| Chapter 202 |
| 2023 -- S 1071 SUBSTITUTE A Enacted 06/21/2023 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATION -- DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN, YOUTH, AND FAMILIES |
Introduced By: Senators LaMountain, Pearson, and DiMario |
| Date Introduced: May 25, 2023 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Section 42-11-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-11 entitled "Department |
| of Administration" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 42-11-2. Powers and duties of department. |
| The department of administration shall have the following powers and duties: |
| (1) To prepare a budget for the several state departments and agencies, subject to the |
| direction and supervision of the governor; |
| (2) To administer the budget for all state departments and agencies, except as specifically |
| exempted by law; |
| (3) To devise, formulate, promulgate, supervise, and control accounting systems, |
| procedures, and methods for the state departments and agencies, conforming to such accounting |
| standards and methods as are prescribed by law; |
| (4) To purchase or to contract for the supplies, materials, articles, equipment, printing, and |
| services needed by state departments and agencies, except as specifically exempted by law; |
| (5) To prescribe standard specifications for those purchases and contracts and to enforce |
| compliance with specifications; |
| (6) To supervise and control the advertising for bids and awards for state purchases; |
| (7) To regulate the requisitioning and storage of purchased items, the disposal of surplus |
| and salvage, and the transfer to or between state departments and agencies of needed supplies, |
| equipment, and materials; |
| (8) To maintain, equip, and keep in repair the state house, state office building, and other |
| premises owned or rented by the state for the use of any department or agency, excepting those |
| buildings, the control of which is vested by law in some other agency; |
| (9) To provide for the periodic inspection, appraisal or inventory of all state buildings and |
| property, real and personal; |
| (10) To require reports from state agencies on the buildings and property in their custody; |
| (11) To issue regulations to govern the protection and custody of the property of the state; |
| (12) To assign office and storage space and to rent and lease land and buildings for the use |
| of the several state departments and agencies in the manner provided by law; |
| (13) To control and supervise the acquisition, operation, maintenance, repair, and |
| replacement of state-owned motor vehicles by state agencies; |
| (14) To maintain and operate central duplicating and mailing service for the several state |
| departments and agencies; |
| (15) To furnish the several departments and agencies of the state with other essential office |
| services; |
| (16) To survey and examine the administration and operation of the state departments and |
| agencies, submitting to the governor proposals to secure greater administrative efficiency and |
| economy, to minimize the duplication of activities, and to effect a better organization and |
| consolidation of functions among state agencies; |
| (17) To operate a merit system of personnel administration and personnel management as |
| defined in § 36-3-3 in connection with the conditions of employment in all state departments and |
| agencies within the classified service; |
| (18) To assign or reassign, with the approval of the governor, any functions, duties, or |
| powers established by this chapter to any agency within the department; |
| (19) To establish, maintain, and operate a data processing center or centers, approve the |
| acquisition and use of electronic data processing services by state agencies, furnish staff assistance |
| in methods, systems and programming work to other state agencies, and arrange for and effect the |
| centralization and consolidation of punch card and electronic data processing equipment and |
| services in order to obtain maximum utilization and efficiency; |
| (20) To devise, formulate, promulgate, supervise, and control a comprehensive and |
| coordinated statewide information system designed to improve the database used in the |
| management of public resources, to consult and advise with other state departments and agencies |
| and municipalities to assure appropriate and full participation in this system, and to encourage the |
| participation of the various municipalities of this state in this system by providing technical or other |
| appropriate assistance toward establishing, within those municipalities, compatible information |
| systems in order to obtain the maximum effectiveness in the management of public resources; |
| (i) The comprehensive and coordinated statewide information system may include a Rhode |
| Island geographic information system of land-related economic, physical, cultural and natural |
| resources. |
| (ii) In order to ensure the continuity of the maintenance and functions of the geographic |
| information system, the general assembly may annually appropriate such sum as it may deem |
