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First Substitute H.B. 299
This document includes House Floor Amendments incorporated into the bill on Mon, Feb 20, 2006 at 3:34 PM by chopkin. --> This document includes House Floor Amendments (CORRECTED) incorporated into the bill on Tue, Feb 21, 2006 at 3:56 PM by chopkin. -->
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8 LONG TITLE
9 General Description:
10 This bill prohibits school personnel from making certain medical recommendations for
11 a minor, including the use of psychotropic medications, and prohibits consideration of a
12 petition for removal of a minor, and removal of a minor from parental custody based on
13 a parent's refusal to consent to the administration of psychotropic medications.
14 Highlighted Provisions:
15 This bill:
16 . prohibits school personnel from making certain medical recommendations for a
17 minor, including the use of psychotropic medications;
18 . prohibits the removal of a minor from parental custody based on a parent's refusal to
19 consent to the administration of psychotropic medications; and
20 . prohibits the consideration of a petition for removal of a minor from parental
21 custody based on a parent's refusal to consent to the administration of psychotropic
22 medications.
23 Monies Appropriated in this Bill:
24 None
25 Other Special Clauses:
26 H. [
26a amendments.
26b This bill coordinates with H.B. 103 by providing technical amendments. .H
27 Utah Code Sections Affected:
28 AMENDS:
29 78-3a-301, as last amended by Chapter 356, Laws of Utah 2004
30 78-3a-305, as last amended by Chapters 68 and 326, Laws of Utah 2003
31 ENACTS:
32 53A-11-603, Utah Code Annotated 1953
33
34 Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
35 Section 1. Section 53A-11-603 is enacted to read:
36 53A-11-603. Definitions -- School personnel -- Medical recommendations --
37 Exceptions -- Penalties.
38 (1) As used in this section:
39 (a) "Health care professional" means a physician, physician assistant, nurse, dentist, or
40 mental health therapist.
41 (b) "School personnel" means any school district or charter school employee, including
42 licensed, part-time, contract, and nonlicensed employees.
43 (2) School personnel may:
44 (a) provide information and observations to a student's parent or guardian about that
45 student, including observations and concerns in the following areas:
46 (i) progress;
47 (ii) health and wellness;
48 (iii) social interactions;
49 (iv) behavior; or
50 (v) topics consistent with Subsection 53A-13-302 (6);
51 (b) communicate information and observations between school personnel regarding a
52 child;
53 (c) refer students to other appropriate school personnel and agents, consistent with
54 local school board or charter school policy, including referrals and communication with a
55 school counselor or other mental health professionals working within the school system;
56 (d) consult or use appropriate health care professionals in the event of an emergency
57 while the student is at school, consistent with the student emergency information provided at
58 student enrollment; and
59 (e) exercise their authority relating to the placement within the school or readmission
60 of a child who may be or has been suspended or expelled for a violation of Section
61 53A-11-904 .
62 (3) School personnel shall:
63 (a) report suspected child abuse consistent with Section 62A-4a-403 ;
64 (b) comply with applicable state and local health department laws, rules, and policies;
65 and
66 (c) conduct evaluations and assessments consistent with the Individuals with
67 Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. Sec. 1400 et seq., and its subsequent amendments.
68 (4) Except as provided in Subsection (6), school personnel may not:
69 (a) recommend to a parent or guardian that a child take or continue to take a
70 psychotropic medication;
71 (b) require that a student take or continue to take a psychotropic medication as a
72 condition for attending school;
73 (c) recommend that a parent or guardian seek or use a type of psychiatric or
74 psychological treatment for a child;
75 (d) conduct a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation or mental health screening,
76 test, evaluation, or assessment of a child, except where this Subsection (4)(d) conflicts with the
77 Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. Sec. 1400 et seq., and its subsequent
78 amendments; or
79 (e) make a child abuse or neglect report to authorities, including the Division of Child
80 and Family Services, solely or primarily on the basis that a parent or guardian refuses to
81 consent to:
82 (i) a psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for a child, including the
83 administration of a psychotropic medication to a child; or
84 (ii) a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child.
