FIRST CONFERENCE REPORT

 

     The Committee of Conference on the matters of difference between the two Houses concerning

 

     Senate Bill No. 769, entitled

 

     A bill to make appropriations for the department of human services for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2015; and to provide for the expenditure of the appropriations.

 

     Recommends:

 

     First:  That the House recede from the Substitute of the House as passed by the House.

 

     Second:  That the Senate and House agree to the Substitute of the Senate as passed by the Senate, amended to read as follows:

 

(attached)

 

     Third:  That the Senate and House agree to the title of the bill to read as follows:

 

     A bill to make appropriations for the department of human services for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2015; and to provide for the expenditure of the appropriations.

 

 

 

_______________________                 ________________________

Bruce Caswell                           Peter MacGregor

 

_______________________                 ________________________

Roger Kahn                              Joe Haveman

 

_______________________                 ________________________

Vincent Gregory                         Rashida Tlaib

 

Conferees for the Senate                Conferees for the House

 

This is our starting text

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SUBSTITUTE FOR

 

SENATE BILL NO. 769

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     A bill to make appropriations for the department of human

 

services for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2015; and to

 

provide for the expenditure of the appropriations.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

PART 1

 

LINE-ITEM APPROPRIATIONS

 

     Sec. 101. There is appropriated for the department of human

 

services for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2015, from the

 

following funds:

 

DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES

 

APPROPRIATION SUMMARY

 

   Full-time equated classified positions....... 12,221.5

 

   Unclassified positions............................ 6.0

 


   Total full-time equated positions............ 12,227.5

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $  5,755,174,700

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

Total interdepartmental grants and intradepartmental

 

   transfers............................................        21,545,900

 

ADJUSTED GROSS APPROPRIATION........................... $  5,733,628,800

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Social security act, temporary assistance for needy

 

   families.............................................       530,006,000

 

Capped federal revenues................................       611,479,900

 

Federal supplemental security income...................         8,594,600

 

Total other federal revenues...........................     3,401,194,700

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Total private revenues.................................        20,299,300

 

Total local revenues...................................        40,364,300

 

Total other state restricted revenues..................       126,237,400

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    995,452,600

 

    State general fund/general purpose schedule:

 

   Ongoing state general fund/general

 

    purpose.................................. 990,302,600

 

   One-time state general fund/general

 

    purpose.................................... 5,150,000

 

   Sec. 102. EXECUTIVE OPERATIONS

 

   Total full-time equated positions............... 681.7

 

   Full-time equated unclassified positions.......... 6.0

 

   Full-time equated classified positions.......... 675.7

 

Unclassified salaries--6.0 FTE positions............... $        724,600

 


Salaries and wages--285.7 FTE positions................        17,469,700

 

Contractual services, supplies, and materials..........        13,453,600

 

Demonstration projects--7.0 FTE positions..............         6,805,100

 

Inspector general salaries and wages--131.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................         7,540,200

 

Electronic benefit transfer EBT........................         8,509,000

 

Michigan community service commission--15.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................        11,597,800

 

AFC, children's welfare and day care

 

   licensure--237.0 FTE positions.......................        28,907,100

 

State office of administrative hearings and rules......         7,535,900

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    102,543,000

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

IDG from department of education.......................         8,222,600

 

ADJUSTED GROSS APPROPRIATION........................... $     94,320,400

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Social security act, temporary assistance for needy

 

   families.............................................        10,155,700

 

Capped federal revenues................................        29,722,900

 

Total other federal revenues...........................        20,804,500

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Total private revenues.................................         3,850,900

 

Total local revenues...................................            16,400

 

Total other state restricted revenues..................             5,400

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $     29,764,600

 


   Sec. 103. CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT

 

   Full-time equated classified positions.......... 190.7

 

Child support enforcement operations--184.7 FTE

 

   positions............................................ $     22,254,500

 

Legal support contracts................................       113,359,100

 

Child support incentive payments.......................        24,409,600

 

State disbursement unit--6.0 FTE positions.............         9,028,300

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    169,051,500

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Capped federal revenues................................         1,700,000

 

Total other federal revenues...........................       144,366,200

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $     22,985,300

 

   Sec. 104. COMMUNITY ACTION AND ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY

 

   Full-time equated classified positions........... 16.0

 

Bureau of community action and economic

 

   opportunity--16.0 FTE positions...................... $      2,068,700

 

Community services block grant.........................        25,840,000

 

Weatherization assistance..............................        16,340,000

 

School success partnership program.....................           300,000

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $     44,548,700

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Social security act, temporary assistance for needy

 

   families.............................................               500

 

Capped federal revenues................................        44,248,200

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $        300,000

 


   Sec. 105. ADULT AND FAMILY SERVICES

 

   Full-time equated classified positions.......... 564.7

 

Guardian contract...................................... $        490,200

 

Adult services policy and administration--8.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................           925,000

 

Office of program policy--28.7 FTE positions...........         3,652,900

 

Employment and training support services...............         4,219,100

 

Wage employment verification reporting.................           547,300

 

Nutrition education--2.0 FTE positions.................        23,038,000

 

Elder law of Michigan MiCAFE contract..................           350,000

 

Elder abuse prosecuting attorney.......................           300,000

 

Michigan rehabilitation services--526.0 FTE positions..       150,589,700

 

Independent living.....................................         6,488,600

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    190,600,800

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

IDG from department of corrections.....................         3,000,000

 

IDG from department of education.......................            13,300

 

ADJUSTED GROSS APPROPRIATION........................... $    187,587,500

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Social security act, temporary assistance for needy

 

   families.............................................         4,667,900

 

Capped federal revenues................................       115,450,000

 

Federal supplemental security income...................         8,594,600

 

Total other federal revenues...........................        27,570,900

 

   Special revenue funds:

 


Private - gifts, bequests, and donations...............         1,946,000

 

Local vocational rehabilitation match..................         6,539,100

 

Second injury fund.....................................           149,400

 

Rehabilitation service fees............................         1,442,900

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $     21,226,700

 

   Sec. 106. CHILDREN'S SERVICES

 

   Full-time equated classified positions.......... 116.3

 

Salaries and wages--53.7 FTE positions................. $      2,461,900

 

Contractual services, supplies, and materials..........         1,129,000

 

Interstate compact.....................................           179,600

 

Families first.........................................        16,944,500

 

Strong families/safe children..........................        12,350,100

 

Child protection and permanency--23.0 FTE positions....        12,892,500

 

Family reunification program...........................         3,977,100

 

Family preservation and prevention services

 

   administration--11.0 FTE positions...................         1,426,800

 

Children's trust fund administration--12.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................           978,300

 

Children's trust fund grants...........................         2,325,100

 

Attorney general contract..............................         4,226,400

 

Prosecuting attorney contracts.........................         2,561,700

 

Child protection.......................................           873,900

 

Domestic violence prevention and treatment--14.6 FTE

 

   positions............................................       15,730,000

 

Rape prevention and services--0.5 FTE position.........         5,072,300

 

Child advocacy centers--0.5 FTE position...............         2,000,000

 

Child abuse and neglect - children's justice

 


   act--1.0 FTE position................................           619,000

 

Family preservation and prevention services programs...         2,500,000

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $     88,248,200

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Social security act, temporary assistance for needy

 

   families.............................................        43,924,200

 

Capped federal revenues................................        24,762,800

 

Total other federal revenues...........................         6,274,300

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Compulsive gambling prevention fund....................         1,040,700

 

Children's trust fund..................................         2,078,000

 

Sexual assault victims' prevention and treatment fund..         3,000,000

 

Child advocacy centers fund............................         2,000,000

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $      5,168,200

 

   Sec. 107. CHILD WELFARE SERVICES

 

   Full-time equated classified positions........ 3,992.2

 

Children's services administration--95.0 FTE positions. $      6,756,900

 

Title IV-E compliance and accountability office--4.0

 

   FTE positions........................................           413,500

 

Child welfare institute--45.0 FTE positions............         8,142,900

 

Child welfare field staff - caseload

 

   compliance--2,511.0 FTE positions....................       121,626,500

 

Child welfare field staff - noncaseload

 

   compliance--330.0 FTE positions......................        17,561,000

 

Education planners--15.0 FTE positions.................           822,200

 

Peer coaches--56.0 FTE positions.......................         3,427,200

 


Child welfare first line supervisors--585.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................        40,493,500

 

Administrative support workers--243.0 FTE positions....         8,303,800

 

Second line supervisors and technical staff--55.0

 

   FTE positions........................................         4,346,800

 

Permanency resource managers--28.5 FTE positions.......         1,736,900

 

Contractual services, supplies, and materials..........         8,145,000

 

Settlement monitor.....................................         1,625,800

 

Foster care payments...................................       192,240,200

 

Serious emotional disturbance - waiver program.........         3,351,600

 

Serious emotional disturbance - nonwaiver program......         2,999,900

 

Guardianship assistance program........................         7,846,000

 

Child care fund........................................       182,206,400

 

Child care fund administration--6.2 FTE positions......           790,100

 

Adoption subsidies.....................................       247,723,200

 

Adoption support services--10.0 FTE positions..........        27,396,600

 

Youth in transition--5.5 FTE positions.................        15,053,500

 

Child welfare medical/psychiatric evaluations..........         8,735,500

 

Psychotropic oversight.................................           618,200

 

Performance based funding implementation--3.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................         1,272,100

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    913,635,300

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

IDG from department of education.......................           140,200

 

ADJUSTED GROSS APPROPRIATION........................... $    913,495,100

 

    Appropriated from:

 


   Federal revenues:

 

Social security act, temporary assistance for needy

 

   families.............................................       217,273,400

 

Capped federal revenues................................        65,848,400

 

Total other federal revenues...........................       233,815,500

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Private - collections..................................         3,244,100

 

Local funds - county chargeback........................        14,689,700

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    378,624,000

 

   Sec. 108. JUVENILE JUSTICE SERVICES

 

   Full-time equated classified positions.......... 182.0

 

W.J. Maxey training school--69.0 FTE positions......... $     10,324,500

 

Bay pines center--42.0 FTE positions...................         4,836,500

 

Shawono center--42.0 FTE positions.....................         4,920,900

 

County juvenile officers...............................         3,904,300

 

Community support services--3.0 FTE positions..........         2,098,500

 

Juvenile justice, administration and

 

   maintenance--23.0 FTE positions......................         3,951,500

 

Juvenile accountability block grant--0.5 FTE position..         1,281,300

 

Committee on juvenile justice administration--2.5

 

   FTE positions........................................           343,900

 

Committee on juvenile justice grants...................         3,000,000

 

In-home community care.................................         1,000,000

 

Juvenile justice vision 20/20..........................         1,000,000

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $     36,661,400

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 


Capped federal revenues................................         5,142,900

 

Total other federal revenues...........................           601,900

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Local funds - state share education funds..............         2,195,500

 

Local funds - county chargeback........................         9,279,300

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $     19,441,800

 

   Sec. 109. LOCAL OFFICE STAFF AND OPERATIONS

 

   Full-time equated classified positions........ 5,904.5

 

Field staff, salaries and wages--5,535.5 FTE positions. $    297,934,600

 

Contractual services, supplies, and materials..........        17,386,300

 

Healthy Michigan plan administration...................        19,536,300

 

Medical/psychiatric evaluations........................         1,420,100

 

Donated funds positions--338.0 FTE positions...........        39,690,800

 

Training and program support--23.0 FTE positions.......         2,310,300

 

Volunteer services and reimbursement...................           942,400

 

SSI advocates--8.0 FTE positions.......................           797,400

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    380,018,200

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

IDG from department of corrections.....................           100,000

 

IDG from department of education.......................         4,654,100

 

ADJUSTED GROSS APPROPRIATION........................... $    375,264,100

 

    Appropriated from:

 

Federal revenues:

 

Social security act, temporary assistance for needy

 

   families.............................................        66,135,100

 

Capped federal revenues................................        32,252,800

 


Total other federal revenues...........................       115,614,100

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Local funds............................................         7,644,300

 

Private funds - donated funds..........................        11,258,300

 

Supplemental security income recoveries................           797,400

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    141,562,100

 

   Sec. 110. DISABILITY DETERMINATION SERVICES

 

   Full-time equated classified positions.......... 571.4

 

Disability determination operations--545.9 FTE

 

   positions............................................ $    107,284,100

 

Medical consultation program--21.4 FTE positions.......         2,542,200

 

Retirement disability determination--4.1 FTE positions.           506,100

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    110,332,400

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

IDG from DTMB - office of retirement services..........           679,400

 

ADJUSTED GROSS APPROPRIATION........................... $    109,653,000

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Total other federal revenues...........................       105,988,900

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $      3,664,100

 

   Sec. 111. CENTRAL SUPPORT ACCOUNTS

 

Rent................................................... $     41,006,400

 

Occupancy charge.......................................        10,582,400

 

Travel.................................................         9,281,600

 

Equipment..............................................            62,600

 

Worker's compensation..................................         2,497,600

 


Payroll taxes and fringe benefits......................       434,135,600

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    497,566,200

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

IDG from department of education.......................         3,601,500

 

ADJUSTED GROSS APPROPRIATION........................... $    493,964,700

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Social security act, temporary assistance for needy

 

   families.............................................       116,475,800

 

Capped federal revenues................................        65,425,400

 

Total other federal revenues...........................       133,710,900

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    178,352,600

 

   Sec. 112. PUBLIC ASSISTANCE

 

   Full-time equated classified positions............ 8.0

 

Family independence program............................ $    146,603,000

 

State disability assistance payments...................        14,373,000

 

Food assistance program benefits.......................     2,547,185,600

 

State supplementation..................................        62,504,100

 

State supplementation administration...................         2,381,100

 

Low-income home energy assistance program..............       174,951,600

 

Food bank funding......................................         1,795,000

 

Homeless programs......................................        15,721,900

 

Multicultural integration funding......................         3,015,500

 

Indigent burial........................................         4,300,000

 

Emergency services local office allocations............        11,508,500

 

Michigan energy assistance program--1.0 FTE position...        50,000,000

 


Refugee assistance program--7.0 FTE positions..........        27,969,000

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $  3,062,308,300

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Social security act, temporary assistance for needy

 

   families.............................................        55,029,200

 

Capped federal revenues................................       205,543,000

 

Total other federal revenues...........................     2,541,695,600

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Child support collections..............................        17,996,000

 

Supplemental security income recoveries................        10,617,600

 

Public assistance recoupment revenue...................         7,010,000

 

Low-income energy assistance fund......................        50,000,000

 