| necessary to the department of administration for its support; |
| (21) To administer a statewide planning program including planning assistance to the state |
| departments and agencies; |
| (22) To administer a statewide program of photography and photographic services; |
| (23) To negotiate with public or private educational institutions in the state, in cooperation |
| with the department of health, for state support of medical education; |
| (24) To promote the expansion of markets for recovered material and to maximize their |
| return to productive economic use through the purchase of materials and supplies with recycled |
| content by the state of Rhode Island to the fullest extent practically feasible; |
| (25) To approve costs as provided in § 23-19-32; |
| (26) To provide all necessary civil service tests for child protective investigators and |
| individuals seeking employment as social workers at the department of human services at least |
| twice each year and to maintain an adequate hiring list for these positions this position at all times; |
| (27)(ai) To prepare a report every three (3) months by of all current property leases or |
| rentals by any state or quasi-state agency to include the following information: |
| (iA) Name of lessor; |
| (iiB) Description of the lease (purpose, physical characteristics, and location); |
| (iiiC) Cost of the lease; |
| (ivD) Amount paid to date; |
| (vE) Date initiated; |
| (viF) Date covered by the lease. |
| (bii) To prepare a report by October 31, 2014, of all current property owned by the state or |
| leased by any state agency or quasi-state agency to include the following information: |
| (iA) Total square feet for each building or leased space; |
| (iiB) Total square feet for each building and space utilized as office space currently; |
| (iiiC) Location of each building or leased space; |
| (ivD) Ratio and listing of buildings owned by the state versus leased; |
| (vE) Total occupancy costs which shall include capital expenses, provided a proxy should |
| be provided to compare properties that are owned versus leased by showing capital expenses on |
| owned properties as a per square foot cost at industry depreciation rates; |
| (vF) Expiration dates of leases; |
| (viiG) Number of workstations per building or leased space; |
| (viiiH) Total square feet divided by number of workstations; |
| (ixI) Total number of vacant workstations; |
| (xJ) Percentage of vacant workstations versus total workstations available; |
| (xiK) Date when an action is required by the state to renew or terminate a lease; |
| (xiiL) Strategic plan for leases commencing or expiring by June 30, 2016; |
| (xiiiM) Map of all state buildings which provides: cost per square foot to maintain, total |
| number of square feet, total operating cost, date each lease expires, number of persons per building |
| and total number of vacant seats per building; and |
| (xivN) Industry benchmark report which shall include total operating cost by full-time |
| equivalent employee, total operating cost by square foot and total square feet divided by full-time |
| equivalent employee; |
| (28) To prepare a report to the chairs of the house and senate finance committees by |
| December 15, 2021, and each year thereafter of all current property owned by the state or leased |
| by any state agency or quasi-state agency to include the following information: |
| (i) Total square feet for each building or leased space; |
| (ii) Total square feet for each building and space utilized as office space currently; |
| (iii) Location of each building or leased space; |
| (iv) Ratio and listing of buildings owned by the state versus leased; |
| (v) Total occupancy costs which shall include capital expenses, provided a proxy should |
| be provided to compare properties that are owned versus leased by showing capital expenses on |
| owned properties as a per square foot cost at industry depreciation rates; |
| (vi) Expiration dates of leases; |
| (vii) Number of workstations per building or leased space; |
| (viii) Total square feet divided by number of workstations; |
| (ix) Total number of vacant workstations; |
| (x) Percentage of vacant workstations versus total workstations available; |
| (xi) Date when an action is required by the state to renew or terminate a lease; |
| (xii) Strategic plan for leases commencing or expiring by June 30, 2022, and each |
| subsequent year thereafter; |
| (xiii) Map of all state buildings that provides: cost per square foot to maintain, total number |
| of square feet, total operating cost, date each lease expires, number of persons per building and |
| total number of vacant seats per building; and |
| (xiv) Industry benchmark report that shall include total operating cost by full-time |
| equivalent employee, total operating cost by square foot and total square feet divided by full-time |
| equivalent employee; |
| (29) To provide by December 31, 1995, the availability of automatic direct deposit to any |
| recipient of a state benefit payment, provided that the agency responsible for making that payment |
| generates one thousand (1,000) or more such payments each month; |
| (30) To encourage municipalities, school districts, and quasi-public agencies to achieve |
