HB 1440
AN ACT relating to the Department of Family and Protective Services'
89th Regular Session
Jan 14, 2025 - Jun 2, 2025 • Session ended
Awaiting Committee Assignment
Bill filed, pending referral to House committee
Committee
Not yet assigned
Fiscal Note
Not available
What This Bill Does
This Texas bill mandates the Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) to produce a comprehensive annual report by February 1st detailing key child protection metrics. The report must include extensive data on child abuse investigations, foster care placements, children in department custody, trafficking victims, mental health cases, and placement outcomes. If the department fails to submit the report on time, they will be fined $1,000 per day, with those penalties redirected to provide financial assistance to relative and designated caregivers.
Subject Areas
Bill Text
relating to the Department of Family and Protective Services' annual report of key performance measures and data elements for child protection; authorizing a penalty. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: SECTION 1. Section 264.001, Family Code, is amended by adding Subdivision (6) to read as follows: (6) "Substitute care" has the meaning assigned by SECTION 2. Section 264.017, Family Code, is amended by amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsection (g) to read as (b) The department shall provide the report required by Subsection (a) to the legislature and shall publish the report and make the report available electronically to the public, including by posting the report on the department's Internet website, not later than February 1 of each year. The report must include, with (1) information on the number and disposition of reports of child abuse and neglect received by the department; (2) information on the number of children [clients] for whom the department took protective action, including investigations, alternative responses, and court-ordered removals; (3) information on the number of children [clients] for whom the department provided services in each program administered by the child protective services division, including investigations, alternative responses, family-based safety services, conservatorship, post-adoption services, and (4) the number of children in this state who died as a result of child abuse or neglect; (5) the number of children described by Subdivision (4) for whom the department was the children's managing conservator (6) information on the timeliness of the department's initial contact in an investigation or alternative response; (7) information on the response time by the department in commencing services to families and children for whom an allegation of child abuse or neglect has been made; (8) information regarding child protection staffing (9) information on the permanency goals in place and achieved for children in the managing conservatorship of the department, including information on the timeliness of achieving the goals, the stability of the children's placement in foster care, and the proximity of placements to the children's home (10) the number of children who suffer from a severe emotional disturbance and for whom the department is appointed managing conservator, including statistics on appointments as joint managing conservator, due to an individual voluntarily relinquishing custody of a child solely to obtain mental health (11) the number of children who are pregnant or a parent while in the managing conservatorship of the department and the number of the children born to a parent in the managing conservatorship of the department who are placed in the managing conservatorship of the department; (12) the number of children who are missing from the children's substitute care provider while in the managing conservatorship of the department; [and] (13) of the children identified under Subdivision (A) the number of children who were located and (B) the actions taken by the department to locate (C) the outcome of each child's case; (14) the number of children who were victims of trafficking under Chapter 20A, Penal Code, while in the managing conservatorship of the department; (15) of the children identified under Subdivision (A) the actions taken by the department to (B) the outcome of each child's case; (16) information on the program under Subchapter I, (A) the number of children placed with a relative (B) the percentage of children in the managing conservatorship of the department who are placed with a relative or (C) statistics on the age and race of the children placed with a relative or designated caregiver; (D) the number of children placed with a relative or designated caregiver who were part of a sibling group; (E) the number of relative or designated caregivers who receive financial assistance; and (F) outcome information for children placed with a relative or designated caregiver including: (i) how many months children spent with a relative or designated caregiver before a case was closed; (ii) the rates of types of resolutions for (iii) statistics comparing the outcomes for relative or designated caregiver placements with and without (17) information on the number of substitute care providers, other than relative or designated caregivers, who (18) the number of complaints brought against (19) the number of children in relative or designated caregiver placements reunified with their families; and (20) the number of children in substitute care, other than relative or designated caregiver placements, reunified with (g) The comptroller shall assess a penalty against the department in the amount of $1,000 for each day after February 1 the department has not filed the report under Subsection (b). The comptroller shall reallocate the amount assessed as a penalty under this subsection as necessary to allow the department to use the money to provide monetary assistance to relative and other designated caregivers under Section 264.755. SECTION 3. This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.
Bill Sponsors
Legislators who authored or co-sponsored this bill.
Bill History
Bill filed: AN ACT relating to the Department of Family and Protective Services'
Related Guides
Learn more about tracking Texas legislation and working with lobbyists.
How to Read & Track Texas Bills
Master bill numbering, understand legislative language, and learn effective tracking strategies.
Understanding Texas Legislative Deadlines
Navigate the 140-day session with critical calendar dates and filing deadlines.
How Laws Get Made in Texas
Follow a bill's journey from filing to the governor's desk through committees and floor votes.
When Should Your Business Hire a Lobbyist?
Discover the signs that your business needs professional advocacy at the Texas Capitol.