Michigan merit award trust fund........................        30,100,000

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    144,316,900

 

   Sec. 113. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

 

Data center operations................................. $      8,426,000

 

Telecommunications.....................................         8,530,100

 

Support services.......................................        13,523,300

 

Staff support..........................................        34,328,100

 

Direct agency charges..................................        48,891,600

 

Administration and Internet............................         6,398,500

 

Child support automation...............................        41,913,100

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    162,010,700

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

IDG from department of education.......................         1,134,800

 


ADJUSTED GROSS APPROPRIATION........................... $    160,875,900

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Social security act, temporary assistance for needy

 

   families.............................................        16,344,200

 

Capped federal revenues................................        21,383,500

 

Total other federal revenues...........................        70,751,900

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $     52,396,300

 

   Sec. 114. ONE-TIME BASIS ONLY APPROPRIATIONS

 

Child support enforcement operations................... $        394,500

 

Legal support contracts................................           105,500

 

Michigan rehabilitation services.......................         2,600,000

 

Flint Catholic charities: center for hope..............           250,000

 

Performance based funding implementation...............           100,000

 

Private child welfare information technology services..           300,000

 

Fostering futures endowment fund.......................           500,000

 

Juvenile justice in-home community care grants.........           250,000

 

Food bank funding......................................           100,000

 

Michigan reading corps.................................           350,000

 

Parent-to-parent adoption support services.............           200,000

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $      5,150,000

 

    Appropriated from:

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $      5,150,000

 

   Sec. 115. BUDGETARY SAVINGS

 

Staffing reductions.................................... $      (7,500,000)

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $     (7,500,000)

 

    Appropriated from:

 


State general fund/general purpose..................... $     (7,500,000)

 

 

 

 

 

PART 2

 

PROVISIONS CONCERNING APPROPRIATIONS

 

FOR FISCAL YEAR 2014-2015

 

GENERAL SECTIONS

 

     Sec. 201. Pursuant to section 30 of article IX of the state

 

constitution of 1963, total state spending from state resources

 

under part 1 for fiscal year 2014-2015 is $1,121,690,000.00 and

 

state spending from state resources to be paid to local units of

 

government for fiscal year 2014-2015 is $97,343,300.00. The

 

itemized statement below identifies appropriations from which

 

spending to local units of government will occur:

 

DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES

 

Child care fund........................................ $     92,937,300

 

County juvenile officers...............................         3,656,500

 

State disability assistance payments...................           726,700

 

Family independence program............................            22,800

 

TOTAL.................................................. $     97,343,300

 

     Sec. 202. The appropriations authorized under this part are

 

subject to the management and budget act, 1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1101

 

to 18.1594.

 

     Sec. 203. As used in this part and part 1:

 

     (a) "AFC" means adult foster care.

 

     (b) "Current fiscal year" means the fiscal year ending

 

September 30, 2015.

 


     (c) "Department" means the department of human services.

 

     (d) "Director" means the director of the department of human

 

services.

 

     (e) "FTE" means full-time equated.

 

     (f) "IDG" means interdepartmental grant.

 

     (g) "MiCAFE" means Michigan's coordinated access to food for

 

the elderly.

 

     (h) "Previous fiscal year" means the fiscal year ending

 

September 30, 2014.

 

     (i) "Settlement" means the settlement agreement entered in the

 

case of Dwayne B. v Snyder, docket no. 2:06-cv-13548 in the United

 

States district court for the eastern district of Michigan.

 

     (j) "SSI" means supplemental security income.

 

     (k) "Temporary assistance for needy families" or "TANF" or

 

"title IV-A" means part A of title IV of the social security act,

 

42 USC 601 to 619.

 

     (l) "Title IV-D" means part D of title IV of the social

 

security act, 42 USC 651 to 669b.

 

     (m) "Title IV-E" means part E of title IV of the social

 

security act, 42 USC 670 to 679c.

 

     Sec. 204. The civil service commission shall bill departments

 

and agencies at the end of the first fiscal quarter for the 1%

 

charge authorized by section 5 of article XI of the state

 

constitution of 1963. Payments shall be made for the total amount

 

of the billing by the end of the second fiscal quarter.

 

     Sec. 205. Pursuant to section 1b of the social welfare act,

 

1939 PA 280, MCL 400.1b, the department shall treat part 1 and this

 


part as a time-limited addendum to the social welfare act, 1939 PA

 

280, MCL 400.1 to 400.119b.

 

     Sec. 206. (1) For each new program or program expansion for

 

which funds in excess of $500,000.00 are appropriated in part 1,

 

the department shall identify specific benchmarks intended to

 

measure the performance or return on taxpayer investment of the

 

program and its associated expenditures. Both of the following

 

apply to the benchmarks:

 

     (a) By November 1, 2014, the department shall report the

 

proposed benchmarks to the house and senate appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the house and senate fiscal

 

agencies, and the state budget director.

 

     (b) The department shall provide an update on its progress in

 

achieving the benchmarks at an appropriations subcommittee meeting

 

called for the purpose of discussing benchmarks and their status.

 

     (2) It is the intent of the legislature that, beginning with

 

the budget for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2016, any

 

proposal for a new program or an expansion of an existing program

 

in excess of $500,000.00 initiated by the executive branch or the

 

legislature will include, as part of the original proposal or

 

budget request, a list of benchmarks intended to measure the

 

performance or return on taxpayer investment of the program or

 

spending increase.

 

     Sec. 207. (1) Sanctions, suspensions, conditions for

 

provisional license status, and other penalties shall not be more

 

stringent for private service providers than for public entities

 

performing equivalent or similar services.

 


     (2) Neither the department nor private service providers or

 

licensees shall be granted preferential treatment or considered

 

automatically to be in compliance with administrative rules based

 

on whether they have collective bargaining agreements with direct

 

care workers. Private service providers or licensees without

 

collective bargaining agreements shall not be subjected to

 

additional requirements or conditions of licensure based on their

 

lack of collective bargaining agreements.

 

     Sec. 208. Unless otherwise specified, the department shall use

 

the Internet to fulfill the reporting requirements of this part.

 

This requirement shall include transmission of reports via

 

electronic mail to the recipients identified for each reporting

 

requirement, and it shall include placement of reports on the

 

Internet.

 

     Sec. 209. Funds appropriated in part 1 shall not be used for

 

the purchase of foreign goods or services, or both, if

 

competitively priced and of comparable quality American goods or

 

services, or both, are available. Preference should be given to

 

goods or services, or both, manufactured or provided by Michigan

 

businesses, if they are competitively priced and of comparable

 

quality. In addition, preference should be given to goods or

 

services, or both, that are manufactured or provided by Michigan

 

businesses owned and operated by veterans, if they are

 

competitively priced and of comparable quality.

 

     Sec. 211. Funds appropriated in part 1 shall not be used by a

 

principal executive department, state agency, or authority to hire

 

a person to provide legal services that are the responsibility of

 


the attorney general. This prohibition does not apply to legal

 

services for bonding activities and for those outside services that

 

the attorney general authorizes.

 

     Sec. 212. (1) In addition to funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

all programs and services, there is appropriated for write-offs of

 

accounts receivable, deferrals, and for prior year obligations in

 

excess of applicable prior year appropriations, an amount equal to

 

total write-offs and prior year obligations, but not to exceed

 

amounts available in prior year revenues or current year revenues

 

that are in excess of the authorized amount.

 

     (2) The department's ability to satisfy appropriation fund

 

sources in part 1 shall not be limited to collections and accruals

 

pertaining to services provided in the current fiscal year, but

 

shall also include reimbursements, refunds, adjustments, and

 

settlements from prior years.

 

     Sec. 213. The department may retain all of the state's share

 

of food assistance overissuance collections as an offset to general

 

fund/general purpose costs. Retained collections shall be applied

 

against federal funds deductions in all appropriation units where

 

department costs related to the investigation and recoupment of

 

food assistance overissuances are incurred. Retained collections in

 

excess of such costs shall be applied against the federal funds

 

deducted in the executive operations appropriation unit.

 

     Sec. 214. On a bimonthly basis, the department shall report on

 

the number of FTEs in pay status by type of staff.

 

     Sec. 215. If a legislative objective of this part or of a bill

 

or amendment to a bill to amend the social welfare act, 1939 PA

 


280, MCL 400.1 to 400.119b, cannot be implemented because

 

implementation would conflict with or violate federal regulations,

 

the department shall notify the state budget director, the house

 

and senate appropriations committees, and the house and senate

 

fiscal agencies and policy offices of that fact.

 

     Sec. 217. The departments and agencies receiving

 

appropriations in part 1 shall prepare a report on out-of-state

 

travel expenses not later than January 1 of each year. The travel

 

report shall be a listing of all travel by classified and

 

unclassified employees outside this state in the immediately

 

preceding fiscal year that was funded in whole or in part with

 

funds appropriated in the department's budget. The report shall be

 

submitted to the house and senate appropriations committees, the

 

house and senate fiscal agencies, and the state budget director.

 

The report shall include the following information:

 

     (a) The dates of each travel occurrence.

 

     (b) The transportation and related costs of each travel

 

occurrence, including the proportion funded with state general

 

fund/general purpose revenues, the proportion funded with state

 

restricted revenues, the proportion funded with federal revenues,

 

and the proportion funded with other revenues.

 

     Sec. 219. The department shall cooperate with the department

 

of technology, management, and budget to maintain a searchable

 

website accessible by the public at no cost that includes, but is

 

not limited to, all of the following for each department or agency:

 

     (a) Fiscal year-to-date expenditures by category.

 

     (b) Fiscal year-to-date expenditures by appropriation unit.

 


     (c) Fiscal year-to-date payments to a selected vendor,

 

including the vendor name, payment date, payment amount, and

 

payment description.

 

     (d) The number of active department employees by job

 

classification.

 

     (e) Job specifications and wage rates.

 

     Sec. 220. The department shall ensure that faith-based

 

organizations are able to apply and compete for services, programs,

 

or contracts that they are qualified and suitable to fulfill. The

 

department shall not disqualify faith-based organizations solely on

 

the basis of the religious nature of their organization or their

 

guiding principles or statements of faith.

 

     Sec. 221. (1) If the revenue collected by the department from

 

private and local sources exceeds the amount spent from amounts

 

appropriated in part 1, the revenue may be carried forward, with

 

approval from the state budget director, into the subsequent fiscal

 

year.

 

     (2) The department shall provide a report on the amount of

 

each revenue stream to be carried forward, as well as the

 

cumulative amount, for the closing fiscal year by October 30 of the

 

current fiscal year to the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the senate and house

 

standing committees on families and human services, and the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies and policy offices.

 

     Sec. 222. (1) The department shall provide written

 

notification to the chairpersons of the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the budget for the department of

 


any policy changes at least 30 days before the implementation date.

 

     (2) The department shall make the entire policy and procedures

 

manual available and accessible to the public via the department

 

website.

 

     (3) The department shall report no later than April 1 of the

 

current fiscal year on each specific policy change made to

 

implement a public act affecting the department that took effect

 

during the prior calendar year to the house and senate

 

appropriations subcommittees on the budget for the department, the

 

joint committee on administrative rules, and the senate and house

 

fiscal agencies. The department shall attach each policy bulletin

 

issued during the prior calendar year to this report.

 

     Sec. 225. The department may hire physicians to be part of the

 

medical review team (MRT) on a temporary basis if Medicaid

 

applications are backlogged more than 2,000. The temporary

 

physicians shall be retained until the backlog has dropped below

 

2,000 for 2 consecutive months. The role of the physicians will be

 

to obtain medical evidence from and grant medical determinations to

 

applicants.

 

     Sec. 226. The department shall not approve any contract for

 

new services, programs, or concepts in excess of $1,000,000.00

 

unless both of the following requirements have been met:

 

     (a) The department has issued and received a request for

 

information (RFI) or a request for qualification (RFQ) before

 

issuing a request for proposal for the contract. The request for

 

information or request for qualification will enable the department

 

to learn more about the market for the products or services that

 


are the subject of the future request for proposal.

 

     (b) The department has provided the legislature with the

 

results of the request for information or request for qualification

 

and posted a summary of the results of the request for information

 

or request for qualification on the department's webpage.

 

     Sec. 227. (1) The department shall conduct a workgroup in

 

conjunction with the department of community health, the state

 

transportation department, the department of corrections, the

 

strategic fund in the department of treasury, and members from both

 

the senate and house of representatives to determine how the state

 

can maximize its services and funding for transportation for low-

 

income, elderly, and disabled individuals through consolidating all

 

of the current transportation services for these populations under

 

1 department.

 

     (2) The department shall submit to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and

 

the state budget office by March 1 of the current fiscal year a

 

report on the findings of the workgroup on the items described in

 

subsection (1).

 

     Sec. 228. The department shall submit to the department of

 

technology, management, and budget all of the information that is

 

required from the department to finalize the request for

 

information process for all bids that are included in the current

 

fiscal year enacted budget for the department by October 1 of the

 

current fiscal year. The department shall submit to the department

 

of technology, management, and budget all of the information

 


required from the department to finalize the request for proposal

 

process by January 1 of the current fiscal year. Requests for

 

proposals shall remain open on the state website and available for

 

bids for at least 30 days.

 

     Sec. 229. (1) The department shall conduct a workgroup with

 

the department of treasury and members from both the senate and

 

house of representatives to determine how the state can align the

 

spending on Michigan Works! job readiness programs with the

 

declining family independence program caseload. The workgroup shall

 

investigate possible reductions in the amount of TANF funding that

 

is provided to Michigan Works!

 

     (2) The department shall submit to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and

 

the state budget office by March 1 of the current fiscal year a

 

report on the recommendations of the workgroup on the items

 

described in subsection (1), including, but not limited to, the

 

proposed amount of TANF funding provided to Michigan Works!

 

     Sec. 230. The department shall issue a request for proposal

 

for the income verification contract for public assistance

 

eligibility determination. The request for proposal process shall

 

be completed no later than February 1, 2015.

 

     Sec. 234. The department shall include specific outcome and

 

performance reporting requirements in the interagency agreement

 

with the Michigan strategic fund for TANF funding to provide job

 

readiness and welfare-to-work programming. TANF funding provided to

 

the Michigan strategic fund in the current fiscal year is

 


contingent on compliance with the data and reporting requirements

 

described in this section. The interagency agreement must require

 

the Michigan strategic fund to provide all of the following items

 

by December 1 of the current fiscal year for the previous year:

 

     (a) An itemized spending report on TANF funding, including all

 

of the following:

 

     (i) Direct services to clients.

