Florida Senate - 2016                               CS for SB 12
       
       
        
       By the Committee on Appropriations; and Senators Garcia,
       Galvano, and Ring
       
       576-03785-16                                            201612c1
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to mental health and substance abuse;
    3         amending s. 29.004, F.S.; including services provided
    4         to treatment-based mental health programs within case
    5         management funded from state revenues as an element of
    6         the state courts system; amending s. 39.001, F.S.;
    7         providing legislative intent regarding mental illness
    8         for purposes of the child welfare system; amending s.
    9         39.407, F.S.; requiring assessment findings to be
   10         provided to the plan that is financially responsible
   11         for a child’s care in residential treatment under
   12         certain circumstances; amending s. 39.507, F.S.;
   13         providing for consideration of mental health issues
   14         and involvement in treatment-based mental health
   15         programs in adjudicatory hearings and orders;
   16         providing requirements for certain court orders;
   17         amending s. 39.521, F.S.; providing for consideration
   18         of mental health issues and involvement in treatment
   19         based mental health programs in disposition hearings;
   20         providing requirements for certain court orders;
   21         amending s. 394.455, F.S.; defining terms; revising
   22         definitions; amending s. 394.4573, F.S.; requiring the
   23         Department of Children and Families to submit a
   24         certain assessment to the Governor and the Legislature
   25         by a specified date; redefining terms; providing
   26         essential elements of a coordinated system of care;
   27         providing requirements for the department’s annual
   28         assessment; authorizing the department to award
   29         certain grants; deleting duties and measures of the
   30         department regarding continuity of care management
   31         systems; amending s. 394.4597, F.S.; revising the
   32         prioritization of health care surrogates to be
   33         selected for involuntary patients; specifying certain
   34         persons who are prohibited from being selected as an
   35         individual’s representative; amending s. 394.4598,
   36         F.S.; specifying certain persons who are prohibited
   37         from being appointed as a person’s guardian advocate;
   38         amending s. 394.462, F.S.; requiring that counties
   39         develop and implement transportation plans; providing
   40         requirements for the plans; revising requirements for
   41         transportation to receiving facilities and treatment
   42         facilities; deleting exceptions to such requirements;
   43         amending s. 394.463, F.S.; authorizing county or
   44         circuit courts to enter ex parte orders for
   45         involuntary examinations; requiring a facility to
   46         provide copies of ex parte orders, reports, and
   47         certifications to managing entities and the
   48         department, rather than the Agency for Health Care
   49         Administration; requiring the managing entity and
   50         department to receive certain orders, certificates,
   51         and reports; requiring the managing entity and the
   52         department to receive and maintain copies of certain
   53         documents; prohibiting a person from being held for
   54         involuntary examination for more than a specified
   55         period of time; providing exceptions; requiring
   56         certain individuals to be released to law enforcement
   57         custody; providing exceptions; amending s. 394.4655,
   58         F.S.; providing for involuntary outpatient services;
   59         requiring a service provider to document certain
   60         inquiries; requiring the managing entity to document
   61         certain efforts; providing requirements for the
   62         appointment of state counsel; making technical
   63         changes; amending s. 394.467, F.S.; revising criteria
   64         for involuntary inpatient placement; requiring a
   65         facility filing a petition for involuntary inpatient
   66         placement to send a copy to the department and
   67         managing entity; providing requirements for the
   68         appointment of state counsel; revising criteria for a
   69         hearing on involuntary inpatient placement; revising
   70         criteria for a procedure for continued involuntary
   71         inpatient services; specifying requirements for a
   72         certain waiver of the patient’s attendance at a
   73         hearing; requiring the court to consider certain
   74         testimony and evidence regarding a patient’s
   75         incompetence; amending s. 394.46715, F.S.; revising
   76         rulemaking authority of the department; amending s.
   77         394.656, F.S.; revising the membership of the Criminal
   78         Justice, Mental Health, and Substance Abuse Statewide
   79         Grant Review Committee; providing duties for the
   80         committee; authorizing a not-for-profit community
   81         provider or managing entity to apply for certain
   82         grants; revising eligibility for such grants; defining
   83         a term; creating s. 394.761, F.S.; authorizing the
   84         agency and the department to develop a plan for
   85         revenue maximization; requiring the plan to be
   86         submitted to the Legislature by a certain date;
   87         amending s. 394.875, F.S.; requiring the department to
   88         modify licensure rules and procedures to create an
   89         option for a single, consolidated license for certain
   90         providers by a specified date; amending s. 394.9082,
   91         F.S.; providing a purpose for behavioral health
   92         managing entities; revising definitions; providing
   93         duties of the department; requiring the department to
   94         revise its contracts with managing entities; providing
   95         duties for managing entities; deleting provisions
   96         relating to legislative findings and intent, service
   97         delivery strategies, essential elements, reporting
   98         requirements, and rulemaking authority; amending s.
   99         397.311, F.S.; defining the terms “informed consent”
  100         and “involuntary services”; revising the definition of
  101         the term “qualified professional”; conforming a cross
  102         reference; amending s. 397.675, F.S.; revising the
  103         criteria for involuntary admissions due to substance
  104         abuse or co-occurring mental health disorders;
  105         amending s. 397.679, F.S.; specifying the licensed
  106         professionals who may complete a certificate for the
  107         involuntary admission of an individual; amending s.
  108         397.6791, F.S.; providing a list of professionals
  109         authorized to initiate a certificate for an emergency
  110         assessment or admission of a person with a substance
  111         abuse disorder; amending s. 397.6793, F.S.; revising
  112         the criteria for initiation of a certificate for an
  113         emergency admission for a person who is substance
  114         abuse impaired; amending s. 397.6795, F.S.; revising
  115         the list of persons who may deliver a person for an
  116         emergency assessment; amending s. 397.681, F.S.;
  117         prohibiting the court from charging a fee for
  118         involuntary petitions; amending s. 397.6811, F.S.;
  119         revising the list of persons who may file a petition
  120         for an involuntary assessment and stabilization;
  121         amending s. 397.6814, F.S.; prohibiting a fee from
  122         being charged for the filing of a petition for
  123         involuntary assessment and stabilization; amending s.
  124         397.6819, F.S.; revising the responsibilities of
  125         service providers who admit an individual for an
  126         involuntary assessment and stabilization; requiring a
  127         managing entity to be notified of certain
  128         recommendations; amending s. 397.695, F.S.;
  129         authorizing certain persons to file a petition for
  130         involuntary outpatient services of an individual;
  131         providing procedures and requirements for such
  132         petitions; amending s. 397.6951, F.S.; requiring that
  133         certain additional information be included in a
  134         petition for involuntary outpatient services; amending
  135         s. 397.6955, F.S.; requiring a court to fulfill
  136         certain additional duties upon the filing of a
  137         petition for involuntary outpatient services; amending
  138         s. 397.6957, F.S.; providing additional requirements
  139         for a hearing on a petition for involuntary outpatient
  140         services; amending s. 397.697, F.S.; authorizing a
  141         court to make a determination of involuntary
  142         outpatient services; authorizing a court to order a
  143         respondent to undergo treatment through a privately
  144         funded licensed service provider under certain
  145         circumstances; prohibiting a court from ordering
  146         involuntary outpatient services under certain
  147         circumstances; requiring the service provider to
  148         document certain inquiries; requiring the managing
  149         entity to document certain efforts; requiring a copy
  150         of the court’s order to be sent to the department and
  151         managing entity; providing procedures for
  152         modifications to such orders; amending s. 397.6971,
  153         F.S.; establishing the requirements for an early
  154         release from involuntary outpatient services; amending
  155         s. 397.6975, F.S.; requiring the court to appoint
  156         certain counsel; providing requirements for hearings
  157         on petitions for continued involuntary outpatient
  158         services; requiring notice of such hearings; amending
  159         s. 397.6977, F.S.; conforming provisions to changes
  160         made by the act; creating s. 397.6978, F.S.; providing
  161         for the appointment of guardian advocates if an
  162         individual is found incompetent to consent to
  163         treatment; providing a list of persons prohibited from
  164         being appointed as an individual’s guardian advocate;
  165         providing requirements for a facility requesting the
  166         appointment of a guardian advocate; requiring a
  167         training course for guardian advocates; providing
  168         requirements for the training course; providing
  169         requirements for the prioritization of individuals to
  170         be selected as guardian advocates; authorizing certain
  171         guardian advocates to consent to medical treatment;
  172         providing exceptions; providing procedures for the
  173         discharge of a guardian advocate; amending s. 409.967,
  174         F.S.; requiring managed care plans to provide for
  175         quality care; amending s. 409.973, F.S.; providing an
  176         integrated behavioral health initiative; amending s.
  177         491.0045, F.S.; revising registration requirements for
  178         interns; repealing s. 394.4674, F.S., relating to the
  179         comprehensive plan and report on the
  180         deinstitutionalization of patients in a treatment
  181         facility; repealing s. 394.4985, F.S., relating to the
  182         implementation of a districtwide information and
  183         referral network; repealing s. 394.745, F.S., relating
  184         to the annual report on the compliance of providers
  185         under contract with the department; repealing s.
  186         397.331, F.S., relating to definitions and legislative
  187         intent; repealing part IX of chapter 397, consisting
  188         of ss. 397.801, 397.811, and 397.821, F.S., relating
  189         to substance abuse impairment services coordination;
  190         repealing s. 397.901, F.S., relating to prototype
  191         juvenile addictions receiving facilities; repealing s.
  192         397.93, F.S., relating to target populations for
  193         children’s substance abuse services; repealing s.
  194         397.94, F.S., relating to the information and referral
  195         network for children’s substance abuse services;
  196         repealing s. 397.951, F.S., relating to substance
  197         abuse treatment and sanctions; repealing s. 397.97,
  198         F.S., relating to demonstration models for children’s
  199         substance abuse services; repealing s. 397.98, F.S.,
  200         relating to utilization management for children’s
  201         substance abuse services; amending ss. 39.407,
  202         212.055, 394.4599, 394.495, 394.496, 394.9085,
  203         397.321, 397.405, 397.407, 397.416, 397.4871, 409.966,
  204         409.972, 440.102, 744.704, and 790.065, F.S.;
  205         conforming cross-references; providing an effective
  206         date.
  207          
  208  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  209  
  210         Section 1. Paragraph (e) is added to subsection (10) of
  211  section 29.004, Florida Statutes, to read:
  212         29.004 State courts system.—For purposes of implementing s.
  213  14, Art. V of the State Constitution, the elements of the state
  214  courts system to be provided from state revenues appropriated by
  215  general law are as follows:
  216         (10) Case management. Case management includes:
  217         (e) Service referral, coordination, monitoring, and
  218  tracking for mental health programs under chapter 394.
  219  
  220  Case management may not include costs associated with the
  221  application of therapeutic jurisprudence principles by the
  222  courts. Case management also may not include case intake and
  223  records management conducted by the clerk of court.
  224         Section 2. Subsection (6) of section 39.001, Florida
  225  Statutes, is amended to read:
  226         39.001 Purposes and intent; personnel standards and
  227  screening.—
  228         (6) MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES.—
  229         (a) The Legislature recognizes that early referral and
  230  comprehensive treatment can help combat mental illness and
  231  substance abuse disorders in families and that treatment is
  232  cost-effective.
  233         (b) The Legislature establishes the following goals for the
  234  state related to mental illness and substance abuse treatment
  235  services in the dependency process:
  236         1. To ensure the safety of children.
  237         2. To prevent and remediate the consequences of mental
  238  illness and substance abuse disorders on families involved in
  239  protective supervision or foster care and reduce the occurrences
  240  of mental illness and substance abuse disorders, including
  241  alcohol abuse or other related disorders, for families who are
  242  at risk of being involved in protective supervision or foster
  243  care.
  244         3. To expedite permanency for children and reunify healthy,
  245  intact families, when appropriate.
  246         4. To support families in recovery.
  247         (c) The Legislature finds that children in the care of the
  248  state’s dependency system need appropriate health care services,
  249  that the impact of mental illnesses and substance abuse on
  250  health indicates the need for health care services to include
  251  treatment for mental health and substance abuse disorders for
  252  services to children and parents where appropriate, and that it
  253  is in the state’s best interest that such children be provided
  254  the services they need to enable them to become and remain
  255  independent of state care. In order to provide these services,
  256  the state’s dependency system must have the ability to identify
  257  and provide appropriate intervention and treatment for children
  258  with personal or family-related mental illness and substance
  259  abuse problems.
  260         (d) It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage the
  261  use of the mental health programs established under chapter 394
  262  and the drug court program model established under by s. 397.334
  263  and authorize courts to assess children and persons who have
  264  custody or are requesting custody of children where good cause
  265  is shown to identify and address mental illnesses and substance
  266  abuse disorders problems as the court deems appropriate at every
  267  stage of the dependency process. Participation in treatment,
  268  including a treatment-based mental health court program or a
  269  treatment-based drug court program, may be required by the court
  270  following adjudication. Participation in assessment and
  271  treatment before prior to adjudication is shall be voluntary,
  272  except as provided in s. 39.407(16).
  273         (e) It is therefore the purpose of the Legislature to
  274  provide authority for the state to contract with mental health
  275  service providers and community substance abuse treatment
  276  providers for the development and operation of specialized
  277  support and overlay services for the dependency system, which
  278  will be fully implemented and used as resources permit.
  279         (f) Participation in a treatment-based mental health court
  280  program or a the treatment-based drug court program does not
  281  divest any public or private agency of its responsibility for a
  282  child or adult, but is intended to enable these agencies to
  283  better meet their needs through shared responsibility and
  284  resources.
  285         Section 3. Paragraph (c) of subsection (6) of section
  286  39.407, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  287         39.407 Medical, psychiatric, and psychological examination
  288  and treatment of child; physical, mental, or substance abuse
  289  examination of person with or requesting child custody.—
  290         (6) Children who are in the legal custody of the department
  291  may be placed by the department, without prior approval of the
  292  court, in a residential treatment center licensed under s.
  293  394.875 or a hospital licensed under chapter 395 for residential
  294  mental health treatment only pursuant to this section or may be
  295  placed by the court in accordance with an order of involuntary
  296  examination or involuntary placement entered pursuant to s.
  297  394.463 or s. 394.467. All children placed in a residential
  298  treatment program under this subsection must have a guardian ad
  299  litem appointed.
  300         (c) Before a child is admitted under this subsection, the
  301  child shall be assessed for suitability for residential
  302  treatment by a qualified evaluator who has conducted a personal
  303  examination and assessment of the child and has made written
  304  findings that:
  305         1. The child appears to have an emotional disturbance
  306  serious enough to require residential treatment and is
  307  reasonably likely to benefit from the treatment.
  308         2. The child has been provided with a clinically
  309  appropriate explanation of the nature and purpose of the
  310  treatment.
  311         3. All available modalities of treatment less restrictive
  312  than residential treatment have been considered, and a less
  313  restrictive alternative that would offer comparable benefits to
  314  the child is unavailable.
  315  
  316  A copy of the written findings of the evaluation and suitability
  317  assessment must be provided to the department, and to the
  318  guardian ad litem, and, if the child is a member of a Medicaid
  319  Managed Health Care Plan, to the plan that is financially
  320  responsible for the child’s care in residential treatment, any
  321  of whom must be provided who shall have the opportunity to
  322  discuss the findings with the evaluator.
  323         Section 4. Subsection (10) of section 39.507, Florida
  324  Statutes, is amended to read:
  325         39.507 Adjudicatory hearings; orders of adjudication.—
  326         (10) After an adjudication of dependency, or a finding of
  327  dependency in which where adjudication is withheld, the court
  328  may order a person who has, custody or is requesting, custody of
  329  the child to submit to a mental health or substance abuse
  330  disorder assessment or evaluation. The order may be made only
  331  upon good cause shown and pursuant to notice and procedural
  332  requirements provided under the Florida Rules of Juvenile
  333  Procedure. The assessment or evaluation must be administered by
  334  an appropriate a qualified professional, as defined in s.
  335  394.455 or s. 397.311. The court may also require such person to
  336  participate in and comply with treatment and services identified
  337  as necessary, including, when appropriate and available,
  338  participation in and compliance with a mental health program
  339  established under chapter 394 or a treatment-based drug court
  340  program established under s. 397.334. In addition to supervision
  341  by the department, the court, including a treatment-based mental
  342  health court program or a the treatment-based drug court
  343  program, may oversee the progress and compliance with treatment
  344  by a person who has custody or is requesting custody of the
  345  child. The court may impose appropriate available sanctions for
  346  noncompliance upon a person who has custody or is requesting
  347  custody of the child or make a finding of noncompliance for
  348  consideration in determining whether an alternative placement of
  349  the child is in the child’s best interests. Any order entered
  350  under this subsection may be made only upon good cause shown.
  351  This subsection does not authorize placement of a child with a
  352  person seeking custody, other than the parent or legal
  353  custodian, who requires mental health or substance abuse
  354  disorder treatment.
  355         Section 5. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section
  356  39.521, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  357         39.521 Disposition hearings; powers of disposition.—
  358         (1) A disposition hearing shall be conducted by the court,
  359  if the court finds that the facts alleged in the petition for
  360  dependency were proven in the adjudicatory hearing, or if the
  361  parents or legal custodians have consented to the finding of
  362  dependency or admitted the allegations in the petition, have
  363  failed to appear for the arraignment hearing after proper
  364  notice, or have not been located despite a diligent search
  365  having been conducted.
  366         (b) When any child is adjudicated by a court to be
  367  dependent, the court having jurisdiction of the child has the
  368  power by order to:
  369         1. Require the parent and, when appropriate, the legal
  370  custodian and the child to participate in treatment and services
  371  identified as necessary. The court may require the person who
  372  has custody or who is requesting custody of the child to submit
  373  to a mental illness or substance abuse disorder assessment or
  374  evaluation. The order may be made only upon good cause shown and
  375  pursuant to notice and procedural requirements provided under
  376  the Florida Rules of Juvenile Procedure. The assessment or
  377  evaluation must be administered by an appropriate a qualified
  378  professional, as defined in s. 394.455 or s. 397.311. The court
  379  may also require such person to participate in and comply with
  380  treatment and services identified as necessary, including, when
  381  appropriate and available, participation in and compliance with
  382  a mental health program established under chapter 394 or a
  383  treatment-based drug court program established under s. 397.334.
  384  In addition to supervision by the department, the court,
  385  including a treatment-based mental health court program or a the
  386  treatment-based drug court program, may oversee the progress and
  387  compliance with treatment by a person who has custody or is
  388  requesting custody of the child. The court may impose
  389  appropriate available sanctions for noncompliance upon a person
  390  who has custody or is requesting custody of the child or make a
  391  finding of noncompliance for consideration in determining
  392  whether an alternative placement of the child is in the child’s
  393  best interests. Any order entered under this subparagraph may be
  394  made only upon good cause shown. This subparagraph does not
  395  authorize placement of a child with a person seeking custody of
  396  the child, other than the child’s parent or legal custodian, who
  397  requires mental health or substance abuse treatment.
  398         2. Require, if the court deems necessary, the parties to
  399  participate in dependency mediation.
  400         3. Require placement of the child either under the
  401  protective supervision of an authorized agent of the department
  402  in the home of one or both of the child’s parents or in the home
  403  of a relative of the child or another adult approved by the
  404  court, or in the custody of the department. Protective
  405  supervision continues until the court terminates it or until the
  406  child reaches the age of 18, whichever date is first. Protective
  407  supervision shall be terminated by the court whenever the court
  408  determines that permanency has been achieved for the child,
  409  whether with a parent, another relative, or a legal custodian,
  410  and that protective supervision is no longer needed. The
  411  termination of supervision may be with or without retaining
  412  jurisdiction, at the court’s discretion, and shall in either
  413  case be considered a permanency option for the child. The order
  414  terminating supervision by the department must shall set forth
  415  the powers of the custodian of the child and shall include the
  416  powers ordinarily granted to a guardian of the person of a minor
  417  unless otherwise specified. Upon the court’s termination of
  418  supervision by the department, no further judicial reviews are
  419  not required if, so long as permanency has been established for
  420  the child.
  421         Section 6. Section 394.455, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  422  read:
  423         394.455 Definitions.—As used in this part, unless the
  424  context clearly requires otherwise, the term:
  425         (1) Access center” means a facility staffed by medical,
  426  behavioral, and substance abuse professionals which provides
  427  emergency screening and evaluation for mental health or
  428  substance abuse disorders and may provide transportation to an
  429  appropriate facility if an individual is in need of more
  430  intensive services.
  431         (2) “Addictions receiving facility” is a secure, acute care
  432  facility that, at a minimum, provides emergency screening,
  433  evaluation, detoxification and stabilization services; is
  434  operated 24 hours per day, 7 days per week; and is designated by
  435  the department to serve individuals found to have substance
  436  abuse impairment who qualify for services under this part.
  437         (3)(1) “Administrator” means the chief administrative
  438  officer of a receiving or treatment facility or his or her
  439  designee.
  440         (4) “Adult” means an individual who is 18 years of age or
  441  older or who has had the disability of nonage removed under
  442  chapter 743.
  443         (5) “Advanced registered nurse practitioner” means any
  444  person licensed in this state to practice professional nursing
  445  who is certified in advanced or specialized nursing practice
  446  under s. 464.012.
  447         (6)(2) “Clinical psychologist” means a psychologist as
  448  defined in s. 490.003(7) with 3 years of postdoctoral experience
  449  in the practice of clinical psychology, inclusive of the
  450  experience required for licensure, or a psychologist employed by
  451  a facility operated by the United States Department of Veterans
  452  Affairs that qualifies as a receiving or treatment facility
  453  under this part.
  454         (7)(3) “Clinical record” means all parts of the record
  455  required to be maintained and includes all medical records,
  456  progress notes, charts, and admission and discharge data, and
  457  all other information recorded by a facility staff which
  458  pertains to the patient’s hospitalization or treatment.
  459         (8)(4) “Clinical social worker” means a person licensed as
  460  a clinical social worker under s. 491.005 or s. 491.006 chapter
  461  491.
  462         (9)(5) “Community facility” means a any community service
  463  provider that contracts contracting with the department to
  464  furnish substance abuse or mental health services under part IV
  465  of this chapter.
  466         (10)(6) “Community mental health center or clinic” means a
  467  publicly funded, not-for-profit center that which contracts with
  468  the department for the provision of inpatient, outpatient, day
  469  treatment, or emergency services.
  470         (11)(7) “Court,” unless otherwise specified, means the
  471  circuit court.
  472         (12)(8) “Department” means the Department of Children and
  473  Families.
  474         (13)“Designated receiving facility” means a facility
  475  approved by the department which may be a public or private
  476  hospital, crisis stabilization unit, addictions receiving
  477  facility and provides, at a minimum, emergency screening,
  478  evaluation, and short-term stabilization for mental health or
  479  substance abuse disorders, and which may have an agreement with
  480  a corresponding facility for transportation and services.
  481         (14) “Detoxification facility” means a facility licensed to
  482  provide detoxification services under chapter 397.
  483         (15) “Electronic means” is a form of telecommunication
  484  which requires all parties to maintain visual as well as audio
  485  communication when being used to conduct an examination by a
  486  qualified professional.
  487         (16)(9) “Express and informed consent” means consent
  488  voluntarily given in writing, by a competent person, after
  489  sufficient explanation and disclosure of the subject matter
  490  involved to enable the person to make a knowing and willful
  491  decision without any element of force, fraud, deceit, duress, or
  492  other form of constraint or coercion.
  493         (17)(10) “Facility” means any hospital, community facility,
  494  public or private facility, or receiving or treatment facility
  495  providing for the evaluation, diagnosis, care, treatment,
  496  training, or hospitalization of persons who appear to have a
  497  mental illness or who have been diagnosed as having a mental
  498  illness or substance abuse impairment. The term “Facility” does
  499  not include a any program or an entity licensed under pursuant
  500  to chapter 400 or chapter 429.
  501         (18) “Governmental facility” means a facility owned,
  502  operated, or administered by the Department of Corrections or
  503  the United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
  504         (19)(11) “Guardian” means the natural guardian of a minor,
  505  or a person appointed by a court to act on behalf of a ward’s
  506  person if the ward is a minor or has been adjudicated
  507  incapacitated.
