SB-0334, As Passed Senate, March 1, 2016
HOUSE SUBSTITUTE FOR
SENATE BILL NO. 334
A bill to amend 1975 PA 238, entitled
"Child protection law,"
by amending sections 2, 3, and 7 (MCL 722.622, 722.623, and
722.627), section 2 as amended by 2014 PA 30, section 3 as amended
by 2014 PA 344, and section 7 as amended by 2014 PA 527.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec. 2. As used in this act:
(a) "Adult foster care location authorized to care for a
child" means an adult foster care family home or adult foster care
small group home as defined in section 3 of the adult foster care
facility licensing act, 1979 PA 218, MCL 400.703, in which a child
is placed in accordance with section 5 of 1973 PA 116, MCL 722.115.
(b) "Attorney" means, if appointed to represent a child under
the provisions referenced in section 10, an attorney serving as the
child's legal advocate in the manner defined and described in
section 13a of chapter XIIA of the probate code of 1939, 1939 PA
288, MCL 712A.13a.
(c) "Central registry" means the system maintained at the
department that is used to keep a record of all reports filed with
the department under this act in which relevant and accurate
evidence of child abuse or child neglect is found to exist.
(d) "Central registry case" means a child protective services
case that the department classifies under sections 8 and 8d as
category I or category II. For a child protective services case
that was investigated before July 1, 1999, central registry case
means an allegation of child abuse or child neglect that the
department substantiated.
(e) "Centralized intake" means the department's statewide
centralized processing center for reports of suspected child abuse
and child neglect.
(f) (e)
"Child" means a person
under 18 years of age.
(g) (f)
"Child abuse" means harm
or threatened harm to a
child's health or welfare that occurs through nonaccidental
physical or mental injury, sexual abuse, sexual exploitation, or
maltreatment, by a parent, a legal guardian, or any other person
responsible for the child's health or welfare or by a teacher, a
teacher's aide, or a member of the clergy.
(h) (g)
"Child care organization"
means that term as defined
in section 1 of 1973 PA 116, MCL 722.111.
(i) (h)
"Child care provider"
means an owner, operator,
employee, or volunteer of a child care organization or of an adult
foster care location authorized to care for a child.
(j) (i)
"Child care regulatory agency"
means the department of
licensing and regulatory affairs or a successor state department
that is responsible for the licensing or registration of child care
organizations or the licensing of adult foster care locations
authorized to care for a child.
(k) (j)
"Child neglect" means
harm or threatened harm to a
child's health or welfare by a parent, legal guardian, or any other
person responsible for the child's health or welfare that occurs
through either of the following:
(i) Negligent treatment, including the failure to provide
adequate food, clothing, shelter, or medical care.
(ii) Placing a child at an unreasonable risk to the child's
health or welfare by failure of the parent, legal guardian, or
other person responsible for the child's health or welfare to
intervene to eliminate that risk when that person is able to do so
and has, or should have, knowledge of the risk.
(l) (k)
"Citizen review panel"
means a panel established as
required by section 106 of title I of the child abuse prevention
and treatment act, 42 USC 5106a.
(m) (l) "Member
of the clergy" means a priest, minister,
rabbi, Christian science practitioner, or other religious
practitioner, or similar functionary of a church, temple, or
recognized religious body, denomination, or organization.
(n) (m)
"Controlled substance"
means that term as defined in
section 7104 of the public health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.7104.
(o) (n)
"CPSI system" means the
child protective service
information system, which is an internal data system maintained
within and by the department, and which is separate from the
central registry and not subject to section 7.
(p) (o)
"Department" means the
department of health and human
services.
(q) (p)
"Director" means the
director of the department.
(r) (q)
"Expunge" means to
physically remove or eliminate and
destroy a record or report.
(s) (r)
"Lawyer-guardian ad
litem" means an attorney appointed
under section 10 who has the powers and duties referenced by
section 10.
(t) (s)
"Local office file" means
the system used to keep a
record of a written report, document, or photograph filed with and
maintained by a county or a regionally based office of the
department.
(u) (t)
"Nonparent adult" means a
person who is 18 years of
age or older and who, regardless of the person's domicile, meets
all of the following criteria in relation to a child:
(i) Has substantial and regular contact with the child.
(ii) Has a close personal relationship with the child's parent
or with a person responsible for the child's health or welfare.
(iii) Is not the child's parent or a person otherwise related
to the child by blood or affinity to the third degree.
(v) "Online reporting system" means the electronic system
established by the department for individuals identified in section
3(1) to report suspected child abuse or child neglect.