 

     (ii) Administrative expenditures.

 

     (b) The number of family independence program (FIP) clients

 

served through the TANF funding, including all of the following:

 

     (i) The number and percentage who obtained employment through

 

Michigan Works!

 

     (ii) The number and percentage who fulfilled their TANF work

 

requirement through other job readiness programming.

 

     (iii) Average TANF spending per client.

 

     (iv) The number and percentage of clients who were referred to

 

Michigan Works! but did not receive a job or job readiness

 

placement and the reasons why.

 

     Sec. 240. The department shall notify the house and senate

 

appropriations committees and the house and senate fiscal agencies

 

of any changes to a child welfare master contract not less than 30

 

days before the change takes effect.

 

     Sec. 250. Amounts appropriated in part 1 for information

 

technology may be designated as work projects and carried forward

 

to support technology projects under the direction of the

 

department of technology, management, and budget. Funds designated

 

in this manner are not available for expenditure until approved as

 


work projects under section 451a of the management and budget act,

 

1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1451a.

 

     Sec. 251. The department and agencies receiving appropriations

 

in part 1 shall receive and retain copies of all reports funded

 

from appropriations in part 1. Federal and state guidelines for

 

short-term and long-term retention of records shall be followed.

 

The department may electronically retain copies of reports unless

 

otherwise required by federal and state guidelines.

 

     Sec. 264. The department shall not take disciplinary action

 

against an employee for communicating with a member of the

 

legislature or his or her staff.

 

     Sec. 265. Within 14 days after the release of the executive

 

budget recommendation, the department shall cooperate with the

 

state budget office to provide the senate and house appropriations

 

chairs, the senate and house appropriations subcommittee chairs,

 

and the senate and house fiscal agencies with an annual report on

 

estimated state restricted fund balances, state restricted fund

 

projected revenues, and state restricted fund expenditures for the

 

fiscal years ending September 30, 2014 and September 30, 2015.

 

     Sec. 274. (1) The department, in collaboration with the state

 

budget office, shall submit to the house and senate appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the house and senate fiscal

 

agencies, and the house and senate policy offices on the day the

 

governor submits to the legislature the budget for the ensuing

 

fiscal year a report on spending and revenue projections for each

 

of the capped federal funds listed below. The report shall contain

 

actual spending and revenue in the previous fiscal year, spending

 


and revenue projections for the current fiscal year as enacted, and

 

spending and revenue projections within the executive budget

 

proposal for the fiscal year beginning October 1, 2015 for each

 

individual line item for the department budget. The report shall

 

also include federal funds transferred to other departments. The

 

capped federal funds shall include, but not be limited to, all of

 

the following:

 

     (a) TANF.

 

     (b) Title XX social services block grant.

 

     (c) Title IV-B part I child welfare services block grant.

 

     (d) Title IV-B part II promoting safe and stable families

 

funds.

 

     (e) Low-income home energy assistance program.

 

     (2) By February 15 of the current fiscal year, the department

 

shall prepare an annual report of its efforts to identify

 

additional TANF maintenance of effort sources and rationale for any

 

increases or decreases from all of the following, but not limited

 

to:

 

     (a) Other departments.

 

     (b) Local units of government.

 

     (c) Private sources.

 

     Sec. 275. (1) The negative appropriation in the staffing

 

reductions line in part 1 shall be offset only through FTE

 

reductions. The line item shall not be offset through cuts to

 

programs, benefits, caseload savings, or policy changes. The

 

department may use TANF funds to offset general fund/general

 

purpose funds in order to realize these savings.

 


     (2) The department shall provide monthly reports on the

 

savings realized under subsection (1) to the chairpersons of the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the senate and

 

house policy offices.

 

     (3) The staffing reductions line shall achieve a zero balance

 

by the close of the current fiscal year.

 

     (4) Funds to offset the staffing reductions line shall be made

 

available through the legislative transfer process provided by

 

section 393(2) of the management and budget act, 1984 PA 431, MCL

 

18.1393.

 

     Sec. 279. (1) All master contracts relating to human services

 

shall be performance-based contracts that employ a client-centered

 

results-oriented process that is based on measurable performance

 

indicators and desired outcomes and includes the annual assessment

 

of the quality of services provided.

 

     (2) By February 1 of the current fiscal year, the department

 

shall provide the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on

 

the department budget and the senate and house fiscal agencies and

 

policy offices a report detailing measurable performance

 

indicators, desired outcomes, and an assessment of the quality of

 

services provided by the department during the previous fiscal

 

year.

 

     Sec. 284. (1) In addition to the funds appropriated in part 1,

 

there is appropriated an amount not to exceed $200,000,000.00 for

 

federal contingency funds. These funds are not available for

 

expenditure until they have been transferred to another line item

 


in part 1 under section 393(2) of the management and budget act,

 

1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1393. These funds shall not be made available

 

to increase TANF authorization.

 

     (2) In addition to the funds appropriated in part 1, there is

 

appropriated an amount not to exceed $5,000,000.00 for state

 

restricted contingency funds. These funds are not available for

 

expenditure until they have been transferred to another line item

 

in part 1 under section 393(2) of the management and budget act,

 

1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1393.

 

     (3) In addition to the funds appropriated in part 1, there is

 

appropriated an amount not to exceed $20,000,000.00 for local

 

contingency funds. These funds are not available for expenditure

 

until they have been transferred to another line item in part 1

 

under section 393(2) of the management and budget act, 1984 PA 431,

 

MCL 18.1393.

 

     (4) In addition to the funds appropriated in part 1, there is

 

appropriated an amount not to exceed $20,000,000.00 for private

 

contingency funds. These funds are not available for expenditure

 

until they have been transferred to another line item in part 1

 

under section 393(2) of the management and budget act, 1984 PA 431,

 

MCL 18.1393.

 

     Sec. 290. Any public advertisement for state assistance shall

 

also inform the public of the welfare fraud hotline operated by the

 

department.

 

     Sec. 291. (1) The department shall verify, using the e-verify

 

system, that all new department employees, and new hire employees

 

of contractors and subcontractors paid from funds appropriated in

 


part 1, are legally present in the United States. The department

 

may verify this information directly or may require contractors and

 

subcontractors to verify the information and submit a certification

 

to the department.

 

     (2) By February 15 of the current fiscal year, the department

 

shall submit to the house and senate appropriations subcommittees

 

on the department budget, the house and senate fiscal agencies, and

 

the house and senate policy offices a report on the number of new

 

department employees and new hire employees of contractors and

 

subcontractors that were found to not be legally present in the

 

United States.

 

     Sec. 293. The department may use funds from the funds

 

appropriated in part 1 to strengthen marriage and family relations

 

through the practice of marriage and family therapy for

 

individuals, families, couples, or groups. The goal of the therapy

 

shall be strengthening families by helping them avoid, eliminate,

 

relieve, manage, or resolve marital or family conflict or discord.

 

     Sec. 295. If the department fails to provide to the

 

legislature reports and other data required by this part or other

 

statute within 30 days after the date the information is due, the

 

state money appropriated in part 1 for salaries and wages

 

responsible for preparing and submitting the report shall be

 

reduced by $150,000.00.

 

     Sec. 296. Not later than November 30, the state budget office

 

shall prepare and transmit a report that provides for estimates of

 

the total general fund/general purpose appropriation lapses at the

 

close of the prior fiscal year. This report shall summarize the

 


projected year-end general fund/general purpose appropriation

 

lapses by major departmental program or program areas. The report

 

shall be transmitted to the chairpersons of the senate and house

 

appropriations committees and the senate and house fiscal agencies.

 

     Sec. 297. Total authorized appropriations from all sources

 

under part 1 for legacy costs for the fiscal year ending September

 

30, 2015 is $283,394,300.00. From this amount, total agency

 

appropriations for pension-related legacy costs are estimated at

 

$159,146,200.00. Total agency appropriations for retiree health

 

care legacy costs are estimated at $124,248,100.00.

 

     Sec. 298. By March 1 of the current fiscal year, the

 

department shall provide to the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the senate and house fiscal

 

agencies, and the senate and house policy offices an annual report

 

on the supervisor-to-staff ratio by department divisions and

 

subdivisions.

 

     Sec. 299. The department shall maintain, on a publicly

 

accessible website, a department scorecard that identifies, tracks,

 

and regularly updates key metrics that are used to monitor and

 

improve the department's performance.

 

 

 

EXECUTIVE OPERATIONS

 

     Sec. 307. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

demonstration projects, $400,000.00 shall be distributed as

 

provided in subsection (2). The amount distributed under this

 

subsection shall not exceed 50% of the total operating expenses of

 

the program described in subsection (2), with the remaining 50%

 


paid by local United Way organizations and other nonprofit

 

organizations and foundations.

 

     (2) Funds distributed under subsection (1) shall be

 

distributed to Michigan 2-1-1, a nonprofit corporation organized

 

under the laws of this state that is exempt from federal income tax

 

under section 501(c)(3) of the internal revenue code, 26 USC

 

501(c)(3), and whose mission is to coordinate and support a

 

statewide 2-1-1 system. Michigan 2-1-1 shall use the funds only to

 

fulfill the Michigan 2-1-1 business plan adopted by Michigan 2-1-1

 

in January 2005.

 

     (3) Michigan 2-1-1 shall refer to the department any calls

 

received reporting fraud, waste, or abuse of state-administered

 

public assistance.

 

     (4) Michigan 2-1-1 shall report annually to the department and

 

the house and senate standing committees with primary jurisdiction

 

over matters relating to human services and telecommunications on

 

2-1-1 system performance, including, but not limited to, call

 

volume by community health and human service needs and unmet needs

 

identified through caller data and customer satisfaction metrics.

 

     Sec. 310. It is the intent of the legislature that the

 

department shall work with youth-oriented nonprofit organizations

 

to provide mentoring programming for children of incarcerated

 

parents and other at-risk children.

 

     Sec. 315. The department, in conjunction with the department

 

of community health, organizations representing disabled and

 

elderly adults, representatives of assisted living facilities, and

 

the legislature, shall conduct a workgroup that explores licensing

 


standards and practices and performance measures for facilities

 

providing adult assisted living services in order to ensure safe,

 

adequately supervised, and protective environments for those

 

individuals and families seeking assisted living services.

 

 

 

ADULT AND FAMILY SERVICES

 

     Sec. 401. (1) All funds appropriated in part 1 for independent

 

living shall be used to support centers for independent living in

 

delivering mandated independent living core services in compliance

 

with federal rules and regulations for the centers, by existing

 

centers for independent living to serve underserved areas, and for

 

projects to build the capacity of centers for independent living to

 

deliver independent living services. Applications for the funds

 

shall be reviewed in accordance with criteria and procedures

 

established by the department. Funds shall be used in a manner

 

consistent with the state plan for independent living. Services

 

provided should assist people with disabilities to move toward

 

self-sufficiency, including support for accessing transportation

 

and health care, obtaining employment, community living, nursing

 

home transition, information and referral services, education,

 

youth transition services, veterans, and stigma reduction

 

activities.

 

     (2) The Michigan centers for independent living shall provide

 

a report by March 1 of the current fiscal year to the house and

 

senate appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the

 

house and senate fiscal agencies, the house and senate policy

 

offices, and the state budget office on direct customer and system

 


outcomes and performance measures.

 

     Sec. 402. The Michigan rehabilitation services shall work

 

collaboratively with the bureau of services for blind persons,

 

service organizations, and government entities to identify

 

qualified match dollars to maximize use of available federal

 

vocational rehabilitation funds.

 

     Sec. 403. (1) It is the intent of the legislature that the

 

funds appropriated in part 1 for Michigan rehabilitation services,

 

and any future funds appropriated for that purpose, shall not be

 

spent unless Michigan rehabilitation services addresses, works to

 

remedy, and accounts for the deficiencies found in Michigan

 

rehabilitation services as detailed in the most recent auditor

 

general report of Michigan rehabilitation services.

 

     (2) The department shall provide quarterly status reports by

 

February 1, May 1, August 1, and November 1 to the house and senate

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the house

 

and senate fiscal agencies, and house and senate policy offices on

 

Michigan rehabilitation services that include all of the following

 

items:

 

     (a) Reductions and changes in administration costs and

 

staffing.

 

     (b) Service delivery plans and implementation steps achieved.

 

     (c) Reorganization plans and implementation steps achieved.

 

     (d) Plans to integrate Michigan rehabilitative services

 

programs into other services provided by the department.

 

     (e) Quarterly expenditures by major spending category.

 

     (f) Employment and job retention rates from both Michigan

 


rehabilitation services and its nonprofit partners.

 

     (g) Success rate of each district in achieving the program

 

goals.

 

     Sec. 404. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

independent living, the department shall allocate $1,500,000.00 to

 

Michigan's centers for independent living to continue to pilot

 

guide services to develop accessible, comprehensive, and integrated

 

services for persons with disabilities. The guide services shall

 

also assist persons with disabilities and their families in

 

navigating state systems when accessing public assistance to become

 

financially self-sufficient.

 

     Sec. 405. It is the intent of the legislature that Michigan

 

rehabilitation services shall not implement an order of selection

 

for vocational and rehabilitative services.

 

     Sec. 407. From the funds appropriated in part 1 to Michigan

 

rehabilitation services, the department shall use the

 

interdepartmental grant from the department of corrections to

 

expand the swift and sure sanctions probation program through

 

Michigan rehabilitation services. The department shall allocate up

 

to $3,000,000.00 as a match for $11,084,500.00, pending the

 

availability of federal vocational rehabilitation funds, for the

 

purpose described in this section. The department shall establish

 

an interagency agreement with the department of corrections and

 

judicial branch to carry out this purpose. These funds shall be

 

used to assist individuals who have a history of probation or

 

parole violations and exceptional mental health needs and shall not

 

be used for individuals who are currently incarcerated. In order to

 


implement the program described in this section, the department

 

shall contract with accredited, community-based rehabilitation

 

organizations for job placement and other support services for

 

eligible probationers referred from that program. If the amount of

 

available federal funding is less than $11,084,500.00, the

 

department shall notify the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the senate and house fiscal

 

agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and the state budget

 

office within 30 days of this determination and the reasons for the

 

lower match.

 

     Sec. 415. (1) If funds become available in part 1, the

 

department may contract with independent contractors from various

 

counties, including, but not limited to, faith-based and nonprofit

 

organizations. Preference shall be given to independent contractors

 

that provide at least 10% in matching funds, through any

 

combination of local, state, or federal funds or in-kind or other

 

donations. However, an independent contractor that cannot secure

 

matching funds shall not be excluded from consideration for the

 

fatherhood program.

