2026 -- S 3066 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED | |
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LC006098/SUB A/3 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2026 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- CHILDREN'S MOBILE | |
RESPONSE AND STABILIZATION SERVICES | |
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Introduced By: Senators Lawson, Murray, Ciccone, Tikoian, and LaMountain | |
Date Introduced: March 12, 2026 | |
Referred To: Senate Health & Human Services | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Legislative Findings and Purpose. |
2 | (a) The General Assembly finds that: |
3 | (1) Children and youth experiencing behavioral health crises require timely, community- |
4 | based interventions to prevent unnecessary emergency department utilization, inpatient |
5 | hospitalization, out-of-home placement, and involvement with law enforcement; |
6 | (2) Children's Mobile Response and Stabilization Services (MRSS) are a Substance Abuse |
7 | and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) best practice, trauma-informed |
8 | intervention that provides rapid crisis response and short-term stabilization for children and youth |
9 | in their natural environments; |
10 | (3) A statewide Children's MRSS system funded through a combination of commercial |
11 | insurance, Medicaid and state general revenue promotes equitable access to services regardless of |
12 | insurance status; |
13 | (4) Rhode Island has an interest in ensuring continuity of care, fiscal sustainability, and the |
14 | participation of experienced community-based providers in delivering children's behavioral health |
15 | crisis services. |
16 | (b) The purpose of this act is to establish Children's Mobile Response and Stabilization |
17 | Services as a standalone statewide behavioral health service in Rhode Island, funded through a |
18 | coordinated Medicaid and state funding model, and administered in a manner that ensures access |
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1 | for all children and youth. |
2 | SECTION 2. Title 42 of the General Laws entitled "STATE AFFAIRS AND |
3 | GOVERNMENT" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
4 | CHAPTER 72.13 |
5 | CHILDREN'S MOBILE RESPONSE AND STABILIZATION SERVICES |
6 | 42-72.13-1. Definitions. |
7 | As used in this chapter: |
8 | (1) "Department" means the department of children, youth and families (DCYF). |
9 | (2) "Designated MRSS provider" means a community-based provider licensed or |
10 | contracted by the department to deliver MRSS. |
11 | (3) "Medicaid agency" means the Medicaid program administered within the executive |
12 | office of health and human services (EOHHS). |
13 | (4) "Mobile response and stabilization services" or "MRSS" means community-based |
14 | behavioral health crisis services for children and youth up to the age of twenty-one (21), including: |
15 | (i) Rapid mobile crisis response; |
16 | (ii) Crisis assessment and de-escalation; |
17 | (iii) Short-term stabilization and follow-up services; and |
18 | (iv) Care coordination with families, schools, healthcare providers, and community-based |
19 | organizations. |
20 | (5) "Natural environment" means homes, schools, childcare settings, and other community |
21 | locations in which children and youth typically live, learn, or receive care. |
22 | 42-72.13-2. Establishment of a statewide MRSS program. |
23 | (a) The department, in coordination with the Medicaid agency, shall establish and |
24 | administer a statewide mobile response and stabilization services program, and shall ensure |
25 | alignment with the Children's Behavioral Health Consent Decree that was ordered in United States |
26 | v. State of Rhode Island, C.A. No. 24-cv-00531. |
27 | (b) The department shall establish standards for MRSS service fidelity. |
28 | (c) MRSS shall be available statewide, twenty-four (24) hours per day, seven (7) days per |
29 | week, to all children and youth regardless of insurance status or Medicaid eligibility. |
30 | (d) The department shall license a minimum of two MRSS providers and a maximum of |
31 | three (3) providers for the entire State of Rhode Island. |
32 | (1) Each licensed MRSS provider shall be responsible to provide MRSS to all children and |
33 | youth up to the age of twenty-one (21) to their agreed geographic region or catchment area as |
34 | established by the department. |
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1 | (2) Licensed MRSS geographic catchment areas shall be through the assignment of the |
2 | specific cities and towns and ensure sustainability and community connection. |
3 | (3) Each MRSS licensed provider shall be responsible for a catchment area with a |
4 | minimum of a total of ninety thousand (90,000) or as established in regulations by the department, |
5 | and a maximum of one hundred forty thousand (140,000) or as established in regulations by the |
6 | department, children and youth up to the age of twenty-one (21). |
7 | (e) No prior authorization, referral, or clinical intake determination shall be required for |
8 | initiation of MRSS. |
9 | (f) Services pursuant to this chapter shall be delivered in the child's natural environment |
10 | whenever clinically appropriate. |
11 | (g) All requests for MRSS shall be presumed eligible for response under a no wrong door |
