BILL NUMBER: AB 87	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN SENATE  JUNE 12, 2013

INTRODUCED BY   Committee on Budget (Blumenfield (Chair), Bloom,
Bonilla,  Campos,  Chesbro, Daly, Dickinson, Gordon,
Jones-Sawyer, Mitchell, Mullin, Muratsuchi, Nazarian, 
Rendon,   Skinner,  Stone, and Ting))

                        JANUARY 10, 2013

   An act  relating to the Budget Act of 2013  
to amend Section 5892 of, and to add Part 3.8 (commencing with
Section 5848.5) to Division 5 of, the Welfare and Institutions Code,
relating to mental health, and making an appropriation therefor, to
take effect immediately, bill related to the budget  .


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 87, as amended, Committee on Budget.  Budget Act of
2013.   Investment in Mental Health Wellness Act of
2013.  
   The California Health Facilities Financing Authority Act
authorizes the California Health Facilities Financing Authority
(authority) to make loans from the continuously appropriated
California Health Facilities Financing Authority Fund to
participating health institutions for financing or refinancing the
acquisition, construction, or remodeling of health facilities. 

   Existing law, the Mental Health Services Act, an initiative
measure enacted by the voters as Proposition 63 at the November 2,
2004, statewide general election, establishes the continuously
appropriated Mental Health Services Fund to fund various county
mental health programs. The act, as originally enacted, limited state
administrative costs to implement duties pursuant to the programs to
5% of the total of annual revenues received for the fund. Existing
law limits state administrative costs to 3.5%. Existing law
establishes the Mental Health Services Oversight and Accountability
Commission (commission) to oversee the administration of various
parts of the Mental Health Services Act. The act provides that it may
be amended by the Legislature by a 2/3 vote of each house as long as
the amendment is consistent with and furthers the intent of the act,
and that the Legislature may also clarify procedures and terms of
the act by majority vote.  
   This bill would restore the limit on state administrative costs to
5%.  
   This bill would establish the Investment in Mental Health Wellness
Act of 2013. The bill would provide that funds appropriated by the
Legislature to the authority for the purposes of the act be made
available to selected counties or counties acting jointly, except as
otherwise provided, and used to increase capacity for client
assistance and services in crisis intervention, crisis stabilization,
crisis residential treatment, rehabilitative mental health services,
and mobile crisis support teams. The bill would require the
authority to develop and to consider specified selection criteria for
awarding grants, as prescribed. The bill would require the authority
to provide prescribed reports to the fiscal and policy committees of
the Legislature on May 1, 2014, and May 1, 2015. The bill would
provide that funds appropriated by the Legislature to the commission
for the purposes of the act be allocated to selected counties,
counties acting jointly, or city mental health departments, as
determined by the commission through a selection process, for triage
personnel to provide intensive case management and linkage to
services for individuals with mental health disorders. The bill would
authorize triage personnel to provide targeted case management
services face to face, by telephone, or by telehealth. The bill would
require the commission to consider specified selection criteria for
awarding grants, and require the commission to provide a prescribed
report to the fiscal and policy committees of the Legislature by
March 1, 2014. The bill would prohibit funds awarded by the authority
or commission from being used to supplant existing financial and
resource commitments of the grantee.  
   The bill would appropriate $500,000 from the General Fund to the
California Health Facilities Financing Authority for these purposes.
 
   This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a
bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill. 

   This bill would express the intent of the Legislature to enact
statutory changes relating to the Budget Act of 2013. 
   Vote: majority. Appropriation:  no   yes
 . Fiscal committee:  no  yes  .
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

   SECTION 1.    Part 3.8 (commencing with Section
5848.5) is added to Division 5 of the   Welfare and
Institutions Code   , to read:  

      PART 3.8.  COMMUNITY-BASED SERVICES


   5848.5.  (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
   (1) California has realigned public community mental health
services to counties and it is imperative that sufficient
community-based resources be available to meet the mental health
needs of eligible individuals.
