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Public Act 104-0032
Public Act 0032 104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY | Public Act 104-0032 | | SB1560 Enrolled | LRB104 11224 KTG 21306 b |
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| AN ACT concerning mental health. | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly: | Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Section | 2-3.203 as follows: | (105 ILCS 5/2-3.203) | Sec. 2-3.203. Mental health screenings. | (a) On or before December 15, 2023, the State Board of | Education, in consultation with the Children's Behavioral | Health Transformation Officer, Children's Behavioral Health | Transformation Team in , and the Office of the Governor, shall | file a report with the Governor and the General Assembly that | includes recommendations for implementation of mental health | screenings in schools for students enrolled in kindergarten | through grade 12. This report must include a landscape scan of | current district-wide screenings, recommendations for | screening tools, training for staff, and linkage and referral | for identified students. | (b) On or before October 1, 2024, the State Board of | Education, in consultation with the Children's Behavioral | Health Transformation Team in , the Office of the Governor, | and relevant stakeholders as needed shall release a strategy | that includes a tool for measuring capacity and readiness to |
| implement universal mental health screening of students. The | strategy shall build upon existing efforts to understand | district needs for resources, technology, training, and | infrastructure supports. The strategy shall include a | framework for supporting districts in a phased approach to | implement universal mental health screenings. The State Board | of Education shall issue a report to the Governor and the | General Assembly on school district readiness and plan for | phased approach to universal mental health screening of | students on or before April 1, 2025. | (c) On or before September 1, 2026, the State Board of | Education, in consultation with the Children's Behavioral | Health Transformation Team in the Office of the Governor and | relevant stakeholders, shall report its work and make | available resource materials, including model procedures and | guidance informed by a phased approach to implementing | universal mental health screening in schools. These model | school district procedures to facilitate the implementation of | mental health screenings shall include, but are not limited | to, the option to opt-out, confidentiality and privacy | considerations, communication with families and communities | about the use of mental health screenings, data sharing, and | storage of mental health screening results and plans for | follow-up and linkage to resources after screenings. Guidance | shall include (1) mental health screening tools available for | school districts to use with students and (2) associated |
| training for school personnel. The State Board of Education | shall make these resource materials available on its website. | (d) Mental health screenings shall be offered by school | districts to students enrolled in grade 3 through grade 12, at | least once a year, beginning with the 2027-2028 school year. A | district may, by action of the State Board of Education, apply | for an extension of the 2027-2028 school year implementation | deadline if the school district meets criteria set by rule by | the State Board of Education, which shall be based on the | recommendations of the report issued in accordance with | subsection (c). Notwithstanding the provisions of this | subsection, the requirement to offer mental health screenings | shall be in effect only for school years in which the State has | successfully procured a screening tool that offers a | self-report option for students and is made available to | school districts at no cost. | (Source: P.A. 103-546, eff. 8-11-23; 103-605, eff. 7-1-24; | 103-885, eff. 8-9-24.) | Section 10. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by | changing Section 5-5.23 as follows: | (305 ILCS 5/5-5.23) | Sec. 5-5.23. Children's mental health services. | (a) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services, by | rule, shall require the screening and assessment of a child |
| prior to any Medicaid-funded admission to an inpatient | hospital for psychiatric services to be funded by Medicaid. | The screening and assessment shall include a determination of | the appropriateness and availability of out-patient support | services for necessary treatment. The Department, by rule, | shall establish methods and standards of payment for the | screening, assessment, and necessary alternative support | services. | (b) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services, to | the extent allowable under federal law, shall secure federal | financial participation for Individual Care Grant expenditures | made by the Department of Healthcare and Family Services for | the Medicaid optional service authorized under Section 1905(h) | of the federal Social Security Act, pursuant to the provisions | of Section 7.1 of the Mental Health and Developmental | Disabilities Administrative Act. The Department of Healthcare | and Family Services may exercise the authority under this | Section as is necessary to administer Individual Care Grants | as authorized under Section 7.1 of the Mental Health and | Developmental Disabilities Administrative Act. | (c) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall | work collaboratively with the Department of Children and | Family Services and the Division of Mental Health of the | Department of Human Services to implement subsections (a) and | (b). | (d) On and after July 1, 2012, the Department shall reduce |
