SENATE BILL No. 19

 

 

January 12, 2005, Introduced by Senator CLARK-COLEMAN and referred to the Committee on Judiciary.

 

 

 

 

 

 

     A bill to amend 1939 PA 280, entitled

 

"The social welfare act,"

 

by amending sections 18c, 55, and 115b (MCL 400.18c, 400.55, and

 

400.115b), section 55 as amended by 1998 PA 516 and section 115b as

 

amended by 2004 PA 193, and by adding section 18b.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

     Sec. 18b. (1) The department shall subsidize and support

 

children in relative care with both financial assistance and the

 

provision of services in at least the same degree as the assistance

 

and services provided for children in foster care.

 

     (2) As used in this act, "relative care" means the care of a

 

child by an adult who is the child's grandparent, brother, sister,

 

stepsister, stepbrother, uncle, or aunt by marriage, blood, or


 

adoption, regardless of the manner in which the child came to be

 

under the care of the relative, including, but not limited to, the

 

following:

 

     (a) A parent's voluntary placement of the child with the

 

relative.

 

     (b) The placement of the child with the relative by the court,

 

the department, or a child placing agency under this act, the

 

probate code of 1939, 1939 PA 288, MCL 710.21 to 712A.32, or

 

another law of this state.

 

     (c) The child's continued residence with the relative as

 

prescribed in section 11a of chapter XIIA of the probate code of

 

1939, 1939 PA 288, MCL 712A.11a.

 

     Sec. 18c. Foster care and relative care financed by a county  

 

department of social welfare  family independence agency shall be

 

provided by the use of licensed child caring institutions or

 

placement agencies, in accordance with the needs of the child, or

 

if licensed child caring institutions or placement agencies are not

 

available, or there is a religious conflict, foster care or

 

relative care shall be provided under the direct supervision of the

 

county department.  , which care  The care provided under this

 

section shall meet the following standards of care and service:

 

     (a)   (1)  Personnel engaged in placement and supervision of

 

children in foster care shall have qualifying training and

 

experience.

 

     (b)   (2)  Adequate records shall be maintained with

 

information on the physical and mental health of the child,  his  

 

the child's emotional stability and family background, together


 

with the reasons for the child's placement away from home to aid in

 

planning for  any  a child placed by the department, toward the end

 

that the child may be reunited with his or her family as soon as it

 

appears possible.

 

     (c)   (3)  Family foster homes used by the department shall be

 

selected with consideration of the religious, racial, and cultural

 

background of the child to be placed and children thus placed shall

 

be visited in these homes at least once a month.

 

     Sec. 55. The county department shall administer a public

 

welfare program  , as follows  to do all of the following:

 

     (a)  To grant  Grant general assistance, including medical

 

care as defined in this section and care in the county medical care

 

facility, but not including hospitalization and infirmary care

 

except for care in the county medical care facility or a county

 

infirmary existing on January 1, 1981, to  any  a person domiciled

 

in the county who has a legal settlement in this state. General

 

assistance may also be granted to a person who has a legal

 

settlement in this state but no domicile in the county and a

 

recoupment may be made when appropriate  in the manner  as provided

 

in cases of emergency hospitalization under this act. In a

 

temporary emergency, general assistance may be given to indigents

 

without a settlement in this state as the county department

 

considers necessary, including, if other funds are not available

 

for the purpose, all necessary expenses in transporting an indigent

 

to his or her domicile in this state, or in another state or

 

nation,  when  if information reasonably tends to show that the

 

person has a home available in his or her place of domicile in this


 

state or a legal residence in another state or nation. A legal

 

settlement in this state is acquired by an emancipated person who

 

has lived continuously in this state for 1 year with the intent to

 

make it his or her home and who, during the 1-year period has not

 

received public assistance, other than assistance received during

 

and as a direct result of a civil defense emergency, or support

 

from relatives. Time spent in a public institution  shall not be  

 

is not counted in determining settlement. A legal settlement  shall

 

be  is lost by remaining away from this state for an uninterrupted

 

period of 1 year except that absence from this state for labor or

 

other special or temporary purpose  shall  does not  occasion  

 

cause loss of settlement.

 

     (b)  To administer  Administer categorical assistance

 

including medical care.

 

     (c)  To supervise  Supervise and be responsible for the

 

operation of the county infirmary and county medical care facility.