  508         (20)(12) “Guardian advocate” means a person appointed by a
  509  court to make decisions regarding mental health or substance
  510  abuse treatment on behalf of a patient who has been found
  511  incompetent to consent to treatment pursuant to this part. The
  512  guardian advocate may be granted specific additional powers by
  513  written order of the court, as provided in this part.
  514         (21)(13) “Hospital” means a hospital facility as defined in
  515  s. 395.002 and licensed under chapter 395 and part II of chapter
  516  408.
  517         (22)(14) “Incapacitated” means that a person has been
  518  adjudicated incapacitated pursuant to part V of chapter 744 and
  519  a guardian of the person has been appointed.
  520         (23)(15) “Incompetent to consent to treatment” means a
  521  state in which that a person’s judgment is so affected by a his
  522  or her mental illness or a substance abuse impairment, that he
  523  or she the person lacks the capacity to make a well-reasoned,
  524  willful, and knowing decision concerning his or her medical, or
  525  mental health, or substance abuse treatment.
  526         (24) “Involuntary examination” means an examination
  527  performed under s. 394.463 or s. 397.675 to determine whether a
  528  person qualifies for involuntary services.
  529         (25) “Involuntary services” in this part means court
  530  ordered outpatient services or inpatient placement for mental
  531  health treatment pursuant to s. 394.4655 or s. 394.467.
  532         (26)(16) “Law enforcement officer” has the same meaning as
  533  provided means a law enforcement officer as defined in s.
  534  943.10.
  535         (27) “Marriage and family therapist” means a person
  536  licensed to practice marriage and family therapy under s.
  537  491.005 or s. 491.006.
  538         (28) “Mental health counselor” means a person licensed to
  539  practice mental health counseling under s. 491.005 or s.
  540  491.006.
  541         (29)(17) “Mental health overlay program” means a mobile
  542  service that which provides an independent examination for
  543  voluntary admission admissions and a range of supplemental
  544  onsite services to persons with a mental illness in a
  545  residential setting such as a nursing home, an assisted living
  546  facility, or an adult family-care home, or a nonresidential
  547  setting such as an adult day care center. Independent
  548  examinations provided pursuant to this part through a mental
  549  health overlay program must only be provided under contract with
  550  the department for this service or be attached to a public
  551  receiving facility that is also a community mental health
  552  center.
  553         (30)(18) “Mental illness” means an impairment of the mental
  554  or emotional processes that exercise conscious control of one’s
  555  actions or of the ability to perceive or understand reality,
  556  which impairment substantially interferes with the person’s
  557  ability to meet the ordinary demands of living. For the purposes
  558  of this part, the term does not include a developmental
  559  disability as defined in chapter 393, intoxication, or
  560  conditions manifested only by antisocial behavior or substance
  561  abuse impairment.
  562         (31) “Minor” means an individual who is 17 years of age or
  563  younger and who has not had the disability of nonage removed
  564  pursuant to s. 743.01 or s. 743.015.
  565         (32)(19) “Mobile crisis response service” means a
  566  nonresidential crisis service attached to a public receiving
  567  facility and available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, through
  568  which provides immediate intensive assessments and
  569  interventions, including screening for admission into a mental
  570  health receiving facility, an addictions receiving facility, or
  571  a detoxification facility, take place for the purpose of
  572  identifying appropriate treatment services.
  573         (33)(20) “Patient” means any person, with or without a co
  574  occurring substance abuse disorder who is held or accepted for
  575  mental health treatment.
  576         (34)(21) “Physician” means a medical practitioner licensed
  577  under chapter 458 or chapter 459 who has experience in the
  578  diagnosis and treatment of mental and nervous disorders or a
  579  physician employed by a facility operated by the United States
  580  Department of Veterans Affairs or the United States Department
  581  of Defense which qualifies as a receiving or treatment facility
  582  under this part.
  583         (35) “Physician assistant” means a person licensed under
  584  chapter 458 or chapter 459 who has experience in the diagnosis
  585  and treatment of mental disorders.
  586         (36)(22) “Private facility” means any hospital or facility
  587  operated by a for-profit or not-for-profit corporation or
  588  association which that provides mental health or substance abuse
  589  services and is not a public facility.
  590         (37)(23) “Psychiatric nurse” means an advanced registered
  591  nurse practitioner certified under s. 464.012 who has a master’s
  592  or doctoral degree in psychiatric nursing, holds a national
  593  advanced practice certification as a psychiatric mental health
  594  advanced practice nurse, and has 2 years of post-master’s
  595  clinical experience under the supervision of a physician.
  596         (38)(24) “Psychiatrist” means a medical practitioner
  597  licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459 who has primarily
  598  diagnosed and treated mental and nervous disorders for at least
  599  a period of not less than 3 years, inclusive of psychiatric
  600  residency.
  601         (39)(25) “Public facility” means a any facility that has
  602  contracted with the department to provide mental health services
  603  to all persons, regardless of their ability to pay, and is
  604  receiving state funds for such purpose.
  605         (40) “Qualified professional” means a physician or a
  606  physician assistant licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459; a
  607  professional licensed under chapter 490.003(7) or chapter 491; a
  608  psychiatrist licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459; or a
  609  psychiatric nurse as defined in subsection (37).
  610         (41)(26) “Receiving facility” means any public or private
  611  facility or hospital designated by the department to receive and
  612  hold or refer, as appropriate, involuntary patients under
  613  emergency conditions or for mental health or substance abuse
  614  psychiatric evaluation and to provide short-term treatment or
  615  transportation to the appropriate service provider. The term
  616  does not include a county jail.
  617         (42)(27) “Representative” means a person selected to
  618  receive notice of proceedings during the time a patient is held
  619  in or admitted to a receiving or treatment facility.
  620         (43)(28)(a) “Restraint” means: a physical device, method,
  621  or drug used to control behavior.
  622         (a) A physical restraint, including is any manual method or
  623  physical or mechanical device, material, or equipment attached
  624  or adjacent to an the individual’s body so that he or she cannot
  625  easily remove the restraint and which restricts freedom of
  626  movement or normal access to one’s body. Physical restraint
  627  includes the physical holding of a person during a procedure to
  628  forcibly administer psychotropic medication. Physical restraint
  629  does not include physical devices such as orthopedically
  630  prescribed appliances, surgical dressings and bandages,
  631  supportive body bands, or other physical holding when necessary
  632  for routine physical examinations and tests or for purposes of
  633  orthopedic, surgical, or other similar medical treatment, when
  634  used to provide support for the achievement of functional body
  635  position or proper balance, or when used to protect a person
  636  from falling out of bed.
  637         (b) A drug or used as a restraint is a medication used to
  638  control a the person’s behavior or to restrict his or her
  639  freedom of movement which and is not part of the standard
  640  treatment regimen of a person with a diagnosed mental illness
  641  who is a client of the department. Physically holding a person
  642  during a procedure to forcibly administer psychotropic
  643  medication is a physical restraint.
  644         (c) Restraint does not include physical devices, such as
  645  orthopedically prescribed appliances, surgical dressings and
  646  bandages, supportive body bands, or other physical holding when
  647  necessary for routine physical examinations and tests; or for
  648  purposes of orthopedic, surgical, or other similar medical
  649  treatment; when used to provide support for the achievement of
  650  functional body position or proper balance; or when used to
  651  protect a person from falling out of bed.
  652         (44) “School psychologist” has the same meaning as in s.
  653  490.003.
  654         (45)(29) “Seclusion” means the physical segregation of a
  655  person in any fashion or involuntary isolation of a person in a
  656  room or area from which the person is prevented from leaving.
  657  The prevention may be by physical barrier or by a staff member
  658  who is acting in a manner, or who is physically situated, so as
  659  to prevent the person from leaving the room or area. For
  660  purposes of this part chapter, the term does not mean isolation
  661  due to a person’s medical condition or symptoms.
  662         (46)(30) “Secretary” means the Secretary of Children and
  663  Families.
  664         (47) “Service provider” means a receiving facility, any
  665  facility licensed under chapter 397, a treatment facility, an
  666  entity under contract with the department to provide mental
  667  health or substance abuse services, a community mental health
  668  center or clinic, a psychologist, a clinical social worker, a
  669  marriage and family therapist, a mental health counselor, a
  670  physician, a psychiatrist, an advanced registered nurse
  671  practitioner, a psychiatric nurse, or a qualified professional
  672  as defined in this section.
  673         (48) “Substance abuse impairment” means a condition
  674  involving the use of alcoholic beverages or any psychoactive or
  675  mood-altering substance in such a manner that a person has lost
  676  the power of self-control and has inflicted or is likely to
  677  inflict physical harm on himself or herself or others.
  678         (49)(31) “Transfer evaluation” means the process by which,
  679  as approved by the appropriate district office of the
  680  department, whereby a person who is being considered for
  681  placement in a state treatment facility is first evaluated for
  682  appropriateness of admission to a state treatment the facility
  683  by a community-based public receiving facility or by a community
  684  mental health center or clinic if the public receiving facility
  685  is not a community mental health center or clinic.
  686         (50)(32) “Treatment facility” means a any state-owned,
  687  state-operated, or state-supported hospital, center, or clinic
  688  designated by the department for extended treatment and
  689  hospitalization, beyond that provided for by a receiving
  690  facility, of persons who have a mental illness, including
  691  facilities of the United States Government, and any private
  692  facility designated by the department when rendering such
  693  services to a person pursuant to the provisions of this part.
  694  Patients treated in facilities of the United States Government
  695  shall be solely those whose care is the responsibility of the
  696  United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
  697         (51) “Triage center” means a facility that is designated by
  698  the department and has medical, behavioral, and substance abuse
  699  professionals present or on call to provide emergency screening
  700  and evaluation of individuals transported to the center by a law
  701  enforcement officer.
  702         (33) “Service provider” means any public or private
  703  receiving facility, an entity under contract with the Department
  704  of Children and Families to provide mental health services, a
  705  clinical psychologist, a clinical social worker, a marriage and
  706  family therapist, a mental health counselor, a physician, a
  707  psychiatric nurse as defined in subsection (23), or a community
  708  mental health center or clinic as defined in this part.
  709         (34) “Involuntary examination” means an examination
  710  performed under s. 394.463 to determine if an individual
  711  qualifies for involuntary inpatient treatment under s.
  712  394.467(1) or involuntary outpatient treatment under s.
  713  394.4655(1).
  714         (35) “Involuntary placement” means either involuntary
  715  outpatient treatment pursuant to s. 394.4655 or involuntary
  716  inpatient treatment pursuant to s. 394.467.
  717         (36) “Marriage and family therapist” means a person
  718  licensed as a marriage and family therapist under chapter 491.
  719         (37) “Mental health counselor” means a person licensed as a
  720  mental health counselor under chapter 491.
  721         (38) “Electronic means” means a form of telecommunication
  722  that requires all parties to maintain visual as well as audio
  723  communication.
  724         Section 7. Section 394.4573, Florida Statutes, is amended
  725  to read:
  726         394.4573 Coordinated system of care; annual assessment;
  727  essential elements Continuity of care management system;
  728  measures of performance; system improvement grants; reports.—On
  729  or before October 1 of each year, the department shall submit to
  730  the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of
  731  the House of Representatives an assessment of the behavioral
  732  health services in this state in the context of the No-Wrong
  733  Door model and standards set forth in this section. The
  734  department’s assessment shall be based on both quantitative and
  735  qualitative data and must identify any significant regional
  736  variations. The assessment must include information gathered
  737  from managing entities; service providers; facilities performing
  738  acute behavioral health care triage functions for the community;
  739  crisis stabilization units; detoxification units; addictions
  740  receiving facilities and hospitals, both public and private; law
  741  enforcement; judicial officials; local governments; behavioral
  742  health consumers and their family members; and the public.
  743         (1) As used in For the purposes of this section:
  744         (a) “Case management” means those direct services provided
  745  to a client in order to assess his or her activities aimed at
  746  assessing client needs, plan or arrange planning services,
  747  coordinate service providers, link linking the service system to
  748  a client, monitor coordinating the various system components,
  749  monitoring service delivery, and evaluate patient outcomes
  750  evaluating the effect of service delivery.
  751         (b) “Case manager” means an individual who works with
  752  clients, and their families and significant others, to provide
  753  case management.
  754         (c) “Client manager” means an employee of the managing
  755  entity or entity under contract with the managing entity
  756  department who is assigned to specific provider agencies and
  757  geographic areas to ensure that the full range of needed
  758  services is available to clients.
  759         (d) “Coordinated system Continuity of care management
  760  system” means a system that assures, within available resources,
  761  that clients have access to the full array of behavioral and
  762  related services in a region or community offered by all service
  763  providers, whether participating under contract with the
  764  managing entity or another method of community partnership or
  765  mutual agreement within the mental health services delivery
  766  system.
  767         (e) “No-Wrong-Door model” means a model for the delivery of
  768  acute care services to persons who have mental health or
  769  substance abuse disorders, or both, which optimizes access to
  770  care, regardless of the entry point to the behavioral health
  771  care system.
  772         (2) The essential elements of a coordinated system of care
  773  include:
  774         (a) Community interventions, such as prevention, primary
  775  care for behavioral health needs, therapeutic and supportive
  776  services, crisis response services, and diversion programs.
  777         (b) A designated receiving system shall consist of one or
  778  more facilities serving a defined geographic area and
  779  responsible for assessment and evaluation, both voluntary and
  780  involuntary, and treatment or triage for patients who present
  781  with mental illness, substance abuse disorder, or co-occurring
  782  disorders. A county or several counties shall plan the
  783  designated receiving system through an inclusive process,
  784  approved by the managing entity, and documented through written
  785  memoranda of agreement or other binding arrangements. The
  786  designated receiving system may be organized in any of the
  787  following ways so long as it functions as a No-Wrong-Door model
  788  that responds to individual needs and integrates services among
  789  various providers:
  790         1. A central receiving system, which consists of a
  791  designated central receiving facility that serves as a single
  792  entry point for persons with mental health or substance abuse
  793  disorders, or both. The central receiving facility must be
  794  capable of assessment, evaluation, and triage or treatment for
  795  various conditions and circumstances.
  796         2. A coordinated receiving system, which consists of
  797  multiple entry points that are linked by shared data systems,
  798  formal referral agreements, and cooperative arrangements for
  799  care coordination and case management. Each entry point must be
  800  a designated receiving facility and must provide or arrange for
  801  necessary services following an initial assessment and
  802  evaluation.
  803         3. A tiered receiving system, which consists of multiple
  804  entry points, some of which offer only specialized or limited
  805  services. Each service provider must be classified according to
  806  its capabilities as either a designated receiving facility, or
  807  another type of service provider such as a residential
  808  detoxification center, triage center, or an access center. All
  809  participating service providers must be linked by methods to
  810  share data that are compliant with both state and federal
  811  patient privacy and confidentiality laws, formal referral
  812  agreements, and cooperative arrangements for care coordination
  813  and case management. An accurate inventory of the participating
  814  service providers which specifies the capabilities and
  815  limitations of each provider must be maintained and made
  816  available at all times to all first responders in the service
  817  area.
  818         (c) Transportation in accordance with a plan developed
  819  under s. 394.462.
  820         (d) Crisis services, including mobile response teams,
  821  crisis stabilization units, addiction receiving facilities, and
  822  detoxification facilities.
  823         (e) Case management, including intensive case management
  824  for individuals determined to be high-need or high-utilization
  825  individuals under s. 394.9082(2(e).
  826         (f) Outpatient services.
  827         (g) Residential services.
  828         (h) Hospital inpatient care.
  829         (i) Aftercare and other post-discharge services.
  830         (j) Medication-assisted treatment and medication
  831  management.
  832         (k) Recovery support, including housing assistance and
  833  support for competitive employment, educational attainment,
  834  independent living skills development, family support and
  835  education, and wellness management and self-care.
  836         (3) The department’s annual assessment must compare the
  837  status and performance of the extant behavioral health system
  838  with the following standards and any other standards or measures
  839  that the department determines to be applicable.
  840         (a) The capacity of the contracted service providers to
  841  meet estimated need when such estimates are based on credible
  842  evidence and sound methodologies.
  843         (b) The extent to which the behavioral health system uses
  844  evidence-informed practices and broadly disseminates the results
  845  of quality improvement activities to all service providers.
  846         (c) The degree to which services are offered in the least
  847  restrictive and most appropriate therapeutic environment.
  848         (d) The scope of system-wide accountability activities used
  849  to monitor patient outcomes and measure continuous improvement
  850  in the behavioral health system.
  851         (4) Subject to a specific appropriation by the Legislature,
  852  the department may award system improvement grants to managing
  853  entities based on the submission of a detailed plan to enhance
  854  services, coordination, or performance measurement in accordance
  855  with the model and standards specified in this section. Such a
  856  grant must be awarded through a performance-based contract that
  857  links payments to the documented and measurable achievement of
  858  system improvements The department is directed to implement a
  859  continuity of care management system for the provision of mental
  860  health care, through the provision of client and case
  861  management, including clients referred from state treatment
  862  facilities to community mental health facilities. Such system
  863  shall include a network of client managers and case managers
  864  throughout the state designed to:
  865         (a) Reduce the possibility of a client’s admission or
  866  readmission to a state treatment facility.
  867         (b) Provide for the creation or designation of an agency in
  868  each county to provide single intake services for each person
  869  seeking mental health services. Such agency shall provide
  870  information and referral services necessary to ensure that
  871  clients receive the most appropriate and least restrictive form
  872  of care, based on the individual needs of the person seeking
  873  treatment. Such agency shall have a single telephone number,
  874  operating 24 hours per day, 7 days per week, where practicable,
  875  at a central location, where each client will have a central
  876  record.
  877         (c) Advocate on behalf of the client to ensure that all
  878  appropriate services are afforded to the client in a timely and
  879  dignified manner.
  880         (d) Require that any public receiving facility initiating a
  881  patient transfer to a licensed hospital for acute care mental
  882  health services not accessible through the public receiving
  883  facility shall notify the hospital of such transfer and send all
  884  records relating to the emergency psychiatric or medical
  885  condition.
  886         (3) The department is directed to develop and include in
  887  contracts with service providers measures of performance with
  888  regard to goals and objectives as specified in the state plan.
  889  Such measures shall use, to the extent practical, existing data
  890  collection methods and reports and shall not require, as a
  891  result of this subsection, additional reports on the part of
  892  service providers. The department shall plan monitoring visits
  893  of community mental health facilities with other state, federal,
  894  and local governmental and private agencies charged with
  895  monitoring such facilities.
  896         Section 8. Paragraphs (d) and (e) of subsection (2) of
  897  section 394.4597, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  898         394.4597 Persons to be notified; patient’s representative.—
  899         (2) INVOLUNTARY PATIENTS.—
  900         (d) When the receiving or treatment facility selects a
  901  representative, first preference shall be given to a health care
  902  surrogate, if one has been previously selected by the patient.
  903  If the patient has not previously selected a health care
  904  surrogate, the selection, except for good cause documented in
  905  the patient’s clinical record, shall be made from the following
  906  list in the order of listing:
  907         1. The patient’s spouse.
  908         2. An adult child of the patient.
  909         3. A parent of the patient.
  910         4. The adult next of kin of the patient.
  911         5. An adult friend of the patient.
  912         6. The appropriate Florida local advocacy council as
  913  provided in s. 402.166.
  914         (e) The following persons are prohibited from selection as
  915  a patient’s representative:
  916         1. A professional providing clinical services to the
  917  patient under this part.
  918         2. The licensed professional who initiated the involuntary
  919  examination of the patient, if the examination was initiated by
  920  professional certificate.
  921         3. An employee, an administrator, or a board member of the
  922  facility providing the examination of the patient.
  923         4. An employee, an administrator, or a board member of a
  924  treatment facility providing treatment for the patient.
  925         5. A person providing any substantial professional services
  926  to the patient, including clinical services.
  927         6. A creditor of the patient.
  928         7. A person subject to an injunction for protection against
  929  domestic violence under s. 741.30, whether the order of
  930  injunction is temporary or final, and for which the patient was
  931  the petitioner.
  932         8. A person subject to an injunction for protection against
  933  repeat violence, stalking, sexual violence, or dating violence
  934  under s. 784.046, whether the order of injunction is temporary
  935  or final, and for which the patient was the petitioner A
  936  licensed professional providing services to the patient under
  937  this part, an employee of a facility providing direct services
  938  to the patient under this part, a department employee, a person
  939  providing other substantial services to the patient in a
  940  professional or business capacity, or a creditor of the patient
  941  shall not be appointed as the patient’s representative.
  942         Section 9. Present subsections (2) through (7) of section
  943  394.4598, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as subsections (3)
  944  through (8), respectively, a new subsection (2) is added to that
  945  section, and present subsections (3) and (4) of that section are
  946  amended, to read:
  947         394.4598 Guardian advocate.—
  948         (2) The following persons are prohibited from appointment
  949  as a patient’s guardian advocate:
  950         (a) A professional providing clinical services to the
  951  patient under this part.
  952         (b) The licensed professional who initiated the involuntary
  953  examination of the patient, if the examination was initiated by
  954  professional certificate.
  955         (c) An employee, an administrator, or a board member of the
  956  facility providing the examination of the patient.
  957         (d) An employee, an administrator, or a board member of a
  958  treatment facility providing treatment of the patient.
  959         (e) A person providing any substantial professional
  960  services, excluding public and professional guardians, to the
  961  patient, including clinical services.
  962         (f) A creditor of the patient.
  963         (g) A person subject to an injunction for protection
  964  against domestic violence under s. 741.30, whether the order of
  965  injunction is temporary or final, and for which the patient was
  966  the petitioner.
  967         (h) A person subject to an injunction for protection
  968  against repeat violence, stalking, sexual violence, or dating
  969  violence under s. 784.046, whether the order of injunction is
  970  temporary or final, and for which the patient was the
  971  petitioner.
  972         (4)(3)In lieu of the training required of guardians
  973  appointed pursuant to chapter 744, Prior to a guardian advocate
  974  must, at a minimum, participate in a 4-hour training course
  975  approved by the court before exercising his or her authority,
  976  the guardian advocate shall attend a training course approved by
  977  the court. At a minimum, this training course, of not less than
  978  4 hours, must include, at minimum, information about the patient
  979  rights, psychotropic medications, the diagnosis of mental
  980  illness, the ethics of medical decisionmaking, and duties of
  981  guardian advocates. This training course shall take the place of
  982  the training required for guardians appointed pursuant to
  983  chapter 744.
  984         (5)(4) The required training course and the information to
  985  be supplied to prospective guardian advocates before prior to
  986  their appointment and the training course for guardian advocates
  987  must be developed and completed through a course developed by
  988  the department, and approved by the chief judge of the circuit
  989  court, and taught by a court-approved organization, which.
  990  Court-approved organizations may include, but is are not limited
  991  to, a community college community or junior colleges, a
  992  guardianship organization guardianship organizations, a and the
  993  local bar association, or The Florida Bar. The training course
  994  may be web-based, provided in video format, or other electronic
  995  means but must be capable of ensuring the identity and
  996  participation of the prospective guardian advocate. The court
  997  may, in its discretion, waive some or all of the training
  998  requirements for guardian advocates or impose additional
  999  requirements. The court shall make its decision on a case-by
 1000  case basis and, in making its decision, shall consider the
 1001  experience and education of the guardian advocate, the duties
 1002  assigned to the guardian advocate, and the needs of the patient.
 1003         Section 10. Section 394.462, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1004  to read:
 1005         394.462 Transportation.—A transportation plan must be
 1006  developed and implemented by each county in accordance with this
 1007  section. A county may enter into a memorandum of understanding
 1008  with the governing boards of nearby counties to establish a
 1009  shared transportation plan. When multiple counties enter into a
 1010  memorandum of understanding for this purpose, the managing
 1011  entity must be notified and provided a copy of the agreement.
 1012  The transportation plan must describe methods of transport to a
 1013  facility within the designated receiving system and may identify
 1014  responsibility for other transportation to a participating
 1015  facility when necessary and agreed to by the facility. The plan
 1016  must describe how individuals who meet the criteria for
 1017  involuntary assessment and evaluation pursuant to ss. 394.463
 1018  and 397.675 will be transported. The plan may rely on emergency
 1019  medical transport services or private transport companies as
 1020  appropriate.
