HB 22-1278
signedBehavioral Health Administration
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedHB 22-1278, also known as the Behavioral Health Administration Act, creates a new agency called the Behavioral Health Administration (BHA) within Colorado’s Department of Human Services. This BHA will take over most behavioral health programs previously managed by another office and will be responsible for setting up systems to handle complaints, monitor performance, ensure safety nets are in place, and manage licensing for all behavioral health entities across the state. The bill also moves some prevention and early intervention programs to the Department of Public Health and Environment. The act has been signed into law, meaning it is now official policy. This means that starting July 1, 2024, these new systems and responsibilities will begin to be implemented, affecting anyone involved in or seeking behavioral health services in Colorado.
Official Summary
The act creates the behavioral health administration (BHA) in the department of human services (department) to create a coordinated, cohesive, and effective behavioral health system in the state. The BHA will handle most of the behavioral health programs that were previously handled by the office of behavioral health in the department. The act establishes a commissioner as the head of the BHA and authorizes the commissioner and state board of human services to adopt and amend rules that previously were promulgated by the executive director of the department. By July 1, 2024, the act requires the BHA to establish: A statewide behavioral health grievance system; A behavioral health performance monitoring system; A comprehensive behavioral health safety net system; Regionally-based behavioral health administrative service organizations; The BHA as the licensing authority for all behavioral health entities; and The BHA advisory council to provide feedback to the BHA on the behavioral health system in the state. The act transfers to the department of public health and environment responsibility for community prevention and early intervention programs previously administered by the department. The act makes extensive conforming amendments. The act appropriates from the general fund to the department: $671,538 for use by the executive director's office; $542,470 for administration and finance; and $2,495,231 for use by the behavioral health administration; The act makes various adjustments to the 2022 general appropriations act for the department, the department of public health and environment, and the legislative department. The act appropriates to the department of public health and environment $638,608 for use by the prevention services division of which $48,111 is from the general fund and $590,497 is from the marijuana tax cash fund. The act appropriates to the department of public health and environment: From reappropriated federal funds $8,181,248 for use by the prevention services division; From the marijuana tax cash fund $18,127 for administration; and From the general fund $11,846 for use by administration and support. The act appropriates from the general fund to the department of health care policy and financing, $246,399 for use by the executive director's office. The act appropriates from the division of insurance cash fund $142,766 to the department of regulatory agencies for use by the division of insurance. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)
Details
- Chamber
- House
- First action
- 2022-05-25
- Latest action
- 2022-03-02
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In House - Assigned to Public & Behavioral Health & Human Services
- OpenStates
- View source ↗
Sponsors
- Rod Pelton (primary) · Republican
- Cleave Simpson (primary) · Republican