   (2) Increasing access to effective outpatient and crisis
stabilization services provides an opportunity to reduce costs
associated with expensive inpatient and emergency room care and to
better meet the needs of individuals with mental health disorders in
the least restrictive manner possible.
   (3) Almost one-fifth of people with mental health disorders visit
a hospital emergency room at least once per year. If an adequate
array of crisis services is not available, it leaves an individual
with little choice but to access an emergency room for assistance
and, potentially, an unnecessary inpatient hospitalization.
   (4) Recent reports have called attention to a continuing problem
of inappropriate and unnecessary utilization of hospital emergency
rooms in California due to limited community-based services for
individuals in psychological distress and acute psychiatric crisis.
Hospitals report that 70 percent of people taken to emergency rooms
for psychiatric evacuation can be stabilized and transferred to a
less intensive level of crisis care. Law enforcement personnel report
that their personnel need to stay with people in the emergency room
waiting area until a placement is found, and that less intensive
levels of care tend not to be available.
   (5) Comprehensive public and private partnerships at both local
and regional levels, including across physical health services,
mental health, substance use disorder, law enforcement, social
services, and related supports, are necessary to develop and maintain
high quality, patient-centered, and cost-effective care for
individuals with mental health disorders that facilitates their
recovery and leads towards wellness.
   (6) The recovery of individuals with mental health disorders is
important for all levels of government, business, and the local
community.
   (b) This section shall be known, and may be cited, as the
Investment in Mental Health Wellness Act of 2013. The objectives of
this section are to do all of the following:
   (1) Expand access to early intervention and treatment services to
improve the client experience, achieve recovery and wellness, and
reduce costs.
   (2) Expand the continuum of services to address crisis
intervention, crisis stabilization, and crisis residential treatment
needs that are wellness, resiliency, and recovery oriented.
   (3) Add at least 25 mobile crisis support teams and at least 2,000
crisis stabilization and crisis residential treatment beds to
bolster capacity at the local level to improve access to mental
health crisis services and address unmet mental health care needs.
   (4) Add at least 600 triage personnel to provide intensive case
management and linkage to services for individuals with mental health
care disorders at various points of access, such as at designated
community-based service points, homeless shelters, and clinics.
   (5) Reduce unnecessary hospitalizations and inpatient days by
appropriately utilizing community-based services and improving access
to timely assistance.
   (6) Reduce recidivism and mitigate unnecessary expenditures of
local law enforcement.
   (7) Provide local communities with increased financial resources
to leverage additional public and private funding sources to achieve
improved networks of care for individuals with mental health
disorders.
   (c) Through appropriations provided in the annual Budget Act for
this purpose, it is the intent of the Legislature to authorize the
California Health Facilities Financing Authority, hereafter referred
to as the authority, and the Mental Health Services Oversight and
Accountability Commission, hereafter referred to as the commission,
to administer competitive selection processes as provided in this
section for capital capacity and program expansion to increase
capacity for mobile crisis support, crisis intervention, crisis
stabilization services, crisis residential treatment, and specified
personnel resources.
   (d) Funds appropriated by the Legislature to the authority for the
purposes of this section shall be made available to selected
counties, or counties acting jointly. The authority may, at its
discretion, also give consideration to private nonprofit corporations
and public agencies in an area or region of the state if a county,
or counties acting jointly, affirmatively supports this designation
and collaboration in lieu of a county government directly receiving
grant funds.
   (1) Grant awards made by the authority shall be used to expand
local resources for the development, capital, equipment acquisition,
and applicable program startup or expansion costs to increase
capacity for client assistance and services in the following areas:
   (A) Crisis intervention, as authorized by Sections 14021.4, 14680,
and 14684.
   (B) Crisis stabilization, as authorized by Sections 14021.4,
14680, and 14684.
   (C) Crisis residential treatment, as authorized by Sections
14021.4, 14680, and 14684.