| any rate of reimbursement for services or other payments or | alter any methodologies authorized by this Code to reduce any | rate of reimbursement for services or other payments in | accordance with Section 5-5e. | (e) All rights, powers, duties, and responsibilities | currently exercised by the Department of Human Services | related to the Individual Care Grant program are transferred | to the Department of Healthcare and Family Services with the | transfer and transition of the Individual Care Grant program | to the Department of Healthcare and Family Services to be | completed and implemented within 6 months after the effective | date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly. For | the purposes of the Successor Agency Act, the Department of | Healthcare and Family Services is declared to be the successor | agency of the Department of Human Services, but only with | respect to the functions of the Department of Human Services | that are transferred to the Department of Healthcare and | Family Services under this amendatory Act of the 99th General | Assembly. | (1) Each act done by the Department of Healthcare and | Family Services in exercise of the transferred powers, | duties, rights, and responsibilities shall have the same | legal effect as if done by the Department of Human | Services or its offices. | (2) Any rules of the Department of Human Services that | relate to the functions and programs transferred by this |
| amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly that are in | full force on the effective date of this amendatory Act of | the 99th General Assembly shall become the rules of the | Department of Healthcare and Family Services. All rules | transferred under this amendatory Act of the 99th General | Assembly are hereby amended such that the term | "Department" shall be defined as the Department of | Healthcare and Family Services and all references to the | "Secretary" shall be changed to the "Director of | Healthcare and Family Services or his or her designee". As | soon as practicable hereafter, the Department of | Healthcare and Family Services shall revise and clarify | the rules to reflect the transfer of rights, powers, | duties, and responsibilities affected by this amendatory | Act of the 99th General Assembly, using the procedures for | recodification of rules available under the Illinois | Administrative Procedure Act, except that existing title, | part, and section numbering for the affected rules may be | retained. The Department of Healthcare and Family | Services, consistent with its authority to do so as | granted by this amendatory Act of the 99th General | Assembly, shall propose and adopt any other rules under | the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act as necessary to | administer the Individual Care Grant program. These rules | may include, but are not limited to, the application | process and eligibility requirements for recipients. |
| (3) All unexpended appropriations and balances and | other funds available for use in connection with any | functions of the Individual Care Grant program shall be | transferred for the use of the Department of Healthcare | and Family Services to operate the Individual Care Grant | program. Unexpended balances shall be expended only for | the purpose for which the appropriation was originally | made. The Department of Healthcare and Family Services | shall exercise all rights, powers, duties, and | responsibilities for operation of the Individual Care | Grant program. | (4) Existing personnel and positions of the Department | of Human Services pertaining to the administration of the | Individual Care Grant program shall be transferred to the | Department of Healthcare and Family Services with the | transfer and transition of the Individual Care Grant | program to the Department of Healthcare and Family | Services. The status and rights of Department of Human | Services employees engaged in the performance of the | functions of the Individual Care Grant program shall not | be affected by this amendatory Act of the 99th General | Assembly. The rights of the employees, the State of | Illinois, and its agencies under the Personnel Code and | applicable collective bargaining agreements or under any | pension, retirement, or annuity plan shall not be affected | by this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly. All |
