CS/HB 597

1
A bill to be entitled
2An act relating to homelessness; amending s. 420.507,
3F.S.; conforming a cross-reference; amending s. 420.621,
4F.S.; revising, providing, and deleting definitions;
5amending s. 420.622, F.S.; increasing and revising
6membership on the Council on Homelessness; removing a
7member from an obsolete organization; correcting the name
8of a member organization on the council; revising the date
9of an annual report; creating s. 420.6275, F.S.; creating
10the Housing First program; providing legislative findings
11and intent; providing methodology; providing components of
12the program; providing that local continuums of care that
13adopt the program be given funding priority; creating s.
14420.628, F.S.; providing legislative findings and intent
15relating to young adults leaving foster care; amending s.
161003.01, F.S.; revising a definition; amending ss. 1003.21
17and 1003.22, F.S.; conforming terminology; providing an
18effective date.
19
20Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
21
22     Section 1.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (22) of section
23420.507, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
24     420.507  Powers of the corporation.--The corporation shall
25have all the powers necessary or convenient to carry out and
26effectuate the purposes and provisions of this part, including
27the following powers which are in addition to all other powers
28granted by other provisions of this part:
29     (22)  To develop and administer the State Apartment
30Incentive Loan program. In developing and administering that
31program, the corporation may:
32     (a)  Make first, second, and other subordinated mortgage
33loans including variable or fixed rate loans subject to
34contingent interest for all State Apartment Incentive Loans
35provided for in this chapter based upon available cash flow of
36the projects. The corporation shall make loans exceeding 25
37percent of project cost available only to nonprofit
38organizations and public bodies that which are able to secure
39grants, donations of land, or contributions from other sources
40and to projects meeting the criteria of subparagraph 1. Mortgage
41loans shall be made available at the following rates of
42interest:
43     1.  Zero to 3 percent interest for sponsors of projects
44that set aside at least 80 percent of their total units for
45residents qualifying as farmworkers as defined in this part, or
46commercial fishing workers as defined in this part, or the
47homeless as defined in s. 420.621 420.621(4) over the life of
48the loan.
49     2.  Zero to 3 percent interest based on the pro rata share
50of units set aside for homeless residents if the total of such
51units is less than 80 percent of the units in the borrower's
52project.
53     3.  One to 9 percent interest for sponsors of projects
54targeted at populations other than farmworkers, commercial
55fishing workers, or and the homeless.
56     Section 2.  Section 420.621, Florida Statutes, is amended
57to read:
58     420.621  Definitions; ss. 420.621-420.627.--As used in ss.
59420.621-420.628 420.621-420.627, the term following terms shall
60have the following meanings, unless the context otherwise
61requires:
62     (1)  "Continuum of care" means the community components
63needed to organize and deliver housing and services to meet the
64specific needs of people who are homeless as they move to stable
65housing and maximum self-sufficiency. It includes action steps
66to end homelessness and prevent a return to homelessness.
67     (2)  "Council on Homelessness" means the council created in
68s. 420.622.
69     (1)  "AFDC" means Aid to Families with Dependent Children
70as administered under chapter 409.
71     (3)(2)  "Department" means the Department of Children and
72Family Services.
73     (4)(3)  "District" means a service district of the
74department of Children and Family Services, as set forth in s.
7520.19.
76     (5)(4)  "Homeless," applied to an individual, or
77"individual experiencing homelessness" means "Homeless" refers
78to an individual who lacks a fixed, regular, and adequate
79nighttime residence and includes or an individual who has a
80primary nighttime residence that is:
81     (a)  Is sharing the housing of other persons due to loss of
82housing, economic hardship, or a similar reason;
83     (b)  Is living in a motel, hotel, travel trailer park, or
84camping ground due to a lack of alternative adequate
85accommodations;
86     (c)  Is living in an emergency or transitional shelter; A
87supervised publicly or privately operated shelter designed to
88provide temporary living accommodations, including welfare
89hotels, congregate shelters, and transitional housing for the
90mentally ill;
91     (b)  An institution that provides a temporary residence for
92individuals intended to be institutionalized; or
93     (d)(c)  Has a primary nighttime residence that is a public
94or private place not designed for, or ordinarily used as, a
95regular sleeping accommodation for human beings;
96     (e)  Is living in a car, park, public space, abandoned
97building, bus or train station, or similar setting; or
98     (f)  Is a migratory individual who qualifies as homeless
99because he or she is living in circumstances described in
100paragraphs (a)-(e).