 1021         (1) TRANSPORTATION TO A RECEIVING FACILITY.—
 1022         (a) Each county shall designate a single law enforcement
 1023  agency within the county, or portions thereof, to take a person
 1024  into custody upon the entry of an ex parte order or the
 1025  execution of a certificate for involuntary examination by an
 1026  authorized professional and to transport that person to an
 1027  appropriate facility within the designated receiving system the
 1028  nearest receiving facility for examination.
 1029         (b)1. The designated law enforcement agency may decline to
 1030  transport the person to a receiving facility only if:
 1031         a.1. The jurisdiction designated by the county has
 1032  contracted on an annual basis with an emergency medical
 1033  transport service or private transport company for
 1034  transportation of persons to receiving facilities pursuant to
 1035  this section at the sole cost of the county; and
 1036         b.2. The law enforcement agency and the emergency medical
 1037  transport service or private transport company agree that the
 1038  continued presence of law enforcement personnel is not necessary
 1039  for the safety of the person or others.
 1040         2.3. The entity providing transportation jurisdiction
 1041  designated by the county may seek reimbursement for
 1042  transportation expenses. The party responsible for payment for
 1043  such transportation is the person receiving the transportation.
 1044  The county shall seek reimbursement from the following sources
 1045  in the following order:
 1046         a. From a private or public third-party payor an insurance
 1047  company, health care corporation, or other source, if the person
 1048  receiving the transportation has applicable coverage is covered
 1049  by an insurance policy or subscribes to a health care
 1050  corporation or other source for payment of such expenses.
 1051         b. From the person receiving the transportation.
 1052         c. From a financial settlement for medical care, treatment,
 1053  hospitalization, or transportation payable or accruing to the
 1054  injured party.
 1055         (c)(b)A Any company that transports a patient pursuant to
 1056  this subsection is considered an independent contractor and is
 1057  solely liable for the safe and dignified transport
 1058  transportation of the patient. Such company must be insured and
 1059  provide no less than $100,000 in liability insurance with
 1060  respect to the transport transportation of patients.
 1061         (d)(c) Any company that contracts with a governing board of
 1062  a county to transport patients shall comply with the applicable
 1063  rules of the department to ensure the safety and dignity of the
 1064  patients.
 1065         (e)(d) When a law enforcement officer takes custody of a
 1066  person pursuant to this part, the officer may request assistance
 1067  from emergency medical personnel if such assistance is needed
 1068  for the safety of the officer or the person in custody.
 1069         (f)(e) When a member of a mental health overlay program or
 1070  a mobile crisis response service is a professional authorized to
 1071  initiate an involuntary examination pursuant to s. 394.463 or s.
 1072  397.675 and that professional evaluates a person and determines
 1073  that transportation to a receiving facility is needed, the
 1074  service, at its discretion, may transport the person to the
 1075  facility or may call on the law enforcement agency or other
 1076  transportation arrangement best suited to the needs of the
 1077  patient.
 1078         (g)(f) When any law enforcement officer has custody of a
 1079  person based on either noncriminal or minor criminal behavior
 1080  that meets the statutory guidelines for involuntary examination
 1081  under this part, the law enforcement officer shall transport the
 1082  person to an appropriate the nearest receiving facility within
 1083  the designated receiving system for examination.
 1084         (h)(g) When any law enforcement officer has arrested a
 1085  person for a felony and it appears that the person meets the
 1086  statutory guidelines for involuntary examination or placement
 1087  under this part, such person must shall first be processed in
 1088  the same manner as any other criminal suspect. The law
 1089  enforcement agency shall thereafter immediately notify the
 1090  appropriate nearest public receiving facility within the
 1091  designated receiving system, which shall be responsible for
 1092  promptly arranging for the examination and treatment of the
 1093  person. A receiving facility is not required to admit a person
 1094  charged with a crime for whom the facility determines and
 1095  documents that it is unable to provide adequate security, but
 1096  shall provide mental health examination and treatment to the
 1097  person where he or she is held.
 1098         (i)(h) If the appropriate law enforcement officer believes
 1099  that a person has an emergency medical condition as defined in
 1100  s. 395.002, the person may be first transported to a hospital
 1101  for emergency medical treatment, regardless of whether the
 1102  hospital is a designated receiving facility.
 1103         (j)(i) The costs of transportation, evaluation,
 1104  hospitalization, and treatment incurred under this subsection by
 1105  persons who have been arrested for violations of any state law
 1106  or county or municipal ordinance may be recovered as provided in
 1107  s. 901.35.
 1108         (k)(j) The nearest receiving facility within the designated
 1109  receiving system must accept, pursuant to this part, persons
 1110  brought by law enforcement officers, an emergency medical
 1111  transport service, or a private transport company for
 1112  involuntary examination.
 1113         (l)(k) Each law enforcement agency designated pursuant to
 1114  paragraph (a) shall establish a policy that develop a memorandum
 1115  of understanding with each receiving facility within the law
 1116  enforcement agency’s jurisdiction which reflects a single set of
 1117  protocols approved by the managing entity for the safe and
 1118  secure transportation of the person and transfer of custody of
 1119  the person. These protocols must also address crisis
 1120  intervention measures.
 1121         (m)(l) When a jurisdiction has entered into a contract with
 1122  an emergency medical transport service or a private transport
 1123  company for transportation of persons to receiving facilities
 1124  within the designated receiving system, such service or company
 1125  shall be given preference for transportation of persons from
 1126  nursing homes, assisted living facilities, adult day care
 1127  centers, or adult family-care homes, unless the behavior of the
 1128  person being transported is such that transportation by a law
 1129  enforcement officer is necessary.
 1130         (n)(m)Nothing in This section may not shall be construed
 1131  to limit emergency examination and treatment of incapacitated
 1132  persons provided in accordance with the provisions of s.
 1133  401.445.
 1134         (2) TRANSPORTATION TO A TREATMENT FACILITY.—
 1135         (a) If neither the patient nor any person legally obligated
 1136  or responsible for the patient is able to pay for the expense of
 1137  transporting a voluntary or involuntary patient to a treatment
 1138  facility, the transportation plan established by the governing
 1139  board of the county or counties must specify how in which the
 1140  hospitalized patient will be transported to, from, and between
 1141  facilities in a is hospitalized shall arrange for such required
 1142  transportation and shall ensure the safe and dignified manner
 1143  transportation of the patient. The governing board of each
 1144  county is authorized to contract with private transport
 1145  companies for the transportation of such patients to and from a
 1146  treatment facility.
 1147         (b) A Any company that transports a patient pursuant to
 1148  this subsection is considered an independent contractor and is
 1149  solely liable for the safe and dignified transportation of the
 1150  patient. Such company must be insured and provide no less than
 1151  $100,000 in liability insurance with respect to the transport
 1152  transportation of patients.
 1153         (c) A Any company that contracts with one or more counties
 1154  the governing board of a county to transport patients in
 1155  accordance with this section shall comply with the applicable
 1156  rules of the department to ensure the safety and dignity of the
 1157  patients.
 1158         (d) County or municipal law enforcement and correctional
 1159  personnel and equipment may shall not be used to transport
 1160  patients adjudicated incapacitated or found by the court to meet
 1161  the criteria for involuntary placement pursuant to s. 394.467,
 1162  except in small rural counties where there are no cost-efficient
 1163  alternatives.
 1164         (3) TRANSFER OF CUSTODY.—Custody of a person who is
 1165  transported pursuant to this part, along with related
 1166  documentation, shall be relinquished to a responsible individual
 1167  at the appropriate receiving or treatment facility.
 1168         (4) EXCEPTIONS.—An exception to the requirements of this
 1169  section may be granted by the secretary of the department for
 1170  the purposes of improving service coordination or better meeting
 1171  the special needs of individuals. A proposal for an exception
 1172  must be submitted by the district administrator after being
 1173  approved by the governing boards of any affected counties, prior
 1174  to submission to the secretary.
 1175         (a) A proposal for an exception must identify the specific
 1176  provision from which an exception is requested; describe how the
 1177  proposal will be implemented by participating law enforcement
 1178  agencies and transportation authorities; and provide a plan for
 1179  the coordination of services such as case management.
 1180         (b) The exception may be granted only for:
 1181         1. An arrangement centralizing and improving the provision
 1182  of services within a district, which may include an exception to
 1183  the requirement for transportation to the nearest receiving
 1184  facility;
 1185         2. An arrangement by which a facility may provide, in
 1186  addition to required psychiatric services, an environment and
 1187  services which are uniquely tailored to the needs of an
 1188  identified group of persons with special needs, such as persons
 1189  with hearing impairments or visual impairments, or elderly
 1190  persons with physical frailties; or
 1191         3. A specialized transportation system that provides an
 1192  efficient and humane method of transporting patients to
 1193  receiving facilities, among receiving facilities, and to
 1194  treatment facilities.
 1195         (c) Any exception approved pursuant to this subsection
 1196  shall be reviewed and approved every 5 years by the secretary.
 1197         Section 11. Subsection (2) of section 394.463, Florida
 1198  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1199         394.463 Involuntary examination.—
 1200         (2) INVOLUNTARY EXAMINATION.—
 1201         (a) An involuntary examination may be initiated by any one
 1202  of the following means:
 1203         1. A circuit or county court may enter an ex parte order
 1204  stating that a person appears to meet the criteria for
 1205  involuntary examination and specifying, giving the findings on
 1206  which that conclusion is based. The ex parte order for
 1207  involuntary examination must be based on written or oral sworn
 1208  testimony that includes specific facts that support the
 1209  findings, written or oral. If other, less restrictive, means are
 1210  not available, such as voluntary appearance for outpatient
 1211  evaluation, a law enforcement officer, or other designated agent
 1212  of the court, shall take the person into custody and deliver him
 1213  or her to an appropriate the nearest receiving facility within
 1214  the designated receiving system for involuntary examination. The
 1215  order of the court shall be made a part of the patient’s
 1216  clinical record. A No fee may not shall be charged for the
 1217  filing of an order under this subsection. Any receiving facility
 1218  accepting the patient based on this order must send a copy of
 1219  the order to the managing entity in the region Agency for Health
 1220  Care Administration on the next working day. The order may be
 1221  submitted electronically through existing data systems, if
 1222  available. The order shall be valid only until the person is
 1223  delivered to the appropriate facility executed or, if not
 1224  executed, for the period specified in the order itself,
 1225  whichever comes first. If no time limit is specified in the
 1226  order, the order shall be valid for 7 days after the date that
 1227  the order was signed.
 1228         2. A law enforcement officer shall take a person who
 1229  appears to meet the criteria for involuntary examination into
 1230  custody and deliver the person or have him or her delivered to
 1231  the appropriate nearest receiving facility within the designated
 1232  receiving system for examination. The officer shall execute a
 1233  written report detailing the circumstances under which the
 1234  person was taken into custody, which must and the report shall
 1235  be made a part of the patient’s clinical record. Any receiving
 1236  facility accepting the patient based on this report must send a
 1237  copy of the report to the department and the managing entity
 1238  Agency for Health Care Administration on the next working day.
 1239         3. A physician, clinical psychologist, psychiatric nurse,
 1240  mental health counselor, marriage and family therapist, or
 1241  clinical social worker may execute a certificate stating that he
 1242  or she has examined a person within the preceding 48 hours and
 1243  finds that the person appears to meet the criteria for
 1244  involuntary examination and stating the observations upon which
 1245  that conclusion is based. If other, less restrictive means, such
 1246  as voluntary appearance for outpatient evaluation, are not
 1247  available, such as voluntary appearance for outpatient
 1248  evaluation, a law enforcement officer shall take into custody
 1249  the person named in the certificate into custody and deliver him
 1250  or her to the appropriate nearest receiving facility within the
 1251  designated receiving system for involuntary examination. The law
 1252  enforcement officer shall execute a written report detailing the
 1253  circumstances under which the person was taken into custody. The
 1254  report and certificate shall be made a part of the patient’s
 1255  clinical record. Any receiving facility accepting the patient
 1256  based on this certificate must send a copy of the certificate to
 1257  the managing entity Agency for Health Care Administration on the
 1258  next working day. The document may be submitted electronically
 1259  through existing data systems, if applicable.
 1260         (b) A person may shall not be removed from any program or
 1261  residential placement licensed under chapter 400 or chapter 429
 1262  and transported to a receiving facility for involuntary
 1263  examination unless an ex parte order, a professional
 1264  certificate, or a law enforcement officer’s report is first
 1265  prepared. If the condition of the person is such that
 1266  preparation of a law enforcement officer’s report is not
 1267  practicable before removal, the report shall be completed as
 1268  soon as possible after removal, but in any case before the
 1269  person is transported to a receiving facility. A receiving
 1270  facility admitting a person for involuntary examination who is
 1271  not accompanied by the required ex parte order, professional
 1272  certificate, or law enforcement officer’s report shall notify
 1273  the managing entity Agency for Health Care Administration of
 1274  such admission by certified mail or by e-mail, if available, by
 1275  no later than the next working day. The provisions of this
 1276  paragraph do not apply when transportation is provided by the
 1277  patient’s family or guardian.
 1278         (c) A law enforcement officer acting in accordance with an
 1279  ex parte order issued pursuant to this subsection may serve and
 1280  execute such order on any day of the week, at any time of the
 1281  day or night.
 1282         (d) A law enforcement officer acting in accordance with an
 1283  ex parte order issued pursuant to this subsection may use such
 1284  reasonable physical force as is necessary to gain entry to the
 1285  premises, and any dwellings, buildings, or other structures
 1286  located on the premises, and to take custody of the person who
 1287  is the subject of the ex parte order.
 1288         (e) The managing entity and the department Agency for
 1289  Health Care Administration shall receive and maintain the copies
 1290  of ex parte petitions and orders, involuntary outpatient
 1291  services placement orders issued pursuant to s. 394.4655,
 1292  involuntary inpatient placement orders issued pursuant to s.
 1293  394.467, professional certificates, and law enforcement
 1294  officers’ reports. These documents shall be considered part of
 1295  the clinical record, governed by the provisions of s. 394.4615.
 1296  These documents shall be used to The agency shall prepare annual
 1297  reports analyzing the data obtained from these documents,
 1298  without information identifying patients, and shall provide
 1299  copies of reports to the department, the President of the
 1300  Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the
 1301  minority leaders of the Senate and the House of Representatives.
 1302         (f) A patient shall be examined by a physician or, a
 1303  clinical psychologist, or by a psychiatric nurse performing
 1304  within the framework of an established protocol with a
 1305  psychiatrist at a receiving facility without unnecessary delay
 1306  to determine if the criteria for involuntary services are met.
 1307  Emergency treatment may be provided and may, upon the order of a
 1308  physician, if the physician determines be given emergency
 1309  treatment if it is determined that such treatment is necessary
 1310  for the safety of the patient or others. The patient may not be
 1311  released by the receiving facility or its contractor without the
 1312  documented approval of a psychiatrist, or a clinical
 1313  psychologist or, if the receiving facility is owned or operated
 1314  by a hospital or health system, the release may also be approved
 1315  by a psychiatric nurse performing within the framework of an
 1316  established protocol with a psychiatrist, or an attending
 1317  emergency department physician with experience in the diagnosis
 1318  and treatment of mental illness and nervous disorders and after
 1319  completion of an involuntary examination pursuant to this
 1320  subsection. A psychiatric nurse may not approve the release of a
 1321  patient if the involuntary examination was initiated by a
 1322  psychiatrist unless the release is approved by the initiating
 1323  psychiatrist. However, a patient may not be held in a receiving
 1324  facility for involuntary examination longer than 72 hours.
 1325         (g) A person may not be held for involuntary examination
 1326  for more than 72 hours from the time of his or her arrival at
 1327  the facility unless one of the following actions is taken at the
 1328  end of the 72-hour examination period or the next business day
 1329  after the end of the 72-hour examination period if the
 1330  examination period ends on a weekend or holiday:
 1331         1. The person must be released with the approval of a
 1332  physician, psychiatrist, psychiatric nurse, or clinical
 1333  psychologist. However, if the examination is conducted in a
 1334  hospital, an attending emergency department physician with
 1335  experience in the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness may
 1336  approve the release.
 1337         2. The person must be asked to give express and informed
 1338  consent for voluntary admission if a physician, psychiatrist,
 1339  psychiatric nurse, or clinical psychologist has determined that
 1340  the individual is competent to consent to treatment.
 1341         3. A petition for involuntary services must be completed
 1342  and filed in the circuit court by the facility administrator. If
 1343  electronic filing of the petition is not available in the county
 1344  and the 72-hour period ends on a weekend or legal holiday, the
 1345  petition must be filed by the next working day. If involuntary
 1346  services are deemed necessary, the least restrictive treatment
 1347  consistent with the optimum improvement of the person’s
 1348  condition must be made available.
 1349         (h) An individual discharged from a facility who is
 1350  currently charged with a crime shall be released to the custody
 1351  of a law enforcement officer, unless the individual has been
 1352  released from law enforcement custody by posting of a bond, by a
 1353  pretrial conditional release, or by other judicial release.
 1354         (i)(g) A person for whom an involuntary examination has
 1355  been initiated who is being evaluated or treated at a hospital
 1356  for an emergency medical condition specified in s. 395.002 must
 1357  be examined by an appropriate a receiving facility within 72
 1358  hours. The 72-hour period begins when the patient arrives at the
 1359  hospital and ceases when the attending physician documents that
 1360  the patient has an emergency medical condition. If the patient
 1361  is examined at a hospital providing emergency medical services
 1362  by a professional qualified to perform an involuntary
 1363  examination and is found as a result of that examination not to
 1364  meet the criteria for involuntary outpatient services placement
 1365  pursuant to s. 394.4655(1) or involuntary inpatient placement
 1366  pursuant to s. 394.467(1), the patient may be offered voluntary
 1367  services or placement, if appropriate, or released directly from
 1368  the hospital providing emergency medical services. The finding
 1369  by the professional that the patient has been examined and does
 1370  not meet the criteria for involuntary inpatient placement or
 1371  involuntary outpatient services placement must be entered into
 1372  the patient’s clinical record. Nothing in This paragraph is not
 1373  intended to prevent a hospital providing emergency medical
 1374  services from appropriately transferring a patient to another
 1375  hospital before prior to stabilization if, provided the
 1376  requirements of s. 395.1041(3)(c) have been met.
 1377         (j)(h) One of the following must occur within 12 hours
 1378  after the patient’s attending physician documents that the
 1379  patient’s medical condition has stabilized or that an emergency
 1380  medical condition does not exist:
 1381         1. The patient must be examined by an appropriate a
 1382  designated receiving facility and released; or
 1383         2. The patient must be transferred to a designated
 1384  receiving facility in which appropriate medical treatment is
 1385  available. However, the receiving facility must be notified of
 1386  the transfer within 2 hours after the patient’s condition has
 1387  been stabilized or after determination that an emergency medical
 1388  condition does not exist.
 1389         (i) Within the 72-hour examination period or, if the 72
 1390  hours ends on a weekend or holiday, no later than the next
 1391  working day thereafter, one of the following actions must be
 1392  taken, based on the individual needs of the patient:
 1393         1. The patient shall be released, unless he or she is
 1394  charged with a crime, in which case the patient shall be
 1395  returned to the custody of a law enforcement officer;
 1396         2. The patient shall be released, subject to the provisions
 1397  of subparagraph 1., for voluntary outpatient treatment;
 1398         3. The patient, unless he or she is charged with a crime,
 1399  shall be asked to give express and informed consent to placement
 1400  as a voluntary patient, and, if such consent is given, the
 1401  patient shall be admitted as a voluntary patient; or
 1402         4. A petition for involuntary placement shall be filed in
 1403  the circuit court when outpatient or inpatient treatment is
 1404  deemed necessary. When inpatient treatment is deemed necessary,
 1405  the least restrictive treatment consistent with the optimum
 1406  improvement of the patient’s condition shall be made available.
 1407  When a petition is to be filed for involuntary outpatient
 1408  placement, it shall be filed by one of the petitioners specified
 1409  in s. 394.4655(3)(a). A petition for involuntary inpatient
 1410  placement shall be filed by the facility administrator.
 1411         Section 12. Section 394.4655, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1412  to read:
 1413         394.4655 Involuntary outpatient services placement.—
 1414         (1) CRITERIA FOR INVOLUNTARY OUTPATIENT SERVICES
 1415  PLACEMENT.—A person may be ordered to involuntary outpatient
 1416  services placement upon a finding of the court, by clear and
 1417  convincing evidence, that the person meets all of the following
 1418  criteria by clear and convincing evidence:
 1419         (a) The person is 18 years of age or older.;
 1420         (b) The person has a mental illness.;
 1421         (c) The person is unlikely to survive safely in the
 1422  community without supervision, based on a clinical
 1423  determination.;
 1424         (d) The person has a history of lack of compliance with
 1425  treatment for mental illness.;
 1426         (e) The person has:
 1427         1. At least twice within the immediately preceding 36
 1428  months been involuntarily admitted to a receiving or treatment
 1429  facility as defined in s. 394.455, or has received mental health
 1430  services in a forensic or correctional facility. The 36-month
 1431  period does not include any period during which the person was
 1432  admitted or incarcerated; or
 1433         2. Engaged in one or more acts of serious violent behavior
 1434  toward self or others, or attempts at serious bodily harm to
 1435  himself or herself or others, within the preceding 36 months.;
 1436         (f) The person is, as a result of his or her mental
 1437  illness, unlikely to voluntarily participate in the recommended
 1438  treatment plan and either he or she has refused voluntary
 1439  services placement for treatment after sufficient and
 1440  conscientious explanation and disclosure of why the services are
 1441  necessary purpose of placement for treatment or he or she is
 1442  unable to determine for himself or herself whether services are
 1443  placement is necessary.;
 1444         (g) In view of the person’s treatment history and current
 1445  behavior, the person is in need of involuntary outpatient
 1446  services placement in order to prevent a relapse or
 1447  deterioration that would be likely to result in serious bodily
 1448  harm to himself or herself or others, or a substantial harm to
 1449  his or her well-being as set forth in s. 394.463(1).;
 1450         (h) It is likely that the person will benefit from
 1451  involuntary outpatient services. placement; and
 1452         (i) All available, less restrictive alternatives that would
 1453  offer an opportunity for improvement of his or her condition
 1454  have been judged to be inappropriate or unavailable.
 1455         (2) INVOLUNTARY OUTPATIENT SERVICES PLACEMENT.—
 1456         (a)1. A patient who is being recommended for involuntary
 1457  outpatient services placement by the administrator of the
 1458  receiving facility where the patient has been examined may be
 1459  retained by the facility after adherence to the notice
 1460  procedures provided in s. 394.4599. The recommendation must be
 1461  supported by the opinion of two qualified professionals a
 1462  psychiatrist and the second opinion of a clinical psychologist
 1463  or another psychiatrist, both of whom have personally examined
 1464  the patient within the preceding 72 hours, that the criteria for
 1465  involuntary outpatient services placement are met. However, in a
 1466  county having a population of fewer than 50,000, if the
 1467  administrator certifies that a psychiatrist or clinical
 1468  psychologist is not available to provide the second opinion, the
 1469  second opinion may be provided by a licensed physician who has
 1470  postgraduate training and experience in diagnosis and treatment
 1471  of mental and nervous disorders or by a psychiatric nurse. Any
 1472  second opinion authorized in this subparagraph may be conducted
 1473  through a face-to-face examination, in person or by electronic
 1474  means. Such recommendation must be entered on an involuntary
 1475  outpatient services placement certificate that authorizes the
 1476  receiving facility to retain the patient pending completion of a
 1477  hearing. The certificate must shall be made a part of the
 1478  patient’s clinical record.
 1479         2. If the patient has been stabilized and no longer meets
 1480  the criteria for involuntary examination pursuant to s.
 1481  394.463(1), the patient must be released from the receiving
 1482  facility while awaiting the hearing for involuntary outpatient
 1483  services placement. Before filing a petition for involuntary
 1484  outpatient services treatment, the administrator of the a
 1485  receiving facility or a designated department representative
 1486  must identify the service provider that will have primary
 1487  responsibility for service provision under an order for
 1488  involuntary outpatient services placement, unless the person is
 1489  otherwise participating in outpatient psychiatric treatment and
 1490  is not in need of public financing for that treatment, in which
 1491  case the individual, if eligible, may be ordered to involuntary
 1492  treatment pursuant to the existing psychiatric treatment
 1493  relationship.
