Louisiana Administrative Code
Title 4 - ADMINISTRATION
Part VII - Governor's Office
Chapter 17 - Women's Services
Subchapter B - Family Violence Program Minimum Standards
Section VII-1729 - Residential Services
Universal Citation: LA Admin Code VII-1729
Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. Basic Considerations. These standards assure family violence programs provide appropriate and quality services to survivors of family violence and their children in an empowering, non-blaming way.
B. Standards
1. General
a. Family violence shelters provide access,
admittance and residence in temporary shelter for survivors of family violence
and their children 24 hours a day, every day of the year.
b. Shift coverage provides on-site staff
coverage 24 hours a day, seven days a week when a survivor is in residence at
the shelter and/or when the hotline is answered at the shelter
facility.
c. Regardless of the
shift requirements, the first priority of the staff is to be responsive and
accessible to a resident or hotline caller.
d. A family violence program provides a back
up system for use during emergencies. A supervisor or designee is available "on
call" by way of pager or in some manner of contact that allows for immediate
response. Each program establishes a protocol that defines criteria and steps
for using the back-up system.
e.
Family violence programs provide a record of individual and group supervision
for shelter employees. Supervision is implemented no less than monthly for
part-time employees (20 or less in a week) and biweekly for full-time
employees. Documentation of supervision for volunteers is recorded and
implemented as if they were part time employees.
f. Documentation of staff/volunteer
supervision reflects the fact that the supervision took place and a listing of
general subject(s) covered in the session is in the personnel or volunteer's
file. In the event of problems related to staff performance, documentation is
performed according to the program's personnel policies.
g. Procedures for adequate staff
communication to provide continuity of service for survivors, including a
regular review of any problem areas to resolve, will be developed and
implemented.
2. Shelter
Services
a. Every survivor is provided:
i. emergency shelter which is structurally
safe and accommodates the particular security concerns of family violence
survivors. The method of providing this security needs to be documented and
this knowledge made available to survivors;
ii. confidentially of stay at shelter. This
is documented in a form and signed by the survivor during intake;
iii. emergency food, clothing, and hygiene
items free of charge to adult survivors and their children. When medical
services are needed the program helps survivors access services.
b. Advocacy/intervention services,
including safety planning for the shelter stay and travel outside the shelter,
are available and offered 24 hours a day, every day of the year, with trained
advocates on site to provide face-to-face emergency services.
c. Family violence shelters ensure that staff
members:
i. have immediate face-to-face
contact with a new survivor admitted to shelter to help determine emergency
needs, orient them to the shelter facility and procedures;
ii. conduct a formal face-to-face intake
process with a new survivor upon admission to shelter and answer any questions
the survivor may have. During this time the staff gives the survivor a copy of
shelter guidelines and education material on family violence, being very
sensitive to the survivor's ability to read and understand. The staff person
doing the intake is trained on discipline guidelines for children in the
shelter and how to assist the mother on following these guidelines through
appropriate discipline techniques;
iii. sign a written agreement with each
survivor about services to be provided by the shelter, which include but are
not limited to:
(a). program services, its
staff and volunteers;
(b).
confidentiality agreements, including records;
(c). house guidelines, rights and privacy
matters;
d.
House guidelines are written in positive and respectful language, including
those guidelines posted throughout the house. The purpose of the guideline is
for protection, safety or health. Guidelines are limited to the most crucial of
situations and reflect the intent to show that the shelter facility is the
survivor's home. (OWS with the assistance of LCADV will review program
guidelines and offer suggestions.) House guidelines include only those items
under the following three categories.
i.
Safety
(a). around confidentiality issues
(confidentiality of staff and survivors and program locations, etc.);
(b). around security issues (possession of
weapons, locked doors, etc.); and
(c). around physical safety (threats or acts
of violence including discipline of children, etc.).
ii. Group Living
(a). programs encourage cooperation between
survivors in communal living;
(b).
programs make every reasonable effort to keep a survivor eligible for services
regardless of her ability or willingness to participate in daily upkeep of the
shelter facility and to adhere to the health and safety guidelines.
iii. Respect for Self and Others.