 

     (2) The department may choose providers that will work with

 

counties to help eligible fathers under TANF guidelines to acquire

 

skills that will enable them to increase their responsible behavior

 

toward their children and the mothers of their children. An

 

increase of financial support for their children should be a very

 

high priority as well as emotional support.

 

     (3) A fatherhood initiative program established under this

 

section shall minimally include at least 3 of the following

 


components: promoting responsible, caring, and effective parenting

 

through counseling; mentoring and parental education; enhancing the

 

abilities and commitment of unemployed or low-income fathers to

 

provide material support for their families and to avoid or leave

 

welfare programs by assisting them to take advantage of job search

 

programs, job training, and education to improve their work habits

 

and work skills; improving fathers' ability to effectively manage

 

family business affairs by means such as education, counseling, and

 

mentoring in household matters; infant care; effective

 

communication and respect; anger management; children's financial

 

support; and drug-free lifestyle.

 

     (4) The department is authorized to make allocations of TANF

 

funds, of not more than 20% per county, under this section only to

 

agencies that report necessary data to the department for the

 

purpose of meeting TANF eligibility reporting requirements.

 

     (5) Upon receipt of the promotion of responsible fatherhood

 

funds from the United States department of health and human

 

services, the department shall use the program criteria set forth

 

in subsection (3) to implement the program with the federal funds.

 

     Sec. 416. (1) If funds become available in part 1, the

 

department may contract with independent contractors from various

 

counties, including, but not limited to, faith-based and nonprofit

 

organizations. Preference shall be given to independent contractors

 

that provide at least 10% in matching funds, through any

 

combination of local, state, or federal funds or in-kind or other

 

donations. However, an independent contractor that cannot secure

 

matching funds shall not be excluded from consideration for a

 


marriage initiative program.

 

     (2) The department may choose providers to work with counties

 

that will work to support and strengthen marriages of those

 

eligible under the TANF guidelines. The areas of work may include,

 

but are not limited to, marital counseling, domestic violence

 

counseling, family counseling, effective communication, and anger

 

management as well as parenting skills to improve the family

 

structure.

 

     (3) A marriage initiative program established under this

 

section may include, but is not limited to, 1 or more of the

 

following: public advertising campaigns on the value of marriage

 

and the skills needed to increase marital stability and health;

 

education in high schools on the value of marriage, relationship

 

skills, and budgeting; premarital, marital, family, and domestic

 

violence counseling; effective communication; marriage mentoring

 

programs which use married couples as role models and mentors in

 

at-risk communities; anger management; and parenting skills to

 

improve the family structure.

 

     (4) The department is authorized to make allocations of TANF

 

funds, of not more than 20% per county, under this section only to

 

agencies that report necessary data to the department for the

 

purpose of meeting TANF eligibility reporting requirements.

 

     (5) Upon receipt of the healthy marriage promotion grant from

 

the United States department of health and human services, the

 

department shall use the program criteria set forth in subsection

 

(3) to implement the program with the federal funds.

 

     Sec. 420. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1, the

 


department shall contract with the prosecuting attorneys

 

association of Michigan for 2 elder abuse resource prosecuting

 

attorneys positions to provide the support and services necessary

 

to increase the capability of the state's prosecutors, adult

 

protective service system, and criminal justice system to

 

effectively identify, investigate, and prosecute elder abuse and

 

financial exploitation.

 

     (2) By March 1 of the current fiscal year, the prosecuting

 

attorneys association shall provide a report on the efficacy of the

 

contract to the state budget office, the house and senate

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the house

 

and senate fiscal agencies, and the house and senate policy

 

offices.

 

     Sec. 423. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for elder law

 

of Michigan MiCAFE contract, the department shall allocate not less

 

than $350,000.00 to the elder law of Michigan MiCAFE to assist this

 

state's elderly population to participate in the food assistance

 

program. Of the $350,000.00 allocated under this section, the

 

department shall use $175,000.00, which are general fund/general

 

purpose funds, as state matching funds for not less than

 

$175,000.00 in United States department of agriculture funding to

 

provide outreach program activities, such as eligibility screen and

 

information services, as part of a statewide food assistance

 

hotline.

 

     Sec. 424. The department may contract with a competitively

 

selected contractor whose service area includes region 2 of the

 

prosperity regions identified and defined by the department of

 


technology, management, and budget. The competitively selected

 

contractor shall be a nonprofit organized and operated exclusively

 

for the tax-exempt purposes set forth in section 501(c)(3) of the

 

United States internal revenue code. Allocated funds shall only be

 

used to defray the operational and capital costs for the workers on

 

wheels program. By January 1 of the current fiscal year, the

 

selected contractor shall provide a report on the number of

 

households served, impact of the recipient's household income,

 

employment status of the recipient, and the number of vehicles

 

awarded through purchase and donation to the house and senate

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the house

 

and senate fiscal agencies, and the house and senate policy

 

offices.

 

     Sec. 425. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1, the

 

department shall provide individuals not more than $500.00 for

 

vehicle repairs, including any repairs done in the previous 12

 

months. However, the department may in its discretion pay for

 

repairs up to $900.00. Payments under this section shall include

 

the combined total of payments made by the department and work

 

participation program.

 

     (2) By November 30 of the current fiscal year, the department

 

shall provide to the senate and house appropriations subcommittees

 

on the department budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and

 

the senate and house policy offices a report detailing the total

 

number of payments for repairs, the number of payments for repairs

 

that exceeded $500.00, the number of payments for repairs that cost

 

exactly $500.00, and the number of payments for repairs that cost

 


exactly $900.00 in the previous fiscal year.

 

 

 

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

 

     Sec. 501. (1) A goal is established that not more than 27% of

 

all children in foster care at any given time during the current

 

fiscal year will have been in foster care for 24 months or more.

 

     (2) By March 1 of the current fiscal year, the department

 

shall provide to the senate and house appropriations subcommittees

 

on the department budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies, the

 

senate and house policy offices, and the state budget office a

 

report describing the steps that will be taken to achieve the

 

specific goal established in this section and on the percentage of

 

children who currently are in foster care and who have been in

 

foster care a total of 24 or more months.

 

     Sec. 502. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for foster

 

care, the department shall provide 50% reimbursement to Indian

 

tribal governments for foster care expenditures for children who

 

are under the jurisdiction of Indian tribal courts and who are not

 

otherwise eligible for federal foster care cost sharing.

 

     Sec. 503. (1) In accordance with the final report of the

 

Michigan child welfare performance-based funding task force issued

 

in response to section 503 of article X of 2013 PA 59, the

 

department shall issue a request for proposal not later than

 

October 1, 2014 for an independent actuary designated as a fellow

 

of the society of actuaries to recommend actuarially sound case

 

rates for necessary out-of-home child welfare services that achieve

 

permanency by the department and private child placing agencies in

 


a prospective payment system under a performance-based funding

 

model.

 

     (2) A prospective rate payment system for private agencies

 

that includes funding for adoption incentive payments is the

 

recommended funding model. The full cost prospective rate payment

 

system will identify and cover contractual costs, paid through the

 

case rate developed by an actuary.

 

     (3) By September 30, 2015, the department shall complete a

 

full cost analysis of the performance-based funding model with

 

respect to the current fiscal year, including relevant information

 

on the actuarial rate-setting process and provide a report on the

 

analysis to the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on

 

the department budget.

 

     (4) In accordance with the final report of the Michigan child

 

welfare performance-based funding task force issued in response to

 

section 503 of article X of 2013 PA 59, the department shall

 

implement a 5-year independent, third-party evaluation of the

 

performance-based funding model. The evaluator shall be selected

 

through a competitive process by a rating committee that includes,

 

but is not limited to, representatives from the department and

 

private child placing agencies.

 

     (5) The department shall create a readiness model with input

 

from private child welfare agencies, counties, and courts that

 

gives direction to self-identified counties and the department

 

regarding county participation before any further expansion of the

 

performance-based funding model.

 

     (6) For phase II, the department shall only phase the

 


implementation of the performance-based funding model into

 

additional counties where the department, private child welfare

 

agencies, the county, and the court operating within that county

 

have agreed to implement the performance-based funding model.

 

     (7) The department, in conjunction with members from both the

 

house of representatives and senate, private child placing

 

agencies, the courts, and counties shall implement the fiscal year

 

2014-2015 recommendations that are described in the workgroup

 

report that was provided in section 503 of article X of 2013 PA 59

 

to establish a performance-based funding for public and private

 

child welfare services providers. The department shall provide a

 

quarterly report on the status of the performance-based contracting

 

model to the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the

 

department budget, the senate and house standing committees on

 

families and human services, and the senate and house fiscal

 

agencies and policy offices.

 

     Sec. 505. By March 1 of the current fiscal year, the

 

department and Wayne County shall provide to the senate and house

 

appropriations committees on the department budget and the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies and policy offices a report for youth

 

served in the previous fiscal year and in the first quarter of the

 

current fiscal year outlining the number of youth served within

 

each juvenile justice system, the type of setting for each youth,

 

performance outcomes, and financial costs or savings.

 

     Sec. 506. The department shall submit a report by February 15

 

of the current fiscal year on the number of foster children under

 

department supervision who did not receive Medicaid coverage and

 


the number of foster children under department supervision that

 

experienced a break in Medicaid coverage during the previous fiscal

 

year to the house and senate appropriations subcommittees on the

 

department budget, the house and senate fiscal agencies, and the

 

house and senate policy offices.

 

     Sec. 507. The department's ability to satisfy appropriation

 

deducts in part 1 for foster care private collections shall not be

 

limited to collections and accruals pertaining to services provided

 

only in the current fiscal year but may include revenues collected

 

during the current fiscal year for services provided in prior

 

fiscal years.

 

     Sec. 508. (1) In addition to the amount appropriated in part 1

 

for children's trust fund grants, money granted or money received

 

as gifts or donations to the children's trust fund created by 1982

 

PA 249, MCL 21.171 to 21.172, is appropriated for expenditure.

 

     (2) The department and the child abuse neglect and prevention

 

board shall collaborate to ensure that administrative delays are

 

avoided and the local grant recipients and direct service providers

 

receive money in an expeditious manner. The department and board

 

shall make available the children's trust fund contract funds to

 

grantees within 31 days of the start date of the funded project.

 

     Sec. 509. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for the

 

child welfare institute, the department shall use up to $100,000.00

 

to enter into a contract to provide pilot training for public and

 

contracted child welfare staff to address secondary trauma.

 

     (2) The department shall report to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 


and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and

 

the state budget office by March 1 of the current fiscal year on

 

the results of the pilot program, including the number of

 

participants, actual costs of the pilot program, and a cost

 

estimate to expand the program statewide.

 

     Sec. 511. The department shall provide quarterly reports to

 

the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house standing committees on families and

 

human services, and the senate and house fiscal agencies and policy

 

offices on the number and percentage of children who received

 

timely health examinations after entry into foster care and the

 

number and percentage of children entering foster care who received

 

a required mental health examination after entry into foster care.

 

     Sec. 513. (1) The department shall not expend funds

 

appropriated in part 1 to pay for the direct placement by the

 

department of a child in an out-of-state facility unless all of the

 

following conditions are met:

 

     (a) There is no appropriate placement available in this state

 

as determined by the department interstate compact office.

 

     (b) An out-of-state placement exists that is nearer to the

 

child's home than the closest appropriate in-state placement as

 

determined by the department interstate compact office.

 

     (c) The out-of-state facility meets all of the licensing

 

standards of this state for a comparable facility.

 

     (d) The out-of-state facility meets all of the applicable

 

licensing standards of the state in which it is located.

 

     (e) The department has done an on-site visit to the out-of-

 


state facility, reviewed the facility records, reviewed licensing

 

records and reports on the facility, and believes that the facility

 

is an appropriate placement for the child.

 

     (2) The department shall not expend money for a child placed

 

in an out-of-state facility without approval of the deputy director

 

for children's services. The department shall notify the

 

appropriate state agency in that state including the name of the

 

out-of-state provider who accepted the placement.

 

     (3) The department shall submit quarterly reports to the state

 

court administrative office, the house and senate appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the house and senate fiscal

 

agencies, and the house and senate policy offices on the number of

 

Michigan children residing in out-of-state facilities at the time

 

of the report, the total cost and average per diem cost of these

 

out-of-state placements to this state, and a list of each such

 

placement arranged by the Michigan county of residence for each

 

child.

 

     (4) The department shall submit an annual report by February

 

15 of the current fiscal year on per diem costs of each residential

 

care provider that has an established state rate and is located or

 

doing business in this state.

 

     (5) It is the intent of the legislature that the department

 

shall work in conjunction with the courts and the state court

 

administrative office to identify data needed to calculate

 

statewide recidivism rates for adjudicated youth placed in either

 

residential secure or nonsecure facilities, defined at 6 months

 

after a youth is released from placement.

 


     (6) By March 1 of the current fiscal year, the department

 

shall notify the legislature on the status of efforts to accomplish

 

the intent of subsection (5).

 

     Sec. 514. The department shall make a comprehensive report

 

concerning children's protective services (CPS) to the legislature,

 

including the senate and house policy offices and the state budget

 

director, by January 1 of the current fiscal year, that shall

 

include all of the following:

 

     (a) Statistical information including, at a minimum, all of

 

the following:

 

     (i) The total number of reports of child abuse or neglect

 

investigated under the child protection law, 1975 PA 238, MCL

 

722.621 to 722.638, and the number of cases classified under

 

category I or category II and the number of cases classified under

 

category III, category IV, or category V.

 

     (ii) Characteristics of perpetrators of child abuse or neglect

 

and the child victims, such as age, relationship, race, and

 

ethnicity and whether the perpetrator exposed the child victim to

 

drug activity, including the manufacture of illicit drugs, that

 

exposed the child victim to substance abuse, a drug house, or

 

methamphetamine.

 

     (iii) The mandatory reporter category in which the individual

 

who made the report fits, or other categorization if the individual

 

is not within a group required to report under the child protection

 

law, 1975 PA 238, MCL 722.621 to 722.638.

 

     (iv) The number of cases that resulted in the separation of the

 

child from the parent or guardian and the period of time of that

 


separation, up to and including termination of parental rights.

 

     (v) For the reported complaints of child abuse or neglect by

 

teachers, school administrators, and school counselors, the number

 

of cases classified under category I or category II and the number

 

of cases classified under category III, category IV, or category V.