85 (5) Notwithstanding Subsection (4)(e), school personnel may make a report that would
86 otherwise be prohibited under Subsection (4)(e) if failure to take the action described under
87 Subsection (4)(e) would present a serious, imminent risk to the child's safety or the safety of
88 others.
89 (6) Notwithstanding Subsection (4), a school counselor or other mental health
90 professional acting in accordance with Title 58, Chapter 60, Mental Health Professional
91 Practice Act, or licensed through the State Board of Education, working within the school
92 system may:
93 (a) recommend, but not require, a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child;
94 (b) recommend, but not require, psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for
95 a child;
96 (c) conduct a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation or mental health screening,
97 test, evaluation, or assessment of a child in accordance with Section 53A-13-302 ; and
98 (d) provide to a parent or guardian, upon the specific request of the parent or guardian,
99 a list of three or more health care professionals or providers, including licensed physicians,
100 psychologists, or other health specialists.
101 (7) Local school boards or charter schools shall adopt a policy:
102 (a) providing for training of appropriate school personnel on the provisions of this
103 section; and
104 (b) indicating that an intentional violation of this section is cause for disciplinary action
105 consistent with local school board or charter school policy and under Section 53A-8-104 .
105a H. (8) Nothing in this section shall be interpreted as discouraging general
105b communication not prohibited by this section between school personnel and a student's
105c parent or guardian. .H
106 Section 2. Section 78-3a-301 is amended to read:
107 78-3a-301. Court-ordered protective custody of a minor following petition filing
108 -- Grounds.
109 (1) After a petition has been filed under Subsection 78-3a-305 (1), if the minor who is
110 the subject of the petition is not in the protective custody of the division, a court may order that
111 the minor be removed from the minor's home or otherwise taken into protective custody if the
112 court finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that any one or more of the following
113 circumstances exist:
114 (a) there is an imminent danger to the physical health or safety of the minor and the
115 minor's physical health or safety may not be protected without removing the minor from the
116 custody of the minor's parent or guardian;
117 (b) a parent or guardian engages in or threatens the minor with unreasonable conduct
118 that causes the minor to suffer emotional damage and there are no reasonable means available
119 by which the minor's emotional health may be protected without removing the minor from the
120 custody of the minor's parent or guardian;
121 (c) the minor or another minor residing in the same household has been physically or
122 sexually abused, or is considered to be at substantial risk of being physically or sexually
123 abused, by a parent or guardian, a member of the parent's or guardian's household, or other
124 person known to the parent or guardian;
125 (d) the parent or guardian is unwilling to have physical custody of the minor;
126 (e) the minor has been abandoned or left without any provision for the minor's support;
127 (f) a parent or guardian who has been incarcerated or institutionalized has not arranged
128 or cannot arrange for safe and appropriate care for the minor;
129 (g) a relative or other adult custodian with whom the minor has been left by the parent
130 or guardian is unwilling or unable to provide care or support for the minor, the whereabouts of
131 the parent or guardian are unknown, and reasonable efforts to locate the parent or guardian
132 have been unsuccessful;
133 (h) the minor is in immediate need of medical care;
134 (i) (i) a parent's or guardian's actions, omissions, or habitual action create an
135 environment that poses a threat to the minor's health or safety; or
136 (ii) a parent's or guardian's action in leaving a minor unattended would reasonably pose
137 a threat to the minor's health or safety;
138 (j) the minor or another minor residing in the same household has been neglected;
139 (k) an infant has been abandoned, as defined in Section 78-3a-313.5 ;
140 (l) the parent or guardian, or an adult residing in the same household as the parent or
141 guardian, has been charged or arrested pursuant to Title 58, Chapter 37d, Clandestine Drug Lab
142 Act, and any clandestine laboratory operation, as defined in Section 58-37d-3 , was located in
143 the residence or on the property where the minor resided; or
144 (m) the minor's welfare is otherwise endangered.
145 (2) (a) For purposes of Subsection (1)(a), if a minor has previously been adjudicated as
146 abused, neglected, or dependent, and a subsequent incident of abuse, neglect, or dependency
147 has occurred involving the same substantiated abuser or under similar circumstance as the
148 previous abuse, that fact constitutes prima facie evidence that the minor cannot safely remain in
149 the custody of the minor's parent.
