SB 18-254
signedChild Welfare Reforms
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedSenate Bill 18-254, also known as Child Welfare Reforms, aims to improve Colorado's child welfare system by clarifying services that must be provided and enhancing funding for various programs. The bill increases state reimbursement for adoption and guardianship subsidies from 80% to 90%, creates a new program for children with intellectual disabilities, and establishes a task force to evaluate the delivery of child welfare services. It also requires counties to transfer unspent funds into a sustainability fund for prevention and intervention programs. This bill has been signed into law, meaning its provisions are now in effect and will impact how child welfare services are funded and delivered across Colorado.
Official Summary
Joint Budget Committee. The bill addresses numerous reforms to the funding structure for the state's child welfare services. Section 1 of the bill clarifies the types of child welfare services that must be available and provided, as necessary and appropriate, by county departments of human or social services (county departments). Sections 2 and 7 of the bill eliminate the option for county departments to maintain unspent general fund money from the child welfare services block allocation if they participate in the collaborative management program or the integrated care management program. Section 3 of the bill adds a statutory definition of and citation to the federal 'Family First Prevention Services Act of 2018'. Section 4 of the bill creates a program in the child welfare system for residential out-of-home placements for children and youth with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Section 5 of the bill: Changes the number of and process for appointments to the child welfare allocations committee; and Requires the development of a child welfare system funding model. Section 6 of the bill: Increases the percentage that counties are reimbursed by the state for adoption and relative guardianship subsidies from 80% to 90%; Formalizes the input process of the child welfare allocations committee; Allows the department of human services (state department) to submit supplemental budget requests for increases in out-of-home placement provider rates and adoption and relative guardianship expenditures; Modifies language concerning negotiations between county departments and providers for out-of-home placement rates; Requires capacity evaluations in counties or regions; Requires the state department to perform an analysis and cost projections to determine the fiscal impact on the state for changes in federal reimbursement rates for child welfare expenditures that result from the federal 'Family First Prevention Services Act of 2018'; Modifies the close-out process for child welfare expenditures; and Creates a child welfare prevention and intervention services cash fund into which unspent general fund money allocated to county departments through block allocations are transferred for sustainability of state-approved prevention and intervention programs and services. Section 8 of the bill creates the delivery of child welfare services task force.(Note: This summary applies to the reengrossed version of this bill as introduced in the second house.) , Read More
Details
- Chamber
- Senate
- First action
- 2018-05-18
- Latest action
- 2018-04-17
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Appropriations
- OpenStates
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