 1494         3. The service provider shall prepare a written proposed
 1495  treatment plan in consultation with the patient or the patient’s
 1496  guardian advocate, if appointed, for the court’s consideration
 1497  for inclusion in the involuntary outpatient services placement
 1498  order. The service provider shall also provide a copy of the
 1499  treatment plan that addresses the nature and extent of the
 1500  mental illness and any co-occurring substance abuse disorders
 1501  that necessitate involuntary outpatient services. The treatment
 1502  plan must specify the likely level of care, including the use of
 1503  medication, and anticipated discharge criteria for terminating
 1504  involuntary outpatient services. The service provider shall also
 1505  provide a copy of the proposed treatment plan to the patient and
 1506  the administrator of the receiving facility. The treatment plan
 1507  must specify the nature and extent of the patient’s mental
 1508  illness, address the reduction of symptoms that necessitate
 1509  involuntary outpatient placement, and include measurable goals
 1510  and objectives for the services and treatment that are provided
 1511  to treat the person’s mental illness and assist the person in
 1512  living and functioning in the community or to prevent a relapse
 1513  or deterioration. Service providers may select and supervise
 1514  other individuals to implement specific aspects of the treatment
 1515  plan. The services in the treatment plan must be deemed
 1516  clinically appropriate by a physician, clinical psychologist,
 1517  psychiatric nurse, mental health counselor, marriage and family
 1518  therapist, or clinical social worker who consults with, or is
 1519  employed or contracted by, the service provider. The service
 1520  provider must certify to the court in the proposed treatment
 1521  plan whether sufficient services for improvement and
 1522  stabilization are currently available and whether the service
 1523  provider agrees to provide those services. If the service
 1524  provider certifies that the services in the proposed treatment
 1525  plan are not available, the petitioner may not file the
 1526  petition. The service provider must notify the managing entity
 1527  as to the availability of the requested services. The managing
 1528  entity must document such efforts to obtain the requested
 1529  services.
 1530         (b) If a patient in involuntary inpatient placement meets
 1531  the criteria for involuntary outpatient services placement, the
 1532  administrator of the treatment facility may, before the
 1533  expiration of the period during which the treatment facility is
 1534  authorized to retain the patient, recommend involuntary
 1535  outpatient services placement. The recommendation must be
 1536  supported by the opinion of two qualified professionals a
 1537  psychiatrist and the second opinion of a clinical psychologist
 1538  or another psychiatrist, both of whom have personally examined
 1539  the patient within the preceding 72 hours, that the criteria for
 1540  involuntary outpatient services placement are met. However, in a
 1541  county having a population of fewer than 50,000, if the
 1542  administrator certifies that a psychiatrist or clinical
 1543  psychologist is not available to provide the second opinion, the
 1544  second opinion may be provided by a licensed physician who has
 1545  postgraduate training and experience in diagnosis and treatment
 1546  of mental and nervous disorders or by a psychiatric nurse. Any
 1547  second opinion authorized in this subparagraph may be conducted
 1548  through a face-to-face examination, in person or by electronic
 1549  means. Such recommendation must be entered on an involuntary
 1550  outpatient services placement certificate, and the certificate
 1551  must be made a part of the patient’s clinical record.
 1552         (c)1. The administrator of the treatment facility shall
 1553  provide a copy of the involuntary outpatient services placement
 1554  certificate and a copy of the state mental health discharge form
 1555  to the managing entity a department representative in the county
 1556  where the patient will be residing. For persons who are leaving
 1557  a state mental health treatment facility, the petition for
 1558  involuntary outpatient services placement must be filed in the
 1559  county where the patient will be residing.
 1560         2. The service provider that will have primary
 1561  responsibility for service provision shall be identified by the
 1562  designated department representative before prior to the order
 1563  for involuntary outpatient services placement and must, before
 1564  prior to filing a petition for involuntary outpatient services
 1565  placement, certify to the court whether the services recommended
 1566  in the patient’s discharge plan are available in the local
 1567  community and whether the service provider agrees to provide
 1568  those services. The service provider must develop with the
 1569  patient, or the patient’s guardian advocate, if appointed, a
 1570  treatment or service plan that addresses the needs identified in
 1571  the discharge plan. The plan must be deemed to be clinically
 1572  appropriate by a physician, clinical psychologist, psychiatric
 1573  nurse, mental health counselor, marriage and family therapist,
 1574  or clinical social worker, as defined in this chapter, who
 1575  consults with, or is employed or contracted by, the service
 1576  provider.
 1577         3. If the service provider certifies that the services in
 1578  the proposed treatment or service plan are not available, the
 1579  petitioner may not file the petition. The service provider must
 1580  notify the managing entity as to the availability of the
 1581  requested services. The managing entity must document such
 1582  efforts to obtain the requested services.
 1583         (3) PETITION FOR INVOLUNTARY OUTPATIENT SERVICES
 1584  PLACEMENT.—
 1585         (a) A petition for involuntary outpatient services
 1586  placement may be filed by:
 1587         1. The administrator of a receiving facility; or
 1588         2. The administrator of a treatment facility.
 1589         (b) Each required criterion for involuntary outpatient
 1590  services placement must be alleged and substantiated in the
 1591  petition for involuntary outpatient services placement. A copy
 1592  of the certificate recommending involuntary outpatient services
 1593  placement completed by two a qualified professionals
 1594  professional specified in subsection (2) must be attached to the
 1595  petition. A copy of the proposed treatment plan must be attached
 1596  to the petition. Before the petition is filed, the service
 1597  provider shall certify that the services in the proposed
 1598  treatment plan are available. If the necessary services are not
 1599  available in the patient’s local community to respond to the
 1600  person’s individual needs, the petition may not be filed. The
 1601  service provider must notify the managing entity as to the
 1602  availability of the requested services. The managing entity must
 1603  document such efforts to obtain the requested services.
 1604         (c) The petition for involuntary outpatient services
 1605  placement must be filed in the county where the patient is
 1606  located, unless the patient is being placed from a state
 1607  treatment facility, in which case the petition must be filed in
 1608  the county where the patient will reside. When the petition has
 1609  been filed, the clerk of the court shall provide copies of the
 1610  petition and the proposed treatment plan to the department, the
 1611  managing entity, the patient, the patient’s guardian or
 1612  representative, the state attorney, and the public defender or
 1613  the patient’s private counsel. A fee may not be charged for
 1614  filing a petition under this subsection.
 1615         (4) APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL.—
 1616         (a) Within 1 court working day after the filing of a
 1617  petition for involuntary outpatient services placement, the
 1618  court shall appoint the public defender to represent the person
 1619  who is the subject of the petition, unless the person is
 1620  otherwise represented by counsel. The clerk of the court shall
 1621  immediately notify the public defender of the appointment. The
 1622  public defender shall represent the person until the petition is
 1623  dismissed, the court order expires, or the patient is discharged
 1624  from involuntary outpatient services placement. An attorney who
 1625  represents the patient must be provided shall have access to the
 1626  patient, witnesses, and records relevant to the presentation of
 1627  the patient’s case and shall represent the interests of the
 1628  patient, regardless of the source of payment to the attorney.
 1629         (b) The state attorney for the circuit in which the patient
 1630  is located shall represent the state as the real party in
 1631  interest in the proceeding and must be provided access to the
 1632  patient’s clinical records and witnesses. The state attorney is
 1633  authorized to independently evaluate the sufficiency and
 1634  appropriateness of the petition for involuntary outpatient
 1635  services.
 1636         (5) CONTINUANCE OF HEARING.—The patient is entitled, with
 1637  the concurrence of the patient’s counsel, to at least one
 1638  continuance of the hearing. The continuance shall be for a
 1639  period of up to 4 weeks.
 1640         (6) HEARING ON INVOLUNTARY OUTPATIENT SERVICES PLACEMENT.—
 1641         (a)1. The court shall hold the hearing on involuntary
 1642  outpatient services placement within 5 working days after the
 1643  filing of the petition, unless a continuance is granted. The
 1644  hearing must shall be held in the county where the petition is
 1645  filed, must shall be as convenient to the patient as is
 1646  consistent with orderly procedure, and must shall be conducted
 1647  in physical settings not likely to be injurious to the patient’s
 1648  condition. If the court finds that the patient’s attendance at
 1649  the hearing is not consistent with the best interests of the
 1650  patient and if the patient’s counsel does not object, the court
 1651  may waive the presence of the patient from all or any portion of
 1652  the hearing. The state attorney for the circuit in which the
 1653  patient is located shall represent the state, rather than the
 1654  petitioner, as the real party in interest in the proceeding.
 1655         2. The court may appoint a magistrate master to preside at
 1656  the hearing. One of the professionals who executed the
 1657  involuntary outpatient services placement certificate shall be a
 1658  witness. The patient and the patient’s guardian or
 1659  representative shall be informed by the court of the right to an
 1660  independent expert examination. If the patient cannot afford
 1661  such an examination, the court shall ensure that one is
 1662  provided, as otherwise provided by law provide for one. The
 1663  independent expert’s report is shall be confidential and not
 1664  discoverable, unless the expert is to be called as a witness for
 1665  the patient at the hearing. The court shall allow testimony from
 1666  individuals, including family members, deemed by the court to be
 1667  relevant under state law, regarding the person’s prior history
 1668  and how that prior history relates to the person’s current
 1669  condition. The testimony in the hearing must be given under
 1670  oath, and the proceedings must be recorded. The patient may
 1671  refuse to testify at the hearing.
 1672         (b)1. If the court concludes that the patient meets the
 1673  criteria for involuntary outpatient services placement pursuant
 1674  to subsection (1), the court shall issue an order for
 1675  involuntary outpatient services placement. The court order shall
 1676  be for a period of up to 90 days 6 months. The order must
 1677  specify the nature and extent of the patient’s mental illness.
 1678  The order of the court and the treatment plan must shall be made
 1679  part of the patient’s clinical record. The service provider
 1680  shall discharge a patient from involuntary outpatient services
 1681  placement when the order expires or any time the patient no
 1682  longer meets the criteria for involuntary services placement.
 1683  Upon discharge, the service provider shall send a certificate of
 1684  discharge to the court.
 1685         2. The court may not order the department or the service
 1686  provider to provide services if the program or service is not
 1687  available in the patient’s local community, if there is no space
 1688  available in the program or service for the patient, or if
 1689  funding is not available for the program or service. The service
 1690  provider must notify the managing entity as to the availability
 1691  of the requested services. The managing entity must document
 1692  such efforts to obtain the requested services. A copy of the
 1693  order must be sent to the managing entity Agency for Health Care
 1694  Administration by the service provider within 1 working day
 1695  after it is received from the court. The order may be submitted
 1696  electronically through existing data systems. After the
 1697  placement order for involuntary services is issued, the service
 1698  provider and the patient may modify provisions of the treatment
 1699  plan. For any material modification of the treatment plan to
 1700  which the patient or, if one is appointed, the patient’s
 1701  guardian advocate agrees, if appointed, does agree, the service
 1702  provider shall send notice of the modification to the court. Any
 1703  material modifications of the treatment plan which are contested
 1704  by the patient or the patient’s guardian advocate, if applicable
 1705  appointed, must be approved or disapproved by the court
 1706  consistent with subsection (2).
 1707         3. If, in the clinical judgment of a physician, the patient
 1708  has failed or has refused to comply with the treatment ordered
 1709  by the court, and, in the clinical judgment of the physician,
 1710  efforts were made to solicit compliance and the patient may meet
 1711  the criteria for involuntary examination, a person may be
 1712  brought to a receiving facility pursuant to s. 394.463. If,
 1713  after examination, the patient does not meet the criteria for
 1714  involuntary inpatient placement pursuant to s. 394.467, the
 1715  patient must be discharged from the receiving facility. The
 1716  involuntary outpatient services placement order shall remain in
 1717  effect unless the service provider determines that the patient
 1718  no longer meets the criteria for involuntary outpatient services
 1719  placement or until the order expires. The service provider must
 1720  determine whether modifications should be made to the existing
 1721  treatment plan and must attempt to continue to engage the
 1722  patient in treatment. For any material modification of the
 1723  treatment plan to which the patient or the patient’s guardian
 1724  advocate, if applicable appointed, agrees does agree, the
 1725  service provider shall send notice of the modification to the
 1726  court. Any material modifications of the treatment plan which
 1727  are contested by the patient or the patient’s guardian advocate,
 1728  if applicable appointed, must be approved or disapproved by the
 1729  court consistent with subsection (2).
 1730         (c) If, at any time before the conclusion of the initial
 1731  hearing on involuntary outpatient services placement, it appears
 1732  to the court that the person does not meet the criteria for
 1733  involuntary outpatient services placement under this section
 1734  but, instead, meets the criteria for involuntary inpatient
 1735  placement, the court may order the person admitted for
 1736  involuntary inpatient examination under s. 394.463. If the
 1737  person instead meets the criteria for involuntary assessment,
 1738  protective custody, or involuntary admission pursuant to s.
 1739  397.675, the court may order the person to be admitted for
 1740  involuntary assessment for a period of 5 days pursuant to s.
 1741  397.6811. Thereafter, all proceedings are shall be governed by
 1742  chapter 397.
 1743         (d) At the hearing on involuntary outpatient services
 1744  placement, the court shall consider testimony and evidence
 1745  regarding the patient’s competence to consent to treatment. If
 1746  the court finds that the patient is incompetent to consent to
 1747  treatment, it shall appoint a guardian advocate as provided in
 1748  s. 394.4598. The guardian advocate shall be appointed or
 1749  discharged in accordance with s. 394.4598.
 1750         (e) The administrator of the receiving facility or the
 1751  designated department representative shall provide a copy of the
 1752  court order and adequate documentation of a patient’s mental
 1753  illness to the service provider for involuntary outpatient
 1754  services placement. Such documentation must include any advance
 1755  directives made by the patient, a psychiatric evaluation of the
 1756  patient, and any evaluations of the patient performed by a
 1757  clinical psychologist or a clinical social worker.
 1758         (7) PROCEDURE FOR CONTINUED INVOLUNTARY OUTPATIENT SERVICES
 1759  PLACEMENT.—
 1760         (a)1. If the person continues to meet the criteria for
 1761  involuntary outpatient services placement, the service provider
 1762  shall, at least 10 days before the expiration of the period
 1763  during which the treatment is ordered for the person, file in
 1764  the circuit court a petition for continued involuntary
 1765  outpatient services placement. The court shall immediately
 1766  schedule a hearing on the petition to be held within 15 days
 1767  after the petition is filed.
 1768         2. The existing involuntary outpatient services placement
 1769  order remains in effect until disposition on the petition for
 1770  continued involuntary outpatient services placement.
 1771         3. A certificate shall be attached to the petition which
 1772  includes a statement from the person’s physician or clinical
 1773  psychologist justifying the request, a brief description of the
 1774  patient’s treatment during the time he or she was receiving
 1775  involuntarily services placed, and an individualized plan of
 1776  continued treatment.
 1777         4. The service provider shall develop the individualized
 1778  plan of continued treatment in consultation with the patient or
 1779  the patient’s guardian advocate, if applicable appointed. When
 1780  the petition has been filed, the clerk of the court shall
 1781  provide copies of the certificate and the individualized plan of
 1782  continued treatment to the department, the patient, the
 1783  patient’s guardian advocate, the state attorney, and the
 1784  patient’s private counsel or the public defender.
 1785         (b) Within 1 court working day after the filing of a
 1786  petition for continued involuntary outpatient services
 1787  placement, the court shall appoint the public defender to
 1788  represent the person who is the subject of the petition, unless
 1789  the person is otherwise represented by counsel. The clerk of the
 1790  court shall immediately notify the public defender of such
 1791  appointment. The public defender shall represent the person
 1792  until the petition is dismissed or the court order expires or
 1793  the patient is discharged from involuntary outpatient services
 1794  placement. Any attorney representing the patient shall have
 1795  access to the patient, witnesses, and records relevant to the
 1796  presentation of the patient’s case and shall represent the
 1797  interests of the patient, regardless of the source of payment to
 1798  the attorney.
 1799         (c) Hearings on petitions for continued involuntary
 1800  outpatient services must placement shall be before the circuit
 1801  court. The court may appoint a magistrate master to preside at
 1802  the hearing. The procedures for obtaining an order pursuant to
 1803  this paragraph must meet the requirements of shall be in
 1804  accordance with subsection (6), except that the time period
 1805  included in paragraph (1)(e) does not apply when is not
 1806  applicable in determining the appropriateness of additional
 1807  periods of involuntary outpatient services placement.
 1808         (d) Notice of the hearing must shall be provided as set
 1809  forth in s. 394.4599. The patient and the patient’s attorney may
 1810  agree to a period of continued outpatient services placement
 1811  without a court hearing.
 1812         (e) The same procedure must shall be repeated before the
 1813  expiration of each additional period the patient is placed in
 1814  treatment.
 1815         (f) If the patient has previously been found incompetent to
 1816  consent to treatment, the court shall consider testimony and
 1817  evidence regarding the patient’s competence. Section 394.4598
 1818  governs the discharge of the guardian advocate if the patient’s
 1819  competency to consent to treatment has been restored.
 1820         Section 13. Section 394.467, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1821  to read:
 1822         394.467 Involuntary inpatient placement.—
 1823         (1) CRITERIA.—A person may be ordered for placed in
 1824  involuntary inpatient placement for treatment upon a finding of
 1825  the court by clear and convincing evidence that:
 1826         (a) He or she has a mental illness is mentally ill and
 1827  because of his or her mental illness:
 1828         1.a. He or she has refused voluntary inpatient placement
 1829  for treatment after sufficient and conscientious explanation and
 1830  disclosure of the purpose of inpatient placement for treatment;
 1831  or
 1832         b. He or she is unable to determine for himself or herself
 1833  whether inpatient placement is necessary; and
 1834         2.a. He or she is manifestly incapable of surviving alone
 1835  or with the help of willing and responsible family or friends,
 1836  including available alternative services, and, without
 1837  treatment, is likely to suffer from neglect or refuse to care
 1838  for himself or herself, and such neglect or refusal poses a real
 1839  and present threat of substantial harm to his or her well-being;
 1840  or
 1841         b. There is substantial likelihood that in the near future
 1842  he or she will inflict serious bodily harm on self or others
 1843  himself or herself or another person, as evidenced by recent
 1844  behavior causing, attempting, or threatening such harm; and
 1845         (b) All available less restrictive treatment alternatives
 1846  that which would offer an opportunity for improvement of his or
 1847  her condition have been judged to be inappropriate.
 1848         (2) ADMISSION TO A TREATMENT FACILITY.—A patient may be
 1849  retained by a receiving facility or involuntarily placed in a
 1850  treatment facility upon the recommendation of the administrator
 1851  of the receiving facility where the patient has been examined
 1852  and after adherence to the notice and hearing procedures
 1853  provided in s. 394.4599. The recommendation must be supported by
 1854  the opinion of two qualified professionals of a psychiatrist and
 1855  the second opinion of a clinical psychologist or another
 1856  psychiatrist, both of whom have personally examined the patient
 1857  within the preceding 72 hours, that the criteria for involuntary
 1858  inpatient placement are met. However, in a county that has a
 1859  population of fewer than 50,000, if the administrator certifies
 1860  that a psychiatrist or clinical psychologist is not available to
 1861  provide the second opinion, the second opinion may be provided
 1862  by a licensed physician who has postgraduate training and
 1863  experience in diagnosis and treatment of mental and nervous
 1864  disorders or by a psychiatric nurse. Any second opinion
 1865  authorized in this subsection may be conducted through a face
 1866  to-face examination, in person or by electronic means. Such
 1867  recommendation shall be entered on a petition for an involuntary
 1868  inpatient placement certificate that authorizes the receiving
 1869  facility to retain the patient pending transfer to a treatment
 1870  facility or completion of a hearing.
 1871         (3) PETITION FOR INVOLUNTARY INPATIENT PLACEMENT.—
 1872         (a) The administrator of the facility shall file a petition
 1873  for involuntary inpatient placement in the court in the county
 1874  where the patient is located. Upon filing, the clerk of the
 1875  court shall provide copies to the department, the patient, the
 1876  patient’s guardian or representative, and the state attorney and
 1877  public defender of the judicial circuit in which the patient is
 1878  located. A No fee may not shall be charged for the filing of a
 1879  petition under this subsection.
 1880         (b) A facility filing a petition under this subsection for
 1881  involuntary inpatient placement shall send a copy of the
 1882  petition to the managing entity in its area.
 1883         (4) APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL.—
 1884         (a) Within 1 court working day after the filing of a
 1885  petition for involuntary inpatient placement, the court shall
 1886  appoint the public defender to represent the person who is the
 1887  subject of the petition, unless the person is otherwise
 1888  represented by counsel. The clerk of the court shall immediately
 1889  notify the public defender of such appointment. Any attorney
 1890  representing the patient shall have access to the patient,
 1891  witnesses, and records relevant to the presentation of the
 1892  patient’s case and shall represent the interests of the patient,
 1893  regardless of the source of payment to the attorney.
 1894         (b) The state attorney for the circuit in which the patient
 1895  is located shall represent the state as the real party in
 1896  interest in the proceeding and must be provided access to the
 1897  patient’s clinical records and witnesses. The state attorney is
 1898  authorized to independently evaluate the sufficiency and
 1899  appropriateness of the petition for involuntary inpatient
 1900  placement.
 1901         (5) CONTINUANCE OF HEARING.—The patient is entitled, with
 1902  the concurrence of the patient’s counsel, to at least one
 1903  continuance of the hearing. The continuance shall be for a
 1904  period of up to 4 weeks.
 1905         (6) HEARING ON INVOLUNTARY INPATIENT PLACEMENT.—
 1906         (a)1. The court shall hold the hearing on involuntary
 1907  inpatient placement within 5 court working days, unless a
 1908  continuance is granted.
 1909         2. Except for good cause documented in the court file, the
 1910  hearing must shall be held in the county or the facility, as
 1911  appropriate, where the patient is located, must and shall be as
 1912  convenient to the patient as is may be consistent with orderly
 1913  procedure, and shall be conducted in physical settings not
 1914  likely to be injurious to the patient’s condition. If the court
 1915  finds that the patient’s attendance at the hearing is not
 1916  consistent with the best interests of the patient, and the
 1917  patient’s counsel does not object, the court may waive the
 1918  presence of the patient from all or any portion of the hearing.
 1919  The state attorney for the circuit in which the patient is
 1920  located shall represent the state, rather than the petitioning
 1921  facility administrator, as the real party in interest in the
 1922  proceeding.
 1923         3.2. The court may appoint a general or special magistrate
 1924  to preside at the hearing. One of the two professionals who
 1925  executed the petition for involuntary inpatient placement
 1926  certificate shall be a witness. The patient and the patient’s
 1927  guardian or representative shall be informed by the court of the
 1928  right to an independent expert examination. If the patient
 1929  cannot afford such an examination, the court shall ensure that
 1930  one is provided, as otherwise provided for by law provide for
 1931  one. The independent expert’s report is shall be confidential
 1932  and not discoverable, unless the expert is to be called as a
 1933  witness for the patient at the hearing. The testimony in the
 1934  hearing must be given under oath, and the proceedings must be
 1935  recorded. The patient may refuse to testify at the hearing.
 1936         (b) If the court concludes that the patient meets the
 1937  criteria for involuntary inpatient placement, it may shall order
 1938  that the patient be transferred to a treatment facility or, if
 1939  the patient is at a treatment facility, that the patient be
 1940  retained there or be treated at any other appropriate receiving
 1941  or treatment facility, or that the patient receive services from
 1942  such a receiving or treatment facility or service provider, on
 1943  an involuntary basis, for a period of up to 90 days 6 months.
 1944  However, any order for involuntary mental health services in a
 1945  treatment facility may be for up to 6 months. The order shall
 1946  specify the nature and extent of the patient’s mental illness.
 1947  The facility shall discharge a patient any time the patient no
 1948  longer meets the criteria for involuntary inpatient placement,
 1949  unless the patient has transferred to voluntary status.
 1950         (c) If at any time before prior to the conclusion of the
 1951  hearing on involuntary inpatient placement it appears to the
 1952  court that the person does not meet the criteria for involuntary
 1953  inpatient placement under this section, but instead meets the
 1954  criteria for involuntary outpatient services placement, the
 1955  court may order the person evaluated for involuntary outpatient
 1956  services placement pursuant to s. 394.4655. The petition and
 1957  hearing procedures set forth in s. 394.4655 shall apply. If the
 1958  person instead meets the criteria for involuntary assessment,
 1959  protective custody, or involuntary admission pursuant to s.