150 (b) For purposes of Subsection (1)(c):
151 (i) another minor residing in the same household may not be removed from the home
152 unless that minor is considered to be at substantial risk of being physically or sexually abused
153 as described in Subsection (1)(c) or Subsection (2)(b)(ii); and
154 (ii) if a parent or guardian has received actual notice that physical or sexual abuse by a
155 person known to the parent has occurred, and there is evidence that the parent or guardian
156 failed to protect the minor, after having received the notice, by allowing the minor to be in the
157 physical presence of the alleged abuser, that fact constitutes prima facie evidence that the
158 minor is at substantial risk of being physically or sexually abused.
159 (3) In the absence of one of the factors described in Subsection (1), a court may not
160 remove a minor from the parent's or guardian's custody on the basis of:
161 (a) educational neglect;
162 (b) mental illness or poverty of the parent or guardian; or
163 (c) disability of the parent or guardian, as defined in Subsection [
164 (4) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (4)(b), a court or the Division of Child and
165 Family Services may not remove a minor from the custody of the minor's parent or guardian on
166 the sole or primary basis that the parent or guardian refuses to consent to:
167 (i) the administration of a psychotropic medication to a child;
168 (ii) a psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for a child; or
169 (iii) a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child.
170 (b) Notwithstanding Subsection (4)(a), a court or the Division of Child and Family
171 Services may remove a minor under conditions that would otherwise be prohibited under
172 Subsection (4)(a) if failure to take an action described under Subsection (4)(a) would present a
173 serious, imminent risk to the child's physical safety or the physical safety of others.
174 [
175 this section may not be placed or kept in a secure detention facility pending further court
176 proceedings unless the minor is detainable based on guidelines promulgated by the Division of
177 Juvenile Justice Services.
178 [
179 without a warrant or court order under Section 62A-4a-202.1 .
180 Section 3. Section 78-3a-305 is amended to read:
181 78-3a-305. Petition filed -- Protective orders.
182 (1) Any interested person may file a petition to commence proceedings in the juvenile
183 court alleging that a minor is abused, neglected, or dependent. The person shall first make a
184 referral with the division.
185 (2) (a) If the child who is the subject of a petition was removed from his home by the
186 Division of Child and Family Services that petition shall be filed on or before the date of the
187 initial shelter hearing described in Section 78-3a-306 .
188 (b) If a petition is requested by the division, the attorney general shall file the petition
189 within 72 hours of the completion of the investigation and request, excluding weekends and
190 holidays, if:
191 (i) the child who is the subject of the requested petition has not been removed from his
192 home by the division; and
193 (ii) without an expedited hearing and services ordered under the protective supervision
194 of the court, the child will likely be taken into protective custody.
195 (3) The petition shall be verified, and contain all of the following:
196 (a) the name, age, and address, if any, of the minor upon whose behalf the petition is
197 brought;
198 (b) the names and addresses, if known to the petitioner, of both parents and any
199 guardian of the minor;
200 (c) a concise statement of facts, separately stated, to support the conclusion that the
201 minor upon whose behalf the petition is being brought is abused, neglected, or dependent; and
202 (d) a statement regarding whether the minor is in protective custody, and if so, the date
203 and precise time the minor was taken into protective custody.
204 (4) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (4)(b), a court or the Division of Child and
205 Family Services may not remove a minor from the custody of the minor's parent or guardian on
206 the sole or primary basis that the parent or guardian refuses to consent to:
207 (i) the administration of a psychotropic medication to a child;
208 (ii) a psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for a child; or
209 (iii) a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child.
210 (b) Notwithstanding Subsection (4)(a), a court or the Division of Child and Family
211 Services may remove a minor under conditions that would otherwise be prohibited under
212 Subsection (4)(a) if failure to take an action described under Subsection (4)(a) would present a
213 serious, imminent risk to the child's physical safety or the physical safety of others.
213a H. Section 4. Coordinating H.B. 299 with S.B. 7 -- Substantive and technical
213b amendments.