   (D) Rehabilitative mental health services, as authorized by
Sections 14021.4, 14680, and 14684.
   (E) Mobile crisis support teams, including personnel and
equipment, such as the purchase of vehicles.
   (2) The authority shall develop selection criteria to expand local
resources, including those described in paragraph (1), and processes
for awarding grants after consulting with representatives and
interested stakeholders from the mental health community, including,
but not limited to, county mental health directors, service
providers, consumer organizations, and other appropriate interests,
such as health care providers and law enforcement, as determined by
the authority. The authority shall ensure that grants result in
cost-effective expansion of the number of community-based crisis
resources in regions and communities selected for funding. The
authority shall also take into account at least the following
criteria and factors when selecting recipients of grants and
determining the amount of grant awards:
   (A) Description of need, including, at a minimum, a comprehensive
description of the project, community need, population to be served,
linkage with other public systems of health and mental health care,
linkage with local law enforcement, social services, and related
assistance, as applicable, and a description of the request for
funding.
   (B) Ability to serve the target population, which includes
individuals eligible for Medi-Cal and individuals eligible for county
health and mental health services.
   (C) Geographic areas or regions of the state to be eligible for
grant awards, which may include rural, suburban, and urban areas, and
may include use of the five regional designations utilized by the
California Mental Health Directors Association.
   (D) Level of community engagement and commitment to project
completion.
   (E) Financial support that, in addition to a grant that may be
awarded by the authority, will be sufficient to complete and operate
the project for which the grant from the authority is awarded.
   (F) Ability to provide additional funding support to the project,
including public or private funding, federal tax credits and grants,
foundation support, and other collaborative efforts.
   (G) Memorandum of understanding among project partners, if
applicable.
   (H) Information regarding the legal status of the collaborating
partners, if applicable.
   (I) Ability to measure key outcomes, including improved access to
services, health and mental health outcomes, and cost benefit of the
project.
   (3) The authority shall determine maximum grants awards, which
shall take into consideration the number of projects awarded to the
grantee, as described in paragraph (1), and shall reflect reasonable
costs for the project and geographic region. The authority may
allocate a grant in increments contingent upon the phases of a
project.
   (4) Funds awarded by the authority pursuant to this section may be
used to supplement, but not to supplant, existing financial and
resource commitments of the grantee or any other member of a
collaborative effort that has been awarded a grant.
   (5) All projects that are awarded grants by the authority shall be
completed within a reasonable period of time, to be determined by
the authority. Funds shall not be released by the authority until the
applicant demonstrates project readiness to the authority's
satisfaction. If the authority determines that a grant recipient has
failed to complete the project under the terms specified in awarding
the grant, the authority may require remedies, including the return
of all or a portion of the grant.
   (6) A grantee that receives a grant from the authority under this
section shall commit to using that capital capacity and program
expansion project, such as the mobile crisis team, crisis
stabilization unit, or crisis residential treatment program, for the
duration of the expected life of the project.
   (7) The authority may consult with a technical assistance entity,
as described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (a) of Section 4061 of
the Welfare and Institutions Code, for the purposes of implementing
this section.
   (8) The authority may adopt emergency regulations relating to the
grants for the capital capacity and program expansion projects
described in this section, including emergency regulations that
define eligible costs and determine minimum and maximum grant
amounts.
   (9) The authority shall provide reports to the fiscal and policy
committees of the Legislature on or before May 1, 2014, and or before
May 1, 2015, on the progress of implementation, that includes, but
are not limited to, the following:
   (A) A description of each project awarded funding.
   (B) The amount of each grant issued.
   (C) A description of other sources of funding for each project.
   (D) The total amount of grants issued.
   (E) A description of project operation and implementation,
including who is being served.
   (10) A recipient of a grant provided pursuant to paragraph (1)
shall adhere to all applicable laws relating to scope of practice,
licensure, certification, staffing, and building codes.
   (e) Funds appropriated by the Legislature to the commission for
the purposes of this section shall be allocated for triage personnel
to provide intensive case management and linkage to services for
individuals with mental health disorders at various points of access.