| transferred employees who are members of collective | bargaining units shall retain their seniority, continuous | service, salary, and accrued benefits. | (5) All books, records, papers, documents, property | (real and personal), contracts, and pending business | pertaining to the powers, duties, rights, and | responsibilities related to the functions of the | Individual Care Grant program, including, but not limited | to, material in electronic or magnetic format and | necessary computer hardware and software, shall be | delivered to the Department of Healthcare and Family | Services; provided, however, that the delivery of this | information shall not violate any applicable | confidentiality constraints. | (6) Whenever reports or notices are now required to be | made or given or papers or documents furnished or served | by any person to or upon the Department of Human Services | in connection with any of the functions transferred by | this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, the same | shall be made, given, furnished, or served in the same | manner to or upon the Department of Healthcare and Family | Services. | (7) This amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly | shall not affect any act done, ratified, or canceled or | any right occurring or established or any action or | proceeding had or commenced in an administrative, civil, |
| or criminal cause regarding the Department of Human | Services before the effective date of this amendatory Act | of the 99th General Assembly; and those actions or | proceedings may be defended, prosecuted, and continued by | the Department of Human Services. | (f) (Blank). | (g) Family Support Program. The Department of Healthcare | and Family Services shall restructure the Family Support | Program, formerly known as the Individual Care Grant program, | to enable early treatment of youth, emerging adults, and | transition-age adults with a serious mental illness or serious | emotional disturbance. | (1) As used in this subsection and in subsections (h) | through (s): | (A) "Youth" means a person under the age of 18. | (B) "Emerging adult" means a person who is 18 | through 20 years of age. | (C) "Transition-age adult" means a person who is | 21 through 25 years of age. | (2) The Department shall amend 89 Ill. Adm. Code 139 | in accordance with this Section and consistent with the | timelines outlined in this Section. | (3) Implementation of any amended requirements shall | be completed within 8 months of the adoption of any | amendment to 89 Ill. Adm. Code 139 that is consistent with | the provisions of this Section. |
| (4) To align the Family Support Program with the | Medicaid system of care, the services available to a | youth, emerging adult, or transition-age adult through the | Family Support Program shall include all Medicaid | community-based mental health treatment services and all | Family Support Program services included under 89 Ill. | Adm. Code 139. No person receiving services through the | Family Support Program or the Specialized Family Support | Program shall become a Medicaid enrollee unless Medicaid | eligibility criteria are met and the person is enrolled in | Medicaid. No part of this Section creates an entitlement | to services through the Family Support Program, the | Specialized Family Support Program, or the Medicaid | program. | (5) The Family Support Program shall align with the | following system of care principles: | (A) Treatment and support services shall be based | on the results of an integrated behavioral health | assessment and treatment plan using an instrument | approved by the Department of Healthcare and Family | Services. | (B) Strong interagency collaboration between all | State agencies the parent or legal guardian is | involved with for services, including the Department | of Healthcare and Family Services, the Department of | Human Services, the Department of Children and Family |
| Services, the Department of Juvenile Justice, and the | Illinois State Board of Education. | (C) Individualized, strengths-based practices and | trauma-informed treatment approaches. | (D) For a youth, full participation of the parent | or legal guardian at all levels of treatment through a | process that is family-centered and youth-focused. The | process shall include consideration of the services | and supports the parent, legal guardian, or caregiver | requires for family stabilization, and shall connect | such person or persons to services based on available | insurance coverage. | (h) Eligibility for the Family Support Program. | Eligibility criteria established under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 139 | for the Family Support Program shall include the following: | (1) Individuals applying to the program must be under | the age of 26. | (2) Requirements for parental or legal guardian | involvement are applicable to youth and to emerging adults | or transition-age adults who have a guardian appointed | under Article XIa of the Probate Act. | (3) Youth, emerging adults, and transition-age adults | are eligible for services under the Family Support Program | upon their third inpatient admission to a hospital or | similar treatment facility for the primary purpose of | psychiatric treatment within the most recent 12 months and |
| are hospitalized for the purpose of psychiatric treatment. | (4) School participation for emerging adults applying | for services under the Family Support Program may be | waived by request of the individual at the sole discretion | of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services. | (5) School participation is not applicable to | transition-age adults. | (i) Notification of Family Support Program and Specialized | Family Support Program services. | (1) Within 12 months after the effective date of this | amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, the | Department of Healthcare and Family Services, with | meaningful stakeholder input through a working group of | psychiatric hospitals, Family Support Program providers, | family support organizations, the Community and | Residential Services Authority, a statewide association | representing a majority of hospitals, a statewide | association representing physicians, and foster care | alumni advocates, shall establish a clear process by which | a youth's or emerging adult's parents, guardian, or | caregiver, or the emerging adult or transition-age adult, | is identified, notified, and educated about the Family | Support Program and the Specialized Family Support Program | upon a first psychiatric inpatient hospital admission, and | any following psychiatric inpatient admissions. | Notification and education may take place through a Family |