213c If this H.B. 299 and S.B. 7, Child Protection Amendments, both pass, it is the intent of
213d the Legislature that the Office of Legislative Research and General Counsel shall prepare the
213e Utah Code database for publication by:
213f (1) amending Subsection 53A-11-603(5) to read as follows:
213g "(5) Notwithstanding Subsection (4)(e), school personnel may make a report that would
213h otherwise be prohibited under Subsection (4)(e) if failure to take the action described under
213i Subsection (4)(e) would present a threat of substantial harm to the child's safety or the safety
213j of others.";
213k (2) amending Subsection 78-3a-301(4) to read as follows:
213l "(4) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (4)(b), a court or the Division of Child and
213m Family Services may not remove a child from the custody of the child's parent or guardian on
213n the sole or primary basis that the parent or guardian refuses to consent to:
213o (i) the administration of a psychotropic medication to a child;
213p (ii) a psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for a child; or
213q (iii) a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child.
213r (b) Notwithstanding Subsection (4)(a), a court or the Division of Child and Family
213s Services may remove a child under conditions that would otherwise be prohibited under
213t Subsection (4)(a) if failure to take an action described under Subsection (4)(a) would present a
213u threat of substantial harm to the child's physical health or safety or the physical health or
213v safety of others.";
213w (3) amending Subsection 78-3a-305(4) to read as follows:
213x "(4) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (4)(b), a court or the Division of Child and
213y Family Services may not remove a child from the custody of the child's parent or guardian on
213z the sole or primary basis that the parent or guardian refuses to consent to:
213aa (i) the administration of a psychotropic medication to a child;
213ab (ii) a psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for a child; or
213ac (iii) a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child.
213ad (b) Notwithstanding Subsection (4)(a), a court or the Division of Child and Family
213ae Services may remove a child under conditions that would otherwise be prohibited under
213af Subsection (4)(a) if failure to take an action described under Subsection (4)(a) would present
213ag a threat of substantial harm to the child's physical health or safety or the physical
213ah health or safety of others."; and
213ai (4) if this H.B. 299, S.B. 7, and H.B. 103 all pass, it is the intent of the Legislature that
213aj the changes in this coordination clause supersede the changes in the coordination clause
213ak coordinating this H.B. 299 with H.B. 103.
213al Section 5. Coordinating H.B. 299 with H.B. 103 -- Technical amendments.
213am If this H.B. 299 and H.B. 103, Changes to Definitions of a Child and a Minor, both pass,
213an it is the intent of the Legislature that the Office of Legislative Research and General Counsel
213ao shall prepare the Utah Code database for publication by:
213ap (1) amending Subsection 78-3a-301(4) to read as follows:
213aq "(4) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (4)(b), a court or the Division of Child and
213ar Family Services may not remove a child from the custody of the child's parent or guardian on
213as the sole or primary basis that the parent or guardian refuses to consent to:
213at (i) the administration of a psychotropic medication to a child;
213au (ii) a psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for a child; or
213av (iii) a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child.
213aw (b) Notwithstanding Subsection (4)(a), a court or the Division of Child and Family
213ax Services may remove a child under conditions that would otherwise be prohibited under
213ay Subsection (4)(a) if failure to take an action described under Subsection (4)(a) would present
213az a serious, imminent risk to the child's physical safety or the physical safety of others."; and
213ba (2) amending Subsection 78-3a-305(4) to read as follows:
213bb "(4) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (4)(b), a court or the Division of Child and
213bc Family Services may not remove a child from the custody of the child's parent or guardian on
213bd the sole or primary basis that the parent or guardian refuses to consent to:
213be (i) the administration of a psychotropic medication to a child;
213bf (ii) a psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for a child; or
213bg (iii) a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child.
213bh (b) Notwithstanding Subsection (4)(a), a court or the Division of Child and Family
213bi Services may remove a child under conditions that would otherwise be prohibited under
213bj Subsection (4)(a) if failure to take an action described under Subsection (4)(a) would present
213bk a serious, imminent risk to the child's physical safety or the physical safety of others.". H
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