HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS
BILL #: CS/HB 899 Mental Health of Students
SPONSOR(S): Education & Employment Committee, Hunschofsky
TIED BILLS: None IDEN./SIM. BILLS: SB 1240
REFERENCE ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF
1) Early Learning & Elementary Education 18 Y, 0 N Wolff Brink
Subcommittee
2) Children, Families & Seniors Subcommittee 15 Y, 0 N Morris Brazzell
3) Appropriations Committee 23 Y, 0 N Fontaine Pridgeon
4) Education & Employment Committee 18 Y, 0 N, As CS Wolff Hassell
SUMMARY ANALYSIS
The Mental Health Assistance Allocation within the Florida Education Finance Program is intended to provide
funding to assist school districts in establishing or expanding school-based mental health care, train educators
and other school staff in detecting and responding to student mental health issues, and connecting children,
youth, and families who may experience behavioral health issues with appropriate services. The bill revises
requirements for a school district’s annual mental health assistance allocation plan to include policies and
procedures that require the provision of information on available mental health services and resources for
students and their families. Additionally, the plan’s policies and procedures must require school districts to
provide any individual living in the same household as a student receiving services with information about
available behavioral health services, when receipt of such services could benefit the well-being of the student.
The bill specifies that charter schools must comply with involuntary examination data reporting requirements
established by the Legislature in 2021 for traditional public schools and requires the Department of Education
to share school-related involuntary examination data with the Department of Children and Families (DCF) by
July 1 each year. The bill requires that the DCF use this data in its biennial analysis of involuntary
examinations of minors in Florida.
The bill requires school districts to identify a mental health coordinator that will serve as the primary point of
contact regarding the district’s student mental health policies, procedures, responsibilities, and reporting.
The bill has an insignificant, negative fiscal impact on the DCF and has no fiscal impact on local governments.
The bill has an effective date of July 1, 2022.
This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives .
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FULL ANALYSIS
I. SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES:
Present Situation
Student Mental Health
In 2018, the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act 1 created the Mental Health
Assistance Allocation within the Florida Education Finance Program.2 The allocation is intended to
provide funding to assist school districts in establishing or expanding school-based mental health care,
train educators and other school staff in detecting and responding to mental health issues, and
connecting children, youth, and families who may experience behavioral health issues with appropriate
services.3 For the 2021-2022 school year, $120 million was appropriated for the allocation.4 Each
school district receives a minimum of $100,000, and the remaining balance is allocated based on each
district’s proportionate share of the state’s total unweighted full-time equivalent student enrollment.5
Eligible charter schools are entitled to a proportionate share of the school district’s allocation.6
Currently, there are 122 mental health professionals employed by Florida’s school districts with each
school district having at least one such professional. 7
School districts are prohibited from using the funds allocated under this section to supplant funds from
other operating funds used for the provision of mental health services. These funds may not be used for
salary increases or bonuses.8
To receive allocation funds, a school district must develop and submit to the district school board for
approval a detailed plan outlining its local program and planned expenditures.9 A school district’s plan
must include all district schools, including charter schools, unless a charter school elects to submit a
plan independently from the school district.10 Each approved plan must be submitted to the
Commissioner of Education by August 1 each year.11
The plan must be focused on a multitiered system of supports to deliver evidence-based mental health
care assessment, diagnosis, intervention, treatment, and recovery services. Supports and services
under the allocation are provided to students with one or more mental health or co-occurring substance
abuse diagnoses and to students at high risk of such diagnoses. The provision of these services must
be coordinated with a student’s primary mental health care provider and with other mental health
providers involved in the student’s care.12
Plans must include elements such as: 13
1 Chapter 2018-3, L.O.F.
2 Section 1011.62(14), F.S.
3 Id.
4 Specific Appropriations 7 and 90, s. 2, ch. 2021-36, L.O.F.
5 Section 1011.62(14), F.S.; See also Florida Department of Education, Florida Education Finance Program 2021-22 Second
Calculation, p. 33, available at https://www.fldoe.org/core/fileparse.php/7507/urlt/2122FEFPSecondCalc.pdf.
6 Section 1011.62(14), F.S.
7 Email, Allison Hess Sitte, Legislative Affairs Director, Florida Department of Education, (Feb. 17, 2022), on file with the Education
& Employment Committee.