(w) (u)
"Person responsible for the
child's health or welfare"
means a parent, legal guardian, person 18 years of age or older who
resides for any length of time in the same home in which the child
resides, or, except when used in section 7(2)(e) or 8(8), nonparent
adult; or an owner, operator, volunteer, or employee of 1 or more
of the following:
(i) A licensed or registered child care organization.
(ii) A licensed or unlicensed adult foster care family home or
adult foster care small group home as defined in section 3 of the
adult foster care facility licensing act, 1979 PA 218, MCL 400.703.
(iii) A court-operated facility as approved under section 14
of the social welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.14.
(x) (v)
"Relevant evidence" means
evidence having a tendency
to make the existence of a fact that is at issue more probable than
it would be without the evidence.
(y) (w)
"Sexual abuse" means
engaging in sexual contact or
sexual penetration as those terms are defined in section 520a of
the Michigan penal code, 1931 PA 328, MCL 750.520a, with a child.
(z) (x)
"Sexual exploitation"
includes allowing, permitting,
or encouraging a child to engage in prostitution, or allowing,
permitting, encouraging, or engaging in the photographing, filming,
or depicting of a child engaged in a listed sexual act as defined
in section 145c of the Michigan penal code, 1931 PA 328, MCL
750.145c.
(aa) (y)
"Specified information"
means information in a
children's protective services case record related specifically to
the department's actions in responding to a complaint of child
abuse or child neglect. Specified information does not include any
of the following:
(i) Except as provided in this subparagraph regarding a
perpetrator of child abuse or child neglect, personal
identification information for any individual identified in a child
protective services record. The exclusion of personal
identification information as specified information prescribed by
this subparagraph does not include personal identification
information identifying an individual alleged to have perpetrated
child abuse or child neglect, which allegation has been classified
as a central registry case.
(ii) Information in a law enforcement report as provided in
section 7(8).
(iii) Any other information that is specifically designated as
confidential under other law.
(iv) Any information not related to the department's actions
in responding to a report of child abuse or child neglect.
(bb) (z)
"Structured decision-making
tool" means the
department document labeled "DSS-4752 (P3) (3-95)" or a revision of
that document that better measures the risk of future harm to a
child.
(cc) (aa)
"Substantiated" means a
child protective services
case classified as a central registry case.
(dd) (bb)
"Unsubstantiated" means a
child protective services
case the department classifies under sections 8 and 8d as category
III, category IV, or category V.
Sec. 3. (1) An individual is required to report under this act
as follows:
(a) A physician, dentist, physician's assistant, registered
dental hygienist, medical examiner, nurse, person licensed to
provide emergency medical care, audiologist, psychologist, marriage
and family therapist, licensed professional counselor, social
worker, licensed master's social worker, licensed bachelor's social
worker, registered social service technician, social service
technician, a person employed in a professional capacity in any
office of the friend of the court, school administrator, school
counselor or teacher, law enforcement officer, member of the
clergy, or regulated child care provider who has reasonable cause
to
suspect child abuse or child neglect shall make immediately, by
telephone
or otherwise, an oral report, or cause an oral report to
be
made, an immediate report to
centralized intake by telephone,
or, if available, through the online reporting system, of the
suspected
child abuse or child neglect. to the department. Within
72
hours after making the an oral report
by telephone to
centralized intake, the reporting person shall file a written
report as required in this act. If the immediate report has been
made using the online reporting system and that report includes the
information required in a written report under subsection (2), that
report is considered a written report for the purposes of this
section and no additional written report is required. If the
reporting person is a member of the staff of a hospital, agency, or
school, the reporting person shall notify the person in charge of
the hospital, agency, or school of his or her finding and that the
report has been made, and shall make a copy of the written or
electronic report available to the person in charge. A notification
to the person in charge of a hospital, agency, or school does not
relieve the member of the staff of the hospital, agency, or school
of the obligation of reporting to the department as required by
this section. One report from a hospital, agency, or school is
adequate to meet the reporting requirement. A member of the staff
of a hospital, agency, or school shall not be dismissed or
otherwise penalized for making a report required by this act or for
cooperating in an investigation.
(b) A department employee who is 1 of the following and has
reasonable cause to suspect child abuse or child neglect shall make
a report of suspected child abuse or child neglect to the
department in the same manner as required under subdivision (a):
(i) Eligibility specialist.
(ii) Family independence manager.
(iii) Family independence specialist.
(iv) Social services specialist.
(v) Social work specialist.
(vi) Social work specialist manager.
