West Virginia Code § 49-2-125

Commission to Study Residential Placement of Children; findings;
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requirements; reports; recommendations.
(a) The Legislature finds that the state's current system of serving children and families in
need of or at risk of needing social, emotional and behavioral health services is fragmented.
The existing categorical structure of government programs and their funding streams
discourages collaboration, resulting in duplication of efforts and a waste of elimited
resources. Children are usually involved in multiple child-serving systems, including child
welfare, juvenile justice and special education. More than ten percent orf children presently
in care are presently in out-of-state placements. Earlier efforts at reform have focused on
quick fixes for individual components of the system at the expense of the whole. It is the
purpose of this section to establish a mechanism to achieve systemic reform by which all of
the state's child-serving agencies involved in the residential tplacement of at-risk youth
jointly and continually study and improve upon this system and make recommendations to
their respective agencies and to the Legislature regarding funding and statutory, regulatory
and policy changes. It is further the Legislature's intent to build upon these
recommendations to establish an integrated system of care for at-risk youth and families that
makes prudent and cost-effective use of limited state resources by drawing upon the
experience of successful models and best practices in this and other jurisdictions, which
focuses on delivering services in the least restrictive setting appropriate to the needs of the
child, and which produces better outcomes for children, families and the state.
(b) There is created within thee Department of Human Services the Commission to Study the
Residential Placement of Children. The commission consists of the Secretary of the
Department of Human SLervices, the Commissioner of the Bureau for Children and Families,
the Commissioner for the Bureau for Behavioral Health and Health Facilities, the
Commissioner for the Bureau for Medical Services, the State Superintendent of Schools, a
representative of local educational agencies, the Director of the Office of Institutional
Educational Programs, the Director of the Office of Special Education Programs and
Assurance, the Director of the Division of Juvenile Services and the Executive Director of the
Prosecuting Attorney's Institute. At the discretion of the West Virginia Supreme Court of
Appeals, circuit and family court judges and other court personnel, including the
Administrator of the Supreme Court of Appeals and the Director of the Juvenile Probation
Services Division, may serve on the commission. These statutory members may further
designate additional persons in their respective offices who may attend the meetings of the
commission if they are the administrative head of the office or division whose functions
necessitate their inclusion in this process. In its deliberations, the commission shall also
consult and solicit input from families and service providers.
(c) The Secretary of the Department of Human Services shall serve as chair of the
commission, which shall meet on a quarterly basis at the call of the chair.
(d) At a minimum, the commission shall study:
(1) The current practices of placing children out-of-home and into in-residential placements,
with special emphasis on out-of-state placements;
(2) The adequacy, capacity, availability and utilization of existing in-state facilities to serve
the needs of children requiring residential placements;
(3) Strategies and methods to reduce the number of children who must be placed in out-of-
state facilities and to return children from existing out-of-state placements, initially targeting
older youth who have been adjudicated delinquent;
(4) Staffing, facilitation and oversight of multidisciplinary treatment planning teams;
(5) The availability of and investment in community-based, less restrictive and less costly
alternatives to residential placements;
(6) Ways in which up-to-date information about in-statae placement availability may be made
readily accessible to state agency and court personnel, including an interactive secure web
site; l
(7) Strategies and methods to promote and sustain cooperation and collaboration between
the courts, state and local agencies, families and service providers, including the use of
inter-agency memoranda of understanding, pooled funding arrangements and sharing of
information and staff resources;
(8) The advisability of including no-refusal clauses in contracts with in-state providers for
placement of children whose treatment needs match the level of licensure held by the
provider;
(9) Identification of i n-state service gaps and the feasibility of developing services to fill
those gaps, including funding;
(10) Identification of fiscal, statutory and regulatory barriers to developing needed services
in-sWtate in a timely and responsive way;
(11) Ways to promote and protect the rights and participation of parents, foster parents and
children involved in out-of-home care;
(12) Ways to certify out-of-state providers to ensure that children who must be placed out-of-
state receive high quality services consistent with this state's standards of licensure and
rules of operation; and
(13) Any other ancillary issue relative to foster care placement.
(e) The commission shall report annually to the Legislative Oversight Commission on Health
and Human Resources Accountability its conclusions and recommendations, including an
implementation plan whereby:
(1) Out-of-state placements shall be reduced by at least ten percent per year and by at least
fifty percent within three years;
(2) Child-serving agencies shall develop joint operating and funding proposals to serve the
needs of children and families that cross their jurisdictional boundaries in a more seamless
way;
(3) Steps shall be taken to obtain all necessary federal plan waivers or amendments in order
for agencies to work collaboratively while maximizing the availability of federal funds;
(4) Agencies shall enter into memoranda of understanding to assuume joint responsibilities;
(5) System of care components and cooperative relationships shall be incrementally
established at the local, state and regional levels, with links to existing resources, such as
family resource networks and regional summits, whereaver possible; and
(6) Recommendations for changes in fiscal, statutolry and regulatory provisions are included
for legislative action.

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