SB 24-001
signedContinue Youth Mental Health Services Program
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedSenate Bill 24-001 extends the "I Matter" youth mental health services program in Colorado until June 30, 2034. The bill also changes how the program selects its online portal provider by removing a previous exemption from state procurement rules and requires an annual report instead of twice-yearly reports to keep track of the program's progress. Additionally, it allocates $5 million from the general fund to support the program. This bill has been signed into law and is now effective as of June 4, 2024.
Official Summary
The temporary youth mental health services program (program), commonly known as "I Matter", is scheduled to repeal on June 30, 2024. The act continues the program until June 30, 2034. Under existing law, the selection of a vendor to create or use an existing online portal to facilitate the program (program vendor) is exempt from the requirements of the state's procurement code. The act repeals the exemption. Existing law requires the state department of human services to report to the general assembly about the program twice each year. The act requires one annual report, due June 30 of each year. The act requires the program vendor to annually deliver to the BHA information and data about the program and requires the BHA to conduct surveys of providers who participate in the program. The act appropriates $5 million from the general fund to the BHA for the program. APPROVED by Governor June 4, 2024 EFFECTIVE June 4, 2024(Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)
Details
- Chamber
- Senate
- First action
- 2024-06-04
- Latest action
- 2024-01-10
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Health & Human Services
- OpenStates
- View source ↗
Sponsors
- Lisa Cutter (primary) · Democratic
- Kyle Brown (primary) · Democratic
- Manny Rutinel (primary) · Democratic