These funds shall be made available to selected counties, counties
acting jointly, or city mental health departments, as determined by
the commission through a selection process. It is the intent of the
Legislature for these funds to be allocated in an efficient manner to
encourage early intervention and receipt of needed services for
individuals with mental health disorders, and to assist in navigating
the local service sector to improve efficiencies and the delivery of
services.
   (1) Triage personnel may provide targeted case management services
face to face, by telephone, or by telehealth with the individual in
need of assistance or his or her significant support person, and may
be provided anywhere in the community. These service activities may
include, but are not limited to, the following:
   (A) Communication, coordination, and referral.
   (B) Monitoring service delivery to ensure the individual accesses
and receives services.
   (C) Monitoring the individual's progress.
   (D) Providing placement service assistance and service plan
development.
   (2) The commission shall take into account at least the following
criteria and factors when selecting recipients and determining the
amount of grant awards for triage personnel as follows:
   (A) Description of need, including potential gaps in local service
connections.
   (B) Description of funding request, including personnel and use of
peer support.
   (C) Description of how triage personnel will be used to facilitate
linkage and access to services, including objectives and anticipated
outcomes.
   (D) Ability to obtain federal Medicaid reimbursement, when
applicable.
   (E) Ability to administer an effective service program and the
degree to which local agencies and service providers will support and
collaborate with the triage personnel effort.
   (F) Geographic areas or regions of the state to be eligible for
grant awards, which shall include rural, suburban, and urban areas,
and may include use of the five regional designations utilized by the
California Mental Health Directors Association.
   (3) The commission shall determine maximum grant awards, and shall
take into consideration the level of need, population to be served,
and related criteria, as described in paragraph (2), and shall
reflect reasonable costs.
   (4) Funds awarded by the commission for purposes of this section
may be used to supplement, but not supplant, existing financial and
resource commitments of the county, counties acting jointly, or city
mental health department that received the grant.
   (5) Notwithstanding any other law, a county, counties acting
jointly, or city mental health department that receives an award of
funds for the purpose of supporting triage personnel pursuant to this
subdivision is not required to provide a matching contribution of
local funds.
   (6) Notwithstanding any other law, the commission, without taking
any further regulatory action, may implement, interpret, or make
specific this section by means of informational letters, bulletins,
or similar instructions.
   (7) The commission shall provide a status report to the fiscal and
policy committees of the Legislature on the progress of
implementation no later than March 1, 2014. 
   SEC. 2.    Section 5892 of the   Welfare and
Institutions Code   is amended to read: 
   5892.  (a) In order to promote efficient implementation of this
act, the county shall use funds distributed from the Mental Health
Services Fund as follows:
   (1) In 2005-06, 2006-07, and in 2007-08 10 percent shall be placed
in a trust fund to be expended for education and training programs
pursuant to Part 3.1.
   (2) In 2005-06, 2006-07 and in 2007-08 10 percent for capital
facilities and technological needs distributed to counties in
accordance with a formula developed in consultation with the
California Mental Health Directors Association to implement plans
developed pursuant to Section 5847.
   (3) Twenty percent of funds distributed to the counties pursuant
to subdivision (c) of Section 5891 shall be used for prevention and
early intervention programs in accordance with Part 3.6 (commencing
with Section 5840) of this division.
   (4) The expenditure for prevention and early intervention may be
increased in any county in which the department determines that the
increase will decrease the need and cost for additional services to
severely mentally ill persons in that county by an amount at least
commensurate with the proposed increase.
   (5) The balance of funds shall be distributed to county mental
health programs for services to persons with severe mental illnesses
pursuant to Part 4 (commencing with Section 5850), for the children's
system of care and Part 3 (commencing with Section 5800), for the
adult and older adult system of care.
   (6) Five percent of the total funding for each county mental
health program for Part 3 (commencing with Section 5800), Part 3.6
(commencing with Section 5840), and Part 4 (commencing with Section
5850) of this division, shall be utilized for innovative programs in
accordance with Sections 5830, 5847, and 5848.