| cost savings in health insurance, purchasing, or energy usage by participating in state contracts, or |
| by entering into collaborative agreements with other municipalities, districts, or agencies. To assist |
| in determining whether the benefit levels including employee cost sharing and unit costs of such |
| benefits and costs are excessive relative to other municipalities, districts, or quasi-public agencies |
| as compared with state benefit levels and costs; and |
| (31) To administer a health benefit exchange in accordance with chapter 157 of this title. |
| SECTION 2. Section 42-72-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-72 entitled "Department |
| of Children, Youth and Families" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 42-72-5. Powers and scope of activities. |
| (a) The department is the principal agency of the state to mobilize the human, physical, and |
| financial resources available to plan, develop, and evaluate a comprehensive and integrated |
| statewide program of services designed to ensure the opportunity for children to reach their full |
| potential. The services include prevention, early intervention, outreach, placement, care and |
| treatment, and after-care programs; provided, however, that the department notifies the state police |
| and cooperates with local police departments when it receives and/or investigates a complaint of |
| sexual assault on a minor and concludes that probable cause exists to support the allegations(s) |
| allegation(s). The department also serves as an advocate for the needs of children. Additionally, |
| on or before October 1, 2023, the department shall implement the hiring process developed by the |
| director pursuant to subsection (f) of this section. |
| (b) To accomplish the purposes and duties, as set forth in this chapter, the director is |
| authorized and empowered: |
| (1) To establish those administrative and operational divisions of the department that the |
| director determines is in the best interests of fulfilling the purposes and duties of this chapter; |
| (2) To assign different tasks to staff members that the director determines best suit the |
| purposes of this chapter; |
| (3) To establish plans and facilities for emergency treatment, relocation, and physical |
| custody of abused or neglected children that may include, but are not limited to, |
| homemaker/educator child-case aides, specialized foster-family programs, daycare facilities, crisis |
| teams, emergency parents, group homes for teenage parents, family centers within existing |
| community agencies, and counseling services; |
| (4) To establish, monitor, and evaluate protective services for children including, but not |
| limited to, purchase of services from private agencies and establishment of a policy and procedure |
| manual to standardize protective services; |
| (5) To plan and initiate primary- and secondary-treatment programs for abused and |
| neglected children; |
| (6) To evaluate the services of the department and to conduct periodic, comprehensive- |
| needs assessment; |
| (7) To license, approve, monitor, and evaluate all residential and non-residential group |
| homes, foster homes, and programs; |
| (8) To recruit and coordinate community resources, public and private; |
| (9) To promulgate rules and regulations concerning the confidentiality, disclosure, and |
| expungement of case records pertaining to matters under the jurisdiction of the department; |
| (10) To establish a minimum mandatory level of twenty (20) hours of training per year and |
| provide ongoing staff development for all staff; provided, however, all social workers hired after |
| June 15, 1991, within the department shall have a minimum of a bachelor’s degree in social work |
| or a closely related field, and must be appointed from a valid, civil-service list; |
| (11) To establish procedures for reporting suspected child abuse and neglect pursuant to |
| chapter 11 of title 40; |
| (12) To promulgate all rules and regulations necessary for the execution of departmental |
| powers pursuant to the administrative procedures act, chapter 35 of this title; |
| (13) To provide and act as a clearinghouse for information, data, and other materials |
| relative to children; |
| (14) To initiate and carry out studies and analysis that will aid in solving local, regional, |
| and statewide problems concerning children; |
| (15) To represent and act on behalf of the state in connection with federal-grant programs |
| applicable to programs for children in the functional areas described in this chapter; |
| (16) To seek, accept, and otherwise take advantage of all federal aid available to the |
| department, and to assist other agencies of the state, local agencies, and community groups in taking |
| advantage of all federal grants and subventions available for children; |
| (17) To review and coordinate those activities of agencies of the state, and of any political |
| subdivision of the state, that affect the full and fair utilization of community resources for programs |
| for children, and initiate programs that will help ensure utilization; |
