SB462,7,22 5. Provide medication management and therapeutic counseling.
SB462,7,33 6. Provide coordination of services for basic needs.
SB462,7,44 7. Provide for the safety and security of both the staff and the patients.
SB462,7,95 8. Have adequate staffing 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, including through use
6of telehealth, as described under s. 49.45 (61), with a multidisciplinary team that
7includes, as needed, psychiatrists or psychiatric nurse practitioners, nurses,
8licensed clinicians capable of completing assessments, peers with lived experience,
9and other appropriate staff.
SB462,7,1310 9. Allow for voluntary and involuntary treatment of individuals in crisis as a
11means to avoid unnecessary placement of those individuals in hospital inpatient
12beds and allow for an effective conversion to voluntary stabilization when warranted
13in the same setting.
SB462,7,1614 10. Contribute, from at least one nonstate, federal, or 3rd-party revenue
15source, an amount, as determined by the department, in addition to any grant
16awarded by the department under this section.
SB462,8,517 (d) Before the department may grant certification to a facility under this
18section, the department shall submit the proposal for certification to the joint
19committee on finance for approval. If the cochairpersons of the joint committee on
20finance do not notify the department within 14 working days after the date of the
21submittal under this paragraph that the committee has scheduled a meeting for the
22purpose of reviewing the proposal, the department may grant certification of that
23facility as described in the proposal. If, within 14 working days after the date of the
24submittal under this paragraph, the cochairpersons of the committee notify the
25department that the committee has scheduled a meeting for the purpose of reviewing

1the proposal, the department may grant certification of that facility only upon
2approval by the committee. When submitting a proposal regarding certification of
3a facility under this paragraph, the department shall provide the joint committee on
4finance with all of the following information about the facility proposed for
5certification:
SB462,8,66 1. The department's rationale for selecting the facility.
SB462,8,77 2. Where the facility is to be located.
SB462,8,88 3. A specific description of the entity that will be awarded certification.
SB462,8,99 4. A description of how the funding for the facility will work.
SB462,8,1010 5. The timeline of the facility for accepting patients.
SB462,8,1111 6. The distance from the facility to the nearest hospital.
SB462,8,1212 7. A description of the facility's plan for staffing, including staff on call.
SB462,8,1313 8. The number of beds in the facility.
SB462,8,1414 9. A description of the facility's admission, hold, and discharge policies.
SB462,8,1515 10. Security considerations for patients and staff at the facility.
SB462,8,1616 11. The estimated population to be served.
SB462,8,1817 12. The estimated number of diversions from the Winnebago Mental Health
18Institute had the facility been operating the past 5 years.
SB462,8,2219 13. Policies that ensure the facility has the capacity to assess physical health
20needs and deliver care for most minor physical health challenges, while also having
21an identified process in order to transfer an individual to a facility with more
22medically staffed services if needed.
SB462,9,223 (e) No later than June 30 of each year, beginning by June 30, 2025, the
24department shall submit to the joint committee on finance a report regarding crisis

1urgent care and observation facilities under this section, including information
2relating to all of the following:
SB462,9,33 1. Applications for certification received by the department.
SB462,9,54 2. The number of admissions, including both voluntary and involuntary
5admissions.
SB462,9,86 3. Data regarding how patients are arriving for admission, including through
7transport by law enforcement, family, emergency medical responders or emergency
8medical services practitioners, or county crisis personnel.
SB462,9,99 4. Average wait times.
SB462,9,1010 5. The length of patient stays.
SB462,9,1111 6. The time of day patients are admitted.
SB462,9,1312 7. The source of payments for patient care, including private payment sources
13or payment under the Medical Assistance program under subch. IV of ch. 49.
SB462,9,1514 8. Data regarding the county of residence for each patient in counties for which
15the county's data is equal to or greater than 20 patients.
SB462,9,1716 9. The estimated number of diversions from the Winnebago Mental Health
17Institute.
SB462,9,1918 10. A description of the number and type of employees providing staffing during
19the various times of day.
SB462,9,2220 11. A description of rules and procedures for determining where to take an
21individual in need of crisis services if a crisis urgent care and observation facility
22does not have capacity or otherwise does not accept an individual.
SB462,9,24 23(3) Admissions. (a) A crisis urgent care and observation facility certified under
24this section may accept individuals for any of the following services:
SB462,9,2525 1. Voluntary stabilization.
SB462,10,2
12. Observation and treatment, including for assessments for mental health or
2substance use disorder.
SB462,10,33 3. Screening for suicide and violence risk.
SB462,10,44 4. Medication management and therapeutic counseling.
SB462,10,155 (b) A crisis urgent care and observation facility certified under this section shall
6accept an adult individual for emergency detention under s. 51.15 and may accept
7a youth for emergency detention under s. 51.15. If the facility does not have capacity
8to accept an adult individual for purposes of emergency detention or if the facility
9does not accept a youth for purposes of emergency detention, that individual shall
10be transported to another appropriate facility in accordance with rules established
11by the department under sub. (4). A county crisis assessment under s. 51.15 (2) (c)
12is required prior to admission to a crisis urgent care and observation facility for
13purposes of emergency detention, but the medical clearance requirement under s.
1451.15 (2) (b) does not apply to crisis urgent care and observation facility admissions
15for purposes of emergency detention.
SB462,10,1816 (c) The department shall encourage each crisis urgent care and observation
17facility certified under this section to operate with the intent to admit individuals for
18no longer than 5 days, except in exceptional circumstances.
SB462,10,20 19(4) Rules. The department shall promulgate rules to implement this section,
20including all of the following:
SB462,10,2221 (a) Establishment of the grant program described under sub. (2), including
22procedures for administration and establishment of criteria for awarding grants.
SB462,11,323 (b) Establishment of requirements for crisis urgent care and observation
24facilities to match a portion of any grant awarded by the department under this
25section, as set forth under sub. (2) (c) 10., and for determining what types of