101
102The terms do term does not refer to an any individual imprisoned
103or otherwise detained pursuant to state or federal law or to
104individuals or families who are sharing housing due to cultural
105preferences, voluntary arrangements, or traditional networks of
106support. The terms include an individual who has been released
107from jail, prison, the juvenile justice system, the child
108welfare system, a mental health and developmental disability
109facility, a residential addiction treatment program, or a
110hospital, for whom no subsequent residence has been identified,
111and who lacks the resources and support network to obtain
112housing.
113     (6)(5)  "Local coalition for the homeless" means a
114coalition established pursuant to s. 420.623.
115     (7)(6)  "New and temporary homeless" means those
116individuals or families who are homeless due to societal
117external factors, such as unemployment or other loss of income,
118personal or family-life crises, or the shortage of low-income
119housing.
120     (8)(7)  "State Office on Homelessness" means the state
121office created in s. 420.622 "Secretary" means the secretary of
122the Department of Children and Family Services.
123     Section 3.  Subsections (2) and (9) of section 420.622,
124Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
125     420.622  State Office on Homelessness; Council on
126Homelessness.--
127     (2)  The Council on Homelessness is created to consist of a
12817-member 15-member council of public and private agency
129representatives who shall develop policy and advise the State
130Office on Homelessness. The council members shall be: the
131Secretary of Children and Family Services, or his or her
132designee; the Secretary of Community Affairs, or his or her
133designee, to advise the council on issues related to rural
134development; the State Surgeon General, or his or her designee;
135the Executive Director of Veterans' Affairs, or his or her
136designee; the Secretary of Corrections, or his or her designee;
137the Secretary of Health Care Administration, or his or her
138designee; the Commissioner of Education, or his or her designee;
139the Director of Workforce Florida, Inc., or his or her designee;
140one representative of the Florida Association of Counties; one
141representative from the Florida League of Cities; one
142representative of the Florida Coalition for Supportive Housing
143Coalition; the Executive Director of the Florida Housing Finance
144Corporation, or his or her designee; one representative of the
145Florida Coalition for the Homeless; one representative of the
146Florida State Rural Development Council; and four members
147appointed by the Governor. The council members shall be
148volunteer, nonpaid persons and shall be reimbursed for travel
149expenses only. The appointed members of the council shall be
150appointed to serve staggered 2-year terms, and the council shall
151meet at least four times per year. The importance of minority,
152gender, and geographic representation must be considered when
153appointing members to the council.
154     (9)  The council shall, by June 30 December 31 of each
155year, beginning in 2010, issue to the Governor, the President of
156the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the
157Secretary of Children and Family Services an evaluation of the
158executive director's performance in fulfilling the statutory
159duties of the office, a report summarizing the council's
160recommendations to the office and the corresponding actions
161taken by the office, and any recommendations to the Legislature
162for proposals to reduce homelessness in this state.
163     Section 4.  Section 420.6275, Florida Statutes, is created
164to read:
165     420.6275  Housing First.--
166     (1)  LEGISLATIVE FINDINGS AND INTENT.--
167     (a)  The Legislature finds that many communities plan to
168manage homelessness rather than plan to end it.
169     (b)  The Legislature also finds that for most of the past
170two decades, public and private solutions to homelessness have
171focused on providing individuals and families who are
172experiencing homelessness with emergency shelter, transitional
173housing, or a combination of both. While emergency shelter
174programs may provide critical access to services for individuals
175and families in crisis, they often fail to address their long-
176term needs.
177     (c)  The Legislature further finds that Housing First is an
178alternative approach to the current system of emergency shelter
179or transitional housing which tends to reduce the length of time
180of homelessness and has proven to be cost-effective.
181     (d)  It is therefore the intent of the Legislature to
182encourage homeless continuums of care to adopt the Housing First
183approach to ending homelessness for individuals and families.
184     (2)  HOUSING FIRST METHODOLOGY.--
185     (a)  The Housing First approach to homelessness differs
186from traditional approaches by providing housing assistance,
187case management, and support services responsive to individual
188or family needs after housing is obtained. By using this
189approach when appropriate, communities can significantly reduce
190the amount of time that individuals and families are homeless
191and prevent further episodes of homelessness. Housing First
192emphasizes that social services provided to enhance individual
193and family well-being can be more effective when people are in
194their own home, and:
195     1.  The housing is not time-limited.
