Texas Administrative Code
Title 1 - ADMINISTRATION
Part 15 - TEXAS HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION
Chapter 377 - CHILDREN'S ADVOCACY PROGRAMS
Subchapter C - STANDARDS OF OPERATION FOR LOCAL CHILDREN'S ADVOCACY CENTERS
Section 377.211 - Operation of Local Children's Advocacy Center and Program
Universal Citation: 1 TX Admin Code ยง 377.211
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) A local children's advocacy center must:
(1) receive, review, and track Department of
Family and Protective Services (DFPS) reports relating to the suspected abuse
or neglect of a child or the death of a child from abuse or neglect to ensure a
consistent, comprehensive approach to all cases that meet the criteria outlined
in the multidisciplinary team working protocol adopted under Texas Family Code
§
RSA 264.4031;
(2) coordinate the activities of
participating agencies relating to abuse and neglect investigations and
delivery of services to alleged abuse and neglect victims and their families;
(3) facilitate assessment of
alleged abuse or neglect victims and their families to determine their need for
services relating to the investigation of abuse or neglect and provide needed
services; and
(4) comply with the
standards adopted under Texas Family Code §
RSA
264.409(c).
(b) A local children's advocacy center must provide:
(1) facilitation of a
multidisciplinary team response to abuse or neglect allegations in accordance
with Texas Family Code §
RSA 264.4061;
(2) a formal process that requires the
multidisciplinary team to routinely discuss and share information regarding
investigations, case status, and services needed by children and families;
(3) a system to monitor the
progress and track the outcome of each case;
(4) a child-focused setting that is
comfortable, private, and physically and psychologically safe for diverse
populations at which a multidisciplinary team can meet to facilitate the
efficient and appropriate disposition of abuse and neglect cases through the
civil and criminal justice systems;
(5) culturally competent services for
children and families throughout the duration of a case;
(6) victim support and advocacy services for
children and families;
(7) forensic
interviews that are conducted in a neutral, fact-finding manner and coordinated
to avoid duplicative interviewing;
(8) access to specialized medical evaluations
and treatment services for victims of alleged abuse or neglect;
(9) evidence-based, trauma-focused mental
health services for children and nonoffending members of the child's family;
and
(10) opportunities for
community involvement through a formalized volunteer program dedicated to
supporting the local children's advocacy center.
(c) Governing Board of a Local Children's Advocacy Center.
(1) A local children's
advocacy center must be governed by a board. In addition to any other persons
appointed or elected to serve on the governing board of a local children's
advocacy center, the governing board must include an executive officer of, or
an employee with decision-making authority selected by an executive officer of:
(A) DFPS;
(B) a law enforcement agency with
jurisdiction to investigate child abuse and neglect in the area served by the
local children's advocacy center; and
(C) the county or district attorney's office
with jurisdiction to prosecute child abuse and neglect cases in the area served
by the local children's advocacy center.
(2) Service on the board of a local
children's advocacy center by an executive officer or employee, under paragraph
(1) of this subsection, is an additional duty of the person's office or
employment.
(3) The governing board
members required under paragraph (1) of this subsection may not constitute a
majority of the membership of a local children's advocacy center's governing
board.
(d) Multidisciplinary Team of a Local Children's Advocacy Center.
(1) A local children's advocacy center's
multidisciplinary team must include employees of the participating agencies
described by Texas Family Code §
RSA
264.403(a).
(2) A representative of any other entity may
participate in the multidisciplinary team response as provided by the
multidisciplinary team working protocol adopted under Texas Family Code §
RSA 264.4031 if:
(A) the entity participates in or provides
the following:
(i) child abuse or neglect
investigations;
(ii) abuse or
neglect investigations involving persons with a disability;
(iii) services to alleged child abuse or
neglect victims; or
(iv) services
to alleged victims who are persons with a disability;
(B) the local children's advocacy center and
participating agencies agree in writing to the entity's participation; and
(C) the entity signs the
memorandum of understating executed under Texas Family Code §
RSA 264.403 and the
working protocol adopted under Texas Family Code §
RSA 264.4031.
(3) A local children's advocacy
center's multidisciplinary team shall be actively involved in the following
multidisciplinary team response:
(A)
coordinating the actions of the participating agencies involved in the
investigation and prosecution of cases and the delivery of services to alleged
abuse or neglect victims and the victims' families; and
(B) conducting at regularly scheduled
intervals multidisciplinary review of appropriate abuse or neglect cases as
provided by the working protocol adopted under Texas Family Code §
RSA
264.4031.
(4) A multidisciplinary team may review an
abuse or neglect case in which the alleged perpetrator is not a person
responsible for a child's care, custody, or welfare.
(5) A multidisciplinary team member is
authorized to share with and receive from other multidisciplinary team members
information made confidential by Texas Government Code Chapter 552, Texas Human
Resources Code §40.005 or § 48.101, or Texas Family Code
§261.201 or §264.408 when acting in the member's official capacity as
an employee of a participating agency described by Texas Family Code §
RSA
264.403(a) or of
another entity described by Texas Family Code
RSA
264.406(b).
(e) Liability.
(1) A person is not liable for civil damages
based on a recommendation made or an opinion rendered in good faith, while
acting in the official scope of the person's duties as a member of a
multidisciplinary team or as a board member, staff member, or volunteer of a
local children's advocacy center.
(2) This limitation on civil liability does
not apply if a person's actions constitute gross negligence.
(f) Confidentiality Requirements Placed on a Local Children's Advocacy Center.
(1) In accordance with Texas Family Code
§
RSA 264.408, the files,
reports, records, communications, and working papers used or developed in
providing services under Texas Family Code Chapter 264 are confidential. This
information is not subject to public release under Texas Government Code
Chapter 552 and may be disclosed only for purposes consistent with Texas Family
Code Chapter 264 without losing its confidential character. Disclosure may be
made to:
(A) DFPS, DFPS employees, law
enforcement agencies, prosecuting attorneys, medical professionals, and other
state or local agencies that provide services to children and families;
and
(B) the attorney for the
alleged victim who is the subject of the records and a court-appointed
volunteer advocate appointed for the alleged victim under Texas Family Code
§
RSA
107.031.
(2) Information related to the investigation
of a report of abuse or neglect under Texas Family Code Chapter 261, and to the
services provided as a result of the investigation, are confidential as
provided by Texas Family Code §
RSA 261.201.
(3) DFPS, a law enforcement agency, and a
prosecuting attorney may share with a local children's advocacy center
information that is confidential under Texas Family Code §
RSA 261.201 as needed to
provide services under Texas Family Code Chapter 264. Confidential information
shared with or provided to a local children's advocacy center remains the
confidential property of the agency that shared or provided the information to
the local children's advocacy center. A request for confidential information
provided to the local children's advocacy center under Texas Family Code §
RSA 264.408 must be made
to the agency that shared or provided the information.
(4) An electronic recording of an interview
with a child or person with a disability that is made by a local children's
advocacy center is the property of the prosecuting attorney involved in the
criminal prosecution of the case involving the child or person with a
disability. If no criminal prosecution occurs, the electronic recording is the
property of the attorney involved in representing DFPS in a civil action
alleging abuse, neglect, or exploitation. If the matter involving the child or
person with a disability is not prosecuted, the electronic recording is the
property of DFPS, if the matter is an investigation by DFPS of abuse, neglect,
or exploitation. If DFPS is not investigating or has not investigated the
matter, the electronic recording is the property of the agency that referred
the matter to the local children's advocacy center.
(5) DFPS must be allowed access to a local
children's advocacy center's electronic recordings of interviews of children or
persons with a disability.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Texas 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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