8 Id.
9 Section 1011.62(14)(a)1.-2., F.S.
10 Id.
11 Section 1011.62(14)(c), F.S.
12 Section 1011.62(14)(b), F.S.
13 Id.
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Direct employment of school-based mental health service providers to expand and enhance
school-based student services and reduce the ratio of students to staff to align with nationally
recommended ratio models;
Contracts or interagency agreements with one or more local community behavioral health
providers or providers of Community Action Team services to provide behavioral health staff
presence and services at district schools;
Policies and procedures which ensure students who are referred to a school-based or
community-based mental health service provider for mental health screening are assessed
within 15 days of referral, and that school-based mental health services are initiated within 15
days after identification and assessment and community-based mental health services are
initiated within 30 days after school or district referral;
Policies and procedures, to be implemented prior to the initiation of an involuntary examination
by a mental or behavioral health provider or school-based law enforcement officer who has
completed crisis intervention training, that include attempting to verbally de-escalate a student
in crisis, including strategies to de-escalate a student with a developmental disability in crisis;
and
Policies requiring that school or law enforcement personnel, prior to initiating an involuntary
examination, make a reasonable attempt to contact a mental health professional authorized to
initiate an involuntary examination, unless the student in crisis poses an imminent danger to
him- or herself or others.
School districts are also required to report program outcomes and expenditures for the previous fiscal
year by September 30 each year.14 The report must, at a minimum, provide the number of each of the
following:15
Students who receive screenings or assessments;
Students who are referred to either school-based or community-based providers for services;
Students who receive either school-based or community-based interventions;
School-based or community-based mental health providers that were paid out of the mental
health assistance allocation; and
Contract-based collaboration efforts or partnerships with community mental health programs.
Youth Mental Health Awareness and Assistance
The Department of Education (DOE) is responsible for developing and maintaining an evidence-based
youth mental health awareness and assistance training program. The program must be designed to
help school personnel identify and understand the signs of emotional disturbance, mental illness, and
substance use disorders and provide such personnel with the skills to help a person who is developing
or experiencing an emotional disturbance, mental health, or substance use problem. 16 At a minimum
the training must include:17
An overview of mental illnesses and substance use disorders and the need to reduce the stigma
of mental illness.
Information on the potential risk factors and warning signs of emotional disturbance, mental
illness, or substance use disorders, including, but not limited to, depression, anxiety, psychosis,
eating disorders, and self-injury, as well as common treatments for those conditions and how to
assess those risks.
Information on how to engage at-risk students with the skills, resources, and knowledge
required to assess the situation, and how to identify and encourage the student to use
appropriate professional help and other support strategies, including, but not limited to, peer,
social, or self-help care.
The DOE must partner with a national organization with expertise in youth mental health to provide the
training to all school personnel in Florida’s elementary, middle, and high schools. Each school district
14 Section 1011.62(14)(d), F.S.
15 Id.
16 Section 1012.584(1), F.S.
17 Section 1012.584(3), F.S.
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school safety specialist must ensure that all school personnel within his or her school district receive
youth mental health awareness and assistance training. 18
Mental Health Data Reporting & Analysis
A student with an acute mental health crisis may require emergency treatment to stabilize his or her
condition. Florida law specifies criteria that a person must meet to be transported to a receiving facility for
an involuntary examination; it also limits who may initiate the examination.19 School personnel are not
among those authorized to initiate an involuntary examination, unless they are one of the professional
certificate holders identified in law, such as certain nurses, mental health counselors or social workers. 20 In
a school setting, it is often a law enforcement officer who evaluates the student and determines if he or she
appears to meet statutory criteria.21 When the determination is made in the affirmative, the transport of a
student to a receiving facility occurs pursuant to a county transportation plan, which may include transport
by a law enforcement officer.22
Professionals who initiate involuntary examinations are required to report the circumstances of the mental
health crisis and make an affirmative statement that the person examined meets statutory criteria. 23 This
information is recorded on a standardized form, which is given to the Department of Children and Families
(DCF).24 The DCF contracts with the Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute at the University of
South Florida (Institute) to perform data analysis and create an annual report which uses the information
from these forms.25 The Institute also analyzes other information relating to mental health and acts as a
provider of crisis services to certain patients.26 Among other sources of information and data, current law
requires the Office of Safe Schools within the DOE to provide data to the Institute to support the evaluation
of mental health services in the state.27
In addition to the annual report, the Legislature required the DCF to investigate the number of involuntary
examinations of minors and provide recommendations for process improvement. In 2017, a DCF task force
issued a report concluding that involuntary examinations of minors were increasing but that specific causes
of the increase are unknown.28 The increase in Florida was consistent with national statistics, and the
report noted that the increase could be a reflection of the increase in the identification of mental health
disorders among children and young adults.29 Additionally, the task force suggested that the increase in
involuntary examinations among children could be the result of recent initiatives designed to improve
Florida’s mental health system and provide earlier diagnosis and treatment. 30
As a follow up to the 2017 task force report, in 2019, the Legislature required the DCF to publish a report
every other year to examine the initiation of involuntary examinations for minors. The initial report published
pursuant to this requirement found that of the 36,078 involuntary examinations of minors in FY 2017-2018,