196     2.  The housing is not contingent on compliance with
197services. Instead, participants must comply with a standard
198lease agreement and are provided with the services and support
199that are necessary to help them do so successfully.
200     3.  A background check and any rehabilitation necessary to
201combat an addiction related to alcoholism or substance abuse has
202been completed by the individual for whom assistance or support
203services are provided.
204     (b)  The Housing First approach addresses the societal
205causes of homelessness and advocates for the immediate return of
206individuals and families into housing and communities. Housing
207First provides a critical link between the emergency and
208transitional housing system and community-based social service,
209educational, and health care organizations and consists of four
210components:
211     1.  Crisis intervention and short-term stabilization.
212     2.  Screening, intake, and needs assessment.
213     3.  Provision of housing resources.
214     4.  Provision of case management.
215     Section 5.  Section 420.628, Florida Statutes, is created
216to read:
217     420.628  Young adults leaving foster care; legislative
218findings.--
219     (1)  The Legislature finds that the transition from
220childhood to adulthood is filled with opportunity and risk. Most
221young people who receive adequate support make this transition
222successfully and become healthy adults who are prepared for work
223and are able to become responsible, fulfilled members of their
224families and communities.
225     (2)  The Legislature finds that there are also many young
226people who enter adulthood without the knowledge, skills,
227attitudes, habits, and relationships that enable them to be
228productive members of society. Those young people who, through
229no fault of their own, live in foster families, group homes, and
230institutions are among those at greatest risk.
231     (3)  The Legislature finds that these young people face
232numerous barriers to a successful transition to adulthood. Those
233barriers include changes in foster care placements and schools,
234limited opportunities for participation in age-appropriate
235activities, and the inability to achieve economic stability,
236make connections with permanent supportive adults or family, and
237access housing. The main barriers to safe and affordable housing
238for youth who leave foster care due to age are cost, lack of
239availability, the unwillingness of many landlords to rent to
240them, and their own lack of knowledge about how to be good
241tenants.
242     (4)  The Legislature also finds that young adults who
243emancipate from the child welfare system are at risk of becoming
244homeless and those who were formerly in foster care are
245disproportionately represented in the homeless population. Only
246about two-fifths of eligible young people receive independent
247living services and, of those who do, few receive adequate
248housing assistance. Without the stability of safe housing, other
249services, training, and opportunities may not be effective.
250     (5)  The Legislature further finds that research on young
251people who emancipate from foster care suggests a nexus between
252foster care involvement and later episodes of homelessness and
253that interventions in the foster care system might help to
254prevent homelessness. Responding to the needs of young people
255leaving the foster care system with developmentally appropriate
256supportive housing models organized in a continuum of decreasing
257supervision may increase their ability to live independently.
258     (6)  It is therefore the intent of the Legislature to
259encourage the Department of Children and Family Services, its
260agents, and community-based care providers operating pursuant to
261s. 409.1671 to develop and implement procedures designed to
262reduce the number of young adults who become homeless after
263leaving the child welfare system.
264     Section 6.  Subsection (12) of section 1003.01, Florida
265Statutes, is amended to read:
266     1003.01  Definitions.--As used in this chapter, the term:
267     (12)  "Children and youths who are experiencing
268homelessness," for programs authorized under subtitle B,
269Education for Homeless Children and Youths, of Title VII of the
270McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, 42 U.S.C. ss. 11431 et
271seq., means children and youths who lack a fixed, regular, and
272adequate nighttime residence, and includes:
273     (a)  Children and youths who are sharing the housing of
274other persons due to loss of housing, economic hardship, or a
275similar reason; are living in motels, hotels, travel trailer
276parks, or camping grounds due to the lack of alternative
277adequate accommodations; are living in emergency or transitional
278shelters; are abandoned in hospitals; or are awaiting foster
279care placement.
280     (b)  Children and youths who have a primary nighttime
281residence that is a public or private place not designed for or
282ordinarily used as a regular sleeping accommodation for human
283beings.
284     (c)  Children and youths who are living in cars, parks,
285public spaces, abandoned buildings, bus or train stations, or
286similar settings.