 

In a county having a population of 1,000,000 or more  which  that

 

maintains a county infirmary or county hospital or a joint

 

infirmary and hospital providing for  mental  mentally ill

 

patients, the institution and the  admissions  admission to the

 

institution  shall be  are subject to the control of  a board to be

 

known as  the board of county institutions. The board of county

 

institutions shall consist of 5 members appointed by the county

 

board of commissioners, except that in a county having a board of

 

county auditors, 3 members of the board of county institutions

 

shall be appointed by the county board of commissioners and 2

 

members shall be appointed by the board of county auditors. Each


 

member of the board of county institutions shall hold office for a

 

term and receive compensation as the county board of commissioners

 

provides by ordinance. In relation to the administration of the

 

institutions, the board  shall have and succeed to  of county

 

institutions has all powers and duties formerly vested by law,

 

general, local or special, in the superintendents of the poor in

 

the county and the board of county institutions as constituted on

 

April 13, 1943. The board of county institutions of the county may

 

also maintain outpatient facilities for the treatment of needy

 

persons suffering from mental  disorders  illness. The board shall

 

also have the same powers as are given to the county board in

 

section 78.

 

     (d)  To furnish  Furnish in all cases,  insofar  as

 

practicable, care and treatment  which  that will tend to restore

 

needy persons to a condition of financial and social independence.

 

     (e)  To require  Require that each applicant  shall  furnish

 

proof satisfactory to the county board that the applicant is

 

entitled to the aid, assistance, or benefit sought.

 

     (f)  To investigate  Investigate, in respect to each

 

application for  any  a form of public aid or assistance, the

 

circumstances of the applicant, both at the time of application and

 

periodically during the receipt of aid or assistance.

 

     (g)  To maintain  Maintain adequate social and financial

 

records pertaining to each recipient of aid or assistance and  so

 

far  as  is  practicable engage in the prevention of social

 

disabilities.

 

     (h) Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision,  to  


 

investigate, when requested by the probate court or the family

 

division of circuit court, matters pertaining to dependent,

 

neglected, and delinquent children and wayward minors under the

 

court's jurisdiction, to provide supervision and foster care or

 

relative care as provided by court order, and  to  furnish the

 

court, on request, investigational service in respect to the

 

hospitalization of children under the program of services for

 

crippled children established under part 58 of the public health

 

code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.5801 to 333.5879, which services  shall  

 

include  the  follow-up investigation and continuing observations.

 

If the county is a county juvenile agency as defined in section 2

 

of the county juvenile agency act, 1998 PA 518, MCL 45.622, the

 

county department's obligations under this subdivision are limited

 

to public wards within the county's jurisdiction under the youth

 

rehabilitation services act, 1974 PA 150, MCL 803.301 to 803.309,

 

and county juvenile agency services as defined in section 117a.

 

     (i)  To assist  Assist other departments, agencies, and

 

institutions of the federal, state, and county governments,  when

 

so  if requested, in performing services in conformity with  the

 

purposes of  this act.

 

     (j)  To assist  Assist in the development of sound programs

 

and standards of child welfare, and promote programs and policies

 

looking  toward the prevention of  to prevent dependency, neglect,

 

and delinquency and other conditions affecting adversely the

 

welfare of families and children.

 

     (k)  To create  Create within the county department a division

 

of medical care. The county board may appoint a properly qualified


 

and licensed doctor of medicine as the head of the division and an

 

advisory committee. The advisory committee shall consist of 1

 

doctor of medicine, nominated by the county medical society; 1

 

dentist, nominated by the district dental society; and 1

 

pharmacist, nominated by the district pharmaceutical association,

 

to assist in formulating policies of medical care and auditing and

 

reviewing bills. "Medical care" as used in this act means medical

 

care rendered under the supervision of a licensed physician in an

 

organized  out-patient  outpatient department of a hospital

 

licensed by the department of  public  community health under

 

article 17 of the public health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.20101 to

 

333.22260, or home and office attendance by a physician,

 

osteopathic physician and surgeon, or podiatrist licensed under

 

article 15 of the public health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.16101 to

 

333.18838; and  when  if prescribed by the physician, osteopathic

 

physician and surgeon, or podiatrist, diagnostic  services  service

 

requiring the use of equipment not available in his or her  offices  

 

office, if the  services do  service does not require overnight

 

care, dental service, optometric service, bedside nursing service

 

in the home, or pharmaceutical service. The private physician-

 

patient relationship shall be maintained. The normal relationships

 

between the recipients of dental, optometric, nursing, and

 

pharmaceutical services, and the services furnished by a physician,

 

osteopathic physician and surgeon, podiatrist, or  a  chiropractor

 

licensed under article 15 of the public health code, 1978 PA 368,

 

MCL 333.16101 to 333.18838, and the persons furnishing these

 

services shall be maintained. This section  shall  does not affect


 

the office of a city physician or city pharmacist established under

 

a city charter, a county health officer, or the medical

 

superintendent of a county hospital. This section  shall permit  

 

permits the use of a case management system, a patient care

 

management system, or other alternative system for providing

 

medical care.

