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Public Act 103-0337 |
HB3230 Enrolled | LRB103 29430 KTG 55821 b |
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AN ACT concerning mental health.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Strengthening and Transforming Behavioral Health Crisis Care |
in Illinois Act. |
Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that: |
(1) 1,440 Illinois residents died from suicide in 2021, up |
from 1,358 in 2020 or a 6% increase. |
(2) An estimated 110,000 Illinois adults struggle with |
schizophrenia, and 220,000 with bipolar disorder. |
(3) 3,013 Illinois residents died due to opioid overdose |
in 2021, a 2.3% increase from 2020 and a 35.8% increase from |
2019. |
(4) Too many people are experiencing suicidal crises, and |
mental health or substance use-related distress without the |
support and care they need, and the pandemic has amplified |
these challenges for children and adults. |
(5) On July 16, 2022, the U.S. transitioned the 10-digit |
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline to 9-8-8, an |
easy-to-remember 3-digit number for 24/7 behavioral health |
crisis care. |
(6) The ultimate goal of the 9-8-8 crisis response system |
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is to reduce the over-reliance on 9-1-1 and law enforcement |
response to suicide, mental health, or substance use crises, |
so that every Illinoisan is ensured appropriate and supportive |
assistance from trained mental health professionals during his |
or her time of need. |
(7) The 3 interdependent pillars of the 9-8-8 crisis |
response system include someone to call (Lifeline Call |
Centers), someone to respond (Mobile Crisis Response Teams), |
and somewhere to go (Crisis Receiving and Stabilization |
Centers). |
(8) The transition to 9-8-8 provides a historic |
opportunity to strengthen and transform the way behavioral |
health crises are treated in Illinois and moves us away from |
criminalizing mental health and substance use disorders and |
treating them as health issues. |
(9) Having a range of mobile crisis response options has |
the potential to save lives. |
(10) Individuals who interact with the 9-8-8 crisis |
response system should receive follow-up and be connected to |
local mental health and substance use resources and other |
community supports. |
(11) Transforming the Illinois behavioral health crisis |
response system will require long-term structural changes and |
investments. These include strengthening core behavioral |
health crisis care services, ensuring rapid post-crisis |
access, increasing coordination across systems and State |
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agencies, enhancing the behavioral health crisis care |
workforce, and establishing sustainable funding from various |
streams for all dimensions of the crisis response system. |
Section 10. Purpose. The purpose of this Act is to improve |
the quality and access to behavioral health crisis services; |
reduce stigma surrounding suicide, mental health, and |
substance use conditions; provide a behavioral health crisis |
response that is equivalent to the response already provided |
to individuals who require emergency physical health care in |
the State; improve equity in addressing mental health and |
substance use conditions; ensure a culturally and |
linguistically competent response to behavioral health crises |
and saving lives; build a new system of equitable and |
linguistically appropriate behavioral crisis services in which |
all individuals are treated with respect, dignity, cultural |
competence, and humility; and comply with the National Suicide |
Hotline Designation Act of 2020 and the Federal Communication |
Commission's rules adopted July 16, 2020 to ensure that all |
citizens and visitors of the State of Illinois receive a |
consistent level of 9-8-8 and crisis behavioral health |
services no matter where they live, work, or travel in the |
State. |
Section 15. Cost analysis and sources of funding. |
(a)(1) Subject to appropriation, the Department of Human |
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Services, Division of Mental Health, shall use an independent |
third-party expert to conduct a cost analysis and determine |
sound costs associated with developing and maintaining a |
statewide initiative for the coordination and delivery of the |
continuum of behavioral health crisis response services in the |
State, including all of the following: |
(A) Crisis call centers. |
(B) Mobile crisis response team services. |
(C) Crisis receiving and stabilization centers. |
(D) Follow-up and other acute behavioral health |
services. |
(2) The analysis shall include costs that are or can be |
reasonably attributed to, but not limited to: |
(A) staffing and technological infrastructure |
enhancements necessary to achieve operational and clinical |
standards and best practices set forth by the 9-8-8 |
Suicide and Crisis Lifeline; |
(B) the recruitment of personnel that reflect the |
demographics of the community served; specialized training |
of staff to assess and serve people experiencing mental |
health, substance use, and suicidal crises, including |
specialized training to serve at-risk communities, |
including culturally and linguistically competent services |
for LGBTQ+, racially, ethnically, and linguistically |
diverse communities; |
(C) the need to develop staffing that is consistent |
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with federal guidelines for mobile crisis response times, |
based on call volume and the geography served; |
(D) the provision of call, text, and chat response; |
mobile crisis response; and follow-up and crisis |
stabilization services that are in response to the 9-8-8 |
Suicide and Crisis Lifeline; |
(E) the costs related to developing and maintaining |
the physical plant, operations, and staffing of crisis |
receiving and stabilization centers; |
(F) the provision of data, reporting, participation in |
evaluations, and related quality improvement activities as |
may be required; |
(G) the administration, oversight, and evaluation of |