| Support Program coordinator, a mobile crisis response | provider, a Comprehensive Community Based Youth Services | provider, the Community and Residential Services | Authority, or any other designated provider or coordinator | identified by the Department of Healthcare and Family | Services. In developing this process, the Department of | Healthcare and Family Services and the working group shall | take into account the unique needs of emerging adults and | transition-age adults without parental involvement who are | eligible for services under the Family Support Program. | The Department of Healthcare and Family Services and the | working group shall ensure the appropriate provider or | coordinator is required to assist individuals and their | parents, guardians, or caregivers, as applicable, in the | completion of the application or referral process for the | Family Support Program or the Specialized Family Support | Program. | (2) (Blank) Upon a youth's, emerging adult's or | transition-age adult's second psychiatric inpatient | hospital admission, prior to hospital discharge, the | hospital must, if it is aware of the patient's prior | psychiatric inpatient hospital admission, ensure that the | youth's parents, guardian, or caregiver, or the emerging | adult or transition-age adult, has been notified of the | Family Support Program and the Specialized Family Support | Program. |
| (3) Psychiatric lockout as last resort. | (A) Prior to referring any youth to the Department | of Children and Family Services for the filing of a | petition in accordance with subparagraph (c) of | paragraph (1) of Section 2-4 of the Juvenile Court Act | of 1987 alleging that the youth is dependent because | the youth was left in a psychiatric hospital beyond | medical necessity, the hospital shall attempt to | contact the youth and the youth's parents, guardian, | or caregiver about the BEACON portal Family Support | Program and the Specialized Family Support Program and | shall assist with entering the youth's information | into the BEACON portal to begin the process of | connecting the youth and family to available resources | connections to the designated Family Support Program | coordinator in the service area by providing | educational materials developed by the Department of | Healthcare and Family Services. Once this process has | begun, any such youth shall be considered a youth for | whom an application for the Family Support Program is | pending with the Department of Healthcare and Family | Services or an active application for the Family | Support Program was being reviewed by the Department | for the purposes of subsection (a) of Section 2-4b of | the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, or for the purposes of | subsection (a) of Section 5-711 of the Juvenile Court |
| Act of 1987. | (B) No state agency or hospital shall coach a | parent or guardian of a youth in a psychiatric | hospital inpatient unit to lock out or otherwise | relinquish custody of a youth to the Department of | Children and Family Services for the sole purpose of | obtaining necessary mental health treatment for the | youth. In the absence of abuse or neglect, a | psychiatric lockout or custody relinquishment to the | Department of Children and Family Services shall only | be considered as the option of last resort. Nothing in | this Section shall prohibit discussion of medical | treatment options or a referral to legal counsel. | (4) Development of new Family Support Program | services. | (A) Development of specialized therapeutic | residential treatment for youth and emerging adults | with high-acuity mental health conditions. Through a | working group led by the Department of Healthcare and | Family Services that includes the Department of | Children and Family Services and residential treatment | providers for youth and emerging adults, the | Department of Healthcare and Family Services, within | 12 months after the effective date of this amendatory | Act of the 101st General Assembly, shall develop a | plan for the development of specialized therapeutic |