 

     (l)  To cause  Cause to be suitably buried the body of a

 

deceased indigent person who has a domicile in the county,  when  

 

if requested by the person's relative or friend, or of a stranger,  

 

when  if requested by a public official following an inquest.

 

     (m)  To administer  Administer additional welfare functions  

 

as are  vested in the department, including hospitalization.

 

     (n)  To act  Act as an agent for the state department in

 

matters requested by the state department under the rules of the

 

state department.

 

      (o) To provide temporary general assistance for each family

 

found ineligible for aid to dependent children assistance by reason

 

of unsuitable family home as provided in section 56.

 

     Sec. 115b. (1) The department shall assume responsibility for

 

all children committed to it by the juvenile division of the

 

probate court, the family division of circuit court, or the court

 

of general criminal jurisdiction under the youth rehabilitation

 

services act, 1974 PA 150, MCL 803.301 to 803.309, and 1935 PA 220,

 

MCL 400.201 to 400.214. The department may provide institutional

 

care, supervision in the community, boarding care, halfway house

 

care, relative care, and other children and youth services and

 

programs necessary to meet the needs of those children or may


 

obtain appropriate services from other state agencies, local public

 

agencies, or private agencies, subject to section 115o. If the

 

program of another state agency is considered to best serve the

 

needs of the child, the other state agency shall give priority to

 

the child.

 

     (2) The department shall study and act upon a request for

 

service as to, or a report received of, neglect, exploitation,

 

abuse, cruelty, or abandonment of a child by a parent, guardian,

 

custodian, or person serving in loco parentis, or a report

 

concerning a child in need of protection. On the basis of the

 

findings of the study, the department shall assure, if necessary,

 

the provision of appropriate social services to the child, parent,

 

guardian, custodian, or person serving in loco parentis, to

 

reinforce and supplement the parental capabilities, so that the

 

behavior or situation causing the problem is corrected or the child

 

is otherwise protected. In assuring the provision of services and

 

providing the services, the department shall encourage

 

participation by other existing governmental units or licensed

 

agencies and may contract with those agencies for the purchase of

 

any service within the scope of this subsection. The department

 

shall initiate action in an appropriate court if the conduct of a

 

parent, guardian, or custodian requires. The department shall

 

promulgate rules necessary for implementing the services authorized

 

in this subsection. The rules shall include provision for local

 

citizen participation in the program to assure local understanding,

 

coordination, and cooperative action with other community

 

resources. In the provision of services, there shall be maximum


 

utilization of other public, private, and voluntary resources

 

available within a community.

 

     (3) If an agency or organization proposes to place for

 

adoption, with a person domiciled in this state, a child who is a

 

citizen of or resides in a country other than the United States or

 

Canada, the department shall conduct, within 180 days after receipt

 

of the request from the agency or organization, the investigation

 

prescribed by section 46 of chapter X of the probate code of 1939,

 

1939 PA 288, MCL 710.46. In a county in which the department

 

determines it to be more feasible both geographically and

 

economically, the department may purchase the adoption services up

 

to the actual cost of providing those services. The department

 

shall charge parent fees prescribed by the legislature.

 

     (4) The office is responsible for the development,

 

interpretation, and dissemination of policy regarding departmental

 

investigations requested or ordered by the probate court or the

 

family division of circuit court under section 55(h) and the

 

provision of foster care or relative care services authorized by

 

this act. Foster care and relative care services shall include

 

foster care of state wards, aid to dependent children foster care,

 

foster care of wards of the family division of circuit court placed

 

under the care and supervision of the department by order of the

 

court, and voluntary parental placement of children in foster care

 

or relative care.

 

     (5) All rights to current, past due, and future support

 

payable on behalf of a child committed to or under the supervision

 

of the department and for whom the department is making state or


 

federally funded foster care or relative care maintenance payments

 

are assigned to the department while the child is receiving or

 

benefiting from those payments. When the department ceases making

 

foster care or relative care maintenance payments for the child,

 

both of the following apply:

 

     (a) Past due support that accrued under the assignment remains

 

assigned to the department.

 

     (b) The assignment of current and future support rights to the

 

department ceases.

 

     (6) The maximum amount of support the department may retain to

 

reimburse the state, the federal government, or both for the cost

 

of care shall not exceed the amount of foster care or relative care

 

maintenance payments made from state or federal money, or both.

 

     Enacting section 1.  This amendatory act does not take effect

 

unless Senate Bill No. 18                                     

 

          of the 93rd Legislature is enacted into law.