287     (d)  Migratory children who are living in circumstances
288described in paragraphs (a)-(c). "Homeless child" means:
289     (a)  One who lacks a fixed, regular nighttime residence;
290     (b)  One who has a primary nighttime residence that is:
291     1.  A supervised publicly or privately operated shelter
292designed to provide temporary living accommodations, including
293welfare hotels, congregate shelters, and transitional housing
294for the mentally ill;
295     2.  An institution that provides a temporary residence for
296individuals intended to be institutionalized; or
297     3.  A public or private place not designed for, or
298ordinarily used as, a regular sleeping accommodation for human
299beings; or
300     (c)  One who temporarily resides with an adult other than
301his or her parent because the parent is suffering financial
302hardship.
303
304A child who is imprisoned, detained, or in the custody of the
305state pursuant to a state or federal law is not a homeless
306child.
307     Section 7.  Paragraph (f) of subsection (1) and paragraph
308(g) of subsection (4) of section 1003.21, Florida Statutes, are
309amended to read:
310     1003.21  School attendance.--
311     (1)
312     (f)  Children and youths who are experiencing homelessness
313Homeless children, as defined in s. 1003.01, must have access to
314a free public education and must be admitted to school in the
315school district in which they or their families live. School
316districts shall assist such homeless children in meeting to meet
317the requirements of subsection (4) and s. 1003.22, as well as
318local requirements for documentation.
319     (4)  Before admitting a child to kindergarten, the
320principal shall require evidence that the child has attained the
321age at which he or she should be admitted in accordance with the
322provisions of subparagraph (1)(a)2. The district school
323superintendent may require evidence of the age of any child whom
324he or she believes to be within the limits of compulsory
325attendance as provided for by law. If the first prescribed
326evidence is not available, the next evidence obtainable in the
327order set forth below shall be accepted:
328     (g)  If none of these evidences can be produced, an
329affidavit of age sworn to by the parent, accompanied by a
330certificate of age signed by a public health officer or by a
331public school physician, or, if neither of these are not is
332available in the county, by a licensed practicing physician
333designated by the district school board, which certificate
334states that the health officer or physician has examined the
335child and believes that the age as stated in the affidavit is
336substantially correct. Children and youths who are experiencing
337homelessness A homeless child, as defined in s. 1003.01, shall
338be given temporary exemption from this section for 30 school
339days.
340     Section 8.  Subsection (1) and paragraph (e) of subsection
341(5) of section 1003.22, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
342     1003.22  School-entry health examinations; immunization
343against communicable diseases; exemptions; duties of Department
344of Health.--
345     (1)  Each district school board and the governing authority
346of each private school shall require that each child who is
347entitled to admittance to kindergarten, or is entitled to any
348other initial entrance into a public or private school in this
349state, present a certification of a school-entry health
350examination performed within 1 year before prior to enrollment
351in school. Each district school board, and the governing
352authority of each private school, may establish a policy that
353permits a student up to 30 school days to present a
354certification of a school-entry health examination. Children and
355youths who are experiencing homelessness A homeless child, as
356defined in s. 1003.01, shall be given a temporary exemption for
35730 school days. Any district school board that establishes such
358a policy shall include provisions in its local school health
359services plan to assist students in obtaining the health
360examinations. However, a any child shall be exempted exempt from
361the requirement of a health examination upon written request of
362the parent of the child stating objections to the examination on
363religious grounds.
364     (5)  The provisions of this section shall not apply if:
365     (e)  An authorized school official issues a temporary
366exemption, for up to a period not to exceed 30 school days, to
367permit a student who transfers into a new county to attend class
368until his or her records can be obtained. Children and youths
369who are experiencing homelessness A homeless child, as defined
370in s. 1003.01, shall be given a temporary exemption for 30
371school days. The public school health nurse or authorized
372private school official is responsible for followup of each such
373student until proper documentation or immunizations are
374obtained. An exemption for 30 days may be issued for a student
375who enters a juvenile justice program to permit the student to
376attend class until his or her records can be obtained or until
377the immunizations can be obtained. An authorized juvenile
378justice official is responsible for followup of each student who
379enters a juvenile justice program until proper documentation or
380immunizations are obtained.
381Section 9.  This act shall take effect July 1, 2009.


CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.