 1960  397.675, then the court may order the person to be admitted for
 1961  involuntary assessment for a period of 5 days pursuant to s.
 1962  397.6811. Thereafter, all proceedings are shall be governed by
 1963  chapter 397.
 1964         (d) At the hearing on involuntary inpatient placement, the
 1965  court shall consider testimony and evidence regarding the
 1966  patient’s competence to consent to treatment. If the court finds
 1967  that the patient is incompetent to consent to treatment, it
 1968  shall appoint a guardian advocate as provided in s. 394.4598.
 1969         (e) The administrator of the petitioning receiving facility
 1970  shall provide a copy of the court order and adequate
 1971  documentation of a patient’s mental illness to the administrator
 1972  of a treatment facility if the whenever a patient is ordered for
 1973  involuntary inpatient placement, whether by civil or criminal
 1974  court. The documentation must shall include any advance
 1975  directives made by the patient, a psychiatric evaluation of the
 1976  patient, and any evaluations of the patient performed by a
 1977  psychiatric nurse, clinical psychologist, a marriage and family
 1978  therapist, a mental health counselor, or a clinical social
 1979  worker. The administrator of a treatment facility may refuse
 1980  admission to any patient directed to its facilities on an
 1981  involuntary basis, whether by civil or criminal court order, who
 1982  is not accompanied at the same time by adequate orders and
 1983  documentation.
 1984         (7) PROCEDURE FOR CONTINUED INVOLUNTARY INPATIENT
 1985  PLACEMENT.—
 1986         (a) Hearings on petitions for continued involuntary
 1987  inpatient placement of an individual placed at any treatment
 1988  facility are shall be administrative hearings and must shall be
 1989  conducted in accordance with the provisions of s. 120.57(1),
 1990  except that any order entered by the administrative law judge is
 1991  shall be final and subject to judicial review in accordance with
 1992  s. 120.68. Orders concerning patients committed after
 1993  successfully pleading not guilty by reason of insanity are shall
 1994  be governed by the provisions of s. 916.15.
 1995         (b) If the patient continues to meet the criteria for
 1996  involuntary inpatient placement and is being treated at a
 1997  treatment facility, the administrator shall, before prior to the
 1998  expiration of the period during which the treatment facility is
 1999  authorized to retain the patient, file a petition requesting
 2000  authorization for continued involuntary inpatient placement. The
 2001  request must shall be accompanied by a statement from the
 2002  patient’s physician, psychiatrist, psychiatric nurse, or
 2003  clinical psychologist justifying the request, a brief
 2004  description of the patient’s treatment during the time he or she
 2005  was involuntarily placed, and an individualized plan of
 2006  continued treatment. Notice of the hearing must shall be
 2007  provided as provided set forth in s. 394.4599. If a patient’s
 2008  attendance at the hearing is voluntarily waived, the
 2009  administrative law judge must determine that the waiver is
 2010  knowing and voluntary before waiving the presence of the patient
 2011  from all or a portion of the hearing. Alternatively, if at the
 2012  hearing the administrative law judge finds that attendance at
 2013  the hearing is not consistent with the best interests of the
 2014  patient, the administrative law judge may waive the presence of
 2015  the patient from all or any portion of the hearing, unless the
 2016  patient, through counsel, objects to the waiver of presence. The
 2017  testimony in the hearing must be under oath, and the proceedings
 2018  must be recorded.
 2019         (c) Unless the patient is otherwise represented or is
 2020  ineligible, he or she shall be represented at the hearing on the
 2021  petition for continued involuntary inpatient placement by the
 2022  public defender of the circuit in which the facility is located.
 2023         (d) If at a hearing it is shown that the patient continues
 2024  to meet the criteria for involuntary inpatient placement, the
 2025  administrative law judge shall sign the order for continued
 2026  involuntary inpatient placement for a period of up to 90 days
 2027  not to exceed 6 months. However, any order for involuntary
 2028  mental health services in a treatment facility may be for up to
 2029  6 months. The same procedure shall be repeated prior to the
 2030  expiration of each additional period the patient is retained.
 2031         (e) If continued involuntary inpatient placement is
 2032  necessary for a patient admitted while serving a criminal
 2033  sentence, but his or her whose sentence is about to expire, or
 2034  for a minor patient involuntarily placed, while a minor but who
 2035  is about to reach the age of 18, the administrator shall
 2036  petition the administrative law judge for an order authorizing
 2037  continued involuntary inpatient placement.
 2038         (f) If the patient has been previously found incompetent to
 2039  consent to treatment, the administrative law judge shall
 2040  consider testimony and evidence regarding the patient’s
 2041  competence. If the administrative law judge finds evidence that
 2042  the patient is now competent to consent to treatment, the
 2043  administrative law judge may issue a recommended order to the
 2044  court that found the patient incompetent to consent to treatment
 2045  that the patient’s competence be restored and that any guardian
 2046  advocate previously appointed be discharged.
 2047         (g) If the patient has been ordered to undergo involuntary
 2048  inpatient placement and has previously been found incompetent to
 2049  consent to treatment, the court shall consider testimony and
 2050  evidence regarding the patient’s incompetence. If the patient’s
 2051  competency to consent to treatment is restored, the discharge of
 2052  the guardian advocate shall be governed by the provisions of s.
 2053  394.4598.
 2054  
 2055  The procedure required in this subsection must be followed
 2056  before the expiration of each additional period the patient is
 2057  involuntarily receiving services.
 2058         (8) RETURN TO FACILITY OF PATIENTS.—If a patient
 2059  involuntarily held When a patient at a treatment facility under
 2060  this part leaves the facility without the administrator’s
 2061  authorization, the administrator may authorize a search for the
 2062  patient and his or her the return of the patient to the
 2063  facility. The administrator may request the assistance of a law
 2064  enforcement agency in this regard the search for and return of
 2065  the patient.
 2066         Section 14. Section 394.46715, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2067  to read:
 2068         394.46715 Rulemaking authority.—The department may adopt
 2069  rules to administer this part Department of Children and
 2070  Families shall have rulemaking authority to implement the
 2071  provisions of ss. 394.455, 394.4598, 394.4615, 394.463,
 2072  394.4655, and 394.467 as amended or created by this act. These
 2073  rules shall be for the purpose of protecting the health, safety,
 2074  and well-being of persons examined, treated, or placed under
 2075  this act.
 2076         Section 15. Section 394.656, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2077  to read:
 2078         394.656 Criminal Justice, Mental Health, and Substance
 2079  Abuse Reinvestment Grant Program.—
 2080         (1) There is created within the Department of Children and
 2081  Families the Criminal Justice, Mental Health, and Substance
 2082  Abuse Reinvestment Grant Program. The purpose of the program is
 2083  to provide funding to counties with which they may use to can
 2084  plan, implement, or expand initiatives that increase public
 2085  safety, avert increased spending on criminal justice, and
 2086  improve the accessibility and effectiveness of treatment
 2087  services for adults and juveniles who have a mental illness,
 2088  substance abuse disorder, or co-occurring mental health and
 2089  substance abuse disorders and who are in, or at risk of
 2090  entering, the criminal or juvenile justice systems.
 2091         (2) The department shall establish a Criminal Justice,
 2092  Mental Health, and Substance Abuse Statewide Grant Review
 2093  Committee. The committee shall include:
 2094         (a) One representative of the Department of Children and
 2095  Families;
 2096         (b) One representative of the Department of Corrections;
 2097         (c) One representative of the Department of Juvenile
 2098  Justice;
 2099         (d) One representative of the Department of Elderly
 2100  Affairs; and
 2101         (e) One representative of the Office of the State Courts
 2102  Administrator;.
 2103         (f) One representative of the Department of Veterans’
 2104  Affairs;
 2105         (g) One representative of the Florida Sheriffs Association;
 2106         (h) One representative of the Florida Police Chiefs
 2107  Association;
 2108         (i) One representative of the Florida Association of
 2109  Counties;
 2110         (j) One representative of the Florida Alcohol and Drug
 2111  Abuse Association;
 2112         (k) One representative of the Florida Association of
 2113  Managing Entities;
 2114         (l) One representative of the Florida Council for Community
 2115  Mental Health;
 2116         (m) One representative of the Florida Prosecuting Attorneys
 2117  Association;
 2118         (n) One representative of the Florida Public Defender
 2119  Association; and
 2120         (o) One administrator of an assisted living facility that
 2121  holds a limited mental health license.
 2122         (3) The committee shall serve as the advisory body to
 2123  review policy and funding issues that help reduce the impact of
 2124  persons with mental illness and substance abuse disorders on
 2125  communities, criminal justice agencies, and the court system.
 2126  The committee shall advise the department in selecting
 2127  priorities for grants and investing awarded grant moneys.
 2128         (4) The committee must have experience in substance use and
 2129  mental health disorders, community corrections, and law
 2130  enforcement. To the extent possible, the members of the
 2131  committee shall have expertise in grant review writing, grant
 2132  reviewing, and grant application scoring.
 2133         (5)(a)(3)(a) A county, or a not-for-profit community
 2134  provider or managing entity designated by the county planning
 2135  council or committee, as described in s. 394.657, may apply for
 2136  a 1-year planning grant or a 3-year implementation or expansion
 2137  grant. The purpose of the grants is to demonstrate that
 2138  investment in treatment efforts related to mental illness,
 2139  substance abuse disorders, or co-occurring mental health and
 2140  substance abuse disorders results in a reduced demand on the
 2141  resources of the judicial, corrections, juvenile detention, and
 2142  health and social services systems.
 2143         (b) To be eligible to receive a 1-year planning grant or a
 2144  3-year implementation or expansion grant:,
 2145         1. A county applicant must have a county planning council
 2146  or committee that is in compliance with the membership
 2147  requirements set forth in this section.
 2148         2. A not-for-profit community provider or managing entity
 2149  must be designated by the county planning council or committee
 2150  and have written authorization to submit an application. A not
 2151  for-profit community provider or managing entity must have
 2152  written authorization for each submitted application.
 2153         (c) The department may award a 3-year implementation or
 2154  expansion grant to an applicant who has not received a 1-year
 2155  planning grant.
 2156         (d) The department may require an applicant to conduct
 2157  sequential intercept mapping for a project. For purposes of this
 2158  paragraph, the term “sequential intercept mapping” means a
 2159  process for reviewing a local community’s mental health,
 2160  substance abuse, criminal justice, and related systems and
 2161  identifying points of interceptions where interventions may be
 2162  made to prevent an individual with a substance abuse disorder or
 2163  mental illness from deeper involvement in the criminal justice
 2164  system.
 2165         (6)(4) The grant review and selection committee shall
 2166  select the grant recipients and notify the department of
 2167  Children and Families in writing of the recipients’ names of the
 2168  applicants who have been selected by the committee to receive a
 2169  grant. Contingent upon the availability of funds and upon
 2170  notification by the grant review and selection committee of
 2171  those applicants approved to receive planning, implementation,
 2172  or expansion grants, the department of Children and Families may
 2173  transfer funds appropriated for the grant program to a selected
 2174  grant recipient to any county awarded a grant.
 2175         Section 16. Section 394.761, Florida Statutes, is created
 2176  to read:
 2177         394.761 Revenue maximization.—The department, in
 2178  coordination with the Agency for Health Care Administration and
 2179  the managing entities, shall compile detailed documentation of
 2180  the cost and reimbursements for Medicaid covered services
 2181  provided to Medicaid eligible individuals by providers of
 2182  behavioral health services that are also funded for programs
 2183  authorized by this chapter and chapter 397. The department’s
 2184  documentation, along with a report of general revenue funds
 2185  supporting behavioral health services that are not counted as
 2186  maintenance of effort or match for any other federal program,
 2187  will be submitted to the Agency for Health Care Administration
 2188  by December 31, 2016. Copies of the report must also be provided
 2189  to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of
 2190  the House of Representatives. If this report presents clear
 2191  evidence that Medicaid reimbursements are less than the costs of
 2192  providing the services, the Agency for Health Care
 2193  Administration and the Department of Children and Families shall
 2194  prepare and submit any budget amendments necessary to use
 2195  unmatched general revenue funds in the 2016-2017 fiscal year to
 2196  draw additional federal funding to increase Medicaid funding to
 2197  behavioral health service providers receiving the unmatched
 2198  general revenue. Payments shall be made to providers in such
 2199  manner as is allowed by federal law and regulations.
 2200         Section 17. Subsection (11) is added to section 394.875,
 2201  Florida Statutes, to read:
 2202         394.875 Crisis stabilization units, residential treatment
 2203  facilities, and residential treatment centers for children and
 2204  adolescents; authorized services; license required.—
 2205         (11) By January 1, 2017, the department and the agency
 2206  shall modify licensure rules and procedures to create an option
 2207  for a single, consolidated license for a provider who offers
 2208  multiple types of mental health and substance abuse services
 2209  regulated under this chapter and chapter 397. Providers eligible
 2210  for a consolidated license shall operate these services through
 2211  a single corporate entity and a unified management structure.
 2212  Any provider serving adults and children must meet department
 2213  standards for separate facilities and other requirements
 2214  necessary to ensure children’s safety and promote therapeutic
 2215  efficacy.
 2216         Section 18. Section 394.9082, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2217  to read:
 2218         (Substantial rewording of section. See
 2219         s. 394.9082, F.S., for present text.)
 2220         394.9082 Behavioral health managing entities purpose;
 2221  definitions; duties; contracting; accountability.—
 2222         (1) PURPOSE.—The purpose of the behavioral health managing
 2223  entities is to plan, coordinate and contract for the delivery of
 2224  community mental health and substance abuse services, to improve
 2225  access to care, to promote service continuity, to purchase
 2226  services, and to support efficient and effective delivery of
 2227  services.
 2228         (2) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
 2229         (a) “Behavioral health services” means mental health
 2230  services and substance abuse prevention and treatment services
 2231  as described in this chapter and chapter 397.
 2232         (b) “Case management” means those direct services provided
 2233  to a client in order to assess needs, plan or arrange services,
 2234  coordinate service providers, monitor service delivery, and
 2235  evaluate outcomes.
 2236         (c) “Coordinated system of care” means the full array of
 2237  behavioral health and related services in a region or a
 2238  community offered by all service providers, whether
 2239  participating under contract with the managing entity or through
 2240  another method of community partnership or mutual agreement.
 2241         (d) “Geographic area” means one or more contiguous
 2242  counties, circuits, or regions as described in s. 409.966.
 2243         (e) “High-need or high-utilization individual” means a
 2244  recipient who meets one or more of the following criteria and
 2245  may be eligible for intensive case management services:
 2246         1. Has resided in a state mental health facility for at
 2247  least 6 months in the last 36 months;
 2248         2. Has had two or more admissions to a state mental health
 2249  facility in the last 36 months; or
 2250         3. Has had three or more admissions to a crisis
 2251  stabilization unit, an addictions receiving facility, a short
 2252  term residential detoxification facility, or an inpatient
 2253  psychiatric unit within the last 12 months.
 2254         (f) “Managed behavioral health organization” means a
 2255  Medicaid managed care organization currently under contract with
 2256  the statewide Medicaid managed medical assistance program in
 2257  this state pursuant to part IV of chapter 409, including a
 2258  managed care organization operating as a behavioral health
 2259  specialty plan.
 2260         (g) “Managing entity” means a corporation designated or
 2261  filed as a nonprofit organization under s. 501(c)(3) of the
 2262  Internal Revenue Code which is selected by, and is under
 2263  contract with, the department to manage the daily operational
 2264  delivery of behavioral health services through a coordinated
 2265  system of care.
 2266         (h) “Provider network” means the group of direct service
 2267  providers, facilities, and organizations under contract with a
 2268  managing entity to provide a comprehensive array of emergency,
 2269  acute care, residential, outpatient, recovery support, and
 2270  consumer support services, including prevention services.
 2271         (i) “Receiving facility” means any public or private
 2272  facility designated by the department to receive and hold or to
 2273  refer, as appropriate, involuntary patients under emergency
 2274  conditions for mental health or substance abuse evaluation and
 2275  to provide treatment or transportation to the appropriate
 2276  service provider. County jails may not be used or designated as
 2277  a receiving facility, a triage center, or an access center.
 2278         (3) DEPARTMENT DUTIES.—The department shall:
 2279         (a)Designate, with input from the managing entity,
 2280  facilities that meet the definitions in s. 394.455(1), (2),
 2281  (13), and (41) and the receiving system developed by one or more
 2282  counties pursuant to s. 394.4573(2)(b).
 2283         (b) Contract with organizations to serve as the managing
 2284  entity in accordance with the requirements of this section.
 2285         (c) Specify the geographic area served.
 2286         (d) Specify data reporting and use of shared data systems.
 2287         (e) Develop strategies to divert persons with mental
 2288  illness or substance abuse disorders from the criminal and
 2289  juvenile justice systems.
 2290         (f) Support the development and implementation of a
 2291  coordinated system of care by requiring each provider that
 2292  receives state funds for behavioral health services through a
 2293  direct contract with the department to work with the managing
 2294  entity in the provider’s service area to coordinate the
 2295  provision of behavioral health services, as part of the contract
 2296  with the department.
 2297         (g) Require that any public receiving facility initiating a
 2298  patient transfer to a licensed hospital for acute care mental
 2299  health services not accessible through the public receiving
 2300  facility notify the hospital of such transfer and provide all
 2301  records relating to the emergency psychiatric or medical
 2302  condition.
 2303         (h) Set performance measures and performance standards for
 2304  managing entities based on nationally recognized standards, such
 2305  as those developed by the National Quality Forum, the National
 2306  Committee for Quality Assurance, or similar credible sources.
 2307  Performance standards must include all of the following:
 2308         1. Annual improvement in the extent to which the need for
 2309  behavioral health services is met by the coordinated system of
 2310  care in the geographic area served.
 2311         2. Annual improvement in the percentage of patients who
 2312  receive services through the coordinated system of care and who
 2313  achieve improved functional status as indicated by health
 2314  condition, employment status, and housing stability.
 2315         3. Annual reduction in the rates of readmissions to acute
 2316  care facilities, jails, prisons, and forensic facilities for
 2317  persons receiving care coordination.
 2318         4. Annual improvement in consumer and family satisfaction.
 2319         (i) Provide technical assistance to the managing entities.
 2320         (j) Promote the integration of behavioral health care and
 2321  primary care.
 2322         (k) Facilitate the coordination between the managing entity
 2323  and other payors of behavioral health care.
 2324         (l) Develop and provide a unique identifier for clients
 2325  receiving services under the managing entity to coordinate care.
 2326         (m) Coordinate procedures for the referral and admission of
 2327  patients to, and the discharge of patients from, state treatment
 2328  facilities and their return to the community.
 2329         (n) Ensure that managing entities comply with state and
 2330  federal laws, rules, and regulations.
 2331         (o) Develop rules for the operations of, and the
 2332  requirements that must be met by, the managing entity, if
 2333  necessary.
 2334         (4)CONTRACTS FOR SERVICES.—
 2335         (a) In contracting for services with managing entities
 2336  under this section, the department must first attempt to
 2337  contract with not-for-profit, community-based organizations that
 2338  have competence in managing networks of providers serving
 2339  persons with mental health and substance abuse disorders.
 2340         (b) The department shall issue an invitation to negotiate
 2341  under s. 287.057 to select an organization to serve as a
 2342  managing entity. If the department receives fewer than two
 2343  responsive bids to the solicitation, the department shall
 2344  reissue the invitation to negotiate, in which case managed
 2345  behavioral health organizations shall be eligible to bid and be
 2346  awarded a contract.
 2347         (c) If the managing entity is a not-for-profit, community
 2348  based organization, it must have a governing board that is
 2349  representative. At a minimum, the governing board must include
 2350  consumers and their family members; representatives of local
 2351  government, area law enforcement agencies, health care
 2352  facilities, and community-based care lead agencies; business
 2353  leaders; and providers of substance abuse and mental health
 2354  services as defined in this chapter and chapter 397.
 2355         (d) If the managing entity is a managed behavioral health
 2356  organization, it must establish an advisory board that meets the
 2357  same requirements specified in paragraph (c) for a governing
 2358  board.
 2359         (e) If the department issues an invitation to negotiate
 2360  pursuant to paragraph (b), the department shall consider the
 2361  advice and recommendations of the provider network and community
 2362  stakeholders in determining the criteria and relative weight of
 2363  the criteria that will be used in the solicitation of the new
 2364  contractor. The department shall consider all of the following
 2365  factors:
 2366         1. Experience serving persons with mental health and
 2367  substance abuse disorders.
 2368         2. Establishment of community partnerships with behavioral
 2369  health providers.
 2370         3. Demonstrated organizational capabilities for network
 2371  management functions.
 2372         4. Capability to coordinate behavioral health with primary
 2373  care services.
 2374         (f) The department’s contracts with managing entities must
 2375  support efficient and effective administration of the behavioral
 2376  health system and ensure accountability for performance.
 2377         (g) A contractor serving as a managing entity shall operate
 2378  under the same data reporting, administrative, and
 2379  administrative rate requirements, regardless of whether it is a
 2380  for-profit or a not-for-profit entity.
 2381         (h) The contract must designate the geographic area that
 2382  will be served by the managing entity, which area must be of
 2383  sufficient size in population, funding, and services to allow
 2384  for flexibility and efficiency.
 2385         (i) The contract must require that, when there is a change
 2386  in the managing entity in a geographic area, a transition plan
 2387  be developed and implemented by the department which ensures
 2388  continuity of care for patients receiving behavioral health
 2389  services.
 2390         (j) By October 31, 2019, if all other contract requirements
 2391  and performance standards are met and the department determines
 2392  that the managing entity has made progress toward the
 2393  implementation of a coordinated system of care in its geographic
 2394  region, the department may continue its contract with the
 2395  managing entity for up to, but not exceeding, 5 years, including
 2396  any and all renewals and extensions. Thereafter, the department
 2397  must issue a competitive solicitation pursuant to paragraph (b).
 2398         (5) DUTIES OF MANAGING ENTITIES.—A managing entity shall:
 2399         (a)Maintain a board of directors that is representative of
 2400  the community and that, at a minimum, includes consumers and
 2401  family members, community stakeholders and organizations, and
 2402  providers of mental health and substance abuse services,
 2403  including public and private receiving facilities.
 2404         (b) Conduct a community behavioral health care needs
 2405  assessment in the geographic area served by the managing entity.
 2406  The needs assessment must be updated annually and provided to
 2407  the department. The assessment must include, at a minimum, the
 2408  information the department needs for its annual report to the
 2409  Governor and Legislature pursuant to s. 394.4573.
 2410         (c) Develop local resources by pursuing third-party
 2411  payments for services, applying for grants, assisting providers
 2412  in securing local matching funds and in-kind services, and any
 2413  other methods needed to ensure services are available and
 2414  accessible.
 2415         (d) Provide assistance to counties to develop a designated
 2416  receiving system pursuant to s. 394.4573(2)(b) and a
 2417  transportation plan pursuant to s. 394.462.
 2418         (e) Promote the development and effective implementation of
 2419  a coordinated system of care pursuant to s. 394.4573.
 2420         (f) Develop a comprehensive network of qualified providers
 2421  to deliver behavioral health services. The managing entity is
 2422  not required to competitively procure network providers, but
 2423  must have a process in place to publicize opportunities to join
 2424  the network and to evaluate providers in the network to
 2425  determine if they can remain in the network. These processes
 2426  must be published on the website of the managing entity. The
 2427  managing entity must ensure continuity of care for clients if a
 2428  provider ceases to provide a service or leaves the network.
 2429         (g) Enter into cooperative agreements with local homeless
 2430  councils and organizations to allow the sharing of available
 2431  resource information, shared client information, client referral
 2432  services, and any other data or information that may be useful
 2433  in addressing the homelessness of persons suffering from a
 2434  behavioral health crisis. All information sharing must comply
 2435  with federal and state privacy and confidentiality laws,
 2436  statutes and regulations.
 2437         (h)Monitor network providers performance and their
 2438  compliance with contract requirements and federal and state
 2439  laws, rules, and regulations.
 2440         (i)Provide or contract for case management services.
 2441         (j) Manage and allocate funds for services to meet the
 2442  requirements of law or rule.
 2443         (k) Promote integration of behavioral health with primary
 2444  care.
