Acute psychiatric patient registry; DBHDS to develop and administer. (SB1222)

Introduced By

Sen. George Barker (D-Alexandria)

Progress

Introduced
Passed Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Signed by Governor
Became Law

Description

Acute psychiatric patient registry. Directs the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services to develop and administer a web-based acute psychiatric patient registry to collect, aggregate, and display de-identified information about individuals who meet the criteria for temporary detention to facilitate the timely identification of a facility for temporary detention and treatment of the individual. The bill requires each community services board and behavioral health authority in the Commonwealth to update information contained in the acute psychiatric patient registry to include information about a person found to meet the criteria for temporary detention and requires private providers to identify patients for whom they are able to provide temporary detention and treatment and to contact the state facility, community services board, or behavioral health agency having custody of the individual to facilitate the transfer of the patient to the provider for temporary detention and treatment. Read the Bill »

Outcome

Bill Has Failed

History

DateAction
01/10/2017Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/11/17 17102944D
01/10/2017Referred to Committee on Education and Health
01/26/2017Impact statement from DPB (SB1222)
02/02/2017Committee substitute printed 17105058D-S1
02/02/2017Reported from Education and Health with substitute (14-Y 1-N) (see vote tally)
02/02/2017Rereferred to Finance
02/02/2017Reported from Finance with amendment (16-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/03/2017Constitutional reading dispensed (38-Y 0-N 1-A) (see vote tally)
02/06/2017Read second time
02/06/2017Reading of substitute waived
02/06/2017Committee substitute agreed to 17105058D-S1
02/06/2017Reading of amendment waived
02/06/2017Committee amendment agreed to
02/06/2017Engrossed by Senate - committee substitute with amendment SB1222ES1
02/06/2017Printed as engrossed 17105058D-ES1
02/07/2017Read third time and passed Senate (40-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/09/2017Placed on Calendar
02/09/2017Read first time
02/09/2017Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice
02/17/2017Impact statement from DPB (SB1222ES1)
02/20/2017Stricken from docket by Courts of Justice

Video

This bill was discussed on the floor of the General Assembly. Below is all of the video that we have of that discussion, 1 clip in all, totaling 1 minute.

Transcript

This is a transcript of the video clips in which this bill is discussed.



Del. Bill Howell (R-Fredericksburg): THE QUESTION IS SHALL SENATE BILL 938 PASS ALL IN FAVOR OF THE MOTION WILL RECORD THEIR VOTES AYE, THOSE OPPOSED NO. ARE THE SENATORS READY TO VOTE? HAVE ALL THE SENATORS VOTED? DO ANY SENATORS DESIRE TO CHANGE THEIR VOTE? THE CLERK WILL CLOSE THE ROLL.

Sen. Tommy Norment (R-Williamsburg): AYES 20, NOS 20.

[Unknown]: AYES 20, NOS 20. THE CHAIR VOTES YES. THE BILL PASSES. SENATE BILL 995, A BILL RELATING TO PUBLIC SCHOOLS, STUDENT DISCIPLINE, LONG-TERM SUSPENSION. THE SENATOR FROM FRANKLIN COUNTY, SENATOR STANLEY.

Sen. Bill Stanley (R-Moneta): THANK YOU, MR. PRESIDENT. I NOW MOVE SENATE BILL 995 PASS AND SPEAKING TO THAT.

[Unknown]: THE SENATOR HAS THE FLOOR.

Sen. Bill Stanley (R-Moneta): LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, SENATE BILL BILL 995 IS A VERY IMPORTANT BILL. RIGHT NOW CURRENTLY IN VIRGINIA, WE HAVE SHORT-TERM SUSPENSIONS WHICH GO UP TO TEN DAYS AND 11 TO 364 DAYS, THESE ARE SCHOOL DAYS, AS LONG-TERM SUSPENSION. SENATE BILL 995 SHORTENS LONG-TERM SUSPENSIONS FROM 11 TO 364 TO 11 TO 60 SCHOOL DAYS. THAT'S STILL HALF OF A YEAR. AS A REMINDER, MR. PRESIDENT, I WOULD SAY THAT STUDIES HAVE SHOWN A STARK FIGURE THAT, WE ARE THE NUMBER ONE STATE THAT CREATES A PIPELINE FROM THE SCHOOLHOUSE TO THE COURTHOUSE AND QUITE FRANKLY, WE NEED TO DO SOMETHING ABOUT THAT. WE NEED TO CREATE A BALANCE TO GIVE THESE CHILDREN AN OPPORTUNITY TO SUCCEED. LAST YEAR ALONE, 126,000 OUT OF

Duplicate Bills

The following bills are identical to this one: HB1918.