 

     (vi) For the reported complaints of child abuse or neglect by

 

teachers, school administrators, and school counselors, the number

 

of cases that resulted in separation of the child from the parent

 

or guardian and the period of time of that separation, up to and

 

including termination of parental rights.

 

     (b) New policies related to children's protective services

 

including, but not limited to, major policy changes and court

 

decisions affecting the children's protective services system

 

during the immediately preceding 12-month period.

 

     (c) The information contained in the report required under

 

section 8d(5) of the child protection law, 1975 PA 238, MCL

 

722.628d, on cases classified under category III.

 

     (d) The department policy, or changes to the department

 

policy, regarding children who have been exposed to the production

 

or manufacture of methamphetamines.

 

     Sec. 515. (1) By October 1, 2014, the department, in

 

conjunction with court and county personnel and representatives of

 

the private child welfare agencies operating in Kent County, shall

 

transfer all existing foster care cases and pending foster family

 

home licensing applications in Kent County to private child welfare

 

agencies. Beginning on or before October 1, 2014, the department,

 

in conjunction with court and county personnel and representatives

 


of the private child welfare agencies operating in Kent County,

 

shall assign all new foster care cases and new foster family home

 

licensing applications or recertifications in Kent County to

 

private child welfare agencies. The department shall notify in

 

writing the chairs of the house and senate appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget within 10 days after all the

 

foster care cases and pending foster family home licensing

 

applications have been transferred to private child welfare

 

agencies in Kent County. Until an actuary who has been designated

 

as a fellow of the society of actuaries has recommended and the

 

department has amended contracts to include case rates for

 

performance-based contracting pursuant to the workgroup findings

 

described in section 503 of article X of 2013 PA 59, the department

 

shall pay providers of foster care services in Kent County the

 

administrative rate established in section 546(1) and (4) of

 

article X of 2013 PA 59. The carrying out of the workgroup or the

 

workgroup findings described in section 503 of article X of 2013 PA

 

59 or any other activities associated with establishing

 

performance-based funding or contracting shall not delay in any way

 

the time deadlines for transferring and assigning foster care cases

 

in Kent County to private child welfare agencies in this section.

 

If the department fails to comply with the requirements of this

 

section, the state money appropriated in part 1 for executive

 

operations shall be reduced by $25,000.00 for each week of

 

noncompliance.

 

     (2) It is the intent of the legislature that the transfers

 

described in this section will not require the children in foster

 


care to be placed into a new foster family home, but that the

 

department will allow the private child welfare agencies to borrow

 

the foster family homes certified through the department.

 

     (3) By March 1, 2015, the department shall submit a report to

 

the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the senate and

 

house policy offices that provides an update on the privatization

 

of child welfare services in Kent County as described in section

 

515 of article X of 2013 PA 59 and includes all of the following:

 

     (a) Costs or savings that resulted from the program.

 

     (b) Gaps in funding.

 

     (c) Program successes.

 

     (d) Challenges and barriers to a successful implementation.

 

     Sec. 519. The department shall permit any private agency that

 

has an existing contract with this state to provide foster care

 

services to be also eligible to provide treatment foster care

 

services.

 

     Sec. 522. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for youth

 

in transition, the department shall allocate $750,000.00 for

 

college scholarships through the fostering futures scholarship

 

program in the Michigan education trust to youths who were in

 

foster care because of child abuse or neglect and are attending a

 

college located in this state. Of the funds appropriated, 100%

 

shall be used to fund scholarships for the youths described in this

 

section.

 

     (2) Not later than March 1 of the current fiscal year, the

 

department shall provide a report to the house and senate

 


appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the house

 

and senate fiscal agencies, and the house and senate policy offices

 

that includes the number of youths who received scholarships and

 

the amount of each scholarship, and the total amount of funds spent

 

or encumbered in the current fiscal year.

 

     Sec. 523. (1) By February 15 of the current fiscal year, the

 

department shall report on the families first, family

 

reunification, and families together building solutions family

 

preservation programs to the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the senate and house fiscal

 

agencies, and the senate and house policy offices. The report shall

 

contain all of the following for each program:

 

     (a) The average cost per recipient served.

 

     (b) Measurable performance indicators.

 

     (c) Desired outcomes or results and goals that can be measured

 

on an annual basis, or desired results for a defined number of

 

years.

 

     (d) Monitored results.

 

     (e) Innovations that may include savings or reductions in

 

administrative costs.

 

     (2) If money becomes available in part 1 for youth in

 

transition and domestic violence prevention and treatment, the

 

department is authorized to make allocations of TANF funds only to

 

agencies that report necessary data to the department for the

 

purpose of meeting TANF eligibility reporting requirements.

 

     Sec. 524. As a condition of receiving funds appropriated in

 

part 1 for strong families/safe children, counties must submit the

 


service spending plan to the department by October 1 of the current

 

fiscal year for approval. The department shall approve the service

 

spending plan within 30 calendar days after receipt of a properly

 

completed service spending plan.

 

     Sec. 525. The department shall implement the same on-site

 

evaluation processes for privately operated child welfare and

 

juvenile justice residential facilities as is used to evaluate

 

state-operated facilities. Penalties for noncompliance shall be the

 

same for privately operated child welfare and juvenile justice

 

residential facilities and state-operated facilities.

 

     Sec. 526. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for foster

 

care payments and related administrative costs, the department may

 

implement the federally approved title IV-E child welfare waiver

 

demonstration project. As required under the waiver, any savings

 

resulting from the demonstration project must be quantified and

 

reinvested into child welfare programming.

 

     Sec. 532. (1) The department, in collaboration with

 

representatives of private child and family agencies, shall revise

 

and improve the annual licensing review process and the annual

 

contract compliance review process for child placing agencies and

 

child caring institutions. The improvement goals shall be safety

 

and care for children. Improvements to the review process shall be

 

directed toward alleviating administrative burdens so that agency

 

resources may be focused on children. The revision shall include

 

identification of duplicative staff activities and information

 

sought from child placing agencies and child caring institutions in

 

the annual review process. The department shall report to the

 


senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies and policy offices,

 

and the state budget director on or before January 15 of the

 

current fiscal year on the findings of the annual licensing review.

 

     (2) The department shall conduct licensing reviews no more

 

than once every 2 years for child placing agencies and child caring

 

institutions that are nationally accredited and have no outstanding

 

violations.

 

     Sec. 533. (1) The department shall make payments to child

 

placing facilities for in-home and out-of-home care services and

 

adoption services within 30 days of receiving all necessary

 

documentation from those agencies.

 

     (2) The department shall provide a report on the status of the

 

implementation and operation of this section by February 15 of the

 

current fiscal year.

 

     Sec. 534. The department shall report to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and

 

the state budget office by November 1 of the current fiscal year a

 

report on the planning, implementation, and operation, regardless

 

of the current operational status, of the statewide automated child

 

welfare information system. The report shall include, but not be

 

limited to, all of the following:

 

     (a) Areas where implementation went as planned.

 

     (b) The number of known issues.

 

     (c) The average number of help tickets submitted per day.

 

     (d) Any additional overtime or other staffing costs to address

 


known issues and volume of help tickets.

 

     (e) Any contract revisions to address known issues and volume

 

of help tickets.

 

     (f) Other strategies undertaken to improve implementation.

 

     Sec. 537. The department, in collaboration with child placing

 

agencies, shall develop a strategy to implement section 115o of the

 

social welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.115o. The strategy shall

 

include a requirement that a department caseworker responsible for

 

preparing a recommendation to a court concerning a juvenile

 

placement shall provide, as part of the recommendation, information

 

regarding the requirements of section 115o of the social welfare

 

act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.115o.

 

     Sec. 540. If a physician or psychiatrist who is providing

 

services to state or court wards placed in a residential facility

 

submits a formal request to the department to change the

 

psychotropic medication of a ward, the department shall, if the

 

ward is a state ward, make a determination on the proposed change

 

within 7 business days after the request or, if the ward is a

 

temporary court ward, seek parental consent within 7 business days

 

after the request. If parental consent is not provided within 7

 

business days, the department shall petition the court on the

 

eighth business day.

 

     Sec. 546. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for foster

 

care payments and from child care fund, the department shall pay

 

providers of foster care services not less than a $37.00

 

administrative rate.

 

     (2) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for foster care

 


payments and from child care fund, the department shall pay

 

providers of general independent living services not less than a

 

$28.00 administrative rate.

 

     (3) From the funds appropriated in part 1, the department

 

shall pay providers of independent living plus services statewide

 

per diem rates for staff-supported housing and host-home housing

 

based on proposals submitted in response to a solicitation for

 

pricing. The independent living plus program provides staff-

 

supported housing and services for foster youth ages 16 through 19

 

who, because of their individual needs and assessments, are not

 

initially appropriate for general independent living foster care.

 

     (4) From the funds appropriated in part 1, the department

 

shall pay providers of foster care services an additional $3.00

 

administrative rate, provided that section 117a of the social

 

welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.117a, is amended to eliminate the

 

county match rate for the additional administrative rate provided

 

in this subsection. Payments under this subsection shall be made,

 

not less than, on a monthly basis.

 

     (5) If required by the federal government to meet title IV-E

 

requirements, providers of foster care services shall submit

 

quarterly expenditure reports to the department to identify actual

 

costs of providing foster care services.

 

     (6) From the funds appropriated in part 1, the department

 

shall provide an increase to each private provider of residential

 

services, if section 117a of the social welfare act, 1939 PA 280,

 

MCL 400.117a, is amended to eliminate the county match rate for the

 

additional rate provided in this section.

 


     Sec. 547. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for the

 

guardianship assistance program, the department shall pay a minimum

 

rate that is not less than the approved age-appropriate payment

 

rates for youth placed in family foster care.

 

     Sec. 556. (1) No later than December 1 for the current fiscal

 

year, the department shall provide an annual report to the

 

subcommittees of the senate and house appropriations committees on

 

the department budget, the house and senate fiscal agencies, and

 

the state budget director that includes the following:

 

     (a) The number of complaints filed by adoptive parents who

 

were not notified that their adopted child had special needs.

 

     (b) The number of cases that received a new or revised

 

determination of care rate as described in subsections (2) and (3),

 

the total expenditures on the program, and the number of cases in

 

each determination of care level of payment.

 

     (2) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for the redetermined

 

adoption assistance program and not later than January 1, 2015, the

 

department shall implement a new state-funded program to allow

 

adoptive parents to request a redetermination of their adoption

 

assistance. Redetermined adoption assistance means a payment as

 

determined by a certification that may be justified when

 

extraordinary care or expense is required for a condition that

 

existed or the cause of which existed before the adoption was

 

finalized. A redetermined adoption assistance rate shall be

 

determined in the same manner using the same criteria as the

 

department uses to determine a support subsidy under section

 

115g(2) of the social welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.115g. The

 


amount of assistance shall be at least 95% of the maximum amount of

 

assistance the department determines the child is eligible to

 

receive and shall be requested as follows:

 

     (a) For adoptive parents with effective adoption assistance

 

agreements signed before January 1, 2015, the adoptive parent may

 

request 1 redetermined adoption assistance certification. If a

 

request for certification under this subdivision is made, it must

 

be requested in writing and received by the department not later

 

than March 31, 2015.

 

     (b) For adoptive parents who sign an adoption assistance

 

agreement on or after January 1, 2015, an adoptive parent may only

 

ever request 1 redetermined adoption assistance certification per

 

adoptee placed in the adoptive parent's home.

 

     (3) If the department denies or the adoptive parent disagrees

 

with the certification, the adoptive parent may request a hearing

 

through an administrative law judge in a manner consistent with the

 

rules promulgated under the administrative procedures act of 1969,

 

1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328.

 

     (4) Not later than October 15, 2014, the department shall

 

notify in writing all adoptive parents with adoption assistance

 

agreements about their ability to request a certification for

 

redetermined adoption assistance between January 1, 2015 and March

 

31, 2015. For all parents entering adoption assistance agreements

 

after this notification, the department shall inform the adoptive

 

parent in writing before the adoption is finalized of his or her

 

right to request 1 certification for a redetermination per adoptee

 

placed in the adoptive parent's home.

 


     (5) If this section conflicts with a state statute enacted

 

subsequent to this act, the state statute controls.

 

     (6) "Certification" under this section means a determination

 

of eligibility by the department that an adoptee is eligible for

 

redetermined adoption assistance.

 

     Sec. 558. The department shall submit to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and

 

the state budget office by March 1 of the current fiscal year a

 

report on the training programs or courses provided through the

 

child welfare training institute and the annual cost for each

 

program or course.

 

     Sec. 559. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

adoption support services including the funds designated as 1-time

 

basis only, the department shall allocate $700,000.00 to the

 

adoptive family support network to operate and expand its adoptive

 

parent mentor program to provide a listening ear, knowledgeable

 

guidance, and community connections to adoptive parents and

 

children who were adopted in this state or another state.

 

     (2) The adoptive family support network shall submit to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house

 

policy offices, and the state budget office by March 1 of the

 

current fiscal year a report on the program described in subsection

 

(1), including, but not limited to, the number of cases served and

 

the number of cases in which the program prevented an out-of-home

 

placement.

 


     Sec. 560. The department, in conjunction with the state court

 

administrative office and the foster care review board, shall

 

coordinate a comprehensive training program for court personnel on

 

the importance of parent-child visitations in foster care cases.

 

     Sec. 562. The department shall provide time and travel

 

reimbursements for foster parents who transport a foster child to

 

parent-child visitations. As part of the foster care parent

 

contract, the department shall provide written confirmation to

 

foster parents that states that the foster parents have the right

 

to request these reimbursements for all parent-child visitations.

 

The department shall provide these reimbursements within 60 days of

 

receiving a request for eligible reimbursements from a foster

 

parent.

 

     Sec. 563. The department shall submit to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and

 

the state budget office by March 1 of the current fiscal year a

 

report on the number and percentage of department employees who had

 

a satisfactory performance evaluation and the number and percentage

 

of department employees who had an unsatisfactory performance

 

evaluation.

 

     Sec. 564. (1) The department shall develop a clear policy for

 

parent-child visitations. The local county offices, caseworkers,

 

and supervisors shall meet a 50% success rate, after accounting for

 

factors outside of the caseworker's control.

 

     (2) Per the court-ordered number of required meetings between

 

caseworkers and parent, the caseworkers shall achieve a success

 


rate of 65%, after accounting for factors outside of the

 

caseworker's control.