the Statewide 9-8-8 Trust Fund; |
(H) the coordination with 9-1-1, emergency service |
providers, crisis co-responders, and other system |
partners, including service providers; and |
(I) the development of service enhancements or |
targeted responses to improve outcomes and address gaps |
and needs. |
(3) The Department of Human Services, Division of Mental |
Health, and independent third-party experts shall obtain |
meaningful stakeholder engagement on the cost analysis |
conducted in accordance with paragraphs (1) and (2). |
(b) The Department of Human Services, Division of Mental |
Health, and independent third-party experts, with meaningful |
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stakeholder engagement, shall provide a set of recommendations |
on multiple sources of funding that could potentially be |
utilized to support a sustainable and comprehensive continuum |
of behavioral health crisis response services. |
(c) The Department of Human Services, Division of Mental |
Health, may hire an independent third-party expert, amend an |
existing Department of Human Services contract with an |
independent third-party expert, or coordinate with the |
Department of Healthcare and Family Services to amend and |
utilize an independent third-party expert contracted with the |
Department of Healthcare and Family Services to conduct a cost |
analysis and determine sound costs as
outlined in this |
Section. |
Section 20. Behavioral health crisis workforce. |
(a) The Department of Human Services, Division of Mental |
Health, with meaningful stakeholder engagement shall do all of |
the following: |
(1) Examine eligibility for participation as an |
Engagement Specialist under the Division of Mental |
Health's Crisis Care Continuum Program. As used in this |
paragraph, "Engagement Specialist" means an individual |
with the lived experience of recovery from a mental health |
condition, substance use disorder, or both. |
(2) Consider many additional experiences, including |
but not limited to, being a parent or family member of a |
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person with a mental health or substance use disorder, |
being from a disadvantaged or marginalized population that |
would be valuable to this role and can help provide a more |
culturally competent crisis response. This includes the |
need for crisis responders who are African American, |
Latinx, have been incarcerated, experienced homelessness, |
identify as LGBTQ+, or are veterans. |
(3) Consider how that expansion impacts the unique |
training and support needs of Engagement Specialists from |
different populations. |
(4) Allow providers to use their clinical discretion |
to determine responses by one individual or by a |
two-person team depending on the nature of the call with |
access to an Engagement Specialist. |
(5) Collect feedback on other policies to address the |
behavioral health workforce issues. |
(b) The Department of Human Services, Division of Mental |
Health, shall implement a process to obtain meaningful |
stakeholder engagement not later than 6 months after the |
effective date of this Act. |
Section 25. Action plan. Not later than 12 months after |
the effective date of this Act, the Department of Human |
Services, Division of Mental Health, shall submit an action |
plan to the General Assembly on the activities under Sections |
15 and 20 of this Act. The action plan shall be filed |
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electronically with the General Assembly, as provided under |
Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization Act, and |
shall be provided electronically to any member of the General |
Assembly upon request. The action plan shall be published on |
the Department of Human Services' website for the public. |
Section 30. Coordination across State agencies. |
(a) The Department of Human Services, Division of Mental |
Health, and the Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
shall convene a stakeholder working group immediately after |
the effective date of this Act to develop recommendations to |
coordinate programming and strategies to support a cohesive |
behavioral health crisis response system. |
(b) The stakeholder working group shall: |
(1) Identify logistical challenges and solutions and |
define a process to ensure the Illinois crisis response |
system established by the Division of Mental Health's |
Crisis Care Continuum Program and the Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services' Medicaid Mobile Crisis |
Response is coordinated across the lifespan. |
(2) Consider cross-program identification and |
alignment of providers within geographic regions, |
messaging regarding the 9-8-8 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline |
and the Illinois Crisis and Referral Entry Services |
(CARES) lines, and coordination between disparate program |
plan goals to ensure that crisis response services are |
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delivered efficiently and without duplication. |
(c) The stakeholder working group shall at least include |
Division of Mental Health Crisis Care Continuum Program |
providers, Pathways to Success providers, parents, family |
advocates, associations that represent behavioral health |
providers, and labor unions that represent workers in the |
behavioral health workforce and shall meet no less than once |
per month. |
(d) Not later than 6 months after the effective date of |
this Act, the Department of Human Services, Division of Mental |
Health, in collaboration with the Department of Healthcare and |
Family Services, shall submit an action plan to the General |
Assembly on the activities under Section 30 of this Act. The |
action plan shall be filed electronically with the General |
Assembly, as provided under Section 3.1 of the General |
Assembly Organization Act, and shall be provided |
electronically to any member of the General Assembly upon |
request. The action plan shall be published on the Department |
of Human Services' website for the public.
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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