12 | standard, and services shall not be denied or delayed due to: |
13 | (1) Payer status; |
14 | (2) Referral source; or |
15 | (3) Clinical screening thresholds inconsistent with a family-defined crisis. |
16 | 42-72.13-3. Service delivery standards. |
17 | (a) Response time. Designated MRSS providers shall provide in-person mobile response |
18 | within sixty (60) minutes of initial contact, unless clinically contraindicated. Telephonic or virtual |
19 | response shall not substitute for in-person response except where clinically appropriate and |
20 | determined by MRSS staff. |
21 | (b) Service components. MRSS shall include, at a minimum: |
22 | (1) Crisis assessment and de-escalation; |
23 | (2) Family engagement and support; |
24 | (3) Short-term stabilization services of sufficient duration to support safe resolution of the |
25 | crisis; and |
26 | (4) Transition planning and linkage to ongoing behavioral health, educational, and |
27 | community supports. |
28 | (c) Designated provider MRSS teams shall consist of a minimum of two (2) staff, including |
29 | at least one licensed behavioral health clinician qualified to conduct clinical assessments and one |
30 | additional team member, which may include a peer support specialist, family partner, or other |
31 | trained paraprofessional. Providers shall ensure access to clinical supervision and psychiatric |
32 | consultation on a twenty-four (24) hour basis. |
33 | (d) Workforce composition. Designated MRSS provider teams shall include licensed |
34 | clinicians and may include peer support specialists, family navigators, and other trained staff with |
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1 | demonstrated expertise in children's behavioral health. |
2 | (e) Cultural and linguistic competency. MRSS designated providers shall deliver services |
3 | in a culturally and linguistically responsive manner and shall ensure accessibility for individuals |
4 | with disabilities. |
5 | (f) Coordination with crisis lines. MRSS shall serve as the primary, mobile crisis response |
6 | system for children and youth experiencing behavioral health crises. MRSS shall operate in |
7 | coordination with, but remain clinically and operationally distinct from, the 988 Suicide and Crisis |
8 | Lifeline (988) and other telephonic triage or referral lines, including Kids' Link RI. Referrals to |
9 | designated MRSS providers shall originate from 988, Kids' Link RI, 911, schools, child welfare |
10 | agencies, healthcare providers, law enforcement, families, or self-referral; provided, however, that |
11 | 988 and other telephonic triage or referral lines may receive, assess, de-escalate, and route crisis |
12 | contacts with applicable law, and designated MRSS providers shall retain clinical discretion in |
13 | accordance with nationally recognized fidelity standards regarding deployment, response modality, |
14 | and timing. Coordination with 988 and other crisis lines shall not result in unnecessary screening, |
15 | triage delays, or redirection that substitutes telephonic intervention for in-person mobile response |
16 | when MRSS is clinically appropriate. Nothing in this section shall permit 988 or any call center |
17 | entity to control dispatch or clinical decision-making for MRSS services once a referral has been |
18 | made. Nothing in this section shall be construed to require designated MRSS providers to operate |
19 | or staff a call center, crisis hotline, or telephonic triage service. |
20 | (g) Coordination with certified community behavioral health clinics (CCBHC). Designated |
21 | MRSS providers shall coordinate with CCBHCs and other behavioral health providers for purposes |
22 | of referral, care transitions, information-sharing, and continuity of care when clinically appropriate |
23 | and with appropriate consent. |
24 | (1) Designated MRSS providers may execute non-financial coordination agreements |
25 | and/or designated collaborating organization (DCO agreements) with coordinating entities such as |
26 | pediatricians, law enforcement, hospitals and other child and youth serving entities. |
27 | (2) Coordination shall not require MRSS to be operated by, embedded within, |
28 | subcontracted to, or financially dependent upon a CCBHC, nor shall it limit the department's |
29 | authority to contract directly with community-based designated MRSS providers. MRSS shall |
30 | remain a distinct mobile crisis response and stabilization service with independent clinical decision- |
31 | making authority. |
32 | (h) Child and family competency requirement. MRSS shall be delivered by designated |
33 | MRSS providers with demonstrated expertise in child and adolescent behavioral health and family |
34 | systems. Designated MRSS providers shall ensure that licensed clinical staff assigned to MRSS |
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1 | possess training and experience specific to children, youth and families, including child |
2 | development, trauma-informed care, family engagement, and coordination with child-serving |
3 | systems. Providers that primarily serve adult populations shall not deliver MRSS unless they |
4 | demonstrate child-specific capacity, staffing, and supervision as required by this chapter. |
5 | (i) MRSS shall be designed and delivered as a child- and family-centered service, distinct |
6 | from adult behavioral health crisis systems. Program design, staffing, and service delivery models |