(vii) Welfare services specialist.
(c) Any employee of an organization or entity that, as a
result of federal funding statutes, regulations, or contracts,
would be prohibited from reporting in the absence of a state
mandate or court order. A person required to report under this
subdivision shall report in the same manner as required under
subdivision (a).
(2) The written report or a report made using the online
reporting system shall contain the name of the child and a
description of the child abuse or child neglect. If possible, the
report shall contain the names and addresses of the child's
parents, the child's guardian, the persons with whom the child
resides, and the child's age. The report shall contain other
information available to the reporting person that might establish
the cause of the child abuse or child neglect, and the manner in
which the child abuse or child neglect occurred.
(3) The department shall inform the reporting person of the
required contents of the written report at the time the oral report
is made by the reporting person.
(4) The written report required in this section shall be
mailed
or otherwise transmitted to the county department of the
county
in which the child suspected of being abused or neglected is
found.centralized intake.
(5) Upon receipt of a written report of suspected child abuse
or child neglect, the department may provide copies to the
prosecuting attorney and the probate court of the counties in which
the child suspected of being abused or neglected resides and is
found.
(6) If an allegation, written report, or subsequent
investigation of suspected child abuse or child neglect indicates a
violation of sections 136b, 145c, 462a to 462h, or 520b to 520g of
the Michigan penal code, 1931 PA 328, MCL 750.136b, 750.145c,
750.462a to 750.462h, and 750.520b to 750.520g, or section 7401c of
the public health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.7401c, involving
methamphetamine has occurred, or if the allegation, written report,
or subsequent investigation indicates that the suspected child
abuse or child neglect was committed by an individual who is not a
person responsible for the child's health or welfare, including,
but not limited to, a member of the clergy, a teacher, or a
teacher's aide, the department shall transmit a copy of the
allegation or written report and the results of any investigation
to a law enforcement agency in the county in which the incident
occurred. If an allegation, written report, or subsequent
investigation indicates that the individual who committed the
suspected child abuse or child neglect is a child care provider and
the department believes that the report has basis in fact, the
department shall, within 24 hours of completion, transmit a copy of
the written report or the results of the investigation to the child
care regulatory agency with authority over the child care
provider's child care organization or adult foster care location
authorized to care for a child.
(7) If a local law enforcement agency receives an allegation
or written report of suspected child abuse or child neglect or
discovers evidence of or receives a report of an individual
allowing a child to be exposed to or to have contact with
methamphetamine production, and the allegation, written report, or
subsequent investigation indicates that the child abuse or child
neglect or allowing a child to be exposed to or to have contact
with methamphetamine production, was committed by a person
responsible for the child's health or welfare, the local law
enforcement agency shall refer the allegation or provide a copy of
the written report and the results of any investigation to the
county department of the county in which the abused or neglected
child is found, as required by subsection (1)(a). If an allegation,
written report, or subsequent investigation indicates that the
individual who committed the suspected child abuse or child neglect
or allowed a child to be exposed to or to have contact with
methamphetamine production, is a child care provider and the local
law enforcement agency believes that the report has basis in fact,
the local law enforcement agency shall transmit a copy of the
written report or the results of the investigation to the child
care regulatory agency with authority over the child care
provider's child care organization or adult foster care location
authorized to care for a child. Nothing in this subsection or
subsection (1) relieves the department of its responsibilities to
investigate reports of suspected child abuse or child neglect under
this act.
(8) For purposes of this act, the pregnancy of a child less
than
12 years of age or the presence of a venereal disease sexually
transmitted infection in a child who is over 1 month of age but
less than 12 years of age is reasonable cause to suspect child
abuse or child neglect has occurred.
(9) In conducting an investigation of child abuse or child
neglect, if the department suspects that a child has been exposed
to or has had contact with methamphetamine production, the
department shall immediately contact the law enforcement agency in
the county in which the incident occurred.
Sec. 7. (1) The department shall maintain a statewide,
electronic central registry to carry out the intent of this act.
(2) Unless made public as specified information released under
section 7d, a written report, document, or photograph filed with
the department as provided in this act is a confidential record
available only to 1 or more of the following:
(a) A legally mandated public or private child protective
agency investigating a report of known or suspected child abuse or
child neglect or a legally mandated public or private child
protective agency or foster care agency prosecuting a disciplinary
action against its own employee involving child protective services
or foster records.
(b) A police or other law enforcement agency investigating a
report of known or suspected child abuse or child neglect.
(c) A physician who is treating a child whom the physician
reasonably suspects may be abused or neglected.