1contributions may count toward the matching requirement. The matching
2requirement established by the department under this paragraph may be fulfilled
3through in-kind contributions.
SB462,11,54 (c) Requirements for admitting, holding, and discharging individuals for
5purposes of emergency detention.
SB462,11,76 (d) Minimum security requirements for crisis urgent care and observation
7facilities certified under this section.
SB462,11,98 (e) Establishment of a target range for the number of beds in a crisis urgent care
9and observation facility certified under this section.
SB462,11,1310 (f) Establishment of policies and criteria to ensure that law enforcement and
11other persons authorized to transport or cause transportation of an individual for
12purposes of emergency detention have clear standards and procedures regarding all
13of the following:
SB462,11,1614 1. The circumstances under which law enforcement and other persons may
15bring an individual to a crisis urgent care and observation facility certified under this
16section.
SB462,11,1917 2. The determination as to which facility law enforcement and other persons
18authorized to transport or cause transportation of an individual for purposes of
19emergency detention may take an individual.
SB462,11,2420 (g) Establishment of policies relating to interfacility transfers, including how
21such transfers should occur and who should be involved in such transfers. Barring
22exigent circumstances that necessitate law enforcement involvement, law
23enforcement may not transport an individual for purposes of an interfacility transfer
24from a crisis urgent care and observation facility.
SB462,12,5
1(h) Establishment of procedures to coordinate communication regarding bed
2availability before the arrival of a patient and establishment of a process for
3determining where to take an individual in need of crisis services if a crisis urgent
4care and observation facility does not have capacity or otherwise does not accept an
5individual.
SB462,12,116 (i) Establishment of policies for coordination between crisis urgent care and
7observation facilities certified under this section and any facility established or
8operated with funding received under s. 165.12 from settlement proceeds from the
9opiate litigation, as defined in s. 165.12 (1), as well as policies to encourage
10awareness of and communication and coordination with other facilities that provide
11services similar to those provided by crisis urgent care and observation facilities.
SB462,12,1712 (j) Establishment of procedures to require a crisis urgent care and observation
13facility to coordinate continuity of care with, when appropriate, a hub-and-spoke
14health home pilot program for any patient treated at a crisis urgent care and
15observation facility for a period of 5 or fewer days. The department shall establish
16procedures for follow-up with other transition facilities in the event that a
17hub-and-spoke health home pilot program is appropriate but not available.
SB462,12,2218 (k) Establishment of policies and procedures for crisis urgent care and
19observation facilities that intend to accept both youths and adults, including
20requirements that youths be treated in a separate part of the facility from adults,
21policies to address youth-related treatment issues, including parental input, and
22staff training for youth-specific issues.
SB462,12,2323 (L) Establishment of appropriate staffing level requirements.
SB462,13,3
1(m) Establishment of requirements to define the population to be served at a
2given crisis urgent care and observation facility, including establishment of any
3minimum age requirements.
SB462,13,10 4(5) Coordination. In accordance with rules established by the department
5under sub. (4) (i), a crisis urgent care and observation facility certified under this
6section shall coordinate to the fullest extent possible with any facility established or
7operated with funding received under s. 165.12 from settlement proceeds from the
8opiate litigation, as defined in s. 165.12 (1), as well as with other facilities that
9provide services similar to those provided by crisis urgent care and observation
10facilities.
SB462,7 11Section 7. 51.15 (2) (d) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB462,13,1512 51.15 (2) (d) Detention under this section may only be in a treatment facility
13approved by the department or the county department, if the facility agrees to detain
14the individual, or a state treatment facility. The department shall approve for
15purposes of this subsection any facility certified under s. 51.036.
SB462,8 16Section 8. Nonstatutory provisions.
SB462,13,2317 (1) When considering the initial certifications of crisis urgent care and
18observation facilities under s. 51.036, the department of health services shall, to the
19fullest extent possible, prioritize certification of a crisis urgent care and observation
20facility to be located at least 100 miles from the Winnebago Mental Health Institute
21and in the region of the state defined as the western region according to the
22department's division of the state into five regions by county as of January 5, 2023,
23for purposes of data analysis and communication.
SB462,13,2424 (End)
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