   (b) In any year after 2007-08, programs for services pursuant to
Part 3 (commencing with Section 5800), and Part 4 (commencing with
Section 5850) of this division may include funds for technological
needs and capital facilities, human resource needs, and a prudent
reserve to ensure services do not have to be significantly reduced in
years in which revenues are below the average of previous years. The
total allocation for purposes authorized by this subdivision shall
not exceed 20 percent of the average amount of funds allocated to
that county for the previous five years pursuant to this section.
   (c) The allocations pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) shall
include funding for annual planning costs pursuant to Section 5848.
The total of these costs shall not exceed 5 percent of the total of
annual revenues received for the fund. The planning costs shall
include funds for county mental health programs to pay for the costs
of consumers, family members, and other stakeholders to participate
in the planning process and for the planning and implementation
required for private provider contracts to be significantly expanded
to provide additional services pursuant to Part 3 (commencing with
Section 5800), and Part 4 (commencing with Section 5850) of this
division.
   (d) Prior to making the allocations pursuant to subdivisions (a),
(b), and (c), funds shall be reserved for the costs for the State
Department of Health Care Services, the California Mental Health
Planning Council, the Office of Statewide Health Planning and
Development, the Mental Health Services Oversight and Accountability
Commission, the State Department of Public Health, and any other
state agency to implement all duties pursuant to the programs set
forth in this section. These costs shall not exceed  3.5
  5  percent of the total of annual revenues
received for the fund. The administrative costs shall include funds
to assist consumers and family members to ensure the appropriate
state and county agencies give full consideration to concerns about
quality, structure of service delivery, or access to services. The
amounts allocated for administration shall include amounts sufficient
to ensure adequate research and evaluation regarding the
effectiveness of services being provided and achievement of the
outcome measures set forth in Part 3 (commencing with Section 5800),
Part 3.6 (commencing with Section 5840), and Part 4 (commencing with
Section 5850) of this division. The amount of funds available for the
purposes of this subdivision in any fiscal year shall be subject to
appropriation in the annual Budget Act.
   (e) In 2004-05 funds shall be allocated as follows:
   (1)  Forty-five percent for education and training pursuant to
Part 3.1 (commencing with Section 5820) of this division.
   (2)  Forty-five percent for capital facilities and technology
needs in the manner specified by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a).
   (3)  Five percent for local planning in the manner specified in
subdivision (c).
   (4) Five percent for state implementation in the manner specified
in subdivision (d).
   (f) Each county shall place all funds received from the State
Mental Health Services Fund in a local Mental Health Services Fund.
The Local Mental Health Services Fund balance shall be invested
consistent with other county funds and the interest earned on the
investments shall be transferred into the fund. The earnings on
investment of these funds shall be available for distribution from
the fund in future years.
   (g) All expenditures for county mental health programs shall be
consistent with a currently approved plan or update pursuant to
Section 5847.
   (h) Other than funds placed in a reserve in accordance with an
approved plan, any funds allocated to a county which have not been
spent for their authorized purpose within three years shall revert to
the state to be deposited into the fund and available for other
counties in future years, provided however, that funds for capital
facilities, technological needs, or education and training may be
retained for up to 10 years before reverting to the fund.
   (i) If there are still additional revenues available in the fund
after the Mental Health Services Oversight and Accountability
Commission has determined there are prudent reserves and no unmet
needs for any of the programs funded pursuant to this section,
including all purposes of the Prevention and Early Intervention
Program, the commission shall develop a plan for expenditures of
these revenues to further the purposes of this act and the
Legislature may appropriate these funds for any purpose consistent
with the commission's adopted plan which furthers the purposes of
this act.