| residential treatment beds similar to a qualified | residential treatment program, as defined in the | federal Family First Prevention Services Act, for | youth in the Family Support Program with high-acuity | mental health needs. The Department of Healthcare and | Family Services and the Department of Children and | Family Services shall work together to maximize | federal funding through Medicaid and Title IV-E of the | Social Security Act in the development and | implementation of this plan. | (B) Using the Department of Children and Family | Services' beyond medical necessity data over the last | 5 years and any other relevant, available data, the | Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall | assess the estimated number of these specialized | high-acuity residential treatment beds that are needed | in each region of the State based on the number of | youth remaining in psychiatric hospitals beyond | medical necessity and the number of youth placed | out-of-state who need this level of care. The | Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall | report the results of this assessment to the General | Assembly by no later than December 31, 2020. | (C) Development of an age-appropriate therapeutic | residential treatment model for emerging adults and | transition-age adults. Within 30 months after the |
| effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st | General Assembly, the Department of Healthcare and | Family Services, in partnership with the Department of | Human Services' Division of Mental Health and with | significant and meaningful stakeholder input through a | working group of providers and other stakeholders, | shall develop a supportive housing model for emerging | adults and transition-age adults receiving services | through the Family Support Program who need | residential treatment and support to enable recovery. | Such a model shall be age-appropriate and shall allow | the residential component of the model to be in a | community-based setting combined with intensive | community-based mental health services. | (j) Workgroup to develop a plan for improving access to | substance use treatment. The Department of Healthcare and | Family Services and the Department of Human Services' Division | of Substance Use Prevention and Recovery shall co-lead a | working group that includes Family Support Program providers, | family support organizations, and other stakeholders over a | 12-month period beginning in the first quarter of calendar | year 2020 to develop a plan for increasing access to substance | use treatment services for youth, emerging adults, and | transition-age adults who are eligible for Family Support | Program services. | (k) Appropriation. Implementation of this Section shall be |
| limited by the State's annual appropriation to the Family | Support Program. Spending within the Family Support Program | appropriation shall be further limited for the new Family | Support Program services to be developed accordingly: | (1) Targeted use of specialized therapeutic | residential treatment for youth and emerging adults with | high-acuity mental health conditions through appropriation | limitation. No more than 12% of all annual Family Support | Program funds shall be spent on this level of care in any | given state fiscal year. | (2) Targeted use of residential treatment model | established for emerging adults and transition-age adults | through appropriation limitation. No more than one-quarter | of all annual Family Support Program funds shall be spent | on this level of care in any given state fiscal year. | (l) Exhausting third party insurance coverage first. | (A) A parent, legal guardian, emerging adult, or | transition-age adult with private insurance coverage shall | work with the Department of Healthcare and Family | Services, or its designee, to identify insurance coverage | for any and all benefits covered by their plan. If | insurance cost-sharing by any method for treatment is | cost-prohibitive for the parent, legal guardian, emerging | adult, or transition-age adult, Family Support Program | funds may be applied as a payer of last resort toward | insurance cost-sharing for purposes of using private |
| insurance coverage to the fullest extent for the | recommended treatment. If the Department, or its agent, | has a concern relating to the parent's, legal guardian's, | emerging adult's, or transition-age adult's insurer's | compliance with Illinois or federal insurance requirements | relating to the coverage of mental health or substance use | disorders, it shall refer all relevant information to the | applicable regulatory authority. | (B) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services | shall use Medicaid funds first for an individual who has | Medicaid coverage if the treatment or service recommended | using an integrated behavioral health assessment and | treatment plan (using the instrument approved by the | Department of Healthcare and Family Services) is covered | by Medicaid. | (C) If private or public insurance coverage does not | cover the needed treatment or service, Family Support | Program funds shall be used to cover the services offered | through the Family Support Program. | (m) Service authorization. A youth, emerging adult, or | transition-age adult enrolled in the Family Support Program or | the Specialized Family Support Program shall be eligible to | receive a mental health treatment service covered by the | applicable program if the medical necessity criteria | established by the Department of Healthcare and Family | Services are met. |