 

     Sec. 565. The department and private child placing agencies

 

shall provide signed copies of the parent agency treatment plan

 

service agreement, that must include, according to department

 

policy, a written plan for parent-child visitation. The agreement

 

should include a signature from the legal parent, when possible. If

 

the parent does not sign the parent agency treatment plan service

 

agreement, the department and private child placing agencies shall

 

provide documentation as to why the parent did not sign the

 

agreement. The supervisor assigned to a case that does not obtain

 

the parent signature also shall provide documentation as to why the

 

parent did not sign the agreement. The information and

 

documentation described in this section shall be made available to

 

the foster care review board upon request.

 

     Sec. 566. For a child who is under court or state supervision,

 

the MiTEAM family team meeting shall include a review of any

 

psychotropic medication the child is currently prescribed, had been

 

prescribed in the past, or had been recommended to take.

 

     Sec. 567. (1) The caseworker or supervisor who is assigned to

 

a foster care case is responsible for completing a medical passport

 

for the cases assigned to him or her. If a child in foster care is

 

transferred to a new placement or returned to his or her parent's

 

or guardian's home, the medical passport and any school records in

 

the caseworker's or supervisor's possession must be transferred

 

within 2 weeks from the date of placement or return to the home.

 

     (2) The department shall submit to the senate and house

 


appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and

 

the state budget office by March 1 of the current fiscal year a

 

report on the items described in subsection (1), including the

 

following:

 

     (a) The percentage of medical passports that were properly

 

filled out.

 

     (b) From the total medical passports transferred, the

 

percentage that transferred within 2 weeks from the date of

 

placement or return to the home.

 

     (c) From the total school records, the percentage that

 

transferred within 2 weeks from the date of placement or return to

 

the home.

 

     Sec. 568. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

adoption subsidies, the department shall pay a minimum adoption

 

subsidy rate that is not less than 95% of the rate that was or

 

would have been provided for the adoptee in family foster care at

 

the time of the adoption. This rate includes the determination of

 

care rate that was paid or would have been paid to the adoptive

 

parent for the adoptee in a family foster care placement, and this

 

amount shall be increased to reflect any increase in the standard

 

age appropriate foster care rate.

 

     (2) "Determination of care rate" as described in this section

 

means a supplemental payment to the standard age appropriate foster

 

care rate that may be justified when extraordinary care or expense

 

is required. The supplemental payment is based on 1 or more of the

 

following case situations where additional care is required of the

 


foster care provider or adoptive parent or an additional expense

 

exists:

 

     (a) Physically disabled children for whom the adoptive parent

 

must provide measurably greater supervision and care.

 

     (b) Children with special psychological or psychiatric needs

 

that require extra time and measurably greater amounts of care and

 

attention by the adoptive parent.

 

     (c) Children requiring special diets that are more expensive

 

than a normal diet and that require extra time and effort by the

 

adoptive parent to obtain or prepare.

 

     (d) Children whose severe acting-out or antisocial behavior

 

requires a measurably greater amount of care and attention of the

 

adoptive parent.

 

     (3) The department shall, on a separate form, allow an

 

adoptive parent to sign a certification that he or she rejects a

 

support subsidy.

 

     (4) If this section conflicts with state statute enacted

 

subsequent to this act, the state statute controls.

 

     Sec. 569. The department shall reimburse private child placing

 

agencies that complete adoptions at the rate according to the date

 

on which the petition for adoption and required support

 

documentation was accepted by the court and not according to the

 

date the court's order placing for adoption was entered.

 

     Sec. 574. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for foster

 

care payments, $2,500,000.00 is allocated to support performance-

 

based contracts with child placing agencies to facilitate the

 

licensure of relative caregivers as foster parents. Agencies shall

 


receive $2,300.00 for each facilitated licensure if completed

 

within 180 days after a child's placement or, if a waiver was

 

previously approved, 180 days from the application date. If the

 

facilitated licensure, or approved waiver, is completed after 180

 

days, the agency shall receive up to $2,300.00. The agency

 

facilitating the licensure would retain the placement and continue

 

to provide case management services for at least 50% of the newly

 

licensed cases for which the placement was appropriate to the

 

agency. Up to 50% of the newly licensed cases would have direct

 

foster care services provided by the department.

 

     (2) From the funds appropriated for foster care payments,

 

$375,000.00 is allocated to support family incentive grants to

 

private and community-based foster care service providers to assist

 

with home improvements or payment for physical exams for applicants

 

needed by foster families to accommodate foster children.

 

     Sec. 583. By February 1 of the current fiscal year, the

 

department shall provide to the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the senate and house

 

standing committees on families and human services, and the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies and policy offices a report that

 

includes:

 

     (a) The number and percentage of foster parents that dropped

 

out of the program in the previous fiscal year and the reasons the

 

foster parents left the program and how those figures compare to

 

prior fiscal years.

 

     (b) The number and percentage of foster parents successfully

 

retained in the previous fiscal year and how those figures compare

 


to prior fiscal years.

 

     Sec. 585. The department shall make available at least 1 pre-

 

service training class each month in which new caseworkers for

 

private foster care and adoption agencies can enroll.

 

     Sec. 587. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 to in-home

 

community care programs including the funds designated as 1-time

 

basis only, $1,250,000.00 shall be used to expand or create new in-

 

home care and community-based juvenile justice services to rural

 

counties through a grant-making process. Counties that received

 

funds for the purpose described in section 587 of article X of 2013

 

PA 59 are not eligible to receive the funds in this section. The

 

department shall expend the full amount of funds for the purpose

 

described in this section by September 1 of the current fiscal

 

year.

 

     (2) By March 1 of the current fiscal year, the department

 

shall submit a report that describes the program expansion and

 

expenditures in detail to the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the senate and house fiscal

 

agencies, and the senate and house policy offices.

 

     Sec. 588. (1) Concurrently with public release, the department

 

shall transmit all reports from the court-appointed settlement

 

monitor, including, but not limited to, the needs assessment and

 

period outcome reporting, to the state budget office, the senate

 

and house appropriations subcommittees on the department budget,

 

and the senate and house fiscal agencies, without revision.

 

     (2) The department shall report quarterly to the state budget

 

office, the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the

 


department budget, and the senate and house fiscal agencies, on the

 

number of children enrolled in the guardianship assistance and

 

foster care - children with serious emotional disturbance waiver

 

programs.

 

     Sec. 589. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for child

 

care fund, the department shall pay 100% of the administrative rate

 

for all new cases referred to providers of foster care services

 

beginning on October 1, 2013.

 

     (2) On a monthly basis, the department shall report on the

 

number of all foster care cases administered by the department and

 

all foster care cases administered by private providers.

 

     Sec. 590. From the funds appropriated in part 1, the

 

department shall provide $30,000.00 for the task force on the

 

prevention of sexual abuse of children defined under section 12b of

 

the child protection law, 1975 PA 238, MCL 722.632b. Use of funds

 

shall be limited to providing reimbursements to task force members

 

for mileage and other travel expenses related to task force

 

operations.

 

     Sec. 592. (1) The department shall conduct a workgroup to

 

assess the feasibility of reorganizing all child welfare and

 

juvenile justice functions within the department into an autonomous

 

agency through a type I transfer under the executive organization

 

act of 1965, 1965 PA 380, MCL 16.101 to 16.608.

 

     (2) By March 1, 2015, the department shall provide a report on

 

the findings of the workgroup described in this section to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies and policy offices,

 


and the state budget director.

 

 

 

PUBLIC ASSISTANCE

 

     Sec. 601. Whenever a client agrees to the release of his or

 

her name and address to the local housing authority, the department

 

shall request from the local housing authority information

 

regarding whether the housing unit for which vendoring has been

 

requested meets applicable local housing codes. Vendoring shall be

 

terminated for those units that the local authority indicates in

 

writing do not meet local housing codes until such time as the

 

local authority indicates in writing that local housing codes have

 

been met.

 

     Sec. 602. The department shall establish a policy to conduct a

 

full evaluation of an individual's assistance needs if the

 

individual has applied for disability 2 times within a 1-year

 

period. Subject to federal approval, individuals are not permitted

 

to apply for disability assistance more than 2 times in 1 year.

 

     Sec. 603. (1) The department shall conduct a workgroup in

 

conjunction with the department of community health and members

 

from both the senate and house of representatives to determine how

 

the state can maximize Medicaid claims for community-based and

 

outpatient treatment services to foster care children and

 

adjudicated youths who are placed in community-based treatment

 

programs. The workgroup shall address the following questions and

 

develop an action plan to implement the feasible items:

 

     (a) Could the department of community health change Medicaid

 

health plan contracts to require the use of the child and

 


adolescent needs and strengths assessment tool?

 

     (b) Could the thresholds for the screening tools for children

 

with mild to moderate mental health needs be changed?

 

     (c) Could the 20-session limit for children and youths not

 

labeled seriously emotionally disturbed be changed to increase

 

coverage?

 

     (d) Could therapeutic interventions such as in-home services

 

or wraparound be substituted for current talk therapy benefits?

 

     (e) Could the community mental health services program provide

 

the mild to moderate treatment that the Medicaid health plans

 

currently provide and does federal law permit this change?

 

     (f) Regarding assessment of children with serious emotional

 

disturbance, which assessment takes precedence if more than 1 tool

 

was used in an evaluation and the conclusions differ?

 

     (g) Could the thresholds to determine serious emotional

 

disturbance be changed, and if so, would a change impact Medicaid

 

eligibility and funding?

 

     (h) Is there a cap on the 1915B waiver, and if not, in what

 

ways could this state access additional intervention services for

 

children with serious emotional disturbance?

 

     (i) How can the department, the department of community

 

health, and the courts take an active role to ensure that

 

adjudicated youths who remain at home are enrolled in Medicaid, if

 

eligible?

 

     (j) What are the needed changes to create a clear policy on

 

suspension or termination of Medicaid for adjudicated youths?

 

     (k) What are the needed changes to update Medicaid system

 


changes?

 

     (l) What can the department do to train the courts on Medicaid

 

eligibility and policy regarding adjudicated youths?

 

     (2) By March 1, 2015, the department shall provide to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house

 

policy offices, and the state budget office a report on the

 

workgroup findings and requirements described in subsection (1).

 

     Sec. 604. (1) The department shall operate a state disability

 

assistance program. Except as provided in subsection (3), persons

 

eligible for this program shall include needy citizens of the

 

United States or aliens exempted from the supplemental security

 

income citizenship requirement who are at least 18 years of age or

 

emancipated minors meeting 1 or more of the following requirements:

 

     (a) A recipient of supplemental security income, social

 

security, or medical assistance due to disability or 65 years of

 

age or older.

 

     (b) A person with a physical or mental impairment which meets

 

federal supplemental security income disability standards, except

 

that the minimum duration of the disability shall be 90 days.

 

Substance abuse alone is not defined as a basis for eligibility.

 

     (c) A resident of an adult foster care facility, a home for

 

the aged, a county infirmary, or a substance abuse treatment

 

center.

 

     (d) A person receiving 30-day postresidential substance abuse

 

treatment.

 

     (e) A person diagnosed as having acquired immunodeficiency

 


syndrome.

 

     (f) A person receiving special education services through the

 

local intermediate school district.

 

     (g) A caretaker of a disabled person who meets the

 

requirements specified in subdivision (a), (b), (e), or (f).

 

     (2) Applicants for and recipients of the state disability

 

assistance program shall be considered needy if they:

 

     (a) Meet the same asset test as is applied for the family

 

independence program.

 

     (b) Have a monthly budgetable income that is less than the

 

payment standards.

 

     (3) Except for a person described in subsection (1)(c) or (d),

 

a person is not disabled for purposes of this section if his or her

 

drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to

 

the determination of disability. "Material to the determination of

 

disability" means that, if the person stopped using drugs or

 

alcohol, his or her remaining physical or mental limitations would

 

not be disabling. If his or her remaining physical or mental

 

limitations would be disabling, then the drug addiction or

 

alcoholism is not material to the determination of disability and

 

the person may receive state disability assistance. Such a person

 

must actively participate in a substance abuse treatment program,

 

and the assistance must be paid to a third party or through vendor

 

payments. For purposes of this section, substance abuse treatment

 

includes receipt of inpatient or outpatient services or

 

participation in alcoholics anonymous or a similar program.

 

     Sec. 605. The level of reimbursement provided to state

 


disability assistance recipients in licensed adult foster care

 

facilities shall be the same as the prevailing supplemental

 

security income rate under the personal care category.

 

     Sec. 606. County department offices shall require each

 

recipient of family independence program and state disability

 

assistance who has applied with the social security administration

 

for supplemental security income to sign a contract to repay any

 

assistance rendered through the family independence program or

 

state disability assistance program upon receipt of retroactive

 

supplemental security income benefits.

 

     Sec. 607. (1) The department's ability to satisfy

 

appropriation deductions in part 1 for state disability

 

assistance/supplemental security income recoveries and public

 

assistance recoupment revenues shall not be limited to recoveries

 

and accruals pertaining to state disability assistance, or family

 

independence assistance grant payments provided only in the current

 

fiscal year, but may include revenues collected during the current

 

year that are prior year related and not a part of the department's

 

accrued entries.

 

     (2) The department may use supplemental security income

 

recoveries to satisfy the deduct in any line in which the revenues

 

are appropriated, regardless of the source from which the revenue

 

is recovered.

 

     Sec. 608. Adult foster care facilities providing domiciliary

 

care or personal care to residents receiving supplemental security

 

income or homes for the aged serving residents receiving

 

supplemental security income shall not require those residents to

 


reimburse the home or facility for care at rates in excess of those

 

legislatively authorized. To the extent permitted by federal law,

 

adult foster care facilities and homes for the aged serving

 

residents receiving supplemental security income shall not be

 

prohibited from accepting third-party payments in addition to

 

supplemental security income provided that the payments are not for

 

food, clothing, shelter, or result in a reduction in the

 

recipient's supplemental security income payment.

 

     Sec. 609. The state supplementation level under the

 

supplemental security income program for the personal care/adult

 

foster care and home for the aged categories shall not be reduced

 

during the current fiscal year. The legislature shall be notified

 

not less than 30 days before any proposed reduction in the state

 

supplementation level.

 

     Sec. 610. (1) In developing good cause criteria for the state

 

emergency relief program, the department shall grant exemptions if

 

the emergency resulted from unexpected expenses related to

 

maintaining or securing employment.