| (18) To administer the pilot, juvenile-restitution program, including the overseeing and |
| coordinating of all local, community-based restitution programs, and the establishment of |
| procedures for the processing of payments to children performing community service; |
| (19) To adopt rules and regulations that: |
| (i) For the twelve-month (12) period beginning on October 1, 1983, and for each |
| subsequent twelve-month (12) period, establish specific goals as to the maximum number of |
| children who will remain in foster care for a period in excess of two (2) years; and |
| (ii) Are reasonably necessary to implement the child-welfare services and foster-care |
| programs; |
| (20) May establish and conduct seminars for the purpose of educating children regarding |
| sexual abuse; |
| (21) To establish fee schedules by regulations for the processing of requests from adoption |
| placement agencies for adoption studies, adoption study updates, and supervision related to |
| interstate and international adoptions. The fee shall equal the actual cost of the service(s) rendered, |
| but in no event shall the fee exceed two thousand dollars ($2,000); |
| (22) To be responsible for the education of all children who are placed, assigned, or |
| otherwise accommodated for residence by the department in a state-operated or -supported |
| community residence licensed by a Rhode Island state agency. In fulfilling this responsibility, the |
| department is authorized to enroll and pay for the education of students in the public schools or, |
| when necessary and appropriate, to itself provide education in accordance with the regulations of |
| the council on elementary and secondary education either directly or through contract; |
| (23) To develop multidisciplinary service plans, in conjunction with the department of |
| health, at hospitals prior to the discharge of any drug-exposed babies. The plan requires the |
| development of a plan using all healthcare professionals; |
| (24) To be responsible for the delivery of appropriate mental health services to seriously |
| emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental disabilities. |
| Appropriate mental health services may include hospitalization, placement in a residential |
| treatment facility, or treatment in a community-based setting. The department is charged with the |
| responsibility for developing the public policy and programs related to the needs of seriously |
| emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental disabilities; |
| In fulfilling its responsibilities the department shall: |
| (i) Plan a diversified and comprehensive network of programs and services to meet the |
| needs of seriously emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental |
| disabilities; |
| (ii) Provide the overall management and supervision of the state program for seriously |
| emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental disabilities; |
| (iii) Promote the development of programs for preventing and controlling emotional or |
| behavioral disorders in children; |
| (iv) Coordinate the efforts of several state departments and agencies to meet the needs of |
| seriously emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental disabilities |
| and to work with private agencies serving those children; |
| (v) Promote the development of new resources for program implementation in providing |
| services to seriously emotionally disturbed children and children with functional developmental |
| disabilities. |
| The department shall adopt rules and regulations that are reasonably necessary to |
| implement a program of mental health services for seriously emotionally disturbed children. |
| Each community, as defined in chapter 7 of title 16, shall contribute to the department, at |
| least in accordance with rules and regulations to be adopted by the department, at least its average |
| per-pupil cost for special education for the year in which placement commences, as its share of the |
| cost of educational services furnished to a seriously emotionally disturbed child pursuant to this |
| section in a residential treatment program that includes the delivery of educational services. |
| “Seriously emotionally disturbed child” means any person under the age of eighteen (18) |
| years, or any person under the age of twenty-one (21) years, who began to receive services from |
| the department prior to attaining eighteen (18) years of age and has continuously received those |
| services thereafter; who has been diagnosed as having an emotional, behavioral, or mental disorder |
| under the current edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual and that disability has been |
| ongoing for one year or more or has the potential of being ongoing for one year or more; and the |
| child is in need of multi-agency intervention; and the child is in an out-of-home placement or is at |
| risk of placement because of the disability. |
| A child with a “functional developmental disability” means any person under the age of |
| eighteen (18) years or any person under the age of twenty-one (21) years who began to receive |
| services from the department prior to attaining eighteen (18) years of age and has continuously |
