Transcript 98th
Missouri Children's Leadership
Council
#KidsWin
2015 Legislative Wrap-Up
TWO YEAR CHIP EXTENSION PASSED!!!
• Congress adopted H.R. 2
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2 year extension of CHIP
23% FMAP rate increase
Funding for home visiting programs
House of Representatives vote was 392-37 with the
entire Missouri delegation voting in support
– Senate vote was 92-8 with both Senators McCaskill
and Blunt voting in support
– President Obama signed the bill on April 16
– Thanks to all who made calls and sent emails
FY16 Budget Highlights
• Most programs flat funded
• $84M increase in foundation formula ($3.2B)
underfunded
• $5M increase in early childhood special education
($149,660,376)
• $2.45M increase in Parents as Teachers ($17,462,250)
• $3M cut to $12.6 for Missouri Preschool Program ($2M
earmarked for programs in provisionally accredited and
unaccredited districts
• Did not include $2M for inspection of childcare
facilities as required by federal Child Development
Block Grant
FY16 Budget (cont.)
• Home visitation programs $3M (flat)
• Early Head Start $6.1M (flat)
• First Steps $53M (flat)
FY16 Budget Highlights (cont.)
• $172,191,119 purchase of childcare
3% provider rate increase
Increase in income eligibility thresholds
< 138%FPL / full benefit
<165%FPL / 75% benefit
<190%FPL / 50% benefit
<215%FPL / 25%benefit
SB341 Omnibus Children’s Bill
• SB341 Protection of Vulnerable Persons
(juvenile’s with problem sexual behavior)
• HB976 Protection of Children
(immunization)
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HB707 Safe Sleep Practices
HB1045 Community Children’s Services Funds
HB1074 Office of Child Advocate Audits
Children’s Division Hotline
SB341 Protection of Vulnerable
Persons
• Applies to juveniles under age 14
• Abuse does not have to be committed by a
person responsible for care, custody and
control of the child
• Hot-line report is communicated to local office
• Local office responds with family assessment
and services
• Does not prevent investigation if warranted
HB976 Protection of Children
Immunization
• Applies to all public, private and parochial day
care centers, preschools and nursery schools
• Upon request, parents shall be notified if
there are children enrolled for whom an
immunization exemption has been filed
HB707 Safe Sleep Practices
• Department of Health and Senior Services empowered to
approve safe sleep recommendations of American Academy
of Pediatrics
• All licensed child care facilities providing care for children
under one year of age SHALL
implement and maintain written safe sleep policy in
accordance with most recent AAP recommendations
Require all employees and volunteers to successfully
complete DHSS approved safe sleep training every three
years
HB1045 Children’s Services Funds
• Prohibits adding services in addition to those
adopted at the time the tax levy is approved
by voters
• Prohibits the state legislature from mandating
expenditure of funds
• Exempts St. Louis County
HB1047 Office of Child Advocate
Audits
• Grants the Office of Child Advocate the
authority to conduct an independent review
of any entity that has had three or more
review requests within a calendar year
• Includes Children’s Division, Juvenile Office or
guardian ad litem
• May make recommendations for changes in
the entity’s policies and procedures
Children’s Division Hotline
• Requires all public and charter schools to post,
in a clearly visible location in a public area of
the school, a sign in English and Spanish
containing the toll-free child abuse and
neglect hotline number
• Must be posted in all student restrooms
• Children’s Division to develop an easily
remembered acronym
SB354 Amino Acid Based Formula
• Requires DHSS to provide coverage, through
state and federal appropriations, for the full
cost of amino acid-based elemental formula
for children under 19 with a medical diagnosis
of allergies, syndromes, or disorders
HB 531 E-Cigs
• Requires liquid nicotine containers to satisfy
child-resistant effectiveness standards
• Applies to nicotine liquid containers sold as a
bottle or other container intended for use in a
vapor products
• Does NOT apply to e-cigs sold as a prefilled
and sealed cartridge
• Applies until federal regulations are adopted
SB 24 Welfare Reform
• Full family immediate sanction if person is not complying with
work activity requirements
• Department SHALL conduct face-to-face meeting
• TANF recipient has six weeks to comply with work activity
• Failure results in 50% reduction in benefits for maximum of 10
weeks
• Work activities required for minimum average of 30 hours per
week for one month to cure sanction
• Failure to cure sanction results in case closed
Welfare Reform (cont.)
• New life-time limit of 45 months (was 60 months)
• No grandfathering of current clients impacting 6,400 children
on January 1, 2016
• In lieu of long-term monthly cash assistance, creates new cash
diversion program of lump-sum cash grants for short term
needs
• Six month disregard of new spouse income and assets
• 2% set aside to fund alternative to abortion services and
awareness
• 2% set aside for healthy marriage and responsible fatherhood
promotion
What Died?
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HB152 Sexual Trafficking of a Child
HB458 Anti-bullying
SB328 Youth Suicide Awareness
SB342/HB735 Perinatal Advisory Countil
HB684 Foster Care (host families)
HB734/SB464 Visual and aural recordings of Safe
Exams
• HB1268 Early Childhood Education/Tobacco Tax