HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
1417 |
THIRTIETH LEGISLATURE, 2019 |
H.D. 1 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION
1. The department of human services has
the largest operating budget of any state department, approximately
$3,304,000,000, including seventy-nine per cent of all the executive branch's
federal funds. The department provides
benefits and services to one in four Hawaii residents, or nearly 360,000 individuals. The State's medicaid program provides medical
insurance coverage for nearly one-half of Hawaii's children.
The
department's programs and services include: protection of vulnerable children
and adults; vocational rehabilitation and financial assistance to the disabled;
the supplemental nutrition assistance program; financial assistance; job
training and placement; housing and services for the homeless; medicaid
services for the State's medically needy population; and prevention, treatment,
and housing for the State's youthful offenders.
To
provide these benefits and services to Hawaii's vulnerable individuals and
families, the department manages significant federal and state funds and
processes vast amounts of information on a daily basis. Initiated by the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act of 2010, the department continues to invest in the
development of an enterprise eligibility system that will support the
integration of services that will lead to improved individual and program
outcomes through more efficient service delivery and data analytics.
As
part of the department's continuous improvement efforts, in 2016, the
department embarked on its ohana nui effort by adopting a multigenerational
approach to transform the way services are provided to individuals and families
to improve outcomes and well-being. By
providing programs and services that maintain a high level of service
integration, quality, and intensity across multiple generations, the department
intends to reduce intergenerational poverty in the State, and the human and
financial costs associated with poverty.
The
human and financial costs associated with poverty are well documented. The 2009 paper "Childhood and
Intergenerational Poverty: The Long Term Consequences of Growing up Poor,"
by Robert L. Wagmiller, Jr., and Robert M. Adelman, found that
"individuals who grow up in poor families are much more likely to be poor
in early adulthood. Moreover, the chances
of being poor in early adulthood increase sharply as the time spent living in
poverty during childhood increases".
The department's programs must focus on reducing the time children,
families, and individuals spend in poverty and supporting every person's
ability to meet their human and economic potential.
Furthermore,
other studies link adverse social and economic conditions in childhood to
health problems in adulthood. The
original 1998 Adverse Childhood Experiences study conducted by the Centers on
Disease Control and Prevention and Kaiser Permanente surveyed nearly seventeen
thousand adults in southern California.
The primary conclusion of the Adverse Childhood Experiences study was
the finding of a strong relationship between "exposure to abuse or
household dysfunction during childhood and multiple risk factors for several
leading causes of death in adults", such as heart disease, cancer, chronic
lung disease, fractures, and liver disease.
While adverse childhood experiences occur across all races and economic
classes, there is a higher prevalence of adverse childhood experiences for
those who also live in poverty.
A
similar conclusion was again found in a 2014 Swedish study that "showed
social and economic disadvantages in childhood were associated with an earlier
onset and faster progression of functional health problems from midlife into
old age". The Swedish study also
concluded that "creating equal opportunities for educational attainment
may help reduce the long-term effect of disadvantaged childhood conditions and
postpone functional health problems".
The
legislature finds that transitioning the department's service delivery to a
multigenerational approach will refocus the department's efforts to provide
available resources and support, reducing the time a child and family spends in
poverty, stabilizing the child's basic needs and environment to enhance their
ability to learn, improving all recipients' economic security, and ultimately
reducing intergenerational poverty in Hawaii.
The purpose of this Act is to require the
department of human services to use an integrated and multigenerational service
delivery approach to reduce the incidence of intergenerational poverty and
dependence on public benefits, consistent with the
nationally recognized best practices.
SECTION
2. Section 26-14, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
"(b)
The department shall administer programs through an integrated and
multigenerational approach designed to improve the social well-being,
economic security, and productivity of the people of the State[.] and
to reduce the incidence of intergenerational poverty and dependence upon public
benefits. Without limit to the
generality of the foregoing, the department shall concern itself with problems
of human behavior, adjustment, and daily living through the administration of
programs of family, child and adult welfare, economic assistance, health care
assistance, rehabilitation toward self-care and support, public housing, and
other related programs provided by law."
SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2030.
Report Title:
DHS; Integrated and Multigenerational Approach; Reduction of Intergenerational Poverty
Description:
Requires the Department of Human Services to use an integrated and multigenerational approach to delivering human services to reduce the incidence of intergenerational poverty and dependence on public benefits. (HB1417 HD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.