 2445         (l) Implement shared data systems necessary for the
 2446  delivery of coordinated care and integrated services, the
 2447  assessment of managing entity performance and provider
 2448  performance, and the reporting of outcomes and costs of
 2449  services.
 2450         (m) Operate in a transparent manner, providing public
 2451  access to information, notice of meetings, and opportunities for
 2452  public participation in managing entity decision-making.
 2453         (n) Establish and maintain effective relationships with
 2454  community stakeholders, including local governments and other
 2455  organizations that serve individuals with behavioral health
 2456  needs.
 2457         (o) Collaborate with local criminal and juvenile justice
 2458  systems to divert persons with mental illness or substance abuse
 2459  disorders, or both, from the criminal and juvenile justice
 2460  systems.
 2461         (p) Collaborate with the local court system to develop
 2462  procedures to maximize the use of involuntary outpatient
 2463  services; reduce involuntary inpatient treatment; and increase
 2464  diversion from the criminal and juvenile justice systems.
 2465         (6) FUNDING FOR MANAGING ENTITIES.—
 2466         (a) A contract established between the department and a
 2467  managing entity under this section must be funded by general
 2468  revenue, other applicable state funds, or applicable federal
 2469  funding sources. A managing entity may carry forward documented
 2470  unexpended state funds from one fiscal year to the next, but the
 2471  cumulative amount carried forward may not exceed 8 percent of
 2472  the total value of the contract. Any unexpended state funds in
 2473  excess of that percentage must be returned to the department.
 2474  The funds carried forward may not be used in a way that would
 2475  increase future recurring obligations or for any program or
 2476  service that was not authorized as of July 1, 2016, under the
 2477  existing contract with the department. Expenditures of funds
 2478  carried forward must be separately reported to the department.
 2479  Any unexpended funds that remain at the end of the contract
 2480  period must be returned to the department. Funds carried forward
 2481  may be retained through contract renewals and new contract
 2482  procurements as long as the same managing entity is retained by
 2483  the department.
 2484         (b) The method of payment for a fixed-price contract with a
 2485  managing entity must provide for a 2-month advance payment at
 2486  the beginning of each fiscal year and equal monthly payments
 2487  thereafter.
 2488         (7) CRISIS STABILIZATION SERVICES UTILIZATION DATABASE.—The
 2489  department shall develop, implement, and maintain standards
 2490  under which a managing entity shall collect utilization data
 2491  from all public receiving facilities situated within its
 2492  geographic service area. As used in this subsection, the term
 2493  “public receiving facility” means an entity that meets the
 2494  licensure requirements of, and is designated by, the department
 2495  to operate as a public receiving facility under s. 394.875 and
 2496  that is operating as a licensed crisis stabilization unit.
 2497         (a) The department shall develop standards and protocols
 2498  for managing entities and public receiving facilities to be used
 2499  for data collection, storage, transmittal, and analysis. The
 2500  standards and protocols must allow for compatibility of data and
 2501  data transmittal between public receiving facilities, managing
 2502  entities, and the department for the implementation and
 2503  requirements of this subsection.
 2504         (b) A managing entity shall require a public receiving
 2505  facility within its provider network to submit data, in real
 2506  time or at least daily, to the managing entity for:
 2507         1. All admissions and discharges of clients receiving
 2508  public receiving facility services who qualify as indigent, as
 2509  defined in s. 394.4787; and
 2510         2. The current active census of total licensed beds, the
 2511  number of beds purchased by the department, the number of
 2512  clients qualifying as indigent who occupy those beds, and the
 2513  total number of unoccupied licensed beds regardless of funding.
 2514         (c) A managing entity shall require a public receiving
 2515  facility within its provider network to submit data, on a
 2516  monthly basis, to the managing entity which aggregates the daily
 2517  data submitted under paragraph (b). The managing entity shall
 2518  reconcile the data in the monthly submission to the data
 2519  received by the managing entity under paragraph (b) to check for
 2520  consistency. If the monthly aggregate data submitted by a public
 2521  receiving facility under this paragraph are inconsistent with
 2522  the daily data submitted under paragraph (b), the managing
 2523  entity shall consult with the public receiving facility to make
 2524  corrections necessary to ensure accurate data.
 2525         (d) A managing entity shall require a public receiving
 2526  facility within its provider network to submit data, on an
 2527  annual basis, to the managing entity which aggregates the data
 2528  submitted and reconciled under paragraph (c). The managing
 2529  entity shall reconcile the data in the annual submission to the
 2530  data received and reconciled by the managing entity under
 2531  paragraph (c) to check for consistency. If the annual aggregate
 2532  data submitted by a public receiving facility under this
 2533  paragraph are inconsistent with the data received and reconciled
 2534  under paragraph (c), the managing entity shall consult with the
 2535  public receiving facility to make corrections necessary to
 2536  ensure accurate data.
 2537         (e) After ensuring the accuracy of data pursuant to
 2538  paragraphs (c) and (d), the managing entity shall submit the
 2539  data to the department on a monthly and an annual basis. The
 2540  department shall create a statewide database for the data
 2541  described under paragraph (b) and submitted under this paragraph
 2542  for the purpose of analyzing the payments for and the use of
 2543  crisis stabilization services funded by the Baker Act on a
 2544  statewide basis and on an individual public receiving facility
 2545  basis.
 2546         Section 19. Present subsections (20) through (45) of
 2547  section 397.311, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as
 2548  subsections (22) through (47), respectively, new subsections
 2549  (20) and (21) are added to that section, and present subsections
 2550  (30) and (38) of that section are amended, to read:
 2551         397.311 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, except part
 2552  VIII, the term:
 2553         (20) “Informed consent” means consent voluntarily given in
 2554  writing by a competent person after sufficient explanation and
 2555  disclosure of the subject matter involved to enable the person
 2556  to make a knowing and willful decision without any element of
 2557  force, fraud, deceit, duress, or other form of constraint or
 2558  coercion.
 2559         (21) “Involuntary services” means an array of behavioral
 2560  health services that may be ordered by the court for persons
 2561  with substance abuse or co-occurring mental health disorders.
 2562         (32)(30) “Qualified professional” means a physician or a
 2563  physician assistant licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459; a
 2564  professional licensed under chapter 490 or chapter 491; an
 2565  advanced registered nurse practitioner having a specialty in
 2566  psychiatry licensed under part I of chapter 464; or a person who
 2567  is certified through a department-recognized certification
 2568  process for substance abuse treatment services and who holds, at
 2569  a minimum, a bachelor’s degree. A person who is certified in
 2570  substance abuse treatment services by a state-recognized
 2571  certification process in another state at the time of employment
 2572  with a licensed substance abuse provider in this state may
 2573  perform the functions of a qualified professional as defined in
 2574  this chapter but must meet certification requirements contained
 2575  in this subsection no later than 1 year after his or her date of
 2576  employment.
 2577         (40)(38) “Service component” or “component” means a
 2578  discrete operational entity within a service provider which is
 2579  subject to licensing as defined by rule. Service components
 2580  include prevention, intervention, and clinical treatment
 2581  described in subsection (24) (22).
 2582         Section 20. Section 397.675, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2583  to read:
 2584         397.675 Criteria for involuntary admissions, including
 2585  protective custody, emergency admission, and other involuntary
 2586  assessment, involuntary treatment, and alternative involuntary
 2587  assessment for minors, for purposes of assessment and
 2588  stabilization, and for involuntary treatment.—A person meets the
 2589  criteria for involuntary admission if there is good faith reason
 2590  to believe that the person has a substance abuse or co-occurring
 2591  mental health disorder is substance abuse impaired and, because
 2592  of such disorder impairment:
 2593         (1) Has lost the power of self-control with respect to
 2594  substance abuse use; and either
 2595         (2)(a) Has inflicted, or threatened or attempted to
 2596  inflict, or unless admitted is likely to inflict, physical harm
 2597  on himself or herself or another; or
 2598         (b) Is in need of substance abuse services and, by reason
 2599  of substance abuse impairment, his or her judgment has been so
 2600  impaired that he or she the person is incapable of appreciating
 2601  his or her need for such services and of making a rational
 2602  decision in that regard, although thereto; however, mere refusal
 2603  to receive such services does not constitute evidence of lack of
 2604  judgment with respect to his or her need for such services.
 2605         (b) Without care or treatment, is likely to suffer from
 2606  neglect or to refuse to care for himself or herself, that such
 2607  neglect or refusal poses a real and present threat of
 2608  substantial harm to his or her well-being and that it is not
 2609  apparent that such harm may be avoided through the help of
 2610  willing family members or friends or the provision of other
 2611  services, or there is substantial likelihood that the person has
 2612  inflicted, or threatened to or attempted to inflict, or, unless
 2613  admitted, is likely to inflict, physical harm on himself,
 2614  herself, or another.
 2615         Section 21. Section 397.679, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2616  to read:
 2617         397.679 Emergency admission; circumstances justifying.—A
 2618  person who meets the criteria for involuntary admission in s.
 2619  397.675 may be admitted to a hospital or to a licensed
 2620  detoxification facility or addictions receiving facility for
 2621  emergency assessment and stabilization, or to a less intensive
 2622  component of a licensed service provider for assessment only,
 2623  upon receipt by the facility of a the physician’s certificate by
 2624  a physician, an advanced registered nurse practitioner, a
 2625  clinical psychologist, a licensed clinical social worker, a
 2626  licensed marriage and family therapist, a licensed mental health
 2627  counselor, a physician assistant working under the scope of
 2628  practice of the supervising physician, or a master’s-level
 2629  certified addictions professional, if the certificate is
 2630  specific to substance abuse disorders, and the completion of an
 2631  application for emergency admission.
 2632         Section 22. Section 397.6791, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2633  to read:
 2634         397.6791 Emergency admission; persons who may initiate.—The
 2635  following professionals persons may request a certificate for an
 2636  emergency assessment or admission:
 2637         (1) In the case of an adult, physicians, advanced
 2638  registered nurse practitioners, clinical psychologists, licensed
 2639  clinical social workers, licensed marriage and family
 2640  therapists, licensed mental health counselors, physician
 2641  assistants working under the scope of practice of the
 2642  supervising physician, and a master’s-level-certified addictions
 2643  professional, if the certificate is specific to substance abuse
 2644  disorders the certifying physician, the person’s spouse or legal
 2645  guardian, any relative of the person, or any other responsible
 2646  adult who has personal knowledge of the person’s substance abuse
 2647  impairment.
 2648         (2) In the case of a minor, the minor’s parent, legal
 2649  guardian, or legal custodian.
 2650         Section 23. Section 397.6793, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2651  to read:
 2652         397.6793 Professional’s Physician’s certificate for
 2653  emergency admission.—
 2654         (1) The professional’s physician’s certificate must include
 2655  the name of the person to be admitted, the relationship between
 2656  the person and the professional executing the certificate
 2657  physician, the relationship between the applicant and the
 2658  professional physician, any relationship between the
 2659  professional physician and the licensed service provider, and a
 2660  statement that the person has been examined and assessed within
 2661  the preceding 5 days of the application date, and must include
 2662  factual allegations with respect to the need for emergency
 2663  admission, including:
 2664         (a) The reason for the physician’s belief that the person
 2665  is substance abuse impaired; and
 2666         (b) The reason for the physician’s belief that because of
 2667  such impairment the person has lost the power of self-control
 2668  with respect to substance abuse; and either
 2669         (c)1. The reason for the belief physician believes that,
 2670  without care or treatment, the person is likely to suffer from
 2671  neglect or refuse to care for himself or herself; that such
 2672  neglect or refusal poses a real and present threat of
 2673  substantial harm to his or her well-being; and that it is not
 2674  apparent that such harm may be avoided through the help of
 2675  willing family members or friends or the provision of other
 2676  services or there is substantial likelihood that the person has
 2677  inflicted or is likely to inflict physical harm on himself or
 2678  herself or others unless admitted; or
 2679         2. The reason for the belief physician believes that the
 2680  person’s refusal to voluntarily receive care is based on
 2681  judgment so impaired by reason of substance abuse that the
 2682  person is incapable of appreciating his or her need for care and
 2683  of making a rational decision regarding his or her need for
 2684  care.
 2685         (2) The professional’s physician’s certificate must
 2686  recommend the least restrictive type of service that is
 2687  appropriate for the person. The certificate must be signed by
 2688  the professional physician. If other less restrictive means are
 2689  not available, such as voluntary appearance for outpatient
 2690  evaluation, a law enforcement officer shall take the person
 2691  named in the certificate into custody and deliver him or her to
 2692  the appropriate facility for involuntary examination.
 2693         (3) A signed copy of the professional’s physician’s
 2694  certificate shall accompany the person, and shall be made a part
 2695  of the person’s clinical record, together with a signed copy of
 2696  the application. The application and the professional’s
 2697  physician’s certificate authorize the involuntary admission of
 2698  the person pursuant to, and subject to the provisions of, ss.
 2699  397.679-397.6797.
 2700         (4) The professional’s certificate is valid for 7 days
 2701  after issuance.
 2702         (5)The professional’s physician’s certificate must
 2703  indicate whether the person requires transportation assistance
 2704  for delivery for emergency admission and specify, pursuant to s.
 2705  397.6795, the type of transportation assistance necessary.
 2706         Section 24. Section 397.6795, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2707  to read:
 2708         397.6795 Transportation-assisted delivery of persons for
 2709  emergency assessment.—An applicant for a person’s emergency
 2710  admission, or the person’s spouse or guardian, or a law
 2711  enforcement officer, or a health officer may deliver a person
 2712  named in the professional’s physician’s certificate for
 2713  emergency admission to a hospital or a licensed detoxification
 2714  facility or addictions receiving facility for emergency
 2715  assessment and stabilization.
 2716         Section 25. Subsection (1) of section 397.681, Florida
 2717  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2718         397.681 Involuntary petitions; general provisions; court
 2719  jurisdiction and right to counsel.—
 2720         (1) JURISDICTION.—The courts have jurisdiction of
 2721  involuntary assessment and stabilization petitions and
 2722  involuntary treatment petitions for substance abuse impaired
 2723  persons, and such petitions must be filed with the clerk of the
 2724  court in the county where the person is located. The clerk of
 2725  the court may not charge a fee for the filing of a petition
 2726  under this section. The chief judge may appoint a general or
 2727  special magistrate to preside over all or part of the
 2728  proceedings. The alleged impaired person is named as the
 2729  respondent.
 2730         Section 26. Subsection (1) of section 397.6811, Florida
 2731  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2732         397.6811 Involuntary assessment and stabilization.—A person
 2733  determined by the court to appear to meet the criteria for
 2734  involuntary admission under s. 397.675 may be admitted for a
 2735  period of 5 days to a hospital or to a licensed detoxification
 2736  facility or addictions receiving facility, for involuntary
 2737  assessment and stabilization or to a less restrictive component
 2738  of a licensed service provider for assessment only upon entry of
 2739  a court order or upon receipt by the licensed service provider
 2740  of a petition. Involuntary assessment and stabilization may be
 2741  initiated by the submission of a petition to the court.
 2742         (1) If the person upon whose behalf the petition is being
 2743  filed is an adult, a petition for involuntary assessment and
 2744  stabilization may be filed by the respondent’s spouse, or legal
 2745  guardian, any relative, a private practitioner, the director of
 2746  a licensed service provider or the director’s designee, or any
 2747  individual three adults who has direct have personal knowledge
 2748  of the respondent’s substance abuse impairment.
 2749         Section 27. Section 397.6814, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2750  to read:
 2751         397.6814 Involuntary assessment and stabilization; contents
 2752  of petition.—A petition for involuntary assessment and
 2753  stabilization must contain the name of the respondent,; the name
 2754  of the applicant or applicants,; the relationship between the
 2755  respondent and the applicant, and; the name of the respondent’s
 2756  attorney, if known, and a statement of the respondent’s ability
 2757  to afford an attorney; and must state facts to support the need
 2758  for involuntary assessment and stabilization, including:
 2759         (1) The reason for the petitioner’s belief that the
 2760  respondent is substance abuse impaired; and
 2761         (2) The reason for the petitioner’s belief that because of
 2762  such impairment the respondent has lost the power of self
 2763  control with respect to substance abuse; and either
 2764         (3)(a) The reason the petitioner believes that the
 2765  respondent has inflicted or is likely to inflict physical harm
 2766  on himself or herself or others unless admitted; or
 2767         (b) The reason the petitioner believes that the
 2768  respondent’s refusal to voluntarily receive care is based on
 2769  judgment so impaired by reason of substance abuse that the
 2770  respondent is incapable of appreciating his or her need for care
 2771  and of making a rational decision regarding that need for care.
 2772  If the respondent has refused to submit to an assessment, such
 2773  refusal must be alleged in the petition.
 2774  
 2775  A fee may not be charged for the filing of a petition pursuant
 2776  to this section.
 2777         Section 28. Section 397.6819, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2778  to read:
 2779         397.6819 Involuntary assessment and stabilization;
 2780  responsibility of licensed service provider.—
 2781         (1) A licensed service provider may admit an individual for
 2782  involuntary assessment and stabilization for a period not to
 2783  exceed 5 days unless a petition has been filed pursuant to s.
 2784  397.6821 or s. 397.6822. The individual must be assessed within
 2785  72 hours without unnecessary delay by a qualified professional.
 2786  If an assessment is performed by a qualified professional who is
 2787  not a physician, the assessment must be reviewed by a physician
 2788  before the end of the assessment period.
 2789         (2) The managing entity must be notified of the
 2790  recommendation for involuntary services so that it may assist in
 2791  locating and providing the requested services, if such services
 2792  are available. The managing entity shall document its efforts to
 2793  obtain the recommended services.
 2794         Section 29. Section 397.695, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2795  to read:
 2796         397.695 Involuntary services treatment; persons who may
 2797  petition.—
 2798         (1)(a) If the respondent is an adult, a petition for
 2799  involuntary services treatment may be filed by the respondent’s
 2800  spouse or legal guardian, any relative, a service provider, or
 2801  any individual three adults who has direct have personal
 2802  knowledge of the respondent’s substance abuse impairment and his
 2803  or her prior course of assessment and treatment.
 2804         (2) If the respondent is a minor, a petition for
 2805  involuntary treatment may be filed by a parent, legal guardian,
 2806  or service provider.
 2807         Section 30. Section 397.6951, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2808  to read:
 2809         397.6951 Contents of petition for involuntary services
 2810  treatment.—A petition for involuntary services treatment must
 2811  contain the name of the respondent to be admitted; the name of
 2812  the petitioner or petitioners; the relationship between the
 2813  respondent and the petitioner; the name of the respondent’s
 2814  attorney, if known, and a statement of the petitioner’s
 2815  knowledge of the respondent’s ability to afford an attorney; the
 2816  findings and recommendations of the assessment performed by the
 2817  qualified professional; and the factual allegations presented by
 2818  the petitioner establishing the need for involuntary outpatient
 2819  services. The factual allegations must demonstrate treatment,
 2820  including:
 2821         (1) The reason for the petitioner’s belief that the
 2822  respondent is substance abuse impaired; and
 2823         (2) The reason for the petitioner’s belief that because of
 2824  such impairment the respondent has lost the power of self
 2825  control with respect to substance abuse; and either
 2826         (3)(a) The reason the petitioner believes that the
 2827  respondent has inflicted or is likely to inflict physical harm
 2828  on himself or herself or others unless the court orders the
 2829  involuntary services admitted; or
 2830         (b) The reason the petitioner believes that the
 2831  respondent’s refusal to voluntarily receive care is based on
 2832  judgment so impaired by reason of substance abuse that the
 2833  respondent is incapable of appreciating his or her need for care
 2834  and of making a rational decision regarding that need for care.
 2835         Section 31. Section 397.6955, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2836  to read:
 2837         397.6955 Duties of court upon filing of petition for
 2838  involuntary services treatment.—
 2839         (1) Upon the filing of a petition for the involuntary
 2840  services for treatment of a substance abuse impaired person with
 2841  the clerk of the court, the court shall immediately determine
 2842  whether the respondent is represented by an attorney or whether
 2843  the appointment of counsel for the respondent is appropriate. If
 2844  the court appoints counsel for the person, the clerk of the
 2845  court shall immediately notify the regional conflict counsel,
 2846  created pursuant to s. 27.511, of the appointment. The regional
 2847  conflict counsel shall represent the person until the petition
 2848  is dismissed, the court order expires, or the person is
 2849  discharged from involuntary services. An attorney that
 2850  represents the person named in the petition shall have access to
 2851  the person, witnesses, and records relevant to the presentation
 2852  of the person’s case and shall represent the interests of the
 2853  person, regardless of the source of payment to the attorney.
 2854         (2) The court shall schedule a hearing to be held on the
 2855  petition within 5 10 days unless a continuance is granted. The
 2856  court may appoint a magistrate to preside at the hearing.
 2857         (3) A copy of the petition and notice of the hearing must
 2858  be provided to the respondent; the respondent’s parent,
 2859  guardian, or legal custodian, in the case of a minor; the
 2860  respondent’s attorney, if known; the petitioner; the
 2861  respondent’s spouse or guardian, if applicable; and such other
 2862  persons as the court may direct. If the respondent is a minor, a
 2863  copy of the petition and notice of the hearing must be and have
 2864  such petition and order personally delivered to the respondent
 2865  if he or she is a minor. The court shall also issue a summons to
 2866  the person whose admission is sought.
 2867         Section 32. Section 397.6957, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2868  to read:
 2869         397.6957 Hearing on petition for involuntary services
 2870  treatment.—
 2871         (1) At a hearing on a petition for involuntary services
 2872  treatment, the court shall hear and review all relevant
 2873  evidence, including the review of results of the assessment
 2874  completed by the qualified professional in connection with the
 2875  respondent’s protective custody, emergency admission,
 2876  involuntary assessment, or alternative involuntary admission.
 2877  The respondent must be present unless the court finds that his
 2878  or her presence is likely to be injurious to himself or herself
 2879  or others, in which event the court must appoint a guardian
 2880  advocate to act in behalf of the respondent throughout the
 2881  proceedings.
 2882         (2) The petitioner has the burden of proving by clear and
 2883  convincing evidence that:
 2884         (a) The respondent is substance abuse impaired and has a
 2885  history of lack of compliance with treatment for substance
 2886  abuse;, and
 2887         (b) Because of such impairment the respondent is unlikely
 2888  to voluntarily participate in the recommended services or is
 2889  unable to determine for himself or herself whether services are
 2890  necessary the respondent has lost the power of self-control with
 2891  respect to substance abuse; and: either
 2892         1. Without services, the respondent is likely to suffer
 2893  from neglect or to refuse to care for himself or herself; that
 2894  such neglect or refusal poses a real and present threat of
 2895  substantial harm to his or her well-being; and that there is a
 2896  substantial likelihood that without services the respondent will
 2897  cause serious bodily harm to himself or herself or others in the
 2898  near future, as evidenced by recent behavior The respondent has
 2899  inflicted or is likely to inflict physical harm on himself or
 2900  herself or others unless admitted; or
 2901         2. The respondent’s refusal to voluntarily receive care is
 2902  based on judgment so impaired by reason of substance abuse that
 2903  the respondent is incapable of appreciating his or her need for
 2904  care and of making a rational decision regarding that need for
 2905  care.
 2906         (3) One of the qualified professionals who executed the
 2907  involuntary services certificate must be a witness. The court
 2908  shall allow testimony from individuals, including family
 2909  members, deemed by the court to be relevant under state law,
 2910  regarding the respondent’s prior history and how that prior
 2911  history relates to the person’s current condition. The testimony
 2912  in the hearing must be under oath, and the proceedings must be
 2913  recorded. The patient may refuse to testify at the hearing.
 2914         (4)(3) At the conclusion of the hearing the court shall
 2915  either dismiss the petition or order the respondent to receive
 2916  undergo involuntary services from his or her substance abuse
 2917  treatment, with the respondent’s chosen licensed service
 2918  provider if to deliver the involuntary substance abuse treatment
 2919  where possible and appropriate.
 2920         Section 33. Section 397.697, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2921  to read:
 2922         397.697 Court determination; effect of court order for
 2923  involuntary services substance abuse treatment.—
 2924         (1) When the court finds that the conditions for
 2925  involuntary services substance abuse treatment have been proved
 2926  by clear and convincing evidence, it may order the respondent to
 2927  receive undergo involuntary services from treatment by a
 2928  licensed service provider for a period not to exceed 90 60 days.
