board, which certificate |
334 | states that the health officer or physician has examined the |
335 | child and believes that the age as stated in the affidavit is |
336 | substantially correct. Children and youths who are experiencing |
337 | homelessness A homeless child, as defined in s. 1003.01, shall |
338 | be given temporary exemption from this section for 30 school |
339 | days. |
340 | Section 8. Subsection (1) and paragraph (e) of subsection |
341 | (5) of section 1003.22, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
342 | 1003.22 School-entry health examinations; immunization |
343 | against communicable diseases; exemptions; duties of Department |
344 | of Health.-- |
345 | (1) Each district school board and the governing authority |
346 | of each private school shall require that each child who is |
347 | entitled to admittance to kindergarten, or is entitled to any |
348 | other initial entrance into a public or private school in this |
349 | state, present a certification of a school-entry health |
350 | examination performed within 1 year before prior to enrollment |
351 | in school. Each district school board, and the governing |
352 | authority of each private school, may establish a policy that |
353 | permits a student up to 30 school days to present a |
354 | certification of a school-entry health examination. Children and |
355 | youths who are experiencing homelessness A homeless child, as |
356 | defined in s. 1003.01, shall be given a temporary exemption for |
357 | 30 school days. Any district school board that establishes such |
358 | a policy shall include provisions in its local school health |
359 | services plan to assist students in obtaining the health |
360 | examinations. However, a any child shall be exempted exempt from |
361 | the requirement of a health examination upon written request of |
362 | the parent of the child stating objections to the examination on |
363 | religious grounds. |
364 | (5) The provisions of this section shall not apply if: |
365 | (e) An authorized school official issues a temporary |
366 | exemption, for up to a period not to exceed 30 school days, to |
367 | permit a student who transfers into a new county to attend class |
368 | until his or her records can be obtained. Children and youths |
369 | who are experiencing homelessness A homeless child, as defined |
370 | in s. 1003.01, shall be given a temporary exemption for 30 |
371 | school days. The public school health nurse or authorized |
372 | private school official is responsible for followup of each such |
373 | student until proper documentation or immunizations are |
374 | obtained. An exemption for 30 days may be issued for a student |
375 | who enters a juvenile justice program to permit the student to |
376 | attend class until his or her records can be obtained or until |
377 | the immunizations can be obtained. An authorized juvenile |
378 | justice official is responsible for followup of each student who |
379 | enters a juvenile justice program until proper documentation or |
380 | immunizations are obtained. |
381 | Section 9. This act shall take effect July 1, 2009. |