| received those services thereafter. |
| The term “functional developmental disability” includes autism spectrum disorders and |
| means a severe, chronic disability of a person that: |
| (A) Is attributable to a mental or physical impairment or combination of mental physical |
| impairments; |
| (B) Is manifested before the person attains age eighteen (18); |
| (C) Is likely to continue indefinitely; |
| (D) Results in age-appropriate, substantial, functional limitations in three (3) or more of |
| the following areas of major life activity: |
| (I) Self-care; |
| (II) Receptive and expressive language; |
| (III) Learning; |
| (IV) Mobility; |
| (V) Self direction; |
| (VI) Capacity for independent living; and |
| (VII) Economic self-sufficiency; and |
| (E) Reflects the person’s need for a combination and sequence of special, interdisciplinary, |
| or generic care, treatment, or other services that are of life-long or extended duration and are |
| individually planned and coordinated. |
| Funding for these clients shall include funds that are transferred to the department of human |
| services as part of the managed healthcare program transfer. However, the expenditures relating to |
| these clients shall not be part of the department of human services’ caseload estimated for the semi- |
| annual, caseload-estimating conference. The expenditures shall be accounted for separately; |
| (25) To provide access to services to any person under the age of eighteen (18) years, or |
| any person under the age of twenty-one (21) years who began to receive child welfare services |
| from the department prior to attaining eighteen (18) years of age, has continuously received those |
| services thereafter, and elects to continue to receive such services after attaining the age of eighteen |
| (18) years. The general assembly has included funding in the FY 2008 DCYF budget in the amount |
| of $10.5 million from all sources of funds and $6.0 million from general revenues to provide a |
| managed system to care for children serviced between 18 to 21 years of age. The department shall |
| manage this caseload to this level of funding; |
| (26) To initiate transition planning in cooperation with the department of behavioral |
| healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals and local school departments for any child who |
| receives services through DCYF; is seriously emotionally disturbed or developmentally delayed |
| pursuant to subsection (b)(24)(v); and whose care may or shall be administered by the department |
| of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals after the age of twenty-one (21) |
| years; the transition planning shall commence at least twelve (12) months prior to the person’s |
| twenty-first birthday and shall result in a collaborative plan submitted to the family court by both |
| the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals and the |
| department of children, youth and families and shall require the approval of the court prior to the |
| dismissal of the abuse, neglect, dependency, or miscellaneous petition before the child’s twenty- |
| first birthday; |
| (27) To develop and maintain, in collaboration with other state and private agencies, a |
| comprehensive continuum of care in this state for children in the care and custody of the department |
| or at risk of being in state care. This continuum of care should be family centered and community |
| based with the focus of maintaining children safely within their families or, when a child cannot |
| live at home, within as close proximity to home as possible based on the needs of the child and |
| resource availability. The continuum should include community-based prevention, family support, |
| and crisis-intervention services, as well as a full array of foster care and residential services, |
| including residential services designed to meet the needs of children who are seriously emotionally |
| disturbed, children who have a functional developmental disability, and youth who have juvenile |
| justice issues. The director shall make reasonable efforts to provide a comprehensive continuum of |
| care for children in the care and custody of DCYF, taking into account the availability of public |
| and private resources and financial appropriations and the director shall submit an annual report to |
| the general assembly as to the status of his or her efforts in accordance with the provisions of § 42- |
| 72-4(b)(13); |
| (28) To administer funds under the John H. Chafee Foster Care Independence and |
| Educational and Training Voucher (ETV) Programs of Title IV-E of the Social Security Act [42 |
| U.S.C. § 677] and the DCYF higher education opportunity grant program as outlined in chapter |
| 72.8 of this title 42, in accordance with rules and regulations as promulgated by the director of the |
| department; and |
| (29) To process nationwide criminal record checks on prospective foster parents and any |
| household member age 18 or older, prospective adoptive parents and any household member age |
| 18 and older, operators of childcare facilities, persons seeking to act as volunteer court-appointed |