18 Section 1012.584(2), F.S.
19 Section 394.463, F.S.
20 Section 394.463(2)(a), F.S.
21 Section 394.463(2)(a)2., F.S.
22 Section 394.462(1), F.S.
23 Section 394.463(2)(a)3., F.S.; Rule 65E-5.280(3), F.A.C.
24 Section 394.463(2)(a)(3., F.S.; Rules 65E-5.120 and 65E-5.280(3), F.A.C.
25 University of South Florida, Baker Act Reporting Center, About Us, https://www.usf.edu/cbcs/baker-act/about/index.aspx (last
visited Feb. 11, 2022).
26 See University of South Florida, Baker Act Reporting Center, What We Do, https://www.usf.edu/cbcs/baker-
act/about/whatwedo.aspx (last visited Feb. 11, 2022); and University of South Florida, Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health
Institute, About the Institute, https://www.usf.edu/cbcs/fmhi/about/ (last visited Feb. 11, 2022).
27 Section 1001.212(7), F.S.
28 Florida Department of Children and Families, Task Force Report on Involuntary Examination of Minors, (Nov. 2017), p. 21,
https://www.myflfamilies.co m/service-programs/samh/publications/docs/S17-005766-
TASK%20FORCE%20ON%20INVOLUNTA RY%20EXAMINATION%20OF%20MINORS.pdf.
29 Id. at 21-22.
30 Id. at 24.
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31
only 20 percent were initiated while the child was in a school setting.32 Of the number of all involuntary
examinations in that year, minors represented only 18 percent of the total. 33 From FY 2013-2014 to FY
2017-2018, statewide involuntary examinations of children increased 19 percent, while only increasing by
14 percent for young adults (ages 18-24) and 16 percent overall.34
In 2021, the Legislature35 required the DCF to include in its analysis data on the initiation of involuntary
examinations of students who are removed from schools, to identify trends in involuntary examinations
involving students, and to make recommendations to encourage the use of alternatives to involuntary
examinations.36 To aid the DCF in this task, school districts are required to annually report to the DOE the
number of involuntary examinations initiated at a school, on school transportation, or at a school-sponsored
event.37 However, the law does not explicitly require charter schools to report such data to the DOE.
Additionally, the DOE is required to share this data with the DCF, but the law does not provide a timeframe
for doing so.38 The law also is silent on whether the DCF must use school district-reported data in its
analysis.
In its 2021 biennial analysis of involuntary examinations of minors, the DCF reported 24,171 involuntary
examinations of minors under the age of 18 for FY 2019-2020 and that these made up 18 percent of all
(128,193) involuntary examinations that year.39 Based on preliminary data from FY 2020-2021, the DCF
reports a decrease in involuntary examinations of children occurring in the school setting, with fewer than
15 percent of such involuntary examinations being initiated at schools. 40
Effect of Proposed Changes
The bill explicitly requires charter schools to report involuntary examinations data.
The bill directs the DOE to share the school district reported involuntary examination data with the DCF
no later than July 1 each year and requires the DCF to use this data in its analysis for its biennial report
on involuntary examinations of minors.
The bill revises requirements for a school district’s annual mental health assistance allocation plan to
include policies and procedures that require the provision of information on available mental health
services and resources for students and their families. Specifically, the bill requires school districts to:
Provide a parent of a student receiving services information about available