| (n) Streamlined application. The Department of Healthcare | and Family Services shall revise the Family Support Program | applications and the application process to reflect the | changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the | 101st General Assembly within 8 months after the adoption of | any amendments to 89 Ill. Adm. Code 139. | (o) Study of reimbursement policies during planned and | unplanned absences of youth and emerging adults in Family | Support Program residential treatment settings. The Department | of Healthcare and Family Services shall undertake a study of | those standards of the Department of Children and Family | Services and other states for reimbursement of residential | treatment during planned and unplanned absences to determine | if reimbursing residential providers for such unplanned | absences positively impacts the availability of residential | treatment for youth and emerging adults. The Department of | Healthcare and Family Services shall begin the study on July | 1, 2019 and shall report its findings and the results of the | study to the General Assembly, along with any recommendations | for or against adopting a similar policy, by December 31, | 2020. | (p) Public awareness and educational campaign for all | relevant providers. The Department of Healthcare and Family | Services shall engage in a public awareness campaign to | educate hospitals with psychiatric units, crisis response | providers such as Screening, Assessment and Support Services |
| providers and Comprehensive Community Based Youth Services | agencies, schools, and other community institutions and | providers across Illinois on the changes made by this | amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly to the Family | Support Program. The Department of Healthcare and Family | Services shall produce written materials geared for the | appropriate target audience, develop webinars, and conduct | outreach visits over a 12-month period beginning after | implementation of the changes made to this Section by this | amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly. | (q) Maximizing federal matching funds for the Family | Support Program and the Specialized Family Support Program. | The Department of Healthcare and Family Services, as the sole | Medicaid State agency, shall seek approval from the federal | Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within 12 months | after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st | General Assembly to draw additional federal Medicaid matching | funds for individuals served under the Family Support Program | or the Specialized Family Support Program who are not covered | by the Department's medical assistance programs. The | Department of Children and Family Services, as the State | agency responsible for administering federal funds pursuant to | Title IV-E of the Social Security Act, shall submit a State | Plan to the federal government within 12 months after the | effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General | Assembly to maximize the use of federal Title IV-E prevention |
| funds through the federal Family First Prevention Services | Act, to provide mental health and substance use disorder | treatment services and supports, including, but not limited | to, the provision of short-term crisis and transition beds | post-hospitalization for youth who are at imminent risk of | entering Illinois' youth welfare system solely due to the | inability to access mental health or substance use treatment | services. | (r) Outcomes and data reported annually to the General | Assembly. Beginning in 2021, the Department of Healthcare and | Family Services shall submit an annual report to the General | Assembly that includes the following information with respect | to the time period covered by the report: | (1) The number and ages of youth, emerging adults, and | transition-age adults who requested services under the | Family Support Program and the Specialized Family Support | Program and the services received. | (2) The number and ages of youth, emerging adults, and | transition-age adults who requested services under the | Specialized Family Support Program who were eligible for | services based on the number of hospitalizations. | (3) The number and ages of youth, emerging adults, and | transition-age adults who applied for Family Support | Program or Specialized Family Support Program services but | did not receive any services. | (s) Rulemaking authority. Unless a timeline is otherwise |
| specified in a subsection, if amendments to 89 Ill. Adm. Code | 139 are needed for implementation of this Section, such | amendments shall be filed by the Department of Healthcare and | Family Services within one year after the effective date of | this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly. | (Source: P.A. 101-461, eff. 1-1-20; 101-616, eff. 12-20-19.) | Section 15. The Interagency Children's Behavioral Health | Services Act is amended by adding Section 35 as follows: | (405 ILCS 165/35 new) | Sec. 35. BEACON training. The Department of Human | Services, in coordination with a statewide association | representing a majority of hospitals, shall establish and | offer a voluntary training that will be recorded and made | available on the Department's website to all hospital social | workers, clinicians, and administrative staff to inform them | of BEACON, a centralized resource for Illinois youth and | families seeking services for behavioral health needs, with | the goal of encouraging families to seek assistance through | BEACON and the Interagency Children's Behavioral Health | Services Team. The training shall include how families and | hospital staff can access BEACON, the process once a case is | entered into BEACON, and State and community programs | accessible through BEACON. |
Effective Date: 1/1/2026
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