Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
CHAPTER 335-S.F.No. 2457
An act relating to civil commitment; conforming
certain standards; authorizing the court to commit
certain persons with mental illnesses to community
hospitals; requiring the commissioner of human
services to provide a report to the legislature on the
mental health system; amending Minnesota Statutes
2000, sections 253B.05, subdivision 2; 253B.07,
subdivision 2b; Minnesota Statutes 2001 Supplement,
section 253B.09, subdivision 1.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 253B.05,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [PEACE OR HEALTH OFFICER AUTHORITY.] (a) A peace
or health officer may take a person into custody and transport
the person to a licensed physician or treatment facility if the
officer has reason to believe, either through direct observation
of the person's behavior, or upon reliable information of the
person's recent behavior and knowledge of the person's past
behavior or psychiatric treatment, that the person is mentally
ill or mentally retarded and in imminent danger of injuring self
or others if not immediately restrained detained. A peace or
health officer or a person working under such officer's
supervision, may take a person who is believed to be chemically
dependent or is intoxicated in public into custody and transport
the person to a treatment facility. If the person is
intoxicated in public or is believed to be chemically dependent
and is not in danger of causing self-harm or harm to any person
or property, the peace or health officer may transport the
person home. The peace or health officer shall make written
application for admission of the person to the treatment
facility. The application shall contain the peace or health
officer's statement specifying the reasons for and circumstances
under which the person was taken into custody. If imminent
danger to specific individuals is a basis for the emergency
hold, the statement must include identifying information on
those individuals, to the extent practicable. A copy of the
statement shall be made available to the person taken into
custody.
(b) As far as is practicable, a peace officer who provides
transportation for a person placed in a facility under this
subdivision may not be in uniform and may not use a vehicle
visibly marked as a law enforcement vehicle.
(c) A person may be admitted to a treatment facility for
emergency care and treatment under this subdivision with the
consent of the head of the facility under the following
circumstances: (1) a written statement is made by the medical
officer on duty at the facility that after preliminary
examination the person has symptoms of mental illness or mental
retardation and appears to be in imminent danger of harming self
or others if not immediately detained; or (2) a written
statement is made by the institution program director or the
director's designee on duty at the facility after preliminary
examination that the person has symptoms of chemical dependency
and appears to be in imminent danger of harming self or
others if not immediately detained or is intoxicated in public.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 253B.07,
subdivision 2b, is amended to read:
Subd. 2b. [APPREHEND AND HOLD ORDERS.] The court may order
the treatment facility to hold the person in a treatment
facility or direct a health officer, peace officer, or other
person to take the proposed patient into custody and transport
the proposed patient to a treatment facility for observation,
evaluation, diagnosis, care, treatment, and, if necessary,
confinement, when:
(1) there has been a particularized showing by the
petitioner that serious imminent physical harm to the proposed
patient or others is likely unless the proposed patient is
immediately apprehended;
(2) the proposed patient has not voluntarily appeared for
the examination or the commitment hearing pursuant to the
summons; or
(3) a person is held pursuant to section 253B.05 and a
request for a petition for commitment has been filed.
The order of the court may be executed on any day and at any
time by the use of all necessary means including the imposition
of necessary restraint upon the proposed patient. Where
possible, a peace officer taking the proposed patient into
custody pursuant to this subdivision shall not be in uniform and
shall not use a motor vehicle visibly marked as a police vehicle.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2001 Supplement, section
253B.09, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [STANDARD OF PROOF.] (a) If the court finds
by clear and convincing evidence that the proposed patient is a
mentally ill, mentally retarded, or chemically dependent person
and after careful consideration of reasonable alternative
dispositions, including but not limited to, dismissal of
petition, voluntary outpatient care, voluntary admission to a
treatment facility, appointment of a guardian or conservator, or
release before commitment as provided for in subdivision 4, it
finds that there is no suitable alternative to judicial
commitment, the court shall commit the patient to the least
restrictive treatment program or alternative programs which can
meet the patient's treatment needs consistent with section
253B.03, subdivision 7.
(b) In deciding on the least restrictive program, the court
shall consider a range of treatment alternatives including, but
not limited to, community-based nonresidential treatment,
community residential treatment, partial hospitalization, acute
care hospital, and regional treatment center services. The
court shall also consider the proposed patient's treatment
preferences and willingness to participate voluntarily in the
treatment ordered. The court may not commit a patient to a
facility or program that is not capable of meeting the patient's
needs.
(c) If the court finds a proposed patient to be a mentally
ill person under section 253B.02, subdivision 13, paragraph (a),
clause (2) or (4), the court shall commit to a community-based
program that meets the proposed patient's needs. For purposes
of this paragraph, a community-based program may include
inpatient mental health services at a community hospital.
Sec. 4. [MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEM REPORT.]
The commissioner of human services shall, in consultation
with consumers of mental health services and their families,
counties, and advocates for and providers of mental health
services, provide a report to the legislature, which includes an
analysis and evaluation of:
(1) the unmet mental health needs of children, adults, and
their families;
(2) the unmet need for specialized crisis teams trained in
cultural competence to work with police to meet crisis mental
health needs of immigrants and refugees;
(3) the barriers to meeting the needs identified in clauses
(1) and (2); and
(4) long-term strategies to overcome the barriers under
clause (3).
The report on the mental health system is due to the chairs of
the house of representatives and senate committees having
jurisdiction over human services issues by January 15, 2003.
Presented to the governor April 12, 2002
Signed by the governor April 16, 2002, 11:59 a.m.
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes