LRB-4984/1
SWB:skw&cjs&cdc
2023 - 2024 LEGISLATURE
October 30, 2023 - Introduced by Representatives Kitchens, Dittrich, Donovan,
Michalski, O'Connor, Snyder and Wichgers, cosponsored by Senators James,
Ballweg and Jacque. Referred to Committee on Mental Health and
Substance Abuse Prevention.
AB576,1,3
1An Act to create 165.875 and 905.095 of the statutes;
relating to: public safety
2peer counseling and privilege for peer support and critical incident stress
3management services communications and granting rule-making authority.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
This bill requires the Department of Justice to establish and implement a
program under which a law enforcement agency, a tribal law enforcement agency, a
fire protection or emergency medical service agency, or any other agency that
employs law enforcement officers, tribal law enforcement officers, correctional
officers, jail officers, juvenile detention officers, fire fighters, dispatchers, emergency
medical responders, emergency medical services practitioners, public safety
personnel, or ambulance service provider personnel, may establish peer support
teams and critical incident stress management (CISM) services teams.
The bill requires the DOJ to organize a program of training required for
membership on a peer support team or CISM team to provide peer support services
or CISM services. The bill requires the Law Enforcement Standards Board (LESB)
to coordinate with the Department of Health Services, the state fire marshal, and
any other relevant agency or entity it determines appropriate to advise LESB in
establishment of the curriculum.
Under the bill, if an agency establishes a peer support team or a CISM services
team, the agency must develop written guidelines for the team and its members.
Under the bill, individuals must be officially designated by an agency head or the
agency head's designee to be a peer support team member or a CISM services team
member and must successfully complete approved training. Except for actions for
medical malpractice, the bill provides a liability exemption for peer support teams
and team members and CISM services teams and team members providing peer
support or CISM services.
The bill establishes certain protections for communications with peer support
team members and CISM services team members. Under the bill, a communication
is defined as an oral statement, written statement, note, record, report, or document
made during or arising out of a meeting between a recipient of peer support services
or CISM services and a peer support team member or a CISM services team member.
The bill provides that, with certain exceptions, a peer support team member or a
CISM services team member may refuse to disclose communications made by a
person receiving peer support services or CISM services, including individual or
group support sessions, if the peer support team member or CISM services team
member is acting in the capacity of a peer support team member or CISM services
team member and is functioning within the team member's written guidelines.
Communications made by a person receiving or providing peer support or CISM
services are not subject to public inspection, copying, or disclosure. The protections
under the bill do not apply if the peer support team member or CISM services team
member was a witness or a party to the incident that prompted the delivery of peer
support services or CISM services. The bill also provides that no privilege exists for
a communication to a peer support team member or CISM services team member
that is any of the following: 1) evidence of actual or suspected child neglect or abuse;
2) evidence that a person receiving peer support services or CISM services is a clear
and immediate danger to himself or herself or others; or 3) evidence that the person
receiving services has committed a crime, plans to commit a crime, or intends to
conceal a crime. Under the bill, a person receiving services who is entitled to claim
the privilege for communications relating to those services may waive the privilege
in writing.
For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be
printed as an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
AB576,1
1Section 1
. 165.875 of the statutes is created to read:
AB576,2,2
2165.875 Public safety peer counseling. (1) Definitions. In this section:
AB576,3,23
(a) “Agency” means a law enforcement agency, a tribal law enforcement agency,
4a fire protection or emergency medical service agency, or any other agency that
5employs law enforcement officers, tribal law enforcement officers, correctional
6officers, jail officers, juvenile detention officers, fire fighters, dispatchers, emergency
1medical responders, emergency medical services practitioners, public safety
2personnel, or ambulance service provider personnel.
AB576,3,33
(b) “Ambulance service provider” has the meaning given in s. 256.01 (3).
AB576,3,84
(c) “Communication” means an oral statement, written statement, note, record,
5report, or document made during or arising out of a meeting between a recipient of
6peer support services or critical incident stress management services and a peer
7support team member or a critical incident stress management services team
8member.
AB576,3,99
(d) “Correctional officer" has the meaning given in s. 301.28 (1).
AB576,3,1110
(e) “Critical incident” means an actual or perceived event or situation that
11involves a crisis, disaster, trauma, or emergency.
AB576,3,2112
(f) “Critical incident stress management services” means services provided by
13a critical incident stress management services team or a critical incident stress
14management services team member to any law enforcement officer, tribal law
15enforcement officer, correctional officer, jail officer, juvenile detention officer, fire
16fighter, dispatcher, emergency medical responder, emergency medical services
17practitioner, public safety personnel, ambulance service provider personnel, or
18civilian employee or volunteer member of a law enforcement agency affected by a
19critical incident and designed to assist the individual affected by a critical incident
20to cope with critical incident stress or to mitigate reactions to critical incident stress.
21“Critical incident stress management services” includes any of the following:
AB576,3,2222
1. Critical incident stress defusings.
AB576,3,2323
2. Critical incident stress debriefings.
AB576,3,2424
3. On-scene support services.
AB576,3,2525
4. One-on-one support services.
AB576,4,9
1(g) “Critical incident stress management services team member” means any
2law enforcement officer, tribal law enforcement officer, correctional officer, jail
3officer, juvenile detention officer, fire fighter, dispatcher, emergency medical
4responder, emergency medical services practitioner, public safety personnel,
5ambulance service provider personnel, civilian employee or volunteer member of a
6law enforcement agency, or other person who has been trained in critical incident
7stress management services and officially designated by the agency head or the
8agency head's designee to be a member of the agency's critical incident stress
9management services team.
AB576,4,1010
(h) “Emergency medical responder" has the meaning given in s. 256.01 (4p).
AB576,4,1211
(i) “Emergency medical services practitioner" has the meaning given in s.
12256.01 (5).
AB576,4,1513
(j) “Fire fighter" means any person employed by the state or a political
14subdivision as a member or officer of a fire department or a member of a volunteer
15fire department, including the state fire marshal and deputies.
AB576,4,1616
(k) “Jail officer" has the meaning given in s. 165.85 (2) (bn).
AB576,4,1717
(L) “Juvenile detention facility” has the meaning given in s. 48.02 (10r).
AB576,4,1818
(m) “Juvenile detention officer” has the meaning given in s. 165.85 (2) (bt).
AB576,4,2319
(n) “Law enforcement agency" means a governmental unit of one or more
20persons employed full time by this state or a political subdivision of this state for the
21purpose of preventing and detecting crime and enforcing state laws or local
22ordinances, employees of which unit are authorized to make arrests for crimes while
23acting within the scope of their authority.
AB576,5,524
(o) “Law enforcement officer” means any person employed by the state or a
25political subdivision for the purpose of detecting and preventing crime and enforcing
1laws or ordinances and who is authorized to make arrests for violations of the laws
2or ordinances the person is employed to enforce, whether that enforcement authority
3extends to all laws or ordinances or is limited to specific laws or ordinances. “Law
4enforcement officer” includes a person appointed as a conservation warden by the
5department of natural resources under s. 23.10 (1).
AB576,5,136
(p) “Peer support services” means any debriefing, defusing, on-scene, or
7one-on-one session provided by a peer support team member that provides
8emotional and moral support to any law enforcement officer, tribal law enforcement
9officer, correctional officer, jail officer, juvenile detention officer, fire fighter,
10dispatcher, emergency medical responder, emergency medical services practitioner,
11public safety personnel, ambulance service provider personnel, or civilian employee
12or volunteer member of a law enforcement agency affected by stress or an incident,
13whether personal or professional.
AB576,5,2014
(q) “Peer support team member” means any law enforcement officer, tribal law
15enforcement officer, jail officer, juvenile detention officer, fire fighter, dispatcher,
16emergency medical responder, emergency medical services practitioner, public
17safety personnel, ambulance service provider personnel, civilian employee or
18volunteer member of a law enforcement agency, or other person who has been trained
19in peer support services and officially designated by the agency head or the agency
20head's designee to be a member of the agency's peer support team.
AB576,5,2121
(r) “Political subdivision” has the meaning given in s. 165.85 (2) (d).
AB576,5,2522
(s) “Public safety personnel” means an employee of a governmental entity who,
23by virtue of the person's job duties, provides support to peace officers, including
24dispatchers, public safety telecommunicators, crime scene and crime laboratory
25technicians, and criminal analysts.
AB576,6,3
1(t) “Trained” means a person who has successfully completed an approved peer
2support training program or an approved critical incident stress management
3training program.
AB576,6,44
(u) “Tribal law enforcement agency" has the meaning given in s. 165.83 (1) (e).
AB576,6,55
(v) “Tribal law enforcement officer” has the meaning given in s. 165.85 (2) (g).
AB576,6,17
6(2) Creation; operation. (a) The department of justice shall establish and
7implement a program for the establishment of peer support teams and critical
8incident stress management services teams. The department of justice shall
9organize a program of training as provided under s. 165.86 (2) (b) for membership on
10a peer support team to provide peer support services and for membership on a critical
11incident stress management services team to provide critical incident stress
12management services. The law enforcement standards board shall establish
13minimum curriculum standards for the training programs to provide training in a
14manner similar to that provided for law enforcement training under s. 165.85, except
15that the board shall coordinate with the department of health services, the state fire
16marshal, and any other relevant agency or entity it determines appropriate to advise
17the board in establishment of the curriculum.
AB576,6,2418
(b) An individual may not provide peer support services unless that individual
19successfully completes a peer support training program required for membership on
20a peer support team. An individual may not provide critical incident stress
21management services services unless that individual successfully completes a
22critical incident stress management services training program required for
23membership on a critical incident stress management services team. The board shall
24prescribe the means for presenting evidence of fulfillment of these requirements.
AB576,7,2
1(c) The department of justice shall promulgate rules to implement this section,
2including all of the following:
AB576,7,43
1. Procedures for establishment of a peer support team or a critical incident
4stress management services team.
AB576,7,65
2. Procedures for designation of individuals to be peer support team members,
6critical incident stress management services team members, or both.
AB576,7,97
(d) 1. An agency may establish a peer support team and, if a peer support team
8is established, shall develop written guidelines for the peer support team and its peer
9support team members.
AB576,7,1310
2. An agency may establish a critical incident stress management services
11team and, if a critical incident stress management services team is established, shall
12develop written guidelines for the critical incident stress management services team
13and its critical incident stress management services team members.
AB576,7,1614
3. No agency may establish or maintain a peer support team or critical incident
15stress management services team unless the agency complies with rules
16promulgated under this section.