Florida Senate - 2023 CS for SB 204
By the Committee on Fiscal Policy; and Senators Rouson and
Garcia
594-02394-23 2023204c1
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to the Task Force on the Monitoring of
3 Children in Out-of-Home Care; creating s. 39.4093,
4 F.S.; creating the task force adjunct to the
5 Department of Law Enforcement; requiring the
6 department to provide certain services; specifying the
7 purpose of the task force; specifying the composition
8 of the task force; providing requirements for member
9 appointments, election of a chair, and meetings;
10 specifying duties of the task force; requiring the
11 Florida Institute for Child Welfare to conduct certain
12 focus groups and individual interviews and submit its
13 findings to the task force by a specified date;
14 requiring the Department of Children and Families to
15 submit certain monthly reports to the task force
16 through a specified date; requiring the task force to
17 submit a report to the Governor and Legislature by a
18 specified date; providing for future review and
19 repeal; providing an effective date.
20
21 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
22
23 Section 1. Section 39.4093, Florida Statutes, is created to
24 read:
25 39.4093 Task Force on the Monitoring of Children in Out-of
26 Home Care.—
27 (1) CREATION.—The Task Force on the Monitoring of Children
28 in Out-of-Home Care, a task force as defined in s. 20.03(8), is
29 created adjunct to the Department of Law Enforcement. The
30 Department of Law Enforcement shall provide administrative and
31 staff support services relating to the functions of the task
32 force.
33 (2) PURPOSE.—The purpose of the task force is to identify
34 and counter the root causes of why children go missing while in
35 out-of-home care and to ensure that prompt and effective action
36 is taken to address such causes. The task force shall examine
37 and recommend improvements to current policies, procedures,
38 programs, and initiatives to prevent children from going missing
39 while in out-of-home care and to ensure that timely and
40 comprehensive steps are taken to find children who are missing
41 for any reason, including, but not limited to, running away,
42 human trafficking, and abduction by or absconding with a parent
43 or an individual who does not have care or custody of the child.
44 (3) MEMBERSHIP; MEETINGS.—
45 (a) The task force is composed of the following members:
46 1. A member of the Senate, appointed by the President of
47 the Senate.
48 2. A member of the House of Representatives, appointed by
49 the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
50 3. The secretary, or his or her designee.
51 4. The Secretary of Juvenile Justice, or his or her
52 designee.
53 5. The executive director of the Statewide Guardian Ad
54 Litem Office, or his or her designee.
55 6. The executive director of the Department of Law
56 Enforcement, or his or her designee.
57 7. A representative from Safe Kids Florida, appointed by
58 the State Surgeon General.
59 8. A representative from the Statewide Council on Human
60 Trafficking, appointed by the Attorney General.
61 9. A representative from a community-based care lead agency
62 that delivers child welfare services in a rural county,
63 appointed by the secretary.
64 10. A representative from a community-based care lead
65 agency that delivers child welfare services in an urban county,
66 appointed by the secretary.
67 11. A licensed foster parent, appointed by the secretary.
68 12. A representative from a residential group care
69 provider, appointed by the secretary.
70 13. A young adult who has aged out of the foster care
71 system, appointed by the secretary.
72 (b) Appointments to the task force must be made by August
73 1, 2023. Each member serves at the pleasure of the official who
74 appointed the member. A vacancy on the task force must be filled
75 in the same manner as the original appointment.
76 (c) The task force shall elect a chair from among its
77 members.
78 (d) The task force shall convene no later than September 1,
79 2023. The task force shall meet monthly or upon the call of the
80 chair. The task force shall hold its meetings through
81 teleconference or other electronic means.
82 (4) DUTIES.—The duties of the task force include all of the
83 following:
84 (a) Analyzing statistical data regarding children in out
85 of-home care who are missing and the reasons why such children
86 are missing, if known.
87 (b) Identifying the root causes of why children go missing
88 while in out-of-home care and how to prevent children from going
89 missing while in out-of-home care.
90 (c) Assessing the relationship between children who go
91 missing from out-of-home care and the risk of such children
92 becoming victims of human trafficking.
93 (d) Assessing the comprehensiveness and effectiveness of
94 existing policies and procedures for preventing children in out
95 of-home care from going missing, for promptly determining
96 whether such children are missing, and for locating any such
97 missing children.
98 (e) Evaluating the state’s approaches to reporting on the
99 individual status of children missing from out-of-home care and
100 the results of the efforts to locate such children, including,
101 but not limited to, the use of technology, training,
102 communication, and cooperation.
103 (f) Measuring the overall performance of efforts to locate
104 and recover children missing from out-of-home care, including,
105 but not limited to, the communication and response between
106 community-based care lead agencies, the department, and other
107 entities.
108 (g) Collaborating with the Florida Institute for Child
109 Welfare to identify best practices used in other states for
110 monitoring the location of children in out-of-home care who go
111 missing, and evaluating whether such practices should be adopted
112 in this state.
113 (h) Submitting recommendations to improve policies,
114 procedures, and systems in this state, including, but not
115 limited to, technology, training, communication, and
116 cooperation, so that all entities are effectively monitoring
117 children in out-of-home care, responding appropriately when such
118 children go missing, and preventing such children from going
119 missing while in out-of-home care.
120 (5) YOUTH AND YOUNG ADULT PARTICIPATION.—The Florida
121 Institute for Child Welfare shall conduct focus groups or
122 individual interviews with children in out-of-home care and
123 young adults who have aged out of the foster care system to
124 assist the task force in fulfilling its duties. The focus groups
125 or individual interviews shall, at a minimum, consider the
126 reasons why such children seek to leave their out-of-home
127 placements and identify opportunities and resources to assist
128 and prevent children from leaving their placements and to
129 facilitate the return of such missing children. The institute
130 shall submit the findings from the focus groups and individual
131 interviews to the task force by April 1, 2024.
132 (6) REPORTS.—
133 (a) Through October 1, 2024, the department shall provide
134 monthly reports to the task force to assist the task force in
135 fulfilling its duties. The monthly reports must, at a minimum,
136 address the number and percentage of children in out-of-home
137 care who have been reported missing; the reasons why such
138 children are missing, if known; and the length of time between
139 when such children are reported missing and their recovery or
140 return. The monthly report must categorize the required data by
141 age, county, community-based care lead agency, and reasons why
142 such children are missing, if known.
143 (b) By October 1, 2024, the task force shall submit to the
144 Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the
145 House of Representatives a report that compiles the findings and
146 recommendations of the task force.
147 (7) REPEAL.—This section is repealed June 30, 2025, unless
148 reviewed and saved from repeal through reenactment by the
149 Legislature.
150 Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2023.