Senate Bill No. 706
(By Senators Kessler, Plymale, Prezioso,
Rowe, Guills and McKenzie)
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[Introduced February 23, 2004; referred to the Committee on the
Judiciary; and then to the Committee on Finance.]
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A BILL to amend the code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, by
adding thereto a new article, designated §49-6F-1, §49-6F-2,
§49-6F-3, §49-6F-4, §49-6F-5, §49-6F-6 and §49-6F-7, all
relating to the establishment of the citizen review panel to
review the procedures of child protective services; providing
for the composition and duties of membership; providing for
confidentiality requirements; providing for expense
reimbursement; providing for civil penalties; and providing
for immunity from liability.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That the code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended
by adding thereto a new article, designated §49-6F-1, §49-6F-2,
§49-6F-3, §49-6F-4, §49-6F-5, §49-6F-6 and §49-6F-7, all to read as
follows:
ARTICLE 6F. CITIZEN REVIEW PANEL.
§49-6F-1. Establishment and purpose of citizen review panel.
The state citizen review panel for children's protective
services is hereby established. Its purpose is to evaluate the
extent to which state and local agencies are effectively
discharging their child protection responsibilities.
§49-6F-2. Membership.
(a) The secretary of the department of health and human
resources shall appoint a citizen review panel to make
recommendations to the secretary concerning specific issues
relating to child abuse and neglect.
(b) The secretary shall solicit nominations for the
appointment of members to the citizen review panel from appropriate
professional organizations and the membership committee of the
existing ad hoc panel.
(c) The secretary shall appoint members who are broadly
representative of the state, with consideration to the
representation of ethnic or racial minorities and diverse
geographic areas. The panel shall include individuals with
expertise in the prevention and treatment of child abuse and
neglect, and may include persons who represent: (1) Child
protective services; (2) foster care; (3) the child fatality review
team; (4) advocates for children's issues; (5) law enforcement; (6)
court-appointed special advocates (CASA); (7) attorneys
representing children; (8) parents; (9) consumers; (10) healthcare;
(11) prosecuting attorneys; (12) youths; (13) family violence prevention advocates; and (14) social service providers.
(d) The panel shall be composed of no more than fifteen
members and shall elect a chairperson and vice-chairperson from the
members of the panel at its first meeting.
(e) Each member of the panel shall serve without compensation,
but may be reimbursed for actual and necessary expenses in a manner
consistent with guidelines of the travel management office of the
department of administration.
(f) The panel shall meet within six months of the enactment of
this article and not less than once every three months thereafter.
§49-6F-3. Duties.
(a) The panel shall examine the policies and procedures of
state and local child protection agencies and, where appropriate,
specific cases, and evaluate the extent to which the agencies are
effectively discharging their child protection responsibilities in
accordance with:
(1) The West Virginia child and family services plan; and
(2) The federal child abuse prevention and treatment act.
(b) The panel may examine any other criteria it considers
important to ensure the protection of children, including:
The agency's coordination with the foster care and adoption
programs established under Part E of Title IV of the Social
Security Act; and
(c) The panel shall prepare an annual report containing a summary of the activities of the panel and any recommendations
pursuant to this section, and deliver the report to the secretary.
§49-6F-4. State assistance.
The department of health and human resources shall:
(a) Provide the panel access to information on cases that the
panel desires to review if the information is necessary for the
panel to carry out its functions; and
(b) Provide the panel, upon its request, staff assistance for
the performance of its duties.
§49-6F-5. Confidentiality.
(a) The proceedings and records of the citizen review panel
shall be confidential and privileged and may not be subject to
subpoena or discovery in a civil action, nor may they be admitted
as evidence in any civil action arising out of the matters which
are subject to evaluation and review by the panel. No person may
be permitted or required to testify in any such civil action as to
any evidence or other matters produced or presented during the
proceedings of the panel, or as to any findings, recommendations,
evaluations, opinions or other actions of the panel or any of its
members.
(b) Information, documents or records otherwise available from
original sources may not be construed as immune from discovery or
use in any civil action merely because they were presented during
proceedings of the panel.
(c) No person who has participated in activities conducted by
the panel may be prevented from testifying in a civil action as to
matters within his or her knowledge, but the witness may not be
required to testify about his or her presentation before the panel
or opinions formed by him or her as a result of participation in
panel activities.
(d) The members and staff of a panel may not:
(1) Disclose to any person or government official any
identifying information about any specific child protection case
with respect to which the panel is provided information; or
(2) Make public any other information provided to the panel
concerning any specific child protection case unless authorized by
state statute.
(e) All information provided to the panel pursuant to its duty
to review child protection cases shall either be destroyed
following the review or shall be returned to the individual or
agency providing the information.
§49-6F-6. Civil penalties.
Any person who violates the provisions of section five of this
article may be subject to civil penalties in an action brought by
the secretary of health and human resources, in an amount not less
than one hundred nor more than one thousand dollars for each
violation.
§49-6F-7. Immunity from liability.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary,
all persons including, but not limited to, members and staff of the
panel and persons called to present information to the panel, and
others who are engaged in activities conducted by the panel related
to its duty to review child protection cases as authorized by this
article, are immune from individual civil liability while acting in
good faith and without malice.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to create a
multidisciplinary citizen panel to review the policies, procedures
and, when appropriate, specific cases handled by child protective
services.
This article is new; therefore, strike-throughs and
underscoring have been omitted.