 2929  The court may order a respondent to undergo treatment through a
 2930  privately funded licensed service provider if the respondent has
 2931  the ability to pay for the treatment, or if any person on the
 2932  respondent’s behalf voluntarily demonstrates a willingness and
 2933  an ability to pay for the treatment. If the court finds it
 2934  necessary, it may direct the sheriff to take the respondent into
 2935  custody and deliver him or her to the licensed service provider
 2936  specified in the court order, or to the nearest appropriate
 2937  licensed service provider, for involuntary services treatment.
 2938  When the conditions justifying involuntary services treatment no
 2939  longer exist, the individual must be released as provided in s.
 2940  397.6971. When the conditions justifying involuntary services
 2941  treatment are expected to exist after 90 60 days of services
 2942  treatment, a renewal of the involuntary services treatment order
 2943  may be requested pursuant to s. 397.6975 before prior to the end
 2944  of the 90 60-day period.
 2945         (2) In all cases resulting in an order for involuntary
 2946  services substance abuse treatment, the court shall retain
 2947  jurisdiction over the case and the parties for the entry of such
 2948  further orders as the circumstances may require. The court’s
 2949  requirements for notification of proposed release must be
 2950  included in the original treatment order.
 2951         (3) An involuntary services treatment order authorizes the
 2952  licensed service provider to require the individual to receive
 2953  services that undergo such treatment as will benefit him or her,
 2954  including services treatment at any licensable service component
 2955  of a licensed service provider.
 2956         (4) If the court orders involuntary services, a copy of the
 2957  order must be sent to the managing entity within 1 working day
 2958  after it is received from the court. Documents may be submitted
 2959  electronically though existing data systems, if applicable.
 2960         Section 34. Section 397.6971, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2961  to read:
 2962         397.6971 Early release from involuntary services substance
 2963  abuse treatment.—
 2964         (1) At any time before prior to the end of the 90 60-day
 2965  involuntary services treatment period, or prior to the end of
 2966  any extension granted pursuant to s. 397.6975, an individual
 2967  receiving admitted for involuntary services treatment may be
 2968  determined eligible for discharge to the most appropriate
 2969  referral or disposition for the individual when any of the
 2970  following apply:
 2971         (a) The individual no longer meets the criteria for
 2972  involuntary admission and has given his or her informed consent
 2973  to be transferred to voluntary treatment status.;
 2974         (b) If the individual was admitted on the grounds of
 2975  likelihood of infliction of physical harm upon himself or
 2976  herself or others, such likelihood no longer exists.; or
 2977         (c) If the individual was admitted on the grounds of need
 2978  for assessment and stabilization or treatment, accompanied by
 2979  inability to make a determination respecting such need, either:
 2980         1. Such inability no longer exists; or
 2981         2. It is evident that further treatment will not bring
 2982  about further significant improvements in the individual’s
 2983  condition.;
 2984         (d) The individual is no longer in need of services.; or
 2985         (e) The director of the service provider determines that
 2986  the individual is beyond the safe management capabilities of the
 2987  provider.
 2988         (2) Whenever a qualified professional determines that an
 2989  individual admitted for involuntary services qualifies treatment
 2990  is ready for early release under for any of the reasons listed
 2991  in subsection (1), the service provider shall immediately
 2992  discharge the individual, and must notify all persons specified
 2993  by the court in the original treatment order.
 2994         Section 35. Section 397.6975, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2995  to read:
 2996         397.6975 Extension of involuntary services substance abuse
 2997  treatment period.—
 2998         (1) Whenever a service provider believes that an individual
 2999  who is nearing the scheduled date of his or her release from
 3000  involuntary services treatment continues to meet the criteria
 3001  for involuntary services treatment in s. 397.693, a petition for
 3002  renewal of the involuntary services treatment order may be filed
 3003  with the court at least 10 days before the expiration of the
 3004  court-ordered services treatment period. The court shall
 3005  immediately schedule a hearing to be held not more than 15 days
 3006  after filing of the petition. The court shall provide the copy
 3007  of the petition for renewal and the notice of the hearing to all
 3008  parties to the proceeding. The hearing is conducted pursuant to
 3009  s. 397.6957.
 3010         (2) If the court finds that the petition for renewal of the
 3011  involuntary services treatment order should be granted, it may
 3012  order the respondent to receive undergo involuntary services
 3013  treatment for a period not to exceed an additional 90 days. When
 3014  the conditions justifying involuntary services treatment no
 3015  longer exist, the individual must be released as provided in s.
 3016  397.6971. When the conditions justifying involuntary services
 3017  treatment continue to exist after an additional 90 days of
 3018  service additional treatment, a new petition requesting renewal
 3019  of the involuntary services treatment order may be filed
 3020  pursuant to this section.
 3021         (3) Within 1 court working day after the filing of a
 3022  petition for continued involuntary services, the court shall
 3023  appoint the regional conflict counsel to represent the
 3024  respondent, unless the respondent is otherwise represented by
 3025  counsel. The clerk of the court shall immediately notify the
 3026  regional conflict counsel of such appointment. The regional
 3027  conflict counsel shall represent the respondent until the
 3028  petition is dismissed or the court order expires or the
 3029  respondent is discharged from involuntary services. Any attorney
 3030  representing the respondent shall have access to the respondent,
 3031  witnesses, and records relevant to the presentation of the
 3032  respondent’s case and shall represent the interests of the
 3033  respondent, regardless of the source of payment to the attorney.
 3034         (4) Hearings on petitions for continued involuntary
 3035  services shall be before the circuit court. The court may
 3036  appoint a magistrate to preside at the hearing. The procedures
 3037  for obtaining an order pursuant to this section shall be in
 3038  accordance with s. 397.697.
 3039         (5) Notice of hearing shall be provided to the respondent
 3040  or his or her counsel. The respondent and the respondent’s
 3041  counsel may agree to a period of continued involuntary services
 3042  without a court hearing.
 3043         (6) The same procedure shall be repeated before the
 3044  expiration of each additional period of involuntary services.
 3045         (7) If the respondent has previously been found incompetent
 3046  to consent to treatment, the court shall consider testimony and
 3047  evidence regarding the respondent’s competence.
 3048         Section 36. Section 397.6977, Florida Statutes, is amended
 3049  to read:
 3050         397.6977 Disposition of individual upon completion of
 3051  involuntary services substance abuse treatment.—At the
 3052  conclusion of the 90 60-day period of court-ordered involuntary
 3053  services treatment, the respondent individual is automatically
 3054  discharged unless a motion for renewal of the involuntary
 3055  services treatment order has been filed with the court pursuant
 3056  to s. 397.6975.
 3057         Section 37. Section 397.6978, Florida Statutes, is created
 3058  to read:
 3059         397.6978 Guardian advocate; patient incompetent to consent;
 3060  substance abuse disorder.
 3061         (1) The administrator of a receiving facility or addictions
 3062  receiving facility may petition the court for the appointment of
 3063  a guardian advocate based upon the opinion of a qualified
 3064  professional that the patient is incompetent to consent to
 3065  treatment. If the court finds that a patient is incompetent to
 3066  consent to treatment and has not been adjudicated incapacitated
 3067  and that a guardian with the authority to consent to mental
 3068  health treatment has not been appointed, it may appoint a
 3069  guardian advocate. The patient has the right to have an attorney
 3070  represent him or her at the hearing. If the person is indigent,
 3071  the court shall appoint the office of the regional conflict
 3072  counsel to represent him or her at the hearing. The patient has
 3073  the right to testify, cross-examine witnesses, and present
 3074  witnesses. The proceeding shall be recorded electronically or
 3075  stenographically, and testimony must be provided under oath. One
 3076  of the qualified professionals authorized to give an opinion in
 3077  support of a petition for involuntary placement, as described in
 3078  s. 397.675 or s. 397.6981, must testify. A guardian advocate
 3079  must meet the qualifications of a guardian contained in part IV
 3080  of chapter 744. The person who is appointed as a guardian
 3081  advocate must agree to the appointment.
 3082         (2) The following persons are prohibited from appointment
 3083  as a patient’s guardian advocate:
 3084         (a) A professional providing clinical services to the
 3085  individual under this part.
 3086         (b) The qualified professional who initiated the
 3087  involuntary examination of the individual, if the examination
 3088  was initiated by a qualified professional’s certificate.
 3089         (c) An employee, an administrator, or a board member of the
 3090  facility providing the examination of the individual.
 3091         (d) An employee, an administrator, or a board member of the
 3092  treatment facility providing treatment of the individual.
 3093         (e) A person providing any substantial professional
 3094  services, excluding public guardians or professional guardians,
 3095  to the individual, including clinical services.
 3096         (f) A creditor of the individual.
 3097         (g) A person subject to an injunction for protection
 3098  against domestic violence under s. 741.30, whether the order of
 3099  injunction is temporary or final, and for which the individual
 3100  was the petitioner.
 3101         (h) A person subject to an injunction for protection
 3102  against repeat violence, stalking, sexual violence, or dating
 3103  violence under s. 784.046, whether the order of injunction is
 3104  temporary or final, and for which the individual was the
 3105  petitioner.
 3106         (3) A facility requesting appointment of a guardian
 3107  advocate must, before the appointment, provide the prospective
 3108  guardian advocate with information about the duties and
 3109  responsibilities of guardian advocates, including information
 3110  about the ethics of medical decision-making. Before asking a
 3111  guardian advocate to give consent to treatment for a patient,
 3112  the facility must provide to the guardian advocate sufficient
 3113  information so that the guardian advocate can decide whether to
 3114  give express and informed consent to the treatment. Such
 3115  information must include information that demonstrates that the
 3116  treatment is essential to the care of the patient and does not
 3117  present an unreasonable risk of serious, hazardous, or
 3118  irreversible side effects. If possible, before giving consent to
 3119  treatment, the guardian advocate must personally meet and talk
 3120  with the patient and the patient’s physician. If that is not
 3121  possible, the discussion may be conducted by telephone. The
 3122  decision of the guardian advocate may be reviewed by the court,
 3123  upon petition of the patient’s attorney, the patient’s family,
 3124  or the facility administrator.
 3125         (4) In lieu of the training required for guardians
 3126  appointed pursuant to chapter 744, a guardian advocate shall
 3127  attend at least a 4-hour training course approved by the court
 3128  before exercising his or her authority. At a minimum, the
 3129  training course must include information about patient rights,
 3130  the diagnosis of substance abuse disorders, the ethics of
 3131  medical decision-making, and the duties of guardian advocates.
 3132         (5) The required training course and the information to be
 3133  supplied to prospective guardian advocates before their
 3134  appointment must be developed by the department, approved by the
 3135  chief judge of the circuit court, and taught by a court-approved
 3136  organization, which may include, but need not be limited to, a
 3137  community college, a guardianship organization, a local bar
 3138  association, or The Florida Bar. The training course may be web
 3139  based, provided in video format, or other electronic means but
 3140  must be capable of ensuring the identity and participation of
 3141  the prospective guardian advocate. The court may waive some or
 3142  all of the training requirements for guardian advocates or
 3143  impose additional requirements. The court shall make its
 3144  decision on a case-by-case basis and, in making its decision,
 3145  shall consider the experience and education of the guardian
 3146  advocate, the duties assigned to the guardian advocate, and the
 3147  needs of the patient.
 3148         (6) In selecting a guardian advocate, the court shall give
 3149  preference to the patient’s health care surrogate, if one has
 3150  already been designated by the patient. If the patient has not
 3151  previously designated a health care surrogate, the selection
 3152  shall be made, except for good cause documented in the court
 3153  record, from among the following persons, listed in order of
 3154  priority:
 3155         (a) The patient’s spouse.
 3156         (b) An adult child of the patient.
 3157         (c) A parent of the patient.
 3158         (d) The adult next of kin of the patient.
 3159         (e) An adult friend of the patient.
 3160         (f) An adult trained and willing to serve as the guardian
 3161  advocate for the patient.
 3162         (7) If a guardian with the authority to consent to medical
 3163  treatment has not already been appointed, or if the patient has
 3164  not already designated a health care surrogate, the court may
 3165  authorize the guardian advocate to consent to medical treatment
 3166  as well as substance abuse disorder treatment. Unless otherwise
 3167  limited by the court, a guardian advocate with authority to
 3168  consent to medical treatment has the same authority to make
 3169  health care decisions and is subject to the same restrictions as
 3170  a proxy appointed under part IV of chapter 765. Unless the
 3171  guardian advocate has sought and received express court approval
 3172  in a proceeding separate from the proceeding to determine the
 3173  competence of the patient to consent to medical treatment, the
 3174  guardian advocate may not consent to:
 3175         (a) Abortion.
 3176         (b) Sterilization.
 3177         (c) Electroshock therapy.
 3178         (d) Psychosurgery.
 3179         (e) Experimental treatments that have not been approved by
 3180  a federally approved institutional review board in accordance
 3181  with 45 C.F.R. part 46 or 21 C.F.R. part 56.
 3182  
 3183  The court must base its authorization on evidence that the
 3184  treatment or procedure is essential to the care of the patient
 3185  and that the treatment does not present an unreasonable risk of
 3186  serious, hazardous, or irreversible side effects. In complying
 3187  with this subsection, the court shall follow the procedures set
 3188  forth in subsection (1).
 3189         (8) The guardian advocate shall be discharged when the
 3190  patient is discharged from an order for involuntary services or
 3191  when the patient is transferred from involuntary to voluntary
 3192  status. The court or a hearing officer shall consider the
 3193  competence of the patient as provided in subsection (1) and may
 3194  consider an involuntarily placed patient’s competence to consent
 3195  to services at any hearing. Upon sufficient evidence, the court
 3196  may restore, or the magistrate may recommend that the court
 3197  restore, the patient’s competence. A copy of the order restoring
 3198  competence or the certificate of discharge containing the
 3199  restoration of competence shall be provided to the patient and
 3200  the guardian advocate.
 3201         Section 38. Present paragraphs (d) through (m) of
 3202  subsection (2) of section 409.967, are redesignated as
 3203  paragraphs (e) through (n), respectively, and a new paragraph
 3204  (d) is added to that subsection, to read:
 3205         409.967 Managed care plan accountability.—
 3206         (2) The agency shall establish such contract requirements
 3207  as are necessary for the operation of the statewide managed care
 3208  program. In addition to any other provisions the agency may deem
 3209  necessary, the contract must require:
 3210         (d) Quality care.—Managed care plans shall provide, or
 3211  contract for the provision of, care coordination to facilitate
 3212  the appropriate delivery of behavioral health care services in
 3213  the least restrictive setting with treatment and recovery
 3214  capabilities that address the needs of the patient. Services
 3215  shall be provided in a manner that integrates behavioral health
 3216  services and primary care. Plans shall be required to achieve
 3217  specific behavioral health outcome standards, established by the
 3218  agency in consultation with the department.
 3219         Section 39. Subsection (5) is added to section 409.973,
 3220  Florida Statutes, to read:
 3221         409.973 Benefits.—
 3222         (5) INTEGRATED BEHAVIORAL HEALTH INITIATIVE.—Each plan
 3223  operating in the managed medical assistance program shall work
 3224  with the managing entity in its service area to establish
 3225  specific organizational supports and protocols that enhance the
 3226  integration and coordination of primary care and behavioral
 3227  health services for Medicaid recipients. Progress in this
 3228  initiative shall be measured using the integration framework and
 3229  core measures developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research
 3230  and Quality.
 3231         Section 40. Section 491.0045, Florida Statutes, is amended
 3232  to read:
 3233         491.0045 Intern registration; requirements.—
 3234         (1) Effective January 1, 1998, An individual who has not
 3235  satisfied intends to practice in Florida to satisfy the
 3236  postgraduate or post-master’s level experience requirements, as
 3237  specified in s. 491.005(1)(c), (3)(c), or (4)(c), must register
 3238  as an intern in the profession for which he or she is seeking
 3239  licensure prior to commencing the post-master’s experience
 3240  requirement or an individual who intends to satisfy part of the
 3241  required graduate-level practicum, internship, or field
 3242  experience, outside the academic arena for any profession, must
 3243  register as an intern in the profession for which he or she is
 3244  seeking licensure prior to commencing the practicum, internship,
 3245  or field experience.
 3246         (2) The department shall register as a clinical social
 3247  worker intern, marriage and family therapist intern, or mental
 3248  health counselor intern each applicant who the board certifies
 3249  has:
 3250         (a) Completed the application form and remitted a
 3251  nonrefundable application fee not to exceed $200, as set by
 3252  board rule;
 3253         (b)1. Completed the education requirements as specified in
 3254  s. 491.005(1)(c), (3)(c), or (4)(c) for the profession for which
 3255  he or she is applying for licensure, if needed; and
 3256         2. Submitted an acceptable supervision plan, as determined
 3257  by the board, for meeting the practicum, internship, or field
 3258  work required for licensure that was not satisfied in his or her
 3259  graduate program.
 3260         (c) Identified a qualified supervisor.
 3261         (3) An individual registered under this section must remain
 3262  under supervision while practicing under registered intern
 3263  status until he or she is in receipt of a license or a letter
 3264  from the department stating that he or she is licensed to
 3265  practice the profession for which he or she applied.
 3266         (4) An individual who has applied for intern registration
 3267  on or before December 31, 2001, and has satisfied the education
 3268  requirements of s. 491.005 that are in effect through December
 3269  31, 2000, will have met the educational requirements for
 3270  licensure for the profession for which he or she has applied.
 3271         (4)(5)An individual who fails Individuals who have
 3272  commenced the experience requirement as specified in s.
 3273  491.005(1)(c), (3)(c), or (4)(c) but failed to register as
 3274  required by subsection (1) shall register with the department
 3275  before January 1, 2000. Individuals who fail to comply with this
 3276  section may subsection shall not be granted a license under this
 3277  chapter, and any time spent by the individual completing the
 3278  experience requirement as specified in s. 491.005(1)(c), (3)(c),
 3279  or (4)(c) before prior to registering as an intern does shall
 3280  not count toward completion of the such requirement.
 3281         (5) An intern registration is valid for 5 years.
 3282         (6) A registration issued on or before March 31, 2017,
 3283  expires March 31, 2022, and may not be renewed or reissued. Any
 3284  registration issued after March 31, 2017, expires 60 months
 3285  after the date it is issued. A subsequent intern registration
 3286  may not be issued unless the candidate has passed the theory and
 3287  practice examination described in s. 491.005(1)(d), (3)(d), and
 3288  (4)(d).
 3289         (7) An individual who has held a provisional license issued
 3290  by the board may not apply for an intern registration in the
 3291  same profession.
 3292         Section 41. Section 394.4674, Florida Statutes, is
 3293  repealed.
 3294         Section 42. Section 394.4985, Florida Statutes, is
 3295  repealed.
 3296         Section 43. Section 394.745, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3297         Section 44. Section 397.331, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3298         Section 45. Section 397.801, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3299         Section 46. Section 397.811, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3300         Section 47. Section 397.821, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3301         Section 48. Section 397.901, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3302         Section 49. Section 397.93, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3303         Section 50. Section 397.94, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3304         Section 51. Section 397.951, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3305         Section 52. Section 397.97, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3306         Section 53. Section 397.98, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3307         Section 54. Paragraph (a) of subsection (3) of section
 3308  39.407, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3309         39.407 Medical, psychiatric, and psychological examination
 3310  and treatment of child; physical, mental, or substance abuse
 3311  examination of person with or requesting child custody.—
 3312         (3)(a)1. Except as otherwise provided in subparagraph (b)1.
 3313  or paragraph (e), before the department provides psychotropic
 3314  medications to a child in its custody, the prescribing physician
 3315  shall attempt to obtain express and informed consent, as defined
 3316  in s. 394.455(16) s. 394.455(9) and as described in s.
 3317  394.459(3)(a), from the child’s parent or legal guardian. The
 3318  department must take steps necessary to facilitate the inclusion
 3319  of the parent in the child’s consultation with the physician.
 3320  However, if the parental rights of the parent have been
 3321  terminated, the parent’s location or identity is unknown or
 3322  cannot reasonably be ascertained, or the parent declines to give
 3323  express and informed consent, the department may, after
 3324  consultation with the prescribing physician, seek court
 3325  authorization to provide the psychotropic medications to the
 3326  child. Unless parental rights have been terminated and if it is
 3327  possible to do so, the department shall continue to involve the
 3328  parent in the decisionmaking process regarding the provision of
 3329  psychotropic medications. If, at any time, a parent whose
 3330  parental rights have not been terminated provides express and
 3331  informed consent to the provision of a psychotropic medication,
 3332  the requirements of this section that the department seek court
 3333  authorization do not apply to that medication until such time as
 3334  the parent no longer consents.
 3335         2. Any time the department seeks a medical evaluation to
 3336  determine the need to initiate or continue a psychotropic
 3337  medication for a child, the department must provide to the
 3338  evaluating physician all pertinent medical information known to
 3339  the department concerning that child.
 3340         Section 55. Paragraph (e) of subsection (5) of section
 3341  212.055, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3342         212.055 Discretionary sales surtaxes; legislative intent;
 3343  authorization and use of proceeds.—It is the legislative intent
 3344  that any authorization for imposition of a discretionary sales
 3345  surtax shall be published in the Florida Statutes as a
 3346  subsection of this section, irrespective of the duration of the
 3347  levy. Each enactment shall specify the types of counties
 3348  authorized to levy; the rate or rates which may be imposed; the
 3349  maximum length of time the surtax may be imposed, if any; the
 3350  procedure which must be followed to secure voter approval, if
 3351  required; the purpose for which the proceeds may be expended;
 3352  and such other requirements as the Legislature may provide.
 3353  Taxable transactions and administrative procedures shall be as
 3354  provided in s. 212.054.
 3355         (5) COUNTY PUBLIC HOSPITAL SURTAX.—Any county as defined in
 3356  s. 125.011(1) may levy the surtax authorized in this subsection
 3357  pursuant to an ordinance either approved by extraordinary vote
 3358  of the county commission or conditioned to take effect only upon
 3359  approval by a majority vote of the electors of the county voting
 3360  in a referendum. In a county as defined in s. 125.011(1), for
 3361  the purposes of this subsection, “county public general
 3362  hospital” means a general hospital as defined in s. 395.002
 3363  which is owned, operated, maintained, or governed by the county
 3364  or its agency, authority, or public health trust.
 3365         (e) A governing board, agency, or authority shall be
 3366  chartered by the county commission upon this act becoming law.
 3367  The governing board, agency, or authority shall adopt and
 3368  implement a health care plan for indigent health care services.
 3369  The governing board, agency, or authority shall consist of no
 3370  more than seven and no fewer than five members appointed by the
 3371  county commission. The members of the governing board, agency,
 3372  or authority shall be at least 18 years of age and residents of
 3373  the county. No member may be employed by or affiliated with a
 3374  health care provider or the public health trust, agency, or
 3375  authority responsible for the county public general hospital.
 3376  The following community organizations shall each appoint a
 3377  representative to a nominating committee: the South Florida
 3378  Hospital and Healthcare Association, the Miami-Dade County
 3379  Public Health Trust, the Dade County Medical Association, the
 3380  Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust, and the Mayor of Miami-Dade
 3381  County. This committee shall nominate between 10 and 14 county
 3382  citizens for the governing board, agency, or authority. The
 3383  slate shall be presented to the county commission and the county
 3384  commission shall confirm the top five to seven nominees,
 3385  depending on the size of the governing board. Until such time as
 3386  the governing board, agency, or authority is created, the funds
 3387  provided for in subparagraph (d)2. shall be placed in a
 3388  restricted account set aside from other county funds and not
 3389  disbursed by the county for any other purpose.
 3390         1. The plan shall divide the county into a minimum of four
 3391  and maximum of six service areas, with no more than one
 3392  participant hospital per service area. The county public general
 3393  hospital shall be designated as the provider for one of the
 3394  service areas. Services shall be provided through participants’
 3395  primary acute care facilities.