 

     (2) For purposes of determining housing affordability

 

eligibility for state emergency relief, a group is considered to

 

have sufficient income to meet ongoing housing expenses if their

 

total housing obligation does not exceed 75% of their total net

 

income.

 

     (3) State emergency relief payments shall not be made to

 

individuals who have been found guilty of fraud in regard to

 

obtaining public assistance.

 

     (4) State emergency relief payments shall not be made

 


available to persons who are out-of-state residents or illegal

 

immigrants.

 

     (5) State emergency relief payments for rent assistance shall

 

be distributed directly to landlords and shall not be added to

 

Michigan bridge cards.

 

     Sec. 611. The state supplementation level under the

 

supplemental security income program for the living independently

 

or living in the household of another categories shall not exceed

 

the minimum state supplementation level as required under federal

 

law or regulations.

 

     Sec. 612. The department shall implement an asset test as part

 

of the eligibility determination for applicants and existing

 

recipients of the refugee assistance program medical benefits.

 

     Sec. 613. The department shall provide reimbursements for the

 

final disposition of indigent persons. The maximum allowable

 

reimbursement for the final disposition shall be $800.00. In

 

addition, reimbursement for a cremation permit fee of up to $75.00

 

and for mileage at the standard rate will also be made available

 

for an eligible cremation. The reimbursements under this section

 

shall account for religious preferences that prohibit cremation.

 

     Sec. 615. Except as required by federal law or regulations,

 

funds appropriated in part 1 shall not be used to provide public

 

assistance to a person who is an illegal alien. This section shall

 

not prohibit the department from entering into contracts with food

 

banks, emergency shelter providers, or other human services

 

agencies who may, as a normal part of doing business, provide food

 

or emergency shelter.

 


     Sec. 616. The department shall require retailers that

 

participate in the electronic benefits transfer program to charge

 

no more than $2.50 in fees for cash back as a condition of

 

participation.

 

     Sec. 617. The department shall prepare a report on the number

 

and percentage of public assistance recipients, categorized by type

 

of assistance received, who were no longer eligible for assistance

 

because of their status in the law enforcement information network

 

and provide the report by February 15 of the current fiscal year to

 

the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house standing committees on families and

 

human services, and the senate and house fiscal agencies and policy

 

offices.

 

     Sec. 619. (1) Subject to subsection (2), the department shall

 

exempt from the denial of title IV-A assistance and food assistance

 

benefits under 21 USC 862a any individual who has been convicted of

 

a felony that included the possession, use, or distribution of a

 

controlled substance, after August 22, 1996, provided that the

 

individual is not in violation of his or her probation or parole

 

requirements. Benefits shall be provided to such individuals as

 

follows:

 

     (a) A third-party payee or vendor shall be required for any

 

cash benefits provided.

 

     (b) An authorized representative shall be required for food

 

assistance receipt.

 

     (2) Subject to federal approval, an individual is not entitled

 

to the exemption in this section if the individual was convicted in

 


2 or more separate cases of a felony that included the possession,

 

use, or distribution of a controlled substance after August 22,

 

1996.

 

     Sec. 620. (1) The department shall make a determination of

 

Medicaid eligibility not later than 60 days after all information

 

to make the determination is received from the applicant if

 

disability is an eligibility factor. For all other Medicaid

 

applicants, including patients of a nursing home, the department

 

shall make a determination of Medicaid eligibility within 45 days

 

of application.

 

     (2) The department shall report on a quarterly basis by

 

February 1, May 1, August 1, and November 1 to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house standing committees on families and human services, and

 

the senate and house fiscal agencies and policy offices on the

 

average Medicaid eligibility standard of promptness for each of the

 

required standards of promptness under subsection (1) and for

 

medical review team reviews achieved statewide and at each local

 

office.

 

     Sec. 622. (1) Subject to federal rules and regulations, the

 

department shall implement a 1-page application for disability

 

redetermination for all disability redetermination applications and

 

cases no later than November 1, 2014.

 

     (2) If the department is not able to implement the 1-page

 

application described in subsection (1), the department shall

 

submit a waiver request to the United State government to allow the

 

department to implement a 1-page application for disability

 


redeterminations for children and adults who are severely mentally,

 

physically, or developmentally disabled with little or no change of

 

recovery to their chronic condition. The waiver request shall

 

emphasize the expediency, efficiency, and added simplification of a

 

1-page application for disability redetermination.

 

     Sec. 625. The department may contract with the legal services

 

association of Michigan to provide assistance to individuals who

 

have applied for or wish to apply for SSI or other federal

 

disability benefits. The legal services association of Michigan

 

shall provide a list of new clients accepted to the department to

 

verify that services have been provided to department clients. The

 

legal services association of Michigan and the department shall

 

work together to develop release forms to share information in

 

appropriate cases. The legal services association of Michigan shall

 

provide quarterly reports indicating cases opened, cases closed,

 

level of services provided on closed cases, and case outcomes on

 

closed cases.

 

     Sec. 626. The department shall collaborate with the department

 

of community health to identify any needed funding, accounting, or

 

other changes needed to provide the department of community health

 

with travel data relating to nonemergency medical services

 

transportation, including, but not limited to, methods of travel,

 

number of people served, travel distances, number of trips, and

 

costs of trips.

 

     Sec. 643. As a condition of receipt of federal TANF funds,

 

homeless shelters and human services agencies shall collaborate

 

with the department to obtain necessary TANF eligibility

 


information on families as soon as possible after admitting a

 

family to the homeless shelter. From the funds appropriated in part

 

1 for homeless programs, the department is authorized to make

 

allocations of TANF funds only to the agencies that report

 

necessary data to the department for the purpose of meeting TANF

 

eligibility reporting requirements. Homeless shelters or human

 

services agencies that do not report necessary data to the

 

department for the purpose of meeting TANF eligibility reporting

 

requirements will not receive reimbursements which exceed the per

 

diem amount they received in fiscal year 2000. The use of TANF

 

funds under this section should not be considered an ongoing

 

commitment of funding.

 

     Sec. 645. An individual or family is considered homeless, for

 

purposes of eligibility for state emergency relief, if living

 

temporarily with others in order to escape domestic violence. For

 

purposes of this section, domestic violence is defined and verified

 

in the same manner as in the department's policies on good cause

 

for not cooperating with child support and paternity requirements.

 

     Sec. 653. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for food

 

assistance, an individual who is the victim of domestic violence

 

and does not qualify for any other exemption may be exempt from the

 

3-month in 36-month limit on receiving food assistance under 7 USC

 

2015. This exemption can be extended an additional 3 months upon

 

demonstration of continuing need.

 

     Sec. 655. Within 14 days after the spending plan for low-

 

income home energy assistance program is approved by the state

 

budget office, the department shall provide the spending plan,

 


including itemized projected expenditures, to the chairpersons of

 

the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the senate and

 

house policy offices.

 

     Sec. 657. The department shall notify persons eligible for

 

extended family independence program benefits under section 57s of

 

the social welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.57s, that receiving

 

extended family independence program benefits will count toward the

 

federal and state lifetime limits. This notification shall be

 

included in both the public assistance application and the letter

 

or form that notifies a person of eligibility for extended family

 

independence program benefits.

 

     Sec. 660. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for food bank

 

funding, the department is authorized to make allocations of TANF

 

funds only to the agencies that report necessary data to the

 

department for the purpose of meeting TANF eligibility reporting

 

requirements. The agencies that do not report necessary data to the

 

department for the purpose of meeting TANF eligibility reporting

 

requirements will not receive allocations in excess of those

 

received in fiscal year 2000. The use of TANF funds under this

 

section should not be considered an ongoing commitment of funding.

 

     Sec. 669. The department shall allocate $2,880,000.00 for the

 

annual clothing allowance. The allowance shall be granted to all

 

eligible children in a family independence program group that does

 

not include an adult.

 

     Sec. 672. (1) The department's office of inspector general

 

shall report to the senate and house of representatives

 


appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, and the senate and house policy offices

 

by February 15 of the current fiscal year on department efforts to

 

reduce inappropriate use of Michigan bridge cards. The department

 

shall provide information on the number of recipients of services

 

who used their electronic benefit transfer card inappropriately and

 

the current status of each case, the number of recipients whose

 

benefits were revoked, whether permanently or temporarily, as a

 

result of inappropriate use, and the number of retailers that were

 

fined or removed from the electronic benefit transfer program for

 

permitting inappropriate use of the cards.

 

     (2) As used in this section, "inappropriate use" means not

 

used to meet a family's ongoing basic needs, including food,

 

clothing, shelter, utilities, household goods, personal care items,

 

and general incidentals.

 

     Sec. 677. (1) The department shall establish a state goal for

 

the percentage of family independence program cases involved in

 

employment activities. The percentage established shall not be less

 

than 50%. The goal for long-term employment shall be 15% of cases

 

for 6 months or more.

 

     (2) On a monthly basis, the department shall report to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies and policy offices,

 

and the state budget director on the number of cases referred to

 

partnership. accountability. training. hope. (PATH), the current

 

percentage of family independence program cases involved in PATH

 

employment activities, an estimate of the current percentage of

 


family independence program cases that meet federal work

 

participation requirements on the whole, and an estimate of the

 

current percentage of the family independence program cases that

 

meet federal work participation requirements for those cases

 

referred to PATH.

 

     (3) The department shall submit to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, and the senate and house policy offices

 

a quarterly report that includes all of the following:

 

     (a) The number and percentage of nonexempt family independence

 

program recipients who are employed.

 

     (b) The average and range of wages of employed family

 

independence program recipients.

 

     (c) When data become available, the number and percentage of

 

employed family independence program recipients who remain employed

 

for 6 months or more.

 

     Sec. 686. (1) The department shall ensure that program policy

 

requires caseworkers to confirm that individuals presenting

 

personal identification issued by another state seeking assistance

 

through the family independence program, food assistance program,

 

state disability assistance program, or medical assistance program

 

are not receiving benefits from any other state.

 

     (2) The department shall require caseworkers to confirm the

 

address provided by any individual seeking family independence

 

program benefits or state disability assistance benefits.

 

     (3) The department shall prohibit individuals with property

 

assets assessed at a value higher than $200,000.00 from accessing

 


assistance through department-administered programs, unless such a

 

prohibition would violate federal rules and guidelines.

 

     (4) The department shall require caseworkers to obtain an up-

 

to-date telephone number during the eligibility determination or

 

redetermination process for individuals seeking medical assistance

 

benefits. On a monthly basis, the department shall provide the

 

department of community health an updated list of telephone numbers

 

for medical assistance recipients.

 

     Sec. 687. (1) The department shall, on a quarterly basis by

 

February 1, May 1, August 1, and November 1, compile and make

 

available on its website all of the following information about the

 

family independence program, state disability assistance, the food

 

assistance program, Medicaid, and state emergency relief:

 

     (a) The number of applications received.

 

     (b) The number of applications approved.

 

     (c) The number of applications denied.

 

     (d) The number of applications pending and neither approved

 

nor denied.

 

     (e) The number of cases closed.

 

     (2) The information provided under subsection (1) shall be

 

compiled and made available for the state as a whole and for each

 

county and reported separately for each program listed in

 

subsection (1).

 

     (3) The department shall, on a quarterly basis by February 1,

 

May 1, August 1, and November 1, compile and make available on its

 

website the family independence program information listed as

 

follows:

 


     (a) The number of new applicants who successfully met the

 

requirements of the 21-day assessment period for partnership

 

accountability training hope.

 

     (b) The number of new applicants who did not meet the

 

requirements of the 21-day assessment period for partnership

 

accountability training hope.

 

     (c) The number of cases sanctioned because of the school

 

truancy policy.

 

     (d) The number of cases closed because of the 48-month and 60-

 

month lifetime limits.

 

     (e) The number of first-, second-, and third-time sanctions.

 

     (f) The number of children ages 0-5 living in FIP-sanctioned

 

households.

 

     (4) The department shall notify the state budget office, the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the senate and

 

house policy offices when the reports required in this section are

 

made available on the department's website.

 

     Sec. 695. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

multicultural integration funding, the department may require each

 

contractor to provide data and information on performance related

 

metrics. These metrics may include, but are not limited to, all of

 

the following:

 

     (a) Each contractor or subcontractor shall have a mission that

 

is consistent with the purpose of multicultural integration

 

funding.

 

     (b) Each contractor shall validate that any subcontractors

 


utilized within these appropriations share the same mission as the

 

lead agency receiving funding.

 

     (c) Each contractor or subcontractor shall demonstrate cost-

 

effectiveness.

 

     (d) Each contractor or subcontractor shall ensure their

 

ability to leverage private dollars to strengthen and maximize

 

service provision.

 

     (e) Each contractor or subcontractor shall provide timely and

 

accurate reports regarding the number of clients served, units of

 

service provision, and ability to meet their stated goals.

 

     (2) The department shall require an annual report from the

 

contractors that receive multicultural integration funding. The

 

annual report, due 60 days following the end of the contract

 

period, shall include specific information on services and programs

 

provided, the client base to which the services and programs were

 

provided, information on any wraparound services provided, and the

 

expenditures for those services. The department shall provide the

 

annual reports to the senate and house appropriations subcommittees

 

on the department budget, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and

 

the state budget office.

 

     (3) The department of community health and the department

 

shall convene a workgroup to discuss and make recommendations on

 

including accreditation in the contractor specifications and

 

potentially moving toward competitive bidding. Each contractor

 

required to provide data per this section shall be invited to

 

participate in the workgroup if so convened.

 

 

 


JUVENILE JUSTICE SERVICES

 

     Sec. 701. Unless required from changes to federal or state law

 

or at the request of a provider, the department shall not alter the

 

terms of any signed contract with a private residential facility

 

serving children under state or court supervision without written

 

consent from a representative of the private residential facility.

 

     Sec. 702. (1) By December 1, 2014, the department, in

 

conjunction with the department of community health, shall submit a

 

waiver request to the federal government to expand Medicaid

 

coverage to children in need of secure residential treatment in

 

this state. The waiver request must include a plan to provide

 

secure stabilization services, assessment, and treatment. The

 

request must include recommendations to make 1 or more of the

 

public juvenile detention facilities or private secure residential

 

facilities eligible to be Medicaid providers. To the extent

 

feasible, the request must use the Medicaid reimbursement model

 

that is currently in place in Vermont at the Woodside Juvenile

 

Rehabilitation Center.

 

     (2) The department shall submit to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and

 

the state budget office by December 15 of the current fiscal year a

 

copy of the waiver request described in subsection (1).