Demerit and warning systems are not used.
iv. Survivors constitutional right to privacy
in their person, property, communications, papers and effects is respected at
all times by programs. Survivors are not under any circumstances subjected to
unwarranted or unreasonable searches conducted by shelter staff of the
survivors person, room, or property. However, circumstances may arise at a
shelter where some sort of search may be necessary to protect the health or
safety of other survivors or staff.
e. All survivors residing in the shelter for
more than 72 hours are provided with an individualized service plan. The
survivor plan reflects assistance to survivor's needs. Programs design service
plans to facilitate revision in the event circumstances change. This plan
includes:
i. release of information
agreements;
ii. an individual or
family plan of self-defined goals and actions to address needed services to
maintain safety and create self-sufficiency;
iii. list of guidelines for children in the
shelter;
iv. length of stay
polices.
f. A protocol
is developed by each program for safe travel of all survivors. All protocols
contain a provision for survivor travel to the shelter for intake. Further, the
protocol reflects survivors need for local travel whether provided by
themselves, the program or public/private carriers.
3. Discharge of Survivors
a. Family violence shelters establish a
length of stay policy that is flexible and that balances the needs of survivors
and the program's ability to meet those needs. Length of stay policy cannot be
shorter than six weeks.
b. Shelters
document the attempt to provide an exit interview with each survivor prior to
their departure. Minimum categories of exit interview include, but are not
limited to, an assessment of program services, treatment by staff (respectful,
helpful, available), knowledge of staff in the areas of dynamics of family
violence, children's services, safety planning, and goal planning. This is to
be completed by survivor through use of a survivor friendly survey. The exit
interview provides for a revision of the survivor's safety plan (inclusive of
children's safety issues) and linkage to outreach and/or follow up services
provided by the program and other community resources. These items are listed
in detail on an exit interview form. The exit interview survey and form must be
approved by OWS and LCADV.
c.
Involuntary Discharge. Shelters must make every effort to work with a survivor
in order for them to remain in shelter, except for situations which compromise
the safety of others such as:
i. the use of
violence or threats of violence;
ii. the use of behavior that repeatedly
disrupts the ability of other survivors/children to receive safe and effective
services;
iii. possession of
illegal substances;
iv. possession
of firearms, stun-guns, knives or any other weapon that may be used or by
accident to threaten a life;
v.
active suicidal or homicidal behaviors;
vi. violating the confidentiality of another
resident.
d. An
individual service plan/contract is developed with the survivor and appropriate
documentation placed in the survivor's file which demonstrates attempts to
assist the survivor and/or her children with problematic/disruptive behaviors.
i. Example A. A survivor is drinking alcohol
and returning to the shelter intoxicated. Once sobriety is established, the
program staff addresses this problem with the survivor and offer to develop a
contract or service plan regarding this situation, such as requiring the
survivor to attend AA meetings and assisting the survivor to those meetings. If
the contract is not followed or the situation reoccurs, then steps to find
other resources for the survivor are offered. If this is not accepted, the
survivor may be asked to leave. The contract and service plan are documented in
survivor's file to reflect the process of offering assistance.
ii. Example B. A survivor's child's behavior
is repeatedly disruptive or destructive. A worker addresses this problem with
the survivor/parent and offers suggestions to remedy this by developing a plan
which may include alternate resources such as a parental support group or
referrals to other appropriate child service providers in the
community.
e. Survivors
may be asked to leave under the following circumstances:
i. credible threats to others, with intent to
harm;
ii. unresolved disruptive or
abusive behavior; or
iii. if the
safety of the shelter is compromised by their continued presence.
4. Re-Entry
a. Shelters do not discriminate against a
survivor by limiting the number of times of re-entry or by requiring a time
limit between re-entry. Programs do not maintain a "no re-admit" list; however,
it is permissible to "not admit at this time" if a survivor is not currently
appropriate. This information is documented in survivor's file. Reentry status
reflects the survivor's need and behaviors at the current time and is not based
on past situations.
AUTHORITY NOTE: Promulgated in accordance with R.S. 46:2122 B and R.S. 46:2127 B1.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Louisiana may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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