7 | shall not be modified in a manner that: |
8 | (1) Aligns MRSS with adult crisis response frameworks; or |
9 | (2) Diminishes specialization in child and adolescent behavioral health. |
10 | (j) Designated MRSS providers shall retain exclusive authority over dispatch, triage, and |
11 | clinical response decisions for MRSS encounters, and such authority shall not be delegated to |
12 | external call centers or third-party entities. |
13 | 42-72.13-4. Funding and reimbursement. |
14 | (a) MRSS shall be funded through a funding model consisting of: |
15 | (1) Medicaid reimbursement for services provided to Medicaid-eligible children and youth |
16 | and shall be developed utilizing a methodology that reflects the full cost of delivering twenty-four |
17 | (24) hour MRSS service; |
18 | (2) State general revenue appropriated to the department for services provided to children |
19 | and youth who are not Medicaid-eligible; and |
20 | (3) State general revenue funding shall function as a guaranteed access backstop, ensuring |
21 | that MRSS services are available to all children and youth regardless of payer source, |
22 | reimbursement status, or coverage limitations. |
23 | (b) On or before October 1, 2027, the Medicaid agency shall submit to the legislature a |
24 | report outlining the necessary steps and activities required to complete an alternative funding |
25 | methodology for Medicaid MRSS payments including any costs associated with implementation. |
26 | Implementation of the alternative methodology shall occur no later than October 1, 2028 in |
27 | accordance with federal approval. |
28 | (c) No child or family shall be denied MRSS based on inability to pay, insurance status or |
29 | failure to satisfy cost-sharing obligations. Designated MRSS providers shall not balance bill |
30 | families for services not reimbursed in whole or in part by Medicaid, commercial insurance, or |
31 | state appropriations. |
32 | (d) State funds appropriated pursuant to this section may be used to draw down available |
33 | federal matching funds to the maximum extent permitted by law. |
34 | (e) In the event of state budget reductions, MRSS shall be classified as an essential child |
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1 | behavioral health service. No reduction in MRSS funding shall occur without a public impact |
2 | analysis and thirty (30) day notice to the general assembly, with explanation of how statutory |
3 | response time and coverage standards will be maintained. |
4 | (f) The department, in consultation with the state Medicaid agency, shall annually certify |
5 | to the general assembly the total funding level necessary to maintain compliance with this chapter |
6 | and the consent decree. The certification shall specify: the portion supported by Medicaid and the |
7 | portion requiring state general revenue. |
8 | (g) Appropriation and minimum state funding requirement. |
9 | (1) The general assembly declares MRSS to be a core child-serving safety net service, and |
10 | funding shall be sufficient to ensure no waitlists, service denials, or geographic gaps in access. |
11 | (2) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2027, there is hereby appropriated nine hundred |
12 | thousand dollars ($900,000) in general revenue to the executive office of health and human services |
13 | to support mobile response and stabilization services for uninsured and underinsured children and |
14 | youth and to cover services and costs not otherwise reimbursed by Medicaid or commercial |
15 | insurance. |
16 | (3) Beginning in fiscal year 2028, and annually thereafter, the department, in coordination |
17 | with the Medicaid agency, shall include in its annual budget request and the governor shall include |
18 | in the budget submitted pursuant to § 35-3-7, a general revenue appropriation sufficient to ensure |
19 | statewide access to mobile response and stabilization services for uninsured and underinsured |
20 | children and youth consistent with the requirements of this chapter and the Children's Behavioral |
21 | Health Consent Decree. |
22 | (4) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2028, and for each fiscal year thereafter, the general |
23 | revenue appropriation for mobile response and stabilization services pursuant to this section shall |
24 | not be less than one million dollars ($1,000,000), unless modified by act of the general assembly. |
25 | (h) For children and youth covered by commercial insurance, the state shall ensure access |
26 | to MRSS services without delay or denial based on coverage limitations, reimbursement disputes, |
27 | or network restrictions. |
28 | (i) The department shall ensure that state general revenue is available as a payer of last |
29 | resort to guarantee uninterrupted access to MRSS services when commercial coverage is |
30 | unavailable, insufficient, or delayed. |
31 | 42-72.13-5. Medicaid coverage. |
32 | (a) The Medicaid agency shall designate MRSS as a covered Medicaid service for eligible |
33 | children and youth up to the age of twenty-one (21), including coverage pursuant to the early and |
34 | periodic screening, diagnostic, and treatment (EPSDT) benefit. |
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1 | (b) The Medicaid agency shall submit any necessary state plan amendments or waiver |