(d) A person legally authorized to place a child in protective
custody when the person is confronted with a child whom the person
reasonably suspects may be abused or neglected and the confidential
record is necessary to determine whether to place the child in
protective custody.
(e) A person, agency, or organization, including a
multidisciplinary case consultation team, authorized to diagnose,
care for, treat, or supervise a child or family who is the subject
of a report or record under this act, or who is responsible for the
child's health or welfare.
(f) A person named in the report or record as a perpetrator or
alleged perpetrator of the child abuse or child neglect or a victim
who is an adult at the time of the request, if the identity of the
reporting person is protected as provided in section 5.
(g) A court for the purposes of determining the suitability of
a person as a guardian of a minor or that otherwise determines that
the information is necessary to decide an issue before the court,
or in the event of a child's death, a court that had jurisdiction
over that child under section 2(b) of chapter XIIA of the probate
code of 1939, 1939 PA 288, MCL 712A.2.
(h) A grand jury that determines the information is necessary
to conduct the grand jury's official business.
(i) A person, agency, or organization engaged in a bona fide
research or evaluation project. The person, agency, or organization
shall not release information identifying a person named in the
report or record unless that person's written consent is obtained.
The person, agency, or organization shall not conduct a personal
interview with a family without the family's prior consent and
shall not disclose information that would identify the child or the
child's family or other identifying information. The department
director may authorize the release of information to a person,
agency, or organization described in this subdivision if the
release contributes to the purposes of this act and the person,
agency, or organization has appropriate controls to maintain the
confidentiality of personally identifying information for a person
named in a report or record made under this act.
(j) A lawyer-guardian ad litem or other attorney appointed as
provided by section 10.
(k) A child placing agency licensed under 1973 PA 116, MCL
722.111 to 722.128, for the purpose of investigating an applicant
for adoption, a foster care applicant or licensee or an employee of
a foster care applicant or licensee, an adult member of an
applicant's or licensee's household, or other persons in a foster
care or adoptive home who are directly responsible for the care and
welfare of children, to determine suitability of a home for
adoption or foster care. The child placing agency shall disclose
the information to a foster care applicant or licensee under 1973
PA 116, MCL 722.111 to 722.128, or to an applicant for adoption.
(l) Family division of circuit court staff authorized by the
court to investigate foster care applicants and licensees,
employees of foster care applicants and licensees, adult members of
the applicant's or licensee's household, and other persons in the
home who are directly responsible for the care and welfare of
children, for the purpose of determining the suitability of the
home for foster care. The court shall disclose this information to
the applicant or licensee.
(m) Subject to section 7a, a standing or select committee or
appropriations subcommittee of either house of the legislature
having jurisdiction over child protective services matters.
(n) The children's ombudsman appointed under the children's
ombudsman act, 1994 PA 204, MCL 722.921 to 722.932.
(o) A child fatality review team established under section 7b
and authorized under that section to investigate and review a child
death.
(p) A county medical examiner or deputy county medical
examiner appointed under 1953 PA 181, MCL 52.201 to 52.216, for the
purpose of carrying out his or her duties under that act.
(q) A citizen review panel established by the department.
Senate Bill No. 334 as amended February 24, 2016
Access under this subdivision is limited to information the
department determines is necessary for the panel to carry out its
prescribed duties.
(r) A child care regulatory agency.
(s) A foster care review board for the purpose of meeting the
requirements of 1984 PA 422, MCL 722.131 to 722.139a.
(t) A local friend of the court office.
(u) A department employee actively representing himself or
herself in a disciplinary action, a labor union representative who
is actively representing a department employee in a disciplinary
action, or an arbitrator or administrative law judge conducting a
hearing involving a department employee's dereliction, malfeasance,
or misfeasance of duty, for use solely in connection with that
action or hearing. Information disclosed under this subdivision
shall be returned not later than 10 days after the conclusion of
the action or hearing. A recipient shall not receive further
disclosures under this subdivision while he or she retains
disclosed information beyond the deadline specified for return.
[(v) A federal or state governmental agency that may, by law,
conduct an audit or similar review of the department's activities under
this act.
]
(3) Subject to subsection (9), a person or entity to whom
information described in subsection (2) is disclosed shall make the
information available only to a person or entity described in
subsection (2). This subsection does not require a court proceeding
to be closed that otherwise would be open to the public.