 3396         2. The plan and subsequent amendments to it shall fund a
 3397  defined range of health care services for both indigent persons
 3398  and the medically poor, including primary care, preventive care,
 3399  hospital emergency room care, and hospital care necessary to
 3400  stabilize the patient. For the purposes of this section,
 3401  “stabilization” means stabilization as defined in s. 397.311(43)
 3402  s. 397.311(41). Where consistent with these objectives, the plan
 3403  may include services rendered by physicians, clinics, community
 3404  hospitals, and alternative delivery sites, as well as at least
 3405  one regional referral hospital per service area. The plan shall
 3406  provide that agreements negotiated between the governing board,
 3407  agency, or authority and providers shall recognize hospitals
 3408  that render a disproportionate share of indigent care, provide
 3409  other incentives to promote the delivery of charity care to draw
 3410  down federal funds where appropriate, and require cost
 3411  containment, including, but not limited to, case management.
 3412  From the funds specified in subparagraphs (d)1. and 2. for
 3413  indigent health care services, service providers shall receive
 3414  reimbursement at a Medicaid rate to be determined by the
 3415  governing board, agency, or authority created pursuant to this
 3416  paragraph for the initial emergency room visit, and a per-member
 3417  per-month fee or capitation for those members enrolled in their
 3418  service area, as compensation for the services rendered
 3419  following the initial emergency visit. Except for provisions of
 3420  emergency services, upon determination of eligibility,
 3421  enrollment shall be deemed to have occurred at the time services
 3422  were rendered. The provisions for specific reimbursement of
 3423  emergency services shall be repealed on July 1, 2001, unless
 3424  otherwise reenacted by the Legislature. The capitation amount or
 3425  rate shall be determined before prior to program implementation
 3426  by an independent actuarial consultant. In no event shall such
 3427  reimbursement rates exceed the Medicaid rate. The plan must also
 3428  provide that any hospitals owned and operated by government
 3429  entities on or after the effective date of this act must, as a
 3430  condition of receiving funds under this subsection, afford
 3431  public access equal to that provided under s. 286.011 as to any
 3432  meeting of the governing board, agency, or authority the subject
 3433  of which is budgeting resources for the retention of charity
 3434  care, as that term is defined in the rules of the Agency for
 3435  Health Care Administration. The plan shall also include
 3436  innovative health care programs that provide cost-effective
 3437  alternatives to traditional methods of service and delivery
 3438  funding.
 3439         3. The plan’s benefits shall be made available to all
 3440  county residents currently eligible to receive health care
 3441  services as indigents or medically poor as defined in paragraph
 3442  (4)(d).
 3443         4. Eligible residents who participate in the health care
 3444  plan shall receive coverage for a period of 12 months or the
 3445  period extending from the time of enrollment to the end of the
 3446  current fiscal year, per enrollment period, whichever is less.
 3447         5. At the end of each fiscal year, the governing board,
 3448  agency, or authority shall prepare an audit that reviews the
 3449  budget of the plan, delivery of services, and quality of
 3450  services, and makes recommendations to increase the plan’s
 3451  efficiency. The audit shall take into account participant
 3452  hospital satisfaction with the plan and assess the amount of
 3453  poststabilization patient transfers requested, and accepted or
 3454  denied, by the county public general hospital.
 3455         Section 56. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section
 3456  394.4599, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3457         394.4599 Notice.—
 3458         (2) INVOLUNTARY ADMISSION.—
 3459         (c)1. A receiving facility shall give notice of the
 3460  whereabouts of a minor who is being involuntarily held for
 3461  examination pursuant to s. 394.463 to the minor’s parent,
 3462  guardian, caregiver, or guardian advocate, in person or by
 3463  telephone or other form of electronic communication, immediately
 3464  after the minor’s arrival at the facility. The facility may
 3465  delay notification for no more than 24 hours after the minor’s
 3466  arrival if the facility has submitted a report to the central
 3467  abuse hotline, pursuant to s. 39.201, based upon knowledge or
 3468  suspicion of abuse, abandonment, or neglect and if the facility
 3469  deems a delay in notification to be in the minor’s best
 3470  interest.
 3471         2. The receiving facility shall attempt to notify the
 3472  minor’s parent, guardian, caregiver, or guardian advocate until
 3473  the receiving facility receives confirmation from the parent,
 3474  guardian, caregiver, or guardian advocate, verbally, by
 3475  telephone or other form of electronic communication, or by
 3476  recorded message, that notification has been received. Attempts
 3477  to notify the parent, guardian, caregiver, or guardian advocate
 3478  must be repeated at least once every hour during the first 12
 3479  hours after the minor’s arrival and once every 24 hours
 3480  thereafter and must continue until such confirmation is
 3481  received, unless the minor is released at the end of the 72-hour
 3482  examination period, or until a petition for involuntary services
 3483  placement is filed with the court pursuant to s. 394.463(2)(g)
 3484  s. 394.463(2)(i). The receiving facility may seek assistance
 3485  from a law enforcement agency to notify the minor’s parent,
 3486  guardian, caregiver, or guardian advocate if the facility has
 3487  not received within the first 24 hours after the minor’s arrival
 3488  a confirmation by the parent, guardian, caregiver, or guardian
 3489  advocate that notification has been received. The receiving
 3490  facility must document notification attempts in the minor’s
 3491  clinical record.
 3492         Section 57. Subsection (3) of section 394.495, Florida
 3493  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3494         394.495 Child and adolescent mental health system of care;
 3495  programs and services.—
 3496         (3) Assessments must be performed by:
 3497         (a) A professional as defined in s. 394.455(6), (8), (34),
 3498  (37), or (38) s. 394.455(2), (4), (21), (23), or (24);
 3499         (b) A professional licensed under chapter 491; or
 3500         (c) A person who is under the direct supervision of a
 3501  professional as defined in s. 394.455(6), (8), (34), (37), or
 3502  (38) s. 394.455(2), (4), (21), (23), or (24) or a professional
 3503  licensed under chapter 491.
 3504         Section 58. Subsection (5) of section 394.496, Florida
 3505  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3506         394.496 Service planning.—
 3507         (5) A professional as defined in s. 394.455(6), (8), (34),
 3508  (37), or (38) s. 394.455(2), (4), (21), (23), or (24) or a
 3509  professional licensed under chapter 491 must be included among
 3510  those persons developing the services plan.
 3511         Section 59. Subsection (6) of section 394.9085, Florida
 3512  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3513         394.9085 Behavioral provider liability.—
 3514         (6) For purposes of this section, the terms “detoxification
 3515  services,” “addictions receiving facility,” and “receiving
 3516  facility” have the same meanings as those provided in ss.
 3517  397.311(24)(a)4., 397.311(24)(a)1., and 394.455(41) ss.
 3518  397.311(22)(a)4., 397.311(22)(a)1., and 394.455(26),
 3519  respectively.
 3520         Section 60. Subsection (15) of section 397.321, Florida
 3521  Statutes, is amended, and subsections (16) through (20) of that
 3522  section are redesignated as subsections (15) through (19),
 3523  respectively, to read:
 3524         397.321 Duties of the department.—The department shall:
 3525         (15) Appoint a substance abuse impairment coordinator to
 3526  represent the department in efforts initiated by the statewide
 3527  substance abuse impairment prevention and treatment coordinator
 3528  established in s. 397.801 and to assist the statewide
 3529  coordinator in fulfilling the responsibilities of that position.
 3530         Section 61. Subsection (8) of section 397.405, Florida
 3531  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3532         397.405 Exemptions from licensure.—The following are exempt
 3533  from the licensing provisions of this chapter:
 3534         (8) A legally cognizable church or nonprofit religious
 3535  organization or denomination providing substance abuse services,
 3536  including prevention services, which are solely religious,
 3537  spiritual, or ecclesiastical in nature. A church or nonprofit
 3538  religious organization or denomination providing any of the
 3539  licensed service components itemized under s. 397.311(24) s.
 3540  397.311(22) is not exempt from substance abuse licensure but
 3541  retains its exemption with respect to all services which are
 3542  solely religious, spiritual, or ecclesiastical in nature.
 3543  
 3544  The exemptions from licensure in this section do not apply to
 3545  any service provider that receives an appropriation, grant, or
 3546  contract from the state to operate as a service provider as
 3547  defined in this chapter or to any substance abuse program
 3548  regulated pursuant to s. 397.406. Furthermore, this chapter may
 3549  not be construed to limit the practice of a physician or
 3550  physician assistant licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459, a
 3551  psychologist licensed under chapter 490, a psychotherapist
 3552  licensed under chapter 491, or an advanced registered nurse
 3553  practitioner licensed under part I of chapter 464, who provides
 3554  substance abuse treatment, so long as the physician, physician
 3555  assistant, psychologist, psychotherapist, or advanced registered
 3556  nurse practitioner does not represent to the public that he or
 3557  she is a licensed service provider and does not provide services
 3558  to individuals pursuant to part V of this chapter. Failure to
 3559  comply with any requirement necessary to maintain an exempt
 3560  status under this section is a misdemeanor of the first degree,
 3561  punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
 3562         Section 62. Subsections (1) and (5) of section 397.407,
 3563  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 3564         397.407 Licensure process; fees.—
 3565         (1) The department shall establish the licensure process to
 3566  include fees and categories of licenses and must prescribe a fee
 3567  range that is based, at least in part, on the number and
 3568  complexity of programs listed in s. 397.311(24) s. 397.311(22)
 3569  which are operated by a licensee. The fees from the licensure of
 3570  service components are sufficient to cover at least 50 percent
 3571  of the costs of regulating the service components. The
 3572  department shall specify a fee range for public and privately
 3573  funded licensed service providers. Fees for privately funded
 3574  licensed service providers must exceed the fees for publicly
 3575  funded licensed service providers.
 3576         (5) The department may issue probationary, regular, and
 3577  interim licenses. The department shall issue one license for
 3578  each service component that is operated by a service provider
 3579  and defined pursuant to s. 397.311(24) s. 397.311(22). The
 3580  license is valid only for the specific service components listed
 3581  for each specific location identified on the license. The
 3582  licensed service provider shall apply for a new license at least
 3583  60 days before the addition of any service components or 30 days
 3584  before the relocation of any of its service sites. Provision of
 3585  service components or delivery of services at a location not
 3586  identified on the license may be considered an unlicensed
 3587  operation that authorizes the department to seek an injunction
 3588  against operation as provided in s. 397.401, in addition to
 3589  other sanctions authorized by s. 397.415. Probationary and
 3590  regular licenses may be issued only after all required
 3591  information has been submitted. A license may not be
 3592  transferred. As used in this subsection, the term “transfer”
 3593  includes, but is not limited to, the transfer of a majority of
 3594  the ownership interest in the licensed entity or transfer of
 3595  responsibilities under the license to another entity by
 3596  contractual arrangement.
 3597         Section 63. Section 397.416, Florida Statutes, is amended
 3598  to read:
 3599         397.416 Substance abuse treatment services; qualified
 3600  professional.—Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a
 3601  person who was certified through a certification process
 3602  recognized by the former Department of Health and Rehabilitative
 3603  Services before January 1, 1995, may perform the duties of a
 3604  qualified professional with respect to substance abuse treatment
 3605  services as defined in this chapter, and need not meet the
 3606  certification requirements contained in s. 397.311(32) s.
 3607  397.311(30).
 3608         Section 64. Subsection (2) of section 397.4871, Florida
 3609  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3610         397.4871 Recovery residence administrator certification.—
 3611         (2) The department shall approve at least one credentialing
 3612  entity by December 1, 2015, for the purpose of developing and
 3613  administering a voluntary credentialing program for
 3614  administrators. The department shall approve any credentialing
 3615  entity that the department endorses pursuant to s. 397.321(15)
 3616  s. 397.321(16) if the credentialing entity also meets the
 3617  requirements of this section. The approved credentialing entity
 3618  shall:
 3619         (a) Establish recovery residence administrator core
 3620  competencies, certification requirements, testing instruments,
 3621  and recertification requirements.
 3622         (b) Establish a process to administer the certification
 3623  application, award, and maintenance processes.
 3624         (c) Develop and administer:
 3625         1. A code of ethics and disciplinary process.
 3626         2. Biennial continuing education requirements and annual
 3627  certification renewal requirements.
 3628         3. An education provider program to approve training
 3629  entities that are qualified to provide precertification training
 3630  to applicants and continuing education opportunities to
 3631  certified persons.
 3632         Section 65. Paragraph (e) of subsection (3) of section
 3633  409.966, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3634         409.966 Eligible plans; selection.—
 3635         (3) QUALITY SELECTION CRITERIA.—
 3636         (e) To ensure managed care plan participation in Regions 1
 3637  and 2, the agency shall award an additional contract to each
 3638  plan with a contract award in Region 1 or Region 2. Such
 3639  contract shall be in any other region in which the plan
 3640  submitted a responsive bid and negotiates a rate acceptable to
 3641  the agency. If a plan that is awarded an additional contract
 3642  pursuant to this paragraph is subject to penalties pursuant to
 3643  s. 409.967(2)(i) s. 409.967(2)(h) for activities in Region 1 or
 3644  Region 2, the additional contract is automatically terminated
 3645  180 days after the imposition of the penalties. The plan must
 3646  reimburse the agency for the cost of enrollment changes and
 3647  other transition activities.
 3648         Section 66. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section
 3649  409.972, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3650         409.972 Mandatory and voluntary enrollment.—
 3651         (1) The following Medicaid-eligible persons are exempt from
 3652  mandatory managed care enrollment required by s. 409.965, and
 3653  may voluntarily choose to participate in the managed medical
 3654  assistance program:
 3655         (b) Medicaid recipients residing in residential commitment
 3656  facilities operated through the Department of Juvenile Justice
 3657  or a mental health treatment facility facilities as defined in
 3658  s. 394.455(50) by s. 394.455(32).
 3659         Section 67. Paragraphs (d) and (g) of subsection (1) of
 3660  section 440.102, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 3661         440.102 Drug-free workplace program requirements.—The
 3662  following provisions apply to a drug-free workplace program
 3663  implemented pursuant to law or to rules adopted by the Agency
 3664  for Health Care Administration:
 3665         (1) DEFINITIONS.—Except where the context otherwise
 3666  requires, as used in this act:
 3667         (d) “Drug rehabilitation program” means a service provider,
 3668  established pursuant to s. 397.311(41) s. 397.311(39), that
 3669  provides confidential, timely, and expert identification,
 3670  assessment, and resolution of employee drug abuse.
 3671         (g) “Employee assistance program” means an established
 3672  program capable of providing expert assessment of employee
 3673  personal concerns; confidential and timely identification
 3674  services with regard to employee drug abuse; referrals of
 3675  employees for appropriate diagnosis, treatment, and assistance;
 3676  and followup services for employees who participate in the
 3677  program or require monitoring after returning to work. If, in
 3678  addition to the above activities, an employee assistance program
 3679  provides diagnostic and treatment services, these services shall
 3680  in all cases be provided by service providers pursuant to s.
 3681  397.311(41) s. 397.311(39).
 3682         Section 68. Subsection (7) of section 744.704, Florida
 3683  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3684         744.704 Powers and duties.—
 3685         (7) A public guardian may shall not commit a ward to a
 3686  mental health treatment facility, as defined in s. 394.455(50)
 3687  s. 394.455(32), without an involuntary placement proceeding as
 3688  provided by law.
 3689         Section 69. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
 3690  790.065, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3691         790.065 Sale and delivery of firearms.—
 3692         (2) Upon receipt of a request for a criminal history record
 3693  check, the Department of Law Enforcement shall, during the
 3694  licensee’s call or by return call, forthwith:
 3695         (a) Review any records available to determine if the
 3696  potential buyer or transferee:
 3697         1. Has been convicted of a felony and is prohibited from
 3698  receipt or possession of a firearm pursuant to s. 790.23;
 3699         2. Has been convicted of a misdemeanor crime of domestic
 3700  violence, and therefore is prohibited from purchasing a firearm;
 3701         3. Has had adjudication of guilt withheld or imposition of
 3702  sentence suspended on any felony or misdemeanor crime of
 3703  domestic violence unless 3 years have elapsed since probation or
 3704  any other conditions set by the court have been fulfilled or
 3705  expunction has occurred; or
 3706         4. Has been adjudicated mentally defective or has been
 3707  committed to a mental institution by a court or as provided in
 3708  sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II), and as a result is prohibited by
 3709  state or federal law from purchasing a firearm.
 3710         a. As used in this subparagraph, “adjudicated mentally
 3711  defective” means a determination by a court that a person, as a
 3712  result of marked subnormal intelligence, or mental illness,
 3713  incompetency, condition, or disease, is a danger to himself or
 3714  herself or to others or lacks the mental capacity to contract or
 3715  manage his or her own affairs. The phrase includes a judicial
 3716  finding of incapacity under s. 744.331(6)(a), an acquittal by
 3717  reason of insanity of a person charged with a criminal offense,
 3718  and a judicial finding that a criminal defendant is not
 3719  competent to stand trial.
 3720         b. As used in this subparagraph, “committed to a mental
 3721  institution” means:
 3722         (I) Involuntary commitment, commitment for mental
 3723  defectiveness or mental illness, and commitment for substance
 3724  abuse. The phrase includes involuntary inpatient placement as
 3725  defined in s. 394.467, involuntary outpatient services placement
 3726  as defined in s. 394.4655, involuntary assessment and
 3727  stabilization under s. 397.6818, and involuntary substance abuse
 3728  treatment under s. 397.6957, but does not include a person in a
 3729  mental institution for observation or discharged from a mental
 3730  institution based upon the initial review by the physician or a
 3731  voluntary admission to a mental institution; or
 3732         (II) Notwithstanding sub-sub-subparagraph (I), voluntary
 3733  admission to a mental institution for outpatient or inpatient
 3734  treatment of a person who had an involuntary examination under
 3735  s. 394.463, where each of the following conditions have been
 3736  met:
 3737         (A) An examining physician found that the person is an
 3738  imminent danger to himself or herself or others.
 3739         (B) The examining physician certified that if the person
 3740  did not agree to voluntary treatment, a petition for involuntary
 3741  outpatient or inpatient services treatment would have been filed
 3742  under s. 394.463(2)(g) s. 394.463(2)(i)4., or the examining
 3743  physician certified that a petition was filed and the person
 3744  subsequently agreed to voluntary treatment before prior to a
 3745  court hearing on the petition.
 3746         (C) Before agreeing to voluntary treatment, the person
 3747  received written notice of that finding and certification, and
 3748  written notice that as a result of such finding, he or she may
 3749  be prohibited from purchasing a firearm, and may not be eligible
 3750  to apply for or retain a concealed weapon or firearms license
 3751  under s. 790.06 and the person acknowledged such notice in
 3752  writing, in substantially the following form:
 3753  
 3754         “I understand that the doctor who examined me believes
 3755         I am a danger to myself or to others. I understand
 3756         that if I do not agree to voluntary treatment, a
 3757         petition will be filed in court to require me to
 3758         receive involuntary treatment. I understand that if
 3759         that petition is filed, I have the right to contest
 3760         it. In the event a petition has been filed, I
 3761         understand that I can subsequently agree to voluntary
 3762         treatment prior to a court hearing. I understand that
 3763         by agreeing to voluntary treatment in either of these
 3764         situations, I may be prohibited from buying firearms
 3765         and from applying for or retaining a concealed weapons
 3766         or firearms license until I apply for and receive
 3767         relief from that restriction under Florida law.”
 3768  
 3769         (D) A judge or a magistrate has, pursuant to sub-sub
 3770  subparagraph c.(II), reviewed the record of the finding,
 3771  certification, notice, and written acknowledgment classifying
 3772  the person as an imminent danger to himself or herself or
 3773  others, and ordered that such record be submitted to the
 3774  department.
 3775         c. In order to check for these conditions, the department
 3776  shall compile and maintain an automated database of persons who
 3777  are prohibited from purchasing a firearm based on court records
 3778  of adjudications of mental defectiveness or commitments to
 3779  mental institutions.
 3780         (I) Except as provided in sub-sub-subparagraph (II), clerks
 3781  of court shall submit these records to the department within 1
 3782  month after the rendition of the adjudication or commitment.
 3783  Reports shall be submitted in an automated format. The reports
 3784  must, at a minimum, include the name, along with any known alias
 3785  or former name, the sex, and the date of birth of the subject.
 3786         (II) For persons committed to a mental institution pursuant
 3787  to sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II), within 24 hours after the
 3788  person’s agreement to voluntary admission, a record of the
 3789  finding, certification, notice, and written acknowledgment must
 3790  be filed by the administrator of the receiving or treatment
 3791  facility, as defined in s. 394.455, with the clerk of the court
 3792  for the county in which the involuntary examination under s.
 3793  394.463 occurred. No fee shall be charged for the filing under
 3794  this sub-sub-subparagraph. The clerk must present the records to
 3795  a judge or magistrate within 24 hours after receipt of the
 3796  records. A judge or magistrate is required and has the lawful
 3797  authority to review the records ex parte and, if the judge or
 3798  magistrate determines that the record supports the classifying
 3799  of the person as an imminent danger to himself or herself or
 3800  others, to order that the record be submitted to the department.
 3801  If a judge or magistrate orders the submittal of the record to
 3802  the department, the record must be submitted to the department
 3803  within 24 hours.
 3804         d. A person who has been adjudicated mentally defective or
 3805  committed to a mental institution, as those terms are defined in
 3806  this paragraph, may petition the circuit court that made the
 3807  adjudication or commitment, or the court that ordered that the
 3808  record be submitted to the department pursuant to sub-sub
 3809  subparagraph c.(II), for relief from the firearm disabilities
 3810  imposed by such adjudication or commitment. A copy of the
 3811  petition shall be served on the state attorney for the county in
 3812  which the person was adjudicated or committed. The state
 3813  attorney may object to and present evidence relevant to the
 3814  relief sought by the petition. The hearing on the petition may
 3815  be open or closed as the petitioner may choose. The petitioner
 3816  may present evidence and subpoena witnesses to appear at the
 3817  hearing on the petition. The petitioner may confront and cross
 3818  examine witnesses called by the state attorney. A record of the
 3819  hearing shall be made by a certified court reporter or by court
 3820  approved electronic means. The court shall make written findings
 3821  of fact and conclusions of law on the issues before it and issue
 3822  a final order. The court shall grant the relief requested in the
 3823  petition if the court finds, based on the evidence presented
 3824  with respect to the petitioner’s reputation, the petitioner’s
 3825  mental health record and, if applicable, criminal history
 3826  record, the circumstances surrounding the firearm disability,
 3827  and any other evidence in the record, that the petitioner will
 3828  not be likely to act in a manner that is dangerous to public
 3829  safety and that granting the relief would not be contrary to the
 3830  public interest. If the final order denies relief, the
 3831  petitioner may not petition again for relief from firearm
 3832  disabilities until 1 year after the date of the final order. The
 3833  petitioner may seek judicial review of a final order denying
 3834  relief in the district court of appeal having jurisdiction over
 3835  the court that issued the order. The review shall be conducted
 3836  de novo. Relief from a firearm disability granted under this
 3837  sub-subparagraph has no effect on the loss of civil rights,
 3838  including firearm rights, for any reason other than the
 3839  particular adjudication of mental defectiveness or commitment to
 3840  a mental institution from which relief is granted.
 3841         e. Upon receipt of proper notice of relief from firearm
 3842  disabilities granted under sub-subparagraph d., the department
 3843  shall delete any mental health record of the person granted
 3844  relief from the automated database of persons who are prohibited
 3845  from purchasing a firearm based on court records of
 3846  adjudications of mental defectiveness or commitments to mental
 3847  institutions.
 3848         f. The department is authorized to disclose data collected
 3849  pursuant to this subparagraph to agencies of the Federal
 3850  Government and other states for use exclusively in determining
 3851  the lawfulness of a firearm sale or transfer. The department is
 3852  also authorized to disclose this data to the Department of
 3853  Agriculture and Consumer Services for purposes of determining
 3854  eligibility for issuance of a concealed weapons or concealed
 3855  firearms license and for determining whether a basis exists for
 3856  revoking or suspending a previously issued license pursuant to
 3857  s. 790.06(10). When a potential buyer or transferee appeals a
 3858  nonapproval based on these records, the clerks of court and
 3859  mental institutions shall, upon request by the department,
 3860  provide information to help determine whether the potential
 3861  buyer or transferee is the same person as the subject of the
 3862  record. Photographs and any other data that could confirm or
 3863  negate identity must be made available to the department for
 3864  such purposes, notwithstanding any other provision of state law
 3865  to the contrary. Any such information that is made confidential
 3866  or exempt from disclosure by law shall retain such confidential
 3867  or exempt status when transferred to the department.
 3868         Section 70. This act shall take effect July 1, 2016.