 

     (3) The department shall submit to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and

 

the state budget office by March 1 of the current fiscal year a

 


report on the status of the Medicaid waiver request described in

 

subsection (1).

 

     Sec. 703. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

juvenile justice vision 20/20, the department shall allocate

 

$1,000,000.00 for the information technology services and projects

 

described in subsection (2). Any unexpended or unencumbered funds

 

appropriated for the services and projects described in subsection

 

(2) are considered work project appropriations and are available

 

for expenditure in the succeeding fiscal year.

 

     (2) The department shall use the funds described in subsection

 

(1) to implement a data exchange for use by the department, circuit

 

and probate courts, private juvenile justice agencies, and the

 

state court administrative office under the guidance of appropriate

 

data sharing agreements that tracks statistical and demographic

 

data on juveniles referred to the family division of the circuit

 

court, otherwise known as the juvenile courts after successful

 

implementation and evaluation of the existing pilot database in

 

Ottawa, Kalamazoo, Kent, Ionia, and Berrien Counties. The following

 

is in compliance with section 451a(1) of the management and budget

 

act, 1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1451a:

 

     (a) The purpose of the project is to implement a new juvenile

 

justice data sharing model that will track data on juveniles

 

referred to the courts.

 

     (b) The project will be accomplished by local court staff,

 

state employees, contracts with private vendors, and juvenile

 

justice stakeholders.

 

     (c) The total estimated cost of the project is $5,550,000.00.

 


     (d) The tentative completion date is September 30, 2019.

 

     (e) The data exchange shall be compatible with MiSACWIS.

 

     (3) The department's director of children's services

 

administration or his or her designee shall serve as a juvenile

 

justice vision 20/20 executive team member.

 

     (4) The department, in collaboration with the state court

 

administrative office and the department of technology, management,

 

and budget, shall submit to the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the senate and house fiscal

 

agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and the state budget

 

office by March 1 of the current fiscal year a report on the status

 

of the implementation items described in subsections (1) and (2).

 

     Sec. 706. Counties shall be subject to 50% chargeback for the

 

use of alternative regional detention services, if those detention

 

services do not fall under the basic provision of section 117e of

 

the social welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.117e, or if a county

 

operates those detention services programs primarily with

 

professional rather than volunteer staff.

 

     Sec. 707. In order to be reimbursed for child care fund

 

expenditures, counties are required to submit department-developed

 

reports to enable the department to document potential federally

 

claimable expenditures. This requirement is in accordance with the

 

reporting requirements specified in section 117a(7) of the social

 

welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.117a.

 

     Sec. 708. (1) As a condition of receiving funds appropriated

 

in part 1 for the child care fund line item, by December 15 of the

 

current fiscal year, counties shall have an approved service

 


spending plan for the current fiscal year. Counties must submit the

 

service spending plan to the department by October 1 of the current

 

fiscal year for approval. The department shall approve within 30

 

calendar days after receipt a properly completed service plan that

 

complies with the requirements of the social welfare act, 1939 PA

 

280, MCL 400.1 to 400.119b, and shall notify a county within 30

 

days after approval that its service plan was approved.

 

     (2) The department shall submit a report to the house and

 

senate appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the

 

house and senate fiscal agencies, and the house and senate policy

 

offices by February 15 of the current fiscal year on the number of

 

counties that fail to submit a service spending plan by October 1

 

and the number of service spending plans not approved by December

 

15.

 

     Sec. 711. Unless already provided in the previous fiscal year,

 

the department shall submit the behavioral health study of juvenile

 

justice facilities operated or contracted for by the state not

 

later than June 30 of the current fiscal year to the senate and

 

house appropriations subcommittees on human services, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies and policy offices, and the state budget

 

director.

 

     Sec. 719. The department shall notify the legislature at least

 

30 days before closing or making any change in the status,

 

including the licensed bed capacity and operating bed capacity, of

 

a state juvenile justice facility.

 

     Sec. 721. If the demand for placements at state-operated

 

juvenile justice residential facilities exceeds capacity, the

 


department shall not increase the available occupancy or services

 

at the facilities, and shall post a request for proposals for a

 

contract with not less than 1 private provider of residential

 

services for juvenile justice youth to be a residential facility of

 

last resort.

 

 

 

LOCAL OFFICE SERVICES

 

     Sec. 750. (1) The department shall maintain out-stationed

 

eligibility specialists in community-based organizations, community

 

mental health agencies, nursing homes, and hospitals unless a

 

community-based organization, community mental health agency,

 

nursing home, or hospital requests that the program be discontinued

 

at its facility.

 

     (2) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for donated funds

 

positions, the department shall enter into a contract with any

 

agency that places a request for a donated funds position and is

 

able and eligible under federal law to provide the required

 

matching funds for federal funding, as determined by federal

 

statute and regulations. If the department denies a request, the

 

department shall provide to the agency that made the request the

 

federal statute or regulation that requires the denial. If the

 

department does not provide the statute or regulation to the

 

agency, the department shall grant the request for the donated

 

funds position.

 

     (3) A contract for a donated funds position must include, but

 

not be limited to, the following performance metrics:

 

     (a) Meeting a standard of promptness for processing

 


applications for Medicaid and other public assistance programs

 

under state law.

 

     (b) Meeting required standards for error rates in determining

 

programmatic eligibility as determined by the department.

 

     (4) The department shall only fill additional donated funds

 

positions after a new contract has been signed. That position shall

 

also be abolished when the contract expires or is terminated.

 

     Sec. 751. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

Healthy Michigan plan administration, the department, in

 

conjunction with the department of community health, shall

 

establish an accounting structure within the Michigan

 

administrative information network that will allow expenditures

 

associated with the administration of the Healthy Michigan plan to

 

be identified. By October 1, 2014, the department shall provide the

 

state budget office and the house and senate fiscal agencies with

 

the relevant accounting structure and associated business objects

 

script and report that groups administrative costs.

 

     (2) The department shall submit to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, the senate and house policy offices, and

 

the state budget office a quarterly report on the implementation

 

status of the Healthy Michigan call center that includes all of the

 

following information:

 

     (a) Call volume during the prior quarter.

 

     (b) Percentage of calls resolved through the Healthy Michigan

 

plan call center.

 

     (c) Percentage of calls transferred to a local department,

 


office, or other office for resolution.

 

     (d) Number of Medicaid applications completed by the Healthy

 

Michigan call center staff and submitted on behalf of clients.

 

 

 

CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT

 

     Sec. 901. (1) The appropriations in part 1 assume a total

 

federal child support incentive payment of $26,500,000.00.

 

     (2) From the federal money received for child support

 

incentive payments, $12,000,000.00 shall be retained by the state

 

and expended for child support program expenses.

 

     (3) From the federal money received for child support

 

incentive payments, $14,500,000.00 shall be paid to the counties

 

based on each county's performance level for each of the federal

 

performance measures as established in 45 CFR 305.2.

 

     (4) If the child support incentive payment to the state from

 

the federal government is greater than $26,500,000.00, then 100% of

 

the excess shall be retained by the state and is appropriated until

 

the total retained by the state reaches $15,397,400.00.

 

     (5) If the child support incentive payment to the state from

 

the federal government is greater than the amount needed to satisfy

 

the provisions identified in subsections (1), (2), (3), and (4),

 

the additional funds shall be subject to appropriation by the

 

legislature.

 

     (6) If the child support incentive payment to the state from

 

the federal government is less than $26,500,000.00, then the state

 

and county share shall each be reduced by 50% of the shortfall.

 

     Sec. 909. (1) If statewide retained child support collections

 


exceed $38,300,000.00, 75% of the amount in excess of

 

$38,300,000.00 is appropriated to legal support contracts. This

 

excess appropriation may be distributed to eligible counties to

 

supplement and not supplant county title IV-D funding.

 

     (2) Each county whose retained child support collections in

 

the current fiscal year exceed its fiscal year 2004-2005 retained

 

child support collections, excluding tax offset and financial

 

institution data match collections in both the current year and

 

fiscal year 2004-2005, shall receive its proportional share of the

 

75% excess.

 

     Sec. 910. (1) If title IV-D-related child support collections

 

are escheated, the state budget director is authorized to adjust

 

the sources of financing for the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

legal support contracts to reduce federal authorization by 66% of

 

the escheated amount and increase general fund/general purpose

 

authorization by the same amount. This budget adjustment is

 

required to offset the loss of federal revenue due to the escheated

 

amount being counted as title IV-D program income in accordance

 

with federal regulations at 45 CFR 304.50.

 

     (2) The department shall notify the chairs of the house and

 

senate appropriations subcommittees on the department budget and

 

the house and senate fiscal agencies within 15 days of the

 

authorization adjustment in subsection (1).

 

 

 

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

 

     Sec. 1001. The department shall reduce the number of computers

 

receiving technical support from the department of technology,

 


management, and budget by 500 no later than November 1, 2014.

 

 

 

COMMUNITY ACTION AND ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY

 

     Sec. 1105. The department shall report to the house and senate

 

appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the house

 

and senate fiscal agencies, the house and senate policy offices,

 

and the state budget office by February 15 of the current fiscal

 

year on the number of homes, the approximate value of each home,

 

whether the home is a single-family or multifamily home, and the

 

square footage of each home weatherized through the appropriations

 

in section 104 during the preceding quarter of the calendar year.

 

The report shall also include the percentage of homes weatherized

 

during the preceding quarter of the calendar year that were renter-

 

occupied.

 

     Sec. 1106. (1) By November 1, 2014, the department shall work

 

in conjunction with the department of community health, the

 

Michigan community action agency association, and the Michigan

 

state housing development authority to appoint members to a joint

 

task force to review housing rehabilitation, energy and

 

weatherization, and hazard abatement program policies and to make

 

recommendations for integrating and coordinating project delivery

 

with the goals of serving more families and achieving better

 

outcomes by maximizing state and federal resources. The task force

 

shall include a representative of the healthy homes section, lead

 

safe home program, the department of community health, a

 

construction management specialist, community development division,

 

Michigan state housing development authority, an energy and

 


weatherization staff representative from the department, a local

 

weatherization operator, a certified lead professional or a

 

certified lead contractor, and representatives from at least 2

 

community organizations that address harmful housing conditions.

 

The department of community health and the Michigan state housing

 

development authority shall organize the initial meeting of the

 

task force and shall provide administrative support for the task

 

force.

 

     (2) By March 1, 2015, the task force described in subsection

 

(1) shall provide to the house and senate chairs of the

 

appropriations subcommittees for the budgets of the department, the

 

department of community health, and the Michigan state housing

 

development authority, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and

 

the senate and house policy offices a report of its findings and

 

recommendations.

 

     Sec. 1107. Subject to federal approval, the department and

 

community action agencies shall give first priority for

 

weatherization services to eligible clients who have a child with a

 

documented blood lead level above 5 micrograms per deciliter

 

(µg/dL).

 

     Sec. 1108. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

school success partnership program, the department shall allocate

 

$300,000.00 to support the northeast Michigan community services

 

agency and expand programming to 4 new counties. The department

 

shall require the following performance objectives be measured and

 

reported for the duration of the state funding for the school

 

success partnership program:

 


     (a) Increasing school attendance and decreasing chronic

 

absenteeism.

 

     (b) Increasing academic performance based on grades with

 

emphasis on math and reading.

 

     (c) Identifying barriers to attendance and success and

 

connecting families with resources to reduce these barriers.

 

     (d) Increasing parent involvement with the parent's child's

 

school and community.

 

     (2) The northeast Michigan community services agency shall

 

provide reports to the department on January 31 and June 30 of the

 

current fiscal year on the number of children and families served

 

and the services that were provided to families to meet the

 

performance objectives identified in this section. The department

 

shall distribute the reports within 1 week after receipt to the

 

house and senate appropriations subcommittees on the department

 

budget, house and senate fiscal agencies, and house and senate

 

policy offices.

 

 

 

ONE-TIME BASIS ONLY APPROPRIATIONS

 

     Sec. 1201. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

performance-based funding implementation, the department shall

 

allocate $100,000.00 to the County of Kent to allow the Kent County

 

private steering consortia to contract for an independent project

 

manager to provide guidance and technical assistance. The

 

independent project manager shall report directly to the Kent

 

County private steering consortia.

 

     Sec. 1202. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for the

 


Flint Catholic charities center for hope, the department shall

 

allocate $250,000.00 to restore and renovate the building where the

 

center for hope is located and other necessary expenses. The funds

 

shall be used to contribute to the restoring hope campaign for the

 

purpose described in this section.

 

     (2) The Flint Catholic charities center for hope shall provide

 

a report by March 1 of the current fiscal year to the senate and

 

house appropriations subcommittees on the department budget, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget office on

 

the total amount of state funding expended for the items described

 

in subsection (1), including, but not limited to, how the state

 

funding was spent, the current status of the project, and any cost

 

overruns.

 

     (3) If the state determines that the Flint Catholic charities

 

center for hope has misused the funds appropriated in this section,

 

the Flint Catholic charities center for hope shall reimburse the

 

state for the amount of state funding misused.

 

     Sec. 1203. From the funds appropriated in part 1, the

 

department shall allocate $300,000.00 to assist private child

 

welfare service providers to meet the implementation requirements

 

of the statewide automated child welfare information system.

 

     Sec. 1204. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for fostering

 

futures trust fund, if the foster care trust fund act, 2008 PA 525,

 

MCL 722.1021 to 722.1031, is amended to create the fostering

 

futures trust fund, $500,000.00 shall be deposited into the fund

 

for use in accordance with that act.

 

     Sec. 1205. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 


Michigan community services commission, the department shall

 

allocate not less than $350,000.00 to the Michigan reading corps to

 

provide literacy services and tutors for students in grades K-3 who

 

are identified as being at-risk of reading failure at elementary

 

schools throughout the state.

 

     (2) The Michigan reading corps shall provide a report by March

 

1 of the current fiscal year to the house and senate appropriations

 

subcommittees on the department budget, the house and senate fiscal

 

agencies, and the house and senate policy offices on outcomes and

 

performance measures of the Michigan reading corps, including, but

 

not limited to, the following specific performance measures:

 

     (a) More than 95% of the K-3 students receiving reading corps

 

services shall demonstrate a positive trend toward reading at grade

 

level.

 

     (b) At least 60% of K-3 students receiving reading corps

 

services shall achieve reading at their grade level or gain at

 

least 1-1/2 year's growth.

 

     (3) If the state determines that the Michigan reading corps

 

has misused the funds appropriated in this section, the Michigan

 

reading corps shall reimburse the state for the amount of state

 

funding misused.