(4) If the department classifies a report of suspected child
abuse or child neglect as a central registry case, the department
shall maintain a record in the central registry and, within 30 days
after the classification, shall notify in writing each person who
is named in the record as a perpetrator of the child abuse or child
neglect. The notice shall be sent by registered or certified mail,
return receipt requested, and delivery restricted to the addressee.
The notice shall set forth the person's right to request expunction
of the record and the right to a hearing if the department refuses
the request. The notice shall state that the record may be released
under section 7d. The notice shall not identify the person
reporting the suspected child abuse or child neglect.
(5) A person who is the subject of a report or record made
under this act may request the department to amend an inaccurate
report or record from the central registry and local office file. A
person who is the subject of a report or record made under this act
may request the department to expunge from the central registry a
report or record by requesting a hearing under subsection (6). A
report or record filed in a local office file is not subject to
expunction except as the department authorizes, if considered in
the best interest of the child.
(6) A person who is the subject of a report or record made
under this act may, within 180 days from the date of service of
notice of the right to a hearing, request the department hold a
hearing to review the request for amendment or expunction. If the
hearing request is made within 180 days of the notice, the
department shall hold a hearing to determine by a preponderance of
the evidence whether the report or record in whole or in part
should be amended or expunged from the central registry. The
hearing shall be held before a hearing officer appointed by the
department and shall be conducted as prescribed by the
administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to
24.328. The department may, for good cause, hold a hearing under
this subsection if the department determines that the person who is
the subject of the report or record submitted the request for a
hearing within 60 days after the 180-day notice period expired.
(7) If the investigation of a report conducted under this act
does not show child abuse or child neglect by a preponderance of
evidence, or if a court dismisses a petition based on the merits of
the petition filed under section 2(b) of chapter XIIA of the
probate code of 1939, 1939 PA 288, MCL 712A.2, because the
petitioner has failed to establish that the child comes within the
jurisdiction of the court, the information identifying the subject
of the report shall be expunged from the central registry. If a
preponderance of evidence of abuse or neglect exists, or if a court
takes jurisdiction of the child under section 2(b) of chapter XIIA
of the probate code of 1939, 1939 PA 288, MCL 712A.2, the
department shall maintain the information in the central registry
as follows:
(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), for a person listed
as a perpetrator in category I or II under section 8d, either as a
result of an investigation or as a result of the reclassification
of a case, the department shall maintain the information in the
central registry for 10 years.
(b) For a person listed as a perpetrator in category I or II
under section 8d that involved any of the circumstances listed in
section 17(1) or 18(1), the department shall maintain the
information in the central registry until the department receives
reliable information that the perpetrator of the abuse or neglect
is dead. For the purpose of this subdivision, "reliable
information" includes, but is not limited to, information obtained
using the United States social security death index database.
(c) For a person who is the subject of a report or record made
under
this act before the effective date of the amendatory act that
added
this subdivision, March 31,
2015 the following applies:
(i) Except as provided in subparagraph (ii), for a person
listed as perpetrator in category I or II under section 8d either
as a result of an investigation or as a result of the
reclassification of a case, the department may remove the
information for a person described in this subparagraph after 10
years without a request for amendment or expunction.
(ii) For a person listed as a perpetrator in category I or II
under section 8d that involved any of the circumstances listed in
section 17(1) or 18(1), the department shall maintain the
information in the central registry until the department receives
reliable information that the perpetrator of the child abuse or
child neglect is dead. For the purpose of this subparagraph,
"reliable information" includes, but is not limited to, information
obtained using the United States social security death index
database.
(8) In releasing information under this act, the department
shall not include a report compiled by a police agency or other law
enforcement agency related to an ongoing investigation of suspected
child abuse or child neglect. This subsection does not prohibit the
department from releasing reports of convictions of crimes related
to child abuse or child neglect.
(9) A member or staff member of a citizen review panel shall
not disclose identifying information about a specific child
protection case to an individual, partnership, corporation,
association, governmental entity, or other legal entity. A member
or staff member of a citizen review panel is a member of a board,
council, commission, or statutorily created task force of a
governmental agency for the purposes of section 7 of 1964 PA 170,
MCL 691.1407. Information obtained by a citizen review panel is not
subject to the freedom of information act, 1976 PA 442, MCL 15.231
to 15.246.
(10) Documents, reports, or records authored by or obtained
from another agency or organization shall not be released or open
for inspection under subsection (2) unless required by other state
or federal law, in response to an order issued by a judge,
magistrate, or other authorized judicial officer, or unless the
documents, reports, or records are requested for a child abuse or
child neglect case or for a criminal investigation of a child abuse
or child neglect case conducted by law enforcement.