2 | applications to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to implement this section. |
3 | (c) The Medicaid agency shall ensure compliance with all applicable EPSDT requirements |
4 | for Medicaid eligible children and youth accessing MRSS. |
5 | (d) Nothing in this section shall prevent the Medicaid agency from implementing |
6 | utilization management or prior authorization to ensure program integrity and compliance with |
7 | federal Medicaid requirements. |
8 | 42-72.13-6. Provider designation and contracting. |
9 | (a) The department shall license and oversee community-based designated MRSS |
10 | providers. The department may enter into contracts as necessary for payment and administrative |
11 | purposes; however, designation as an MRSS provider shall be based on licensure, not procurement |
12 | status. |
13 | (b) In designating MRSS providers, the department shall prioritize: |
14 | (1) MRSS providers with demonstrated experience in children's behavioral health crisis |
15 | services; |
16 | (2) Existing community-based providers currently delivering mobile crisis or stabilization |
17 | services; and |
18 | (3) Geographic coverage sufficient to ensure statewide access. |
19 | (c) Designated MRSS provider contracts shall establish reimbursement rates, performance |
20 | standards, reporting requirements, and care coordination expectations. |
21 | (d) The department shall establish a licensure category specific to children’s mobile |
22 | response and stabilization services, including standards for clinical staffing, child and family |
23 | expertise, and service delivery requirements. Each designated MRSS provider shall be responsible |
24 | to provide MRSS to all children and youth up to the age of twenty-one (21) and demonstrate a |
25 | willingness to provide services for the purposes of mutual aid to other licensed MRSS providers |
26 | when needed. |
27 | (e) No provider shall deliver MRSS unless licensed pursuant to this chapter. |
28 | 42-72.13-7. Oversight and reporting. |
29 | (a) The department shall collect data on MRSS utilization, response times, outcomes, and |
30 | cost avoidance. |
31 | (b) No later than January 1 of each year, the department shall submit a report to the |
32 | governor and the general assembly detailing: |
33 | (1) Program utilization and geographic coverage; |
34 | (2) Funding sources and expenditures; |
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1 | (3) Outcomes related to emergency department and inpatient diversion; and |
2 | (4) Recommendations for statutory or budgetary changes. |
3 | 42-72.13-8. Rulemaking authority. |
4 | (a) The department shall promulgate rules and regulations necessary to implement this |
5 | chapter. The rules and regulations shall establish a statewide MRSS mutual aid framework to ensure |
6 | coverage during periods of high demand, workforce shortages, or regional capacity constraints. |
7 | (b) The department rules and regulations shall include the following: |
8 | (1) "Family-defined crisis" means a situation identified by a child or youth, their parent, |
9 | caregiver, or another individual responsible for the welfare of the child or youth as causing |
10 | emotional, behavioral, or relational distress that exceeds the family's ability to manage safely |
11 | without support. |
12 | (2) "Screen-in standard" means an access standard under which all requests for MRSS are |
13 | presumed eligible for response unless clinical judgment determines that the situation presents a |
14 | level of imminent risk that requires emergency services beyond the scope of MRSS. |
15 | (3) "Stabilization services" means time-limited, post-crisis supports provided following the |
16 | initial mobile response to assist the child or youth and their family in maintaining safety, |
17 | strengthening coping strategies, and connecting to ongoing services and natural supports. |
18 | (4) "Crisis episode" means the period of care beginning with the initial request for MRSS |
19 | and continuing through crisis response, stabilization, and transition or discharge. |
20 | (5) "Mutual aid" means a coordinated, temporary arrangement among designated MRSS |
21 | providers to ensure statewide coverage during periods of high demand, workforce shortages, or |
22 | localized capacity constraints. |
23 | (c) Designated MRSS providers shall participate in coordinated coverage protocols to |
24 | prevent service gaps and ensure statewide response time requirements are met. Participation in |
25 | mutual aid shall not be used to supplant existing designated MRSS providers or reallocate base |
26 | funding. |
27 | 42-72.13-9. Severability. |
28 | If any provision of this act is held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect other provisions |
29 | of the act which can be given effect without the invalid provision. |
30 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC006098/SUB A/3 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- CHILDREN'S MOBILE | |
RESPONSE AND STABILIZATION SERVICES | |
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1 | This act would establish a statewide mobile response and stabilization services program to |
2 | provide rapid crisis response and short-term stabilization for children and youth in their natural |
3 | environments. |
4 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC006098/SUB A/3 | |
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