| special advocates, persons seeking employment in a childcare facility or at the training school for |
| youth or on behalf of any person seeking employment at DCYF, who are required to submit to |
| nationwide criminal background checks as a matter of law. |
| (c) In order to assist in the discharge of his or her duties, the director may request from any |
| agency of the state information pertinent to the affairs and problems of children. |
| (d) [Deleted by P.L. 2008, ch. 9, art. 16, § 2.] |
| (e) [Deleted by P.L. 2008, ch. 9, art. 16, § 2.] |
| (f) On or before October 1, 2023, the director shall establish a process for hiring individuals |
| seeking employment at the department as a social caseworker or child protective investigator. The |
| department shall be provided with funding for one full-time employee, or the equivalent, to support |
| the implementation of the hiring process. The process shall be in effect through September 30, |
| 2024. |
| (1) Generally, the process shall include, but need not be limited to: |
| (i) Screening and reviewing candidates for eligibility criteria including education and |
| experience; |
| (ii) Administering the requisite civil service examinations; |
| (iii) Conducting in-person interviews; |
| (iv) Determining which applicants will be offered employment; and |
| (v) Determining the order in which employment offers will be given. |
| (2) Specifically, the process shall include, but need not be limited to, the following |
| elements: |
| (i) Eligibility criteria. |
| (A) Candidates must meet the minimum job requirements as defined in the specification |
| with social caseworker IIs and child protective investigators as approved by the department of |
| administration. |
| (ii) Civil service examinations. |
| (A) Examinations shall be offered by the department at least three (3) times per month to |
| individuals who meet the eligibility criteria and at times that shall include a weekend, a weekday, |
| and a weeknight option. |
| (B) The director shall determine the process and administration of the exam. The director |
| is not obligated to schedule an examination if there are no current applicants for the position |
| available by the deadline set by the director pursuant to this subsection. |
| (C) If an applicant does not pass the examination, the department shall notify the applicant |
| as soon as is practicable. Applicants wishing to re-take the examination are not eligible to do so |
| until sixty (60) days have passed from the date said the notification was sent. |
| (iii) In-person interviews. |
| (A) Applicants who pass the civil service examination shall be invited to an in-person |
| interview. |
| (B) The interview shall be conducted by at least two (2) current employees of the |
| department. |
| (I) One of whom shall have a culturally or racially diverse background; and |
| (II) One of whom is currently in a supervisory role over social caseworkers or child |
| protective investigators for at least three (3) years. |
| (III) Satisfying the requirements of subsections (f)(2)(iii)(B)(I) and (f)(2)(iii)(B)(II) of this |
| section does not necessarily require two (2) individuals. One individual may satisfy both |
| requirements. |
| (C) There shall be a good faith effort to accommodate the availability of the applicant and |
| the individuals on the panel when scheduling the interview. |
| (iv) Offering employment. |
| (A) Prior to offering employment, an applicant shall pass both the civil service exam and |
| the in-person interview. Nothing herein is a guarantee of employment to an applicant who meets |
| these criteria. |
| (B) Determining whether an applicant successfully completes the in-person interview shall |
| be based on criteria established by the director. |
| (I) The department of administration shall score the civil service exams and provide a |
| pass/fail listing of all candidates to DCYF within five (5) business days of receipt of the exams |
| from DCYF. |
| (II) The director may create a method of scoring interviews to provide objectivity and |
| uniformity when assessing applicants. |
| (g) On or before March 15, 2024, the department shall provide an interim report to the |
| senate president and the speaker of the house regarding the hiring process developed and |
| implemented pursuant to subsection (f) of this section. The report shall include, but is not limited |
| to, the following data concerning social caseworkers and child protective investigators at the |
| department: |
| (1) The number of social caseworkers hired using the process developed pursuant to |
| subsection (f) of this section; |
| (2) The number of child protective investigators hired using the process developed pursuant |
| to subsection (f) of this section; |
| (3) The number of terminations or resignations since October 1, 2023; |
| (4) The number of vacancies that existed on October 1, 2023, and the number of vacancies |
| that exist as of the date of the report; and |
| (5) Any identified barriers to hiring that exist in spite of, or because of, the process |
| developed pursuant to subsection (f) of this section. |
| SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC003017/SUB A |
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