The proposed legislation aims to enhance the treatment and support for individuals with behavioral health disorders within Colorado's criminal and juvenile justice systems.
Key Provisions:
Extended Services Post-Dismissal:
Allows the Department of Human Services (DHS) to continue providing services for up to 90 days after criminal charges are dismissed due to a person's incompetence to proceed.
Permanent Supportive Housing Agreements:
Permits DHS to collaborate with organizations to offer permanent supportive housing for individuals whose cases are dismissed because of incompetence or those who have completed a Bridges wraparound care program.
Data Collection and Sharing:
Mandates DHS to gather information on the living arrangements of individuals post-dismissal or referral to the Bridges program and share this data with the Division of Housing in the Department of Local Affairs.
Judicial Department Notification Form:
Requires the development of a standardized form for courts to notify DHS when denying personal recognizance bonds and ordering inpatient restoration services for defendants deemed incompetent.
Competency Status and Bond Eligibility:
Clarifies that a defendant's competency status should not influence bond eligibility, prohibit no-bond holds based solely on competency, and ensures that competency is not a factor in setting or modifying bond conditions.
Conversion of Evaluation Orders:
Instructs courts to convert in-custody or inpatient evaluation or restoration orders to out-of-custody and outpatient services if a defendant is released on bond while awaiting such services.
This legislation seeks to improve continuity of care, housing stability, and equitable treatment for individuals with behavioral health challenges in the justice system.
Summary
Legislative Oversight Committee Concerning the Treatment of Persons with Behavioral Health Disorders in the Criminal and Juvenile Justice Systems. Under existing law, when criminal charges are dismissed against a person receiving inpatient restoration services from the department of human services (DHS), DHS must stop providing services to the person. The bill permits DHS to continue to provide services for up to 90 days after the person's case is dismissed because the person is incompetent to proceed. DHS is permitted to enter into an agreement with an organization to provide permanent supportive housing for a person whose case is dismissed because the person is incompetent to proceed or the person has successfully completed a bridges wraparound care program, and for a person who has been referred to the bridges wraparound care program.
The bill requires DHS to collect information for each person
whose charges are dismissed following a determination by the court that the person is incompetent to proceed or following satisfactory completion of a bridges wraparound care program, or who has been referred to the bridges wraparound care program, concerning where the person lives or intends to live following the dismissal or referral. DHS shall share that information with the division of housing in the department of local affairs.
The bill requires the judicial department to develop a form for a
court to use to notify DHS of the court's specific findings when the court denies a personal recognizance bond and orders inpatient restoration services for a defendant who is in custody for a misdemeanor, petty offense, or traffic offense, and who the court determines is incompetent to proceed but there is a substantial probability that the defendant, with restoration services, will attain competency in the reasonably foreseeable future.
The bill states that a defendant's competency status does not affect
the defendant's eligibility for release on bond and is not a basis for a no-bond hold or mental health stay. A court shall not consider competency status as a factor in setting or modifying a monetary condition of bond. The bill requires a court to convert an order for in-custody or inpatient evaluation or restoration to an order for out-of-custody and outpatient evaluation or restoration if the defendant is released on bond while awaiting an in-custody or inpatient evaluation or restoration.