Colorado Code § 26-5-102

Provision of child welfare services - system reform goals - out-of-home placements for children and youth with intellectual and developmental disabilities - reporting - rules - definition
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(1) (a) The state board shall adopt rules to establish a program of
child welfare services, administered by the state department or supervised by the state
department and administered by the county departments, and, where applicable, in accordance
with the conditions accompanying available federal funds for such purpose. The rules must
establish a fee based upon the child support guidelines set forth in section 14-10-115 requiring
those persons legally responsible for the child or youth to pay for all, or a portion, of the services
provided pursuant to this article 5 when a county department that delivers child welfare services
determines that a referral is appropriate in accordance with rules promulgated by the state board
of human services. The state board is authorized to promulgate rules to implement the provisions
of this article 5 relating to the allocation of funds to counties for the delivery of child welfare
services.
(b) Upon appropriate request and within available appropriations, child welfare services
shall be provided for any child residing or present in the state of Colorado who is in need of such
services. Foster care fees shall be considered child support obligations, and all remedies for the
enforcement and collection of child support shall apply. Foster care fees established pursuant to
section 14-10-115, C.R.S., may be collected pursuant to the administrative procedures to
establish child support enforcement set forth in article 13.5 of this title. Due process is
guaranteed in all actions regarding any such administrative process concerning foster care fees,
and a court hearing of the matter before the district court may be obtained in the manner
prescribed in section 26-13.5-105. Nothing contained in article 13.5 of this title shall be
construed to deprive a court of competent jurisdiction from determining the duty of support of
any obligor against whom an administrative order is issued pursuant to this article.
(2) Reforms in child welfare and related delivery systems must be directed at the
following objectives:
(a) More efficient and responsive service systems for children, youth, and families;
(b) Increased flexibility and collaboration across multiple agencies and funding streams
to ensure the delivery of services based on the needs of the child or youth;
(c) Encouragement and authorization for a truly integrated service system that
incorporates blended funding and administration;
(d) Focus on quality and outcome-driven services with accountability for an entire array
of services that families need, rather than forcing families to be transferred from agency to
agency;
(e) Development of data systems to support these goals and to allow administrators and
policy makers to better manage and evaluate;
(f) Authority and incentives for creative solutions at the local level that are not bound by
the constraints of current agency barriers and categorical funding streams, including authority for
local policy makers to create new entities incorporating blended funding and administration;
(g) Successful training efforts directed at county staff, judges, court staff, providers,
parents, and families and other appropriate entities that are involved in managed care service
systems, which training efforts shall include, but not be limited to, the operation of the child
welfare training academy created in section 26-5-109. Notwithstanding any limitation of the "M"
notation of the appropriation in the annual appropriation act for child welfare services, the state
department is authorized to expend any additional federal or private funding that may be
available to support the training efforts identified in this subsection (2).
(h) Promotion of the development of a family-centered, community-based strategy for
placement decisions that includes team decision making, family-group decision making, or other
agency decision making processes that involve the family and community supports;
(i) Promotion of the local placement of children with families by recruiting and
supporting foster care homes within the neighborhoods and communities in which identified
children reside;
(j) Successful transition of individuals eighteen to twenty years of age with intellectual
and developmental disabilities to adult services for individuals with intellectual and
developmental disabilities pursuant to section 25.5-6-409.5, C.R.S.
(3) (a) On or before August 1, 2018, the state department shall develop a program to
serve children and youth with intellectual and developmental disabilities who are placed by
county departments of human or social services in a licensed out-of-home setting, as defined in
section 26-6-903, and children or youth committed to or in the custody of the state department.
(b) The state department shall promulgate rules concerning the placement of children or
youth in the program. The rules must include, but need not be limited to, quality assurance
monitoring, admissions, discharge planning, appropriate length of stay, and an appeals process
for children or youth who are determined to be ineligible for the program or who are being
removed from the program before meeting discharge criteria, as defined by the child's or youth's
treatment plan, and without the consent of a parent, legal guardian, or county department. The
rules regarding the appeals process must include access to the interdisciplinary appeals review
panel, referenced in section 26.5-5-314 (5). For an appeal pursuant to this subsection (3)(b), the
panel shall include the members appointed pursuant to section 26.5-5-314 (5) and, at a
minimum:
(I) A representative from a county department;
(II) A treatment director or coordinator for a residential treatment program;
(III) A staff member from a program-approved service agency that offers residential
habilitation; and
(IV) A representative from the department of health care policy and financing with
expertise in the children's habilitation residential program, as described in this section.