   (j) For the 2011-12 fiscal year, General Fund revenues will be
insufficient to fully fund many existing mental health programs,
including Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment
(EPSDT), Medi-Cal Specialty Mental Health Managed Care, and mental
health services provided for special education pupils. In order to
adequately fund those programs for the 2011-12 fiscal year and avoid
deeper reductions in programs that serve individuals with severe
mental illness and the most vulnerable, medically needy citizens of
the state, prior to distribution of funds under paragraphs (1) to
(6), inclusive, of subdivision (a), effective July 1, 2011, moneys
shall be allocated from the Mental Health Services Fund to the
counties as follows:
   (1) Commencing July 1, 2011, one hundred eighty-three million six
hundred thousand dollars ($183,600,000) of the funds available as of
July 1, 2011, in the Mental Health Services Fund, shall be allocated
in a manner consistent with subdivision (c) of Section 5778 and based
on a formula determined by the state in consultation with the
California Mental Health Directors Association to meet the fiscal
year 2011-12 General Fund obligation for Medi-Cal Specialty Mental
Health Managed Care.
   (2) Upon completion of the allocation in paragraph (1), the
Controller shall distribute to counties ninety-eight million five
hundred eighty-six thousand dollars ($98,586,000) from the Mental
Health Services Fund for mental health services for special education
pupils based on a formula determined by the state in consultation
with the California Mental Health Directors Association.
   (3) Upon completion of the allocation in paragraph (2), the
Controller shall distribute to counties 50 percent of their 2011-12
Mental Health Services Act component allocations consistent with
Sections 5847 and 5891, not to exceed four hundred eighty-eight
million dollars ($488,000,000). This allocation shall commence
beginning August 1, 2011.
   (4) Upon completion of the allocation in paragraph (3), and as
revenues are deposited into the Mental Health Services Fund, the
Controller shall distribute five hundred seventy-nine million dollars
($579,000,000) from the Mental Health Services Fund to counties to
meet the General Fund obligation for EPSDT for fiscal year 2011-12.
These revenues shall be distributed to counties on a quarterly basis
and based on a formula determined by the state in consultation with
the California Mental Health Directors Association. These funds shall
not be subject to reconciliation or cost settlement.
   (5) The Controller shall distribute to counties the remaining
2011-12 Mental Health Services Act component allocations consistent
with Sections 5847 and 5891, beginning no later than April 30, 2012.
These remaining allocations shall be made on a monthly basis.
   (6) The total one-time allocation from the Mental Health Services
Fund for EPSDT, Medi-Cal Specialty Mental Health Managed Care, and
mental health services provided to special education pupils as
referenced shall not exceed eight hundred sixty-two million dollars
($862,000,000). Any revenues deposited in the Mental Health Services
Fund in fiscal year 2011-12 that exceed this obligation shall be
distributed to counties for remaining fiscal year 2011-12 Mental
Health Services Act component allocations, consistent with Sections
5847 and 5891.
   (k) Subdivision (j) shall not be subject to repayment.
   (  l  ) Subdivision (j) shall become inoperative on July
1, 2012.
   SEC. 3.    For the purpose of the Investment in
Mental Health Wellness Act of 2013, the amount of five hundred
thousand dollars ($500,000) is hereby appropriated from the General
Fund to the California Health Facilities Financing Authority to
implement grant programs to support the development, capital,
equipment acquisition, and applicable program startup or expansion
costs to increase capacity for client assistance and services for
individuals with mental health disorders. The authority may
administratively
establish positions for this purpose. These funds shall be available
for encumbrance and expenditure until June 30, 2016. 
   SEC. 4.    This act is a bill providing for
appropriations related to the Budget Bill within the meaning of
subdivision (e) of Section 12 of Article IV of the California
Constitution, has been identified as related to the budget in the
Budget Bill, and shall take effect immediately. 
   SEC. 5.    The Legislature finds and declares that
this act clarifies procedures and terms of the Mental Health Services
Act within the meaning of Section 18 of the Mental Health Services
Act.  
  SECTION 1.    It is the intent of the Legislature
to enact statutory changes relating to the Budget Act of 2013.