(b.5) All members of the interdisciplinary appeals review panel assembled pursuant to
subsection (3)(b) of this section shall not be associated with the child or youth who is the subject
of the appeal and the child's or youth's placement provider. If a parent, legal guardian, county
department, program provider, or the state department is not satisfied with the interdisciplinary
appeals review panel recommendation, that party to the appeal is entitled to a review by an
independent hearing officer at a state hearing.
(c) On or before December 31, 2018, the state department shall contract with licensed
providers for the delivery of services to children and youth with intellectual and developmental
disabilities who are placed in the program. The state department shall utilize a request for
proposal process to define the scope of the contract and to select the licensed providers. The
providers must be approved by the department of health care policy and financing as service
providers for children eligible for enrollment in the children's habilitation residential program
waiver established pursuant to section 25.5-6-903.
(d) A county department that wishes to place a child or youth in the program shall
submit an application to the state department for review. Within seven days of making an
application to the state department for placement of a child or youth in the program, a county
department shall refer the child or youth to be assessed for enrollment in the children's
habilitation residential program, or assist the parent or legal guardian who retains legal custody
to make the referral. The county department shall provide to the state department evidence that
the county department or the child's parent or legal guardian has referred the child or youth for
enrollment in the children's habilitation residential program or evidence of either enrollment in
or denial of enrollment in the children's habilitation residential program, depending on whether
the child or youth is eligible or ineligible for such enrollment. The state department shall
approve admissions into the program and determine discharge criteria for each placement.
Enrollment of a child or youth in the children's habilitation residential program does not
constitute automatic placement with a service provider contracted with pursuant to subsection
(3)(c) of this section. A county department that has applied for the admission of a child or youth
into the program must be notified in writing of a placement approved by the state department.
(e) For the duration of the treatment, as defined in the approval letter from the state
department, and for thirty days after the completion of treatment, the state department shall
reimburse the provider directly for costs associated with the placement of a child or youth in the
program.
(f) The state department shall notify the county department that is responsible for the
placement of the child or youth of the date on which the reimbursement eligibility will expire.
Upon expiration of the reimbursement eligibility, if the child or youth remains in placement at
the facility, the county department is responsible for one hundred percent of the placement costs.
(g) A county department that has placed a child or youth in the program retains the right
to remove the child or youth from the program any time prior to the discharge date specified by
the state department.
(h) The state department shall reimburse the provider one hundred percent of the cost of
unutilized beds in the program to ensure available space for emergency residential out-of-home
placements.
(i) Entities other than county departments, including but not limited to hospitals, health-
care providers, providers of case management services, and case management agencies, as
defined in section 25.5-6-1702, may refer a family to voluntarily apply for placement with a
service provider contracted with pursuant to subsection (3)(c) of this section and may assist with
the application to the state department for admission of the family's child or youth with
intellectual and developmental disabilities into the program pursuant to this subsection (3). The
applications will be considered if space is available. The entity may refer the family to a provider
of case management services or assist the family with the process of enrolling the child or youth
in the children's habilitation residential program if the child or youth is eligible. However,
children and youth with intellectual and developmental disabilities placed by county departments
or the state department must have priority for admission to the program. The state department
shall not accept applications for placement of a child or youth who is exclusively insured by
private insurance. A child or youth who is dually insured by private insurance and medicaid and
whose residential level of care has been denied by private insurance may be eligible for services
in the program. A child or youth who is eligible for enrollment in the children's habilitation
residential program must be enrolled.
(j) Any family that is voluntarily applying for placement with assistance from any entity
defined in subsection (3)(i) of this section shall work directly with the provider to determine
responsibility for payment.
(k) The state department may maintain up to three open beds specifically for children
and youth in the custody of a county or committed to or in the custody of the state department
who may need services on an emergency basis.
(l) On or before February 1, 2023, and, notwithstanding the provisions of section 24-1-
136 (11)(a)(I), every February 1 thereafter, the state department shall report the following
information from the previous calendar year to the health and human services committee of the
senate and the public and behavioral health and human services committee of the house of
representatives, or any successor committees:
(I) The number of children or youth who met transition or discharge criteria and left the
program;
(II) The total number of applications received for the program during the applicable year
and the number of applicants who:
(A) Met program eligibility criteria;
(B) Did not meet program eligibility criteria;
(C) Were admitted to the program; and
(D) Were added to the wait list;
(III) The number of children or youth removed from the wait list and placed in the
program;
(IV) The number of children or youth removed from the program before meeting
transition criteria and the reason or reasons for removal;
(V) The number of appeals to the interdisciplinary appeals review panel during the
previous year, including the number that were approved and the number that were denied;
(VI) The number of beds during each month that were:
(A) Open or unoccupied;
(B) Occupied; or
(C) Used for emergency placements; and
(VII) The average length of stay.
(4) As used in this section, "county department" means a county department of human or
social services.

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